Difference between revisions of ".MzQy.NjU4Ng"

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Switzerland
 
Switzerland
 
is bounded on ye. N. by yt. part of Alsace
 
is bounded on ye. N. by yt. part of Alsace
call'd Suntgau, ye. Black Forest, &
+
call'd Suntgaw, ye. Black Forest, &
 
part of Suabria.  On ye. E. by Tyrol;
 
part of Suabria.  On ye. E. by Tyrol;
 
[[addition]] on ye. S. by [[/addition]] ye. Dcs. of Savoy & Milan & Bergamo,
 
[[addition]] on ye. S. by [[/addition]] ye. Dcs. of Savoy & Milan & Bergamo,

Revision as of 19:59, 29 July 2018

Switzerland is bounded on ye. N. by yt. part of Alsace call'd Suntgaw, ye. Black Forest, & part of Suabria. On ye. E. by Tyrol; addition on ye. S. by /addition ye. Dcs. of Savoy & Milan & Bergamo, & Brescia in Italy & On ye. W. by Burgundy.

Switzerland extends from deletion ye. 45 by 47 D. of N. lat /deletion ^ addition E. to W. 260 miles & 100 miles from N. to S; /addition as it lies between ye. 45 Deg 45 min & 47 Deg. 30 min of Lat one might suspect it to be deletion a very temperate /deletion addition moderately warm but /addition their mountains being ye. highest in Europe, & great part of ye. year cover'd with snow, ye. air is much sharper than in much colder latitudes. Ye. weather is very changeable deletion unclear /deletion deletion unclear /deletion addition As ye source /addition of many Rivers are found in & near this country, 'tis suppos'd to be ye. highest Land in Europe; particularly by ye. Rhine ye. Rhone, ye. Danube &c. there also some very beautifull lakes which might almost be call'd seas, viz. deletion unclear /deletion addition of Constance /addition deletion unclear /deletion Geneva, Neufchattel, Zurich, & Lucerne. There is no Inland country better supply'd with water, for besides these, there is one at ye. top of almost every Mountain which are also good pasture, & some produce good Corn. It is a very well Wooded Country; you may see whole forests of Pine & Fir-trees, which would be inestimable, if they lay near ye. sea. Ye. Swiss in plentifull years put their corn into magazines, for their vallies very often are barren on account of ye. great mountains which surround them.