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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: BUN-CAL |
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CAIETAE PORTUS (mod. Gaeta) , an ancient harbour of Latium adiectum, Italy, in the territory of Formiae, from which it is 5 m. S.W. The name (originally Ai, rn) is generally derived from the nurse of Aeneas. The harbour, owing' to its fine anchorage, was much in use, but the place was never' a separate
coast
amphitheatre and theatre: near the church of La Trinita, higher up, are remains of a large reservoir. There are also traces of an aqueduct. The promontory (548 ft.) is crowned by the tomb of Munatius Plancus, founder of Lugudunum (mod. Lyons), who died after 22 B.C. It is a circular structure of blocks of travertine 16o ft. high and 18o ft. in diameter . Further inland is the so-called tomb of L. Atratinus, about too ft. in diameter . Caietae Portus was no doubt connected with the Via Appia (which passed through Formiae) by a deverticulum. There seems also to have been a road running W.N.W. along the precipitous coast
See E. Gesualdo Osservazioni critiche sopra la storia della Via Appia di Pratilli p. 7 (Naples, 1754). (T. As.) CAILLI$ (or CA1r.LE), RENE AUGUSTE (1799-1838), French explorer, was born at Mauze, Poitou, in 1799, the son of a baker. The reading of Robinson Crusoe kindled in him a love of travel and adventure, and at the age of sixteen he made a voyage to Senegal
Guadeloupe
Senegal
laws
governor of Senegal, but receiving no encouragement went to Sierra Leone where the British authorities made him superintendent of an indigo plantation. Having saved go he joined a Mandingo caravan going inland. He was dressed as a Mussulman, and gave out that he was an Arab from Egypt
east
east
' The two places are sufficiently close for the one villa to have borne both names; but Mommsen (Corp. Inscrip. Lat. x., Berlin, 1883, p. 603) prefers to differentiate them. in January 1828 he went north-east and gained the city of Jenne, whence he continued his journey to Timbuktu by water. After spending a fortnight (loth April-4th May) in Timbuktu he joined a caravan crossing the Sahara to Morocco, reaching Fez on the 12th of August. From Tangier he returned to France. He had been preceded at Timbuktu by a British officer, Major Gordon Laing, but Laing had been murdered (18'26) on leaving the city and Caillie was the first to accomplish the journey in safety. He was awarded the prize of 1400 offered by the Geographical Society of Paris to the first traveller who should gain exact information of Timbuktu, to be compared with that given by .Mungo Park. He also received the order of the Legion of Honour, a pension, and other distinctions, and it was at the public expense that his Journal d'un voyage a Temboctou et d Jenne clans l'Afrique Centrale, etc. (edited by E. F. Jomard) was published in three volumes in 1830. Caillie died at Badere in 1838 of a malady contracted during his African travels. For the greater part of his life he spelt his name Caillie, afterwards omitting the second " i." See Dr Robert Brown's The Story of Africa, vol. i. chap. xii. ,(London, 1892); Goepp and Cordier, Les Grands Hommes de France, voyageurs: Rene Caille (Paris, 1885) ; E. F. Jomard, Notice historique sur la vie et les voyages de R. Caillie (Paris, 1839). An English version of Caillie's Journal was published in London in 183o in two volumes under the title of Travels through Central Africa to Timbuctoo, &c. End of Article: CAIETAE PORTUS (mod. Gaeta) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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