Purchas his pilgrimes. part 4 In fiue bookes. The first, contayning the voyages and peregrinations made by ancient kings, patriarkes, apostles, philosophers, and others, to and thorow the remoter parts of the knowne world: enquiries also of languages and religions, especially of the moderne diuersified professions of Christianitie. The second, a description of all the circum-nauigations of the globe. The third, nauigations and voyages of English-men, alongst the coasts of Africa ... The fourth, English voyages beyond the East Indies, to the ilands of Iapan, China, Cauchinchina, the Philippinæ with others ... The fifth, nauigations, voyages, traffiques, discoueries, of the English nation in the easterne parts of the world ... The first part.

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Title
Purchas his pilgrimes. part 4 In fiue bookes. The first, contayning the voyages and peregrinations made by ancient kings, patriarkes, apostles, philosophers, and others, to and thorow the remoter parts of the knowne world: enquiries also of languages and religions, especially of the moderne diuersified professions of Christianitie. The second, a description of all the circum-nauigations of the globe. The third, nauigations and voyages of English-men, alongst the coasts of Africa ... The fourth, English voyages beyond the East Indies, to the ilands of Iapan, China, Cauchinchina, the Philippinæ with others ... The fifth, nauigations, voyages, traffiques, discoueries, of the English nation in the easterne parts of the world ... The first part.
Author
Purchas, Samuel, 1577?-1626.
Publication
London :: Printed by William Stansby for Henrie Fetherstone, and are to be sold at his shop in Pauls Church-yard at the signe of the Rose,
1625.
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"Purchas his pilgrimes. part 4 In fiue bookes. The first, contayning the voyages and peregrinations made by ancient kings, patriarkes, apostles, philosophers, and others, to and thorow the remoter parts of the knowne world: enquiries also of languages and religions, especially of the moderne diuersified professions of Christianitie. The second, a description of all the circum-nauigations of the globe. The third, nauigations and voyages of English-men, alongst the coasts of Africa ... The fourth, English voyages beyond the East Indies, to the ilands of Iapan, China, Cauchinchina, the Philippinæ with others ... The fifth, nauigations, voyages, traffiques, discoueries, of the English nation in the easterne parts of the world ... The first part." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A71306.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed April 25, 2025.

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AN ALPHABETICALL TABLE OF THE PRINCIPALL things contained in the fiue Bookes of the fourth Part of Purchas his Pilgrimes.

A
  • AAys a Prouince in Florida, 1553
  • Abaya formozo, a Harbour in Brasile, where is found great store of Amber greice, Coral, Bra∣sil-wood, Fish, &c. 1240
  • Abausango Retambuero a great mountaine in Brasile, 1240
  • Abausanga, the name of a valiant Caniball, 1228
  • Abermot, a great Lord of Mawoo∣shen, 1874
  • Aborollas, dangerous Sands & clifts in the West-Indies betweene the Cape and Spirito Santo, 1222
  • Abraham Cock an Englishman ma∣ried in America, 1141
  • Abrioio great Shoalds in the Lati∣tude of 21 and 22 Degrees from Hispaniola westward, 1834
  • Acara a towne in Peru, 1446
  • Acacoustomed a Riuer in Mawoo∣shen, 1874
  • Acapulea, the situation and descrip∣tion thereof, 1418. 1446. 1562
  • Acarewanas, Indian Kings & Lords so called, 1247
  • Acari, a Towne, where is made the best and greatest store of wine in all Peru, 1446
  • Accomack, a Riuer in Virginia, 1694
  • Acela, a Towne in Florida, 1531
  • Achese, a Towne in Florida, 1536
  • Achneres, a certaine people so called: their natures, habitations, fashions, and commodities, 1357
  • Acle, a Gulph so called, 1244
  • Acoma, a Towne of 6000 Indians, the passage to which is by stayres ••••wen out of a rocke, 1561, 1562
  • Acuco, a Prouince in America, 1560
  • Acus, a Prouince in America, 1560
  • Acuti, a beast of Brasile, like a Coney, 1301
  • Adams Tree in Brasile, 1310
  • L. Admirall of England his deserued commendations, 1962
  • Adultely, how punished by the In∣dians, 1159. by the Aethiopians, 1234. by the Guianians, 1272
  • Aquacay, a Prouince in Florida, 1553
  • Aquatorke, a place situate in the Coast of China, on the North, 1433
  • Age reuerenced among the Sauages, 1333
  • Ague, a speciall medicine for the same, 1311
  • Aio, an Iland in Orenoco, 1248
  • Aire causing swelling in the legges, 1222
  • Alaqua, a riuer in Brasile, the depth thereof, and how passed, 1239
  • Alimama, a Town in Florida, 1545
  • Allcatrace a rauenous Sea-fowle de∣scribed, 1376
  • Alegranca, one of the most northerly Ilands of the Canaries, 1155. the inhabitants and commodities ther∣of, 1267
  • St. Alexio an Iland described. 1238
  • Alexandro Vrsino his relations of Terra Firma, and Peru, 1418, &c.
  • Alexander. viz. Sir William Alex∣ander Knight, his patent for the Plantation of Noua Scotia, 1871
  • Alfonso Gabrero his comming to the riuer of Plate, 1350
  • Algernoone-Fort in Virginia kept by Captaine Dauies, 1748
  • All Nesico, a tree in Brasil very precious and rich, good against bruises, 1239
  • Allen the Cardinall promiseth the Crowne of England to the Duke of Parma, 1907
  • Alo, a kinde of drinke vsed by the Spaniards in the West Indies, like Braggat, made of hot spices, 1174
  • Altamaca-towne, 1536
  • Aluarez Nunnez, made Generall of the Spaniards in Brasile, his me∣morable expl••••ts, &c. 1356, & sequ. His ship-wracke, land-tra∣uell, and famine, ibid. His dis∣respect among his souldiers, 1357. sedition among his men, 1359. His dissembled sicknesse and treche∣rous cruelty toward the Indians, 1360. Hee is captiuated and sent into Spaine, and the dissention en∣suing, ibid. Vide Nunnez.
  • Amaie, a towne in Florida, 1553
  • Amam Buquano, two Ilands in Brasile, 1241
  • Amapajo Riuer, 1248
  • Amana Riuer, 1247
  • Amariocapana vallies, and the in∣habitants thereof, 1248
  • Amazons country, 1559, 1218. The names of all the Riuers and Nations betweene it and the Bra∣bisses, 1286. The description of their nature, country, customes, and commodities at large, 1287
  • Amazon women, their fashions, and countrie, 1358. Vide Women.
  • Amber, how called by the Indians, 1241
  • Ambergreece where found, 1224, 1237, 1240, 1313, 1377, 1796
  • Ambition among Sauages, 1212
  • Ambroa, a beast in Aethiopia, 1233
  • Ambush of the Caribes, 1256
  • Amecaxo, Indians of Brasle, 1310
  • Amiebas-towne in the riuer Mar∣win, 1283
  • America, 1223. How diuided be∣tweene the Sp〈…〉〈…〉ds and Portin∣gals,

Page [unnumbered]

  • 1435. The strife about it, 1437
  • Americaes strange beasts, plants, &c 1325, 1326. & sequ. Strange Birds, 1329, 1330. Bees and Butterflies, ibid. The enuy of the Americans, 1330. Ameri∣caes medicinable plants, and ve∣nemous, 1330. With leaues of in∣credible bignesse, 1332. The cause of their warres, 1333. Their irre∣conciliation with their aduersaries ibid. Their assemblies, weapons, skill, archery, stratagems, their clamorous fiercenesse, captines, 1335, 1336. vid. Indians and Brasilians.
  • Anato, a berry or cod wherewith the Indians paint, 1251
  • Anapermia a riuer, how situate, 1247
  • Anaquia, sauages so called, 1299
  • Ancica, a place in Affrica, 1234 The inhabitants thereof, the stub∣bornest vnder the Sunne; most blacke of any, their religion, con∣cubines, countrie, and commodi∣ties; they are right vnder the line, 1237
  • Anebas, a place in the Indies, 1248. certaine Moores so called, 1250
  • Angola, a place in Aethiopia, 1212 The inhabitants, markets, lawes, King, pompe, & rites of obeysance, controuersies, &c. 1233. Their Religion, ibid. Description of the Country, their slauery to the Por∣tingals, their coloured cloathes, greatest disgrace, their feeding & lodging, 1233, 1234. their man∣ner of taking Elephants, their cole∣blacke colour, stature, punishment of adultery, circumcision, how ea∣sily their country may bee taken from the Portingals, 1234. yeer∣ly shipped from it 28000 slaues, 1243
  • Anhelim, Sauages in the Maine of Brasile, 1299
  • Anchors that are vnserniceable, how mended without iron, 1390
  • Angra, the chiefe towne of Tercera, one of the Azores, the description and fortification thereof, 1668, 1143
  • Anima, a bird in Brasile, that hath on his beake a medicinable horne, 1306
  • Anneda, a tree very soueraigne a∣gainst the scuruy, 1625
  • Annes Hill the situation of it, 1242
  • S. Annes Iland, 1379
  • Anoixi, a Towne in Florida, the in∣habitants whereof were taken by the Spaniards, 1550
  • Ant-Beare, a beast with a nose of a yard long, deceiuing Ants with putting forth his tongue, 1214. It is also called Tamandros, 1216, 1301
  • Ante, a place in Florida, the commo∣dities thereof, 1503, 1504
  • Anteperistase, and the effects there∣of, 1627
  • S. Anthonie, a garison towne of the Spaniards in Florida, 1182
  • Sr. Antony Ralife forced to returne for England, 1941
  • St Antonio, a Riuer, 1223. the de∣scription, commodities, &c. 1239
  • Antis, a Prouince neere Peru, whose inhabitants worshipped Tygres and great Snakes of 25 and 30 foot long, and harmlesse, 1457
  • Apalachen a place supposed very well stored with gold, in Florida, 1501 The chiefe towne thereof descri∣bed, their manner of building, and fortification, their commodities of beasts, fowles, and plants: a geo∣graphical description of their coun∣trie, their assault of the Spaniards, &c. 1502, 1503
  • Apamatica, a country in Uirginia, 1688
  • Apamatucke-riuer, 1692
  • Apanawaspek, a great riuer in Ma∣wooshen, lying West and by South of Ramassoc, 1874
  • Apanmenseck, a great riuer in Mawooshen, ibid.
  • Apes with beards and mustachoes, 1243
  • Apetupa, certaine Indians so called, 1299
  • Apigapigtanga, certaine sauages so called in Brasile, 1298
  • Aponig, a great riuer not far from Aponik, 1874
  • Aponik, a great riuer in Mawoo∣shen, ibid.
  • Appisham, a towne on the riuer A∣ponik, ibid.
  • Apples of America, 1332 Apples at Angola and Auanas, pleasant and wholesome but eating iron like A∣qua-fortis, 1243. Apples in Guiana causing sleepe to death, 1276
  • Aquirini Indians, 1299
  • Aquiguira-Brasilians, 1299
  • Aquixo, a great Lord in Florida, 1546
  • Aracawa Riuer, 1251. The commo∣dities and inhabitants thereabout, 1251, 1263
  • Aracuaiati, certaine Indian sauages, 1299
  • Araomi, an Iland in Orenoco, 1248
  • Ararape, certaine Brasilian inhabi∣tants, 1298
  • Arawagatos, certaine Indians neere Orenoco, 1248
  • Arbadaos-Indians, their hungry life, 1517
  • Archers, very expert and strong, 1503. Archers that kill birds flying, fishes swimming, beasts run∣ning, 1771
  • Archers-hope, a point of land in Virginia so called, 1688. Ar∣chers relation of a Fleet sent to Virginia, 1733, 1734
  • Arecias, certaine clifts in Brasile so called, 1238
  • Capt. Argals voyage and successe, 1758, & seq. His relation of his acts in Virginia, anno 1613. his getting store of corne for the plan∣tation, 1764, 1765. His taking prisoner Powhatons daughter, and freeing Englishmen, 1765. his returne, ibid. His valour in displating the Frēch, 1768, 1808
  • Armada furnished against the Eng∣lish in the West Indies, their fight, 1398, & seq. An armada prepa∣red against the Lord Howard, Admirall of her Maiesties fleet at the Azores, 1144
  • Arrow running in at the mouth of a man, and comming out at his poale, yet the man saued, 1206. Arrowes fiue or sixe in one body escaping, ibid. One and twenty ar∣rowes in one man that liued after 4 houres, 1219. A hundred ar∣rowes in two men before they fell, 1256. Arrowes of Indians that runne through a Target Pistoll. proofe, 1688
  • Arrowhotacks, certaine Indians of Virginia, hauing but 30 fighting men, 1692
  • Sr. Arthur Gorge, his relation of a voyage to the Iles of Azores, 1938
  • Articles offered to Port Ricco-men by the Earle of Cumberland, 1163. And receiued. 1164
  • Articles propounded by Mr. More to the Company planted in the Bermudas to hee subscribed to generally, 1795
  • Arraroopana, an entrance into the riuer Orenoco, 1248
  • Armes vsed by the Indians, 1261
  • Aruba Iland described, 1146, 1246
  • Aruburguary, a town of the Epeu∣remii in the Indies, 1285
  • Arwarcas, certaine Indians so called that dwell in the Wyapoco, 1253
  • ...

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Assapana, the first Iland in Oreno∣que, 148
  • Assaccona, a Prouince in Guiana, 1285
  • Assawais, certaine Indian inhabi∣ting the Plaines of Samia, 148
  • Ashamabaga, a riuer in Mawoo∣shen westward from Sagodok, 1875
  • Asshaw a town on the riuer Aponeg in Mawooshen, 1874
  • Aspiner a Gouernor in Nausset vn∣der the great Massasoye, his good entertainment of our English for∣ces, 1853
  • Assumption, a place erected by the Spaniards in the West Indies. 1352
  • Asticon, a great Lord in Mawoo∣shen, 1874
  • Atabalipa Prince of Peru craftily taken by the Spaniards, and after∣wards perfidiously slaine, 1445, 1452, 1490, 1491
  • Atacames Bay, the situation there∣of, 1401
  • Atacama, a towne in Peru, 1443
  • Athul, a pleasant Country neere the Riuer Orenoco, 1248
  • Atuhualpa, or Atabalipa, Emperer of Peru, his warres with his bro∣ther, his victory. crueltie, &c. 1483, 1484, 1485
  • Ataios-Indians, 1516
  • Atrico, a place fiue leagues from Mexico, 1414
  • Attoca-Riuer, 1248
  • Atturari, certaine inhabitauts of the West Indies, 1299
  • Anasalii, spirits possessing and vex∣ing the inhabitants of West India, 1213
  • Auauares, certaine Indians so called, 1514
  • Aubri a French Priest, lost in New France, and after many dayes found againe, being almost star∣ued, all his food being a fruit worse then wild cherries. 1623
  • Audacity of the English Admirall in the voyage to the Azores, 1943
  • Augurari Brasilians, 1299
  • Autiamque a Prouince in Florida described, with the commodiis thereof, 1550, 1551
  • Axa a place in America, 1561
  • Aximocuntla, a place in New Spaine, 1558
  • Azores Ilands, their number and no∣mination in particular, why called Azores, and why the Flemmish Ilands, 1667, 1668. Azores Iles situated in the Atlanticke and Westerne Oceans, betweene 37 and 40 Degrees, 1938. the inhabitant Port〈…〉〈…〉 hate the Sp〈…〉〈…〉ds, and would bee freed from them, if they might fall with a Gouernour that could protect them from the Sp〈…〉〈…〉. 1952
  • Aztatlan a Prouince neere New-Spaine. 1559
  • Ayard, Indian wood so called. 1251
  • Ayer, a disease in Tereeta. 1671
  • Aygas Indians, then nature and commodities described, 1351
  • Ay〈…〉〈…〉y a Towne in Florida, called by the Spaniards The towne of reliefe: the commodities and de∣scription thereof. 1537
B
  • BAgres, a very strange Fish in RioGrand in Florida. 1548
  • Bahia a Towne in the West-Indies neere the Line. 1189
  • Baldiuia, his death by a cup of mol∣ten Gold which the India•••• forced him to drinke, saying, Now glut thy selfe with gold. 1443
  • Baldiuia, a places name neere the South-sea. 1391. Baldiuia Port 1442. 1443
  • Balparizo, a place in America. 1399
  • Balsamum, of three sorts in Tppan Basse neere Brasile, white, red & blacke, all very odorierous. 1189
  • Bancke in the New-found Land knowne by Mariners to bee neere by the testimony of Birds, 1628. The description of it, and the fish∣ing there, ibid.
  • Banner of a Spanish ship, hung vp in one of the Churches of Leyden, in token of triumph, 1909
  • Baptisme of Spaniards leaueth no character in the Indians, 1323
  • Baptisme forbidden by the Deuill to the Sauages, 1564
  • Baratta, a delicate perfume, and ad∣mirable in curing greene wounds, 1276
  • Barbudos Iland, the description and commodities thereof, 1255, 1256
  • Baede, an Indian towne, 1364
  • Bareras Mermethues hils in Parey∣na, 1237
  • Capt. Barker of Bristowes nauiga∣tions, 1180
  • Capt. Barker slaine in Brasile, 1195
  • Barkley, viz. Sir Iohn Barkley his noble resolution, ambition and courage, 1151
  • Baroti, an India towne, 1364
  • Barrennesse of women how dispel∣led by the Indians, 1303
  • Bartennis Indian inhabitants, 1349
  • Bartholomew de las Casas his dis∣couerie of Spanish cruelties in the Indies, 1569, & sequ, his dispu∣tations with Doctor Sepulueda concerning the same point, 1631.
  • Saint Bartholmew Valley in New Biscany, 1562
  • Bascherepos Indians, 1357
  • Basenesse of the Spaniards in refu∣sing the Earle of Essex his chal∣lenge, 1924
  • Basse, great plenty summer and win∣ter taken at Mattachiest, 1859
  • Bastimento Ilands, 1244
  • A Bath temperately hot in Domi∣nica, 1158 A Bath caring di∣uers diseases, 1281, 1282. Bathes boyling meat, 1685
  • Batiscan-Riuer in Canada, 1611
  • Battell of Sauages, 1218, 1224, 1272, 1272, 1273, 1348. Bat∣tell of Sauages with Spanards, 1360, 1361
  • Batts very great and noxious, 1284
  • Baximete a place fertile with fine gold, 1413
  • Bay of Cods in Canada, 1616
  • Bay of heate, ibid.
  • Bay, a towne in Brasile, 1142, 1438
  • Bayama, a Gulfe in the West Indies, 1241
  • Bayamond, a riuer in Port-Ricco, 1169
  • Bayas de Sant Antonio, sands on the coasts of Brasile, 1238
  • Bayshas de Ambrobrio, certaine clifts so called, 1223
  • Beares tame taught by Sauages in stead of Ladders, to cary the clim∣bers vp on trees, 1644
  • Beares that swim 14 Leagues from the Continent to feed on Birds, 1605
  • Beasts with armed scales repelling Iron in America, 1326
  • A Beast called Hay that liueth vpon haire, 1328
  • A Beast with a monstrous snout, ibid.
  • Beasts hideously howling, 1381
  • Beasts that carie their young ones in a bag vnder their belly, 1502. A beasts hide of strange forms and fashion, 1560
  • Beds of what kind vsed among the Sauages, 1188
  • Beefe how kept in the Ilands of Mo∣na and Sauona, &c. 1146
  • Beeues infinitely plentifull, 1171, 1421
  • Bees without stings, 1364
  • Belle a voire, a riuer of Florida, discouered by the French, 1603
  • ...

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Belligods, 1202
  • Bengula in Affrica, 1234
  • Saint Bent, an Iland in Brasile, 1240
  • Bermuda plantation distrest by Rats in infinite number, 1796. Their deuouring their fruits, ibid. The weaknesse and mortality succee∣ding, ibid. & 1797. The predi∣ction thereof portended by Rauens, 1797. Bermudas Plantation vnder the gouernment of Master Moore, ibid. Vnder Captaine Tucker, ibid. Its growth in be∣nefit and commodities, 1798. Its gouernment by Captaine Kendall and Captaine Butler, ibid. Its Forts built by Master Moore, 1802. Its gouernment by a Tri∣umuirate, ibid. A Church built, with supplies of all necessaries, ib. Bermudas plantation-affaires vn∣der diuers Gouernours, and the fortification therof at large, 1804 1805, 1811. Bemudas impreg∣nability, 1823. Englands naturall and nationall right to plant in Bermudas, 1811
  • Bermuda Ilands infamous for storms and thunder, their situation, 1169. Called the Deuils Ilands, 1737. Opinions of their number, magni∣tude, circuit, and latitude, sea∣sons and climate, 1738 Pearle∣fishing there, ibid. The danger of ariuall thither by ships; their soile, want of venemous beasts, fruits, Cedars, 1739. Palmes there, and their commodities; trees, Silke∣wormes, ibid. The reason why they were not formerly inhabited, ibid. Their want of fresh water, fish great store, mking of salt there. 1740 The wholesomnesse of the fish, and its caue; store of Whales. Fowles, ibid. Wild Hogs and Tortoises, 1741. Bermudas liked by Sir Thomas Gates, and other Mariners, and preferred be∣fore Virginia, 1745. The religi∣ons orders in Bermudas vnder the said Gouernour. 1746. Ber∣mudas possession taken, their so∣lemnities, Preaching, Admini∣stration of the Sacraments, mari∣age rites, &c. 1746. Bermudas, crosse erected by Sir Thomas 〈◊〉〈◊〉 in memoriall of his deliue∣rie, the inscription, 1747. Ber∣mudas plantation by the English, 1793, 1794. Articles proposed to the plantationers, 1795. Bermu∣das store of Ambergreece, 1796. Bermudas geographically descri∣bed, 1798. The soile, ibid. With other commodities at large, 1799, 1800. & seq. Another des••••ipti∣on of its auer all excellencies. 1806
  • Bermuda City in Virginia, 1767, 1768
  • Berrias making drinke, of a restri∣ctiue operation. 1739
  • Berria, a Riuer, 1206
  • Beuer-skins very plentifull in Ca∣nada and New England, 1842
  • Beuers burnt by Sauages, 1644
  • Biarataca, a beast in Brasile that killeth with his stincking smell men and dogs, 1303
  • Biesaie a nation neere the Riuer Pa∣rana in the West Indies, 1364
  • Bigrorgia, Indians of Brasile, 1300
  • Bird-land, one of the Virgin Ilands in the West Indies, 1159
  • Birds incredibly plentifull there, 1159, 1160
  • Birds strange in Brasile, 1305, 1306 Birds that haue two generations, that dance, that sound like bels, that haue three skins, that haue hornes, ibid. Birds that bring ti∣dings of ships ariuall, whose fat is good for loosenesse; birds that die and liue againe: their seuerall names, 1316, 1317. Birds in A∣merica very delicate and glitter∣ing, their natures, names, and di∣uersities, 1329. A bird of a most monstrous bill, 1330. A bird no bigger then a Drone Bee, that makes most harmonious melody, 1330. Birds beleeued by the Barbarians to bee sent from their friends with newes, 1330. Birds like Snipes that discouer dange∣rous sheales, 1374. Birds taken with hooke and liue, 1383. Their dscription, ibid. Birds worship∣ped as gods. 1560
  • Birds strangely taken in the Bermu∣das, by men yelling, and howling, 1741
  • Biscaines, a sauage people inhabi∣ting neere Grand Bay, on the north of New-found Land, 1882
  • Biscouers vse to fight well, 1150
  • Bishop of Cusco taken prisoner by the English at Cadiz; he is set at liberty without ransome, 1933
  • Bishop and his Clerkes, certaine Rockes on the north side of Silley so called, 1967
  • Blanches Bay, 1386
  • Blancke, a place whither the French Biscaines, and Portugals yeerely repaire for Fish, neere the South Cape of New-found Land, 1886
  • Blacke-Pinace sunke, 1167
  • Blacke-Rocke, a place yeerely fished by three or foure hundred sayle of Spaniards, 1837
  • Blanco Iland, 166
  • Blas••••, a Frier of the Order of Fran∣ciseus of Siuill, being in great extremity through the slauish bon∣dage of the Spaniards, was relee∣ued by the Sauages of the Ile of Dominica, 1833
  • A Blazing-star in the yeare 1590. Ouer Tercera, 1678. Another ouer England Anno 1606, page 1685
  • Bloody fix rife, and the causes thereof, 1149
  • Blew-beds wel sold for two or three hundred bushels of corne, 1710
  • Bores in Brasile that haue their nauels on their backes, by the sent of which the Dogs hunt and de∣siroy them, 1301
  • Boates of strange forme and fashion, 1504. Bates onely of ollowed trees by the Indians of New France. 1633
  • A Boat that sailed from the Bermu∣das to Ireland 1803. And there hangd vp for a monument. ibid.
  • Boeyua; Snakes among the Sa∣uages, 1210
  • Bogs and watry places engendring euill diseases, 1623, 1624
  • Boicupecanga, a kind of Snake that hath venemous prickles on his backe, 1303
  • Bolus, a Riuer in Virginia, the com∣modities, and inhabitants, 1693
  • Bonas Ayres, a place in the riuer of Plate, 1218
  • Bonito or Spanish Mackarell, 1376
  • Boarding how to bee avoided in a Sea-fight, 1405
  • Borsis a towne taken by Captaine Petuin in the Portugall voyage, 1926
  • Boybona an Indian name of a moun∣taine in Brasile, in English the Rotten Whale, 1240
  • Boycininga and Boiciningpeba, certain snakes in Brasile that haue bels in their tailes, and are very poysonous, 1304
  • Boyes of the Indians not suffered to take Tobacco, their reuerence to their elders, their habit, &c. 1869
  • Boytiapua, a Frog-eating Snake or Serpent, wherewith if a barren womans hips be strooke, the Indi∣ans say she presently conceiues with child, 1303
  • Boynara, a place in the Indies, 1246
  • ...

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Boisterous Seas, not agreeable to London delicacie. 1941
  • Brabisse Riuer, and the particular names of the Riuers betweene it and the Amazons, and Nations, 1286
  • Bracheo, neere the Paretaes in the West Indies. 1246
  • Branco de Malambo, 1434
  • Brasile, the Rivers, Capes, and Ports thereof described: their danger or safety for Navigators, 1237, 1238. & seq. Brasile when first found and discovered, and by whom, 1437. The con∣troversie concerning it, betweene the Spaniards and Portugals, 1437
  • Brasile, the difficulty of sayling thi∣ther some times of the yeare, 1156, 1157
  • A Brasilian brought to K. Henry the eighth in his wilde accoustre∣ments, 1179
  • Brasile is sixe hundred leagues from the Streights of Mgellane. 1193
  • Brasilian coasts full of Shoales, 1195
  • Brasilian Sauages, 1225, 1226. seq. strange and monstrous Beasts in Brasile, their names, 1242, 1243. Brasilians their nature, sub••••cti∣on, man-eating, shooting, nakednes, flat-heads, 1243. plenty of mynes, 1243. Brasil, and Brasilians, described, 1289, & seq their opi∣nion of an Iland of God. of their soule and paradise, ibid. Their mariages-rites, drinkings, diet, ruling children, liberalitie, drunkennesse, rudenesse, manner of eating, 1290. Their lodging, na∣kednesse, modestie, haire, houses, child-birth, ceremonies, loue of children, and education, 1291. Their entertaining strangers with weeping welcome, their hospitali∣tie, their drinking smoake of Peti∣gina, their traffiquing ornaments, the vsage of their wiues, iealousie, musicke, 1292. Singing, instru∣ments, loue of poetry, their buri∣als, and excessiue lamentation, tooles, weapons, archerie, their arts, quick-sightednesse, trauels, swimming, fishing, swords, 1293, 1294. Their manner of eating mans flesh, and divers their cere∣monies at large, 1295, 1296, 1297. Their creating Gentlemen, the badges thereof, and their three titles, Abaetes, Murubixab, Moçacara, 1297. Their langua∣ges and nations, ibid. The climate, seasons, nature of the soyle, 1300▪ Varietie of strange wilde beasts, 1301, 1302, & 1303. Diversity of fearfull Serpents, and the ve∣nome of hat climate, 1303, 1304. The varietie of P••••ats, and strangenesse of other Bird, 1305, 1306. Diversities and wonders of their trees and fruits for Physick, and 〈◊〉〈◊〉 h〈…〉〈…〉se: the severall names of their trees and plants, 1307, 1308, 1309. Rare and admira∣ble plants, their severall names and wonders at large, 1310, 1311, 1312. Their multitude and singularitie of fishes, and their names at large, 1314, 1315 & seq. Their Fish that liveth al∣together in Salt-water, and their names, 1316, 1317. The delicate fresh-water of Brasile, and Rivers, ibid. Thei strange, vast, and fearfull sea-serpents, and their severall names, 1317, 1318, What Portugall commodi∣ties in Brasile, 1319. Brasile hath few Lice and Fleas, but in∣finite store of venemous gnats, ibid. Articles for the good of Bra∣sile to the Spanish King, 1320, & seq. The want of iustice, and the irregularitie: of those parts, 1321. Their dis-respect of the Ie∣suits in the matters of counsaile, ibid. How cruelly the Brasilians are dealt with by the Portugals, 1321. & seq. Their want of in∣struction, and inhumane slauerie, 1324. Brasils beasts, plants, and other living things described, 1325, 1326. & seq. Brasile wood, ibid. Difference of plants, beasts, and commodities from ours, and their severall description, 1325. & seq. Their astonishment at the hearing of God: Their in∣constancie, naturall parts, &c. 1340. Their mariages, and poly∣gamie, the manners of women with child, &c. 1341. The de∣struction of families, and bounds of their possessions, 1342. Their houshold stuffe. 1343. Their en∣tertainment. 1344, 1345. Their Physicke and demeanour towards the sicke, their buriall attended with diuellish rites. 1346. Brasils description and chiefe Havens. 1382. A Brasile Ship taken by Sir Water Raleigh, 1938. Bra∣sile commodities sent for Spaine, not onely gold, but much other treasures, as Ginger, Sugar, Hides, Tobacco, &c. 1817
  • Brauadoes are sometimes the hin∣derers of successe in great proiects, 194
  • Braverie of the English turneth to beggerie. 1942
  • Bridegroomes th•••• giue the fist hansll of their spous•••• to their hin∣dred and friends. 1481
  • Brigalian Iland the situation thereof 1240
  • Buena Ventura, a River in the West Indies, the description thereof, 1413, 1414
  • Bueno Aeres, a t••••ne in the Ri∣ver of Plate, 141
  • Buccaw ganecants, a towne vnder the dominion of Bashabez Saga∣mo of Mawooshen. 1873
  • Building without tooles or engines, miraculous by the Indians of Peru, 1477, 1478
  • Burdones, a place so called, 126
  • Burkes rebellion in Ireland, 1893
  • The Burlings, an Iland so called: 〈◊〉〈◊〉 soyle, commodi〈…〉〈…〉, and i••••a∣bitants described, 1155
  • Butter how made by the Indians. 1539
C.
  • CAbot, viz. Sir Sebastian Ca∣bot his American travels, 1177, 1178, & seq. he discovered so much of the continent of the New World, that it deserved to bee called Caboiana. rather then America, 1177, 1112
  • Cabusto, a towne in Florida, 1544
  • Caat, certaine Brasilians so called. 1298
  • Cera River, 1248
  • Cadiz taken by the English, the Ca∣stle surrendred, &c 1931. Cadi described, 1932. It is set ••••fir and rased to the ground. 1933
  • Caiama Iland, the description therof, 1248
  • Caiocame, a towne in Mawoc∣shen, 1874
  • Caioses, Cannibals so called, living in Brasile, 1241
  • Caiuari, certaine Savages of Bra∣sile living in Caues, 199
  • Cale, a towne of Florida, 1532
  • Caleformia, a sea so called, 1560 or an Iland, or many Ilands, as others say, 1562
  • Calenture, 1181, 1182
  • Caliane, a River in Guiana, very aboundant with gold and silver, ••••60
  • Caliquen towne, 1533
  • Callipuny, a mountaine in Guyana. 171
  • ...

