summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/41923.txt
blob: 7c582d7473d51d29f17affca7c9b5ae5cfccc5c8 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
780
781
782
783
784
785
786
787
788
789
790
791
792
793
794
795
796
797
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
815
816
817
818
819
820
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
838
839
840
841
842
843
844
845
846
847
848
849
850
851
852
853
854
855
856
857
858
859
860
861
862
863
864
865
866
867
868
869
870
871
872
873
874
875
876
877
878
879
880
881
882
883
884
885
886
887
888
889
890
891
892
893
894
895
896
897
898
899
900
901
902
903
904
905
906
907
908
909
910
911
912
913
914
915
916
917
918
919
920
921
922
923
924
925
926
927
928
929
930
931
932
933
934
935
936
937
938
939
940
941
942
943
944
945
946
947
948
949
950
951
952
953
954
955
956
957
958
959
960
961
962
963
964
965
966
967
968
969
970
971
972
973
974
975
976
977
978
979
980
981
982
983
984
985
986
987
988
989
990
991
992
993
994
995
996
997
998
999
1000
1001
1002
1003
1004
1005
1006
1007
1008
1009
1010
1011
1012
1013
1014
1015
1016
1017
1018
1019
1020
1021
1022
1023
1024
1025
1026
1027
1028
1029
1030
1031
1032
1033
1034
1035
1036
1037
1038
1039
1040
1041
1042
1043
1044
1045
1046
1047
1048
1049
1050
1051
1052
1053
1054
1055
1056
1057
1058
1059
1060
1061
1062
1063
1064
1065
1066
1067
1068
1069
1070
1071
1072
1073
1074
1075
1076
1077
1078
1079
1080
1081
1082
1083
1084
1085
1086
1087
1088
1089
1090
1091
1092
1093
1094
1095
1096
1097
1098
1099
1100
1101
1102
1103
1104
1105
1106
1107
1108
1109
1110
1111
1112
1113
1114
1115
1116
1117
1118
1119
1120
1121
1122
1123
1124
1125
1126
1127
1128
1129
1130
1131
1132
1133
1134
1135
1136
1137
1138
1139
1140
1141
1142
1143
1144
1145
1146
1147
1148
1149
1150
1151
1152
1153
1154
1155
1156
1157
1158
1159
1160
1161
1162
1163
1164
1165
1166
1167
1168
1169
1170
1171
1172
1173
1174
1175
1176
1177
1178
1179
1180
1181
1182
1183
1184
1185
1186
1187
1188
1189
1190
1191
1192
1193
1194
1195
1196
1197
1198
1199
1200
1201
1202
1203
1204
1205
1206
1207
1208
1209
1210
1211
1212
1213
1214
1215
1216
1217
1218
1219
1220
1221
1222
1223
1224
1225
1226
1227
1228
1229
1230
1231
1232
1233
1234
1235
1236
1237
1238
1239
1240
1241
1242
1243
1244
1245
1246
1247
1248
1249
1250
1251
1252
1253
1254
1255
1256
1257
1258
1259
1260
1261
1262
1263
1264
1265
1266
1267
1268
1269
1270
1271
1272
1273
1274
1275
1276
1277
1278
1279
1280
1281
1282
1283
1284
1285
1286
1287
1288
1289
1290
1291
1292
1293
1294
1295
1296
1297
1298
1299
1300
1301
1302
1303
1304
1305
1306
1307
1308
1309
1310
1311
1312
1313
1314
1315
1316
1317
1318
1319
1320
1321
1322
1323
1324
1325
1326
1327
1328
1329
1330
1331
1332
1333
1334
1335
1336
1337
1338
1339
1340
1341
1342
1343
1344
1345
1346
1347
1348
1349
1350
1351
1352
1353
1354
1355
1356
1357
1358
1359
1360
1361
1362
1363
1364
1365
1366
1367
1368
1369
1370
1371
1372
1373
1374
1375
1376
1377
1378
1379
1380
1381
1382
1383
1384
1385
1386
1387
1388
1389
1390
1391
1392
1393
1394
1395
1396
1397
1398
1399
1400
1401
1402
1403
1404
1405
1406
1407
1408
1409
1410
1411
1412
1413
1414
1415
1416
1417
1418
1419
1420
1421
1422
1423
1424
1425
1426
1427
1428
1429
1430
1431
1432
1433
1434
1435
1436
1437
1438
1439
1440
1441
1442
1443
1444
1445
1446
1447
1448
1449
1450
1451
1452
1453
1454
1455
1456
1457
1458
1459
1460
1461
1462
1463
1464
1465
1466
1467
1468
1469
1470
1471
1472
1473
1474
1475
1476
1477
1478
1479
1480
1481
1482
1483
1484
1485
1486
1487
1488
1489
1490
1491
1492
1493
1494
1495
1496
1497
1498
1499
1500
1501
1502
1503
1504
1505
1506
1507
1508
1509
1510
1511
1512
1513
1514
1515
1516
1517
1518
1519
1520
1521
1522
1523
1524
1525
1526
1527
1528
1529
1530
1531
1532
1533
1534
1535
1536
1537
1538
1539
1540
1541
1542
1543
1544
1545
1546
1547
1548
1549
1550
1551
1552
1553
1554
1555
1556
1557
1558
1559
1560
1561
1562
1563
1564
1565
1566
1567
1568
1569
1570
1571
1572
1573
1574
1575
1576
1577
1578
1579
1580
1581
1582
1583
1584
1585
1586
1587
1588
1589
1590
1591
1592
1593
1594
1595
1596
1597
1598
1599
1600
1601
1602
1603
1604
1605
1606
1607
1608
1609
1610
1611
1612
1613
1614
1615
1616
1617
1618
1619
1620
1621
1622
1623
1624
1625
1626
1627
1628
1629
1630
1631
1632
1633
1634
1635
1636
1637
1638
1639
1640
1641
1642
1643
1644
1645
1646
1647
1648
1649
1650
1651
1652
1653
1654
1655
1656
1657
1658
1659
1660
1661
1662
1663
1664
1665
1666
1667
1668
1669
1670
1671
1672
1673
1674
1675
1676
1677
1678
1679
1680
1681
1682
1683
1684
1685
1686
1687
1688
1689
1690
1691
1692
1693
1694
1695
1696
1697
1698
1699
1700
1701
1702
1703
1704
1705
1706
1707
1708
1709
1710
1711
1712
1713
1714
1715
1716
1717
1718
1719
1720
1721
1722
1723
1724
1725
1726
1727
1728
1729
1730
1731
1732
1733
1734
1735
1736
1737
1738
1739
1740
1741
1742
1743
1744
1745
1746
1747
1748
1749
1750
1751
1752
1753
1754
1755
1756
1757
1758
1759
1760
1761
1762
1763
1764
1765
1766
1767
1768
1769
1770
1771
1772
1773
1774
1775
1776
1777
1778
1779
1780
1781
1782
1783
1784
1785
1786
1787
1788
1789
1790
1791
1792
1793
1794
1795
1796
1797
1798
1799
1800
1801
1802
1803
1804
1805
1806
1807
1808
1809
1810
1811
1812
1813
1814
1815
1816
1817
1818
1819
1820
1821
1822
1823
1824
1825
1826
1827
1828
1829
1830
1831
1832
1833
1834
1835
1836
1837
1838
1839
1840
1841
1842
1843
1844
1845
1846
1847
1848
1849
1850
1851
1852
1853
1854
1855
1856
1857
1858
1859
1860
1861
1862
1863
1864
1865
1866
1867
1868
1869
1870
1871
1872
1873
1874
1875
1876
1877
1878
1879
1880
1881
1882
1883
1884
1885
1886
1887
1888
1889
1890
1891
1892
1893
1894
1895
1896
1897
1898
1899
1900
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031
2032
2033
2034
2035
2036
2037
2038
2039
2040
2041
2042
2043
2044
2045
2046
2047
2048
2049
2050
2051
2052
2053
2054
2055
2056
2057
2058
2059
2060
2061
2062
2063
2064
2065
2066
2067
2068
2069
2070
2071
2072
2073
2074
2075
2076
2077
2078
2079
2080
2081
2082
2083
2084
2085
2086
2087
2088
2089
2090
2091
2092
2093
2094
2095
2096
2097
2098
2099
2100
2101
2102
2103
2104
2105
2106
2107
2108
2109
2110
2111
2112
2113
2114
2115
2116
2117
2118
2119
2120
2121
2122
2123
2124
2125
2126
2127
2128
2129
2130
2131
2132
2133
2134
2135
2136
2137
2138
2139
2140
2141
2142
2143
2144
2145
2146
2147
2148
2149
2150
2151
2152
2153
2154
2155
2156
2157
2158
2159
2160
2161
2162
2163
2164
2165
2166
2167
2168
2169
2170
2171
2172
2173
2174
2175
2176
2177
2178
2179
2180
2181
2182
2183
2184
2185
2186
2187
2188
2189
2190
2191
2192
2193
2194
2195
2196
2197
2198
2199
2200
2201
2202
2203
2204
2205
2206
2207
2208
2209
2210
2211
2212
2213
2214
2215
2216
2217
2218
2219
2220
2221
2222
2223
2224
2225
2226
2227
2228
2229
2230
2231
2232
2233
2234
2235
2236
2237
2238
2239
2240
2241
2242
2243
2244
2245
2246
2247
2248
2249
2250
2251
2252
2253
2254
2255
2256
2257
2258
2259
2260
2261
2262
2263
2264
2265
2266
2267
2268
2269
2270
2271
2272
2273
2274
2275
2276
2277
2278
2279
2280
2281
2282
2283
2284
2285
2286
2287
2288
2289
2290
2291
2292
2293
2294
2295
2296
2297
2298
2299
2300
2301
2302
2303
2304
2305
2306
2307
2308
2309
2310
2311
2312
2313
2314
2315
2316
2317
2318
2319
2320
2321
2322
2323
2324
2325
2326
2327
2328
2329
2330
2331
2332
2333
2334
2335
2336
2337
2338
2339
2340
2341
2342
2343
2344
2345
2346
2347
2348
2349
2350
2351
2352
2353
2354
2355
2356
2357
2358
2359
2360
2361
2362
2363
2364
2365
2366
2367
2368
2369
2370
2371
2372
2373
2374
2375
2376
2377
2378
2379
2380
2381
2382
2383
2384
2385
2386
2387
2388
2389
2390
2391
2392
2393
2394
2395
2396
2397
2398
2399
2400
2401
2402
2403
2404
2405
2406
2407
2408
2409
2410
2411
2412
2413
2414
2415
2416
2417
2418
2419
2420
2421
2422
2423
2424
2425
2426
2427
2428
2429
2430
2431
2432
2433
2434
2435
2436
2437
2438
2439
2440
2441
2442
2443
2444
2445
2446
2447
2448
2449
2450
2451
2452
2453
2454
2455
2456
2457
2458
2459
2460
2461
2462
2463
2464
2465
2466
2467
2468
2469
2470
2471
2472
2473
2474
2475
2476
2477
2478
2479
2480
2481
2482
2483
2484
2485
2486
2487
2488
2489
2490
2491
2492
2493
2494
2495
2496
2497
2498
2499
2500
2501
2502
2503
2504
2505
2506
2507
2508
2509
2510
2511
2512
2513
2514
2515
2516
2517
2518
2519
2520
2521
2522
2523
2524
2525
2526
2527
2528
2529
2530
2531
2532
2533
2534
2535
2536
2537
2538
2539
2540
2541
2542
2543
2544
2545
2546
2547
2548
2549
2550
2551
2552
2553
2554
2555
2556
2557
2558
2559
2560
2561
2562
2563
2564
2565
2566
2567
2568
2569
2570
2571
2572
2573
2574
2575
2576
2577
2578
2579
2580
2581
2582
2583
2584
2585
2586
2587
2588
2589
2590
2591
2592
2593
2594
2595
2596
2597
2598
2599
2600
2601
2602
2603
2604
2605
2606
2607
2608
2609
2610
2611
2612
2613
2614
2615
2616
2617
2618
2619
2620
2621
2622
2623
2624
2625
2626
2627
2628
2629
2630
2631
2632
2633
2634
2635
2636
2637
2638
2639
2640
2641
2642
2643
2644
2645
2646
2647
2648
2649
2650
2651
2652
2653
2654
2655
2656
2657
2658
2659
2660
2661
2662
2663
2664
2665
2666
2667
2668
2669
2670
2671
2672
2673
2674
2675
2676
2677
2678
2679
2680
2681
2682
2683
2684
2685
2686
2687
2688
2689
2690
2691
2692
2693
2694
2695
2696
2697
2698
2699
2700
2701
2702
2703
2704
2705
2706
2707
2708
2709
2710
2711
2712
2713
2714
2715
2716
2717
2718
2719
2720
2721
2722
2723
2724
2725
2726
2727
2728
2729
2730
2731
2732
2733
2734
2735
2736
2737
2738
2739
2740
2741
2742
2743
2744
2745
2746
2747
2748
2749
2750
2751
2752
2753
2754
2755
2756
2757
2758
2759
2760
2761
2762
2763
2764
2765
2766
2767
2768
2769
2770
2771
2772
2773
2774
2775
2776
2777
2778
2779
2780
2781
2782
2783
2784
2785
2786
2787
2788
2789
2790
2791
2792
2793
2794
2795
2796
2797
2798
2799
2800
2801
2802
2803
2804
2805
2806
2807
2808
2809
2810
2811
2812
2813
2814
2815
2816
2817
2818
2819
2820
2821
2822
2823
2824
2825
2826
2827
2828
2829
2830
2831
2832
2833
2834
2835
2836
2837
2838
2839
2840
2841
2842
2843
2844
2845
2846
2847
2848
2849
2850
2851
2852
2853
2854
2855
2856
2857
2858
2859
2860
2861
2862
2863
2864
2865
2866
2867
2868
2869
2870
2871
2872
2873
2874
2875
2876
2877
2878
2879
2880
2881
2882
2883
2884
2885
2886
2887
2888
2889
2890
2891
2892
2893
2894
2895
2896
2897
2898
2899
2900
2901
2902
2903
2904
2905
2906
2907
2908
2909
2910
2911
2912
2913
2914
2915
2916
2917
2918
2919
2920
2921
2922
2923
2924
2925
2926
2927
2928
2929
2930
2931
2932
2933
2934
2935
2936
2937
2938
2939
2940
2941
2942
2943
2944
2945
2946
2947
2948
2949
2950
2951
2952
2953
2954
2955
2956
2957
2958
2959
2960
2961
2962
2963
2964
2965
2966
2967
2968
2969
2970
2971
2972
2973
2974
2975
2976
2977
2978
2979
2980
2981
2982
2983
2984
2985
2986
2987
2988
2989
2990
2991
2992
2993
2994
2995
2996
2997
2998
2999
3000
3001
3002
3003
3004
3005
3006
3007
3008
3009
3010
3011
3012
3013
3014
3015
3016
3017
3018
3019
3020
3021
3022
3023
3024
3025
3026
3027
3028
3029
3030
3031
3032
3033
3034
3035
3036
3037
3038
3039
3040
3041
3042
3043
3044
3045
3046
3047
3048
3049
3050
3051
3052
3053
3054
3055
3056
3057
3058
3059
3060
3061
3062
3063
3064
3065
3066
3067
3068
3069
3070
3071
3072
3073
3074
3075
3076
3077
3078
3079
3080
3081
3082
3083
3084
3085
3086
3087
3088
3089
3090
3091
3092
3093
3094
3095
3096
3097
3098
3099
3100
3101
3102
3103
3104
3105
3106
3107
3108
3109
3110
3111
3112
3113
3114
3115
3116
3117
3118
3119
3120
3121
3122
3123
3124
3125
3126
3127
3128
3129
3130
3131
3132
3133
3134
3135
3136
3137
3138
3139
3140
3141
3142
3143
3144
3145
3146
3147
3148
3149
3150
3151
3152
3153
3154
3155
3156
3157
3158
3159
3160
3161
3162
3163
3164
3165
3166
3167
3168
3169
3170
3171
3172
3173
3174
3175
3176
3177
3178
3179
3180
3181
3182
3183
3184
3185
3186
3187
3188
3189
3190
3191
3192
3193
3194
3195
3196
3197
3198
3199
3200
3201
3202
3203
3204
3205
3206
3207
3208
3209
3210
3211
3212
3213
3214
3215
3216
3217
3218
3219
3220
3221
3222
3223
3224
3225
3226
3227
3228
3229
3230
3231
3232
3233
3234
3235
3236
3237
3238
3239
3240
3241
3242
3243
3244
3245
3246
3247
3248
3249
3250
3251
3252
3253
3254
3255
3256
3257
3258
3259
3260
3261
3262
3263
3264
3265
3266
3267
3268
3269
3270
3271
3272
3273
3274
3275
3276
3277
3278
3279
3280
3281
3282
3283
3284
3285
3286
3287
3288
3289
3290
3291
3292
3293
3294
3295
3296
3297
3298
3299
3300
3301
3302
3303
3304
3305
3306
3307
3308
3309
3310
3311
3312
3313
3314
3315
3316
3317
3318
3319
3320
3321
3322
3323
3324
3325
3326
3327
3328
3329
3330
3331
3332
3333
3334
3335
3336
3337
3338
3339
3340
3341
3342
3343
3344
3345
3346
3347
3348
3349
3350
3351
3352
3353
3354
3355
3356
3357
3358
3359
3360
3361
3362
3363
3364
3365
3366
3367
3368
3369
3370
3371
3372
3373
3374
3375
3376
3377
3378
3379
3380
3381
3382
3383
3384
3385
3386
3387
3388
3389
3390
3391
3392
3393
3394
3395
3396
3397
3398
3399
3400
3401
3402
3403
3404
3405
3406
3407
3408
3409
3410
3411
3412
3413
3414
3415
3416
3417
3418
3419
3420
3421
3422
3423
3424
3425
3426
3427
3428
3429
3430
3431
3432
3433
3434
3435
3436
3437
3438
3439
3440
3441
3442
3443
3444
3445
3446
3447
3448
3449
3450
3451
3452
3453
3454
3455
3456
3457
3458
3459
3460
3461
3462
3463
3464
3465
3466
3467
3468
3469
3470
3471
3472
3473
3474
3475
3476
3477
3478
3479
3480
3481
3482
3483
3484
3485
3486
3487
3488
3489
3490
3491
3492
3493
3494
3495
3496
3497
3498
3499
3500
3501
3502
3503
3504
3505
3506
3507
3508
3509
3510
3511
3512
3513
3514
3515
3516
3517
3518
3519
3520
3521
3522
3523
3524
3525
3526
3527
3528
3529
3530
3531
3532
3533
3534
3535
3536
3537
3538
3539
3540
3541
3542
3543
3544
3545
3546
3547
3548
3549
3550
3551
3552
3553
3554
3555
3556
3557
3558
3559
3560
3561
3562
3563
3564
3565
3566
3567
3568
3569
3570
3571
3572
3573
3574
3575
3576
3577
3578
3579
3580
3581
3582
3583
3584
3585
3586
3587
3588
3589
3590
3591
3592
3593
3594
3595
3596
3597
3598
3599
3600
3601
3602
3603
3604
3605
3606
3607
3608
3609
3610
3611
3612
3613
3614
3615
3616
3617
3618
3619
3620
3621
3622
3623
3624
3625
3626
3627
3628
3629
3630
3631
3632
3633
3634
3635
3636
3637
3638
3639
3640
3641
3642
3643
3644
3645
3646
3647
3648
3649
3650
3651
3652
3653
3654
3655
3656
3657
3658
3659
3660
3661
3662
3663
3664
3665
3666
3667
3668
3669
3670
3671
3672
3673
3674
3675
3676
3677
3678
3679
3680
3681
3682
3683
3684
3685
3686
3687
3688
3689
3690
3691
3692
3693
3694
3695
3696
3697
3698
3699
3700
3701
3702
3703
3704
3705
3706
3707
3708
3709
3710
3711
3712
3713
3714
3715
3716
3717
3718
3719
3720
3721
3722
3723
3724
3725
3726
3727
3728
3729
3730
3731
3732
3733
3734
3735
3736
3737
3738
3739
3740
3741
3742
3743
3744
3745
3746
3747
3748
3749
3750
3751
3752
3753
3754
3755
3756
3757
3758
3759
3760
3761
3762
3763
3764
3765
3766
3767
3768
3769
3770
3771
3772
3773
3774
3775
3776
3777
3778
3779
3780
3781
3782
3783
3784
3785
3786
3787
3788
3789
3790
3791
3792
3793
3794
3795
3796
3797
3798
3799
3800
3801
3802
3803
3804
3805
3806
3807
3808
3809
3810
3811
3812
3813
3814
3815
3816
3817
3818
3819
3820
3821
3822
3823
3824
3825
3826
3827
3828
3829
3830
3831
3832
3833
3834
3835
3836
3837
3838
3839
3840
3841
3842
3843
3844
3845
3846
3847
3848
3849
3850
3851
3852
3853
3854
3855
3856
3857
3858
3859
3860
3861
3862
3863
3864
3865
3866
3867
3868
3869
3870
3871
3872
3873
3874
3875
3876
3877
3878
3879
3880
3881
3882
3883
3884
3885
3886
3887
3888
3889
3890
3891
3892
3893
3894
3895
3896
3897
3898
3899
3900
3901
3902
3903
3904
3905
3906
3907
3908
3909
3910
3911
3912
3913
3914
3915
3916
3917
3918
3919
3920
3921
3922
3923
3924
3925
3926
3927
3928
3929
3930
3931
3932
3933
3934
3935
3936
3937
3938
3939
3940
3941
3942
3943
3944
3945
3946
3947
3948
3949
3950
3951
3952
3953
3954
3955
3956
3957
3958
3959
3960
3961
3962
3963
3964
3965
3966
3967
3968
3969
3970
3971
3972
3973
3974
3975
3976
3977
3978
3979
3980
3981
3982
3983
3984
3985
3986
3987
3988
3989
3990
3991
3992
3993
3994
3995
3996
3997
3998
3999
4000
4001
4002
4003
4004
4005
4006
4007
4008
4009
4010
4011
4012
4013
4014
4015
4016
4017
4018
4019
4020
4021
4022
4023
4024
4025
4026
4027
4028
4029
4030
4031
4032
4033
4034
4035
4036
4037
4038
4039
4040
4041
4042
4043
4044
4045
4046
4047
4048
4049
4050
4051
4052
4053
4054
4055
4056
4057
4058
4059
4060
4061
4062
4063
4064
4065
4066
4067
4068
4069
4070
4071
4072
4073
4074
4075
4076
4077
4078
4079
4080
4081
4082
4083
4084
4085
4086
4087
4088
4089
4090
4091
4092
4093
4094
4095
4096
4097
4098
4099
4100
4101
4102
4103
4104
4105
4106
4107
4108
4109
4110
4111
4112
4113
4114
4115
4116
4117
4118
4119
4120
4121
4122
4123
4124
4125
4126
4127
4128
4129
4130
4131
4132
4133
4134
4135
4136
4137
4138
4139
4140
4141
4142
4143
4144
4145
4146
4147
4148
4149
4150
4151
4152
4153
4154
4155
4156
4157
4158
4159
4160
4161
4162
4163
4164
4165
4166
4167
4168
4169
4170
4171
4172
4173
4174
4175
4176
4177
4178
4179
4180
4181
4182
4183
4184
4185
4186
4187
4188
4189
4190
4191
4192
4193
4194
4195
4196
4197
4198
4199
4200
4201
4202
4203
4204
4205
4206
4207
4208
4209
4210
4211
4212
4213
4214
4215
4216
4217
4218
4219
4220
4221
4222
4223
4224
4225
4226
4227
4228
4229
4230
4231
4232
4233
4234
4235
4236
4237
4238
4239
4240
4241
4242
4243
4244
4245
4246
4247
4248
4249
4250
4251
4252
4253
4254
4255
4256
4257
4258
4259
4260
4261
4262
4263
4264
4265
4266
4267
4268
4269
4270
4271
4272
4273
4274
4275
4276
4277
4278
4279
4280
4281
4282
4283
4284
4285
4286
4287
4288
4289
4290
4291
4292
4293
4294
4295
4296
4297
4298
4299
4300
4301
4302
4303
4304
4305
4306
4307
4308
4309
4310
4311
4312
4313
4314
4315
4316
4317
4318
4319
4320
4321
4322
4323
4324
4325
4326
4327
4328
4329
4330
4331
4332
4333
4334
4335
4336
4337
4338
4339
4340
4341
4342
4343
4344
4345
4346
4347
4348
4349
4350
4351
4352
4353
4354
4355
4356
4357
4358
4359
4360
4361
4362
4363
4364
4365
4366
4367
4368
4369
4370
4371
4372
4373
4374
4375
4376
4377
4378
4379
4380
4381
4382
4383
4384
4385
4386
4387
4388
4389
4390
4391
4392
4393
4394
4395
4396
4397
4398
4399
4400
4401
4402
4403
4404
4405
4406
4407
4408
4409
4410
4411
4412
4413
4414
4415
4416
4417
4418
4419
4420
4421
4422
4423
4424
4425
4426
4427
4428
4429
4430
4431
4432
4433
4434
4435
4436
4437
4438
4439
4440
4441
4442
4443
4444
4445
4446
4447
4448
4449
4450
4451
4452
4453
4454
4455
4456
4457
4458
4459
4460
4461
4462
4463
4464
4465
4466
4467
4468
4469
4470
4471
4472
4473
4474
4475
4476
4477
4478
4479
4480
4481
4482
4483
4484
4485
4486
4487
4488
4489
4490
4491
4492
4493
4494
4495
4496
4497
4498
4499
4500
4501
4502
4503
4504
4505
4506
4507
4508
4509
4510
4511
4512
4513
4514
4515
4516
4517
4518
4519
4520
4521
4522
4523
4524
4525
4526
4527
4528
4529
4530
4531
4532
4533
4534
4535
4536
4537
4538
4539
4540
4541
4542
4543
4544
4545
4546
4547
4548
4549
4550
4551
4552
4553
4554
4555
4556
4557
4558
4559
4560
4561
4562
4563
4564
4565
4566
4567
4568
4569
4570
4571
4572
4573
4574
4575
4576
4577
4578
4579
4580
4581
4582
4583
4584
4585
4586
4587
4588
4589
4590
4591
4592
4593
4594
4595
4596
4597
4598
4599
4600
4601
4602
4603
4604
4605
4606
4607
4608
4609
4610
4611
4612
4613
4614
4615
4616
4617
4618
4619
4620
4621
4622
4623
4624
4625
4626
4627
4628
4629
4630
4631
4632
4633
4634
4635
4636
4637
4638
4639
4640
4641
4642
4643
4644
4645
4646
4647
4648
4649
4650
4651
4652
4653
4654
4655
4656
4657
4658
4659
4660
4661
4662
4663
4664
4665
4666
4667
4668
4669
4670
4671
4672
4673
4674
4675
4676
4677
4678
4679
4680
4681
4682
4683
4684
4685
4686
4687
4688
4689
4690
4691
4692
4693
4694
4695
4696
4697
4698
4699
4700
4701
4702
4703
4704
4705
4706
4707
4708
4709
4710
4711
4712
4713
4714
4715
4716
4717
4718
4719
4720
4721
4722
4723
4724
4725
4726
4727
4728
4729
4730
4731
4732
4733
4734
4735
4736
4737
4738
4739
4740
4741
4742
4743
4744
4745
4746
4747
4748
4749
4750
4751
4752
4753
4754
4755
4756
4757
4758
4759
4760
4761
4762
4763
4764
4765
4766
4767
4768
4769
4770
4771
4772
4773
4774
4775
4776
4777
4778
4779
4780
4781
4782
4783
4784
4785
4786
4787
4788
4789
4790
4791
4792
4793
4794
4795
4796
4797
4798
4799
4800
4801
4802
4803
4804
4805
4806
4807
4808
4809
4810
4811
4812
4813
4814
4815
4816
4817
4818
4819
4820
4821
4822
4823
4824
4825
4826
4827
4828
4829
4830
4831
4832
4833
4834
4835
4836
4837
4838
4839
4840
4841
4842
4843
4844
4845
4846
4847
4848
4849
4850
4851
4852
4853
4854
4855
4856
4857
4858
4859
4860
4861
4862
4863
4864
4865
4866
4867
4868
4869
4870
4871
4872
4873
4874
4875
4876
4877
4878
4879
4880
4881
4882
4883
4884
4885
4886
4887
4888
4889
4890
4891
4892
4893
4894
4895
4896
4897
4898
4899
4900
4901
4902
4903
4904
4905
4906
4907
4908
4909
4910
4911
4912
4913
4914
4915
4916
4917
4918
4919
4920
4921
4922
4923
4924
4925
4926
4927
4928
4929
4930
4931
4932
4933
4934
4935
4936
4937
4938
4939
4940
4941
4942
4943
4944
4945
4946
4947
4948
4949
4950
4951
4952
4953
4954
4955
4956
4957
4958
4959
4960
4961
4962
4963
4964
4965
4966
4967
4968
4969
4970
4971
4972
4973
4974
4975
4976
4977
4978
4979
4980
4981
4982
4983
4984
4985
4986
4987
4988
4989
4990
4991
4992
4993
4994
4995
4996
4997
4998
4999
5000
5001
5002
5003
5004
5005
5006
5007
5008
5009
5010
5011
5012
5013
5014
5015
5016
5017
5018
5019
5020
5021
5022
5023
5024
5025
5026
5027
5028
5029
5030
5031
5032
5033
5034
5035
5036
5037
5038
5039
5040
5041
5042
5043
5044
5045
5046
5047
5048
5049
5050
5051
5052
5053
5054
5055
5056
5057
5058
5059
5060
5061
5062
5063
5064
5065
5066
5067
5068
5069
5070
5071
5072
5073
5074
5075
5076
5077
5078
5079
5080
5081
5082
5083
5084
5085
5086
5087
5088
5089
5090
5091
5092
5093
5094
5095
5096
5097
5098
5099
5100
5101
5102
5103
5104
5105
5106
5107
5108
5109
5110
5111
5112
5113
5114
5115
5116
5117
5118
5119
5120
5121
5122
5123
5124
5125
5126
5127
5128
5129
5130
5131
5132
5133
5134
5135
5136
5137
5138
5139
5140
5141
5142
5143
5144
5145
5146
5147
5148
5149
5150
5151
5152
5153
5154
5155
5156
5157
5158
5159
5160
5161
5162
5163
5164
5165
5166
5167
5168
5169
5170
5171
5172
5173
5174
5175
5176
5177
5178
5179
5180
5181
5182
5183
5184
5185
5186
5187
5188
5189
5190
5191
5192
5193
5194
5195
5196
5197
5198
5199
5200
5201
5202
5203
5204
5205
5206
5207
5208
5209
5210
5211
5212
5213
5214
5215
5216
5217
5218
5219
5220
5221
5222
5223
5224
5225
5226
5227
5228
5229
5230
5231
5232
5233
5234
5235
5236
5237
5238
5239
5240
5241
5242
5243
5244
5245
5246
5247
5248
5249
5250
5251
5252
5253
5254
5255
5256
5257
5258
5259
5260
5261
5262
5263
5264
5265
5266
5267
5268
5269
5270
5271
5272
5273
5274
5275
5276
5277
5278
5279
5280
5281
5282
5283
5284
5285
5286
5287
5288
5289
5290
5291
5292
5293
5294
5295
5296
5297
5298
5299
5300
5301
5302
5303
5304
5305
5306
5307
5308
5309
5310
5311
5312
5313
5314
5315
5316
5317
5318
5319
5320
5321
5322
5323
5324
5325
5326
5327
5328
5329
5330
5331
5332
5333
5334
5335
5336
5337
5338
5339
5340
5341
5342
5343
5344
5345
5346
5347
5348
5349
5350
5351
5352
5353
5354
5355
5356
5357
5358
5359
5360
5361
5362
5363
5364
5365
5366
5367
5368
5369
5370
5371
5372
5373
5374
5375
5376
5377
5378
5379
5380
5381
5382
5383
5384
5385
5386
5387
5388
5389
5390
5391
5392
5393
5394
5395
5396
5397
5398
5399
5400
5401
5402
5403
5404
5405
5406
5407
5408
5409
5410
5411
5412
5413
5414
5415
5416
5417
5418
5419
5420
5421
5422
5423
5424
5425
5426
5427
5428
5429
5430
5431
5432
5433
5434
5435
5436
5437
5438
5439
5440
5441
5442
5443
5444
5445
5446
5447
5448
5449
5450
5451
5452
5453
5454
5455
5456
5457
5458
5459
5460
5461
5462
5463
5464
5465
5466
5467
5468
5469
5470
5471
5472
5473
5474
5475
5476
5477
5478
5479
5480
5481
5482
5483
5484
5485
5486
5487
5488
5489
5490
5491
5492
5493
5494
5495
5496
5497
5498
5499
5500
5501
5502
5503
5504
5505
5506
5507
5508
5509
5510
5511
5512
5513
5514
5515
5516
5517
5518
5519
5520
5521
5522
5523
5524
5525
5526
5527
5528
5529
5530
5531
5532
5533
5534
5535
5536
5537
5538
5539
5540
5541
5542
5543
5544
5545
5546
5547
5548
5549
5550
5551
5552
5553
5554
5555
5556
5557
5558
5559
5560
5561
5562
5563
5564
5565
5566
5567
5568
5569
5570
5571
5572
5573
5574
5575
5576
5577
5578
5579
5580
5581
5582
5583
5584
5585
5586
5587
5588
5589
5590
5591
5592
5593
5594
5595
5596
5597
5598
5599
5600
5601
5602
5603
5604
5605
5606
5607
5608
5609
5610
5611
5612
5613
5614
5615
5616
5617
5618
5619
5620
5621
5622
5623
5624
5625
5626
5627
5628
5629
5630
5631
5632
5633
5634
5635
5636
5637
5638
5639
5640
5641
5642
5643
5644
5645
5646
5647
5648
5649
5650
5651
5652
5653
5654
5655
5656
5657
5658
5659
5660
5661
5662
5663
5664
5665
5666
5667
5668
5669
5670
5671
5672
5673
5674
5675
5676
5677
5678
5679
5680
5681
5682
5683
5684
5685
5686
5687
5688
5689
5690
5691
5692
5693
5694
5695
5696
5697
5698
5699
5700
5701
5702
5703
5704
5705
5706
5707
5708
5709
5710
5711
5712
5713
5714
5715
5716
5717
5718
5719
5720
5721
5722
5723
5724
5725
5726
5727
5728
5729
5730
5731
5732
5733
5734
5735
5736
5737
5738
5739
5740
5741
5742
5743
5744
5745
5746
5747
5748
5749
5750
5751
5752
5753
5754
5755
5756
5757
5758
5759
5760
5761
5762
5763
5764
5765
5766
5767
5768
5769
5770
5771
5772
5773
5774
5775
5776
5777
5778
5779
5780
5781
5782
5783
5784
5785
5786
5787
5788
5789
5790
5791
5792
5793
5794
5795
5796
5797
5798
5799
5800
5801
5802
5803
5804
5805
5806
5807
5808
5809
5810
5811
5812
5813
5814
5815
5816
5817
5818
5819
5820
5821
5822
5823
5824
5825
5826
5827
5828
5829
5830
5831
5832
5833
5834
5835
5836
5837
5838
5839
5840
5841
5842
5843
5844
5845
5846
5847
5848
5849
5850
5851
5852
5853
5854
5855
5856
5857
5858
5859
5860
5861
5862
5863
5864
5865
5866
5867
5868
5869
5870
5871
5872
5873
5874
5875
5876
5877
5878
5879
5880
5881
5882
5883
5884
5885
5886
5887
5888
5889
5890
5891
5892
5893
5894
5895
5896
5897
5898
5899
5900
5901
5902
5903
5904
5905
5906
5907
5908
5909
5910
5911
5912
5913
5914
5915
5916
5917
5918
5919
5920
5921
5922
5923
5924
5925
5926
5927
5928
5929
5930
5931
5932
5933
5934
5935
5936
5937
5938
5939
5940
5941
5942
5943
5944
5945
5946
5947
5948
5949
5950
5951
5952
5953
5954
5955
5956
5957
5958
5959
5960
5961
5962
5963
5964
5965
5966
5967
5968
5969
5970
5971
5972
5973
5974
5975
5976
5977
5978
5979
5980
5981
5982
5983
5984
5985
5986
5987
5988
5989
5990
5991
5992
5993
5994
5995
5996
5997
5998
5999
6000
6001
6002
6003
6004
6005
6006
6007
6008
6009
6010
6011
6012
6013
6014
6015
6016
6017
6018
6019
6020
6021
6022
6023
6024
6025
6026
6027
6028
6029
6030
6031
6032
6033
6034
6035
6036
6037
6038
6039
6040
6041
6042
6043
6044
6045
6046
6047
6048
6049
6050
6051
6052
6053
6054
6055
6056
6057
6058
6059
6060
6061
6062
6063
6064
6065
6066
6067
6068
6069
6070
6071
6072
6073
6074
6075
6076
6077
6078
6079
6080
6081
6082
6083
6084
6085
6086
6087
6088
6089
6090
6091
6092
6093
6094
6095
6096
6097
6098
6099
6100
6101
6102
6103
6104
6105
6106
6107
6108
6109
6110
6111
6112
6113
6114
6115
6116
6117
6118
6119
6120
6121
6122
6123
6124
6125
6126
6127
6128
6129
6130
6131
6132
6133
6134
6135
6136
6137
6138
6139
6140
6141
6142
6143
6144
6145
6146
6147
6148
6149
6150
6151
6152
6153
6154
6155
6156
6157
6158
6159
6160
6161
6162
6163
6164
6165
6166
6167
6168
6169
6170
6171
6172
6173
6174
6175
6176
6177
6178
6179
6180
6181
6182
6183
6184
6185
6186
6187
6188
6189
6190
6191
6192
6193
6194
6195
6196
6197
6198
6199
6200
6201
6202
6203
6204
6205
6206
6207
6208
6209
6210
6211
6212
6213
6214
6215
6216
6217
6218
6219
6220
6221
6222
6223
6224
6225
6226
6227
6228
6229
6230
6231
6232
6233
6234
6235
6236
6237
6238
6239
6240
6241
6242
6243
6244
6245
6246
6247
6248
6249
6250
6251
6252
6253
6254
6255
6256
6257
6258
6259
6260
6261
6262
6263
6264
6265
6266
6267
6268
6269
6270
6271
6272
6273
6274
6275
6276
6277
6278
6279
6280
6281
6282
6283
6284
6285
6286
6287
6288
6289
6290
6291
6292
6293
6294
6295
6296
6297
6298
6299
6300
6301
6302
6303
6304
6305
6306
6307
6308
6309
6310
6311
6312
6313
6314
6315
6316
6317
6318
6319
6320
6321
6322
6323
6324
6325
6326
6327
6328
6329
6330
6331
6332
6333
6334
6335
6336
6337
6338
6339
6340
6341
6342
6343
6344
6345
6346
6347
6348
6349
6350
6351
6352
6353
6354
6355
6356
6357
6358
6359
6360
6361
6362
6363
6364
6365
6366
6367
6368
6369
6370
6371
6372
6373
6374
6375
6376
6377
6378
6379
6380
6381
6382
6383
6384
6385
6386
6387
6388
6389
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6397
6398
6399
6400
6401
6402
6403
6404
6405
6406
6407
6408
6409
6410
6411
6412
6413
6414
6415
6416
6417
6418
6419
6420
6421
6422
6423
6424
6425
6426
6427
6428
6429
6430
6431
6432
6433
6434
6435
6436
6437
6438
6439
6440
6441
6442
6443
6444
6445
6446
6447
6448
6449
6450
6451
6452
6453
6454
6455
6456
6457
6458
6459
6460
6461
6462
6463
6464
6465
6466
6467
6468
6469
6470
6471
6472
6473
6474
6475
6476
6477
6478
6479
6480
6481
6482
6483
6484
6485
6486
6487
6488
6489
6490
6491
6492
6493
6494
6495
6496
6497
6498
6499
6500
6501
6502
6503
6504
6505
6506
6507
6508
6509
6510
6511
6512
6513
6514
6515
6516
6517
6518
6519
6520
6521
6522
6523
6524
6525
6526
6527
6528
6529
6530
6531
6532
6533
6534
6535
6536
6537
6538
6539
6540
6541
6542
6543
6544
6545
6546
6547
6548
6549
6550
6551
6552
6553
6554
6555
6556
6557
6558
6559
6560
6561
6562
6563
6564
6565
6566
6567
6568
6569
6570
6571
6572
6573
6574
6575
6576
6577
6578
6579
6580
6581
6582
6583
6584
6585
6586
6587
6588
6589
6590
6591
6592
6593
6594
6595
6596
6597
6598
6599
6600
6601
6602
6603
6604
6605
6606
6607
6608
6609
6610
6611
6612
6613
6614
6615
6616
6617
6618
6619
6620
6621
6622
6623
6624
6625
6626
6627
6628
6629
6630
6631
6632
6633
6634
6635
6636
6637
6638
6639
6640
6641
6642
6643
6644
6645
6646
6647
6648
6649
6650
6651
6652
6653
6654
6655
6656
6657
6658
6659
6660
6661
6662
6663
6664
6665
6666
6667
6668
6669
6670
6671
6672
6673
6674
6675
6676
6677
6678
6679
6680
6681
6682
6683
6684
6685
6686
6687
6688
6689
6690
6691
6692
6693
6694
6695
6696
6697
6698
6699
6700
6701
6702
6703
6704
6705
6706
6707
6708
6709
6710
6711
6712
6713
6714
6715
6716
6717
6718
6719
6720
6721
6722
6723
6724
6725
6726
6727
6728
6729
6730
6731
6732
6733
6734
6735
6736
6737
6738
6739
6740
6741
6742
6743
6744
6745
6746
6747
6748
6749
6750
6751
6752
6753
6754
6755
6756
6757
6758
6759
6760
6761
6762
6763
6764
6765
6766
6767
6768
6769
6770
6771
6772
6773
6774
6775
6776
6777
6778
6779
6780
6781
6782
6783
6784
6785
6786
6787
6788
6789
6790
6791
6792
6793
6794
6795
6796
6797
6798
6799
6800
6801
6802
6803
6804
6805
6806
6807
6808
6809
6810
6811
6812
6813
6814
6815
6816
6817
6818
6819
6820
6821
6822
6823
6824
6825
6826
6827
6828
6829
6830
6831
6832
6833
6834
6835
6836
6837
6838
6839
6840
6841
6842
6843
6844
6845
6846
6847
6848
6849
6850
6851
6852
6853
6854
6855
6856
6857
6858
6859
6860
6861
6862
6863
6864
6865
6866
6867
6868
6869
6870
6871
6872
6873
6874
6875
6876
6877
6878
6879
6880
6881
6882
6883
6884
6885
6886
6887
6888
6889
6890
6891
6892
6893
6894
6895
6896
6897
6898
6899
6900
6901
6902
6903
6904
6905
6906
6907
6908
6909
6910
6911
6912
6913
6914
6915
6916
6917
6918
6919
6920
6921
6922
6923
6924
6925
6926
6927
6928
6929
6930
6931
6932
6933
6934
6935
6936
6937
6938
6939
6940
6941
6942
6943
6944
6945
6946
6947
6948
6949
6950
6951
6952
6953
6954
6955
6956
6957
6958
6959
6960
6961
6962
6963
6964
6965
6966
6967
6968
6969
6970
6971
6972
6973
6974
6975
6976
6977
6978
6979
6980
6981
6982
6983
6984
6985
6986
6987
6988
6989
6990
6991
6992
6993
6994
6995
6996
6997
6998
6999
7000
7001
7002
7003
7004
7005
7006
7007
7008
7009
7010
7011
7012
7013
7014
7015
7016
7017
7018
7019
7020
7021
7022
7023
7024
7025
7026
7027
7028
7029
7030
7031
7032
7033
7034
7035
7036
7037
7038
7039
7040
7041
7042
7043
7044
7045
7046
7047
7048
7049
7050
7051
7052
7053
7054
7055
7056
7057
7058
7059
7060
7061
7062
7063
7064
7065
7066
7067
7068
7069
7070
7071
7072
7073
7074
7075
7076
7077
7078
7079
7080
7081
7082
7083
7084
7085
7086
7087
7088
7089
7090
7091
7092
7093
7094
7095
7096
7097
7098
7099
7100
7101
7102
7103
7104
7105
7106
7107
7108
7109
7110
7111
7112
7113
7114
7115
7116
7117
7118
7119
7120
7121
7122
7123
7124
7125
7126
7127
7128
7129
7130
7131
7132
7133
7134
7135
7136
7137
7138
7139
7140
7141
7142
7143
7144
7145
7146
7147
7148
7149
7150
7151
7152
7153
7154
7155
7156
7157
7158
7159
7160
7161
7162
7163
7164
7165
7166
7167
7168
7169
7170
7171
7172
7173
7174
7175
7176
7177
7178
7179
7180
7181
7182
7183
7184
7185
7186
7187
7188
7189
7190
7191
7192
7193
7194
7195
7196
7197
7198
7199
7200
7201
7202
7203
7204
7205
7206
7207
7208
7209
7210
7211
7212
7213
7214
7215
7216
7217
7218
7219
7220
7221
7222
7223
7224
7225
7226
7227
7228
7229
7230
7231
7232
7233
7234
7235
7236
7237
7238
7239
7240
7241
7242
7243
7244
7245
7246
7247
7248
7249
7250
7251
7252
7253
7254
7255
7256
7257
7258
7259
7260
7261
7262
7263
7264
7265
7266
7267
7268
7269
7270
7271
7272
7273
7274
7275
7276
7277
7278
7279
7280
7281
7282
7283
7284
7285
7286
7287
7288
7289
7290
7291
7292
7293
7294
7295
7296
7297
7298
7299
7300
7301
7302
7303
7304
7305
7306
7307
7308
7309
7310
7311
7312
7313
7314
7315
7316
7317
7318
7319
7320
7321
7322
7323
7324
7325
7326
7327
7328
7329
7330
7331
7332
7333
7334
7335
7336
7337
7338
7339
7340
7341
7342
7343
7344
7345
7346
7347
7348
7349
7350
7351
7352
7353
7354
7355
7356
7357
7358
7359
7360
7361
7362
7363
7364
7365
7366
7367
7368
7369
7370
7371
7372
7373
7374
7375
7376
7377
7378
7379
7380
7381
7382
7383
7384
7385
7386
7387
7388
7389
7390
7391
7392
7393
7394
7395
7396
7397
7398
7399
7400
7401
7402
7403
7404
7405
7406
7407
7408
7409
7410
7411
7412
7413
7414
7415
7416
7417
7418
7419
7420
7421
7422
7423
7424
7425
7426
7427
7428
7429
7430
7431
7432
7433
7434
7435
7436
7437
7438
7439
7440
7441
7442
7443
7444
7445
7446
7447
7448
7449
7450
7451
7452
7453
7454
7455
7456
7457
7458
7459
7460
7461
7462
7463
7464
7465
7466
7467
7468
7469
7470
7471
7472
7473
7474
7475
7476
7477
7478
7479
7480
7481
7482
7483
7484
7485
7486
7487
7488
7489
7490
7491
7492
7493
7494
7495
7496
7497
7498
7499
7500
7501
7502
7503
7504
7505
7506
7507
7508
7509
7510
7511
7512
7513
7514
7515
7516
7517
7518
7519
7520
7521
7522
7523
7524
7525
7526
7527
7528
7529
7530
7531
7532
7533
7534
7535
7536
7537
7538
7539
7540
7541
7542
7543
7544
7545
7546
7547
7548
7549
7550
7551
7552
7553
7554
7555
7556
7557
7558
7559
7560
7561
7562
7563
7564
7565
7566
7567
7568
7569
7570
7571
7572
7573
7574
7575
7576
7577
7578
7579
7580
7581
7582
7583
7584
7585
7586
7587
7588
7589
7590
7591
7592
7593
7594
7595
7596
7597
7598
7599
7600
7601
7602
7603
7604
7605
7606
7607
7608
7609
7610
7611
7612
7613
7614
7615
7616
7617
7618
7619
7620
7621
7622
7623
7624
7625
7626
7627
7628
7629
7630
7631
7632
7633
7634
7635
7636
7637
7638
7639
7640
7641
7642
7643
7644
7645
7646
7647
7648
7649
7650
7651
7652
7653
7654
7655
7656
7657
7658
7659
7660
7661
7662
7663
7664
7665
7666
7667
7668
7669
7670
7671
7672
7673
7674
7675
7676
7677
7678
7679
7680
7681
7682
7683
7684
7685
7686
7687
7688
7689
7690
7691
7692
7693
7694
7695
7696
7697
7698
7699
7700
7701
7702
7703
7704
7705
7706
7707
7708
7709
7710
7711
7712
7713
7714
7715
7716
7717
7718
7719
7720
7721
7722
7723
7724
7725
7726
7727
7728
7729
7730
7731
7732
7733
7734
7735
7736
7737
7738
7739
7740
7741
7742
7743
7744
7745
7746
7747
7748
7749
7750
7751
7752
7753
7754
7755
7756
7757
7758
7759
7760
7761
7762
7763
7764
7765
7766
7767
7768
7769
7770
7771
7772
7773
7774
7775
7776
7777
7778
7779
7780
7781
7782
7783
7784
7785
7786
7787
7788
7789
7790
7791
7792
7793
7794
7795
7796
7797
7798
7799
7800
7801
7802
7803
7804
7805
7806
7807
7808
7809
7810
7811
7812
7813
7814
7815
7816
7817
7818
7819
7820
7821
7822
7823
7824
7825
7826
7827
7828
7829
7830
7831
7832
7833
7834
7835
7836
7837
7838
7839
7840
7841
7842
7843
7844
7845
7846
7847
7848
7849
7850
7851
7852
7853
7854
7855
7856
7857
7858
7859
7860
7861
7862
7863
7864
7865
7866
7867
7868
7869
7870
7871
7872
7873
7874
7875
7876
7877
7878
7879
7880
7881
7882
7883
7884
7885
7886
7887
7888
7889
7890
7891
7892
7893
7894
7895
7896
7897
7898
7899
7900
7901
7902
7903
7904
7905
7906
7907
7908
7909
7910
7911
7912
7913
7914
7915
7916
7917
7918
7919
7920
7921
7922
7923
7924
7925
7926
7927
7928
7929
7930
7931
7932
7933
7934
7935
7936
7937
7938
7939
7940
7941
7942
7943
7944
7945
7946
7947
7948
7949
7950
7951
7952
7953
7954
7955
7956
7957
7958
7959
7960
7961
7962
7963
7964
7965
7966
7967
7968
7969
7970
7971
7972
7973
7974
7975
7976
7977
7978
7979
7980
7981
7982
7983
7984
7985
7986
7987
7988
7989
7990
7991
7992
7993
7994
7995
7996
7997
7998
7999
8000
8001
8002
8003
8004
8005
8006
8007
8008
8009
8010
8011
8012
8013
8014
8015
8016
8017
8018
8019
8020
8021
8022
8023
8024
8025
8026
8027
8028
8029
8030
8031
8032
8033
8034
8035
8036
8037
8038
8039
8040
8041
8042
8043
8044
8045
8046
8047
8048
8049
8050
8051
8052
8053
8054
8055
8056
8057
8058
8059
8060
8061
8062
8063
8064
8065
8066
8067
8068
8069
8070
8071
8072
8073
8074
8075
8076
8077
8078
8079
8080
8081
8082
8083
8084
8085
8086
8087
8088
8089
8090
8091
8092
8093
8094
8095
8096
8097
8098
8099
8100
8101
8102
8103
8104
8105
8106
8107
8108
8109
8110
8111
8112
8113
8114
8115
8116
8117
8118
8119
8120
8121
8122
8123
8124
8125
8126
8127
8128
8129
8130
8131
8132
8133
8134
8135
8136
8137
8138
8139
8140
8141
8142
8143
8144
8145
8146
8147
8148
8149
8150
8151
8152
8153
8154
8155
8156
8157
8158
8159
8160
8161
8162
8163
8164
8165
8166
8167
8168
8169
8170
8171
8172
8173
8174
8175
8176
8177
8178
8179
8180
8181
8182
8183
8184
8185
8186
8187
8188
8189
8190
8191
8192
8193
8194
8195
8196
8197
8198
8199
8200
8201
8202
8203
8204
8205
8206
8207
8208
8209
8210
8211
8212
8213
8214
8215
8216
8217
8218
8219
8220
8221
8222
8223
8224
8225
8226
8227
8228
8229
8230
8231
8232
8233
8234
8235
8236
8237
8238
8239
8240
8241
8242
8243
8244
8245
8246
8247
8248
8249
8250
8251
8252
8253
8254
8255
8256
8257
8258
8259
8260
8261
8262
8263
8264
8265
8266
8267
8268
8269
8270
8271
8272
8273
8274
8275
8276
8277
8278
8279
8280
8281
8282
8283
8284
8285
8286
8287
8288
8289
8290
8291
8292
8293
8294
8295
8296
8297
8298
8299
8300
8301
8302
8303
8304
8305
8306
8307
8308
8309
8310
8311
8312
8313
8314
8315
8316
8317
8318
8319
8320
8321
8322
8323
8324
8325
8326
8327
8328
8329
8330
8331
8332
8333
8334
8335
8336
8337
8338
8339
8340
8341
8342
8343
8344
8345
8346
8347
8348
8349
8350
8351
8352
8353
8354
8355
8356
8357
8358
8359
8360
8361
8362
8363
8364
8365
8366
8367
8368
8369
8370
8371
8372
8373
8374
8375
8376
8377
8378
8379
8380
8381
8382
8383
8384
8385
8386
8387
8388
8389
8390
8391
8392
8393
8394
8395
8396
8397
8398
8399
8400
8401
8402
8403
8404
8405
8406
8407
8408
8409
8410
8411
8412
8413
8414
8415
8416
8417
8418
8419
8420
8421
8422
8423
8424
8425
8426
8427
8428
8429
8430
8431
8432
8433
8434
8435
8436
8437
8438
8439
8440
8441
8442
8443
8444
8445
8446
8447
8448
8449
8450
8451
8452
8453
8454
8455
8456
8457
8458
8459
8460
8461
8462
8463
8464
8465
8466
8467
8468
8469
8470
8471
8472
8473
8474
8475
8476
8477
8478
8479
8480
8481
8482
8483
8484
8485
8486
8487
8488
8489
8490
8491
8492
8493
8494
8495
8496
8497
8498
8499
8500
8501
8502
8503
8504
8505
8506
8507
8508
8509
8510
8511
8512
8513
8514
8515
8516
8517
8518
8519
8520
8521
8522
8523
8524
8525
8526
8527
8528
8529
8530
8531
8532
8533
8534
8535
8536
8537
8538
8539
8540
8541
8542
8543
8544
8545
8546
8547
8548
8549
8550
8551
8552
8553
8554
8555
8556
8557
8558
8559
8560
8561
8562
8563
8564
8565
8566
8567
8568
8569
8570
8571
8572
8573
8574
8575
8576
8577
8578
8579
8580
8581
8582
8583
8584
8585
8586
8587
8588
8589
8590
8591
8592
8593
8594
8595
8596
8597
8598
8599
8600
8601
8602
8603
8604
8605
8606
8607
8608
8609
8610
8611
8612
8613
8614
8615
8616
8617
8618
8619
8620
8621
8622
8623
8624
8625
8626
8627
8628
8629
8630
8631
8632
8633
8634
8635
8636
8637
8638
8639
8640
8641
8642
8643
8644
8645
8646
8647
8648
8649
8650
8651
8652
8653
8654
8655
8656
8657
8658
8659
8660
8661
8662
8663
8664
8665
8666
8667
8668
8669
8670
8671
8672
8673
8674
8675
8676
8677
8678
8679
8680
8681
8682
8683
8684
8685
8686
8687
8688
8689
8690
8691
8692
8693
8694
8695
8696
8697
8698
8699
8700
8701
8702
8703
8704
8705
8706
8707
8708
8709
8710
8711
8712
8713
8714
8715
8716
8717
8718
8719
8720
8721
8722
8723
8724
8725
8726
8727
8728
8729
8730
8731
8732
8733
8734
8735
8736
8737
8738
8739
8740
8741
8742
8743
8744
8745
8746
8747
8748
8749
8750
8751
8752
8753
8754
8755
8756
8757
8758
8759
8760
8761
8762
8763
8764
8765
8766
8767
8768
8769
8770
8771
8772
8773
8774
8775
8776
8777
8778
8779
8780
8781
8782
8783
8784
8785
8786
8787
8788
8789
8790
8791
8792
8793
8794
8795
8796
8797
8798
8799
8800
8801
8802
8803
8804
8805
8806
8807
8808
8809
8810
8811
8812
8813
8814
8815
8816
8817
8818
8819
8820
8821
8822
8823
8824
8825
8826
8827
8828
8829
8830
8831
8832
8833
8834
8835
8836
8837
8838
8839
8840
8841
8842
8843
8844
8845
8846
8847
8848
8849
8850
8851
8852
8853
8854
8855
8856
8857
8858
8859
8860
8861
8862
8863
8864
8865
8866
8867
8868
8869
8870
8871
8872
8873
8874
8875
8876
8877
8878
8879
8880
8881
8882
8883
8884
8885
8886
8887
8888
8889
8890
8891
8892
8893
8894
8895
8896
8897
8898
8899
8900
8901
8902
8903
8904
8905
8906
8907
8908
8909
8910
8911
8912
8913
8914
8915
8916
8917
8918
8919
8920
8921
8922
8923
8924
8925
8926
8927
8928
8929
8930
8931
8932
8933
8934
8935
8936
8937
8938
8939
8940
8941
8942
8943
8944
8945
8946
8947
8948
8949
8950
8951
8952
8953
8954
8955
8956
8957
8958
8959
8960
8961
8962
8963
8964
8965
8966
8967
8968
8969
8970
8971
8972
8973
8974
8975
8976
8977
8978
8979
8980
8981
8982
8983
8984
8985
8986
8987
8988
8989
8990
8991
8992
8993
8994
8995
8996
8997
8998
8999
9000
9001
9002
9003
9004
9005
9006
9007
9008
9009
9010
9011
9012
9013
9014
9015
9016
9017
9018
9019
9020
9021
9022
9023
9024
9025
9026
9027
9028
9029
9030
9031
9032
9033
9034
9035
9036
9037
9038
9039
9040
9041
9042
9043
9044
9045
9046
9047
9048
9049
9050
9051
9052
9053
9054
9055
9056
9057
9058
9059
9060
9061
9062
9063
9064
9065
9066
9067
9068
9069
9070
9071
9072
9073
9074
9075
9076
9077
9078
9079
9080
9081
9082
9083
9084
9085
9086
9087
9088
9089
9090
9091
9092
9093
9094
9095
9096
9097
9098
9099
9100
9101
9102
9103
9104
9105
9106
9107
9108
9109
9110
9111
9112
9113
9114
9115
9116
9117
9118
9119
9120
9121
9122
9123
9124
9125
9126
9127
9128
9129
9130
9131
9132
9133
9134
9135
9136
9137
9138
9139
9140
9141
9142
9143
9144
9145
9146
9147
9148
9149
9150
9151
9152
9153
9154
9155
9156
9157
9158
9159
9160
9161
9162
9163
9164
9165
9166
9167
9168
9169
9170
9171
9172
9173
9174
9175
9176
9177
9178
9179
9180
9181
9182
9183
9184
9185
9186
9187
9188
9189
9190
9191
9192
9193
9194
9195
9196
9197
9198
9199
9200
9201
9202
9203
9204
9205
9206
9207
9208
9209
9210
9211
9212
9213
9214
9215
9216
9217
9218
9219
9220
9221
9222
9223
9224
9225
9226
9227
9228
9229
9230
9231
9232
9233
9234
9235
9236
9237
9238
9239
9240
9241
9242
9243
9244
9245
9246
9247
9248
9249
9250
9251
9252
9253
9254
9255
9256
9257
9258
9259
9260
9261
9262
9263
9264
9265
9266
9267
9268
9269
9270
9271
9272
9273
9274
9275
9276
9277
9278
9279
9280
9281
9282
9283
9284
9285
9286
9287
9288
9289
9290
9291
9292
9293
9294
9295
9296
9297
9298
9299
9300
9301
9302
9303
9304
9305
9306
9307
9308
9309
9310
9311
9312
9313
9314
9315
9316
9317
9318
9319
9320
9321
9322
9323
9324
9325
9326
9327
9328
9329
9330
9331
9332
9333
9334
9335
9336
9337
9338
9339
9340
9341
9342
9343
9344
9345
9346
9347
9348
9349
9350
9351
9352
9353
9354
9355
9356
9357
9358
9359
9360
9361
9362
9363
9364
9365
9366
9367
9368
9369
9370
9371
9372
9373
9374
9375
9376
9377
9378
9379
9380
9381
9382
9383
9384
9385
9386
9387
9388
9389
9390
9391
9392
9393
9394
9395
9396
9397
9398
9399
9400
9401
9402
9403
9404
9405
9406
9407
9408
9409
9410
9411
9412
9413
9414
9415
9416
9417
9418
9419
9420
9421
9422
9423
9424
9425
9426
9427
9428
9429
9430
9431
9432
9433
9434
9435
9436
9437
9438
9439
9440
9441
9442
9443
9444
9445
9446
9447
9448
9449
9450
9451
9452
9453
9454
9455
9456
9457
9458
9459
9460
9461
9462
9463
9464
9465
9466
9467
9468
9469
9470
9471
9472
9473
9474
9475
9476
9477
9478
9479
9480
9481
9482
9483
9484
9485
9486
9487
9488
9489
9490
9491
9492
9493
9494
9495
9496
9497
9498
9499
9500
9501
9502
9503
9504
9505
9506
9507
9508
9509
9510
9511
9512
9513
9514
9515
9516
9517
9518
9519
9520
9521
9522
9523
9524
9525
9526
9527
9528
9529
9530
9531
9532
9533
9534
9535
9536
9537
9538
9539
9540
9541
9542
9543
9544
9545
9546
9547
9548
9549
9550
9551
9552
9553
9554
9555
9556
9557
9558
9559
9560
9561
9562
9563
9564
9565
9566
9567
9568
9569
9570
9571
9572
9573
9574
9575
9576
9577
9578
9579
9580
9581
9582
9583
9584
9585
9586
9587
9588
9589
9590
9591
9592
9593
9594
9595
9596
9597
9598
9599
9600
9601
9602
9603
9604
9605
9606
9607
9608
9609
9610
9611
9612
9613
9614
9615
9616
9617
9618
9619
9620
9621
9622
9623
9624
9625
9626
9627
9628
9629
9630
9631
9632
9633
9634
9635
9636
9637
9638
9639
9640
9641
9642
9643
9644
9645
9646
9647
9648
9649
9650
9651
9652
9653
9654
9655
9656
9657
9658
9659
9660
9661
9662
9663
9664
9665
9666
9667
9668
9669
9670
9671
9672
9673
9674
9675
9676
9677
9678
9679
9680
9681
9682
9683
9684
9685
9686
9687
9688
9689
9690
9691
9692
9693
9694
9695
9696
9697
9698
9699
9700
9701
9702
9703
9704
9705
9706
9707
9708
9709
9710
9711
9712
9713
9714
9715
9716
9717
9718
9719
9720
9721
9722
9723
9724
9725
9726
9727
9728
9729
9730
9731
9732
9733
9734
9735
9736
9737
9738
9739
9740
9741
9742
9743
9744
9745
9746
9747
9748
9749
9750
9751
9752
9753
9754
9755
9756
9757
9758
9759
9760
9761
9762
9763
9764
9765
9766
9767
9768
9769
9770
9771
9772
9773
9774
9775
9776
9777
9778
9779
9780
9781
9782
9783
9784
9785
9786
9787
9788
9789
9790
9791
9792
9793
9794
9795
9796
9797
9798
9799
9800
9801
9802
9803
9804
9805
9806
9807
9808
9809
9810
9811
9812
9813
9814
9815
9816
9817
9818
9819
9820
9821
9822
9823
9824
9825
9826
9827
9828
9829
9830
9831
9832
9833
9834
9835
9836
9837
9838
9839
9840
9841
9842
9843
9844
9845
9846
9847
9848
9849
9850
9851
9852
9853
9854
9855
9856
9857
9858
9859
9860
9861
9862
9863
9864
9865
9866
9867
9868
9869
9870
9871
9872
9873
9874
9875
9876
9877
9878
9879
9880
9881
9882
9883
9884
9885
9886
9887
9888
9889
9890
9891
9892
9893
9894
9895
9896
9897
9898
9899
9900
9901
9902
9903
9904
9905
9906
9907
9908
9909
9910
9911
9912
9913
9914
9915
9916
9917
9918
9919
9920
9921
9922
9923
9924
9925
9926
9927
9928
9929
9930
9931
9932
9933
9934
9935
9936
9937
9938
9939
9940
9941
9942
9943
9944
9945
9946
9947
9948
9949
9950
9951
9952
9953
9954
9955
9956
9957
9958
9959
9960
9961
9962
9963
9964
9965
9966
9967
9968
9969
9970
9971
9972
9973
9974
9975
9976
9977
9978
9979
9980
9981
9982
9983
9984
9985
9986
9987
9988
9989
9990
9991
9992
9993
9994
9995
9996
9997
9998
9999
10000
10001
10002
10003
10004
10005
10006
10007
10008
10009
10010
10011
10012
10013
10014
10015
10016
10017
10018
10019
10020
10021
10022
10023
10024
10025
10026
10027
10028
10029
10030
10031
10032
10033
10034
10035
10036
10037
10038
10039
10040
10041
10042
10043
10044
10045
10046
10047
10048
10049
10050
10051
10052
10053
10054
10055
10056
10057
10058
10059
10060
10061
10062
10063
10064
10065
10066
10067
10068
10069
10070
10071
10072
10073
10074
10075
10076
10077
10078
10079
10080
10081
10082
10083
10084
10085
10086
10087
10088
10089
10090
10091
10092
10093
10094
10095
10096
10097
10098
10099
10100
10101
10102
10103
10104
10105
10106
10107
10108
10109
10110
10111
10112
10113
10114
10115
10116
10117
10118
10119
10120
10121
10122
10123
10124
10125
10126
10127
10128
10129
10130
10131
10132
10133
10134
10135
10136
10137
10138
10139
10140
10141
10142
10143
10144
10145
10146
10147
10148
10149
10150
10151
10152
10153
10154
10155
10156
10157
10158
10159
10160
10161
10162
10163
10164
10165
10166
10167
10168
10169
10170
10171
10172
10173
10174
10175
10176
10177
10178
10179
10180
10181
10182
10183
10184
10185
10186
10187
10188
10189
10190
10191
10192
10193
10194
10195
10196
10197
10198
10199
10200
10201
10202
10203
10204
10205
10206
10207
10208
10209
10210
10211
10212
10213
10214
10215
10216
10217
10218
10219
10220
10221
10222
10223
10224
10225
10226
10227
10228
10229
10230
10231
10232
10233
10234
10235
10236
10237
10238
10239
10240
10241
10242
10243
10244
10245
10246
10247
10248
10249
10250
10251
10252
10253
10254
10255
10256
10257
10258
10259
10260
10261
10262
10263
10264
10265
10266
10267
10268
10269
10270
10271
10272
10273
10274
10275
10276
10277
10278
10279
10280
10281
10282
10283
10284
10285
10286
10287
10288
10289
10290
10291
10292
10293
10294
10295
10296
10297
10298
10299
10300
10301
10302
10303
10304
10305
10306
10307
10308
10309
10310
10311
10312
10313
10314
10315
10316
10317
10318
10319
10320
10321
10322
10323
10324
10325
10326
10327
10328
10329
10330
10331
10332
10333
10334
10335
10336
10337
10338
10339
10340
10341
10342
10343
10344
10345
10346
10347
10348
10349
10350
10351
10352
10353
10354
10355
10356
10357
10358
10359
10360
10361
10362
10363
10364
10365
10366
10367
10368
10369
10370
10371
10372
10373
10374
10375
10376
10377
10378
10379
10380
10381
10382
10383
10384
10385
10386
10387
10388
10389
10390
10391
10392
10393
10394
10395
10396
10397
10398
10399
10400
10401
10402
10403
10404
10405
10406
10407
10408
10409
10410
10411
10412
10413
10414
10415
10416
10417
10418
10419
10420
10421
10422
10423
10424
10425
10426
10427
10428
10429
10430
10431
10432
10433
10434
10435
10436
10437
10438
10439
10440
10441
10442
10443
10444
10445
10446
10447
10448
10449
10450
10451
10452
10453
10454
10455
10456
10457
10458
10459
10460
10461
10462
10463
10464
10465
10466
10467
10468
10469
10470
10471
10472
10473
10474
10475
10476
10477
10478
10479
10480
10481
10482
10483
10484
10485
10486
10487
10488
10489
10490
10491
10492
10493
10494
10495
10496
10497
10498
10499
10500
10501
10502
10503
10504
10505
10506
10507
10508
10509
10510
10511
10512
10513
10514
10515
10516
10517
10518
10519
10520
10521
10522
10523
10524
10525
10526
10527
10528
10529
10530
10531
10532
10533
10534
10535
10536
10537
10538
10539
10540
10541
10542
10543
10544
10545
10546
10547
10548
10549
10550
10551
10552
10553
10554
10555
10556
10557
10558
10559
10560
10561
10562
10563
10564
10565
10566
10567
10568
10569
10570
10571
10572
10573
10574
10575
10576
10577
10578
10579
10580
10581
10582
10583
10584
10585
10586
10587
10588
10589
10590
10591
10592
10593
10594
10595
10596
10597
10598
10599
10600
10601
10602
10603
10604
10605
10606
10607
10608
10609
10610
10611
10612
10613
10614
10615
10616
10617
10618
10619
10620
10621
10622
10623
10624
10625
10626
10627
10628
10629
10630
10631
10632
10633
10634
10635
10636
10637
10638
10639
10640
10641
10642
10643
10644
10645
10646
10647
10648
10649
10650
10651
10652
10653
10654
10655
10656
10657
10658
10659
10660
10661
10662
10663
10664
10665
10666
10667
10668
10669
10670
10671
10672
10673
10674
10675
10676
10677
10678
10679
10680
10681
10682
10683
10684
10685
10686
10687
10688
10689
10690
10691
10692
10693
10694
10695
10696
10697
10698
10699
10700
10701
10702
10703
10704
10705
10706
10707
10708
10709
10710
10711
10712
10713
10714
10715
10716
10717
10718
10719
10720
10721
10722
10723
10724
10725
10726
10727
10728
10729
10730
10731
10732
10733
10734
10735
10736
10737
10738
10739
10740
10741
10742
10743
10744
10745
10746
10747
10748
10749
10750
10751
10752
10753
10754
10755
10756
10757
10758
10759
10760
10761
10762
10763
10764
10765
10766
10767
10768
10769
10770
10771
10772
10773
10774
10775
10776
10777
10778
10779
10780
10781
10782
10783
10784
10785
10786
10787
10788
10789
10790
10791
10792
10793
10794
10795
10796
10797
10798
10799
10800
10801
10802
10803
10804
10805
10806
10807
10808
10809
10810
10811
10812
10813
10814
10815
10816
10817
10818
10819
10820
10821
10822
10823
10824
10825
10826
10827
10828
10829
10830
10831
10832
10833
10834
10835
10836
10837
10838
10839
10840
10841
10842
10843
10844
10845
10846
10847
10848
10849
10850
10851
10852
10853
10854
10855
10856
10857
10858
10859
10860
10861
10862
10863
10864
10865
10866
10867
10868
10869
10870
10871
10872
10873
10874
10875
10876
10877
10878
10879
10880
10881
10882
10883
10884
10885
10886
10887
10888
10889
10890
10891
10892
10893
10894
10895
10896
10897
10898
10899
10900
10901
10902
10903
10904
10905
10906
10907
10908
10909
10910
10911
10912
10913
10914
10915
10916
10917
10918
10919
10920
10921
10922
10923
10924
10925
10926
10927
10928
10929
10930
10931
10932
10933
10934
10935
10936
10937
10938
10939
10940
10941
10942
10943
10944
10945
10946
10947
10948
10949
10950
10951
10952
10953
10954
10955
10956
10957
10958
10959
10960
10961
10962
10963
10964
10965
10966
10967
10968
10969
10970
10971
10972
10973
10974
10975
10976
10977
10978
10979
10980
10981
10982
10983
10984
10985
10986
10987
10988
10989
10990
10991
10992
10993
10994
10995
10996
10997
10998
10999
11000
11001
11002
11003
11004
11005
11006
11007
11008
11009
11010
11011
11012
11013
11014
11015
11016
11017
11018
11019
11020
11021
11022
11023
11024
11025
11026
11027
11028
11029
11030
11031
11032
11033
11034
11035
11036
11037
11038
11039
11040
11041
11042
11043
11044
11045
11046
11047
11048
11049
11050
11051
11052
11053
11054
11055
11056
11057
11058
11059
11060
11061
11062
11063
11064
11065
11066
11067
11068
11069
11070
11071
11072
11073
11074
11075
11076
11077
11078
11079
11080
11081
11082
11083
11084
11085
11086
11087
11088
11089
11090
11091
11092
11093
11094
11095
11096
11097
11098
11099
11100
11101
11102
11103
11104
11105
11106
11107
11108
11109
11110
11111
11112
11113
11114
11115
11116
11117
11118
11119
11120
11121
11122
11123
11124
11125
11126
11127
11128
11129
11130
11131
11132
11133
11134
11135
11136
11137
11138
11139
11140
11141
11142
11143
11144
11145
11146
11147
11148
11149
11150
11151
11152
11153
11154
11155
11156
11157
11158
11159
11160
11161
11162
11163
11164
11165
11166
11167
11168
11169
11170
11171
11172
11173
11174
11175
11176
11177
11178
11179
11180
11181
11182
11183
11184
11185
11186
11187
11188
11189
11190
11191
11192
11193
11194
11195
11196
11197
11198
11199
11200
11201
11202
11203
11204
11205
11206
11207
11208
11209
11210
11211
11212
11213
11214
11215
11216
11217
11218
11219
11220
11221
11222
11223
11224
11225
11226
11227
11228
11229
11230
11231
11232
11233
11234
11235
11236
11237
11238
11239
11240
11241
11242
11243
11244
11245
11246
11247
11248
11249
11250
11251
11252
11253
11254
11255
11256
11257
11258
11259
11260
11261
11262
11263
11264
11265
11266
11267
11268
11269
11270
11271
11272
11273
11274
11275
11276
11277
11278
11279
11280
11281
11282
11283
11284
11285
11286
11287
11288
11289
11290
11291
11292
11293
11294
11295
11296
11297
11298
11299
11300
11301
11302
11303
11304
11305
11306
11307
11308
11309
11310
11311
11312
11313
11314
11315
11316
11317
11318
11319
11320
11321
11322
11323
11324
11325
11326
11327
11328
11329
11330
11331
11332
11333
11334
11335
11336
11337
11338
11339
11340
11341
11342
11343
11344
11345
11346
11347
11348
11349
11350
11351
11352
11353
11354
11355
11356
11357
11358
11359
11360
11361
11362
11363
11364
11365
11366
11367
11368
11369
11370
11371
11372
11373
11374
11375
11376
11377
11378
11379
11380
11381
11382
11383
11384
11385
11386
11387
11388
11389
11390
11391
11392
11393
11394
11395
11396
11397
11398
11399
11400
11401
11402
11403
11404
11405
11406
11407
11408
11409
11410
11411
11412
11413
11414
11415
11416
11417
11418
11419
11420
11421
11422
11423
11424
11425
11426
11427
11428
11429
11430
11431
11432
11433
11434
11435
11436
11437
11438
11439
11440
11441
11442
11443
11444
11445
11446
11447
11448
11449
11450
11451
11452
11453
11454
11455
11456
11457
11458
11459
11460
11461
11462
11463
11464
11465
11466
11467
11468
11469
11470
11471
11472
11473
11474
11475
11476
11477
11478
11479
11480
11481
11482
11483
11484
11485
11486
11487
11488
11489
11490
11491
11492
11493
11494
11495
11496
11497
11498
11499
11500
11501
11502
11503
11504
11505
11506
11507
11508
11509
11510
11511
11512
11513
11514
11515
11516
11517
11518
11519
11520
11521
11522
11523
11524
11525
11526
11527
11528
11529
11530
11531
11532
11533
11534
11535
11536
11537
11538
11539
11540
11541
11542
11543
11544
11545
11546
11547
11548
11549
11550
11551
11552
11553
11554
11555
11556
11557
11558
11559
11560
11561
11562
11563
11564
11565
11566
11567
11568
11569
11570
11571
11572
11573
11574
11575
11576
11577
11578
11579
11580
11581
11582
11583
11584
11585
11586
11587
11588
11589
11590
11591
11592
11593
11594
11595
11596
11597
11598
11599
11600
11601
11602
11603
11604
11605
11606
11607
11608
11609
11610
11611
11612
11613
11614
11615
11616
11617
11618
11619
11620
11621
11622
11623
11624
11625
11626
11627
11628
11629
11630
11631
11632
11633
11634
11635
11636
11637
11638
11639
11640
11641
11642
11643
11644
11645
11646
11647
11648
11649
11650
11651
11652
11653
11654
11655
11656
11657
11658
11659
11660
11661
11662
11663
11664
11665
11666
11667
11668
11669
11670
11671
11672
11673
11674
11675
11676
11677
11678
11679
11680
11681
11682
11683
11684
11685
11686
11687
11688
11689
11690
11691
11692
11693
11694
11695
11696
11697
11698
11699
11700
11701
11702
11703
11704
11705
11706
11707
11708
11709
11710
11711
11712
11713
11714
11715
11716
11717
11718
11719
11720
11721
11722
11723
11724
11725
11726
11727
11728
11729
11730
11731
11732
11733
11734
11735
11736
11737
11738
11739
11740
11741
11742
11743
11744
11745
11746
11747
11748
11749
11750
11751
11752
11753
11754
11755
11756
11757
11758
11759
11760
11761
11762
11763
11764
11765
11766
11767
11768
11769
11770
11771
11772
11773
11774
11775
11776
11777
11778
11779
11780
11781
11782
11783
11784
11785
11786
11787
11788
11789
11790
11791
11792
11793
11794
11795
11796
11797
11798
11799
11800
11801
11802
11803
11804
11805
11806
11807
11808
11809
11810
11811
11812
11813
11814
11815
11816
11817
11818
11819
11820
11821
11822
11823
11824
11825
11826
11827
11828
11829
11830
11831
11832
11833
11834
11835
11836
11837
11838
11839
11840
11841
11842
11843
11844
11845
11846
11847
11848
11849
11850
11851
11852
11853
11854
11855
11856
11857
11858
11859
11860
11861
11862
11863
11864
11865
11866
11867
11868
11869
11870
11871
11872
11873
11874
11875
11876
11877
11878
11879
11880
11881
11882
11883
11884
11885
11886
11887
11888
11889
11890
11891
11892
11893
11894
11895
11896
11897
11898
11899
11900
11901
11902
11903
11904
11905
11906
11907
11908
11909
11910
11911
11912
11913
11914
11915
11916
11917
11918
11919
11920
11921
11922
11923
11924
11925
11926
11927
11928
11929
11930
11931
11932
11933
11934
11935
11936
11937
11938
11939
11940
11941
11942
11943
11944
11945
11946
11947
11948
11949
11950
11951
11952
11953
11954
11955
11956
11957
11958
11959
11960
11961
11962
11963
11964
11965
11966
11967
11968
11969
11970
11971
11972
11973
11974
11975
11976
11977
11978
11979
11980
11981
11982
11983
11984
11985
11986
11987
11988
11989
11990
11991
11992
11993
11994
11995
11996
11997
11998
11999
12000
12001
12002
12003
12004
12005
12006
12007
12008
12009
12010
12011
12012
12013
12014
12015
12016
12017
12018
12019
12020
12021
12022
12023
12024
12025
12026
12027
12028
12029
12030
12031
12032
12033
12034
12035
12036
12037
12038
12039
12040
12041
12042
12043
12044
12045
12046
12047
12048
12049
12050
12051
12052
12053
12054
12055
12056
12057
12058
12059
12060
12061
12062
12063
12064
12065
12066
12067
12068
12069
12070
12071
12072
12073
12074
12075
12076
12077
12078
12079
12080
12081
12082
12083
12084
12085
12086
12087
12088
12089
12090
12091
12092
12093
12094
12095
12096
12097
12098
12099
12100
12101
12102
12103
12104
12105
12106
12107
12108
12109
12110
12111
12112
12113
12114
12115
12116
12117
12118
12119
12120
12121
12122
12123
12124
12125
12126
12127
12128
12129
12130
12131
12132
12133
12134
12135
12136
12137
12138
12139
12140
12141
12142
12143
12144
12145
12146
12147
12148
12149
12150
12151
12152
12153
12154
12155
12156
12157
12158
12159
12160
12161
12162
12163
12164
12165
12166
12167
12168
12169
12170
12171
12172
12173
12174
12175
12176
12177
12178
12179
12180
12181
12182
12183
12184
12185
12186
12187
12188
12189
12190
12191
12192
12193
12194
12195
12196
12197
12198
12199
12200
12201
12202
12203
12204
12205
12206
12207
12208
12209
12210
12211
12212
12213
12214
12215
12216
12217
12218
12219
12220
12221
12222
12223
12224
12225
12226
12227
12228
12229
12230
12231
12232
12233
12234
12235
12236
12237
12238
12239
12240
12241
12242
12243
12244
12245
12246
12247
12248
12249
12250
12251
12252
12253
12254
12255
12256
12257
12258
12259
12260
12261
12262
12263
12264
12265
12266
12267
12268
12269
12270
12271
12272
12273
12274
12275
12276
12277
12278
12279
12280
12281
12282
12283
12284
12285
12286
12287
12288
12289
12290
12291
12292
12293
12294
12295
12296
12297
12298
12299
12300
12301
12302
12303
12304
12305
12306
12307
12308
12309
12310
12311
12312
12313
12314
12315
12316
12317
12318
12319
12320
12321
12322
12323
12324
12325
12326
12327
12328
12329
12330
12331
12332
12333
12334
12335
12336
12337
12338
12339
12340
12341
12342
12343
12344
12345
12346
12347
12348
12349
12350
12351
12352
12353
12354
12355
12356
12357
12358
12359
12360
12361
12362
12363
12364
12365
12366
12367
12368
12369
12370
12371
12372
12373
12374
12375
12376
12377
12378
12379
12380
12381
12382
12383
12384
12385
12386
12387
12388
12389
12390
12391
12392
12393
12394
12395
12396
12397
12398
12399
12400
12401
12402
12403
12404
12405
12406
12407
12408
12409
12410
12411
12412
12413
12414
12415
12416
12417
12418
12419
12420
12421
12422
12423
12424
12425
12426
12427
12428
12429
12430
12431
12432
12433
12434
12435
12436
12437
12438
12439
12440
12441
12442
12443
12444
12445
12446
12447
12448
12449
12450
12451
12452
12453
12454
12455
12456
12457
12458
12459
12460
12461
12462
12463
12464
12465
12466
12467
12468
12469
12470
12471
12472
12473
12474
12475
12476
12477
12478
12479
12480
12481
12482
12483
12484
12485
12486
12487
12488
12489
12490
12491
12492
12493
12494
12495
12496
12497
12498
12499
12500
12501
12502
12503
12504
12505
12506
12507
12508
12509
12510
12511
12512
12513
12514
12515
12516
12517
12518
12519
12520
12521
12522
12523
12524
12525
12526
12527
12528
12529
12530
12531
12532
12533
12534
12535
12536
12537
12538
12539
12540
12541
12542
12543
12544
12545
12546
12547
12548
12549
12550
12551
12552
12553
12554
12555
12556
12557
12558
12559
12560
12561
12562
12563
12564
12565
12566
12567
12568
12569
12570
12571
12572
12573
12574
12575
12576
12577
12578
12579
12580
12581
12582
12583
12584
12585
12586
12587
12588
12589
12590
12591
12592
12593
12594
12595
12596
12597
12598
12599
12600
12601
12602
12603
12604
12605
12606
12607
12608
12609
12610
12611
12612
12613
12614
12615
12616
12617
12618
12619
12620
12621
12622
12623
12624
12625
12626
12627
12628
12629
12630
12631
12632
12633
12634
12635
12636
12637
12638
12639
12640
12641
12642
12643
12644
12645
12646
12647
12648
12649
12650
12651
12652
12653
12654
12655
12656
12657
12658
12659
12660
12661
12662
12663
12664
12665
12666
12667
12668
12669
12670
12671
12672
12673
12674
12675
12676
12677
12678
12679
12680
12681
12682
12683
12684
12685
12686
12687
12688
12689
12690
12691
12692
12693
12694
12695
12696
12697
12698
12699
12700
12701
12702
12703
12704
12705
12706
12707
12708
12709
12710
12711
12712
12713
12714
12715
12716
12717
12718
12719
12720
12721
12722
12723
12724
12725
12726
12727
12728
12729
12730
12731
12732
12733
12734
12735
12736
12737
12738
12739
12740
12741
12742
12743
12744
12745
12746
12747
12748
12749
12750
12751
12752
12753
12754
12755
12756
12757
12758
12759
12760
12761
12762
12763
12764
12765
12766
12767
12768
12769
12770
12771
12772
12773
12774
12775
12776
12777
12778
12779
12780
12781
12782
12783
12784
12785
12786
12787
12788
12789
12790
12791
12792
12793
12794
12795
12796
12797
12798
12799
12800
12801
12802
12803
12804
12805
12806
12807
12808
12809
12810
12811
12812
12813
12814
12815
12816
12817
12818
12819
12820
12821
12822
12823
12824
12825
12826
12827
12828
12829
12830
12831
12832
12833
12834
12835
12836
12837
12838
12839
12840
12841
12842
12843
12844
12845
12846
12847
12848
12849
12850
12851
12852
12853
12854
12855
12856
12857
12858
12859
12860
12861
12862
12863
12864
12865
12866
12867
12868
12869
12870
12871
12872
12873
12874
12875
12876
12877
12878
12879
12880
12881
12882
12883
12884
12885
12886
12887
12888
12889
12890
12891
12892
12893
12894
12895
12896
12897
12898
12899
12900
12901
12902
12903
12904
12905
12906
12907
12908
12909
12910
12911
12912
12913
12914
12915
12916
12917
12918
12919
12920
12921
12922
12923
12924
12925
12926
12927
12928
12929
12930
12931
12932
12933
12934
12935
12936
12937
12938
12939
12940
12941
12942
12943
12944
12945
12946
12947
12948
12949
12950
12951
12952
12953
12954
12955
12956
12957
12958
12959
12960
12961
12962
12963
12964
12965
12966
12967
12968
12969
12970
12971
12972
12973
12974
12975
12976
12977
12978
12979
12980
12981
12982
12983
12984
12985
12986
12987
12988
12989
12990
12991
12992
12993
12994
12995
12996
12997
12998
12999
13000
13001
13002
13003
13004
13005
13006
13007
13008
13009
13010
13011
13012
13013
13014
13015
13016
13017
13018
13019
13020
13021
13022
13023
13024
13025
13026
13027
13028
13029
13030
13031
13032
13033
13034
13035
13036
13037
13038
13039
13040
13041
13042
13043
13044
13045
13046
13047
13048
13049
13050
13051
13052
13053
13054
13055
13056
13057
13058
13059
13060
13061
13062
13063
13064
13065
13066
13067
13068
13069
13070
13071
13072
13073
13074
13075
13076
13077
13078
13079
13080
13081
13082
13083
13084
13085
13086
13087
13088
13089
13090
13091
13092
13093
13094
13095
13096
13097
13098
13099
13100
13101
13102
13103
13104
13105
13106
13107
13108
13109
13110
13111
13112
13113
13114
13115
13116
13117
13118
13119
13120
13121
13122
13123
13124
13125
13126
13127
13128
13129
13130
13131
13132
13133
13134
13135
13136
13137
13138
13139
13140
13141
13142
13143
13144
13145
13146
13147
13148
13149
13150
13151
13152
13153
13154
13155
13156
13157
13158
13159
13160
13161
13162
13163
13164
13165
13166
13167
13168
13169
13170
13171
13172
13173
13174
13175
13176
13177
13178
13179
13180
13181
13182
13183
13184
13185
13186
13187
13188
13189
13190
13191
13192
13193
13194
13195
13196
13197
13198
13199
13200
13201
13202
13203
13204
13205
13206
13207
13208
13209
13210
13211
13212
13213
13214
13215
13216
13217
13218
13219
13220
13221
13222
13223
13224
13225
13226
13227
13228
13229
13230
13231
13232
13233
13234
13235
13236
13237
13238
13239
13240
13241
13242
13243
13244
13245
13246
13247
13248
13249
13250
13251
13252
13253
13254
13255
13256
13257
13258
13259
13260
13261
13262
13263
13264
13265
13266
13267
13268
13269
13270
13271
13272
13273
13274
13275
13276
13277
13278
13279
13280
13281
13282
13283
13284
13285
13286
13287
13288
13289
13290
13291
13292
13293
13294
13295
13296
13297
13298
13299
13300
13301
13302
13303
13304
13305
13306
13307
13308
13309
13310
13311
13312
13313
13314
13315
13316
13317
13318
13319
13320
13321
13322
13323
13324
13325
13326
13327
13328
13329
13330
13331
13332
13333
13334
13335
13336
13337
13338
13339
13340
13341
13342
13343
13344
13345
13346
13347
13348
13349
13350
13351
13352
13353
13354
13355
13356
13357
13358
13359
13360
13361
13362
13363
13364
13365
13366
13367
13368
13369
13370
13371
13372
13373
13374
13375
13376
13377
13378
13379
13380
13381
13382
13383
13384
13385
13386
13387
13388
13389
13390
13391
13392
13393
13394
13395
13396
13397
13398
13399
13400
13401
13402
13403
13404
13405
13406
13407
13408
13409
13410
13411
13412
13413
13414
13415
13416
13417
13418
13419
13420
13421
13422
13423
13424
13425
13426
13427
13428
13429
13430
13431
13432
13433
13434
13435
13436
13437
13438
13439
13440
13441
13442
13443
13444
13445
13446
13447
13448
13449
13450
13451
13452
13453
13454
13455
13456
13457
13458
13459
13460
13461
13462
13463
13464
13465
13466
13467
13468
13469
13470
13471
13472
13473
13474
13475
13476
13477
13478
13479
13480
13481
13482
13483
13484
13485
13486
13487
13488
13489
13490
13491
13492
13493
13494
13495
13496
13497
13498
13499
13500
13501
13502
13503
13504
13505
13506
13507
13508
13509
13510
13511
13512
13513
13514
13515
13516
13517
13518
13519
13520
13521
13522
13523
13524
13525
13526
13527
13528
13529
13530
13531
13532
13533
13534
13535
13536
13537
13538
13539
13540
13541
13542
13543
13544
13545
13546
13547
13548
13549
13550
13551
13552
13553
13554
13555
13556
13557
13558
13559
13560
13561
13562
13563
13564
13565
13566
13567
13568
13569
13570
13571
13572
13573
13574
13575
13576
13577
13578
13579
13580
13581
13582
13583
13584
13585
13586
13587
13588
13589
13590
13591
13592
13593
13594
13595
13596
13597
13598
13599
13600
13601
13602
13603
13604
13605
13606
13607
13608
13609
13610
13611
13612
13613
13614
13615
13616
13617
13618
13619
13620
13621
13622
13623
13624
13625
13626
13627
13628
13629
13630
13631
13632
13633
13634
13635
13636
13637
13638
13639
13640
13641
13642
13643
13644
13645
13646
13647
13648
13649
13650
13651
13652
13653
13654
13655
13656
13657
13658
13659
13660
13661
13662
13663
13664
13665
13666
13667
13668
13669
13670
13671
13672
13673
13674
13675
13676
13677
13678
13679
13680
13681
13682
13683
13684
13685
13686
13687
13688
13689
13690
13691
13692
13693
13694
13695
13696
13697
13698
13699
13700
13701
13702
13703
13704
13705
13706
13707
13708
13709
13710
13711
13712
13713
13714
13715
13716
13717
13718
13719
13720
13721
13722
13723
13724
13725
13726
13727
13728
13729
13730
13731
13732
13733
13734
13735
13736
13737
13738
13739
13740
13741
13742
13743
13744
13745
13746
13747
13748
13749
13750
13751
13752
13753
13754
13755
13756
13757
13758
13759
13760
13761
13762
13763
13764
13765
13766
13767
13768
13769
13770
13771
13772
13773
13774
13775
13776
13777
13778
13779
13780
13781
13782
13783
13784
13785
13786
13787
13788
13789
13790
13791
13792
13793
13794
13795
13796
13797
13798
13799
13800
13801
13802
13803
13804
13805
13806
13807
13808
13809
13810
13811
13812
13813
13814
13815
13816
13817
13818
13819
13820
13821
13822
13823
13824
13825
13826
13827
13828
13829
13830
13831
13832
13833
13834
13835
13836
13837
13838
13839
13840
13841
13842
13843
13844
13845
13846
13847
13848
13849
13850
13851
13852
13853
13854
13855
13856
13857
13858
13859
13860
13861
13862
13863
13864
13865
13866
13867
13868
13869
13870
13871
13872
13873
13874
13875
13876
13877
13878
13879
13880
13881
13882
13883
13884
13885
13886
13887
13888
13889
13890
13891
13892
13893
13894
13895
13896
13897
13898
13899
13900
13901
13902
13903
13904
13905
13906
13907
13908
13909
13910
13911
13912
13913
13914
13915
13916
13917
13918
13919
13920
13921
13922
13923
13924
13925
13926
13927
13928
13929
13930
13931
13932
13933
13934
13935
13936
13937
13938
13939
13940
13941
13942
13943
13944
13945
13946
13947
13948
13949
13950
13951
13952
13953
13954
13955
13956
13957
13958
13959
13960
13961
13962
13963
13964
13965
13966
13967
13968
13969
13970
13971
13972
13973
13974
13975
13976
13977
13978
13979
13980
13981
13982
13983
13984
13985
13986
13987
13988
13989
13990
13991
13992
13993
13994
13995
13996
13997
13998
13999
14000
14001
14002
14003
14004
14005
14006
14007
14008
14009
14010
14011
14012
14013
14014
14015
14016
14017
14018
14019
14020
14021
14022
14023
14024
14025
14026
14027
14028
14029
14030
14031
14032
14033
14034
14035
14036
14037
14038
14039
14040
14041
14042
14043
14044
14045
14046
14047
14048
14049
14050
14051
14052
14053
14054
14055
14056
14057
14058
14059
14060
14061
14062
14063
14064
14065
14066
14067
14068
14069
14070
14071
14072
14073
14074
14075
14076
14077
14078
14079
14080
14081
14082
14083
14084
14085
14086
14087
14088
14089
14090
14091
14092
14093
14094
14095
14096
14097
14098
14099
14100
14101
14102
14103
14104
14105
14106
14107
14108
14109
14110
14111
14112
14113
14114
14115
14116
14117
14118
14119
14120
14121
14122
14123
14124
14125
14126
14127
14128
14129
14130
14131
14132
14133
14134
14135
14136
14137
14138
14139
14140
14141
14142
14143
14144
14145
14146
14147
14148
14149
14150
14151
14152
14153
14154
14155
14156
14157
14158
14159
14160
14161
14162
14163
14164
14165
14166
14167
14168
14169
14170
14171
14172
14173
14174
14175
14176
14177
14178
14179
14180
14181
14182
14183
14184
14185
14186
14187
14188
14189
14190
14191
14192
14193
14194
14195
14196
14197
14198
14199
14200
14201
14202
14203
14204
14205
14206
14207
14208
14209
14210
14211
14212
14213
14214
14215
14216
14217
14218
14219
14220
14221
14222
14223
14224
14225
14226
14227
14228
14229
14230
14231
14232
14233
14234
14235
14236
14237
14238
14239
14240
14241
14242
14243
14244
14245
14246
14247
14248
14249
14250
14251
14252
14253
14254
14255
14256
14257
14258
14259
14260
14261
14262
14263
14264
14265
14266
14267
14268
14269
14270
14271
14272
14273
14274
14275
14276
14277
14278
14279
14280
14281
14282
14283
14284
14285
14286
14287
14288
14289
14290
14291
14292
14293
14294
14295
14296
14297
14298
14299
14300
14301
14302
14303
14304
14305
14306
14307
14308
14309
14310
14311
14312
14313
14314
14315
14316
14317
14318
14319
14320
14321
14322
14323
14324
14325
14326
14327
14328
14329
14330
14331
14332
14333
14334
14335
14336
14337
14338
14339
14340
14341
14342
14343
14344
14345
14346
14347
14348
14349
14350
14351
14352
14353
14354
14355
14356
14357
14358
14359
14360
14361
14362
14363
14364
14365
14366
14367
14368
14369
14370
14371
14372
14373
14374
14375
14376
14377
14378
14379
14380
14381
14382
14383
14384
14385
14386
14387
14388
14389
14390
14391
14392
14393
14394
14395
14396
14397
14398
14399
14400
14401
14402
14403
14404
14405
14406
14407
14408
14409
14410
14411
14412
14413
14414
14415
14416
14417
14418
14419
14420
14421
14422
14423
14424
14425
14426
14427
14428
14429
14430
14431
14432
14433
14434
14435
14436
14437
14438
14439
14440
14441
14442
14443
14444
14445
14446
14447
14448
14449
14450
14451
14452
14453
14454
14455
14456
14457
14458
14459
14460
14461
14462
14463
14464
14465
14466
14467
14468
14469
14470
14471
14472
14473
14474
14475
14476
14477
14478
14479
14480
14481
14482
14483
14484
14485
14486
14487
14488
14489
14490
14491
14492
14493
14494
14495
14496
14497
14498
14499
14500
14501
14502
14503
14504
14505
14506
14507
14508
14509
14510
14511
14512
14513
14514
14515
14516
14517
14518
14519
14520
14521
14522
14523
14524
14525
14526
14527
14528
14529
14530
14531
14532
14533
14534
14535
14536
14537
14538
14539
14540
14541
14542
14543
14544
14545
14546
14547
14548
14549
14550
14551
14552
14553
14554
14555
14556
14557
14558
14559
14560
14561
14562
14563
14564
14565
14566
14567
14568
14569
14570
14571
14572
14573
14574
14575
14576
14577
14578
14579
14580
14581
14582
14583
14584
14585
14586
14587
14588
14589
14590
14591
14592
14593
14594
14595
14596
14597
14598
14599
14600
14601
14602
14603
14604
14605
14606
14607
14608
14609
14610
14611
14612
14613
14614
14615
14616
14617
14618
14619
14620
14621
14622
14623
14624
14625
14626
14627
14628
14629
14630
14631
14632
14633
14634
14635
14636
14637
14638
14639
14640
14641
14642
14643
14644
14645
14646
14647
14648
14649
14650
14651
14652
14653
14654
14655
14656
14657
14658
14659
14660
14661
14662
14663
14664
14665
14666
14667
14668
14669
14670
14671
14672
14673
14674
14675
14676
14677
14678
14679
14680
14681
14682
14683
14684
14685
14686
14687
14688
14689
14690
14691
14692
14693
14694
14695
14696
14697
14698
14699
14700
14701
14702
14703
14704
14705
14706
14707
14708
14709
14710
14711
14712
14713
14714
14715
14716
14717
14718
14719
14720
14721
14722
14723
14724
14725
14726
14727
14728
14729
14730
14731
14732
14733
14734
14735
14736
14737
14738
14739
14740
14741
14742
14743
14744
14745
14746
14747
14748
14749
14750
14751
14752
14753
14754
14755
14756
14757
14758
14759
14760
14761
14762
14763
14764
14765
14766
14767
14768
14769
14770
14771
14772
14773
14774
14775
14776
14777
14778
14779
14780
14781
14782
14783
14784
14785
14786
14787
14788
14789
14790
14791
14792
14793
14794
14795
14796
14797
14798
14799
14800
14801
14802
14803
14804
14805
14806
14807
14808
14809
14810
14811
14812
14813
14814
14815
14816
14817
14818
14819
14820
14821
14822
14823
14824
14825
14826
14827
14828
14829
14830
14831
14832
14833
14834
14835
14836
14837
14838
14839
14840
14841
14842
14843
14844
14845
14846
14847
14848
14849
14850
14851
14852
14853
14854
14855
14856
14857
14858
14859
14860
14861
14862
14863
14864
14865
14866
14867
14868
14869
14870
14871
14872
14873
14874
14875
14876
14877
14878
14879
14880
14881
14882
14883
14884
14885
14886
14887
14888
14889
14890
14891
14892
14893
14894
14895
14896
14897
14898
14899
14900
14901
14902
14903
14904
14905
14906
14907
14908
14909
14910
14911
14912
14913
14914
14915
14916
14917
14918
14919
14920
14921
14922
14923
14924
14925
14926
14927
14928
14929
14930
14931
14932
14933
14934
14935
14936
14937
14938
14939
14940
14941
14942
14943
14944
14945
14946
14947
14948
14949
14950
14951
14952
14953
14954
14955
14956
14957
14958
14959
14960
14961
14962
14963
14964
14965
14966
14967
14968
14969
14970
14971
14972
14973
14974
14975
14976
14977
14978
14979
14980
14981
14982
14983
14984
14985
14986
14987
14988
14989
14990
14991
14992
14993
14994
14995
14996
14997
14998
14999
15000
15001
15002
15003
15004
15005
15006
15007
15008
15009
15010
15011
15012
15013
15014
15015
15016
15017
15018
15019
15020
15021
15022
15023
15024
15025
15026
15027
15028
15029
15030
15031
15032
15033
15034
15035
15036
15037
15038
15039
15040
15041
15042
15043
15044
15045
15046
15047
15048
15049
15050
15051
15052
15053
15054
15055
15056
15057
15058
15059
15060
15061
15062
15063
15064
15065
15066
15067
15068
15069
15070
15071
15072
15073
15074
15075
15076
15077
15078
15079
15080
15081
15082
15083
15084
15085
15086
15087
15088
15089
15090
15091
15092
15093
15094
15095
15096
15097
15098
15099
15100
15101
15102
15103
15104
15105
15106
15107
15108
15109
15110
15111
15112
15113
15114
15115
15116
15117
15118
15119
15120
15121
15122
15123
15124
15125
15126
15127
15128
15129
15130
15131
15132
15133
15134
15135
15136
15137
15138
15139
15140
15141
15142
15143
15144
15145
15146
15147
15148
15149
15150
15151
15152
15153
15154
15155
15156
15157
15158
15159
15160
15161
15162
15163
15164
15165
15166
15167
15168
15169
15170
15171
15172
15173
15174
15175
15176
15177
15178
15179
15180
15181
15182
15183
15184
15185
15186
15187
15188
15189
15190
15191
15192
15193
15194
15195
15196
15197
15198
15199
15200
15201
15202
15203
15204
15205
15206
15207
15208
15209
15210
15211
15212
15213
15214
15215
15216
15217
15218
15219
15220
15221
15222
15223
15224
15225
15226
15227
15228
15229
15230
15231
15232
15233
15234
15235
15236
15237
15238
15239
15240
15241
15242
15243
15244
15245
15246
15247
15248
15249
15250
15251
15252
15253
15254
15255
15256
15257
15258
15259
15260
15261
15262
15263
15264
15265
15266
15267
15268
15269
15270
15271
15272
15273
15274
15275
15276
15277
15278
15279
15280
15281
15282
15283
15284
15285
15286
15287
15288
15289
15290
15291
15292
15293
15294
15295
15296
15297
15298
15299
15300
15301
15302
15303
15304
15305
15306
15307
15308
15309
15310
15311
15312
15313
15314
15315
15316
15317
15318
15319
15320
15321
15322
15323
15324
15325
15326
15327
15328
15329
15330
15331
15332
15333
15334
15335
15336
15337
15338
15339
15340
15341
15342
15343
15344
15345
15346
15347
15348
15349
15350
15351
15352
15353
15354
15355
15356
15357
15358
15359
15360
15361
15362
15363
15364
15365
15366
15367
15368
15369
15370
15371
15372
15373
15374
15375
15376
15377
15378
15379
15380
15381
15382
15383
15384
15385
15386
15387
15388
15389
15390
15391
15392
15393
15394
15395
15396
15397
15398
15399
15400
15401
15402
15403
15404
15405
15406
15407
15408
15409
15410
15411
15412
15413
15414
15415
15416
15417
15418
15419
15420
15421
15422
15423
15424
15425
15426
15427
15428
15429
15430
15431
15432
15433
15434
15435
15436
15437
15438
15439
15440
15441
15442
15443
15444
15445
15446
15447
15448
15449
15450
15451
15452
15453
15454
15455
15456
15457
15458
15459
15460
15461
15462
15463
15464
15465
15466
15467
15468
15469
15470
15471
15472
15473
15474
15475
15476
15477
15478
15479
15480
15481
15482
15483
15484
15485
15486
15487
15488
15489
15490
15491
15492
15493
15494
15495
15496
15497
15498
15499
15500
15501
15502
15503
15504
15505
15506
15507
15508
15509
15510
15511
15512
15513
15514
15515
15516
15517
15518
15519
15520
15521
15522
15523
15524
15525
15526
15527
15528
15529
15530
15531
15532
15533
15534
15535
15536
15537
15538
15539
15540
15541
15542
15543
15544
15545
15546
15547
15548
15549
15550
15551
15552
15553
15554
15555
15556
15557
15558
15559
15560
15561
15562
15563
15564
15565
15566
15567
15568
15569
15570
15571
15572
15573
15574
15575
15576
15577
15578
15579
15580
15581
15582
15583
15584
15585
15586
15587
15588
15589
15590
15591
15592
15593
15594
15595
15596
15597
15598
15599
15600
15601
15602
15603
15604
15605
15606
15607
15608
15609
15610
15611
15612
15613
15614
15615
15616
15617
15618
15619
15620
15621
15622
15623
15624
15625
15626
15627
15628
15629
15630
15631
15632
15633
15634
15635
15636
15637
15638
15639
15640
15641
15642
15643
15644
15645
15646
15647
15648
15649
15650
15651
15652
15653
15654
15655
15656
15657
15658
15659
15660
15661
15662
15663
15664
15665
15666
15667
15668
15669
15670
15671
15672
15673
15674
15675
15676
15677
15678
15679
15680
15681
15682
15683
15684
15685
15686
15687
15688
15689
15690
15691
15692
15693
15694
15695
15696
15697
15698
15699
15700
15701
15702
15703
15704
15705
15706
15707
15708
15709
15710
15711
15712
15713
15714
15715
15716
15717
15718
15719
15720
15721
15722
15723
15724
15725
15726
15727
15728
15729
15730
15731
15732
15733
15734
15735
15736
15737
15738
15739
15740
15741
15742
15743
15744
15745
15746
15747
15748
15749
15750
15751
15752
15753
15754
15755
15756
15757
15758
15759
15760
15761
15762
15763
15764
15765
15766
15767
15768
15769
15770
15771
15772
15773
15774
15775
15776
15777
15778
15779
15780
15781
15782
15783
15784
15785
15786
15787
15788
15789
15790
15791
15792
15793
15794
15795
15796
15797
15798
15799
15800
15801
15802
15803
15804
15805
15806
15807
15808
15809
15810
15811
15812
15813
15814
15815
15816
15817
15818
15819
15820
15821
15822
15823
15824
15825
15826
15827
15828
15829
15830
15831
15832
15833
15834
15835
15836
15837
15838
15839
15840
15841
15842
15843
15844
15845
15846
15847
15848
15849
15850
15851
15852
15853
15854
15855
15856
15857
15858
15859
15860
15861
15862
15863
15864
15865
15866
15867
15868
15869
15870
15871
15872
15873
15874
15875
15876
15877
15878
15879
15880
15881
15882
15883
15884
15885
15886
15887
15888
15889
15890
15891
15892
15893
15894
15895
15896
15897
15898
15899
15900
15901
15902
15903
15904
15905
15906
15907
15908
15909
15910
15911
15912
15913
15914
15915
15916
15917
15918
15919
15920
15921
15922
15923
15924
15925
15926
15927
15928
15929
15930
15931
15932
15933
15934
15935
15936
15937
15938
15939
15940
15941
15942
15943
15944
15945
15946
15947
15948
15949
15950
15951
15952
15953
15954
15955
15956
15957
15958
15959
15960
15961
15962
15963
15964
15965
15966
15967
15968
15969
15970
15971
15972
15973
15974
15975
15976
15977
15978
15979
15980
15981
15982
15983
15984
15985
15986
15987
15988
15989
15990
15991
15992
15993
15994
15995
15996
15997
15998
15999
16000
16001
16002
16003
16004
16005
16006
16007
16008
16009
16010
16011
16012
16013
16014
16015
16016
16017
16018
16019
16020
16021
16022
16023
16024
16025
16026
16027
16028
16029
16030
16031
16032
16033
16034
16035
16036
16037
16038
16039
16040
16041
16042
16043
16044
16045
16046
16047
16048
16049
16050
16051
16052
16053
16054
16055
16056
16057
16058
16059
16060
16061
16062
16063
16064
16065
16066
16067
16068
16069
16070
16071
16072
16073
16074
16075
16076
16077
16078
16079
16080
16081
16082
16083
16084
16085
16086
16087
16088
16089
16090
16091
16092
16093
16094
16095
16096
16097
16098
16099
16100
16101
16102
16103
16104
16105
16106
16107
16108
16109
16110
16111
16112
16113
16114
16115
16116
16117
16118
16119
16120
16121
16122
16123
16124
16125
16126
16127
16128
16129
16130
16131
16132
16133
16134
16135
16136
16137
16138
16139
16140
16141
16142
16143
16144
16145
16146
16147
16148
16149
16150
16151
16152
16153
16154
16155
16156
16157
16158
16159
16160
16161
16162
16163
16164
16165
16166
16167
16168
16169
16170
16171
16172
16173
16174
16175
16176
16177
16178
16179
16180
16181
16182
16183
16184
16185
16186
16187
16188
16189
16190
16191
16192
16193
16194
16195
16196
16197
16198
16199
16200
16201
16202
16203
16204
16205
16206
16207
16208
16209
16210
16211
16212
16213
16214
16215
16216
16217
16218
16219
16220
16221
16222
16223
16224
16225
16226
16227
16228
16229
16230
16231
16232
16233
16234
16235
16236
16237
16238
16239
16240
16241
16242
16243
16244
16245
16246
16247
16248
16249
16250
16251
16252
16253
16254
16255
16256
16257
16258
16259
16260
16261
16262
16263
16264
16265
16266
16267
16268
16269
16270
16271
16272
16273
16274
16275
16276
16277
16278
16279
16280
16281
16282
16283
16284
16285
16286
16287
16288
16289
16290
16291
16292
16293
16294
16295
16296
16297
16298
16299
16300
16301
16302
16303
16304
16305
16306
16307
16308
16309
16310
16311
16312
16313
16314
16315
16316
16317
16318
16319
16320
16321
16322
16323
16324
16325
16326
16327
16328
16329
16330
16331
16332
16333
16334
16335
16336
16337
16338
16339
16340
16341
16342
16343
16344
16345
16346
16347
16348
16349
16350
16351
16352
16353
16354
16355
16356
16357
16358
16359
16360
16361
16362
16363
16364
16365
16366
16367
16368
16369
16370
16371
16372
16373
16374
16375
16376
16377
16378
16379
16380
16381
16382
16383
16384
16385
16386
16387
16388
16389
16390
16391
16392
16393
16394
16395
16396
16397
16398
16399
16400
16401
16402
16403
16404
16405
16406
16407
16408
16409
16410
16411
16412
16413
16414
16415
16416
16417
16418
16419
16420
16421
16422
16423
16424
16425
16426
16427
16428
16429
16430
16431
16432
16433
16434
16435
16436
16437
16438
16439
16440
16441
16442
16443
16444
16445
16446
16447
16448
16449
16450
16451
16452
16453
16454
16455
16456
16457
16458
16459
16460
16461
16462
16463
16464
16465
16466
16467
16468
16469
16470
16471
16472
16473
16474
16475
16476
16477
16478
16479
16480
16481
16482
16483
16484
16485
16486
16487
16488
16489
16490
16491
16492
16493
16494
16495
16496
16497
16498
16499
16500
16501
16502
16503
16504
16505
16506
16507
16508
16509
16510
16511
16512
16513
16514
16515
16516
16517
16518
16519
16520
16521
16522
16523
16524
16525
16526
16527
16528
16529
16530
16531
16532
16533
16534
16535
16536
16537
16538
16539
16540
16541
16542
16543
16544
16545
16546
16547
16548
16549
16550
16551
16552
16553
16554
16555
16556
16557
16558
16559
16560
16561
16562
16563
16564
16565
16566
16567
16568
16569
16570
16571
16572
16573
16574
16575
16576
16577
16578
16579
16580
16581
16582
16583
16584
16585
16586
16587
16588
16589
16590
16591
16592
16593
16594
16595
16596
16597
16598
16599
16600
16601
16602
16603
16604
16605
16606
16607
16608
16609
16610
16611
16612
16613
16614
16615
16616
16617
16618
16619
16620
16621
16622
16623
16624
16625
16626
16627
16628
16629
16630
16631
16632
16633
16634
16635
16636
16637
16638
16639
16640
16641
16642
16643
16644
16645
16646
16647
16648
16649
16650
16651
16652
16653
16654
16655
16656
16657
16658
16659
16660
16661
16662
16663
16664
16665
16666
16667
16668
16669
16670
16671
16672
16673
16674
16675
16676
16677
16678
16679
16680
16681
16682
16683
16684
16685
16686
16687
16688
16689
16690
16691
16692
16693
16694
16695
16696
16697
16698
16699
16700
16701
16702
16703
16704
16705
16706
16707
16708
16709
16710
16711
16712
16713
16714
16715
16716
16717
16718
16719
16720
16721
16722
16723
16724
16725
16726
16727
16728
16729
16730
16731
16732
16733
16734
16735
16736
16737
16738
16739
16740
16741
16742
16743
16744
16745
16746
16747
16748
16749
16750
16751
16752
16753
16754
16755
16756
16757
16758
16759
16760
16761
16762
16763
16764
16765
16766
16767
16768
16769
16770
16771
16772
16773
16774
16775
16776
16777
16778
16779
16780
16781
16782
16783
16784
16785
16786
16787
16788
16789
16790
16791
16792
16793
16794
16795
16796
16797
16798
16799
16800
16801
16802
16803
16804
16805
16806
16807
16808
16809
16810
16811
16812
16813
16814
16815
16816
16817
16818
16819
16820
16821
16822
16823
16824
16825
16826
16827
16828
16829
16830
16831
16832
16833
16834
16835
16836
16837
16838
16839
16840
16841
16842
16843
16844
16845
16846
16847
16848
16849
16850
16851
16852
16853
16854
16855
16856
16857
16858
16859
16860
16861
16862
16863
16864
16865
16866
16867
16868
16869
16870
16871
16872
16873
16874
16875
16876
16877
16878
16879
16880
16881
16882
16883
16884
16885
16886
16887
16888
16889
16890
16891
16892
16893
16894
16895
16896
16897
16898
16899
16900
16901
16902
16903
16904
16905
16906
16907
16908
16909
16910
16911
16912
16913
16914
16915
16916
16917
16918
16919
16920
16921
16922
16923
16924
16925
16926
16927
16928
16929
16930
16931
16932
16933
16934
16935
16936
16937
16938
16939
16940
16941
16942
16943
16944
16945
16946
16947
16948
16949
16950
16951
16952
16953
16954
16955
16956
16957
16958
16959
16960
16961
16962
16963
16964
16965
16966
16967
16968
16969
16970
16971
16972
16973
16974
16975
16976
16977
16978
16979
16980
16981
16982
16983
16984
16985
16986
16987
16988
16989
16990
16991
16992
16993
16994
16995
16996
16997
16998
16999
17000
17001
17002
17003
17004
17005
17006
17007
17008
17009
17010
17011
17012
17013
17014
17015
17016
17017
17018
17019
17020
17021
17022
17023
17024
17025
17026
17027
17028
17029
17030
17031
17032
17033
17034
17035
17036
17037
17038
17039
17040
17041
17042
17043
17044
17045
17046
17047
17048
17049
17050
17051
17052
17053
17054
17055
17056
17057
17058
17059
17060
17061
17062
17063
17064
17065
17066
17067
17068
17069
17070
17071
17072
17073
17074
17075
17076
17077
17078
17079
17080
17081
17082
17083
17084
17085
17086
17087
17088
17089
17090
17091
17092
17093
17094
17095
17096
17097
17098
17099
17100
17101
17102
17103
17104
17105
17106
17107
17108
17109
17110
17111
17112
17113
17114
17115
17116
17117
17118
17119
17120
17121
17122
17123
17124
17125
17126
17127
17128
17129
17130
17131
17132
17133
17134
17135
17136
17137
17138
17139
17140
17141
17142
17143
17144
17145
17146
17147
17148
17149
17150
17151
17152
17153
17154
17155
17156
17157
17158
17159
17160
17161
17162
17163
17164
17165
17166
17167
17168
17169
17170
17171
17172
17173
17174
17175
17176
17177
17178
17179
17180
17181
17182
17183
17184
17185
17186
17187
17188
17189
17190
17191
17192
17193
17194
17195
17196
17197
17198
17199
17200
17201
17202
17203
17204
17205
17206
17207
17208
17209
17210
17211
17212
17213
17214
17215
17216
17217
17218
17219
17220
17221
17222
17223
17224
17225
17226
17227
17228
17229
17230
17231
17232
17233
17234
17235
17236
17237
17238
17239
17240
17241
17242
17243
17244
17245
17246
17247
17248
17249
17250
17251
17252
17253
17254
17255
17256
17257
17258
17259
17260
17261
17262
17263
17264
17265
17266
17267
17268
17269
17270
17271
17272
17273
17274
17275
17276
17277
17278
17279
17280
17281
17282
17283
17284
17285
17286
17287
17288
17289
17290
17291
17292
17293
17294
17295
17296
17297
17298
17299
17300
17301
17302
17303
17304
17305
17306
17307
17308
17309
17310
17311
17312
17313
17314
17315
17316
17317
17318
17319
17320
17321
17322
17323
17324
17325
17326
17327
17328
17329
17330
17331
17332
17333
17334
17335
17336
17337
17338
17339
17340
17341
17342
17343
17344
17345
17346
17347
17348
17349
17350
17351
17352
17353
17354
17355
17356
17357
17358
17359
17360
17361
17362
17363
17364
17365
17366
17367
17368
17369
17370
17371
17372
17373
17374
17375
17376
17377
17378
17379
17380
17381
17382
17383
17384
17385
17386
17387
17388
17389
17390
17391
17392
17393
17394
17395
17396
17397
17398
17399
17400
17401
17402
17403
17404
17405
17406
17407
17408
17409
17410
17411
17412
17413
17414
17415
17416
17417
17418
17419
17420
17421
17422
17423
17424
17425
17426
17427
17428
17429
17430
17431
17432
17433
17434
17435
17436
17437
17438
17439
17440
17441
17442
17443
17444
17445
17446
17447
17448
17449
17450
17451
17452
17453
17454
17455
17456
17457
17458
17459
17460
17461
17462
17463
17464
17465
17466
17467
17468
17469
17470
17471
17472
17473
17474
17475
17476
17477
17478
17479
17480
17481
17482
17483
17484
17485
17486
17487
17488
17489
17490
17491
17492
17493
17494
17495
17496
17497
17498
17499
17500
17501
17502
17503
17504
17505
17506
17507
17508
17509
17510
17511
17512
17513
17514
17515
17516
17517
17518
17519
17520
17521
17522
17523
17524
17525
17526
17527
17528
17529
17530
17531
17532
17533
17534
17535
17536
17537
17538
17539
17540
17541
17542
17543
17544
17545
17546
17547
17548
17549
17550
17551
17552
17553
17554
17555
17556
17557
17558
17559
17560
17561
17562
17563
17564
17565
17566
17567
17568
17569
17570
17571
17572
17573
17574
17575
17576
17577
17578
17579
17580
17581
17582
17583
17584
17585
17586
17587
17588
17589
17590
17591
17592
17593
17594
17595
17596
17597
17598
17599
17600
17601
17602
17603
17604
17605
17606
17607
17608
17609
17610
17611
17612
17613
17614
17615
17616
17617
17618
17619
17620
17621
17622
17623
17624
17625
17626
17627
17628
17629
17630
17631
17632
17633
17634
17635
17636
17637
17638
17639
17640
17641
17642
17643
17644
17645
17646
17647
17648
17649
17650
17651
17652
17653
17654
17655
17656
17657
17658
17659
17660
17661
17662
17663
17664
17665
17666
17667
17668
17669
17670
17671
17672
17673
17674
17675
17676
17677
17678
17679
17680
17681
17682
17683
17684
17685
17686
17687
17688
17689
17690
17691
17692
17693
17694
17695
17696
17697
17698
17699
17700
17701
17702
17703
17704
17705
17706
17707
17708
17709
17710
17711
17712
17713
17714
17715
17716
17717
17718
17719
17720
17721
17722
17723
17724
17725
17726
17727
17728
17729
17730
17731
17732
17733
17734
17735
17736
17737
17738
17739
17740
17741
17742
17743
17744
17745
17746
17747
17748
17749
17750
17751
17752
17753
17754
17755
17756
17757
17758
17759
17760
17761
17762
17763
17764
17765
17766
17767
17768
17769
17770
17771
17772
17773
17774
17775
17776
17777
17778
17779
17780
17781
17782
17783
17784
17785
17786
17787
17788
17789
17790
17791
17792
17793
17794
17795
17796
17797
17798
17799
17800
17801
17802
17803
17804
17805
17806
17807
17808
17809
17810
17811
17812
17813
17814
17815
17816
17817
17818
17819
17820
17821
17822
17823
17824
17825
17826
17827
17828
17829
17830
17831
17832
17833
17834
17835
17836
17837
17838
17839
17840
17841
17842
17843
17844
17845
17846
17847
17848
17849
17850
17851
17852
17853
17854
17855
17856
17857
17858
17859
17860
17861
17862
17863
17864
17865
17866
17867
17868
17869
17870
17871
17872
17873
17874
17875
17876
17877
17878
17879
17880
17881
17882
17883
17884
17885
17886
17887
17888
17889
17890
17891
17892
17893
17894
17895
17896
17897
17898
17899
17900
17901
17902
17903
17904
17905
17906
17907
17908
17909
17910
17911
17912
17913
17914
17915
17916
17917
17918
17919
17920
17921
17922
17923
17924
17925
17926
17927
17928
17929
17930
17931
17932
17933
17934
17935
17936
17937
17938
17939
17940
17941
17942
17943
17944
17945
17946
17947
17948
17949
17950
17951
17952
17953
17954
17955
17956
17957
17958
17959
17960
17961
17962
17963
17964
17965
17966
17967
17968
17969
17970
17971
17972
17973
17974
17975
17976
17977
17978
17979
17980
17981
17982
17983
17984
17985
17986
17987
17988
17989
17990
17991
17992
17993
17994
17995
17996
17997
17998
17999
18000
18001
18002
18003
18004
18005
18006
18007
18008
18009
18010
18011
18012
18013
18014
18015
18016
18017
18018
18019
18020
18021
18022
18023
18024
18025
18026
18027
18028
18029
18030
18031
18032
18033
18034
18035
18036
18037
18038
18039
18040
18041
18042
18043
18044
18045
18046
18047
18048
18049
18050
18051
18052
18053
18054
18055
18056
18057
18058
18059
18060
18061
18062
18063
18064
18065
18066
18067
18068
18069
18070
18071
18072
18073
18074
18075
18076
18077
18078
18079
18080
18081
18082
18083
18084
18085
18086
18087
18088
18089
18090
18091
18092
18093
18094
18095
18096
18097
18098
18099
18100
18101
18102
18103
18104
18105
18106
18107
18108
18109
18110
18111
18112
18113
18114
18115
18116
18117
18118
18119
18120
18121
18122
18123
18124
18125
18126
18127
18128
18129
18130
18131
18132
18133
18134
18135
18136
18137
18138
18139
18140
18141
18142
18143
18144
18145
18146
18147
18148
18149
18150
18151
18152
18153
18154
18155
18156
18157
18158
18159
18160
18161
18162
18163
18164
18165
18166
18167
18168
18169
18170
18171
18172
18173
18174
18175
18176
18177
18178
18179
18180
18181
18182
18183
18184
18185
18186
18187
18188
18189
18190
18191
18192
18193
18194
18195
18196
18197
18198
18199
18200
18201
18202
18203
18204
18205
18206
18207
18208
18209
18210
18211
18212
18213
18214
18215
18216
18217
18218
18219
18220
18221
18222
18223
18224
18225
18226
18227
18228
18229
18230
18231
18232
18233
18234
18235
18236
18237
18238
18239
18240
18241
18242
18243
18244
18245
18246
18247
18248
18249
18250
18251
18252
18253
18254
18255
18256
18257
18258
18259
18260
18261
18262
18263
18264
18265
18266
18267
18268
18269
18270
18271
18272
18273
18274
18275
18276
18277
18278
18279
18280
18281
18282
18283
18284
18285
18286
18287
18288
18289
18290
18291
18292
18293
18294
18295
18296
18297
18298
18299
18300
18301
18302
18303
18304
18305
18306
18307
18308
18309
18310
18311
18312
18313
18314
18315
18316
18317
18318
18319
18320
18321
18322
18323
18324
18325
18326
18327
18328
18329
18330
18331
18332
18333
18334
18335
18336
18337
18338
18339
18340
18341
18342
18343
18344
18345
18346
18347
18348
18349
18350
18351
18352
18353
18354
18355
18356
18357
18358
18359
18360
18361
18362
18363
18364
18365
18366
18367
18368
18369
18370
18371
18372
18373
18374
18375
18376
18377
18378
18379
18380
18381
18382
18383
18384
18385
18386
18387
18388
18389
18390
18391
18392
18393
18394
18395
18396
18397
18398
18399
18400
18401
18402
18403
18404
18405
18406
18407
18408
18409
18410
18411
18412
18413
18414
18415
18416
18417
18418
18419
18420
18421
18422
18423
18424
18425
18426
18427
18428
18429
18430
18431
18432
18433
18434
18435
18436
18437
18438
18439
18440
18441
18442
18443
18444
18445
18446
18447
18448
18449
18450
18451
18452
18453
18454
18455
18456
18457
18458
18459
18460
18461
18462
18463
18464
18465
18466
18467
18468
18469
18470
18471
18472
18473
18474
18475
18476
18477
18478
18479
18480
18481
18482
18483
18484
18485
18486
18487
18488
18489
18490
18491
18492
18493
18494
18495
18496
18497
18498
18499
18500
18501
18502
18503
18504
18505
18506
18507
18508
18509
18510
18511
18512
18513
18514
18515
18516
18517
18518
18519
18520
18521
18522
18523
18524
18525
18526
18527
18528
18529
18530
18531
18532
18533
18534
18535
18536
18537
18538
18539
18540
18541
18542
18543
18544
18545
18546
18547
18548
18549
18550
18551
18552
18553
18554
18555
18556
18557
18558
18559
18560
18561
18562
18563
18564
18565
18566
18567
18568
18569
18570
18571
18572
18573
18574
18575
18576
18577
18578
18579
18580
18581
18582
18583
18584
18585
18586
18587
18588
18589
18590
18591
18592
18593
18594
18595
18596
18597
18598
18599
18600
18601
18602
18603
18604
18605
18606
18607
18608
18609
18610
18611
18612
18613
18614
18615
18616
18617
18618
18619
18620
18621
18622
18623
18624
18625
18626
18627
18628
18629
18630
18631
18632
18633
18634
18635
18636
18637
18638
18639
18640
18641
18642
18643
18644
18645
18646
18647
18648
18649
18650
18651
18652
18653
18654
18655
18656
18657
18658
18659
18660
18661
18662
18663
18664
18665
18666
18667
18668
18669
18670
18671
18672
18673
18674
18675
18676
18677
18678
18679
18680
18681
18682
18683
18684
18685
18686
18687
18688
18689
18690
18691
18692
18693
18694
18695
18696
18697
18698
18699
18700
18701
18702
18703
18704
18705
18706
18707
18708
18709
18710
18711
18712
18713
18714
18715
18716
18717
18718
18719
18720
18721
18722
18723
18724
18725
18726
18727
18728
18729
18730
18731
18732
18733
18734
18735
18736
18737
18738
18739
18740
18741
18742
18743
18744
18745
18746
18747
18748
18749
18750
18751
18752
18753
18754
18755
18756
18757
18758
18759
18760
18761
18762
18763
18764
18765
18766
18767
18768
18769
18770
18771
18772
18773
18774
18775
18776
18777
18778
18779
18780
18781
18782
18783
18784
18785
18786
18787
18788
18789
18790
18791
18792
18793
18794
18795
18796
18797
18798
18799
18800
18801
18802
18803
18804
18805
18806
18807
18808
18809
18810
18811
18812
18813
18814
18815
18816
18817
18818
18819
18820
18821
18822
18823
18824
18825
18826
18827
18828
18829
18830
18831
18832
18833
18834
18835
18836
18837
18838
18839
18840
18841
18842
18843
18844
18845
18846
18847
18848
18849
18850
18851
18852
18853
18854
18855
18856
18857
18858
18859
18860
18861
18862
18863
18864
18865
18866
18867
18868
18869
18870
18871
18872
18873
18874
18875
18876
18877
18878
18879
18880
18881
18882
18883
18884
18885
18886
18887
18888
18889
18890
18891
18892
18893
18894
18895
18896
18897
18898
18899
18900
18901
18902
18903
18904
18905
18906
18907
18908
18909
18910
18911
18912
18913
18914
18915
18916
18917
18918
18919
18920
18921
18922
18923
18924
18925
18926
18927
18928
18929
18930
18931
18932
18933
18934
18935
18936
18937
18938
18939
18940
18941
18942
18943
18944
18945
18946
18947
18948
18949
18950
18951
18952
18953
18954
18955
18956
18957
18958
18959
18960
18961
18962
18963
18964
18965
18966
18967
18968
18969
18970
18971
18972
18973
18974
18975
18976
18977
18978
18979
18980
18981
18982
18983
18984
18985
18986
18987
18988
18989
18990
18991
18992
18993
18994
18995
18996
18997
18998
18999
19000
19001
19002
19003
19004
19005
19006
19007
19008
19009
19010
19011
19012
19013
19014
19015
19016
19017
19018
19019
19020
19021
19022
19023
19024
19025
19026
19027
19028
19029
19030
19031
19032
19033
19034
19035
19036
19037
19038
19039
19040
19041
19042
19043
19044
19045
19046
19047
19048
19049
19050
19051
19052
19053
19054
19055
19056
19057
19058
19059
19060
19061
19062
19063
19064
19065
19066
19067
19068
19069
19070
19071
19072
19073
19074
19075
19076
19077
19078
19079
19080
19081
19082
19083
19084
19085
19086
19087
19088
19089
19090
19091
19092
19093
19094
19095
19096
19097
19098
19099
19100
19101
19102
19103
19104
19105
19106
19107
19108
19109
19110
19111
19112
19113
19114
19115
19116
19117
19118
19119
19120
19121
19122
19123
19124
19125
19126
19127
19128
19129
19130
19131
19132
19133
19134
19135
19136
19137
19138
19139
19140
19141
19142
19143
19144
19145
19146
19147
19148
19149
19150
19151
19152
19153
19154
19155
19156
19157
19158
19159
19160
19161
19162
19163
19164
19165
19166
19167
19168
19169
19170
19171
19172
19173
19174
19175
19176
19177
19178
19179
19180
19181
19182
19183
19184
19185
19186
19187
19188
19189
19190
19191
19192
19193
19194
19195
19196
19197
19198
19199
19200
19201
19202
19203
19204
19205
19206
19207
19208
19209
19210
19211
19212
19213
19214
19215
19216
19217
19218
19219
19220
19221
19222
19223
19224
19225
19226
19227
19228
19229
19230
19231
19232
19233
19234
19235
19236
19237
19238
19239
19240
19241
19242
19243
19244
19245
19246
19247
19248
19249
19250
19251
19252
19253
19254
19255
19256
19257
19258
19259
19260
19261
19262
19263
19264
19265
19266
19267
19268
19269
19270
19271
19272
19273
19274
19275
19276
19277
19278
19279
19280
19281
19282
19283
19284
19285
19286
19287
19288
19289
19290
19291
19292
19293
19294
19295
19296
19297
19298
19299
19300
19301
19302
19303
19304
19305
19306
19307
19308
19309
19310
19311
19312
19313
19314
19315
19316
19317
19318
19319
19320
19321
19322
19323
19324
19325
19326
19327
19328
19329
19330
19331
19332
19333
19334
19335
19336
19337
19338
19339
19340
19341
19342
19343
19344
19345
19346
19347
19348
19349
19350
19351
19352
19353
19354
19355
19356
19357
19358
19359
19360
19361
19362
19363
19364
19365
19366
19367
19368
19369
19370
19371
19372
19373
19374
19375
19376
19377
19378
19379
19380
19381
19382
19383
19384
19385
19386
19387
19388
19389
19390
19391
19392
19393
19394
19395
19396
19397
19398
19399
19400
19401
19402
19403
19404
19405
19406
19407
19408
19409
19410
19411
19412
19413
19414
19415
19416
19417
19418
19419
19420
19421
19422
19423
19424
19425
19426
19427
19428
19429
19430
19431
19432
19433
19434
19435
19436
19437
19438
19439
19440
19441
19442
19443
19444
19445
19446
19447
19448
19449
19450
19451
19452
19453
19454
19455
19456
19457
19458
19459
19460
19461
19462
19463
19464
19465
19466
19467
19468
19469
19470
19471
19472
19473
19474
19475
19476
19477
19478
19479
19480
19481
19482
19483
19484
19485
19486
19487
19488
19489
19490
19491
19492
19493
19494
19495
19496
19497
19498
19499
19500
19501
19502
19503
19504
19505
19506
19507
19508
19509
19510
19511
19512
19513
19514
19515
19516
19517
19518
19519
19520
19521
19522
19523
19524
19525
19526
19527
19528
19529
19530
19531
19532
19533
19534
19535
19536
19537
19538
19539
19540
19541
19542
19543
19544
19545
19546
19547
19548
19549
19550
19551
19552
19553
19554
19555
19556
19557
19558
19559
19560
19561
19562
19563
19564
19565
19566
19567
19568
19569
19570
19571
19572
19573
19574
19575
19576
19577
19578
19579
19580
19581
19582
19583
19584
19585
19586
19587
19588
19589
19590
19591
19592
19593
19594
19595
19596
19597
19598
19599
19600
19601
19602
19603
19604
19605
19606
19607
19608
19609
19610
19611
19612
19613
19614
19615
19616
19617
19618
19619
19620
19621
19622
19623
19624
19625
19626
19627
19628
19629
19630
19631
19632
19633
19634
19635
19636
19637
19638
19639
19640
19641
19642
19643
19644
19645
19646
19647
19648
19649
19650
19651
19652
19653
19654
19655
19656
19657
19658
19659
19660
19661
19662
19663
19664
19665
19666
19667
19668
19669
19670
19671
19672
19673
19674
19675
19676
19677
19678
19679
19680
19681
19682
19683
19684
19685
19686
19687
19688
19689
19690
19691
19692
19693
19694
19695
19696
19697
19698
19699
19700
19701
19702
19703
19704
19705
19706
19707
19708
19709
19710
19711
19712
19713
19714
19715
19716
19717
19718
19719
19720
19721
19722
19723
19724
19725
19726
19727
19728
19729
19730
19731
19732
19733
19734
19735
19736
19737
19738
19739
19740
19741
19742
19743
19744
19745
19746
19747
19748
19749
19750
19751
19752
19753
19754
19755
19756
19757
19758
19759
19760
19761
19762
19763
19764
19765
19766
19767
19768
19769
19770
19771
19772
19773
19774
19775
19776
19777
19778
19779
19780
19781
19782
19783
19784
19785
19786
19787
19788
19789
19790
19791
19792
19793
19794
19795
19796
19797
19798
19799
19800
19801
19802
19803
19804
19805
19806
19807
19808
19809
19810
19811
19812
19813
19814
19815
19816
19817
19818
19819
19820
19821
19822
19823
19824
19825
19826
19827
19828
19829
19830
19831
19832
19833
19834
19835
19836
19837
19838
19839
19840
19841
19842
19843
19844
19845
19846
19847
19848
19849
19850
19851
19852
19853
19854
19855
19856
19857
19858
19859
19860
19861
19862
19863
19864
19865
19866
19867
19868
19869
19870
19871
19872
19873
19874
19875
19876
19877
19878
19879
19880
19881
19882
19883
19884
19885
19886
19887
19888
19889
19890
19891
19892
19893
19894
19895
19896
19897
19898
19899
19900
19901
19902
19903
19904
19905
19906
19907
19908
19909
19910
19911
19912
19913
19914
19915
19916
19917
19918
19919
19920
19921
19922
19923
19924
19925
19926
19927
19928
19929
19930
19931
19932
19933
19934
19935
19936
19937
19938
19939
19940
19941
19942
19943
19944
19945
19946
19947
19948
19949
19950
19951
19952
19953
19954
19955
19956
19957
19958
19959
19960
19961
19962
19963
19964
19965
19966
19967
19968
19969
19970
19971
19972
19973
19974
19975
19976
19977
19978
19979
19980
19981
19982
19983
19984
19985
19986
19987
19988
19989
19990
19991
19992
19993
19994
19995
19996
19997
19998
19999
20000
20001
20002
20003
20004
20005
20006
20007
20008
20009
20010
20011
20012
20013
20014
20015
20016
20017
20018
20019
20020
20021
20022
20023
20024
20025
20026
20027
20028
20029
20030
20031
20032
20033
20034
20035
20036
20037
20038
20039
20040
20041
20042
20043
20044
20045
20046
20047
20048
20049
20050
20051
20052
20053
20054
20055
20056
20057
20058
20059
20060
20061
20062
20063
20064
20065
20066
20067
20068
20069
20070
20071
20072
20073
20074
20075
20076
20077
20078
20079
20080
20081
20082
20083
20084
20085
20086
20087
20088
20089
20090
20091
20092
20093
20094
20095
20096
20097
20098
20099
20100
20101
20102
20103
20104
20105
20106
20107
20108
20109
20110
20111
20112
20113
20114
20115
20116
20117
20118
20119
20120
20121
20122
20123
20124
20125
20126
20127
20128
20129
20130
20131
20132
20133
20134
20135
20136
20137
20138
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Golden Bough (Third Edition, Vol. 6 of
12) by James George Frazer



