No. (of Notes, dfc.)
Greece led him, he tells me, to observe
the same fact: particularly among the
Speziotes ; whence also sprung Canaris,
the bravest Greek Admiral of the Revolution.
— J. C. N.
55 Études, pp. 153, seq.
56 Wood-cut, fig. 9. Crania Æg. p. 54 ; from
Rosellini, M.R. 161 ; M. S. iv. 53, 62,
250. Compare Wilkinson, Manners and
Cust,, i. pi. 62, fig. 2, a, b ; and p. 367 ;
with Osburn, Testimony, p. 137.
57 Morton’s inedited Letter to myself, “ Philadelphia,
23 Nov. 1842.” -—G. R. G.
58 Layard, Babylon, 1853, pp. 144, 231. We
attribute differences of physiognomy
chiefly to the ethnographic inferiority of
Assyrian artists.
59 Phys. Hist. 1841, iii. pp. 24-5.
60 Varieties of Man, 1851, pp. 551-2.
61 De Brotonne, Filiations et Migrationes des
Peuples, Paris, 1837.
62 In order that we may not be suspected of
considering Plato’s ethical romance
about the “ Atalantic Isles” to be
historical, we refer the reader to Martin,
Études sur le Timéè de Platon, cited
hereinafter. .
63 The Archæology and Pre-historic Annals
of Scotland, Edinburgh, 1851, pp. 700-1.
64 Genesis xi. 31; xii. 1, 2, 5 Cahen, i.
p. 31.
65 Genesis xvii. 5 ; lb., p. 42.
66 Genesis xvii. 15 ; — Lanci, Parahpomem,
1845. Travellers have npt only hunted
for, but narrate how they'have actually
found the “ double cave” they call
Machphelah ! (Vide report of Syro-
Egÿpt. Soc., Nov. 8—in London Athenaeum,
Nov. 19, 1853 ; p. 1391.)
67 Genesis xxiv. 3, 4 ; Cahen, pp. 65-6.
68 Genesis xii. 45 ; — Lanci, Paral., i. p. 26.
69 Genesis xxxviii. 2.
70 Exodus ii. 19.
, 71 Exodus ii. 21.
72 Exodus xii. 38 ;—Cahen, Text, ii. p. 50.
73 Leviticus xxiv. 10.
74 1 Kings xi. 1, 2.
75 Crania Æg., pi. xi. fig. 2 ; p. 47.
76 Birch, Criteria, in Otia, p. 84.
77 Layard, Babylon, p. 610.
78 History of,the Jews.
79 The Asmonean, New York, 27 March,
1850, contains a confirmatory article on
the Jews of Malabar, translated from the
Parisian “ Archives Jraelites.”
80 Missionary Researches, p. 308.
81 Remarks on the Mats’ Hafar Tomar, or
“ Book of the Letter,” an Ethiopie
Manuscript : Syro-Egypt. Soc., London,
lf48.
82 Encÿclopædia Britannica.
83 Phys. Hist., 1844, iv. pp. 82, 83.
84 Wood-cut, fig. 13—Dubeux, Tartarie.
85 Borrow, Gipsies in Spain.
86 Lest our positions should be questioned,
we refer to Prichard for Continental instances,
to Wilson for the Pre-Celtic in
Scotland and Scandinavia, to Logan,
Crawfurd, and Earl, for those among
islanders of the Indian Archipelago.
87 Races of Men ; vol. ix. U. S. Exploring
Expcd., 1848, p. 305.
88 Wood-cut, fig. 14—Layard, Babylon, pp.
152, 153.
No. (of Notes, <ßc.)
89 Wood-cut, fig. 15—op. cit., pp. 582-584.
90 Wood-cut, fig 16—op. cit., p. 105.
91 Wood-cut, fig. 17—op. cit., p. 583.
92 Wood-but, fig. 18—op. cit., p. 538.
•93 Wood-cut,.fig. 19—Wilkinson, Man. and
Cust., i. p. 384, pi. 69, fig. 8.