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Callis taken by the Spaniards, 1927
  • Calmes, the strange effects thereof in the Sea, and in mens bodies, 1373
  • Camalaha, a Fayre in the Indies neere Orenoco, where women are sold. 1248
  • Camauiars, certaine Savages that haue paps reaching vnder their waste. 1299
  • Camana, a road in Brasile, 1142 as also a towne in Peru, 1446
  • Campseau, a Port in New-France, described, 1639
  • Camarijiuua, a River, how situate, 1223. Its danger or ease for Na∣vigation, and the commodities thereof, 1238
  • Camo a Hill on the coasts of Brasile, 1240
  • Camoni, Indians, 1514
  • Campeche the chiefe towne of Ia∣catan, 1186
  • Canacum the Governour of Mano∣met, his friendly entertainment to the English, 1858
  • Canada River, 1606. The adioyning Countrey, the Inhabitants, descrip∣tion, feasts, fights, lodging, houses, Canons, with other customes, 1606, 1607. They endure great famine, lye, and are false-hearted, their beliefe, and ridiculous re∣lation of God, ibid. & 1609. vide Indians of Canada.
  • Canasagua, a towne in Florida, 1539
  • Canauerall, where, 1247
  • Canarie Ilands, their number, and description, 1369, 1370
  • Canariagranda, 1185, 1369, et seq.
  • Candish his Voyage, 1971. & seq. he takes the towne Santos, and Saint Vincent, 1191. Loseth Cap∣taine Dauies, ibid. His ariuall at Port-desire, and the Magellane Streights, ibid. His mutinous company, 1192. and distresse in the streights, 1193. Returne for Brasil, 1194. His company slaine, 1195. His valour and proiects, ibid. Losse of men by Indians and Portingals, 1197. Losse of the Roe-bucke, 1200. Seuerity, ibid. His weaknesse, and vnwil∣lingnesse of his company, for going to the Streights, 1200. His voyage further discouered by Anthony niuer, 1201, 1202. & seq. The supposed ouerthrow of his voyage, 1203
  • Canduacu, Brasilian beast that dart their bristles through a mans skin, 1302
  • Canari, a Province of More∣quito, 1248
  • Cannete, i towne in Peru, 1446
  • Canri, a toune in the Riuer Mar∣win in America, 1283
  • Canibals with faces like dogs at Ports-desire, 1191. Other strange and valorous Caunibals. 1208
  • Canibals profer fa〈…〉〈…〉 to Can∣dish in Santos, 1203. Canni∣bals naked and fearfull, 1204. cald Pories, 1208. Their strange entertainment of strangers, 1208.
  • Canibals called Tamoyes, 1228, 1240. vid. Savages.
  • Cano, a famous Nauigator, 1191
  • Canoas or boats of threescore foot long with 80 men in them, 1380
  • Cape Blanco, 1379
  • Cape Saint Francisco, 1400
  • Cape Saint Antonio, 1147
  • Capawucke a place in the Ind••••s, stored with gold, 1841
  • Cape bona Espernza, the danger of the passage there, 1151, 1152
  • Cape Rico, 1170
  • Cape Verdi, 1181
  • Cape de la vela, 118, 1244
  • Cape Frio, or cold Cape, its situa∣tion, 1202. Its Navigation, 1240
  • Cape Saint Augustine, 1238
  • Cape Caldera, 146
  • Cape de verde, its vnhealthinesse, 1370. Its Ilands, 1371
  • Capignramirinij a place in Brasile 1238. Cape Agreda, cape fro∣ward, 1386
  • Cape chiqui-towne, 1535. Cape Francois, 1603
  • Cape Saint Maries, Cape de Rare, Cape Saint Lawrence, 1606
  • Caperrocca, a Sauage towne, 1285
  • Capitua a flat land in Brasile, 1238 Cape-cod, 1647. Cape Charls, 1691. Cape Henry in Virginia, 1687. Cape Laware in Virginia, 1762. Its adioyning Shoales, ibid.
  • Captaines for narres, how chosen a∣mong the Indians, 1262
  • Captaines errours checked, 1397. patience commendable in a Cap∣taine, 1153
  • Captaine Listers dingerous attempt in my Lord of Cumberlands voyage, 1143. Hee is drowned and his Ship in his returne, ibid.
  • Captaine Bayly slaine, 1144
  • Captaine Munson taken captiue, 1144
  • Captaine Nortons Uoyage, ibid.
  • Captaine Caues surprizall of in Ar gosie of Lisbone. ibid.
  • Captaine Nortons assailing a For∣tingall, ibid. Capt. Caue, Admi∣rall in the eighth Uoyage of the Lord of Cumberland, slaine, 1147
  • Captaine Antonie killed, ibid.
  • Captaine Dounton wounded, 1148
  • Capurisell a River, 1250
  • Capucaras, water-Serpents in the Indies, 1211
  • Capari, a River neere Orenoque, 1247
  • Carrabouca, a place in India, 1249
  • Carcocies, Indians so called, 1365
  • Carder, viz. Peter Carder a Cor∣nish man, his hard fortune and escapes, 1187. The losse of his company. 1188. His living two moneths vpon a fruit like Oran∣ges, and his drinking of his owne Urine, ibid. His conversing with Indians, bid. Teacheth them to marre. 1189. His departure from them, ibid. His imprisonment, de∣liverance, 1189, 1190. His im∣ployment, 1190. His escape from the Portingals, and ariuall to England after nine yeares voyage, 1190
  • Carigue, a Beast in Brasile that that carteth her yong ones in a bag about with her, 1301
  • Cari-River, 1248
  • A Carrak runneth a shore to avoid the English, 1938
  • Caripo a towne in Guiana, 1268
  • Caroli, a pleasant River neere Ore∣noco, 1248
  • Carraemba, Sauages so called, 1299
  • Carapana, a place in the Province of Emeria, 1247
  • Carraibas, certain Ingglers in Bra∣sile. 1290
  • Carracus a place in the Indies, 1242, 1248
  • Caredenas, a Province in America, 1560
  • Carripapoory Ilands neere Guiana. 1268
  • Carendies a fierce Nation of the Indies, neere the River, of Plate their nature, warlikenesse, and description, 1348
  • A Carrack runneth her selfe on ground for feare of the English, 1964
  • Carracks taken and burnt by Eng∣lish Captaines, 1145, 1147, 1148
  • Carracks not so great as wealthy, 1150
  • Carracks vsed to returne from the

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Indies, at the Acores by Sep∣tember, 1169
  • A Carrack with foure millions and a halfe of treasure burnt in Port-Ricco, 1171
  • Great Carrack fired, 1182. Another taken, 1183
  • Carchconos Indians, 1364
  • Carcariso, Indians so called, 1353
  • Caribes neere Orenoco, 1249 great enemies to the Indians, 1261
  • Carios Sauages, their nature, com∣modities, customes, towne, fortifi∣cation, &c. described, 1351
  • Captaine Carre slaine in the Por∣tugall Voyage, 1924
  • Caruolos Sauages, their nature, and description, 1232
  • Carruco, certaine Sauages in Flo∣rida, 1510
  • Capt. Carsey slaine in the Portugal Voyage, 1924
  • Cartagena assaulted and taken, 1182, Its description and force, 1419, 1434. Tis massacred by Spaniards, 1584
  • A Caruell stolne by English cap∣tiues, 1151
  • Cascais, a towne of Portugall forsa∣ken at the approach of the Eng∣lish, 1923
  • Casiste, a great Floridan towne, 1541
  • Casuero Riuer, 1248
  • Casqui a great Gouernour in Ame∣rica, his large dominions, and townes, 1547, 1548
  • Cassaui bread, 1146. The maner of making it, the goodnesse and de∣scription of it, 1173, 1251
  • Cassia Fistula in Brasile, 1308
  • Castro, a place on the coast of Chili, 1442
  • Castro his discoverie, 1447
  • Casuays, a River in the Indies, 1223
  • Cassipa River, 1248
  • Cassipogotos Indians, neere Ore∣noco 1248
  • Castle of Cascais yeelded to the English, 1924
  • Castle of Saint Philip, neere Porto Bello, 1244
  • Catalte, a Province in Florida, 1553
  • Catagua Indians, 1300
  • Saint Catalina Iland, 1438
  • Caturi River, 1248
  • Catamaya, a towne in Florida, 1550
  • Cattle infinite store in Port-Ricco, 1171
  • Cat of the Mountaine, called by the Indians, Marcayahite, store in Brasile, 1229
  • Cauoques, a language of some In∣dians in Florida, 1519
  • Cawas a Mountaine in Port Ricco, 1170
  • Caxamalca, a large Indian Citie, described, with its chiefe orna∣ments, 1489
  • Cayas, a towne of Florida, 1549
  • Caycooscoocooro, a towne in the River Marwin, inhabited by the Arwaccas Savages, 1283
  • Cazique, a Title of dignitie among the Savages, as much as to say, a Lord. 1502
  • Cedars, in New-France, 1622. In the Bermudas, 1739. Cedars in Alexandria, reported by the Iewes to be them of Libanus, that beare old and new fruit all the yeare, ibid. Cedars ill for shipping. 1747
  • Ceuola, a Province, 1560. In it are seuen Cities neere together, their manner of making houses, for sum∣mer and winter, their commodities of Turqueses and Emeraulds, their beasts, and climate, ibid.
  • Chachapuya, a Province in Ameri∣ca of valiant men, and faire wo∣men, that worship Snakes, 1478
  • Chagre, a Riuer in the Indies, 1180
  • Chagnate a towne in Florida, 1553
  • Captaine Chalons his voyage to the Northerne parts, his vnfortu∣nate hap to the losse of the whole aduenture, 1827
  • Mr Henry Chaltons voyage to the North of Virginia, his cōmisera∣tion towards a distressed Frier, his taking captiue by the Spaniards, his goods divided into the Spanish Ships, 1834
  • Chalaque Province, 1539
  • Champlains voyage into Canada in the yeare 1603, 1605 His ariuall at Canada: 1606. His discouering of divers Ilands there, ibid. His returne, 1619
  • Chauca, a valiant Indian Nation, descending as they suppose from a a Lyon, which they worship for a god, 1457, 1641
  • Charges of certaine voyages to Virginia, little gaine for losse of life, 1842
  • Charitie, a great Ship landing at Plimouth in New England, 1856. Charitie of the Indians to∣ward thse which are impoverished by sicknesse, 1869. Charitie and courtesie among savages, 1345
  • Chawonock in Virginia, its diffe∣rent languages mentioned, 1694
  • Chereno, a great Commander in Port Ricco, 1169
  • Chebegnados, a towne in Mawoo∣shen, 1874
  • Cherente, a River in Florida, 1603
  • Chiaza, a Province in Florida, 1538
  • Chickhahamania, a River in Vir∣ginia, 1692. The inhabitants go∣verned by Priests, 1692
  • Chicaca, a towne in Florida, 1544
  • Chichilcale, a Province in Ame∣rica, 1560
  • M. Chidleys voyage for the Ma∣gellane Streights, 1187
  • Children throwne to dogs, 1582
  • Child-birth, how and with what ease among the Indians, 1263, 1868
  • Chile, a rich Country in the Indies, 1232. Its description and discoue∣rie by some Spaniards, 1442. The taking thereof by the Spaniards, and the towne first inhabited by them, 1442
  • China hath two wayes to it through the Streights of Magellane, and Caput bonae spei, 1193
  • Chirihuana brutish Indians so cal∣led, 1475
  • Chiriguana, a Province subiect to Peru, 1419
  • A Chirurgion curing with words, 1205
  • Chisaptack a brooke in Virginia, 1692
  • Chischa, a Floridan Province, 1540
  • Choamo, a countrey in Port Ricco 1169
  • Chesepian-Bay, 1658
  • Chesupioc-Bay, 1686
  • Chily, a Province subiect to Peru, its seuerall townes, 1419
  • Chilca, a place in America. 1398
  • Chinca, a place in the South Sea, 1416
  • Chinchilla, a beast of wondrous esti∣mation by reason of a rich Furr, 1395
  • Cholupaha, a towne of Florida, 1333
  • Chouakoet-Bay in New France, 1626
  • Choosa, a valley in the South sea, 1416
  • Christs name blasphemed by the per∣fidie of Spanish-Christians, 1450
  • Christians crueltie to each other ex∣ceeding savages, 1623
  • Christians deservedly controuled by the Indians, 1449. How thought

Page [unnumbered]

  • of by them, an Indian definition of a Christian. 1450. Christi∣ans eate one another, 1508
  • Chrystall. 1230
  • Chrystall Rocke in Virginia. 1772
  • Chrystall Mountaine. 1231
  • Cholula, a part of New Spaine rui∣nated, in respect of the inhabitants, by Spaniards. 1577, 1578
  • Chullula, a place in the South Sea. 1418
  • Chule, an Iland poorely inhabited by the Sp〈…〉〈…〉 in the South See, 〈◊〉〈◊〉 rich with ••••ld. 1392
  • Churches prof〈…〉〈…〉 punished. 1163
  • ...Ci, 〈◊〉〈◊〉 towne. 1561
  • Cibola, a Province in America, discouered by the Spaniards. 1560
  • Cicu, Indians of Brasile. 1299
  • Cicuic, a towne in America. 1561
  • Cilicedemo, a mountaine in Guy∣ana. 1272
  • Cinque Llagas, a great Carrack fired. 1148
  • Circumcision among Aethiopians. 1234
  • Ciuet Cats. 1372
  • Ciuill dissentions. 1452, 1453
  • Si Nicholas Cliffords death by a shot, as hee was at supper. 1184
  • A Climate vnsufferably hot, and within sixe miles againe intolera∣bly cold. 1420
  • Coaio's, or Coucho's, Indians. 1516
  • Cobe, a place neere Hauana in the West Indies. 1246
  • Cobrus, vide Serpent.
  • Coca, a Floridan Countrey, the townes and commodities therein. 1540
  • Coche, an Ile neere Margarita. 1186
  • A Cocke treading a sow, another crowing clearely within twelue houres it was hatched. 1805
  • Cocos trees, and their fruit descri∣bed. 1371, 1372, 1173
  • Corwina a towne, 1279
  • Coiula, a Province in New-Spain. 1558
  • Cold very extreame freezing men to death. 1204, & 1205. vid. winter.
  • Collick how cured. 1308
  • Colliman a precious gu••••e in Gui∣ana, for sundry diseases. 1276
  • Colonies in Virginia the first. 1645, 1683, 1684
  • Colonies plantation, requireth first afaire land, and a safe harbour. 1664. Colonies in Virginia on what conditions granted, as it appeareth by the Patent, 1683, 1684
  • Colonel Bret, slain in the Portugal Voyage. 1924
  • Comana a townes name. 1266. Its description and climate. ibid.
  • Coman Ibes, Inhabitants in the Indies. 1248
  • Commanders, how farre to trust Officers. 1402
  • Comorratty, a towne in the River Mawin in America. 1283
  • Compasse vsed in travelling sandie Countries. 1242
  • Compostella Citie. 1528
  • Conduit-head. 1384
  • Conde de Andrada his Armie. 1920
  • Conception, a town in Chili. 1443
  • Concoere, a towne in America in∣habited by Sauages. 1283
  • Congo, a Region in Affrica, the King thereof: his great strength, his Christian Religion, guard, pompe, riding on Elephants, rites of State. 1234
  • Conibas lake. 1566. Neere it a stately Citie of Indians, their ornament and great fortification. 1566
  • Connies of two sorts in Florida, the manner how they are taken by the Indians there. 1551
  • Conauacus, chiefe Prince of the great people of Nanohigganset, his challenge to the English men, he is terrified by a present of pow∣der and shot. 1854
  • Coniuration vsed of the Indians, being in distresse for want of raine. 1867
  • Conversion of sinners, a worke me∣ritorious, witnesse a Spanish Cap∣taine, 1558
  • Content, a small Ship of Sir George Carews, fought with three great Spanish Ships of six hundred tuns a piece, 1186
  • Cooligoa, a Province in Florida, 1549
  • Cocunibo, an excellent and safe harbor in the West Indies, 1394. The markes whereby to finde it. ibid.
  • Cordoua-towne. 1446
  • Cooropan, a place ten dayes iour∣ney from the head of the River Marrawin, 1285. Directions for the iourney betwixt Marrawin, and Cooropan, ibid. Directions to Cooropan from the head of the River Sehnama. 1286
  • Cooshebery, a Prouince in Guiana: the description, pleasantnesse, healthinesse, and commodities thereof, 7171
  • Corburrimore, a towne of the E∣puremei in the Indies. 1285
  • Cape Corientes, 1147
  • Corne how kept in Tercera, 1669
  • Corn-hil, a place in New-England, where the Savages were went to hide their corne, 1845. Corne much encreaseth in New-Eng∣land, 1871
  • Coro, a towne in America, 1258 The fruitfulnesse & commodities thereof. 1258
  • Corrall, 1516
  • Combination of the English forces is New-England, 1843
  • Complaint of a Sauage woman for her sonnes losse, stolne away by Hunt an Englishman, 1853
  • Copiapo a towne of Chili, in the Indies, 144
  • Coquinibo, an American towne, 144
  • Coresao Iland, how situate, 1146
  • Coro, a towne and Castle, burnt by Captain. Preston, and Captain Summers, 1186
  • Cororoespe, or the River of Toads in America, 1223
  • Cortez a Spaniard, contesteth with Don Antonio de Mendoza, for discoveries of land, sendeth forth Francis Vllua with a Fleet of three Ships for that purpose. 1560
  • Corupeo, a spirit vsing to possesse and vexe the Americans, 1213
  • Casnero River, 1248
  • Costa Ricca, a West Indian towne, copious with gold, 1419, 1446
  • Covetousnesse the cause of the dis∣peopling the Indies by the Spa∣niards, 1569
  • Couetousnesse is an Idoll, vnto which the Spaniards haue sacri∣ficed millions of Indians, 1602, 1603,
  • Couetousnesse reproved by a Sa∣vage, 1331
  • A provinciall Councell held at Lyma. 1421
  • Counsaile vsed among the Indians, 1270
  • Countries vnhealthy. 1360
  • Countries very healthy, 1274
  • Countries vnknowne, and descripti∣on of them, 1383, 1334
  • Cowab, a Mountaine, 1271
  • Cowardlinesse of the Indians, 1154
  • Cowardlinesse of the Master of the Ree-Bucke in Brasile, 1197
  • Cozco, the Imperiall City of Peru, the opinion the Inhabitants have

Page [unnumbered]

  • of it, the admir able Temple of the Sunne in it, rich hangings, ima∣ges, profuse ornaments, Chap∣pels, roofes, plates, gardens, heapes, all Church-instruments in gold, their priests, and charinesse of their Temple, 1464, 1465. Their divers Monasteries, their riches, manner in mariages, care of Infants, 1457. Their super sti∣tion, feasts, braverie, fasts, solemn feasts for the Sunne, 1472. Their adoration, & sacrifices solemnized at the rising thereof, holy fire, festi∣vall eating, drunkennesse, 1473 Their sooth-saying, ibid. Manner of creating Knights, and Ceremo∣nies, 1474. Cozco, also descri∣bed, with its situation, fortificati∣on and splendour, 1496, 1497
  • Crabs on the land in great abun∣dance, 1172, 1330: Ten or twelue sorts of Crabs, 1315
  • Crocodiles by the Indians called Aligartos, 1228. Their descripti∣on, and maner of fishing for them, and bait. ib. His Cods are muske, ib. Crocodiles in America harm∣lesse, and kept tame, 1326. Cro∣codiles in great Scoules, 1400.
  • Saint Croix point, and the countrey described, 1611, & 1622
  • Crooroorere, a Suppay towne in the Indies, 1285
  • Crosses erected by the Spaniards in New-Spaine intoken of possession, 1557
  • The Crozier, a Starre neere the Pole antartick, 1157
  • Crokemago, a Province in Ma∣wooshen, neere the River Sha∣wakotoc. 1875
  • Cruelty is companion of cowardize, 1395. And feare, ibid. Requited in the Spanish Gouernour by the Indians, 1449. Cruelty cru∣elly rewarded, 1959
  • Cuba, an Iland described, 1147. Its want of fortification, the chiefe Port Lahauana, wherein is a ca∣stle of Spaniards, 1415. The length and breadth thereof, and the Christian townes thereof na∣med, 1529. The King, commonal∣tie, men, women, and sucking children, how many murdered by Spaniards, 1572
  • Cueremagbas, Indians so called, their nature, strength, courtesic, and commodities, 1351
  • Cueruo, one of the Azories Iles, ta∣king its name from the multitude of Crows breeding in that place, 1939
  • Cuigbe Indians, 1299
  • Cuigtaio, Brasilians so called, 1299
  • Cuimechi, warlike Indians that wander in droues in the mountains to seeke food, 1561
  • Cuinao Province, 1557
  • Cuinquiro, a place in New Spaine, 1557
  • Cuiseo Province taken by the Spa∣niards, 1558
  • Culiazzon, a Nation in the Indies, 1527
  • Cultalculebes, Indians of Florida, 1519
  • Cumberlands first Voyage discove∣red, 1141. The time when they set forth, his ships and company, ib. His arivall at Brasile, 1142. Hee taketh foure Ships from the Portingall, ibid. The hinderance of his Voyage for the South sea, his disastrous losse of a Hulke, men, and goods, his returne to Eng∣land, ibid. His second voyage, his acts at Sluce, the 88 service, his company returne, 1142 His third voyage, ibid. His ariuall at Saint Michael, and attempt there, dan∣ger by a Fish, ibid. Taketh a prize from the Spaniards, the euasion of some of his men with a small Boat, 1143. His surpriz all of Fiall, a town in Tercera, ibid. His losse of men, and danger of his person, ibid. His great want of drinke, his clemencie, and equity. ibid. The number of his prizes taken in the voyage, his returne, 1144. His fourth voyage, purchase, losse, returne for England. ibid. His fifth voy∣age, hindrances, defeating, reti∣ring to London, and committing the charge to Captaine Norton, ibid. His gaines by the Portingal Carrack taken in that voyage, 1145, 1146. His sixth voyage, purchases, sicknesse, returne, ibid. The seuenth voyage, ibid. The eighth voyage, and the surprizo of a Carrack, 1147. The ninth voyages successe, 1148. The tenth voyage, ibid. Eleventh voyage, 1149. Twelfth voyage its prepa∣ration, company, and ships, ibid. His meanes to get intelligence, ill successe of his plot, 1150. Ariues at the Canaries, 1151. His care and government of his company, 1151. His discreetnesse, and gui∣dance by reason, 1152. His pro∣iects, ibid. His ariuall at Domi∣nica, and entertainment, ibid. His comming to Port-Ricco, 1153, 1160. To the Canaries, 1155. His perill at the assault of Port-Ricco, 1161. Besicging Fort-Mora, his iustice, severitie, and taking the fortresse, 1162, 1163. Offers the ransoming of Port-Ricco, departeth hence, 1168, 1169. Meetes with his Fleet by Flores, 1176. His returne and danger on the coast of Norman∣die, 1176, His vnfortunate mis∣sing the Spanish ships at the Azo∣res, where hee lost forty millions, 1673. And others of fiue millions, ibid.
  • Cumana, a towne, 1186, 1248
  • Cumpehe, Brasilian Sauages so cal∣led, 1299
  • Cunames, Indians in New Mexi∣co, their townes, and faculties of painting described, 1561
  • Cunarreo sands, 1500
  • Curenda, a populous Indian nation in the River Parana described, their apparell, ornament, and com∣modities, 1350
  • Cutes wrought by prayers, 1515
  • Curewapori Ilands, 1279
  • Curiadan, a place in Trinidad, the inhabitants called Saluages, 1247
  • Curiapan, a place neere Orenoque, 1247
  • A Current in the Sea, vnder thirty two degrees, 1174
  • Currents that set East or West may breed mistake in Navigators, ibid. Other vncertaine currents, 1400, 1373
  • A Current setting to the North∣ward in forty degrees, 1759
  • Curucucu, Snakes in Brasile of 15 spans long very venemous, 1304
  • Curupija, Indians of Brasile, 1299
  • Cusco, a place in the South Sea, 1416. A Citie as bigge as Rome, it hath in it a thousand Spaniards, 1420
  • Customes of fishing, of wonderfull gaine to the townes of Lubecke, Hamborough, and Embden, 1837
  • Customes paiá yearely to the Prince of the Indians, 1869
  • Cutifa-chiqui, a Province in Flo∣rida, 1537
  • Caynaccaro a Province, 1558
D.
  • DAinty, a Ship of Sir Richard Hawkins, fortunate in voyage for her Maiestie, vnfortunate for the owners, 1367
  • Dale, viz, Sir Tho: Dales ariuali

Page [unnumbered]

  • at Virginia, 1733. His relation of the passages there, and how the affaires stood, An. 1614. p. 1768, & seq. His commendation. 1770
  • Damarius Coue, a place neere Munhiggen, forty leagues from Plimouth in New-England, North-east-ward, 1856
  • Dancing, distinguishing nations in the Indies, 1480
  • Dancing of the Virginians, 1687, 1573, 1574
  • Dariene, a Sound in the Indies, 1180
  • Sir Ber. Drake, his ariue at the New-found-land. 1883
  • Captaine Darmers fishing voyage, his coasting the shore till hee came to Virginia, his men fall sicke, his returne to the New-found-land, his discouerie of many fruit∣full Coasts, and pleasant Rivers from Hudsons River to Cape Iames. 1830 The prosperous suc∣cesse hee had in p••••curing a truce betweene vs and the Savages: is treacherously betrayed, wounded, and flyeth to Virginia for succour, and there dyeth, 1831
  • Capt. Davies voyage to the South Sea, 1191. & seq. His losse of Cap. Candish successe, ibid. & seq. Accused for treacherie, 1193 Candishes opinion of him, 1194
  • Daycao, a riuer in Florida, 1554
  • Dayes of publike Thanks giving in∣stituted in New-England, 1867
  • Dayes length in New-England, 1871
  • Dead, not lamented by some Indi∣ans, 1523
  • Deaws very vnhealthy to English∣men, and Indians, 1250
  • Deere worshipped by some Indi∣ans, 1479. Deere of severall sorts bringing forth two, three or foure at once, 1831. Decre good store in New-England, and the manner of taking them, 1845. Deeres-flesh dried in the winde, food of the Indians, 1881
  • Dermers resolution by letter, of some passages in Virginia, 1778 1779
  • Description of the King of Spaines invincible Armada, 1897
  • De Todos los Santos, a towne in the West Indies neere the line, 1189
  • Dvill consulted withall by he Indi∣ans of Wypoco: they call him Peyar, 1263. As also Watup, who beat them sometimes blacke and blew, 1274. The Brasilians cal him Curupira, Taguain, Pig∣tangu, Machchera, & Anhan∣ga, they feare him much, and think their soules after death are tured into Devils, 1290
  • The Devils, illuding, wounding, and tormenting the Savages of Flori∣da, 1516, 1517. The Devill wor∣shipped by New-Spaniards, that is, in Noua Hispania: their de∣lusion by him, 1558. Temples built for him, and an oratory made, and meat given him by them of new Mexico, 1561
  • The Divell forbids Baptisme to the Indians, 1564
  • The deuils policy in keeping the In∣dians poore, 1868. His try all of those which are dedicated to him. ibid. His being worshipped by the Virginians, his images, feare, and name of Oke, 1701
  • Dyals, how admired by the Virgi∣nian Savages, 1708
  • Damonds in Brasile, 1230, In Ca∣nada, 1612. in New France, 1611
  • Difference betweene Campe and garison Souldiers, 1944
  • Diego Flores de Valdes, a Spaniard sent with a Fleet to Brasile, and the successe, 1440, 1441
  • Diego de Almagro, the first Spa∣nish discouerer of Chili, 1475. The next Pedro de Maldiuia, 1476
  • Discoveries of divers Ilands, and Lakes in Canada, 1614. & seq.
  • A Discoverie of the English full of danger. Discoveries proue best, when least discouered, 1955
  • First discoveries of America the new World by English, and Spa∣nish, 1812
  • Diseases very strange, 1191, 1214, 1258
  • Disorder, the fore-runner of ill successe in Candshes Fleet, 1202
  • Disorder more weakencth the Eng∣lish, then the enemy, 1966
  • Disp••••ations touching Spanish cru∣eltie in the Indies, 1601, 1602, 1603
  • Dissequebe an Indian River, 1269
  • Dogs worshipped, 1471. Ravenous dogs, 1172. Terrible to the Indians, 1327, 1328
  • Great dogs that fight with Buls and carie fifty pound on their backe in hunting, 1561
  • Dogs that devoure men, first taught by Spaniards, 1582
  • Dogs that cannot barke, 1696
  • Dolphin described, his loue to man∣kinde, 1375
  • Saint Domingo, 1146. The de∣scription, riches, and fortification thereof, 1418
  • Dominica, 1152. The inhabitants described, with their brutishnesse, 1685. The inhabitants hate the Spaniards, loue the English, their presents, tradings, and commodi∣ties, ibid. Want of cloathes, orna∣ments, Canons. Merchandise, and red painting, 1158. More copious description of the soyle, woods, mountaines, towne, wo〈…〉〈…〉, mode∣stie, King, familiaritie of their maids, chastitie, desire of cloathes, 1158, 1159. Their common fare, state, meat, haire, desire to learne English, 1159. Distinction of maids and wiues, 1159
  • Dominica assaulted, and taken by Sir Francis Drake, 1182. Inha∣bited by Spaniards, the sand of the Rivers mixed with gold, great plenty of Roots, and Sugar Canes, 1833
  • Don Alfonso Perez de Guzman, Commander of the Spanish Fleet in 88. 1901
  • Don Antonio de Mendoza, his strife with Cortez, for most dis∣coveries, and sending forth divers by sea and land for that purpose, 1560
  • Don Diego de Pmentell, taken prisoner in Zeland, 1911
  • Don Iohn of Austria defeated of his intended treachery, to get to him∣selfe Mary Queene of Scots his wife, 1893
  • Dos Patos, a River in America, 1218
  • Don Pedro and his company taken prisoners by Sir Francis Dake, 1905
  • Douer-cliff-sound, on the North of Virginia, 1648
  • A Doue lighted on the Mastes of English Ships, 1967
  • Dragnanes, a certaine kind of Indi∣ans in Florida, 1510
  • Drake, viz. Sir Francis Drakes first discovery of the Southermost land, 1391. His treacherous vsage by the Indians, 1392. His expediti∣on with a great Fleet, 1434. His riches gotten by his voyages, 1439
  • Sir Fra. Drakes original parentage, education, progresse, first voyage, surprising of the towne of Nombre de Dios, 1179. His burning 200000 Duckets in Merchan∣dize, and protestation for the South sea, 1180. His circumnauigation, the opinion of his riches, ibid.

