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of London, but in suitable spots near the great centres of popula- | tion in the Midlands and the North, or big towns elsewhere not already well supplied with nurseries. By such a selection of a locality the beginner may build up a retail trade in hothouse fruit, or at least a trade with local fruiterers and grocers, thus avoiding railway charges and salesmen's commissions to a great extent, though it may often be advantageous to send certain kinds of produce to a distant market. Above all, a man who has no knowledge of the hothouse industry should avoid embarking his capital in it, trusting himself in the hands of a foreman, as experience shows that such a venture usually leads to disaster. Some years of training in different nurseries are desirable for any young man who is desirous of becoming a grower of hothouse fruits or flowers.

There can be no doubt that flower-growing is greatly extending in England, and that competition among home growers is becoming more severe. Foreign supplies of flowers have increased, but not nearly as greatly in proportion as home supplies, and it seems clear that home growers have gained ground in relation to their foreign rivals, except with respect to flowers for the growth of which foreigners have extraordinary natural advantages. There seems some danger of the home culture of the narcissus being over-done, and the florists' chrysanthemum appears to be produced in excess of the demand. Again, in the production of violets the warm and sunny South of France has an advantage not possessed by England, whilst Holland, likewise for climatic reasons, maintains her hold upon the hyacinth and tulip trade. Whether the production of flowers as a whole is gaining ground upon the demand or not is a difficult question to answer. It is true that the prices of flowers have fallen generally; but production, at any rate under glass, has been cheapened, and if a fair profit can be obtained, the fall in prices, without which the existing consumption of flowers would be impossible, does not necessarily imply over-production. There is some difference of opinion among growers upon this point; but nearly all agree that profits are now so small that production on a large scale is necessary to provide a fair income. Industrial flower-growing affords such a wide scope for the exercise of superior skill, industry and alertness, that it is not surprising to find some who are engaged in it doing remarkably well to all appearance, while others are struggling on and hardly paying their way. That a man with only a little capital, starting in a small way, has many disadvantages is certain; also, that his chance of saving money and extending his business quickly is much smaller than it was. To the casual looker-on, who knows nothing of the drudgery of the industry, flower-growing seems a delightful method of getting a living. That it is an entrancing pursuit there is no doubt; but it is equally true that it is a very arduous one, requiring careful forethought, ceaseless attention and abundant energy. Fortunately for those who might be tempted, without any knowledge of the industry, to embark capital in it, flower-growing, if at all comprehensive in scope, so obviously requires a varied and extensive technical knowledge, combined with good commercial ability, that any one can see that a thorough training is necessary to a man who intends to adopt it as a business, especially if hothouse flowers are to be produced.

The market for fruit, and more especially for flowers, is a fickle one, and there is nearly always some uncertainty as to the course of prices. The perishable nature of soft fruit and cut flowers renders the markets very sensitive to anything in the nature of a glut, the occurrence of which is usually attended with disastrous results to producers. Foreign competition, moreover, has constantly to be faced, and it is likely to increase rather than diminish. French growers have a great advantage over the open-air cultivators of England, for the climate enables them to get their produce into the markets early in the season, when the highest prices are obtainable. The geographical advantage which France enjoys in being so near to England is, however, considerably discounted by the increasing facilities for cold storage in transit, both by rail and sea. The development of such facilities permits of the retail sale in England of luscious fruit as fresh and attractive as when it was gathered beneath the sunny skies of California. In the case of flowers, fashion is an element not to be ignored. Flowers much in request in one season may meet with very little demand in another, and it is difficult

for the producer to anticipate the changes which caprice may dictate.
Even for the same kind of flower the requirements are very uncertain,
and the white blossom which is all the rage in one season may be
discarded in favour of one of another colour in the next. The sale
of fresh flowers for church decoration at Christmas and Easter has
reached enormous dimensions. The irregularity in the date of the
festival, however, causes some inconvenience to growers. If it falls
forward for sale, whilst a late Easter may find the season too far
very early the great bulk of suitable flowers may not be sufficiently
advanced. The trade in cut flowers, therefore, is generally attended
by uncertainty, and often by anxiety.
(W. FR.; J. Ws.)

