Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 25.djvu/135
C Y M D M D
121
CYMENE, hydrocarbon found in oils,
xvii. 748.
CYMOPHANE, mineral, xvi. 386. CYMRl, or Cymry (q_.v. IV. 352. CYMRIC LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE,
xx. 642. CYMRY, branch of the Celtic family, n.
651; iv. 352; v. 300. CYNANCHE PAROTID^EA, disease, xvii.
22
CYNEGETICA, Oppian s poem, xn. 393;
xvii. 797. CYNEWULF, Anglo-Saxon writer, vm.
403-
CYNICS, school of Greek philosophy, vi. 745; n. 137; xxi. 379; xxn. 562; ethics of, vm. 578.
CYNOCEPHALUS, genus of apes, n. 152; xv. 476.
CYNOGALE, species of carnivorous mam mals, xv. 436.
CYNOIDEA, section of Carnivora, xv. 437.
CYNOMYS, genus of rodent mammals, xv. 418, 560.
CYNOPHONTIS, Greek festival, xiv. 678.
CYNOPTERUS, genus of bats, xv. 409.
CYNOSCEPHAL^E, Greece, Battle of (197
B.C.), IX. 288; XX. 752; XXIII. 222 ,299.
CYNTHIA, mistress of Propertius, xix.
812. CYNTHIID^E, family of Tunicata, xxm.
617. CYNTHIUS (Giovanni Battista Giraldi),
Italian novelist, X. 620. CYPERUS BABYLONICUS, aromatic drug,
x. 17. CYPERUS PAPYRUS, paper reed, xvni.
231.
CYPERUS-ROOT OIL, XVII. 744.
CYPHOPHTHALMIDES, family of Arach-
nida, n. 279. CYPR/EA MONETA, cowry-shell mollusc,
vi. 535-
CY-PRES, in law, vi. 745.
CYPRESS, tree, vi. 745; culture of, n. 320; in United States, xxm. 809.
CYPRESSE GROVE, Drummond s work, vii. 481.
CYPRIAN, bishop of Carthage, vi. 746; his conception of the episcopate, v. 701; vm. 487.
, bishop of Nisibis, Syriac writer,
xxn. 844. - DIALECT, of Greek, XI. 133.
CYPRINE, mineral, xvi. 410.
CYPRIPEDIUM, genus of orchids, xvii. 818.
CYPRUS, island, Mediterranean, VI. 747; xv. 820; xxm. 653; its connexion with Phoenicia, XVIII. 805; coins of, xvii. 648; captured by the Turks (1570-71), xxm. 644; ceded to Eng land, XXIII. 652; Cyprian dialect, XI. 133-
CYPSELUS, genus of birds, xxn. 760.
, Chest of, early Greek sculpture, II.
3475 vi. 397.
CYRANO DE BERGERAC, on travelling to the moon, I. 186.
CYRENAICA, district, Africa, vi. 750.
CYRENAICS, school of Greek philo sophers, VI. 750; II. 506; their philo sophical system, xxi. 379; its relation to Epicureanism, Vlll. 475.
CYRENE, ancient town, Africa, vi. 750; xxm. 280; coins of, xvn. 651.
CVRIACUS, patriarch of the Jacobites, Syriac writer, xxn. 842.
CYRIL, St, bishop of Jerusalem, vi. 751; his canon, v. 10.
, St, early missionary to the Slavs,
xvi. 194.
, bishop of Turoff, Eussian sermon- writer, xxi. 103.
of Alexandria, vi. 751; opponent
of Nestorius, XVII. 353. of Berytus, Byzantine jurist, VI.
752.
LUCARIS, patriarch of Constan tinople and reformer of the Greek Church, XL 158; I. 496.
CYRILLIC ALPHABET, i. 613.
CYRILLONA, Syriac writer, xxn. 828.
CYRILLUS. See Cyril.
CYRIL THORNTON, novel by Thomas Hamilton, XL 416.
CYROP/EDIA, Xenophon s work, xxiv. 721; vi. 752.
CYRRHESTICA, Syria, coins of, xvn. 649.