Page [unnumbered]

  • Which were sequestred to the Queen, his voyage to Domingo, company and ships, ariues at Saint Iago, and takes it, 1181. His comming to Dominica, and Saint Christopher, 1181. Takes Saint Domingo, 1182. And Cartage∣na, ib. Fireth two Spanish fortres∣ses, ibid. His returne, benefit, losse of men, ibid. His voyage at Calz, his Fleet, and Prizes, ibid. Takes a Carrack, 1183. His going for the Azores, ibid. His last voyage, His fellow Commissioner, his ta∣king Rio de la Hacha, Ranche∣ria, Tapia, S. Martha, and Nom∣bre de Dios, his death, successor, and Fleets arivall at Plimouth, 1183. His disagreeing with Sir Iohn Hawkins, 1184. His com∣parison with him, 1185. 1186. His buriall, 1245. His clemency to conquered foe. 1905
  • Iohn Drake liued 15 moneths with the savages, 1186. His mishaps, 1440, 1441. His fame gotten by his iourney to the West Indies, and about the World. 1916
  • Drano, a River neere Orenoco. Its vnhealthy passage, 1250
  • Dreames sceming ominous, 1191
  • Drinke to some poison, to other bodies beneficiall, although the very same, 1173. Great drinking∣match by the Indians, 1285. Drink made of roots great want of drink, 1364. Its quality and varietie a∣mong the Indians, 1381. Drin∣king esteemed by those of Peru the greatest courtesie that can be offe∣red by King, or Subiect, 1473. Strange drinking, 1519. Drinke made of Berries at the Bermudas, 1739. Drinke made of Plummes in Virginia, 1784. Scarcitie of drinke, 1143
  • Drowth extraordinarie in New-England. 1866
  • Drugs in Guiana, 1276
  • Drunkennesse, a vice of Savages, 1189, 1473. Drunkennesse like to ouerthrow an English Armie, 1916
  • Ducks, the curiousnesse of making their nests in the Magellane Streights, 1385
  • Dudley, viz. Sir Robert Dudley his voyage, and successe to Trini∣dada, and the coast of Paria, &c. 1186
  • Duke of Medina his kindnesse to the English, 1834. His yearely tri∣bute of the Fishers of Tunny-Mul∣lit, and Purgos, 1837. His pre∣paration, for the Spanish Fleet in Anno 1588, 1895
  • Duke of Parma his forces in 88, 1902. His apparell for horses, 1903. His vaine hope of the Crowne of England, 1907
  • Duke of Medina is prohibited the Court, because hee returned with∣out the English Crowne, 1910
  • Duke of Parma's force against Eng∣land, 1895
  • Capt. Du Pont his voyages into the New-found-lands, 1643
  • A Dutchmans courtesie to the Eng∣lish, 1261. Dutchmens treachery to the Englishmens inhabiting Virginia, 1841
  • Dutchmens fals-heartednesse, 1721 And abuse of Capt. Smith, by ioyning to Powhatan, 1723. Their treacherie frustrateth his attempt for the surprizall of Pow∣hatans house, 1725. Their plot to kill Capt. Smith, and fruitlesse issue, 1726. Their continued base treacherie, and deserved pension; one comming to a miserable and among the English; the others ha∣ving their braines beaten out by Savages, 1729
E.
  • EArle of Essex, his worthy acts, 1917. His valorous chalenge in Portugall Voyage, 1924. His voyage to the Iles. of Azores, 1935. His trouble, travell, and arivall: Hee taketh three Spanish Ships, 1937
  • Earth medicinable: earth like gume in Virginia, 1765. Earth red like terra sigillata, 1765
  • Earth-quakes, 1476
  • Earth-quakes frequent in Tercera, 1670. A terrible Earth-quake in S, Michaels Ile, and the dread∣full effects thereof, 1678, 1679
  • Ease and efferainate life, enemies to great practices, 1436
  • East-India warres, disburden the Spaniard of West India gold and silver, 1815
  • Ecatepeck, supposed the highest mountaine in the world, from the top whereof are discerned the north and South seas, 1177
  • Eclipses, what conceited to be by some Americans, 1462
  • Echro, an Iland neere Port-Ricco, 1267
  • Eggs very hard; and sounding like Bels, 1306
  • Ekinnick, a kinde of worme that poysoneth the water, 1286
  • Elephants, how taken by the Aethi∣opians, 1234
  • El estado de Arauco, the description thereof, the fiercenesse of the inha∣bitants, and their opinion of the Spaniards, 1442
  • El Ca••••o, the Port of Lima, 1446
  • Capt. Ellis his relation of Sir Rich∣ard Hawkins his voyage, 1416
  • Q. Elizabeths providence in re∣pairing her Army Royall, 1903
  • Q. Elizabeth denounced excom∣municate by Pope 〈◊〉〈◊〉, her sub∣iects are discharged from loyalty and allegeance, 1892. Her enemies abroad are disappointed, traitors at home taken in their owne pt, bid. Her triumph after the delive∣rance in 88. 1912
  • Q. Elizabeths Encomium. 1823
  • Q. Elizabeths martial affairs, 1181
  • Elizabeth-Bay, 1386
  • Elizabeths Ile in Virginia, 1648 Its description, being thought fit and commodious for plantation, 1649. At large, 1651. vide Ile of Elizabeth.
  • Elizabeth her manifold dangers, and gracious deliverances, 1890
  • Elizabeth Iles, inhabitants, descri∣bed: their ornaments, nature, pro∣portion, wittinesse, courtesie, yet theeverie, 1651. The description of the climate, ibid.
  • Embalming by the Indians, how well performed, 1459
  • Embassage from the English to the Massasoyt, chiefe Commander of the Savages in Pacanokick, 1851
  • Embroderie exercised among the Savages, 1560
  • Emeralds of inestimable worth, 1420 1446. An Emerald as big as an Estriches Egge, and therefore was adored by the Indians, 1481. Emerald store, 1560
  • Emeria the easter most part of Do∣rado, 1247
  • Enemies to bee kept in awe, as the Spaniards by the Earle of Cum∣berland at Port-Ricco, who though he meant not to spoile their towne, yet told them not so much, 1186
  • Enemies taken among the Savages are commonly killed and eaten, 1217, 1218
  • Engines in warre by the Indians performed, 1361
  • Englishmens discoveries of Ame∣rica, 1813
  • An English Pilots treacherie, and adherence to the Spaniards, 1773
  • ...

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Englands gaine by Salt-fish, Poore-Iohn, Salmonds, and Pilchards, 1837
  • Englishmen rather desirous to bee renowned for mercy and clemen∣cie, then for dreadfull conquest, 1959
  • English miracles by Captain Smith in Virginia, such as the Spaniard vsed in the Indies, 1727
  • English-Bay in the Magellane streights, the description of the in∣habitants, 1388
  • English Captiues delivered by the Duke of Medina, 1934
  • English Nauy returneth from Azo∣res Iles, 1968
  • English forces mustered, 1903
  • English gallants reprehended for their vnprouidence in going to warre, 1942
  • English inhabiting the River Wia∣poco. 1270
  • Englishmen chusing rather to trust God and the Sea, then the deuill, and the Spaniards, 1186
  • Englishmen striking terrour in the Charibes, 1273. Take possession of the Mountaine Gomerigo, 1278
  • English mens nature. 1440
  • Englishmen slaine in Virginia by the treacherie of the Indians, and the cause why, 1841
  • Englishmens encounters in New-England, 1841
  • Englishmen cheat the Indian of their victuals, and turne savage, 1865
  • Englishmens throats cut by the Por∣tingals, 1959
  • English fugitiues appointed to giue the first onset against their owne Nation, 1908
  • Englishmen sinke the Spanish ships, or take them, 1673, 1674
  • English Fleet set forth, and successe, 1676
  • English returne from the pursuit of the Spaniards, 1910
  • English ships by their nimblenesse farre exceeding the Spanish Gal∣liasses, 1905
  • English victory, ioyned with cour∣tesie, 1677
  • English famine and mortalitie in Virginia, 1690
  • English souldiers dye with drinking of water, 1927
  • E〈…〉〈…〉sh desire a battell with the Portingals, 1924
  • English forbidden to furnish the Spa∣niard with munition, 1927
  • Enmity imparted by sending a rattle, Snakes-skinne full of arrowe, 1854
  • Entertainment, how strange among the Savages of Pores, 1208, 1292. Among Brasilians,
  • Enuy espyeth more inpretended, then in professed enemies, 1959
  • Eparigotos, enemies to the Epuremi in India, 1248
  • Epeoya, a great Iland in Brasile, 1241. Called by the Indians Sa∣peawera, ibid.
  • Epuremi, Indians neere the River Orenoco, 1248
  • Equibone, a towne at the foot of Marwin in America, inhabited by the Arwaccas, and Parawago∣tos Savages, 1283
  • Eregooda, a place neere Orenoco, 1248
  • Escudo, an Iland, 1185
  • Estanca, that is, a farme place, where slaues keepe cattle, and make Cassani bread among the Indians, 1146
  • Estechemins, Savages in Canada, enemies to the Irocois. 1607
  • Estriches tame, 1230
  • Eteowbo, a mountaine in America, 1214
  • Etepararange, a mountaine aboun∣ding with gold, 1229
  • Etaoca, a place in America, 1219
  • Etapuca, a great mountaine in A∣merica, 1214
  • Etamatiqua, a Cape in Brasile, its fitnesse for Navigation, 1238. And description, ibid.
  • Etapusick, a place in the Indies, with singular mynes of gold, 1222
  • Etechemins, Savages of New-France, that are theeues and trea∣cherous, 1626
  • Etoica, a River in Brasile, its dan∣gerous Navigation, 1240
  • Euill-peace, a towne so named by the Spaniards in Florida, and the reason thereof, 1533
  • Europa, a River that commeth into Orenoco, 1248
  • Example prevaileth more then pre∣cept. 1743
F.
  • FAls of water very violent and strange, 1610
  • False-heartednesse how auoided in the treacherous Indians by Spa∣nish policie. 1552
  • False-heartednesse of the Savages, called Massacheusets, 1859 Of the Indians towards Master Westons men, 1865
  • Famine very vrgent in the In∣dies, 1214. Miserable in the same countrey, 1258
  • Famine among the French-men, 1325. Among the Dutch and Spaniards, at the River of Plate, the vnnaturall, effects thereof, 1348. Famine among Spaniards, 1401, 1477, 1508. Among the Indians, and some few hun∣gry Spaniards, 1517, 1518. In∣credible famine, 1526. Famine and mortalitie of the English in Virginia, 1690. Famine in great extremitie, enforcing man-slaughter, and man∣eating, 1732
  • Famishing strangely escaped, by An∣drew Hillyard, all his fellowes perishing, 1802, 1803
  • Faraon, a towne burnt vp by the English, in their returne from Cadiz, 1934
  • Fast, publikely instituted, and obser∣ved, by the English in New Eng∣land, being in distresse for want of raine, 1867
  • Fasts instituted in England, and Zeland, for Gods gracious deli∣verance in 88. 1911
  • Father Martin Perez, of the socie∣tie of Iesus, his relation of his travels, and description of Gi∣noloa, 1562, 1563, & seq. His baptizing many Indians, and instructing them in a knowne tongue, &c. 1564. What kinde of Christianitie hee taught them, 1564, 1565
  • Fayael, one of the Ilands of the Azo∣res, the description and taking thereof by the Earle of Cumber∣land, 1672. Their feare of the English Nauy, 1676
  • The Feags a strange sicknesse in the Bermudas, much annoying the English, 1797
  • Feare, the cause of Tyrannie, 1437
  • Feare, causing death in the Indians, 1522
  • Feasts of Savages, 1607
  • Feathers vsed for cloathes, 1212
  • Feuers, how eased by plants, 1311 How gotten in hot Countries and auoided, 1370, 1371
  • Febacco Iland, 1266
  • Ferdinando Gorge, his employ∣ment in the plantation of New-Scotland, 1842
  • Captaine Fenton his expedition and ouerthrow, 1141, 1142
  • ...

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Fernambue, aport in America, 1190, 1202, 1438
  • Fernandes Gires his discouery of a Land in the south Sea, with the rare commodities thereof, 1422
  • Fetherstons Bay in Virginia, why so called, 1716
  • Figs of Brasile, 1332
  • Fight betweene the English and and Spaniards in Saint Iohn Port-Ricco, 1161. Betweene English and Indians with Por∣tingals, 1197. Fighting against a natiue countrie rewarded, 1404 Fighting betweene two Indian na∣tions in Peru very extreame and bloody, 1458. Betweene the Eng∣lish and Spaniards in the narrow Seas, 1906. A fight betweene the English and Spaniards before Greeueling, 1908. A fight by sea betweene the English and Spanish before Cadiz, 1930
  • Fire burning in the woods for the space of three dayes, 1890. Great danger by fire, 1145, 1918
  • A Fish endangering a boat and men, 1142. Fishes flying, 1157, 1314 Their danger of deuouring in Sea or Ayre, 1376
  • Fishing of New England very com∣modious to the plantation of Vir∣ginia, 1842
  • Fishing how commodious, and espe∣cially to the Hollanders, 1821
  • Fishing with swords, 1714
  • Fishing with golden hookes, 1216
  • Fishing with wood, 1251
  • Fish great store in Guiana, 1275. A fish with foure eyes, two aboue wa∣ter, and two vnder: a fish also with warme blood like flesh. ibid.
  • Fish made drunke with wood, 1276
  • Fish like beefe in taste and proportion, 1283. It is called the Ox-fish, the description thereof at large, 1313 1314. It hath eyes which it may close and shut at will, armes, and hands, in his head it hath 2 stones of approued soueraignnesse for the stone in the body. ibid.
  • A Fish that snorteth, and thereby is apprehended, ibid. A fish that hath two broad stones in his mouth ibid. fish good against the poison of a Snake, and very wholesome, 1313. Fish that maketh the hol∣ders hands benummed, or sha∣king as one that hath the palsie: Fish that maketh all that touch it to sticke fast vnto it: Fishes like men and women; their fearfulness to the Indians, their manner of killing men: Fish that dyes the water, and euadeth the Fisher: Fish that proues a remedy for the Spleene: a Fish that easts his mouth, shell and feet, 1314, 1315 & seq. A Fish with fingers, and vttering a squeaking sound, 1331 Fish so plentifull that it may bee kild in the water with clubs, 1549 Fishes that haue voices like Owles, 1639. Good fishing, 1640
  • Fits-Morrice slaine in Ireland, 1893
  • Flatterers, base kind of people, 1957
  • A Flemmish Ship burnt at the fight before Cadiz, 1930
  • Flores, a place in the Azores, 1144 The description thereof, 1175, 1672
  • Florida possessed by the Spaniards, 1501. The inhabitants many of them tall of stature, and expert ar∣chers, 1503. The townes and in∣habitants thereof variously descri∣bed, 1503, 1504. & seq. Flori∣da hath gold and pretious stones on the sea coast, 1554. The di∣stance of sundry places one from the other, necessary for trauellers, 1556. Losse of inhabitants in Flo∣rida by Spanish cruelty, 1589. The great age of some men there, 1604. They liue in the woods 3 months in the yeare, vpon hunting, 1604. English men the first dis∣couerers of Florida, 1813
  • Flutes made of Reedes, 1687
  • Fluxes stayed by fruits, as Guianas Papaias, and wild Grapes, 1172. by a berry, 1276, 1308. by a plant 1311
  • Fooles-coat, a liuery of the Spanish Inquisition, 1179
  • Forests trauelled by compasse, 1636
  • Fort Mora summond, befieged, and taken by the Lord of Cumberland, 1163, 1164. The strength and danger of passage for ships by it, 1164
  • Fort St. Iohn of the Spaniards in Florida, 1182
  • Fortileza, a towne in Port-Ricco, 1164
  • Fountaines of pitchy substance very hot, that serue to calke ships with∣all, 1481
  • A Fountaine that turneth wood in∣to stone, 1670
  • Fox-Iland, on the north of Virginia, 1654
  • Francis Bouadilla chiefe Marshall of the Fleet in 88 sent for England, 1901
  • Francisco de Zeres his relation of the conquest of Peru and Cusco, called New Castile, 1491. & sequ.
  • Francisco Pizarro a Spaniard, his discouery of Peru, and successe, 1444, 1451, 1452, 1489, 1490, 1491, 1492, 1493, 1494.
  • St. Francis a riuer in America, ••••23 A towne there with Ch••••••ery, Bishop, Deane, and Uniuersity of Spaniards, 1421
  • Franciscan Fryers of great esteeme in the West Indies, 1242
  • French-Bay in New France, 1621
  • French-Pox cured with Sassafras, 1655
  • French nauigations to the north A∣merica, 1603. Their discouery of Cape Francois, the Riuer Moy, taking possession there, and disco∣uering eight riuers more, their dissention and ouerthrow, ibid. French famine on the Seat their miserable distressed scarcity in Florida, mutiny and ease by Sir Iohn Hawkins, 1604. F••••nch∣men remoue their plantation from St. Croix to Port Royall, 1626. Frenchmen settle themselues within the limits of the English in the Newfound-Land, though to their small aduantage, 1828. Frenchmēs courtesie to the Eng∣lish nation, 1834. Frenchmens couetousnesse, and their infamy in that regard, 1638. Frenchmens mutiny against their Captaine, discouered and reuenged, 1624. Frenchmen baptize Indians, 1644. French yearely repaire to the New-found Land for Traine∣oyle, 1884. French Kings wrongs to England. 1892. French Am∣bassador plotteth with Moody a∣bout the death of Queene Eliza∣beth, 1893. Frenchmen dis∣planted from Uirginia by Captain Argall, 1808, 1809. French∣men seise on part of the King of Spaines Armada, 1910
  • Fresh-water-springs in the New∣found Land, 1886
  • Fryer Marco de Niza accompanied with diuers other, their voyage in∣to New Mexico, and the adioy∣ning coasts and lands, 1560, 1561 & seq. Fryers that shewed more charity to the Indians then some mariners of our English nation, 1828
  • Captaine Frobisher his 〈◊〉〈◊〉 and prosperous conflict with the Spanish Armada in 88, and re∣warded

Page [unnumbered]

  • with the order of Knight∣hood, 1907
  • Fruits poisonous 1213. Good fruits how discerned from the bad in the Indies, 1379. Fruits gathered 3 times in the yeare, 1527
  • Fuego, one of the Ilands of Gape Verde, the fruit therein, fiery ••••ll, and naturall fortification, 1371
  • Funerals among the Indians of Wia∣poco, 1264
  • Furres very good bought for kniues, 1••••2
  • Furres rich and sweetest of any thing 1505
  • Fyall or Fayall, a towne in the Azo∣res, the fertilitie, bignesse, dwel∣lings, and taking thereof by the Lord of Cumberland, 1143
G.
  • GAboretho, an Indian towne, 1364
  • Gachepe, a high land neere the en∣trance into the riuer Canada, 1606. The description and big∣nesse thereof, 1616
  • Galliaces in number 4 in the fleet in 88, vnder the command of Dom Vgo de Moncada, 1900. They are described, 1901
  • Gallies, and their power in fighting, 1183. Gallies of Anda-luzia seise on a Barke of Plimouth, 1925
  • Gallions comming to the West In∣dies were cast away on the Ile Guaddop, 1833. Galleons of the Fleet in 88 described, 1901. A Gallion burnt in the Portin∣gall voyage, 1918
  • Games vsed among the Massasoyts, 1852
  • Garcillasco de la Voga, his relation of the ancient Kings, and Lawes of Peru before the Spanish con∣quest, 1454, & seq.
  • Gardens of Gold, 1465, 1466
  • Garone a riuer in Florida, 1603
  • Gates, viz. Sir Thomas Gates his ariuall in Virginia, 1732
  • Gates his Bay in the Bermudas, 1739. Sir Thomas Gates wrack and redemption on the Iland Ber∣mudas, largely related, 1734, & seq. His endurance of a grieuous storme, 1734, 1735, 1736. Ari∣uall at the Iland, 1737. His care for the Virginian Colonie, sending Rauens there, and care and toyle to furnish Pinaces for a voyage, 1742, 1743. His punishment and pardon of mutinies, and conspira∣cie against him, 1743. His crosses by a second mutiny, 1744. By a third, ibid. His punishing of a factious fellow, 1745. His Letters to Sir George Summers, con∣taining his desire of furthering a Plantation, and reclaiming the factions, 1745, 1746. His religi∣ous orders in Bermudas, 1746, and possessing it for the King of Englands, with good rites and ce∣remonies, ibid, & 1747. His set∣ting sayle for Virginia, and ari∣uall there, 1748. His miserable welcome, ibid. His assuming the Presid••••cy there, 1749. His speech to the distressed Compa∣ny, with its acceptation, 1749. his proposing orders to the Colony, 1749. His aliotting times of la∣bour, 1750. Purpose to leaue the Country, 1751. Resigning the Presidency, 1754 vnto the Lord De la Ware, ibid. His returne for England. 1756. His testimo∣nie vnder oath of the state of Vir∣ginia, 1757, 1758
  • Gawaba, the north west point of Port-Ricco, somewhat dange∣rous for nauigation, 1170
  • A Generall should bee couragious in fight, and courteous in victorie, 1411
  • The Generals authority among the Spaniards, 1413
  • Geneuera Riuer, 1416
  • Gentlemen, in what manner made knowne and styled among the Bra∣silians, 1297
  • Sir George Carow his valour in the voyage to the Azres Iles, 1840
  • Master George Prcies relation of the south colony of Virginia, 1685 et se qu. He is Deputy Gouernor in the absence of the Lord De la Ware, 1763
  • Master George Thorpe too cour∣teous to the Sauage-Uirginians, cruelly repaid, 1789
  • Saint George, one of the Ilands of the Azores, the situation and de∣scription thereof, 1672
  • S. George, one of the Bermudas or Sommer Ilands, 1794
  • George Fenner, his valorous en∣counter with the Spanish Armada 1906
  • Georges Fort, a plantation neere the riuer Sagado in Mawoo∣shen, 1874
  • Giboya, a great land Snake without poyson, in Brasile, 1303
  • Gilbert, viz. Sir Humfrey Gilbert his ariue at the New-found land, 1882. Lost one of his Ships at the Iles of Canady, and returning for England was ouerwhelmed in the Sea, ibid.
  • Captaine Bartholmew Gilbert his voyage to Uirginia, with the oc∣currents therein, 1656, 1657, et seq. He is slaine and foure men more by the Indians, 1658
  • Gilbert-point, on the coast of the New-found Lands, 1648
  • Ginge a towne of Sauages in the In∣dies, 1364
  • Ginoloa, an Indian Prouince, the de∣scription and situation thereof, 1563. The fruitfulnesse thereof, commodities, inhabitants, and their workmanship and apparell, their long haire, tall stature, great valour, and weapons, 1563, 1564 readinesse in them to heare the Gospell, their Baptisme, and Ca∣〈…〉〈…〉sme, subiection to the Deuill, and familiarity with him, their houses, ingenuity, and adoration of Castles, with Mats, and couerings of Reeds, 1564. Their formes of maiages, and Polygamy, educa∣tion of children, fashions in making Knights, adopting sonnes, manner of burialls, ibid. et 1565
  • Ginger plentifull in Port-Ricco, 1171
  • Ginger how it groweth, 1178
  • Gironde, a riuer of Florida, disco∣uered by the French, 1603
  • Glasses sold deare, 1232
  • Guamanga, a City in the south sea, 60 leagues from Lima, 1416
  • Gnats, 1359
  • Goauar Riuer, 1248
  • God acknowledged by the Aethio∣pians, and called Cari-pongoa, 1233. by the Brasilians Tupan, 1290
  • Godwin-sands, 1149
  • Gomeribo, a mountaine in Guiana very fruitfull possessed by the Eng∣lish, 1278. deliuery thereof to an Indian as tenant to the King of England, 1279
  • Gomora, one of the Canary Ilands, 1833
  • Iohn Goodmans voyage and di∣stresse in New England, 1848
  • Gold (which is strange) very much dispraised, 1814, 1815. Gold in Port-Ricco, 1165, 1170. In Topimo, 1560
  • Gold-getters shall haue many corri∣uals, ibid.
  • Gold ready tried of great valew in the Riuers of Port-Ricco, 1170
  • Gold in no valew, 1189
  • ...