UNITED STATES

In the United States horticulture and market gardening have now assumed immense proportions. In a country of over 3,000,000 sq. m., stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific on the one hand, and from the Gulf of Mexico to the great northern lakes and the Dominion of Canada on the other, a great variation of climatic conditions is not unnatural. From a horticultural point of view there are practically two well-defined regions: (1) that to the east of the Rocky Mountains across to the Atlantic, where the climate is more like that of eastern Asia than of western Europe so far as rainfall, temperature and seasonable conditions are concerned; (2) that to the west of the Rockies, known as the Pacific coast region, where the climate is somewhat similar to that of western Europe. It may be added that in the northern states-in Washington, Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, &c.-the winters are often very severe, while the southern states practically enjoy a temperature somewhat similar to that of the Riviera. Indeed the range of temperature between the extreme northern states and the extreme southern may vary as much as 120° F. The great aim of American gardeners, therefore, has been to find out or to produce the kinds of fruits, flowers and vegetables that are likely to flourish in different parts of this immense country. Fruit Culture.-There is probably no country in the world where so many different kinds of fruit can be grown with advantage to the nation as in the United States. In the temperate regions apples, pears and plums are la gely grown, and orchards of these are chiefly to be found in the states of New York, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Missouri, Colorado, and also in northern Texas, Arkansas and N. California. To these may be added cranberries and quinces, which are chiefly grown in the New England states. The quinces are not a crop of first-rate importance, but as much as 800,000 bushels of cranberries are grown each year. The peach orchards are assuming great proportions, and are chiefly to be found in Georgia and Texas, while grapes are grown throughout the Republic from east to west in all favourable localities. Oranges, lemons and citrons are more or less extensively grown in Florida and California, and in these regions what are known as Japanese or "Kelsey" plums (forms of Prunus triflora) are also grown as marketable crops. Pomegranates are not yet largely grown, but it is possible their culture will develop in southern Texas and Louisiana, where the climate is tempered by the waters of the Gulf of Mexico. Tomatoes are grown in most parts of the country so easily that there is frequently a glut; while the strawberry region extends from Florida to Virginia, Pennsylvania and other states-thus securing a natural succession from south to north for the various great market centres.

Of the fruits mentioned apples are undoubtedly the most important. Not only are the American people themselves supplied with fresh fruit, but immense quantities are exported to Europe Great Britain alone absorbing as much as 1,430,000 cwt. in 1908. The varieties originally grown were of course those taken or introduced from Europe by the early settlers. brought about, and the varieties mostly cultivated now are Since the middle of the 19th century great changes have been distinctly American. They have been raised by crossing and intercrossing the most suitable European forms with others since imported from Russia. In the extreme northern states indeed, where it is essential to have apple trees that will stand the severest winters, the Russian varieties crossed with the betry crab of eastern Europe (Pyrus baccata) have produced

a race eminently suited to that particular region. The individual | to peach culture. As a rule the crops do well. Sometimes, fruits are not very large, but the trees are remarkably hardy. however, a disease known as the "yellows" makes sad havoc Farther south larger fruited varieties are grown, and among amongst them, and scarcely a fruit is picked in an orchard which these may be noted Baldwins, Newton pippins, Spitzenbergs early in the season gave promise of a magnificent crop. and Rhode Island greening. Apple orchards are numerous in the State of New York, where it is estimated that over 100,000 acres are devoted to them. In the hilly regions of Missouri, Arkansas and Colorado there are also great plantations of apples. The trees, however, are grown on different principles from those in New York State. In the latter state apple trees with ordinary care live to more than 100 years of age and produce great crops; In the other states, however, an apple tree is said to be middleaged at 20, decrepit at 30 and practically useless at 40 years of age. They possess the advantage, however, of bearing early and heavily.

Until the introduction of the cold-storage system, about the year 1880, America could hardly be regarded as a commercial fruit-growing country. Since then, however, owing to the great improvements made in railway refrigerating vans and storage houses, immense quantities of fruit can be despatched in good condition to any part of the world; or they can be kept at home in safety until such time as the markets of Chicago, New York, Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia, &c., are considered favourable for their reception.

Apple trees are planted at distances varying from 25 ft. to 30 ft. apart in the middle western states, to 40 ft. to 50 ft. apart in New York State. Here and there, however, in some of the very best orchards the trees are planted 60 ft. apart every way. Each tree thus has a chance to develop to its utmost limits, and as air and light reach it better, a far larger fruit-bearing surface is secured. Actual experience has shown that trees planted at 60 ft. apart about 28 to the acre-produce more fruit by 43 bushels than trees at 30 ft. apart-i.e. about 48 to the acre. Until recent years pruning as known to English and French gardeners was practically unknown. There was indeed no great necessity for it, as the trees, not being cramped for space, threw their branches outwards and upwards, and thus rarely become overcrowded. When practised, however, the operation could scarcely be called pruning; lopping or trimming would be more accurate descriptions.