This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no
restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under
the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or
online at http://www.gutenberg.org/license



Title: The Golden Bough (Third Edition, Vol. 6 of 12)

Author: James George Frazer

Release Date: January 26, 2013 [Ebook #41923]

Language: English

Character set encoding: US-ASCII


***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GOLDEN BOUGH (THIRD EDITION, VOL. 6 OF 12)***





                             The Golden Bough

                      A Study in Magic and Religion

                                    By

               James George Frazer, D.C.L., LL.D., Litt.D.

                   Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge

     Professor of Social Anthropology in the University of Liverpool

                             Vol. VI. of XII.

                      Part IV: Adonis Attis Osiris.

                               Vol. 2 of 2.

                           New York and London

                            MacMillan and Co.

                                   1911





CONTENTS


Chapter I. The Myth Of Osiris.
Chapter II. The Official Egyptian Calendar.
Chapter III. The Calendar of the Egyptian Farmer.
   § 1. The Rise and Fall of the Nile.
   § 2. Rites of Irrigation.
   § 3. Rites of Sowing.
   § 4. Rites of Harvest.
Chapter IV. The Official Festivals of Osiris.
   § 1. The Festival at Sais.
   § 2. Feasts of All Souls.
   § 3. The Festival in the Month of Athyr.
   § 4. The Festival in the Month of Khoiak.
   § 5. The Resurrection of Osiris.
   § 6. Readjustment of Egyptian Festivals.
Chapter V. The Nature of Osiris.
   § 1. Osiris a Corn-God.
   § 2. Osiris a Tree-Spirit.
   § 3. Osiris a God of Fertility.
   § 4. Osiris a God of the Dead.
Chapter VI. Isis.
Chapter VII. Osiris and the Sun.
Chapter VIII. Osiris and the Moon.
Chapter IX. The Doctrine of Lunar Sympathy.
Chapter X. The King As Osiris.
Chapter XI. The Origin of Osiris.
Chapter XII. Mother-Kin And Mother Goddesses.
   § 1. Dying Gods and Mourning Goddesses.
   § 2. Influence of Mother-Kin on Religion.
   § 3. Mother-Kin and Mother Goddesses in the Ancient East.
Notes.
   I. Moloch The King.
   II. The Widowed Flamen.
      § 1. The Pollution of Death.
      § 2. The Marriage of the Roman Gods.
      § 3. Children of Living Parents in Ritual.
   III. A Charm To Protect a Town.
   IV. Some Customs Of The Pelew Islanders.
      § 1. Priests dressed as Women.
      § 2. Prostitution of Unmarried Girls.
      § 3. Custom of slaying Chiefs.
Index.
Footnotes






                               [Cover Art]

[Transcriber's Note: The above cover image was produced by the submitter
at Distributed Proofreaders, and is being placed into the public domain.]





CHAPTER I. THE MYTH OF OSIRIS.


(M1) In ancient Egypt the god whose death and resurrection were annually
celebrated with alternate sorrow and joy was Osiris, the most popular of
all Egyptian deities; and there are good grounds for classing him in one
of his aspects with Adonis and Attis as a personification of the great
yearly vicissitudes of nature, especially of the corn. But the immense
vogue which he enjoyed for many ages induced his devoted worshippers to
heap upon him the attributes and powers of many other gods; so that it is
not always easy to strip him, so to say, of his borrowed plumes and to
restore them to their proper owners. In the following pages I do not
pretend to enumerate and analyse all the alien elements which thus
gathered round the popular deity. All that I shall attempt to do is to
peel off these accretions and to exhibit the god, as far as possible, in
his primitive simplicity. The discoveries of recent years in Egypt enable
us to do so with more confidence now than when I first addressed myself to
the problem many years ago.

(M2) The story of Osiris is told in a connected form only by Plutarch,
whose narrative has been confirmed and to some extent amplified in modern
times by the evidence of the monuments.(1) Of the monuments which
illustrate the myth or legend of Osiris the oldest are a long series of
hymns, prayers, incantations, and liturgies, which have been found
engraved in hieroglyphics on the walls, passages, and galleries of five
pyramids at Sakkara. From the place where they were discovered these
ancient religious records are known as the Pyramid Texts. They date from
the fifth and sixth dynasties, and the period of time during which they
were carved on the pyramids is believed to have been roughly a hundred and
fifty years from about the year 2625 B.C. onward. But from their contents
it appears that many of these documents were drawn up much earlier; for in
some of them there are references to works which have perished, and in
others there are political allusions which seem to show that the passages
containing them must have been composed at a time when the Northern and
Southern Kingdoms were still independent and hostile states and had not
yet coalesced into a single realm under the sway of one powerful monarch.
As the union of the kingdoms appears to have taken place about three
thousand four hundred years before our era, the whole period covered by
the composition of the Pyramid Texts probably did not fall short of a
thousand years. Thus the documents form the oldest body of religious
literature surviving to us from the ancient world, and occupy a place in
the history of Egyptian language and civilization like that which the
Vedic hymns and incantations occupy in the history of Aryan speech and
culture.(2)

(M3) The special purpose for which these texts were engraved on the
pyramids was to ensure the eternal life and felicity of the dead kings who
slept beneath these colossal monuments. Hence the dominant note that
sounds through them all is an insistent, a passionate protest against the
reality of death: indeed the word death never occurs in the Pyramid Texts
except to be scornfully denied or to be applied to an enemy. Again and
again the indomitable assurance is repeated that the dead man did not die
but lives. "King Teti has not died the death, he has become a glorious one
in the horizon." "Ho! King Unis! Thou didst not depart dead, thou didst
depart living." "Thou hast departed that thou mightest live, thou hast not
departed that thou mightest die." "Thou diest not." "This King Pepi dies
not." "Have ye said that he would die? He dies not; this King Pepi lives
for ever." "Live! Thou shalt not die." "Thou livest, thou livest, raise
thee up." "Thou diest not, stand up, raise thee up." "O lofty one among
the Imperishable Stars, thou perishest not eternally."(3) Thus for
Egyptian kings death was swallowed up in victory; and through their tears
Egyptian mourners might ask, like Christian mourners thousands of years
afterwards, "O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?"

(M4) Now it is significant that in these ancient documents, though the
myth or legend of Osiris is not set forth at length, it is often alluded
to as if it were a matter of common knowledge. Hence we may legitimately
infer the great antiquity of the Osirian tradition in Egypt. Indeed so
numerous are the allusions to it in the Pyramid Texts that by their help
we could reconstruct the story in its main outlines even without the
narrative of Plutarch.(4) Thus the discovery of these texts has confirmed
our belief in the accuracy and fidelity of the Greek writer, and we may
accept his account with confidence even when it records incidents or
details which have not yet been verified by a comparison with original
Egyptian sources. The tragic tale runs thus:

(M5) Osiris was the offspring of an intrigue between the earth-god Seb
(Keb or Geb, as the name is sometimes transliterated) and the sky-goddess
Nut. The Greeks identified his parents with their own deities Cronus and
Rhea. When the sun-god Ra perceived that his wife Nut had been unfaithful
to him, he declared with a curse that she should be delivered of the child
in no month and no year. But the goddess had another lover, the god Thoth
or Hermes, as the Greeks called him, and he playing at draughts with the
moon won from her a seventy-second part(5) of every day, and having
compounded five whole days out of these parts he added them to the
Egyptian year of three hundred and sixty days. This was the mythical
origin of the five supplementary days which the Egyptians annually
inserted at the end of every year in order to establish a harmony between
lunar and solar time.(6) On these five days, regarded as outside the year
of twelve months, the curse of the sun-god did not rest, and accordingly
Osiris was born on the first of them. At his nativity a voice rang out
proclaiming that the Lord of All had come into the world. Some say that a
certain Pamyles heard a voice from the temple at Thebes bidding him
announce with a shout that a great king, the beneficent Osiris, was born.
But Osiris was not the only child of his mother. On the second of the
supplementary days she gave birth to the elder Horus, on the third to the
god Set, whom the Greeks called Typhon, on the fourth to the goddess Isis,
and on the fifth to the goddess Nephthys.(7) Afterwards Set married his
sister Nephthys, and Osiris married his sister Isis.