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Gold among the Topinaques, 1229 among the Pories, store, 1229. Gold, 1230, 1231 1232, 1358. In Affrica, 1237. The manner of purifying it in the Indies, 1242. and plenty there, ibid. Gold in Guiana how, and how pure, 1249 1261. Gold in shew, 1255. in the Riuer Aracow, 1263. Gold how greedily desired, 1277. Gold store in the mountaine Oraddo, and plaine of Mumpara, 1284. Gold gathered two wayes, 1395. Plenty of gold, ibid. Gold pro∣cureth trechery, 1415. Gold great store, 1419. Gold shipped from Cartagena for the Spaniard euery yeare, how much, 1420
  • Gold is not alwaies the greatest ele∣uation of the Country where it is, 1814, 1815
  • A Gold-desirer how serued by the Indians, 1391. The desire of gold makth Christians infamous a∣mong Pagans, 1449. Gold cal∣led by them the Christians god, 1450. Gold not valued, 1526
  • Golden Country, 1231
  • A golden chain of incredible weight and bignesse, 1480. Infinite store of gold in Per, 1490. 1491, 1494. A gold-wdge, the grea∣test that euer was naturally found, lost in the Sea, 1571
  • Gosnols voyage to Uirginia, their resolution to plant, and breaking off againe, 1647, et seq.
  • Gosnols hope, 1648
  • Gotierez his conuerting the Indians after the Spanish fashion, 1449
  • Gouernment necessary by Land or Sea, 1156
  • Gouernours-Iland, a little Iland neere Port Ricco, abounding with store of Pigeons, 1172
  • Cap. Gourgues, a Frenchmans naui∣gation into Florida, his reuenge on the Spaniards, for the wrongs his Countrimen sustained by them, 1604, 1605
  • Grampus, a Bay in New England so called by reason of the multitude of Grampuses sound in that place, all kind of hearber, roots, and trees, and a very fertile soile, 1846, 1847
  • Granada, a new Kingdome of the Spaniards in America, the plenty of gold, chiefe City, and seuerall Prouinces therof, 1419. Extream desolation and losse of inhabitants by the sauage torures and cruel∣ties of the Spaniards, 1591, 1592 1593, 1594, 1595
  • Granata Iles, 1186
  • Grande, a riuer in Florida, 1603
  • Grand Bay, a Harbour on the north of the New-found Land, 1882
  • Grapes good against the flux, 1172, Grapes in New France, 1622
  • Grasse wanting in a blacke champion country of the Indies, 1214
  • Gratiosa, one of the Iles of the Azo∣res, 1671. It submitteth it selfe to the English Admirall, 1960
  • Gregory 13. his rage against Q. Elizabeth, 1893
  • Greedinesse a dangerous enemy, 1152, 1393. Greedinesse loseth his prey, 1964. Greedinesse of Mariners a maine preiudice to the Virginian Colony, 1751
  • Sir Richard Greenuile Generall of Virginia, his voyage and acts, 1645, his desperatenesse against the Spanish Armadoes, 1961
  • Sir Rchard Greenuiles fight with the too vnequall Spanish Fleet his stout resistance, and great preiu∣dice the Spaniards sustained by him, his taking and death, with his Encomium, 1678
  • Guamimbique strange small birds in Brasile, of admired colour, hat∣ched as some thinke of bubbles of water, 1305
  • Guacapo, drinke made of the coor∣sest Sugar called Molasses, and hot spices, in the Indies, 1174
  • Guacoya, a towne in Florida neere the riuer Rio grand, the inhabi∣tants and commodities thereof, 1552
  • Guadalcanal, one of the Iles of Salo∣mon, 1447
  • Guadalupa-Ile, wherein is a Bathe so hot, that meat may bee seethed in it, 1685
  • Guiahate, a towne in Florida, well peopled, and plentifull with Maiz 1550
  • Guaiacatu, Sauages of Brasile, 1299
  • Guaiacones-Indians, 1519
  • Gualua a strange Spring in Tercea, 1670
  • Guaniguanico, 1501
  • Guarionix, a Realme in Hispanio∣la, the King pittifully abi〈…〉〈…〉ed by Spaniards, 1751
  • Guanos, a fruit in S. Lucia which eaten ripe sets a man a scouring, but greene, stayes from scouring 1265
  • Guatatlan, a prouince in New Spain 1559
  • Guayanaguacu, caue-inhabiting Sa∣uages, 1299
  • Guayo, Brasilias: Indians, 1299
  • Guyayaquill a riuer with 〈◊〉〈◊〉 Ilands in the oth, 〈◊〉〈◊〉 1446
  • Guasco, a Prouince in Florida, 1554
  • Guatimala, a Prouince in Ameri∣ca dispeopled by Spanish cruelty, 1579 1580
  • Guaracayo, inhabitants of part of Brasile, 1298
  • Guaitaca-Indians, 1300
  • Guatalca, a principall Port Towne, 1446
  • Guadianilla, a riuer in Port-Ricco, 1170
  • Guaire, Brasile Indians, 1300
  • Guirapanga, a bird that makes a sound as hard as a Bell, 1306
  • Gulgaifi, Indians neere the riuer of Plate, their description, 1350
  • Gumms of rare operation for sundy diseases in Guyana. 1276
  • A Gunners carelesnesse, 1402
  • Gunpowder sowne by Sauages, 1709
  • Guacouelica, a place rich with siluer Mynes, 1421
  • Gusts on the West Indian shoares, 1157
  • Iohn Guy his Letter from the New found Land, 186
  • Guyano, a great mountaine in Pot Ricco, 1169
  • Guyauas, a little excellent fruit as big as a Peach, with little seeds in them like Goosberies, 1172 It is good against the flux, 1172
  • Guyana, a riuer in America, not that of Sir Walte Raleighs, the store of Cattell, Sugar-mills com∣modities, and inhabitants thereof. 1238
  • Guyrig Brasilians, 1300
  • Guansa Tomasongano, a riuer in Affrica, 1220
  • Guyana, 1247, & seq. The riuers and countries adioyning, 1249. The bounds and limits, 1270. Ri∣uers and Prouinces. 1271, 1272. the gouernment thereof, iustice, iealousie, mariages, ibid. Their diuers languages, ancient inhabi∣tants Caribes, 1272. Artillerie, order in the warres, 1272, 1273. Policy, seasons, accompts of time by the Moone, religion, rites at bu∣rying Captaines, 1273, 1274. Their drunkennesse, opinion of the dead, Priests, and conference with the Deuill, 1274. The quality of the Climat, 1274. their prouision, bread, drinke honey, possibility of vines, beasts, fish, fowle, fruits, 1274, 1275. Its commodities of

Page [unnumbered]

  • Merchandise, as Sugar-canes, cotton-wooll, wood for dyers of cloth, 1275. Sweet gums very pre∣cious in Physicke and Chirurgery, drugs, medicinall plants, strange wood, Tobacco, 1276, 1277. the things these Indians most desire to trade for, ibid. 1277. hopes of gold, ibid.
  • Guyaxule-Prouince, 1539
  • Guyraupiaguara, a great land-snake that goeth as fast on tops of trees as a man on the ground, 1303
  • Guyranhe eng era, an excellent spea∣king Bird in Brasile, 1305
  • A Giants Anatomy sent from Chi∣na to the King of Spaine, of won∣drous greatnesse, 1178
  • Gyants at Port-Desire, their length, bignesse, slinging-stones, 1232 Gyants at Brasile, 1243. of twelue foot height, ibid. Gyants in Pe∣ru, of whom one eates as much as fifty men, 1481
H.
  • HAbetebin, a Plaine in the West Indies betweene Mar∣win and Coorepan, 1285
  • Harbours in Virginia verie safe and admirable, 1664 Harbour of Pentecost, its de∣scription, and commendation, pre∣ferred before the riuer Orenoco, and others, 1664. Its seuerall be∣neficiall matters of worth largely, 1665, 1666 Harbour of Frenchmen, called by the Indians Aiurema Piasaue in Brasile, its passage for nauigators, 1239
  • Capt. Mich. Harcourt, his taking possession of Arrawary, 1278
  • Capt. Harcourts voyage 1267, & seq. His company, and departing from Dartmouth, 1267. His ari∣uall at the Canaries, and from thence to Wiapoco, and Guiana, 1267, 1268. commeth to Cari∣po, conuerseth with the Indians, 1268, 1269. agreeth and resideth with them, 1270. taketh possession of the mountaine Gomerigo, 1278 The losse of his voyage, 1279. lea∣ueth Guiana, 1281. Returneth home, his small losses of men by the voyage, ibid. & 1282
  • Harris, one that blew off his nose in frosty weather, at the Straits of Magellane, 1204
  • Hadarinner, a town of Suppay-Saua∣ges in the Indies, 1286
  • Haile as big as Oranges, 1561
  • Haire as big as a mans finger, 1560
  • Halo, the circle seen about the Moon very strange and large in the Bar∣mudas Ilands, 1738
  • Hamaca-beds, 1256
  • Hamburgers ships surprised by the English, 1929
  • Han, a Language of the Indians in Florida, 1519
  • Hanamob, a towne of the Arwac-Sauages in the Indies, 1286
  • Haps hill in Uirginia, 3649
  • Hapaluia, a great Floridan towne, and its commodities, 1534
  • Harbouring in enemies ports is ve∣rie dangerous, 1378
  • Hardoo an Arwacca towne in the West Indies, 1285
  • Hatuncolla, Pancarcolla, Indians that haue diuers fables of their O∣riginall; they worship a Ramme, and sacrifice vnto him, 1461
  • Hawkins Mayden-land, 1384
  • Sir Iohn Hawkins his courtesie to the French, 1604. Sr. Ioh. Haw∣kins voyage, 1177. His courtesie to the Spaniards repayd with tre∣chery, ibid. & seq. his misfortune, 1179. Death, 1183. A compa∣ring of him with Sr. Fran. Drake 1185, 1186
  • Master Will. Hawkins men perfi∣diously slaine at Playa, 1181
  • Sir Richard Hawkins his voyage, 1367, & seq. His comming to the Canaries, Ilands of Cape Verde, the West Indies, and accidents there & by the way, ibid. at large: the ouerthrow of his voyage, 1383 His comming to the Straits of Magellane, 1384. the danger of his ship vpon a rocke there, 1388. their strange deliuerance againe from shipwracke, 1389. His com∣ming into the Straits of Magel∣lane, 1391. His taking fiue ships, 1393. His fighting with the Spa∣nish Armada, his dangerous wounds, 1403, 1404, 1405, 1406 The successe and accidents of this fight at large, ibid. & 1407, 1408. His surrendring the Ship, 1410. His courteous vsage by the Spanish General, 1413. et seq. Imprisonment, &c. 1415. his re∣spect with the Spaniards, 1417
  • Hauana, where situate, 124, 1501
  • Hay, a beast in Brasile feeding on ayre and leaues of trees, 1243
  • Head-ache cured by a leafe, 1276
  • Herbes very medicinable in Brasile, their names and qualities, 1310, et seq. Herbes good against the poyson of Snakes, against the stone, but hurtfull to feuers; others good for feuers, with leaues of a fad∣dome long, for vlcers and the Poxe, for the stone, and liuer, ibid. Good herbes against the ague, for a purge, for the bloody∣fluxe, for poyson, for feuers, for the wormes, for a womanish fluxe, for wounds, for old sores, for the cough and rheumes, for the scabs, for abortion, 1311. An herbe that openeth or shutteth with the Sunne, that is sensible, that hath no smell, 1312 Herbe that seemeth to haue the sense of feeling, 1174
  • Heardsmen of Port-Ricco, their thankefulnesse to Master Cha∣lons for giuing them a poore Frier 1833
  • Heauen refused by some Indians, and why, 1574
  • Heauen angry with the English po∣lices, 1942
  • St. Helena a Spanish garison towns in Florida, 1182, 1200
  • Henrico, a towne in Virginia, the description and situation thereof, 1767
  • Henry Earle of Northumberland murthereth himselfe, being com∣mitted for treason, 1893
  • Highney, a realme in Hispanicla, the Queen and inhabitants burnt, hanged, torne in pieces, or other∣wise tortured by the Spaniards, 1572
  • Andrew Hilliard his strange and miraculous preseruation from famishing, 1802. His sustenance for eleuen dayes on his flesh, and a spoonfull or two of water, with a littleblood, ibid. et 1803
  • Hills-hap, a place so named in the North part of Virginia, 1646
  • Three Hils, markes of Nauigators on the coast of Brasile, called by the Indians, Aquare, Wason, Remitum, 1238
  • Hills worshipped by some Indians, 1459
  • A strange Hill in Saint Michael an Iland of the Azores, wanting fire, and the Ayre cold, yet hauing hot fountaines neere it, 1243. A smoakie fiery Hill in Fuego, 1371
  • Hirara, a beast in Brafile like a Ci∣uet-Cat, that eateth nothing but honey, 1302
  • Hispania Noua described, the inha∣bitants, riches, and commodities thereof, 1432, 1433. Discoue∣ries

Page [unnumbered]

  • of divers Provinces there∣about, with their names, 1556, 1557. & seq. The time when first it was begunne to be inhabi∣ted by the Spaniards, 1577. The fertilitie thereof, ibid. The cruelty committed by them on the poore Indians, 1577
  • Hispaniola described, 1146. In∣habited onely by Spaniards with∣out one naturall, 1419. The number of inhabitants consu∣med by the drowning, roasting, paunching, strangling, and o∣ther vnknowne butchering of the Spaniards, 1570. & seq. Hispaniola hath twenty fiue thousand Rivers plenteous with gold, the Realmes thereof, 1571, 1572. The innocen∣cie of the Inhabitants, and vn∣deserved Spanish tortures, 1572
  • Hobbamoqui, a Power worshipped of the Indians of New-Eng∣land, the same which wee call Divell, 1867. His illusion, wherewith hee deceiveth that blind and superstitious people, 1867, 1868. His appearing to the Indians in sundry shapes, but vsually in the forme of a Snake, ibid.
  • Captaine Hobson his voyage being directed by two Indians, the treacherie of his Indians, and his returne with the losse of the whole adventure, 1828, 1829
  • Hollanders trade in Hudsons Ri∣ver, 1830. Their yearely reve∣nues by the commodities of fishing, the number of their fishing boats, their industrie in providing Ships, 1837
  • Hollanders and Spaniards enmi∣tie each to the other is implacable, 1951
  • Honduras a Bay, 1147
  • Honestie of certaine Indians, in restoring such things as they found in the woods, 1850
  • Honey, aboundance thereof in cer∣taine Trees, 1363
  • Honour preferred before life, 1944
  • Stephen Hopkins a factious fellow condemned, yet pardoned for mu∣tiny in Bermudas, 1744
  • Horrura, a mountaine, 1285
  • Horses cast ouer-boord, 1910
  • Horses all trotters, 1171
  • Horses shooed with gold, 1490
  • Horses eaten, 1504
  • Io. Hortops relation of adven∣tures, 1178
  • Hospitalitie of the Indians to tra∣vellers, 1869
  • Hospitalitie among Savages, 1188, 1209
  • Hot-countries agree not with idelers, 1370
  • Houses of two Bow-shot in length, 1188. Houses on tops of trees, 1285. Houses without roofes, in Regions without Raine, 1420. Houses of great men, how di∣stinguished from those of inferiour ranke, among the Florida-Ame∣ricans, 1536
  • Houses of the Savages in New-England, the manner of their building, and description of their houshold stuffe, 1846
  • Lord Howard, Admirall of her Maiesties Fleet to surprise the Indian Fleet, 1144. His va∣lorous conflicts with the Spanish Armada, 1905
  • Huamachucu, Indians neere Peru, that worship party-coloured stones and sacrifice mans flesh, con∣quered, and reformed by the Em∣perour of Peru, 1471
  • Hunapampa, Indians that goe na∣ked, worshipping birds, beasts, or plants, 1478
  • Huana Cupac, sometimes an Em∣perour in Peru, his worth, va∣lour, conquest, enlargement of his Dominions, his subdued na∣tions, clemencie, courtesie to wo∣men, 1480, 1481. Further con∣quests, and acts, his dscreet coniecture of a power supremer then the Sunne, 1481. His feare, will, and prophesie of the Spanish invasion, his death, 1482, 1483
  • Hubates, a well-peopled Province, 1562
  • Hugo de Moncada, slaine by the English in the narrow seas, 1908
  • An Hulke with nine tunne of gold, 1223. Threescore Hulkes laden with provision for Spaine, taken by the English, 1924
  • Humanitie among Savages of Flo∣rida, to the distressed Spaniards, 1507
  • Hungry fare of the Savages inha∣biting New-England, 1852
  • Hunt, a worthlesse fellow of the English Nation, his cruelty and treacherous vsage of the Sava∣ges, to the great disadvantage of many of our countrey-men, 1828
  • Hunting, how handsomely perfor∣med by the Indians in Florida, 1521
  • Hunting the wylde Boare, how at∣chieued by the English at the Ber∣mudas, 174
  • Huntly wasteth the enimies in the Portugall voyage, 1918
I.
  • SAint Iago, a towne taken by Sir Francis Drake, and other Eng∣lish, 1181. The fruits fortification, commodities, and inhabitants thereof, 1371, 1529
  • Iaguacini beasts that are killed by their sleepinesse, 1303
  • Iacos Indians, their desire of Reli∣gion, 1251
  • Iamaica, the situation and descripti∣on thereof, 1147, 1185, 1419. possessed by the Spaniards; out of which were slaughtered by them sixe hundred thousand guiltlesse soules without faith or Sacra∣ments, 1573
  • S. Iames Ilands, 1379. The commo∣dities thereof, ibid.
  • Iames town in Virginia, how situate, 1692. The first founding thereof, 1707. The burning and repairing thereof, 1710, 1711. The aban∣doning, and re-assuming thereof by the English, 1732. The descripti∣on, situation, fortification, temple, building, and vnhealthinesse thereof, 1752, 1753
  • Iangathus, things made of Canes, and tyed together with ••••ths, in stead of boats, 1213
  • Iaquerequere, a towne neere Saint Sebastian, 1211, 1212. The In∣habitants thereof, 1300
  • Iaquereasick, an American River, 1223. In what manner nauigable, 1239
  • Iaquetyua, a Tree growing in the mountaines in America, 1214
  • Iaques Carters nauigations to New∣found-land, & Bird-Iland, 1605
  • Iarraraca, venemous Serpents in Bra∣sile, whereof there bee foure kinds there mentioned, 1303, 1304
  • Iararaques, Serpents that vse the water amongst the Indians, 1211
  • Iawayri, a River in America issuing from Potosin a mountain in Peru, 1214
  • Iawayrippo, a towne in the West-Indies, 1208, 1212
  • Iberacua, a Snake whose vehement poison maketh the hurt persons blood distil through all the passages of his body, 1304
  • ...

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Ibiboca, a Snake very faire to looke on, and of most vehement poyson, but very plentifull in Brasile, 1304
  • Ice-mountaines of eight leagues, 1606. Ices of the Newfound-Land, how caused, 1627
  • Idolatry how caused among the In∣dians, 1558
  • Idols sold to the Indians by Spani∣ards, 1583
  • Iealousie of Sauages, 1662, 1272
  • Ienero, a riuer neere the Line in the West Indies, 1190. the descrip∣tion thereof, 1240. three hundred houses on it, its description, 1438
  • Ieperos, Indians so called, 1361
  • Ieronimo-riuer, 1386
  • Ierome Benzoes relation of the new World, 1448, & seq.
  • Iesuits Colledge at Santos, 1203. Iesuits friends to Sauages, 1243 Iesuits bring vp the children of the Brasilians, 1292. are of great esteeme among them, 1298. Iesuits acts in the Indies, 1564, 1565. Iesuits exploits and tra∣uels, either for deuotion or ambi∣tion, 1807. their pride, ibid.
  • Igwabes Indians of Florida, 1511
  • Ilha grande, a place neere Brasile, 1202
  • Ilands on the North of Virginia, their description and commodities for fish and salt, 1654
  • Iles of Salomon, their discouery and description, 1447
  • Ile Malhado in Florida, 1508. the inhabitants, description, and com∣modities: extreame mourning for children, and the neglect of age, their burials, and mariage-rites, their Phisitians, their houses, beds, sports, manner of curing the sicke, 1508, 1509
  • Iles of Saint Peter, neere Canada 1606
  • Iles of Saint Paul, neere Canada 1606
  • Iland of Pearles in the South Sea, 1180
  • Ile Francisco, 1180, 1411
  • Faire Iland, 1384
  • Iland of Cockles. 1439
  • Iland of Birds inumerable, 1605
  • Ile of the Hare in the Riuer Sage∣uay, 1610
  • Ile of Filbeards, ibid.
  • Ile of Orleans in Canada, encom∣passed with dangerous flats and sands, its description, 1611
  • Thirty Ilands full of Walnuts neere Canada, 1612
  • Ile of Saint Eloy, the fertility of the soyle adioyning, fitnesse to bee planted, 1611, 1612
  • Iles neere the Sault, or fall of Cana∣da, description, various fertility of beasts, trees, and fruits, 1613.
  • Ile Percee in Canada, 1616
  • ... Ile de Bonadventure, ib.
  • Ile of St. Croix in New France, its description and fertility in diuers kinds, 1622. its three discommo∣dities that hinder good wintering in it, 1623. an Iland of Vines thereabout, 1633. Iles very com∣modious and harborous, 1884
  • Iland voyage vnder the Earle of Es∣sex, 1935, & seq.
  • Illas de Lobos, desart Ilands in the Indies abounding with Seales, 1400
  • Illas de los Galapagos, desart I∣lands and fruitlesse, 1400
  • Ile of Elizabeth, the Trees, Fowles, Beasts, Fruits, Fishes, Snakes, Colours, Metals, and Stones, thereof described, 1651, 1652, & 1653
  • Image of our Lady at Mexico, 1178
  • Images of gold among the Indians, 1285
  • Imperiall, a City of Spaniards, the inhabitants samisht, 1477
  • Inca Roca, a Peruan Emperour, his acts and conquests, repairing Schooles for proficiency in Arts, his death and successor, 1457
  • Incas, the name of the Emperours of Peru before the Spanish inua∣sion, 1458. their Sacrifices to the Sunne, their ceremonies, conceit of sicknesses, idolatry, Priests, Mo∣nasteries, diuision of Empires, tythings, tything-men, officers, education of children, 1460 their Iudges, and manner of deci∣ding of controuersies, Counsellors of Warre, Priuie Councellors, and pretended conuersion of their neighbours, 1461. their Astrolo∣gie, opinion of Eclipses, Thunder, and Rainbow, their Dreames, Geometry, Chorography, Arith∣meticke, Musicke, Poetry, Com∣medies, Handicraftsmen, 1462, 1463. The Incas, their Mona∣steries, and pretious golden orna∣ments, their life, chastity, and em∣ployment, 1466. their manner of sharing of tillage, care of widowes and souldiers, tributes, freedomes, want of Beggars, Innes, hospitals, treasuries, courses after victories, 1469, 1470. stupendious riches and pomp of their Princely houses, and admired superfluity of gold on their ornaments, officers, hun∣ting, and Postes, 1470, 1471. triumphes and ceremonies, 1471. the Incas marrie their owne Si∣sters, 1479. their abuse, banish∣ment, trecherous conquest, and finall extirpation by the Spaniards 1487, 1488
  • Indians killing themselues because they would not serue the Spani∣ards, 1415. A stratagem of theirs against the Spaniards, 1442, 1443. Indians how dealt with by the Spaniards, 1448. their abusing all Christians for their sake, 1449. their magnanimity, and feare of horses, 1449. their discreet reproofe of vnchristian Christians, 1450. and opinion of them, their name for them, the promulgation of their liberty, 1453, 1454. Indians worship∣ping high mountaines 1459. In∣dians that worship the sea, because it yeelds them fish, and the Whale because of his greatnesse, 1471. Indian policy and ouerthrow of the Spaniards, 1476. Indian victories, 1477. their valour and dexterity in armes, ibid. Indians names beyond More∣shego, 1280. Indian nati∣ons and languages almost innume∣rable in Florida, 1521. Indi∣an superstition, 1522. Indians countries dispeopled by the Spa∣niards, the feare they beare toward them, they are sooner reclaimed by loue then cruelty, 1525. Indians lazy life, 1154. Indian Sodomy, 1519 West Indians described, 1158. Caniball-Indians afraid to eate a man, lest he should haue the Pox, 1177 Indians at least thirtie thousand slaine and captiued by the Portingals at one time, 1219 An Indians courage and Chri∣stian desire at his death, 1219. Indian, a Fish in the Sea, and Fox in the wood, 1243 Indians artillery, 1261 Indians manner of punishing murther and adulterie, their ie∣lousie of their wiues, 1272 Policie in their warres, 1273 Indians auoyding the sight of Christians, and other Indians, 1271

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Indians with rough skinnes like buffe, 1280. Names of In∣dian Riuers, 1281. et 1282. names of Nations, 1280 et 1282. Indians how bruitishly and tre∣cherously dealt withall by the Ca∣niball-Portingals, chusing rather to flye to the mercy of their flesh∣deuouring enemies, then these Christian-Antichristian Sauages 1322. Their fruitlesse baptisme by the Portingals, 1323. the Indians religion of Brasile, or rather irre∣ligion, the feare they haue of the Deuill, 1336, 1337. their solemn assembly, singing, 1337, & sequ. dancing, ibid. Ceremonies, super∣stition, idolatrie, ibid. Indian va∣lour, 1395. Indians worse then slaues to the Spaniards, 1398. In∣dians gouernment, disposition, and state in generall, 1421. Indi∣ans valour, 1557. and simplicity in matters of knowledge and reli∣gion, ibid. Indians in New Eng∣land very tractible, their manner of hunting the beast called Mosse, 1832. Indians of Dominica taught to driue their Canoas with sayles, 1833. Indians sore terri∣fied at the sight of some English∣men, 1843. Indians drinking onely at the Spring head, 1852. their feare of the English, vpon report that they kept the plague buried in a store-house, permitting it to infect as it pleased them, 1855 they buy mens liues for Beuers skins, ibid. Indians of Matta∣chiest, their kinde vsage of the English, 1858. Indians of Mano∣met much giuen to gaming, will play for the skin on their wiues backes, 1859. their ioyfull recei∣uing some religious precepts, 1862 Indians in Port-Royall, their courtesie in getting prouision for the French Plantation, 1632. In∣dians oration and eloquence, cour∣tefie, noblenesse, liberality vpon what termes, 1633. Indians of the Northerne America, their playing & musicke their customes in curing wounds, their simplicity and ignorance, yet subtilty, thee∣uishnesse, and traiterousnesse, 1634. they must not bee depen∣ded on, but swayed with seuerity. ibid. an Indian womans present ibid. the Indians disapproofe of garments, ibid. Indians of diuers languages, not vnderstanding one another in New France, 1635. Indians how they may best be ter∣rified, 1635. you must not express any security, but alwayes seeme to be warie, resolute, and prepared for them, 1635. Indians of New France their warfare, 1638. In∣dian Southsaying, and supposed trechery, 1639. Indians loue to their children, ibid. they are pre∣ferred before Christians, ibid. In∣dians weepe at the departure of the French from their coasts, 1640. Indians christned in New France by the Frenchmen, 1644. Indian battaile, victory, and the consequents thereof, ibid. Indians of Virginia, their strange apparell, and other description, 1647 Their great delight in musicke, dances, weapons, ornaments, boats, gar∣dens, &c. 1655. trechery, and discouery, 1656. Indians dispo∣sition and trechery, ceremonies, idolatrie, women, and their na∣ture, their ornaments, 1662, 1663. & seq. Indian Virginian words of language vsed amongst them, 1667. Indians in Virginia creeping vpon all foure, with their bowes in their mouthes, desperate and hara〈…〉〈…〉, 1686. their women and maids habit, and other cu∣stomes, 1689. An Indian 160 years old, with a long white beard very lusty, which is euen a wonder amongst them, 1689. Indians subtilty and rebellion to the Spa∣niards in Florida, their slaughter by them, after slauerie, 1533, 1534. their murder by the Spa∣nish seruilitie, 1535. an Indian Lady that swaid a Nation of them in Florida, the commodities of her country, and the courtesie shee shewed the Spaniards, 1537, 1538. an Indian burned, ibid. another christned by the Spani∣ards, 1538. Indian stratagem against the Spaniards, 1544. their sudden slaughter, and endangered vtmost ouerthrow of them, 1545. Indians paint themselues with terrible colour, to strike terror in their aduersaries, 1546. their trecherie, ibid. Indian eloquence, 1550. an Indians valiant and wittie answer to an imperious Spa∣niard, 1552. Indians ridiculous custome at the death of their Ca∣tique, 1553. Indians how they are wont to expresse obedience to some of their superiors in Florida 1553. An Indian throwne to the dogs by a Spaniard, 1554. In∣dians conspiracy against the Spa∣niards in Florida discouered, the actors cruelly dealt withall, hauing their right hands cut off, 1555. An Indian burnt for heresie, and conspiracy, by a Spanish Iudge in New Spaine 1557. Indian ido∣latry and worship of the Deuill, 1558. they must bee brought to Christianity by feare, as saith a Spanish Preacher, 1559. Indian hypocrisie, 1558. linea vltima. Indians so couragious and vali∣ant, that armed most with poore clubs, they contest brauely with strongly armed Spaniards on horse backe, 1558. Indians worship∣ping plants, and birds, and singing songs vnto them: and that sacri∣fice one man yearely to a painted Serpent, which the sacrificed man taketh patiently, 1560. Indian embroidery, 1560. Indian want of Masse and instructing Mini∣sters, 1563. Indians capable of religion, and their baptisme and instruction, 1564 Indian secrets smothered by Spaniards lest they should come to light with their dis∣aduantage, 1567. Indies disco∣uered by the Spaniards, Anno 1492. the first Land inhabited the Ile of Hspaniola, 1569. The nature of the Indians in generall thereabout their simplicity, pati∣ence, meckenesse, innocency, inge∣nuitie, and tender breeding, 1569. Three Millions of Indians perish by the Spaniards in Hispaniola, fiue hundred thousand in the Lu∣cayos, in all thereabout twelue or fifteene Millions, 1569, 1570 Indians to the number of a Mil∣lion slaine and consumed by them in Iohn and lamaica Ilands, 1573. Indians suppose Gold to be the Spaniards God, 1573. Indi∣ans refuse heauen, fearing to meet the Spaniards there, 1574. Indi∣ans how many in the Ile Cuba deuoured by Spaniards, 1574. Indians destroyed by Spaniards in Terra Firma, and their mul∣titude, 1575, 1526. Indians in Nicaragua consumed by the Spa∣niards fiue hundred thousand, 1577. Indians in New Spaine, and its seuerall Prouinces, deuou∣red by the Spaniards to two or three Millions, 1577, 1578. Indians in Guatymala, dispatcht by Spaniards innumerablie, 1579 1580, and Spanish Man-eaters, that is, Spaniards allowing shara∣bles of Mans-flesh for food, 1580.