Apple orchards are not immune from insect pests and fungoid diseases, and an enormous business is now done in spraying machines and various insecticides. It pays to spray the trees, and figures have been given to show that orchards that have been sprayed four times have produced an average income of £211 per acre against £103 per acre from unsprayed orchards.

The spring frosts are also troublesome, and in the Colorado and other orchards the process known as "smudging" is now adopted to save the crops. This consists in placing 20 or 30, or even more, iron or tin pots to an acre, each pot containing wooden chips soaked in tar (or pitch) mixed with kerosene. Whenever the thermometer shows 3 or 4 degrees of frost the smudge-pots are lighted. A dense white smoke then arises and is diffused throughout the orchards, enveloping the blossoming heads of the trees in a dense cloud. This prevents the frost from killing the tender pistils in the blossoms, and when several smudge-pots are alight at the same time the temperature of the orchard is raised two or three degrees. This work has generally to be done between 3 and 5 A.M., and the growers naturally have an anxious time until all danger is over. The failure to attend to smudging, even on one occasion, may result in the loss of the entire crop of plums, apples or pears.

states.

Next to apples perhaps peaches are the most important fruit crop. The industry is chiefly carried on in Georgia, Texas and S. Carolina, and on a smaller scale in some of the adjoining Peaches thus flourish in regions that are quite unsuitable for apples or pears. In many orchards in Georgia, where over 3,000,000 acres have been planted, there are as many as 100,000 peach trees; while some of the large fruit companies grow as many as 365,000. In one place in West Virginia there is, however, a peach orchard containing 175,000 trees, and in Missouri another company has 3 sq. m. devoted

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Plums are an important crop in many states. Besides the European varieties and those that have been raised by crossing with American forms, there is now a growing trade done in Japanese plums. The largest of these is popularly known as Kelseys," named after John Kelsey, who raised the first fruit in 1876 from trees brought to California in 1870. Sometimes the fruits are 3 in. in diameter, and like most of the Japanese varieties are more heart-shaped and pointed than plums of European origin. One apparent drawback to the Kelsey plum is its irregularity in ripening. It has been known in some years to be quite ripe in June, while in others the fruits are still green in October.

Pears are much grown in such states as Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Missouri and California; while bush fruits like currants, gooseberries and raspberries find large spaces devoted in most of the middle and northern states. Naturally a good deal of crossing and intercrossing has taken place amongst the European and American forms of these fruits, but so far as gooseberries are concerned no great advance seems to have been made in securing varieties capable of resisting the devastating gooseberry mildew.

Other fruits of more or less commercial value are oranges, lemons and citrons, chiefly in Florida. Lemons are practically a necessity to the American people, owing to the heat of the summers, when cool and refreshing drinks with an agreeable acidulous taste are in great demand. The pomelo (grape-fruit) is a kind of lemon with a thicker rind and a more acid flavour. At one time its culture was confined to Florida, but of recent years it has found its way into Californian orchards. Notwithstanding the prevailing mildness of the climate in both California and Florida, the crops of oranges, lemons, citrons, &c., are sometimes severely injured by frosts when in blossom.

Other fruits likely to be heard of in the future are the kaki or persimmon, the loquat, which is already grown in Louisiana, as well as the pomegranate.

Great aid and encouragement are given by the government to the progress of American fruit-growing, and by the experiments that are being constantly carried out and tabulated at Cornell University and by the U.S.A. department of agriculture.

Flower Culture.-So far as flowers are concerned there appears to be little difference between the kinds of plants grown in the United States and in England, France, Belgium, Germany, Holland, &c. Indeed there is a great interchange of new varieties of plants between Europe and America, and modifications in systems of culture are being gradually introduced from one side of the Atlantic to the other. The building of greenhouses for commercial purposes is perhaps on a somewhat different scale from that in England, but there are probably no extensive areas of glass such as are to be seen north of London from Enfield Highway to Broxburne. Hot water apparatus differs merely in detail, although most of the boilers used resemble those on the continent of Europe rather than inEngland. Great business is done in bulbs-mostly imported from Holland-stove and greenhouse plants, hardy perennials, orchids, ferns of the "fancy" and " dagger" types of Nephrolepis, and in carnations and roses. Amongst the latter thousands of such varieties as Beauty, Liberty, Killarney, Richmond and Bride are grown, and realize good prices as a rule in the markets. Carnations of the winter-flowering or perpetual" type have long been grown in America, and enormous prices have been given for individual plants on certain occasions, rivalling the fancy prices paid in England for certain orchids. The American system of carnation-growing has quite captivated English cultivators, and new varieties are being constantly raised in both countries. Chrysanthemums are another great feature of American florists, and sometimes during the winter season a speculative grower will send a living specimen to one of the London exhibitions in the hope of booking large orders for cuttings of it later on. Sweet

peas, dahlias, lilies of the valley, arum lilies and indeed every
flower that is popular in England is equally popular in America,
and consequently is largely grown.

