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as then old and grey-headed. Some years after the above period, Riley's Narrative, epitomised in Leyden's Discoveries and Travels in Africa, vol. i., _speaking of the King of Timbuctoo, says, this sovereign is a very large, old, grey-headed black man_, called _Shegar_, which means Sultan. This, however, I must observe is a misinterpretation of the word _Shegar_, which is an African-Arabic word, and signifies _red or carrotty_, and is a word applicable to his physiognomy; but certainly not to his rank:--_Abd 442 Shegar_, a carrotty or red Negro. If these two testimonies, since 1800, be correct, then the _anachronism_ of which I am accused in the New Supplement to the Encyclopedia Britannica, (title Africa,) is misapplied. [Footnote 245: Since publishing this letter, Mr. Bowdich, in his Account of Ashantee, pages 194, 195, says, Woolo was King of Timbuctoo in 1807, or ten years before Mr. Bowdich was at Ashantee.] Many of this king's civil officers, however, in 1800, were muselmen; but the military were altogether Negroes. However fervent the zeal of Muhamedanism may be at Timbuctoo, it is not, I imagine, sufficient to convert the Negroes, who have not the best opinion of the Muhamedan tenets. The Negroes, however, are disposed to abjure idolatry for any other form of religion that they can be persuaded to think preferable, or that holds out a better prospect; a convincing proof of which has been seen by the readiness of the Africans of Congo and Angola, to renounce their idolatry for the Christian faith, by the conversion of thousands to that faith by the indefatigable zeal of the catholic missionaries, when the Portuguese first discovered those countries, and which, if the Sovereign of Portugal had persevered with that laudable zeal with which he began to promote the conversion of the Africans, the inhabitants of those extensive and populous countries might, at this day, have been altogether members of the Christian church!! 443 _On the Junction of the Nile of Egypt with the Nile of Timbuctoo, or of Sudan_. TO THE EDITOR OF THE MONTHLY MAGAZINE.[246] [Footnote 246: Inserted in March, 1817.] Sir, London, Jan. 25. 1817. Having read some annotations, in the Journal of a Mission to the Interior of
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