Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 25.djvu/39
A N U A P
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ANURA, order of Amphibia, I. 751. ANUS, Anatomy of the, vn. 228 ; piles,
XI. 366. ANVERS (Antwerp, q.v.), town, Belgium,
II. 144.
ANVIL, for smith work, II. 147; XI. 426. ANWARI, Persian poet, 1 1. 147; xvm. 658. ANWEILER, town, Bavaria, n. 147. ANXENOR, Greek sculptor, n. 147. ANXIA (Lanciano), ancient town, Italy,
xiv. 259. ANXUR (Terracina), ancient town, Italy,
XXlll. 190.
ANYER, town, Java, xm. 605. ANZIN, town, France, n. 147; XVH. 535. ANZITENE, ancient district, Asia, xiv.
159.
AOIDOI, ancient Greek singers, XVIII. 51. AONYX, genus of otters, xvm. 69. AORSI, or Aorses, Asiatic people, XVI.
813; xvm. 594.
AORTA, in anatomy, I. 801, 902. AOSTA, town, Italy, n. 147. AOUDAD, goat-like sheep, xxi. 785. AOULIAS, Nepalese race, xvn. 341. APACHES, American Indian tribe, XII.
832-
APAMEA (Birejik), ancient town, Meso potamia, n. 147; xvi. 48. ancient town, Phrygia, II. 147;
xvm. 852. , ancient town, Syria, II. 147; XXI I.
823; coins of, xvn. 649. APANAGE, feudal term, n. 147. APANAGES, Period of the, in Russia,
xxi. 89. APANOMERIA, town, Thera island,
Greece, xxiii. 280. APAR, kind of armadillo, XV. 387. APATELITE, mineral, xvi. 401. APATIN, town, Hungary, II. 147. APATITE, mineral, x. 228; xvi. 407;
xvm. 818; polarity of, xix. 313. APATURIA, Greek festival, II. 147. APAUARCTICENE, Parthian kingdom,
xvm. 592. APE, zoological group, II. 148; XV. 444;
man s relation to the, 1 1. 107 ; organs
of touch in, xxiii. 479; in Spain,
XXII. 297; South American forms, I.
68 1 ; Sumatran forms, xxn. 640. APELDOORN, town, Netherlands, n. 169. APELLAS, Greek sculptor, n. 169. APELLES, Greek painter, n. 169, 363;
xvn. 41; xvm. 853. APELLON, form of name Apollo, II. 185. APENNINES, mountains, Italy, n. 169;
xm. 434, 437; crossed by Via Flaminia,
IX. 289.
APENRADE, town, Prussia, n. 170. APHANIPTERA, group of insects, vn.
256; xm. 150. APHASIA, disease, n. 171. APHEK, town, Phoenicia, Xix. 91. APHID.E, group of insects, xm. 146, 153. APHIS GRANARIA, wheat pest, xxiv.
535-
APHONIA, nervous disease, xxiii. 320. APHORISM, n. 171. APHRAATES, Syriac writer, xxn. 827. APHRITE, mineral, xvi. 397. APHRODITE, Greek goddess (the Eoman
Venus), II. 171; xvm. 295; the Egyp tian Athor, III. 13; Praxiteles s statue
of, xvm. 853; temple of, at Paphos,
Cyprus, xvm. 228.
, mineral, XVI. 414.
AND CUPIDS, statuette, xxiii. 191. URANIA, Phoenician goddess, xvm.
756. APHROTHORACA, order of Protozoa, xix.
845. APHTHA, Epizootic, cattle disease, xvn.
60. APHTHARTODOCETISM, ancient heresy,
xm. 796. APHTHONGIA, defect of speech, xxn.
448. APHTHONIUS, Greek rhetorician, XX.
514; his fables, vin. 838. APIA, town, Navigators Islands, Pacific,
xvn. 279. APIARIES, in. 499. APICIUS, Roman epicures, n. 173. APICULTURE, bee-keeping, in. 499; xii.
138.
APION, Greek grammarian, n. 173. APIS, Egyptian deity, II. 173; vn. 717. APLANATIC LENSES, xvi. 260; xxni.