Vegetables. So far as these are concerned, potatoes, cabbages,
cauliflowers, beans of all kinds, cucumbers, tomatoes (already
referred to under fruits), musk-melons, lettuces, radishes, endives,
carrots, &c.; are naturally grown in great quantities, not only in the
open air, but also under glass. The French system of intensive
cultivation as practised on hot beds of manure round Paris is practi-
cally unknown at present. In the southern states there would be
no necessity to practise it, but in the northern ones it is likely to
attract attention.
FRUMENTIUS (c. 300–c. 360), the founder of the Abyssinian
UJ. Ws.)
church, traditionally identified in Abyssinian literature with
Abba Salama or Father of Peace (but see ETHIOPIA), was a
native of Phoenicia. According to the 4th-century historian
Rufinus (x. 9), who gives Aedesius himself as his authority, a
certain Tyrian, Meropius, accompanied by his kinsmen Fru-
mentius and Aedesius, set out on an expedition to “
but fell into the hands of Ethiopians on the shore of the Red Sea
'India,"
and, with his ship's crew, was put to death. The two young men
were taken to the king at Axum, where they were well treated
and in time obtained great influence. With the help of Christian
merchants who visited the country Frumentius gave Christianity
a firm footing, which was strengthened when in 326 he was
consecrated bishop by Athanasius of Alexandria, who in his
Epistola ad Constantinum mentions the consecration, and gives
some details of the history of Frumentius's mission. Later
witnesses speak of his fidelity to the homoousian during the
Arian controversies. Aedesius returned to Tyre, where he was
ordained presbyter.

He

FRUNDSBERG, GEORG VON (1473-1528), German soldier, was born at Mindelheim on the 24th of September 1473. fought for the German king Maximilian I. against the Swiss in 1499, and in the same year was among the imperial troops sent to assist Ludovico Sforza, duke of Milan, against the French. Still serving Maximilian, he took part in 1504 in the war over the succession to the duchy of Bavaria-Landshut, and afterwards fought in the Netherlands. Convinced of the necessity of a native body of trained infantry Frundsberg assisted Maximilian to organize the Landsknechte (q.v.), and subsequently at the head of bands of these formidable troops he was of great service to the Empire and the Habsburgs. In 1509 he shared in the war against Venice, winning fame for himself and his men; and after a short visit to Germany returned to Italy, where in 1513 and 1514 he gained fresh laurels by his enterprises against the Venetians and the French. Peace being made, he returned to Germany, and at the head of the infantry of the Swabian league assisted to drive Ulrich of Württemberg from his duchy in 1519. At the diet of Worms in 1521 he spoke words of encouragement to Luther, and when the struggle between France and the Empire was renewed he took part in the invasion of Picardy, and then proceeding to Italy brought the greater part of Lombardy under the influence of Charles V. through his victory at Bicocca in April 1522. He was partly responsible for the great victory over the French at Pavia in February 1525, and, returning to Germany, he assisted to suppress the Peasant revolt, using on this occasion, however, diplomacy as well as force. When the war in Italy was renewed Frundsberg raised an army at his own expense, and skilfully surmounting many difficulties, joined the constable de Bourbon near Piacenza and marched towards Rome. Before he reached the city, however, his unpaid troops showed signs of mutiny, and their leader, stricken with illness and unable to pacify them, gave up his command. Returning to Germany, he died at Mindelheim on the 20th of August 1528. He was a capable and chivalrous soldier, and a devoted servant of the Habsburgs. His son Caspar (1500-1536) and his grandson Georg (d. 1586) were both soldiers of some distinction. With the latter's death the family became extinct. See Adam Reissner, Historia Herrn Georgs und Herrn Kaspars von Frundsberg (Frankfort, 1568). A German translation of this work was published at Frankfort in 1572. F. W. Barthold, Georg von Frundsberg (Hamburg, 1833); J. Heilmann, Kriegsgeschichte von Bayern, Franken, Pfalz und Schwaben (Munich, 1868).

