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Augmentation.

Holland, and was active in several engagements. In 1804 he was made a marshal; and in the following year he commanded a division of the army which reduced the Vorarlberg; and was afterward engaged at Wetzlar, Jena, Eylau; also in Italy (1809); Spain (1810); Berlin, Bavaria, and Saxony (1813). He d. June 11, 1816.

AUGER, FLEXIBLE, an invention which permits great freedom in the direction of a boring tool. Its shaft is a closely coiled, flexible steel spiral, fitted at one end with a sheave or pulley, and at the other with a suitable jaw for holding a bit. This shaft turns within a flexible tube lined with spiral wire. Motion is communicated to the pulley by a cord, or belt, from some fixed machinery, and the belt is kept strained by a counter-rope which is tied to some firm support. Augers are used varying from threeeighths of an inch to an inch in diameter. The larger requires an inch driving cord.

AUGIER, GUILLAUME VICTOR ÉMILE, a French dramatist of considerable reputation, was b. at Valence, on the 17th of Sept., 1820, and was educated for the profession of an advocate. He soon, however, showed a predilection for letters, especially the drama. In 1844 he composed a piece in two acts, and in verse, entitled La Cigue, which he offered to the Théâtre Francais, but without success. The Odéon, however, received it, and it was played at that theater with considerable applause for nearly three months. This, while it is the first, is said by some to be the best of A.'s works, containing some excellent moral lessons set in a framework of the antique, and made attractive by elegant versification. In the following year, the Théâtre Français sought his services, and he produced for that theater his second comedy, entitled Un Homme de Bien, in three acts, and in verse. This was a comedy of the day, and was only partially successful. L'Aventurière (1848) was better received, and Gabrielle (1849), also a highly moral piece, gained for its author the Monthyon prize. Diane (1852), a drama, in which Rachel took the principal part, failed. La Pierre de Touche (1853), a prose comedy, written in partnership with Jules Sandeau, was more fortunate. Philiberte (1853), a verse-comedy, is a charming genre piece. Among his subsequent pieces, which belong all more or less to the comedy of intrigue, are Le Mariage d' Olympe; Le Gendre de M. Poirier, written in partnership with Jules Sandeau; Les Lionnes Pauvres (1858) and the Beau Mariage (1859), both written in conjunction with E. Foussier. Either singly or with others A. also wrote Les Effrontés, Maître Guérin, La Chasse au Roman, Le Prix Martin, etc., and Sapho, the last mentioned an opera, the music by Gounod. In 1856 he published a small volume of Poésies, some of which are very elegant in thought and expression. In 1858 A. was elected a member of the Académie Française ; in the same year became an officer in the légion d'honneur, of which he became a commander in 1868. He died Oct. 25, 1889.

AU GITE (from Gr. augé, brilliancy), or PYROXENE (from Gr. pyr, fire, and xenos, a guest), a mineral very nearly allied to hornblende (q.v.), which has, indeed, by some mineralogists been regarded as a variety of it, although the distinction between them is undeniably important, as characterizing two distinct series of igneous rocks. A. consists of 47 to 56 per cent of silica, 20 to 25 per cent of lime, and 12 to 19 per cent of magnesia, the magnesia sometimes giving place in whole or in part to protoxide of iron, and some varieties containing a little alumina, or a little protoxide of manganese. Its specific gravity is 3.195 to 3.525. It is little affected by acids, or not at all. It is usually of a greenish color, often nearly black. It crystallizes in six or eight-sided prisms variously modified; it often occurs in crystals, sometimes imbedded, often in grains or scales. It is an essential component of many igneous rocks, particularly of basalt (q.v.), dolerite, and A.-porphyry (see PORPHYRY), from which chiefly it derives its importance as a mineral species. A. rock, consisting essentially of A. alone, occurs in the Pyrenees. A. is a common mineral in the trap-rocks of Britain and other countries. It is rarely associated with quartz, in which respect it differs from hornblende, but very often with labradorite, olivine, and leucite. Fluorine, which is generally present in small quantity in hornblende, has never been detected in A. The form of the crystals is also different in the two minerals, as well as their cleavage; but Prof. Gustav Rose of Berlin has endeavored to show that the difference between A. and hornblende arises only from the different circumstances in which crystallization has taken place, and that A. is the production of a comparatively rapid, and hornblende of a comparatively slow cooling. He regards some of the varieties as intermediate. His views have been supported by experiments, and by a comparison of A. with certain crystalline substances occurring among the scoria of foundries.-Diopside, sahlite, and coccolite are varieties of A.-Diallage (q.v.) and hypersthene (q.v.) are very nearly allied to it.