144. APLANOGAMETES, cells in plants, xx.
425. APLYSIA, genus of Mollusca, xvi. 656,
657.
APNCEA, Signs of, in drowning, vn. 474. APO, mountain, Philippine Islands,
xvin. 748. APOCALYPSE, book of Scripture, n. 174;
xx. 496. APOCALYPTIC LITERATURE, n. 174;
xvi. 315. APOCRYPHA, of the Old Testament, n.
180; Syriac version, xxn. 824, 826;
book of Baruch, in. 404; Esdras, vin.
541; Judith, xm. 765; Maccabees,
xv. 131; Tobit, xxni. 428. APODICTIC REASONING, in logic, xiv.
785, 786. APOGAMY, in plant reproduction, xx.
424. APOLDA, town, Germany, n. 184; xxi.
349- APOLLINARIS, Sulpicius, grammarian
of Carthage, n. 185.
MINERAL WATER, xxiv. 399.
SlDONIUS, early Christian writer,
II. 184. APOLLINOPOLIS MAGNA (Edfu), town,
Egypt, vii. 783; temple at, n. 389. APOLLO, Greek god, n. 185; vn. 51; his
relation to Latona, Xiv. 345; oracle of,
xvn. 808; Belvidere statue of, n. 186;
temple of, at Delphi, vn. 52; temples
of, at Thebes, xxni. 230.
APOLLO AND DAPHNE, Max Miiller s
theory of, xvn. 138. APOLLO EPICURIUS, temple of, Bassoe,
Greece, xvin. 735. APOLLODORUS, Roman architect, n. 186.
, Athenian grammarian, n. 186.
, Greek painter, 1 1. 186.
APOLLONIA, ancient town, Cyrenaica,
n. 186; xxiii. 575.
, ancient town, Illyria, II. 186.
, ancient town, Thrace, n. 186.
, town, Siphanto, Greek Archipelago,
xxn. 95. , lake, Asia Minor, II. 709; xvn.
APOLLONIATIS, Parthian kingdom,
xvin. 592. APOLLONIUS, Alexandrian grammarian,
n. 187. , Dyscolus, grammarian, n. 187.
, Molo, Greek rhetorician, II. 187.
, Pergseus, Greek geometrician, u.
187; his application of geometry to
astronomy, n. 749; on conic sections,
vi. 273. -, Rhodius, Greek epic poet, II. 187;
his Argonautica, I. 499.
of Tralles, sculptor, II. 187.
, Tyanseus, philosopher and magi cian, n. 188; xxiii. 420; his life, by
Philostratus, xvin. 796.
OF TYRE, Greek romance, xx. 635.
APOLLOS, of Scripture, II. 189. APOLOGETICS, in theology, n. 189;
dogmatic, vn. 339; xxni. 274;
Origen s work on, xvn. 841. APOLOGETICUS, Tertullian s work,
xxni. 197.
APOLOGIA, of Plato, ix. 198. APOLOGUE, fable, n. 193; vin. 837. APOLOGY, Justin Martyr s, xin. 790. APOMORPHIA, emetic, xvn. 793. APOPHTHEGM, 11. 193; i. 783. APOPHYLLITE, mineral, xvi. 421. APOPLEXY, disease, n. 193; from heat,
xxn. 666. APOSPORY, in plant reproduction, xx.
424. APOSTASY, n. 194; legal aspects of, XL
733.
A POSTERIORI, in philosophy, n. 214. APOSTLE, of Scripture, 1 1. 194; of the
Gentiles (Paul), xvin. 416; of Rome
(Philip Neri), xvn. 346. APOSTLES, their relation to the Christian
church, v. 700.
, Acts of the, I. 123.
APOSTLES CREED, n. 194; vi. 561. APOSTOLIC, designation of churches, n.
194.
BISHOP, title of the pope, xix.
498. BRETHREN, Christian sects, n. 198;
xx. 322.
CANONS, 11. 194; v. 16.
CONSTITUTIONS, n. 195, 196; v.
1 6.
XXV. 4