metry for the part of a solid figure, such as a cone or pyramid,
FRUSTUM (Latin for a “piece broken off "), a term in geo-
parallel planes; and hence in architecture a name given to the
drum of a column.
cut off by a plane parallel to the base, or lying between two

FRUYTIERS, PHILIP (1627-1666), Flemish painter and
and entered the Antwerp gild of painters without a fee in 1631.
engraver, was a pupil of the Jesuits' college at Antwerp in 1627,
He is described in the register of that institution as "illuminator,
in this branch of his art for arrangement, drawing, and especially
painter and engraver." The current account of his life is " that
he worked exclusively in water colours, yet was so remarkable
for force and clearness of colour, as to excite the admiration of
Rubens, whom he portrayed with all his family.
with figures of life size, and four smaller pictures in oil, for the
that he was an artist of the most versatile talents, as may be
The truth
judged from the fact that in 1646 he executed an Assumption
considerable sum of 1150 florins. Unhappily no undoubted
church of St Jacques at Antwerp, for which he received the
point to with certainty is a series of etched plates, chiefly por-
traits, which are acknowledged to have been powerfully and
production of his hand has been preserved. All that we can
skilfully handled. If, however, we search the portfolios of art
coloured with extraordinary brilliancy. In form they quite
collections on the European continent, we sometimes stumble
recall the works of Rubens, and these,
upon miniatures on vellum, drawn with great talent and
of Philip Fruytiers.
may be, are the work

century JOSEPH FRY (1728-1787), a doctor, settled in Bristol, FRY, the name of a well-known English Quaker family, originally living in Wiltshire. About the middle of the 18th medicine for commerce. He became interested in china-making, soap-boiling and type-founding businesses in Bristol, and in a where he acquired a large practice, but eventually abandoned chemical works at Battersea, all of which ventures proved very profitable. The type-founding business was subsequently removed to London and conducted by his son Edmund. Joseph Fry, however, is best remembered as the founder of the great Bristol firm of J. S. Fry & Sons, chocolate manufacturers. He purchased the chocolate-making patent of William ChurchAfter his death the Bristol chocolate factory was carried on with increasing success by his widow and by his son, JOSEPH STORRS man and on it laid the foundations of the present large business. FRY (1767-1835).

Bristol, which still forms the centre of the firm's premises, and in 1798 a Watt's steam-engine was purchased and the cocoaIn 1795 a new and larger factory was built in Union Street, beans ground by steam. three sons, Joseph (1795-1879), Francis, and Richard (1807-1878) became partners in the firm, the control being mainly in the On the death of Joseph Storrs Fry his hands of FRANCIS FRY (1803-1886). Francis Fry was in every this did not exhaust his activities. He took a principal part in way a remarkable character. The development of the business the introduction of railways to the west of England, and in 1852 to its modern enormous proportion was chiefly his work, but drew up a scheme for a general English railway parcel service. early English Bibles, of which he made in the course of a long life a large and striking collection, and of the most celebrated He was an ardent bibliographer, taking a special interest in of which he published facsimiles with bibliographical notes. Francis Fry died in 1886, and his son Francis J. Fry and nephew Joseph Storrs Fry carried on the business, which in 1896 was for family reasons converted into a private limited company, Joseph Storrs Fry being chairman and all the directors members of the Fry family.

FRY, SIR EDWARD (1827

November 1827, and educated at University College, London,
and London University. He was called to the bar in 1854 and
of Joseph Fry (1795-1879), was born at Bristol on the 4th of
), English judge, second son
recognized as a leading equity lawyer. In 1877 he was raised
was made a Q.C. in 1869, practising in the rolls court and becoming
to the bench and knighted. As chancery judge he will be

by a numerous family, the youngest of whom was born in 1822. Two interesting volumes of Memoirs, with Extracts from her Journals and Letters, edited by two of her daughters, were published in 1847. See also Elizabeth Fry, by G. King Lewis (1910).

remembered for his careful interpretations and elucidations of | which she died on the 12th of October 1845. She was survived the Judicature Acts, then first coming into operation. In 1883 he was made a lord justice of appeal, but resigned in 1892; and subsequently his knowledge of equity and talents for arbitration were utilized by the British government from time to time in various special directions, particularly as chairman of many commissions. He was also one of the British representatives at the Paris North Sea Inquiry Commission (1905), and was appointed a member of the Hague Permanent Arbitration Court. He wrote A Treatise on the Specific Performance of Public Contracts (London, 1858, and many subsequent editions).