AU'GLAIZE, a co. in w. Ohio, intersected by the Lake Erie and Western and the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton railroads; 398 sq.m.; pop. '90, 28,100. The Miami canal passes through, and it is drained by A. river. Surface level, well wooded, and soil fertile. Co. seat, Wapakoneta.

AUGMENTATION, in heraldry. See HERALDRY.

AUGMENTATION, in music, is the reproduction of a melody, or principal subject of a composition, in the course of the progress of the piece, in notes of greater length than those notes in which the melody is first introduced. The tempo remains unaltered. A. is of great importance in the treatment of the subjects, or themes, for fugues, and, when cleverly used, produces great effects.

Auguries.

AUGMENTATION, PROCESS OF, in Scotch law, is an action in the court of teinds (q.v.) by the minister of a parish against the titular, or beneficiary, and heritors, for the purpose of procuring an increase to his stipend. The moderator and clerk of the presbytery to which the minister belongs must also be called as parties. By 48 Geo. III. c. 138, it is enacted that no A. shall be granted till the expiration of 15 years from any A. previous to the act, nor till the expiration of 20 years from any A. subsequent to the act. A period of 20 years must thus elapse between each augmentation. The amount of the A. is fixed, or modified, as it is termed, in grain or victual; the stipend itself being paid in money, according to the fiars' prices (q.v.) of each year. In addition to the ascertainment or modification of a suitable stipend, regard being had to the state of the teinds, the extent of the parish, the expense of living, etc.-a process of A. has the further object in view of localing the stipend so modified-i.e., of assigning it in due proportions to the heritors or other parties in possession of the tithes. This latter object is attained by what is called a scheme of locality, or an allotment of the stipend modified to the several parties liable therefor. This scheme is prepared at the instance of the second junior lord ordinary (see COURT OF SESSION) on a remit from the teind court. The last conclusion in a summons of A. is for a suitable sum, or increase to the sum already allowed, for communion elements-i.e., for bread, wine, and other necessaries for celebrating the sacrament of the Lord's supper after the Presbyterian fashion. When there is not a sufficient amount of teind to bring the stipend of the minister up to £150 per annum, with £8 68. 8d. for communion elements, it is provided by 50 Geo. III. c. 84, and 5 Geo. IV. c. 72, that the residue shall be paid by the exchequer. In addition to their stipend, ministers have right to a manse and glebe, or a provision of £50 annually in lieu of them. See STIPEND, GLEBE, MANSE; see also PARLIAMENTARY CHURCH.

The

AUGSBURG, historically one of the most notable cities in Germany, is situated in the angle between the rivers Wertach and Lech, and is the chief city of the circle of Swabia and Neuburg, in Bavaria. The pop. is (1890) 75,523. Though presenting an antique and rather deserted appearance, A. has numerous fine buildings, and especially one noble street, the "imperial" Maximilian Strasse, adorned with bronze fountains. industry of A. is reviving; several cotton and woolen factories are in operation, as well as manufactories of paper, tobacco, and machinery. Its gold and silver wares still retain their ancient reputation. The art of copper engraving is extinct; but printing, lithography, and bookselling have taken a new start. The Allgemeine Zeitung, the best-known paper in Germany, was published here (now at Munich) till 1882. In 1890, there were 12 printing establishments and 36 book-shops. There are 74 breweries. Banking and stockjobbing are extensively carried on; and it is still the emporium of the trade with Italy and Southern Germany. It is the center of a system of railways connecting it with Nürnberg and Leipsic, with Switzerland, Munich, etc. The foundation of A. was the "colony" planted by the emperor Augustus, 12 B.C., after the conquest of the Vindelici, probably on the site of a former residence of that people. It was called Augusta Vindelicorum, and hence the present name. It became the capital of the province of Rhætia, was laid waste by the Huns in the 5th c., and came next under the dominion of the Frankish kings. In the war of Charlemagne with Thassilo of Bavaria, it was again destroyed. After the division of Charlemagne's empire, it came under the duke of Swabia; but having become already rich by commerce, was able to purchase gradually many privileges, and finally became, in 1276, a free city of the empire. It now rose to greater consequence than ever, and had reached the summit of its prosperity by the end of the 14th century. About this time (1368), its aristocratic government was set aside for a democratic, which lasted for 170 years, till the aristocracy, favored by Charles V., regained the ascendency. A. continued in great eminence for its commerce, manufac tures, and art, till the war between Charles V. and the Protestant league of Schmalkald (1540). Along with Nürnberg it formed the emporium of the trade between northern Europe and the south, and its merchants were princes whose ships were in all seas. See FUGGER. It was also the center of German art as represented by the Holbeins, Burkmair, Altdorfer, and others. Many diets of the empire were held in A., and the leading events of the reformation are associated with its name. The discovery of the road to India by the cape, and of America, turned the commerce of the world into new channels, and dried up the sources of A.'s prosperity. It lost its freedom with the abolition of the German empire in 1806, and was taken possession of by Bavaria.

