Notes and Queries, Number 22, March 30, 1850 by Various
page 35 of 70 (50%)
page 35 of 70 (50%)
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CANTAB.
* * * * * REPLIES. THE DODO. Mr. Strickland has justly observed that this subject "belongs rather to human history than to pure zoology." Though I have not seen Mr. Strickland's book, I venture to offer him a few suggestions, not as _answers_ to his questions, but as slight aids towards the resolution of some of them. Qu. 1. There can be no doubt about the discovery of Mauritius and Bourbon by the Portuguese; and if not by a Mascarhenas, that the islands were first so named in honour of some member of that illustrious family, many of whom make a conspicuous figure in the Decads of the Portuguese Livy. I expected to have found some notice of the discovery in the very curious little volume of Antonio Galvaõ, printed in 1563, under the following title:--_Tratado dos Descobrimentos Antigos, e Modernos feitos até a Era de 1550_; but I merely find a vague notice of several nameless islands--"alguma Ilheta sem gente: onde diz que tomaraõ agoa e lenha"--and that, in 1517, Jorge Mascarenhas was despatched by sea to the coast of China. This is the more provoking, as, in general, Galvaõ is very circumstantial about the discoveries of his countrymen. Qu. 5. The article in Ree's _Cyclopædia_ is a pretty specimen of the |
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