FRY, ELIZABETH (1780-1845), English philanthropist, and, after Howard, the chief promoter of prison reform in Europe, was born in Norwich on the 21st of May 1780. Her father, John Gurney, afterwards of Earlham Hall, a wealthy merchant and banker, represented an old family which for some generations had belonged to the Society of Friends. While still a girl she gave many indications of the benevolence of disposition, clearness and independence of judgment, and strength of purpose, for which she was afterwards so distinguished; but it was not until after she had entered her eighteenth year that her religion assumed a decided character, and that she was induced, under the preaching of the American Quaker, William Savery, to become an earnest and enthusiastic though never fanatical "Friend." In August 1800 she became the wife of Joseph Fry, a London merchant. Amid increasing family cares she was unwearied in her attention to the poor and the neglected of her neighbourhood; and in 1811 she was acknowledged by her co-religionists as a "minister," an honour and responsibility for which she was undoubtedly qualified, not only by vigour of intelligence and warmth of heart, but also by an altogether unusual faculty of clear, fluent and persuasive speech. Although she had made several visits to Newgate prison as early as February 1813, it was not until nearly four years afterwards that the great public work of her life may be said to have begun. The association for the Improvement of the Female Prisoners in Newgate was formed in April 1817. Its aim was the much-needed establishment of some of what are now regarded as the first principles of prison discipline, such as entire separation of the sexes, classification of criminals, female supervision for the women, and adequate provision for their religious and secular instruction, as also for their useful employment. The ameliorations effected by this association, and largely by the personal exertions of Mrs Fry, soon became obvious, and led to a rapid extension of similar methods to other places. In 1818 she, along with her brother, visited the prisons of Scotland and the north of England; and the publication (1819) of the notes of this tour, as also the cordial recognition of the value of her work by the House of Commons committee on the prisons of the metropolis, led to a great increase of her correspondence, which now extended to Italy, Denmark and Russia, as well as to all parts of the United Kingdom. Through a visit to Ireland, which she made in 1827, she was led to direct her attention to other houses of detention besides prisons; and her observations resulted in many important improvements in the British hospital system, and in the treatment of the insane. In 1838 she visited France, and besides conferring with many of the leading prison officials, she personally visited most of the houses of detention in Paris, as well as in Rouen, Caen and some other places. In the following year she obtained an official permission to visit all the prisons in that country; and her tour, which extended from Boulogne and Abbeville to Toulouse and Marseilles, resulted in a report which was presented to the minister of the interior and the prefect of police. Before returning to England she had included Geneva, Zürich, Stuttgart and Frankfort-on-Main in her inspection. The summer of 1840 | found her travelling through Belgium, Holland and Prussia on the same mission; and in 1841 she also visited Copenhagen. In 1842, through failing health, Mrs Fry was compelled to forgo her plans for a still more widely extended activity, but had the satisfaction of hearing from almost every quarter of Europe that the authorities were giving increased practical effect to her suggestions. In 1844 she was seized with a lingering illness, of

FRYXELL, ANDERS (1795-1881), Swedish historian, was born at Hesselskog, Dalsland, Sweden, on the 7th of February 1795. He was educated at Upsala, took holy orders in 1820, was made a doctor of philosophy in 1821, and in 1823 began to publish the great work of his life, the Stories from Swedish History. He did not bring this labour to a close until, fifty-six years later, he published the forty-sixth and crowning volume of his vast enterprise. Fryxell, as a historian, appealed to every class by the picturesqueness of his style and the breadth of his research; he had the gift of awakening to an extraordinary degree the national sense in his readers. In 1824 he published his Swedish Grammar, which was long without a rival. In 1833 | he received the title of professor, and in 1835 he was appointed to the incumbency of Sunne, in the diocese of Karlstad, where he resided for the remainder of his life. In 1840 he was elected to the Swedish Academy in succession to the poet Wallin (17791839). In 1847 Fryxell received from his bishop permission to withdraw from all the services of the Church, that he might devote himself without interruption to historical investigation. Among his numerous minor writings are prominent his Characteristics of Sweden between 1592 and 1600 (1830), his Origins of the Inaccuracy with which the History of Sweden in Catholic Times has been Treated (1847), and his Contributions to the Literary History of Sweden. It is now beginning to be seen that the abundant labours of Fryxell were rather of a popular than of a scientific order, and although their influence during his lifetime was unbounded, it is only fair to later and exacter historians to admit that they threaten to become obsolete in more than one direction. On the 21st of March 1881 Anders Fryxell died at Stockholm, and in 1884 his daughter Eva Fryxell (born 1829) published from his MS. an interesting History of My History, which was really a literary autobiography and displays the persistency and tirelessness of his industry. (E. G.)

