VUL [338 3 tJVU
Convention of debauch'd Pcrfons, or the reading of wan- The Author of the Verfion is not known, nor fo much as
ton Books, hot Foods, the Abundance and Acrimony of the guefs d at. See Septuacnt.
ferous Matter which moiftens the Pudendum, Suppreffion of It was a long time known by the Name of the ltahc, or
the Menfes, large Dofcs of Cantharides, &c. Old Verfion ; as being of very great Antiquity in the Zatm
It has been frequently found, that Maids that were held Church.— It was the common, or vulgar Verfion before S.
to be poffefs'd, were only feiz'd with the Vterine Fury :
Before the Paroxyfm, the Patient often appears filent and forrowful, with a Flufliing in the Face, and a Refpiration
and Pulfe frequently intermitting, and fuddenly varying.' •
During the Paroxyfm they burft fometimes into Laughter, and then into a Fit of Tears, &c.
Bleeding, fietid Suffiments, and other hyfterical Medi- cines, are proper during the Fit.
Men are fubject to the Difeafe as well as Women ; fo that it might with 'more Propriety be call'd, the Furor Venerea!, or Venereal Fury.
It had its Name Furor Vterinus, from an Opinion, that it proceeded from Vapours rifing from the Womb to the Brain.
UTERUS, in Anatomy, the Matrix or Womb of a Wo.
Jerom made a new one 5 whence its Name Vulgate.
Nobilius in 1588, and F. Morin in 1628, gave new Edi- tions of it 5 pretending to have reftored, and rccollatcd it from the Antients who had cited it. — The Vulgate was held by S. Auguftine to be preferable to all the other Latin Ver- fions then extant 5 as rendering rhe Words and Senfe of the facred Text, more clofely and juftly than any of the reff. It has fince been re-touch'd from the Corrections of S. "~fe- rom ; and 'tis this Mixture of the anticnt Italic Verfion and fome Corrections of S. Jerom. that is now called the Vul- gate, and which the Council of Trent has declar'd to be authentick.
'Tis this Vulgate alone is ufed in the Romifjj Church, ex- cepting for fome Paffages of the antient Vulgate left in the Miffal, and thePfalms ; which arc frill fung according to the
man ; or that Organ of Generation wherein the Bufmefs of old /M/;c Verfion. See Bible. Conception is perform'd, and wherein the Embryo or Fetus Vulgate of the New Teftament.- This the Romamfts ge- ls lode'd fed, and grows, during the time of deflation, or ncrally hold preferable to the common Greek Text ; in re- till its Delivery.' Its 'Definition fie under the Article gard 'tis this alone, and not the Greek Text, that the Coun-
Matrix ci ' °f Trent has declar'd authentick : Accordingly, thac
Its Office, &c. under Generation, Conception, Ges- Church has, as itwere, adopted this Edition. The Priefti tation, Foetus, &c.
Vagina UTERI. See Vagina
UTILE, a Latin Term fignifying profitable or ufeful ; fometimes ufed by Englifh Authors in the fame Senfe. The "Utile and the fluke, Profit and Delight, are both to
read no other at the Altar, the Preachers quote no other the Chair, nor the Divines in the Schools.
Yet fome of their belt Authors, F. Souhours for infiance, own, that among the Differences that are found between the common Greek and the Vulgate, there are fome wherein the
be aim'd at in Poetry ; but it is difputcd which of them is Greek reading appears the more clear and natural than that
to be aim'd at in the firft place. Corueille fays exprefly, of the Latin ; fo that the fecond might be correfled from
flans la Tragcdie I'utile nentre que fous la forme dude- the firft, if the Holy See, fhou Id think fit.— But thofe Dif- leBable. See Poetry. ferences, for the generality, only confift in a few Syllables or
In the Language of the Philofophcrs, there is nothing Words : They rarely touch the Senfe. Befidcs, in fome of
the moft confiderable, the Vulgate is authoriz'd by feveral antient Manufcripts.
Souhours fpent the laft Tears of his Life, in givin
See OuT-
"Utile but what is juft and honeft : Nihil honum ni/i 1'onefium : nihil malum nifi turpe. Cic. de Fin. lib. 2. UTLAGATIO, inLaw-Term, an Out-la wry.
LAWRY.
UTLAGATO capiendo, quando utlagatus in unocomi- tatu foftea fugit in Alium, a Writ for the apprehending a Man who is outlaw'd in one Country, and flies into another. See Outlawry.
UTLAGH, Utlaghus. See Outlaw.
UTLAND. See Inland.
UTLART, or Utlawry. See Outlawry.
UTRUM. See Assise.
UTTER, or Outer Sarrifters, are fuch Candidates as, in regard of their long Study and great Indullry beftow'd upon the Knowledge of the Common Law, are call'd out of their Contemplation to Practice, and in the View ol the World to take upon 'em the Protection and Defence of Cli- ents. See Barrister.
