Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 11.djvu/580

546  the Dominican Republic, and from to the  the two  divisions have been maintained; the  made an effort to re-establish their authority in Santo Domingo by landing  there in, but withdrew in. In Hayti several s rapidly succeeded each other, but in, a  who had been a , was ed to the. He attempted to the eastern part of the island, but was defeated. In he assumed the  of,  of Hayti, and in the  was ed. He was in, and a  was proclaimed under the  of. His was unpopular, and in  he was obliged by an  to  and flee to. He was succeeded in the by. An broke out against him in, and after a struggle of two s he was captured and. On 29,,  was ed , and Gen. on 17,.

1em

1em

1em (undefined)  HAYWARD, (c.–), one of the earliest of  as distinguished from the old, was  about  at or near  on the  of. According to a statement in his will he “received the means of his ” out of the of. It is affirmed by the old authorities that he at  and took the  of  in, but his  does not occur in any of the. In he  The First Part of the Life and Raigne of King Henrie the IIII., extending to the end of the first yeare of his raigne, which, from its dedication to the, and a passage it contained on , led to the ’s  by. The also caused  to search the  for “places in it that might be drawn within case of ,” who reported, “For  surely I find none, but for  very many,”—explaining that many of his sentences had been stolen from Cornelius Tacitus. Notwithstanding this jocular exculpation Hayward was continued in, in all probability until after the death of the. On the of  he courted that ’s favour by the  of two  —On the Right of Succession, and A Treatise of Union of England and Scotland ; and in  he was appointed  along with  of the  which  attempted to found at. In he  his Lives of the Three Norman Kings of England, which he wrote at the request of Prince Henry. In he was admitted an  of, and in  he received the honour of. He died 27th. Among his s was found The Life and Raigne of K. EdwardVI., first in, and Certain Yeres of Queen Elizabeth’s Raigne, the beginning of which was  in an edition of the Reign of EdwardVI.,  in , but which was first  in a complete form in , for the , under the editorship of John Bruce, who prefixed an introduction on the life and writings of the author. Hayward was conscientious and diligent in obtaining information, and, although his reasoning on questions of is often ish, his descriptions are generally graphic and vigorous. Notwithstanding his by, his  of the qualities of her  and person is flattering rather than detractive.  HAZÁRA, or, a in the -ship of the, , lying between 33°45’ and 35° 2’N. , and between 72°35’ 30” and 74° 9’E. It forms the north-eastern district of the, and is bounded on the N. by the , the , , and ; on the E. by the  of ; on the S. by  ; and on the W. by the. The is 2771. The forms a of territory extending far into the heart of the outer, and consisting of a long narrow, shut in on both sides by lofty , whose peaks rise to a height of 17,000  above. Towards the centre of the the  of  is bounded by, which sweep southward still maintaining a general parallel direction, and send off spurs on every side which divide the  into numerous minor s. The  is well ed by the tributaries of the , the , which flows through the  into the  , and many s. Throughout the scenery is picturesque. To the north rise the distant peaks of the -clad ; midway, the central stand clothed to their rounded summits with s and other  s, while  and  spread a green  over the nearer, and  covers every available slope.