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COPYRIGHT, 1908

By THE UNIVERSITY SOCIETY Inc.

THE STANDARD LIBRARY OF

NATURAL HISTORY

VOLUMES IV.-V.: LIVING RACES OF MANKIND

VOLUME IV.

VOLUMES IV-V

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FIJI ISLANDS-Inhabitants; physical type; weapons,

dress, and ornaments; food; a Fiji grass house; manners

and customs; former cannibalism and human sacrifices;

strangling of aged parents and of wives and slaves of

chiefs; slavery of women; betrothal and marriage; super-

stitions; Christian missions. POLYNESIANS-Racial

stock; one of the finest races in the world"; resemblance

to Europeans; orderly habits; games and pastimes;

religion; deified chiefs; priest as "medicine man"; ordeals.

TONGA or FRIENDLY ISLANDS-Lord George Campbell on

the people; Captain Erskine's account; the Tow-Tow
(religious festival); Captain Cook sees a fighting game;
funerals; Tongans Christianised; Rev. J. G. Wood's love-
story. SAMOA-Home of a handsome race; R. L.
Stevenson's attachment to them; accounts of Williams
and Pritchard; women go to the wars; marriage customs.
HERVEY ISLANDS Strange marriage ceremony; "human
pathway" for bridal pair. SOCIETY ISLANDS-Named
by Captain Cook; history and population; people praised
by Guillemard; Tahitian etiquette; how Tahitians marry.
PITCAIRN ISLAND Remarkable episode; a faithful
English settler; happy community. SANDWICH ISLANDS
(HAWAII)-Former and present population; natives read
and write; European customs and dress; leprosy; Chinese
and European residents; Christian missions; annexation
to the United States..

SIAM, ANAM, CAMBODIA, BURMA

Native and Caucasian elements. SIAM-Geographical
position; population; French and English influence; Shans
and Siamese proper; accounts of European observers.
ANAM-A great population, subject to France; Anamite
type; called a repulsive people; Lord Curzon's more
favourable view; mixed religion; picturesque markets.
CAMBODIA-Ancient kingdom and famous ruins; Keane's
description of Cambodian tribes. BURMA-Burmese are
Mongolians; their peculiar social system; most interesting
people are the Chins; their character, homes, habits, and
customs in birth, death, marriage, and war; anecdotes
illustrating their peculiarities and modes of life; the
secluded Karens; simultaneous marriages and funerals;
curious courtship....
97-120

CHAPTER VI

CHINA AND MONGOLIA

CHINA-Ancient descriptions; present area and popu-
lation; "Book of History"; racial stock; physical traits

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JAPAN, THE HAIRY AINU, KOREA, FORMOSA, LIU-KIU ISLANDS, AND TIBET JAPAN-Nippon, “Land of the Rising Sun"; geography and population; blended races; military successes; traditional origins; physical and mental traits; authentic history; manners; amusements; dress; revolution of 1868; graphic description of the people; Japanese art; religion; Shinto shrines; Christian missions. THE HAIRY AINU— Aborigines of Japan; descriptions of travellers; huts and villages; persistent characteristics. KOREA-Mongolian stock; the people and their modes of life. FORMOSACeded to Japan; Chinese and other inhabitants; customs of wild tribes. LIU-KIU ISLANDS-Japanese and Chinese elements; Chamberlain's account of the people. TIBET Country and population; industries; Lassa, the sacred city; Lamaism; praying-wheels, etc.. 145-168

CHAPTER VIII

THE ANDAMAN ISLANDS

THE VEDDAS OF CEYLON-THE ABORIGINAL RACES OF INDIA: CENSUS RETURNS OF POPULATION: CLASSIFICATION OF RACES: THE ARYAN INVASION: CASTE: KOLS, GONDS, TODAS, KHONDS, ETC.

