No. (of Notes, <£c.)
516 Martin, Man and Monkeys, p, 310.
517 Dumoutier, pi. 32, fig. 2—“ Isle Mawi.”
518 Philadelphia, 2d ed., 1844; pp. 4, 5.
519 Mr. Strain’s letter to Dr. Morton, “ Rio
Janeiro, 7th Decern., 1843”— Proceed.
Acad. Nat. Sciences., Phila., Dec., 1844.
520 Putnam’s American edition, New York,
: 1853, p. 36. ,
521 Ethnography and Archaeology; American
Journ. of Science and Art, ii. 2d series;
Neyr Haven, 1846; tirage a part, pp.
67, 117-9.
522 Crania Americana, p. 145.
523 Rivero and Tschudi (pp. 39—40) doubt the
possession by Dr. Morton of crania of
the royal Inca family: but the note of
the translator (p. 41) may be passed
over as inconsequent.
524 The Creole Negro; supra, No. 491.
525 Cr. Americana, p. 130; pi. xi. C.
526 Op. cit., p. 131; xi. D.
527 Peruvian Antiquities, pp. 39-40.
528 Cr. Americana, p. 152 ; pi. xvi.
529 Op. cit., p. 155; pi. xviii.
530 Op. cit., p. 166; pi. xxii.
531 Op. cit., p. 198; pi. xxxix.
532 Op. cit., p. 220; pi. lii.
533 Op. cit., p. 224 ; pi. lv.
534 Op. cit., p. 259.
535 Op. cit., p. 257.
536 Anthropologie, pp. 229-30, 232.
537 Martin, Man and Monkeys, p. 273.
538 Ibid., p. 273.
539 Chine, d’apres les documents Chinois, p.l.
540 Wood-cut, fig. 329—Paravey, Documents,
&c., sur le Deluge de Noe, Paris, 1838,
pp. 11, 56 :-r—Pauthier, Chou-king, Part
II., chap. i. p. 62; Part IV., chap. xxvii.,
p. 1 3 1 Ibid., Chine, pp. 55-7.
541 Pauthier, Chine, pi. 22; pp. 120-1.
542 Ibid., pi. 51, fig. 4 ; pp. 24/5-8.
543 Ibid., pi. 12; pp. 57-8.
544 Ibid., pp. 472-4.
545 Revolutions des Peuples de l’Asie Moyenne,
Paris, 1839 ; ii. p. 432.
546 Catalogue, 3d ed., 1849; Intro., pp. 1-2.
547 Nat. Hist, of Human Species; Edinb.,
1848, p. 157.
548 Bremer, Homes of the New World, Am.
ed., 1853, ii. pp. 162-3. [Note, 24 Jan.,
1854. Let me confirm my colleague’s
accuracy by ,two additional extracts —
1st, as regards crosses between American
Indians and white men. All readers
are aware with what gusto a superior
civilization has been attributed to the
Mandans; and how sundry instances
of fair complexion, light hair and blue
eyes, among individuals of that tribe,
have also led to surmises that they
might even be of Welsh descent!
Major John Le Conte pointed out to
me a solution in the fact that Lewis and
Clark wintered among them with a
party of 43 able-bodied men. As a
specimen, read the following account
of one orgie, on Saturday night, Jan.
5, 1805— “ Unus nostrum sodalium
multum alacrior et potentior juventute,
hac nocte honorem quatuor maritorum
custodivit.” (Lewis and Clark, Travels
to the source of the Missouri river;,
1804-6; London ed., 1814; ch. vi., pp.
109-111.) — 2d, As respects crosses be- I
No. (of Notes, die.)
tween Negroes, Indians, and white
persons, on the Panama Isthmus; a
passage which was indicated to me bv
Mr. Conrad :— , y
“ The character of the half-castes is,
if possible, worse than that of. the
Negroes. These people have all the
vices and none of the virtues of their
parents. They are weak in body, and
are more liable to -disease than either
the whites or other races. It seems
that as long as pure blood is added to
the half-castes proper, when they intermarry
only with their own colour,
they have many children, but these do
not live to grow up; while in families
of unmixed blood the offspring are
fewer, but of longer lives. As the
physical circumstances under which
both are placed are the same, there
must really be a specific distinction
bet ween,t he races, and their intermixture
be considered as an infringement
of the law of Nature.”—Berthold See-
mann, F. LvS„ — Narrative of the Voyage
of H. M. S. Herald, 1845-51 : London,
1853, 1., p. 302. — G. R. G.]
549 Martin, Man and Monkeys, p. 210, fig.
180.
550 Ibid.—fig. 181.
551 Ibid.—fig. 182.
552 Savage and Wyman, Troglodytes Gonllæ;
Boston, Jour, of Nat. Hist., 1847, p. 27.