CYRUS, the Elder, founder of the Persian empire, VI. 752; xvni. 564; his con- cjuest of Babylonia, in. 188; his re lations to the Jews, xm. 417; his re ligious policy, xin. 384; his tomb, at Murgab, n. 399; xvni. 558, 567.
, the Younger, Persian satrap, vi.
753; xvin. 576.
CYST FORMATIONS, in human body, xvni. 365.
CYSTICERCUS Bovis, beef measle, xxm. 52; xxiv. 206.
CYSTIC SARCOMA, disease, xvni. 369.
CYSTIDEA, order of Echinodermata, vn. 638.
CYSTITIS, disease, xxiv. 188.
CYSTOPHORA, genus of seals, xv. 444; xxi. 581.
CYTHERA (Cerigo), island, Greece, v. 346; xin. 205.
CYTHEREA, genus of Mollusca, xvi. 686.
CYTINACE^E, order of parasitic plants, xvni. 265.
CYTISUS, genus of trees, xiv. 179.
CVTODE, mass of protoplasm, I. 843.
CYTOGENESIS, in plants, xn. 13.
CYZICUS, ancient town, Asia Minor, vi. 753; xvn. 122; coins of, xvn. 645; siege of, by Mithradates (74 B.C.), xv. 56.
CZACKI, Tadeusz, Polish statesman and writer, VI. 754.
CZAR, title of emperor of Russia, xxi. 92.
CZARTORYSKI, Adam George, Polish prince and patriot, VI. 754; XIX. 298.
CZASLAU, town, Bohemia, VI. 754 ; battle of (1742), in. 127.
CZECHS, Slavonic people, VI. 754; ill. 861 ; xvi. 8n; xix. 285; xxn. 145, 147, 151; their language and litera ture, in. 861 ; XXII. 151 ; dictionaries of language, vn. 188.
CZEGLED, town, Hungary, vi. 754.
CZENSTOCHOVA, Old and New, towns, Poland, VI. 754.
CZERNA, river, Macedonia, xv. 136.
CZERNOWITZ, town, Austria, vi. 755.; university of, xxm. 852.
CZERNY, Karl, Austrian musical com poser and pianist, vi. 755.
GEORGE, Tsrni George, or Kara-
georgevich, Servian leader, VI. 755; xxi. 689.
CZERSKI, Johann, leader of the Catholic Apostolic Christians, x. 444.
CZOLBE, Heinrich C., on evolution, vm. 767-
T"^ the fourth letter of the alphabet,
- -* y vi. 756.
DABCHICK, bird, XL 80.
DA C ADORE (Titian, q.v.), Italian painter,
xxm. 413.
DA CAPO, musical term, xvn. 87, 93. DACCA, district and town, India, VI.
756: DACE, fish, vi. 758; xn. 692; xx, 582;
angling for, n. 42. DACELO, genus of birds, Xiv. 82. DACH, Simon, German hymn-writer,
xn. 587. DACHSTEIN, mountain, Austria, I. 628;
xxi. 241; xxn. 614. DACIA, ancient country, Europe, vi. 758;
xxiv. 269; conquest of, by Trajan
(105), xxm. 504.
DACIER, Andre, French scholar, vi. 759. , Anne Lefevre, French scholar, vi.
759-
DA COSTA, Isaak, Dutch poet and theo logian, vi. 759. DACTYLOPSILA, genus of marsupial
mammals, xvni. 729. DACTYLOPTERUS, fish, ix. 352. D ADAM, L Isle, grand-master of Knights
Hospitallers, xxi. 174. DADDY LONG LEGS, insect, xin. 150;
as wheat pest, xxiv. 535. DADHA, Syriac monk and writer, xxn.
830. DADH-ISHO, abbot of Mount Izla, Syriac
writer, XXII. 838. DADH-ISHO, of Seleucia, Syriac writer,
xxn. 830.
DADO, in architecture, n. 463. D^EDALA, Mount, Asia Minor, xv. 93. DAEDALUS, in Greek legend, vi. 760; I.
185; n. 347.
, reef, Red Sea, xx. 316.
XXV. 1 6