AUGS'BURG CONFESSION, the chief standard of faith in the Lutheran church. Its history is the following. With a view to an amicable arrangement of the religious split that had existed in Germany since 1517, Charles V., as protector of the church, had convoked a diet of the empire, to meet at Augsburg, 8th April, 1530, and had required from the Protestants a short statement of the doctrines in which they departed from the Catholic church. The elector, John, of Saxony, therefore, in Mar., called on his Wittenberg theologians, with Luther at their head, to draw up articles of faith, to lay before him at Torgau. The commissioned doctors took as a basis, in so far as pure doctrine was concerned, articles that had been agreed to the previous year at conferences held at Marburg and Schwabach, in the form of resolutions of the Lutheran reformers of Germany against the doctrines of Zwingli. These doctrinal articles supplemented, and with a practical part newly added, were laid before the elector at Torgau. Mel

Auguries.

anchthon then, taking the Torgau_articles as a foundation, began in Augsburg, in May, and with the advice of various Protestant theologians, as well as princes and other secular authorities, composed the document, which he first called an apology, but which in the diet itself took the name of the A. C. Luther was not present in Augsburg, being then under the ban of the empire, but his advice was had recourse to in its composition The Torgau articles were in German; the confession was both in German and Latin; and Melanchthon labored incessantly at its improvement till it was presented to the emperor, June 25. The character of Melanchthon, in the absence of Luther, had led him, in setting about the composition of the document, to aim at maintaining a spirit of love, forbearance, and mediation, as well as the utmost brevity and simplicity. Its object, which only became gradually apparent after the meeting of the diet, was, in the first place, to give a collected view of the belief of the Lutheran Protestants, aiming at the same time at refuting the calumnies of the Catholics, and at laying a foundation for measures of reconciliation.

The first part of the confession contains 21 articles of faith and doctrine: 1. Of God; 2. Of original sin; 3. Of the Son of God; 4. Of justification; 5. Of preaching; 6. Of new obedience; 7 and 8. Of the church; 9. Of baptism; 10. Of the Lord's supper; 11. Of confession; 12. Of penance; 13. Of the use of sacraments; 14. Of church government; 15. Of church order; 16. Of secular government; 17. Of Christ's second coming to judgment; 18. Of free will; 19. Of the cause of sin; 20. Of faith and good works; 21. Of the worship of saints. The second and more practical part, which is carried out at greater length, contains seven articles on disputed points: 22. On the two kinds of the sacrament; 23. Of the marriage of priests; 24. Of the mass; 25. Of confession; 26. Of distinctions of meat; 27. Of conventual vows; 28. Of the authority of bishops.