(M6) Reigning as a king on earth, Osiris reclaimed the Egyptians from
savagery, gave them laws, and taught them to worship the gods. Before his
time the Egyptians had been cannibals. But Isis, the sister and wife of
Osiris, discovered wheat and barley growing wild, and Osiris introduced
the cultivation of these grains amongst his people, who forthwith
abandoned cannibalism and took kindly to a corn diet. Moreover, Osiris is
said to have been the first to gather fruit from trees, to train the vine
to poles, and to tread the grapes. Eager to communicate these beneficent
discoveries to all mankind, he committed the whole government of Egypt to
his wife Isis, and travelled over the world, diffusing the blessings of
civilization and agriculture wherever he went. In countries where a harsh
climate or niggardly soil forbade the cultivation of the vine, he taught
the inhabitants to console themselves for the want of wine by brewing beer
from barley. Loaded with the wealth that had been showered upon him by
grateful nations, he returned to Egypt, and on account of the benefits he
had conferred on mankind he was unanimously hailed and worshipped as a
deity.(8) But his brother Set (whom the Greeks called Typhon) with
seventy-two others plotted against him. Having taken the measure of his
good brother's body by stealth, the bad brother Typhon fashioned and
highly decorated a coffer of the same size, and once when they were all
drinking and making merry he brought in the coffer and jestingly promised
to give it to the one whom it should fit exactly. Well, they all tried one
after the other, but it fitted none of them. Last of all Osiris stepped
into it and lay down. On that the conspirators ran and slammed the lid
down on him, nailed it fast, soldered it with molten lead, and flung the
coffer into the Nile. This happened on the seventeenth day of the month
Athyr, when the sun is in the sign of the Scorpion, and in the
eight-and-twentieth year of the reign or the life of Osiris. When Isis
heard of it she sheared off a lock of her hair, put on mourning attire,
and wandered disconsolately up and down, seeking the body.(9)

(M7) By the advice of the god of wisdom she took refuge in the papyrus
swamps of the Delta. Seven scorpions accompanied her in her flight. One
evening when she was weary she came to the house of a woman, who, alarmed
at the sight of the scorpions, shut the door in her face. Then one of the
scorpions crept under the door and stung the child of the woman that he
died. But when Isis heard the mother's lamentation, her heart was touched,
and she laid her hands on the child and uttered her powerful spells; so
the poison was driven out of the child and he lived. Afterwards Isis
herself gave birth to a son in the swamps. She had conceived him while she
fluttered in the form of a hawk over the corpse of her dead husband. The
infant was the younger Horus, who in his youth bore the name of
Harpocrates, that is, the child Horus. Him Buto, the goddess of the north,
hid from the wrath of his wicked uncle Set. Yet she could not guard him
from all mishap; for one day when Isis came to her little son's
hiding-place she found him stretched lifeless and rigid on the ground: a
scorpion had stung him. Then Isis prayed to the sun-god Ra for help. The
god hearkened to her and staid his bark in the sky, and sent down Thoth to
teach her the spell by which she might restore her son to life. She
uttered the words of power, and straightway the poison flowed from the
body of Horus, air passed into him, and he lived. Then Thoth ascended up
into the sky and took his place once more in the bark of the sun, and the
bright pomp passed onward jubilant.(10)

(M8) Meantime the coffer containing the body of Osiris had floated down
the river and away out to sea, till at last it drifted ashore at Byblus,
on the coast of Syria. Here a fine _erica_-tree shot up suddenly and
enclosed the chest in its trunk. The king of the country, admiring the
growth of the tree, had it cut down and made into a pillar of his house;
but he did not know that the coffer with the dead Osiris was in it. Word
of this came to Isis and she journeyed to Byblus, and sat down by the
well, in humble guise, her face wet with tears. To none would she speak
till the king's handmaidens came, and them she greeted kindly, and braided
their hair, and breathed on them from her own divine body a wondrous
perfume. But when the queen beheld the braids of her handmaidens' hair and
smelt the sweet smell that emanated from them, she sent for the stranger
woman and took her into her house and made her the nurse of her child. But
Isis gave the babe her finger instead of her breast to suck, and at night
she began to burn all that was mortal of him away, while she herself in
the likeness of a swallow fluttered round the pillar that contained her
dead brother, twittering mournfully. But the queen spied what she was
doing and shrieked out when she saw her child in flames, and thereby she
hindered him from becoming immortal. Then the goddess revealed herself and
begged for the pillar of the roof, and they gave it her, and she cut the
coffer out of it, and fell upon it and embraced it and lamented so loud
that the younger of the king's children died of fright on the spot. But
the trunk of the tree she wrapped in fine linen, and poured ointment on
it, and gave it to the king and queen, and the wood stands in a temple of
Isis and is worshipped by the people of Byblus to this day. And Isis put
the coffer in a boat and took the eldest of the king's children with her
and sailed away. As soon as they were alone, she opened the chest, and
laying her face on the face of her brother she kissed him and wept. But
the child came behind her softly and saw what she was about, and she
turned and looked at him in anger, and the child could not bear her look
and died; but some say that it was not so, but that he fell into the sea
and was drowned. It is he whom the Egyptians sing of at their banquets
under the name of Maneros. But Isis put the coffer by and went to see her
son Horus at the city of Buto, and Typhon found the coffer as he was
hunting a boar one night by the light of a full moon.(11) And he knew the
body, and rent it into fourteen pieces, and scattered them abroad. But
Isis sailed up and down the marshes in a shallop made of papyrus, looking
for the pieces; and that is why when people sail in shallops made of
papyrus, the crocodiles do not hurt them, for they fear or respect the
goddess. And that is the reason, too, why there are many graves of Osiris
in Egypt, for she buried each limb as she found it. But others will have
it that she buried an image of him in every city, pretending it was his
body, in order that Osiris might be worshipped in many places, and that if
Typhon searched for the real grave he might not be able to find it.(12)
However, the genital member of Osiris had been eaten by the fishes, so
Isis made an image of it instead, and the image is used by the Egyptians
at their festivals to this day.(13) "Isis," writes the historian Diodorus
Siculus, "recovered all the parts of the body except the genitals; and
because she wished that her husband's grave should be unknown and honoured
by all who dwell in the land of Egypt, she resorted to the following
device. She moulded human images out of wax and spices, corresponding to
the stature of Osiris, round each one of the parts of his body. Then she
called in the priests according to their families and took an oath of them
all that they would reveal to no man the trust she was about to repose in
them. So to each of them privately she said that to them alone she
entrusted the burial of the body, and reminding them of the benefits they
had received she exhorted them to bury the body in their own land and to
honour Osiris as a god. She also besought them to dedicate one of the
animals of their country, whichever they chose, and to honour it in life
as they had formerly honoured Osiris, and when it died to grant it
obsequies like his. And because she would encourage the priests in their
own interest to bestow the aforesaid honours, she gave them a third part
of the land to be used by them in the service and worship of the gods.
Accordingly it is said that the priests, mindful of the benefits of
Osiris, desirous of gratifying the queen, and moved by the prospect of
gain, carried out all the injunctions of Isis. Wherefore to this day each
of the priests imagines that Osiris is buried in his country, and they
honour the beasts that were consecrated in the beginning, and when the
animals die the priests renew at their burial the mourning for Osiris. But
the sacred bulls, the one called Apis and the other Mnevis, were dedicated
to Osiris, and it was ordained that they should be worshipped as gods in
common by all the Egyptians; since these animals above all others had
helped the discoverers of corn in sowing the seed and procuring the
universal benefits of agriculture."(14)

(M9) Such is the myth or legend of Osiris, as told by Greek writers and
eked out by more or less fragmentary notices or allusions in native
Egyptian literature. A long inscription in the temple at Denderah has
preserved a list of the god's graves, and other texts mention the parts of
his body which were treasured as holy relics in each of the sanctuaries.
Thus his heart was at Athribis, his backbone at Busiris, his neck at
Letopolis, and his head at Memphis. As often happens in such cases, some
of his divine limbs were miraculously multiplied. His head, for example,
was at Abydos as well as at Memphis, and his legs, which were remarkably
numerous, would have sufficed for several ordinary mortals.(15) In this
respect, however, Osiris was nothing to St. Denys, of whom no less than
seven heads, all equally genuine, are extant.(16)

(M10) According to native Egyptian accounts, which supplement that of
Plutarch, when Isis had found the corpse of her husband Osiris, she and
her sister Nephthys sat down beside it and uttered a lament which in after
ages became the type of all Egyptian lamentations for the dead. "Come to
thy house," they wailed, "Come to thy house. O god On! come to thy house,
thou who hast no foes. O fair youth, come to thy house, that thou mayest
see me. I am thy sister, whom thou lovest; thou shalt not part from me. O
fair boy, come to thy house.... I see thee not, yet doth my heart yearn
after thee and mine eyes desire thee. Come to her who loves thee, who
loves thee, Unnefer, thou blessed one! Come to thy sister, come to thy
wife, to thy wife, thou whose heart stands still. Come to thy housewife. I
am thy sister by the same mother, thou shalt not be far from me. Gods and
men have turned their faces towards thee and weep for thee together.... I
call after thee and weep, so that my cry is heard to heaven, but thou
hearest not my voice; yet am I thy sister, whom thou didst love on earth;
thou didst love none but me, my brother! my brother!"(17) This lament for
the fair youth cut off in his prime reminds us of the laments for Adonis.
The title of Unnefer or "the Good Being" bestowed on him marks the
beneficence which tradition universally ascribed to Osiris; it was at once
his commonest title and one of his names as king.(18)

(M11) The lamentations of the two sad sisters were not in vain. In pity
for her sorrow the sun-god Ra sent down from heaven the jackal-headed god
Anubis, who, with the aid of Isis and Nephthys, of Thoth and Horus, pieced
together the broken body of the murdered god, swathed it in linen
bandages, and observed all the other rites which the Egyptians were wont
to perform over the bodies of the departed. Then Isis fanned the cold clay
with her wings: Osiris revived, and thenceforth reigned as king over the
dead in the other world.(19) There he bore the titles of Lord of the
Underworld, Lord of Eternity, Ruler of the Dead.(20) There, too, in the
great Hall of the Two Truths, assisted by forty-two assessors, one from
each of the principal districts of Egypt, he presided as judge at the
trial of the souls of the departed, who made their solemn confession
before him, and, their heart having been weighed in the balance of
justice, received the reward of virtue in a life eternal or the
appropriate punishment of their sins.(21) The confession or rather
profession which the _Book of the Dead_ puts in the mouth of the deceased
at the judgment-bar of Osiris(22) sets the morality of the ancient
Egyptians in a very favourable light. In rendering an account of his life
the deceased solemnly protested that he had not oppressed his fellow-men,
that he had made none to weep, that he had done no murder, neither
committed fornication nor borne false witness, that he had not falsified
the balance, that he had not taken the milk from the mouths of babes, that
he had given bread to the hungry and water to the thirsty, and had clothed
the naked. In harmony with these professions are the epitaphs on Egyptian
graves, which reveal, if not the moral practice, at least the moral ideals
of those who slept beneath them. Thus, for example, a man says in his
epitaph: "I gave bread to the hungry and clothes to the naked, and ferried
across in my own boat him who could not pass the water. I was a father to
the orphan, a husband to the widow, a shelter from the wind to them that
were cold. I am one that spake good and told good. I earned my substance
in righteousness."(23) Those who had done thus in their mortal life and
had been acquitted at the Great Assize, were believed to dwell thenceforth
at ease in a land where the corn grew higher than on earth, where harvests
never failed, where trees were always green, and wives for ever young and
fair.(24)

(M12) We are not clearly informed as to the fate which the Egyptians
supposed to befall the wicked after death. In the scenes which represent
the Last Judgment there is seen crouching beside the scales, in which the
heart of the dead is being weighed, a monstrous animal known as the "Eater
of the Dead." It has the head of a crocodile, the trunk of a lion, and the
hinder parts of a hippopotamus. Some think that the souls of those whose
hearts had been weighed in the balance and found wanting were delivered
over to this grim monster to be devoured; but this view appears to be
conjectural. "Generally the animal seems to have been placed there simply
as guardian of the entrance to the Fields of the Blessed, but sometimes it
is likened to Set. Elsewhere it is said that the judges of the dead slay
the wicked and drink their blood. In brief, here also we have conflicting
statements, and can only gather that there seems to have been no general
agreement among the dwellers in the Valley of the Nile as to the ultimate
lot of the wicked."(25)

(M13) In the resurrection of Osiris the Egyptians saw the pledge of a life
everlasting for themselves beyond the grave. They believed that every man
would live eternally in the other world if only his surviving friends did
for his body what the gods had done for the body of Osiris. Hence the
ceremonies observed by the Egyptians over the human dead were an exact
copy of those which Anubis, Horus, and the rest had performed over the
dead god. "At every burial there was enacted a representation of the
divine mystery which had been performed of old over Osiris, when his son,
his sisters, his friends were gathered round his mangled remains and
succeeded by their spells and manipulations in converting his broken body
into the first mummy, which they afterwards reanimated and furnished with
the means of entering on a new individual life beyond the grave. The mummy
of the deceased was Osiris; the professional female mourners were his two
sisters Isis and Nephthys; Anubis, Horus, all the gods of the Osirian
legend gathered about the corpse." In this solemn drama of death and
resurrection the principal part was played by the celebrant, who
represented Horus the son of the dead and resuscitated Osiris.(26) He
formally opened the eyes and mouth of the dead man by rubbing or
pretending to rub them four times with the bleeding heart and thigh of a
sacrificed bull; after which a pretence was made of actually opening the
mouth of the mummy or of the statue with certain instruments specially
reserved for the purpose. Geese and gazelles were also sacrificed by being
decapitated; they were supposed to represent the enemies of Osiris, who
after the murder of the divine man had sought to evade the righteous
punishment of their crime but had been detected and beheaded.(27)

(M14) Thus every dead Egyptian was identified with Osiris and bore his
name. From the Middle Kingdom onwards it was the regular practice to
address the deceased as "Osiris So-and-So," as if he were the god himself,
and to add the standing epithet "true of speech," because true speech was
characteristic of Osiris.(28) The thousands of inscribed and pictured
tombs that have been opened in the valley of the Nile prove that the
mystery of the resurrection was performed for the benefit of every dead
Egyptian;(29) as Osiris died and rose again from the dead, so all men
hoped to arise like him from death to life eternal. In an Egyptian text it
is said of the departed that "as surely as Osiris lives, so shall he live
also; as surely as Osiris did not die, so shall he not die; as surely as
Osiris is not annihilated, so shall he too not be annihilated." The dead
man, conceived to be lying, like Osiris, with mangled body, was comforted
by being told that the heavenly goddess Nut, the mother of Osiris, was
coming to gather up his poor scattered limbs and mould them with her own
hands into a form immortal and divine. "She gives thee thy head, she
brings thee thy bones, she sets thy limbs together and puts thy heart in
thy body." Thus the resurrection of the dead was conceived, like that of
Osiris, not merely as spiritual but also as bodily. "They possess their
heart, they possess their senses, they possess their mouth, they possess
their feet, they possess their arms, they possess all their limbs."(30)

(M15) If we may trust Egyptian legend, the trials and contests of the
royal house did not cease with the restoration of Osiris to life and his
elevation to the rank of presiding deity in the world of the dead. When
Horus the younger, the son of Osiris and Isis, was grown to man's estate,
the ghost of his royal and murdered father appeared to him and urged him,
like another Hamlet, to avenge the foul unnatural murder upon his wicked
uncle. Thus encouraged, the youth attacked the miscreant. The combat was
terrific and lasted many days. Horus lost an eye in the conflict and Set
suffered a still more serious mutilation. At last Thoth parted the
combatants and healed their wounds; the eye of Horus he restored by
spitting on it. According to one account the great battle was fought on
the twenty-sixth day of the month of Thoth. Foiled in open war, the artful
uncle now took the law of his virtuous nephew. He brought a suit of
bastardy against Horus, hoping thus to rob him of his inheritance and to
get possession of it himself; nay, not content with having murdered his
good brother, the unnatural Set carried his rancour even beyond the grave
by accusing the dead Osiris of certain high crimes and misdemeanours. The
case was tried before the supreme court of the gods in the great hall at
Heliopolis. Thoth, the god of wisdom, pleaded the cause of Osiris, and the
august judges decided that "the word of Osiris was true." Moreover, they
pronounced Horus to be the true-begotten son of his father. So that prince
assumed the crown and mounted the throne of the lamented Osiris. However,
according to another and perhaps later version of the story, the victory
of Horus over his uncle was by no means so decisive, and their struggles
ended in a compromise, by which Horus reigned over the Delta, while Set
became king of the upper valley of the Nile from near Memphis to the first
cataract. Be that as it may, with the accession of Horus began for the
Egyptians the modern period of the world, for on his throne all the kings
of Egypt sat as his successors.(31)

(M16) These legends of a contest for the throne of Egypt may perhaps
contain a reminiscence of real dynastical struggles which attended an
attempt to change the right of succession from the female to the male
line. For under a rule of female kinship the heir to the throne is either
the late king's brother, or the son of the late king's sister, while under
a rule of male kinship the heir to the throne is the late king's son. In
the legend of Osiris the rival heirs are Set and Horus, Set being the late
king's brother, and Horus the late king's son; though Horus indeed united
both claims to the crown, being the son of the king's sister as well as of
the king. A similar attempt to shift the line of succession seems to have
given rise to similar contests at Rome.(32)

(M17) Thus according to what seems to have been the general native
tradition Osiris was a good and beloved king of Egypt, who suffered a
violent death but rose from the dead and was henceforth worshipped as a
deity. In harmony with this tradition he was regularly represented by
sculptors and painters in human and regal form as a dead king, swathed in
the wrappings of a mummy, but wearing on his head a kingly crown and
grasping in one of his hands, which were left free from the bandages, a
kingly sceptre.(33) Two cities above all others were associated with his
myth or memory. One of them was Busiris in Lower Egypt, which claimed to
possess his backbone; the other was Abydos in Upper Egypt, which gloried
in the possession of his head.(34) Encircled by the nimbus of the dead yet
living god, Abydos, originally an obscure place, became from the end of
the Old Kingdom the holiest spot in Egypt; his tomb there would seem to
have been to the Egyptians what the Church of the Holy Sepulchre at
Jerusalem is to Christians. It was the wish of every pious man that his
dead body should rest in hallowed earth near the grave of the glorified
Osiris. Few indeed were rich enough to enjoy this inestimable privilege;
for, apart from the cost of a tomb in the sacred city, the mere transport
of mummies from great distances was both difficult and expensive. Yet so
eager were many to absorb in death the blessed influence which radiated
from the holy sepulchre that they caused their surviving friends to convey
their mortal remains to Abydos, there to tarry for a short time, and then
to be brought back by river and interred in the tombs which had been made
ready for them in their native land. Others had cenotaphs built or
memorial tablets erected for themselves near the tomb of their dead and
risen Lord, that they might share with him the bliss of a joyful
resurrection.(35)

(M18) Hence from the earliest ages of Egyptian history Abydos would seem
to have been a city of the dead rather than of the living; certainly there
is no evidence that the place was ever of any political importance.(36) No
less than nine of the most ancient kings of Egypt known to us were buried
here, for their tombs have been discovered and explored within recent
years.(37) The royal necropolis lies on the edge of the desert about a
mile and a half from the temple of Osiris.(38) Of the graves the oldest is
that of King Khent, the second or third king of the first dynasty. His
reign, which fell somewhere between three thousand four hundred and three
thousand two hundred years before our era, seems to have marked an epoch
in the history of Egypt, for under him the costume, the figure drawing,
and the hieroglyphics all assumed the character which they thenceforth
preserved to the very end of Egyptian nationality.(39) Later ages
identified him with Osiris in a more intimate sense than that in which the
divine title was lavished on every dead king and indeed on every dead man;
for his tomb was actually converted into the tomb of Osiris and as such
received in great profusion the offerings of the faithful. Somewhere
between the twenty-second and the twenty-sixth dynasty a massive bier of
grey granite was placed in the sepulchral chamber. On it, cut in high
relief, reposes a shrouded figure of the dead Osiris. He lies at full
length, with bare and upturned face. On his head is the White Crown of
Upper Egypt; in his hands, which issue from the shroud, he holds the
characteristic emblems of the god, the sceptre and the scourge. At the
four corners of the bier are perched four hawks, representing the four
children of Horus, each with their father's banner, keeping watch over the
dead god, as they kept watch over the four quarters of the world. A fifth
hawk seems to have been perched on the middle of the body of Osiris, but
it had been broken off before the tomb was discovered in recent years, for
only the bird's claws remain in position. Finely carved heads of lions,
one at each corner of the bier, with the claws to match below, complete
the impressive monument. The scene represented is unquestionably the
impregnation of Isis in the form of a hawk by the dead Osiris; the Copts
who dismantled the shrine appear to have vented their pious rage on the
figure of the hawk Isis by carrying it off or smashing it. If any doubt
could exist as to the meaning of these sculptured figures, it would be set
at rest by the ancient inscriptions attached to them. Over against the
right shoulder of the shrouded figure, who lies stretched on the bier, are
carved in hieroglyphics the words, "Osiris, the Good Being, true of
speech"; and over against the place where the missing hawk perched on the
body of the dead god is carved the symbol of Isis. Two relics of the
ancient human occupants of the tomb escaped alike the fury of the fanatics
and the avarice of the plunderers who pillaged and destroyed it. One of
the relics is a human skull, from which the lower jawbone is missing; the
other is an arm encircled by gorgeous jewelled bracelets of gold,
turquoises, amethysts, and dark purple lapis lazuli. The former may be the
head of King Khent himself; the latter is almost certainly the arm of his
queen. One of the bracelets is composed of alternate plaques of gold and
turquoise, each ornamented with the figure of a hawk perched on the top of
it.(40) The hawk was the sacred bird or crest of the earliest dynasties of
Egyptian kings. The figure of a hawk was borne before the king as a
standard on solemn occasions: the oldest capital of the country known to
us was called Hawk-town: there the kings of the first dynasty built a
temple to the hawk: there in modern times has been found a splendid golden
head of a hawk dating from the Ancient Empire; and on the life-like statue
of King Chephren of the third dynasty we see a hawk with out-spread wings
protecting the back of the monarch's head. From the earliest to the latest
times of Egyptian civilization "the Hawk" was the epithet of the king of
Egypt and of the king alone; it took the first place in the list of his
titles.(41) The sanctity of the bird may help us to understand why Isis
took the form of a hawk in order to mate with her dead husband; why the
queen of Egypt wore on her arm a bracelet adorned with golden hawks; and
why in the holy sepulchre the four sons of Horus were represented in the
likeness of hawks keeping watch over the effigy of their divine
grandfather.(42)

(M19) The legend recorded by Plutarch which associated the dead Osiris
with Byblus in Phoenicia(43) is doubtless late and probably untrustworthy.
It may have been suggested by the resemblance which the worship of the
Egyptian Osiris bore to the worship of the Phoenician Adonis in that city.
But it is possible that the story has no deeper foundation than a verbal
misunderstanding. For Byblus is not only the name of a city, it is the
Greek word for papyrus; and as Isis is said after the death of Osiris to
have taken refuge in the papyrus swamps of the Delta, where she gave birth
to and reared her son Horus, a Greek writer may perhaps have confused the
plant with the city of the same name.(44) However that may have been, the
association of Osiris with Adonis at Byblus gave rise to a curious tale.
It is said that every year the people beyond the rivers of Ethiopia used
to write a letter to the women of Byblus informing them that the lost and
lamented Adonis was found. This letter they enclosed in an earthen pot,
which they sealed and sent floating down the river to the sea. The waves
carried the pot to Byblus, where every year it arrived at the time when
the Syrian women were weeping for their dead Lord. The pot was taken up
from the water and opened: the letter was read; and the weeping women
dried their tears, because the lost Adonis was found.(45)





CHAPTER II. THE OFFICIAL EGYPTIAN CALENDAR.


(M20) A useful clue to the original nature of a god or goddess is often
furnished by the season at which his or her festival is celebrated. Thus,
if the festival falls at the new or the full moon, there is a certain
presumption that the deity thus honoured either is the moon or at least
has lunar affinities. If the festival is held at the winter or summer
solstice, we naturally surmise that the god is the sun, or at all events
that he stands in some close relation to that luminary. Again, if the
festival coincides with the time of sowing or harvest, we are inclined to
infer that the divinity is an embodiment of the earth or of the corn.
These presumptions or inferences, taken by themselves, are by no means
conclusive; but if they happen to be confirmed by other indications, the
evidence may be regarded as fairly strong.

(M21) Unfortunately, in dealing with the Egyptian gods we are in a great
measure precluded from making use of this clue. The reason is not that the
dates of the festivals are always unknown, but that they shifted from year
to year, until after a long interval they had revolved through the whole
course of the seasons. This gradual revolution of the festal Egyptian
cycle resulted from the employment of a calendar year which neither
corresponded exactly to the solar year nor was periodically corrected by
intercalation.(46) The solar year is equivalent to about three hundred and
sixty-five and a quarter days; but the ancient Egyptians, ignoring the
quarter of a day, reckoned the year at three hundred and sixty-five days
only.(47) Thus each of their calendar years was shorter than the true
solar year by about a quarter of a day. In four years the deficiency
amounted to one whole day; in forty years it amounted to ten days; in four
hundred years it amounted to a hundred days; and so it went on increasing
until after a lapse of four times three hundred and sixty-five, or one
thousand four hundred and sixty solar years, the deficiency amounted to
three hundred and sixty-five days, or a whole Egyptian year. Hence one
thousand four hundred and sixty solar years, or their equivalent, one
thousand four hundred and sixty-one Egyptian years, formed a period or
cycle at the end of which the Egyptian festivals returned to those points
of the solar year at which they had been celebrated in the beginning.(48)
In the meantime they had been held successively on every day of the solar
year, though always on the same day of the calendar.

(M22) Thus the official calendar was completely divorced, except at rare
and long intervals, from what may be called the natural calendar of the
shepherd, the husbandman, and the sailor--that is, from the course of the
seasons in which the times for the various labours of cattle-breeding,
tillage, and navigation are marked by the position of the sun in the sky,
the rising or setting of the stars, the fall of rain, the growth of
pasture, the ripening of the corn, the blowing of certain winds, and so
forth. Nowhere, perhaps, are the events of this natural calendar better
marked or more regular in their recurrence than in Egypt; nowhere
accordingly could their divergence from the corresponding dates of the
official calendar be more readily observed. The divergence certainly did
not escape the notice of the Egyptians themselves, and some of them
apparently attempted successfully to correct it. Thus we are told that the
Theban priests, who particularly excelled in astronomy, were acquainted
with the true length of the solar year, and harmonized the calendar with
it by intercalating a day every few, probably every four, years.(49) But
this scientific improvement was too deeply opposed to the religious
conservatism of the Egyptian nature to win general acceptance. "The
Egyptians," said Geminus, a Greek astronomer writing about 77 B.C., "are
of an opposite opinion and purpose from the Greeks. For they neither
reckon the years by the sun nor the months and days by the moon, but they
observe a peculiar system of their own. They wish, in fact, that the
sacrifices should not always be offered to the gods at the same time of
the year, but that they should pass through all the seasons of the year,
so that the summer festival should in time be celebrated in winter, in
autumn, and in spring. For that purpose they employ a year of three
hundred and sixty-five days, composed of twelve months of thirty days
each, with five supplementary days added. But they do not add the quarter
of a day for the reason I have given--namely, in order that their festivals
may revolve."(50) So attached, indeed, were the Egyptians to their old
calendar, that the kings at their consecration were led by the priest of
Isis at Memphis into the holy of holies, and there made to swear that they
would maintain the year of three hundred and sixty-five days without
intercalation.(51)

(M23) The practical inconvenience of a calendar which marked true time
only once in about fifteen hundred years might be calmly borne by a
submissive Oriental race like the ancient Egyptians, but it naturally
proved a stumbling-block to the less patient temperament of their European
conquerors. Accordingly in the reign of King Ptolemy III. Euergetes a
decree was passed that henceforth the movable Egyptian year should be
converted into a fixed solar year by the intercalation of one day at the
end of every four years, "in order that the seasons may do their duty
perpetually according to the present constitution of the world, and that
it may not happen, through the shifting of the star by one day in four
years, that some of the public festivals which are now held in the winter
should ever be celebrated in the summer, and that other festivals now held
in the summer should hereafter be celebrated in the winter, as has
happened before, and must happen again if the year of three hundred and
sixty-five days be retained." The decree was passed in the year 239 or 238
B.C. by the high priests, scribes, and other dignitaries of the Egyptian
church assembled in convocation at Canopus; but we cannot doubt that the
measure, though it embodied native Egyptian science, was prompted by the
king or his Macedonian advisers.(52) This sage attempt to reform the
erratic calendar was not permanently successful. The change may indeed
have been carried out during the reign of the king who instituted it, but
it was abandoned by the year 196 B.C. at latest, as we learn from the
celebrated inscription known as the Rosetta stone, in which a month of the
Macedonian calendar is equated to the corresponding month of the movable
Egyptian year.(53) And the testimony of Geminus, which I have cited,
proves that in the following century the festivals were still revolving in
the old style.

(M24) The reform which the Macedonian king had vainly attempted to impose
upon his people was accomplished by the practical Romans when they took
over the administration of the country. The expedient by which they
effected the change was a simple one; indeed it was no other than that to
which Ptolemy Euergetes had resorted for the same purpose. They merely
intercalated one day at the end of every four years, thus equalizing
within a small fraction four calendar years to four solar years.
Henceforth the official and the natural calendars were in practical
agreement. The movable Egyptian year had been converted into the fixed
Alexandrian year, as it was called, which agreed with the Julian year in
length and in its system of intercalation, though it differed from that
year in retaining the twelve equal Egyptian months and five supplementary
days.(54) But while the new calendar received the sanction of law and
regulated the business of government, the ancient calendar was too firmly
established in popular usage to be at once displaced. Accordingly it
survived for ages side by side with its modern rival.(55) The spread of
Christianity, which required a fixed year for the due observance of its
festivals, did much to promote the adoption of the new Alexandrian style,
and by the beginning of the fifth century the ancient movable year of
Egypt appears to have been not only dead but forgotten.(56)





CHAPTER III. THE CALENDAR OF THE EGYPTIAN FARMER.




§ 1. The Rise and Fall of the Nile.


(M25) If the Egyptian farmer of the olden time could thus get no help,
except at the rarest intervals, from the official or sacerdotal calendar,
he must have been compelled to observe for himself those natural signals
which marked the times for the various operations of husbandry. In all
ages of which we possess any records the Egyptians have been an
agricultural people, dependent for their subsistence on the growth of the
corn. The cereals which they cultivated were wheat, barley, and apparently
sorghum (_Holcus sorghum_, Linnaeus), the _doora_ of the modern
fellaheen.(57) Then as now the whole country, with the exception of a
fringe on the coast of the Mediterranean, was almost rainless, and owed
its immense fertility entirely to the annual inundation of the Nile,
which, regulated by an elaborate system of dams and canals, was
distributed over the fields, renewing the soil year by year with a fresh
deposit of mud washed down from the great equatorial lakes and the
mountains of Abyssinia. Hence the rise of the river has always been
watched by the inhabitants with the utmost anxiety; for if it either falls
short of or exceeds a certain height, dearth and famine are the inevitable
consequences.(58) The water begins to rise early in June, but it is not
until the latter half of July that it swells to a mighty tide. By the end
of September the inundation is at its greatest height. The country is now
submerged, and presents the appearance of a sea of turbid water, from
which the towns and villages, built on higher ground, rise like islands.
For about a month the flood remains nearly stationary, then sinks more and
more rapidly, till by December or January the river has returned to its
ordinary bed. With the approach of summer the level of the water continues
to fall. In the early days of June the Nile is reduced to half its
ordinary breadth; and Egypt, scorched by the sun, blasted by the wind that
has blown from the Sahara for many days, seems a mere continuation of the
desert. The trees are choked with a thick layer of grey dust. A few meagre
patches of vegetables, watered with difficulty, struggle painfully for
existence in the immediate neighbourhood of the villages. Some appearance
of verdure lingers beside the canals and in the hollows from which the
moisture has not wholly evaporated. The plain appears to pant in the
pitiless sunshine, bare, dusty, ash-coloured, cracked and seamed as far as
the eye can see with a network of fissures. From the middle of April till
the middle of June the land of Egypt is but half alive, waiting for the
new Nile.(59)

(M26) For countless ages this cycle of natural events has determined the
annual labours of the Egyptian husbandman. The first work of the
agricultural year is the cutting of the dams which have hitherto prevented
the swollen river from flooding the canals and the fields. This is done,
and the pent-up waters released on their beneficent mission, in the first
half of August.(60) In November, when the inundation has subsided, wheat,
barley, and sorghum are sown. The time of harvest varies with the
district, falling about a month later in the north than in the south. In
Upper or Southern Egypt barley is reaped at the beginning of March, wheat
at the beginning of April, and sorghum about the end of that month.(61)

(M27) It is natural to suppose that these various events of the
agricultural year were celebrated by the Egyptian farmer with some simple
religious rites designed to secure the blessing of the gods upon his
labours. These rustic ceremonies he would continue to perform year after
year at the same season, while the solemn festivals of the priests
continued to shift, with the shifting calendar, from summer through spring
to winter, and so backward through autumn to summer. The rites of the
husbandman were stable because they rested on direct observation of
nature: the rites of the priest were unstable because they were based on a
false calculation. Yet many of the priestly festivals may have been
nothing but the old rural festivals disguised in the course of ages by the
pomp of sacerdotalism and severed, by the error of the calendar, from
their roots in the natural cycle of the seasons.




§ 2. Rites of Irrigation.


(M28) These conjectures are confirmed by the little we know both of the
popular and of the official Egyptian religion. Thus we are told that the
Egyptians held a festival of Isis at the time when the Nile began to rise.
They believed that the goddess was then mourning for the lost Osiris, and
that the tears which dropped from her eyes swelled the impetuous tide of
the river.(62) Hence in Egyptian inscriptions Isis is spoken of as she
"who maketh the Nile to swell and overflow, who maketh the Nile to swell
in his season."(63) Similarly the Toradjas of Central Celebes imagine that
showers of rain are the tears shed by the compassionate gods in weeping
for somebody who is about to die; a shower in the morning is to them an
infallible omen of death.(64) However, an uneasy suspicion would seem to
have occurred to the Egyptians that perhaps after all the tears of the
goddess might not suffice of themselves to raise the water to the proper
level; so in the time of Rameses II. the king used on the first day of the
flood to throw into the Nile a written order commanding the river to do
its duty, and the submissive stream never failed to obey the royal
mandate.(65) Yet the ancient belief survives in a modified form to this
day. For the Nile, as we saw, begins to rise in June about the time of the
summer solstice, and the people still attribute its increased volume to a
miraculous drop which falls into the river on the night of the seventeenth
of the month. The charms and divinations which they practise on that
mystic night in order to ascertain the length of their own life and to rid
the houses of bugs may well date from a remote antiquity.(66) Now if
Osiris was in one of his aspects a god of the corn, nothing could be more
natural than that he should be mourned at midsummer. For by that time the
harvest was past, the fields were bare, the river ran low, life seemed to
be suspended, the corn-god was dead. At such a moment people who saw the
handiwork of divine beings in all the operations of nature might well
trace the swelling of the sacred stream to the tears shed by the goddess
at the death of the beneficent corn-god her husband.

(M29) And the sign of the rising waters on earth was accompanied by a sign
in heaven. For in the early days of Egyptian history, some three or four
thousand years before the beginning of our era, the splendid star of
Sirius, the brightest of all the fixed stars, appeared at dawn in the east
just before sunrise about the time of the summer solstice, when the Nile
begins to rise.(67) The Egyptians called it Sothis, and regarded it as the
star of Isis,(68) just as the Babylonians deemed the planet Venus the star
of Astarte. To both peoples apparently the brilliant luminary in the
morning sky seemed the goddess of life and love come to mourn her departed
lover or spouse and to wake him from the dead. Hence the rising of Sirius
marked the beginning of the sacred Egyptian year,(69) and was regularly
celebrated by a festival which did not shift with the shifting official
year.(70) The first day of the first month Thoth was theoretically
supposed to date from the heliacal rising of the bright star, and in all
probability it really did so when the official or civil year of three
hundred and sixty-five days was first instituted. But the miscalculation
which has been already explained(71) had the effect of making the star to
shift its place in the calendar by one day in four years. Thus if Sirius
rose on the first of Thoth in one year, it would rise on the second of
Thoth four years afterwards, on the third of Thoth eight years afterwards,
and so on until after the lapse of a Siriac or Sothic period of fourteen
hundred and sixty solar years the first of Thoth again coincided with the
heliacal rising of Sirius.(72) This observation of the gradual
displacement of the star in the calendar has been of the utmost importance
for the progress of astronomy, since it led the Egyptians directly to the
determination of the approximately true length of the solar year and thus
laid the basis of our modern calendar; for the Julian calendar, which we
owe to Caesar, was founded on the Egyptian theory, though not on the
Egyptian practice.(73) It was therefore a fortunate moment for the world
when some pious Egyptian, thousands of years ago, identified for the first
time the bright star of Sirius with his goddess; for the identification
induced his countrymen to regard the heavenly body with an attention which
they would never have paid to it if they had known it to be nothing but a
world vastly greater than our own and separated from it by an
inconceivable, if not immeasurable, abyss of space.

(M30) The cutting of the dams and the admission of the water into the
canals and fields is a great event in the Egyptian year. At Cairo the
operation generally takes place between the sixth and the sixteenth of
August, and till lately was attended by ceremonies which deserve to be
noticed, because they were probably handed down from antiquity. An ancient
canal, known by the name of the Khalij, formerly passed through the native
town of Cairo. Near its entrance the canal was crossed by a dam of earth,
very broad at the bottom and diminishing in breadth upwards, which used to
be constructed before or soon after the Nile began to rise. In front of
the dam, on the side of the river, was reared a truncated cone of earth
called the _'arooseh_ or "bride," on the top of which a little maize or
millet was generally sown. This "bride" was commonly washed down by the
rising tide a week or a fortnight before the cutting of the dam. Tradition
runs that the old custom was to deck a young virgin in gay apparel and
throw her into the river as a sacrifice to obtain a plentiful
inundation.(74) Certainly human sacrifices were offered for a similar
purpose by the Wajagga of German East Africa down to recent years. These
people irrigate their fields by means of skilfully constructed channels,
through which they conduct the water of the mountain brooks and rivers to
the thirsty land. They imagine that the spirits of their forefathers dwell
in the rocky basins of these rushing streams, and that they would resent
the withdrawal of the water to irrigate the fields if compensation were
not offered to them. The water-rate paid to them consisted of a child,
uncircumcised and of unblemished body, who was decked with ornaments and
bells and thrown into the river to drown, before they ventured to draw off
the water into the irrigation channel. Having thrown him in, his
executioners shewed a clean pair of heels, because they expected the river
to rise in flood at once on receipt of the water-rate.(75) In similar
circumstances the Njamus of British East Africa sacrifice a sheep before
they let the water of the stream flow into the ditch or artificial
channel. The fat, dung, and blood of the animal are sprinkled at the mouth
of the ditch and in the water; thereupon the dam is broken down and the
stream pours into the ditch. The sacrifice may only be offered by a man of
the Il Mayek clan, and for two days afterwards he wears the skin of the
beast tied round his head. No one may quarrel with this man while the
water is irrigating the crops, else the people believe that the water
would cease to flow in the ditch; more than that, if the men of the Il
Mayek clan were angry and sulked for ten days, the water would dry up
permanently for that season. Hence the Il Mayek clan enjoys great
consideration in the tribe, since the crops are thought to depend on their
good will and good offices. Ten elders assist at the sacrifice of the
sheep, though they may take no part in it. They must all be of a
particular age; and after the ceremony they may not cohabit with their
wives until harvest, and they are obliged to sleep at night in their
granaries. Curiously enough, too, while the water is irrigating the
fields, nobody may kill waterbuck, eland, oryx, zebra, rhinoceros, or
hippopotamus. Anybody caught red-handed in the act of breaking this
game-law would at once be cast out of the village.(76)

(M31) Whether the "bride" who used to figure at the ceremony of cutting
the dam in Cairo was ever a live woman or not, the intention of the
practice appears to have been to marry the river, conceived as a male
power, to his bride the corn-land, which was soon to be fertilized by his
water. The ceremony was therefore a charm to ensure the growth of the
crops. As such it probably dated, in one form or another, from ancient
times. Dense crowds assembled to witness the cutting of the dam. The
operation was performed before sunrise, and many people spent the
preceding night on the banks of the canal or in boats lit with lamps on
the river, while fireworks were displayed and guns discharged at frequent
intervals. Before sunrise a great number of workmen began to cut the dam,
and the task was accomplished about an hour before the sun appeared on the
horizon. When only a thin ridge of earth remained, a boat with an officer
on board was propelled against it, and breaking through the slight barrier
descended with the rush of water into the canal. The Governor of Cairo
flung a purse of gold into the boat as it passed. Formerly the custom was
to throw money into the canal. The populace used to dive after it, and
several lives were generally lost in the scramble.(77) This practice also
would seem to have been ancient, for Seneca tells us that at a place
called the Veins of the Nile, not far from Philae, the priests used to
cast money and offerings of gold into the river at a festival which
apparently took place at the rising of the water.(78) At Cairo the
time-honoured ceremony came to an end in 1897, when the old canal was
filled up. An electric tramway now runs over the spot where for countless
ages crowds of worshippers or holiday-makers had annually assembled to
witness the marriage of the Nile.(79)




§ 3. Rites of Sowing.


(M32) The next great operation of the agricultural year in Egypt is the
sowing of the seed in November, when the water of the inundation has
retreated from the fields. With the Egyptians, as with many peoples of
antiquity, the committing of the seed to the earth assumed the character
of a solemn and mournful rite. On this subject I will let Plutarch speak
for himself. "What," he asks, "are we to make of the gloomy, joyless, and
mournful sacrifices, if it is wrong either to omit the established rites
or to confuse and disturb our conceptions of the gods by absurd
suspicions? For the Greeks also perform many rites which resemble those of
the Egyptians and are observed about the same time. Thus at the festival
of the Thesmophoria in Athens women sit on the ground and fast. And the
Boeotians open the vaults of the Sorrowful One,(80) naming that festival
sorrowful because Demeter is sorrowing for the descent of the Maiden. The
month is the month of sowing about the setting of the Pleiades.(81) The
Egyptians call it Athyr, the Athenians Pyanepsion, the Boeotians the month
of Demeter. Theopompus informs us that the western peoples consider and
call the winter Cronus, the summer Aphrodite, and the spring Persephone,
and they believe that all things are brought into being by Cronus and
Aphrodite. The Phrygians imagine that the god sleeps in winter and wakes
in summer, and accordingly they celebrate with Bacchic rites the putting
him to bed in winter and his awakening in summer. The Paphlagonians allege
that he is bound fast and shut up in winter, but that he stirs and is set
free in spring. And the season furnishes a hint that the sadness is for
the hiding of those fruits of the earth which the ancients esteemed, not
indeed gods, but great and necessary gifts bestowed by the gods in order
that men might not lead the life of savages and of wild beasts. For it was
that time of year when they saw some of the fruits vanishing and falling
from the trees, while they sowed others grudgingly and with difficulty,
scraping the earth with their hands and huddling it up again, on the
uncertain chance that what they deposited in the ground would ever ripen
and come to maturity. Thus they did in many respects like those who bury
and mourn their dead. And just as we say that a purchaser of Plato's books
purchases Plato, or that an actor who plays the comedies of Menander plays
Menander, so the men of old did not hesitate to call the gifts and
products of the gods by the names of the gods themselves, thereby
honouring and glorifying the things on account of their utility. But in
after ages simple folk in their ignorance applied to the gods statements
which only held true of the fruits of the earth, and so they came not
merely to say but actually to believe that the growth and decay of plants,
on which they subsisted,(82) were the birth and the death of gods. Thus
they fell into absurd, immoral, and confused ways of thinking, though all
the while the absurdity of the fallacy was manifest. Hence Xenophanes of
Colophon declared that if the Egyptians deemed their gods divine they
should not weep for them, and that if they wept for them they should not
deem them divine. 'For it is ridiculous,' said he, 'to lament and pray
that the fruits would be good enough to grow and ripen again in order that
they may again be eaten and lamented.' But he was wrong, for though the
lamentations are for the fruits, the prayers are addressed to the gods, as
the causes and givers of them, that they would be pleased to make fresh
fruits to spring up instead of those that perish."(83)

(M33) In this interesting passage Plutarch expresses his belief that the
worship of the fruits of the earth was the result of a verbal
misapprehension or disease of language, as it has been called by a modern
school of mythologists, who explain the origin of myths in general on the
same easy principle of metaphors misunderstood. Primitive man, on
Plutarch's theory, firmly believed that the fruits of the earth on which
he subsisted were not themselves gods but merely the gifts of the gods,
who were the real givers of all good things. Yet at the same time men were
in the habit of bestowing on these divine products the names of their
divine creators, either out of gratitude or merely for the sake of
brevity, as when we say that a man has bought a Shakespeare or acted
Moliere, when we mean that he has bought the works of Shakespeare or acted
the plays of Moliere. This abbreviated mode of expression was
misunderstood in later times, and so people came to look upon the fruits
of the earth as themselves divine instead of as being the work of
divinities: in short, they mistook the creature for the creator. In like
manner Plutarch would explain the Egyptian worship of animals as reverence
done not so much to the beasts themselves as to the great god who displays
the divine handiwork in sentient organisms even more than in the most
beautiful and wonderful works of inanimate nature.(84)

(M34) The comparative study of religion has proved that these theories of
Plutarch are an inversion of the truth. Fetishism, or the view that the
fruits of the earth and things in general are divine or animated by
powerful spirits, is not, as Plutarch imagined, a late corruption of a
pure and primitive theism, which regarded the gods as the creators and
givers of all good things. On the contrary, fetishism is early and theism
is late in the history of mankind. In this respect Xenophanes, whom
Plutarch attempts to correct, displayed a much truer insight into the mind
of the savage. To weep crocodile tears over the animals and plants which
he kills and eats, and to pray them to come again in order that they may
be again eaten and again lamented--this may seem absurd to us, but it is
precisely what the savage does. And from his point of view the proceeding
is not at all absurd but perfectly rational and well calculated to answer
his ends. For he sincerely believes that animals and fruits are tenanted
by spirits who can harm him if they please, and who cannot but be put to
considerable inconvenience by that destruction of their bodies which is
unfortunately inseparable from the processes of mastication and digestion.
What more natural, therefore, than that the savage should offer excuses to
the beasts and the fruits for the painful necessity he is under of
consuming them, and that he should endeavour to alleviate their pangs by
soft words and an air of respectful sympathy, in order that they may bear
him no grudge, and may in due time come again to be again eaten and again
lamented? Judged by the standard of primitive manners the attitude of the
walrus to the oysters was strictly correct:--


    "_'__I weep for you,__'__ the Walrus said:_
      _'__I deeply sympathize.__'_
    _With sobs and tears he sorted out_
      _Those of the largest size,_
    _Holding his pocket-handkerchief_
      _Before his streaming eyes._"


(M35) Many examples of such hypocritical lamentations for animals, drawn
not from the fancy of a playful writer but from the facts of savage life,
could be cited.(85) Here I shall quote the general statement of a writer
on the Indians of British Columbia, because it covers the case of
vegetable as well as of animal food. After describing the respectful
welcome accorded by the Stlatlum Indians to the first "sock-eye" salmon
which they have caught in the season, he goes on: "The significance of
these ceremonies is easy to perceive when we remember the attitude of the
Indians towards nature generally, and recall their myths relating to the
salmon, and their coming to their rivers and streams. Nothing that the
Indian of this region eats is regarded by him as mere food and nothing
more. Not a single plant, animal, or fish, or other object upon which he
feeds, is looked upon in this light, or as something he has secured for
himself by his own wit and skill. He regards it rather as something which
has been voluntarily and compassionately placed in his hands by the
goodwill and consent of the 'spirit' of the object itself, or by the
intercession and magic of his culture-heroes; to be retained and used by
him only upon the fulfilment of certain conditions. These conditions
include respect and reverent care in the killing or plucking of the animal
or plant and proper treatment of the parts he has no use for, such as the
bones, blood, and offal; and the depositing of the same in some stream or
lake, so that the object may by that means renew its life and physical
form. The practices in connection with the killing of animals and the
gathering of plants and fruits all make this quite clear, and it is only
when we bear this attitude of the savage towards nature in mind that we
can hope to rightly understand the motives and purposes of many of his
strange customs and beliefs."(86)

(M36) We can now understand why among many peoples of antiquity, as
Plutarch tells us, the time of sowing was a time of sorrow. The laying of
the seed in the earth was a burial of the divine element, and it was
fitting that like a human burial it should be performed with gravity and
the semblance, if not the reality, of sorrow. Yet they sorrowed not
without hope, perhaps a sure and certain hope, that the seed which they
thus committed with sighs and tears to the ground would yet rise from the
dust and yield fruit a hundredfold to the reaper. "They that sow in tears
shall reap in joy. He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed,
shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with
him."(87)




§ 4. Rites of Harvest.


(M37) The Egyptian harvest, as we have seen, falls not in autumn but in
spring, in the months of March, April, and May. To the husbandman the time
of harvest, at least in a good year, must necessarily be a season of joy:
in bringing home his sheaves he is requited for his long and anxious
labours. Yet if the old Egyptian farmer felt a secret joy at reaping and
garnering the grain, it was essential that he should conceal the natural
emotion under an air of profound dejection. For was he not severing the
body of the corn-god with his sickle and trampling it to pieces under the
hoofs of his cattle on the threshing-floor?(88) Accordingly we are told
that it was an ancient custom of the Egyptian corn-reapers to beat their
breasts and lament over the first sheaf cut, while at the same time they
called upon Isis.(89) The invocation seems to have taken the form of a
melancholy chant, to which the Greeks gave the name of Maneros. Similar
plaintive strains were chanted by corn-reapers in Phoenicia and other
parts of Western Asia.(90) Probably all these doleful ditties were
lamentations for the corn-god killed by the sickles of the reapers. In
Egypt the slain deity was Osiris, and the name _Maneros_ applied to the
dirge appears to be derived from certain words meaning "Come to thy
house," which often occur in the lamentations for the dead god.(91)

(M38) Ceremonies of the same sort have been observed by other peoples,
probably for the same purpose. Thus we are told that among all vegetables
corn (_selu_), by which is apparently meant maize, holds the first place
in the household economy and the ceremonial observance of the Cherokee
Indians, who invoke it under the name of "the Old Woman" in allusion to a
myth that it sprang from the blood of an old woman killed by her
disobedient sons. "Much ceremony accompanied the planting and tending of
the crop. Seven grains, the sacred number, were put into each hill, and
these were not afterwards thinned out. After the last working of the crop,
the priest and an assistant--generally the owner of the field--went into the
field and built a small enclosure in the centre. Then entering it, they
seated themselves upon the ground, with heads bent down, and while the
assistant kept perfect silence the priest, with rattle in hand, sang songs
of invocation to the spirit of the corn. Soon, according to the orthodox
belief, a loud rustling would be heard outside, which they would know was
caused by the 'Old Woman' bringing the corn into the field, but neither
must look up until the song was finished. This ceremony was repeated on
four successive nights, after which no one entered the field for seven
other nights, when the priest himself went in, and, if all the sacred
regulations had been properly observed, was rewarded by finding young ears
upon the stalks. The corn ceremonies could be performed by the owner of
the field himself, provided he was willing to pay a sufficient fee to the
priest in order to learn the songs and ritual. Care was always taken to
keep a clean trail from the field to the house, so that the corn might be
encouraged to stay at home and not go wandering elsewhere. Most of these
customs have now fallen into disuse excepting among the old people, by
many of whom they are still religiously observed. Another curious
ceremony, of which even the memory is now almost forgotten, was enacted
after the first working of the corn, when the owner or priest stood in
succession at each of the four corners of the field and wept and wailed
loudly. Even the priests are now unable to give a reason for this
performance, which may have been a lament for the bloody death of Selu,"
the Old Woman of the Corn.(92) In these Cherokee practices the
lamentations and the invocations of the Old Woman of the Corn resemble the
ancient Egyptian customs of lamenting over the first corn cut and calling
upon Isis, herself probably in one of her aspects an Old Woman of the
Corn. Further, the Cherokee precaution of leaving a clear path from the
field to the house resembles the Egyptian invitation to Osiris, "Come to
thy house." So in the East Indies to this day people observe elaborate
ceremonies for the purpose of bringing back the Soul of the Rice from the
fields to the barn.(93) The Nandi of British East Africa perform a
ceremony in September when the eleusine grain is ripening. Every woman who
owns a plantation goes out with her daughters into the cornfields and
makes a bonfire of the branches and leaves of certain trees (the _Solanum
campylanthum_ and _Lantana salvifolia_). After that they pluck some of the
eleusine, and each of them puts one grain in her necklace, chews another
and rubs it on her forehead, throat, and breast. "No joy is shown by the
womenfolk on this occasion, and they sorrowfully cut a basketful of the
corn which they take home with them and place in the loft to dry."(94)

(M39) Just as the Egyptians lamented at cutting the corn, so the Karok
Indians of California lament at hewing the sacred wood for the fire in the
assembly-room. The wood must be cut from a tree on the top of the highest
hill. In lopping off the boughs the Indian weeps and sobs piteously,
shedding real tears, and at the top of the tree he leaves two branches and
a top-knot, resembling a man's head and outstretched arms. Having
descended from the tree, he binds the wood in a faggot and carries it back
to the assembly-room, blubbering all the way. If he is asked why he thus
weeps at cutting and fetching the sacred fuel, he will either give no
answer or say simply that he does it for luck.(95) We may suspect that his
real motive is to appease the wrath of the tree-spirit, many of whose
limbs he has amputated, though he took care to leave him two arms and a
head.

(M40) The conception of the corn-spirit as old and dead at harvest is very
clearly embodied in a custom observed by the Arabs of Moab. When the
harvesters have nearly finished their task and only a small corner of the
field remains to be reaped, the owner takes a handful of wheat tied up in
a sheaf. A hole is dug in the form of a grave, and two stones are set
upright, one at the head and the other at the foot, just as in an ordinary
burial. Then the sheaf of wheat is laid at the bottom of the grave, and
the sheikh pronounces these words, "The old man is dead." Earth is
afterwards thrown in to cover the sheaf, with a prayer, "May Allah bring
us back the wheat of the dead."(96)





CHAPTER IV. THE OFFICIAL FESTIVALS OF OSIRIS.




§ 1. The Festival at Sais.


(M41) Such, then, were the principal events of the farmer's calendar in
ancient Egypt, and such the simple religious rites by which he celebrated
them. But we have still to consider the Osirian festivals of the official
calendar, so far as these are described by Greek writers or recorded on
the monuments. In examining them it is necessary to bear in mind that on
account of the movable year of the old Egyptian calendar the true or
astronomical dates of the official festivals must have varied from year to
year, at least until the adoption of the fixed Alexandrian year in 30 B.C.
From that time onward, apparently, the dates of the festivals were
determined by the new calendar, and so ceased to rotate throughout the
length of the solar year. At all events Plutarch, writing about the end of
the first century, implies that they were then fixed, not movable; for
though he does not mention the Alexandrian calendar, he clearly dates the
festivals by it.(97) Moreover, the long festal calendar of Esne, an
important document of the Imperial age, is obviously based on the fixed
Alexandrian year; for it assigns the mark for New Year's Day to the day
which corresponds to the twenty-ninth of August, which was the first day
of the Alexandrian year, and its references to the rising of the Nile, the
position of the sun, and the operations of agriculture are all in harmony
with this supposition.(98) Thus we may take it as fairly certain that from
30 B.C. onwards the Egyptian festivals were stationary in the solar year.

(M42) Herodotus tells us that the grave of Osiris was at Sais in Lower
Egypt, and that there was a lake there upon which the sufferings of the
god were displayed as a mystery by night.(99) This commemoration of the
divine passion was held once a year: the people mourned and beat their
breasts at it to testify their sorrow for the death of the god; and an
image of a cow, made of gilt wood with a golden sun between its horns, was
carried out of the chamber in which it stood the rest of the year.(100)
The cow no doubt represented Isis herself, for cows were sacred to her,
and she was regularly depicted with the horns of a cow on her head,(101)
or even as a woman with the head of a cow.(102) It is probable that the
carrying out of her cow-shaped image symbolized the goddess searching for
the dead body of Osiris; for this was the native Egyptian interpretation
of a similar ceremony observed in Plutarch's time about the winter
solstice, when the gilt cow was carried seven times round the temple.(103)
A great feature of the festival was the nocturnal illumination. People
fastened rows of oil-lamps to the outside of their houses, and the lamps
burned all night long. The custom was not confined to Sais, but was
observed throughout the whole of Egypt.(104)

This universal illumination of the houses on one night of the year
suggests that the festival may have been a commemoration not merely of the
dead Osiris but of the dead in general, in other words, that it may have
been a night of All Souls.(105) For it is a widespread belief that the
souls of the dead revisit their old homes on one night of the year; and on
that solemn occasion people prepare for the reception of the ghosts by
laying out food for them to eat, and lighting lamps to guide them on their
dark road from and to the grave. The following instances will illustrate
the custom.




§ 2. Feasts of All Souls.


(M43) The Esquimaux of St. Michael and the lower Yukon River in Alaska
hold a festival of the dead every year at the end of November or the
beginning of December, as well as a greater festival at intervals of
several years. At these seasons, food, drink, and clothes are provided for
the returning ghosts in the _kashim_ or clubhouse of the village, which is
illuminated with oil lamps. Every man or woman who wishes to honour a dead
friend sets up a lamp on a stand in front of the place which the deceased
used to occupy in the clubhouse. These lamps, filled with seal oil, are
kept burning day and night till the festival is over. They are believed to
light the shades on their return to their old home and back again to the
land of the dead. If any one fails to put up a lamp in the clubhouse and
to keep it burning, the shade whom he or she desires to honour could not
find its way to the place and so would miss the feast. On the eve of the
festival the nearest male relation goes to the grave and summons the ghost
by planting there a small model of a seal spear or of a wooden dish,
according as the deceased was a man or a woman. The badges of the dead are
marked on these implements. When all is ready, the ghosts gather in the
fire-pit under the clubhouse, and ascending through the floor at the
proper moment take possession of the bodies of their namesakes, to whom
the offerings of food, drink, and clothing are made for the benefit of the
dead. Thus each shade obtains the supplies he needs in the other world.
The dead who have none to make offerings to them are believed to suffer
great destitution. Hence the Esquimaux fear to die without leaving behind
them some one who will sacrifice to their spirits, and childless people
generally adopt children lest their shades should be forgotten at the
festivals. When a person has been much disliked, his ghost is sometimes
purposely ignored, and that is deemed the severest punishment that could
be inflicted upon him. After the songs of invitation to the dead have been
sung, the givers of the feast take a small portion of food from every dish
and cast it down as an offering to the shades; then each pours a little
water on the floor so that it runs through the cracks. In this way they
believe that the spiritual essence of all the food and water is conveyed
to the souls. The remainder of the food is afterwards distributed among
the people present, who eat of it heartily. Then with songs and dances the
feast comes to an end, and the ghosts are dismissed to their own place.
Dances form a conspicuous feature of the great festival of the dead, which
is held every few years. The dancers dance not only in the clubhouse but
also at the graves and on the ice, if the deceased met their death by
drowning.(106)

The Indians of California used to observe annual ceremonies of mourning
for the dead,(107) at some of which the souls of the departed were
represented by living persons. Ten or more men would prepare themselves to
play the part of the ghosts by fasting for several days, especially by
abstaining from flesh. Disguised with paint and soot, adorned with
feathers and grasses, they danced and sang in the village or rushed about
in the forest by night with burning torches in their hands. After a time
they presented themselves to the relations of the deceased, who looked
upon these maskers as in very truth their departed friends and received
them accordingly with an outburst of lamentation, the old women scratching
their own faces and smiting their breasts with stones in token of
mourning. These masquerades were generally held in February. During their
continuance a strict fast was observed in the village.(108) Among the
Konkaus of California the dance of the dead is always held about the end
of August and marks their New Year's Day. They collect a large quantity of
food, clothing, baskets, ornaments, and whatever else the spirits are
supposed to need in the other world. These they hang on a semicircle of
boughs or small trees, cut and set in the ground leafless. In the centre
burns a great fire, and hard by are the graves. The ceremony begins at
evening and lasts till daybreak. As darkness falls, men and women sit on
the graves and wail for the dead of the year. Then they dance round the
fire with frenzied yells and whoops, casting from time to time the
offerings into the flames. All must be consumed before the first faint
streaks of dawn glimmer in the East.(109) The Choctaws used to have a
great respect for their dead. They did not bury their bodies but laid them
on biers made of bark and supported by forked sticks about fifteen feet
high. When the worms had consumed the flesh, the skeleton was dismembered,
any remains of muscles and sinews were buried, and the bones were
deposited in a box, the skull being reddened with ochre. The box
containing the bones was then carried to the common burial ground. In the
early days of November the tribe celebrated a great festival which they
called the Festival of the Dead or of the Souls; every family then
gathered in the common burial ground, and there with weeping and
lamentation visited the boxes which contained the mouldering relics of
their dead. On returning from the graveyard they held a great banquet,
which ended the festival.(110) Some of the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico
"believe that on a certain day (in August, I think) the dead rise from
their graves and flit about the neighbouring hills, and on that day all
who have lost friends carry out quantities of corn, bread, meat, and such
other good things of this life as they can obtain, and place them in the
haunts frequented by the dead, in order that the departed spirits may once
more enjoy the comforts of this nether world. They have been encouraged in
this belief by the priests, who were in the habit of sending out and
appropriating to themselves all these things, and then making the poor
simple Indians believe that the dead had eaten them."(111)

(M44) The Miztecs of Mexico believed that the souls of the dead came back
in the twelfth month of every year, which corresponded to our November. On
this day of All Souls the houses were decked out to welcome the spirits.
Jars of food and drink were set on a table in the principal room, and the
family went forth with torches to meet the ghosts and invite them to
enter. Then returning themselves to the house they knelt around the table,
and with eyes bent on the ground prayed the souls to accept of the
offerings and to procure the blessings of the gods upon the family. Thus
they remained on bended knees and with downcast eyes till the morning, not
daring to look at the table lest they should offend the spirits by spying
on them at their meal. With the first beams of the sun they rose, glad at
heart. The jars of food which had been presented to the dead were given to
the poor or deposited in a secret place.(112) The Indians of Santiago
Tepehuacan believe that the souls of their dead return to them on the
night of the eighteenth of October, the festival of St. Luke, and they
sweep the roads in order that the ghosts may find them clean on their
passage.(113)

(M45) Again, the natives of Sumba, an East Indian island, celebrate a New
Year's festival, which is at the same time a festival of the dead. The
graves are in the middle of the village, and at a given moment all the
people repair to them and raise a loud weeping and wailing. Then after
indulging for a short time in the national pastimes they disperse to their
houses, and every family calls upon its dead to come back. The ghosts are
believed to hear and accept the invitation. Accordingly betel and areca
nuts are set out for them. Victims, too, are sacrificed in front of every
house, and their hearts and livers are offered with rice to the dead.
After a decent interval these portions are distributed amongst the living,
who consume them and banquet gaily on flesh and rice, a rare event in
their frugal lives. Then they play, dance, and sing to their heart's
content, and the festival which began so lugubriously ends by being the
merriest of the year. A little before daybreak the invisible guests take
their departure. All the people turn out of their houses to escort them a
little way. Holding in one hand the half of a coco-nut, which contains a
small packet of provisions for the dead, and in the other hand a piece of
smouldering wood, they march in procession, singing a drawling song to the
accompaniment of a gong and waving the lighted brands in time to the
music. So they move through the darkness till with the last words of the
song they throw away the coco-nuts and the brands in the direction of the
spirit-land, leaving the ghosts to wend their way thither, while they
themselves return to the village.(114)

(M46) In Kiriwina, one of the Trobriand Islands, to the east of New
Guinea, the spirits of the ancestors are believed to revisit their native
village in a body once a year after the harvest has been got in. At this
time the men perform special dances, the people openly display their
valuables, spread out on platforms, and great feasts are made for the
spirits. On a certain night, when the moon is at the full, all the people
raise a great shout and so drive away the spirits to the spirit land.(115)
The Sea Dyaks of Borneo celebrate a great festival in honour of the dead
at irregular intervals, it may be one or more years after the death of a
particular person. All who have died since the last feast was held, and
have not yet been honoured by such a celebration, are remembered at this
time; hence the number of persons commemorated may be great, especially if
many years have elapsed since the last commemoration service. The
preparations last many weeks: food and drink and all other necessaries are
stored in plenty, and the whole neighbourhood for miles round is invited
to attend. On the eve of the feast the women take bamboo splints and
fashion out of them little models of various useful articles, and these
models are hung over the graves for the use of the dead in the other
world. If the feast is held in honour of a man, the things manufactured in
his behoof will take the form of a bamboo gun, a shield, a war-cap, and so
on; if it is a woman who is commemorated, little models of a loom, a
fish-basket, a winnowing-fan and such like things will be provided for her
spirit; and if it is a child for whom the rite is performed, toys of
various kinds will be made ready for the childish ghost. Finally, to stay
the appetite of ghosts who may be too sharp-set to wait for the formal
banquet in the house, a supply of victuals is very considerately placed
outside the house on which the hungry spirits may fall to without delay.
The dead arrive in a boat from the other world; for living Dyaks generally
travel by river, from which it necessarily follows that Dyak ghosts do so
likewise. The ship in which the ghostly visitors voyage to the land of the
living is not much to look at, being in appearance nothing but a tiny boat
made out of a bamboo which has been used to cook rice. Even this is not
set floating on the river but is simply thrown away under the house. Yet
through the incantations uttered by the professional wailing-woman the
bark is wafted away to the spirit world and is there converted into a
large war-canoe. Gladly the ghosts embark and sail away as soon as the
final summons comes. It always comes in the evening, for it is then that
the wailer begins to croon her mournful ditties; but the way is so long
that the spirits do not arrive in the house till the day is breaking. To
refresh them after their weary journey a bamboo full of rice-spirit awaits
them; and this they partake of by deputy, for a brave old man, who does
not fear the face of ghosts, quaffs the beverage in their stead amid the
joyful shouts of the spectators. On the morning after the feast the living
pay the last offices of respect to the dead. Monuments made of ironwood,
the little bamboo articles, and food of all kinds are set upon the graves.
In consideration of these gifts the ghosts now relinquish all claims on
their surviving relatives, and henceforth earn their own living by the
sweat of their brow. Before they take their final departure they come to
eat and drink in the house for the last time.(116)

(M47) Thus the Dyak festival of the dead is not an annual welcome accorded
to all the souls of ancestors; it is a propitiatory ceremony designed to
secure once for all the eternal welfare of the recently departed, or at
least to prevent their ghosts from returning to infest and importune the
living. The same is perhaps the intention of the "soul departure" (_Kathi
Kasham_) festival which the Tangkul Nagas of Manipur, in Assam, celebrate
every year about the end of January. At this great feast the dead are
represented by living men, chosen on the ground of their likeness to the
departed, who are decked with ornaments and treated as if they were in
truth the deceased persons come to life again. In that character they
dance together in the large open space of the village, they are fed by the
female relations, and they go from house to house, receiving presents of
cloth. The festival lasts ten days, but the great day is the ninth. Huge
torches of pinewood are made ready to be used that evening when darkness
has fallen. The time of departure of the dead is at hand. Their living
representatives are treated to a last meal in the houses, and they
distribute farewell presents to the sorrowing kinsfolk, who have come to
bid them good-bye. When the sun has set, a procession is formed. At the
head of it march men holding aloft the flaring, sputtering torches. Then
follow the elders armed and in martial array, and behind them stalk the
representatives of the dead, with the relations of the departed crowding
and trooping about them. Slowly and mournfully the sad procession moves,
with loud lamentations, through the darkness to a spot at the north end of
the village which is overshadowed by a great tree. The light of the
torches is to guide the souls of the dead to their place of rest; the
warlike array of the elders is to guard them from the perils and dangers
of the way. At the village boundary the procession stops and the
torch-bearers throw down their torches. At the same moment the spirits of
the dead are believed to pass into the dying flambeaux and in that guise
to depart to the far country. There is therefore no further need for their
living representatives, who are accordingly stripped of all their finery
on the spot. When the people return home, each family is careful to light
a pine torch and set it burning on a stone in the house just inside the
front door; this they do as a precaution to prevent their own souls from
following the spirits of the dead to the other world. The expense of thus
despatching the dead to their long home is very great; when the head of a
family dies, debts may be incurred and rice-fields and houses sold to
defray the cost of carriage. Thus the living impoverish themselves in
order to enrich the dead.(117)

(M48) The Oraons or Uraons of Bengal feast their dead every year on a day
in January. This ceremony is called the Great Marriage, because by it the
bones of the deceased are believed to be mysteriously reunited to each
other. The Oraons treat the bones of the dead differently according to the
dates of their death in the agricultural year. The bones of those who died
before the seeds have sprouted in the fields are burnt, and the few
charred bones which have not been reduced to ashes are gathered in an
earthen pot. With the bones in the pot are placed offerings of rice,
native gin, and money, and then they carry the urn to the river, where the
bones of their forefathers repose. But the bones of all who die after the
seeds have sprung up and before the end of harvest may not be taken to the
river, because the people believe that were that to be done the crops
would suffer. These bones are therefore put away in a pot under a stone
near the house till the harvest is over. Then on the appointed day in
January they are all collected. A banquet is given in honour of the dead,
and then both men and women form a procession to accompany the bones to
their last resting-place in the sands of the river. But first the relics
of mortality are carried from house to house in the village, and each
family pours rice and gin into the urn which contains the bones of its
dead. Then the procession sets out for the river, men and women dancing,
singing, beating drums, and weeping, while the earthen pots containing the
bones are passed from hand to hand and dance with the jigging steps of the
dancers. When they are yet some way from the spot, the bearers of the urns
run forward and bury them in the sand of the river. When the rest come up,
they all bathe and the Great Marriage is over.(118)

(M49) In the Bilaspore district of the Central Provinces, India, "the
festival known as the Fortnight of the Manes--_Pitr Pak_--occurs about
September. It is believed that during this fortnight it is the practice of
all the departed to come and visit their relatives. The homes are
therefore cleaned, and the spaces in front of the house are plastered and
painted in order to be pleasing to those who are expected. It is believed
that the departed will return on the very date on which they went away. A
father who left on the fourth, be it the fourth of the dark half or the
light half of the moon, will return to visit his family on the fourth of
the Fortnight of the Manes. On that day cakes are prepared, and with
certain ceremony these are offered to the unseen hovering spirit. Their
implicit belief is that the spirit will partake of the essence of the
food, and that which remains--the material portion--may be eaten by members
of the family. The souls of women, it is said, will all come on the ninth
of the fortnight. On the thirteenth come those who have met with a violent
death and who lost their lives by a fall, by snake-bite, or any other
unusual cause. During the Fortnight of the Manes a woman is not supposed
to put on new bangles and a man is not permitted to shave. In short, this
is a season of sad remembrances, an annual festival for the
departed."(119)

(M50) The Bghais, a Karen tribe of Burma, hold an annual feast for the
dead at the new moon which falls near the end of August or the beginning
of September. All the villagers who have lost relatives within the last
three years take part in it. Food and drink are set out on tables for the
ghosts, and new clothes for them are hung up in the room. All being ready,
the people beat gongs and begin to weep. Each one calls upon the relation
whom he has lost to come and eat. When the dead are thought to have
arrived, the living address them, saying, "You have come to me, you have
returned to me. It has been raining hard, and you must be wet. Dress
yourselves, clothe yourselves with these new garments, and all the
companions that are with you. Eat betel together with all that accompany
you, all your friends and associates, and the long dead. Call them all to
eat and drink." The ghosts having finished their repast, the people dry
their tears and sit down to eat what is left. More food is then prepared
and put into a basket, and at cock-crow next morning the contents of the
basket are thrown out of the house, while the living weep and call upon
their dead as before.(120) The Hkamies, a hill tribe of North Aracan, hold
an important festival every year in honour of departed spirits. It falls
after harvest and is called "the opening of the house of the dead." When a
person dies and has been burnt, the ashes are collected and placed in a
small house in the forest together with his spear or gun, which has first
been broken. These little huts are generally arranged in groups near a
village, and are sometimes large enough to be mistaken for one. After
harvest all the relations of the deceased cook various kinds of food and
take them with pots of liquor distilled from rice to the village of the
dead. There they open the doors of the houses, and having placed the food
and drink inside they shut them again. After that they weep, eat, drink,
and return home.(121)

(M51) The great festival of the dead in Cambodia takes place on the last
day of the month Phatrabot (September-October), but ever since the moon
began to wane everybody has been busy preparing for it. In every house
cakes and sweetmeats are set out, candles burn, incense sticks smoke, and
the whole is offered to the ancestral shades with an invocation which is
thrice repeated: "O all you our ancestors who are departed, deign to come
and eat what we have prepared for you, and to bless your posterity and
make it happy." Fifteen days afterwards many little boats are made of bark
and filled with rice, cakes, small coins, smoking incense sticks, and
lighted candles. At evening these are set floating on the river, and the
souls of the dead embark in them to return to their own place. The living
now bid them farewell. "Go to the lands," they say, "go to the fields you
inhabit, to the mountains, under the stones which are your abodes. Go
away! return! In due time your sons and your grandsons will think of you.
Then you will return, you will return, you will return." The river is now
covered with twinkling points of fire. But the current soon bears them
away, and as they vanish one by one in the darkness the souls depart with
them to the far country.(122) In Tonquin, as in Sumba, the dead revisit
their kinsfolk and their old homes at the New Year. From the hour of
midnight, when the New Year begins, no one dares to shut the door of his
house for fear of excluding the ghosts, who begin to arrive at that time.
Preparations have been made to welcome and refresh them after their long
journey. Beds and mats are ready for their weary bodies to repose upon,
water to wash their dusty feet, slippers to comfort them, and canes to
support their feeble steps. Candles burn on the domestic altar, and
pastilles diffuse a fragrant odour. The people bow before the unseen
visitors and beseech them to remember and bless their descendants in the
coming year. Having discharged this pious duty they abstain from sweeping
the houses for three days lest the dust should incommode the ghosts.(123)

(M52) In Annam one of the most important festivals of the year is the
festival of Tet, which falls on the first three days of the New Year. It
is devoted to the worship of ancestors. Everybody, even the poorest, must
provide a good meal for the souls of his dead at this time and must
himself eat and drink heartily. Some families, in order to discharge this
pious duty, run into debt for the whole year. In the houses everything is
put in order, washed, and scoured for the reception of the dear and
distinguished guests. A tall bamboo pole is set up in the front of every
house and allowed to stand there for seven days. A small basket containing
areca, betel, and leaves of gilt paper is fastened to the pole. The
erection of the pole is a sacred rite which no family omits to perform,
though why they do so few people can say. Some, however, allege that the
posts are intended to guide the ancestral spirits to their old homes. The
ceremony of the reception of the shades takes place at nightfall on the
last day of the year. The house of the head of the family is then decked
with flowers, and in the room which serves as a domestic chapel the altar
of the ancestors is surrounded with flowers, among which the lotus, the
emblem of immortality, is most conspicuous. On a table are set red
candles, perfumes, incense, sandal-wood, and plates full of bananas,
oranges, and other fruits. The relations crouch before the altar, and
kneeling at the foot of it the head of the house invokes the name of the
family which he represents. Then in solemn tones he recites an
incantation, mentioning the names of his most illustrious ancestors and
marking time with the strokes of a hammer upon a gong, while crackers are
exploded outside the room. After that, he implores the ancestral shades to
protect their descendants and invites them to a repast, which is spread
for them on a table. Round this table he walks, serving the invisible
guests with his own hands. He distributes to them smoking balls of rice in
little china saucers, and pours tea or spirits into each little cup, while
he murmurs words of invitation and compliment. When the ghosts have eaten
and drunk their fill, the head of the family returns to the altar and
salutes them for the last time. Finally, he takes leaves of yellow paper,
covered with gold and silver spangles, and throws them into a brazier
placed at the foot of the ancestral tablets. These papers represent
imaginary bars of gold and silver which the living send to the dead.
Cardboard models of houses, furniture, jewels, clothes, of everything in
short that the ghosts can need in the other world, are despatched to them
in like manner in the flames. Then the family sits down to table and
feasts on the remains of the ghostly banquet.(124)

(M53) But in Annam it is not merely the spirits of ancestors who are thus
feasted and supplied with all the necessaries of life. The poor ghosts of
those who died without leaving descendants or whose bodies were left
unburied are not forgotten by the pious Annamites. But these spirits come
round at a different time of year from the others. The seventh month of
the year is set apart for expiatory sacrifices destined to benefit these
unhappy beings, and that is why in Annam nobody should marry or be
betrothed in that month. The great day of the month is the fifteenth,
which is called the Festival of the Souls. On that day the ghosts in
question are set free by the lord of the underworld, and they come
prowling about among the living. They are exceedingly dangerous,
especially to children. Hence in order to appease their wrath and prevent
them from entering the houses every family takes care to put out offerings
for them in the street. Before every house on that night you may see
candles lighted, paper garments of many colours, paper hats, paper boots,
paper furniture, ingots of gold and silver paper, all hanging in tempting
array from a string, while plates of food and cups of tea and rice-spirit
stand ready for the use of hungry and thirsty souls. The theory is that
the ghosts will be so busy consuming the victuals, appropriating the
deceitful riches, and trying on the paper coats, hats, and boots that they
will have neither the leisure nor the inclination to intrude upon the
domestic circle indoors. At seven o'clock in the evening fire is put to
the offerings, and the paper wardrobe, furniture, and money soon vanish
crackling in the flames. At the same moment, peeping in at a door or
window, you may see the domestic ancestral altar brilliantly illuminated.
As for the food, it is supposed to be thrown on the fire or on the ground
for the use of the ghosts, but practically it is eaten by vagabonds and
beggars, who scuffle for the booty.(125)

(M54) In Cochinchina the ancestral spirits are similarly propitiated and
fed on the first day of the New Year. The tablets which represent them are
placed on the domestic altar, and the family prostrate themselves before
these emblems of the departed. The head of the family lights sticks of
incense on the altar and prays the shades of his forefathers to accept the
offerings and be favourable to their descendants. With great gravity he
waits upon the ghosts, passing dishes of food before the ancestral tablets
and pouring out wine and tea to slake the thirst of the spirits. When the
dead are supposed to be satisfied with the shadowy essence of the food,
the living partake of its gross material substance.(126) In Siam and Japan
also the souls of the dead revisit their families for three days in every
year, and the lamps which the Japanese kindle in multitudes on that
occasion to light the spirits on their way have procured for the festival
the name of the Feast of Lanterns. It is to be observed that in Siam, as
in Tonquin and Sumba, the return of the ghosts takes place at the New
Year.(127)

(M55) The Chewsurs of the Caucasus believe that the souls of the departed
revisit their old homes on the Saturday night of the second week in Lent.
This gathering of the dead is called the "Assembly of Souls." The people
spare no expense to treat the unseen guests handsomely. Beer is brewed and
loaves of various shapes baked specially for the occasion.(128) The
Armenians celebrate the memory of the dead on many days of the year,
burning incense and lighting tapers in their honour. One of their customs
is to keep a "light of the dead" burning all night in the house in order
that the ghosts may be able to enter. For if the spirits find the house
dark, they spit down the chimney and depart, cursing the churlish
inmates.(129)

(M56) Early in April every year the Dahomans of West Africa "set a table,
as they term it, and invite friends to eat with the deceased relatives,
whose spirits are supposed to move round and partake of the good things of
this life. Even my interpreter, Madi-Ki Lemon, who pretends to despise the
belief in fetish, sets a table to his ancestors, and will tell you that
his grand- or great-grandfather, Corporal Lemon, makes a meal on this
occasion which will last him till the next annual feast."(130) The Barea
and apparently the Kunama, two heathen tribes who lead a settled
agricultural life to the north of Abyssinia, celebrate every year a
festival in the month of November. It is a festival of thanksgiving for
the completion of the harvest, and at the same time a commemoration and
propitiation of the dead. Every house prepares much beer for the occasion,
and a small pot of beer is set out for each deceased member of the
household. After standing for two days in the house the beer which was
devoted to the dead is drunk by the living. At these festivals all the
people of a district meet in a special place, and there pass the time in
games and dances. Among the Barea the festive gatherings are held in a
sacred grove. We are told that "he who owes another a drubbing on this day
can pay his debt with impunity; for it is a day of peace when all feuds
are in abeyance." Wild honey may not be gathered till the festival has
been held.(131) Apparently the festival is a sort of Saturnalia, such as
is celebrated elsewhere at the end of harvest.(132) At that season there
is food and to spare for the dead as well as the living.

