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The New Gresham Encyclopedia Part 19

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FAIDHERBE (f[=a]-derb), Louis Leon Cesar, a French general, born in 1818, died in 1889. He entered the army in 1840, served in Africa and the West Indies, was appointed Governor of Senegal in 1854, and afterwards of a district in Algiers from 1867 to 1870. After the fall of Napoleon III, he was summoned by the Government of the National Defence to France and appointed commander of the army of the north. He fought some b.l.o.o.d.y but indecisive battles with the Germans under Manteuffel and Goeben. After the war he was elected to the a.s.sembly by Lille, his native place, but on the triumph of Thiers retired from politics to private life. He wrote _epigraphie Phenicienne_, and valuable monographs on Senegal, the Sudan, and other parts of Africa.

FAIENCE (f[.a]-yens'), imitation porcelain, a kind of fine pottery, superior to the common pottery in its glazing, beauty of form, and richness of painting. Several kinds of faience are distinguished by critics. It derived its name from the town of Faenza, in Italy, where a fine sort of pottery called _majolica_ was manufactured as early as the fourteenth century. The majolica reached its greatest perfection between 1530 and 1560. In the Louvre, the Musee de Cluny, the British and Victoria and Albert Museums, at Berlin, and at Dresden are rich collections of it. The modern faience appears to have been invented about the middle of the sixteenth century, at Faenza, as an imitation of majolica, and obtained its name in France, where a man from Faenza, having discovered a similar kind of clay at Nevers, had introduced the manufacture of it. True faience is made of a yellowish or ruddy earth, covered with an enamel which is usually white, but may be coloured. This enamel is a gla.s.s rendered opaque by oxide of tin or other suitable material, and is intended not only to glaze the body, but to conceal it entirely. See _Pottery_.--Cf. M. L. Solon, _The Old French Faience_.

FAILLY (f[.a]-y[=e]), Pierre Louis Charles Achille de, French general, born in 1810, died in 1892. He distinguished himself in the Crimean War, and commanded a division against the Austrians in 1859. He was the means of introducing the Cha.s.sepot rifle into the French army, and commanded the troops which dispersed Garibaldi's irregulars at Mentana. At the outbreak of the Franco-German War Failly received the command of the 5th Corps, but was very unfortunate or unskilful in his organization of operations. His masterly inactivity in the early weeks of the war caused great popular indignation in France. Sedan ended his career as a soldier.

FAILSWORTH, a town of England, in Lancas.h.i.+re, 4 miles north-east of Manchester, with cotton-mills. Silk-weaving and hat-making are also carried on. Pop. 16,972.

FAINeANTS (f[=a]-n[=a]-[.a][n.]; Fr., 'do-nothings'), a sarcastic epithet applied to the later Merovingian kings of France, who were puppets in the hands of the mayors of the palace. Louis V, the last of the Carlovingian dynasty, received the same designation.



FAINTING, or SYNCOPE, a sudden suspension of the heart's action, of sensation, and the power of motion. It may be produced by loss of blood, pain, emotional disturbance, or organic or other diseases of the heart. It is to be treated by placing the patient on his back in a rec.u.mbent position or even with head slightly depressed, sprinkling cold water on his face, applying stimulant scents to the nostrils, or anything which tends to bring back the blood to the brain. The admission of fresh cool air and the loosening of any tight articles of dress are important.

FAIRBAIRN, Patrick, Scottish theologian, born 1805, died 1874. He became a minister of the Established Church, but joined the Free Church at the disruption in 1843. In 1853 he was appointed professor of divinity in the Free Church College, Aberdeen, and in 1856 princ.i.p.al of the Free Church College, Glasgow. Among his works are: _Typology of Scripture_; _Jonah: his Life, Character, and Mission_; _Ezekiel_; _Prophecy_; _Hermeneutical Manual_; _Pastoral Epistles of St. Paul_. He edited and wrote extensively for the _Imperial Bible Dictionary_.

