archiepiscopacy (page 294) - following the Anglican or Episcopal church, rather than the Catholic church
famous cavern-pagoda of Elephants, in India. (page 295) - The Elephanta Caves form a collection of cave temples predominantly dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva; UNESCO has designated them as a World Heritage Site
Leuwenhoeck (page 302) - Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, commonly known as the Father of Microbiology, one of the first miscroscopists and microbiologists who discovered bacteria, protists, sperm cells, blood cells, and much more (1632-1723)
Mendanna (page 306) - Álvaro de Mendaña de Neira (1542-1595), a Spanish navigator who discovered the Solomon Islands
Figuera (page 306) - Spanish writer Cristóbal Suárez de Figueroa (1571-after 1644) wrote about Mendaña's voyage
made a Mazeppa of (page 316) - tied to the back of a wild horse. In the 1819 poem Mazeppa by Lord Byron, this is the fate of the title character, who was loosely based on the life of a Ukrainian kossack by that name
Dunfermline (page 334) - an abbey in the Scottish town of the same name
Neskyeuna Shakers (page 351) - members of a communal, celibate, emotional Protestant denomination whose first U.S. settlement was founded in 1776 in Niskayuna, New York - they're mostly known for the furniture they created today, but some of the stories about the Shakers are wild
freshet (page 352) - a sudden overflow of a stream, for example after a spring thaw
calomel (page 360) - a chemical compound used as a treatment to purge the bowels
jalap (page 360) - a Mexican vine whose dried roots are used as a treatment to purge the bowels
gamboge (page 364) - a strong red-yellow color
Isthmus of Darien (page 379) - the narrow strip of land through which the Panama Canal would eventually be built
Lavater (page 387) - Johann Kaspar Lavater (1741-1801), a Swiss physiognomist
Gall (page 387) - Franz Joseph Gall (1758-1828), the founder of phrenology
Spurzheim (page 387) - Johann Spurzheim (1776-1832), who worked as an assistant to Gall but later split from him
Phidias’s marble Jove (page 387) - a massive, seated sculpture of Zeus in Olympia, Greece, considered one of the seven wonders of the ancient world
Then I had to look up the seven wonders of the ancient world because there are only seven. Shouldn't I know them?
Melancthon (page 388) - Philipp Melanchthon (1497-1560), a German theologian with receding hairline
Champollion (page 389) - Jean-François Champollion (1790-1832), a French scholar who deciphered the Rosetta Stone
Bartholomew Diaz (page 409) - Bartholomew Dias (c. 1450-1500), a Portuguese explorer who in 1488 became the first European known to have sailed around the western tip of Africa
Cleopatra’s barges from Actium (page 411) - Actium was a Roman colony in Greece, in 31 B.C. the site of the decisive naval battle in the war between the Roman emperor Octavian and the combined forces of Mark Antony and Cleopatra, queen of Egypt
Darmonodes’ elephant (page 421) - scholars don't know the source of this name, but the story recalls one in Plutarch's Moralia in which an elephant falls in love with a flower-girl and caresses her breasts with its trunk
As Ptolemy Philopater testified of the African elephant (page 422) - a pharaoh of Egypt who reigned from 221-205 B.C.