(M57) Among peoples of the Aryan stock, so far back as we can trace their
history, the worship and propitiation of the dead seem to have formed a
principal element of the popular religion;(133) and like so many other
races they appear to have believed that once a year the souls of their
departed kinsfolk revisited their old homes and expected to be refreshed
with abundance of good cheer by their surviving relations. This belief
gave rise to the custom of celebrating an annual Feast of All Souls, which
has come down to us from a dateless antiquity and is still observed year
by year, with rites of primitive simplicity, in some parts of Europe. Such
a festival was held every year in spring by the old Iranians. The
celebration fell at the end of the year and lasted ten days, namely the
last five days of the last month and the five following supplementary
days, which were regularly inserted to make up a year of three hundred and
sixty-five days; for the old Iranian, like the old Egyptian, year was a
vague year of twelve months of thirty days each, with five supplementary
days added at the end for the sake of bringing it into apparent, though
not real, harmony with the sun's annual course in the sky. According to
one calculation the ten days of the festival corresponded to the last days
of February, but according to another they fell in March; in later ages
the Parsees assigned them to the time of the spring equinox. The name of
the festival was Hamaspathmaedaya.(134) From a passage in the
_Zend-Avesta_, the ancient sacred book of the Iranians, we learn that on
the ten nights of the festival the souls of the dead (the Fravashis) were
believed to go about the village asking the people to do them reverence,
to pray to them, to meditate on them, and to furnish them with meat and
clothes, while at the same time they promised that blessings should rest
on the pious householder who complied with their request.(135) The Arab
geographer Albiruni, who flourished about the year one thousand of our
era, tells us that among the Persians of his time the last five days of
the month Aban were called Farwardajan. "During this time," he says,
"people put food in the halls of the dead and drink on the roofs of the
houses, believing that the spirits of their dead during these days come
out from the places of their reward or their punishment, that they go to
the dishes laid out for them, imbibe their strength and suck their taste.
They fumigate their houses with juniper, that the dead may enjoy its
smell. The spirits of the pious men dwell among their families, children,
and relations, and occupy themselves with their affairs, although
invisible to them." He adds that there was a controversy among the
Persians as to the date of this festival of the dead, some maintaining
that the five days during which it lasted were the last five days of the
month Aban, whereas others held that they were the five supplementary days
which were inserted between the months Aban and Adhar. The dispute, he
continues, was settled by the adoption of all ten days for the celebration
of the feast.(136)

(M58) Similar beliefs as to the annual return of the dead survive to this
day in many parts of Europe and find expression in similar customs. The
day of the dead or of All Souls, as we call it, is commonly the second of
November. Thus in Lower Brittany the souls of the departed come to visit
the living on the eve of that day. After vespers are over, the priests and
choir walk in procession, "the procession of the charnel-house," chanting
a weird dirge in the Breton tongue. Then the people go home, gather round
the fire, and talk of the departed. The housewife covers the kitchen table
with a white cloth, sets out cider, curds, and hot pancakes on it, and
retires with the family to rest. The fire on the hearth is kept up by a
huge log known as "the log of the dead" (_kef ann Anaon_). Soon doleful
voices outside in the darkness break the stillness of night. It is the
"singers of death" who go about the streets waking the sleepers by a wild
and melancholy song, in which they remind the living in their comfortable
beds to pray for the poor souls in pain. All that night the dead warm
themselves at the hearth and feast on the viands prepared for them.
Sometimes the awe-struck listeners hear the stools creaking in the
kitchen, or the dead leaves outside rustling under the ghostly
footsteps.(137) In the Vosges Mountains on All Souls' Eve the solemn sound
of the church bells invites good Christians to pray for the repose of the
dead. While the bells are ringing, it is customary in some families to
uncover the beds and open the windows, doubtless in order to let the poor
souls enter and rest. No one that evening would dare to remain deaf to the
appeal of the bells. The prayers are prolonged to a late hour of the
night. When the last _De profundis_ has been uttered, the head of the
family gently covers up the beds, sprinkles them with holy water, and
shuts the windows. In some villages fire is kept up on the hearth and a
basket of nuts is placed beside it for the use of the ghosts.(138) Again,
in some parts of Saintonge and Aunis a Candlemas candle used to be lit
before the domestic crucifix on All Souls' Day at the very hour when the
last member of the family departed this life; and some people, just as in
Tonquin, refrained from sweeping the house that day lest they should
thereby disturb the ghostly visitors.(139)

(M59) In Bruges, Dinant, and other towns of Belgium holy candles burn all
night in the houses on the Eve of All Souls, and the bells toll till
midnight, or even till morning. People, too, often set lighted candles on
the graves. At Scherpenheuvel the houses are illuminated, and the people
walk in procession carrying lighted candles in their hands. A very common
custom in Belgium is to eat "soul-cakes" or "soul-bread" on the eve or the
day of All Souls. The eating of them is believed to benefit the dead in
some way. Perhaps originally, as among the Esquimaux of Alaska to this
day,(140) the ghosts were thought to enter into the bodies of their
relatives and so to share the victuals which the survivors consumed.
Similarly at festivals in honour of the dead in Northern India it is
customary to feed Brahmans, and the food which these holy men partake of
is believed to pass to the deceased and to refresh their languid
spirits.(141) The same idea of eating and drinking by proxy may perhaps
partly explain many other funeral feasts. Be that as it may, at Dixmude
and elsewhere in Belgium they say that you deliver a soul from Purgatory
for every cake you eat. At Antwerp they give a local colour to the
soul-cakes by baking them with plenty of saffron, the deep yellow tinge
being suggestive of the flames of Purgatory. People in Antwerp at the same
season are careful not to slam doors or windows for fear of hurting the
ghosts.(142)

(M60) In Lechrain, a district of Southern Bavaria which extends along the
valley of the Lech from its source to near the point where the river flows
into the Danube, the two festivals of All Saints and All Souls, on the
first and second of November, have significantly fused in popular usage
into a single festival of the dead. In fact, the people pay little or no
heed to the saints and give all their thoughts to the souls of their
departed kinsfolk. The Feast of All Souls begins immediately after vespers
on All Saints' Day. Even on the eve of All Saints' Day, that is, on the
thirty-first of October, which we call Hallowe'en, the graveyard is
cleaned and every grave adorned. The decoration consists in weeding the
mounds, sprinkling a layer of charcoal on the bare earth, and marking out
patterns on it in red service-berries. The marigold, too, is still in
bloom at that season in cottage gardens, and garlands of its orange
blooms, mingled with other late flowers left by the departing summer, are
twined about the grey mossgrown tombstones. The basin of holy water is
filled with fresh water and a branch of box-wood put into it; for box-wood
in the popular mind is associated with death and the dead. On the eve of
All Souls' Day the people begin to visit the graves and to offer the
soul-cakes to the hungry souls. Next morning, before eight o'clock,
commence the vigil, the requiem, and the solemn visitation of the graves.
On that day every household offers a plate of meal, oats, and spelt on a
side-altar in the church; while in the middle of the sacred edifice a bier
is set, covered with a pall, and surrounded by lighted tapers and vessels
of holy water. The tapers burnt on that day and indeed generally in
services for the departed are red. In the evening people go, whenever they
can do so, to their native village, where their dear ones lie in the
churchyard; and there at the graves they pray for the poor souls, and
leave an offering of soul-cakes also on a side-altar in the church. The
soul-cakes are baked of dough in the shape of a coil of hair and are made
of all sizes up to three feet long. They form a perquisite of the
sexton.(143)

(M61) The custom of baking soul-cakes, sometimes called simply "souls," on
All Souls' Day is widespread in Southern Germany and Austria;(144)
everywhere, we may assume, the cakes were originally intended for the
benefit of the hungry dead, though they are often eaten by the living. In
the Upper Palatinate people throw food into the fire on All Souls' Day for
the poor souls, set lights on the table for them, and pray on bended knees
for their repose. On the graves, too, lights are kindled, vessels of holy
water placed, and food deposited for the refreshment of the souls. All
over the Upper Palatinate on All Souls' Day it is also customary to bake
special cakes of fine bread and distribute them to the poor,(145) who eat
them perhaps as the deputies of the dead.

(M62) The Germans of Bohemia observe All Souls' Day with much solemnity.
Each family celebrates the memory of its dead. On the eve of the day it is
customary to eat cakes and to drink cold milk for the purpose of cooling
the poor souls who are roasting in purgatory; from which it appears that
spirits feel the soothing effect of victuals consumed vicariously by their
friends on earth. The ringing of the church bells to prayer on that
evening is believed to be the signal at which the ghosts, released from
the infernal gaol, come trooping to the old familiar fire-side, there to
rest from their pangs for a single night. So in many places people fill a
lamp with butter, light it, and set it on the hearth, that with the butter
the poor ghosts may anoint the burns they have received from the
sulphureous and tormenting flames of purgatory. Next morning the chime of
the church bells, ringing to early mass, is the knell that bids the souls
return to their place of pain; but such as have completed their penance
take flight to heaven. So on the eve of All Saints' Day each family
gathers in the parlour or the kitchen, speaks softly of those they have
lost, recalls what they said and did in life, and prays for the repose of
their souls. While the prayer is being said, the children kindle little
wax lights which have been specially bought for the purpose that day. Next
morning the families go to church, where mass is celebrated for the dead;
then they wend their way to the churchyard, where they deck the graves of
their kinsfolk with flowers and wreaths and set little lights upon them.
This custom of illumining the graves and decking them with flowers on the
Eve or Day of All Souls is common all over Bohemia; it is observed in
Prague as well as in the country, by Czechs as well as by Germans. In some
Czech villages four-cornered cakes of a special sort, baked of white
wheaten meal with milk, are eaten on All Souls' Day or given to beggars
that they may pray for the dead.(146) Among the Germans of Western Bohemia
poor children go from house to house on All Souls' Day, begging for
soul-cakes, and when they receive them they pray God to bless all poor
souls. In the southern districts every farmer used to grind a great
quantity of corn against the day and to bake it into five or six hundred
little black soul-cakes which he gave away to the poor who came begging
for them.(147)

(M63) All Souls' Day is celebrated with similar rites by the Germans of
Moravia. "The festival of the farewell to summer," says a German writer on
this subject, "was held by our heathen forefathers in the beginning of
November, and with the memory of the departed summer they united the
memory of the departed souls, and this last has survived in the Feast of
All Souls, which is everywhere observed with great piety. On the evening
of All Souls the relations of the departed assemble in the churchyards and
adorn the graves of their dear ones with flowers and lights, while the
children kindle little wax tapers, which have been bought for them, to
light the 'poor souls.' According to the popular belief, the dead go in
procession to the church about midnight, and any stout-hearted young man
can there see all the living men who will die within the year."(148)

(M64) In the Tyrol the beliefs and customs are similar. There, too,
"soul-lights," that is, lamps filled with lard or butter are lighted and
placed on the hearth on All Souls' Eve in order that poor souls, escaped
from the fires of purgatory, may smear the melted grease on their burns
and so alleviate their pangs. Some people also leave milk and dough-nuts
for them on the table all night. The graves also are illuminated with wax
candles and decked with such a profusion of flowers that you might think
it was springtime.(149) In the Italian Tyrol it is customary to give bread
or money to the poor on All Souls' Day; in the Val di Ledro children
threaten to dirty the doors of houses if they do not get the usual dole.
Some rich people treat the poor to bean-soup on that day. Others put
pitchers full of water in the kitchen on All Souls' night that the poor
souls may slake their thirst.(150) In Baden it is still customary to deck
the graves with flowers and lights on All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day.
The lights are sometimes kindled in hollow turnips, on the sides of which
inscriptions are carved and shine out in the darkness. If any child steals
a turnip-lantern or anything else from a grave, the indignant ghost who
has been robbed appears to the thief the same night and reclaims his
stolen property. A relic of the old custom of feeding the dead survives in
the practice of giving soul-cakes to godchildren.(151)

(M65) The Letts used to entertain and feed the souls of the dead for four
weeks from Michaelmas (September 29) to the day of St. Simon and St. Jude
(October 28). They called the season _Wellalaick_ or _Semlicka_, and
regarded it as so holy that while it lasted they would not willingly
thresh the corn, alleging that grain threshed at that time would be
useless for sowing, since the souls of the dead would not allow it to
sprout. But we may suspect that the original motive of the abstinence was
a fear lest the blows of the flails should fall upon the poor ghosts
swarming in the air. At this season the people were wont to prepare food
of all sorts for the spirits and set it on the floor of a room, which had
been well heated and swept for the purpose. Late in the evening the master
of the house went into the room, tended the fire, and called upon his dead
kinsfolk by their names to come and eat and drink. If he saw the ghosts,
he would die within the year; but if he did not see them he would outlive
it. When he thought the souls had eaten and drunk enough, he took the
staff which served as a poker and laying it on the threshold cut it in two
with an axe. At the same time he bade the spirits go their way, charging
them to keep to the roads and paths and not to tread upon the rye. If the
crops turned out ill next year, the people laid the failure at the door of
the ghosts, who fancied themselves scurvily treated and had taken their
revenge by trampling down the corn.(152) The Samagitians annually invited
the dead to come from their graves and enjoy a bath and a feast. For their
entertainment they prepared a special hut, in which they set out food and
drink, together with a seat and a napkin for every soul who had been
invited. They left the souls to revel by themselves for three days in the
hut; then they deposited the remains of the banquet on the graves and bade
the ghosts farewell. The good things, however, were usually consumed by
charcoal burners in the forest. This feast of the dead fell early in
November.(153) The Esthonians prepare a meal for their dead on All Souls'
Day, the second of November, and invite them by their names to come and
partake of it. The ghosts arrive in the early morning at the first
cock-crow, and depart at the second, being ceremoniously lighted out of
the house by the head of the family, who waves a white cloth after them
and bids them come again next year.(154)

(M66) In some parts of the Russian Government of Olonets the inhabitants
of a village sometimes celebrate a joint festival in honour of all their
dead. Having chosen a house for the purpose, they spread three tables, one
outside the front door, one in the passage, and one in the room which is
heated by a stove. Then they go out to meet their unseen guests and usher
them into the house with these words, "Ye are tired, our own ones; take
something to eat." The ghosts accordingly refresh themselves at each table
in succession. Then the master of the house bids them warm themselves at
the stove, remarking that they must have grown cold in the damp earth.
After that the living guests sit down to eat at the tables. Towards the
end of the meal the host opens the window and lets the ghosts gently out
of it by means of the shroud in which they were lowered into the grave. As
they slide down it from the warm room into the outer air, the people tell
them, "Now it is time for you to go home, and your feet must be tired; the
way is not a little one for you to travel. Here it is softer for you. Now,
in God's name, farewell!"(155)

(M67) Among the Votiaks of Russia every family sacrifices to its dead once
a year in the week before Palm Sunday. The sacrifice is offered in the
house about midnight. Flesh, bread, or cakes and beer are set on the
table, and on the floor beside the table stands a trough of bark with a
lighted wax candle stuck on the rim. The master of the house, having
covered his head with his hat, takes a piece of meat in his hand and says,
"Ye spirits of the long departed, guard and preserve us well. Make none of
us cripples. Send no plagues upon us. Cause the corn, the wine, and the
food to prosper with us."(156) The Votiaks of the Governments of Wjatka
and Kasan celebrate two memorial festivals of the dead every year, one in
autumn and the other in spring. On a certain day koumiss is distilled,
beer brewed, and potato scones baked in every house. All the members of a
clan, who trace their descent through women from one mythical ancestress,
assemble in a single house, generally in one which lies at the boundary of
the clan land. Here an old man moulds wax candles; and when the requisite
number is made he sticks them on the shelf of the stove, and begins to
mention the dead relations of the master of the house by name. For each of
them he crumbles a piece of bread, gives each of them a piece of pancake,
pours koumiss and beer, and puts a spoonful of soup into a trough made for
the purpose. All persons present whose parents are dead follow his
example. The dogs are then allowed to eat out of the trough. If they eat
quietly, it is a sign that the dead live at peace; if they do not eat
quietly, it argues the contrary. Then the company sit down to table and
partake of the meal. Next morning both the dead and the living refresh
themselves with a drink, and a fowl is boiled. The proceedings are the
same as on the evening before. But now they treat the souls for the last
time as a preparation for their journey, saying: "Eat, drink, and go home
to your companions. Live at peace, be gracious to us, keep our children,
guard our corn, our beasts and birds." Then the people banquet and indulge
in all sorts of improprieties. The women refrain from feasting until the
dead have taken their departure; but when the souls are gone, there is no
longer any motive for abstinence, the koumiss circulates freely among the
women, and they grow wanton. Yet at this, as at every other festival, the
men and women eat in different parts of the room.(157)

(M68) On All Saints' Day, the first of November, shops and streets in the
Abruzzi are filled with candles, which people buy in order to kindle them
in the evening on the graves of their relations. For all the dead come to
visit their homes that night, the Eve of All Souls, and they need lights
to show them the way. For their use, too, lights are kept burning in the
houses all night. Before people go to sleep they place on the table a
lighted lamp or candle and a frugal meal of bread and water. The dead
issue from their graves and stalk in procession through every street of
the village. You can see them if you stand at a cross-road with your chin
resting on a forked stick. First pass the souls of the good, and then the
souls of the murdered and the damned. Once, they say, a man was thus
peeping at the ghastly procession. The good souls told him he had better
go home. He did not, and when he saw the tail of the procession he died of
fright.(158)

(M69) In our own country the old belief in the annual return of the dead
long lingered in the custom of baking "soul-cakes" and eating them or
distributing them to the poor on All Souls' Day. Peasant girls used to go
from farmhouse to farmhouse on that day, singing,


    "_Soul, soul, for a soul cake,_
    _Pray you, good mistress, a soul cake._"(159)


In Shropshire down to the seventeenth century it was customary on All
Souls' Day to set on the table a high heap of soul-cakes, and most
visitors to the house took one of them. The antiquary John Aubrey, who
records the custom, mentions also the appropriate verses:


    "_A soul-cake, a soul-cake,_
    _Have mercy on all Christen soules for a soule-cake._"(160)


Indeed the custom of soul-cakes survived in Shropshire down to the latter
part of the nineteenth century and may not be extinct even now. "With us,
All Saints' Day is known as 'Souling Day,' and up to the present time in
many places, poor children, and sometimes men, go out 'souling': which
means that they go round to the houses of all the more well-to-do people
within reach, reciting a ditty peculiar to the day, and looking for a dole
of cakes, broken victuals, ale, apples, or money. The two latter are now
the usual rewards, but there are few old North Salopians who cannot
remember when 'soul-cakes' were made at all the farms and 'bettermost'
houses in readiness for the day, and were given to all who came for them.
We are told of liberal housewives who would provide as many as a
clothes-basket full."(161) The same custom of going out "a-souling" on All
Saints' Day or All Souls' Day used to be observed in the neighbouring
counties of Staffordshire, Cheshire, Lancashire, Herefordshire, and
Monmouthshire. In Herefordshire the soul-cakes were made of oatmeal, and
he or she who received one of them was bound to say to the giver:


    "_God have your saul,_
      _Beens and all._"(162)


Thus the practice of "souling" appears to have prevailed especially in the
English counties which border on Wales. In many parts of Wales itself down
to the first half of the nineteenth century poor peasants used to go about
begging for bread on All Souls' Day. The bread bestowed on them was called
_bara ran_ or dole-bread. "This custom was a survival of the Middle Ages,
when the poor begged bread for the souls of their departed relatives and
friends."(163) However, the custom was not confined to the west of
England, for at Whitby in Yorkshire down to the early part of the
nineteenth century it was usual to make "soul mass loaves" on or about All
Souls' Day. They were small round loaves, sold by bakers at a farthing
apiece, chiefly for presents to children. In former times people used to
keep one or two of them for good luck.(164) In Aberdeenshire, also, "on
All Souls' Day, baked cakes of a particular sort are given away to those
who may chance to visit the house, where they are made. The cakes are
called 'dirge-loaf.' "(165) Even in the remote island of St. Kilda it was
customary on All Saints' Day to bake a large cake in the form of a
triangle, furrowed round; the cake must be all eaten that night.(166)

(M70) The same mode of celebrating All Souls' Day has been transported by
Catholicism to the New World and imparted to the aborigines of that
continent. Thus in Carchi, a province of Ecuador, the Indians prepare
foods of various sorts against All Souls' Day, and when the day has come
they take some of the provisions to the church and there deposit them on
tables set out for the purpose. These good things are the perquisite of
the priest, who celebrates mass for the dead. After the service the
Indians repair to the cemetery, where with burning candles and pots of
holy water they prostrate themselves before the tombs of their relations,
while the priest or the sacristan recites prayers for the souls of the
departed. In the evening the Indians return to their houses. A table with
four lights on it is spread with food and drink, especially with such
things as the dead loved in their life. The door is left open all night,
no doubt to let the spirits of the dead enter, and the family sits up,
keeping the invisible guests company through the long hours of darkness.
From seven o'clock and onwards troops of children traverse the village and
its neighbourhood. They go from house to house ringing a bell and crying,
"We are angels, we descend from the sky, we ask for bread." The people go
to their doors and beg the children to recite a _Pater Noster_ or an _Ave
Maria_ for the dead whom they name. When the prayer has been duly said,
they give the children a little of the food from the table. All night long
this goes on, band succeeding band of children. At five o'clock in the
morning the family consumes the remainder of the food of the souls.(167)
Here the children going from door to door during the night of All Souls
appear to personate the souls of the dead who are also abroad at that
time; hence to give bread to the children is the same thing as to give
bread to the poor hungry souls. Probably the same explanation applies to
the giving of soul-cakes to children and the poor on All Souls' Day in
Europe.

(M71) A comparison of these European customs with the similar heathen
rites can leave no room for doubt that the nominally Christian feast of
All Souls is nothing but an old pagan festival of the dead which the
Church, unable or unwilling to suppress, resolved from motives of policy
to connive at. But whence did it borrow the practice of solemnizing the
festival on that particular day, the second of November? In order to
answer this question we should observe, first, that celebrations of this
sort are often held at the beginning of a New Year,(168) and, second, that
the peoples of North-Western Europe, the Celts and the Teutons, appear to
have dated the beginning of their year from the beginning of winter, the
Celts reckoning it from the first of November(169) and the Teutons from
the first of October.(170) The difference of reckoning may be due to a
difference of climate, the home of the Teutons in Central and Northern
Europe being a region where winter sets in earlier than on the more
temperate and humid coasts of the Atlantic, the home of the Celts. These
considerations suggest that the festival of All Souls on the second of
November originated with the Celts, and spread from them to the rest of
the European peoples, who, while they preserved their old feasts of the
dead practically unchanged, may have transferred them to the second of
November. This conjecture is supported by what we know of the
ecclesiastical institution, or rather recognition, of the festival. For
that recognition was first accorded at the end of the tenth century in
France, a Celtic country, from which the Church festival gradually spread
over Europe. It was Odilo, abbot of the great Benedictine monastery of
Clugny, who initiated the change in 998 A.D. by ordering that in all the
monasteries over which he ruled, a solemn mass should be celebrated on the
second of November for all the dead who sleep in Christ. The example thus
set was followed by other religious houses, and the bishops, one after
another, introduced the new celebration into their dioceses. Thus the
festival of All Souls gradually established itself throughout Christendom,
though in fact the Church has never formally sanctioned it by a general
edict nor attached much weight to its observance. Indeed, when objections
were raised to the festival at the Reformation, the ecclesiastical
authorities seemed ready to abandon it.(171) These facts are explained
very simply by the theory that an old Celtic commemoration of the dead
lingered in France down to the end of the tenth century, and was then, as
a measure of policy and a concession to ineradicable paganism, at last
incorporated in the Catholic ritual. The consciousness of the heathen
origin of the practice would naturally prevent the supreme authorities
from insisting strongly on its observance. They appear rightly to have
regarded it as an outpost which they could surrender to the forces of
rationalism without endangering the citadel of the faith.

(M72) Perhaps we may go a step further and explain in like manner the
origin of the feast of All Saints on the first of November. For the
analogy of similar customs elsewhere would lead us to suppose that the old
Celtic festival of the dead was held on the Celtic New Year's Day, that
is, on the first, not the second, of November. May not then the
institution of the feast of All Saints on that day have been the first
attempt of the Church to give a colour of Christianity to the ancient
heathen rite by substituting the saints for the souls of the dead as the
true object of worship? The facts of history seem to countenance this
hypothesis. For the feast of All Saints was instituted in France and
Germany by order of the Emperor Lewis the Pious in 835 A.D., that is,
about a hundred and sixty years before the introduction of the feast of
All Souls. The innovation was made by the advice of the pope, Gregory IV.,
whose motive may well have been that of suppressing an old pagan custom
which was still notoriously practised in France and Germany. The idea,
however, was not a novel one, for the testimony of Bede proves that in
Britain, another Celtic country, the feast of All Saints on the first of
November was already celebrated in the eighth century.(172) We may
conjecture that this attempt to divert the devotion of the faithful from
the souls of the dead to the saints proved a failure, and that finally the
Church reluctantly decided to sanction the popular superstition by frankly
admitting a feast of All Souls into the calendar. But it could not assign
the new, or rather the old, festival to the old day, the first of
November, since that was already occupied by the feast of All Saints.
Accordingly it placed the mass for the dead on the next day, the second of
November. On this theory the feasts of All Saints and of All Souls mark
two successive efforts of the Catholic Church to eradicate an old heathen
festival of the dead. Both efforts failed. "In all Catholic countries the
day of All Souls has preserved the serious character of a festival of the
dead which no worldly gaieties are allowed to disturb. It is then the
sacred duty of the survivors to visit the graves of their loved ones in
the churchyard, to deck them with flowers and lights, and to utter a
devout prayer--a pious custom with which in cities like Paris and Vienna
even the gay and frivolous comply for the sake of appearance, if not to
satisfy an impulse of the heart."(173)




§ 3. The Festival in the Month of Athyr.


(M73) The foregoing evidence lends some support to the conjecture--for it
is only a conjecture--that the great festival of Osiris at Sais, with its
accompanying illumination of the houses, was a night of All Souls, when
the ghosts of the dead swarmed in the streets and revisited their old
homes, which were lit up to welcome them back again. Herodotus, who
briefly describes the festival, omits to mention its date, but we can
determine it with some probability from other sources. Thus Plutarch tells
us that Osiris was murdered on the seventeenth of the month Athyr, and
that the Egyptians accordingly observed mournful rites for four days from
the seventeenth of Athyr.(174) Now in the Alexandrian calendar, which
Plutarch used, these four days corresponded to the thirteenth, fourteenth,
fifteenth, and sixteenth of November, and this date answers exactly to the
other indications given by Plutarch, who says that at the time of the
festival the Nile was sinking, the north winds dying away, the nights
lengthening, and the leaves falling from the trees. During these four days
a gilt cow swathed in a black pall was exhibited as an image of Isis.
This, no doubt, was the image mentioned by Herodotus in his account of the
festival.(175) On the nineteenth day of the month the people went down to
the sea, the priests carrying a shrine which contained a golden casket.
Into this casket they poured fresh water, and thereupon the spectators
raised a shout that Osiris was found. After that they took some vegetable
mould, moistened it with water, mixed it with precious spices and incense,
and moulded the paste into a small moon-shaped image, which was then robed
and ornamented.(176) Thus it appears that the purpose of the ceremonies
described by Plutarch was to represent dramatically, first, the search for
the dead body of Osiris, and, second, its joyful discovery, followed by
the resurrection of the dead god who came to life again in the new image
of vegetable mould and spices. Lactantius tells us how on these occasions
the priests, with their shaven bodies, beat their breasts and lamented,
imitating the sorrowful search of Isis for her lost son Osiris, and how
afterwards their sorrow was turned to joy when the jackal-headed god
Anubis, or rather a mummer in his stead, produced a small boy, the living
representative of the god who was lost and was found.(177) Thus Lactantius
regarded Osiris as the son instead of the husband of Isis, and he makes no
mention of the image of vegetable mould. It is probable that the boy who
figured in the sacred drama played the part, not of Osiris, but of his son
Horus;(178) but as the death and resurrection of the god were celebrated
in many cities of Egypt, it is also possible that in some places the part
of the god come to life was played by a living actor instead of by an
image. Another Christian writer describes how the Egyptians, with shorn
heads, annually lamented over a buried idol of Osiris, smiting their
breasts, slashing their shoulders, ripping open their old wounds, until,
after several days of mourning, they professed to find the mangled remains
of the god, at which they rejoiced.(179) However the details of the
ceremony may have varied in different places, the pretence of finding the
god's body, and probably of restoring it to life, was a great event in the
festal year of the Egyptians. The shouts of joy which greeted it are
described or alluded to by many ancient writers.(180)




§ 4. The Festival in the Month of Khoiak.


(M74) The funeral rites of Osiris, as they were observed at his great
festival in the sixteen provinces of Egypt, are described in a long
inscription of the Ptolemaic period, which is engraved on the walls of the
god's temple at Denderah, the Tentyra of the Greeks, a town of Upper Egypt
situated on the western bank of the Nile about forty miles north of
Thebes.(181) Unfortunately, while the information thus furnished is
remarkably full and minute on many points, the arrangement adopted in the
inscription is so confused and the expression often so obscure that a
clear and consistent account of the ceremonies as a whole can hardly be
extracted from it. Moreover, we learn from the document that the
ceremonies varied somewhat in the several cities, the ritual of Abydos,
for example, differing from that of Busiris. Without attempting to trace
all the particularities of local usage I shall briefly indicate what seem
to have been the leading features of the festival, so far as these can be
ascertained with tolerable certainty.(182)

(M75) The rites lasted eighteen days, from the twelfth to the thirtieth of
the month Khoiak, and set forth the nature of Osiris in his triple aspect
as dead, dismembered, and finally reconstituted by the union of his
scattered limbs. In the first of these aspects he was called Chent-Ament
(Khenti-Amenti), in the second Osiris-Sep, and in the third Sokari
(Seker).(183) Small images of the god were moulded of sand or vegetable
earth and corn, to which incense was sometimes added;(184) his face was
painted yellow and his cheek-bones green.(185) These images were cast in a
mould of pure gold, which represented the god in the form of a mummy, with
the white crown of Egypt on his head.(186) The festival opened on the
twelfth day of Khoiak with a ceremony of ploughing and sowing. Two black
cows were yoked to the plough, which was made of tamarisk wood, while the
share was of black copper. A boy scattered the seed. One end of the field
was sown with barley, the other with spelt, and the middle with flax.
During the operation the chief celebrant recited the ritual chapter of
"the sowing of the fields."(187) At Busiris on the twentieth of Khoiak
sand and barley were put in the god's "garden," which appears to have been
a sort of large flower-pot. This was done in the presence of the
cow-goddess Shenty, represented seemingly by the image of a cow made of
gilt sycamore wood with a headless human image in its inside. "Then fresh
inundation water was poured out of a golden vase over both the goddess and
the 'garden' and the barley was allowed to grow as the emblem of the
resurrection of the god after his burial in the earth, 'for the growth of
the garden is the growth of the divine substance.' "(188) On the
twenty-second of Khoiak, at the eighth hour, the images of Osiris,
attended by thirty-four images of deities, performed a mysterious voyage
in thirty-four tiny boats made of papyrus, which were illuminated by three
hundred and sixty-five lights.(189) On the twenty-fourth of Khoiak, after
sunset, the effigy of Osiris in a coffin of mulberry wood was laid in the
grave, and at the ninth hour of the night the effigy which had been made
and deposited the year before was removed and placed upon boughs of
sycamore.(190) Lastly, on the thirtieth day of Khoiak they repaired to the
holy sepulchre, a subterranean chamber over which appears to have grown a
clump of Persea-trees. Entering the vault by the western door, they laid
the coffined effigy of the dead god reverently on a bed of sand in the
chamber. So they left him to his rest, and departed from the sepulchre by
the eastern door. Thus ended the ceremonies in the month of Khoiak.(191)




§ 5. The Resurrection of Osiris.


(M76) In the foregoing account of the festival, drawn from the great
inscription of Denderah, the burial of Osiris figures prominently, while
his resurrection is implied rather than expressed. This defect of the
document, however, is amply compensated by a remarkable series of
bas-reliefs which accompany and illustrate the inscription. These exhibit
in a series of scenes the dead god lying swathed as a mummy on his bier,
then gradually raising himself up higher and higher, until at last he has
entirely quitted the bier and is seen erect between the guardian wings of
the faithful Isis, who stands behind him, while a male figure holds up
before his eyes the _crux ansata_, the Egyptian symbol of life.(192) The
resurrection of the god could hardly be portrayed more graphically. Even
more instructive, however, is another representation of the same event in
a chamber dedicated to Osiris in the great temple of Isis at Philae. Here
we see the dead body of Osiris with stalks of corn springing from it,
while a priest waters the stalks from a pitcher which he holds in his
hand. The accompanying inscription sets forth that "this is the form of
him whom one may not name, Osiris of the mysteries, who springs from the
returning waters."(193) Taken together, the picture and the words seem to
leave no doubt that Osiris was here conceived and represented as a
personification of the corn which springs from the fields after they have
been fertilized by the inundation. This, according to the inscription, was
the kernel of the mysteries, the innermost secret revealed to the
initiated. So in the rites of Demeter at Eleusis a reaped ear of corn was
exhibited to the worshippers as the central mystery of their
religion.(194) We can now fully understand why at the great festival of
sowing in the month of Khoiak the priests used to bury effigies of Osiris
made of earth and corn. When these effigies were taken up again at the end
of a year or of a shorter interval, the corn would be found to have
sprouted from the body of Osiris, and this sprouting of the grain would be
hailed as an omen, or rather as the cause, of the growth of the
crops.(195) The corn-god produced the corn from himself: he gave his own
body to feed the people: he died that they might live.

(M77) And from the death and resurrection of their great god the Egyptians
drew not only their support and sustenance in this life, but also their
hope of a life eternal beyond the grave. This hope is indicated in the
clearest manner by the very remarkable effigies of Osiris which have come
to light in Egyptian cemeteries. Thus in the Valley of the Kings at Thebes
there was found the tomb of a royal fan-bearer who lived about 1500 B.C.
Among the rich contents of the tomb there was a bier on which rested a
mattress of reeds covered with three layers of linen. On the upper side of
the linen was painted a life-size figure of Osiris; and the interior of
the figure, which was waterproof, contained a mixture of vegetable mould,
barley, and a sticky fluid. The barley had sprouted and sent out shoots
two or three inches long.(196) Again, in the cemetery at Cynopolis "were
numerous burials of Osiris figures. These were made of grain wrapped up in
cloth and roughly shaped like an Osiris, and placed inside a bricked-up
recess at the side of the tomb, sometimes in small pottery coffins,
sometimes in wooden coffins in the form of a hawk-mummy, sometimes without
any coffins at all."(197) These corn-stuffed figures were bandaged like
mummies with patches of gilding here and there, as if in imitation of the
golden mould in which the similar figures of Osiris were cast at the
festival of sowing.(198) Again, effigies of Osiris, with faces of green
wax and their interior full of grain, were found buried near the
necropolis of Thebes.(199) Finally, we are told by Professor Erman that
between the legs of mummies "there sometimes lies a figure of Osiris made
of slime; it is filled with grains of corn, the sprouting of which is
intended to signify the resurrection of the god."(200) We cannot doubt
that, just as the burial of corn-stuffed images of Osiris in the earth at
the festival of sowing was designed to quicken the seed, so the burial of
similar images in the grave was meant to quicken the dead, in other words,
to ensure their spiritual immortality.




§ 6. Readjustment of Egyptian Festivals.


(M78) The festival of Osiris which Plutarch assigns to the month of Athyr
would seem to be identical in substance with the one which the inscription
of Denderah assigns to the following month, namely, to Khoiak. Apparently
the essence of both festivals was a dramatic representation of the death
and resurrection of the god; in both of them Isis was figured by a gilt
cow, and Osiris by an image moulded of moist vegetable earth. But if the
festivals were the same, why were they held in different months? It is
easy to suggest that different towns in Egypt celebrated the festival at
different dates. But when we remember that according to the great
inscription of Denderah, the authority of which is indisputable, the
festival fell in the month of Khoiak in every province of Egypt, we shall
be reluctant to suppose that at some one place, or even at a few places,
it was exceptionally held in the preceding month of Athyr, and that the
usually well-informed Plutarch described the exception as if it had been
the rule, of which on this supposition he must have been wholly ignorant.
More probably the discrepancy is to be explained by the great change which
came over the Egyptian calendar between the date of the inscription and
the lifetime of Plutarch. For when the inscription was drawn up in the
Ptolemaic age the festivals were dated by the old vague or movable year,
and therefore rotated gradually through the whole circle of the seasons;
whereas at the time when Plutarch wrote, about the end of the first
century, they were seemingly dated by the fixed Alexandrian year, and
accordingly had ceased to rotate.(201)

(M79) But even if we grant that in Plutarch's day the festivals had become
stationary, still this would not explain why the old festival of Khoiak
had been transferred to Athyr. In order to understand that transference it
seems necessary to suppose that when the Egyptians gave to their months
fixed places in the solar year by accepting the Alexandrian system of
intercalation, they at the same time transferred the festivals from what
may be called their artificial to their natural dates. Under the old
system a summer festival was sometimes held in winter and a winter
festival in summer; a harvest celebration sometimes fell at the season of
sowing, and a sowing celebration at the season of harvest. People might
reconcile themselves to such anomalies so long as they knew that they were
only temporary, and that in the course of time the festivals would
necessarily return to their proper seasons. But it must have been
otherwise when they adopted a fixed instead of a movable year, and so
arrested the rotation of the festivals for ever. For they could not but be
aware that every festival would thenceforth continue to occupy for all
time that particular place in the solar year which it chanced to occupy in
the year 30 B.C., when the calendar became fixed. If in that particular
year it happened, as it might have happened, that the summer festivals
were held in winter and the winter festivals in summer, they would always
be so held in future; the absurdity and anomaly would never again be
rectified as it had been before. This consideration, which could not have
escaped intelligent men, must have suggested the advisability of
transferring the festivals from the dates at which they chanced to be
celebrated in 30 B.C. to the dates at which they ought properly to be
celebrated in the course of nature.

(M80) Now what in the year 30 B.C. was the actual amount of discrepancy
between the accidental and the natural dates of the festivals? It was a
little more than a month. In that year Thoth, the first month of the
Egyptian calendar, happened to begin on the twenty-ninth of August,(202)
whereas according to theory it should have begun with the heliacal rising
of Sirius on the twentieth of July, that is, forty days or, roughly
speaking, a month earlier. From this it follows that in the year 30 B.C.
all the Egyptian festivals fell about a month later than their natural
dates, and they must have continued to fall a month late for ever if they
were allowed to retain those places in the calendar which they chanced to
occupy in that particular year. In these circumstances it would be a
natural and sensible thing to restore the festivals to their proper places
in the solar year by celebrating them one calendar month earlier than
before.(203) If this measure were adopted the festivals which had hitherto
been held, for example, in the third month Athyr would henceforth be held
in the second month Phaophi; the festivals which had hitherto fallen in
the fourth month Khoiak would thenceforth fall in the third month Athyr;
and so on. Thus the festal calendar would be reduced to harmony with the
seasons instead of being in more or less flagrant discord with them, as it
had generally been before, and must always have been afterwards if the
change which I have indicated had not been introduced. It is only to
credit the native astronomers and the Roman rulers of Egypt with common
sense to suppose that they actually adopted the measure. On that
supposition we can perfectly understand why the festival of sowing, which
had formerly belonged to the month of Khoiak, was transferred to Athyr.
For in the Alexandrian calendar Khoiak corresponds very nearly to
December, and Athyr to November. But in Egypt the month of November, not
the month of December, is the season of sowing. There was therefore every
reason why the great sowing festival of the corn-god Osiris should be held
in Athyr and not Khoiak, in November and not in December. In like manner
we may suppose that all the Egyptian festivals were restored to their true
places in the solar year, and that when Plutarch dates a festival both by
its calendar month and by its relation to the cycle of the seasons, he is
perfectly right in doing so, and we may accept his evidence with
confidence instead of having to accuse him of ignorantly confounding the
movable Egyptian with the fixed Alexandrian year. Accusations of ignorance
levelled at the best writers of antiquity are apt to recoil on those who
make them.(204)





CHAPTER V. THE NATURE OF OSIRIS.




§ 1. Osiris a Corn-God.


(M81) The foregoing survey of the myth and ritual of Osiris may suffice to
prove that in one of his aspects the god was a personification of the
corn, which may be said to die and come to life again every year. Through
all the pomp and glamour with which in later times the priests had
invested his worship, the conception of him as the corn-god comes clearly
out in the festival of his death and resurrection, which was celebrated in
the month of Khoiak and at a later period in the month of Athyr. That
festival appears to have been essentially a festival of sowing, which
properly fell at the time when the husbandman actually committed the seed
to the earth. On that occasion an effigy of the corn-god, moulded of earth
and corn, was buried with funeral rites in the ground in order that, dying
there, he might come to life again with the new crops. The ceremony was,
in fact, a charm to ensure the growth of the corn by sympathetic magic,
and we may conjecture that as such it was practised in a simple form by
every Egyptian farmer on his fields long before it was adopted and
transfigured by the priests in the stately ritual of the temple. In the
modern, but doubtless ancient, Arab custom of burying "the Old Man,"
namely, a sheaf of wheat, in the harvest-field and praying that he may
return from the dead,(205) we see the germ out of which the worship of the
corn-god Osiris was probably developed. Earth.(206) What more appropriate
parentage could be invented for the corn which springs from the ground
that has been fertilized by the water of heaven? It is true that the land
of Egypt owed its fertility directly to the Nile and not to showers; but
the inhabitants must have known or guessed that the great river in its
turn was fed by the rains which fell in the far interior. Again, the
legend that Osiris was the first to teach men the use of corn(207) would
be most naturally told of the corn-god himself. Further, the story that
his mangled remains were scattered up and down the land and buried in
different places may be a mythical way of expressing either the sowing or
the winnowing of the grain. The latter interpretation is supported by the
tale that Isis placed the severed limbs of Osiris on a corn-sieve.(208) Or
more probably the legend may be a reminiscence of a custom of slaying a
human victim, perhaps a representative of the corn-spirit, and
distributing his flesh or scattering his ashes over the fields to
fertilize them. In modern Europe the figure of Death is sometimes torn in
pieces, and the fragments are then buried in the ground to make the crops
grow well,(209) and in other parts of the world human victims are treated
in the same way.(210) With regard to the ancient Egyptians we have it on
the authority of Manetho that they used to burn red-haired men and scatter
their ashes with winnowing fans,(211) and it is highly significant that
this barbarous sacrifice was offered by the kings at the grave of
Osiris.(212) We may conjecture that the victims represented Osiris
himself, who was annually slain, dismembered, and buried in their persons
that he might quicken the seed in the earth.

(M82) Possibly in prehistoric times the kings themselves played the part
of the god and were slain and dismembered in that character. Set as well
as Osiris is said to have been torn in pieces after a reign of eighteen
days, which was commemorated by an annual festival of the same
length.(213) According to one story Romulus, the first king of Rome, was
cut in pieces by the senators, who buried the fragments of him in the
ground;(214) and the traditional day of his death, the seventh of July,
was celebrated with certain curious rites, which were apparently connected
with the artificial fertilization of the fig.(215) Again, Greek legend
told how Pentheus, king of Thebes, and Lycurgus, king of the Thracian
Edonians, opposed the vine-god Dionysus, and how the impious monarchs were
rent in pieces, the one by the frenzied Bacchanals, the other by
horses.(216) These Greek traditions may well be distorted reminiscences of
a custom of sacrificing human beings, and especially divine kings, in the
character of Dionysus, a god who resembled Osiris in many points and was
said like him to have been torn limb from limb.(217) We are told that in
Chios men were rent in pieces as a sacrifice to Dionysus;(218) and since
they died the same death as their god, it is reasonable to suppose that
they personated him. The story that the Thracian Orpheus was similarly
torn limb from limb by the Bacchanals seems to indicate that he too
perished in the character of the god whose death he died.(219) It is
significant that the Thracian Lycurgus, king of the Edonians, is said to
have been put to death in order that the ground, which had ceased to be
fruitful, might regain its fertility.(220) In some Thracian villages at
Carnival time a custom is still annually observed, which may well be a
mitigation of an ancient practice of putting a man, perhaps a king, to
death in the character of Dionysus for the sake of the crops. A man
disguised in goatskins and fawnskins, the livery of Dionysus, is shot at
and falls down as dead. A pretence is made of flaying his body and of
mourning over him, but afterwards he comes to life again. Further, a
plough is dragged about the village and seed is scattered, while prayers
are said that the wheat, rye, and barley may be plentiful. One town
(Viza), where these customs are observed, was the capital of the old
Thracian kings. In another town (Kosti, near the Black Sea) the principal
masker is called the king. He wears goatskins or sheepskins, and is
attended by a boy who dispenses wine to the people. The king himself
carries seed, which he casts on the ground before the church, after being
invited to throw it on two bands of married and unmarried men
respectively. Finally, he is stripped of the skins and thrown into the
river.(221)

(M83) Further, we read of a Norwegian king, Halfdan the Black, whose body
was cut up and buried in different parts of his kingdom for the sake of
ensuring the fruitfulness of the earth. He is said to have been drowned at
the age of forty through the breaking of the ice in spring. What followed
his death is thus related by the old Norse historian Snorri Sturluson: "He
had been the most prosperous (literally, blessed with abundance) of all
kings. So greatly did men value him that when the news came that he was
dead and his body removed to Hringariki and intended for burial there, the
chief men from Raumariki and Westfold and Heithmoerk came and all requested
that they might take his body with them and bury it in their various
provinces; they thought that it would bring abundance to those who
obtained it. Eventually it was settled that the body was distributed in
four places. The head was laid in a barrow at Steinn in Hringariki, and
each party took away their own share and buried it. All these barrows are
called Halfdan's barrows."(222) It should be remembered that this Halfdan
belonged to the family of the Ynglings, who traced their descent from
Frey, the great Scandinavian god of fertility.(223) Frey himself is said
to have reigned as king of Sweden at Upsala. The years of his reign were
plenteous, and the people laid the plenty to his account. So when he died,
they would not burn him, as it had been customary to do with the dead
before his time; but they resolved to preserve his body, believing that,
so long as it remained in Sweden, the land would have abundance and peace.
Therefore they reared a great mound, and put him in it, and sacrificed to
him for plenty and peace ever afterwards. And for three years after his
death they poured the tribute to him into the mound, as if he were alive;
the gold they poured in by one window, the silver by a second, and the
copper by a third.(224)

(M84) The natives of Kiwai, an island lying off the mouth of the Fly River
in British New Guinea, tell of a certain magician named Segera, who had
sago for his totem. When his son died, the death was set down to the magic
of an enemy, and the bereaved father was so angry that by his spells he
caused the whole crop of sago in the country to fail; only in his own
garden the sago grew as luxuriantly as ever. When many had died of famine,
the people went to him and begged him to remove the spells which he had
cast on the sago palms, so that they might eat food and live. The
magician, touched with remorse and pity, went round planting a sago shoot
in every garden, and the shoots flourished, sago was plentiful once more,
and the famine came to an end. When Segera was old and ill, he told the
people that he would soon die, but that, nevertheless, he would cause
their gardens to thrive. Accordingly, he instructed them that when he was
dead they should cut him up and place pieces of his flesh in their
gardens, but his head was to be buried in his own garden. Of him it is
said that he outlived the ordinary age, and that no man knew his father,
but that he made the sago good and no one was hungry any more. Old men who
were alive a few years ago affirmed that they had known Segera in their
youth, and the general opinion of the Kiwai people seems to be that Segera
died not more than two generations ago.(225)

(M85) Taken all together, these legends point to a widespread practice of
dismembering the body of a king or magician and burying the pieces in
different parts of the country in order to ensure the fertility of the
ground and probably also the fecundity of man and beast. Whether regarded
as the descendant of a god, as himself divine, or simply as a mighty
enchanter, the king was believed to radiate magical virtue for the good of
his subjects, quickening the seed in the earth and in the womb. This
radiation of reproductive energy did not cease with his life; hence the
people deemed it essential to preserve his body as a pledge of the
continued prosperity of the country. It would be natural to imagine that
the spot where the dead king was buried would enjoy a more than ordinary
share of his blessed influence, and accordingly disputes would almost
inevitably arise between different districts for the exclusive possession
of so powerful a talisman. These disputes could be settled and local
jealousies appeased by dividing the precious body between the rival
claimants, in order that all should benefit in equal measure by its
life-giving properties. This was certainly done in Norway with the body of
Halfdan the Black, the descendant of the harvest-god Frey; it appears to
have been done with the body of Segera, the sago-magician of Kiwai; and we
may conjecture that in prehistoric times it was done with the bodies of
Egyptian kings, who personated Osiris, the god of fertility in general and
of the corn in particular. At least such a practice would account for the
legend of the mangling of the god's body and the distribution of the
pieces throughout Egypt.

(M86) In this connexion the story that the genital member of Osiris was
missing when Isis pieced together his mutilated body,(226) may not be
without significance. When a Zulu medicine-man wishes to make the crops
grow well, he will take the body of a man who has died in full vigour and
cut minute portions of tissue from the foot, the leg, the arm, the face,
and the nail of a single finger in order to compound a fertilizing
medicine out of them. But the most important part of the medicine consists
of the dead man's generative organs, which are removed entire. All these
pieces of the corpse are fried with herbs on a slow fire, then ground to
powder, and sown over the fields.(227) We have seen that similarly the
Egyptians scattered the ashes of human victims by means of
winnowing-fans;(228) and if my explanation of the practice is correct, it
may well have been that they, like the Zulus, attributed a special power
of reproduction to the genital organs, and therefore carefully excised
them from the body of the victim in order to impart their virtue to the
fields. I have conjectured that a similar use was made of the severed
portions of the priests of Attis.(229)

(M87) To an ancient Egyptian, with his firm belief in a personal
immortality dependent on the integrity of the body, the prospect of
mutilation after death must have been very repugnant; and we may suppose
that the kings offered a strenuous resistance to the custom and finally
succeeded in abolishing it. They may have represented to the people that
they would attain their object better by keeping the royal corpse intact
than by frittering it away in small pieces. Their subjects apparently
acquiesced in the argument, or at all events in the conclusion; yet the
mountains of masonry beneath which the old Egyptian kings lay buried may
have been intended to guard them from the superstitious devotion of their
friends quite as much as from the hostile designs of their enemies, since
both alike must have been under a strong temptation to violate the
sanctity of the grave in order to possess themselves of bodies which were
believed to be endowed with magical virtue of the most tremendous potency.
In antiquity the safety of the state was often believed to depend on the
possession of a talisman, which sometimes consisted of the bones of a king
or hero. Hence the graves of such persons were sometimes kept secret.(230)
The violation of royal tombs by a conqueror was not a mere insult: it was
a deadly blow struck at the prosperity of the kingdom. Hence Ashurbanipal
carried off to Assyria the bones of the kings of Elam, believing that thus
he gave their shades no repose and deprived them of food and drink.(231)
The Moabites burned the bones of the king of Edom into lime.(232)
Lysimachus is said to have opened the graves of the kings of Epirus and
scattered the bones of the dead.(233)

(M88) With savage and barbarous tribes in like manner it is not unusual to
violate the sanctity of the tomb either for the purpose of wreaking
vengeance on the dead or more commonly perhaps for the sake of gaining
possession of the bones and converting them to magical uses. Hence the
Mpongwe kings of the Gaboon region in West Africa are buried secretly lest
their heads should fall into the hands of men of another tribe, who would
make a powerful fetish out of the brains.(234) Again, in Togoland, West
Africa, the kings of the Ho tribe are buried with great secrecy in the
forest, and a false grave is made ostentatiously in the king's house. None
but his personal retainers and a single daughter know where the king's
real grave is. The intention of this secret burial is to prevent enemies
from digging up the corpse and cutting off the head.(235) "The heads of
important chiefs in the Calabar districts are usually cut off from the
body on burial and kept secretly for fear the head, and thereby the
spirit, of the dead chief, should be stolen from the town. If it were
stolen it would be not only a great advantage to its new possessor, but a
great danger to the chief's old town, because he would know all the
peculiar ju-ju relating to it. For each town has a peculiar one, kept
exceedingly secret, in addition to the general ju-jus, and this secret one
would then be in the hands of the new owners of the spirit."(236) The
graves of Basuto chiefs are kept secret lest certain more or less
imaginary witches and wizards called _Baloi_, who haunt tombs, should get
possession of the bones and work evil magic with them.(237) In the Thonga
tribe of South Africa, when a chief dies, he is buried secretly by night
in a sacred wood, and few people know the place of the grave. With some
clans of the tribe it is customary to level the mound over the grave so
that no sign whatever remains to show where the body has been buried. This
is said to be done lest enemies should exhume the corpse and cut off the
ears, the diaphragm, and other parts in order to make powerful war-charms
out of them.(238) By many tribes in Fiji "the burial-place of their chief
is kept a profound secret, lest those whom he injured during his lifetime
should revenge themselves by digging up and insulting or even eating his
body. In some places the dead chief is buried in his own house, and armed
warriors of his mother's kin keep watch night and day over his grave.
After a time his bones are taken up and carried by night to some far-away
inaccessible cave in the mountains, whose position is known only to a few
trustworthy men. Ladders are constructed to enable them to reach the cave,
and are taken down when the bones have been deposited there. Many
frightful stories are told in connection with this custom, and it is
certain that not even decomposition itself avails to baulk the last
revenge of cannibals if they can find the grave. The very bones of the
dead chief are not secure from the revenge of those whose friends he
killed during his lifetime, or whom he otherwise so exasperated by the
tyrannous exercise of his power as to fill their hearts with a deadly
hate. In one instance within my own knowledge, when the hiding-place was
discovered, the bones were taken away, scraped, and stewed down into a
horrible hell-broth."(239) When a Melanesian dies who enjoyed a reputation
for magical powers in his lifetime, his friends will sometimes hold a sham
burial and keep the real grave secret for fear that men might come and dig
up the skull and bones to make charms with them.(240)

(M89) Beliefs and practices of this sort are by no means confined to
agricultural peoples. Among the Koniags of Alaska "in ancient times the
pursuit of the whale was accompanied by numerous superstitious observances
kept a secret by the hunters. Lieutenant Davidof states that the whalers
preserved the bodies of brave or distinguished men in secluded caves, and
before proceeding upon a whale-hunt would carry these dead bodies into a
stream and then drink of the water thus tainted. One famous whaler of
Kadiak who desired to flatter Baranof, the first chief manager of the
Russian colonies, said to him, 'When you die I shall try to steal your
body,' intending thus to express his great respect for Baranof. On the
occasion of the death of a whaler his fellows would cut the body into
pieces, each man taking one of them for the purpose of rubbing his
spear-heads therewith. These pieces were dried or otherwise preserved, and
were frequently taken into the canoes as talismans."(241)

(M90) To return to the human victims whose ashes the Egyptians scattered
with winnowing-fans,(242) the red hair of these unfortunates was probably
significant. If I am right, the custom of sacrificing such persons was not
a mere way of wreaking a national spite on fair-haired foreigners, whom
the black-haired Egyptians of old, like the black-haired Chinese of modern
times, may have regarded as red-haired devils. For in Egypt the oxen which
were sacrificed had also to be red; a single black or white hair found on
the beast would have disqualified it for the sacrifice.(243) If, as I
conjecture, these human sacrifices were intended to promote the growth of
the crops--and the winnowing of their ashes seems to support this
view--red-haired victims were perhaps selected as best fitted to personate
the spirit of the ruddy grain. For when a god is represented by a living
person, it is natural that the human representative should be chosen on
the ground of his supposed resemblance to the divine original. Hence the
ancient Mexicans, conceiving the maize as a personal being who went
through the whole course of life between seed-time and harvest, sacrificed
new-born babes when the maize was sown, older children when it had
sprouted, and so on till it was fully ripe, when they sacrificed old
men.(244) A name for Osiris was the "crop" or "harvest";(245) and the
ancients sometimes explained him as a personification of the corn.(246)




§ 2. Osiris a Tree-Spirit.


(M91) But Osiris was more than a spirit of the corn; he was also a
tree-spirit, and this may perhaps have been his primitive character, since
the worship of trees is naturally older in the history of religion than
the worship of the cereals. However that may have been, to an agricultural
people like the Egyptians, who depended almost wholly on their crops, the
corn-god was naturally a far more important personage than the tree-god,
and attracted a larger share of their devotion. The character of Osiris as
a tree-spirit was represented very graphically in a ceremony described by
Firmicus Maternus.(247) A pine-tree having been cut down, the centre was
hollowed out, and with the wood thus excavated an image of Osiris was
made, which was then buried like a corpse in the hollow of the tree. It is
hard to imagine how the conception of a tree as tenanted by a personal
being could be more plainly expressed. The image of Osiris thus made was
kept for a year and then burned, exactly as was done with the image of
Attis which was attached to the pine-tree.(248) The ceremony of cutting
the tree, as described by Firmicus Maternus, appears to be alluded to by
Plutarch.(249) It was probably the ritual counterpart of the mythical
discovery of the body of Osiris enclosed in the _erica_-tree.(250)

(M92) Now we know from the monuments that at Busiris, Memphis, and
elsewhere the great festival of Osiris closed on the thirtieth of Khoiak
with the setting up of a remarkable pillar known as the _tatu_, _tat_,
_tet_, _dad_, or _ded_. This was a column with four or five cross-bars,
like superposed capitals, at the top. The whole roughly resembled a
telegraph-post with the cross-pieces which support the wires. Sometimes on
the monuments a human form is given to the pillar by carving a grotesque
face on it, robing the lower part, crowning the top with the symbols of
Osiris, and adding two arms which hold two other characteristic emblems of
the god, the crook and the scourge or flail. On a Theban tomb the king
himself, assisted by his relations and a priest, is represented hauling at
the ropes by which the pillar is being raised, while the queen looks on
and her sixteen daughters accompany the ceremony with the music of rattles
and sistrums. Again, in the hall of the Osirian mysteries at Abydos the
King Sety I. and the goddess Isis are depicted raising the column between
them. In Egyptian theology the pillar was interpreted as the backbone of
Osiris, and whatever its meaning may have been, it was one of the holiest
symbols of the national religion. It might very well be a conventional way
of representing a tree stripped of its leaves; and if Osiris was a
tree-spirit, the bare trunk and branches might naturally be described as
his backbone. The setting up of the column would thus, as several modern
scholars believe, shadow forth the resurrection of the god, and the
importance of the occasion would explain and justify the prominent part
which the king appears to have taken in the ceremony.(251) It is to be
noted that in the myth of Osiris the _erica_-tree which shot up and
enclosed his dead body, was cut down by a king and turned by him into a
pillar of his house.(252) We can hardly doubt, therefore, that this
incident of the legend was supposed to be dramatically set forth in the
erection of the _ded_ column by the king. Like the similar custom of
cutting a pine-tree and fastening an image to it in the rites of Attis,
the ceremony may have belonged to that class of customs of which the
bringing in of the May-pole is among the most familiar. The association of
the king and queen of Egypt with the _ded_ pillar reminds us of the
association of a King and Queen of May with the May-pole.(253) The
resemblance may be more than superficial.

(M93) In the hall of Osiris at Denderah the coffin containing the
hawk-headed mummy of the god is clearly depicted as enclosed within a
tree, apparently a conifer, the trunk and branches of which are seen above
and below the coffin.(254) The scene thus corresponds closely both to the
myth and to the ceremony described by Firmicus Maternus. In another scene
at Denderah a tree of the same sort is represented growing between the
dead and the reviving Osiris, as if on purpose to indicate that the tree
was the symbol of the divine resurrection.(255) A pine-cone often appears
on the monuments as an offering presented to Osiris, and a manuscript of
the Louvre speaks of the cedar as sprung from him.(256) The sycamore and
the tamarisk were also his trees. In inscriptions he is spoken of as
residing in them;(257) and in tombs his mother Nut is often portrayed
standing in the midst of a sycamore-tree and pouring a libation for the
benefit of the dead.(258) In one of the Pyramid Texts we read, "Hail to
thee, Sycamore, which enclosest the god";(259) and in certain temples the
statue of Osiris used to be placed for seven days upon branches of
sycamores. The explanation appended in the sacred texts declares that the
placing of the image on the tree was intended to recall the seven months
passed by Osiris in the womb of his mother Nut, the goddess of the
sycamore.(260) The rite recalls the story that Adonis was born after ten
months' gestation from a myrrh-tree.(261) Further, in a sepulchre at How
(Diospolis Parva) a tamarisk is depicted overshadowing the tomb of Osiris,
while a bird is perched among the branches with the significant legend
"the soul of Osiris,"(262) showing that the spirit of the dead god was
believed to haunt his sacred tree.(263) Again, in the series of sculptures
which illustrate the mystic history of Osiris in the great temple of Isis
at Philae, a tamarisk is figured with two men pouring water on it. The
accompanying inscription leaves no doubt, says Brugsch, that the verdure
of the earth was believed to be connected with the verdure of the tree,
and that the sculpture refers to the grave of Osiris at Philae, of which
Plutarch tells us that it was overshadowed by a _methide_ plant, taller
than any olive-tree. This sculpture, it may be observed, occurs in the
same chamber in which the god is represented as a corpse with ears of corn
springing from him.(264) In inscriptions he is referred to as "the one in
the tree," "the solitary one in the acacia," and so forth.(265) On the
monuments he sometimes appears as a mummy covered with a tree or with
plants;(266) and trees are represented growing from his grave.(267)

(M94) It accords with the character of Osiris as a tree-spirit that his
worshippers were forbidden to injure fruit-trees, and with his character
as a god of vegetation in general that they were not allowed to stop up
wells of water, which are so important for the irrigation of hot southern
lands.(268) According to one legend, he taught men to train the vine to
poles, to prune its superfluous foliage, and to extract the juice of the
grape.(269) In the papyrus of Nebseni, written about 1550 B.C., Osiris is
depicted sitting in a shrine, from the roof of which hang clusters of
grapes;(270) and in the papyrus of the royal scribe Nekht we see the god
enthroned in front of a pool, from the banks of which a luxuriant vine,
with many bunches of grapes, grows towards the green face of the seated
deity.(271) The ivy was sacred to him, and was called his plant because it
is always green.(272)




§ 3. Osiris a God of Fertility.


(M95) As a god of vegetation Osiris was naturally conceived as a god of
creative energy in general, since men at a certain stage of evolution fail
to distinguish between the reproductive powers of animals and of plants.
Hence a striking feature in his worship was the coarse but expressive
symbolism by which this aspect of his nature was presented to the eye not
merely of the initiated but of the multitude. At his festival women used
to go about the villages singing songs in his praise and carrying obscene
images of him which they set in motion by means of strings.(273) The
custom was probably a charm to ensure the growth of the crops. A similar
image of him, decked with all the fruits of the earth, is said to have
stood in a temple before a figure of Isis,(274) and in the chambers
dedicated to him at Philae the dead god is portrayed lying on his bier in
an attitude which indicates in the plainest way that even in death his
generative virtue was not extinct but only suspended, ready to prove a
source of life and fertility to the world when the opportunity should
offer.(275) Hymns addressed to Osiris contain allusions to this important
side of his nature. In one of them it is said that the world waxes green
in triumph through him; and another declares, "Thou art the father and
mother of mankind, they live on thy breath, they subsist on the flesh of
thy body."(276) We may conjecture that in this paternal aspect he was
supposed, like other gods of fertility, to bless men and women with
offspring, and that the processions at his festival were intended to
promote this object as well as to quicken the seed in the ground. It would
be to misjudge ancient religion to denounce as lewd and profligate the
emblems and the ceremonies which the Egyptians employed for the purpose of
giving effect to this conception of the divine power. The ends which they
proposed to themselves in these rites were natural and laudable; only the
means they adopted to compass them were mistaken. A similar fallacy
induced the Greeks to adopt a like symbolism in their Dionysiac festivals,
and the superficial but striking resemblance thus produced between the two
religions has perhaps more than anything else misled inquirers, both
ancient and modern, into identifying worships which, though certainly akin
in nature, are perfectly distinct and independent in origin.(277)




§ 4. Osiris a God of the Dead.


(M96) We have seen that in one of his aspects Osiris was the ruler and
judge of the dead.(278) To a people like the Egyptians, who not only
believed in a life beyond the grave but actually spent much of their time,
labour, and money in preparing for it, this office of the god must have
appeared hardly, if at all, less important than his function of making the
earth to bring forth its fruits in due season. We may assume that in the
faith of his worshippers the two provinces of the god were intimately
connected. In laying their dead in the grave they committed them to his
keeping who could raise them from the dust to life eternal, even as he
caused the seed to spring from the ground. Of that faith the corn-stuffed
effigies of Osiris found in Egyptian tombs furnish an eloquent and
unequivocal testimony.(279) They were at once an emblem and an instrument
of resurrection. Thus from the sprouting of the grain the ancient
Egyptians drew an augury of human immortality. They are not the only
people who have built the same far-reaching hopes on the same slender
foundation. "Thou fool, that which thou sowest, thou sowest not that body
that shall be, but bare grain, it may chance of wheat, or of some other
grain: but God giveth it a body as it hath pleased him, and to every seed
his own body. So also is the resurrection of the dead. It is sown in
corruption; it is raised in incorruption: it is sown in weakness; it is
raised in power: it is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual
body."(280)

(M97) A god who thus fed his people with his own broken body in this life,
and who held out to them a promise of a blissful eternity in a better
world hereafter, naturally reigned supreme in their affections. We need
not wonder, therefore, that in Egypt the worship of the other gods was
overshadowed by that of Osiris, and that while they were revered each in
his own district, he and his divine partner Isis were adored in all.(281)





CHAPTER VI. ISIS.


(M98) The original meaning of the goddess Isis is still more difficult to
determine than that of her brother and husband Osiris. Her attributes and
epithets were so numerous that in the hieroglyphics she is called "the
many-named," "the thousand-named," and in Greek inscriptions "the
myriad-named."(282) The late eminent Dutch scholar C. P. Tiele confessed
candidly that "it is now impossible to tell precisely to what natural
phenomena the character of Isis at first referred." Yet he adds,
"Originally she was a goddess of fecundity."(283) Similarly Dr. Budge
writes that "Isis was the great and beneficent goddess and mother, whose
influence and love pervaded all heaven and earth and the abode of the
dead, and she was the personification of the great feminine, creative
power which conceived, and brought forth every living creature and thing,
from the gods in heaven to man on the earth, and to the insect on the
ground; what she brought forth she protected, and cared for, and fed, and
nourished, and she employed her life in using her power graciously and
successfully, not only in creating new beings but in restoring those that
were dead. She was, besides these things, the highest type of a faithful
and loving wife and mother, and it was in this capacity that the Egyptians
honoured and worshipped her most."(284)

(M99) Thus in her character of a goddess of fecundity Isis answered to the
great mother goddesses of Asia, though she differed from them in the
chastity and fidelity of her conjugal life; for while they were unmarried
and dissolute, she had a husband and was a true wife to him as well as an
affectionate mother to their son. Hence her beautiful Madonna-like figure
reflects a more refined state of society and of morals than the coarse,
sensual, cruel figures of Astarte, Anaitis, Cybele, and the rest of that
crew. A clear trace, indeed, of an ethical standard very different from
our own lingers in her double relation of sister and wife to Osiris; but
in most other respects she is rather late than primitive, the full-blown
flower rather than the seed of a long religious development. The
attributes ascribed to her were too various to be all her own. They were
graces borrowed from many lesser deities, sweets rifled from a thousand
humbler plants to feed the honey of her superb efflorescence. Yet in her
complex nature it is perhaps still possible to detect the original nucleus
round which by a slow process of accretion the other elements gathered.
For if her brother and husband Osiris was in one of his aspects the
corn-god, as we have seen reason to believe, she must surely have been the
corn-goddess. There are at least some grounds for thinking so. For if we
may trust Diodorus Siculus, whose authority appears to have been the
Egyptian historian Manetho, the discovery of wheat and barley was
attributed to Isis, and at her festivals stalks of these grains were
carried in procession to commemorate the boon she had conferred on
men.(285) A further detail is added by Augustine. He says that Isis made
the discovery of barley at the moment when she was sacrificing to the
common ancestors of her husband and herself, all of whom had been kings,
and that she showed the newly discovered ears of barley to Osiris and his
councillor Thoth or Mercury, as Roman writers called him. That is why,
adds Augustine, they identify Isis with Ceres.(286) Further, at
harvest-time, when the Egyptian reapers had cut the first stalks, they
laid them down and beat their breasts, wailing and calling upon Isis.(287)
The custom has been already explained as a lament for the corn-spirit
slain under the sickle.(288) Amongst the epithets by which Isis is
designated in the inscriptions are "Creatress of green things," "Green
goddess, whose green colour is like unto the greenness of the earth,"
"Lady of Bread," "Lady of Beer," "Lady of Abundance."(289) According to
Brugsch she is "not only the creatress of the fresh verdure of vegetation
which covers the earth, but is actually the green corn-field itself, which
is personified as a goddess."(290) This is confirmed by her epithet
_Sochit_ or _Sochet_, meaning "a corn-field," a sense which the word still
retains in Coptic.(291) The Greeks conceived of Isis as a corn-goddess,
for they identified her with Demeter.(292) In a Greek epigram she is
described as "she who has given birth to the fruits of the earth," and
"the mother of the ears of corn";(293) and in a hymn composed in her
honour she speaks of herself as "queen of the wheat-field," and is
described as "charged with the care of the fruitful furrow's wheat-rich
path."(294) Accordingly, Greek or Roman artists often represented her with
ears of corn on her head or in her hand.(295)

(M100) Such, we may suppose, was Isis in the olden time, a rustic
Corn-Mother adored with uncouth rites by Egyptian swains. But the homely
features of the clownish goddess could hardly be traced in the refined,
the saintly form which, spiritualized by ages of religious evolution, she
presented to her worshippers of after days as the true wife, the tender
mother, the beneficent queen of nature, encircled with the nimbus of moral
purity, of immemorial and mysterious sanctity. Thus chastened and
transfigured she won many hearts far beyond the boundaries of her native
land. In that welter of religions which accompanied the decline of
national life in antiquity her worship was one of the most popular at Rome
and throughout the empire. Some of the Roman emperors themselves were
openly addicted to it.(296) And however the religion of Isis may, like any
other, have been often worn as a cloak by men and women of loose life, her
rites appear on the whole to have been honourably distinguished by a
dignity and composure, a solemnity and decorum well fitted to soothe the
troubled mind, to ease the burdened heart. They appealed therefore to
gentle spirits, and above all to women, whom the bloody and licentious
rites of other Oriental goddesses only shocked and repelled. We need not
wonder, then, that in a period of decadence, when traditional faiths were
shaken, when systems clashed, when men's minds were disquieted, when the
fabric of empire itself, once deemed eternal, began to show ominous rents
and fissures, the serene figure of Isis with her spiritual calm, her
gracious promise of immortality, should have appeared to many like a star
in a stormy sky, and should have roused in their breasts a rapture of
devotion not unlike that which was paid in the Middle Ages to the Virgin
Mary. Indeed her stately ritual, with its shaven and tonsured priests, its
matins and vespers, its tinkling music, its baptism and aspersions of holy
water, its solemn processions, its jewelled images of the Mother of God,
presented many points of similarity to the pomps and ceremonies of
Catholicism.(297) The resemblance need not be purely accidental. Ancient
Egypt may have contributed its share to the gorgeous symbolism of the
Catholic Church as well as to the pale abstractions of her theology.(298)
Certainly in art the figure of Isis suckling the infant Horus is so like
that of the Madonna and child that it has sometimes received the adoration
of ignorant Christians.(299) And to Isis in her later character of
patroness of mariners the Virgin Mary perhaps owes her beautiful epithet
of _Stella Maris_, "Star of the Sea," under which she is adored by
tempest-tossed sailors.(300) The attributes of a marine deity may have
been bestowed on Isis by the sea-faring Greeks of Alexandria. They are
quite foreign to her original character and to the habits of the
Egyptians, who had no love of the sea.(301) On this hypothesis Sirius, the
bright star of Isis, which on July mornings rises from the glassy waves of
the eastern Mediterranean, a harbinger of halcyon weather to mariners, was
the true _Stella Maris_, "the Star of the Sea."





CHAPTER VII. OSIRIS AND THE SUN.