This document, signed by some six Protestant princes and two free cities, was read before the emperor and the diet, 25th June, 1530. Melanchthon, not looking upon the confession as binding, began shortly after to make some alterations in its expression; at last, in 1540, he published a Latin edition (Confessio Variata) in which there were important changes and additions. This was especially the case with the article on the Lord's supper, in which, with a view to conciliation, he endeavored to unite the views of the Lutherans and Calvinists. This gave rise subsequently to much controversy; orthodox Lutheranism repudiated the alterations of Melanchthon, and long continued to subject his memory to great abuse; though it is clear that Melanchthon and his adherents contemplated no substantial departure in doctrine from the original confession. It is not certain that the form of the confession found in the Lutheran standards is identical with the unaltered A. C., as the two original documents-German and Latinlaid before the diet have been lost. The chief distinction between the orthodox Lutherans and the reformed churches of Germany has all along been adherence to the "unaltered" or to the "altered" confession. It was even a matter of controversy whether the "reformed" were entitled to the rights secured to the Protestants by the religious peace of Augsburg, concluded in 1555, on the ground of the "unaltered" confession.-Though the A. C. is still formally adhered to by the Protestant churches of Germany, it is con fessedly no longer the expression of the belief of the vast majority of the members, after the great advances made by theology, and the many alterations in public opinion and feeling.

AUGS BURG INTERIM. See INTERIM.

AUGUR, CHRISTOPHER C., b. 1821; a graduate of West Point and brigadier-general in the U. S. army; served in the war with Mexico, and in various Indian skirmishes. In the civil war he was major-general of volunteers, and was wounded at Cedar mountain. At the close of the war he was brevetted major-general; retired July 10, 1885. D. Dec., 1897.

AUGUR, HEZEKIAH, 1791-1858; an American artist. His best work is the statue of "Jephtha and his Daughter" in the Trumbull gallery of Yale college; but what gave him greater fame was the invention of a machine for carving, which is now in general use.

AUGURIES and AUSPICES. These terms are familiar to every reader of Roman history, and are, besides, so frequently employed in English in a secondary and metaphorical sense, that a vague notion of their original meaning is caught up even by those who know nothing of classical antiquities. As, however, the entire religious and political life of the early Romans was deeply penetrated by the influence of their sacred superstitions, and as amongst these auguries and auspices held a prominent place, a clear conception of what they were is a matter of considerable moment. The following statements exhibit, in a condensed form, the substance of what is known on the subject. Like almost all primitive nations, the Romans believed that every unusual occurrence had a supernatural significance, and contained, hidden in it, the will of heaven regarding men. To reveal or interpret this hidden will, was the exclusive privilege of the augur, who apparently derived his official designation, in part at least, from avis, a bird; while Roman history abundantly proves that the observation of the flight of birds was a principal means adopted for discovering the purpose of the gods. It was not, however, any one who could be appointed an augur. The gods selected their own interpreters-that is to say, they conferred the divine gift upon them from their very birth; but an educational discipline was also considered necessary, and hence a "college of

augurs" figures in the very dawn of Roman history. Romulus, it is almost certain, was an augur himself. He is said to have been skilled in the art of divination from his youth; and by "divination" we must specially understand augury; for the Romans, with patriotic piety, held all the forms of divination practiced in other countries to be useless and profane. Previous to the Ogulnian law, passed in the year 307 B.C., there were only four augurs, who were selected from the patricians. By this law, however, the plebeians became eligible for the pontifical or augural offices, and five were immediately created. For more than 200 years, the number continued the same, till Sulla, in 81 B.C., increased it to fifteen. Finally, in the first days of the empire, when all parties, зick of the long civil wars, hurried to throw their privileges at the feet of the monarch who had brought peace into their homes, the right or electing augurs at his pleasure was conferred on Augustus, after which the number became indefinite.

At first the augurs were elected by the comitia curiata; but as the sanction of the former was necessary to give validity to the acts of the latter, they could always "veto" any elections which were obnoxious to them; so that the power of electing members to fill up vacancies naturally fell into the hands of the college itself, and so continued till 103 B. C., when a tribune of the people named Ahenobarbus carried a law by which it was enacted that for the future, vacancies in the augural and pontifical offices should not be filled up by those religious corporations themselves, but by a majority of certain picked tribes. This new law was occasionally repealed and re-enacted during the civil wars which lasted till the time of Augustus. The scramble for power, however, during these political vicissitudes, as well as the general advance of knowledge, had rendered its prophetic pretensions ridiculous in the eyes of educated people. By Cicero's time, it had lost its religious character altogether, but was still regarded as one of the highest political dignities, and coveted for the power it conferred.

