Page:The New International Encyclopædia 1st ed. v. 10.djvu/528

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458
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ILIAC ARTERIES. 458 ILLPOITIMACY. in carrying <iii the circulation in uterine life is nolioi'd in llic article Kottls. IL'IAD. Sec lIoMFR. ILIAD OF FRANCE, The. A name some- times fiivfu to the Rumun de In Roue. ILION, Il'lOn. A villufe'f in Herkimer County, N. v., 12 miles east-southeast of Utica; on the Mohawk Kiver, the Krie Canal, and the New York Central and Hudson River and the West Shore railroads (Map: New York, K 2). It has a fine |>ublic library, with about 11,000 volumes. The manufactures include lirearms. typewriters, bicycles, knit jinods, and cabinet and liling cases. The waterworks and elect ric-lijiht plants are owned by the municipality. One or two families seem to have moved to the site of llion about 181C, but there was pro]H"rly no village here until about 1828. It was incorporated in 1852, Population, in 1890, 4057; in 1!)00, 51.38. ILI'ONA (Lat., froniGk. ■JhSir/ . Ilionc) . In Greek niytholo>,'j- the wife of Polymnestor, Kinf; of Thrace. Slie was the daughter of Priam and Hecuba, anil according to oni' legend brought up her brother Polydorus. who had been com- mitted to the care of Polymnestor. When the latter, instigated by the Greeks, who wished to exterminate the race of Priam, designed the nurder of Polydorus, Iliona substituted his own son. Deipihis. who was put to death instead. ILI'ONEUS (Lat.. from Gk.'limtlr) The son of Niobe. killed with all her other children. He was praying, and .polln would have saved him if the arrow had not already been sent. ILITHYIA, illthl'yA (Lat.. from Gk. EJXn -9i'ia, UileHhi/ia) . The Greek goddess who pre- sided over childbirth. 'Hie plural form Ilithyiic is used in the Hind, but elsewhere only one god- dess of the name is mentioned. ILIUM. See Troy. ILIUM (Lat.. flank). A portion of one of the bones of the pelvis, the os innominatum. In the undeveloped child it is a distinct portion, which afterwards becomes united to the pubis in front and to the ischium behind and below. It is the hipbone or haunch-bone. See Pelts. ILKESTON, IlTcfs-ton. A market-town in Derbysliire. Kiigland. 10 miles northeast of Derby, on an eminence in the valley of Krewash (Map: England, E 4). There are maiiufaeturcs of hosiery and lace, and coal and iron works in the vicinity. The tovn possesses a valuable medicinal mineral spring and baths. It was known in 1084 as Tilehestune. It obtained a grant for a market and fair in 1251, but was not incorporat- ed l)efore 1887. It owns its gas, water, markets, and cemetery, and maintains a sewage farm. Population, in 1891, l!t,744; in 1901, 25,400. ILKHANS, M-kilivz'. See Mongol Dynasties. ILL.ffi'NUS (XcoLat., from Gk. lO.eiv. cilcin, to roll closely). A fossil trilobile with smooth- surfaced elliptical or rounfled carapace, found in the Ordovician and Silurian rocks of most parts oT the world. Sec Tuilohita. ILLAMPU, f-lyam'poo. A mountain of the .lldes. Sec SoRATA. ILLA-TICSI, e'lyft tf-k's* (Quichua, Eternal Liglit ) . . name given to the supreme god of the Peruvians. I'iracoeha. ILLE-ET-VILAINE, M'A<v6'lftn'. A mari- time department in the northwest of France, a portion of the old Province of Brittany, lying between the ICnglisli Channel and the Department of Loire-lnferieure (Map: France, E 3). Area, 2699 square miles. Population, in 1890, 622,- 0,39; in 1901, 613,567. It is watered chiefly by the rivers from which it derives its name — the Vilaine, and its tributary, the Hie. The usual grain crops are raised in sulTicient quantity to meet the wants of the population. Flax and hemp are extensively produced, and the cider of this district is esteemed the best produced in the country. Cattle arc reared in great numbers, iron-mines are worked, and great varieties of linen and woolen fabrics are manufactured. Rcnnes is the capital, and Saint-Malo the principal seaport. ILLEGITIMACY (from Lat. in-, not + fc- ffitiiiiux. Ic'Lral. from lex, law). According to the civil and statute law as found in many States, the status of children born out of wedlock. In England, children born out of wedlock have been held as illegitimate even upon subsequent inter- marriage of the parents; also children of the deceased wife's sister h.ave long lieen considered illegitimate. In Italy, much confusion has arisen as to legitimacy, owing to the strife between Church and State. It has been held that chil- dren resulting from marriages which had been solemnized by the Church only were illegitimate, a civil marriage being necessary to give legiti- macy to olfspring. In ew York the children of a man and woman cohabiting professedly as husliand and wife have been held to be legitimate. In France, where informal imions are common, the same rule does not hold. Children of such a union are considered illegitimate. A great variety exists as to theorj' and practice in difTcrent lands, and reference must !)e made to special treatises on the subject. Illegitimacy has lieen much discussed from three distinct points of view — the moral, the economic, and the legal. 1897 1898 1899 1900 COUNTBY Total births Illegit- imate Total births Illeglt- imat«  Total births Illegit- imate Total births mpRit- imat«  PRfCt. llleKit- Imate, 1900 Rnvrl) d uud Wales 921.693 106,664 128,877 1.991.126 869.107 190.987 1.101.848 161.441 132,999 38.409 2.802 8.068 184.084 75.989 15,885 70,199 4.407 14,933 923,166 105.457 130.861 2.029.890 • 843.933 190.921 1.070.074 160,765 136.523 38.333 2.873 8,870 1R5.220 74.586 15.052 67.262 4.206 15.641 928,646 103.900 130.656 2.045.286 847.627 194.268 1.088.658 163.289 37.124 2.674 8,448 183,504 74,970 14,919 67.262 4,290 926.304 101.46'J 131.355 36.814 2.702 8.603 4.00 2.7 6.6 (1899) 8.9 827.297 73,121 8.8 (1899) 7.r>8 Itnlv 1.067.376 162.611 63,406 6.00 4.247 2.6 Swe(i»n