(M101) Osiris has been sometimes interpreted as the sun-god; and in modern
times this view has been held by so many distinguished writers that it
deserves a brief examination. If we inquire on what evidence Osiris has
been identified with the sun or the sun-god, it will be found on analysis
to be minute in quantity and dubious, where it is not absolutely
worthless, in quality. The diligent Jablonski, the first modern scholar to
collect and sift the testimony of classical writers on Egyptian religion,
says that it can be shown in many ways that Osiris is the sun, and that he
could produce a cloud of witnesses to prove it, but that it is needless to
do so, since no learned man is ignorant of the fact.(302) Of the writers
whom he condescends to quote, the only two who expressly identify Osiris
with the sun are Diodorus and Macrobius. The passage in Diodorus runs
thus:(303) "It is said that the aboriginal inhabitants of Egypt, looking
up to the sky, and smitten with awe and wonder at the nature of the
universe, supposed that there were two gods, eternal and primaeval, the
sun and the moon, of whom they named the sun Osiris and the moon Isis."
Even if Diodorus's authority for this statement is Manetho, as there is
some ground for believing,(304) little or no weight can be attached to it.
For it is plainly a philosophical, and therefore a late, explanation of
the first beginnings of Egyptian religion, reminding us of Kant's familiar
saying about the starry heavens and the moral law rather than of the rude
traditions of a primitive people. Jablonski's second authority, Macrobius,
is no better, but rather worse. For Macrobius was the father of that large
family of mythologists who resolve all or most gods into the sun.
According to him Mercury was the sun, Mars was the sun, Janus was the sun,
Saturn was the sun, so was Jupiter, also Nemesis, likewise Pan, and so on
through a great part of the pantheon.(305) It was natural, therefore, that
he should identify Osiris with the sun,(306) but his reasons for doing so
are exceedingly slight. He refers to the ceremonies of alternate
lamentation and joy as if they reflected the vicissitudes of the great
luminary in his course through the sky. Further, he argues that Osiris
must be the sun because an eye was one of his symbols. It is true that an
eye was a symbol of Osiris,(307) and it is also true that the sun was
often called "the eye of Horus";(308) yet the coincidence hardly suffices
to establish the identity of the two deities. The opinion that Osiris was
the sun is also mentioned, but not accepted, by Plutarch,(309) and it is
referred to by Firmicus Maternus.(310)

(M102) Amongst modern scholars, Lepsius, in identifying Osiris with the
sun, appears to rely mainly on the passage of Diodorus already quoted. But
the monuments, he adds, also show "that down to a late time Osiris was
sometimes conceived as _Ra_. In this quality he is named _Osiris-Ra_ even
in the 'Book of the Dead,' and Isis is often called 'the royal consort of
Ra.' "(311) That Ra was both the physical sun and the sun-god is
undisputed; but with every deference for the authority of so great a
scholar as Lepsius, we may doubt whether the identification of Osiris with
Ra can be accepted as proof that Osiris was originally the sun. For the
religion of ancient Egypt(312) may be described as a confederacy of local
cults which, while maintaining against each other a certain measure of
jealous and even hostile independence, were yet constantly subjected to
the fusing and amalgamating influence of political centralization and
philosophic thought. The history of the religion appears to have largely
consisted of a struggle between these opposite forces or tendencies. On
the one side there was the conservative tendency to preserve the local
cults with all their distinctive features, fresh, sharp, and crisp as they
had been handed down from an immemorial past. On the other side there was
the progressive tendency, favoured by the gradual fusion of the people
under a powerful central government, first to dull the edge of these
provincial distinctions, and finally to break them down completely and
merge them in a single national religion. The conservative party probably
mustered in its ranks the great bulk of the people, their prejudices and
affections being warmly enlisted in favour of the local deity, with whose
temple and rites they had been familiar from childhood; and the popular
dislike of change, based on the endearing effect of old association, must
have been strongly reinforced by the less disinterested opposition of the
local clergy, whose material interests would necessarily suffer with any
decay of their shrines. On the other hand the kings, whose power and glory
rose with the political and ecclesiastical consolidation of the realm,
were the natural champions of religious unity; and their efforts would be
seconded by the refined and thoughtful minority, who could hardly fail to
be shocked by the many barbarous and revolting elements in the local
rites. As usually happens in such cases, the process of religious
unification appears to have been largely effected by discovering points of
similarity, real or imaginary, between the provincial deities, which were
thereupon declared to be only different names or manifestations of the
same god.

(M103) Of the deities who thus acted as centres of attraction, absorbing
in themselves a multitude of minor divinities, by far the most important
was the sun-god Ra. There appear to have been few gods in Egypt who were
not at one time or other identified with him. Ammon of Thebes, Horus of
the East, Horus of Edfu, Chnum of Elephantine, Tum of Heliopolis, all were
regarded as one god, the sun. Even the water-god Sobk, in spite of his
crocodile shape, did not escape the same fate. Indeed one king, Amenophis
IV., undertook to sweep away all the old gods at a stroke and replace them
by a single god, the "great living disc of the sun."(313) In the hymns
composed in his honour, this deity is referred to as "the living disc of
the sun, besides whom there is none other." He is said to have made "the
far heaven" and "men, beasts, and birds; he strengtheneth the eyes with
his beams, and when he showeth himself, all flowers live and grow, the
meadows flourish at his upgoing and are drunken at his sight, all cattle
skip on their feet, and the birds that are in the marsh flutter for joy."
It is he "who bringeth the years, createth the months, maketh the days,
calculateth the hours, the lord of time, by whom men reckon." In his zeal
for the unity of god, the king commanded to erase the names of all other
gods from the monuments, and to destroy their images. His rage was
particularly directed against the god Ammon, whose name and likeness were
effaced wherever they were found; even the sanctity of the tomb was
violated in order to destroy the memorials of the hated deity. In some of
the halls of the great temples at Carnac, Luxor, and other places, all the
names of the gods, with a few chance exceptions, were scratched out. The
monarch even changed his own name, Amenophis, because it was compounded of
Ammon, and took instead the name of Chu-en-aten, "gleam of the sun's
disc." Thebes itself, the ancient capital of his glorious ancestors, full
of the monuments of their piety and idolatry, was no longer a fit home for
the puritan king. He deserted it, and built for himself a new capital in
Middle Egypt at the place now known as Tell-el-Amarna. Here in a few years
a city of palaces and gardens rose like an exhalation at his command, and
here the king, his dearly loved wife and children, and his complaisant
courtiers led a merry life. The grave and sombre ritual of Thebes was
discarded. The sun-god was worshipped with songs and hymns, with the music
of harps and flutes, with offerings of cakes and fruits and flowers. Blood
seldom stained his kindly altars. The king himself celebrated the offices
of religion. He preached with unction, and we may be sure that his
courtiers listened with at least an outward semblance of devotion. From
the too-faithful portraits of himself which he has bequeathed to us we can
still picture to ourselves the heretic king in the pulpit, with his tall,
lanky figure, his bandy legs, his pot-belly, his long, lean, haggard face
aglow with the fever of religious fanaticism. Yet "the doctrine," as he
loved to call it, which he proclaimed to his hearers was apparently no
stern message of renunciation in this world, of terrors in the world to
come. The thoughts of death, of judgment, and of a life beyond the grave,
which weighed like a nightmare on the minds of the Egyptians, seem to have
been banished for a time. Even the name of Osiris, the awful judge of the
dead, is not once mentioned in the graves at Tell-el-Amarna. All this
lasted only during the life of the reformer. His death was followed by a
violent reaction. The old gods were reinstated in their rank and
privileges: their names and images were restored, and new temples were
built. But all the shrines and palaces reared by the late king were thrown
down: even the sculptures that referred to him and to his god in
rock-tombs and on the sides of hills were erased or filled up with stucco:
his name appears on no later monument, and was carefully omitted from all
official lists. The new capital was abandoned, never to be inhabited
again. Its plan can still be traced in the sands of the desert.

(M104) This attempt of King Amenophis IV. is only an extreme example of a
tendency which appears to have affected the religion of Egypt as far back
as we can trace it. Therefore, to come back to our point, in attempting to
discover the original character of any Egyptian god, no weight can be
given to the identification of him with other gods, least of all with the
sun-god Ra. Far from helping to follow up the trail, these identifications
only cross and confuse it. The best evidence for the original character of
the Egyptian gods is to be found in their ritual and myths, so far as
these are known, and in the manner in which they are portrayed on the
monuments. It is mainly on evidence drawn from these sources that I rest
my interpretation of Osiris.

(M105) The ground upon which some modern writers seem chiefly to rely for
the identification of Osiris with the sun is that the story of his death
fits better with the solar phenomena than with any other in nature. It may
readily be admitted that the daily appearance and disappearance of the sun
might very naturally be expressed by a myth of his death and resurrection;
and writers who regard Osiris as the sun are careful to indicate that it
is the diurnal, and not the annual, course of the sun to which they
understand the myth to apply. Thus Renouf, who identified Osiris with the
sun, admitted that the Egyptian sun could not with any show of reason be
described as dead in winter.(314) But if his daily death was the theme of
the legend, why was it celebrated by an annual ceremony? This fact alone
seems fatal to the interpretation of the myth as descriptive of sunset and
sunrise. Again, though the sun may be said to die daily, in what sense can
he be said to be torn in pieces?(315)

(M106) In the course of our inquiry it has, I trust, been made clear that
there is another natural phenomenon to which the conception of death and
resurrection is as applicable as to sunset and sunrise, and which, as a
matter of fact, has been so conceived and represented in folk-custom. That
phenomenon is the annual growth and decay of vegetation. A strong reason
for interpreting the death of Osiris as the decay of vegetation rather
than as the sunset is to be found in the general, though not unanimous,
voice of antiquity, which classed together the worship and myths of
Osiris, Adonis, Attis, Dionysus, and Demeter, as religions of essentially
the same type.(316) The consensus of ancient opinion on this subject seems
too great to be rejected as a mere fancy. So closely did the rites of
Osiris resemble those of Adonis at Byblus that some of the people of
Byblus themselves maintained that it was Osiris and not Adonis whose death
was mourned by them.(317) Such a view could certainly not have been held
if the rituals of the two gods had not been so alike as to be almost
indistinguishable. Herodotus found the similarity between the rites of
Osiris and Dionysus so great, that he thought it impossible the latter
could have arisen independently; they must, he supposed, have been
recently borrowed, with slight alterations, by the Greeks from the
Egyptians.(318) Again, Plutarch, a very keen student of comparative
religion, insists upon the detailed resemblance of the rites of Osiris to
those of Dionysus.(319) We cannot reject the evidence of such intelligent
and trustworthy witnesses on plain matters of fact which fell under their
own cognizance. Their explanations of the worships it is indeed possible
to reject, for the meaning of religious cults is often open to question;
but resemblances of ritual are matters of observation. Therefore, those
who explain Osiris as the sun are driven to the alternative of either
dismissing as mistaken the testimony of antiquity to the similarity of the
rites of Osiris, Adonis, Attis, Dionysus, and Demeter, or of interpreting
all these rites as sun-worship. No modern scholar has fairly faced and
accepted either side of this alternative. To accept the former would be to
affirm that we know the rites of these deities better than the men who
practised, or at least who witnessed them. To accept the latter would
involve a wrenching, clipping, mangling, and distorting of myth and ritual
from which even Macrobius shrank.(320) On the other hand, the view that
the essence of all these rites was the mimic death and revival of
vegetation, explains them separately and collectively in an easy and
natural way, and harmonizes with the general testimony borne by the
ancients to their substantial similarity.





CHAPTER VIII. OSIRIS AND THE MOON.


(M107) Before we conclude this study of Osiris it will be worth while to
consider an ancient view of his nature, which deserves more attention than
it has received in modern times. We are told by Plutarch that among the
philosophers who saw in the gods of Egypt personifications of natural
objects and forces, there were some who interpreted Osiris as the moon and
his enemy Typhon as the sun, "because the moon, with her humid and
generative light, is favourable to the propagation of animals and the
growth of plants; while the sun with his fierce fire scorches and burns up
all growing things, renders the greater part of the earth uninhabitable by
reason of his blaze, and often overpowers the moon herself."(321) Whatever
may be thought of the physical qualities here attributed to the moon, the
arguments adduced by the ancients to prove the identity of Osiris with
that luminary carry with them a weight which has at least not been
lightened by the results of modern research. An examination of them and of
other evidence pointing in the same direction will, perhaps, help to set
the original character of the Egyptian deity in a clearer light.(322)

1. Osiris was said to have lived or reigned twenty-eight years. This might
fairly be taken as a mythical expression for a lunar month.(323)

2. His body was reported to have been rent into fourteen pieces.(324) This
might be interpreted of the waning moon, which appears to lose a portion
of itself on each of the fourteen days that make up the second half of a
lunar month. It is expressly said that his enemy Typhon found the body of
Osiris at the full moon;(325) thus the dismemberment of the god would
begin with the waning of the moon. To primitive man it seems manifest that
the waning moon is actually dwindling, and he naturally enough explains
its diminution by supposing that the planet is being rent or broken in
pieces or eaten away. The Klamath Indians of Oregon speak of the moon as
"the one broken to pieces" with reference to its changing aspect; they
never apply such a term to the sun,(326) whose apparent change of bulk at
different seasons of the year is far too insignificant to attract the
attention of the savage, or at least to be described by him in such
forcible language. The Dacotas believe that when the moon is full, a great
many little mice begin to nibble at one side of it and do not cease till
they have eaten it all up, after which a new moon is born and grows to
maturity, only to share the fate of its countless predecessors.(327) A
similar belief is held by the Huzuls of the Carpathians, except that they
ascribe the destruction of the old moon to wolves instead of to mice.(328)

3. At the new moon of the month Phamenoth, which was the beginning of
spring, the Egyptians celebrated what they called "the entry of Osiris
into the moon."(329)

4. At the ceremony called "the burial of Osiris" the Egyptians made a
crescent-shaped chest "because the moon, when it approaches the sun,
assumes the form of a crescent and vanishes."(330)

5. The bull Apis, held to be an image of the soul of Osiris,(331) was born
of a cow which was believed to have been impregnated, not in the vulgar
way by a bull, but by a divine influence emanating from the moon.(332)

6. Once a year, at the full moon, pigs were sacrificed simultaneously to
the moon and Osiris.(333)

7. In a hymn supposed to be addressed by Isis to Osiris, it is said that
Thoth--


            "_Placeth thy soul in the bark Ma-at,_
    _In that name which is thine, of __GOD MOON__._"


And again:--


    "_Thou who comest to us as a child each month,_
    _We do not cease to contemplate thee._
    _Thine emanation heightens the brilliancy_
    _Of the stars of Orion in the firmament._"(334)


Here then Osiris is identified with the moon in set terms. If in the same
hymn he is said to "illuminate us like Ra" (the sun), that is obviously no
reason for identifying him with the sun, but quite the contrary. For
though the moon may reasonably be compared to the sun, neither the sun nor
anything else can reasonably be compared to itself.

8. In art Osiris is sometimes represented as a human-headed mummy grasping
in his hands his characteristic emblems and wearing on his head, instead
of the usual crown, a full moon within a crescent.(335)

(M108) Now if in one of his aspects Osiris was originally a deity of
vegetation, we can easily enough understand why in a later and more
philosophic age he should come to be thus identified or confounded with
the moon.(336) For as soon as he begins to meditate upon the causes of
things, the early philosopher is led by certain obvious, though
fallacious, appearances to regard the moon as the ultimate cause of the
growth of plants. In the first place he associates its apparent growth and
decay with the growth and decay of sublunary things, and imagines that in
virtue of a secret sympathy the celestial phenomena really produce those
terrestrial changes which in point of fact they merely resemble. Thus
Pliny says that the moon may fairly be considered the planet of breath,
"because it saturates the earth and by its approach fills bodies, while by
its departure it empties them. Hence it is," he goes on, "that shell-fish
increase with the increase of the moon and that bloodless creatures
especially feel breath at that time; even the blood of men grows and
diminishes with the light of the moon, and leaves and herbage also feel
the same influence, since the lunar energy penetrates all things."(337)
"There is no doubt," writes Macrobius, "that the moon is the author and
framer of mortal bodies, so much so that some things expand or shrink as
it waxes or wanes."(338) Again, Aulus Gellius puts in the mouth of a
friend the remark that "the same things which grow with the waxing, do
dwindle with the waning moon," and he quotes from a commentary of
Plutarch's on Hesiod a statement that the onion is the only vegetable
which violates this great law of nature by sprouting in the wane and
withering in the increase of the moon.(339) Scottish Highlanders allege
that in the increase of the moon everything has a tendency to grow or
stick together;(340) and they call the second moon of autumn "the ripening
moon" (_Gealach an abachaidh_), because they imagine that crops ripen as
much by its light as by day.(341)

(M109) From this supposed influence of the moon on the life of plants and
animals, men in ancient and modern times have deduced a whole code of
rules for the guidance of the husbandman, the shepherd, and others in the
conduct of their affairs. Thus an ancient writer on agriculture lays it
down as a maxim, that whatever is to be sown should be sown while the moon
is waxing, and that whatever is to be cut or gathered should be cut or
gathered while it is waning.(342) A modern treatise on superstition
describes how the superstitious man regulates all his conduct by the moon:
"Whatever he would have to grow, he sets about it when she is in her
increase; but for what he would have made less he chooses her wane."(343)
In Germany the phases of the moon are observed by superstitious people at
all the more or even less important actions of life, such as tilling the
fields, building or changing houses, marriages, hair-cutting, bleeding,
cupping, and so forth. The particular rules vary in different places, but
the principle generally followed is that whatever is done to increase
anything should be done while the moon is waxing; whatever is done to
diminish anything should be done while the moon is waning. For example,
sowing, planting, and grafting should be done in the first half of the
moon, but the felling of timber and mowing should be done in the second
half.(344) In various parts of Europe it is believed that plants, nails,
hair, and corns, cut while the moon is on the increase, will grow again
fast, but that if cut while it is on the decrease they will grow slowly or
waste away.(345) Hence persons who wish their hair to grow thick and long
should cut it in the first half of the moon.(346) On the same principle
sheep are shorn when the moon is waxing, because it is supposed that the
wool will then be longest and most enduring.(347) Some negroes of the
Gaboon think that taro and other vegetables never thrive if they are
planted after full moon, but that they grow fast and strong if they are
planted in the first quarter.(348) The Highlanders of Scotland used to
expect better crops of grain by sowing their seed in the moon's
increase.(349) On the other hand they thought that garden vegetables, such
as onions and kail, run to seed if they are sown in the increase, but that
they grow to pot-herbs if they are sown in the wane.(350) So Thomas Tusser
advised the peasant to sow peas and beans in the wane of the moon "that
they with the planet may rest and arise."(351) The Zulus welcome the first
appearance of the new moon with beating of drums and other demonstrations
of joy; but next day they abstain from all labour, "thinking that if
anything is sown on those days they can never reap the benefit
thereof."(352) But in this matter of sowing and planting a refined
distinction is sometimes drawn by French, German, and Esthonian peasants;
plants which bear fruit above ground are sown by them when the moon is
waxing, but plants which are cultivated for the sake of their roots, such
as potatoes and turnips, are sown when the moon is waning.(353) The reason
for this distinction seems to be a vague idea that the waxing moon is
coming up and the waning moon going down, and that accordingly fruits
which grow upwards should be sown in the former period, and fruits which
grow downwards in the latter. Before beginning to plant their cacao the
Pipiles of Central America exposed the finest seeds for four nights to the
moonlight,(354) but whether they did so at the waxing or waning of the
moon is not said. Even pots, it would seem, are not exempt from this great
law of nature. In Uganda "potters waited for the new moon to appear before
baking their pots; when it was some days old, they prepared their fires
and baked the vessels. No potter would bake pots when the moon was past
the full, for he believed that they would be a failure, and would be sure
to crack or break in the burning, if he did so, and that his labour
accordingly would go for nothing."(355)

(M110) Again, the waning of the moon has been commonly recommended both in
ancient and modern times as the proper time for felling trees,(356)
apparently because it was thought fit and natural that the operation of
cutting down should be performed on earth at the time when the lunar orb
was, so to say, being cut down in the sky. In France before the Revolution
the forestry laws enjoined that trees should only be felled after the moon
had passed the full; and in French bills announcing the sale of timber you
may still read a notice that the wood was cut in the waning of the
moon.(357) So among the Shans of Burma, when a house is to be built, it is
a rule that "a lucky day should be chosen to commence the cutting of the
bamboos. The day must not only be a fortunate one for the builder, but it
must also be in the second half of the month, when the moon is waning.
Shans believe that if bamboos are cut during the first half of the month,
when the moon is waxing, they do not last well, as boring insects attack
them and they will soon become rotten. This belief is prevalent all over
the East."(358) A like belief obtains in various parts of Mexico. No
Mexican will cut timber while the moon is increasing; they say it must be
cut while the moon is waning or the wood will certainly rot.(359) In
Colombia, South America, people think that corn should only be sown and
timber felled when the moon is on the wane. They say that the waxing moon
draws the sap up through the trunk and branches, whereas the sap flows
down and leaves the wood dry during the wane of the moon.(360) But
sometimes the opposite rule is adopted, and equally forcible arguments are
urged in its defence. Thus, when the Wabondei of Eastern Africa are about
to build a house, they take care to cut the posts for it when the moon is
on the increase; for they say that posts cut when the moon is wasting away
would soon rot, whereas posts cut while the moon is waxing are very
durable.(361) The same rule is observed for the same reason in some parts
of Germany.(362)

(M111) But the partisans of the ordinarily received opinion have sometimes
supported it by another reason, which introduces us to the second of those
fallacious appearances by which men have been led to regard the moon as
the cause of growth in plants. From observing rightly that dew falls most
thickly on cloudless nights, they inferred wrongly that it was caused by
the moon, a theory which the poet Alcman expressed in mythical form by
saying that dew was a daughter of Zeus and the moon.(363) Hence the
ancients concluded that the moon is the great source of moisture, as the
sun is the great source of heat.(364) And as the humid power of the moon
was assumed to be greater when the planet was waxing than when it was
waning, they thought that timber cut during the increase of the luminary
would be saturated with moisture, whereas timber cut in the wane would be
comparatively dry. Hence we are told that in antiquity carpenters would
reject timber felled when the moon was growing or full, because they
believed that such timber teemed with sap;(365) and in the Vosges at the
present day people allege that wood cut at the new moon does not dry.(366)
We have seen that the same reason is assigned for the same practice in
Colombia.(367) In the Hebrides peasants give the same reason for cutting
their peats when the moon is on the wane; "for they observe that if they
are cut in the increase, they continue still moist and never burn clear,
nor are they without smoke, but the contrary is daily observed of peats
cut in the decrease."(368)

(M112) Thus misled by a double fallacy primitive philosophy comes to view
the moon as the great cause of vegetable growth, first, because the planet
seems itself to grow, and second, because it is supposed to be the source
of dew and moisture. It is no wonder, therefore, that agricultural peoples
should adore the planet which they believe to influence so profoundly the
crops on which they depend for subsistence. Accordingly we find that in
the hotter regions of America, where maize is cultivated and manioc is the
staple food, the moon was recognized as the principal object of worship,
and plantations of manioc were assigned to it as a return for the service
it rendered in the production of the crops. The worship of the moon in
preference to the sun was general among the Caribs, and, perhaps, also
among most of the other Indian tribes who cultivated maize in the tropical
forests to the east of the Andes; and the same thing has been observed,
under the same physical conditions, among the aborigines of the hottest
region of Peru, the northern valleys of Yuncapata. Here the Indians of
Pacasmayu and the neighbouring valleys revered the moon as their principal
divinity. The "house of the moon" at Pacasmayu was the chief temple of the
district; and the same sacrifices of maize-flour, of wine, and of children
which were offered by the mountaineers of the Andes to the Sun-god, were
offered by the lowlanders to the Moon-god in order that he might cause
their crops to thrive.(369) In ancient Babylonia, where the population was
essentially agricultural, the moon-god took precedence of the sun-god and
was indeed reckoned his father.(370)

(M113) Hence it would be no matter for surprise if, after worshipping the
crops which furnished them with the means of subsistence, the ancient
Egyptians should in later times have identified the spirit of the corn
with the moon, which a false philosophy had taught them to regard as the
ultimate cause of the growth of vegetation. In this way we can understand
why in their most recent forms the myth and ritual of Osiris, the old god
of trees and corn, should bear many traces of efforts made to bring them
into a superficial conformity with the new doctrine of his lunar affinity.





CHAPTER IX. THE DOCTRINE OF LUNAR SYMPATHY.


(M114) In the preceding chapter some evidence was adduced of the
sympathetic influence which the waxing or waning moon is popularly
supposed to exert on growth, especially on the growth of vegetation. But
the doctrine of lunar sympathy does not stop there; it is applied also to
the affairs of man, and various customs and rules have been deduced from
it which aim at the amelioration and even the indefinite extension of
human life. To illustrate this application of the popular theory at length
would be out of place here, but a few cases may be mentioned by way of
specimen.

(M115) The natural fact on which all the customs in question seem to rest
is the apparent monthly increase and decrease of the moon. From this
observation men have inferred that all things simultaneously wax or wane
in sympathy with it.(371) Thus the Mentras or Mantras of the Malay
Peninsula have a tradition that in the beginning men did not die but grew
thin with the waning of the moon, and waxed fat as she neared the
full.(372) Of the Scottish Highlanders we are told that "the moon in her
increase, full growth, and in her wane are with them the emblems of a
rising, flourishing, and declining fortune. At the last period of her
revolution they carefully avoid to engage in any business of importance;
but the first and middle they seize with avidity, presaging the most
auspicious issue to their undertakings."(373) Similarly in some parts of
Germany it is commonly believed that whatever is undertaken when the moon
is on the increase succeeds well, and that the full moon brings everything
to perfection; whereas business undertaken in the wane of the moon is
doomed to failure.(374) This German belief has come down, as we might have
anticipated, from barbaric times; for Tacitus tells us that the Germans
considered the new or the full moon the most auspicious time for
business;(375) and Caesar informs us that the Germans despaired of victory
if they joined battle before the new moon.(376) The Spartans seem to have
been of the same opinion, for it was a rule with them never to march out
to war except when the moon was full. The rule prevented them from sending
troops in time to fight the Persians at Marathon,(377) and but for
Athenian valour this paltry superstition might have turned the scale of
battle and decided the destiny of Greece, if not of Europe, for centuries.
The Athenians themselves paid dear for a similar scruple: an eclipse of
the moon cost them the loss of a gallant fleet and army before Syracuse,
and practically sealed the fate of Athens, for she never recovered from
the blow.(378) So heavy is the sacrifice which superstition demands of its
votaries. In this respect the Greeks were on a level with the negroes of
the Sudan, among whom, if a march has been decided upon during the last
quarter of the moon, the departure is always deferred until the first day
of the new moon. No chief would dare to undertake an expedition and lead
out his warriors before the appearance of the crescent. Merchants and
private persons observe the same rule on their journeys.(379) In like
manner the Mandingoes of Senegambia pay great attention to the changes of
the moon, and think it very unlucky to begin a journey or any other work
of consequence in the last quarter.(380)

It is especially the appearance of the new moon, with its promise of
growth and increase, which is greeted with ceremonies intended to renew
and invigorate, by means of sympathetic magic, the life of man. Observers,
ignorant of savage superstition, have commonly misinterpreted such customs
as worship or adoration paid to the moon. In point of fact the ceremonies
of new moon are probably in many cases rather magical than religious. The
Indians of the Ucayali River in Peru hail the appearance of the new moon
with great joy. They make long speeches to her, accompanied with vehement
gesticulations, imploring her protection and begging that she will be so
good as to invigorate their bodies.(381) On the day when the new moon
first appeared, it was a custom with the Indians of San Juan Capistrano,
in California, to call together all the young men for the purpose of its
celebration. "_Correr la luna!_" shouted one of the old men, "Come, my
boys, the moon! the moon!" Immediately the young men began to run about in
a disorderly fashion as if they were distracted, while the old men danced
in a circle, saying, "As the moon dieth, and cometh to life again, so we
also having to die will again live."(382) An old traveller tells us that
at the appearance of every new moon the negroes of the Congo clapped their
hands and cried out, sometimes falling on their knees, "So may I renew my
life as thou art renewed." But if the sky happened to be clouded, they did
nothing, alleging that the planet had lost its virtue.(383) A somewhat
similar custom prevails among the Ovambo of South-Western Africa. On the
first moonlight night of the new moon, young and old, their bodies smeared
with white earth, perhaps in imitation of the planet's silvery light,
dance to the moon and address to it wishes which they feel sure will be
granted.(384) We may conjecture that among these wishes is a prayer for a
renewal of life. When a Masai sees the new moon he throws a twig or stone
at it with his left hand, and says, "Give me long life," or "Give me
strength"; and when a pregnant woman sees the new moon she milks some milk
into a small gourd, which she covers with green grass. Then she pours the
milk away in the direction of the moon and says, "Moon, give me my child
safely."(385) Among the Wagogo of German East Africa, at sight of the new
moon some people break a stick in pieces, spit on the pieces, and throw
them towards the moon, saying, "Let all illness go to the west, where the
sun sets."(386) Among the Boloki of the Upper Congo there is much shouting
and gesticulation on the appearance of a new moon. Those who have enjoyed
good health pray that it may be continued, and those who have been sick
ascribe their illness to the coming of the luminary and beg her to take
away bad health and give them good health instead.(387) The Esthonians
think that all the misfortunes which might befall a man in the course of a
month may be forestalled and shifted to the moon, if a man will only say
to the new moon, "Good morrow, new moon. I must grow young, you must grow
old. My eyes must grow bright, yours must grow dark. I must grow light as
a bird, you must grow heavy as iron."(388) On the fifteenth day of the
moon, that is, at the time when the luminary has begun to wane, the
Coreans take round pieces of paper, either red or white, which represent
the moon, and having fixed them perpendicularly on split sticks they place
them on the tops of the houses. Then persons who have been forewarned by
fortune-tellers of impending evil pray to the moon to remove it from
them.(389)

(M116) In India people attempt to absorb the vital influence of the moon
by drinking water in which the luminary is reflected. Thus the Mohammedans
of Oude fill a silver basin with water and hold it so that the orb of the
full moon is mirrored in it. The person to be benefited must look
steadfastly at the moon in the basin, then shut his eyes and drink the
water at one gulp. Doctors recommend the draught as a remedy for nervous
disorders and palpitation of the heart. Somewhat similar customs prevail
among the Hindoos of Northern India. At the full moon of the month of Kuar
(September-October) people lay out food on the house-tops, and when it has
absorbed the rays of the moon they distribute it among their relations,
who are supposed to lengthen their life by eating of the food which has
thus been saturated with moonshine. Patients are often made to look at the
moon reflected in melted butter, oil, or milk as a cure for leprosy and
the like diseases.(390)

(M117) Naturally enough the genial influence of moonshine is often
supposed to be particularly beneficial to children; for will not the
waxing moon help them to wax in strength and stature? Hence in the island
of Kiriwina, one of the Trobriands Group to the east of New Guinea, a
mother always lifts up or presents her child to the first full moon after
its birth in order that it may grow fast and talk soon.(391) So among the
Baganda of Central Africa it was customary for each mother to take her
child out at the first new moon after its birth, and to point out the moon
to the infant; this was thought to make the child grow healthy and
strong.(392) Among the Thonga of South Africa the presentation of the baby
to the moon does not take place until the mother has resumed her monthly
periods, which usually happens in the third month after the birth. When
the new moon appears, the mother takes a torch or a burning brand from the
fire and goes to the ash-heap behind the hut. She is followed by the
grandmother carrying the child. At the ash-heap the mother throws the
burning stick towards the moon, while the grandmother tosses the baby into
the air, saying, "This is your moon!" The child squalls and rolls over on
the ash-heap. Then the mother snatches up the infant and nurses it; so
they go home.(393)

(M118) The Guarayos Indians, who inhabit the gloomy tropical forests of
Eastern Bolivia, lift up their children in the air at new moon in order
that they may grow.(394) Among the Apinagos Indians, on the Tocantins
River in Brazil, the French traveller Castelnau witnessed a remarkable
dance by moonlight. The Indians danced in two long ranks which faced each
other, the women on one side, the men on the other. Between the two ranks
of dancers blazed a great fire. The men were painted in brilliant colours,
and for the most part wore white or red skull-caps made of maize-flour and
resin. Their dancing was very monotonous and consisted of a jerky movement
of the body, while the dancer advanced first one leg and then the other.
This dance they accompanied with a melancholy song, striking the ground
with their weapons. Opposite them the women, naked and unpainted, stood in
a single rank, their bodies bent slightly forward, their knees pressed
together, their arms swinging in measured time, now forward, now backward,
so as to join hands. A remarkable figure in the dance was a personage
painted scarlet all over, who held in his hand a rattle composed of a
gourd full of pebbles. From time to time he leaped across the great fire
which burned between the men and the women. Then he would run rapidly in
front of the women, stopping now and then before one or other and
performing a series of strange gambols, while he shook his rattle
violently. Sometimes he would sink with one knee to the ground, and then
suddenly throw himself backward. Altogether the agility and endurance
which he displayed were remarkable. This dance lasted for hours. When a
woman was tired out she withdrew, and her place was taken by another; but
the same men danced the monotonous dance all night. Towards midnight the
moon attained the zenith and flooded the scene with her bright rays. A
change now took place in the dance. A long line of men and women advanced
to the fire between the ranks of the dancers. Each of them held one end of
a hammock in which lay a new-born infant, whose squalls could be heard.
These babes were now to be presented by their parents to the moon. On
reaching the end of the line each couple swung the hammock, accompanying
the movement by a chant, which all the Indians sang in chorus. The song
seemed to consist of three words, repeated over and over again. Soon a
shrill voice was heard, and a hideous old hag, like a skeleton, appeared
with her arms raised above her head. She went round and round the assembly
several times, then disappeared in silence. While she was present, the
scarlet dancer with the rattle bounded about more furiously than ever,
stopping only for a moment while he passed in front of the line of women.
His body was contracted and bent towards them, and described an undulatory
movement like that of a worm writhing. He shook his rattle violently, as
if he would fain kindle in the women the fire which burned in himself.
Then rising abruptly he would resume his wild career. During this time the
loud voice of an orator was heard from the village repeating a curious
name without cessation. Then the speaker approached slowly, carrying on
his back some gorgeous bunches of brilliant feathers and under his arm a
stone axe. Behind him walked a young woman bearing an infant in a loose
girdle at her waist; the child was wrapped in a mat, which protected it
against the chill night air. The couple paced slowly for a minute or two,
and then vanished without speaking a word. At the same moment the curious
name which the orator had shouted was taken up by the whole assembly and
repeated by them again and again. This scene in its turn lasted a long
time, but ceased suddenly with the setting of the moon. The French
traveller who witnessed it fell asleep, and when he awoke all was calm
once more: there was nothing to recall the infernal dances of the
night.(395)

(M119) In explanation of these dances Castelnau merely observes that the
Apinagos, like many other South American Indians, pay a superstitious
respect to the moon. We may suppose that the ceremonious presentation of
the infants to the moon was intended to ensure their life and growth. The
names solemnly chanted by the whole assembly were probably those which the
parents publicly bestowed on their children. As to the scarlet dancer who
leaped across the fire, we may conjecture that he personated the moon, and
that his strange antics in front of the women were designed to impart to
them the fertilizing virtue of the luminary, and perhaps to facilitate
their delivery.

(M120) Among the Baganda of Central Africa there is general rejoicing when
the new moon appears, and no work is done for seven days. When the
crescent is first visible at evening, mothers take out their babies and
hold them at arms' length, saying, "I want my child to keep in health till
the moon wanes." At the same time a ceremony is performed which may be
intended to ensure the king's life and health throughout the ensuing
month. It is a custom with the Baganda to preserve the king's navel-string
with great care during his life. The precious object is called the "Twin"
of the king, as if it were his double; and the ghost of the royal
afterbirth is believed to be attached to it. Enclosed in a pot, which is
wrapt in bark cloths, the navel-string is kept in a temple specially built
for it near the king's enclosure, and a great minister of state acts as
its guardian and priest. Every new moon, at evening, he carries it in
state, wrapped in bark cloths, to the king, who takes it into his hands,
examines it, and returns it to the minister. The keeper of the
navel-string then goes back with it to the house and sets it in the
doorway, where it remains all night. Next morning it is taken from its
wrappings and again placed in the doorway until the evening, when it is
once more swathed in bark cloths and restored to its usual place.(396)
Apparently the navel-string is conceived as a vital portion, a sort of
external soul, of the king; and the attentions bestowed on it at the new
moon may be supposed to refresh and invigorate it, thereby refreshing and
invigorating the king's life.

(M121) The Armenians appear to think that the moon exercises a baleful
influence on little children. To avert that influence a mother will show
the moon to her child and say, "Thine uncle, thine uncle." For the same
purpose the father and mother will mount to the roof of the house at new
moon on a Wednesday or Friday. The father then puts the child on a shovel
and gives it to the mother, saying, "If it is thine, take it to thee. But
if it is mine, rear it and give it to me back." The mother then takes the
child and the shovel, and returns them to the father in like manner.(397)
A similar opinion as to the noxious influence of moonshine on children was
apparently held by the ancient Greeks; for Greek nurses took great care
never to show their infants to the moon.(398) Some Brazilian Indians in
like manner guard babies against the moon, believing that it would make
them ill. Immediately after delivery mothers will hide themselves and
their infants in the thickest parts of the forest in order that the
moonlight may not fall on them.(399) It would be easy to understand why
the waning moon should be deemed injurious to children; they might be
supposed to peak and pine with its dwindling light. Thus in Angus it is
thought that if a child be weaned during the waning of the moon, it will
decay all the time that the moon continues to wane.(400) But it is less
easy to see why the same deleterious influence on children should be
ascribed to moonlight in general.

(M122) There are many other ways in which people have sought to turn lunar
sympathy to practical account. Clearly the increase of the moon is the
time to increase your goods, and the decrease of the moon is the time to
diminish your ills. Acting on this imaginary law of nature many persons in
Europe show their money to the new moon or turn it in their pockets at
that season, in the belief that the money will grow with the growth of the
planet; sometimes, by way of additional precaution, they spit on the coin
at the same time.(401) "Both Christians and Moslems in Syria turn their
silver money in their pockets at the new moon for luck; and two persons
meeting under the new moon will each take out a silver coin and embrace,
saying, 'May you begin and end; and may it be a good month to us.' "(402)
Conversely the waning of the moon is the most natural time to get rid of
bodily ailments. In Brittany they think that warts vary with the phases of
the moon, growing as it waxes and vanishing away as it wanes.(403)
Accordingly, they say in Germany that if you would rid yourself of warts
you should treat them when the moon is on the decrease.(404) And a German
cure for toothache, earache, headache, and so forth, is to look towards
the waning moon and say, "As the moon decreases, so may my pains decrease
also."(405) However, some Germans reverse the rule. They say, for example,
that if you are afflicted with a wen, you should face the waxing moon, lay
your finger on the wen, and say thrice, "What I see waxes; what I touch,
let it vanish away." After each of these two sentences you should cross
yourself thrice. Then go home without speaking to any one, and repeat
three paternosters behind the kitchen door.(406) The Huzuls of the
Carpathians recommend a somewhat similar, and no doubt equally
efficacious, cure for waterbrash. They say that at new moon the patient
should run thrice round the house and then say to the moon, "Moon, moon,
where wast thou?" "Behind the mountain." "What hast thou eaten there?"
"Horse flesh." "Why hast thou brought me nothing?" "Because I forgot."
"May the waterbrash forget to burn me!"(407) Thus a curative virtue
appears to be attributed by some people to the waning and by others to the
waxing moon. There is perhaps just as much, or as little, to be said for
the one attribution as for the other.





CHAPTER X. THE KING AS OSIRIS.


(M123) In the foregoing discussion we found reason to believe that the
Semitic Adonis and the Phrygian Attis were at one time personated in the
flesh by kings, princes, or priests who played the part of the god for a
time and then either died a violent death in the divine character or had
to redeem their life in one way or another, whether by performing a
make-believe sacrifice at some expense of pain and danger to themselves,
or by delegating the duty to a substitute.(408) Further, we conjectured
that in Egypt the part of Osiris may have been played by the king
himself.(409) It remains to adduce some positive evidence of this
personation.

(M124) A great festival called the Sed was celebrated by the Egyptians
with much solemnity at intervals of thirty years. Various portions of the
ritual are represented on the ancient monuments of Hieraconpolis and
Abydos and in the oldest decorated temple of Egypt known to us, that of
Usirniri at Busiris, which dates from the fifth dynasty. It appears that
the ceremonies were as old as the Egyptian civilization, and that they
continued to be observed till the end of the Roman period.(410) The reason
for holding them at intervals of thirty years is uncertain, but we can
hardly doubt that the period was determined by astronomical
considerations. According to one view, it was based on the observation of
Saturn's period of revolution round the sun, which is, roughly speaking,
thirty years, or, more exactly, twenty-nine years and one hundred and
seventy-four days.(411) According to another view, the thirty years'
period had reference to Sirius, the star of Isis. We have seen that on
account of the vague character of the old Egyptian year the heliacal
rising of Sirius shifted its place gradually through every month of the
calendar.(412) In one hundred and twenty years the star thus passed
through one whole month of thirty days. To speak more precisely, it rose
on the first of the month during the first four years of the period: it
rose on the second of the month in the second four years, on the third of
the month in the third four years; and so on successively, till in the
last four years of the hundred and twenty years it rose on the last day of
the month. As the Egyptians watched the annual summer rising of the star
with attention and associated it with the most popular of their goddesses,
it would be natural that its passage from one month to another, at
intervals of one hundred and twenty years, should be the occasion of a
great festival, and that the long period of one hundred and twenty years
should be divided into four minor periods of thirty years respectively,
each celebrated by a minor festival.(413) If this theory of the Sed
festivals is correct, we should expect to find that every fourth
celebration was distinguished from the rest by a higher degree of
solemnity, since it marked the completion of a twelfth part of the star's
journey through the twelve months. Now it appears that in point of fact
every fourth Sed festival was marked off from its fellows by the adjective
_tep_ or "chief," and that these "chief" celebrations fell as a rule in
the years when Sirius rose on the first of the month.(414) These facts
confirm the view that the Sed festival was closely connected with the star
Sirius, and through it with Isis.

(M125) However, we are here concerned rather with the meaning and the
rites of the festival than with the reasons for holding it once every
thirty years. The intention of the festival seems to have been to procure
for the king a new lease of life, a renovation of his divine energies, a
rejuvenescence. In the inscriptions of Abydos we read, after an account of
the rites, the following address to the king: "Thou dost recommence thy
renewal, thou art granted to flourish again like the infant god Moon, thou
dost grow young again, and that from season to season, like Nun at the
beginning of time, thou art born again in renewing the Sed festivals. All
life comes to thy nostril, and thou art king of the whole earth for
ever."(415) In short, on these occasions it appears to have been supposed
that the king was in a manner born again.

(M126) But how was the new birth effected? Apparently the essence of the
rites consisted in identifying the king with Osiris; for just as Osiris
had died and risen again from the dead, so the king might be thought to
die and to live again with the god whom he personated. The ceremony would
thus be for the king a death as well as a rebirth. Accordingly in pictures
of the Sed festival on the monuments we see the king posing as the dead
Osiris. He sits in a shrine like a god, holding in his hands the crook and
flail of Osiris: he is wrapped in tight bandages like the mummified
Osiris; indeed, there is nothing but his name to prove that he is not
Osiris himself. This enthronement of the king in the attitude of the dead
god seems to have been the principal event of the festival.(416) Further,
the queen and the king's daughters figured prominently in the
ceremonies.(417) A discharge of arrows formed part of the rites;(418) and
in some sculptures at Carnac the queen is portrayed shooting arrows
towards the four quarters of the world, while the king does the same with
rings.(419) The oldest illustration of the festival is on the mace of
Narmer, which is believed to date from 5500 B.C. Here we see the king
seated as Osiris in a shrine at the top of nine steps. Beside the shrine
stand fan-bearers, and in front of it is a figure in a palanquin, which,
according to an inscription in another representation of the scene,
appears to be the royal child. An enclosure of curtains hung on poles
surrounds the dancing-ground, where three men are performing a sacred
dance. A procession of standards is depicted beside the enclosure; it is
headed by the standard of the jackal-god Up-uat, the "opener of ways" for
the dead.(420) Similarly on a seal of King Zer, or rather Khent, one of
the early kings of the first dynasty, the monarch appears as Osiris with
the standard of the jackal-god before him. In front of him, too, is the
ostrich feather on which "the dead king was supposed to ascend into
heaven. Here, then, the king, identified with Osiris, king of the dead,
has before him the jackal-god, who leads the dead, and the ostrich
feather, which symbolizes his reception into the sky."(421) There are even
grounds for thinking that in order to complete the mimic death of the king
at the Sed festival an effigy of him, clad in the costume of Osiris, was
solemnly buried in a cenotaph.(422)

(M127) According to Professor Flinders Petrie, "the conclusion may be
drawn thus. In the savage age of prehistoric times, the Egyptians, like
many other African and Indian peoples, killed their priest-king at stated
intervals, in order that the ruler should, with unimpaired life and
health, be enabled to maintain the kingdom in its highest condition. The
royal daughters were present in order that they might be married to his
successor. The jackal-god went before him, to open the way to the unseen
world; and the ostrich feather received and bore away the king's soul in
the breeze that blew it out of sight. This was the celebration of the
'end,' the _sed_ feast. The king thus became the dead king, patron of all
those who had died in his reign, who were his subjects here and hereafter.
He was thus one with Osiris, the king of the dead. This fierce custom
became changed, as in other lands, by appointing a deputy king to die in
his stead; which idea survived in the Coptic Abu Nerus, with his tall
crown of Upper Egypt, false beard, and sceptre. After the death of the
deputy, the real king renewed his life and reign. Henceforward this became
the greatest of the royal festivals, the apotheosis of the king during his
life, after which he became Osiris upon earth and the patron of the dead
in the underworld."(423)

(M128) A similar theory of the Sed festival is maintained by another
eminent Egyptologist, M. Alexandre Moret. He says: "In most of the temples
of Egypt, of all periods, pictures set forth for us the principal scenes
of a solemn festival called 'festival of the tail,' the Sed festival. It
consisted essentially in a representation of the ritual death of the king
followed by his rebirth. In this case the king is identified with Osiris,
the god who in historical times is the hero of the sacred drama of
humanity, he who guides us through the three stages of life, death, and
rebirth in the other world. Hence, clad in the funeral costume of Osiris,
with the tight-fitting garment clinging to him like a shroud, Pharaoh is
conducted to the tomb; and from it he returns rejuvenated and reborn like
Osiris emerging from the dead. How was this fiction carried out? how was
this miracle performed? By the sacrifice of human or animal victims. On
behalf of the king a priest lay down in the skin of the animal victim: he
assumed the posture characteristic of an embryo in its mother's womb: when
he came forth from the skin he was deemed to be reborn; and Pharaoh, for
whom this rite was celebrated, was himself reborn, or to adopt the
Egyptian expression, 'he renewed his births.' And in testimony of the due
performance of the rites the king girt his loins with the tail, a
compendious representative of the skin of the sacrificed beast, whence the
name of 'the festival of the tail.'

"How are we to explain the rule that at a certain point of his reign every
Pharaoh must undergo this ritual death followed by fictitious rebirth? Is
it simply a renewal of the initiation into the Osirian mysteries? or does
the festival present some more special features? The ill-defined part
played by the royal children in these rites seems to me to indicate that
the Sed festival represents other episodes which refer to the transmission
of the regal office. At the dawn of civilization in Egypt the people were
perhaps familiar with the alternative either of putting their king to
death in his full vigour in order that his power should be transmitted
intact to his successor, or of attempting to rejuvenate him and to 'renew
his life.' The latter measure was an invention of the Pharaohs. How could
it be carried out more effectively than by identifying themselves with
Osiris, by applying to themselves the process of resurrection, the funeral
rites by which Isis, according to the priests, had magically saved her
husband from death? Perhaps the fictitious death of the king may be
regarded as a mitigation of the primitive murder of the divine king, a
transition from a barbarous reality to symbolism."(424)

(M129) Whether this interpretation of the Sed festival be accepted in all
its details or not, one thing seems quite certain: on these solemn
occasions the god Osiris was personated by the king of Egypt himself. That
is the point with which we are here chiefly concerned.





CHAPTER XI. THE ORIGIN OF OSIRIS.


(M130) Thus far we have discussed the character of Osiris as he is
presented to us in the art and literature of Egypt and in the testimonies
of Greek writers; and we have found that judged by these indications he
was in the main a god of vegetation and of the dead. But we have still to
ask, how did the conception of such a composite deity originate? Did it
arise simply through observation of the great annual fluctuations of the
seasons and a desire to explain them? Was it a result of brooding over the
mystery of external nature? Was it the attempt of a rude philosophy to
lift the veil and explore the hidden springs that set the vast machine in
motion? That man at a very early stage of his long history meditated on
these things and evolved certain crude theories which partially satisfied
his craving after knowledge is certain; from such meditations of
Babylonian and Phrygian sages appear to have sprung the pathetic figures
of Adonis and Attis; and from such meditations of Egyptian sages may have
sprung the tragic figure of Osiris.

(M131) Yet a broad distinction seems to sever the myth and worship of
Osiris from the kindred myths and worships of Adonis and Attis. For while
Adonis and Attis were minor divinities in the religion of Western Asia,
completely overshadowed by the greater deities of their respective
pantheons, the solemn figure of Osiris towered in solitary grandeur over
all the welter of Egyptian gods, like a pyramid of his native land lit up
by the last rays of the setting sun when all below it is in shadow. And
whereas legend generally represented Adonis and Attis as simple swains,
mere herdsmen or hunters whom the fatal love of a goddess had elevated
above their homely sphere into a brief and melancholy pre-eminence, Osiris
uniformly appears in tradition as a great and beneficent king. In life, he
ruled over his people, beloved and revered for the benefits he conferred
on them and on the world; in death he reigned in their hearts and memories
as lord of the dead, the awful judge at whose bar every man must one day
stand to give an account of the deeds done in the body and to receive the
final award. In the faith of the Egyptians the cruel death and blessed
resurrection of Osiris occupied the same place as the death and
resurrection of Christ hold in the faith of Christians. As Osiris died and
rose again from the dead, so they hoped through him and in his dear name
to wake triumphant from the sleep of death to a blissful eternity. That
was their sheet-anchor in life's stormy sea; that was the hope which
supported and consoled millions of Egyptian men and women for a period of
time far longer than that during which Christianity has now existed on
earth. In the long history of religion no two divine figures resemble each
other more closely in the fervour of personal devotion which they have
kindled and in the high hopes which they have inspired than Osiris and
Christ. The sad figure of Buddha indeed has been as deeply loved and
revered by countless millions; but he had no glad tidings of immortality
for men, nothing but the promise of a final release from the burden of
mortality.

(M132) And if Osiris and Christ have been the centres of the like
enthusiastic devotion, may not the secret of their influence have been
similar? If Christ lived the life and died the death of a man on earth,
may not Osiris have done so likewise? The immense and enduring popularity
of his worship speaks in favour of the supposition; for all the other
great religious or semi-religious systems which have won for themselves a
permanent place in the affections of mankind, have been founded by
individual great men, who by their personal life and example exerted a
power of attraction such as no cold abstractions, no pale products of the
collective wisdom or folly could ever exert on the minds and hearts of
humanity. Thus it was with Buddhism, with Confucianism, with Christianity,
and with Mohammedanism; and thus it may well have been with the religion
of Osiris. Certainly we shall do less violence to the evidence if we
accept the unanimous tradition of ancient Egypt on this point than if we
resolve the figure of Osiris into a myth pure and simple. And when we
consider that from the earliest to the latest times Egyptian kings were
worshipped as gods both in life and in death, there appears to be nothing
extravagant or improbable in the view that one of them by his personal
qualities excited a larger measure of devotion than usual during his life
and was remembered with fonder affection and deeper reverence after his
death; till in time his beloved memory, dimmed, transfigured, and
encircled with a halo of glory by the mists of time, grew into the
dominant religion of his people. At least this theory is reasonable enough
to deserve a serious consideration. If we accept it, we may suppose that
the mythical elements, which legend undoubtedly ascribed to Osiris, were
later accretions which gathered about his memory like ivy about a ruin.
There is no improbability in such a supposition; on the contrary, all
analogy is in its favour, for nothing is more certain than that myths grow
like weeds round the great historical figures of the past.

(M133) In recent years the historical reality of Osiris as a king who once
lived and reigned in Egypt has been maintained by more than one learned
scholar;(425) and without venturing to pronounce a decided opinion on so
obscure and difficult a question, I think it worth while, following the
example of Dr. Wallis Budge, to indicate certain modern African analogies
which tend to confirm the view that beneath the mythical wrappings of
Osiris there lay the mummy of a dead man. At all events the analogies
which I shall cite suffice to prove that the custom of worshipping dead
kings has not been confined to Egypt, but has been apparently widespread
throughout Africa, though the evidence now at our disposal only enables us
to detect the observance of the custom at a few points of the great
continent. But even if the resemblance in this respect between ancient
Egypt and modern Africa should be regarded as established, it would not
justify us in inferring an ethnical affinity between the fair or ruddy
Egyptians and the black aboriginal races who occupy almost the whole of
Africa except a comparatively narrow fringe on the northern sea-board.
Scholars are still divided on the question of the original home and racial
relationship of the ancient Egyptians. It has been held on the one hand
that they belong to an indigenous white race which has been always in
possession of the Mediterranean coasts of Africa; and on the other hand it
has been supposed that they are akin to the Semites in blood as well as in
language, and that they entered Africa from the East, whether by gradual
infiltration or on a sudden wave of conquest like the Arabs in the decline
of the Roman empire.(426) On either view a great gulf divided them from
the swarthy natives of the Sudan, with whom they were always in contact on
their southern border; and though a certain admixture may have taken place
through marriage between the two races, it seems unsafe to assume that the
religious and political resemblances which can be traced between them are
based on any closer relationship than the general similarity in structure
and functions of the human mind.

(M134) In a former part of this work we saw that the Shilluks, a pastoral
and partially agricultural people of the White Nile, worship the spirits
of their dead kings.(427) The graves of the deceased monarchs form indeed
the national or tribal temples; and as each king is interred at the
village where he was born and where his afterbirth is buried, these
grave-shrines are scattered over the country. Each of them usually
comprises a small group of round huts, resembling the common houses of the
people, the whole being enclosed by a fence; one of the huts is built over
the grave, the others are occupied by the guardians of the shrine, who at
first are generally the widows or old men-servants of the deceased king.
When these women or retainers die, they are succeeded in office by their
descendants, for the tombs are maintained in perpetuity, so that the
number of temples and of gods is always on the increase. Cattle are
dedicated to these royal shrines and animals sacrificed at them. For
example, when the millet crop threatens to fail or a murrain breaks out
among the beasts, one of the dead kings will appear to somebody in a dream
and demand a sacrifice. The dream is reported to the king, and he
immediately orders a bullock and a cow to be sent to the grave of the dead
king who appeared in a vision of the night to the sleeper. This is done;
the bullock is killed and the cow added to the sacred herd of the shrine.
It is customary, also, though not necessary, at harvest to offer some of
the new millet at the temple-tombs of the kings; and sick people send
animals to be sacrificed there on their behalf. Special regard is paid to
trees that grow near the graves of the kings; and the spirits of the
departed monarchs are believed to appear from time to time in the form of
certain animals. One of them, for example, always takes the shape of a
certain insect, which seems to be the larva of the _Mantidae_. When a
Shilluk finds one of these insects, he will take it up in his hands and
deposit it reverentially at the shrine. Other kings manifest themselves as
a certain species of white birds; others assume the form of giraffes. When
one of these long-legged and long-necked creatures comes stalking up
fearlessly to a village where there is a king's grave, the people know
that the king's soul is in the animal, and the attendants at the royal
tomb testify their joy at the appearance of their master by sacrificing a
sheep or even a bullock.

(M135) But of all the dead kings none is revered so deeply or occupies so
large a place in the minds of the people as Nyakang, the traditional
founder of the dynasty and the ancestor of all the kings who have reigned
after him to the present day. Of these kings the Shilluks have preserved
the memory and the genealogy; twenty-six seem to have sat on the throne
since Nyakang, but the period of time covered by their reigns is much
shorter than it would have been under conditions such as now prevail in
Europe; for down to the time when their country came under British rule it
was the regular custom of the Shilluks to put their kings to death as soon
as they showed serious symptoms of bodily or mental decay. The custom was
based on "the conviction that the king must not be allowed to become ill
or senile, lest with his diminishing vigour the cattle should sicken and
fail to bear their increase, the crops should rot in the fields, and man,
stricken with disease, should die in ever-increasing numbers."(428) It is
said that Nyakang, like Romulus, disappeared in a great storm, which
scattered all the people about him; in their absence the king took a
cloth, tied it tightly round his neck, and strangled himself. According to
one account, that is the death which all his successors on the throne have
died;(429) but while tradition appears to be unanimous as to the custom of
regicide, it varies as to the precise mode in which the kings were
relieved of their office and of life. But still the people are convinced
that Nyakang did not really die but only vanished mysteriously away like
the wind. When a missionary asked the Shilluks as to the manner of
Nyakang's death, they were filled with amazement at his ignorance and
stoutly maintained that he never died, for were he to die all the Shilluks
would die also.(430) The graves of this deified king are shown in various
parts of the country.

(M136) From time to time the spirit of Nyakang manifests itself to his
people in the form of an animal. Any creature of regal port or surpassing
beauty may serve as his temporary incarnation. Such among wild animals are
lions, crocodiles, little yellow snakes that crawl about men's houses, the
finest sorts of antelopes, flamingoes with their rose-pink and scarlet
plumage, and butterflies of all sorts with their brilliant and varied
hues. An unusually fine head of cattle is also recognized as the abode of
the great king's soul; for example he once appeared in the shape of a
white bull, whereupon the living king commanded special sacrifices to be
offered in honour of his deified predecessor. When a bird in which the
royal spirit is known to be lodged lights on a tree, that tree becomes
sacred to Nyakang; beads and cloths are hung on its boughs, sacrifices and
prayers are offered below it. Once when the Turks unknowingly felled such
a tree, fear and horror fell on the Shilluks who beheld the sacrilege.
They filled the air with lamentations and killed an ox to appease their
insulted ancestor.(431) Particular regard is also paid to trees that grow
near the graves of Nyakang, though they are not regularly worshipped.(432)
In one place two gigantic baobab trees are pointed out as marking the spot
where Nyakang once stood, and sacrifices are now offered under their
spreading shade.(433)

(M137) There seems to be no doubt that in spite of the mythical elements
which have gathered round his memory, Nyakang was a real man, who led the
Shilluks to their present home on the Nile either from the west or from
the south; for on this point tradition varies. "The first and most
important ancestor, who is everywhere revered, is Nyakang, the first
Shilluk king. He always receives the honourable titles of Father (_uo_),
Ancestor (_qua_), King (_red_) or Kings (_ror_), Ancestors, and Great Man
Above (_cal duong mal_) to distinguish him from the other great men on
earth. Nyakang, as we know, was an historical personage; he led the
Shilluks to the land which they now occupy; he helped them to victory,
made them great and warlike, regulated marriage and law, distributed the
country among them, divided it into districts, and in order to increase
the dependence of the people on him and to show them his power, became
their greatest benefactor by giving himself out as the bestower of
rain."(434) Yet Nyakang is now universally revered by the people as a
demi-god; indeed for all practical purposes his worship quite eclipses
that of the supreme god Juok, the creator, who, having ordered the world,
committed it to the care of ancestral spirits and demons, and now,
dwelling aloft, concerns himself no further with human affairs. Hence men
pay little heed to their creator and seldom take his name into their lips
except in a few conventional forms of salutation at meeting and parting
like our "Good-bye." Far otherwise is it with Nyakang. He "is the ancestor
of the Shilluk nation and the founder of the Shilluk dynasty. He is
worshipped, sacrifices and prayers are offered to him; he may be said to
be lifted to the rank of a demi-god, though they never forget that he has
been a real man. He is expressly designated as 'little' in comparison with
God." Yet "in the political, religious and personal life Nyakang takes a
far more important place than Juok. Nyakang is the national hero, of whom
each Shilluk feels proud, who is praised in innumerable popular songs and
sayings; he is not only a superior being, but also a man. He is the
sublime model for every true Shilluk; everything they value most in their
national and private life has its origin in him: their kingdom and their
fighting as well as cattle-breeding and farming. While Nyakang is their
good father, who only does them good, Juok is the great, uncontrollable
power, which is to be propitiated, in order to avoid his inflictions of
evil."(435) Indeed "the whole working religion of the Shilluk is a cult of
Nyakang, the semi-divine ancestor of their kings, in each of whom his
spirit is immanent."(436) The transmission of the divine or semi-divine
spirit of Nyakang to the reigning monarch appears to take place at the
king's installation and to be effected by means of a rude wooden effigy of
Nyakang, in which the spirit of that deified man is perhaps supposed to be
immanent. But however the spiritual transmission may be carried out, "the
fundamental idea of the cult of the Shilluk divine kings is the immanence
in each of the spirit of Nyakang."(437) Thus the Shilluk kings are
encircled with a certain halo of divinity because they are thought to be
animated by the divine spirit of their ancestor, the founder of the
dynasty.

(M138) The universal belief of the Shilluks in the former humanity of
Nyakang is strongly confirmed by the exact parallelism which prevails
between his worship and that of the dead kings his successors. Like them
he is worshipped at his tomb; but unlike them he has not one tomb only,
but ten scattered over the country. Each of these tombs is called "the
grave of Nyakang," though the people well know that nobody is buried
there. Like the grave-shrines of the other kings, those of Nyakang consist
of a small group of circular huts of the ordinary pattern enclosed by a
fence. Only children under puberty and the few old people whose duty it is
to take care of the shrines may enter these sacred enclosures. The rites
performed at them resemble those observed at the shrines of the kings. Two
great ceremonies are annually performed at the shrines of Nyakang: one is
observed before the beginning of the rainy season in order to ensure a due
supply of rain; the other is a thanksgiving at harvest, when porridge made
from the new grain is poured out on the threshold of Nyakang's hut and
smeared on the outer walls of the building. Even before the millet is
reaped the people cut some of the ripening ears and thrust them into the
thatch of the sacred hut. Thus it would seem that the Shilluks believe
themselves to be dependent on the favour of Nyakang for the rain and the
crops. "As the giver of rain, Nyakang is the first and greatest benefactor
of the people. In that country rain is everything, without rain there is
nothing. The Shilluk does not trouble his head about artificial
irrigation, he waits for the rain. If the rain falls, then the millet
grows, the cows thrive, man has food and can dance and marry; for that is
the ideal of the Shilluks."(438) Sick people also bring or send sheep as
an offering to the nearest shrine of Nyakang in order that they may be
healed of their sickness. The attendants of the sanctuary slaughter the
animal, consume its flesh, and give the sufferer the benefit of their
prayers.(439)

(M139) The example of Nyakang seems to show that under favourable
circumstances the worship of a dead king may develop into the dominant
religion of a people. There is, therefore, no intrinsic improbability in
the view that in ancient Egypt the religion of Osiris originated in that
way. Certainly some curious resemblances can be traced between the dead
Nyakang and the dead Osiris. Both died violent and mysterious deaths: the
graves of both were pointed out in many parts of the country: both were
deemed the great sources of fertility for the whole land: and both were
associated with certain sacred trees and animals, particularly with bulls.
And just as Egyptian kings identified themselves both in life and in death
with their deified predecessor Osiris, so Shilluk kings are still believed
to be animated by the spirit of their deified predecessor Nyakang and to
share his divinity.

(M140) Another African people who regularly worship, or rather used to
worship, the spirits of their dead kings are the Baganda. Their country
Uganda lies at the very source of the Nile, where the great river issues
from Lake Victoria Nyanza. Among them the ghosts of dead kings were placed
on an equality with the gods and received the same honour and worship;
they foretold events which concerned the State, and they advised the
living king, warning him when war was likely to break out. The king
consulted them periodically, visiting first one and then another of the
temples in which the mortal remains of his predecessors were preserved
with religious care. But the temple (_malolo_) of a king contained only
his lower jawbone and his navel-string (_mulongo_); his body was buried
elsewhere.(440) For curiously enough the Baganda believed that the part of
the body to which the ghost of a dead man adheres above all others is the
lower jawbone; wherever that portion of his person may be carried, the
ghost, in the opinion of these people, will follow it, even to the ends of
the earth, and will be perfectly content to remain with it so long as the
jawbone is honoured.(441) Hence the jawbones of all the kings of Uganda
from the earliest times to the present day have been preserved with the
utmost care, each of them being deposited, along with the stump of the
monarch's navel-string, in a temple specially dedicated to the worship of
the king's ghost; for it is believed that the ghosts of the deceased
monarchs would quarrel if they shared the same temple, the question of
precedence being one which it would be very difficult for them to adjust
to their mutual satisfaction.(442) All the temples of the dead kings stand
in the district called Busiro, which means the place of the graves,
because the tombs as well as the temples of the departed potentates are
situated within its boundaries. The supervision of the temples and of the
estates attached to them was a duty incumbent on the _Mugema_ or earl of
Busiro, one of the few hereditary chiefs in the country. His principal
office was that of Prime Minister (_Katikiro_) to the dead kings.(443)

(M141) When a king dies, his body is sent to Busiro and there embalmed.
Then it is laid to rest in a large round house, which has been built for
its reception on the top of a hill. This is the king's tomb. It is a
conical structure supported by a central post, with a thatched roof
reaching down to the ground. Round the hut a high strong fence of reeds is
erected, and an outer fence encircles the whole at some distance lower
down the hill. Here the body is placed on a bedstead; the sepulchral
chamber is filled with bark cloths till it can hold no more, the mainpost
is cut down, and the door of the tomb closed, so that no one can enter it
again. When that was done, the wives of the late king used to be brought,
with their arms pinioned, and placed at intervals round the outer wall of
the tomb, where they were clubbed to death. Hundreds of men were also
killed in the space between the two fences, that their ghosts might wait
on the ghost of the dead king in the other world. None of their bodies
were buried; they were left to rot where they fell. Then the gates in the
fences were closed; and three chiefs with their men guarded the dead
bodies from the wild beasts and the vultures. But the hut in which the
king's body reposed was never repaired; it was allowed to moulder and fall
into decay.(444)

(M142) Five months later the jawbone of the royal corpse was removed in
order to be fashioned into an effigy or representative of the dead king.
For this purpose three chiefs entered the tomb, not through the door, but
by cutting a hole through the wall, and having severed the head from the
body they brought it out, carefully filling up the hole in the wall behind
them, replacing the thatch, and securing the gates in the fence. When the
jawbone had been removed by a chief of the Civet clan, the skull was sent
back to Busiro and buried with honour near the mouldering tomb. In
contrast to the neglect of the tomb where the royal body lay, the place
where the skull was buried was kept in good repair and guarded by some of
the old princesses and widows. As for the jawbone, it was put in an
ant-hill and left there till the ants had eaten away all the flesh. Then,
after it had been washed in beer and milk, it was decorated with
cowry-shells and placed in a wooden vessel; this vessel was next wrapt in
bark cloths till it assumed a conical shape, about two and a half feet
high by a foot and a half broad at the base. This conical packet,
decorated on the outside with beads, was treated as an image of the
deceased king or rather as if it were the king himself in life, for it was
called simply "The King." Beside it was placed the stump of the king's
navel-string, similarly wrapt in bark cloths and decorated, though not
made up into a conical shape.(445) The reason for preserving both the
jawbone and the navel-string was that the ghost of the king was supposed
to attach itself to his jawbone, and the ghost of his double to his
navel-string. For in the belief of the Baganda every person has a double,
namely, the afterbirth or placenta, which is born immediately after him
and is regarded by the people as a second child. Now that double has a
ghost of its own, which adheres to the navel-string; and if the person is
to remain healthy, it is essential that the ghost of his double should be
carefully preserved. Hence every Baganda man and woman keeps his or her
navel-string wrapt up in bark cloth as a treasure of great price on which
his health and prosperity are dependent; the precious little bundle is
called his Twin (_mulongo_), because it contains the ghost of his double,
the afterbirth. If that is deemed necessary for everybody, much more is it
deemed essential for the welfare of the king; hence during his life the
stump of his navel-string is kept, as we saw,(446) by one of the principal
ministers of state and is inspected by the king himself every month. And
when his majesty has departed this life, the unity of his spirit
imperatively demands that his own ghost and the ghost of his double should
be kept together in the same place; that is why the jawbone and the
navel-string of every dead king are carefully preserved in the same
temple, because the two ghosts adhere respectively to these two parts of
his person, and it would be unreasonable and indeed cruel to divide
them.(447)

(M143) The two ghosts having been thus safely lodged in the two precious
parcels, the next thing was to install them in the temple, where they were
to enter on their career of beneficent activity. A site having been
chosen, the whole country supplied the labour necessary for building the
temple; and ministers were appointed to wait upon the dead king. The
officers of state who had held important posts during his life retained
their titles and continued to discharge their duties towards their old
master in death. Accordingly houses were built for them near the temple.
The dowager queen also took up her residence at the entrance to the temple
enclosure, and became its principal guardian. Many also of the king's
widows of lower rank were drafted off to live inside the enclosure and
keep watch over it. When the queen or any of these widows died, her place
was supplied by another princess or a woman of the same clan; for the
temple was maintained in perpetuity. However, when the reigning king died,
the temple of his predecessor lost much of its importance, though it was
still kept up in a less magnificent style; indeed no temple of a dead king
was allowed to disappear altogether.(448) Of all the attendants at the
temple the most important probably was the prophet or medium (_mandwa_),
whose business it was from time to time to be inspired by the ghost of the
deceased monarch and to give oracles in his name. To this holy office he
dedicated himself by drinking a draught of beer and a draught of milk out
of the dead king's skull.(449)

(M144) The temple consecrated to the worship of a king regularly stood on
a hill. The site was generally chosen by the king in his life, but
sometimes his choice was set aside by his successor, who gave orders to
build the temple in another place.(450) The structure was a large conical
or bee-hive-shaped hut of the ordinary pattern, divided internally into
two chambers, an outer and an inner. Any person might enter the outer
chamber, but the inner was sacred and no profane person might set foot in
it; for there the holy relics of the dead king, his jawbone and his
navel-string, were kept for safety in a cell dug in the floor, and there,
in close attendance on them, the king's ghost was believed to dwell. In
front of the partition which screened this Holy of Holies from the gaze of
the multitude there stood a throne, covered with lion and leopard skins
and fenced off from the rest of the sacred edifice by a glittering rail of
brass spears, shields, and knives. A forest of poles, supporting the roof,
formed a series of aisles in perfect line, and at the end of the central
nave appeared, like the altar of a Christian church, the throne in all its
glory. When the king's ghost held a reception, the holy relics, the
jawbone and the navel-string, each in its decorated wrappings, were
brought forth and set on the throne; and every person who entered the
temple bowed to the ground and greeted the jawbone in an awestruck voice,
for he regarded it as the king in person. Solemn music played during the
reception, the drums rolling and the women chanting, while they clapped
their hands to the rhythm of the songs. Sometimes the dead king spoke to
the congregation by the voice of his prophet. That was a great event. When
the oracle was about to be given to the expectant throng, the prophet
stepped up to the throne, and addressing the spirit informed him of the
business in hand. Then he smoked one or two pipes, and the fumes bringing
on the prophetic fit, he began to rave and to speak in the very voice and
with the characteristic turns of speech of the departed monarch, for the
king's spirit was now in him. This message from the world beyond the grave
was naturally received with rapt attention. Gradually the fit of
inspiration passed: the voice of the prophet resumed its natural tones:
the spirit had departed from him and returned to its abode in the inner
room. Such a solemn audience used to be announced beforehand by the
beating of the drums in the early morning, and the worshippers brought
with them to the temple offerings of food for the dead king, as if he were
still alive.(451)

(M145) But the greatest day of all was when the reigning king visited the
temple of his father. This he did as a rule only once during his reign.
Nor did the people approve of the visits being repeated, for each visit
was the signal for the death of many. Yet, attracted by a painful
curiosity, crowds assembled, followed the monarch to the temple, and
thronged to see the great ceremony of the meeting between the king and the
ghost of his royal father. The sacred relics were displayed: an old man
explained them to the monarch and placed them in his hands: the prophet,
inspired by the dead king's spirit, revealed to the living king his
destiny. The interview over, the king was carried back to his house. It
was on the return journey that he always gave, suddenly and without
warning, the signal of death. Obedient to his orders the guards rushed
upon the crowd, captured hundreds of spectators, pinioned them, marched
them back to the temple, and slaughtered them within the precincts, that
their ghosts might wait on the ghost of the dead king.(452) But though the
king rarely visited his father's ghost at the temple, he had a private
chapel for the ghost within the vast enclosure of the royal residence; and
here he often paid his devotions to the august spirit, of whom he stood
greatly in awe. He took his wives with him to sing the departed monarch's
praise, and he constantly made offerings at the shrine. Thither, too,
would come the prophet to suck words of wisdom from the venerable ghost
and to impart them to the king, who thus walked in the counsel of his
glorified father.(453)

(M146) In Kiziba, a district of Central Africa on the western side of Lake
Victoria Nyanza, the souls of dead kings become ruling spirits; temples
are built in their honour and priests appointed to serve them. The people
are composed of two different races, the Bairu, who are aboriginals, and
the Bahima, who are immigrants from the north. The royal family belongs to
the Bahima stock. In his lifetime the king's person is sacred; and all his
actions, property, and so forth are described by special terms
appropriated to that purpose. The people are divided into totemic clans:
the totems (_muziro_) are mostly animals or parts of animals: no man may
kill or eat his totem animal, nor marry a woman who has the same totem as
himself. The royal family seems to have serpents for their totem; after
death the king's soul lives in a serpent, while his body is buried in the
hut where he died. The people revere a supreme god named Rugaba, who is
believed to have created man and cattle; but they know little about him,
and though they occasionally pray to him, particularly in the case of a
difficult birth, he has no priests and receives no sacrifices. The
business of the priests is to act as intermediaries, not between God and
man, but between men and the spirits. The spirits are believed to have
been formerly kings of the world. The highest of them is a certain Wamara,
who rules over the souls of the dead, and who would seem to have been a
great king in his life. Temples are built for him; they are like the
houses of men, but only half as large. A perpetual holy fire is kept up in
each temple, and the priest passes the night in it. He receives white
sheep or goats as victims, and generally acts also as a diviner or
physician. When a man is very ill, he thinks that Wamara, the lord of the
spirits of the dead, is summoning him to the far country; so he sends a
sacrifice to Wamara's priest, who prays to the spirit to let the sick man
live yet a while.(454) This great spirit of an ancient king, who now rules
over the dead, resembles the Egyptian Osiris.

(M147) The Bantu tribes who inhabit the great tableland of Northern
Rhodesia revere a supreme being whom they call Leza, but their ideas about
him are hazy. Thunder, lightning, earthquakes, rain, and other natural
phenomena are grouped together under his name as manifestations of his
power. Among the more progressive tribes, such as the Awemba and the
Wabisa, the great god is thought to take some interest in human affairs;
and though they do not pray to him, they nevertheless invoke him by his
names of praise, which set forth his attributes as the protector and judge
of mankind. It is he, too, who receives the souls of the departed. "Yet,
as far as the dominant Wemba tribe is concerned, the cult of Leza is
outside their ordinary religion. There is no direct access to him by
prayer or by sacrifices, which are made to Mulenga and the other great
tribal and ancestral spirits instead. For upon such animism is founded the
whole fabric of Wemba religion."(455) The ancestral spirits whom the
Awemba and all other tribes of this region worship may be divided into two
main classes. First come the spirits of departed chiefs, who are publicly
worshipped by the whole tribe; and second come the spirits of near
relations who are worshipped privately by each head of a family.(456)
"Among the Awemba there is no special shrine for these purely family
spirits, who are worshipped inside the hut, and to whom family sacrifice
of a sheep, a goat, or a fowl is made, the spirit receiving the blood
spilt on the ground, while all the members of the family partake of the
flesh together. For a religious Wemba man the cult of the spirit of his
nearest relations (of his grandparents, or of his deceased father, mother,
elder brother, or maternal uncle) is considered quite sufficient. Out of
these spirit relatives a man will worship one whom he considers as his
special familiar, for various reasons. For instance, the diviner may have
told him that his last illness was caused because he had not respected the
spirit of his uncle; accordingly he will be careful in future to adopt his
uncle as his tutelary spirit. As a mark of such respect he may devote a
cow or a goat to one of the spirits of his ancestors. Holding the fowl,
for instance, in his hands, he will dedicate it, asking the spirit to come
and abide in it, upon which the fowl is let go, and is afterwards called
by the name of the spirit. If the necessities, however, of the larder
demand that it should be killed, another animal is taken, and the spirit
is asked to accept it as a substitute! Before beginning any special task,
such as hoeing a new garden, or going on a journey, Wemba men invoke their
tutelary spirits to be with them and to assist their efforts, in short
ejaculatory prayers usually couched in a set formula. Among many of the
tribes in the North Luangwa district longer formal prayers are still made
to all the deceased ancestors of the clan at the time of harvest, asking
them to protect the crops and to drive away illnesses and evil spirits
from the family, which honours them with libations of beer and offerings
of the first-fruits."(457)

(M148) Thus among these tribes, who all belong to the great Bantu family,
the public worship which a whole tribe pays to the souls of its dead
chiefs is probably nothing but an extension of the private worship which
every family pays privately to the souls of its dead members. And just as
the members of his family whom a man worships privately are not mythical
beings conjured up by imagination out of a distant past, but were once
real men like himself whom he knew in life, it may be his father, or
uncle, or elder brother, so we may be sure that in like manner the dead
chiefs revered by the whole tribe are not creations of the mythical fancy,
but were once real men of flesh and blood, who ruled over the tribe, and
whose memory has been more or less faithfully preserved by tradition. In
this respect the tribes of Northern Rhodesia are typical of all the tribes
of that great Bantu family which occupies nearly the whole southern half
of Africa, from the great equatorial lakes to the Cape of Good Hope. The
main practical religion of all these numerous and widespread peoples
appears to be the worship of their ancestors.

