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BAR BAR ( 522 ) BARD, a poet among the ancient Gauls and Britons, BARGEMONT. a town of Provence in France, in the who celebrated the praifes of heroes, with a view to diocefe of Frejus. inculcate virtue, and fometimes to terminate a diffe- BARILLIA, a kind of Spanifh pot-afh, ufed in the rence between two armies at the point of engagement. glals-trade. It is dfputed wherein the bards differed from the BARING o/'/tisr.r, in agriculture, the taking away fome druids : Some pretend that thefe werd the priefts and of the earth about the roots, that the winter-rain and philofophers of the nation, and that thofe were only fnow-water may penetrate further into the roots. This the poets and hiftorians; but it is more probable that is frequently pra&ifed in the autumn. druid was a general word, comprehending the priefts, BARJOLS, a town0 of Provence in France, in 6° the judges, the inftrudtors of youth, and the bards E. long, and 43 qb' N. lat. or poets. BARIPICNI, or Suoni Baripicni, in mufic, fignify BARDANA, in botany. See Arctium. in general any low, grave, or deep found. BARDED, in heraldry, the fame with caparifoned. BARK, in the anatomy of plants, the exterior part of BARDELLE, in the menage, a faddle made in the trees, correfponding to the fldn of an animal. See form of a great faddle, but only of cloth fluffed with Agriculture, p 43. ftraw, and tied tight down with packthread, without Bark, or Jesuit’s Bark, is a name given by way of either leather, wood, or iron. In Italy they trot their eminence to the quinquina. See Quinquina. Bark, in navigation, a little veffel with two or three colts with fuch faddles. BARDESANISTS, in church-hiftory, Chriftian here- triangular fails; but, according to Guillet, it is a veftics of the fecond century, who piaintained that the fel with three marts, viz. a main-maft, fore-maft, and devil was a felf-exiftent independent being ; that Jefus mizen-maft. It carries about two hundred tons. Chrift was not born of a woman, but brought his body BARKAN, a town of Hungary, remarkable for two with him from heaven ; and denied the refurre&ion of vidtories which the Chriftians obtained there over the Turks, the one in 1664, and the other in 1683. the body. BARDEWICK, a town in Lower Saxony in Germany, BARKARY, a tan-houfe, or place for keeping bark, about feven miles north of Lunenburg. It is fubjedt fStiKK-binding, a diftemper incident to trees, cured by to the eledtor0 of Hanover, and fituated in io° E. flitting the bark, or cutting along the grain. Bark-galling, is when the trees are galled with thorns, long, and 53 4c/ N. lat. be. It is cured by binding clay on the galled places. BARDS, Bardi. See Bard. Bards, in the art of cookery, broad flices of bacon, BARK-/«;z£Mf, or Barca longa, a fmall low ftiarp-built, with which pullets, capons, pigeons, 6'c. are fome- but very long veflel without a deck. It goes with times covered, before they are roafted, baked, or other- fails and oars, and is very common in Spain. wife dreffed. BARKHAMSTEAD, a market-town in the weft part miles weft of HertBARDT, a port-town of Pomerania, 0in Germany; it is of Hertfordlhire, about eighteen ford, in 4' W. long, and 5ip 40' N. lat. fubjedt 0 to Sweden, and fituated in 13 20 E. long, and BARKING, a filhing town of Eflex, fituated on the 54 20' N. lat. BAREITH, a town of Franconia in 0Germany, in river Thames, about eight miles eaft of London. the margraviate of Culbach; ,in 12 20/ E. long, and Barking of trees, the peeling off the rind or bark. This muft be done, in our climate, in the month of 50° N. lat BARENTON, a town of lower Normandy in France. May, becaufe at that time the fap of the tree fepaBAR-FEE, a fee of twenty pence which every prifoner rates the bark from the wood. It would be very difficult to perform it at any other time of the year, unacquitted of felony pays to the goaler. BARFLEUR, a town and cape of Normandy, in France, lefs the feafon was extremely wet and rainy, for heat and drynefs are a very great hinderance to it. about 12 miles eaft ofj Cherburg

in i° 15' W. and BARKLEY, a market-town of Gloucefterffiire, about 490 47/. N. lat. » BARGE, in naval affairs, a boat of ftate and pleafure, fifteen miles fouth-weft of Gloucefter, in 20 35^ W. Ion. adorned with various ornaments, having bales and tilts, and 51° 4c/ N. lat. and feats covered with cufhions and carpets, and BARKWAY, a market-town in Hertfordffiire, under benches for many oars; as the lord-mayor’s barge, the meridian of London, and fifteen miles fouth of a company’s barge, an admiral’s barge, be. It is al- Cambridge. fo the name of a flat-bottomed velfel employed for car BARLEDUC, the capital of the duchy of Bar. See rying goods in a navigable river; as thofe upon the Bar. river Thames, called weft-country^ barges. BARLEMONT, a town of Hainault, in the French Barge, in ornithology. See Scolopax. Netherlands, fituated on the river 0Sambre, about fiffouth of Mons. m3 40/ E. long, and BARGE-coa/’/er, in architedlure, a beam mortifed into teen miles another, to. ftrengthen the building. 50° to7 N. lat. BARGE-caar/k, with bricklayers, a term ufed for that BARLETTA, a port-town of Barri, in the kingdom of part of the tiling which projects over without the Naples, fituated on the gulf of Venice, twenty-two principal rafters, in all forts of buildings, where there miles weft of Barri, in 17° E. long, and 41° N. lat. is either a gable or a kirkin-head. See Gable and BARLEY, in botany. See Hordeum. Head, Barley--