St. Mary's and solicited baptism. The rite was postponed, and he was advised to return with his family the next year; but the ceremony took place on 5 July, 1640, in the presence of the governor's secretary and the leading people of the settlement. Chilomacon received the name of Charles, and his wife that of Mary, in honor of the king and queen of England. He sent his daughter to St. Mary's to be educated. As she is spoken of as “queen of the Piscataways” in 1642, Chilomacon probably died soon after his baptism.
CHILSON, Gardner, inventor, b. in Thompson,
Conn., in 1804; d. 21 Nov., 1877. He received a
public-school education, became apprentice to a
cabinet-maker in Stirling, Conn., and removed to
Providence, R. I., on coming of age. He went to
Boston in 1837, and engaged in the manufacture
of stoves and furnaces at Mansfield, Mass. As early
as 1844 he devised a furnace that received a prize
medal at the London world's fair in 1851. Among
his numerous inventions are conical radiators,
applied to stoves and furnaces (1854), a cooking-range
with two ovens placed above the fire, and arranged
so that either or both may be used (1858), and an
office stove surmounted with a broad disk, which
radiates heat toward the floor (1865).
CHILTON, Thomas, clergyman, b. in Garrard
county, Ky., 30 July, 1798 ; d. in Montgomery,
Texas, 15 Aug., 1854. He was a member of the
Kentucky legislature for several sessions, and for
four terms a member of congress from Kentucky,
1829-'37. While practising law with success, he
became a Baptist preacher, removed to Alabama,
and was elected president of the Alabama Baptist
state convention, and soon abandoned the law. In
1842 he became pastor of the Baptist church in
Monte:omerv. He afterward removed to Texas.
CHILTON, William P., jurist, b. in Kentucky ;
d. in Alabama, 20 Jan., 1871. He was, at different
times, a member of each house of the Alabama
legislature. In 1848 he was elected to the supreme
court of Alabama, serving (a part of the time as
chief justice) for a term of ten years. During the
existence of the Confederate government, 18j1-'5,
he was a member^ of its congress. ^
CHIMALPAIN QUAUTLEHUANITZIN, the
Indian name of Domingo or Juan Bautista Anton
Muñon, who was a descendant of the caciques of
Aineca Ameca, and flourished in the latter part of
the 10th century. He was of pure Indian descent,
received a good education, taught at the Francis-
can college of Santiago Tlatelolco of Mexico, de-
voted himself to the study of the old Mexican and
other neighboring nations, and wrote several his-
torical works in the Nahuatl and Spanish lan-
guages. His principal works are " Historia meji-
eana antigua, que comprende los sucesos y sucesion
de reyes hasta el ano 1526 " ; " Cronica de Mejico
desde el aito 1068 hasta el de 1597 de la era vul-
gar"; " Apuntamientos de sucesos desde 1064 has-
ta 1521"; "Relaciones originales de los reinos de
Aculhuacan, Mejico y otras provincias desde muy
remotos tiempos " ; and " Relacion de la conquista
de Mejico por los espailoles."
CHIMALPOPOCA (che-mal-po-po'-ca), third
Mexican or Aztec king (fifth king, according to
some accounts), d. in 1423. He was elected by the
senate to succeed Iluitzilihuitl on the same day
that the latter king died, 2 Feb., 1414. He ad-
vised Tayauh or Tayatzin to kill his eldest brother,
Maxtla or Maxlaton, who had been recognized heir
to their father Tezozomoc, tyrant of Azcapotzalco,
but the plot was discovered. Then Maxtla ordered
a feast to be prepared in honor of his brother
and Chimalpopoca, in order to have them mur-
dered together ; but the latter could not go,
and Tayauh was the only one killed at the ban-
quet. "Maxtla sent a strong detachment to Mexico
to imprison Chimalpopoca, who had attempted to
commit suicide, and had him taken to Azcapotzal-
co, confined in a wooden cage under close surveil-
lance, and almost starved to death, when the pris-
oner succeeded in taking his own life by hanging
from a beam of his cage.
CHIMALPOPOCA, tenth king of Culhuacan, flourished early in the 15th century. He succeed- ed Acamapictli II. as ruler of the Culhuas, and oc- cupied the throne in 1402. He was the last king of their nation, which afterward became tributary of Texcoco. — Chimalpopoca, Tecpanec king of Tlacopan, flourished in the latter part of the 15th century. He was the second king of Tlacopan, hav- ing succeded Totoquiyauhtzin I. in 1409.
CHINCHON, Countess of. Spanish lady, wife of
the viceroy of Peru. While residing in that coun-
try she became acquainted with the virtues of Pe-
ruvian bark, and when she returned to Spain, in
1632, took with her a quantity of the medicinal
plant and introduced its use into Europe, first em-
ploying it for the cure of malarial fevers about
1640. In honor of her, Linnjeus gave the name
cinchona to the genus of plants yielding the bark.
CHIPMAN, Daniel, lawver, b. in Salisbury,
Conn., 22 Oct., 1765; d. in Ripton, Vt., 23 April,
1850. In 1775 his father removed to Tinmouth,
and Daniel labored on a farm until 1783, and was
graduated at Dartmouth in 1788. After studying
law with his brother Nathaniel, at Rutland, Vt.,
he began practice there, but in 1794 removed to
Middlebury. He became distinguished in his pro-
fession, and also in literature ; was made a member
of the American academv in 1812 ; professor of law
at Middlebury from 1806 till 1816. He represented
Rutland in the state constitutional convention of
1793, and was often a member of the legislature
between 1794 and 1808, when he was elected a
member of the council, and from 1809 till 1815.
and again in 1818 and 1821; speaker in 1813-'4;
member of congress in 1815-'7; member of the
constitutional conventions of 1816 and 1850. Ho
was the first reporter of the supreme court of
Vermont, and published a treatise on the " Law
of Contracts " (Middlebury, 1822) ; a volume of
'• Reports of the Supreme Court " (1835) ; biogra-
phies of his brother, Nathaniel Chipman, with
selections from his papers (Boston, 1846) : Seth
Warner and Gen. Thomas Chittenden (1849).—
His brother, Nathaniel, jurist, b. in Salisbury,
Conn., 15 Nov., 1752; d. in Tinmouth, Vt.. 15
Feb., 1843, was graduated at Yale in 1777. Dur-
ing his senior year he obtained a lieutenant's com-
mission in the American army, was on duty at
Valley Forge in the winter of 1777-8, and was
present at the battles of Monmouth and White
Plains. Resigning his commission in October,
1778. he removed to Litchfield, Conn., and was
admitted to the bar in March, 1779. He then re-
moved to Tinmouth, Vt., was a member of the
Vermont legislature in 1784-5, a judge of the
state supreme court in 1786, and chief justice in
1789. In that year he was one of the commis-
sioners on behalif of Vermont to adjust difl'erences
with New Vork, and in 1791 to negotiate the ad-
mission of Vermont into the Union. In 1791 ho
was appointed by Washington judge of the U. S.
district court of Vermont, which he resigned in
1793; in October, 1796, was again chosen chief
justice of the supreme court, and at the same
time was appointed one of a committee to revise
the statutes, the duties of which were almost