(M149) To adduce in full the evidence which points to this conclusion
would lead us too far from our present subject; it must suffice to cite a
few typical statements of competent authorities which refer to different
tribes of the Bantu stock. Speaking with special reference to the tribes
of South-Eastern Africa, the Rev. James Macdonald tells us that "the
religion of the Bantu, which they not only profess but really regulate
their conduct by, is based on the belief that the spirits of their
ancestors interfere constantly in their affairs. Every man worships his
own ancestors and offers sacrifices to avert their wrath. The clan
worships the spirits of the ancestors of its chiefs, and the tribe
worships the spirits of the ancestors of the paramount chief."(458) "The
religion of the Bantu was based upon the supposition of the existence of
spirits that could interfere with the affairs of this world. These spirits
were those of their ancestors and their deceased chiefs, the greatest of
whom had control over lightning. When the spirits became offended or
hungry they sent a plague or disaster until sacrifices were offered and
their wrath or hunger was appeased. The head of a family of commoners on
such an occasion killed an animal, and all ate of the meat, as the hungry
ghost was supposed to be satisfied with the smell."(459) For example, in
the year 1891 the son of a chief of the Pondomisi tribe was arrested for
an assault and sent for trial before a colonial court. It chanced to be a
season of intense heat and severe drought, and the Pondomisi tribe
attributed these calamities to the wrath of a dead chief named Gwanya,
very famous in his lifetime, whose body, fastened to a log, had been
buried under a heap of stones in a deep pool of the Lina river. This
redoubtable chieftain was the seventh ancestor in the direct line of the
man who had committed the assault; and he warmly resented the indignity
which the whites had done to a noble scion of his house by consigning him
to durance vile. To appease the natural indignation of the ghost, the
tribesmen killed cattle on the banks of the pool which contained his
grave, and threw the flesh into the water along with new dishes full of
beer. The prisoner, however, was convicted of the assault and sentenced by
the ruthless magistrate, who was no respecter of ghosts, to pay a fine.
But the tribe clubbed together and paid the fine for him; and a few days
later rain fell in plenty. The mollified ghost had opened the celestial
sluices.(460)

(M150) Another writer, describing the religion of the South African
Bantus, tells us that "the ancestral spirits love the very things they
loved before they passed through the flesh; they cherish the same desires
and have the same antipathies. The living cannot add to the number of the
wives of ancestral spirits; but they can kill cattle in their honour and
keep their praise and memory alive on earth. Above all things, they can
give them beef and beer. And if the living do not give them sufficient of
these things the spirits are supposed to give the people a bad time: they
send drought, and sickness, and famine, until people kill cattle in their
honour. When men are alive they love to be praised and flattered, fed and
attended to; after death they want the very same things, for death does
not change personality.... In time of drought, or sickness, or great
trouble, there would be great searchings of heart as to which ancestor had
been neglected, for the trouble would be supposed to be caused by the
neglected ancestor. Most of the people would get the subject on their
nerves (at least, as far as a Kafir could get anything on the leather
strings which do duty for nerves), and some one would be sure to have a
vivid dream in which an ancestor would complain that the people had not
praised him half enough of late. So an ox would be killed, either by the
head-man of the kraal or by a diviner. Then the man would say over the ox
as it was being killed, 'Cry out, ox of So-and-So; listen to us,
So-and-So; this is your ox; we praise you by all your laud-giving names,
and tell of all your deeds; do not be angry with us any more; do you not
see that this is your ox? Do not accuse us of neglecting you; when,
forsooth, have we ceased to praise you and offer you meat and beer? Take
note, then, that here is another ox we are offering to you.' When the ox
is dead some of the meat is mixed with herbs and medicines and placed in a
hut with a bowlful of blood. This meat is placed in the part of the hut
where the man loved to sit while he was alive, and some one is told off to
guard the sacrifice. The meat is left for a night, or longer, and the
spirits are supposed to come and enjoy the smell, or drink the serum which
oozes from the meat, and to inhale the smell of the beer. The priest or
diviner will then sprinkle the people and the huts with medicine made from
the contents of the stomach of the ox. He places a little on a sherd; when
this is dry he burns it and calls on the spirits to smell the incense.
After the meat has been left for a certain time it is taken out and
cooked, and eaten by the men near the cattle kraal in public.... If the
trouble does not vanish after this ceremony the people get angry and say
to the spirits, 'When have we ceased to kill cattle for you, and when have
we ever refused to praise you by your praise-names? Why, then, do you
treat us so shabbily? If you do not behave better we shall utterly forget
your names, and then what will you do when there is no one to praise you?
You will have to go and live on grasshoppers. If you do not mend your ways
we shall forget you. What use is it that we kill oxen for you and praise
you? You do not give us rain or crops, or cause our cattle to bear well;
you show no gratitude in return for all we do for you. We shall utterly
disown you. We shall tell the people that, as for us, we have no ancestral
spirits, and this will be to your shame. We are disgusted with
you.' "(461) Thus the sweet savour of beef and beer does not suffice to
content Caffre ghosts; they share the love of praise and flattery with
many gods of higher rank.

(M151) Among the Basutos, an important Bantu people of South Africa, "each
family is supposed to be under the direct influence and protection of its
ancestors; but the tribe, taken as a whole, acknowledges for its national
gods the ancestors of the reigning sovereign. Thus, the Basutos address
their prayers to Monaheng and Motlumi, from whom their chiefs are
descended. The Baharutsis and the Barolongs invoke Tobege and his wife
Mampa. Mampa makes known the will of her husband, announcing each of her
revelations by these words, '_O re! O re!_' 'He has said! he has said!'
They make a distinction between the ancient and modern divinities. The
latter are considered inferior in power, but more accessible; hence this
formula, which is often used: 'New gods! entreat the ancient gods for us!'
In all countries spirits are more the objects of fear than of love. A deep
feeling of terror generally accompanies the idea that the dead dispose of
the lot of the living. The ancients spoke much of incensed shades. If they
sacrificed to the manes, it was generally in order to appease them. These
ideas perfectly correspond to those of the Basutos. They conjure rather
than pray; although they seek to gain favours, they think more of averting
chastisement. Their predominating idea as to their ancestors is, that they
are continually endeavouring to draw them to themselves. Every disease is
attributed to them; thus medicine among these people is almost entirely a
religious affair. The first thing is to discover, by means of the
_litaola_ (divining bones), under the influence of what _molimo_ the
patient is supposed to be. Is it an ancestor on the father's side or the
mother's? According as fate decides, the paternal or maternal uncle will
offer the purifying sacrifice, but rarely the father or brother. This
sacrifice alone can render efficacious the medicines prescribed by the
_ngaka_ (doctor).... As soon as a person is dead he takes his place among
the family gods. His remains are deposited in the cattle-pen. An ox is
immolated over his grave: this is the first oblation made to the new
divinity, and at the same time an act of intercession in his favour,
serving to ensure his happy reception in the subterranean regions. All
those present aid in sprinkling the grave, and repeat the following
prayer: 'Repose in peace with the gods; give us tranquil nights.' "(462)

(M152) Similarly among the Thonga, another Bantu tribe of South Africa,
"any man, who has departed this earthly life, becomes a _shikwembu_, a
god";(463) "when an old decrepit man or woman dies, he at once becomes a
god: he has entered the domain of infinity."(464) In this tribe "the
spirits of the ancestors are the main objects of religious worship. They
form the principal category of spirits."(465) "On the one hand, the
ancestor-gods are truly gods, endowed with the attributes of divinity;
whilst, on the other, they seem to be nothing but mere human beings,
exactly on the same level as their worshippers."(466) There are two great
classes of these ancestor-gods, to wit, "those of the family, and those of
the country, the latter being those of the reigning family. They do not
differ as regards their nature. In national calamities those of the
country are invoked, whilst, for purely family matters, those of the
family are called upon. Moreover, each family has two sets of gods, those
on the father's side and those on the mother's, those of _kweru_ and those
of _bakokwana_. They are equal in dignity. Both can be invoked, and the
divinatory bones are always asked to which the offering must be made. It
seems, however, as if the gods on the mother's side were more
tender-hearted and more popular than those on the father's. The reason for
this is, perhaps, that relations are easier with the family of the mother
than with that of the father. It is also just possible that it is a relic
of the matriarchal period, when the ancestors of the mother only were
known, and consequently invoked. At any rate, the part played by
_batukulu_ [uterine] nephews in the offerings shows that they are the true
representatives of the gods, not of those of their father, but of their
mother."(467) Among the Thonga "the belief in the continuation of life
after death is universal, being at the base of the ancestrolatry, which is
the religion of the tribe."(468) "How real is the ancestrolatry, the
religion of the Thonga, of, in fact, all the South African Bantus! How
frequent and manifold are its manifestations! This is the first, and the
most perceptible set of their religious intuitions, and any European, who
has stayed in their villages, learnt their language, and tried to
understand their customs, has had the opportunity of familiarizing himself
with this religion."(469)

(M153) Among the Basutos and Bechuanas, who also belong to the great Bantu
family, the sacrificial ritual is not highly developed. "Only in great
misfortunes which affect the whole people or the royal family, a black ox
is slaughtered; for in such cases they always think that the angry spirits
of the departed are the cause of all the suffering. '_Re amogioa ki
badimo_,' say the people, 'the spirits are robbing us.' The ox is led to
the chiefs grave; there they pray, 'Lord, we are come to call upon thee,
we who are thy children; make not our hearts troubled; take not, Lord,
that which is ours.' The old chief is honoured and praised in songs, he is
invoked by all his praise-names, the ox is killed and its flesh eaten, but
the blood and the contents of the stomach are poured on the grave, and
there the bones of the sacrificed animal are also deposited."(470)

(M154) The Zulus, another great Bantu tribe of South Africa, believe in
the existence of a being whom they call Unkulunkulu, which means "the
Old-Old-one, the most ancient man." They say that "it is he who was the
first man; he broke off in the beginning. We do not know his wife; and the
ancients do not tell us that he had a wife."(471) This Old-Old-one or
Great-Great-one "is represented as having made all things--men, cattle,
water, fire, the mountains, and whatever else is seen. He is also said to
have appointed their names. Creation was effected by splitting a reed,
when the first man and other things issued from the cleft."(472) Further,
the Zulus and other Caffre tribes of Natal "believe that, when a person
dies, his _i-hloze_ or _isi-tute_ survives. These words are translated
'spirit,' and there seems no objection to the rendering. They refer to
something manifestly distinguished from the body, and the nature of which
the prophets endeavour to explain by saying that it is identical with the
shadow. The residence of the _ama-hloze_, or spirits, seems to be beneath;
the practice of breaking a man's assagais, before they are buried with
him, shows that he is believed to return to earth through the grave; while
it appears to be generally thought that, if the earth were removed from
the grave, the ghost would return and frighten his descendants. When
spirits have entered the future state, they are believed to possess great
power; prosperity is ascribed to their favour, and misfortune to their
anger; they are elevated in fact to the rank of deities, and (except where
the Great-Great is worshipped concurrently with them) they are the only
objects of a Kafir's adoration. Their attention (or providence) is limited
to their own relatives--a father caring for the family, and a chief for the
tribe, which they respectively left behind them. They are believed to
occupy the same relative position as they did in the body, the departed
spirit of a chief being sometimes invoked to compel a man's ancestors to
bless him."(473)

(M155) "To these shades of the dead, especially to the ghosts of their
great men, as Jama, Senzangakona, and Chaka, their former kings, they look
for help, and offer sacrifices; that is, slaughter cattle to them, and
offer a sort of prayer, in time of danger and distress.... When they are
sick, they slaughter cattle to the shades, and say, 'Father, look on me,
that this disease may cease from me. Let me have health on the earth, and
live a long time.' They carry the meat into the house, and shut it up
there, saying, 'Let the paternal shades eat, so shall they know that the
offering was made for them, and grant us great wealth, so that both we and
our children may prosper.' In the cattle-fold they talk a long time,
praising the ghosts; they take the contents of the stomach, and strew it
upon all the fold. Again they take it, and strew it within the houses,
saying, 'Hail, friend! Thou of such a place, grant us a blessing,
beholding what we have done. You see this distress; may you remove it,
since we have given you our animal. We know not what more you want,
whether you still require anything more or not.' They say, 'May you grant
us grain, that it may be abundant, that we may eat, of course, and not be
in need of anything, since now we have given you what you want.' They say,
'Yes, for a long time have you preserved me in all my going. Behold, you
see, I have just come to have a kraal. This kraal was built by yourself,
father; and now why do you consent to diminish your own kraal? Build on us
as you have begun, let it be large, that your offspring, still here above,
may increase, increasing in knowledge of you, whence cometh great power.'
Sometimes they make beer for the ghosts, and leave a little in the pot,
saying, 'It will be eaten by the ghosts that they may grant an abundant
harvest again, that we may not have a famine.' If one is on the point of
being injured by anything, he says, 'I was preserved by our divinity,
which was still watching over me.' Perhaps he slaughters a goat in honour
of the same, and puts the gall on his head; and when the goat cries out
for pain of being killed, he says, 'Yes, then, there is your animal, let
it cry, that ye may hear, ye our gods who have preserved me; I myself am
desirous of living on thus a long time here on the earth; why then do you
call me to account, since I think I am all right in respect to you? And
while I live, I put my trust in you, our paternal and maternal
gods.' "(474)

(M156) "Black people," say the Zulus, "do not worship all Amatongo
indifferently, that is, all the dead of their tribe. Speaking generally,
the head of each house is worshipped by the children of that house; for
they do not know the ancients who are dead, nor their laud-giving names,
nor their names. But their father whom they knew is the head by whom they
begin and end in their prayer, for they know him best, and his love for
his children; they remember his kindness to them whilst he was living;
they compare his treatment of them whilst he was living, support
themselves by it, and say, 'He will still treat us in the same way now he
is dead. We do not know why he should regard others besides us; he will
regard us only.' So it is then although they worship the many Amatongo of
their tribe, making a great fence around them for their protection; yet
their father is far before all others when they worship the Amatongo.
Their father is a great treasure to them even when he is dead. And those
of his children who are already grown up know him thoroughly, his
gentleness, and his bravery. And if there is illness in the village, the
eldest son lauds him with the laud-giving names which he gained when
fighting with the enemy, and at the same time lauds all the other
Amatongo; the son reproves the father, saying, 'We for our parts may just
die. Who are you looking after? Let us die all of us, that we may see into
whose house you will enter.(475) You will eat grasshoppers; you will no
longer be invited to go anywhere, if you destroy your own village.' After
that, because they have worshipped him, they take courage saying, 'He has
heard; he will come and treat our diseases, and they will cease.' Such
then is the faith which children have in the Itongo [ancestral spirit]
which is their father. And if there is a chief wife of a village, who has
given birth to children, and if her husband is not dead, her Itongo is
much reverenced by her husband and all the children. And that chief wife
becomes an Itongo which takes great care of the village. But it is the
father especially that is the head of the village."(476) Thus among the
Zulus it is the spirits of those who have just died, especially the
spirits of fathers and mothers, who are most revered and worshipped. The
spirits of the more remote dead are forgotten.

(M157) When the missionaries inquired into the religious ideas of the
Herero, a Bantu tribe of German South-West Africa, they heard much of a
certain Mukuru, whom at first they took to be the great god of heaven and
earth. Accordingly they adopted Mukuru as the native name for the
Christian God, and set out on their mission to preach the glad tidings of
Mukuru and his divine Son to the poor benighted heathen. But their first
experiences were disconcerting. Again and again when they arrived in a
village and announced their intention to the chief, they were brought up
very short by that great man, who told them with an air of astonishment
that he himself was Mukuru. For example, Messrs. Buettner and Irle paid a
visit to an old chief named Tjenda and remonstrated with him on the
impropriety of which he had been guilty in giving a baptized girl in
marriage to a native gentleman whose domestic arrangements were framed on
the polygamous patriarchal pattern. "Mukuru will punish you for that,"
said Mr. Buettner. "What?" roared the chief. "Who's Mukuru? Why, I am
Mukuru in my own tribe," and he bundled the two missionaries out of the
village. A repetition of these painful incidents at last impressed on the
minds of the missionaries the conviction that Mukuru was not God at all
but merely the head of a family, an ancestor, whether alive or dead.(477)
They ascertained at the same time that the Herero recognize a good god who
dwells in heaven and bears the name of Ndjambi Karunga. But they do not
worship him nor bring him offerings, because he is so kind that he hurts
nobody, and therefore they need not fear him. "Rather they share the
opinion of the other Bantu tribes that Ndjambi, the good Creator, has
withdrawn to heaven and left the government on earth to the demons."(478)
"It is true that the Herero are acquainted with punishment for what is
bad. But that punishment they ascribe to Mukuru or their ancestors. It is
their ancestors (_Ovakuru_(479)) whom they must fear; it is they who are
angry and can bring danger and misfortune on a man. So it is intelligible
that the whole of their worship turns, not on Ndjambi Karunga, but on
their ancestors. It is in order to win and keep their favour, to avert
their displeasure and wrath, in short to propitiate them, that the Herero
bring their many offerings; they do so not out of gratitude, but out of
fear, not out of love, but out of terror. Their religion is a worship of
ancestors with here and there touches of fetishism."(480) "Thus among the
Herero, as among all Bantu tribes, there exists a religious dualism: they
know the highest, the true God, but they worship their ancestors."(481)
And among the worshipful ancestors "the old dead chiefs of every tribe
take the first place. The son of a great dead chief and the whole tribe
worship that old father as their god. But the remote ancestors of that
chief they do not worship, indeed they hardly know them by name and can no
longer point to their graves."(482) Thus with the Herero, as with the
Zulus, it is the recent and well-remembered dead who are chiefly or
exclusively worshipped; as the souls of the departed recede further and
further into the past their memory perishes, and the nimbus of
supernatural glory which encircled it for a time fades gradually away.

(M158) The religion of the Ovambo, another Bantu tribe of German
South-West Africa, is similar. They also recognize a great being named
Kalunga, who created the world and man, but they neither fear nor worship
him. A far greater part is played in the religion of the Ovambo by their
belief in spirits, and amongst the worshipful spirits a conspicuous place
is assigned to the souls of the dead. Every man leaves behind him at death
a spirit, which continues to exist on earth and can influence the living;
for example, it may enter into their bodies and thereby cause all sorts of
sickness. However, the souls of ordinary dead men can exert their
influence only on members of their own families; the souls of dead chiefs,
on the other hand, have power over the rain, which they can either give or
withhold. To these powerful spirits a portion of the new corn is offered
at harvest as a thank-offering for their forbearance in not visiting the
people with sickness, and above all for their bounty in sending down the
fertilizing showers on the crops. The souls of dead magicians are
particularly dreaded; and to prevent the multiplication of these dangerous
spirits it is customary to dismember their bodies, severing the arms and
legs from the trunk and cutting the tongue out of the mouth. If these
precautions are taken immediately after death, the soul of the dead man
cannot become a dangerous ghost; the mutilation of his body has
practically disarmed his spirit.(483)

(M159) The Wahehe, a Bantu tribe of German East Africa, believe in a great
invisible spirit named Nguruhi, who created the world and rules both human
destiny and the elements. He it is who makes the rain to fall, the sun to
shine, the wind to blow, the thunder to roll, and the crops to grow. "This
god is accordingly conceived as all-powerful, yet with the limitation that
he only exercises a general power of direction over the world, especially
human fate, while the _masoka_, the spirits of the dead, wield a permanent
and very considerable influence on the course of particular events.
Nguruhi is lord also of all the spirits of the dead (_masoka_), but his
relation to them has not been further thought out. With this Supreme Being
the people hold no intercourse by means of prayer, sacrifice, or in any
other way. He stands remote from the religious life of the Wahehe and
really serves only as an explanation of all those things and events which
are otherwise inexplicable. All religious intercourse, all worship centres
alone on the spirits of the dead. Hence if we speak of a religion of the
Wahehe, it must be described as a pure worship of ancestors."(484) The
human soul quits the body at death and at once becomes an ancestral spirit
(_m'soka_), invisible and endowed with complete liberty of motion. Even
the youngest children have souls which rank among the ancestral spirits at
death. Hence the great multitude of the dead comprises spirits of all
ages, from the infant one day old to the grey-haired patriarch. They are
good or bad according as they were good or bad in life, and their social
position also is unchanged. He who was powerful in life is powerful also
in death; he who was a nobody among men is a nobody also among the
spirits. Hence the ghost of a great man can do more for the living than
the ghost of a common man; and the ghost of a man can do more than the
ghost of a woman. Yet even the meanest ghost has power over the greatest
living man, who can only defend himself by appealing for help to stronger
ancestral spirits. Thus while the Supreme Being exercises a general
superintendence over affairs, the real administration is in the hands of
the ancestral spirits. While he, for example, regulates the weather as a
whole, it is the ghosts who cause each particular shower to fall or the
sun to break out in glory from the clouds. If he sends plagues on the
whole people or stays the ravages of disease, it is the ghosts who make
each individual sick or sound. These powerful spirits exert themselves
especially to help their descendants, though they do not hesitate to
plague their own kith and kin if they think themselves neglected. They
flit freely through the air and perch on trees, mountains, and so forth,
but they lodge by preference at their graves, and you are always sure of
finding them there, if you wish to consult them.(485) That is why in the
country of the Wahehe the only places of sacrifice are the graves; temples
and altars are unknown.(486) However, it is only the bodies of
considerable persons that are buried; the corpses of common folk are
simply thrown away in the bush;(487) so that the number of graves and
consequently of sacrificial places is strictly limited. The spirits of the
dead appear to the living most commonly in dreams to give them information
or warning, but oftener to chide and torment them. So the sleeper wakes in
a fright and consults a diviner, who directs him what he must do in order
to appease the angry ghost. Following the directions of his spiritual
adviser the man sacrifices an ox, or it may be only a sheep or a fowl, at
the tomb of one of his ancestors, prays to the ghost, and having scattered
a few morsels of the victim's flesh on the grave, and spat a mouthful of
beer upon it, retires with his family to feast on the remainder of the
carcase. Such sacrifices to the dead are offered on occasion of sickness,
the lack of male heirs, a threatened war, an intended journey, in short,
before any important undertaking of which the issue is doubtful; and, they
are accompanied by prayers for health, victory, good harvests, and so
forth.(488)

(M160) Once more, the Bahima, a Bantu people of Ankole, in Central Africa,
believe in a supreme god Lugaba, who dwells in the sky and created man and
beast; but "this supreme being is not worshipped nor are offerings made to
him; he has no sacred place. Although they talk freely about him, and
acknowledge him to be their great benefactor, they accept all his gifts as
a matter of course, and make him no offering in return.... One must not,
therefore, conclude that the Bahima are an irreligious people; like most
of the Bantu tribes their religion consists chiefly in dealing with ghosts
of departed relatives, and in standing well with them; from the king to
the humblest peasant the ghosts call for daily consideration and constant
offerings, whilst the deities are only sought in case of great trials or
national calamities."(489)

(M161) To return, now, to the worship of dead chiefs or kings among the
Bantu tribes of Northern Rhodesia. The spirits of dead chiefs had
priestesses to wait upon them, who were called the "wives of the
departed." These were elderly women who led a celibate life and swept the
huts dedicated to the ghosts of the chiefs. The aid of these dead
potentates was invoked in time of war and in seasons of drought, and
special offerings were brought to their shrines at harvest.(490) Among the
Awemba, who form the aristocracy of the country,(491) when a diviner
announced that a drought was caused by the spirits of dead chiefs or kings
buried at Mwaruli, a bull would be sent to be sacrificed to the souls of
the deceased rulers; or if the drought was severe, a human victim would be
despatched, and the high priest would keep him caged in a stoutly woven
fish-basket, until the preparations for the sacrifice were complete.(492)
Among the Yombe no one might eat of the first-fruits of the crops until
the living chief had sacrificed a bull before the tomb of his grandfather,
and had deposited pots of fresh beer and porridge, made from the
first-fruits, in front of the shrine. The ground about the tomb was then
carefully weeded, and the blood of the sacrificial victim sprinkled on the
freshly turned up soil and on the rafters of the little hut. After
thanking the ghost of his grandfather for the harvest, and begging him to
partake of the first-fruits, the chief and his train withdrew to feast on
the carcase and the fresh porridge and beer at the village.(493) When the
head chief or king of the Awemba had resolved to make war on a distant
enemy, he and the older men of the tribe would pray daily for victory to
the spirits of the dead kings, his predecessors. The day before the army
was to set forth, the great war-drum boomed out and the warriors flocked
together from the outlying districts under their respective captains. In
the dusk of the evening the king and the elderly women, who passed for the
wives of the dead kings and tended their shrines at the capital, went and
prayed at these shrines that the souls of the departed monarchs would keep
the war-path free from foes and lead the king in a straight course to the
enemy's stockade. These solemn prayers the king led in person, and the
women beat their bare breasts as they joined in the earnest appeal. Next
morning the whole army was marshalled in front of the ghost-huts of the
dead kings: the living king danced a war-dance before his ancestors, while
his chief wife sprinkled him with holy flour; and all prostrated
themselves in supplication before the shrines.(494)

(M162) Among these tribes of Northern Rhodesia the spirits of dead chiefs
or kings sometimes take possession of the bodies of live men or women and
prophesy through their mouths. When the spirit of a dead chief comes over
a man, he begins to roar like a lion, whereupon the women gather together
and beat the drums, shouting that the chief has come to visit the village.
The man thus temporarily inspired will prophesy of future wars or
impending attacks by lions. While the inspiration lasts, he may eat
nothing cooked by fire, but only unfermented dough. However, the spirit of
a departed chief takes possession of women oftener than of men. "These
women assert that they are possessed by the soul of some dead chief, and
when they feel the divine afflatus, whiten their faces to attract
attention, and anoint themselves with flour, which has a religious and
sanctifying potency. One of their number beats a drum, and the others
dance, singing at the same time a weird song, with curious intervals.
Finally, when they have arrived at the requisite pitch of religious
exaltation, the possessed woman falls to the ground, and bursts forth into
a low and almost inarticulate chant, which has a most uncanny effect. All
are silent at once, and the _bashing'anga_ (medicine-men) gather round to
interpret the voice of the spirit."(495) Sometimes the spirits of departed
chiefs are reincarnated in animals, which are then revered as the abodes
of the dead rulers. Thus the paramount chief of the Amambwe is incarnated
after death in the form of a young lion, while Bisa and Wiwa chiefs come
back in the shape of pythons. In one of the rest-houses near Fife a tame
python waxed fat on the offerings of fowls and sour beer which the
Winamwanga presented to it in the fond belief that it housed the spirit of
one of their dead chiefs. One day unfortunately for himself the reptile
deity ventured to dispute the possession of the rest-house with a German
cattle-dealer who was passing by; a discharge of shot settled the dispute
in favour of the cattle-dealer, and the worshippers of the deity beheld
him no more.(496)

(M163) Another Bantu people who worship the spirits of their dead kings
are the Barotse or Marotse of the Upper Zambesi. The Barotse believe in a
supreme god, the creator of all things, whom they call Niambe. He lives in
the sun, and by his marriage with the moon begat the world, the animals,
and last of all men. But the cunning and ferocity of his creature man
terrified the beneficent creator, so that he fled from earth and escaped
up the thread of a spider's web to heaven. There he still retains a
certain power to interfere in human affairs, and that is why men sometimes
pray and sacrifice to him. For example, the worshipper salutes the rising
sun and offers him a vessel of water, no doubt to quench the thirst of the
deity on his hot journey across the sky. Again, when a long drought has
prevailed, a black ox is sacrificed to Niambe "as a symbol of the clouds
big with the longed-for rain." And before they sow the fields, the women
pile the seeds and their digging hoes in a heap, and pray to the god that
he would render their labour fruitful.(497)

(M164) Yet while they acknowledge the divine supremacy of Niambe, the
Barotse address their prayers most frequently to the inferior deities, the
_ditino_, who are the deified kings of the country. The tombs of the
departed monarchs may be seen near the villages which they inhabited in
life. Each tomb stands in a grove of beautiful trees and is encircled by a
tall palisade of pointed stakes, covered with fine mats, like the palisade
which surrounds the royal residence of a living king. Such an enclosure is
sacred; the people are forbidden to enter it lest they should disturb the
ghost of him who sleeps below. But the inhabitants of the nearest village
are charged with the duty of keeping the tomb and the enclosure in good
order, repairing the palisade, and replacing the mats when they are worn
out. Once a month, at the new moon, the women sweep not only the grave and
the enclosure but the whole village. The guardian of the tomb is at the
same time a priest; he acts as intermediary between the god and the people
who come to pray to the deity. He bears the title of Ngomboti; he alone
has the right to enter the sacred enclosure; the profane multitude must
stand at a respectful distance. Even the king himself, when he comes to
consult one of his ancestors, is forbidden to set foot on the holy ground.
In presence of the god, or, as they call him, the Master of the Tomb, the
monarch must bear himself like a slave in the presence of his lord. He
kneels down near the entrance, claps his hands, and gives the royal
salute; and from within the enclosure the priest solemnly returns the
salute, just as the king himself, when he holds his court, returns the
salute of his subjects. Then the suppliant, whether king or commoner,
makes his petition to the deity and deposits his offering; for no man may
pray to the god with empty hands. Inside the enclosure, close to the
entrance, is a hole which is supposed to serve as a channel of
communication with the spirit of the deified king. In it the offerings are
placed. Often they consist of milk which is poured into the hole; and the
faster it drains away, the more favourably inclined is the god thought to
be to the petitioner. More solid offerings, such as flesh, clothes, and
glass beads, become the property of the priest after they have been
allowed to lie for a decent time beside the sacred aperture of the tomb.
The spirits of dead kings are thus consulted on matters of public concern
as well as by private individuals touching their own affairs. If a war is
to be waged, if a plague is raging among the people or a murrain among the
cattle, if the land is parched with drought, in short, if any danger
threatens or any calamity has afflicted the country, recourse is had to
these local gods, dwelling each in his shady grove, not far from the
abodes of the living. They are near, but the great god in heaven is far
away. What wonder, therefore, that their help is often sought while he is
neglected? They are national heroes as well as gods; their history is
remembered; men tell of the doughty deeds they did in their lifetime; why
should they not be able to succour their votaries now that they have put
on immortality? All over the country these temple-tombs may be seen. They
serve as historical monuments to recall to the people the names of their
former kings and the annals of their country. One of the most popular of
the royal shrines is near Senanga at the southern end of the great plain
of the Barotse. Voyagers who go down the Zambesi do not fail to pay their
devotions at the shrine, that the god of the place may make their voyage
to prosper and may guard the frail canoe from shipwreck in the rush and
roar of the rapids; and when they return in safety they repair again to
the sacred spot to deposit a thank-offering for the protection of the
deity.(498)

(M165) The foregoing examples suffice to prove that the worship of dead
chiefs and kings has been an important, perhaps we may even say, the most
important element in the religion of many African tribes. Regarded from
the native point of view nothing could be more natural. The king rules
over his people in life; and since all these tribes entertain a firm and
unquestioning belief not only in the existence but in the power of the
spirits of the dead, they necessarily conclude that of all the departed
spirits none can be so potent for good or evil, none therefore need to be
propitiated so earnestly by prayer and sacrifice, as the souls of dead
kings. Thus while every family worships privately the spirits of its own
ancestors, the whole tribe worships publicly the spirits of its departed
monarchs, paying to each of these invisible potentates, whose reality they
never dream of doubting, a homage of precisely the same sort as that which
they render to his living successor on the throne. Such a religion of the
dead is by no means incompatible with the recognition of higher spiritual
powers who may have an origin quite independent of the worship of
ancestors. We have seen in point of fact that many tribes, whose practical
religion is concentrated chiefly on their dead, nevertheless acknowledge
the existence of a supreme god, the creator of man and of all things, whom
they do not regard as a glorified ghost. The Baganda, the most progressive
and advanced of all the Bantu tribes, had a whole pantheon of gods whom
they sharply distinguished from the worshipful spirits of their
forefathers.

(M166) Yet in spite of this distinction we may suspect that in many cases
the seeming line of division between gods and worshipful ghosts is
deceptive; and that the magic touch of time, which distorts and magnifies
the past, especially among peoples who see it only through the haze of
oral tradition, has glorified and transfigured many a dead man into a
deity. This at all events seems to have been the history of some of the
Baganda gods. On this subject our best authority says that "the principal
gods appear to have been at one time human beings, noted for their skill
and bravery, who were afterwards deified by the people and invested with
supernatural powers."(499) "Mukasa held the highest rank among the gods of
Uganda. He was a benign god; he never asked for the life of any human
being, but animals were sacrificed to him at the yearly festivals, and
also at other times when the king, or a leading chief, wished to consult
him. He had nothing to do with war, but sought to heal the bodies and
minds of men. He was the god of plenty; he gave the people an increase of
food, cattle, and children. From the legends still current it seems to be
almost certain that he was a human being who, because of his benevolence,
came to be regarded as a god.... The legends about Mukasa are of great
interest; they show how the human element has been lost in the divine, how
the natural has been effaced by the supernatural, until, in the minds of
the common people, only the supernatural remains."(500)

(M167) If we cannot prove that the great god Mukasa himself was once a
man, we have very tangible evidence that his brother the war-god Kibuka
was so. For like the dead kings of Uganda, Kibuka was worshipped in a
great conical hut resembling the huts which living people inhabit: like
them, his spirit was supposed to enter from time to time into the body of
his priest and to give oracles through him; and like them he was
represented in his temple by his personal relics, his jawbone and his
navel-string, which were rescued from the ruins of his temple and now rest
in the Ethnological Museum at Cambridge. In face of this complete
parallelism between the god and the kings whose personal existence is not
open to question, it seems difficult to doubt that Kibuka was once like
them a real man, and that he spoke with the jawbone and made bodily use of
the other corporeal organs which were preserved in his temple.(501)

(M168) These analogies lend some support to the theory that in ancient
Egypt, where the kings were worshipped by their people both in life and
death, Osiris may have been originally nothing but one of these deified
monarchs whose worship gradually eclipsed that of all the rest and ended
by rivalling or even surpassing that of the great sun-god himself. We have
seen that at Abydos, one of the principal centres of his worship, the tomb
of Osiris was identified with the tomb of King Khent, one of the earliest
monarchs of the first Egyptian dynasty, and that in this tomb were found a
woman's richly jewelled arm and a human skull lacking the lower jawbone,
which may well be the head of the king himself and the arm of his queen.
The carved monument of Osiris which was found in the sepulchral chamber
appears indeed to be a work of late Egyptian art, but it may have replaced
an earlier sarcophagus. Certainly we may reasonably suppose that the
identification of the tomb of Osiris with the tomb of King Khent was very
ancient; for though the priests may have renewed the sculptured effigy of
the dead god, they would hardly dare to shift the site of the Holy
Sepulchre.(502) Now the sepulchre is distant about a mile and a half from
the temple in which Osiris was worshipped as a god. There is thus a
curious coincidence, if there is nothing more, between the worship of
Osiris and the worship of the dead kings of Uganda. As a dead king of
Uganda was worshipped in a temple, while his headless body reposed at some
distance in a royal tomb, and his head, without the lower jawbone, was
buried by itself near the grave, so Osiris was worshipped in a temple not
far from the royal tomb which tradition identified with his grave. Perhaps
after all tradition was right. It is possible, though it would be very
rash to affirm, that Osiris was no other than the historical King Khent of
the first dynasty;(503) that the skull found in the tomb is the skull of
Osiris himself; and that while it reposed in the grave the missing jawbone
was preserved, like the jawbone of a dead king of Uganda, as a holy and
perhaps oracular relic in the neighbouring temple. If that were so, we
should be almost driven to conclude that the bejewelled woman's arm found
in the tomb of Osiris is the arm of Isis.

(M169) In support of the conclusion that the myth and religion of Osiris
grew up round the revered memory of a dead man we may quote the words in
which the historian of European morals describes the necessity under which
the popular imagination labours of embodying its cherished ideals in
living persons. He is referring to the dawn of the age of chivalry, when
in the morning twilight the heroic figure of Charlemagne rose like a
bright star above the political horizon, to be thenceforth encircled by a
halo of romance like the nimbus that shone round the head of Osiris. "In
order that the tendencies I have described should acquire their full
force, it was necessary that they should be represented or illustrated in
some great personage, who, by the splendour and the beauty of his career,
could fascinate the imaginations of men. It is much easier to govern great
masses of men through their imagination than through their reason. Moral
principles rarely act powerfully upon the world, except by way of example
or ideals. When the course of events has been to glorify the ascetic or
monarchical or military spirit, a great saint, or sovereign, or soldier
will arise, who will concentrate in one dazzling focus the blind
tendencies of his time, kindle the enthusiasm and fascinate the
imagination of the people. But for the prevailing tendency, the great man
would not have arisen, or would not have exercised his great influence.
But for the great man, whose career appealed vividly to the imagination,
the prevailing tendency would never have acquired its full
intensity."(504)

(M170) Whether the parallel thus suggested between Charlemagne, the
mediaeval ideal of a Christian knight, and Osiris, the ancient Egyptian
ideal of a just and beneficent monarch, holds good or not, it is now
impossible to determine. For while Charlemagne stands near enough to allow
us clearly to discern his historical reality, Osiris is so remote that we
can no longer discriminate with any certitude between the elements of
history and fable which appear to have blended in his traditional
character. I am content to indicate bare possibilities: dogmatism on such
points would be in the highest degree rash and unbecoming. Whether Osiris
and Isis were from first to last purely imaginary beings, the ideal
creations of a primitive philosophy, or whether they were originally a
real man and woman about whom after death the myth-making fancy wove its
gossamer rainbow-tinted web, is a question to which I am not bold enough
to give a decided answer.





CHAPTER XII. MOTHER-KIN AND MOTHER GODDESSES.




§ 1. Dying Gods and Mourning Goddesses.


(M171) We have now concluded our inquiry into the nature and worship of
the three Oriental deities Adonis, Attis, and Osiris. The substantial
similarity of their mythical character justifies us in treating of them
together. All three apparently embodied the powers of fertility in general
and of vegetation in particular. All three were believed to have died and
risen again from the dead; and the divine death and resurrection of all
three were dramatically represented at annual festivals, which their
worshippers celebrated with alternate transports of sorrow and joy, of
weeping and exultation. The natural phenomena thus mythically conceived
and mythically represented were the great changes of the seasons,
especially the most striking and impressive of all, the decay and revival
of vegetation; and the intention of the sacred dramas was to refresh and
strengthen, by sympathetic magic, the failing energies of nature, in order
that the trees should bear fruit, that the corn should ripen, that men and
animals should reproduce their kinds.

(M172) But the three gods did not stand by themselves. The mythical
personification of nature, of which all three were in at least one aspect
the products, required that each of them should be coupled with a goddess,
and in each case it appears that originally the goddess was a more
powerful and important personage than the god. At all events it is always
the god rather than the goddess who comes to a sad end, and whose death is
annually mourned. Thus, whereas Osiris was slain by Typhon, his divine
spouse Isis survived and brought him to life again. This feature of the
myth seems to indicate that in the beginning Isis was, what Astarte and
Cybele always continued to be, the stronger divinity of the pair. Now the
superiority thus assigned to the goddess over the god is most naturally
explained as the result of a social system in which maternity counted for
more than paternity, descent being traced and property handed down through
women rather than through men. At all events this explanation cannot be
deemed intrinsically improbable if we can show that the supposed cause has
produced the very same effect among existing peoples, about whose
institutions we possess accurate information. This I will now endeavour to
do.




§ 2. Influence of Mother-Kin on Religion.


(M173) The social system which traces descent and transmits property
through the mother alone may be called mother-kin, while the converse
system which traces descent and transmits property through the father
alone may be called father-kin.(505) A good example of the influence which
mother-kin may exert on religion is furnished by the Khasis of Assam,
whose customs and beliefs have lately been carefully recorded by a British
officer specially charged with the study of the native races of the
province.(506) Like the ancient Egyptians and the Semites of Syria and
Mesopotamia, the Khasis live in settled villages and maintain themselves
chiefly by the cultivation of the ground; yet "their social organization
presents one of the most perfect examples still surviving of matriarchal
institutions, carried out with a logic and thoroughness which, to those
accustomed to regard the status and authority of the father as the
foundation of society, are exceedingly remarkable. Not only is the mother
the head and source, and only bond of union, of the family: in the most
primitive part of the hills, the Synteng country, she is the only owner of
real property, and through her alone is inheritance transmitted.(507) The
father has no kinship with his children, who belong to their mother's
clan; what he earns goes to his own matriarchal stock, and at his death
his bones are deposited in the cromlech of his mother's kin. In Jowai he
neither lives nor eats in his wife's house, but visits it only after dark.
In the veneration of ancestors, which is the foundation of the tribal
piety, the primal ancestress (_Ka Iawbei_) and her brother are the only
persons regarded. The flat memorial stones set up to perpetuate the memory
of the dead are called after the woman who represents the clan (_maw
kynthei_), and the standing stones ranged behind them are dedicated to the
male kinsmen on the mother's side. In harmony with this scheme of ancestor
worship, the other spirits to whom propitiation is offered are mainly
female, though here male personages also figure. The powers of sickness
and death are all female, and these are those most frequently worshipped.
The two protectors of the household are goddesses, though with them is
also revered the first father of the clan, _U Thawlang_. Priestesses
assist at all sacrifices, and the male officiants are only their deputies;
in one important state, Khyrim, the High Priestess and actual head of the
State is a woman, who combines in her person sacerdotal and regal
functions."(508) Thus amongst the Khasis of the present day the
superiority of the goddess to the god, and especially of the revered
ancestress to the revered ancestor, is based directly on the social system
which traces descent and transmits property through women only. It is not
unreasonable therefore to suppose that in Western Asia the superiority of
the Mother Goddess to the Father God originated in the same archaic system
of mother-kin.

(M174) Another instance of the same cause producing the same effect may be
drawn from the institutions of the Pelew Islanders, which have been
described by an accurate observer long resident in the islands. These
people, who form a branch of the Micronesian stock, are divided into a
series of exogamous families or clans with descent in the female
line,(509) so that, as usually happens under such a system, a man's heirs
are not his own children but the children of his sister or of his maternal
aunt.(510) Every family or clan traces its descent from a woman, the
common mother of the whole kin,(511) and accordingly the members of the
clan worship a goddess, not a god.(512) These families or clans, with
female descent and a worship of goddesses rather than of gods, are grouped
together in villages, each village comprising about a score of clans and
forming with its lands a petty independent state.(513) Every such
village-state has its special deity or deities, generally a god and a
goddess. But these political deities of the villages are said to be
directly derived from the domestic deities of the families or clans,(514)
from which it seems to follow that among these people gods are
historically later than goddesses and have been developed out of
them.(515) The late origin of the gods as compared with the goddesses is
further indicated by the nature of their names.(516)

(M175) This preference for goddesses over gods in the clans of the Pelew
Islanders has been explained, no doubt rightly, by the high importance of
women in the social system of the people.(517) For the existence of the
clan depends entirely on the life of the women, not at all upon the life
of the men. If the women survive, it is no matter though every man of the
clan should perish; for the women will, as usual, marry men of another
clan, and their offspring will inherit their mother's clan, thereby
prolonging its existence. Whereas if the women of the clan all die out,
the clan necessarily becomes extinct, even though every man of it should
survive; for the men must, as usual, marry women of another clan, and
their offspring will inherit their mothers' clan, not the clan of their
fathers, which accordingly, with the death of the fathers, is wiped out
from the community. Hence in these islands women bear the titles of
_Adhalal a pelu_, "Mothers of the Land," and _Adhalal a blay_, "Mothers of
the Clan," and they are said to enjoy complete equality with the men in
every respect.(518) Indeed, in one passage our principal authority speaks
of "the predominance of feminine influence in the social condition of the
people," and asserts without qualification that the women are politically
and socially superior to the men.(519) The eldest women of the clan
exercise, he tells us, the most decisive influence on the conduct of its
affairs, and the headman does nothing without full consultation with them,
a consultation which in the great houses extends to affairs of state and
foreign politics.(520) Nay, these elder women are even esteemed and
treated as equal to the deities in their lifetime.(521)

(M176) But the high position which women thus take in Pelew society is not
a result of mother-kin only. It has an industrial as well as a kinship
basis. For the Pelew Islanders subsist mainly on the produce of their taro
fields, and the cultivation of this, their staple food, is the business of
the women alone. "This cardinal branch of Pelew agriculture, which is of
paramount importance for the subsistence of the people, is left entirely
in the hands of the women. This fact may have contributed materially to
the predominance of female influence in the social condition of the
people. The women do not merely bestow life on the people, they also do
that which is most essential for the preservation of life, and therefore
they are called _Adhalal a pelu_, the 'Mothers of the Land,' and are
politically and socially superior to men. Only their offspring enjoy the
privilege of membership of the state (the children of the men are,
strictly speaking, strangers destitute of rights), and the oldest women of
the families are esteemed and treated as equal to deities even in their
lifetime, and they exercise a decisive influence on the conduct of affairs
of state. No chief would venture to come to a decision without first
consulting with the _Adhalal a blay_, the 'Mothers of the Family.' From
this point of view it is impossible to regard the assignment of the taro
cultivation to women as a consequence of their subordinate position in
society: the women themselves do not so regard it. The richest woman of
the village looks with pride on her taro patch, and although she has
female followers enough to allow her merely to superintend the work
without taking part in it, she nevertheless prefers to lay aside her fine
apron and to betake herself to the deep mire, clad in a small apron that
hardly hides her nakedness, with a little mat on her back to protect her
from the burning heat of the sun, and with a shade of banana leaves for
her eyes. There, dripping with sweat in the burning sun and coated with
mud to the hips and over the elbows, she toils to set the younger women a
good example. Moreover, as in every other occupation, the _kaliths_, the
gods, must also be invoked, and who could be better fitted for the
discharge of so important a duty than the Mother of the House?"(522) It
seems clear that in any agricultural people who, like the Pelew Islanders,
retain mother-kin and depute the labours of husbandry to women, the
conception of a great Mother Goddess, the divine source of all fertility,
might easily originate. Perhaps the same social and industrial conditions
may have combined to develop the great Mother Goddesses of Western Asia
and Egypt.

(M177) But in the Pelew Islands women have yet another road to power. For
some of them are reputed to be the wives of gods, and act as their
oracular mouthpieces. Such prophetesses are called _Amlaheys_, and no
surprise is felt when one of them is brought to bed. Her child passes for
the offspring of the god, her divine husband, and goes about with his hair
hanging loose in token of his superhuman parentage. It is thought that no
mortal man would dare to intrigue with one of these human wives of a god,
since the jealous deity would surely visit the rash culprit with deadly
sickness and a lingering decline.(523) But in these islands men as well as
women are often possessed by a deity and speak in his name. Under his
inspiration they mimic, often with great histrionic skill, the particular
appearance and manner which are believed to be characteristic of the
indwelling divinity. These inspired men (_Korongs_) usually enjoy great
consideration and exert a powerful influence over the whole community.
They always acquire wealth in the exercise of their profession. When they
are not themselves chiefs, they are treated as chiefs or even preferred to
them. In not a few places the deity whom they personate is also the
political head of the land; and in that case his inspired priest, however
humble his origin, ranks as a spiritual king and rules over all the
chiefs. Indeed we are told that, with the physical and intellectual decay
of the race, the power of the priests is more and more in the ascendant
and threatens, if unchecked, to develop before long into an absolute
theocracy which will swallow up every other form of government.(524)

(M178) Thus the present, or at least the recent, state of society and
religion in the Pelew Islands presents some interesting parallels to the
social and religious condition of Western Asia and Egypt in early days, if
the conclusions reached in this work are correct. In both regions we see a
society based on mother-kin developing a religion in which goddesses of
the clan originally occupied the foremost place, though in later times, as
the clans coalesced into states, the old goddesses have been rivalled and
to some extent supplanted by the new male gods of the enlarged pantheon.
But in the religion of the Pelew Islanders, as in that of the Khasis and
the ancient Egyptians, the balance of power has never wholly shifted from
the female to the male line, because society has never passed from
mother-kin to father-kin. And in the Pelew Islands as in the ancient East
we see the tide of political power running strongly in the direction of
theocracy, the people resigning the conduct of affairs into the hands of
men who claimed to rule them in the name of the gods. In the Pelew Islands
such men might have developed into divine kings like those of Babylon and
Egypt, if the natural course of evolution had not been cut short by the
intervention of Europe.(525)

(M179) The evidence of the Khasis and the Pelew Islanders, two peoples
very remote and very different from each other, suffices to prove that the
influence which mother-kin may exert on religion is real and deep. But in
order to dissipate misapprehensions, which appear to be rife on this
subject, it may be well to remind or inform the reader that the ancient
and widespread custom of tracing descent and inheriting property through
the mother alone does not by any means imply that the government of the
tribes which observe the custom is in the hands of women; in short, it
should always be borne in mind that mother-kin does not mean mother-rule.
On the contrary, the practice of mother-kin prevails most extensively
amongst the lowest savages, with whom woman, instead of being the ruler of
man, is always his drudge and often little better than his slave. Indeed,
so far is the system from implying any social superiority of women that it
probably took its rise from what we should regard as their deepest
degradation, to wit, from a state of society in which the relations of the
sexes were so loose and vague that children could not be fathered on any
particular man.(526)

(M180) When we pass from the purely savage state to that higher plane of
culture in which the accumulation of property, and especially of landed
property, has become a powerful instrument of social and political
influence, we naturally find that wherever the ancient preference for the
female line of descent has been retained, it tends to increase the
importance and enhance the dignity of woman; and her aggrandizement is
most marked in princely families, where she either herself holds royal
authority as well as private property, or at least transmits them both to
her consort or her children. But this social advance of women has never
been carried so far as to place men as a whole in a position of political
subordination to them. Even where the system of mother-kin in regard to
descent and property has prevailed most fully, the actual government has
generally, if not invariably, remained in the hands of men. Exceptions
have no doubt occurred; women have occasionally arisen who by sheer force
of character have swayed for a time the destinies of their people. But
such exceptions are rare and their effects transitory; they do not affect
the truth of the general rule that human society has been governed in the
past and, human nature remaining the same, is likely to be governed in the
future, mainly by masculine force and masculine intelligence.

(M181) To this rule the Khasis, with their elaborate system of mother-kin,
form no exception. For among them, while landed property is both
transmitted through women and held by women alone, political power is
transmitted indeed through women, but is held by men; in other words, the
Khasi tribes are, with a single exception, governed by kings, not by
queens. And even in the one tribe, which is nominally ruled by women, the
real power is delegated by the reigning queen or High Priestess to her
son, her nephew, or a more distant male relation. In all the other tribes
the kingship may be held by a woman only on the failure of all male heirs
in the female line.(527) So far is mother-kin from implying mother-rule. A
Khasi king inherits power in right of his mother, but he exercises it in
his own. Similarly the Pelew Islanders, in spite of their system of
mother-kin, are governed by chiefs, not by chieftainesses. It is true that
there are chieftainesses, and that they indirectly exercise much
influence; but their direct authority is limited to the affairs of women,
especially to the administration of the women's clubs or associations,
which answer to the clubs or associations of the men.(528) And to take
another example, the Melanesians, like the Khasis and the Pelew Islanders,
have the system of mother-kin, being similarly divided into exogamous
clans with descent in the female line; "but it must be understood that the
mother is in no way the head of the family. The house of the family is the
father's, the garden is his, the rule and government are his."(529)

(M182) We may safely assume that the practice has been the same among all
the many peoples who have retained the ancient system of mother-kin under
a monarchical constitution. In Africa, for example, the chieftainship or
kingship often descends in the female line, but it is men, not women, who
inherit it.(530) The theory of a gynaecocracy is in truth a dream of
visionaries and pedants. And equally chimerical is the idea that the
predominance of goddesses under a system of mother-kin like that of the
Khasis is a creation of the female mind. If women ever created gods, they
would be more likely to give them masculine than feminine features. In
point of fact the great religious ideals which have permanently impressed
themselves on the world seem always to have been a product of the male
imagination. Men make gods and women worship them. The combination of
ancestor-worship with mother-kin furnishes a simple and sufficient
explanation of the superiority of goddesses over gods in a state of
society where these conditions prevail. Men naturally assign the first
place in their devotions to the ancestress from whom they trace their
descent. We need not resort to a fantastic hypothesis of the preponderance
of the feminine fancy in order to account for the facts.

(M183) The theory that under a system of mother-kin the women rule the men
and set up goddesses for them to worship is indeed so improbable in
itself, and so contrary to experience, that it scarcely deserves the
serious attention which it appears to have received.(531) But when we have
brushed aside these cobwebs, as we must do, we are still left face to face
with the solid fact of the wide prevalence of mother-kin, that is, of a
social system which traces descent and transmits property through women
and not through men. That a social system so widely spread and so deeply
rooted should have affected the religion of the peoples who practise it,
may reasonably be inferred, especially when we remember that in primitive
communities the social relations of the gods commonly reflect the social
relations of their worshippers. How the system of mother-kin may mould
religious ideas and customs, creating goddesses and assigning at least a
nominal superiority to priestesses over priests, is shown with perfect
lucidity by the example of the Khasis, and hardly less clearly by the
example of the Pelew Islanders. It cannot therefore be rash to hold that
what the system has certainly done for these peoples, it may well have
done for many more. But unfortunately through lack of documentary evidence
we are seldom able to trace its influence so clearly.




§ 3. Mother-Kin and Mother Goddesses in the Ancient East.


(M184) While the combination of mother-kin in society with a preference
for goddesses in religion is to be found as a matter of fact among the
Khasis and Pelew Islanders of to-day, the former prevalence of mother-kin
in the lands where the great goddesses Astarte and Cybele were worshipped
is a matter of inference only. In later times father-kin had certainly
displaced mother-kin among the Semitic worshippers of Astarte, and
probably the same change had taken place among the Phrygian worshippers of
Cybele. Yet the older custom lingered in Lycia down to the historical
period;(532) and we may conjecture that in former times it was widely
spread through Asia Minor. The secluded situation and rugged mountains of
Lycia favoured the survival of a native language and of native
institutions long after these had disappeared from the wide plains and
fertile valleys which lay on the highroads of war and commerce. Lycia was
to Asia Minor what the highlands of Wales and of Scotland have been to
Britain, the last entrenchments where the old race stood at bay. And even
among the Semites of antiquity, though father-kin finally prevailed in
matters of descent and property, traces of an older system of mother-kin,
with its looser sexual relations, appear to have long survived in the
sphere of religion. At all events one of the most learned and acute of
Semitic scholars adduced what he regarded as evidence sufficient to prove
"that in old Arabian religion gods and goddesses often occurred in pairs,
the goddess being the greater, so that the god cannot be her Baal, that
the goddess is often a mother without being a wife, and the god her son,
and that the progress of things was towards changing goddesses into gods
or lowering them beneath the male deity."(533)

(M185) In Egypt the archaic system of mother-kin, with its preference for
women over men in matters of property and inheritance, lasted down to
Roman times, and it was traditionally based on the example of Isis, who
had avenged her husband's murder and had continued to reign after his
decease, conferring benefits on mankind. "For these reasons," says
Diodorus Siculus, "it was appointed that the queen should enjoy greater
power and honour than the king, and that among private people the wife
should rule over her husband, in the marriage contract the husband
agreeing to obey his wife in all things."(534) A corollary of the superior
position thus conceded to women in Egypt was that the obligation of
maintaining parents in their old age rested on the daughters, not on the
sons, of the family.(535)

(M186) The same legal superiority of women over men accounts for the most
remarkable feature in the social system of the ancient Egyptians, to wit,
the marriage of full brothers with full sisters. That marriage, which to
us seems strange and unnatural, was by no means a whim of the reigning
Ptolemies; on the contrary, these Macedonian conquerors appear, with
characteristic prudence, to have borrowed the custom from their Egyptian
predecessors for the express purpose of conciliating native prejudice. In
the eyes of the Egyptians "marriage between brother and sister was the
best of marriages, and it acquired an ineffable degree of sanctity when
the brother and sister who contracted it were themselves born of a brother
and sister, who had in their turn also sprung from a union of the same
sort."(536) Nor did the principle apply only to gods and kings. The common
people acted on it in their daily life. They regarded marriages between
brothers and sisters as the most natural and reasonable of all.(537) The
evidence of legal documents, including marriage contracts, tends to prove
that such unions were the rule, not the exception, in ancient Egypt, and
that they continued to form the majority of marriages long after the
Romans had obtained a firm footing in the country. As we cannot suppose
that Roman influence was used to promote a custom which must have been
abhorrent to Roman instincts, we may safely assume that the proportion of
brother and sister marriages in Egypt had been still greater in the days
when the country was free.(538)

(M187) It would doubtless be a mistake to treat these marriages as a relic
of savagery, as a survival of a tribal communism which knew no bar to the
intercourse of the sexes. For such a theory would not explain why union
with a sister was not only allowed, but preferred to all others. The true
motive of that preference was most probably the wish of brothers to obtain
for their own use the family property, which belonged of right to their
sisters, and which otherwise they would have seen in the enjoyment of
strangers, the husbands of their sisters. This is the system which in
Ceylon is known as _beena_ marriage. Under it the daughter, not the son,
is the heir. She stays at home, and her husband comes and lives with her
in the house; but her brother goes away and dwells in his wife's home,
inheriting nothing from his parents.(539) Such a system could not fail in
time to prove irksome. Men would be loth to quit the old home, resign the
ancestral property to a stranger, and go out to seek their fortune
empty-handed in the world. The remedy was obvious. A man had nothing to do
but to marry his sister himself instead of handing her over to another.
Having done so he stayed at home and enjoyed the family estate in virtue
of his marriage with the heiress. This simple and perfectly effective
expedient for keeping the property in the family most probably explains
the custom of brother and sister marriage in Egypt.(540)

(M188) Thus the union of Osiris with his sister Isis was not a freak of
the story-teller's fancy: it reflected a social custom which was itself
based on practical considerations of the most solid kind. When we reflect
that this practice of mother-kin as opposed to father-kin survived down to
the latest times of antiquity, not in an obscure and barbarous tribe, but
in a nation whose immemorial civilization was its glory and the wonder of
the world, we may without being extravagant suppose that a similar
practice formerly prevailed in Syria and Phrygia, and that it accounts for
the superiority of the goddess over the god in the divine partnerships of
Adonis and Astarte, of Attis and Cybele. But the ancient system both of
society and of religion had undergone far more change in these countries
than in Egypt, where to the last the main outlines of the old structure
could be traced in the national institutions to which the Egyptians clung
with a passionate, a fanatical devotion. Mother-kin, the divinity of kings
and queens, a sense of the original connexion of the gods with
nature--these things outlived the Persian, the Macedonian, the Roman
conquest, and only perished under the more powerful solvent of
Christianity. But the old order did not vanish at once with the official
establishment of the new religion. In the age of Constantine the Greeks of
Egypt still attributed the rise of the Nile to Serapis, the later form of
Osiris, alleging that the inundation could not take place if the standard
cubit, which was used to measure it, were not deposited according to
custom in the temple of the god. The emperor ordered the cubit to be
transferred to a church; and next year, to the general surprise, the river
rose just as usual.(541) Even at a later time Athanasius himself had to
confess with sorrow and indignation that under his own eyes the Egyptians
still annually mourned the death of Osiris.(542) The end came with the
destruction of the great Serapeum at Alexandria, the last stronghold of
the heathen in Egypt. It perished in a furious and bloody sedition, in
which Christians and pagans seem to have vied with each other in mutual
atrocities. After its fall the temples were levelled with the ground or
converted into churches, and the images of the old gods went to the
melting-pot to be converted into base uses for the rabble of
Alexandria.(543)

(M189) The singular tenacity with which the Egyptian people maintained
their traditional beliefs and customs for thousands of years sprang no
doubt from the stubborn conservatism of the national character. Yet that
conservatism was itself in great measure an effect of geographical and
climatic conditions and of the ways of life which they favoured.
Surrounded on every side by deserts or almost harbourless seas, the
Egyptians occupied a position of great natural strength which for long
ages together protected them from invasion and allowed their native habits
to set and harden, undisturbed by the subversive influence of foreign
conquest. The wonderful regularity of nature in Egypt also conduced to a
corresponding stability in the minds of the people. Year in, year out, the
immutable succession of the seasons brought with it the same unvarying
round of agricultural toil. What the fathers had done, the sons did in the
same manner at the same season, and so it went on from generation to
generation. This monotonous routine is common indeed to all purely
agricultural communities, and everywhere tends to beget in the husbandman
a settled phlegmatic habit of mind very different from the mobility, the
alertness, the pliability of character which the hazards and uncertainties
of commerce and the sea foster in the merchant and the sailor. The
saturnine temperament of the farmer is as naturally averse to change as
the more mercurial spirit of the trader and the seaman is predisposed to
it. But the stereotyping of ideas and of customs was carried further in
Egypt than in most lands devoted to husbandry by reason of the greater
uniformity of the Egyptian seasons and the more complete isolation of the
country.

(M190) The general effect of these causes was to create a type of national
character which presented many points of resemblance to that of the
Chinese. In both we see the same inflexible strength of will, the same
astonishing industry, the same strange blend of humanity and savagery, the
same obstinate adherence to tradition, the same pride of race and of
ancient civilization, the same contempt for foreigners as for upstarts and
barbarians, the same patient outward submission to an alien rule combined
with an unshakeable inward devotion to native ideals. It was this
conservative temper of the people, bred in great measure of the physical
nature of their land, which, so to say, embalmed the memory of Osiris long
after the corresponding figures of Adonis and Attis had suffered decay.
For while Egypt enjoyed profound repose, the tides of war and conquest, of
traffic and commerce, had for centuries rolled over Western Asia, the
native home of Adonis and Attis; and if the shock of nationalities in this
great meeting-ground of East and West was favourable to the rise of new
faiths and new moralities, it was in the same measure unfavourable to the
preservation of the old.





NOTES.




I. Moloch The King.


(M191) I cannot leave the evidence for the sacred character of Jewish
kings(544) without mentioning a suggestion which was made to me by my
friend and teacher the Rev. Professor R. H. Kennett. He thinks that
Moloch, to whom first-born children were burnt by their parents in the
valley of Hinnom, outside the walls of Jerusalem,(545) may have been
originally the human king regarded as an incarnate deity. Certainly the
name of Moloch, or rather Molech (for so it is always written in the
Massoretic text(546)), is merely a slightly disguised form of _melech_,
the ordinary Hebrew word for "king," the scribes having apparently given
the dreadful word the vowels of bosheth, "shameful thing."(547) But it
seems clear that in historical times the Jews who offered these sacrifices
identified Molech, not with the human king, but with Jehovah, though the
prophets protested against the custom as an outrage on the divine
majesty.(548)

(M192) If, however, these sacrifices were originally offered to or in
behalf of the human king, it is possible that they were intended to
prolong his life and strengthen his hands for the performance of those
magical functions which he was expected to discharge for the good of his
people. The old kings of Sweden answered with their heads for the
fertility of the ground,(549) and we read that one of them, Aun or On by
name, sacrificed nine of his sons to Odin at Upsala in order that his own
life might be spared. After the sacrifice of his second son he received
from the god an oracle that he should live as long as he gave him one of
his sons every tenth year. When he had thus sacrificed seven sons, the
ruthless father still lived, but was so feeble that he could no longer
walk and had to be carried in a chair. Then he offered up his eighth son
and lived ten years more, bedridden. After that he sacrificed his ninth
son, and lived ten years more, drinking out of a horn like a weaned child.
He now wished to sacrifice his last remaining son to Odin, but the Swedes
would not let him, so he died and was buried in a mound at Upsala.(550) In
this Swedish tradition the king's children seem to have been looked upon
as substitutes offered to the god in place of their father, and apparently
this was also the current explanation of the slaughter of the first-born
in the later times of Israel.(551) On that view the sacrifices were
vicarious, and therefore purely religious, being intended to propitiate a
stern and exacting deity. Similarly we read that when Amestris, wife of
Xerxes, was grown old, she sacrificed on her behalf twice seven noble
children to the earth god by burying them alive.(552) If the story is
true--and it rests on the authority of Herodotus, a nearly contemporary
witness--we may surmise that the aged queen acted thus with an eye to the
future rather than to the past; she hoped that the grim god of the
nether-world would accept the young victims in her stead, and let her live
for many years. The same idea of vicarious suffering comes out in a
tradition told of a certain Hova king of Madagascar, who bore the sonorous
name of Andriamasinavalona. When he had grown sickly and feeble, the
oracle was consulted as to the best way of restoring him to health. "The
following result was the consequence of the directions of the oracle. A
speech was first delivered to the people, offering great honours and
rewards to the family of any individual who would freely offer himself to
be sacrificed, in order to the king's recovery. The people shuddered at
the idea, and ran away in different directions. One man, however,
presented himself for the purpose, and his offer was accepted. The
sacrificer girded up his loins, sharpened his knife, and bound the victim.
After which, he was laid down with his head towards the east, upon a mat
spread for the purpose, according to the custom with animals on such
occasions, when the priest appeared, to proceed with all solemnity in
slaughtering the victim by cutting his throat. A quantity of red liquid,
however, which had been prepared from a native dye, was spilled in the
ceremony; and, to the amazement of those who looked on, blood seemed to be
flowing all around. The man, as might be supposed, was unhurt; but the
king rewarded him and his descendants with the perpetual privilege of
exemption from capital punishment for any violation of the laws. The
descendants of the man to this day form a particular class, called _Tay
maty manota_, which may be translated, 'Not dead, though transgressing.'
Instances frequently occur, of individuals of this class appropriating
bullocks, rice, and other things belonging to the sovereign, as if they
were their own, and escaping merely with a reprimand, while a common
person would have to suffer death, or be reduced to slavery."(553)

(M193) Sometimes, however, the practices intended to prolong the king's
life seem to rest on a theory of nutrition rather than of substitution; in
other words, the life of the victims, instead of being offered vicariously
to a god, is apparently supposed to pass directly into the body of the
sacrificer, thus refreshing his failing strength and prolonging his
existence. So regarded, the custom is magical rather than religious in
character, since the desired effect is thought to follow directly without
the intervention of a deity. At all events, it can be shown that
sacrifices of this sort have been offered to prolong the life of kings in
other parts of the world. Thus in regard to some of the negroes who
inhabit the delta of the Niger we read that: "A custom which formerly was
practised by the Ibani, and is still prevalent among all the interior
tribes, consists in prolonging the life of a king or ancestral
representative by the daily, or possibly weekly, sacrifice of a chicken
and egg. Every morning, as soon as the patriarch has risen from his bed,
the sacrificial articles are procured either by his mother, head wife, or
eldest daughter, and given to the priest, who receives them on the open
space in front of the house. When this has been reported to the patriarch,
he comes outside and, sitting down, joins in the ceremony. Taking the
chicken in his hand, the priest first of all touches the patriarch's face
with it, and afterwards passes it over the whole of his body. He then cuts
its throat and allows the blood to drop on the ground. Mixing the blood
and the earth into a paste, he rubs it on the old man's forehead and
breast, and this is not to be washed off under any circumstances until the
evening. The chicken and the egg, also a piece of white cloth, are now
tied on to a stick, which, if a stream is in the near vicinity, is planted
in the ground at the water-side. During the carriage of these articles to
the place in question, all the wives and many members of the household
accompany the priest, invoking the deity as they go to prolong their
father's life. This is done in the firm conviction that through the
sacrifice of each chicken his life will be accordingly prolonged."(554)

(M194) The ceremony thus described is, like so many other rites, a
combination of magic and religion; for whereas the prayers to the god are
religious, the passing of the victim over the king's body and the smearing
of him with its blood are magical, being plainly intended to convey to him
directly, without the mediation of any deity, the life of the fowl. In the
following instances the practices for prolonging the king's life seem to
be purely magical. Among the Zulus, at one of the annual feasts of
first-fruits, a bull is killed by a particular regiment. In slaughtering
the beast they may not use spears or sticks, but must break its neck or
choke it with their bare hands. "It is then burned, and the strength of
the bull is supposed to enter into the king, thereby prolonging his
life."(555) Again, in an early Portuguese historian we read of a Caffre
king of East Africa that "it is related of this Monomotapa that he has a
house where he commands bodies of men who have died at the hands of the
law to be hung up, and where thus hanging all the humidity of their bodies
falls into vases placed underneath, and when all has dropped from them and
they shrink and dry up he commands them to be taken down and buried, and
with the fat and moisture in the vases they say he makes ointments with
which he anoints himself in order to enjoy long life--which is his
belief--and also to be proof against receiving harm from sorcerers."(556)

(M195) The Baganda of Central Africa used to kill men on various occasions
for the purpose of prolonging the king's life; in all cases it would seem
to be thought that the life of the murdered man was in some mysterious
fashion transferred to the king, so that the monarch received thereby a
fresh accession of vital energy. For example, whenever a particular royal
drum had a new skin put on it, not only was a cow killed to furnish the
skin and its blood run into the drum, but a man was beheaded and the
spouting blood from the severed neck was allowed to gush into the drum,
"so that, when the drum was beaten, it was supposed to add fresh life and
vigour to the king from the life of the slain man."(557) Again, at the
coronation of a new king, a royal chamberlain was chosen to take charge of
the king's inner court and to guard his wives. From the royal presence the
chamberlain was conducted, along with eight captives, to one of the human
shambles; there he was blindfolded while seven of the men were clubbed to
death, only the dull thud and crashing sound telling him of what was
taking place. But when the seven had been thus despatched, the bandages
were removed from the chamberlain's eyes and he witnessed the death of the
eighth. As each man was killed, his belly was ripped open and his bowels
pulled out and hung round the chamberlain's neck. These deaths were said
to add to the King's vigour and to make the chamberlain strong and
faithful.(558) Nor were these the only human sacrifices offered at a
king's coronation for the purpose of strengthening the new monarch. When
the king had reigned two or three months, he was expected to hunt first a
leopard and then a bushbuck. On the night after the hunt of the bushbuck,
one of the ministers of State caught a man and brought him before the king
in the dark; the king speared him slightly, then the man was strangled and
the body thrown into a papyrus swamp, that it might never be found again.
Another ceremony performed about this time to confirm the king in his
kingdom was to catch a man, bind him, and bring him before the king, who
wounded him slightly with a spear. Then the man was put to death. These
men were killed to invigorate the king.(559)

(M196) When a king of Uganda had reigned some time, apparently several
years, a ceremony was performed for the sake of prolonging his life. For
this purpose the king paid a visit--a fatal visit--to a chief of the
Lung-fish clan, who bore the title of Nankere and resided in the district
of Busiro, where the tombs and temples of the kings were situated. When
the time for the ceremony had been appointed, the chief chose one of his
own sons, who was to die that the king might live. If the chief had no
son, a near relation was compelled to serve as a substitute. The hapless
youth was fed and clothed and treated in all respects like a prince, and
taken to live in a particular house near the place where the king was to
lodge for the ceremony. When the destined victim had been feasted and
guarded for a month, the king set out on his progress from the capital. On
the way he stopped at the temple of the great god Mukasa; there he changed
his garments, leaving behind him in the temple those which he had been
wearing. Also he left behind him all his anklets, and did not put on any
fresh ones, for he was shortly to receive new anklets of a remarkable
kind. When the king arrived at his destination, the chief met him, and the
two exchanged a gourd of beer. At this interview the king's mother was
present to see her son for the last time; for from that moment the two
were never allowed to look upon each other again. The chief addressed the
king's mother informing her of this final separation; then turning to the
king he said, "You are now of age; go and live longer than your
forefathers." Then the chief's son was introduced. The chief took him by
the hand and presented him to the king, who passed him on to the
body-guard; they led him outside and killed him by beating him with their
clenched fists. The muscles from the back of the body of the murdered
youth were removed and made into two anklets for the king, and a strip of
skin cut from the corpse was made into a whip, which was kept in the royal
enclosure for special feasts. The dead body was thrown on waste land and
guarded against wild beasts, but not buried.(560)

(M197) When that ceremony was over, the king departed to go to another
chief in Busiro; but on the way thither he stopped at a place called Baka
and sat down under a great tree to play a game of spinning fruit-stones.
It is a children's game, but it was no child's play to the man who ran to
fetch the fruit-stones for the king to play with; for he was caught and
speared to death on the spot for the purpose of prolonging the king's
life. After the game had been played the king with his train passed on and
lodged with a certain princess till the anklets made from the muscles of
the chief's murdered son were ready for him to wear; it was the princess
who had to superintend the making of these royal ornaments.(561)

(M198) When all these ceremonies were over, the king made a great feast.
At this feast a priest went about carrying under his mantle the whip that
had been made from the skin of the murdered young man. As he passed
through the crowd of merrymakers, he would flick a man here and there with
the whip, and it was believed that the man on whom the lash lighted would
be childless and might die, unless he made an offering of either nine or
ninety cowrie shells to the priest who had struck him. Naturally he
hastened to procure the shells and take them to the striker, who, on
receiving them, struck the man on the shoulder with his hand, thus
restoring to him the generative powers of which the blow of the whip had
deprived him. At the end of the feast the drummers removed all the drums
but one, which they left as if they had forgotten it. Somebody in the
crowd would notice the apparent oversight and run after the drummers with
the drum, saying, "You have left one behind." The thanks he received was
that he was caught and killed and the bones of his upper arm made into
drumsticks for that particular drum. The drum was never afterwards brought
out during the whole of the king's reign, but was kept covered up till the
time came to bring it out on the corresponding feast of his successor. Yet
from time to time the priest, who had flicked the revellers with the whip
of human skin, would dress himself up in a mantle of cow-hide from neck to
foot, and concealing the drumstick of human bones under his robe would go
into the king's presence, and suddenly whipping out the bones from his
bosom would brandish them in the king's face. Then he would as suddenly
hide them again, but only to repeat the manoeuvre. After that he retired
and restored the bones to their usual place. They were decorated with
cowrie shells and little bells, which jingled as he shook them at the
king.(562)

(M199) The precise meaning of these latter ceremonies is obscure; but we
may suppose that just as the human blood poured into a drum was thought to
pass into the king's veins in the booming notes of the drum, so the
clicking of the human bones and the jingling of their bells were supposed
to infuse into the royal person the vigour of the murdered man. The
purpose of flicking commoners with the whip made of human skin is even
more obscure; but we may conjecture that the life or virility of every man
struck with the whip was supposed to be transmitted in some way to the
king, who thus recruited his vital, and especially his reproductive,
energies at this solemn feast. If I am right in my interpretation, all
these Baganda modes of strengthening the king and prolonging his life
belonged to the nutritive rather than to the vicarious type of sacrifice,
from which it will follow that they were magical rather than religious in
character.

