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AMMONIUS SACCAS—AMNESTY.
contained an image of the god, composed of smarag-
dus and other gems, A. was remarkable for the
palace of its ancient kings, surrounded by a triple
wall, in the very heart of the oasis, and for its
¢Well of the Sun,” of which the waters were coldest
at noonday, and warmest at midnight. Here the
Emperor Justinian built a Christian church. The
length of the oasis is 15 miles, by 12 broad; it is
about 150 miles distant from the Mediterranean,
-~
and is situated in lat. 29° N., and in long. 26° E.
AMMO'NIUS SACCAS, a Greek philosopher,
founder of the Neoplatonic School, is said to have
been in his earlier days a porter in Alexandria. His
parents were Christian, but he himself is said to
have abandoned his early religion, in which he had
been instructed by Clemens Alexandrinus, and to
have devoted himself to the study of heathen phil-
osophy under Athenagoras; although both Eusebius
and St Jerome deny that he ever formally aposta-
tised from the Christian faith. His great endeav-
our was to harmonise, through a comprehensive
eclecticism, the various philosophical theories which
prevailed in the Roman world, especially those of
Aristotle and Plato. He also laboured to amalgam-
ate with these the doctrines of the Magi and
Brahmans; but instead of boldly announcing the
result as his own, he claimed for his system the
highest antiquity. His most distinguished pupils
were Longinus, Herennius, Origen, and Plotinus, the
last of whom, by far the most subtle and profound
of the Neoplatonists, always expressed the highest
respect for his master. A. died at Alexandria, 241
A.D. He left no writings behind him.
A. is the name of several learned men in the later
periods of Greek history; such as A., the master of
Plutarch, who lived during the reign of the Emperor
Adrian, and, like A. Saccas, taught a species of eclec-
ticism in philosophy; A., the Christian philosopher
of the 3d c., who wrote a Harmony of the Gospels ;
A., son of Hermeas, a Peripatetic philosopher of
the 5th c., and disciple of Proclus; A., the famous
surgeon of Alexandria, who lived in the time of
Ptolemy Philadelphus; and A., the Grammarian,
who was at first high-priest in an Egyptian temple,
sacred to the god Apis, and afterwards (389 A.D.)
became teacher at Constantinople, where he had the
church historian Socrates for his pupil.
AMMO'PHILA, a genus of Grasses, closely allied
to Arundo (see REED), and distinguished by a spike-
like panicle, and by the glumes being nearly equal,
keeled, longer than the palee of the single floret,
and surrounded at the base by a tuft of hairs.—A4.
arundinacea, formerly called Arundo arenaria—a
grass about 2—3 feet high, with rigid bluish leaves,
the edges of which are rolled in, and very creeping
roots—is frequent on the sandy sea-shores of Britain
and the continent of Europe. It is sometimes called
SEA REED or SAND REED, and sometimes MAT GRASS,
the culms being wrought into foot-mats, coverings
for stairs, &c., in the manufacture of which many
families residing along the coast of Ireland are
employed most of the year. It is also called Marum,
Marrum, or Marram, by which name it is designated
in laws both English and Scottish, by which the
destruction of it was prohibited under severe penal-
ties, because of its great utility in fixing the shifting
sand. In Holland, and in Norfolk, it is extensively
employed—along with the Sea LymE GRASS (q. v.)—
in preserving the banks of sand which prevent the
inroads of the sea. It is of little value as food for
cattle, although they eat the very young leaves.
'_[;fle tfibre has been used instead of flax, but is too
short.
AMMUNI'TION. Sometimes this name is given
to cannon and mortars, as well as to the projectiles
and explosive substances employed with them ; but |
more usually A. is considered to apply to the latter
—such as shot, shell, gunpowder, cartridges, fuses,
wads, grenades. Muskets, swords, bayonets, and
other small-arms are sometimes, but improperly,
included under this term. The Royal Laboratory at
Woolwich is the place where A. is chiefly prepared
for the British army and navy. The cannon-balls
may be cast at some of the great iron-foundries in
the north; the shells may be cast or forged in the
shell-factory at Woolwich; the muskets may be
made at Birmingham, and the rifles at Enfield ; the
bullets at the shot-factories; the gunpowder at
Waltham-Abbey—and so on ; but the ‘making up’
of the A.is mostly conducted at the establishment
above mentioned. Bags of serge, in enormous
number, are cut out and made, and filled to form
the cartridges for large ordnance. Bags or tubes
of paper are made and filled to constitute cartridges
for small-arms. The tubes and combustibles for war-
rockets and fuses are also manufactured. The cart-
ridges for small-arms (rifles, muskets, carbines, and
pistols) are made in millions ; since it is on those that
the main offensive operations of an army depend. It
has been calculated by the Woolwich authorities,
that a British army of 60,000 men, comprising a fair
average of infantry, cavalry, artillery, and engineers,
ought. to be provided with no less than 18,000,000
ball-cartridges for small-arms, for six months’
operations. These would require 1000 A. wagons,
and 3600 horses, to convey them all at once. I#
is therefore deemed better that, under any such
circumstances, there should be established entrepéts
for supplying the troops from time to time. The
wagons constructed for this kind of service will
carry 20,000 rounds of small-arm A. each; the
cartridges are packed in boxes, and the wagons are
drawn by four horses each. Several wagons are
organised into an ‘equipment,” under the charge of
a detachment of artillery; and there are several
such equipments for an army of the magnitude
above mentioned—one for each division of infantry,
a small portion for the cavalry, and the rest in
reserve. It has been laid down that an army of
60,000 men ought to have 2,680,000 cartridges with
them, besides those in reserve ; and that the convey-
ance of such a quantity, with a few forges and
stores, would require 150 A. wagons, 830 men, and
704 horses. The equipment would return to the
entrepdt for a new supply when needed. In the
Peninsular War, and at Waterloo, the English used
two-horse carts, carrying about 10,000 rounds of
small-arm A. each; but a superior kind of wagon
has been since introduced. In the field, an infantry
soldier usually carries about 60 rounds, put in
compartments in his pouch; the pouch having a
separate receptacle for percussion-caps. When the
word A. isused in connection with artillery matters,
the ¢ fixed’ A. comprises the loaded shells, cartridges,
and carcasses; whereas the ‘unfixed’ are the unfilled
case-shot, grape-shot, and shell. During peace, the
Woolwich Laboratory serves out little less than a
million lbs. of gunpowder annually, in A. for the
army and navy, for purposes of exercising, saluting,
&c.: the quantity in war is of course indeterminable.
The chief kinds of A. will be found briefly described
under their proper headings.
A’MNESTY signifies an act of pardon or oblivion,
and the effect of 1t is, that the crimes and offences
against the state, specified in the act, are so
obliterated that they can never again be charged
against the guilty parties. The A. may be either
absolute, or qualified with exceptions. Instances
of the latter are to be found in ancient and modern
history : thus, Thrasybulus, when he overthrew
the oligarchy in Athens, caused an A. 2}:;) be
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