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Indians tortured and slaine abun∣dantly by Spaniards in Panuco, Mechuacham, and Xalisco, 1580, 1581. Indians to the num∣ber of eight hundred sold for one horse by a Spaniard, 1580. Indi∣ans sold for infamous Merchan∣dize, 1581, 1582. Indians how many were slaine in Yucatan, 1581, 1582, 1583. What store in Saint Martha by Spaniards, 1583, 1584. In Carthagena, 1584. On the coast of Pearles, Paria, and the Ile of Trinity, 1586. In Yuia pari, and Venesue∣la, Indians slaine in number foure or fiue thousand thousand, 1587. In Florida, the Riuer La Plata, in divers Provinces of Peru, 1589, 1590, 1591. Indians in new Cra∣nada, dispatched by sundry cruel∣ties of the Spaniards, 1592, 1593, 1594, 1595. In divers other places, by divers diuellish strata∣gems, 1596, 1597, 1598, 1599, 1600, 1601, 1602. Indians worship a Pillar of stone in Flo∣rida, 1603. Indian subiection to the Englishmen in Virginia, 1841 Indians of New-England, their care in preserving the carkeises of their dead friends in sepulchres, full stuffed with sweet powders, 1846. Their encounter with the English, the manner of inciting their men to Battell, 1847. Their habite and manner of welcoming forrenners, 1849. Indians glory, in the weaknesse of the English forces, 1856. An Indian plot∣ting treacherie is taken prisoner, 1864. Indians terrified in con∣science, for sake their houses, and fly into the deserts and thickets, 1866. Indians opinion concer∣ning the Creation, that all men descend from the loynes of one man, and one woman, which were first created, the cause of their disper∣sions, being as yet vnknowne, 1867. Indians of New-Eng∣land witty and laborious in diuers arts, 1870. Indians described both in habit, and nature, their manner of salutation, 1881. Indians of Canada, 1609. Their speaking with the Divell, their painting themselves, apparell, deuice to goe on snow, mariages, licentiousnesse of yong Wenches, and burials, with their beliefe of the soule, 1609, 1610
  • Industrie of the English, in the dis∣couerie and plantation of New-England, 1848
  • Infants slaine by the Savages to doe sacrifice to their god Habbamok, 1868
  • Inquisition in New-Spaine, the punishment of two Italians there, 1177. Inquisitions barbarous cru∣eltie, 1178
  • Insolencie of the Indians of Massa∣chaoset, 1864
  • Interpreters so necessarie to a land∣trauell in a strange countrie, that without them it cannot bee effected, 1554
  • Ioancho de Luyando, a Mynt∣master in Port-Ricco, hisriches, and plenty of gold, 1170
  • Iohn Ortis a Spaniard, his taking by the Indians in Pamphilo de Naruaez, his voyage, his sundry misfortunes, and escapes, with a happy meeting his countri-men, 1531. His large travailes with Captaine Soto, his death, and the discontent thence issuing to the Captaine, 1551
  • Saint Iohns River in New-France, its beauty, store of fish, vines, with other commodities, 1622
  • Saint Iohn de Port-Ricco, a Citie in the West Indies, taken by the English, its description, aire, dewes, greatnesse, Church, want of Glasse-windowes, doores, stan∣ding of their Quire in the lowest part of the Church, 1144. Forti∣fication, 1165. Healthinesse, ibid. Its situation, 1169 And fortifica∣tion, 1418
  • Saint Iohns head, the easterly part of Port-Ricco, 1169
  • Captaine Iohn Smith his discoverie of Russels Iles, Point-Ployer, and Limbo Iles in Virginia, 1712. His entertainment by the Savages, with courtesic, and trca∣cherie, his mens desire of returne, 1713. His many Savage bicke∣rings, endanger by a stinging Fish, and safe returne, 1714. His setting forth againe, and encounter with the Savages, 1714, 1715. The loue hee received from Mosco that Savage, ibid. His fight with the Tapahonecks, 1716. His great tempests, yet safe returne, 1716. His assuming the presiden∣cie of Virginia, 1716. His oppo∣sition by the Councell, iourney to Powhatan onely with foure, 1717. His strange entertainment, ibid. His provision for Nansa∣mund, proiect for Powhatan, and setting forth, 1720. His discourse, and passages with Powhatan, 1721, 1722. His escaping death amidst his treacherous vassals, ibid. His abuse by some treache∣rous Dutchmen, 1723. His great danger with fifteene men, by a multitude of Indians, ibid. His valiant evasion, and forcing them to composition, captinating their King in the midst of them, ibid. & 1724. His poysoning by the Vassals of Powhatan and escape, 1725. His death plotted by Dutchmen, his escape, encounter, and captivating the King of Pas∣pahigh, and other bickerings, 1726. His progresse in the planta∣tion, hinderance, and desire of re∣mouall thereof, 1727, 1728. His hatred by vpstart plantationers, escaping their plots, and revenge on them, 1729. His suppressing mutinies, appeasing, concluding peace, endanger by powder, 1730, 1731. His endanger of murther, grieuous torture, returne for Eng∣land, and the cause, with the conse∣quents. 1731, 1732. His accu∣sers, and accusation, 1731. His innocencie, 1732
  • Master Iones his endeuours, furthe∣ring the plantation of New-Eng∣land, 1867
  • Ippoa, a place neere the great Iland in America, 1212
  • Irasing, a place seven leagues from Mexico, 1414
  • Irocois, Savages in Canada, 1607 Their River, and manner of for∣tification with stakes, 1612. Their further description, provision, and townes, and warres, with their vanquishment, and affrighting with a musket-shot, 1643
  • Iron extolled aboue gold, 1814
  • Isla del Gallo, an Iland, 1444
  • Itshuera, a towne of the Caribes, one dayes iourney from the head of the River Marwin, 1285
  • Saint Iuan de Lua, achiefe part in Noua Hispania, 1432
  • Iuan de Ofnate, his discoverie of the North from old Mexico, his armie and preparation, 1563. His losse and revenge of his Nephew, his building a towne, and possessi∣on for Spaine, 1566
  • Iuan Fernandes Ilands, their situa∣tion and plenty, 1393
  • Iucatan, how so called, 1455. The inhabitants tortured, and consu∣med, by the Spaniards, 1581, 1582, 1583
  • Iumanos Indians, 1561
  • ...

Page [unnumbered]

  • Saint Iuo de Vllua, a Port towne, 1418
  • Iuana the second Iland in Orenoque 1248
  • Ixtatlan, a place in New-Spaine, 1558
  • Iyanough, a Governour among the Savages of Pechanochick, 1853
  • Saint Izabella, one of the Iles of Sa∣lomon, 1447
K.
  • KAiwaire, a towne inhabited by the Careebees, in the River Marwin in America, 1283
  • Kebec, a place in New-France, wherein was a plantation of the French begun by Capt. Cham∣plaine, 1642. The naturall fruit and commodities thereof, ibid.
  • Kecoughtan, a towne of Savages in Virginia, 1687. The inhabitants, maner of entertainment, dancing, Orations, 1687
  • Kenebek, a towne vnder the Do∣minion of Apomhamen in Ma∣wooshen, 1874
  • Ketangheanycke, a town vnder the Sagamos Octoworth, 1875
  • Capt. Keymish his voyage to Gui∣ana, 1269
  • Kiarno, a towne of the Sauages, 1286
  • Kietitan, a god of the Savages, 1862
  • Kine very strange in Brasile, living in water, without hornes or vd∣ders, 1243. Kine strange neere Quiuira, with bunched backs, 1561
  • A Kings distinction from others among the Amazons, is by a crowne of feathers, a woodden sword, or a chaine of Lyons teeth, 1288
  • Kings bodies how bestowed after death by the Peruans, before the Spanish conquest, 1464
  • Kings dying among the Floridan In∣dians, and Tartarians, two yong men are slaine, to wait vpon them in the next world, 1553
  • King Iames his name nothing re∣spected among the Spaniards, 1834. His faithfulnesse to the Queene of England, his wise answere to her Embassadour, 1912. His gracious letters to the Earle of Southhampton, touching the Silke-wormes, and Silke-grasse in Virginia, 1787
  • I0. King Englishman, one that li∣ved fifteene yeares at Santos, 1203
  • Kimbeki, a River in New-France, 1625
  • Knaw-saw an Iland, how situate, 1184
  • Knights, how chosen and created among the ancient Emperours of Peru, and who thought worthy of Knighthood, 1474
  • Kniuets adventures, accidents, 1192 He finds a chest of Rials, 1203. Loseth his toes by frost; 1204. Narrow scaping death, 1205, 1206. His danger by a Sea-Monster, 1207. Eateth Whale, 1207. His escaping (all his fel∣lowes slaine) 1207. His comming to the River Ianero, and escaping from drowning by a woman, his life there, 1208. His slaverie in a Sugar-mill, nakednesse, shame, and flight to the wildernesse, his life there, 1208. His perill by a Sa∣vage, 1208. By a Sharke-fish, 1209. His disastrous flight and wracke, 1209. In danger of star∣ving, ibid. His imprisonment, condemnation, pardon, 1210. His wounding the Factor, flight, iour∣ney, and fortune, 1210. His fear∣full travels through the wilder∣nesse, and manifold dangers there, 1210, 1211. His returne to his old master after many perils, 1212. Kils a great dangerous Snake, 1215. Is stocked, and brought to execution, saved, 1216 Passeth in a weake vessell through a River that ran vnder-ground, 1217. His escape, all his fellowes devoured, ibid. His nakednesse, 1218. Returne againe to his Por∣tingall Master, his danger, ibid. & 1219. His adventure vnder-water, 1220. His escape and voy∣age to Angola in Africa, his sen∣ding backe againe, ibid. His plot and dangerous discoverie, 1221. Saveth his master from drow∣ning, ibid. Is imprisoned, 1222. Escapeth drowning, 1223. Ari∣veth at Lisbon, his sicknesse there, 1224. One and twenty times let blood, 1225. His reco∣verie, imployment, and imprison∣ment, ibid.
  • Kniues and Hatchets deare sold amongst the Indians, 1229, 1208
  • A Knife bought eight women, 1249
  • Kuskara waock, a river in Virginia, the inhabitants thereof, 1694
L.
  • LAbour well imployed hath its reward one time or other, 1832
  • La Buena Ventura, an vnhealthy place in Peru, 1446
  • La Canela, a Country in Peru, 1415
  • Lacana, a miserable towne in Flo∣rida, 1553
  • Laguada, a towns in Port-Ricco, 1170
  • Lake of a hundred leagues in length, 1644
  • A Lake wondrous great, 1612. A Lake of 80 leagues, 1614. Many others, ib. & 1615. One of three hundred leagues, 1616.
  • La Loma de Camana, a very fertile soyle in America, the description thereof, 1420
  • La Mocha an Iland in America, 1443
  • Lampere, a fortified Citie of the Carios in the Indies, taken by the Spaniards, 1352
  • Lancerota, the town and Castle taken by the Earle of Cumberland, 1151, 1155. It is one of the grea∣test Ilands of the Canaries, 1155 The chiefe towne in it described, 1156. The inhabitants, armes, situation, commodities, latitude, their severall haruests, Church, Religion, ibid.
  • Language of Savages, 1237. A thousand languages of Savages, 1524. Language words of Virginian Savages, 1667. Lan∣guage very copious and difficult, 1870
  • La Pacheta, a small Iland, 1414
  • Laquedambaras, Nut-trees among the Indians, 1502
  • La para Iua, a place in the Indies taken by French from the Spanish, and repossessed by them, 1438
  • Las Cabecas, Iles so called, 1244
  • Las Ilhas, an American towne, 1438
  • Layfield, viz. Doctor Layfield his relation of Port-Ricco voyage, 1155. & seq. His imployment vnder the Lord of Cumberland, 1169
  • Leafe in Guiana called Kellette cu∣ring poisoned wounds, and the headah, 1276. Apparell made of leaues, 1213
  • League betweene the Mussasois and the English, 1850
  • Leakes, how stop'd vnder-water

Page [unnumbered]

  • without aboard, 1394
  • Leagh, viz. Sir Oliph Leagh, the traiterous massacring of three score and seven of his men, in an Iland of the West-Indies, 1255, 1256. & seq.
  • Captaine Leighs voyage to Ore∣noque, 1156. To Guiana, and plant••••ion there, 1250 His com∣ming to Wyapogo, and Araca∣wa, 1251, 1252. his death, & the danger of his men, 1621, 1622
  • Leopards called by the Indians Ia∣warile, 1229
  • Le Equille, a River in New-France, 1621
  • Lepos Tomienos a kinde of Ca∣nibals, 1216
  • Lerius his relation of Brasile, 1325. & seq. 1836
  • Letters sent from the Colony in New-England, Anno 1622. 1840. From New-found-land, 1889
  • Lice, 1205
  • Leyhannos, a Savage people of the West-Indies, 1364
  • Lignum Vitae, 1657
  • Lightening kils two men, 1672 Lightening in a great tempest saues Mariners from shipwracke. 1716
  • Light at sea seene on the Shrouds in a hell darke night, conceits and names thereof, 1737
  • Lima Indians of Peru, 1365. Their City, bignesse, and inhabitants, 1416, 1421
  • Limbo-Iles in Virginia, 1712
  • Lime made of Oysters, 1315
  • Limo River, 1248
  • Line, how and when most safely to be passed, 1377
  • Listers dangerous attempt, 1143
  • Liver, by what meanes corroborated and preserved, 1310
  • Lizards eaten in America, 1326 A monstrous Lizard, 1327
  • Master Locks death neere the Line, the onely friend of Captaine Can∣dish in his last voyage, 1201
  • Lomioo, a town in the Indies, inha∣bited by Arwacca Savages, 1285
  • Londoners voyage to New-Eng∣land, Anno 1616. p. 1838. To the Canaries from London, An. 1616. p. 1839. From London to New-England againe, An. 1620 ouerthrowne by the rage of divers tempests, to the losse of goods and men, 1840
  • Long-Ile in New-France, 1622
  • Long-reach a place in the Straits of Magellane, 1389
  • Lopez de Agira, a mutinous Soul∣dier among the Spaniards, his ex∣treame cruelty, and event, 1436, 1437. His plot to poison Queene Elizabeth, 1894
  • Lopez Vaz, a Portingall, his voy∣age and Historie touching places and discoveries in America, 1432 &t seq.
  • Loquilla, A hill famous for Mynes in Port-Ricco, 1171
  • Lopos Savages in Brasile, called by the Portingals Bilreros: their houses, wyldnesse, harmlesnesse, shamelesnesse, beastlinesse, wo∣men, complexion, 1230. Store of gold, ibid.
  • Lord de la Ware his happy ariuall at the distressed Colony in Virgi∣nia, 1732. His presidency there, 1754. his first Acts, and the constitution of Officers, his coun∣cell, ibid. His sending Sir George Summers to the Bermudas for provision, ibid. His wrongs by Powhatan, and revenge, with a message to him, 1755. Its successe and his punishing an Indian, 1756 His relation to the Lords and the Councell of Virginia, touching his returne thence, 1762. & seq. His sundry sicknesses, ibid. & 1763 His death in a voyage to Virginia, 1774
  • Lord of Southampton Treasurer of Virginia, 1783. His provision and supply of it, ibid. His letters to the Colony touching silk-plants. 1787, 1788
  • Lotterie set vp in London, for the Colony in Virginia. 1773
  • Lots cast for euery mans severall logding in New-England, 1848
  • Low-Countries supposed to have Ships great and small of all sorts, 20000 1821
  • Saint Lucia, 1146. The description and commodities thereof, 1265
  • Lukes-Bay, a pleasant harbour in New-Scotland, 1873
  • Lutherans thought a title of igno∣minie to the Spaniards, though they confessed God tooke part with them, 1680
  • Luysa, a towne neere Port-Rcco, 1170
  • Luys de Moscoso made Gouernour of Cuba, and Adelantado of Flo∣rida after Sotoes death, 1552. His and his companies resolution to travell by Land West ward in that countrey, his ariuall at seue∣rall Indian townes, and entertain∣ment, 1553. His being in danger of losing himselfe, and his company in the desert-countreys, ibid. His vncomfortable travels in the de∣serts, & endurāce of scarcity there, his returning the same way hee came, 1554. And taking passage downe a River to the sea, the whole remainder of his company, their dangerous storme, and perill by the Indians in the River, 1555. His ariuall at Panuco, 1556
  • Lying, how punished by some In∣dians, 1451
  • Lyma, a place in the West-Indies, 1242, 1393. The description of the Bay that leadeth to it, 1394
  • Lyons in the West Indies, 1211. They call them Iawarosou, 1229. are worshipped in Peru, 1457
M.
  • MAcanao, the westermost point of Margarita, 1266
  • Mace, his voyage to Virginia, in a barke sent by Sir Walter Ra∣leigh, 1653
  • Machaseis, a river in the West In∣dies, 1265
  • Maccah, a small River neere Ore∣noco, and Guyana, 1246
  • Macucagua, a Bird resembling the Feasant, and hath three skins one ouer another, 1306
  • Macurio, a River, 1247
  • Macuerendas, a Nation in the River Parana in the Indies, populous and fierce, their description, 1350
  • Macuta Indians in Brasile, 1299
  • Madalena, a River in Florida, 1504
  • Madera Ilands, their description, di∣uision, and commodities, 1369 Madera Ile discouered by Master Challons, in his voyage to the North of Virginia, 1833
  • Madiopuera, a venemous plumme, 1230
  • Magalines, a Portingall Naviga∣tor, 1191
  • Mguana, a Province in Hispa∣niola, 1572
  • Magdalene River, 1434
  • Magellane Straits described, 1384. vide streights. Magellane streights extreame winter, 1193
  • Maguy, a tree yeelding Wine, Vine∣ger, Honey, beds, threads, needles, tables, and hafts of kniues, besides many medicinable vses, 1421
  • Maiz of two sorts, the one like Rice, the other like Ginny Wheat, 1173 1851. Maketh strong drinke, 1258
  • Malabrigo Port, 1399
  • ...

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Manco King of Peru, his distresse by the faithlesse Spaniards, and the issue, 1486, 1487
  • Mammeis, an excellent kind of fruit, 1172
  • Manarippano, an Iland in the midst of the River Orenoco, 1249
  • Manilla Iland. 1446
  • Mandioco, the ordinary food of the inhabitants of Brasile, which ser∣veth for bread: the strange effects thereof, 1214, 1309, 1310. Wine made of the root Mandioco, which preserveth the Liver, 1310
  • Man-eaters, vid. Canibals.
  • Mans inconstancie, 1190, 1191
  • Mapies, certaine Indians so called, their description, countrey, and commodities, they are a very war∣like Nation, and treacherous, 1362, 1363. Their ouerthrow by the Spaniards, ibid.
  • Marble Rocke of halfe a mile in length, 1761
  • Marchin-Bay, how situate, and why so called, 1626
  • Marcomwin, a village in the River Marwin, 1283
  • Saint Maries Iland, the situation and description thereof, 1393, 1143, 1671
  • Mariages how vndertaken and so∣lemnized by the Inhabitants of Peru, 1457. Mariage forbidden to him that hath not taken his ene∣mie, 1290
  • Mariquites, certaine Canibals so cal∣led, their stature, women, dwel∣lings, religion, language, cloathing, &c. 1226, 1227
  • Maroer, a Brasilian Riuer, 1242
  • Mariners, their duty and disposition, 1368, 1403
  • Martha, a Province in America very rich in gold and other com∣modities, 1583. It is now changed from a peopled Countrey to a de∣sert, by Spanish crueltie, 1583, 1584
  • Martha's Uineyard, a dis-inhabited Ile. 1648
  • Saint Martha, a towne taken by Sir Francis Drake, 1183
  • Marwin River, and the Regions therevnto adioyning, 1283
  • Massasoys, a company of Savages in New-England, 1849
  • Massasoyt, his acknowledgement of King Iames to be the Gouernour of his Countrey, and himselfe his man: his kinde entertainment of English, and prohibiting the French, 1852, 1862
  • Massangono, a Portingall Fort in Affrica, the description thereof, 1220, 1234. Gold therein taken by the Portingals, 1237
  • Mastiues much regarded in Vir∣ginis, 1655
  • Matauzas, the situation and descrip∣tion thereof, 1246, 1247
  • Matini, a haven in America, 1146, 1157
  • Saint Matthews Bay. 1401
  • Matta diabolo, a Fort in Port-Ricco, 1162
  • Mattaick, a Rocke which with the brightnesse thereof dazeleth the eyes, 1285
  • Mattouri an Ilandin Guiana, 1272
  • Mauriapigtanga, Inhabitants of Brasile, 1298
  • Mawooshen, a Countrey discovered by the English, Anno 1622. 1873
  • Maids how distinguished from ma∣ried women in Virginia, 1689. Their habite and behauiour when they are to be taken to mariage, 1869, 1159
  • Henry Mays his voyage and ship∣wracke on the Bermudas, or Summer-Ilands, 1795. The losse and saving of some men. ibid.
  • Meat made of Snakes, 1210. Meat how kept from corrupting among the Savages, 1326. Meat not ea∣ten by the Indians, vnlesse sancti∣fied by the Spaniards, 1522
  • Meecombe, a towne on the River Apanawapesk. 1874
  • Mechuacan, a place in New-Spaine, 1557, 1580
  • Mechuacan, a place neere the South Sea, 1559
  • Mecola, the situation thereof, 1246
  • Mendozaes Indian voyage and suc∣cesse, 1347, 1348. & seq. Hee builds the citie Buenos Ayres, the miserable famine there, and warres with the Indians, the death of his souldiers: his retur∣ning and death by the way, 1348, 1349, 1350
  • Men of three hundred yeares age in Florida, 1604
  • Mendoza his intended treason against Queene Elizabeth, 1892. Hee being Embassador from Spaine is commanded to depart the English coast, 1893
  • Menehighon Iland, how situate, 1829
  • Mepenes, a Nation in the River Parana in the Indies, their de∣scription, strength, and multitude, 1351
  • Mermaids seene in Brasile, 1240 on the coast of New-found-land, 1887
  • Mermen, or men of the Sea that kill men with embracing, and then seeme to sigh, 1315. Some are as little as children, and doe no hurt, 1318
  • Mesquiquez an Indian fruit, 1519, 1520
  • Mestizo, one that is halfe a Sauage, and halfe a Portingall, 1207
  • Metall like Lead found in Canada, on the South, 1618
  • Meuis Ile the situation, excellent bathes, and commodities thereof, 1685
  • Mexico Navigations, 1177. The bignesse of the Citie, the nature and docibilitie of the naturals, the company of Spaniards there, 1421 The populousnesse thereof, 1432. Mexico and all the adioyning Provinces vnpeopled by Spanish crueltie, 1578. Two millions of Indians slaine by them there, ibid.
  • Saint Michael a place in the Azores, 1142. A strange Hill, and wels there, 1142. Its description, 1671
  • Saint Michael, a River in Ameri∣ca, neere the River of Toads, 1223. It is dangerous for Navi∣gation, 1239
  • Saint Michaels Strait in Florida, 1505
  • Saint Michaels towne triumpheth at the departure of the English, 1966
  • Mico, a river in Florida, which at the mouth is called Rio Grand, 1552
  • Middletons voyage, 1246. & 1247
  • Miles Standish his travell in New-found-land, 1848
  • Military orders established in New-England, 1849. Military disci∣pline as well shewed in making a faire and safe retreit, as in giving a fierce and furious onset, 1962
  • Will. Millington drawne into the Sea by a Fish, and never seene more, 1802
  • Mines of gold in Port-Ricco, 1165. Where the richest Mines, 1177. At Etapusick very rich Mines of gold and silver, 1222, 1229. Mines in plenty, 1230. Like∣wise, 1231, 1248. Mines of A∣palatci in Florida, 1604. Mines of Copper, of a metall like silver in Canada, 1617. Other Mines there, & where to be found, 1618, 1619. Mine of Steele, 1639
  • ...

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Minoya, a place in Florida, 1554
  • Miracles wrought by the Spaniards (as themselues report) in the West Indies. 1516
  • Mirth, a preservatiue against the scuruy, 1625
  • Mists, store and thicke, neere the Banke very cold, and the cause thereof, 1628. It is then faire at land, though at sea foggie, 1629
  • Mocha, an Iland in the South sea, 1391. The description and com∣modities thereof, 1392
  • Mochocho, an Indian Gouernour in Florida, 1531, 1532
  • Mogador, a place on the coast of Barbary, 1250
  • Mehotse, a populous Indian Pro∣vince, 1562
  • Melopaques, certaine Savages of Brasile, 1229. They haue store of gold, but esteeme it not, except to fish withall, ibid.
  • A Monasterie in Saint Iohn de Port Ricco, 1165. Monasteries in Peru and Cozco, 1456, 1457
  • Moneta Ile, its difficult landing, and vnspeakable abundance of Fowle, 1686
  • Monkeys rosted and eaten, 1213 Monkeys in Brasile called Wa∣riua by the Inhabitants as bigge as a Spanyell, with long broad beards, 1226, 1302. Their King, his fashion, and other seats of actiuitie, ibid. Some that are men∣deuourers, ibid. Their care in providing the safety of their yong, 1328
  • Monserotta Iland, 1281
  • Monseur de Montz voyages rela∣ted, 1620. & seq. His societie broken, and is enuied at, 1638
  • Monte Christo, a weake towne of the Spaniards in the Indies, 1418
  • Monte de Plata, 1432
  • Mooremoreno Iland, 1397. Its in∣habitants, description, their loue to the English, and hate of Spani∣ards, 1398
  • Master Moores Plantation and go∣vernment in the Bermudas I∣lands, 1802. His building Forts, ibid. dispelling Spanish ships, and other acts, ibid. His death, and disposition, ibid.
  • Moratiggon, an Ile about a dayes sayle from New-England, 1849
  • Morecapana Road, the situation thereof, 1246
  • Moreeshego, a place in the River Marwin, 1283
  • Morrequito, a certain country neere Orenoco, 1248
  • Morou, a towne of Canibals, 1227
  • Morrowina, a Guyanian Province, 1271
  • Captaine Morgan slaine in Brasile, 1197
  • Morouishaua the Kings name among some Savages of Brasile, 1229
  • Mosco a Savage, famous for his loue to the English, 1715
  • Mosse, a certaine beast as bigge as an Oxe, headed like a Deere, with a broad Palme, which hee mewes euery yeare: his haire is long like an Elke, hee hath a great bunch vnder his throat, his legges long, his skin maketh very good Buffe, his flesh is excellent food, very vsefull to the Savages in New-England, 1832
  • Motto of the King of Spaine in Saint Domingo, 1182
  • Mottayas certaine Canibals in Bra∣sile their loue to the English, fee∣ding on Frogges, Snakes, Mon∣keys, and Dogs, their man eating, haire, beasts, and commodities, 1229, 1230
  • Mourning expressed by cutting of the haire among Indians, 1291 Mourning of the Indians for those that die, 1869
  • Mount-mansell, an Iland on the coast of New-England, aboun∣ding with the Beast called Mss, 1832
  • Mount Howard, 1260, 1254
  • Mount Huntly, 1261
  • Mount Aldworth in Virginia, 1655
  • Mountainiers, Savages so called in Canada, that make warres with the Irocos, 1607
  • Mountaines stored with gold, 1284. A mighty mountaine snowy on the top, and torrid at the foot, 1156. A mountaine exceeding steepe, 1214. A glittering moun∣taine, 1216. A mountaine of Crab-Lice, 1228. Mountaine of metals, 1232. Mountains aboun∣ding with silver and gold, 1248. Mountaines covered with Snow, that for their height may bee seene thirty leagues into the Sea, 1434
  • Moyemon, a large towne in the Ri∣ver Marwin, 1283
  • Muccambro, an Iland and Moun∣taine in Guiana, 1272
  • Mumpara a plaine, abounding with graines of gold, 1284
  • Murther, how punished in Guiana, 1272. In Brasile, 1342
  • Murther punished by the Indians, with present death, 1870
  • Muskitoes, their venemous stinging, 1556
  • Muso, a towne in new Granada; the exceeding benefit thereof, to the King of Spaine, 1420
  • Muske of a Crocodiles Cod, 1228
  • Muske-Snake, a sweet smelling Serpent of Brasile, 130
  • Mutinie like to receiue its deserved reward, 1201
  • Mutinie, the ouerthrow of a voyage, 1260
  • Mutiny among the Spaniards, 1436 Among the French in Florida, 1603. Among the English in Virginia, 1729, 1730. In the Bermudas, 1743
  • Mutinga aboundeth with Myues, 1203
  • Mutton-Port, 1620
N.
  • NAguatex, a towne in Florida, 1553
  • Namaschet, a towne vnder Massa∣soyt, 1851. The Namaschets courteous entertainment of the English, ibid.
  • Names encreased, according to the number of persons, slaughtered among the Indians, 1226
  • Names altered amongst the Indians according to their acts and dispo∣sition, 1869. Names of certaine Englishmen assistants in the Plan∣tation of the New-found-land, 1888
  • Names of the English Knights figh∣ting at the siege of Cadiz, 1933. Names of the Captaines and chiefe officers in the Voyage to Azores, 1939
  • Nansamund, a River in Virginia, 1692
  • Nanohiggansets threaten the Eng∣lish, 1853. Their great superstiti∣on in doing sacrifice to their god Habbamoqui, 1868
  • Naruaez, his voyage, ariuall at Do∣minica, Saint Iago. The Trini∣tie, his shipwracke there, his com∣ming to the land of Marles, 1500, 1501, 1499. His taking possession of a towne in Florida for the King of Spaine, 1501. His ariuall at Apalachen, and entertainment there, his surprisall by other Indi∣ans, his comming to Ante, 1502, 1503. His distressed successe, 1504. And losse of men by the