(M200) The same thing may perhaps be said of the wholesale massacres which
used to be perpetrated when a king of Uganda was ill. At these times the
priests informed the royal patient that persons marked by a certain
physical peculiarity, such as a cast of the eye, a particular gait, or a
distinctive colouring, must be put to death. Accordingly the king sent out
his catchpoles, who waylaid such persons in the roads and dragged them to
the royal enclosure, where they were kept until the tale of victims
prescribed by the priest was complete. Before they were led away to one of
the eight places of execution, which were regularly appointed for this
purpose in different parts of the kingdom, the victims had to drink
medicated beer with the king out of a special pot, in order that he might
have power over their ghosts, lest they should afterwards come back to
torment him. They were killed, sometimes by being speared to death,
sometimes by being hacked to pieces, sometimes by being burned alive.
Contrary to the usual custom of the Baganda, the bodies, or what remained
of the bodies, of these unfortunates were always left unburied on the
place of execution.(563) In what way precisely the sick king was supposed
to benefit by these massacres of his subjects does not appear, but we may
surmise that somehow the victims were believed to give their lives for him
or to him.

(M201) Thus it is possible that in Israel also the sacrifices of children
to Moloch were in like manner intended to prolong the life of the human
king (_melech_) either by serving as substitutes for him or by recruiting
his failing energies with their vigorous young life. But it is equally
possible, and perhaps more probable, that the sacrifice of the first-born
children was only a particular application of the ancient law which
devoted to the deity the first-born of every womb, whether of cattle or of
human beings.(564)




II. The Widowed Flamen.



§ 1. The Pollution of Death.


(M202) A different explanation of the rule which obliged the Flamen Dialis
to resign the priesthood on the death of his wife(565) has been suggested
by my friend Dr. L. R. Farnell. He supposes that such a bereavement would
render the Flamen ceremonially impure, and therefore unfit to hold
office.(566) It is true that the ceremonial pollution caused by death
commonly disqualifies a man for the discharge of sacred functions, but as
a rule the disqualification is only temporary and can be removed by
seclusion and the observance of purificatory rites, the length of the
seclusion and the nature of the purification varying with the degree of
relationship in which the living stand to the dead. Thus, for example, if
one of the sacred eunuchs at Hierapolis-Bambyce saw the dead body of a
stranger, he was unclean for that day and might not enter the sanctuary of
the goddess; but next day after purifying himself he was free to enter.
But if the corpse happened to be that of a relation he was unclean for
thirty days and had to shave his head before he might set foot within the
holy precinct.(567) Again, in the Greek island of Ceos persons who had
offered the annual sacrifices to their departed friends were unclean for
two days afterwards and might not enter a sanctuary; they had to purify
themselves with water.(568) Similarly no one might go into the shrine of
Men Tyrannus for ten days after being in contact with the dead.(569) Once
more, at Stratonicea in Caria a chorus of thirty noble boys, clad in white
and holding branches in their hands, used to sing a hymn daily in honour
of Zeus and Hecate; but if one of them were sick or had suffered a
domestic bereavement, he was for the time being excused, not permanently
excluded, from the performance of his sacred duties.(570) On the analogy
of these and similar cases we should expect to find the widowed Flamen
temporarily debarred from the exercise of his office, not permanently
relieved of it.

(M203) However, in support of Dr. Farnell's view I would cite an Indian
parallel which was pointed out to me by Dr. W. H. R. Rivers. Among the
Todas of the Neilgherry Hills in Southern India the priestly dairyman
(_palol_) is a sacred personage, and his life, like that of the Flamen
Dialis, is hedged in by many taboos. Now when a death occurs in his clan,
the dairyman may not attend any of the funeral ceremonies unless he gives
up office, but he may be re-elected after the second funeral ceremonies
have been completed. In the interval his place must be taken by a man of
another clan. Some eighteen or nineteen years ago a man named Karkievan
resigned the office of dairyman when his wife died, but two years later he
was re-elected and has held office ever since. There have meantime been
many deaths in his clan, but he has not attended a funeral, and has not
therefore had to resign his post again. Apparently in old times a more
stringent rule prevailed, and the dairyman was obliged to vacate office
whenever a death occurred in his clan. For, according to tradition, the
clan of Keadrol was divided into its two existing divisions for the
express purpose of ensuring that there might still be men to undertake the
office of dairyman when a death occurred in the clan, the men of the one
division taking office whenever there was a death in the other.(571)

At first sight this case may seem exactly parallel to the case of the
Flamen Dialis and the Flaminica on Dr. Farnell's theory; for here there
can be no doubt whatever that it is the pollution of death which
disqualifies the sacred dairyman from holding office, since, if he only
avoids that pollution by not attending the funeral, he is allowed at the
present day to retain his post. On this analogy we might suppose that it
was not so much the death of his wife as the attendance at her funeral
which compelled the Flamen Dialis to resign, especially as we know that he
was expressly forbidden to touch a dead body or to enter the place where
corpses were burned.(572)

(M204) But a closer inspection of the facts proves that the analogy breaks
down at some important points. For though the Flamen Dialis was forbidden
to touch a dead body or to enter a place where corpses were burned, he was
permitted to attend a funeral;(573) so that there could hardly be any
objection to his attending the funeral of his wife. This permission
clearly tells against the view that it was the mere pollution of death
which obliged him to resign office when his wife died. Further, and this
is a point of fundamental difference between the two cases, whereas the
Flamen Dialis was bound to be married, and married too by a rite of
special solemnity,(574) there is no such obligation on the sacred dairyman
of the Todas; indeed, if he is married, he is bound to live apart from his
wife during his term of office.(575) Surely the obligation laid on the
Flamen Dialis to be married of itself implies that with the death of his
wife he necessarily ceased to hold office: there is no need to search for
another reason in the pollution of death which, as I have just shown, does
not seem to square with the permission granted to the Flamen to attend a
funeral. That this is indeed the true explanation of the rule in question
is strongly suggested by the further and apparently parallel rule which
forbade the Flamen to divorce his wife; nothing but death might part
them.(576) Now the rule which enjoined that a Flamen must be married, and
the rule which forbade him to divorce his wife, have obviously nothing to
do with the pollution of death, yet they can hardly be separated from the
other rule that with the death of his wife he vacated office. All three
rules are explained in the most natural way on the hypothesis which I have
adopted, namely, that this married priest and priestess had to perform in
common certain rites which the husband could not perform without his wife.
The same obvious solution of the problem was suggested long ago by
Plutarch, who, after asking why the Flamen Dialis had to lay down office
on the death of his wife, says, amongst other things, that "perhaps it is
because she performs sacred rites along with him (for many of the rites
may not be performed without the presence of a married woman), and to
marry another wife immediately on the death of the first would hardly be
possible or decent."(577) This simple explanation of the rule seems quite
sufficient, and it would clearly hold good whether I am right or wrong in
further supposing that the human husband and wife in this case represented
a divine husband and wife, a god and goddess, to wit Jupiter and Juno, or
rather Dianus (Janus) and Diana;(578) and that supposition in its turn
might still hold good even if I were wrong in further conjecturing that of
this divine pair the goddess (Juno or rather Diana) was originally the
more important partner.

(M205) However it is to be explained, the Roman rule which forbade the
Flamen Dialis to be a widower has its parallel among the Kotas, a tribe
who, like the Todas, inhabit the Neilgherry Hills of Southern India. For
the higher Kota priests are not allowed to be widowers; if a priest's wife
dies while he is in office, his appointment lapses. At the same time
priests "should avoid pollution, and may not attend a Toda or Badaga
funeral, or approach the seclusion hut set apart for Kota women."(579)
Jewish priests were specially permitted to contract the pollution of death
for near relations, among whom father, mother, son, daughter, and
unmarried sister are particularly enumerated; but they were forbidden to
contract the pollution for strangers. However, among the relations for
whom a priest might thus defile himself a wife is not mentioned.(580)



§ 2. The Marriage of the Roman Gods.


(M206) The theory that the Flamen Dialis and his wife personated a divine
couple, whether Jupiter and Juno or Dianus (Janus) and Diana, supposes a
married relation between the god and goddess, and so far it would
certainly be untenable if Dr. Farnell were right in assuming, on the
authority of Mr. W. Warde Fowler, that the Roman gods were celibate.(581)
On that subject, however, Varro, the most learned of Roman antiquaries,
was of a contrary opinion. He not only spoke particularly of Juno as the
wife of Jupiter,(582) but he also affirmed generally, in the most
unambiguous language, that the old Roman gods were married, and in saying
so he referred not to the religion of his own day, which had been modified
by Greek influence, but to the religion of the ancient Romans, his
ancestors.(583) Seneca ridiculed the marriage of the Roman gods, citing as
examples the marriages of Mars and Bellona, of Vulcan and Venus, of
Neptune and Salacia, and adding sarcastically that some of the goddesses
were spinsters or widows, such as Populonia, Fulgora, and Rumina, whose
faded charms or unamiable character had failed to attract a suitor.(584)

(M207) Again, the learned Servius, whose commentary on Virgil is a gold
mine of Roman religious lore, informs us that the pontiffs celebrated the
marriage of the infernal deity Orcus with very great solemnity;(585) and
for this statement he would seem to have had the authority of the
pontifical books themselves, for he refers to them in the same connexion
only a few lines before. As it is in the highest degree unlikely that the
pontiffs would solemnize any foreign rites, we may safely assume that the
marriage of Orcus was not borrowed from Greek mythology, but was a genuine
old Roman ceremony, and this is all the more probable because Servius, our
authority for the custom, has recorded some curious and obviously ancient
taboos which were observed at the marriage and in the ritual of Ceres, the
goddess who seems to have been joined in wedlock to Orcus. One of these
taboos forbade the use of wine, the other forbade persons to name their
father or daughter.(586)

(M208) Further, the learned Roman antiquary Aulus Gellius quotes from "the
books of the priests of the Roman people" (the highest possible authority
on the subject) and from "many ancient speeches" a list of old Roman
deities, in which there seem to be at least five pairs of males and
females.(587) More than that he proves conclusively by quotations from
Plautus, the annalist Cn. Gellius, and Licinius Imbrex that these old
writers certainly regarded one at least of the pairs (Mars and Nerio) as
husband and wife;(588) and we have good ancient evidence for viewing in
the same light three others of the pairs. Thus the old annalist and
antiquarian L. Cincius Alimentus, who fought against Hannibal and was
captured by him, affirmed in his work on the Roman calendar that Maia was
the wife of Vulcan;(589) and as there was a Flamen of Vulcan, who
sacrificed to Maia on May Day,(590) it is reasonable to suppose that he
was assisted in the ceremony by a Flaminica, his wife, just as on my
hypothesis the Flamen Dialis was assisted by his wife the Flaminica.
Another old Roman historian, L. Calpurnius Piso, who wrote in the second
century B.C., said that the name of Vulcan's wife was not Maia but
Majestas.(591) In saying so he may have intended to correct what he
believed to be a mistake of his predecessor L. Cincius. Again, that
Salacia was the wife of Neptune is perhaps implied by Varro,(592) and is
positively affirmed by Seneca, Augustine, and Servius.(593) Again, Ennius
appears to have regarded Hora as the wife of Quirinus, for in the first
book of his Annals he declared his devotion to that divine pair.(594) In
fact, of the five pairs of male and female deities cited by Aulus Gellius
from the priestly books and ancient speeches the only one as to which we
have not independent evidence that it consisted of a husband and wife is
Saturn and Lua; and in regard to Lua we know that she was spoken of as a
mother,(595) which renders it not improbable that she was also a wife.
However, according to some very respectable authorities the wife of Saturn
was not Lua, but Ops,(596) so that we have two independent lines of proof
that Saturn was supposed to be married.

Lastly, the epithets "father" and "mother" which the Romans bestowed on
many of their deities(597) are most naturally understood to imply
paternity and maternity; and if the implication is admitted, the inference
appears to be inevitable that these divine beings were supposed to
exercise sexual functions, whether in lawful marriage or in unlawful
concubinage. As to Jupiter in particular his paternity is positively
attested by Latin inscriptions, one of them very old, which describe
Fortuna Primigenia, the great goddess of Praeneste, as his daughter.(598)
Again, the rustic deity Faunus, one of the oldest and most popular gods of
Italy,(599) was represented by tradition in the character of a husband and
a father; one of the epithets applied to him expressed in a coarse way his
generative powers.(600) Fauna or the Good Goddess (_Bona Dea_), another of
the oldest native Italian deities, was variously called his wife or his
daughter, and he is said to have assumed the form of a snake in order to
cohabit with her.(601) Again, the most famous of all Roman myths
represented the founder of Rome himself, Romulus and his twin brother
Remus, as begotten by the god Mars on a Vestal Virgin;(602) and every
Roman who accepted the tradition thereby acknowledged the fatherhood of
the god in the physical, not in a figurative, sense of the word. If the
story of the birth of Romulus and Remus should be dismissed as a late
product of the mythical fancy working under Greek influence, the same
objection can hardly be urged against the story of the birth of another
Roman king, Servius Tullius, who is said to have been a son of the
fire-god and a slave woman; his mother conceived him beside the royal
hearth, where she was impregnated by a flame that shot out from the fire
in the shape of the male organ of generation.(603) It would scarcely be
possible to express the physical fatherhood of the fire-god in more
unambiguous terms. Now a precisely similar story was told of the birth of
Romulus himself;(604) and we may suspect that this was an older form of
the story than the legend which fathered the twins on Mars. Similarly,
Caeculus, the founder of Praeneste, passed for a son of the fire-god
Vulcan. It was said that his mother was impregnated by a spark which
leaped from the fire and struck her as she sat by the hearth. In later
life, when Caeculus boasted of his divine parentage to a crowd, and they
refused to believe him, he prayed to his father to give the unbelievers a
sign, and straightway a lambent flame surrounded the whole multitude. The
proof was conclusive, and henceforth Caeculus passed for a true son of the
fire-god.(605) Such tales of kings or heroes begotten by the fire-god on
mortal women appear to be genuine old Italian myths, which may well go
back far beyond the foundation of Rome to the common fountain of Aryan
mythology; for the marriage customs observed by various branches of the
Aryan family point clearly to a belief in the power of fire to impregnate
women.(606)

(M209) On the whole, if we follow the authority of the ancients
themselves, we seem bound to conclude that the Roman gods, like those of
many other early peoples, were believed to be married and to beget
children. It is true that, compared with the full-blooded gods of Greece,
the deities of Rome appear to us shadowy creatures, pale abstractions
garbed in little that can vie with the gorgeous pall of myth and story
which Grecian fancy threw around its divine creations. Yet the few
specimens of Roman mythology which have survived the wreck of
antiquity(607) justify us in believing that they are but fragments of far
more copious traditions which have perished. At all events the comparative
aridity and barrenness of the Roman religious imagination is no reason for
setting aside the positive testimony of learned Roman writers as to a
point of fundamental importance in their own religion about which they
could hardly be mistaken. It should never be forgotten that on this
subject the ancients had access to many sources of information which are
no longer open to us, and for a modern scholar to reject their evidence in
favour of a personal impression derived from a necessarily imperfect
knowledge of the facts seems scarcely consistent with sound principles of
history and criticism.(608)



§ 3. Children of Living Parents in Ritual.


(M210) But Dr. Farnell adduces another argument in support of his view
that it was the pollution of death which obliged the widowed Flamen Dialis
to resign the priesthood. He points to what he considers the analogy of
the rule of Greek ritual which required that certain sacred offices should
be discharged only by a boy whose parents were both alive.(609) This rule
he would explain in like manner by supposing that the death of one or both
of his parents would render a boy ceremonially impure and therefore unfit
to perform religious functions. Dr. Farnell might have apparently
strengthened his case by observing that the Flamen Dialis and the
Flaminica Dialis were themselves assisted in their office, the one by a
boy, the other by a girl, both of whose parents must be alive.(610) At
first sight this fits in perfectly with his theory: the Flamen, the
Flaminica, and their youthful ministers were all rendered incapable of
performing their sacred duties by the taint or corruption of death.

(M211) But a closer scrutiny of the argument reveals a flaw. It proves too
much. For observe that in these Greek and Roman offices held by boys and
girls the disqualification caused by the death of a parent is necessarily
lifelong, since the bereavement is irreparable. Accordingly, if Dr.
Farnell's theory is right, the ceremonial pollution which is the cause of
the disqualification must also be lifelong; in other words, every orphan
is ceremoniously unclean for life and thereby excluded for ever from the
discharge of sacred duties. So sweeping a rule would at a stroke exclude a
large, if not the larger, part of the population of any country from the
offices of religion, and lay them permanently under all those burdensome
restrictions which the pollution of death entails among many nations; for
obviously a large, if not the larger, part of the population of any
country at any time has lost one or both of its parents by death. No
people, so far as I know, has ever carried the theory of the ceremonial
pollution of death to this extremity in practice. And even if it were
supposed that the taint wore off or evaporated with time from common folk
so as to let them go about their common duties in everyday life, would it
not still cleave to priests? If it incapacitated the Flamen's minister,
would it not incapacitate the Flamen himself? In other words, would not
the Flamen Dialis be obliged to vacate office on the death of his father
or mother? There is no hint in ancient writers that he had to do so. And
while it is generally unsafe to argue from the silence of our authorities,
I think that we may do so in this case without being rash; for Plutarch
not only mentions but discusses the rule which obliged the Flamen Dialis
to resign office on the death of his wife,(611) and if he had known of a
parallel rule which compelled him to retire on the death of a parent, he
would surely have mentioned it. But if the ceremonial pollution which
would certainly be caused by the death of a parent did not compel the
Flamen Dialis to vacate office, we may safely conclude that neither did
the similar pollution caused by the death of his wife. Thus the argument
adduced by Dr. Farnell in favour of his view proves on analysis to tell
strongly against it.

(M212) But if the rule which excluded orphans from certain sacred offices
cannot with any probability be explained on the theory of their ceremonial
pollution, it may be worth while to inquire whether another and better
explanation of the rule cannot be found. For that purpose I shall collect
all the cases of it known to me. The collection is doubtless far from
complete: I only offer it as a starting-point for research.

(M213) At the time of the vintage, which in Greece falls in October,
Athenian boys chosen from every tribe assembled at the sanctuary of
Dionysus, the god of the vine. There, branches of vines laden with ripe
grapes were given to them, and holding them in their hands they raced to
the sanctuary of Athena Sciras. The winner received and drained a cup
containing a mixture of olive-oil, wine, honey, cheese, and barley-groats.
It was necessary that both the parents of each of these boy-runners should
be alive.(612) At the same festival, and perhaps on the same day, an
Athenian boy, whose parents must both be alive, carried in procession a
branch of olive wreathed with white and purple wool and decked with fruits
of many kinds, while a chorus sang that the branch bore figs, fat loaves,
honey, oil, and wine. Thus they went in procession to a temple of Apollo,
at the door of which the boy deposited the holy bough. The ceremony is
said to have been instituted by the Athenians in obedience to an oracle
for the purpose of supplicating the help of the god in a season of
dearth.(613) Similar boughs similarly laden with fruits and loaves were
hung up on the doors of every Athenian house and allowed to remain there a
year, at the end of which they were replaced by fresh ones. While the
branch was being fastened to the door, a boy whose parents were both alive
recited the same verses about the branch bearing figs, fat loaves, honey,
oil, and wine. This custom also is said to have been instituted for the
sake of putting an end to a dearth.(614) The people of Magnesia on the
Maeander vowed a bull every year to Zeus, the Saviour of the City, in the
month of Cronion, at the beginning of sowing, and after maintaining the
animal at the public expense throughout the winter they sacrificed it,
apparently at harvest-time, in the following summer. Nine boys and nine
girls, whose fathers and mothers were all living, took part in the
religious services of the consecration and the sacrifice of the bull. At
the consecration public prayers were offered for the safety of the city
and the land, for the safety of the citizens and their wives and children,
for the safety of all that dwelt in the city and the land, for peace and
wealth and abundance of corn and all other fruits, and for the cattle. A
herald led the prayers, and the priest and priestess, the boys and girls,
the high officers and magistrates, all joined in these solemn petitions
for the welfare of their country.(615) Among the Karo-Bataks of Central
Sumatra the threshing of the rice is the occasion of various ceremonies,
and in these a prominent part is played by a girl, whose father and mother
must be both alive. Her special duty is to take care of the sheaf of rice
in which the soul of the rice is believed to reside. This sheaf usually
consists of the first rice cut and bound in the field; it is treated
exactly like a person.(616)

(M214) The rites thus far described, in which boys and girls of living
parents took part, were clearly ceremonies intended specially to ensure
the fertility of the soil. This is indicated not merely by the nature of
the rites and of the prayers or verses which accompanied them, but also by
the seasons at which they were observed; for these were the vintage, the
harvest-home, and the beginning of sowing. We may therefore compare a
custom practised by the Roman Brethren of the Ploughed Fields (_Fratres
Arvales_), a college of priests whose business it was to perform the rites
deemed necessary for the growth of the corn. As a badge of office they
wore wreaths of corn-ears, and paid their devotions to an antique goddess
of fertility, the Dea Dia. Her home was in a grove of ancient evergreen
oaks and laurels out in the Campagna, five miles from Rome. Hither every
year in the month of May, when the fields were ripe or ripening to the
sickle, reaped ears of the new corn were brought and hallowed by the
Brethren with quaint rites, that a blessing might rest on the coming
harvest. The first or preliminary consecration of the ears, however, took
place, not in the grove, but in the house of the Master of the Brethren at
Rome. Here the Brethren were waited upon by four free-born boys, the
children of living fathers and mothers. While the Brethren reclined on
couches, the boys were allowed to sit on chairs and partake of the feast,
and when it was over they carried the rest of the now hallowed corn and
laid it on the altar.(617)

(M215) In these and all other rites intended to ensure the fertility of
the ground, of cattle, or of human beings, the employment of children of
living parents seems to be intelligible on the principle of sympathetic
magic; for such children might be deemed fuller of life than orphans,
either because they "flourished on both sides," as the Greeks put it, or
because the very survival of their parents might be taken as a proof that
the stock of which the children came was vigorous and therefore able to
impart of its superabundant energy to others.

(M216) But the rites in which the children of living parents are required
to officiate do not always aim at promoting the growth of the crops. At
Olympia the olive-branches which formed the victors' crowns had to be cut
from a sacred tree with a golden sickle by a lad whose father and mother
must be both alive.(618) The tree was a wild olive growing within the holy
precinct, at the west end of the temple of Zeus. It bore the name of the
Olive of the Fair Crown, and near it was an altar to the Nymphs of the
Fair Crowns.(619) At Delphi every eighth year a sacred drama or
miracle-play was acted which drew crowds of spectators from all parts of
Greece. It set forth the slaying of the Dragon by Apollo. The principal
part was sustained by a lad, the son of living parents, who seems to have
personated the god himself. In an open space the likeness of a lordly
palace, erected for the occasion, represented the Dragon's den. It was
attacked and burned by the lad, aided by women who carried blazing
torches. When the Dragon had received his deadly wound, the lad, still
acting the part of the god, fled far away to be purged of the guilt of
blood in the beautiful Vale of Tempe, where the Peneus flows in a deep
wooded gorge between the snowy peaks of Olympus and Ossa, its smooth and
silent tide shadowed by overhanging trees and tall white cliffs. In places
these great crags rise abruptly from the stream and approach each other so
near that only a narrow strip of sky is visible overhead; but where they
recede a little, the meadows at their foot are verdant with evergreen
shrubs, among which Apollo's own laurel may still be seen. In antiquity
the god himself, stained with the Dragon's blood, is said to have come, a
haggard footsore wayfarer, to this wild secluded glen and there plucked
branches from one of the laurels that grew in its green thickets beside
the rippling river. Some of them he used to twine a wreath for his brows,
one of them he carried in his hand, doubtless in order that, guarded by
the sacred plant, he might escape the hobgoblins which dogged his steps.
So the boy, his human representative, did the same, and brought back to
Delphi wreaths of laurel from the same tree to be awarded to the victors
in the Pythian games. Hence the whole festival of the Slaying of the
Dragon at Delphi went by the name of the Festival of Crowning.(620) From
this it appears that at Delphi as well as at Olympia the boughs which were
used to crown the victors had to be cut from a sacred tree by a boy whose
parents must be both alive.

(M217) At Thebes a festival called the Laurel-bearing was held once in
every eight years, when branches of laurel were carried in procession to
the temple of Apollo. The principal part in the procession was taken by a
boy who held a laurel bough and bore the title of the Laurel-bearer: he
seems to have personated the god himself. His hair hung down on his
shoulders, and he wore a golden crown, a bright-coloured robe, and shoes
of a special shape: both his parents must be alive.(621) We may suppose
that the golden crown which he wore was fashioned in the shape of laurel
leaves and replaced a wreath of real laurel. Thus the boy with the laurel
wreath on his head and the laurel bough in his hand would resemble the
traditional equipment of Apollo when he purified himself for the slaughter
of the dragon. We may conjecture that at Thebes the Laurel-bearer
originally personated not Apollo but the local hero Cadmus, who slew the
dragon and had like Apollo to purify himself for the slaughter. The
conjecture is confirmed by vase-paintings which represent Cadmus crowned
with laurel preparing to attack the dragon or actually in combat with the
monster, while goddesses bend over him holding out wreaths of laurel as
the meed of victory.(622) On this hypothesis the octennial Delphic
Festival of Crowning and the octennial Theban Festival of Laurel-bearing
were closely akin: in both the prominent part played by the laurel was
purificatory or expiatory.(623) Thus at Olympia, Delphi, and Thebes a boy
whose parents were both alive was entrusted with the duty of cutting or
wearing a sacred wreath at a great festival which recurred at intervals of
several years.(624)

(M218) Why a boy of living parents should be chosen for such an office is
not at first sight clear; the reason might be more obvious if we
understood the ideas in which the custom of wearing wreaths and crowns had
its origin. Probably in many cases wreaths and crowns were amulets before
they were ornaments; in other words, their first intention may have been
not so much to adorn the head as to protect it from harm by surrounding it
with a plant, a metal, or any other thing which was supposed to possess
the magical virtue of banning baleful influences. Thus the Arabs of Moab
will put a circlet of copper on the head of a man who is suffering from
headache, for they believe that this will banish the pain; and if the pain
is in an arm or a leg, they will treat the ailing limb in like manner.
They think that red beads hung before the eyes of children who are
afflicted with ophthalmia will rid them of the malady, and that a red
ribbon tied to the foot will prevent it from stumbling on a stony
path.(625) Again, the Melanesians of the Gazelle Peninsula in New Britain
often deck their dusky bodies with flowers, leaves, and scented herbs not
only at festivals but on other occasions which to the European might seem
inappropriate for such gay ornaments. But in truth the bright blossoms and
verdant foliage are not intended to decorate the wearer but to endow him
with certain magical virtues, which are supposed to inhere in the flowers
and leaves. Thus one man may be seen strutting about with a wreath of
greenery which passes round his neck and droops over his shoulders, back,
and breast. He is not a mere dandy, but a lover who hopes that the wreath
will work as a charm on a woman's heart. Again, another may be observed
with a bunch of the red dracaena leaves knotted round his neck and the
long stalk hanging down his back. He is a soldier, and these leaves are
supposed to make him invulnerable. But if the lover should fail to win the
affections of his swarthy mistress, if the warrior should be wounded in
battle, it never occurs to either of them to question the magical virtue
of the charm; they ascribe the failure either to the more potent charm of
another magician or to some oversight on their own part.(626) On the
theory that wreaths and garlands serve as amulets to protect the wearer
against the powers of evil we can understand not only why in antiquity
sacred persons such as priests and kings wore crowns, but also why dead
bodies, sacrificial victims, and in certain circumstances even inanimate
objects such as the implements of sacrifice, the doors of houses, and so
forth, were decorated or rather guarded by wreaths.(627) Further, on this
hypothesis we may perhaps perceive why children of living parents were
specially chosen to cut or wear sacred wreaths. Since such children were
apparently supposed to be endowed with a more than common share of vital
energy, they might be deemed peculiarly fitted to make or wear amulets
which were designed to protect the wearer from injury and death: the
current of life which circulated in their own veins overflowed, as it
were, and reinforced the magic virtue of the wreath. For the same reason
such children would naturally be chosen to personate gods, as they
seemingly were at Delphi and Thebes.

(M219) At Ephesus, if we may trust the evidence of the Greek
romance-writer, Heliodorus, a boy and girl of living parents used to hold
for a year the priesthood of Apollo and Artemis respectively. When their
period of office was nearly expired, they led a sacred embassy to Delos,
the birthplace of the divine brother and sister, where they superintended
the musical and athletic contests and laid down the priesthood.(628) At
Rome no girl might be chosen a Vestal Virgin unless both her father and
mother were living;(629) yet there is no evidence or probability that a
Vestal vacated office on the death of a parent; indeed she generally held
office for life.(630) This alone may suffice to prove that the custom of
entrusting certain sacred duties to children of living parents was not
based on any notion that orphans as such were ceremonially unclean. Again,
the dancing priests of Mars, the Salii, must be sons of living
parents;(631) but as in the case of the Vestals this condition probably
only applied at the date of their election, for they seem like the Vestals
to have held office for life. At all events we read of a lively old
gentleman who still skipped and capered about as a dancing priest with an
agility which threw the efforts of his younger colleagues into the
shade.(632) Again, at the public games in Rome boys of living parents had
to escort the images of the gods in their sacred cars, and it was a dire
omen if one of them relaxed his hold on the holy cart or let a strap slip
from his fingers.(633) And when the stout Roman heart was shaken by the
appalling news that somebody had been struck by lightning, that the sky
had somewhere been suddenly overcast, or that a she-mule had been safely
delivered of a colt, boys and girls whose fathers and mothers were still
alive used to be sought out and employed to help in expiating the terrific
prodigy.(634) Again, when the Capitol had been sacked and burned by the
disorderly troops of Vitellius, solemn preparations were made to rebuild
it. The whole area was enclosed by a cordon of fillets and wreaths. Then
soldiers chosen for their auspicious names entered within the barriers
holding branches of lucky trees in their hands; and afterwards the Vestal
Virgins, aided by boys and girls of living parents, washed the foundations
with water drawn from springs and rivers.(635) In this ceremony the choice
of such children seems to be based on the same idea as the choice of such
water; for as running water is deemed to be especially alive,(636) so the
vital current might be thought to flow without interruption in the
children of living parents but to stagnate in orphans. Hence the children
of living parents rather than orphans would naturally be chosen to pour
the living water over the foundations, and so to lend something of their
own vitality or endurance to a building that was designed to last for
ever.

(M220) On the same principle we can easily understand why the children of
living parents should be especially chosen to perform certain offices at
marriage. The motive of such a choice may be a wish to ensure by
sympathetic magic the life of the newly wedded pair and of their
offspring. Thus at Roman marriages the bride was escorted to her new home
by three boys whose parents were all living. Two of the boys held her, and
the third carried a torch of buckthorn or hawthorn in front of her,(637)
probably for the purpose of averting the powers of evil; for buckthorn or
hawthorn was credited with this magical virtue.(638) At marriages in
ancient Athens a boy whose parents were both living used to wear a wreath
of thorns and acorns and to carry about a winnowing-fan full of loaves,
crying, "I have escaped the bad, I have found the better."(639) In modern
Greece on the Sunday before a marriage the bridegroom sends to the bride
the wedding cake by the hands of a boy, both of whose parents must be
living. The messenger takes great care not to stumble or to injure the
cake, for to do either would be a very bad omen. He may not enter the
bride's house till she has taken the cake from him. For this purpose he
lays it down on the threshold of the door, and then both of them, the boy
and the bride, rush at it and try to seize the greater part of the cake.
And when cattle are being slaughtered for the marriage festivities, the
first beast killed for the bride's house must be killed by a youth whose
parents are both alive. Further, a son of living parents must solemnly
fetch the water with which the bridegroom's head is ceremonially washed by
women before marriage. And on the day after the marriage bride and
bridegroom go in procession to the well or spring from which they are
henceforth to fetch their water. The bride greets the spring, drinks of
the water from the hollow of her hand, and throws money and food into it.
Then follows a dance, accompanied by a song, round about the spring.
Lastly, a lad whose parents are both living draws water from the spring in
a special vessel and carries it to the house of the bridal pair without
speaking a word: this "unspoken water," as it is called, is regarded as
peculiarly holy and wholesome. When the young couple return from the
spring, they fill their mouths with the "unspoken water" and try to spirt
it on each other inside the door of the house.(640) In Albania, when women
are baking cakes for a wedding, the first to put hand to the dough must be
a maiden whose parents are both alive and who has brothers, the more the
better; for only such a girl is deemed lucky. And when the bride has
dismounted from her horse at the bridegroom's door, a small boy whose
parents are both alive (for only such a boy is thought to bring luck) is
passed thrice backwards and forwards under the horse's belly, as if he
would girdle the beast.(641) Among the South Slavs of Bulgaria a little
child whose father and mother are both alive helps to bake the two bridal
cakes, pouring water and salt on the meal and stirring the mixture with a
spurtle of a special shape; then a girl lifts the child in her arms, and
the little one touches the roof-beam thrice with the spurtle, saying,
"Boys and girls." And when the bride's hair is to be dressed for the
wedding day, the work of combing and plaiting it must be begun by a child
of living parents.(642) Among the Eesa and Gadabursi, two Somali tribes,
on the morning after a marriage "the bride's female relations bring
presents of milk, and are accompanied by a young male child whose parents
are living. The child drinks some of the milk before any one else tastes
it; and after him the bridegroom, if his parents are living; but if one or
both of his parents are dead, and those of the bride living, she drinks
after the child. By doing this they believe that if the newly-married
woman bears a child the father will be alive at the time."(643) A slightly
different application of the same principle appears in the old Hindoo rule
that when a bride reached the house of her husband, she should be made to
descend from the chariot by women of good character whose husbands and
sons were living, and that afterwards these women should seat the bride on
a bull's hide, while her husband recited the verse, "Here ye cows, bring
forth calves."(644) Here the ceremony of seating the young wife on a
bull's hide seems plainly intended to make her fruitful through the
generative virtue of the bull; while the attendance of women, whose
husbands and sons are living, is no doubt a device for ensuring, by
sympathetic magic, the life both of the bride's husband and of her future
offspring.

(M221) In the Somali custom just described the part played by the child of
living parents is unambiguous and helps to throw light on the obscurer
cases which precede. Such a child is clearly supposed to impart the virtue
of longevity to the milk of which it partakes, and so to transmit it to
the newly married pair who afterwards drink of the milk. Similarly, we may
suppose that in all marriage rites at least, if not in religious rites
generally, the employment of children of living parents is intended to
diffuse by sympathy the blessings of life and longevity among all who
participate in the ceremonies. This intention seems to underlie the use
which the Malagasy make of the children of living parents in ritual. Thus,
when a child is a week old, it is dressed up in the finest clothes that
can be got, and is then carried out of the house by some person whose
parents are both still living; afterwards it is brought back to the
mother. In the act of being carried out and in, the infant must be twice
carefully lifted over the fire, which is placed near the door. If the
child is a boy, the axe, knife, and spear of the family, together with any
building tools that may be in the house, are taken out of it at the same
time. "The implements are perhaps used chiefly as emblems of the
occupations in which it is expected the infant will engage when it arrives
at maturer years; and the whole may be regarded as expressing the hopes
cherished of his activity, wealth, and enjoyments."(645) On such an
occasion the service of a person whose parents are both alive seems
naturally calculated to promote the longevity of the infant. For a like
reason, probably, the holy water used at the Malagasy ceremony of
circumcision is drawn from a pool by a person whose parents are both still
living.(646) The same idea may explain a funeral custom observed by the
Sihanaka of Madagascar. After a burial the family of the deceased, with
their near relatives and dependents, meet in the house from which the
corpse was lately removed "to drink rum and to undergo a purifying and
preserving baptism called _fafy ranom-boahangy_. Leaves of the lemon or
lime tree, and the stalks of two kinds of grass, are gathered and placed
in a vessel with water. A person, both of whose parents are living, is
chosen to perform the rite, and this 'holy water' is then sprinkled upon
the walls of the house and upon all assembled within them, and finally
around the house outside."(647) Here a person whose parents are both
living appears to be credited with a more than common share of life and
longevity; from which it naturally follows that he is better fitted than
any one else to perform a ceremony intended to avert the danger of death
from the household.

(M222) The notion that a child of living parents is endowed with a higher
degree of vitality than an orphan probably explains all the cases of the
employment of such a child in ritual, whether the particular rite is
designed to ensure the fertility of the ground or the fruitfulness of
women, or to avert the danger of death and other calamities. Yet it might
be a mistake to suppose that this notion is always clearly apprehended by
the persons who practise the customs. In their minds the definite
conception of superabundant and overflowing vitality may easily dissolve
into a vague idea that the child of living parents is luckier than other
folk. No more than this seems to be at the bottom of the Masai rule that
when the warriors wish to select a chief, they must choose "a man whose
parents are still living, who owns cattle and has never killed anybody,
whose parents are not blind, and who himself has not a discoloured
eye."(648) And nothing more is needed to explain the ancient Greek custom
which assigned the duty of drawing lots from an urn to a boy under puberty
whose father and mother were both in life.(649) At Athens it would appear
that registers of these boys were kept, perhaps in order that the lads
might discharge, as occasion arose, those offices of religion which
required the service of such auspicious youths.(650) The atrocious tyrant
Heliogabalus, one of the worst monsters who ever disgraced the human form,
caused search to be made throughout Italy for noble and handsome boys
whose parents were both alive, and he sacrificed them to his barbarous
gods, torturing them first and grabbling among their entrails afterwards
for omens. He seems to have thought that such victims would be peculiarly
acceptable to the Syrian deities whom he worshipped; so he encouraged the
torturers and butchers at their work, and thanked the gods for enabling
him to ferret out "their friends."(651)




III. A Charm To Protect a Town.


(M223) The tradition that a Lydian king tried to make the citadel of
Sardes impregnable by carrying round it a lion(652) may perhaps be
illustrated by a South African custom. When the Bechuanas are about to
found a new town, they observe an elaborate ritual. They choose a bull
from the herd, sew up its eyelids with sinew, and then allow the blinded
animal to wander at will for four days. On the fifth day they track it
down and sacrifice it at sunset on the spot where it happens to be
standing. The carcase is then roasted whole and divided among the people.
Ritual requires that every particle of the flesh should be consumed on the
spot. When the sacrificial meal is over, the medicine-men take the hide
and mark it with appropriate medicines, the composition of which is a
professional secret. Then with one long spiral cut they convert the whole
hide into a single thong. Having done so they cut up the thong into
lengths of about two feet and despatch messengers in all directions to peg
down one of those strips in each of the paths leading to the new town.
"After this," it is said, "if a foreigner approaches the new town to
destroy it with his charms, he will find that the town has prepared itself
for his coming."(653) Thus it would seem that the pastoral Bechuanas
attempt to place a new town under the protection of one of their sacred
cattle(654) by distributing pieces of its hide at all points where an
enemy could approach it, just as the Lydian king thought to place the
citadel of his capital under the protection of the lion-god by carrying
the animal round the boundaries.

(M224) Further, the Bechuana custom may throw light on a widespread legend
which relates how a wily settler in a new country bought from the natives
as much land as could be covered with a hide, and how he then proceeded to
cut the hide into thongs and to claim as much land as could be enclosed by
the thongs. It was thus, according to the Hottentots, that the first
European settlers obtained a footing in South Africa.(655) But the most
familiar example of such stories is the tradition that Dido procured the
site of Carthage in this fashion, and that the place hence received the
name of Byrsa or "hide."(656) Similar tales occur in the legendary history
of Saxons and Danes,(657) and they meet us in India, Siberia, Burma,
Cambodia, Java, and Bali.(658) The wide diffusion of such stories confirms
the conjecture of Jacob Grimm that in them we have a reminiscence of a
mode of land measurement which was once actually in use, and of which the
designation is still retained in the English _hide_.(659) The Bechuana
custom suggests that the mode of measuring by a hide may have originated
in a practice of encompassing a piece of land with thongs cut from the
hide of a sacrificial victim in order to place the ground under the
guardianship of the sacred animal.

(M225) But why do the Bechuanas sew up the eyelids of the bull which is to
be used for this purpose? The answer appears to be given by the ceremonies
which the same people observe when they are going out to war. On that
occasion a woman rushes up to the army with her eyes shut and shakes a
winnowing-fan, while she cries out, "The army is not seen! The army is not
seen!" And a medicine-man at the same time sprinkles medicine over the
spears, crying out in like manner, "The army is not seen! The army is not
seen!" After that they seize a bull, sew up its eyelids with a hair of its
tail, and drive it for some distance along the road which the army is to
take. When it has preceded the army a little way, the bull is sacrificed,
roasted whole, and eaten by the warriors. All the flesh must be consumed
on the spot. Such parts as cannot be eaten are burnt with fire. Only the
contents of the stomach are carefully preserved as a charm which is to
lead the warriors to victory. Chosen men carry the precious guts in front
of the army, and it is deemed most important that no one should precede
them. When they stop, the army stops, and it will not resume the march
till it sees that the men with the bull's guts have gone forward.(660) The
meaning of these ceremonies is explained by the cries of the woman and the
priest, "The army is not seen! The army is not seen!" Clearly it is
desirable that the army should not be perceived by the enemies until it is
upon them. Accordingly on the principles of homoeopathic magic the
Bechuanas apparently imagine that they can make themselves invisible by
eating of the flesh of a blind bull, blindness and invisibility being to
their simple minds the same thing. For the same reason the bowels of the
blind ox are carried in front of the army to hide its advance from hostile
eyes. In like manner the custom of sacrificing and eating a blind ox on
the place where a new town is to be built may be intended to render the
town invisible to enemies. At all events the Bawenda, a South African
people who belong to the same Bantu stock as the Bechuanas, take great
pains to conceal their kraals from passers-by. The kraals are built in the
forest or bush, and the long winding footpaths which lead to them are
often kept open only by the support of a single pole here and there.
Indeed the paths are so low and narrow that it is very difficult to bring
a horse into such a village. In time of war the poles are removed and the
thorny creepers fall down, forming a natural screen or bulwark which the
enemy can neither penetrate nor destroy by fire. The kraals are also
surrounded by walls of undressed stones with a filling of soil; and to
hide them still better from the view of the enemy the tops of the walls
are sown with Indian corn or planted with tobacco. Hence travellers
passing through the country seldom come across a Bawenda kraal. To see
where the Bawenda dwell you must climb to the tops of mountains and look
down on the roofs of their round huts peeping out of the surrounding green
like clusters of mushrooms in the woods.(661) The object which the Bawenda
attain by these perfectly rational means, the Bechuanas seek to compass by
the sacrifice and consumption of a blind bull.

(M226) This explanation of the use of a blinded ox in sacrifice is
confirmed by the reasons alleged by a Caffre for the observance of a
somewhat similar custom in purificatory ceremonies after a battle. On
these occasions the Bechuanas and other Caffre tribes of South Africa kill
a black ox and cut out the tip of its tongue, an eye, a piece of the
ham-string, and a piece of the principal sinew of the shoulder. These
parts are fried with certain herbs and rubbed into the joints of the
warriors. By cutting out the tongue of the ox they think to prevent the
enemy from wagging his tongue against them; by severing the sinews of the
ox they hope to cause the enemy's sinews to fail him in the battle; and by
removing the eye of the ox they imagine that they prevent the enemy from
casting a covetous eye on their cattle.(662)




IV. Some Customs Of The Pelew Islanders.


We have seen that the state of society and religion among the Pelew
Islanders in modern times presents several points of similarity to the
condition of the peoples about the Eastern Mediterranean in
antiquity.(663) Here I propose briefly to call attention to certain other
customs of the Pelew Islanders which may serve to illustrate some of the
institutions discussed in this volume.



§ 1. Priests dressed as Women.


(M227) In the Pelew Islands it often happens that a goddess chooses a man,
not a woman, for her minister and inspired mouthpiece. When that is so,
the favoured man is thenceforth regarded and treated as a woman. He wears
female attire, he carries a piece of gold on his neck, he labours like a
woman in the taro fields, and he plays his new part so well that he earns
the hearty contempt of his fellows.(664) The pretended change of sex under
the inspiration of a female spirit perhaps explains a custom widely spread
among savages, in accordance with which some men dress as women and act as
women through life. These unsexed creatures often, perhaps generally,
profess the arts of sorcery and healing, they communicate with spirits,
and are regarded sometimes with awe and sometimes with contempt, as beings
of a higher or lower order than common folk. Often they are dedicated and
trained to their vocation from childhood. Effeminate sorcerers or priests
of this sort are found among the Sea Dyaks of Borneo,(665) the Bugis of
South Celebes,(666) the Patagonians of South America,(667) and the
Aleutians and many Indian tribes of North America.(668) In the island of
Rambree, off the coast of Aracan, a set of vagabond "conjurors," who
dressed and lived as women, used to dance round a tall pole, invoking the
aid of their favourite idol on the occasion of any calamity.(669) Male
members of the Vallabha sect in India often seek to win the favour of the
god Krishna, whom they specially revere, by wearing their hair long and
assimilating themselves to women; even their spiritual chiefs, the
so-called Maharajas, sometimes simulate the appearance of women when they
lead the worship of their followers.(670) In Madagascar we hear of
effeminate men who wore female attire and acted as women, thinking thereby
to do God service.(671) In the kingdom of Congo there was a sacrificial
priest who commonly dressed as a woman and gloried in the title of the
Grandmother. The post of Grandmother must have been much coveted, for the
incumbent might not be put to death, whatever crimes or rascalities he
committed; and to do him justice he appears commonly to have taken full
advantage of this benefit of clergy. When he died, his fortunate successor
dissected the body of the deceased Grandmother, extracting his heart and
other vital organs, and amputating his fingers and toes, which he kept as
priceless relics, and sold as sovereign remedies for all the ills that
flesh is heir to.(672)

(M228) We may conjecture that in many of these cases the call to this
strange form of the religious life came in the shape of a dream or vision,
in which the dreamer or visionary imagined himself to be a woman or to be
possessed by a female spirit; for with many savage races the disordered
fancies of sleep or ecstasy are accepted as oracular admonitions which it
would be perilous to disregard. At all events we are told that a dream or
a revelation of some sort was the reason which in North America these
men-women commonly alleged for the life they led; it had been thus brought
home to them, they said, that their medicine or their salvation lay in
living as women, and when once they had got this notion into their head
nothing could drive it out again. Many an Indian father attempted by
persuasion, by bribes, by violence, to deter his son from obeying the
mysterious call, but all to no purpose.(673) Among the Sauks, an Indian
tribe of North America, these effeminate beings were always despised, but
sometimes they were pitied "as labouring under an unfortunate destiny
which they cannot avoid, being supposed to be impelled to this course by a
vision from the female spirit that resides in the moon."(674) Similarly
the Omahas, another Indian tribe of North America, "believe that the
unfortunate beings, called _Min-qu-ga_, are mysterious or sacred because
they have been affected by the Moon Being. When a young Omaha fasted for
the first time on reaching puberty, it was thought that the Moon Being
appeared to him, holding in one hand a bow and arrows and in the other a
pack strap, such as the Indian women use. When the youth tried to grasp
the bow and arrows the Moon Being crossed his hands very quickly, and if
the youth was not very careful he seized the pack strap instead of the bow
and arrows, thereby fixing his lot in after life. In such a case he could
not help acting the woman, speaking, dressing, and working just as Indian
women used to do."(675) Among the Ibans or Sea Dyaks of Borneo the highest
class of sorcerers or medicine-men (_manangs_) are those who are believed
to have been transformed into women. Such a man is therefore called a
"changed medicine-man" (_manang bali_) on account of his supposed change
of sex. The call to transform himself into a woman is said to come as a
supernatural command thrice repeated in dreams; to disregard the command
would mean death. Accordingly he makes a feast, sacrifices a pig or two to
avert evil consequences from the tribe, and then assumes the garb of a
woman. Thenceforth he is treated as a woman and occupies himself in
feminine pursuits. His chief aim is to copy female manners and habits as
accurately as possible. He is employed for the same purposes as an
ordinary medicine-man and his methods are similar, but he is paid much
higher fees and is often called in when others have been unable to effect
a cure.(676) Similarly among the Chukchees of North-Eastern Asia there are
shamans or medicine-men who assimilate themselves as far as possible to
women, and who are believed to be called to this vocation by spirits in a
dream. The call usually comes at the critical age of early youth when the
shamanistic inspiration, as it is called, first manifests itself. But the
call is much dreaded by the youthful adepts, and some of them prefer death
to obedience. There are, however, various stages or degrees of
transformation. In the first stage the man apes a woman only in the manner
of braiding and arranging the hair of his head. In the second he dons
female attire; in the third stage he adopts as far as possible the life
and characteristics of the female sex. A young man who is undergoing this
final transformation abandons all masculine occupations and manners. He
throws away the rifle and the lance, the lasso of the reindeer herdsman,
and the harpoon of the seal-hunter, and betakes himself to the needle and
the skin-scraper instead. He learns the use of them quickly, because the
spirits are helping him all the time. Even his pronunciation changes from
the male to the female mode. At the same time his body alters, if not in
outward appearance, at least in its faculties and forces. He loses
masculine strength, fleetness of foot, endurance in wrestling, and falls
into the debility and helplessness of a woman. Even his mental character
undergoes a change. His old brute courage and fighting spirit are gone; he
grows shy and bashful before strangers, fond of small talk and of dandling
little children. In short he becomes a woman with the appearance of a man,
and as a woman he is often taken to wife by another man, with whom he
leads a regular married life. Extraordinary powers are attributed to such
transformed shamans. They are supposed to enjoy the special protection of
spirits who play the part of supernatural husbands to them. Hence they are
much dreaded even by their colleagues in the profession who remain mere
men; hence, too, they excel in all branches of magic, including
ventriloquism.(677) Among the Teso of Central Africa medicine-men often
dress as women and wear feminine ornaments, such as heavy chains of beads
and shells round their heads and necks.(678)

(M229) And just as a man inspired by a goddess may adopt female attire, so
conversely a woman inspired by a god may adopt male costume. In Uganda the
great god Mukasa, the deity of the Victoria Nyanza Lake and of abundance,
imparted his oracles through a woman, who in ordinary life dressed like
the rest of her sex in a bark cloth wrapped round the body and fastened
with a girdle, so as to leave the arms and shoulders bare; but when she
prophesied under the inspiration of the god, she wore two bark cloths
knotted in masculine style over her shoulders and crossing each other on
her breast and back.(679) When once the god had chosen her, she retained
office for life; she might not marry or converse with any man except one
particular priest, who was always present when she was possessed by the
deity.(680)

(M230) Perhaps this assumed change of sex under the inspiration of a
goddess may give the key to the legends of the effeminate Sardanapalus and
the effeminate Hercules,(681) as well as to the practice of the effeminate
priests of Cybele and the Syrian goddess. In all such cases the pretended
transformation of a man into a woman would be intelligible if we supposed
that the womanish priest or king thought himself animated by a female
spirit, whose sex, accordingly, he felt bound to imitate. Certainly the
eunuch priests of Cybele seem to have bereft themselves of their manhood
under the supposed inspiration of the Great Goddess.(682) The priest of
Hercules at Antimachia, in Cos, who dressed as a woman when he offered
sacrifice, is said to have done so in imitation of Hercules who disguised
himself as a woman to escape the pursuit of his enemies.(683) So the
Lydian Hercules wore female attire when he served for three years as the
purchased slave of the imperious Omphale, Queen of Lydia.(684) If we
suppose that Queen Omphale, like Queen Semiramis, was nothing but the
great Asiatic goddess,(685) or one of her Avatars, it becomes probable
that the story of the womanish Hercules of Lydia preserves a reminiscence
of a line or college of effeminate priests who, like the eunuch priests of
the Syrian goddess, dressed as women in imitation of their goddess and
were supposed to be inspired by her. The probability is increased by the
practice of the priests of Hercules at Antimachia, in Cos, who, as we have
just seen, actually wore female attire when they were engaged in their
sacred duties. Similarly at the vernal mysteries of Hercules in Rome the
men were draped in the garments of women;(686) and in some of the rites
and processions of Dionysus also men wore female attire.(687) In legend
and art there are clear traces of an effeminate Dionysus, who perhaps
figured in a strange ceremony for the artificial fertilization of the
fig.(688) Among the Nahanarvals, an ancient German tribe, a priest garbed
as a woman presided over a sacred grove.(689) These and similar
practices(690) need not necessarily have any connexion with the social
system of mother-kin. Wherever a goddess is revered and the theory of
inspiration is held, a man may be thought to be possessed by a female
spirit, whether society be organized on mother-kin or on father-kin. Still
the chances of such a transformation of sex will be greater under
mother-kin than under father-kin if, as we have found reason to believe, a
system of mother-kin is more favourable to the development and
multiplication of goddesses than of gods. It is therefore, perhaps, no
mere accident that we meet with these effeminate priests in regions like
the Pelew Islands and Western Asia, where the system of mother-kin either
actually prevails or has at least left traces of it behind in tradition
and custom. Such traces, for example, are to be found in Lydia and
Cos,(691) in both of which the effeminate Hercules had his home.

(M231) But the religious or superstitious interchange of dress between men
and women is an obscure and complex problem, and it is unlikely that any
single solution would apply to all the cases. Probably the custom has been
practised from many different motives. For example, the practice of
dressing boys as girls has certainly been sometimes adopted to avert the
Evil Eye;(692) and it is possible that the custom of changing garments at
marriage, the bridegroom disguising himself as a woman, or the bride
disguising herself as a man, may have been resorted to for the same
purpose. Thus in Cos, where the priest of Hercules wore female attire, the
bridegroom was in like manner dressed as a woman when he received his
bride.(693) Spartan brides had their hair shaved, and were clad in men's
clothes and booted on their wedding night.(694) Argive brides wore false
beards when they slept with their husbands for the first time.(695) In
Southern Celebes a bridegroom at a certain point of the long and elaborate
marriage ceremonies puts on the garments which his bride has just put
off.(696) Among the Jews of Egypt in the Middle Ages the bride led the
wedding dance with a helmet on her head and a sword in her hand, while the
bridegroom adorned himself as a woman and put on female attire.(697) At a
Brahman marriage in Southern India "the bride is dressed up as a boy, and
another girl is dressed up to represent the bride. They are taken in
procession through the street, and, on returning, the pseudo-bridegroom is
made to speak to the real bridegroom in somewhat insolent tones, and some
mock play is indulged in. The real bridegroom is addressed as if he was
the syce (groom) or gumasta (clerk) of the pseudo-bridegroom, and is
sometimes treated as a thief, and judgment passed on him by the
latter."(698) Among the Bharias of the Central Provinces of India "the
bridegroom puts on women's ornaments and carries with him an iron
nut-cutter or dagger to keep off evil spirits."(699) Similarly among the
Khangars, a low Hindustani caste of the same region, "the bridegroom is
dressed in a yellow gown and overcloth, with trousers of red chintz, red
shoes, and a marriage crown of date-palm leaves. He has the silver
ornaments usually worn by women on his neck, as the _khang-wari_ or silver
ring and the _hamel_ or necklace of rupees. In order to avert the evil eye
he carries a dagger or nut-cracker, and a smudge of lampblack is made on
his forehead to disfigure him and thus avert the evil eye, which, it is
thought, would otherwise be too probably attracted by his exquisitely
beautiful appearance in his wedding garments."(700) These examples render
it highly probable that, like the dagger or nut-cracker which he holds in
his hand, the woman's ornaments which he wears are intended to protect the
bridegroom against demons or the evil eye at this critical moment of his
life, the protection apparently consisting in a disguise which enables him
to elude the unwelcome attentions of malignant beings.(701)

(M232) A similar explanation probably accounts for the similar exchange of
costume between other persons than the bride and bridegroom at marriage.
For example, after a Bharia wedding, "the girl's mother gets the dress of
the boy's father and puts it on, together with a false beard and
moustaches, and dances holding a wooden ladle in one hand and a packet of
ashes in the other. Every time she approaches the bridegroom's father on
her rounds she spills some of the ashes over him and occasionally gives
him a crack on the head with her ladle, these actions being accompanied by
bursts of laughter from the party and frenzied playing by the musicians.
When the party reach the bridegroom's house on their return, his mother
and the other women come out, and burn a little mustard and human hair in
a lamp, the unpleasant smell emitted by these articles being considered
potent to drive away evil spirits."(702) Again, after a Khangar wedding
the father of the bridegroom, dressed in women's clothes, dances with the
mother of the bride, while the two throw turmeric mixed with water on each
other.(703) Similarly after a wedding of the Bharbhunjas, another
Hindustani caste of the Central Provinces, the bridegroom's father dances
before the family in women's clothes which have been supplied by the
bride's father.(704) Such disguises and dances may be intended either to
protect the disguised dancer himself against the evil eye or perhaps
rather to guard the principal personages of the ceremony, the bride and
bridegroom, by diverting the attention of demons from them to the
guiser.(705) However, when at marriage the bride alone assumes the costume
and appearance of the other sex, the motive for the disguise may perhaps
be a notion that on the principle of homoeopathic magic she thereby
ensures the birth of a male heir. Similarly in Sweden there is a popular
superstition that "on the night preceding her nuptials the bride should
have a baby-boy to sleep with her, in which case her first-born will be a
son";(706) and among the Kabyles, when a bride dismounts from her mule at
her husband's house, a young lad leaps into the saddle before she touches
the ground, in order that her first child may be a boy.(707)

(M233) Be that as it may, there is no doubt that the assumption of woman's
dress is sometimes intended to disguise a man for the purpose of deceiving
a demon. Thus among the Boloki or Bangala on the Upper Congo a man was
long afflicted with an internal malady. When all other remedies had
failed, a witch-doctor informed the sufferer that the cause of his trouble
was an evil spirit, and that the best thing he could do was to go far away
where the devil could not get at him, and to remain there till he had
recovered his health. The patient followed the prescription. At dead of
night he left his house, taking only two of his wives with him and telling
no one of his destination, lest the demon should hear it and follow him.
So he went far away from his town, donned a woman's dress, and speaking in
a woman's voice he pretended to be other than he was, in order that the
devil should not be able to find him at his new address. Strange to say,
these sage measures failed to effect a cure, and wearying of exile he at
last returned home, where he continued to dress and speak as a woman.(708)
Again, the Kuki-Lushai of Assam believe that if a man kills an enemy or a
wild beast, the ghost of the dead man or animal will haunt him and drive
him mad. The only way of averting this catastrophe is to dress up as a
woman and pretend to be one. For example, a man who had shot a tiger and
was in fear of being haunted by the animal's ghost, dressed himself up in
a woman's petticoat and cloth, wore ivory earrings, and wound a mottled
cloth round his head like a turban. Then smoking a woman's pipe, carrying
a little basket, and spinning a cotton spindle, he paraded the village
followed by a crowd roaring and shrieking with laughter, while he
preserved the gravity of a judge, for a single smile would have been
fatal. To guard against the possibility of unseasonable mirth, he carried
a porcupine in his arms, and if ever, tickled beyond the pitch of
endurance, he burst into a guffaw, the crowd said, "It was the porcupine
that laughed." All this was done to mortify the pride of the tiger's ghost
by leading him to believe that he had been shot by a woman.(709)

(M234) The same dread of attracting the attention of dangerous spirits at
critical times perhaps explains the custom observed by some East African
tribes of wearing the costume of the opposite sex at circumcision. Thus,
when Masai boys have been circumcised they dress as women, wearing
earrings in their ears and long garments that reach to the ground. They
also whiten their swarthy faces with chalk. This costume they retain till
their wounds are healed, whereupon they are shaved and assume the skins
and ornaments of warriors.(710) Among the Nandi, a tribe of British East
Africa, before boys are circumcised they receive a visit from young girls,
who give them some of their own garments and ornaments. These the boys put
on and wear till the operation of circumcision is over, when they exchange
the girls' clothes for the garments of women, which, together with
necklaces, are provided for them by their mothers; and these women's
garments the newly circumcised lads must continue to wear for months
afterwards. Girls are also circumcised among the Nandi, and before they
submit to the operation they attire themselves in men's garments and carry
clubs in their hands.(711)

(M235) If such interchange of costume between men and women is intended to
disguise the wearers against demons, we may compare the practice of the
Lycian men, who regularly wore women's dress in mourning;(712) for this
might be intended to conceal them from the ghost, just as perhaps for a
similar reason some peoples of antiquity used to descend into pits and
remain there for several days, shunning the light of the sun, whenever a
death had taken place in the family.(713) A similar desire to deceive
spirits may perhaps explain a device to which the Loeboes, a primitive
tribe of Sumatra, resort when they wish to obtain male or female
offspring. If parents have several sons and desire that the next child
shall be a girl, they dress the boys as girls, cut their hair after the
girlish fashion, and hang necklaces round their necks. On the contrary,
when they have many daughters and wish to have a son, they dress the girls
up as boys.(714)

(M236) On the whole we conclude that the custom of men dressing as women
and of women dressing as men has been practised from a variety of
superstitious motives, among which the principal would seem to be the wish
to please certain powerful spirits or to deceive others.



§ 2. Prostitution of Unmarried Girls.


(M237) Like many peoples of Western Asia in antiquity, the Pelew Islanders
systematically prostitute their unmarried girls for hire. Hence, just as
in Lydia and Cyprus of old, the damsels are a source of income to their
family, and women wait impatiently for the time when their young daughters
will be able to help the household by their earnings. Indeed the mother
regularly anticipates the time by depriving the girl of her virginity with
her own hands.(715) Hence the theory that the prostitution of unmarried
girls is a device to destroy their virginity without risk to their
husbands is just as inapplicable to the Pelew Islanders as we have seen it
to be to the peoples of Western Asia in antiquity. When a Pelew girl has
thus been prepared for her vocation by her mother, she sells her favours
to all the men of her village who can pay for them and who do not belong
to her own exogamous clan; but she never grants her favours to the same
man twice. Accordingly in every village of the Pelew Islands it may be
taken as certain that the men and women know each other carnally, except
that members of the same clan are debarred from each other by the rule of
exogamy.(716) Thus a well-marked form of sexual communism, limited only by
the exogamous prohibitions which attach to the clans, prevails among these
people. Nor is this communism restricted to the inhabitants of the same
village, for the girls of each village are regularly sent away to serve as
prostitutes (_armengols_) in another village. There they live with the men
of one of the many clubs or associations (_kaldebekels_) in the clubhouse
(_blay_), attending to the house, consorting freely with the men, and
receiving pay for their services. A girl leading this life in the
clubhouse of another village is well treated by the men: a wrong done to
her is a wrong done to the whole club; and in her own village her value is
increased, not diminished, by the time she thus spends as a prostitute in
a neighbouring community. After her period of service is over she may
marry either in the village where she has served or in her own. Sometimes
many or all of the young women of a village go together to act as
prostitutes (_armengols_) in a neighbouring village, and for this they are
well paid by the community which receives them. The money so earned is
divided among the chiefs of the village to which the damsels belong. Such
a joint expedition of the unmarried girls of a village is called a
_blolobol_. But the young women never act as _armengols_ in any clubhouse
of their own village.(717)

(M238) Thus, while the Pelew custom of prostituting the unmarried girls to
all the men of their own village, but not of their own clan, is a form of
sexual communism practised within a local group, the custom of
prostituting them to men of other villages is a form of sexual communism
practised between members of different local groups; it is a kind of
group-marriage. These customs of the Pelew Islanders therefore support by
analogy the hypothesis that among the ancient peoples of Western Asia also
the systematic prostitution of unmarried women may have been derived from
an earlier period of sexual communism.(718)

(M239) A somewhat similar custom prevails in Yap, one of the western group
of the Caroline Islands, situated to the north of the Pelew group. In each
of the men's clubhouses "are kept three or four unmarried girls or
_Mespil_, whose business it is to minister to the pleasures of the men of
the particular clan or brotherhood to which the building belongs. As with
the Kroomen on the Gold Coast, each man, married or single, takes his turn
by rotation in the rites through which each girl must pass before she is
deemed ripe for marriage. The natives say it is an ordeal or preliminary
trial to fit them for the cares and burden of maternity. She is rarely a
girl of the same village, and, of course, must be sprung from a different
sept. Whenever she wishes to become a _Langin_ or respectable married
woman, she may, and is thought none the less of for her frailties as a
_Mespil_.... But I believe this self-immolation before marriage is
confined to the daughters of the inferior chiefs and commons. The supply
of _Mespil_ is generally kept up by the purchase of slave girls from the
neighbouring districts."(719) According to another account a _mespil_
"must always be stolen, by force or cunning, from a district at some
distance from that wherein her captors reside. After she has been fairly,
or unfairly, captured and installed in her new home, she loses no shade of
respect among her own people; on the contrary, have not her beauty and her
worth received the highest proof of her exalted perfection, in the
devotion, not of one, but of a whole community of lovers?"(720) However,
though the girl is nominally stolen from another district, the matter is
almost always arranged privately with the local chief, who consents to
wink hard at the theft in consideration of a good round sum of shell money
and stone money, which serves "to salve the wounds of a disrupted family
and dispel all thoughts of a bloody retaliation. Nevertheless, the whole
proceeding is still carried out with the greatest possible secrecy and
stealth."(721)



§ 3. Custom of slaying Chiefs.


(M240) In the Pelew Islands when the chief of a clan has reigned too long
or has made himself unpopular, the heir has a formal right to put him to
death, though for reasons which will appear this right is only exercised
in some of the principal clans. The practice of regicide, if that word may
be extended to the assassination of chiefs, is in these islands a national
institution regulated by exact rules, and every high chief must lay his
account with it. Indeed so well recognized is the custom that when the
heir-apparent, who under the system of mother-kin must be a brother, a
nephew, or a cousin on the mother's side, proves himself precocious and
energetic, the people say, "The cousin is a grown man. The chief's
_tobolbel_ is nigh at hand."(722)

(M241) In such cases the plot of death is commonly so well hushed up that
it seldom miscarries. The first care of the conspirators is to discover
where the doomed man keeps his money. For this purpose an old woman will
sleep for some nights in the house and make inquiries quietly, till like a
sleuth-hound she has nosed the hoard. Then the conspirators come, and the
candidate for the chieftainship despatches his predecessor either with his
own hand or by the hand of a young cousin. Having done the deed he takes
possession of the official residence, and applies to the widow of the
deceased the form of persuasion technically known as _meleket_. This
consists of putting a noose round her neck, and drawing it tighter and
tighter till she consents to give up her late husband's money. After that
the murderer and his friends have nothing further to do for the present,
but to remain quietly in the house and allow events to take their usual
course.

(M242) Meantime the chiefs assemble in the council-house, and the loud
droning notes of the triton-shell, which answers the purpose of a tocsin,
summon the whole population to arms. The warriors muster, and surrounding
the house where the conspirators are ensconced they shower spears and
stones at it, as if to inflict condign punishment on the assassins. But
this is a mere blind, a sham, a legal fiction, intended perhaps to throw
dust in the eyes of the ghost and make him think that his death is being
avenged. In point of fact the warriors take good care to direct their
missiles at the roof or walls of the house, for if they threw them at the
windows they might perhaps hurt the murderer. After this formality has
been satisfactorily performed, the regicide steps out of the house and
engages in the genial task of paying the death duties to the various
chiefs assembled. When he has observed this indispensable ceremony, the
law is satisfied: all constitutional forms have been carried out: the
assassin is now the legitimate successor of his victim and reigns in his
stead without any further trouble.

(M243) But if he has omitted to massacre his predecessor and has allowed
him to die a natural death, he suffers for his negligence by being
compelled to observe a long series of complicated and irksome formalities
before he can make good his succession in the eyes of the law. For in that
case the title of chief has to be formally withdrawn from the dead man and
conferred on his successor by a curious ceremony, which includes the
presentation of a coco-nut and a taro plant to the new chief. Moreover, at
first he may not enter the chief's house, but has to be shut up in a tiny
hut for thirty or forty days during all the time of mourning, and even
when that is over he may not come out till he has received and paid for a
human head brought him by the people of a friendly state. After that he
still may not go to the sea-shore until more formalities have been fully
observed. These comprise a very costly fishing expedition, which is
conducted by the inhabitants of another district and lasts for weeks. At
the end of it a net full of fish is brought to the chief's house, and the
people of the neighbouring communities are summoned by the blast of
trumpets. As soon as the stranger fishermen have been publicly paid for
their services, a relative of the new chief steps across the net and
solemnly splits a coco-nut in two with an old-fashioned knife made of a
Tridacna shell, while at the same time he bans all the evils that might
befall his kinsman. Then, without looking at the nut, he throws the pieces
on the ground, and if they fall so that the two halves lie with the
opening upwards, it is an omen that the chief will live long. The pieces
of the nut are then tied together and taken to the house of another chief,
the friend of the new ruler, and there they are kept in token that the
ceremony has been duly performed. Thereupon the fish are divided among the
people, the strangers receiving half. This completes the legal ceremonies
of accession, and the new chief may now go about freely. But these tedious
formalities and others which I pass over are dispensed with when the new
chief has proved his title by slaying his predecessor. In that case the
procedure is much simplified, but on the other hand the death duties are
so very heavy that only rich men can afford to indulge in the luxury of
regicide. Hence in the Pelew Islands of to-day, or at least of yesterday,
the old-fashioned mode of succession by slaughter is now restricted to a
few families of the bluest blood and the longest purses.(723)

(M244) If this account of the existing or recent usage of the Pelew
Islanders sheds little light on the motives for putting chiefs to death,
it well illustrates the business-like precision with which such a custom
may be carried out, and the public indifference, if not approval, with
which it may be regarded as an ordinary incident of constitutional
government. So far, therefore, the Pelew custom bears out the view that a
systematic practice of regicide, however strange and revolting it may seem
to us, is perfectly compatible with a state of society in which human
conduct and human life are estimated by a standard very different from
ours. If we would understand the early history of institutions, we must
learn to detach ourselves from the prepossessions of our own time and
country, and to place ourselves as far as possible at the standpoint of
men in distant lands and distant ages.





INDEX.


Aban, a Persian month, ii. 68

Abd-Hadad, priestly king of Hierapolis, i. 163 _n._ 3

Aberdeenshire, All Souls' Day in, ii. 79 _sq._

Abi-baal, i. 51 _n._ 4

Abi-el, i. 51 _n._ 4

Abi-jah, King, his family, i. 51 _n._ 2;
  "father of Jehovah," 51 _n._ 4

Abi-melech, "father of a king," i. 51 _n._ 4

Abi-milk (Abi-melech), king of Tyre, i. 16 _n._ 5

Abimelech massacres his seventy brothers, i. 51 _n._ 2

Abipones, of South America, their worship of the Pleiades, i. 258 _n._ 2

Abraham, his attempted sacrifice of Isaac, ii. 219 _n._ 1

Abruzzi, gossips of St. John in the, i. 245 _n._ 2;
  marvellous properties attributed to water on St. John's Night in the,
              246;
  Easter ceremonies in the, 256;
  the feast of All Souls in the, ii. 77 _sq._;
  rules as to sowing seed and cutting timber in the, 133 _n._ 3

Abu Rabah, resort of childless wives in Palestine, i. 78, 79

Abydos, head of Osiris at, ii. 11;
  the favourite burial-place of the Egyptians, 18 _sq._;
  specially associated with Osiris, 18, 197;
  tombs of the ancient Egyptian kings at, 19;
  the ritual of, 86;
  hall of the Osirian mysteries at, 108;
  representations of the Sed festival at, 151;
  inscriptions at, 153;
  temple of Osiris at, 198

Acacia, Osiris in the, ii. 111

Achaia, subject to earthquakes, i. 202

Acharaca, cave of Pluto at, i. 205 _sq._

Acilisena, temple of Anaitis at, i. 38

Adad, Syrian king, i. 15;
  Babylonian and Assyrian god of thunder and lightning, 163

Adana in Cilicia, i. 169 _n._ 3

Addison, Joseph, on the grotto _dei cani_ at Naples, i. 205 _n._ 1

Adhar, a Persian month, ii. 68

Adom-melech or Uri-melech, king of Byblus, i. 14, 17

_Adon_, a Semitic title, i. 6 _sq._, 16 _sq._, 20, 49 _n._ 7

Adonai, title of Jehovah, i. 6 _sq._

Adoni, "my lord," Semitic title, i. 7;
  names compounded with, 17

Adoni-bezek, king of Jerusalem, i. 17

Adoni-jah, elder brother of King Solomon, i. 51 _n._ 2

Adoni-zedek, king of Jerusalem, i. 17

Adonis, myth of, i. 3 _sqq._;
  Greek worship of, 6;
  in Greek mythology, 10 _sqq._;
  in Syria, 13 _sqq._;
  monuments of, 29;
  in Cyprus, 31 _sqq._, 49;
  identified with Osiris, 32;
  mourning for, at Byblus, 38;
  said to be the fruit of incest, 43;
  his mother Myrrha, 43;
  son of Theias, 43 _n._ 4, 55 _n._ 4;
  the son of Cinyras, 49;
  the title of the sons of Phoenician kings in Cyprus, 49;
  his violent death, 55;
  music in the worship of, 55;
  sacred prostitution in the worship of, 57;
  inspired prophets in worship of, 76;
  human representatives of, perhaps burnt, 110;
  doves burned in honour of, 147;
  personated by priestly kings, 223;
  the ritual of, 223 _sqq._;
  his death and resurrection represented in his rites, 224 _sq._;
  festivals of, 224 _sqq._;
  flutes played in the laments for, 225 _n._ 3;
  the ascension of, 225;
  images of, thrown into the sea or springs, 225, 227 _n._ 3, 236;
  born from a myrrh-tree, 227, ii. 110;
  bewailed by Argive women, i. 227 _n._;
  analogy of his rites to Indian and European ceremonies, 227;
  his death and resurrection interpreted as representations of the decay
              and revival of vegetation, 227 _sqq._;
  interpreted as the sun, 228;
  interpreted by the ancients as the god of the reaped and sprouting corn,
              229;
  as a corn-spirit, 230 _sqq._;
  hunger the root of the worship of, 231;
  perhaps originally a personification of wild vegetation, especially
              grass and trees, 233;
  the gardens of, 236 _sqq._;
  rain-charm in the rites of, 237;
  resemblance of his rites to the festival of Easter, 254 _sqq._, 306;
  worshipped at Bethlehem, 257 _sqq._;
  and the planet Venus as the Morning Star, 258 _sq._;
  sometimes identified with Attis, 263;
  swine not eaten by worshippers of, 265;
  rites of, among the Greeks, 298;
  lamented by women at Byblus, ii. 23

Adonis and Aphrodite, i. 11 _sq._, 29, 280;
  their marriage celebrated at Alexandria, 224

---- and Attis identified with Dionysus, ii. 127 _n._

---- and Osiris, similarity between their rites, ii. 127

----, Attis, Osiris, their mythical similarity, i. 6, ii. 201

----, the river, its valley, i. 28 _sqq._;
  annual discoloration of the, 30, 225

Aedepsus, hot springs of Hercules at, i. 211 _sq._

Aedesius, Sextilius Agesilaus, dedicates altar to Attis, i. 275 _n._ 1

Aegipan and Hermes, i. 157

Aelian, on impregnation of Judean maid by serpent, i. 81

Aeneas and Dido, i. 114 _n._ 1

Aeschylus, on Typhon, i. 156

Aesculapius, in relation to serpents, i. 80 _sq._;
  reputed father of Aratus, 80 _sq._;
  his shrines at Sicyon and Titane, 81;
  his dispute with Hercules, 209 _sq._

Aeson and Medea, i. 181 _n._ 1

_Aetna_, Latin poem, i. 221 _n._ 4

Africa, serpents as reincarnations of the dead in, i. 82 _sqq._;
  infant burial in, 91 _sq._;
  reincarnation of the dead in, 91 _sq._;
  annual festivals of the dead in, ii. 66;
  worship of dead kings and chiefs in, 160 _sqq._;
  supreme gods in, 165, 173 _sq._, 174, 186, with _n._ 5, 187 _n._ 1, 188
              _sq._, 190;
  worship of ancestral spirits among the Bantu tribes of, 174 _sqq._;
  inheritance of the kingship under mother-kin in, 211

----, North, custom of bathing at Midsummer among the Mohammedan peoples of,
            i. 249

----, West, sacred men and women in, i. 65 _sqq._;
  human sacrifices in, ii. 99 _n._ 2

Afterbirth or placenta regarded as a person's double or twin, ii. 169
            _sq._
  See _also_ Placenta

Afterbirths buried in banana groves, i. 93;
  regarded as twins of the children, 93;
  Shilluk kings interred where their afterbirths are buried, ii. 162

Agbasia, West African god, i. 79

Agdestis, a man-monster in the myth of Attis, i. 269

Agesipolis, King of Sparta, his conduct in an earthquake, i. 196

Agraulus, daughter of Cecrops, worshipped at Salamis in Cyprus, i. 145,
            146

Agricultural peoples worship the moon, ii. 138 _sq._

Agriculture, religious objections to, i. 88 _sqq._;
  in the hands of women in the Pelew Islands, ii. 206 _sq._;
  its tendency to produce a conservative character, 217 _sq._

Ahts of Vancouver Island regard the moon as the husband of the sun, ii.
            139 _n._ 1

Airi, a deity of North-West India, i. 170

Aiyar, N. Subramhanya, on Indian dancing-girls, i. 63 _sqq._

Ajax and Teucer, names of priestly kings of Olba, i. 144 _sq._, 161

Akhetaton (Tell-el-Amarna), the capital of Amenophis IV., ii. 123 _n._ 1

Akikuyu of British East Africa, their worship of snakes, i. 67 _sq._;
  their belief in serpents as reincarnations of the dead, 82, 85

Alaska, the Esquimaux of, ii. 51;
  the Koniags of, 106

Albania, marriage custom in, ii. 246

Albanians of the Caucasus, their worship of the moon, i. 73

Albinoes the offspring of the moon, i. 91

Albiruni, Arab geographer, on the Persian festival of the dead, ii. 68

Alcman on dew, ii. 137

Aleutians, effeminate sorcerers among the, ii. 254

Alexander Severus, at festival of Attis, i. 273

Alexander the Great expels a king of Paphos, i. 42;
  his fabulous birth, 81;
  assumes costumes of deities, 165;
  sacrifices to Megarsian Athena, 169 _n._ 3

Alexandria, festival of Adonis at, i. 224;
  the Serapeum at, ii. 119 _n._, 217

Alexandrian calendar, used by Plutarch, ii. 84

---- year, the fixed, ii. 28, 92;
  Plutarch's use of the, 49

All Saints, feast of, perhaps substituted for an old pagan festival of the
            dead, ii. 82 _sq._

All Souls, feast of, ii. 51 _sqq._;
  originally a pagan festival of the dead, 81;
  instituted by Odilo, abbot of Clugny, 82

Allatu, Babylonian goddess, i. 9

Allifae in Samnium, baths of Hercules at, i. 213 _n._ 2

Almo, procession to the river, in the rites of Attis, i. 273.