FAIRBAIRN, Sir William, British civil engineer, born at Kelso, Roxburghs.h.i.+re, in 1789, died 18th Aug., 1874. He was apprenticed as an engine-wright at a colliery in North s.h.i.+elds, and commenced business on his own account in Manchester with James Lillie in 1817, where he made many improvements in machinery, such as the use of iron instead of wood in the shafting of cotton-mills. About 1831, his attention having been attracted to the use of iron as a material for s.h.i.+pbuilding, he built the first iron s.h.i.+p. His firm became extensively employed in iron s.h.i.+pbuilding at Manchester and at Millwall, London, and had a great share in the development of the trade. He shares with Stephenson the merit of constructing the great tubular bridge across the Menai Strait. Fairbairn was one of the earliest members of the British a.s.sociation for the Advancement of Science, of which he was president in 1861 and 1862. He was created a baronet in 1869. Sir William wrote many valuable professional books and papers, amongst which are: _On Ca.n.a.l Steam Navigation_ (1831); _Iron: its History, Properties, and Manufacture_ (1841); _Application of Iron to Building Purposes_ (1854); _Iron s.h.i.+p-building_ (1865). His brother Sir Peter, born 1799, died 1861, had also great mechanical ability, and founded large machine-works at Leeds.

FAIRFAX, Edward, the translator into English verse of Ta.s.so's _Jerusalem Delivered_, was the natural son of Sir Thomas Fairfax of Denton, and born in the last quarter of the sixteenth century. He settled at Newhall, in the parish of Fewston, Yorks.h.i.+re, to a life of studious leisure. The first edition of his translation bears the date of 1600. One or two eclogues by him also remain. He died in 1635.

FAIRFAX, Thomas, Lord, parliamentary general during the English Civil War, born in 1611 at Denton, in Yorks.h.i.+re, died at Nun Appleton, Yorks.h.i.+re, 12th Nov., 1671. He was the son and heir of Ferdinando, Lord Fairfax, to whose t.i.tle and estates he succeeded in 1648. After serving in the Netherlands with some reputation, he returned to England, and on the rupture between Charles I and the Parliament joined the forces of the latter. In 1642 he was appointed General of the Horse, and two years later held a chief command in the army sent to co-operate with the Scots. In 1645, on the resignation of the Earl of Ess.e.x, Fairfax became general-in-chief of the Parliamentary army. After the victory at Naseby he marched into the western counties, quelling all opposition, put down the insurgents in Kent and Ess.e.x in 1647, and captured Colchester. In April, 1649, he was occupied along with Cromwell in suppressing revolt in the army; but positively declined to march against the Scottish Presbyterians. He was a member of Cromwell's first Parliament. He co-operated in the restoration of Charles II, being one of the committee charged to secure his return.

FAIRFORD, a town in Gloucesters.h.i.+re, England, 8 miles east by south of Cirencester, with a church the twenty-eight windows of which are filled with beautiful stained gla.s.s, formerly ascribed to Albert Durer, but now known to have been designed and executed in England. Fairford was the birth-place of John Keble. Pop. 1410.

FAIR HEAD, a basaltic promontory on the north coast of Ireland, County Antrim, rising to the height of 636 feet.

FAIRIES AND ELVES. The fairies of folk-belief must be distinguished from the fairies of imaginative literature. Shakespeare, for instance, drew upon the fairy-lore of living tradition to create a new fairy mythology (as in _A Midsummer Night's Dream_) which became a literary convention. In the fairy stories of Hans Andersen the folk-material was similarly used in a free and individual manner. A distinction must likewise be drawn between the Celtic fairies and the Teutonic elves. The former are mainly females, like the nymphs of Homer, ruled over by a fairy queen, while the latter are mainly males, ruled over by an elf-king. Mab, the fairy queen, had no consort in British fairy literature until Oberon, King of the Fairies, was imported from mediaeval romance. His name 'Auberon', anciently 'Alberon', is identical with that of the German elfin king 'Alberich'. Indeed, the very names 'fairy' and 'fay' were introduced into these islands from abroad.