94 Lepsius, Auswahl, Leipsig, 1840, “ Canon
der Proportionen” ; —ibid., Briefe
ausÆgypten, Berlin, 1852, pp. 105,106;
—and Birch, Gallery of Antiquities, Br.
Museum, pi. 33, fig. 147.
95 Rev. Archéol., 1844, p. 213, seq. ; 1847,
p. 296, seq. :—Commentary on the Cuneiform
Inscrip., 1850, pp. 4-7.
96 Wood-cut, fig. 20—Botta, Mon. de Ninive,
pl. 36.
97 Wood-cut, fig. 21—ibid., pi. 68 bis.
90 Polyhym., lxxvii. ; Bonomi, Nineveh, pp.
182,301.
99 Woöd-cuts, figs. 22', 23 — Botta, op. cit.,
pi. 14.
100 Wood-cut, fig. 24 — Lettres de M. Botta
sur ses découvertes à Khorsabad, 1845,
pl. xxii., and p. 28. ,
I 101 Essai de déchiffrement de l’Ecriture Assyrienne,
1845, pp. 22-25.
102 De Longpérier, Galerie Assyrienne, 1850,
p. 16 ; and Nos. 1, 12, 27, 33.
103 Gliddon, “ Hist. Sketches of Egypt,” No.
5, New York Sun, Jan. 14, 1850.
104 Wood-ciit, fig. 2 5— Botta, Mon;‘de Ninive,
pl. 45. *
105 Wood-cut, fig. 26 — Layard, Monuments
of Nineveh, folio pi. 42.
106 Wood-cut, fig; 27—Layard, Babylon, pp.
150, 143-4.
107 2 Kings xviii. ; Isaiah xxxvi.
108 Wood-cut, fig. 28—Layard, Babylon, pp.
617-9.
109 2 Kings xv. 19-21.
110 Wood-cut, fig. 29—Layard, op. cit., p.361.
111 Vide infra, Part III., p. 714.
112 Deuteron, xxiii. 8, 9; Cahen, v. p. 99.
113 Egyptian Cartouches found at Nimroud,
R. Soc. Lit., Jan. 1848, p. pp. 164-71
114 Mr. Birch’s translation—Private letter to
g. r . g. ; I ;
115“ Wood-cut, fig. 31 — Rosellini, M. R., pi.
xii. fig. 46 ; — Conf. Bunsen, Ægyptens
Stelle, iii. p. 133.
116 Bonomi, Nineveh and its Palaces, 1852,
pp. 77, 78.
117 Babylon, pp. 153-9, 280-2, 630-1.
118 Egypt. Inscrip, in Bibliothèque Nationale,
1852, p. 17.
119 Wood-cut, fig. 32 — Layard, Babylon, p.
630: — Lepsius, Denkmäler, Abth. in.
i | 88.
120 Babylon, 623.
121 Birch, Stat. Tablet of Karnac, 1846, pp.
29, 37 : — Gliddon, Otia Ægyptiaca, p.
103.
122 Birch, in Layard’s Babylon, p. 630: — or
Lepsius, Auswahl, Taf. xiiv line 21.
123 Wood-cUt, fig. 33—Rosellini, M. R., pl.i.
fig. 2 : — Conferre Lepsius, Denkmäler,
Abth. iii. Bl. i., at Berlin. Lepsius (Letters,
pp. 278, 381) calls her Amunoph s
“ mother, Aahmes-nufre-Ari”—“Ame-
nophis I. and the black Queen Aahmes-
nefruari.” That she is painted black,
as well as red, no one disputes ; but did
the Negro-black pigment ever accompany
such osteological structure ?
124 Crania Ægypt. p. 47.
No. (cf Notes, <fc.)
125 Wood-cUts, figs. 34, 35—Lepsius, Denkmäler,
Altes Reich, Dyn. IV., Grab 75,
Abth. ii. Bl. 8, 10.
126 Wood-cut, fig. 36 — Bunsen, op. cit. ii.
Frontispiece.
127 Wood-cut, fig. 37 — Afrique Ancienne,
Carthage, Univ. Pittor., from a coin.
