The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Volym 14Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 1884 Includes articles on issues of worldwide anthropological interest. |
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Sida 16
... woman by a man of the invading tribes is qualified for admission to the Nanga . He inherits the qualifi- " Kamilaroi and Kŏrnai , " p . 308 . 2 The map of Navitilevu , showing the Nanga country ( Plate II ) , was drawn for me by Mr ...
... woman by a man of the invading tribes is qualified for admission to the Nanga . He inherits the qualifi- " Kamilaroi and Kŏrnai , " p . 308 . 2 The map of Navitilevu , showing the Nanga country ( Plate II ) , was drawn for me by Mr ...
Sida 24
... Nanga , and that any woman laid hold of within the enclosure was for the time the lawful prize of her captor . But I have not Various dances of great indecency having been performed , the 24 REV . LORIMER FISON . - The Nanga ,
... Nanga , and that any woman laid hold of within the enclosure was for the time the lawful prize of her captor . But I have not Various dances of great indecency having been performed , the 24 REV . LORIMER FISON . - The Nanga ,
Sida 29
... woman passed by , and lowering my voice , I said , " Hush ! the women must not hear these things . " This finished him . Covering his mouth with his open hand he said earnestly , in an awestruck tone , " Of a truth , sir , you are a ...
... woman passed by , and lowering my voice , I said , " Hush ! the women must not hear these things . " This finished him . Covering his mouth with his open hand he said earnestly , in an awestruck tone , " Of a truth , sir , you are a ...
Sida 34
... woman , boy , girl . Why , then , if the same word appears in Malay and Melanesia , must the Melanesian word be borrowed ? Why , if names of some common things are different in this Melanesian and that Polynesian language , must the two ...
... woman , boy , girl . Why , then , if the same word appears in Malay and Melanesia , must the Melanesian word be borrowed ? Why , if names of some common things are different in this Melanesian and that Polynesian language , must the two ...
Sida 87
... woman was despatched to follow up the fire , still to be seen blazing on the downs , and to bring some back with her . After some time she returned , bearing a blazing firestick as the witness of the success of her mission . She was ...
... woman was despatched to follow up the fire , still to be seen blazing on the downs , and to bring some back with her . After some time she returned , bearing a blazing firestick as the witness of the success of her mission . She was ...
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Andra upplagor - Visa alla
The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and ..., Volym 17 Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1888 |
The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and ..., Volym 2 Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1873 |
The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and ..., Volym 15 Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1886 |
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aborigines Africa alien ancient Andaman Andaman Islands Andamanese Anthrop Antiparos appears Arab Australian average Bantu Beja bones breadth Broca bronze Bullawangs called ceremonies characters clan cowries cranium custom Dar-Fur demes descent divisions Egypt Egyptian exogamous fact father feet females flint foramen magnum FRANCIS GALTON GARSON genos gravel Hamitic headman height horizontal implements inches indicate inhabitants Inst instruments Iroquois Islands Jeraeil Journ Kamilaroi Kordofan Kubus Kurnai language length Ludgate Hill Malay males marriage measurements Melanesian mother Murray River Museum Nanga nasal native Negro Nile novices Nuba Nubian orbits organisation paper person phratria plane Plate Polynesian Port Blair prehistoric present probably Prof Professor race regard River Royal seems sexes Shilluk skull Society South stone Sudán Ta-ta-thi taken totem tribes Tutnurring W. H. FLOWER woman women words Yoruba
Populära avsnitt
Sida 156 - Whereupon the king took counsel, and made two calves of gold, and said unto them, It is too much for you to go up to Jerusalem: behold thy gods, O Israel, which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt.
Sida 32 - This feasting and frolic may be kept up for several days, after which the „ordinary restrictions recur once more. The rights of property are again respected, the abandoned revellers „settle down into steady-going married couples, and brothers and sisters may not so much as speak to one „another. Nowhere in Fiji, as far as I am aware, excepting in the Nanga country, are these extravagances „connected with the rite of circumcision !). ') Compare Zipporah's offering on behalf of Moses, Exodus...
Sida 96 - Arab women generally cultivate some fields of dura, or corn, sufficient for the wants of the tribe. The Arab himself would consider it a disgrace to practise any manual labour. He is essentially a hunter, a robber, and a warrior, and, after caring for his cattle, devotes all his energies to slavehunting and war."i2 Some of these Arab tribes are very numerous and powerful.
Sida 320 - ... to his endowment with the privileges of manhood and of its subsequent duties and responsibilities. These ceremonies implant within the minds of the young men an unquestioning " feeling of obedience to the old men of the tribe and to the moral code of which they are the depositories, and furthermore to ensure that, before the youth is permitted to 'take his place in the community, join in the councils, and marry, he shall be possessed of those qualifications which will enable him to act for the...
Sida 379 - Even in the first step of establishing certain primary groups of equivalent rank there has been no accord. The number of such groups has been most variously estimated by different writers from two up to sixty, or more, although it is important to note that there has always been a tendency to revert to the four primitive types sketched out by Linnaeus — the European, Asiatic, African, and American — expanded into five by Blumenbach by the addition of the Malay, and reduced by Cuvier to three by...
Sida 98 - The Wa-huma, to whom the attention of ethnologists has scarcely yet been seriously directed, present some points of great anthropological interest, probably affording a solution of the difficulties connected with the constituent elements of the Bantu races in East Central Africa. Speke had already observed that the chiefs of the Bantu nations about the great lakes were always Wa-Huma, a pastoral people evidently of Galla stock, and originally immigrants from the Galla country. Since then it has been...
Sida 278 - ... females, we should take the 100 males and draft out the 7 weakest of them, and draft in the 7 strongest females. Very powerful women exist, but happily perhaps for the repose of the other sex, such gifted women are rare. Out of 1657 adult females of various ages measured at the laboratory, the strongest could only exert a squeeze of 86 Ibs. or about that of a medium man. The population of England hardly contains enough material to form even a few regiments of efficient Amazons.
Sida 311 - It was thought that the lads had become selfish, and no longer willing to share that which they obtained by their own exertions, or had given to them, with their friends. The boys being all seated in a row, at each end of which was one of the Headmen, the doctor proceeded to exercise his magical functions. He stooped over the first boy, and muttering some words which I could not catch, he kneaded the lad's stomach with his hands. This he did to each one successively, and by it the Kurnai supposed...
Sida 88 - PEARLS OF THE FAITH ; or, Islam's Rosary : being the Ninety-nine beautiful names of Allah. With Comments in Verse from various Oriental sources as made by an Indian Mussulman. By Edwin Arnold, MA, CSI, &c. Second Edition. Crown 8vo, pp. xvi. and 320, cloth. 1883. 7s. 6d. ARNOLD.— THE LIGHT OF ASIA ; or, THE GREAT RENUNCIATION (Mahabhinishkramana).
Sida 88 - PARRY.— A SHORT CHAPTER ON LETTER-CHANGE, with Examples. Being chiefly an attempt to reduce in a simple manner the principal classical and cognate words to their primitive meanings. By J. Parry, BA, formerly Scholar of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. Fcap. 8vo, pp. 16, wrapper. 1884. Is.