More than one cla.s.s of supernatural beings referred to in Gaelic as the _side_ (Irish) or _sith_ (Scottish), and p.r.o.nounced _shee_, are now called 'fairies'. These include the Danann deities of Irish mythology and 'the mothers' (Y Mamau) of Welsh folk-lore. The word _side_ or _sith_ has the secondary meaning of 'peace', and refers to the silence of death and the silence of fairy movements. It may also be translated as 'supernatural', 'Otherworld', or 'unearthly'. Mysterious diseases that come in epidemics and afterwards disappear are referred to as diseases of the side or sith.

Cat demons are _cait s.h.i.+th_, the cuckoo is _eun sith_, the mythical 'water horse' is _each sith_, a monstrous dog that pa.s.ses over land and sea by night is _cu sith_, while the 'will-o'-the-wisp' is _teine sith_ ('supernatural fire'). In Iceland _side_ refers to the dwellings (earth mounds, &c.) of the Dananns, &c., as well as to the supernatural inhabitants. The fairies of folk-belief always come from the west on eddies of wind, and cannot be seen except by those who have 'second sight', or those whose eyes have been anointed with a green balsam possessed by fairies. Sometimes the fairies render themselves visible to all, but one who grasps the garment of a fairy finds his hand closing on nothing. The usual height of fairies is about 3 feet, but they have power to shrink and pa.s.s through a crack in a door. They may also a.s.sume great stature. The Danann _side_ of Ireland are of human or above human height. In Scotland 'green ladies' are of ordinary human size. The chief fairy colours are blue (the eyes), golden (the hair), and green, red, and grey (for clothing).

Occasionally fairy beings are white and black. A black fairy with a red spot above the heart is referred to in Scottish stories, but is rare. He can be slain by piercing the red spot. The _side_ or _sith_ may be attired entirely in green with red caps, or have red cloaks and green skirts. A beautiful fairy queen may suddenly transform herself into an ugly old hag with black and white face and garments, as did the fairy who carried off Thomas the Rhymer to the Underworld. The dead were supposed to go to Fairyland, the Pagan Paradise. Those who died before their time were doomed to visit their former haunts as 'green ladies', i.e. green ghosts, until their measure of life was completed. Stories that tell of visions of the dead in the Underworld refer to them feasting and dancing, or reaping corn and plucking fruit in well-watered valleys. The resemblance of the Celtic Agricultural Paradise to the Otherworld of the Egyptian Osiris, which was originally situated under the ground, is of special interest. Both in the Underworld Paradise and on the 'Isles of the Blest' (the Celtic _Avalon_ or 'apple land' and 'Land of the Ever-Young') is a tree of life, which may be an apple tree, a hazel tree, or a rowan tree. The apples, nuts, or berries confer longevity on the G.o.ds and the souls of human beings that partake of them. On those human beings who have won their favour, the fairies bestow weapons, implements, musical instruments, songs, tunes, and medicines, and the power to work charms and foretell future events. In the Underworld, fairies engage in metal working and other industries. Sometimes they visit houses, and spin and weave with supernatural skill and speed in a single night big bales of clothing material, or make beautiful garments. Fairies possess gems, gold, silver, and copper in their underground dwellings.

Cornish miners hear them working in their mines. The 'banshee' (Ir.

_ben-side_) is a Fate who is seen was.h.i.+ng the blood-stained clothing, or the 'death clothes', of those who are doomed to die a sudden death. She either howls, or sings a weird song, or can be heard 'knocking' as she strikes the clothing with a beetle during the was.h.i.+ng, when a tragedy is at hand. Fairy women of great beauty have human lovers, but vanish for ever after a few meetings, with the result that their lovers become demented.

Fairy men (_fer-side_) likewise upset the minds of girls. The fairies abduct human children, leaving 'changelings' in cradles, or carry off wives to act as 'wet nurses' or midwives. Men who die suddenly are supposed to be transported to Fairyland. King Arthur, the Rev. Mr. Kirk of Aberfoyle, Thomas the Rhymer, and others were removed to the Fairy Paradise. Among the Celtic _side_ are _pixies_, _geniti-glinni_ (valley genii), _Bocanachs_ (male goblins), _Bananachs_ (female goblins), _Demna aeir_ (spirits of the air), &c. Fairies may appear in animal forms, chiefly as beautiful birds.