THE ANDAMAN ISLANDS-People of the Great Andaman group; dwarfish stature; scanty clothing; modes of life as described by Man and Dobson. THE VEDDAS OF CEYLON-People a remnant; wretchedness and dejection; an ill-shapen race; disgusting food; Sir James Tennent's three groups; primitive virtues and defects. INDIAHindu type; Topinard's three strata; Dravidians and Jats; alliance with Australian natives; census of India; Keane's classification; "a great museum of races"; Willam Crooke on the so-called Aryan invasion. HINDU CASTES-Definition of caste; four original castes and table of chief subdivisions; description of various castes and tribes... .. 169-192

CHAPTER IX

INDIA (continued): WOLF-REARED CHILDREN, KASHMIRIS, PARSIS, KHASIS: RELIGION IN INDIA: ARYAN THEOLOGY, LITERATURE, ETC.-AFGHANISTAN AND BALUCHISTAN

WOLF-REARED CHILDREN-Tradition confirmed; Ball's testimony; Max Müller's interest. KASHMIRIS-One of the finest Indian races; description of the type. PARSIS -Iranians settled in Bombay; race and religion preserved through centuries. KHASIS-Members of the TibetoBurmese race; grand dances in honor of the new moon. RELIGION IN INDIA-Statistical information regarding the various religions and sects. ARYAN THEOLOGY, LITERATURE, ETC.-The Vedas; belief in a future state; Aryan migration told in Vedic hymns; the Vedic period; beginning of the burning of widows (suttee); Aryan character and faith; teaching of the Brahmans; unity of God; Brahmanic literature; domination of the Brahmans; their discipline; praise and criticism of them; religious fanaticism; fakirs; sacrilege of killing cattle. AFGHANIS

TAN AND BALUCHISTAN-Afghans a fine, warlike race; tradition of their origin; Keane and Bellew on the Afghans; Baluchis distinguished from Afghans... 193-216

CHAPTER X

TURKESTAN, BOKHARA, SIBERIA, AND PERSIA

TURKESTAN-History; tribes and hordes; characteristics; manners; peculiar customs. BOKHARA-Practically Russian; mixed population, Usbegs and Tajiks compared. SIBERIA-Classification of native inhabitants; the Tunguses; their admirable qualities; Theel's estimate of them; how they hunt; they live in tents; called "Frenchmen of the tundra"; Samoyedes and Ostiaks, of Finnish stock; full description of these dwellers in the Arctic Circle; other Siberian tribes. PERSIA-Past and present extent, primary types and various branches of the Persians; physical and mental traits; family and social relations; great liars"; culture and industry; subtlety and politeness; distinctive dress; diet; buildings; Iranians; Nestorians; Kurds; Luris and Bakhtians; story of a Bakhtian chief; Persians chiefly Mohammedans of the fanatical Shiah sect.. 217-240

CHAPTER XI

ARABIA, SYRIA, PALESTINE, ASIA MINOR, AND ARMENIA

ARABIA-Arabs most picturesque of Orientals; race; typical Bedouin; character; Vámbéry contrasts Arab and Turk; hospitality; manners; dress; weapons; towndwellers; food; discovery of coffee; animals; social classes; customs and ceremonies; fanatical Islamites. SYRIAFormer territory and present extent; mixed race; Mohammedanism; the Druses. PALESTINE-Position and population; the Hebrew race and character; their intellectual influence; history and religion; Jewish weddings. ASIA MINOR-Three chief elements of population, Turks, Greeks, Armenians; interesting description of each; Burnaby on dwellings and inmates. ARMENIANS-Distribution; race; character and habits; Armenia an Asiatic. battle-ground; comparison with Jews; female dress; once fire-worshippers; churches and monasteries; gorgeous ritual.. 241-264

CHAPTER XII

AFRICA: INTRODUCTORY-THE PYGMY OR NEGRILLO RACES THE PEOPLE OF MADAGASCAR

General characteristics and classification. BUSHMENLocation and history; physical features; dress, ornaments, and weapons; dwellings; drawings; food; social system; religion; folklore; language. ANGOLA DWARFS-APpearance and habits. THE OBONGO-Described by Du Chaillu and Lenz. THE AKKA-Best known of Equatorial dwarfs; referred to by ancient writers; modern accounts by Stanley, Junker, and Schweinfurth; Schweinfurth's Akka boy. BATWA AND WAMBUTTU-Interesting observations by Stanley, Burrows, and others. Emin Pasha's servant. PYGMIES IN ABYSSINIA AND BRITISH EAST AFRICA-Described by Sir W. C. Harris, Rigby, Borelli, etc. PEOPLE OF MADAGASCAR-A Malay race; divisions; the Hova, Bara, Ikongo, Sakalava, and other tribes; descriptions by travellers.. 265-288

CHAPTER XIII

.....

THE NEGRO IN GENERAL-THE BANTU

NEGROES

Physical features; dress and ornaments; tattooing; weapons; dwellings; food; social organisation; character;

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