King Juba (page 422) - probably Juba I (85-46 B.C.) of Numidia, an area encompassing modern-day Algeria and part of Tunisia
proas (page 425) - various types of multi-hull outrigger sailboats of the Austronesian peoples
rowels (page 427) - small, rotating, spiked wheels on the end of a horse's spur, used to give subtle cues to the horse, with designs varying from blunt (gentle) to sharp (strong)
King Porus’ elephants in the Indian battle with Alexander (page 428) - King Porus was a ruler of Paurava, in the modern-day state of Punjab, India, in the fourth century B.C. In the battle of the Hydaspes between Porus and Alexander the Great in 326 B.C., Alexander won
Gulfweed (page 432) - sargassum, a free-floating seaweed
en bon point (page 437) - embonpoint, plumpness
Bashaw (page 438) - pasha, a military or civil official in Turkey
Vidocq (page 439) - Eugène François Vidocq (1775-1857), a French private investigator who started life as a criminal and wrote about the young women he'd seduced
You might have heard of the Vidocq Society - a voluntary brain trust of retired and working criminologists that meet the third Thursday of every month to assist in the investigation of cold-case murders from all over the country. Meetings take place in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Justinian’s Pandects (page 441) - a 50-book digest of Roman laws compiled for Emperor Justinian I in the 6th century
Coke-upon-Littleton (page 442) - an important commentary on British property law written by Sir Edward Coke (1552-1634)
Brandreth’s pills (page 456) - Pills heavily advertised by Dr. Benjamin Brandreth and known as a laxative
poltroon (page 461) - coward
squilgee (page 466) - a swab made of untwisted yarn
Hydriote (page 471) - a person from Hydra, an island in Greece
Canaris (page 471) - Constantine Kanaris (c. 1793-1877), a naval officer during the Greek war for independence from Turkey. In 1822 he began using fire ships against the Turks by stealthily attaching a small ship to a Turkish flagship and setting it on fire
Rabelais (page 474) - Francois Rabelais (1494-1553), a French satirist
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego (page 476) - three men who, in a story in the Old Testament book of Daniel (3:12-30), refuse a king's order to worship a golden idol. They are punished by being thrown into a furnace, but they survive without harm. The king then orders his people to worship their God
metempsychosis (page 478) - the reincarnation of a soul after death into a new body
Pactolus (page 479) - a river in Turkey that once contained gold sands linked to the myth of King Midas washing away his golden touch in its waters, and a source of wealth for Lydian kings like Croesus
Popayan (page 481) - a city in Colombia, South America, that had a famous mint
Golconda (page 481) - a ruined city in India, once famous for its wealth
Daboll's arithmetic (page 481) - a textbook used widely in schools in the United States
seignories (page 500) - (or seigniories/seigniories) were feudal land grants, essentially lordships or domains, in places like France, New France (Quebec), and British North America, where a seigneur (lord) held rights and obligations over the land and its inhabitants, involving rents, fealty, and jurisdiction, existing until abolished in the 19th century but leaving legacies in place names and historical land tenure systems
Pompey's Pillar (page 504) - an ancient, freestanding column in Alexandria, Egypt, built not by Pompey (a leader of the Roman Republic in the first century B.C.) but in honor of the Emperor Diocletian, who ruled Rome in the third century A.D.
temple of Denderah (page 508) - the Dendera Temple complex in Egypt
multum in parvo (page 519) -Latin for "much in little"
"...We must up Burtons and break out." (page 525) -
- Up Burtons - raise the burtons - a kind of light tackle used for hoisting
- Break out - lift all the barrels of oil out of the cargo hold
Zoroaster (page 529) - the chief prophet of the Zoroastrian religion was said to have been assassinated
corpusants (page 557) - another name for St. Elmo's Fire, a spooky, glowing electrical phenomenon seen on ships during storms, named from Portuguese for "holy body" (corpo-santo) because sailors thought it was a saint's manifestation
“Mene, Mene, Tekel Upharsin” (page 558) - the writing on the wall in the biblical book of Daniel
here now’s a patched professor in Queen Nature’s granite-founded College (page 574) - I've no clue. I assume he's suggesting the person he's talking to is a weak man - "patched professor" - but I've no idea about the rest.
Antiochus’s elephants in the book of Maccabees (page 608) - in 1 Maccabees, a book of scripture included in the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox bibles, the Greek King Antiochus V shows his elephants grape and mulberry juice before battle, to incite them to fight
Note: There are a surprising number of elephant references in Moby-Dick.
Fata Morgana (page 632) - an optical illusion that makes objects on the horizon appear longer and higher up than they are
Ixion (page 634) - a figure in Greek mythology punished for various sins by being bound to a winged wheel of fire
Hat mentions (why hats?):