Elves are workers in metals, like Wayland Smith, and guardians of treasure who a.s.sume the forms of fish, otters, serpents, &c. Black elves dwell under the ground, and white elves haunt the air and the sea. Sea-elves are 'nikkers'. The Greek 'Fates', like the Celtic fairies, spin, weave, and embroider wedding and other garments in a single night for those they favour, and sometimes appear in groups of three, as old hags, to foretell tragic events or work spells. Celtic 'women of the _side_' sometimes appear in groups of three. The nereids are, like the fairy ladies, beautiful and capricious, and are likewise invariably blue eyed and golden haired.

'Nereid born' refers to the changeling idea. Nereids travel on whirlwinds, and, like the Celtic fairies, cause spinning spirals of dust on highways.

They confer gifts on mortals, and accept offerings of food. Lacon the poet sings, "I will set a great bowl of white milk for the nymphs". In the Scottish Highlands the milk offering was poured on the ground for those 'under the earth', or into a hollowed stone (_clach-na-gruagaich_). The Indian 'nagas' have power to change from serpent to human form, or to appear as half-human, half-reptile beings. Like the Celtic fairies, they have been referred to by some writers as aborigines who hid from invaders in earth-houses, in forests, and among the hills. In this connection P. C.

Roy, the translator of the _Mahabharata_, writes: "Nagas are semi-divine and can move through air and water and ascend to high heaven itself when they like, and have their home at Patala (the Underworld). To take them for some non-Aryan race, as has become the fas.h.i.+on with some ... is the very height of absurdity.... None of these writers, however, is acquainted with Sanskrit, and that is their best excuse." The fairies and elves of China and j.a.pan resemble those of Europe. In Polynesia there are fairy-like beings. They are called _Patupaiarehe_, and dwell in lonely places, appearing only at night. Human beings receive gifts from them, or knowledge of how to make nets, weapons, &c. The changeling idea is as prevalent as in Europe. It is of special interest to find that the Polynesian fairies have, like the Celtic, fair hair and white skins. Other peoples believe in the existence of fairy-like beings. See _Folklore_.--BIBLIOGRAPHY: T.

Keightley, _Fairy Mythology_; E. S. Hartland, _Science of Fairy Tales_; Delattre, _English Fairy Poetry from the Origins to the Seventeenth Century_; H. A. Giles, _China and the Chinese_; J. G. Lawson, _Modern Greek Folklore and Ancient Greek Religion_; Sir George Grey, _Polynesian Mythology_; P. W. Joyce, _Social History of Ancient Ireland_.

FAIR ISLE, an island lying nearly midway between the Orkney and Shetland Islands, 3 miles long by 2 broad. It is inaccessible except at one point, and rises to the height of 711 feet. Some grain is grown, but the surface is mostly in pasture. The men engage in fis.h.i.+ng; the women knit a well-known variety of hosiery, introduced, it is said, by Spaniards who escaped from the wreck of one of the vessels belonging to the Spanish Armada. There are two lighthouses. Pop. 147.

FAIR OAKS, BATTLE OF, fought at Fair Oaks, in Virginia, 7 miles east of Richmond, between the Confederates under General Johnston and the Union troops under General McClellan, 31st May, 1862. The loss on each side was nearly 6000 men; the result was indecisive.

