Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 25.djvu/310
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M N M N
MONA (Anglesea), island, "Wales, II. 30;
xv. 453. MONACH, island, Scotland, its climate,
vi. 5.
MONACHA, genus of birds, XX. 101. MONACHISM, or Monasticism, xvi. 698
(list of foundations, 715); monastic
libraries, xiv. 513.
, British, Fosbroke s work, ix. 470.
MONACO, principality, South Europe,
xvi. 717. MONADIDEA, order of Protozoa, xix.
856.
MONADISM, atomic theory, ill. 37. MONADNOCK, mountain, U.S.A., xxm.
792.
MONADS, Leibnitz s theory of, xiv. 421. MONAGHAN, county, Ireland, xvi. 718;
representation, XXIII. 727; town, xvi.
718. MONALDESCHI, Giovanni, Christina of
Sweden s treatment of, v. 703. MONA LISA, Leonardo s painting, xiv.
460.
MONAMINES, in chemistry, v. 575. MONARCHIANISM, in early Christian
theology, xvi. 718; xin. 671; moda-
listic, of Noetus, xvn. 531. MONARCHY, Government by, xi. n;
early Roman, xx. 732. MONASTERIES, I. 10; suppression of, in
England, vi. 606; vill. 335, 375;
XI. 664; in Old London, xiv. 844;
Lamaist, Tibet, xiv. 499. MONASTICISM, xvi. 698; in England,
vni. 281, 286, 298, 304, 316; early
Irish, XIII. 248; in Greek Church, xi.
159; St Jerome s defence of, Xlll. 630. MONASTIC LIBRARIES, xiv. 513. MONASTIC VESTMENTS, vi. 463. MONASTIC Vow, xxiv. 301. M ON ASTIR, town, Roumelia, Turkey,
xvi. 719; i. 448; plain, xv. 136.
, town, Tunis, XXIII. 620.
MONAXONA, order of sponges, xxn.
423- MONAXONIDA, tribe of sponges, XXII.
421.
MONAZITE, mineral, xvi. 403. MONBODDO, Lord, Scottish judge and
philosopher, xvi. 719; on evolution,
vni. 760. MONBUTTU, mountains, Soudan, Africa,
xxii. 277.
MONCADA, Francisco de, Spanish his torian, xxii. 359.
MONCAYO, Sierra de, Spain, XXIV. 769. MONCHEN-GLADBACH, town, Prussia,
x. 631. MoNCHGUT, district, Riigen, Prussia,
xxi. 56. MONCHSBERG, mountain, Austria, xxi.
239- MONCRIEFF, Alexander, Scottish Seced-
er, xxill. 728. GUN, II. 557; carriage for, IX. 451;
XI. 312.
MONCTON, town, New Brunswick, xvi. 719; xvn. 375.
MONDE, Le, Paris newspaper, xvii. 426.
MONDE vi LLE, Henri de, French surgeon, xxii. 675.
MONDHIR, Moorish emir in Spain, xxii. 312.
of Hira, invader of Syria, xvm.
612.
MONDINO of Bologna, father of modern anatomy, I. 805.
MONDONEDO, town, Spain, xvi. 719.
MONDOVI, town, Italy, XVI. 720.
MONEMBASIA (Malvasia), ancient town, Greece, xv. 346.
MONERA, division of Protozoa, II. 50.
MONEY, xvi. 720 (table, 732); coinage of, xvi. 480; coined, xvii. 630; use of cowry-shells as, VI. 535 ; economic theories of, xix. 356; earliest notices of, vi. 197; paper, in relation to ex change, vill. 788; in relation to values, xxiv. 5 1 ; connexion of, with units of weight, xxiv. 482 ; Dudley North s paradoxes on, xvm. 555.
, Colonel, on the cultivation of tea,
xxm. 99.
AND TRADE CONSIDERED, Law s
work, xiv. 369.
MONEY-ORDERS, Post-office, xix. 572.
MONFERRATO, Italian marquisate, xvi. 738.