553 Martin, op. cit., p. 228.....
554 Ibid., p. 280.
555 Ibid., p. 384.
556 Ibid., p. 223.
557 Prichard, Researches, i,¿p. 290, fig. 3.
558 Martin, op. cit., p. 367.
559 Virey, Hist. Nat.,, ii. p. 42.
560 Martin, op. cit., p. 254.,
561-562 Wood-cuts, figs. 346, 348— Illustrated
London News, 1851-—“ drawn
by-an English officer at the Cape.”
563 Amaryllidaceae, pp. 338, 339.
564 Races of Men, p. .12.
565 American Jour, of Science and Art, Vol.
xxxviii., No. 2.
566 Anatomie comparée, tome ii.
PAET I I .
567 Geographiæ Sacræ.Pars prior; Cadomi,
fol., 1651—(Loganian Library, Phila.)
568 Spicilegium Geographiæ Hebræor. exteræ,
post Bochart., vol. ii., 1769-80.
569 Gliddon, Otia, London, 1849, pp. 16, 124.
570 Rev. Dr. Eadie,. Early Oriental History—
Encyclopaedia Metropolifana, London,
^ 1852, p. 2.
571 Rev. Dr. Hales, Analysis of Chronology;
2d ed., 1830; Preface, p. 21, and i. p.
.3 5 2 . /
572 Pauthier, Livres Sacrés de 1’ Orient, Paris,
Intro., p. 1.
573 Cahen, La Bible, Traduction-Nouvelle,
Paris, 1831 ; i. pp. 26-8.
574 Avec un Atlas géographique, pittoresque,
archéologique, géologique, &c.—“ Ouvrage
qui a remporté Je prix de la Société
de Géographie de Paris, en 1838;”
Paris, 6 vol. Text, 8vo., 1839-43.
No. (of Notes, de.)
575- Bulletins de l’Académie royale de Bruxelles,
vi. ; and Notions élémentaires de
Statistique, Paris, 1840.
576 Voyage dans les steps d’Astrakhan et du
Caucaso; and Histoire Primitive des
Peuples qui ont habité anciennement
_ ces contrées. '
577 GoMeR. Bochart, pp. 194~6. — Homer,
Odyss. xi. 14.—Diodor., v. 32.—Herod.,
iv. 100.—Josephus, Anrôq. i. 6.—Rawlinson,
Commentary, 1850, p. 68.—Dubois
; i. 61, iv. 321, 327, 350, 391; v.
22 35 44.
578 MaGUG. Bochart, pp. 212-19. — Rev.
Moses Stuart, Interpretation of Prophecy,
Andover, 1842, p. 123. — De
Wette, transi., Parker, i. p. 95-7, &c.
'—Kur’àn, Ch. xviii., v. 93, 96 ; xxi. 95,
&c. — Pauthier, L’iv. Sac. de 1’Orient,
p. 495 : Lane, Selections, p. 140.—Barthélémy,
Anciennes Religions des
Gaules; Rev. Archéol., 1851, p. 338,
note.—Dubois, iv. 321, 345; 363-407.—
Josephus, Ant., i. 6. — Hieronymus,
Comm, in Ezek. xxxviii, 2. — Lenor-
mant, Cours d’Hist. Ancien., Paris,
1837, p. 289.—Emelin, 1774, and Porter
(Travels, "ii. 520), 1819 — “ wall of Gog
and Magog at Derbend.” — Anthon,
Classic. Diet., 1843; voce “ Asi,” p.
218. ' “ Scythic” is here used in the
sense proposed by Rawlinson (Commentary,
pp. 68, 75 : and Cuneiform
Inscriptions, 1847, pp. 20, 34-7,) and
•adopted by Norris, (Memoir on the
Scythic Version of the Behistun inscription;
Jour. R, Asiat. Soc., 1853; xv.,
Part 1, p. 2.—‘Sir W. Jones, 6th Discourse,
on Persians; Asiatic Researches,
1799, ii. p. 64. — Gliddon, Otia, p. 124.
— Westergaard, Median Species of
ArroWheaaed writing : Antiq. du Nord,
1844 ; pp. 273-8, 289.—Hincks, Perse-
politan Writing, 1846, p. 18. — D’Orna-
lius d’Halloy, Races Humaines, ou
éléments d’ethnographie, 1845, “ Ossetes,”
p. 79.
579 MeDI. Bochart, pp. 219-25.—Heroin vu.
—De Saulcy, Recherches sur l’Ecriture
cunéiforme Assyrienne; Paris, 1848,
p. 26. — Layard, Babylon, p. 628. — De
Longpéiier, Lettre à M. Lowenstern ;
Rev. Archéol., 1847, p. 505. —Rawlinson,
Tablet of Behistun.—Birch, Tablet
* of Karnac, pp. 14-5. — Dubois, iv. 321,
339.
580 IUN. Bochart,'pp. 174-6.—Aristophanes,
In Acharnum ; Act i., scene 9.—Homer.,
Iliad, xii$685.—Pausanias, Achaic., p.
397. — Herodotus, viii. 44. — Rosetta
Stone, in Lepsius’s Auswahl ; or ¡m.