FAIRS (Lat. _feria_, holiday, connected with _festus_, feast), periodical meetings of persons having goods or wares for sale in an open market held at a particular place, and generally for the transaction of a particular cla.s.s of business. The origin of fairs is obviously to be traced to the convenience of bringing together at stated times the buyers and sellers of the stock-produce of a district. In Europe the numerous festivals of the Church afforded the most favourable opportunity for the establishment of these markets. This a.s.sociation is indicated in the German name of a fair, which is identical with that used for the ceremony of the ma.s.s. In the Middle Ages fairs were of great importance, and were specially privileged and chartered by princes and magistrates, public proclamation being made of their commencement and duration. But modern facilities of communication have much diminished the necessity for periodical markets, and it is now chiefly amongst agriculturists that they are of much importance, large agricultural meetings being held in various districts for the sale of cattle and horses, and for the exhibition of agricultural implements. There are also, especially in Scotland, a considerable number of hiring fairs for farm servants. In the less developed commerce of the East, however, they still retain much of their ancient importance and magnitude. In Europe the most important fairs of the present day are those at Leipzig and Frankfort-on-the-Main in Germany, at Lyons in France, and Nijni-Novgorod in Russia. The last is, indeed, the largest fair in the world. The fairs of Great Britain now mostly consist of the weekly market-days of country towns and the agricultural meetings already mentioned. In many places the old fair-days are still kept, but are now merely an a.s.semblage of penny-theatres, peep-shows, and such amus.e.m.e.nts. Amongst the fairs which were once celebrated saturnalia, or rather baccha.n.a.lia, may be mentioned Donnybrook Fair in the county of Dublin; Bartholomew and Greenwich Fairs, London; and Glasgow Fair. The first three are now extinct. Fairs in the sense of markets are unknown in the United States, but the term is usually given to ladies' fancy bazaars, collections of fine art or the higher industries for public exhibition.--Cf. C. Walford, _Fairs, Past and Present_.

FAIR TRADE, an economical policy advocated by many in Britain, which, while not opposed to free trade in principle, would meet the prohibitory tariffs that foreign countries may put on British goods by placing equally heavy duties on goods sent from these countries to Britain. See _Free Trade_.

FAIRWEATHER, MOUNT, on the west coast of North America, in Alaska territory. It rises to the height of 14,900 feet, and is covered with perpetual snow.

FAIRY RING, a circle, or part of a circle of gra.s.s, of a darker colour and more luxuriant growth than the surrounding herbage, superst.i.tiously a.s.sociated with fairy revels. Actually it is due to the growth of a subterranean fungus-mycelium, which gradually spreads outwards from a central point of origin, the older parts dying and serving as manure for the gra.s.s, which appears even more vigorous than it really is by contrast with that on the outermost edge of the ring, where the living mycelium has a bad effect upon the gra.s.s-roots. The commonest fairy-ring fungus is _Marasmius oreades_, the fairy-ring champignon.

FAITH, the a.s.sent of the mind to the truth of what is declared by another, resting on his authority and veracity, either without other evidence or on probable evidence of any kind. In a special sense the term faith is used for the a.s.sent of the mind to what is given forth as a revelation of man's relation to G.o.d and the infinite, i.e. a religious faith. In Christian theology we have: first, _historical_ or _speculative faith_, or belief in the historic truthfulness of the Scripture narrative and the claims of Scripture to an inspired and supernatural origin; second, _evangelical_ or _saving faith_, that emotion of the mind (as Dwight defines it) which is called trust, or confidence exercised towards the moral character of G.o.d, and particularly of the Saviour.--Cf. W. R. Inge, _Faith and its Psychology_.

FAITH-HEALING. The tenets of the Peculiar People and of other believers in healing by faith differ from the views of Christian Scientists in this respect: that, while the latter hold pain and disease to be illusions of the imagination, the faith-healer admits their existence, but affirms the possibility of their removal by non-scientific means. Some make use of anointing with oil, while others hold prayer and the laying-on of hands to be the only requisites. Faith-healing traces its source to the raising of the apparently dead, the curing of the sick, the restoration of sight to the blind, and other recorded miracles of Christ; thence through the miracles of the disciples and their successors, down to the performances of Dorothy Trudel in Switzerland, and the displays of Dowie in London (1904).

