Definition of Malaca
Malacca is a name given to the whole Malay Peninsula, that
remarkable tongue of land 44 to 210 m. wide, stretching 800 m. SE. from
Burma between the Strait of Malacca and the Gulf of Siam; mountain ranges
7000 ft. high from the backbone; along the coast are deep mangrove
swamps; the plains between yield rice, sugar-cane, cotton, and tobacco;
there are forests of teak, camphor, ebony, and sandal-wood, and the
richest tin mines in the world; the climate is unhealthy; the northern
portion is Siamese, the southern constitutes the British Straits
Settlements, of which one, on the W. coast, is specifically called
Malacca (92); it exports tin and tapioca; the capital, Malacca
(20), 120 m. NW. of Singapore, was the scene of Francis Xavier's labours.
- Wikipedia
Ma*lac"ca (?), n. A town and
district upon the seacoast of the Malay Peninsula.
Malacca cane (Bot.), a cane obtained
from a species of palm of the genus Calamus (C.
Scipionum), and of a brown color, often mottled. The plant is a
native of Cochin China, Sumatra, and Malays.
- Webster's Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
- State in western Malaysia.
- Capital of Malacca state.
- The Nuttall Encyclopedia
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