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Indians, ibid. His misery by thirst, 1505. His companies extreame weaknesse, 1509. With insufferable famine and mortali∣tie, 1508
  • Napetuca, a towne in Florida, 1533
  • Naragooc, a towne in Mawooshen, 1875
  • Nations that are barbarous, licenced by the Popes Bull to be subdued by violence, 1602
  • Nauarre ouerthroweth the forces of the French King at the battell of Courtras, 1942
  • Nauy of Queene Elizabeth sent to the Azores, 1939
  • Navigation the advancement of Na∣tions, 1820
  • Nauigators instr••••tions, 1368, 1373
  • Nausets, a company of the Savages in New-England a hundred strong, 1849
  • Nebamocago, a towne bordering on the River Aponeg, in Mawoo∣shen, 1874
  • Negligence like to endanger the losse of a great prize, 1145 The Portingals for the West-Negro's rebelling against the Spa∣niards, 1434
  • Neguiwo, an Ile neere the River Sagodohoc in Mawooshen, 1874
  • Nepios certaine inhabitants of Tri∣nidad 1247
  • Niewoc an Ile in Mawooshen, 1874
  • Neredoshan, a towne on the River Aponeg, 1874
  • Nets made to carie travelling stran∣gers from towne to towne in Bra∣sile, 1242
  • New-France, a great part of it thought to be sandie ground as far as Virginia, 1634, 1635. New-Frances commodities presented the King of France, 1641. The inhabitants when first christened, 1644
  • New-France inhabited by the Frenchmen, because they hope to get a passage thence to China, 1642, 1644. The manner of tra∣ding in New-France, 1626
  • New-Frances diseases how they may be escaped, 1624, 1625. New France, the bounds thereof, 1603. The probabilities of gold Mines there, 1621. Diamonds & Turkie stones there, 1621. Grapes, Fish, and Cedars, 1622
  • New-Mexico the towns thereof, and building the inhabitants, and their worshipping the Deuill, 1561
  • Capt: Newports voyage to Virginia, and returne for England, 1186, 1705, 1706. His supposed preiu∣dice to the English plantation there, 1717. His opposing Capt. Smith, ibid. His proceeding to discouer Monacan in Virginia, and suc∣cesse, 1778
  • New-England & the New-found-land discouered and implanted by the English, 1827. The climat very temperate, agreeable to the bodies of the English, making them liue longer then in other countreys, the soyle fertile, variety of nourishing hearbs, and roots, the coast full of commodious harbours and havens, many Iles fit for plantation, wood of all sorts in abundance, 1831. The people haue our English Nation in good estimation, and are tractable in trading, the Sea is stored with all kind of Fish, diuersity of wild foule, Doues in great aboundance in time of Strawberries, abundance of rich Furs, 1831, 1832. Great shews of Amber-greece and Pearle, store of Whales in the Sea thereabout, ibid.
  • New-England described, 1870. English corne and cattle prosper there, 1878
  • New-found-land described, the fer∣tility of the soyle, the temperature of the aire, conueniencie of the Baies, the inhabitants, their nature and customes, 1885. Herbs and flowers pleasant and medicinable, great in∣crease of corne, store of Deere and other beasts: great store of land and water-foule, 1885. Store of trees fit to build with, 1886. Great proba∣bilitie of Mynes, and fish in great abundance, ibid.
  • New-Plimmouth abounding with divers commodities of great worth, and very necessary for mans suste∣nance: Timber of all sorts, di∣uers Mines of vnknowne worth, store of fish, Beauers, and others, 1840
  • Nicaragua Province, 1446, 1576
  • Saint Nicholas Bay, 1146
  • Nicholas Sanders his slanders a∣gainst Q. Elizabeth; Hee obtai∣neth to be the Popes Nuncio; en∣tereth Ireland, winneth Desmon: runneth mad, and dyeth miserably, 1893
  • Nicorago, a River, 1185
  • Nilco, a Province or territory in Flo∣rida, one of the richest in all that country, the townes, inhabitants, and commodities thereof, 155
  • Noblemen imployed in the voyage to the Azores, 1939
  • Noble Personages voluntaries in 88. vnder the King of Spaines banner, 1901
  • Nondacao, a province in Florida wel inhabited, the commodities thereof, 1553
  • Norrack, a Province neere the River Arwi in Guiana, 1271
  • Gen. Norris his materiall education, Generall of all the English Forces Martiall in the field vnder Conte Hohenlo, Martiall of the field in England; Generall of the Army in Frisland, Lord President of Mun∣ster in Ireland, 1916. Winneth great honour & fame by his wel or∣dered retrait in the service before Gaunt, 1962. His death, 1968
  • Mr Norwoods relation of the Ber∣mudas, and the English plantation there, 1797. & seq.
  • Noert, a famous Navigator among the Dutch, 1191
  • Norumbega River, and the fabulous narrations thereof, 1625
  • Nose lost in cold weather, 105
  • Noua Galitia, 1526
  • Noua Scotia, a prosperous plantation, by the dexterity of Sir Samuel Ar∣gall, 1828. Noua Scotia, a planta∣tion in America, 1871. Abundance of Strawberries and all kind of wild foule, and very pleasant countrey, 1873
  • Nunnez his relation of the Fleet which Pamphilo Naruaez was go∣uernour of in India, 1499. & seq. His shipwracke, 1500. His disastrous fortune by famine, sicknesse, labour, and nakednesse, a∣mng the Indians, 1509, 1510. His comming after divers perils to the Indians-Auauarez, 1514. His mishaps there, and dangerous esca∣ping of burning, 1515. His curing the sicke by prayer and raising one from the dead, 1516. His comming to the Harbudaos, and the hungry shifts hee made there, 1517, 1518. His re∣pute among the Savages, their feare and admiration of him, 1521, 1522, 1323. His travell to the South Sea, and occurrents, 1524, &c. His meeting with his coun∣try-men, 1526. His ariuall at Compostella and Mexico, 1528
  • Nunno de Guzmans his expediti∣ons, 1556. & seq. His taking posses∣sion for the King of Spaine in the

Page [unnumbered]

  • River of Purification, his erecting crosses, killing, and converting Indians, burning hereticks, 1556, 1557. Travels and discoveries of divers Provinces, bickerings with Indians comming neere the South Sea, and purpose touching the A∣mazons, 1558, 1559
  • Nutmeg-trees, 1309
  • Nuts in the ground, 1650
O.
  • OAres of what fashion among the West-Indians, 1158. Oares of the Indians of the New∣found-land, 1880
  • Oaths and Blasphemie against God, and our Lady, forbidden in the Spanish Armado, 1902. Oths how punished among the English in Virginia, 1719
  • Ocagna a place in America where is abundance of gold, 1419
  • Ocawita, a pretty bigge Iland in Orenoque, 1248
  • Ochete towne, 1534
  • Ochus, a Floridan Province, 155
  • Ocoa, a towne in Hipaniola, 1186, 1418
  • Ocute a towne in Florida, 1556
  • Oecope, a high mountaine, 148
  • Offrings amongst the Indians to the Diuell by the intercession of their Priest Powah, 1868
  • Olmoleigh River, 1254
  • Olynda a towne in Brasile, 1238
  • Olypho a mount in the Indies. 1253
  • Omitlan, a Province of the greater Spaine in America: the descripti∣on of the countrey, soyle, and noi∣some serpents, the discoverie and taking possession thereof by the Spaniards, 1559
  • Opechankanow, a great King a∣mongst the Indians taken by an Englishman in the midst of his ar∣mie, 1841. And in his own house, 1723, 172. His plots and perfi∣die against Captaine Smith han∣somely repelled, ibid.
  • Oportunities neglected, 1196
  • Oraddo, a montaine plentifull for gold, 1284
  • Oranges their soveraigne vertue, 1378. Good against the scuruie, 1763
  • Order observed in the Spanish Fleet, 105
  • Ordnances best for Ships: whether long or short pieces, 1403
  • Orenque a Riuer in Americ de∣scribed, 1156, 1247, 1248, 1249, & seq.
  • Organs, a place in the West-Indies abounding with gold mines, 1222, 1242
  • Orillano a Spanish Captaine, his dis∣coveries, 1415
  • Oange, a strange kinde of disease, 1671
  • Ostriches as tall as a man, 1189
  • Ouercharging pieces of Ordnance, and other pieces how preiudiciall, 1397, 1398
  • Ouigondi a towne of Savages in the Northerne America, 1638
  • Oxenhams voyage to the West-Indies, his attempts and travels to the South Sea, his prizs and misfortune,, 1180, 1414
  • Oxen woolled like sheere in Florida, 1550 Oxen Bunch-back'd and very strang descried, which are meat drinke 〈◊〉〈◊〉, houses, fire, vessels, 〈◊◊〉〈◊◊〉 m••••sters whole substance 1561 Ox•••• 〈◊〉〈◊〉 by their name in in T〈…〉〈…〉 like men 169, 1670
  • Oxefi〈…〉〈…〉, 1313 1314
  • Oyste〈…〉〈…〉 g〈…〉〈…〉t and havn Pearls in thm 131. Oystes the 〈◊〉〈◊〉 su∣stenance of om〈…〉〈…〉 I〈…〉〈…〉 〈◊〉〈◊〉 for a quarter of a yer together, 109
P.
  • ...PA〈…〉〈…〉 〈◊〉〈◊〉 E〈…〉〈…〉 of 〈◊〉〈◊〉 his Acts, Temple 〈◊◊〉〈◊◊〉, 1471 1472
  • Pacaba Province, 1549
  • Pafallaya Province 1644
  • Paembos, or Piembos, an Indian Savage Nation, 153
  • Palisema Province, 149
  • Palma one of the Canary Ilands, 1833
  • Palmeto tree, and the fruit thereof described, 1173, 1375
  • Palmes excellent to cure the Haeme∣roides, 1332
  • Pamauke River, 1692
  • Panaçe yuawe apacone, a gret Mountaine so called, 113
  • Panama the situation, descritio, nd riches thereof, 1180, 1418, 1444
  • Panco a Province dispeopled by the Spaniards, 1580
  • Panaguiri Indians f Balle, 100
  • Panobscot, a towne vpon the River Ramassoc, 1874
  • Paoo River, 1248
  • Paps which certaine people haue reahi•••• vnder their wast, and neere to thir knees, 1299
  • Papayes a kine of fruit like an Apple of a waterish taste, good against the Fluxe, 1172
  • Papemena River, 1248
  • Parabol River, 1351
  • Paracuona River, 1213
  • Paratee Port, 1212
  • Paraeyua River, 1209, 1211, 1213 1237, 1242.
  • Paramaree, a towne in the River Marwin, 1283
  • Paranapiacano, a Mountaine full of Snakes and wilde beasts, 1210, 1212
  • Parker, viz. Capt. William Parker his voyage and taking of Saint Vincent and Puerto Bello, 1243 1244, 1245
  • Parrats & Parochettoes wonderfull plentifull, 1172, 1264, 1304, 1305, 1372. A strange relation of a Parrat in America, 1329
  • Pary his treason against Queene Elizabeth in what manner reuea∣led, 1893
  • Partridges as bigge as Geese, 1329
  • Pasini a towne in the River Mar∣win, 1283
  • Passaos Cape, 1400
  • Patogones, people of great stature like Giants, 138
  • Patoa Prouince described, 1536
  • Patawomeck, a River sixe or seven miles in breadth, and nauigable an hundred and forty miles, 1693
  • Patent of the French King to Mon∣seur de Monts, for the inhabiting of the Countreys of La Cadia Ca∣nada, and other places in New-France, 1619, 1620. New Pa∣tents thought on concerning the plātation of New-England, 1830 A patent for the plātation of New∣found-land. An. 1610, 1876 Pa∣tents granted by his Maiesty of England for Virginia's planta∣tion, 1683, 1684, 1787, 1777
  • Pat xet a border of New-England inabited by the English, 1849
  • Painting much vsed by the Indians, 1229, 1358
  • Payen River, 1285
  • Payta Iland how situate, 1400, 446
  • Peace: Musicall signes thereof a∣mongst the Indians, 1533
  • Pearles plentifull, 1419, 1560, 1661, 1843. Pearle-fishing per∣formed with incredible torture of the Indians, 1586. Pearles of wonderfull bignesse, 1411. The best Pearles where found, and how knowne, ibid. Pearles found in Muscles and Oysters, 1205, 1235, 1315, 1316
  • Pease which are venemous, 1206
  • Pedro Sermiento a towne in the Straits of Magellane, 1416
  • Pedro Ordonnes de Ceuallos, a

Page [unnumbered]

  • Spanish Priest his observations concerning the West-Indies, 1420, 1421. & seq.
  • Peionas a Savage Nation, 1363
  • Pemaquid River, 1874
  • Pemptegoet, 1625
  • Penguin Iland, the situation and de∣scription thereof, 1187, 1191, 1384, 1385
  • Penguins described, and how taken, 1385
  • Pentecost Harbour, 1660
  • People of the Kine, certaine Indi∣ans so called, their admirable pro∣portion, agilitie, beauty, behauiour, &c. 1523
  • People of Harts, other Indians so called, 1524, 1525
  • Pepper hotter and stronger then the blacke Pepper vsed with vs, 1173
  • Peritoqua, a River that goeth to Saint Vincent Iland in Brasile, 1241
  • Pert, viz. Sir Thomas Pert his A∣merican travels, 1177. & seq.
  • Peru language and letters, 1454 The originall, lines, conquests, lawes and Idolatries of the ancient Kings of Peru. 1454, 1455. & seq. The first voyage to Peru, 1455. Names and traditions of Peru, ibid. The wrongs which the inhabitants of Peru haue sustained by Spanish cruelty, 1590. Spanish forces, forts, and townes in Peru, 1418, 1419. The discouery, com∣modities, and Provinces of Pe∣ru, 1419, 1443, 1444, 1445. Neuer any raine in some parts of Peru, and the cause thereof, 1444 The admired plenty of gold in Peru, 1490. Peruan expeditions by the Spaniards, and their successe in such enterprises, 1450, 1451. The Peruans their opinion of God, and reverence in the very naming of him, 1450
  • Petiuares or Petiwares, certaine Sa∣vages in the Indies, their nature, stature, region, religion, superstiti∣on, diet, rites of childbirth, &c. 1225, 1226. Their man-eating, butchering Captiues, and the man∣ner thereof, 1226. Their language, and how to trade safely with them, 1237
  • Petutan River, 1525
  • Philippina Ilands discouered, 1446
  • Phili and Iacob towne, 1563
  • Physicke hath the same operation in England, and vnder the Lne, 1157. Indian Physitians their esteeme, and manner of curing, 1509
  • Piache towne and River, 1542
  • Pianita towne, 1211
  • Pico, one of the Ilands of the Azores, the description and commodities thereof, 1672, 1638. The high hill of Pico, which is more then fifteene miles in length, out of the top whereof issue often flames of fire like Aetna, and is thought to bee higher then the Pike of the Cana∣ries, 1672
  • Pigs without tayles, 1189
  • Pigmies of Brasile dwelling in Caues, 1231, 1300
  • Pigru, certaine Indians of Brasile, 1299
  • Pillars of stone, which are worshipped by certaine Indians, 1603
  • Pines, an excellent and delicious fruit, 1172
  • Pinos, an Iland on the South side of Cuba, 1836, 1185
  • Pipicorwarra Mountaine, 1285
  • Pirats English and Spanish, 1412. Misprision of that terme Pirats, and what a Pirat is, ibid.
  • Pitch plentifull, and how made, 1556, 1281
  • Plantines, a fruit growing on a shrub betwixt an hearb and a tree, in tast like an Apple-Iohn, 1173, 1371
  • Plants adored by Indians, 1479, 1560. Plants that haue the sense of feeling, 1280. Venemous plants 1525
  • Plantations in New-England, 1832. In New-Plimouth, 1842. The necessaries required for plan∣tation, 1621, 1631
  • Plate River, 1141, 122
  • Plumbe-drinke, 1784
  • Plumbs that are venemous, 1230
  • Pocahontas, daughter to King Powhatan, her being baptized and maried to an English-man, 1841, 1760. Her vertuous life and death, 1774
  • Poeticall Savages, 1292
  • Polizado, a Port in New-England, 1844
  • Pome-citrons so great as that two or three of them will load a horse, 1173
  • Pomegranats medicinable, 1794
  • Popaian Province, 1446
  • Popes authoritie derided by the King of Peru, 1445, 1452
  • Porco, a place plentifull for Gold, 1419
  • Pories certaine Sauages so called, 1213. Their stature, diet, com∣plexion, habitation, lodging, &c. 1229
  • Portingals their cruelty to the Sava∣ges, 1297, 1321. & seq. Divers of them massacred by Savages, 1189, 1117. Portingall Ships surprizd by Sir Bernard Dake, and brought into England laden with Fish, 1883. The Portingals exquisitenesse in steering, 1379
  • Port-Ricco the situation and de∣scription thereof, 1153, 1169. & seq. 1415. It is the key of the West-Indies, 1166. The fortifi∣cation thereof, 1161. Fight be∣twixt the inhabitants thereof, and the English, 1162
  • Port St Iulian, 1187, 1194, 1383
  • Port-Famine lying at the mouth of the Straits of Magellane, 1204, 1233. The inhabitants, their com∣modities, coldnesse of the climate, &c. 1232, 1233
  • Porto Bello, the situation and de∣scription thereof, 1601, 1245. The surprizing thereof by Captaine Parker, 1245
  • Porta la Spaniola, 1247
  • Port de la Heue, 1640
  • Pot Saualet, 1640
  • Port-desire, 1193, 1194, 1232, 1391
  • Port-Royal, 1621, 1631, 163. The French plantation remoued from Saint Croix thither, 1626
  • Porto Sequero, 1438. Porto o Plata, 1418. Port Fortune, 1635 Porto Reale, 1418. Port Calua, 1224. Port Negro, 1873. Port Valparizo, 1393. Porto Docal∣no, 128. Port du Rossignoll, 1630. Port du Mouton, 1630. Port-Folly, 1873
  • Possession Bay, 1261
  • Possowne, a strange beast which re∣assumes her yong ones into her bel∣ly at pleasure, 1772
  • Potosi a mountaine in Peru, the in∣habitants thereof, rich mines, multitude of Spanish treasure, and Spaniards there, 1214, 1420, 1421, 1365
  • Potossi a place rich in Mines, yeel∣ding great store of treasure to the King of Spaine, 1419
  • Powah an Indian Priest, 1868. The Powahs inuocation of the Di∣uell, and offering sacrifices to him, ibid.
  • Powels voyage from the Summer-Ilands to the Indies, 1804
  • Powder and shot, how abominable to some Savages, 1854. Straw-pow∣der eaten by some Indians, and needy Spaniards, 1524
  • Powhatan River, 1689
  • Powhatan the Virginian Empero〈…〉〈…〉

Page [unnumbered]

  • his subtiltie, flatterie, practices, &c. 1721, 1722. Hee becomes subiect to the English governour, 1841. His person, attendance, guard, treasure, wines, authority, lawes, 1703, 1704. His policy and Coronation, 1778. His di∣uers treacherous practices against the English, 1711, 1722, 1724, 1725, 1756. His enuy to the English plantation, 1750. His death, 1775
  • Poxe how cured, 1308, 1310
  • Point of St Matthew 1606. Point of all the Divels, ibid. Point Ployer, 1712. Point-Care, 1648. Point-Comfort, 1687
  • Poison on trees, 1525. Poison cured by a certaine leafe, 1276. by a plant, 1310, 1311
  • Prayer made by Q. Elizabeth, af∣ter her deliuery from the Spanish inuasion, 1928
  • Pretious-stones variety and abun∣dance, 1224, 1231
  • Priests and Iesuits alwayes chiefe actors in projecting and effecting treasons, 1894. Virginian Priests, 1358, 1701, 1274. their autho∣rity and manner of life, 1771
  • President of Siuill his cruelty to the English Captiues, 1835
  • Priguica, a beast like a shag-haird dog, in face like a woman, the la∣ziest of all beasts, 1303
  • Pringe his voyage set forth by the Merchants of Bristoll to Uirginia 1654, & sequ. his discouery of Fox-Island, Whitson-Bay, and Mount Aldworth, 1654, 1655. his danger by Sauages and safe re∣turne, 1656
  • Prodigies portending desolation of the ancient inhabitāts of Peru, 1482
  • Prophecy amongst the Indians con∣cerning the destruction of their country, 1482
  • Prosperity, the effects thereof, 1192
  • Prouidence of the English in New England, in hoarding vp corne vnder ground, 1844
  • Prouisions soundnesse or defect pro∣ueth the furtherance or ouerthrow of a voyage, 1396. the mischiefe of corrupt or scanty prouisions, 1396, 1397
  • Pueblo de los Angelos, 1418
  • Puerto Vici, 1400
  • Puerto Seguro, 1190
  • Puerto Santo, 1186
  • Puerto Vieio, 1446, 1481
  • Puma Iland, the place where the Spaniards build their principall shipping in the Indies, 1400. Neere it is the River Lima, which is medicinable, ibid. The inhabi∣tants grosse Idolaters, worshiping Lyons, Tygers, and other beasts, 1480
  • ...Punta de Olynda, 1238. Punta de laraya, 1242. Punta de Santa Elena, 1400. Punta de Augussa, ibid.
  • Purging plants in the Bermudas, 1801. A purge for the Ague, 1311, 1379
  • Purification of Mary, a River so cal∣led in New-Spaine, 1556
  • Putapayma, an Iland farre vp within the River of Orenoco, 1248
Q.
  • QVebec strait, 1611. Along the coa〈…〉〈…〉 of Quebec are Dia∣monds in the Rocks of Slate, ibid.
  • Quereiu, a Bird of admirable beau∣ty, and great esteeme amongst the Indians, 1305, 1306
  • Querna Vaca, a towne in the Mar∣quesado of Hernan Cortes, thir∣teene leagues from Mexico, 1418
  • Quibiquesson, a famous Riuer in Mawooshen, 1873
  • Quigaute a great Province, and a very plentifull Countrey, 1548
  • Quillacu, the most miserable of all Nations, neither having good land, nor Aire, nor water, whence growes a Proverbe applyed to co∣uetous Misers; Hee is a vey Quillacu, 1479
  • Quillacena, or Iron-nose Pro∣vince, a vile brutish lousie people without Religion, eating any Car∣rion, 1479
  • Quintera Bay, a place of good an∣choring, but an open Bay, 1394
  • Quipana, a towne fiue dayes iourney from Tulla, 1550
  • Quires Province, 1561
  • Quiriciguig, and Quirigma, cer∣taine Indians of Brasile so called, 1300
  • Quito the first Citie of the King∣dome of Peru, 1419, 1420, 1479
  • Quiuira Province, the situation and description thereof, 1561
  • Quiyoughcohanocke, two Rivers so called; and how situate, 1692
  • Quizquiz Province, 1546
R.
  • RAines very vnwholsome, hap∣pening in the way betwixt the Canaries, and West-Indies, 1157. Continuall raines at some times of the yeare vpon the coast of Guiana, 1270. Countreys where it never raineth, 1420. Prodigious raines of sand and ashes, 1476. Exceeding cold raines, 1554
  • A Rainbow appearing by Moone∣light, and differing in colour from those of the Sunne, 1949, 1951. The forme of a Rainbow vnder a Caue, 1631
  • Ramassoc, a great River in Mawoo∣shen, 1874
  • Rancheria, an excellent place for Pearle-fishing, 1146. It is assaulted and taken by the English, ibid.
  • Rapahanna, a towne in Virginia, 1687, 1688
  • Rapahanock River, 1694
  • Rashnesse in great enterprizes greatly blamed, 1961
  • Ratliffe, alias Sicklemore, slaine by Powhatan, 1732
  • Rats of twelue kinds, 1303. Rts that sleepe all day, and wake all night, 1316. Danger by Rats, and the preventing thereof in ships, 1391. Rats innumerable in the Bermudas, 1796, 1797. A strange Rat-plague, 1727
  • Henry Ravens, his voyage from Bermuda to Virginia, 1742
  • Ravens in Bermudas, which see∣med to portend a sequell of morta∣litie. 1797
  • Raleighs, viz. Sir Walter Ra∣leighs his acts and esteeme at Orenoco, 1269. His fur∣nishing Ships for the first Dis∣coverie of Virginia, 1645. For a second, third, fourth, fift and sixt voyage, 1645, 1646. He is accu∣sed of breach of Articles, in the voyage to the Iles of Azores, he answereth for himselfe, 1958. His men left in Virginia, and what became of them, 1728
  • Recibo, a towne in Port-Ricco, 1170
  • Red-Reed, a plant in the Bermu∣das causing a forcible vomit, and effectually purging the stomacke, 1801
  • Registers observed by the Indians, and their manner of registring, 1870
  • Richard Duke of Yorke, father to Plantagenet, his wilfull casting away himselfe, 1962
  • Richard Sanders and his compani∣ons, their comming from the Ber∣mudas to Ireland in a small

Page [unnumbered]

  • boat without any instrument, in a direct line, 1803
  • Rinde of a tree which is more strong then any spice, in Virginia, 1653
  • Rio del Oro River, the breadth and depth thereof, 1141
  • Rio de la Hacha, a place taken by the English, 1183. The riches and strength thereof, 1419
  • Rio grand, an American River, the situation, description, and com∣modities thereof, 1224, 1237, 1552
  • Rivers of gold, 1216. A Riuer run∣ning vnder-ground, 1217. Names of Riuers in America, 1282, 1286. A medicinable Riuer, 1400. Riuers that encrease very much, and ouerflow the bankes in dry weather, without the flowing of the Sea, 1553. River of Toads, 1223. 1240. River of Stones, 1223, 1238. River of Palmes, 1505. River of Kine, 1562. River of Saint Crosses, 1562. River Saint Margaret in Canada, 1617. River Canada, 1631. River de Carinas, from the end of which if there were a channell made of foure leagues in length, there would bee a passage to the South Sea through it, with∣out passing the perilous straits of Magellane, 1433 Lord of Robewall Lieutenant to the French King, in the Coun∣treys of Canada, Saguenay, and Hochelaga, 1605
  • Rocke of Christall, which if a man looke on in a Sunne-shine day, will dazell his eyes, 1285
  • Roecrafts Voyage to the New-found-land, his surprizing of a French-Barke, the conspiracie of his owne Mariners against him. the discouerie of the conspiracie, &c. 1829. his voyage to Virgi∣nia, kind vsage by Sir Samuel Argoll, the distresse hee suffered in a tempest, his death in a priuate quarrell, 1830
  • Romanes custome in managing of Martiall affaires, 1942
  • Rome, a Citie of murtherers and ha∣ters of Kings, 1894. New Rome much more drunken with the blood of Christians, then heathenish Rome with the blood of Ethnicks, 1894. Romane policie, 1669
  • Rosier, his relation of a voyage to Virginia, 1651, & seq.
  • Ruminnaui, an Indian Captaine, his cruell tyranny in Peru, 1486
  • Russels Iles in Virginia, 1712
  • Russia, a little village in the Riuer Marwin, 1283
S.
  • SAbbath, 1163, 1657
  • Sabuco, a Riuer and Towne in Port-Ricco, 1170
  • Sacatekas, the richest Mynes in the Indies, 1177
  • Sachim of Mattachuest acknow∣ledgeth the power of the English God, 1866
  • Sacrifices, and Sacrificers, 1472, 1531, 1557 Sacrifices to the Deuill, 1531, 1868 Sacrifices to the water, 1702
  • Sacriledge punished, 1163
  • Sagenay-riuer, and the adioyning Countries described, 1606, 1610
  • Sayles of cotton cloth, 1394
  • Sagadohoc, a riuer in Mawooshen, 1874
  • Sagamos, the name of a Captaine a∣mong the Northerne Americans, 1633
  • Saint Lucia, one of the Ant-Iles in the latitude of 14 degrees, and 20 minutes, 1833
  • Salma riuer, 1248
  • Salomons Ilands, their situation, discouery, and losse, 1399
  • Salt how made and purified by the Indians, 1550
  • Saltcountrie, 1365. Salt made in New-found Land, 1889
  • Salt-water dangerous to drinke, 1143
  • Salt-water made drinkeable, 1378
  • Samuel Champlain a Frenchman, his taking vpon him the plantation of Kebec in New France, 1642. a conspiracy against him, ibid. his aduice for a further discouery, 1642, 1643. his fight with the Sauages, and returne for France, 1643. another voyage, ibid. & 1644
  • Samia-plains, neere the riuer Ore∣noque, 1248. Indians inhabiting those Plaines, 1248
  • Samambaia, a Tree in America, 1213
  • Sambo Bay, 1245
  • Sanctifying meat vsed by the Por∣tingals in the Indies, 1522
  • Sands rained downe in Peru, 1476, Sands dangerous for nauigation in Brasil, called by the Portingals Bayhas de Sant Antonio, 1238
  • Sandy places trauelled by Compasse, 1242
  • Sandy Cape, 1620
  • Santa Port, 1399
  • Santa Maria, one of the Azores I∣lands, 1834
  • Santa Cruce, a Carracke surprised by Captaine Norton and St. Iohn Burroughs, 1144, 1145. is burne by the Portingals, ibid.
  • Santa Fe del Nueuo regno di Gra∣nada, the chiefe Citie in new Gra∣nada, 1419
  • Santas, a towne, 1438
  • Sapparow, the high countrie of Guiana, 1280
  • Saquarema, a nauigable riuer in Brasile, its description and com∣modities, 1240
  • Sassafrage, 1649. its medicinable vertue, 1655
  • Sasquesahunock, certaine Indian Gyants, their description, 1693
  • Sauseges made of the heart and guts of Cods and Lord spiced, 1628
  • Sauage-rocke, 1647
  • Sauage and his crue plotted the death of Q. Elizabeth, 1893
  • Sauages haue their goods interred with them, and why, 1605 Sauages fight with the English, 1187. Sauages of Tuppan Bass 1188. Sauage towne described, ibid. their manners, warres, and vsage of their captiues, 1188, 1218. drunkennesse, 1189. their religion, commodities, they esteem not gold, ibid. their hospitall fi∣delity to Anthony Kniuet Eng∣lishman, 1209. their infidelity, 1211. their ambition, 1212. Sa∣uages called Carijos, and their bat∣tells, 1218. Sauages called Peti∣uares, 1225. Mariquites, 1226. Topinambazes, 1227. Tomomi∣nos, Waytaquazes, ibid. Way∣mores, ibid. Abasanguaretam, 1228. Wayanasses, ibid. Topina∣ques, ibid. called Pories, Mo∣lopaques, Motayas, 1229 Lopos, Wayanawazons, 1230. Sauages their religious desires, 1251. Sa∣uages that make flat their chil∣drens faces, that liue in hollow trees, quartering their faces into foure colours yellow, azure, parti∣coloured, and blacke, 1481. Sa∣uages very courteous, and wee∣ping at the distresse of Christians, 1507. Sauages that kill their children left they should marrie with their aduersaries, that eate any kind of Serpents, that are great theeues, lyars, & drunkards, their tormenting Flies, 1512, 1513. their drinking onely raine∣water,

Page [unnumbered]