128 Wood-cut, fig. 38 — idem.
129 Wood-cut, fig. 39 — Rosellini, M. R. pi.
157; M. S. iv. p. 237 Osburn, Egypt’s
Testimony, pp. 114-6, fig. 1.
130 Wood-cut, fig. 40 — M. R. 151, M. S. iv.
p. 82: r-* Wilkinson, Man. and Cust. i.
pi. 69, fig. 7 : — Birch, Stat. Tablet,
p. 34.
131 Wood-cut, fig. 41—M. R. 161, fig. 1 ; 159,
fig. 3; M. S. iv. p. 1C5) :— Morton, pi.
xiv. fig. 20, p. 48.
132 Rawlinson, Persian Cuneiform Inscrip, of
Behistun, 1847, p. 270.
133 Wood-cut, fig. 43—-Vaux, Nineveh and
Persepolis, 1851, pp. 350-1.
134 Letronne, Civilisation Égyptienne, 1845,
pp. 30-43.
135 Rawlinson, op. cit. p. xxviii.
136 Wood-cut, fig. 44 — Cost,e et Flandin,
Perse Ancienne, pi. 18.
137 Rawlinson, op. cit. p. 323.
138 Wood-cut, fig. 45 — Perse Anciénne, pi.
154.
139 De Sacy, Antiquités de la Perse, et médailles
des rois Sassanides, Paris, 1793 ;
pp. 12, 64 ; A, No. 3—recopied in Perse
Ancienne.
140 Woodcut, fig. 46 — Perse Ancienne, pl.
185
141 Perse Ancienne, pl. 49, bas-relief A.
142 Woodcut, fig. 47—Perse Ancienne, pl. 51,
bas-relief D.
143 Layard, Monuments of Nineveh, 1849,
folio plate; Nineveh and its Remains,
ii. pp. 329-31 : — well described by Bonomi,
op. cit. pp. 287-95.
144 Wood-cut, fig. 50 — Rosellini, M. R. pl.
103, and 87 ; M. S. iii. part 2, p. 157:—
Morton, Crania Ægypt. p. 63.
145 Pauthier, Chine, pp. 417, 427, 429. According
to Callery and Yvan (L’Insurrection
en Chine, depuis son origine
jusqu’à la prise de Nankin, Paris,
1853) the present Chinese insurgents let
all their hair grow, as their ancestry did
under the Mings, to distinguish themselves
from the Tartar usurpers.
146 Lepsius, Chronologie, i. p. 379. Ibid.,
Discoveries, transi. Mackenzie, p. 381.
147 De Sola, Lindenthal, and Raphall ; New
Transi, of the Scriptures, London, pp.
46-7 : — Genesis xi. 10-26.
148 Monumenti Storici, ii. p. 461, seq.
149 Apochrypha, xiv. 17.
150 Wood-cuts, figs.44 to 71—Rosellini, Monumenti
Reali, pi. i. to xxiii. ; and Mon.
Storici, ii., “ Iconografia de’ Faraoni.”
Out selections are arranged in accordance
with the more recent improvements
of Egyptian chronology.
151 Prisse, Suite des Monumens de Champollion,
1848, pi. x. : — but compare
Lepsius, Denkmäler, Abth. iii. Bl. 100.
Ibid., Ægyptischen Götterkreis, 1851,
pp. 40-5. Ibid., Briefe aus Ægypten,
1852, pp. 89, 362.
152 Morton, Cr. Æg. p. 44, pi. xiv. 3; from
Rosellini.
No. (of Notes, c£c.)
153 Colossus at Aboosimbel ; M. R. pi. vi. fig.
22. 154 Chron. der Ægypter, i. pp. 321-2, 358,
37 f. .
155 Notés upon an Inscription in the Bibliothèque
Nationale of Paris, Trans. R.
Soc. Lit. 1852, iv. pp. 16, 17, 21.
156 Gliddon, Chapters, p. 22; and Otia, p.
134.
157 Wood-cuts, fig. 71, bis—Rosellini, M. R.
pl. 79.