The modes of divination employed by the augurs were five in number-augurium ex cœlo, ex avibus, ex tripudiis, ex quadrupedibus, ex diris. The first, related to the interpretation of the celestial phenomena, such as thunder and lightning, was apparently of Etruscan origin, and held to be of supreme significance. The second related to the interpretation of the noise and flight of birds. It was not every bird, however, that could be a sure messenger of the gods. Generally speaking, those "consulted," as it was called, were the eagle, vulture, crow, raven, owl, and hen. The first two belonged to the class of alites, or birds whose flight revealed the will of the gods; the last four to the class of oscines, whose voice divulged the same. These two modes of augury were the oldest and most important. Of the other three, the auguries ex tripudiis were taken from the feeding of chickens; the auguries ex quadrupedibus, from four-footed animals -as, for instance, if a dog, or wolf, or hare ran across the path of a Roman, and startled him by any unusual motion, he mentioned it to an augur, who was expected to be able to advise him what to do; the auguries ex diris (a vague kind of augury), from any trifling accidents or occurrences not included in the previous four-such as sneezing, stumbling, spilling salt on the table, etc.

At Rome, the auspices were taken on the summit of the Capitoline hill; and the ground on which the augur stood was solemnly set apart for the purpose. The latter then took a wand, and marked out a portion of the heavens in which his observations were to be made. This imaginary portion was called a templum (hence contemplari, to contemplate), and was subdivided into right and left. According as the birds appeared in either of these divisions were the auspices favorable or unfavorable. How vast the political influence and authority of the augurs must have been is seen from the fact that almost nothing of any consequence could take place without their sanction and approval. The election of every important ruler, king, consul, dictator, or prætor, every civic officer, every religious functionary, was invalid if the auspices were unfavorable. No general could lawfully engage in battle-no public land could be allotted-no marriage or adoption, at least among the patricians, was held valid-unless the auspices were first taken, while the comitia of the centuries could be dispersed at a moment's notice by the veto of any member of the augural college.

We have employed the two terms, auguries and auspices, as synonymous. But & slight difference is perceptible between them: not the augurs only, but the chief magistrates of Rome (inheriting the honor from Romulus), held the " auspices," while the "auguries" were exclusively in the possession of the former; but the mode of divination, und the end to be obtained by it, seem to have been the same in both cases.

The power of taking the auspices in war was confined to the commander-in-chief; and any victory gained by a legate was said to be won under the auspices of his superior, and the latter alone was entitled to a triumph. Hence has originated the very common phrase in our language, "under the auspices" of some one, which usually denotes nothing more than that the person alluded to merely lends the influence of his name.

AUGUST, the sixth month in the Roman year which began with Mar. was originally styled Sextilis, and received its present name from the emperor Augustus, on account of several of the most fortunate events of his life having occurred during this month. On this month he was first admitted to the consulate, and thrice entered the city in triumph. On the same month, the legions from the Janiculum placed themselves under his auspices, Egypt was brought under the authority of the Roman people, and an end put to the civil wars. (See Macrobius, i. 12.) As the fifth month, or Quintilis, had pre

Augusta.

viously been styled Julius in honor of Julius Cæsar, a day was taken from Feb. to make A. equal with July.

AUGUSTA, a co. of Virginia, in the valley of the Shenandoah; 950 sq.m.; pop. '70, 28,763-6737 colored; in '90, 37,005, inclu. colored. It is watered by the branches of the Shenandoah and their tributaries, and by several small streams flowing into the James river. The elevation is considerable, including as it does the ridge dividing the waters of the Shenandoah from those of the James. The population is largely of Scotch-Irish descent, with an intermixture of the German clement from Pennsylvania. The chief productions are beef, pork, mutton, wool, wheat, corn, rye, oats, barley, hay, and tobacco. The streams furnish an abundance of water-power. Deposits of iron and magnesia are found in some places. Near Craigsville is an inexhaustible deposit of coral marble of fine quality, and in the eastern section anthracite coal is abundant. Mineral springs abound. The educational advantages of the county are of a superior kind. County-seat, Staunton. Weyer's Cave is in this co.

