Page:The Six Voyages of John Baptista Tavernier.djvu/152
Chio, JWethelin , Smyrna , Trey , Letnnos , Tenedos , Negrofont , The JDardanels . Athens , JW#f ,
St. John of Dacres, Antioch , T'rebiz.ondj Sinopus ,
Sakes.
Medilli.
Izmir.
Eski Iftamboul.
Limio.
Bogge-adafi.
Eghirbos.
Bogaz-ki.
Atina.
Biroult.
Saida.
Sour.
Acra.
Antexia.
Tarabozan.
Sinap.
In the Fortrefs of Sinoptts , at the lower part of the Wall there is a 'Stone to be feen , where there is an Infcription in Latin abbreviated , with the word Rome in it } whence fome conjecture may be made that the Romans built it.
The Mediterranean Sea , The Ocean , The Blacky Sea,
Akdeniis. Derijay Mouhiit. Kara-Deniis.
CHAP. VIII.
Remarks upon the Trade of the Island of Candy and the principal Isles of the Archipelago, as also upon some of the Cities of Greece adjoyning; with a particular Relation of the present Condition of the Grand Signor's Galleys, belonging as well to the Isles as to the Continent.
Of the island of Candy.
Out of the Island of Candy Strangers export great store of Wheat and Sallet-Oyl, all sorts of Pulse, Cheese, yellow Wax, Cottons, Silks, but more especially Malmsey, wherein consists its chiefest Trade. When Vintage draws near, the Country-people that are to gather the Grapes wrap their Feet in a piece of a Boar's Skin, which they tye together upon the upper part of the Foot with a piece of Pack-thred, to preserve their Feet from the violent heat of the Rocks upon which they are to tread. Those Skins are brought out of Russia by the Russes, that bring Botargo and Caviare to Constantinople, where they have a vast vent for it all over Turkie, Persia, and Ethiopia; where they that follow the Greek and Armenian Church, eat little or nothing else all the Lent. By the way take notice, that the Turks make a certain Glew out of Sturgeon, which is the best in the World, so that whatever is fasten'd with it, will rather break in another place than where it is glew'd. They make it thus: When they have caught a Sturgeon, they pull out his Guts, and then there remains a Skin that covers the Flesh; this Skin they take off from the head to the belly. It is very clammy, and about the thickness of two Sheets of Paper, which they roll as thick as a Man's Arm, and let it dry in the Sun. When they use it, they beat it with a Mallet, and when it is well beat'n they break it into pieces, and steep it in Water for half an hour in a little Pot.
When the Venetians were Matters of Candy, they that had committed any Crime which deserv'd Death, if they could get out of the Ifland before they were appre-hended,