MONGE, Gaspard, French mathematician, xvi. 738 ; on the adherence of particles, v. 57.
MONGHYR, district, India, xvi. 739; town, xvi. 740.
MONGOLIA, country, Asia, II. 686; xvi. 749; in time of Marco Polo, xix. 404.
MONGOLIAN LANGUAGE, xvi. 749; xxiv. i.
MONGOLOID TYPE, of man, n. 113.
MONGOLS, Asiatic people, xvi. 740; n. 696; XXIII. 70; affinities of, with the Turks, xxm. 658; resemblances to ancient Mexicans, xvi. 207; conquests of, XIII. 620; religion of, XX. 363; in Western Asia, xvi. 588; in China, V. 646; in mediceval Europe, V. 132, 627; invasion of Europe by (1683), xix. 296; invasion of Japan by, xm. 583; in Russia, xxi. 79, 90; their overthrow of the Seljuks, xxi. 637; in Siberia, xxii. 8.
MONGOOS, or Mungoos, carnivorous mammal, xn. 629; xv. 436.
MONGREL, or Hybrid, xn. 422.
MONICA, mother of St Augustine, ill.
75-
MONIES, Abbreviations for, I. 29. MONISM, in philosophy, xxm. 234;
Stoic doctrine, xxii. 563. MONITA SECRETA, of the Jesuits, xm.
650. MONITEUR, Paris newspaper, xvii. 424.
MONITION, in law, xvi. 751.
MONITOR, lizard, xiv. 734.
MONK, George, duke of Albemarle,
English general, xvi. 751; xn. 80; in
Scotland, xxi. 514. of Heilsbronn, German poet, XI.
624. MONKCHESTER (Newcastle), ancient
town, England, xvii. 379.
MONKEY-NUT, XI. 221.
MONKEYS, or Apes, n. 151; xv. 444; man s relation to, II. 107; of South America, I. 68 1; skins of, IX. 838; Tibetan belief in descent from, xxm.
343- MONK-FISH, xii. 686.
MONKLANDS RAILWAY, Scotland, XX.
224.
MONK LEWIS (Matthew G. Lewis), Eng lish writer, xiv. 493.
MONKS, XVI. 698; I. 10, 22; their char acter in England, vill. 373; their in fluence on education, vn. 672; vest ments of, VI. 463; Lamaist, in Tibet, xiv. 500.
MONKSHOOD, plant, I. 98.
MONK S RHUBARB, plant, vn. 310.
MONKWEARMOUTH, suburb of Sunder- land, England, xxii. 657.
MON-LAM, Tibetan festival, xiv. 501.
MONMOUTH, county, England, xvi. 753; representation, xxm. 727; town, XVI. 754.
, town, Illinois, U.S.A., xvi. 755.
, James, duke of, xvi. 755; vm.
350; in Scotland, xxi. 516; his rela tions with William of Orange, xxiv.
579- , Earl of (Charles Mordaunt), XVlil.
700. MONNIER, Maria Therese de, Mirabeau s
correspondent Sophie, xvi. 493. MoNOCHORD, musical instrument, XIX.
65. MONOCOTYLEDONOUS PLANTS, IV. 92.
MONOCOTYLEDONS, subclass of plants, xxiv. 131.
MONOCYSTIS AGILIS, species of Proto zoa, xix. 853.
MONODELPHIA, subclass of Mammalia, xv. 372, 383.
MONODON, genus of cetacean mammals, xv. 398; xvii. 235.
MONOGENEA, division of trematode worms, xxm. 539.
MONOGENIST THEORY, of origin of races, II. 114.
MONOLITH, prehistoric stone monu ment, n. 383; xxi. 51.
MONOLOGION, of Anselm, II. 92.
MONOMAKH, Vladimir, prince of Kieff, Russia, xxi. 89.
MONOMYA, order of Mollusca, xvi. 685.
MONOPELTIS, genus of lacertilian reptiles, xx. 451.
MONOPHYSITISM, in ancient church,