AUGUSTA, city and co. seat of Richmond co., Georgia, on the Savannah river, 248 miles from the ocean; lat. 33° 28′ n.; long. 81° 54′ w.; 132 miles n.w. of Savannah; 171 miles e. by s. of Atlanta. Augusta, named for an English princess, was laid out under charter by Oglethorpe in 1735, and a garrison stationed there in 1736, and was for many years the leading inland town in the colony. In Dec. 1778 it was taken by the British and loyalists, but recaptured June 5, 1781, by Gen. Pickens and Col. Henry Lee. It was the capital of the State till 1795; was chartered a second time Jan. 1798; incorporated Dec. 1817. During the Civil War it was garrisoned by the Confederate forces. Augusta is at the head of steamboat navigation, and is connected by a line of steamboats with coastwise steamships; the principal railroads are the Central, the Augusta Southern, the Charleston and West Carolina, the Georgia, the South Carolina and Georgia, and the Southern. Augusta is 700 feet above the sea, has a climate like Aiken, only 17 miles distant, somewhat cooler than Savannah, an even temperature, and dry, balmy atmosphere. The mean summer temperature is about 79.49°; winter, 46.82°. It is an increasingly popular resort for consumptives and other invalids. Augusta is finely laid out, with broad, beautifully shaded streets, intersecting at right angles. Greene St. is 168 feet wide, with four rows of trees, and lined with elegant residences. Broad St., the principal business street, is 160 to 180 ft. wide; on it stands the Confederate Monument, an obelisk 80 feet high, surmounted by the statue of a soldier. On the green about the City Hall stands the granite monument, 45 feet high, erected in 1849 to the Georgia signers of the Declaration of Independence. There are several parks, one, May Park, containing 104 acres; 25 squares; and outside the city are the cemetery, and Fair Grounds attractively laid out. Summerville, on the Sand Hills, overlooking the city, is a suburb of handsome villas and cottages, and a well-known health resort. It contains a fine hotel, the Bon Air, and the United States Arsenal. The principal buildings are the Cotton Exchange, New Theatre, Opera House, Masonic Temple, Odd Fellows' Hall, Telfair Building; the Globe, Planters', Augusta, Central, Arlington and Coskery Hotels; the Sibley, King, Augusta and Enterprise cotton mills, and the Y. M. C. A. building.

In 1890 there were 417 manufactories with $7,075,996 capital, producing goods at $3,631,888 value. The cotton mills alone, including the Graniteville and Langley mills across the river in South Carolina, had $6,000,000 capital, with products valued at $6,000,000. Augusta is one of the largest cotton markets in the South, and produces more unbleached domestic goods than any place in the United States. Its lumber trade and shipping of fruits and vegetables are extensive. There are excellent public schools. The chief institutions are Richmond Academy, Houghton Inst., St. Mary's and Sacred Heart Academies, the Georgia Medical College, a business college, Summerville Academy, Walker Baptist Institute, high schools, and Paine's Institute. The main public institutions are the Orphan Asylum, Louise King Home, two charity hospitals, a reformed home, juvenile reformatory, etc. There are daily, weekly, and monthly periodicals; national banks; churches of all denominations; and many miles of electric roads. The city is lighted by electricity, and by means of a dam 1720 feet long and a canal 8 miles long, water is supplied in abundance. Pop. 1860, 12,493-4049 colored; 1880, 21,89110,109 colored; 1890, 33,300, is said to have since increased to 48,000.

AUGUSTA, city, capital of Maine, and co. seat of Kennebec Co.; situated mainly on the west bank of the Kennebec River, 45 miles from its mouth; on the Maine Central railroad; 74 miles from Bangor; 170 miles from Boston. The site of the present city was the Indian Cushnoc. The first permanent settlement was made in 1754 by traders from Plymouth, Mass., who built a fort on the east side. A settlement was made in 1762 and was incorporated in 1771 as Hallowell. The present Hallowell was set off in 1797, and Augusta received the name of Harrington, which was soon changed to Augusta. It was made the capital in 1831, and became a city in March, 1849. Augusta is at the head of sloop navigation, but small steamboats ascend 18 miles further. The river, which is crossed by two bridges, one 520 feet long, is closed by ice 121 days every year on an average. Semi-weekly steamers run to Portland and Boston, and the Maine Central R. R. (Augusta div.) traverses the city. The climate is rather severe, the average greatest heat being 87.60; greatest cold, 21.30. The city is built partly on a series of terraces, rising from the river. The State House, erected in 1828, is a granite building with a graceful

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