Faith-healers flourish extensively in Sweden and America, while even in England 'Bethshans' (houses of cure) have been established. Faith, or some may say credulity, attributes the alleged cures to supernatural agency; science sees in them the action of 'suggestion', with an exalted and emotional state of mind in the patient, more especially when surrounded and encouraged by a crowd of expectant and credulous lookers-on. Excessive reliance on his or her own powers has not seldom brought a faith-healer within the menace of the law, owing to neglect to employ a qualified medical man, and the consequent death of the sufferer. In a broad sense of the term the belief in healing by faith has been at the root of 'touching'

for the King's Evil, a practice followed by several English and French sovereigns (see _Macbeth_, iv, 3, 141); of the value placed on relics; of alleged cures effected at such 'holy places' as St. Winifred's Well in Wales, and the miraculous grotto at Lourdes; and of the firm belief, not yet entirely extinct, in many rustic remedies, such as the removal of children's ailments by immuring a live shrew in a cleft ash tree.--BIBLIOGRAPHY: F. Podmore, _Mesmerism and Christian Science_; G. B.

Cutten, _Three Thousand Years of Mental Healing_.

FAKIRS (f[.a]-k[=e]rz'; literally 'poor men'), a kind of fanatic met with chiefly in India and the neighbouring countries, who retire from the world and give themselves up to contemplation. They are properly of the Mohammedan religion, but the term is often used for a mendicant of any faith. They are found both living in communities and solitary. The wandering fakirs gain the veneration of the lower cla.s.ses by absurd penances and self-mutilations.

FALAISE (f[.a]-l[=a]z), a town, France, department of Calvados, picturesquely situated on a rocky precipice (Fr. _falaise_) 23 miles S.S.E.

of Caen. It contains several objects of interest, among others the ruined castle of the Dukes of Normandy, where William the Conqueror was born. Pop.

6850.

FALASHAS, inhabitants of Amhara, in Abyssinia, who claim descent from Jewish emigrants during the reign of Jereboam. See _Abyssinia_.

FALCKENSTEIN, Edward Vogel von, a Prussian general, born in 1797, died in 1885. In 1813 he entered the Prussian army, distinguis.h.i.+ng himself at the battles of Katzbach and Montmirail. In 1848 he served in the Holstein campaign, and he acted as colonel and chief of staff in the war with Denmark in 1864. In the war of 1866 he commanded the Seventh Army Corps. On the outbreak of the Franco-German War in 1870 he was appointed military governor of the maritime provinces.

[Ill.u.s.tration: Greenland Falcon (_Falco candicans_)]

FALCON (f[a:]'kn), a name of various birds of prey, members of the family Falconidae. The falcons proper (genus Falco), for strength, symmetry, and powers of flight are the most perfectly developed of the feathered race.

They are distinguished by having the beak curved from the base, hooked at the point, the upper mandible with a notch or tooth on its cutting edge on either side, wings long and powerful, the second feather rather the longest, legs short and strong. The largest European falcons are the jerfalcon or gyrfalcon proper (_Falco gyrfalco_), a native of the Scandinavian Peninsula, and the Iceland falcon (_F. islandus_); to which may be also added the Greenland falcon (_F. candicans_). Between these three species much confusion at one time prevailed, but they are now distinctly defined and described. These three Arctic falcons are often referred to the special genus Hierofalco. In the Greenland falcon the prevailing colour at all ages is white, in the Iceland falcon dark. The latter more nearly resembles the true gyrfalcon of Norway, which, however, is generally darker, rather smaller, but with a longer tail. The average length of any of these falcons is about 2 feet. The Greenland species used to be the most highly prized by falconers. Its food consists chiefly of ptarmigans, hares, and water-fowl. It is found over a wide range of northern territory. The peregrine falcon (_F. peregr[=i]nus_) is not so large as the jerfalcon, but more graceful in shape. It chiefly inhabits wild districts, and nestles among rocks. It preys on grouse, partridges, ptarmigans, pigeons, rabbits, &c. Its flight is exceedingly swift, said to be as much as 150 miles an hour. The peregrine falcon was one of those most frequently used in falconry. Other British falcons are the hobby (_Hypotriorchis subbuteo_), formerly a great favourite for the chase of small game when falconry was in fas.h.i.+on; the merlin or stone-falcon (_aesalon regulus_), small but swift and spirited; the kestrel or wind-hover (_Tinnunculus alaudarius_), one of the most common British falcons. The term falcon is by sportsmen restricted to the female, the male, which is smaller and less courageous, being called _tiercel_, _tersel_, _tercelet_, or _falconet_. See _Falconry_.