FUAD PASHA (1815-1869), Turkish statesman, was the son of the distinguished poet Kechéji-zadé Izzet Molla. He was educated at the medical school and was at first an army surgeon. About 1836 he entered the civil service as an official of the foreign ministry. He became secretary of the embassy in London; was employed on special missions in the principalities and at St Petersburg (1848), and was sent to Egypt as special commissioner in 1851. In that year he became minister for foreign affairs, a post to which he was appointed also on four subsequent occasions and which he held at the time of his death. During the Crimean War he commanded the troops on the Greek frontier and distinguished himself by his bravery. He was Turkish delegate at the Paris conference of 1856; was charged with a mission to Syria in 1860; grand vizier in 1860 and 1861, and also minister of war. He accompanied the sultan Abd-ul-Aziz on his journey to Egypt and Europe, when the freedom of the city of London was conferred on him. He died at Nice (whither he had been ordered for his health) in 1869. Fuad was renowned for his boldness and promptness of decision, as well as for his ready wit and his many bons mots. Generally regarded as the partisan of a pro-English policy; he rendered most valuable service to his country by his able management of the foreign relations of Turkey, and not least by his efficacious settlement of affairs in Syria after the massacres of 1860.

FUCHOW, FU-CHAU, FOOCHOW, a city of China, capital of the province of Fu-kien, and one of the principal ports open to foreign commerce. In the local dialect it is called Hokchiu. It is situated on the river Min, about 35 m. from the sea, in 26° 5' N. and 119° 20′ E., 140 m. N. of Amoy and 280 S. of Hang-chow. The city proper, lying nearly 3 m. from the north bank of the river, is surrounded by a wall about 30 ft. high and 12 ft. thick, which makes a circuit of upwards of 5 m. and is pierced by seven gateways surrounded by tall fantastic watch-towers.

him.

The whole district between the city and the river, the island of | another species of the genus Digitalis, which was so named by
Nantai, and the southern banks of the Min are occupied by
extensive suburbs; and the river itself bears a large floating
population. Communication from bank to bank is afforded
by a long stone bridge supported by forty solid stone piers in its
northern section and by nine in its southern. The most remark-
able establishment of Fuchow is the arsenal situated about
3 m. down the stream at Pagoda Island, where the sea-going
vessels usually anchor. It was founded in 1867, and is conducted
under the direction of French engineers according to European
methods. In 1870 it employed about 1000 workmen besides
fifty European superintendents, and between that date and
1880 it turned out about 20 or 30 small gunboats. In 1884 it
was partially destroyed by the French fleet, and for a number of
years the workshops and machinery were allowed to stand idle
and go to decay. On the 1st of August 1895 an attack was
made on the English mission near the city of Ku-chang, 120 m.
west of Fuchow, on which occasion nine missionaries, of whom
eight were ladies, were massacred. The port was opened to
European commerce in 1842; and in 1853 the firm of Russell
and Co. shipped the first cargoes of tea from Fuchow to Europe
and America. The total trade in foreign vessels in 1876 was
imports to the value of £1,531,617, and exports to the value
of £3,330,489. In 1904 the imports amounted to £1,440,351,
and the exports to £1,034,436. The number of vessels that
entered in 1876 was 275, and of these 211 were British,. 27
German, 11 Danish and 9 American. While in 1904 480
vessels entered the port, 216 of which were British. A large
trade is carried on by the native merchants in timber, paper,
woollen and cotton goods, oranges and olives; but the foreign
houses mainly confine themselves to opium and tea. Commercial
intercourse with Australia and New Zealand is on the increase.
The principal imports, besides opium, are shirtings, T-cloths,
lead and tin, medicines, rice, tobacco, and beans and peas.
Two steamboat lines afford regular communication with Hong-
Kong twice a month. The town is the seat of several important
missions, of which the first was founded in 1846. That supported
by the American board had in 1876 issued 1,3000,000 copies of
Chinese books and tracts.

FUCHS, JOHANN NEPOMUK VON (1774-1856), German chemist and mineralogist, was born at Mattenzell, near Brennberg in the Bavarian Forest, on the 15th of May 1774. In 1807 he became professor of chemistry and mineralogy at the university of Landshut, and in 1823 conservator of the mineralogical collections at Munich, where he was appointed professor of mineralogy three years later, on the removal thither of the university of Landshut. He retired in 1852, was ennobled by the king of Bavaria in 1854, and died at Munich on the 5th of March 1856. His name is chiefly known for his mineralogical observations and for his work on soluble glass.