  • 1514. Other Sauages strange customes, fights, feare of horses, quicke-sensed, 1518, 1519 Sauage strange fashions in Flori∣da, 1520, 1521. Forty English slaine by the Sauages of St. Lucia, Anno 1605. 1833
  • Saugaleon Cape, 1398
  • Saualet a Frenchman, making two and forty voyages to New-found-Land, 1605
  • Sauona Iland, 1141
  • Sausa, a Prouince in the Indies, whose inhabitants worship the pi∣cture of Dog, 1471
  • Scorpions not deadly, 1304
  • Scourge of Malice, a fortunate ship, 1148
  • Schnirdels trauells to Peru, and ac∣cidents there, 1347, & 1362
  • Schenetveba, a large towne in the Indies, 1364
  • Scouring or flux, how it may be pro∣uoked or stayed, 1265
  • Scooadodepon, a towne of the Ca∣ribes in the Indies, 1286
  • Scriueners voyage to Werawoca∣moco, 1719. his death by drow∣ning in the passage from Iames Towne in Virginia, to the Ile of Hogs, 1724
  • Scuruie, reigning in New France, 1642. and vnder the Aequino∣ctiall, 1202. its cause, effects, signes, and remedie, 1373, 1374. great raigning of it among Mari∣ners, 1374. the things that are discommodious or beneficiall to the patient, 1623, 1763
  • Scuruy-grasse, 1191. its medici∣nable operations, 1624
  • Sea blacke in colour beyond the line, 1157. a Sea-monster like a man, of complexion like a tawny In∣dian, 1187. another strange Sea-monster, 1207
  • Sea-water warme, the ayre being cold, 1627. Sea made fresh by a violent intermixture of riuers in Florida, 1555. Sea-scum like pitch, and vsed like pitch, called Coper in Florida, 1556. Sea dis∣commodious for meats in sickness, 1624. Sea danger, 1223
  • Sea-fire, a meteor seene commonly in temposts, the diuers opinions and names thereof, 1737
  • The Sea worshipped by some Indians, 1471
  • Sea-faring mens errors, 1368
  • Sea-fights, 1183, 1186, 1402, & seq. the requisitenesse of armour in Sea-fights, 1408. a Sea-fight betweene the Spanish and English, at vnequall hand, the successe largely related, 1780, 1781, 1784
  • Sea-hawking, 1376
  • Sea-voyages require a Princes purse, 1942
  • Sea-stratagem of the English, hauing good effect, 1908
  • Sea-snakes, 1315
  • Seale-land, 1440
  • Seales great store, 1187. their na∣ture and description, 1386
  • Seasons falling vnequally vnder the same parallel, 1637
  • Sea-men, their seuerall offices, 1403
  • Seminaries erected at Rome and Rhemes, 1893
  • Security is dangerous, 1635
  • St. Sebastian Iland, 1200
  • Seed-time in New England, 1866
  • Segouni, abeast in Brasile, 1243
  • Selinama riuer, 1284. directions to trauell there, 1286
  • Seralta, an ancient Commander in Port Rcco, 1166
  • Serpents called Iebua, 1226. a ser∣pent called Cobrus in Brasile, as big as a man, twenty foot long, his strange feeding, rotting, and revi∣ving, 1243. A Serpent called Cururijuba, thirty foot long, its de∣scription, 1317, 1318. Serpents that are armed with plates not pierceable by an arrow, ibid. Ser∣pents called Guararici, which be∣ing heard sing by the indians, cau∣seth them to dye, so strong is their imagination, 1318. a huge Ser∣pent, 1350. two great Serpents, 1603
  • Shadden a towne of the Arwaccas in the West Indies, 1285
  • Shambles of mans flesh among the Spaniards in the Indies, 1280
  • Sharke, a fish so called, described, 1376
  • Sheathing of Ships requisite, 1387
  • Shawakotoc a riuer in Mawooshen, 1875
  • Sheepe why s〈…〉〈…〉 in Port-Ricco, 1172. Sheep vsed for cariages as horses, in the Indies, called Ami∣das, 1362. Sheepe as big as horses, with huge hornes, and small tayles, neere Mexico, 1560, one horne waigheth 50 pound, 1561
  • Shels of Pearle curiously wrought by nature, 1381
  • Sherleys voyage, 1168
  • Showers of gold, 1395
  • Shooting at Sea how aduisedly to be vndertaken, 1369
  • Sicknesse, its cause and remedy, 1251. Sicknesses vnknowne in New France, 1623, Sicknesse in Guiana 1261. Sicknesse pre∣uented by good dyet, 1624. sick∣nesse destroying the whole Coun∣try in Pataxt in New England, 1849
  • Sickene Mountaine, 1286
  • Sierra Leona, a country so called, 1141
  • Shipwracks, 1355, 1356, 1440, 1560, 1673, 1674, 1676, 1677
  • Ships, how most conueniently built for warres or Merchandise, 1405 1406. ships vnprofitably built of Cedar in the Bermudas, 1747. ships taken by Sr. Francis Drake at the Cascois in the Portingall voyage, 1923. ships of great worth taken by the English at the fight before Cadiz, 1930. in ships whe∣ther race-building be commodious for men of warre, 1409
  • Silk-wormes in Florida, 1603. in the Bermudas, 1739
  • Silk-grasse in Virginia, 1758
  • Silley, an Ile on the west of England 1247
  • Siluer in Florida presented to the French by the Inhabitants, 1603
  • Smiarra, a towne neere the Fort of Marwin, inhabited by the Ar∣wacca Sauages, 1283
  • Sir Samuel Argal by vertue of com∣mission with much valour and dis∣cretion dispossessed the French of their vsurped possession in the New found Land, 1828. his departure from the coasts of Virginia, 1830. His inuention of trade with the Uirginia Sauages, 1763
  • Skin as ruffe as Buffe, on men, 1280
  • Skuls of dead men layd in the win∣dowes of houses among some Indi∣ans perchance to put them in mind of mortality, 1560
  • Slate good store in Canada, affor∣ding Diamonds, 1610, 1611
  • Sleeping-hearbe, 1312
  • Smiths Iles before Uirginia, 1691
  • Capt. Smith of Plimouth his disaste∣rous voyage, with sudden returne by the vnmercifulnesse of a raging tempest, his second aduentures to the Westerne Ilands, hee is chased by the French Pyrates, is taken prisoner, and the voyage ouer∣throwne, 1829. Captaine Smiths suspition by the Councell of Virgi∣nia, his behauiour and clearing there from, 1706. his care for the Plantation and furtherance there∣of, his discouerie of the riuer,

Page [unnumbered]

  • 1707. he fights and kils sauages, is taken by them, brought to the Emperour, threatned death, and saued by the Kings daughter, re∣turneth to the Plantation, 1708, 1709. his second arriuall at Pow∣hatans court, 1710. his better de∣sire then power, to benefit the plan∣tation, 1711. his striking terror in the Sauages, ibid. his departure for a discouerie, 1712
  • Iohn Smith his voyage to New-England finished in the space of 6 moneths, with gaine of fifteene hundred pounds, 1838
  • Snakes-hearb excellent good against the poyson of Snakes, 1311
  • Snakes eaten, 1210. snakes verie venemous, 1212. A dangerous snake kild, 1215. its quality. ib. name Sorocueu, 1230, its descri∣ption, 1231. Snakes without poy∣son, 1303. their plenty and diuer∣sitie in Brasile, 1303, 1304. with their names, ibid. & 1317, 1318 Snakes of thirty foot long called Amara, worshipped 1457, 1478. Snakes worshipped in Topira, 1560. Snakes worne about the neckes of the Virginians, 1698
  • Snowes exceeding great in Florida 1551. Snowes made vse of in stead of drinke, 1561. Snowes as good as a furd-gowne for fruits, 1636
  • Soacatino, a towne in Florida, very poore and destitute of prouision, 1554
  • Socke riuer, 116
  • Sodomites burnt by the Indians, 1558
  • Somme-riuer in Florida discouered by the French, 1603
  • Sommerset-Iland in the Bermudas, 1796
  • Sir George Sommers ariuall at the Bermudas, and death, 1733. his care for the suruay of those Ilands, 1738. his departure from Uirgi∣nia to the Bermudas, 1754
  • Sommer Ilands commodities at large, 1794, 1795. Vide Ber∣mudas.
  • Somma, a place in America, 1222
  • Soto a Spaniard, his parentage time of his flourishing, nature, and dig∣nity, 1528, 1529. his voyage to Florida at large related, and dis∣couery, 1530 the company of his ships, and number of his S〈…〉〈…〉iers, his ariuall at Florida and at the towne V•••••• and meeting with Indianized Christians there, 1530, 1531. his comming to Pa∣racossi, Acela, Tocaste, Cale, townes in Florida, his newes of Gold, and Maiz, 1532. his ap∣proach at other seuerall townes in America-Florida, and seuerity to the Indians, 1533, 1534. his many bickerings with the Indians, his resolution for the Prouince of Ochus, 1535. hee pretends him∣selfe to be the sonne of the Sunne, 1536. his ingratitude to an In∣dian Princess that had vsed him & his company kindly, 1538, 1539. burieth a letter neere a Pine-tree, to giue direction to his lost fol∣lowers, 1537. carieth the Ca∣ciques with them, till hee was out of their countries, 1541. the course of his trauels, 1542. his skirmish and losse by the Indians, 1543. his other Indian occurrents, 1546, 1547, 1548, 1549, et seq. his ariuall at seuerall Floridan towns, or cottages, his weaknesse and losse of his company. 1550. his hinde∣rance by the losse of Iohn Otiz, his dangerous passages ouer riuers and snowes, his courteous enter∣tainment by the Inhabitants of Nilco, 1551. his distresse, griefe, sicknesse, death, praise, titles, and substituting Luis de Moscoso in his roome, 1552
  • Soory-soory, a towne inhabited by Sauages neere Marwin in Ame∣rica, 1283
  • Soule, the Brasilians opinion there∣of, 1290. the opinion of the In∣dians of Canada, 1610
  • South-sea passage hoped through Uirginia, 1822
  • South Sea discouered more largely then heretofore, 1566
  • Souricoua, a riuer in Canada pas∣sable with Canoas, 1616, 1617
  • Soynoone, a towne of the Indians neere Marwin riuer, 1285
  • Spaine is said to yeeld the King (the King himselfe, Dukes Marqui∣ses, and F〈…〉〈…〉rle with their retinue excepted, 〈◊〉〈◊〉 from 18 〈…〉〈…〉re old to 50, but 1125390 men, pag 1817
  • Spaniards how esteemed of by the Floridans, 1524
  • Spanish pretended cures of the sicke in the Indies, 1515. Spanish pos∣session of Peru, and its wealth, 1495, 1496. they eate one ano∣ther, 1512. Spaniards vnspeak∣able treasure in Peru, 1487 Spa∣niards preaching to the Indians, 1485. Spaniards Ecclesiasticall reuennues in the Indies, want of Bishops, holding Councels, the Kings reuennues yearely out of the Indies. twelue, Millions and whence it issueth, 1422. Spanish destruction of some Indians from off their country altogether, 1415 Spanish Fleet for the Indies, and shipwracke, 1440. Spaniards tre∣cherously circumuent the inhabi∣tants and King of Peru, 1445. Spanish cruelty to their prostrate slaues, 1448. Spaniards came to the Indies for conuerting, but not of Indians, but gold to their owne vses, 1449. Spanish ciuill disa∣greements in Peru, 1453. vsage of the inhabitants, 1453, 1454. Spaniards called by the Indians Vitacochie, that is Sea-froth, supposing such could not bee borne of a woman, 1454. Spaniards losse of foure ships, 1142. Spanish Galleons taken, 1144. Spaniards assault and repulse. 1149. Spa∣niards yeela to the English, 1164. their enuy or desperatenesse, 1166 Spaniards best ruled with seue∣rity, 1168, their vngratefull tre∣chery, 1177. their perfidious in∣sulting cruelty, 1178, and abuse of the English in Mexico, ibid. et 1179. Spanish distresse in Chili, 1476, 1477. Spaniards very rich in the Indies, 1242. Spanish attempts defeated 1475. they are called in Triaidada, Conquera∣bians, 1247. Spaniards dare not but by stealth trafficke with the English; the best things for traf∣ficke with them, 1266. they are molested by the Caribes, 1281. their taking Lampere, an Indian fortified towne, 1352. Spaniards like to be deuoured by the Indians, 1354. their fight and ouercom∣ming them, 1355, 1356. they striue to discouer the Amazons, 1359. Spanish cruelty and tre∣chery towards the harmlesse Indi∣ans 1354, 1360, 1361. they de∣stroy the Indians called Mapais, 1362, 1363. Spoyles of Spani∣ards in Peru, 1478. Spanish ciuill disagreements in the Indies, 1364. Spanish periurie, 1378. a trecherous and vngratefull Spa∣niard issue, 1394. Spanish light with the English vnequally, 1404 Spanish discipline in fights by sea, their seuerall offices and autho∣ritie, their prying and imitating English orders, 1404. their care∣fulnesse in being armed, 1408. wherein they onely ouercome the

Page [unnumbered]

  • English, ibid. a noble Spaniard, 1410. Spaniards carelesnesse for good Surgeons in fights, 1412. Spanish intelligence by trecherous Englishmen, 1415. Spanish for∣ces how strong or weake in seuerall places of Peru and thereabout, their treasure, when, where, and whence conueyed into Spaine, 1419, 1420. the Spaniards liues and gouernment in the Indies, 1421. their courtesie, and conuer∣sion of them as they call it, 1448. their hatred of gold, 1449, 1454. Spaniards why called Viracoche 1458. Spaniards ransacking of our English ships, putting the men to most cruell bondage, 1834. the Spaniards cruelty to the dead car∣kasse of an Englishman, holding him to hee a Lutheran, 1835. They deny to doe iustice, are very willing the English should serue their state, ibid. They betray and take prisoner the men of Captaine Legat, 1836. Spanish pride and its issue in an Indian Gouernour, 1677. Spanish ships of great worth sunke neere Tercera, com∣ming from the Indies, 1673. ano∣ther ship of good strength sunke by an Englishman of a great deale smaller force, ibid. Spanish ships taken by the English, ibid. Spa∣nish ships, riches, and shipwracke of some, 1673. Spanish Fleet cast away, great and rich, 1674. O∣thers taken, ibid. Spanish cowar∣dise, and insulting cruelty, 1675. Spaniards smart for the crueltie and dissention with the English, 1676. Spaniards queld by the English, 1677. Spanish ship∣wracke a iust plague vpon them, 1679, 1680. Spanish infidelity worse then Pagan, 1527. Spanish manner of preaching to the Indians with the issue thereof, 1528. Spa∣niards eate dogs in Florida, and there dye like dogs for want of vi∣ctuals, 1536. Spaniards thinke it a worke meritorious to conuert the Indians, that is, with the sword, 1558. Spaniards contest each with other for superiority in disco∣uering forraine Countries, 1560. Spaniards first discouery of the Indies and possession thereof, their cruelty and couetousnesse related by a Fryer, the Millions of Indi∣ans slaine by them, for their gold, 1569, 1570. Spanish cowardise and cruelty in broyling, burning, drowning, and twenty wayes else murdering them of Hispaniola, 1570. & seq. Spanish torturing vndeserued by the harmlesse In∣dians, hauing not committed any thing against them punishable by the law of man, 1572. Spanish slaughter of a million in St. Ihon and Iamaica, 1573. Spanish in∣uention to dispeople those Nations, ibid. The Spaniards god, 1574 Spaniards kill many in Cuba, men, women, and children, 1573, 1574. Spaniards dispeopling Terra Firma, 1576. They mur∣ther in the Prouince of Nicara∣gua 500000 men, 1576, 1577. Spaniards kill two or three milli∣ons in Noua Hispanis, and its se∣uerall Prouinces, 1577, 1578. an infinite number in Guatimula, 1576. Spanish Anthropophagi, 1580. Spanish torturing and de∣stroying the Indians in Panucha, Machuachan, and Xalisco, 1580 1581, of Yucatan, 1581, 1582, 1583. Spaniards sell the In∣dians Idols, 1583. deuoure the Indians of S. Martha, ibid. & 1584. as also of Cartagena, 1584 of the Coast of Pearles, the Coast of Paria, and the Ile of Trinitie, 1585, 1586, 1587. Indians how vsed at Sea by Spaniards, and at landing, 1586. at the fish∣ing for Pearles, 1587, Spanish gluttony, 1588. Cruelty in Yuia∣pari and Venesula, to the ruine of foure or fiue millions of Indians, 1587, 1588. in Florida, Riuer de la Plata, and the kingdomes of Peru, 1589, 1590, 1591. Spa∣nish conuersion of the Indians how weakely followed, 1594. their di∣uers feats of cruelty and inhuma∣nity to the poore Christians of New Granado, and the seuerall prouin∣ces thereof, 1591, 1592, 1593, 1594, 1595. Spanish gold thir∣stinesse, and thence issuing blood∣thirstinesse of the Indians, 1596, 1597. Spanish reformation of cruelties and wrongs in the Indies ought to bee performed, and vpon what reasons, 1598, 1599, 1600, 1601, 1692. a repetition of sun∣dry butcheries, ibid. Spanish rea∣sons mouing them to a possession of the Indies, 1603. Spanish cruel∣tie hath kild and destroyed in all the Indies 20 millions, ibid. Spa∣niards massacre the French in Florida, and plant themselues, 1604. are massacred again by the French is they deserued, 1605 Spanish irregularitie in the Indies derided by a French Catholike, 1621. Spaniards arrest English Ships, 1893. Spanish preparation against England, Anno 1588. p. 1895. Spanish policy, 1897. The Spanish A〈…〉〈…〉ada setteth faile, is discomfited by a tempest; is at last descried by an English Pirat. 1903 Spaniards vaine opinion concer∣ning the English Fleet, 1907 Spaniards fire their owne ships, 1931. Span: Armada's cut their Cables, 1908. They fly for to saue their liues, 1910. They suffer mi∣serable shipwracke on the Irish Sea. They seize on some Scottish Fisher-boats, ib. Spanish plagues and miseries by the English, 1680 There flight for feare of the Eng∣lish, 1932. Spanish Fly-boats mo∣lest the English, about the coasts of Cornwall, 1698. Spanish Car∣uels dispersed, 1698. Spanish ships at Sea, for the discoverie of the state of Virginia's Colony, 1773. Spaniards hated by the Portin∣gals, 1952. Spaniards variety of dispositions in various fortunes. 1954. Their nature in generall. ibid.
  • Sparries relations of the Ile of Tri∣nidad, Guiana, and the River Orenoco, 1247, 1248, & seq.
  • Spices excellent good, hot, and com∣fortable in the Magellane straits, 1390
  • Spiders with silken webs, and little eggs like Quick-siluer in the Ber∣mudas, 1899. Not found to bee venemous, ibid.
  • Spignard wherof is a precious oynt∣ment made, 1264
  • Spilpergen a famous Navigator a∣mong the Dutck, 1191
  • Spirito Santo a Port in the West-Indies neerè the Liue, 1190, 1196. Its description, and fortifi∣cation, 1197
  • Spleene, how cased, 1315
  • Squanto a Savage of the company of the Massasoyts, very helpfull and commodious to the English, 1851
  • Squasachin wife to the great gouer∣nour of the Savages, 1861
  • Squirrels flying in Virginia, 1695
  • Capt. Standish his training vp his men in New-England to military affaires, 1854. His iourney to the Masacheuasets, 1863. Hee en∣countreth with a Savage, and put∣teth him to flight. 1865

Page [unnumbered]

  • teth him to flight, 1865
  • Stars obserued by the Indians, 1870
  • Stately Statues in the Indies, 1463
  • Steering a ship requireth exquisite care. 1378, 1379
  • Stills set on worke for want of water 1967
  • Stingeray Ile so named of a stinging Raye, 1714
  • Stomaccace a strange disease, its cause, and cure by scurvie-grasse, 1624
  • The Stone how and with what cur'd 1310. An approued medicine for it. 1312
  • Stones like Chrystall, 1216
  • Rich Stones, 1276
  • Stones transparent, 1284
  • No Stones in some part of Florida, 1504
  • Stones medicinable, 1509
  • Stones how necessary in new France 1624. The benefit of them inge∣nerall, ibid.
  • Straits of Magellane, how dange∣rous a passage 1439
  • Strawberies of rare bignesse in Vir∣ginia, 1686
  • A Stratagem of the Indians. 1442 1443, Peter Strosse in his despe∣rate brauery taken by the Spani∣ards, to the losse of his nauy. 1962
  • Tho. Stukley, an English fugi∣tine his faire promise to the Popes bastard, 1893
  • Stuesia an Indian riuer, 1362
  • Sturgeon store in Virginia, 1758
  • Suboris certaine Indians so called, 1364
  • Earle of Suffolkes setting forth a Fleet, 1186
  • Sugar-Canes, 1171
  • Sulphry smels issuing from raine, 1157
  • Cap. Summers voyage, 1186
  • Sun and Moone worshipped, 1233, 1464. 1465.
  • Suppayas certaine Indians inhabi∣ting Wiapoco riuer, their de∣scription, 1263. Their naked∣nesse, painting, child-birth, Fune∣ralls, &c. ibid.
  • Supply to the Plantation in Virgi∣nia by the English 1841. Supply to the plantation of New-England 1867
  • Superstition among Savages, 1226
  • Surarer a towne of Savages called Araccaws in America, 1283
  • Sarcucuses a Savage nation their commodities 1356
  • Susolas-Indians, 1516
  • Swearing forbidden amongst the In∣habitants of Peru, 1451
  • Swearers punished in the King of Spaines Armada, 1902
  • Swearing and blaspheming, its ill euent, 1805
  • Sweating vsed by the Indians, to expell diseases, 1624
  • Swine with holes in their backs. 1326
  • Sword-fish, 1266
  • Symamios, Savages in the West-Indies so called, 1364
  • Symarons fugitiue Negroes in the West-Indies, 1414. Their habitation called St. Iago de los Negros, ibid.
T.
  • TAbaga Iland, 1415
  • Tacia Savages, 1299
  • Tagrona one of the richest valleyes in the Indies, 1434
  • Tali a Floridan Towne, 1540
  • Tamgara a dancing bird, troubled with some disease like the falling sicknesse, 1305
  • Tamos a populous Prouince, 1562
  • Tamkings a peece of wood of great moment for shooting in peeces of Ordnance, 1413
  • Taminna a mountaine in America, signifying the mountaine of gold, 1217
  • Tapatu a Floridan riuer, 1552
  • Tapecuia Savages, 1299
  • Tapetijwason, a strange beast in in Port-famine in the streights of Magellane, 1233. Portu∣gals call them Gombe, 1233
  • Tapati, a Brasilian beast that bar∣keth like a dog, 1393
  • Tapia taken by Sir Francis Drake, 1183
  • Tapuyas certaine Savages so called 1213. Many Nations vnder that name, 1298 & seq. Their speech cannot bee vnderstood, 1299. The seuerall nations, ibid.
  • Tapyrousoa, au Indian beast whose skin makes Targets, 1325
  • Taragauig Brasilians that fight wth enuenomed arrowes, 1299
  • Tar or Taroo a place neer Orenoco 1249
  • Targets of Cow hides 1560
  • Targets made of Buff-skins eaten, 1214. Targets beneficiall a∣gainst Savage arrowes, 1716
  • Tarcaluca-Prouince, 1541
  • Taru a beast of Brasil that hath scales like plates on her back which no arrow may enter, 1302
  • Tatalacoya a towne of the Indians, in Florida surprized by Spa∣niards, 1549
  • Tatarcax a rich King in America, 1561
  • Tauparamunni a towne inhabited by Caribes in the riuer Marwin, 1283
  • Taymayas the name of some Indi∣an Savages, 1211, 1213. Ta∣moyes description, their infinite store of gold and precius stones, their nature and civilitie, 1231
  • Tecoantepeck the first Towne in New Spaine, 1177
  • Teeth shedding by drinking a kind of water neere the River Rhine, 1622
  • Teixo a wood as hard as stone, 1670
  • Temples couered with straw in To∣pira, 1560. Temples to the Sun, Moone and Stars, richly a∣dorned in the ancient City Cozco of Peru, which women might not enter, 1465
  • A horrible Tempest, 1175. Ex∣treame Tempests, 1193, 1194, 1223, 1500. Frequent Tem∣pests, 1502, A dreadfull Tem∣pest neere Tercera, throwing fishes on the ground, ouer excee∣ding high cliffes, its pittifull ef∣fects, 1679, 1680. An extreame Tempest brauely related, 1735, 1736, 1737
  • Tenaserea a Mountatine in the East-Indies, where Diamonds are found, 1271
  • Teneriffa an Iland in the Canaries, its exceeding high mountaines, great riches, store of Sacke, 1156 1369, 1370
  • Tepique a Prouince neere New-Spaine, taken possession of by Spaniards, 1559
  • Tercera one of the Azores Ilands, 1143. The description thereof, its forts & fortification, mountain and sudden discouerie of ships, its chiefe Towne, wines; prouision, fruits, 1668. The chiefe traf∣ficke, woad, 1669. Its birds sea∣sons, Stones, ibid. Corne, Uines, Oxen called by names like men, ibid. Subiect to earth-quakes, strange fountaine and wood, In∣habitants are all Portingalls or Spaniards, 1670, its strange di∣seases, strong windes, and other villages, 1671. Whence so called, and the store of Oade growing there, 1938
  • Terra-Australis incognita, its de∣scription at large, 1423, & seq.

Page [unnumbered]

  • its bignesse, situation, diuersity of inhabitants their manner and dis∣position described, 1423. its com∣modities of fruits, beasts, fishes, filuer, pearle, probability of gold, spices, &c. 1424 Riuers, and o∣ther commoditie, at large, its pos∣session for the King of Spain, 1425 1426
  • Terra Firma, 1146. it hath on the coast 70 Ilands, 1434 the publi∣cation of God there after the Spa∣niards manner, eight hundred thousand inhabitants made away by Spanish cruelty, the women there were murdered, which the Indians thought great cowardise, 1575, 1576
  • Tetitlan, a Prouine in New Spain, 1559
  • Teulnicham-Prouince, 1559
  • Tharletons perfidie, 1382, 1383
  • Testogos, a place so called, 1242
  • Tetattecoumoynetto, a towne of the Charibes, neere the riuer Marwin in America, 1285
  • Thefts basenesse, 1153
  • Theft seuerely punished by the Indi∣ans, 1870
  • Theft punished in the English army, 1921
  • Thimogoa, Inhahitants of Florida, 1604
  • Thirst in great extremity, 1505. Thirst breeding faintnesse and death, 1686
  • Thirty sayle of Ships sent to fit ther the plantation in New England, 1832
  • Thought slayeth a man, 1878
  • St Thomas fabled by the Indians to preach to their ancestors, his Chap∣pell, and miracle, 1219
  • Three Spanish ships taken by the English Admirall, 1960
  • Three Armadaes of the King of Spaine cast away on the shoald cal∣led Osca copos, or Catch-chops 1836
  • Three Spanish ships surprised by the English, 1908
  • Thunders strange effects, 1405
  • Thunders horrid and predigious in the Bermudas, 1738
  • Thunderbolts frequent in the In∣dies, they often cleane great trees, 150
  • Tiembos, fierce and populous Indi∣ans neere the riuer of Plate, their nature, fashion, description, 1349
  • Tiguez, a Prouince in America, 1561
  • Tillage, more necessary then mynes for a new Plantation, 1631
  • Timimino, Indians consumed by the Portingals in Brasile, 1298
  • Tipi, Indians in Brasile, that fight with venomed arrowes, 1299
  • Titicaca, an Iland in Peru, of infi∣nite riches, their precious Temple, worship, and conceit of the Sunne, 1465
  • Tiuitinas, Inhabitants neere Oreno∣co, two sorts of them, 1247 1285
  • Toads and Frogs eaten, 1214, 1229 1230, 1327
  • The Toad fish, 1315
  • Toalli, a Floridan towne, and its description, its inhabitants and their disposition, 1536
  • Tobaccoes first bringers in vse, 1182. Tobacco, 1228, 1230, 1264, 1271. Tobacco saue mens liues 1258. Tobacco store. 1276 1277. its effects in Physicke, and abuse, its name of the Holy herbe, and the manner how the Indians drinke it, 1311. how they blow it in canes one on another, to encrease valour, 1238. a strange kind of tobacco, 1392. Tobacco not profitable in New England, the cause why 1871. Tobacco pipe of a Lobsters claw, 1662. Tobac∣co of Virginia how disparaged by Tobacco-mongers. 1775, Tobac∣co worth to Spaine 100000 pound yearly, 1821
  • Tobosos Indians, 1561
  • Tobyas Bay in the Straits of Ma∣gellane, 1205, 1388
  • Tockwhogh riuer in Virginia, 1694
  • Tocaste towne in America, 1531
  • Tocoman, a place in the Indies in∣habited by Pigmies, 1231. tis esteemed to be the vttrmost part of Brasile where it ioynes to Peru, ibid. & 1242
  • Tocoya, a towne in the Indies, 1258
  • Tocu, a place of America, fertile with gold, 1419
  • Tolisbay straits, 1233
  • Tohanna, Indians so called, 1363
  • Tonola, a prouince in New Spaine, 1558
  • Tomomimos, Sauages so called, 1217. they liue at Moregoge, their townes, and warres with the Portingals, 1227
  • Tooth ache cured, 1308
  • Toira, an Indian prouince aboun∣ding with gold and emeraulds, ar∣mour made of siluer, the inhabi∣tants worship birds and hearbes, they sacrifice to a serpent, 1560
  • Tortoyse, its description in Bermu∣das, it liues 24 houres after its head is off, 1800, a Tortoyse with 700 egges in his belly, taken and eaten, 1255. they lay two or three hundred egges at once, 1314 Tortoyse nor fish nor flesh, 1741
  • Topinan bazes, Sauages like the Petiuares, their caruing, haire, singing, 1227. Vide Petiuares.
  • Toupin Indians neere the riuer Ie∣nero, 1347
  • Trauelling very easie and strange for a small vallew in the Indies, 1242. Trauell-direction in the Indies, 1285. more directions for trauell, 1286. Trauelling in hot water, 1359
  • A Tree that yeeldeth the inhabitants most of the water they haue, 1370 Trees, their nature and abun∣dance in Dominica, 1158. T〈…〉〈…〉es strange and vnknowne in Port-Ricco, 1165. Trees that beare buds, greene fruit, and ripe fruit, with seeds all together, 1173. Trees hauing the sense of feeling, 1280. Trees good against bruise, and distilling Balsome, 1239 trees of exceeding hard wood, ex∣ceeding great, 1256. Trees that haue alwayes greene leaues, that beare fruit twice in a yeare called Mangaba trees, flowing with milk that might serue for hara Waxe, called Marvege. Trees that cause (thir fruit being eaten) teeth to fall, Trees whose fruit makes haire fall, their strange na∣ture and severall names in Bra∣sile, 1307, 1308, 1309. Trees that serue to cure greene wounds, having good Balme, 1308. For the Colicke, for the bloody Fluxe, for cold diseases, for the Poxe, for the Toothake, ibid. Trees fruit that killeth any fish in the water, that change leaues euery moneth, that make Inke, that hath in it a riuer of water, such strangenesse of trees, se 1309. and their names ibid. Trees in Salt-water, 1316. vide Plant.
  • ase Treacherie in an Irishman, 1200. man Englishman, 120. Whose miserable end, 1221. In a Savage, 1251. In the Indians, 1256, 1258. To themselues, 1361. Treachre the losse of a voyage, 183. Treacerie in the Indians, 1392. vide P〈…〉〈…〉fidie,
  • Triana, a towne taken and fired by Capt. Parker, 1244
  • Trinity Ile pestered with Spanish cruelty, and robbea of inhabitants, 1584, 1585
  • ...