Birch’s Gallery, pp. 114-17, pi. 49 :
also,Lenormant,Essai sur leTexle Grec,
1840; pp. 10, 11; lines No. 54; and p.
45.—Hincks (True date of the Rosetta
Stone, Dublin, 1842, pp. 6, 8,) claims
“ March, 197, B. c.,” as date of this
decree; but a Letronne would first
have determined the year of “ C. vide
infra, pp. 665-7.^4 Champollion, Grammaire
Égyptienne, pp. 151, 175; Diet.,
p. 66.— “ Ouinin,” in conquests of
Seti-Meneptha, and of Ramses II.—De
Satilcy, Recherches, p. 26 ; Inscriptions
No. (of Notes, dc.)
trouvées à Khorsabad, Rev. Archeol.,
1850, pp. 769-72.— Rawlinson, Behis-
tùn, pp. 1, xxvii.—Layârd, Babylon, p.
628. Pauthier’s Manou, lib. x., v. 44.
—Wilford, Asiatic Researches, 1799;
iii. p. 358.—Sykes, Jour. R. Asiat. Soc.,
1841., vol. vi. ; Art. xiv. pp. 434-6. —
“ J. P. S.” (in Kitto, Biblical Encyclopaedia,
ii., p. 393-400) omits any explanation
of Tubal, Meshech, and Tiras,
in fiis “ sons of ' Japheth” (p. 397).
There are numerous similar oversights
in Kitto, no less than in Robinsons
Calmet. — Dubois, iv. 321. 334.
581 TiuBaL. Bochart, pp. 204-13. — Munk,
Palestine, p. 420.—De Wette, n. 366.
seq. — Strabo, ii. 129. —Herod., vu. 78.
Rawlinson, Commentary, pp. 63—4.^
Layard, Babylon, p. 628. — Dubois, iv.
321,388. . TT ,
582 MeSAeK. Bochart, pp. 204-13.^4Herod.,
111., 94; vii. 78.,— Rawlinson, Commentary,
pp. 63-4.—Birch, Stat. Tablet
of Karnac, pp. 14- 5. —Hincks, Report
of Syro-Ægyptian Soc., 1846.—Dubois,
iii 17 ; iv. 321, 336, 347. .
583 TilRaS. Bochart, p. 172-3. For hieroglyphical
mention of “ Thraces, m
Egyptian conquests, see Champollion
(Lettres) and Rosellini (MS., iv. 288) :
for classical, the “ Inscrip, of Adulis
. ^Champollion-Figeac, Eg. Anc., p. 67.
—Dubois, iv. 321, 324.
584 ASAKeNaZ. Bochart, pp. 196-8.—-Pliny,
iv. 24,—Kitto, ii. p. 397.—Rawlinson,
Commentary, p. 46; “ Nimroud Obelisk.'’—
Ibid., London Lit. Gazette,
Aug., 1851.—Dubois, iv: 321, 330, 391.
585 RIPaTi. Bochart, pp. 198- 9. — Strabo,
vii. 341. —Pliny, iv. 24.-001)013, iv.
321 330.
586 TioGaRMaH. Bochart, pp. 200-4.—
Moses Choren., Hist, of Arm., p. 24.—'
St. Martin, Mémoires sur l’Arménie,
1818 ; i. pp. 205, 271- 8.—Strabo, su. —
Josephus, Ant., i. 1, 6. — Lowenstern,
Lettre à M. de Saulcy, Rev. Archéol.,
1849, p. 494. —Dubois, ii., p. 9; iv. pp.
332-3.—Jardot, Révolutions, ii. p. 6.
587 ALISaH. Bochart, pp. 176^8.—Homer,
II., ii. 617. — Grote, Hist, of Greece, i.
p. 487.—Herod, i. § 146, &c.
588 Wood-cut, fig. 355—Layard; folio Monuments
; and Babylon, pp. 343, 350. De
Longpérier, Rev. Archéol., 1^44, pp.
224-5; *1847, p. 297.— Stuart, Cru.
Hist, and Def., pp. 113, 114, 120. — De
Wette, ii. pp. 452- 6.—Cahen, Notes on
Jonah, vol. xii.—“ Berosiana,” m Bunsen’s
Eg. Pl., i.’pp. 704-19. — Munk,
Palestine, pp. 451-2. — On “ Sibylline
verses” see Letronne, Examen Archéologique,
Croix Ansée, 1846, pp. 33—4.
589 TîaRSIS. A c t s , xxii. 3. — Lanci, Paralipomeni,’’
i. pp. 150-5. — Gesenius, in
Parker’s De Wette, i. p. 455, note. —
Munk, Pal-., p. 29. — Gliddon;:Otia, p.
50. — Pickering, Races, p. 373. — Pauthier,
Sinico-Ægyptiaca, p. 10. — Bochart,
pp. 188-94. — London Lit. Gaz.,
May, 1852. ,
590 KiTtIM. Bochart, pp. 178-83. —Birch,
Tvnrv o r n am e n ts found a t Nimroud, p p .