His collected works, including Über den Einfluss der Chemie und Mineralogie (1824), Die Naturgeschichte des Mineralreichs (1842), Über die Theorien der Erde (1844), were published at Munich in 1856. FUCHS, LEONHARD (1501-1566), German physician and botanist, was born at Wembdingen in Bavaria on the 17th of January 1501. He attended school at Heilbronn and Erfurt, and in 1521 graduated at the university of Ingolstadt. About the same time he espoused the doctrines of the Reformation. Having in 1524 received his diploma as doctor of medicine, he practised for two years in Munich. He became in 1526 professor of medicine at Ingolstadt, and in 1528 physician to the margrave of Anspach. In Anspach he was the means of saving the lives of many during the epidemic locally known as the "English sweating-sickness." By the duke of Württemberg he was, in 1535, appointed to the professorship of medicine at the university of Tübingen, a post held by him till his death on the 10th of May 1566. Fuchs was an advocate of the Galenic school of medicine, and published several Latin translations of treatises by its founder and by Hippocrates. But his most important publication was De historia stirpium commentarii insignes (Basel, 1542), a work illustrated with more than five hundred excellent outline illustrations, including figures of the common foxglove and of

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FUCHSIA, so named by Plumier in honour of the botanist
Leonhard Fuchs, a genus of plants of the natural order Onagraceae,
characterized by entire, usually opposite leaves, pendent flowers,
a funnel-shaped, brightly coloured, quadripartite, deciduous
calyx, 4 petals, alternating with the calycine segments, 8, rarely
10, exserted stamens, a long filiform style, an inferior ovary,
and fruit, a fleshy ovoid many-seeded berry. All the members
of the genus, with the exception of the New Zealand species,
F. excorticata, F. Colensoi and F. procumbens, are natives of
Central and South America-occurring in the interior of forests
or in damp and shady mountainous situations. The various
species differ not a little in size as well as in other characters;
some, as F. verrucosa, being dwarf shrubs; others, as F. arbo-
rescens and F. apetala, attaining a height of 12 to 16 ft., and having
stems several inches in diameter. Plumier, in his Nova plan-
tarum Americanarum genera (p. 14, tab. 14, Paris, 1703), gave
a description of a species of fuchsia, the first known, under the
name of Fuchsia triphylla, fare coccineo, and a somewhat con-
ventional outline figure
of the same plant was
published at Amster-
dam in 1757 by Bur-
mann. In the Histoire
des plantes médicinales
of the South American
traveller Feuillée (p. 64,
pl. XLVII.), written in
1709-1711, and pub-
lished by him with his
Journal, Paris, 1725,
the name Thilco is
applied to a species of
fuchsia from Chile,
which is described,
though not evidently
so figured, as having
a pentamerous calyx.
The F. coccinea of Aiton
(fig.) (see J. D Hooker,
in Journal Linnean Soc.,
Botany, vol. x. p. 458,
1867), the first species
of fuchsia cultivated in
England, where it was
long confined to the
greenhouse, was brought
from South America by
Captain Firth in 1788 and placed in Kew Gardens. Of this
species Mr Lee, a nurseryman at Hammersmith, soon after-
wards obtained an example, and procured from it by means
of cuttings several hundred plants, which he sold at a guinea
each. In 1823 F. macrostemma and F. gracilis, and during
the next two or three years several other species, were intro-
duced into England; but it was not until about 1837, or
soon after florists had acquired F. fulgens, that varieties of
interest began to make their appearance. The numerous
hybrid forms now existing are the result chiefly of the
intercrossing of that or other long-flowered with globose-
flowered plants. F. Venus-victrix, raised by Mr Gulliver,
gardener to the Rev. S. Marriott of Horsemonden, Kent, and sold
in 1822 to Messrs Cripps, was the earliest white-sepalled fuchsia.
The first fuchsia with a white corolla was produced about 1853
by Mr Storey. In some varieties the blossoms are variegated,
and in others they are double. There appears to be very little
limit to the number of forms to be obtained by careful cultivation
and selection. To hybridize, the flower as soon as it opens is
emasculated, and it is then fertilized with pollen from some
different flower.

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Fuchsia coccinea.

1, Flower cut open after removal of sepals; 2, fruit; 3, floral diagram.

Ripe seed is sown either in autumn or about February or March in light, rich, well-drained mould, and is thinly covered with

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