FALCO'NE, Aniello, Italian painter, born in 1600, studied along with Salvator Rosa under Spagnoletto. His paintings, consisting chiefly of battle-pieces, are masterpieces, but very rare. He died in 1665.

FALCONER (f[a:]k'n[.e]r), Hugh, Scottish naturalist, born in 1808, died, 1865. After having graduated in arts at Aberdeen and medicine at Edinburgh, he went to India as a surgeon in 1830. Here he made valuable geological researches, and turned his attention to the introduction of tea cultivation. In 1837 he accompanied Barnes's second mission to Cabul. He visited England in 1843 and published an ill.u.s.trated descriptive work ent.i.tled _Fauna Antigua Sivalensis_ (Ancient Fauna of the Sivalik Hills).

He returned to India in 1848, where he had been appointed superintendent of the botanic gardens at Calcutta. In 1855 he returned to England, where he died.

FALCONER, William, poet and writer on naval affairs, born at Edinburgh in 1732. He went to sea in the merchant service, was wrecked, and wrote a poem (_The s.h.i.+pwreck_) descriptive of the incidents, published in 1762. He then entered the navy, and was rated as mids.h.i.+pman on board the _Royal George_.

In 1769 he published a _Universal Marine Dictionary_. The same year he sailed for Bengal as purser of the _Aurora_ frigate, which is believed to have foundered at sea.

FALCON'IDae, a family of diurnal birds of prey, in which the destructive powers are most perfectly developed. The family includes the different species of eagles as well as the hawks and falcons properly so called, and comprises the sub-families Gypaetinae (lammergeiers), Polyborinae (carrion hawks), Accipitrinae (hawks and harriers), Aquilinae (eagles), Buteoninae (kites and buzzards), and Falconinae (falcons).

[Ill.u.s.tration: Falcon with Hood]

FALCONRY (f[a:]'kn-ri), also called _hawking_, the pursuit of game by means of trained hawks or falcons. Falconry is a sport of great antiquity in Asia, having been followed in China as early as 2000 B.C. In Europe it was, during the Middle Ages, the favourite amus.e.m.e.nt of princes and n.o.bles, and, as ladies could take part in it, became very general. Charlemagne pa.s.sed laws in regard to falconry, while in Germany Henry the Fowler and the Emperor Frederick the Second were greatly addicted to it, and the latter wrote a work on the subject. In France it reached its greatest popularity under Francis I, whose grand falconer controlled an establishment of fifteen n.o.bles and fifty falconers, at an annual cost of about 40,000 livres. In Britain the sport was practised before the Norman Conquest, but became still more popular after it, and till about 1650 enjoyed the prominence now held by fox-hunting. One of the most interesting of English works on the subject is that which forms the first part of the _Boke of St.

Albans_, first printed in 1481. George Turberville's _Booke of Faulconrie or Hawking_ (1575), and Simon Latham's _The Faulcon's Lure and Cure_ (1633), may also be mentioned. Though the invention of fire-arms gradually superseded this amus.e.m.e.nt, it is not yet entirely extinct. The Duke of St.