In moft other Countries they are call'd Licentiates. See Licentiate.
They have their Name Utter Sarrifters, q. d. Pleaders cufter the Sar, to diftinguiftl 'em from Benchers, who have been Readers, and are fometimes admitted to plead with- in the Bar ; as the King's Council are. See Bench er, &c.
UVEA, in Anatomy, the third Tunic, or Membrane of the Eye ; thus call'd, as refembling a Grape-ftone. See Eye.
The hind-part of this Coat, or that next the Orbit of the Eye on each fide, is call'd the Choroides ; and is derived from the Via Mater. See Choroides.
The fore-part is, like the former, rranfparent, but thin- ner ■ and is by Authors reckon'd as a different Tunic, and call'd Uvea.
Of the Duplicaturc of this Part, is form'd that ftnped, va- riegated Circle, call'd the Iris. See Iris.
And in its middle is a Perforation, thro' which appears a little black Speck, which is the Sight, or Tupil of the ' about which the Iris forms a Ring. See Pup-
French Tranflation of the New Teftament, according to the Vulgate.
In 1675, a new Edition of the Greek Teftament was publifh'd by the Univerfity of Oxford ; and great Care ta- ken therein, to compare the common Greek Text with all the moft anticnt Manufcripts in England, France, Spain, and Italy ; and to note the Differences obferv'd therein.
In the Preface to this Work, the Editors fpeaking of the divers Vcrfions of the Bible in the vulgar Tongues, obferve of the Vulgate, that there is no Verfion in any Language to be compar'd with it. — And this they juftify, by comparing Paffages that occur in the moft celebrared Greek Manufcripts, with the fame Paffages in the Vulgate, where there is any difference between that and the common printed Greek Copy.
In effect, 'tis probable, that at the Time the antient Ita- lic, or Vulgate Verfion of the New Teftament was made, and at the Time it was afterwards compar'd with the Greek Manufcripts by S. Jerom 5 as they were then nearer the Times of the Apoftles, they had jufter Greek Copies, and thofe better kept than any of thofe ufed when Printing was firft fet on foot, two Centuries ago.
M. Simon calls the Greek Verfion of the Seventy, before it was revis'd and reformed by Origen, The antient Vulgate Greek. — Origeu's Correction got the upper hand of the an- tient Greek, and joftled it out of ufe 5 fo that we have now fcarce any Copies thereof. See Seetuagint.
VULNERARY, in Medicine, an Epithet given to Re- medies proper for the Cure of Wounds, and Ulcers. See Wound, and Ulcer.
There are divers Vulnerary Herbs ; as Arifiolochia, or Birthwort ; Sanicle, or Self-heal ; "Plantain, Moufe-Ear, Veronica, or Fluellin, Agrimony, Vervein, or Holy Herb, Sifc.
There are alfo Vuhierary "Potions, compofed of various Simples.' — Vulnerary Balms, Unguents, Plaifters, cifc. See
Eye - and about which the Iris forms a Ring. See Iupil.
From the infide of this Membrane, fpring certain Fibres ;
which fpread themfelves round the cryftalline Humour ; fer- Balm, (gc.
ving to contract or dilate the Sight at pleafure ; and call'd The Word is form'd from the Latin Vulntts, Wound,
the Ligamentum Ciliare. See Ciliare, and Crystalline. VULTUS de Luca. See Veronica.
VULVA, a Name fome Phyficians give to the Uterus, UVULA, in Anatomy, a round, foft, fpongeous Body,
or Womb. ' like trie End of a Child's Finger ; fufpended from the Pa-
The Word Vulva, is Latin, thus call'd, quafi Valva, late, near the Foramina of the Noflrils, perpendicularly over
a Door. See Uterus. the Glottis.
Vulva is fometimes alfo, tho lefs properly, ufed for the Its ufe is to break rhe Force of the cold Air, and prevent
'Pudendum Muliebre. See Pudendum.
Vulva Cerebri, is an oblong Furrow in the Brain ; fo called from its likenefs, in Figure, to a Female Vulva.
VULCANO, among Naturalifts. See Volcano.
VULGAR FraSiom. See Fraction.
VULGATE, a very antient Latin Tranflation of the Bi
its entering roo precipitately into the Lungs. See Respi- ration, &c.
It's form'd of a Duplicature of the Membrane of the Pa- late ; and is called by fome Authors Columella, and by others Gurgulio.
It is moved by two Pair of Mufcles, and fufpended by
ble • and the only one the Church of Rome acknowledges as many Ligaments.— The Mufcles are, the External, cal- authentick. See Bible. led the Sphenoftaphilinus, which draws the Uvula upwards
and