158 Ibid., M. R. pl. clx. lxxx. ; M. S. iii. pp. 2,
95, seq. ; iv. pp. 245-9 : — Mortoq, Cr.
Æg. p. 55 : — Osburn, Test., p. 121 :—
Birch, Tabl. of Karnac, pp. 14, 15-35.
159 Morton’s inedited MSS. — Letter to Mr.
Gliddon, entitled, ‘1 Reflections on Mr.
G.’s Ethnological Charts,” 1842; corrected
by Dr. Morton’s autographic
notes, Philadelphia, 23d March, 1843.
We shall refer to it as “ Morton’s MS.
Letter.”
160 Wood-cut, fig. 74—Rosellini, M. R. clvi.
and lx; M. S. iii. pp. 1, 433, seq. ; iv.
pp. 228-44 :—Lenormant, Cours ¿’Histoire
Ancienne, 1838, pp. 322-36: —
Champollion- le - Jeune, Lettr. d’Egypte,
p. 250, seq. Champollion-Figeac, Ég.
Anc. pp. 29-31, pi. i. ; — Wilkinson,
Topog. Thebes, 1835, pp. 106-7: —
Man. and Cust. i. pp. 364, 371, pi. 62,
No. 4, fig. a : — Mod. Egypt, ii. p. 105 :
— Osburn, Testimony, pp. 22-7, 114,
143 :—Birch, Stat. Tab. Kar. p. 20;
161 Wood-cut, fig. 75 — Lepsius, Denkmäler,
Abth. iii. Bl. 136, fig. 37 a.
162 Woodcut, fig. 76 — Rosellini, M. R. clxi.
fig. 1 ; clix. fig. 3 ; M. S. iv. p. 150 : —
Morton, Cr. Æg. p. 48, pi. xiv. 20.
163 Denkmäler, Abth. iii. Bl. 136, fig. d.
164 Woodcut, fig. 78 — Rosellini, M.R. clxi;
M. S. iv. pp. 91, 251 :—De Säulcy, Recherches,
Inscrip, de Van, 1848, p. 26.
165 Wood-cut, fig. 80—Rosellini, M. R. Ixix. ;
M. S. iii. part. 2, p. 29 : — Birch, Gallery,
pp. 93, 97, pi. 38:—Morton, p. 46,
pi. xiv. 24. It is moulded in colors at the
British Museum.
166 Wood-cut, fig. 81— M. R. cli. ; M. S. iv.
p. 82, seq. : — Wilkinson, M. and C. i.
p. 384, pi. 69, fig. 7 ; — Osburn, p. 53 ;
—Birch, Stat. T ab. p. 34.
167 Wood-cut, fig. 82—Rosellini, M. R. clix. :
— Champollion-Figeac, pp. 208-9, pi.
62 : — Hoskins, Ethiopia, p. §29, pi. i.
ii. : — Morton, p. 41, pi. xiv. 22 ; —
Wilkinson, M. and C. i. pi. iv. p. 379 :
—Birch, Gallery, p. 80 ; and Stat. Tab.
p. 61 :—Prisse, Salle des Ancêtres, Rev.
Archéol. 1845, p. 11, and note. N.B.
After this page was stereotyped, we
received Mr. Birch’s freshest paper (Annals
of Thotmes III., 1853) wherein he
assigns these KeFa to the Island of
Cyprus. Vide infra, pp. 479-480, voce
“ KTHM.”
168 Wood-cut, fig. 83—Rosellini, M. R. clix .
M. S. iii. p. 435 ; iv. p. 234 : — Birch,
Gallery, pp. 88-9, 97, pi. 38 : — Stat.
Tab. pp. 13-14.
169 Woodcuts, figs. 84, 85 — Rosellini, M. C.
xxii. : — Wilkinson, i. pi. iv. : — Champollion
Figeac, pp.. 376-8 : — Morton,-
p. 50; pi. xiv. 21 :—Osburn, Testimony,
p. 52 :—Hoskins, Ethiopia, plates, part