Albans is still hereditary grand falconer, and presents the king with a _cast_ (or pair) of falcons on the day of his coronation. In Persia and other Eastern countries hawking is still in favour. The game hunted includes hares and rabbits, and, in the East, gazelles; with herons, wild geese, and many smaller birds. The training of a hawk is a work requiring great patience and skill, the natural wildness and intractable nature of the birds being very difficult to overcome. When a hawk suffers itself to be hooded and unhooded quietly, and will come to the trainer's hand to receive food, its education is considered far advanced, and the work of accustoming it to the _lure_ may be proceeded with. The _lure_ may be a piece of leather or wood, covered with the wings and feathers of a bird, and with a cord attached. The falcon is fed from it, and is recalled from flight by the falconer swinging the lure round his head with a peculiar cry. When the bird has been taught to obey the lure, it is next practised in the art of seizing its game, being initiated with prey fastened to a peg, and flown later at free game. When fully trained and being used for sport, the falcon is kept hooded until actually required to fly. Among the many technical terms connected with falconry may be mentioned that of _mew_ (= moult), from which is derived the familiar name _mews_, originally places where hawks were kept while moulting.--BIBLIOGRAPHY: J. E. Harting, _Bibliotheca accipitraria_; Salvin and Broderick, _Falconry in the British Isles_; E. B. Mich.e.l.l, _The Art and Practice of Hawking_; H. c.o.x, C.

Richardson, and G. Lascelles, _Coursing and Falconry_ (The Badminton Library).

FALD'STOOL (O.H.Ger. _falden_, to fold, and _stol_, chair), a folding stool provided with a cus.h.i.+on for a person to kneel on during the performance of certain acts of devotion, especially a kind of stool placed at the south side of the altar, on which the Kings of England kneel at their coronation.

The term is also given to a small desk at which the litany is enjoined to be sung or said.

FALER'NIAN WINE, an ancient wine of great repute amongst the Romans. It was made from the grapes grown on Mount Falernus in Campania. It was strong and generous, probably much resembling modern sherry.

FALIE'RO, Marino, Doge of Venice, born in 1274, commanded the troops of the republic at the siege of Zara in Dalmatia, where he gained a brilliant victory over the King of Hungary. He succeeded Andrea Dandolo, 11th Oct., 1354, was accused of the design of overthrowing the republic and making himself sovereign of the state, and beheaded 17th April, 1355. The last scenes of his life are depicted in Byron's tragedy of _Marino Faliero_.

FAL'KIRK, a parliamentary burgh of Scotland, in Stirlings.h.i.+re, 21 miles west by north of Edinburgh. The older portion of it is old-fas.h.i.+oned and irregularly built. There are several modern suburbs. In the town or its vicinity are the Carron Ironworks, the Falkirk Foundry, and others works, collieries, chemical-works, and distilleries. Falkirk is connected with the port of Grangemouth by a railway 3 miles long. The Trysts of Falkirk, held on Stenhousemuir, 3 miles to the N.N.W., are the largest cattle-fairs in Scotland. Falkirk is an old town, with many historical a.s.sociations. In the neighbourhood was fought the battle of Falkirk in 1298 between Sir William Wallace and Edward I, the Scots, who were much inferior in numbers, being defeated. About 1 mile south-west from the town the Highlanders under Prince Charles defeated the Royal forces under General Hawley, 17th Jan., 1746. _Stirling and Falkirk Burghs_ return one member to the House of Commons. Pop. of Falkirk, 33,312.

FALKLAND (f[a:]k'land), Lucius Gary, Viscount, an English man of letters, born about 1610. His father being then Lord-Deputy of Ireland, he was educated at Trinity College, Dublin. After pa.s.sing a short time abroad, he devoted himself to a life of retirement and literary studies, chiefly residing at his seat at Burford, near Oxford, which he made a kind of academy for the learned men of the neighbouring universities. In 1639 he joined the expedition against Scotland; and in 1640, his peerage being Scottish, he was chosen member of the House of Commons for Newport, in the Isle of Wight. In the first instance he warmly supported the Parliament, but doubts of the ultimate objects of the parliamentary leaders caused him to modify his att.i.tude; and in 1642 he accepted from Charles I the office of Secretary of State. When hostilities began, he embraced decidedly the cause of the king, though he desired peace rather than victory. He was slain at the battle of Newbury, 20th Sept., 1643. He left behind him a work ent.i.tled _A Discourse on the Infallibility of the Church of Rome_, several pamphlets and published speeches, and a few poems, but nothing that explains the universal praises bestowed on him by contemporaries.

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