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... Trinity harbour Ahanan in the New-found Land, 1882
  • Tripassey, a harbour commodious and temperate in the latitude of 46 degrees, 1885
  • Trinidada, 1186. the Indians there haue 4 names, their commanders now called Captaines, inhabited by the Spaniards, 1247
  • Trinity, a hauen in Cuba, 1500
  • Trugillo, the vtmost towne of the Prouince Valenzuola in Ameri∣ca, 1419
  • Truxillo, a place in America, 1399
  • Triumphall Uerses of the English deliuerie in 88, 1912
  • Cap: Tuberone, 116
  • Tuberones, the name of Dog-fish by the Portingals, 1209
  • Tucana, a bird like a Pye, with a bill a span long, very big, 1306
  • Tucanucu Sauage Brasilians, 1299
  • Tuccaman, a towne in the river of Plate, 230 miles from the en∣trance, its fruitfulnesse, its want of gold, 1141
  • Tuckers-terror, a shoale on the coast of Uirginia, 1648
  • Capt. Tucker, gouernour of the plan∣tation in the Bermudas, his acts there, 1803
  • Tulahe, a fruitfull country neere Guiana, 1248
  • Tulla, a place in Florida, 1550
  • Tullumuchase, a great Towne in Florida, 1541
  • Tu'u, a place inhabited by the Spa∣niards neere Cartagena, its force, 1419
  • Tumbez, a plaine country in Peru, 1444. its inhabitants are vitious and luxurious, people that idolize Tygers and Lyons, 1480
  • Tune, a fruit in Florida, on which onely the inhabitants liue three moneths in a yeare, 1511
  • Tunsteroito, a towne of Sauages in the West Indies, 1285
  • Tunza, a place in America, 1419
  • Tupiguae, Brasilians deuoured by the slauery of the Portingals, 1298
  • Tupinaba, Indians so called, 1298
  • Tupinaquin, Indians inhabiting Brasile, 1298
  • Tuppac Inca Yupanqui, Emperor sometime of Peru, his valiant acts and attempts, conquests and enlar∣ging his Empire, ciuilizing many sauage nations, his progeny, death, and successor, 1478, 1479
  • Tuppan Bass, Sauages so called neere Brasile, 1188. their mirth, habit, life, and lodging, ibid.
  • Tupac Amaru, heire to the Empire of Peru falsly accused, and cruelly executed by the Spanish Uiceroy, 1488. his well deserued issue, ibid.
  • Tupan-boyera, a place inhabited by Canibals in Brasile, 1227. the Portingals call it Organes, ibid.
  • Tupijo, Brasilian Saages, 1299
  • Tuquema, a Prouince subiect to Peru, its seuerall townes of gouern∣ment, 1419
  • Turkes taken by the Spaniards, and made Gally-slaues, rescued by the English, and set at liberty, 1933
  • Turky-stenes in New France, 1621 1622
  • Turneps a remedy against the scur∣ie, 1880
  • Master Turners relation of Brasile, &c, 1243
  • Turners relation, voyage, successe, at large, 1265, 1266
  • Turtles innumerable, 1306
  • Tutelpinco, a forsaken towne in Florida, left by the inhabitants, and destitute of prouision, 1551
  • Tygers worshipped, 1457
V.
  • VAcupa, a Prouince in Ame∣rica, 1560
  • Vahuar huacac, an Emperour in Peru, his acts and conquest, hee wept blood at his natiuity, 1457 1458
  • Valenzuola, a golden place in A∣merica, 1419
  • Valpariso, a plae in the south Sea, 1416
  • Valuation of the voyages of fishing Boats, to the coast of New found Land, 1886
  • Varaua, a fish in Brasile as big as an Oxe, 1239
  • Vaytacasses, a kinde of Sauages, 1219
  • Vbra Riuer, 1248
  • Vcita, a towne in Florida, its descrip∣tion, and commodities, 1530
  • Vela Pampilona, an American place, 1419
  • A Venetian ship taken by the Eng∣lish, 1906
  • Venter-hauen, a place in the west parts of Ireland, 1144
  • Veragua, a towne in the West Indies plenteous of gold, 1419. it neuer raines there, an vnhealthy country 1433
  • V••••u Cruz, a new towne, 1418
  • Verginia, its hopefull commodities, the inhabitants idolatry and wor∣ship of the Sunne, their othes and fidelity thereupon, 1690. 〈…〉〈…〉their customes, 1690. plantation there, and mortality, accompanied with famine, 1689. 1690. Virginias bounds, temperature, winds, en∣trance, mountaines, soile, 1691. vallies, and 5 faire delicate naui∣gable Riuers neere the English Plantation, 1692. its seuerall and different languages there∣about, 1694. Vide Virginia.
  • Via tuna, Indians in Brasile de••••••∣red by the Portingals, 1298
  • Victuals verie scarce in Plimouth in New England, 1856. Victu∣als of the Spanish Fleet sent for England, Anno 1588. 1901
  • Vigo, a towne taken by the English in the Portingall voyage, 1926
  • Villa de Praya, a towne in Tercera, one of the Ilands of Azores, 1668
  • Villa Franca, a towne of St Michels one of the Azores Iles, 1963. the situation, fertility of the soyle, and fruits of the Land, 1964
  • Vines store in Canada Ilands, 1612 vines naturally growing in New England, 1844
  • St Vincent a port in the West In∣dies, 1190. called by the Inians Warapuimama, its description, 1242, 1438
  • Virachocha, an Emperour of Peru, his first conquest, 1458, his seue∣rall acts, and death, with his suc∣cessor, 1459
  • The V〈…〉〈…〉gines Ilands not inhabited, and description, 1159
  • Virginia Companies aduentures in fi••••ing ships, one of them being ta∣ken by the Turkes, 1836. Vrgi∣nia despised of the very abiects, 1841. fruitfulnesse of the Land, store of fish and Fowle, ibid. Vir∣ginia why so called, the praise thereof, the first voyages and dis∣coueries there, with their colonies, 1645, 1646. Virginias healthi∣nesse, ibid. a Virginian yellow haird, and faire, 1689. Virginias naturall commodities, trees, among which, cypresse, vines, wines, fruits, gums sassafras, nourishable roots, raw, they are poyson, roasted, not so; but otherwise vsed for bread, me∣dicinable plants, beasts in variety, 1694. 1695. birds, fishes, and mi∣nerals, 1696. fruits that are plan∣tedin Virginia, the seasons there, their vse of corne, of flesh, the ayres mildnesse, and commodities for trafficke with France, Swethland, Spain, & Holland, 1696, 1697.

Page [unnumbered]

  • ... the commodities that may redound thence to the industrious, ibid. Virginians number, nations, lan∣guages, their description, consti∣tution, Barbers, apparell, women, shamefastnesse, attire, ornaments, 1697, 1698. their building, lod∣ging, bedding, gardens, exercise for men or women, child-birth, naming children, easie deliuery, their manner of striking fire, of making bowes and arrowes, 1698 their swords and targets, boats, fishing, spinning, fish-hookes, hun∣ting, either in companyes or alone, consultations before battell, 1699. Virginians neere the English Plantation, their enemies, their manner of embattelling, strata∣gems, ambusadoes, painting to make themselues looke terrible, singing and yelling in their com∣bate, musicke, and entertainment of great men, 1700. their trade, Physicke, Chirurgery, charming, 1701. their Religion, and adora∣tion of any thing that can hurt them without their preuention, worshipping the Deuil called Oke, buriall of their Kings, their ordi∣nary burialls, and mourning for the dead, their Temples, their supposed sanctitie, Priests, and their habite, times for solemnities, ibid. their coniuration, altars, sa∣crifices to the water, their solemne customes for the making South∣sayers, their opinion of their Kings and Priests soules, and the com∣mon peoples after death, their opi∣nion of the Christians God, 1702. manner of gouernment which is monarchicall, their Kings pompe described, 1703, 1704. Virgi∣nian punishment of offenders, 1703. Virginia by whom dis∣commended, the miserie it sustai∣ned by effeminate idlers, 1704. Virginian dissentions in the Eng∣lish plantationers, 1706. The Planters nominated, and their first imployment, ibid. their mise∣rie, famine, and sicknesse, with mor∣tality, caused by the Presidents a∣uarice, 1706, 1707. with vnex∣pected remedy, ibid, seconded by the care of Captaine Smith, ibid. Virginian plots for the leauing the Plantation, 1707, 1709. Vir∣ginian plantation and trading en∣damaged by the ambition of the Company, 1710. by desire of gaine in some priuate persons, 1711. Virginias golden hopes frustrate, ibid. Virginia its want of a good President, 1712. Virginias plan∣tation supposed ouerthrow, 1717. Virgina-Tauerne, the abuse of trading among Saylors there, 1719. Virginian first mariage of the English, 1720. Virginian Plantations supply, 1708, 1716, 1719. Gold as easie to bee gotten as corne there, from the needy Sa∣uages, 1725. Virginian planters losse of armes by the trecherie of Dutchmen, 1725. Virginias buildings repaired, but by want of prouision not prosecuted, the cause of such want, 1727. and the mi∣serie sustained by lazinesse, ibid. Virginias vnprofitable planters checked by the Presidents speech, 1728. Virginias healthinesse, and the care taken for sicke men there by the English, 1728. the Planta∣tions third supply, 1729. the change of gouernment and Cap∣taines, the preiudice of the plan∣tation, and mutiny seconding the supply 1729. Virginia Plantati∣on at the Falls, and Nanamund, 1729. Virginia planters breake peace with the Sauages, 1730. Virg〈…〉〈…〉 〈◊〉〈◊〉 of Presi∣dents, losing Captaine Smith, the miserie, famine, and dicomfort it sustained by his absence, 1732. its supply by the ariuall of the Lord La Ware, Sir Thomas Dale, 1732, 1733. Virginias innouation in gouernment, whether mutinous or no, 1734. Viginias dispraise by idle fellowes, 1743. the Presidency of Virginia assu∣med by St Thomas Gates, 1749 the miserie of it at that time, ibid. the causes thereof, ibid. & 1750. Virginias hopes and aduancement 1750. other causes of its distresse, and the distresse it selfe, 1751. more at large, 1756, 1757. its commodities, 1757. Virginians triumphs after victory, feasting, simlicity, feare, horrible and pro∣digious rites of southsaying, their iudgement of powder, and other customes, 1708, 1709. Virgini∣ans are al of all occupations, 1709 a Virginian exchanged for a Christian, 1710. Virginia Sa∣uages strange mortality, 1712. Virginians courtesie to the Eng∣lish, 1713. and trecherous proiects ibid. exceeding feare of Muskets, ibid. how Virginian Sauages may be dealt withall, 1714. Vir∣ginia Sauages fight disguised like bushes, 1716. Virginians made proud, not awed by courtesie and benignity, 1717. Virginians in want and pouerty, 1725. a Virgi∣nian Sauages his Oration to Cap∣taine Smith, 1727. a Virginian smothered at Iames towne, and recouered, lunaticke, and restored, 1726, 1727. Virgina Sauages offer to fight vnder English ban∣ners, 1729. Virginian Sauages brought perforce to peace with the English, 1769, 1770. Virginia Sauages religion and disposition, 1771. their countries described, seasons, climate, beasts, birds, fishes and other rarities, 1771, 1772, 1773. Virginian account of yeares, 1774. Virginians kill some English, ibid. their treche∣rous and bloody nature, 1788, 1789. Virginians worship the Deuill, but loue him not, 1790. their fearing the shadow of a Piece or Musket, with their sowing gunpowder, ibid. Virginians pos∣sesse some Pieces, with munition after the massacre, destroyed cat∣tell, ibid. Virginian plantations Presidency assumed by the Lord De la Ware, its first successe, 1754. 1755, 1756. in what case it was left by the said Lord, and the cause why he left it, 1763. its commodities, ibid. & 1764. Vir∣ginias plantations benefit of corne by Captaine Argall, 1765. its ra∣rities, ibid. Virginian affaires variety, by the approach of diuers Captaines there, 1766, 1767, 1768. its commodities, vnworthy English inhabitants, ibid. chiefe places the Bermuda City and Henrico, ibid. its Forts, 1768. Virginias eleuation aboue many countries, 1770. Virginian af∣faires, Anno 1617, 1618, page 1774. Anno 1619, page 1775. the profits that may bee deriued thence, ibid. Anno 1619 et 1620 page 1775, 1775. the supplies from England in that time, ibid. with Ships, men, and their employ∣ments there, on what commodities for trading, 1776; 1777. Virgi∣nian benefactors, 1777. Virgi∣nian affaires in the yeare 1621, page 1783. with the supply of men, goods, and Ships then sent, with other accidents, ibid. 〈◊〉〈◊〉 1784. and supplies, with rela∣tion of matters of trading there, 1784. Virginia's praises farther related, 1717, wth the hopes to paxss

Page [unnumbered]

  • thense to China. 1786. Virgi∣nia's state before the massacre, 1788. The massacre it selfe, the plot and execution, 1788, 1789, 1790. 1347. The Englishmen basely murdered in it, ibid. A Virginian conuerted, discovers the plots, 1790. Virginiaes plan∣tations necessaries, without which it may not so wel be effected, 1791 Virginiaes massacre supposed case, seconded by a sicknesse, 1792. Its authors end, ibid. The supply thereof by King Iames, 1793. Virginia commended and discommended, according to mens diuers humours, discovered in Letters, 1806, 1807. Virginia planted by French men, 1807. They afterwards displanted by Sir Samuel Argall, 1808. Virgi∣nia's possession and plantation, by the English, soundly and largely proved to be lawfull, by a natu∣rall, and nationall right, 1809, 1810, 1811. Virginia's first dis∣couerie, and discouerers, 1812. Virginia rightly possessed by the English, by acknowledgement of the Prince there, 1813. By buy∣ing, selling, cession, forfeiture, ib. Virginiaes plantation advanceth Gods glory, 1817, 1818. Virgi∣nia's want of good exeused, 1814, 1815. Virginia-plantations losse by the massacre, 1816. The num∣ber there since, ibid. Virginia's plantation to the prosecuted, and for what reasons, 1826. & seq. As first Religion, honour of the Nation, &c. 1816 Virginia deserues plantation for the profit, 1817. For disburde∣ning multitudes, 1818. For a temperate climate, ibid. For large∣nesse, ibid. Commodious Rivers whose sliding embracements of the earth are fiuently described, ibid. Sikes, Wines, Mines, drugs, &c. ibid. Materials for shipping, 1820. Fishng, 1821. Tobacco trading, ibid. Hopes of passage to the South Sea, 1822. For other reasons & advantages, 1824. For being a refreshment to ships tired with long voyages. ibid. & 1825
  • Virguano, a towne inhabited by Sa∣vages in America neere Mar∣win, 1285
  • A Vision, 148
  • Visitation of the sicke among the Indians, the horrible hideous noise vsed by those miserable com∣forters, 1860
  • Vitachaco, a town in Florida, 1534
  • Vlissingers take one of the Portingal Gallions, 1909
  • Vllibaholi a walled towne of the In∣dians in Florida, and the fashion of those walls, 1541
  • Vndermining of townes, 1919
  • Vnicornes horne saveth many from poison, 1213
  • Vno a River, 1223
  • Vomiting to death, 1214. Vomi∣ting procured by what Plants in Bermuda Ilands, 1801
  • Vna, a mountaine in the West-In∣dies, 1285
  • A Vnicorne with a strange horne, 1560. With haire as bigge as a finger. ibid.
  • Vnthankfulnesse in Spaniards to∣wards their Indian Benefactors, 1526
  • Voyages are commonly ouerthrowne by the Captaines giving way, or too much yeelding lenity, 1389. Voyages by the Lord of Cum∣berland, 1141. 1142 & seq. Voyages by Sir Sebastian Ca∣bot, Sir Thomas Pert, 1177. By Sir Iohn Hawkins, Sir Fran. Drake, ibid. & seq. Voyages by Capt. Michelson, Capt. New∣port, Earle of Suffolke, Sir Ro∣bert Dudley, ibid. Voyages by Captaine Preston, Capt. Sum∣mers. Sir Anthony Sherley, Capt. Parker, Sir Walter Ra∣leigh, Mr Will. Hawkins, ibid. Capt. Parker, 1243, 1244, & seq. Mddleton, 1246, 1247. Voyages by Reniger, Borey, Pudsey, Steuen, Hare, Fenton, Ward, and Iohn Drake, 1186. Voyages by Captaine Candish, and Capt. Dauies, 1191, 1192, &c. By Sir Richard Hawkins, 1367. &c. By Pamphilo Nar∣uaez Spaniard, 1500, 1501, & seq. By Francisco Pizarro, 1489, & seq. Voyages by Nun∣no de Guzman Spaniard, 1556. & seq. Soto his Voyages and discoveries of Florida, 1530. at large in seq. Voyages by the the French, and discoueries of Florida, and Canada, 1603. & seq. Voyages by Monseur de Montz, 1620. & seq. Voyages from England, the ships being fur∣nished with two hundred pounds in Cash, 1838. From Plim∣mouth to Bilboa with dry fish, 1839. A voyage of seven sayle from the West-country, 1839. Voyages to Virginia furnished by Sir Walter Raleigh, 165, 1646. Voyage of Captaine Gos∣nol to Virginia, Anno 1602. pag. 1647. & seq. Voyage by Mr Pringe to Virginia, 1654. & seq. By Captaine Gilbert to the same, 1656. & seq. By Capt. Weymouth to Virginia, 1659. & seq Avoyage to the Ie of Azo∣res by the Right Honorable Rob. Earle of Essex, 1935. Voyages by Sir Thomas Gates, 1734▪ & seq. By Captaine Argall, 1758. Voyages to Sommer-Iland by the English, 1793. & seq. An admirable voyage from the Ber∣mudas to Ireland in a small boat, 1803
  • Vparason, a River nauigable in Brasile, 140
  • Vpanason, a River in the Ind••••s, very commodious for watering, 1223
  • Vpsegon, a towne in Mawooshen, vnder the Lord Bashabes, 1874
  • Vrarino towne, a towne of Awac∣cas, and aawogoto, Savages in America, 1283
  • Vraitan an Iland in Brasile, called by the Portingals Alqua〈…〉〈…〉, 1241. Its description for Navi∣gators, ibid.
  • Vrapo, and Arieppo, two Indian woods, 1251
  • Vrine drunke for want of water, 1188
  • Vrokere, Indians so called, 1286
  • Vrquam River, 1364
  • Vtinama, a Floridan towne: 1533
  • A Vulcan, a most dreadfull thing casting forth fire, & stones as great as a house causing vnwholsomnesse of thence-issuing waters, 159
  • Vupanqui his raigne ouer the inha∣bitants of Peru, his acts and con∣quests his making a bridge of Ozi∣ers beautifying the Sunnes temple, extent of his dominions, transplan∣tation of countries, 1463, 1464
  • Vzela, a towne in Florida in Ame∣rica, 1534
W.
  • VVAboc••••yaway an Ar∣wacca towne in Ameri∣ca, 1286
  • Wacarimock mountaines neere the riuer O. enoco, 1248
  • Walnuts, thirty Ilands of thm, 1612
  • Wancoobanoua, a valley aboun∣ding with gold-grains wased from the mountaines, 1284
  • Wages detaining, how turbulent 〈◊〉〈◊〉 a

Page [unnumbered]

  • yoyage, 196
  • Want of water in New-England, causing some of our men to famish, 1844
  • Waratiua, a riuer in Brasile, its de∣scription for Navigation, 1440
  • Want of bread in the English Army, 1921
  • Io. Want, a schismaticall and sediti∣ous fellow in the Bermudas, 1743
  • Wareteena, a place in America, 1212
  • Warooca, a towne of the Arwacca 〈◊〉〈◊〉 Savages in the Indies, 1285
  • Warraskoyat, Indian-Virginians, 1692
  • Warres between the Portingals, and the Indians; its effects, 1321 Warres made for the water, 1364 Warres betweene the Indians and Spaniards in Chili, 1443
  • Warriers that haue killed men among the Savages of Tuppan, haue as many holes board through their visage in token of honour, 1189
  • Warlike Fleets set forth by the Eng∣lish Deborah, the Q. Elizabeth, 1891
  • Water that is salt dangerously drunk, 1143. Strange kinde of watering, 1146. Water-drinking endange∣reth many, 1178. Want of fresh∣water, 1188. Water too much drunke kils Will. Pitcher, ibid. Salt-water cureth sores, 1207 Water vnwholsome and deadly, 1248 Water burning and tasting like brimstone, 175. Water ve∣nemous, 1379. Water very hot in a lake of Florida, 1549. Bad waters breeding sundry diseases, 1623. Waters that being drunke, caused teeth to fall in two houres space, 1624. Watry ground the supposed cause of vnhealthinesse in Port-royall among the French, 1632. Water sacrificed to by the Virginians in time of tempest, 1702. Water want in Virginie, 1712. Water wanting in the Eng∣lish armie, 1966
  • Watry iourneys, 1359
  • Wayanasses, Savages so called in the West-Indies, 1211. Their com∣plexion, cowardlinesse, painting, lodging, Tobacco, chiefe towne, 1228
  • Waanawazons, Canibals in Ameri∣ca, 1213. Their simplicity, stature, feeding, lazinesse, women, 120
  • Waymores Savages in Brasile, their stature, valour, rudenesse, swift∣nesse, man-eating, 1227.
  • Way••••quazons, called by the Indi∣dians Iocoex, are Brasilian Sa∣vages, their habitation, stature, women-warriours, lodging, iarres, man-eating, 1228
  • Weaknesse of the English in New-England, causing the Indians to insult, 1848
  • Wealth bred ambition among Cap∣taines, 1145
  • Weannocks, Indians in Virginia, their number of fighting men, 1692
  • Weeaopona, a towne of the Arwac∣cas in America, 1285
  • Weeping in salutation, an expression of obedience in some Indians of Florida, 1553
  • Three Wels, one very hot, another scalding hot, a third temperate, neere a cold Hill, 1243
  • Werowances, the title of a King in Virginia, 1692
  • Werawocomoco River in Virgi∣nia, 1692
  • West-winds constanly, 1658
  • Master Wests plantation at the Fals in Virginia, 1730
  • West-country voyage in twelue ships with a good returne, 1840
  • Westons men abuse the Savages of Massacheusets, which caused much vnkindnesse to the English, 1857. Their misery among the Savages, 1863
  • Capt. Weymoths voyage to Virgi∣nia, 1659. & seq His danger by sandy, and rocky Shoales, escape and ariuall at Pentecost. harbour, 1659, 1660
  • A Whale very great, eaten by An∣thony Kniuet, 1207.
  • Whales haue open heads, whereat they breathe, their battaile with the Sword-fish, 1313, 1376, 1377, 1685
  • A Whale worshipped 1471
  • Whale-fishing in the Bermudas, and its benefit, 1797
  • Whitson-Bay in Virginia, 1654
  • Capt. Rich. Whitbornes Voyages to the New-found-land, 1882. His voyage to Lisbone, is taken by a French Pirate. 1883
  • Whelps drest and eaten, 1202
  • Whittingtons communication with the Indians, 1881
  • Wia a River in Guiara, 1261
  • Wiapogo River, 1250. Its commo∣dities, 1261, 1263, 1264. at large. threescore leagues broad, supposed the biggst in the world, 1267, 1268. Its situation and strength, 1270. English plant there, ibid.
  • Wiaumli, a River to the North of Orenoco, 1249
  • Wiawia, a towne in the West-In∣dies, 1280. Or Wia Wiam, 1283. Tis inhabited by the Yaios and other Savages, 1283
  • Wighcocamoco river in Virginia, 1694
  • Wighsacan, a medicinable plant in Virginia, 1695
  • Wikeries are Indians that inhabite the Plaines of Samia, 1248
  • Mr Will. Strachy his relation of Sir Tho: Gates voyage, and of the Colony of Virginia, 1734: & seq.
  • William Morgan his happy & most strange deliverance, 1943
  • Wild-geese in great Shoales, 1845
  • Willowes 1316
  • Mr Wilsons relations at large, 1661, 1262. & seq.
  • Wine ouerthroweth more then the enemy, 1349. The Wine of the Nauy in 88. 1991 Wine causeth ambition & dissen∣tion, 1151
  • Extreame winds, 1175. In the straits of Magellane, 1194. An exceeding winde by Sea and Land, 1500. Winds that pi•••••••• iron and stone, 1671
  • Winter not durable by Christians,
  • Witawamack, an insulting slaue a∣mong the Savages, opprobrious to the English, 1859
  • Wines connted a dignitie among the Savages, the hauing of many of them only permitted to the King, and those that haue proved them∣selues braue fellows, 1188, 1217. Wiues and children sold for Hat∣chets and Kniues, 1208. Wiues put away for adultery, 1870
  • Sir Io. Winkfield dyeth at the fight in Cadiz, in warlike manner bu∣ried, 1932
  • Wolues in New-England pursuing our English Dogs, 1849. Wolues in the New-found-land faning and playing with English masty dogs, 1885
  • Womens strange entertaining stran∣ers among Savages, 1717. Wo∣men dancing starke naked, 1618. Indian womens modestie, yet fa∣miliaritie, 1158, 1159. Women got by valour among the Savages, 1209. Women Archers, 1226. 1228. Women with vgly bodies and good faces, 1228. Eight wo∣men bought for a red-hasted knife, 1249. A woman roasied, 1272. Women starke naked, 1268 Women goe before men in Bra∣sile, 1292. Their agreement there

Page [unnumbered]

  • among themselues, their chastitie if maried, but oosenesse vnmaried, 1341. A womans price amongst the Carios of the West Indies, 1357. Women toile among some Indians. 1382. Women that re∣venge the wrong of their husbands, not solitarily by themselues called Amazons, 1437. Women (n not Kings daughters) might not enter the Temple of the Sunne a∣mong the ancient inhabitants of Peru, 1465. Womens vsage and habite among some Indians of Flo∣rida, 1524. Women amongst the Indians put to vile slavery, 1869. Women not suffered to enter any of the Ships of the King of Spaines Armada, 1901
  • Wonders of the new World, 1477.
  • Wood-bind, a plant running on trees like a Vine, that causeth a vehement and harmlesse purging, 1801
  • Wood that maketh fish drunk, 172 Wood of all colours, 1670 Wood as hard as iron, ibid.
  • Words of the Savages language in Virginia, 1667
  • Wormes how killed in the bodie, 1311
  • Wormes breeding great-torment, 1251. Very pernicious in Brasile, but killed by Garlicke, 1382. Wormes poysoning water, 1286. Wormes deuouring the flesh, 1365. Wormes very preiudiciall to ships without sheathing, vnder the Aequinoctiall, 1387
  • Wounds, how cured, 1310, 1311
  • Wyanesses, a towne in the West-Indies, 1208
  • Wyapocoories, inhabitants in a Province of Guiana, 〈…〉〈…〉1
  • Wywaypanami Indians with 〈…〉〈…〉ul∣ders higher then their heads, 〈…〉〈…〉85
X
  • XAlisco, a Province neere the South Sea, 1559. The great losse of inhabitants in it by the Spanish inhumane cruelty, 1581. Eight hundred townes burned in those Realmes by Spaniards, ibid.
  • Xalpa Province discouered by the Spaniards, 1559
  • Xaltenango Province, 1559
  • Xaqua, a harbour in the Iland of Cuba, 1500
  • Xaragua, a dominion in the Ile His∣paniola, its King and Lords trai∣terously burnt by the Spaniards, th Queene hanged, the youths thrust through, or having their legs cut off, they that fled condem∣ed to perpetuall slauerie, 1572
  • Xualla, a Province in Florida, 1539
Y.
  • YAes, Indians neere the River Wyapoco, their nature and de∣scription, 1263
  • Yaguiana, a towne in Hispaniola, 1186
  • Capt. Yerdly Deputy Governour in Virginia, 1773. His acts and ex∣ploits there, ibid. & 1774
  • Yerua viua, an hearbe that is senss∣ble, and shrinkes at any mans touch, not resprouting till his de∣parture, 1174
  • Youghtanund, inhabitants of Vir∣ginia, 162
  • Youwalprenay, a towne of the Ca∣ribes, 1285
  • Ytara an America Floridan town, 1533
  • Ytaua, a towne in Florida, 1541
  • Yupaha, an Indian country in Flo∣rida, ruled by a woman, her great town, commodities, and abundance of gold, 1535
  • Yupanqui an Emperour of Peru, before the Spanish conquest, his difficult attempts, 1474. He sub∣dued the Chunchus, and so ex∣tended his Empire, ibid. & 1475. His assault of the Chirihuana. a Savage Nation, and successe, his proceeding to conquer Chili, 1475 his miraculous Fort and buil∣dings, other acts and death, 1477, 1478
  • Yuia Pari, a River in America, th inhabitants thereabout tortured by the Spaniards, 1587
Z.
  • ZAcheo, a place so called, 1186 Zapatula, a place of New-Spaine, 1558
  • Zemie, an Indian Nation neere the Riuer of Plate, 1363
  • Zemais Saluaisco, Indians so called in the River Paana, their de∣scription, 1350, 1351
  • Zumpanga, a towne of Indians, 1418
FINIS.
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