Almond causes virgin to conceive, i. 263;
  the father of all things, 263 _sq._

Alyattes, king of Lydia, i. 133 _n._ 1

Alynomus, king of Paphos, i. 43

Amambwe, a Bantu tribe of Northern Rhodesia, its head chief reincarnated
            in a lion, ii. 193

Amasis, king of Egypt, his body burnt by Cambyses, i. 176 _n._ 2

Amathus, in Cyprus, Adonis and Melcarth at, i. 32, 117;
  statue of lion-slaying god found at, 117

Amatongo, ancestral spirits (Zulu term), i. 74 _n._ 4, ii. 184

Ambabai, an Indian goddess, i. 243

Ambala District, Punjaub, i. 94

Amelineau, E., discovers the tomb of King Khent, ii. 21 _n._ 1

Amenophis IV., king of Egypt, his attempt to abolish all gods but the
            sun-god, ii. 123 _sqq._

America, reincarnation of the dead in, i. 91;
  the moon worshipped by the agricultural Indians of tropical, ii. 138

Amestris, wife of Xerxes, her sacrifice of children, ii. 220 _sq._

Ammon, Milcom, the god of, i. 19

Ammon (the Egyptian) at Thebes, his human wives, i. 72;
  of Thebes identified with the sun, ii. 123;
  rage of King Amenophis IV. against the god, 124

Amoor, Gilyaks of the, i. 278 _n._ 2

Amorites, their law as to fornication, i. 37 _sq._

Amsanctus, the valley of, i. 204 _sq._

Amulets, crowns and wreaths as, ii. 242 _sq._

Amyclae, in the vale of Sparta, i. 313, 314, 315

Amyclas, father of Hyacinth, i. 313

Anacreon, on Cinyras, i. 55

Anacyndaraxes, father of Sardanapalus, i. 172

Anaitis, sacred prostitution in the worship of, i. 38

_Anassa_, "Queen," title of goddess, i. 35 _n._ 2

Anazarba or Anazarbus, in Cilicia, i. 167 _n._ 1

Ancestor-worship among the Khasis of Assam, ii. 203;
  combined with mother-kin tends to a predominance of goddesses over gods
              in religion, 211 _sq._

Ancestors, propitiation of deceased, i. 46;
  the worship of, the main practical religion of the Bantu tribes, ii. 176
              _sqq._

Ancestral spirits on shoulders of medicine-men, i. 74 _n._ 4;
  incarnate in serpents, 82 _sqq._;
  in the form of animals, 83;
  worshipped by the Bantu tribes of Africa, ii. 174 _sqq._;
  prayers to, 175 _sq._, 178 _sq._, 183 _sq._;
  sacrifices to, 175, 178 _s.q._, 180, 181 _sq._, 183 _sq._, 190;
  on the father's and on the mother's side, the two distinguished, 180,
              181.
  _See also_ Dead

Anchiale in Cilicia, i. 144; monument of Sardanapalus at, 172

Andania in Messenia, sacred men and women at, i. 76 _n._ 3

Andriamasinavalona, a Hova king, vicarious sacrifice for, ii. 221

Anemone, the scarlet, sprung from the blood of Adonis, i. 226

Angel, the Destroying, over Jerusalem, i. 24

Angus, belief as to the weaning of children in, ii. 148

Anhalt, custom at sowing in, i. 239

Animals sacrificed by being hanged, i. 289 _sq._, 292;
  and plants, edible, savage lamentations for, ii. 43 _sq._;
  dead kings and chiefs incarnate in, 162, 163 _sq._, 173, 193;
  sacrificed to prolong the life of kings, 222

Anje-a, a mythical being who brings children to women, i. 103

Anklets made of human sinews worn by king of Uganda, ii. 224 _sq._

Ankole, in Central Africa, the Bahima of, ii. 190

Anna, sister of Dido, i. 114 _n._ 1

Annam, offerings to the dead in spring in, i. 235 _n._ 1;
  annual festivals of the dead in, ii. 62 _sqq._

Annual death and resurrection of gods, i. 6

Anointing as a ceremony of consecration, i. 21 _n._ 2 and  3, 68, 74

---- sacred stones, custom of, i. 36

Antelopes, soul of a dead king incarnate in, ii. 163

_Anthesteria_, festival of the dead at Athens, i. 234 _sq._

Antigonus, King, i. 212

Antimachia in Cos, priest of Hercules at, ii. 258

Antioch, destroyed by an earthquake, i. 222 _n._ 1;
  festival of Adonis at, 227, 257 _sq._

Antiochus, Greek calendar of, i. 303 _n._ 3

Antwerp, feast of All Souls in, ii. 70

Anubis, Egyptian jackal-headed god, ii. 15, 18 _n._ 3, 22 _n._ 2;
  finds the body of Osiris, 85

Apameia, worship of Poseidon at, i. 195

Aphaca in Syria, sanctuary of Astarte at, i. 28, 259;
  meteor as signal for festival at, 259

Aphrodite, her sacred doves, i. 33, 147;
  sanctuary of, at Paphos, 33 _sqq._;
  the month of, 145;
  her blood dyes white roses red, 226;
  name applied to summer, ii. 41

---- and Adonis, i. 11 _sq._, 29, 280;
  their marriage celebrated at Alexandria, 224

---- and Cinyras, i. 48 _sq._

---- and Pygmalion, i. 49 _sq._

---- of the Lebanon, the mourning, i. 29 _sq._

Apinagos Indians of Brazil, their dances and presentation of children to
            the moon, ii. 145 _sqq._

Apis, sacred Egyptian bull, ii. 11, 119 _n._;
  mourning for the death of, i. 225;
  held to be an image of the soul of Osiris, ii. 130

Apollo, the friend of Cinyras, i. 54;
  music in the worship of, 54 _sq._;
  reputed father of Augustus, 81;
  the Catalonian, 147 _n._ 3;
  his musical contest with Marsyas, 288;
  purified at Tempe, ii. 240

---- and Artemis, their priesthood at Ephesus, ii. 243 _sq._

---- and Marsyas, i. 55

---- at Delphi, sacrifices of Croesus to, i. 180 _n._ 1;
  and the Dragon at Delphi, ii. 240

---- of the Golden Sword, i. 176

---- the Four-handed, ii. 250 _n._ 2

Apotheosis by being burnt alive, i. 179 _sq._

Appian, on the costume of a priest of Isis, ii. 85 _n._ 3

Apples forbidden to worshippers of Cybele and Attis, i. 280 _n._ 7

Apuleius, on the worship of Isis, ii. 119 _n._

Arab name for the scarlet anemone, i. 226

Arabic writer on the mourning for Ta-uz (Tammuz) in Harran, i. 230

Arabs resort to the springs of Callirrhoe in Moab, i. 215 _sq._

---- of Moab, their custom at harvest, ii. 48, 96;
  their remedies for ailments, 242

Aratus of Sicyon, deemed a son of Aesculapius, i. 81

Araucanian Indians of South America eat fruit of Araucanian pine, i. 278
            _n._ 2

Araunah, the threshing-floor of, i. 24

Arcadians sacrifice to thunder and lightning, i. 157

Archigallus, high-priest of Attis, i. 268, 279;
  prophesies, 271 _n._

Arctic origin, alleged, of the Aryans, i. 229 _n._ 1

Arenna or Arinna, i. 136 _n._ 1;
  the sun-goddess of, 136

Arensdorf, custom at sowing in, i. 239

Argaeus, Mount, in Cappadocia, i. 190 _sq._

Argive brides wore false beards, ii. 260

---- women bewail Adonis, i. 227 _n._

Aristomenes, Messenian hero, his fabulous birth, i. 81

Aristophanes, on the Spartan envoy, i. 196 _n._ 4;
  on Hercules as patron of hot springs, 209

Aristotelian philosophy, revival of the, i. 301

Aristotle on the political institutions of Cyprus, i. 49 _n._ 7;
  on earthquakes, 211 _n._ 3

_Armengols_, in the Pelew Islands, ii. 265

Armenia, sacred prostitution of girls before marriage in, i. 38, 58

Armenians, their festivals of the dead, ii. 65 _sq._;
  their opinion of the baleful influence of the moon on children, 148

Arrian on Attis, i. 282

Artemis at Perga, i. 35;
  name given by Greeks to Asiatic Mother Goddesses, 169

---- and Apollo, their priesthood at Ephesus, ii. 243

---- of Ephesus served by eunuch priests, i. 269

---- the Hanged, i. 291

----, Laphrian, at Patrae, i. 126 _n._ 2

----, Perasian, at Castabala, i. 115, 167 _sqq._

----, Sarpedonian, in Cilicia, i. 167, 171

---- Tauropolis, i. 275 _n._ 1

----, the Tauric, human sacrifices to the, i. 115

Artemision, a Greek month, ii. 239 _n._ 1

Arunta of Central Australia, their belief in the reincarnation of the
            dead, i. 99, 100

Arval Brethren, their wreaths of corn, i. 44 _n._;
  a Roman college of priests, ii. 239

Aryan family, marriage customs of the, ii. 235

Aryans, their alleged Arctic origin, i. 229 _n._ 1;
  annual festivals of the dead among the, ii. 67 _sqq._

Aryenis, daughter of Alyattes, i. 133 _n._ 1

Ascalon, the goddess Derceto at, i. 34 _n._ 3

Ascension of Adonis, i. 225

Ashantee, human sacrifices at earthquakes in, i. 201;
  kings of, their human sacrifices, ii. 97 _n._ 7

_Asherim_, sacred poles, i. 18, 18 _n._ 2, 107, 108

Ashes of human victims scattered by winnowing-fans, ii. 97, 106

Ashtoreth (Astarte), i. 18 _n._ 2 _See_ Astarte

Ashurbanipal, king of Assyria, i. 144;
  confused with the legendary Sardanapalus, 173 _sq._;
  carries off the bones of the kings of Elam, ii. 103

Ashvin, an Indian month, i. 243

Asia Minor, priestly dynasties of, i. 140 _sq._;
  subject to volcanic forces, 190;
  subject to earthquakes, 202

Asiatic goddesses of fertility served by eunuch priests, i. 269 _sq._

Asopus, the river, i. 81

"A-souling," custom of, in England, ii. 79

Aspalis, a form of Artemis, i. 292

Assam, the Khasis of, i. 46, ii. 202 _sqq._;
  the Tangkul Nagas of, ii. 57 _sqq._

Assumption of the Virgin and the festival of Diana, i. 308, 309

Assyrian cavalry, i. 25 _n._ 3

Assyrians in Cilicia, i. 173

Astarte at Byblus, i. 13 _sq._;
  and the _asherim_, 18;
  kings as priests of, 26;
  at Paphos, 33 _sqq._;
  doves sacred to, 147;
  identified with the planet Venus, 258;
  of the Syrian Hierapolis served by eunuch priests, 269 _sq._;
  called by Lucian the Assyrian Hera, 280 _n._ 5;
  the Heavenly Goddess, 303;
  the planet Venus her star, ii. 35

---- Aphrodite, i. 304 _n._

Asteria, mother of the Tyrian Hercules (Melcarth), i. 112

Astyages, king of the Medes, i. 133 _n._ 1

_Asvattha_ tree, i. 82

Atargatis, Syrian goddess, i. 34 _n._ 3, 137;
  worshipped at Hierapolis-Bambyce, 162 _sq._;
  derivation of the name, 162;
  her husband-god, 162 _sq._

Ates, a Phrygian, i. 286

Athamas, the dynasty of, i. 287

Athanasius, on the mourning for Osiris, ii. 217

'Atheh, Cilician goddess, i. 162

Athena, temple of, at Salamis in Cyprus, i. 145;
  and hot springs, 209, 210

----, Magarsian, a Cilician goddess, i. 169 _n._ 3

---- Sciras, sanctuary of, ii. 238

Athenian boys, race of, at the vintage, ii. 238;
  boy carrying an olive-branch in procession, 238

Athenians, their superstition as to an eclipse of the moon, ii. 141

Athens, sacred serpent at, i. 87;
  the Commemoration of the Dead at, 234;
  sacrifice of an ox at, 296 _sq._;
  marriage custom at, ii. 245

Athribis, heart of Osiris at, ii. 11

Athyr, Egyptian month, ii. 8, 41, 49 _n._ 1;
  Osiris murdered on the seventeenth day of, 8, 84;
  festival of Osiris in the month of, 84 _sqq._, 91

Atonga, tribe of Lake Nyassa, their theory of earthquakes, i. 199

Attica, summer festival of Adonis in, i. 226

Attis, priests of Cybele called, i. 140;
  sometimes identified with Adonis, 263;
  myth and ritual of, 263 _sqq._;
  beloved by Cybele, 263, 282;
  legends of his death, 264;
  his legend at Pessinus, 264;
  his self-mutilation, 264 _sq._;
  and the pine-tree, 264, 265, 267, 271, 277 _sq._, 285, ii. 98 _n._ 5;
  his eunuch priests, i. 265, 266;
  festival of his death and resurrection in March, 267 _sqq._, 272 _sq._,
              307 _sq._;
  violets sprung from the blood of, 267;
  the mourning for, 272;
  bath of bull's blood in the rites of, 274 _sqq._;
  mysteries of, 274 _sq._;
  as a god of vegetation, 277 _sqq._, 279;
  as the Father God, 281 _sqq._;
  identified with Zeus, 282;
  as a sky-god, 282 _sqq._;
  emasculation of, suggested explanation of myth, 283;
  his star-spangled cap, 284;
  identified with Phrygian moon-god Men Tyrannus, 284;
  human representatives of, 285 _sqq._;
  title borne by priests of Cybele, 285, 287

----, Adonis, Osiris, their mythical similarity, i. 6, ii. 201

Atys, son of Croesus, his death, i. 286;
  early king of Lydia, 286

Aubrey, John, on soul-cakes, ii. 78

Augustine on the effeminate priests of the Great Mother, i. 298;
  on the heathen origin of Christmas, 305;
  on the discovery of corn by Isis, ii. 116;
  on Salacia as the wife of Neptune, 233

Augustodunum (Autun), worship of Cybele at, i. 279

Augustus reputed a son of Apollo, i. 81

Aulus Gellius on the influence of the moon, ii. 132

Aun, or On, King of Sweden, sacrifices his sons to Odin, ii. 220

Aunis, feast of All Souls in, ii. 69 _sq._

Aurelia Aemilia, a sacred harlot, i. 38

Aurohuacas, Indians of Colombia, i. 23 _n._ 2

Aust, E., on the marriage of the Roman gods, ii. 236 _n._ 1

Australia, belief as to the reincarnation of the dead in, i. 99 _sqq._

Australian aborigines, their preparation for marriage, i. 60;
  their belief in conception without sexual intercourse, 99 _sqq._;
  their cuttings for the dead, 268

Austria, leaping over Midsummer fires in, i. 251

"Awakening of Hercules," festival at Tyre, i. 111

Awemba, Bantu tribe of Rhodesia, ii. 174;
  their worship of ancestral spirits, 175;
  their prayers to dead kings before going to war, 191 _sq._

Axe, emblem of Hittite god of thundering sky, i. 134;
  as divine emblem, 163;
  symbol of Asiatic thunder-god, 183

----, double-headed, symbol of Sandan, i. 127;
  carried by Lydian kings, 182;
  a palladium of the Heraclid sovereignty, 182;
  figured on coins, 183 _n._

Ba-bwende, a tribe of the Congo, i. 271 _n._

Ba-sundi, a tribe of the Congo, i. 271 _n._

Baal, Semitic god, i. 15, 16;
  royal names compounded with, 16;
  as the god of fertility, 26 _sq._;
  conceived as god who fertilizes land by subterranean water, 159

---- and Sandan at Tarsus, i. 142 _sq._, 161

---- of the Lebanon, i. 32

---- of Tarsus, i. 117 _sqq._, 162 _sq._

Baalath or Astarte, i. 26, 34

---- and Baal, i. 27

---- Gebal, i. 14

Baalbec, i. 28;
  sacred prostitution at, 37;
  image of Hadad at, 163

Baalim, firstlings and first-fruits offered to the, i. 27;
  called lovers, 75 _n._

Babylon, early kings of, worshipped as gods, i. 15;
  worship of Mylitta at, 36;
  religious prostitution at, 58;
  human wives of Marduk at, 71;
  sanctuary of Serapis at, ii. 119 _n._

Babylonia, worship of Tammuz in, i. 6 _sqq._;
  the moon-god took precedence of the sun-god in ancient, ii. 138 _sq._

Babylonian hymns to Tammuz, i. 9

Bacchanals tear Pentheus in pieces, ii. 98

Bacchic orgies suppressed by Roman government, i. 301 _n._ 2

Bacchylides as to Croesus on the pyre, i. 175 _sq._

Backbone of Osiris represented by the _ded_ pillar, ii. 108 _sq._

Baden, feast of All Souls in, ii. 74

Baethgen, F., on goddess 'Hatheh, i. 162 _n._ 2

Baganda, their worship of the python, i. 86;
  rebirth of the dead among the, 92 _sq._;
  their theory of earthquakes, 199;
  their presentation of infants to the new moon, ii. 144, 145;
  ceremony observed by the king at new moon, 147;
  their worship of dead kings, 167 _sqq._;
  their veneration for the ghosts of dead relations, 191 _n._ 1;
  their pantheon, 196;
  human sacrifices offered to prolong the life of their kings, 223 _sqq._

Bagishu (Bageshu) of Mount Elgon, reincarnation of the dead among the, i.
            92

Bagobos of the Philippine Islands, their theory of earthquakes, i. 200;
  of Mindanao, their custom of hanging and spearing human victims, 290
              _sq._

Baharutsis, a Bantu tribe of South Africa, ii. 179

Bahima, their belief as to dead kings and chiefs, i. 83 _n._ 1

---- of Ankole in Central Africa, their worship of the dead, ii. 190 _sq._;
  their belief in a supreme god Lugaba, 190

---- of Kiziba, ii. 173

Baigas, Dravidian tribe of India, their objection to agriculture, i. 89

Bailly, French astronomer, on the Arctic origin of the rites of Adonis, i.
            229

Bairu, the, of Kiziba, ii. 173

Baku, on the Caspian, perpetual fires at, i. 192

Balinese, their conduct in an earthquake, i. 198

_Baloi_, witches and wizards, ii. 104

Banana, women impregnated by the flower of the, i. 93

Bangalas of the Congo, rebirth of dead among the, i. 92. _See also_ Boloki

Bantu tribes, their belief in serpents as reincarnations of the dead, i.
            82 _sqq._;
  their worship of ancestral spirits, ii. 174 _sqq._;
  their main practical religion a worship of ancestors, 176 _sqq._;
  their worship of the dead, 176 _sqq._, 191 _sqq._

Banyoro, their worship of serpents, i. 86 _n._ 1

Baptism of bull's blood in the rites of Cybele, i. 274 _sqq._

Bar-rekub, king of Samal, i. 15 _sq._

Baralongs, a Bantu tribe of South Africa, ii. 179

Barea and Kunama, their annual festival of the dead, ii. 66

Barley forced for festival, i. 240, 241, 242, 244, 251 _sq._

---- and wheat discovered by Isis, ii. 116

Barotse, a Bantu tribe of the Zambesi, their belief in a supreme god
            Niambe, ii. 193;
  their worship of dead kings, 194 _sq._

Barren women resort to graves in order to get children, i. 90;
  entice souls of dead children to them, 94

Barrenness of women cured by passing through holed stone, i. 36, with _n._
            4;
  removed by serpent, 86;
  children murdered as a remedy for, 95

Barrows of Halfdan, ii. 100

Barsom, bundle of twigs used by Parsee priests, i. 191 _n._ 2

Barth, H., on sculptures at BoghazKeui, i. 133 _n._ 1

Basil, pots of, on St. John's Day in Sicily, i. 245

Basuto chiefs buried secretly, ii. 104

Basutos, worship of the dead among the, ii. 179 _sq._

Bataks of Sumatra, their theory of earthquakes, i. 199 _sq._

Batara-guru, the Batak creator, i. 199 _sq._

Bath in river at the rites of Cybele, i. 273, 274 _n._;
  of bull's blood in the rites of Attis, 274 _sqq._;
  of image of Cybele perhaps a rain-charm, 280

---- of Aphrodite, i. 280

---- of Demeter, i. 280

---- of Hera in the river Burrha, i. 280;
  in the spring of Canathus, 280

Bathing on St. John's Day or Eve (Midsummer Day or Eve), i. 246 _sqq._;
  pagan origin of the custom, 249

Baths of Hercules, i. 212

---- of Solomon in Moab, i. 215

Batoo Bedano, an earthquake god, i. 202

Battle, purificatory ceremonies after a, ii. 251 _sq._

---- of the gods and giants, i. 157

Baudissin, W. W. Graf von, on Tammuz and Adonis, i. 6 _n._ 1;
  on Adonis as the personification of the spring vegetation, 228 _n._ 6;
  on summer festival of Adonis, 232 _n._

Bavaria, gardens of Adonis in, i. 244

Bawenda, the, of South Africa, the positions of their villages hidden, ii.
            251

Bearded Venus, in Cyprus, i. 165, ii. 259 _n._ 3

Beaufort, F., on perpetual flame in Lycia, i. 222 _n._

Bechuana ritual at founding a new town, ii. 249

Bechuanas, their sacrifice of a blind bull on various occasions, ii. 249,
            250 _sq._

Bede, on the feast of All Saints, ii. 83

Beech, M. W. H., on serpent-worship, i. 85

_Beena_ marriage in Ceylon, ii. 215

Begbie, General, i. 62 _n._

Bel or Marduk at Babylon, i. 71

Belgium, feast of All Souls in, ii. 70

Bellerophon and Pegasus, i. 302 _n._ 4

Bellona and Mars, ii. 231

Ben-hadad, king of Damascus, i. 15

Bendall, Professor C., i. 229 _n._ 1

Benefit of clergy, i. 68

Bengal, the Oraons and Mundas of, i. 46, 240

Benin, human victims crucified at, i. 294 _n._ 3

Bent, J. Theodore, discovers ruins of Olba, i. 151;
  identifies site of Hieropolis-Castabala, 168 _n._ 1

Berecynthia, title of Cybele, i. 279 _n._ 4

Berenice and Ptolemy, annual festival in their honour, ii. 35 _n._ 1

Bes, Egyptian god, i. 118 _n._ 1

Bethlehem, worship of Adonis at, i. 257 _sqq._;
  fertility of the neighbourhood, 257 _n._ 3;
  the Star of, 259

Betsileo of Madagascar, their belief in serpents as reincarnations of the
            dead, i. 83

Bghais, a Karen tribe of Burma, their annual festival of the dead, ii. 60
            _sq._

Bhadon, Indian month, i. 243

Bharbhunjas, of the Central Provinces, India, marriage custom of the, ii.
            262

Bharias, of the Central Provinces, India, exchange of costume between men
            and women at marriage among the, ii. 260 _sq._

Bhujariya, festival in the Central Provinces of India, i. 242

Bilaspore, infant burial in, i. 94 _sq._;
  annual festival of the dead in, ii. 60

Bion on the scarlet anemone, i. 226 _n._ 1

Bird, soul of a tree in a, ii. 111 _n._ 1

---- called "the soul of Osiris," ii. 110

Birds burnt in honour of Artemis, i. 126 _n._ 2;
  white, souls of dead kings incarnate in, ii. 162

Birks, Rev. E. B., on harvest custom at Orwell, i. 237 _n._ 4

Birth, new, through blood in rites of Attis, i. 274 _sq._;
  of Egyptian kings at the Sed festival, ii. 153, 155 _sq._

Birthday of the Sun, the twenty-fifth of December, i. 303 _sqq._

Bisa chiefs reincarnated in pythons, ii. 193

Bishnois of the Punjaub, infant burial among the, i. 94

Bithynians invoke Attis, i. 282

Black-snake clan, i. 100

_Blay_, men's clubhouse in the Pelew Islands, ii. 265

Blekinge, province of Sweden, Midsummer custom in, i. 251

Blind bull sacrificed at the foundation of a town, ii. 249;
  sacrificed before an army going to war, 250

Blood, bath of bull's, in the rites of Attis, i. 274 _sqq._;
  remission of sins through the shedding of, 299;
  used in expiation for homicide, 299 _n._ 2;
  of pig used in exorcism and purification, 299 _n._ 2;
  not to be shed in certain sacrifices, ii. 222 _n._ 2

Blood, the Day of, in the festival of Attis, i. 268, 285

Blowing of Trumpets in the festival of Attis, i. 268

Blue Spring, the, at Syracuse, i. 213 _n._ 1

Boar, Attis killed by a, i. 264

Bocage of Normandy, rule as to the clipping of wool in the, ii. 134 _n._ 3

Bodies of the dead, magical uses made of the, ii. 100 _sqq._;
  guarded against mutilation, 103;
  thought to be endowed with magical powers, 103, 104 _sq._

Bodroum in Cilicia, ruins of, i. 167

Boghaz-Keui, Hittite capital, excavations of H. Winckler at, i. 125 _n._;
  situation and remains, 128 _sqq._;
  the gods of, 128 _sqq._;
  rock-hewn sculptures at, 129 _sqq._

Bohemia, May-pole or Midsummer-tree in, i. 250;
  feast of All Souls in, ii. 72 _sq._

Bolivia, the Chiriguanos Indians of, ii. 143 _n._ 4, 145

Boloki, or Bangala, of the Upper Congo, their ceremonies at the new moon,
            ii. 143;
  attempt to deceive spirit of disease among the, 262

Bones of the dead used in rain-making ceremonies, i. 22;
  of dead kings carried off or destroyed by enemies, ii. 103 _sq._

----, fossil, source of myths about giants, i. 157 _sq._

Bonfire on St. John's Eve, dances round it, i. 245

_Book of the Dead_, ii. 13

Bor, the ancient Tyana, Hittite monument at, i. 122 _n._ 1

Borneo, custom of head-hunting in, i. 294 _sqq._;
  effeminate sorcerers in, ii. 253, 256

Bosanquet, Professor R. C., on the Four-handed Apollo, ii. 250 _n._ 2

Bosman, W., on serpent-worship, i. 67

Bouche, Abbe, on West African priestesses, i. 66 _n._ 3, 69

Boys of living parents in ritual, ii. 236 _sqq._;
  dressed as girls to avert the Evil Eye, 260;
  marriage customs to ensure the birth of, 262

Brahman marriage in Southern India, bride dressed as a boy at, ii. 260

Brazil, the Apinagos Indians of, ii. 145 _sqq._

Brazilian Indians, their belief in the noxious influence of the moon on
            children, ii. 148

Bread, fast from, in mourning for Attis, i. 272

Breasted, Professor J. H., on the eye of Horus, ii. 121 _n._ 3;
  on Amenophis IV., 123 _n._ 1;
  on the Sed festival, 156 _n._ 1

Breath not to defile sacred flame, i. 191

Brethren of the Ploughed Fields (_Fratres Arvales_), a Roman college of
            priests, ii. 239.
  _See also_ Arval Brethren

"Bride" of the Nile, ii. 38

---- and Bridegroom at Midsummer in Sweden, i. 251

Bridegroom disfigured in order to avert the evil eye, ii. 261

British Columbia, the Indians of, respect the animals and plants which
            they eat, ii. 44

Brittany, feast of All Souls in, ii. 69;
  belief as to warts and the moon in, 149

Bromo, volcano in Java, worshipped, i. 220 _sq._

Brother of a god, i. 51;
  dead elder, worshipped, ii. 175

Brothers and sisters, marriages of, in royal families, i. 44;
  in ancient Egypt, ii. 214 _sqq._;
  their intention to keep the property in the family, 215 _sq._

Brown, A. R., on the beliefs of the West Australian aborigines as to the
            causes of childbirth, i. 104 _sqq._

Brown, Dr. George, on snakes as reincarnations of chiefs, i. 84

Bruges, feast of All Souls in, ii. 70

Brugsch, H., on Egyptian names for a year, ii. 26 _n._ 1;
  on the Sothic period, 37 _n._;
  on the grave of Osiris at Philae, 111;
  on Isis as a personified corn-field, 117

Buddha and Buddhism, ii. 159

Buddhism, spiritual declension of, i. 310 _sq._

Budge, Dr. E. A. Wallis, on goddess Net, i. 282 _n._;
  on an Egyptian funeral rite, ii. 15 _n._ 2;
  on Isis, 115 _sq._;
  on the nature of Osiris, 126 _n._ 2;
  on the solar theory of Osiris, 131 _n._ 3;
  on the historical reality of Osiris, 160 _n._ 1;
  on Khenti-Amenti, 198 _n._ 2

Buduna tribe of West Australia, their beliefs as to the birth of children,
            i. 104 _sq._

Bugis of South Celebes, effeminate priests or sorcerers among the, ii. 253
            _sq._

Bulgaria, marriage customs in, ii. 246

Bull as emblem of generative force, i. 123;
  worshipped by the Hittites, 123, 132;
  emblem of Hittite thunder-god, 134 _sqq._;
  Hittite god standing on a, 135;
  as emblem of a thunder-god, 136;
  as symbol of thunder and fertility, 163 _sq._;
  the emblem of the Father God, 164;
  worshipped at Euyuk, 164;
  testicles of, used in rites of Cybele and Attis, 276;
  sacrificed at Egyptian funeral, ii. 15;
  white, soul of dead king incarnate in a, 164;
  sacrificed to prolong the life of a king, 222;
  sacrificed to Zeus, the Saviour of the City, 238;
  blinded and sacrificed at the foundation of a town, 249

Bull's blood, bath of, in the rites of Attis, i. 274 _sq._

---- hide cut in strips and pegged down round the site of a new town, ii.
            249;
  bride seated on a, 246

---- skin, body of the dead placed in a, ii. 15 _n._ 2

Bulls, husband-god at Hierapolis seated on, i. 163

---- sacrificed at caves of Pluto, i. 206;
  sacrificed to Persephone, 213 _n._ 1;
  sacrificed to dead chiefs, ii. 191

Burial at cross-roads, i. 93 _n._ 1

---- of infants to ensure their rebirth, i. 91, 93 _sqq._;
  at Gezer, 108 _sq._;
  of Osiris in his rites, ii. 88

Burma, the Bghais of, ii. 60

Burmese, their conduct during an earthquake, i. 201

Burne, Miss C. S., and Miss G. F. Jackson on "Souling Day" in Shropshire,
            ii. 78 _sq._

Burning of Melcarth, i. 110 _sqq._;
  of Sandan, 117 _sqq._;
  of Cilician gods, 170 _sq._;
  of Sardanapalus, 172 _sqq._;
  of Croesus, 174 _sqq._;
  of a god, 188 _sq._

Burnings for dead kings of Judah, i. 177 _sq._;
  for dead Jewish Rabbis at Meiron, 178

Burns, Robert, on John Barleycorn, i. 230 _sq._

Burnt alive, apotheosis by being, i. 179 _sq._

---- Land of Lydia, i. 193 _sq._

Burrha, river, Hera's bath in the, i. 280

Buru, East Indian island, use of oil as a charm in, i. 21 _n._ 2

Busiris, backbone of Osiris at, ii. 11;
  specially associated with Osiris, 18;
  the ritual of, 86;
  rites of Osiris at, 87 _sq._;
  festival of Osiris in the month of Khoiak at, 108;
  temple of Usirniri at, 151

Busiro, the district containing the graves and temples of the kings of
            Uganda, ii. 168, 169, 224

Bustard totem, i. 104

Buto, city in Egypt, ii. 10

Butterflies, soul of a dead king incarnate in, ii. 164

Byblus, Adonis at, i. 13 _sqq._;
  the kings of, 14 _sqq._;
  mourning for Adonis at, 38;
  religious prostitution at, 58;
  inspired prophets at, 75 _sq._;
  festival of Adonis at, 225;
  Osiris and Isis at, ii. 9;
  the queen of, 9;
  Osiris associated with, 22 _sq._, 127;
  its relation to Egypt, 127 _n._ 1

Byrsa, origin of the name, ii. 250

Cadmus turned into a snake, i. 86 _sq._;
  perhaps personated by the Laurel-bearer at Thebes, ii. 241

----, Mount, i. 207

Cadys, a Lydian, i. 183

Caeculus, son of the fire-god Vulcan, ii. 235

Caesar introduces the Julian calendar, ii. 37;
  as to German observation of the moon, 141

Caffre purificatory ceremonies after a battle, ii. 251 _sq._

Cairo, ceremony of cutting the dams at, ii. 38, 39 _sq._

Calabar district, heads of chiefs buried secretly in the, ii. 104

Calabria, Easter custom in, i. 254

Calauria, Poseidon worshipped in, i. 203 _n._ 2

Calendar, the natural, ii. 25

----, the Alexandrian, used by Plutarch, ii. 84

----, the Coptic, ii. 6 _n._ 3

----, the Egyptian, ii. 24 _sqq._;
  date of its introduction, 36 _n._ 2

---- of the Egyptian farmer, ii. 30 _sqq._

---- of Esne, ii. 49 _sq._

---- of the Indians of Yucatan, ii. 28 _n._

----, the Julian, ii. 93 _n._ 1

---- of the ancient Mexicans, its mode of intercalation, ii. 28 _n._ 3

---- of Philocalus, i. 303 _n._ 2, 304 _n._ 3, ii. 95 _n._ 1

Calendars, the Roman Rustic, ii. 95 _n._ 1

California, the Karok Indians of, ii. 47;
  the Indians of, their annual festivals of the dead, 52 _sq._

Californian Indians eat pine nuts, i. 278 _n._ 2;
  their notion that the owl is the guardian of the "California big tree,"
              ii. 111 _n._ 1

Callaway, Rev. Henry, on the worship of the dead among the Zulus, ii. 184
            _sq._

Callirrhoe, the springs of, in Moab, i. 214 _sqq._

Calpurnius Piso, L., on the wife of Vulcan, ii. 232 _sq._

Calycadnus River, in Cilicia, i. 167 _n._ 2

Camasene and Janus, ii. 235 _n._ 6

Cambodia, annual festival of the dead in, ii. 61 _sq._

Cambridge, personal relics of Kibuka, the war-god of the Baganda,
            preserved at, ii. 197

Cambyses, king of Persia, his treatment of Amasis, i. 176 _n._ 2

Cameroon negroes, expiation for homicide among the, i. 299 _n._ 2

Camul, custom as to hospitality in, i. 39 _n._ 3

Canaanite kings of Jerusalem, i. 17

Canathus, Hera's annual bath in the spring of, i. 280

Candaules, king of Lydia, i. 182, 183

Canicular year, a Sothic period, ii. 36 _n._ 2

Canopic decree, ii. 34 _n._ 1, 37 _n._, 88 _n._ 2

Canopus, the decree of, ii. 27

Capaneus and Evadne, i. 177 _n._ 3

Cape Bedford in Queensland, belief of the natives as to the birth of
            children, i. 102

Capital punishment among some peoples originally a sacrifice, i. 290 _n._
            2

Capitol at Rome, ceremonies at the rebuilding of the, ii. 244

Cappadocia, volcanic region of, i. 189 _sqq._;
  fire-worship in, 191 _sq._

Car Nicobar, exorcism in, i. 299 _n._ 2

Carchemish, Hittite capital on Euphrates, i. 123, 137 _n._ 2, 138 _n._

Carchi, a province of Ecuador, All Souls' Day in, ii. 80

Caria, Zeus Labrandeus in, i. 182;
  poisonous vapours in, 205 _sq._

Carians, their mourning for Osiris, ii. 86 _n._ 1

Caribs worshipped the moon in preference to the sun, ii. 138

Carlyle, Thomas, on the execution of the astronomer Bailly, i. 229 _n._ 1

Carna and Janus, ii. 235 _n._ 6

Carnae, temples at, ii. 124;
  the sculptures at, 154

Carnival at Rome in the rites of Attis, i. 273

---- custom in Thracian villages, ii. 99 _sq._

Carpini, de Plano, on funeral customs of the Mongols, i. 293

Carthage, legend and worship of Dido at, i. 113 _sq._;
  Hamilcar worshipped at, 116;
  the _suffetes_ of, 116 _n._ 1;
  rites of Cybele at, 274 _n._;
  the effeminate priests of the Great Mother at, 298;
  legend as to the foundation of, ii. 250

Casalis, E., on serpent-worship, i. 84;
  on the worship of the dead among the Basutos, ii. 179 _sq._

Castabala in Cappadocia, i. 168

---- in Cilicia, worship of Perasian Artemis at, i. 115, 167 _sqq._

Castelnau, F. de, on the reverence of the Apinagos for the moon, ii. 146
            _sq._

Castiglione a Casauria, in the Abruzzi, Midsummer custom at, i. 246

Castor's tune, i. 196 _n._ 3

Castration of Cronus and Uranus, i. 283;
  of sky-god, suggested explanation of, 283;
  of priests, suggested explanation of, 283 _sq._

Catafalque burnt at funeral of king of Siam, i. 179

Catania in Sicily, the vineyards of, i. 194;
  gardens of Adonis at, 245

Catholic Church, the ritual of the, i. 54;
  ceremonies on Good Friday in the, 254, 255 _sq._

Cato, i. 43

Catullus on self-mutilation of a priest of Attis, i. 270

Caucasus, the Albanians of the, i. 73;
  the Chewsurs of the, ii. 65

Cauldron, the magical, which makes the old young again, i. 181

Caverns of Demeter, i. 88

Caves, limestone, i. 152;
  in Semitic religion, 169 _n._ 3

Cecrops, father of Agraulus, i. 145

Cedar forests of Cilicia, i. 149, 150 _n._ 1

---- sprung from the body of Osiris, ii. 110

---- -tree god, Osiris interpreted as a, ii. 109 _n._ 1

Celaenae, skin of Marsyas shown at, i. 288

Celebes, conduct of the inhabitants in an earthquake, i. 200

----, Central, the Toradjas of, ii. 33

----, Southern, marriage custom in, ii. 260

Celenderis in Cilicia, i. 41

Celtic year reckoned from November 1st, ii. 81

Censorinus, on the date of the rising of Sirius, ii. 34 _n._ 1

Central Provinces of India, gardens of Adonis in the, i. 242 _sq._

Ceos, the rising of Sirius observed in, ii. 35 _n._ 1;
  rule as to the pollution of death in, 227

Cereals cultivated in ancient Egypt, ii. 30

Ceremonies, magical, for the regulation of the seasons, i. 3 _sqq._

Ceres married to Orcus, ii. 231

Ceylon, _beena_ marriage in, ii. 215

Chadwick, Professor H. M., ii. 81 _n._ 3;
  on the dismemberment of Halfdan the Black, 100 _n._ 2;
  on a priest dressed as a woman, 259 _n._ 2

Change in date of Egyptian festivals with the adoption of the fixed
            Alexandrian year, ii. 92 _sqq._

Chants, plaintive, of corn-reapers in antiquity, ii. 45 _sq._

Charlemagne compared to Osiris, ii. 199

Charm, to protect a town, ii. 249 _sqq._

Charon, places of, i. 204, 205

_Charonia_, places of Charon, i. 204

Chastity, ceremonial, i. 43;
  ordeal of, 115 _n._ 2

Chent-Ament (Khenti-Amenti), title of Osiris, ii. 87

Chephren, King of Egypt, his statue, ii. 21 _sq._

Cherokee Indians, their myth of the Old Woman of the corn, ii. 46 _sq._;
  their lamentations after "the first working of the corn," 47

Cheshire, All Souls' Day in, ii. 79

Chewsurs of the Caucasus, their annual festival of the dead, ii. 65

Cheyne, T. K., on lament for kings of Judah, i. 20 _n._ 2

Chief, ancestral, reincarnate in snakes, i. 84

Chiefs in the Pelew Islands, custom of slaying, ii. 266 _sqq._

----, dead, worshipped, ii. 175, 176, 177, 179, 181 _sq._, 187;
  thought to control the rain, 188;
  human sacrifices to, 191;
  spirits of, prophesy through living men and women, 192 _sq._

"Child-stones," where souls of dead await rebirth, i. 100

Childbirth, primitive ignorance of the causes of, i. 106 _sq._

Childless women expect offspring from St. George, i. 78;
  resort to Baths of Solomon, 78;
  receive offspring from serpent, 86;
  resort to graves in order to secure offspring, 96;
  resort to hot springs in Syria, 213 _sqq._

Children bestowed by saints, i. 78 _sq._;
  given by serpent, 86;
  murdered that their souls may be reborn in barren women, 95;
  sacrificed to volcano in Siao, 219;
  sacrificed at irrigation channels, ii. 38;
  sacrificed by the Mexicans for the maize, 107;
  presented to the moon, 144 _sqq._

---- of God, i. 68

---- of living parents in ritual, ii. 236 _sqq._;
  apparently thought to be endowed with more vitality than others, 247
              _sq._

Chili, earthquakes in, i. 202

Chimaera, Mount, in Lycia, perpetual fire on, i. 221

China, funeral of emperor of, i. 294

Chinese author on disturbance of earth-spirits by agriculture, i. 89

---- character compared to that of the ancient Egyptians, ii. 218

Chios, men sacrificed to Dionysus in, ii. 98 _sq._

Chiriguanos Indians of Bolivia, their address to the sun, ii. 143 _n._ 4

Chiriqui, volcano, i. 181

Chittim (Citium) in Cyprus, i. 31

Chnum of Elephantine identified with the sun, ii. 123

Choctaws, their annual festival of the dead, ii. 53 _sq._

Christ crucified on March 25th, tradition, i. 306

Christian, F. W., on the prostitution of unmarried girls in Yap, ii. 265
            _sq._

Christian festivals displace heathen festivals, i. 308

Christianity and paganism, their resemblances explained as diabolical
            counterfeits, i. 302, 309 _sq._

Christians and pagans, their controversy as to Easter, i. 309 _sq._

Christmas, festival of, borrowed from the Mithraic religion, i. 302
            _sqq._;
  the heathen origin of, 305

Chu-en-aten, name assumed by King Amenophis IV., ii. 124

Chukchees of North-Eastern Asia, effeminate sorcerers among the, ii. 256
            _sq._

Cicero at Cybistra, i. 122 _n._ 3;
  corresponds with Cilician king, 145 _n._ 2

Cilicia, male deity of, assimilated to Zeus, i. 118 _sq._;
  kings of, their affinity to Sandan, 144;
  the Assyrians in, 173

----, Western or Rugged, described, i. 148 _sqq._;
  fossils of, 152 _sq._

Cilician deity assimilated to Zeus, i. 144 _sqq._, 148, 152

---- Gates, pass of the, i. 120

---- goddesses, i. 161 _sqq._

---- gods, the burning of, i. 170 _sq._

---- pirates, i. 149 _sq._

---- priests, names of, i. 144

Cincius Alimentus, L., on Maia as the wife of Vulcan, ii. 232

Cinyrads, dynasty of the, i. 41 _sqq._

Cinyras, the father of Adonis, i. 13, 14, 49;
  king of Byblus, 27;
  founds sanctuary of Astarte, 28;
  said to have instituted religious prostitution, 41, 50;
  his daughters, 41, 50;
  his riches, 42;
  his incest, 43;
  wooed by Aphrodite, 48 _sq._;
  meaning of the name, 52;
  the friend of Apollo, 54;
  legends of his death, 55

Ciotat in Provence, bathing at Midsummer at, i. 248

Circumcision, exchange of dress between men and women at, ii. 263

Citium (Chittim), in Cyprus, i. 31, 50

Civilization, ancient, undermined by Oriental religions and other causes,
            i. 299 _sqq._

Claudianus, Lucius Minius, i. 164

Claudius, the Emperor, and the rites of Attis, i. 266

Claudius Gothicus, the Emperor, i. 266 _n._ 2

Clavigero, on the Mexican calendar, ii. 28 _n._

Cleomenes, King of Sparta, and serpents, i. 87

Cleon of Magnesia at Gades, i. 113

Climatic and geographical conditions, their effect on national character,
            ii. 217

Clymenus, king of Arcadia, his incest, i. 44 _n._ 1

Cnossus in Crete, prehistoric palace at, i. 34

Cochinchina, annual festival of the dead in, ii. 65

Cock as emblem of a priest of Attis, i. 279

Codrington, Dr. R. H., on mother-kin in Melanesia, ii. 211

Coimbatore, dancing-girls at, i. 62

Coincidence between the Christian and the heathen festivals of the divine
            death and resurrection, i. 308 _sq._

Cologne, Petrarch at, on St. John's Eve, i. 247 _sq._

Colombia, rule as to the felling of timber in, ii. 136

Comana, in Cappadocia, i. 136 _n._ 1

---- in Pontus, worship of goddess Ma at, i. 39;
  swine not allowed to enter, 265 _n._ 1

----, the two cities, i. 168 _n._ 6

Commemoration of the Dead at Athens, i. 234

Commodus, conspiracy against, i. 273;
  addicted to the worship of Isis, ii. 118

Communal rights over women, i. 40, 61 _n._

Compromise of Christianity with paganism, parallel with Buddhism, i. 310
            _sqq._

Conception, supposed, without sexual intercourse, i. 91, 93 _n._ 2, 264;
  in women supposed to be caused by food, 96, 102, 103, 104, 105.
  _See also_ Impregnation

Conceptional animals and plants as causes of pregnancy in women, i. 97
            _sq._, 104 _sq._

Concubines, human, of the god Ammon, i. 72

Conder, C. R., on "holy men" in Syria, i. 77 _n._ 4;
  on turning money at the new moon, ii. 149 _n._ 2

Condylea in Arcadia, sacred grove of Artemis at, i. 291

Cone, image of Astarte, i. 14

Cones as emblems of a goddess, i. 34 _sqq._;
  votive, found in Babylonia, 35 _n._ 5

Confession of the dead, the Egyptian, ii. 13 _sq._

Confucianism, ii. 160

Congo, burial of infants on the, i. 91;
  priest dressed as a woman on the, ii. 254 _sq._

Conibos Indians of the Ucayali River, their theory of earthquakes, i. 198

Conical stone as divine emblem, i. 165, 166

Constantine destroys temple of Astarte, i. 28;
  suppresses sacred prostitution, 37;
  removes standard cubit from the Serapeum, ii. 216 _sq._

Consus and Ops, ii. 233 _n._ 6

Contest for the throne of Egypt, traditions of a, ii. 17 _sq._

Cook, A. B., i. 49 _n._ 6;
  on name of priest of Corycian Zeus, 155 _n._ 1;
  on the death of Romulus, ii. 98 _n._ 2;
  on the festival of Laurel-bearing at Thebes, 241 _n._ 3;
  on traces of mother-kin in the myth and ritual of Hercules, 259 _n._ 4

Coomassie, in Ashantee, i. 201

Copenhagen, bathing on St. John's Eve at, i. 248

Coptic calendar, ii. 6 _n._ 3

Corea, dance of eunuchs in, i. 270 _n._ 2

Coreans, their ceremony on the fifteenth day of the moon, ii. 143

Corn sprouting from the dead body of Osiris, ii. 89;
  water thrown on the last corn cut, a rain-charm, i. 237 _sq._

---- and grapes, symbols of the god of Tarsus, i. 119, 143;
  of the god of Ibreez, 121;
  figured with double-headed axe on Lydian coin, 183

---- and vine, emblems of the gods of Tarsus and Ibreez, i. 160 _sq._

---- -god, Adonis as a, i. 230 _sqq._;
  Attis as a, 279;
  mourned at midsummer, ii. 34;
  Osiris as a, 89 _sqq._, 96 _sqq._

---- -reaping in Egypt, Palestine, and Greece, date of the, i. 231 _n._ 3

---- -sieve, severed limbs of Osiris placed on a, ii. 97

---- -spirit, Tammuz or Adonis as a, i. 230 _sqq._;
  propitiation of the, perhaps fused with a worship of the dead, 233
              _sqq._;
  represented as a dead old man, ii. 48, 96;
  represented by human victims, 97, 106 _sq._

---- -stuffed effigies of Osiris buried with the dead as a symbol of
            resurrection, ii. 90 _sq._, 114

---- -wreaths as first-fruits, i. 43;
  worn by Arval Brethren, i. 44 _n._

Coronation, human sacrifices to prolong a king's life at his, ii. 223

Corycian cave, priests of Zeus at the, i. 145;
  the god of the, 152 _sqq._;
  described, 153 _sq._;
  saffron at the, 187;
  name perhaps derived from crocus, 187

Corycus in Cilicia, ruins of, i. 153

Cos, traces of mother-kin in, ii. 259;
  Sacred Marriage in, 259 _n._ 4;
  bridegroom dressed as woman in, 260

Cosenza in Calabria, Easter custom at, i. 254

Cotys, king of Lydia, i. 187

Cow, image of, in the rites of Osiris, ii. 50, 84;
  Isis represented with the head of a, 50;
  thought to be impregnated by moonshine, 130 _sq._

---- goddess Shenty, ii. 88

Cows sacred to Isis, ii. 50

Creation of the world thought to be annually repeated, i. 284

Crescent-shaped chest in the rites of Osiris, ii. 85, 130

Crests of the Cilician pirates, i. 149

Crete, sacred trees and pillars in, i. 107 _n._ 2

Crimea, the Taurians of the, i. 294

Crocodile-shaped hero, i. 139 _n._ 1

Croesus, king of Lydia, captures Pteria, i. 128;
  the burning of, 174 sqq., 179;
  his burnt offerings to Apollo at Delphi, 180 _n._ 1;
  dedicates golden lion at Delphi, 184;
  his son Atys, 286

Cronion, a Greek month, ii. 238.

Cronus, identified with Phoenician El, i. 166;
  castrates his father Uranus and is castrated by his son Zeus, 283;
  name applied to winter, ii. 41

Crook and scourge or flail, the emblems of Osiris, ii. 108, 153, compare
            20

Crooke, W., on sacred dancing-girls, i. 65 _n._ 1;
  on Mohammedan saints, 78 _n._ 2;
  on infant burial, 93 _sq._;
  on the custom of the False Bride, ii. 262 _n._ 2

Crops dependent on serpent-god, i. 67;
  human victims sacrificed for the, 290 _sq._

Cross-roads, burial at, i. 93 _n._ 1

Crown-wearer, priest of Hercules at Tarsus, i. 143

Crowns as amulets, ii. 242 _sq._;
  laid aside in mourning, etc., 243 _n._ 2

---- of Egypt, the White and the Red, ii. 21 _n._ 1

Crucifixion of Christ, tradition as to the date of, i. 306

---- of human victims at Benin, i. 294 _n._ 3;
  gentile, at the spring equinox, 307 _n._

_Crux ansata_, the Egyptian symbol of life, ii. 89

Cubit, the standard, kept in the temple of Serapis, ii. 217

Cultivation of staple food in the hands of women (Pelew Islands), ii. 206
            _sq._

Cumont, Professor Franz, on the _taurobolium_, i. 275 _n._ 1;
  on the Nativity of the Sun, 303 _n._ 3;
  as to the parallel between Easter and the rites of Attis, 310 _n._ 1

Customs of the Pelew Islanders, ii. 253 _sqq._, 266 _sqq._

Cuthar, father of Adonis, i. 13 _n._ 2

Cuttings for the dead, i. 268

Cyaxares, king of the Medes, i. 133 _n._, 174

Cybele, the image of, i. 35 _n._ 3;
  her cymbals and tambourines, 54;
  her lions and turreted crown, 137;
  priests of, called Attis, 140;
  the Mother of the Gods, 263;
  her love for Attis, 263, 282;
  her worship adopted by the Romans, 265;
  sacrifice of virility to image of, 268;
  subterranean chambers of, 268;
  orgiastic rites of, 278;
  a goddess of fertility, 279;
  worshipped in Gaul, 279;
  fasts observed by the worshippers of, 280;
  a friend of Marsyas, 288;
  effeminate priests of, ii. 257, 258

Cybistra in Cappadocia, i. 120, 122, 124

Cymbal, drinking out of a, i. 274

Cymbals in religious music, i. 52, 54

---- and tambourines in worship of Cybele, i. 54

Cynopolis, the cemetery of, ii. 90

Cypriote syllabary, i. 49 _n._ 7

Cyprus, Phoenicians in, i. 31 _sq._;
  Adonis in, 31 _sqq._;
  sacred prostitution in, 36, 50, 59;
  Melcarth worshipped in, 117;
  human sacrifices in, 145 _sq._;
  the bearded Venus in, ii. 259 _n._ 3

Cyril of Alexandria on the festival of Adonis at Alexandria, i. 224 _n._ 2

Cyrus and Croesus, i. 174 _sqq._

Cyzicus, worship of the Placianian Mother at, i. 274 _n._

Dacia, hot springs in, i. 213

Dacotas, their theory of the waning moon, ii. 130

_Dad_ pillar. _See_ _Ded_ pillar

Dahomans, their annual festival of the dead, ii. 66

Dahomey, kings of, their human sacrifices, ii. 97 _n._ 7.

Dairyman, sacred, of the Todas, his custom as to the pollution of death,
            ii. 228;
  bound to live apart from his wife, 229

Dalisandos in Isauria, inscriptions at, ii. 213 _n._ 1

Damascus, Aramean kings of, i. 15

Damasen, a giant, i. 186

Damatrius, a Greek month, ii. 49 _n._ 1

Dams in Egypt, the cutting of the, ii. 31 _sq._, 37 _sq._, 39 _sq._

Dance of eunuchs in Corea, i. 270 _n._ 2;
  on the Congo, 271 _n._;
  of hermaphrodites in Pegu, 271 _n._;
  sacred, at the Sed festival, ii. 154;
  of king before the ghosts of his ancestor, 192

Dances, religious, i. 61, 65, 68;
  at festivals of the dead, ii. 52, 53, 55, 58, 59;
  at the new moon, 142

Dancing-girls in India, harlots and wives of the gods, i. 61 _sqq._

Danh-gbi, python-god, i. 66

Darmesteter, James, on the Fravashis, ii. 67 _n._ 2;
  his theory as to the date of the _Gathas_, ii. 84 _n._

_Dasi_, dancing-girl, i. 63

Dastarkon in Cappadocia, i. 147 _n._ 3

Dates forbidden to worshippers of Cybele and Attis, i. 280

Daughter of a god, i. 51

David, King, in relation to the old kings of Jerusalem, i. 18 _sq._;
  his conquest of Ammon, 19;
  his taking of a census, 24;
  as a harper, 52, 53, 54

---- and Goliath, i. 19 _n._ 2

---- and Saul, i. 21

Davis, Mr. R. F., on harvest custom in Nottinghamshire, i. 238 _n._

Day of Blood in rites of Attis, i. 268, 285

De Plano Carpini, on the funeral customs of the Mongols, i. 293

Dea Dia, a Roman goddess of fertility, ii. 239

Dead, Festival of the, in Java, i. 220;
  worship of the, perhaps fused with the propitiation of the corn-spirit,
              233 _sqq._;
  cuttings for the, 268;
  Osiris king and judge of the, ii. 13 _sq._;
  the Egyptian, identified with Osiris, 16;
  annual festivals of the, 51 _sqq._;
  the spirits of the, personated by living men, 52, 53, 58;
  magical uses made of their bodies, 100 _sqq._;
  worship of the, among the Bantu tribes of Africa, 176 _sqq._
  _See also_ Ancestral spirits

----, reincarnation of the, i. 82 _sqq._;
  in America, 91;
  in Africa, 91 _sq._

---- kings and chiefs worshipped in Africa, ii. 160 _sqq._;
  sacrifices offered to, 162, 166 _sq._;
  incarnate in animals, 162, 163 _sq._, 173;
  consulted as oracles, 167, 171, 172, 195;
  human sacrifices to, 173;
  worshipped by the Barotse, 194 _sq._

---- men believed to beget children, i. 91, 264

---- Sea, i. 23

Death in the fire as an apotheosis, i. 179 _sq._;
  the pollution of, ii. 227 _sqq._

---- and resurrection, annual, of gods, i. 6;
  of Adonis represented in his rites, 224 _sq._;
  coincidence between the pagan and the Christian festival of the divine,
              308;
  of Osiris dramatically represented in his rites, ii. 85 _sq._;
  of Osiris interpreted as the decay and growth of vegetation, 126 _sqq._

December, the twenty-fifth of, reckoned the winter solstice, and the
            birthday of the Sun, i. 303 _sqq._

Decline of the civic virtues under the influence of Oriental religions, i.
            300 _sq._

_Ded_ or _tet_ pillar, the backbone of Osiris, ii. 108 _sq._

Dedicated men and women in Africa, i. 65 _sqq._

Dedication of girls to the service of a temple, i. 61 _sqq._;
  of children to gods, 79

Dee, river, holed stone in the, i. 36 _n._ 4

Defoe, Daniel, on the Angel of the Plague, i. 24 _n._ 2

Delos, sacred embassy to, ii. 244

Delphi, Apollo and the Dragon at, ii. 240

_Delphinium Ajacis_, i. 314 _n._ 1

Demeter, her sacred caverns, i. 88;
  sacred vaults of, 278;
  sorrowing for the descent of the Maiden, ii. 41;
  the month of, 41;
  mysteries of, at Eleusis, 90;
  at the well, 111 _n._ 6;
  identified with Isis, 117

---- and ears of corn, i. 166

---- and Poseidon, i. 280

---- and the king's son at Eleusis, i. 180

Denderah, inscriptions at, ii. 11, 86 _sqq._, 89, 91, 130 _n._;
  the hall of Osiris at, 110

Derceto, goddess at Ascalon, i. 34 _n._ 3

Dervishes revered in Syria, i. 77 _n._ 4;
  of Asia Minor, 170

Deucalion at Hierapolis, i. 162 _n._ 2

Deuteronomic redactor, i. 26 _n._ 1

Deuteronomy, publication of, i. 18 _n._ 3

Deutsch-Zepling in Transylvania, rule as to sowing in, ii. 133 _n._ 3

_Devadasi_, dancing-girl, i. 63 _sq._

_Devaratial_, dancing-girl, i. 63

Dew, bathing in the, on Midsummer Eve or Day, i. 246 _sq._, 248;
  a daughter of Zeus and the moon, ii. 137

Diabolical counterfeits, resemblances of paganism to Christianity
            explained as, i. 302, 309 _sq._

Diana, a Mother Goddess, i. 45;
  her sanctuary at Nemi, 45

Dianus and Diana, i. 27, 45

Dido flees from Tyre, i. 50;
  her traditional death in the fire, 114;
  worshipped at Carthage, 114;
  meaning of the name, 114 _n._ 1;
  an Avatar of Astarte, 177;
  how she procured the site of Carthage, ii. 250

Dinant, feast of All Souls in, ii. 70

_Dinkard_, a Pahlavi work, ii. 68 _n._ 2

Dinkas, their belief in serpents as reincarnations of the dead, i. 82
            _sq._;
  pour milk on graves, 87

Dio Chrysostom, on the people of Tarsus, i. 118;
  on pyre at Tarsus, 126 _n._ 1

Diodorus Siculus, on worship of Poseidon in Peloponnese, i. 203;
  on the burial of Osiris, ii. 10 _sq._;
  on the rise of the Nile, 31 _n._ 1;
  on the date of harvest in Egypt, 32 _n._ 2;
  on Osiris as a sun-god, 120;
  on the predominance of women over men in ancient Egypt, 214

Diomede, human sacrifices to, i. 145

Dionysus in form of bull, i. 123;
  with vine and ploughman on a coin, 166;
  ancient interpretation of, 194, 213;
  death, resurrection, and ascension of, 302 _n._ 4;
  torn in pieces, ii. 98;
  human sacrifices to, in Chios, 98 _sq._;
  his coarse symbolism, 113;
  identified with Osiris, 113;
  race of boys at vintage from his sanctuary, 238;
  men dressed as women in the rites of, 258;
  the effeminate, 259

Diospolis Parva (How), monument of Osiris at, ii. 110

Diphilus, king of Cyprus, i. 146

Disc, winged, as divine emblem, i. 132

Discoloration, annual, of the river Adonis, i. 30, 225

Discovery of the body of Osiris, ii. 85 _sq._

Disease of language the supposed source of myths, ii. 42

Disguises to avert the evil eye, ii. 262;
  to deceive dangerous spirits, 262 _sq._, 263 _sq._

Dismemberment of Osiris, suggested explanations of the, ii. 97;
  of Halfdan the Black, king of Norway, 100, 102;
  of Segera, a magician of Kiwai, 101;
  of kings and magicians, and use of their severed limbs to fertilize the
              country, 101 _sq._;
  of the bodies of the dead to prevent their souls from becoming dangerous
              ghosts, 188

_Ditino_, deified dead kings, ii. 194

Divination at Midsummer, i. 252 _sq._

Divining bones, ii. 180, 181

Divinities of the volcano Kirauea, i. 217

Divinity of Semitic kings, i. 15 _sqq._;
  of Lydian kings, 182 _sqq._

Dixmude, in Belgium, feast of All Souls at, ii. 70

Dobrizhoffer, M., on the respect of the Abipones for the Pleiades, i. 258
            _n._ 2

Doctrine of lunar sympathy, ii. 140 _sqq._

_Dod_, "beloved," i. 19 _n._ 2, 20 _n._ 2

Dog-star. _See_ Sirius

Doliche in Commagene, i. 136

Domaszewski, Professor A., on the rites of Attis at Rome, i. 266 _n._ 2

Dorasques of Panama, their theory of earthquakes, i. 201

Dos Santos, J., Portuguese historian, on the method adopted by a Caffre
            king to prolong his life, ii. 222 _sq._

Double, the afterbirth or placenta, regarded as a person's double, ii. 169
            _sq._

---- -headed axe, symbol of Sandan, i. 127;
  carried by Lydian kings, 182;
  a palladium of the Heraclid sovereignty, 182;
  figured on coins, 183 _n._

---- -headed eagle, Hittite emblem, i. 133 _n._

Doutte, Edmond, on sacred prostitution in Morocco, i. 39 _n._ 3

Doves burnt in honour of Adonis, i. 126 _n._ 2, 147

----, sacred, of Aphrodite, i. 33;
  or Astarte, 147

Dowries earned by prostitution, i. 38, 59

Dragon slain by Cadmus at Thebes, ii. 241

---- and Apollo, at Delphi, ii. 240

Drama, sacred, of the death and resurrection of Osiris, ii. 85 _sq._

Dramas, magical, for the regulation of the seasons, i. 4 _sq._

Dramatic representation of the resurrection of Osiris in his rites, ii. 85

Dreams, revelations given to sick people by Pluto and Persephone in, i.
            205;
  spirits of the dead appear to the living in, ii. 162, 190;
  as causes of attempted transformation of men into women, 255 _sqq._

Drenching last corn cut with water as a rain-charm, i. 237 _sq._

Drinking out of a king's skull in order to be inspired by his spirit, ii.
            171

Drought, kings answerable for, i. 21 _sq._

Drum, eating out of a, i. 274

Drums, human sacrifice for royal, ii. 223, 225

Duchesne, Mgr. L., on the origin of Christmas, i. 305 _n._ 4;
  on the date of the Crucifixion, 307

Dyaks of Sarawak, their custom of head-hunting, i. 295 _sq._

Ea, Babylonian god, i. 9

Eagle to carry soul to heaven, i. 126 _sq._;
  double-headed, Hittite emblem, 133 _n._

Ears of corn, emblem of Demeter, i. 166

Earth as the Great Mother, i. 27

---- and sky, myth of their violent separation, i. 283

----, the goddess, mother of Typhon, i. 156

Earth-goddess annually married to Sun-god, i. 47 _sq._;
  disturbed by the operations of husbandry, 88 _sqq._;
  married to Sky-god, 282, with _n._ 2

---- -spirits disturbed by agriculture, i. 89

Earthquake god, i. 194 _sqq._

Earthquakes, attempts to stop, i. 196 _sqq._

East, mother-kin and Mother Goddesses in the ancient, ii. 212 _sqq._

Easter, gardens of Adonis at, in Sicily, i. 253 _sq._;
  resemblance of the festival of, to the rites of Adonis, 254 _sqq._, 306;
  the festival of, assimilated to the spring festival of Attis, 306
              _sqq._;
  controversy between Christians and pagans as to the origin of, 309 _sq._

"Eater of the Dead," fabulous Egyptian monster, ii. 14

Eclipse of the moon, Athenian superstition as to an, ii. 141

Eden, the tree of life in, i. 186 _n._ 4

Edom, the kings of, i. 15;
  their bones burned by the Moabites, ii. 104

Edonians in Thrace, Lycurgus king of the, ii. 98, 99

Eesa, a Somali tribe, ii. 246

Effect of geographical and climatic conditions on national character, ii.
            217

Effeminate sorcerers or priests, order of, ii. 253 _sqq._

Effigies of Osiris, stuffed with corn, buried with the dead as a symbol of
            resurrection, ii. 90 _sq._, 114

Egypt, wives of Ammon in, i. 72;
  date of the corn-reaping in, 231 _n._ 3;
  the Nativity of the Sun at the winter solstice in, 303;
  in early June, ii. 31;
  mother-kin in ancient, 213 _sqq._

Egyptian astronomers acquainted with the true length of the solar year,
            ii. 26, 27, 37 _n._

---- calendar, the official, ii. 24 _sqq._;
  date of its introduction, 36 _n._ 2

---- ceremony at the winter solstice, ii. 50

---- dead identified with Osiris, ii. 16

---- farmer, calendar of the, ii. 30 _sqq._;
  his festivals, ii. 32 _sqq._

---- festivals, their dates shifting, ii. 24 _sq._, 92 _sqq._;
  readjustment of, 91 _sqq._

---- funeral rites a copy of those performed over Osiris, ii. 15

---- hope of immortality centred in Osiris, ii. 15 _sq._, 114, 159

---- kings worshipped as gods, i. 52;
  the most ancient, buried at Abydos, ii. 19;
  their oath not to correct the vague Egyptian year by intercalation, 26;
  perhaps formerly slain in the character of Osiris, 97 _sq._, 102;
  as Osiris, 151 _sqq._;
  renew their life by identifying themselves with the dead and risen
              Osiris, 153 _sq._;
  born again at the Sed festival, 153, 155 _sq._;
  perhaps formerly put to death to prevent their bodily and mental decay,
              154 _sq._, 156

Egyptian language akin to the Semitic, ii. 161

---- months, table of, ii. 37 _n._

---- myth of the separation of earth and sky, i. 283 _n._ 3

---- people, the conservatism of their character, ii. 217 _sq._;
  compared to the Chinese, 218

---- reapers, their lamentations and invocations of Isis, i. 232, ii. 45,
            117

---- religion, the development of, ii. 122 _sqq._;
  dominated by Osiris, 158 _sq._

---- standard resembling a placenta, ii. 156 _n._ 1

---- year vague, not corrected by intercalation, ii. 24 _sq._;
  the sacred, began with the rising of Sirius, 35

Egyptians sacrifice red-haired men, ii. 97, 106;
  the ancient, question of their ethnical affinity, 161

Ekoi of Southern Nigeria, their custom of mutilating men and women at
            festivals, i. 270 _n._ 2

El, Phoenician god, i. 13, 16 _n._ 1;
  identified with Cronus, 166

El-Bugat, festival of mourning for Tammuz in Harran, i. 230

Elam, the kings of, their bones carried off by Ashurbanipal, ii. 103 _sq._

Eleusis, Demeter and the king's son at, i. 180;
  sacrifice of oxen at, 292 _n._ 3;
  mysteries of Demeter at, ii. 90

Eli, the sons of, i. 76

Elisha prophesies to music, i. 53, 54;
  finds water in the desert, 53, 75

Ellis, A. B., on sacred prostitution in West Africa, i. 65 _sq._, 69
            _sq._;
  on tattoo marks of priests, 74 _n._ 4;
  on an ordeal of chastity, 115

Emesa, sun-god Heliogabalus at, i. 35

Empedocles leaps into the crater of Etna, i. 181

Emperor of China, funeral of an, i. 294

{~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ZETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} distinguished from {~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, i. 316 _n._ 1

Enemy, charms to disable an, ii. 252

England, harvest custom in, i. 237;
  the feast of All Souls in, ii. 78 _sq._

Ennius, on Hora and Quirinus, ii. 233

"Entry of Osiris into the moon," ii. 130

Enylus, king of Byblus, i. 15 _n._

Ephesus, Artemis of, i. 269;
  Hecate at, 291;
  the priesthood of Apollo and Artemis at, ii. 243 _sq._

Epidaurus, Aesculapius at, i. 80

Epiphany, the sixth of January, i. 305

Epirus, the kings of, their bones scattered by Lysimachus, ii. 104

Equinox, the vernal, resurrection of Attis at the, i. 273, 307 _sq._;
  date of the Crucifixion assigned to the spring equinox, 307;
  tradition that the world was created at the spring equinox, 307

Erechtheum, sacred serpent in the, i. 87

Erechtheus, king of Athens, his incest with his daughter, i. 44 _n._ 1;
  his sacred serpent, 87

Eregli (the ancient Cybistra) in Cappadocia, i. 120, 122

Eresh-Kigal, Babylonian goddess, i. 9

_Erica_-tree, Osiris in the, ii. 9, 108, 109

Eriphyle, the necklace of, i. 32 _n._ 2

Erman, Professor A., on Anubis at Abydos, ii. 18 _n._ 3;
  on corn-stuffed effigies of Osiris, 91;
  on the development of Egyptian religion, 122 _n._ 2

_Erme_ or _Nenneri_, gardens of Adonis in Sardinia, i. 244

Eshmun, Phoenician deity, i. 111 _n._ 6

Esne, the festal calendar of, ii. 49 _sq._

Esquimaux of Alaska, their annual festival of the dead, i. 51 _sq._

Esthonian peasants regulate their sowing and planting by the moon, ii. 135

Esthonians, their ceremony at the new moon, ii. 143

Eternal life, initiate born again to, in the rites of Cybele and Attis, i.
            274 _sq._

Etesian winds, i. 35 _n._ 1

Etna, Mount, Typhon buried under, i. 156, 157;
  the death of Empedocles on, 181;
  the ashes of, 194;
  offerings thrown into the craters of, 221

Euboea subject to earthquakes, i. 211;
  date of threshing in, 232 _n._;
  harvest custom in, 238

Eudoxus, on the Egyptian festivals, ii. 35 _n._ 2

Eunuch, priests of the Mother Goddess, i. 206;
  in the service of Asiatic goddesses of fertility, 269 _sq._;
  in various lands, 270 _n._ 2;
  of Attis tattooed with pattern of ivy, 278;
  of Cybele, ii. 258

Eunuchs, dances of, i. 270 _n._ 2, 271 _n._;
  dedicated to a goddess in India, 271 _n._;
  sacred, at Hierapolis-Bambyce, their rule as to the pollution of death,
              ii. 272

Euripides on the death of Pentheus, ii. 98 _n._ 5

Europe, custom of showing money to the new moon in, ii. 148 _sq._

Eusebius on sacred prostitution, i. 37 _n._ 2, 73 _n._ 1

Euyuk in Cappadocia, Hittite palace at, i. 123, 132, 133 _n._;
  bull worshipped at, 164

Evadne and Capaneus, i. 177 _n._ 3

Evil Eye, boys dressed as girls to avert the, ii. 260;
  bridegroom disfigured in order to avert the, 261;
  disguises to avert the, 262

Ewe farmers fear to wound the Earth goddess, i. 90

---- people of Togo-land, their belief in the marriage of Sky with Earth, i.
            282 _n._ 2

---- speaking peoples of the Slave Coast, sacred prostitution among the, i.
            65 _sq._;
  worship pythons, 83 _n._ 1

Exchange of dress between men and women in rites, ii. 259 _n._ 3;
  at marriage, 260 _sqq._;
  at circumcision, 263

Exogamous clans in the Pelew Islands, ii. 204

Exorcism by means of music, i. 54 _sq._

Expiation for homicide, i. 299 _n._ 2;
  Roman, for prodigies, ii. 244

Eye as a symbol of Osiris, ii. 121;
  of sacrificial ox cut out, 251 _sq._

---- of Horus, ii. 17, 121 with _n._ 3

----, the Evil, boys dressed as girls to avert the, ii. 260;
  bridegroom disfigured in order to avert, 261

Eyes of the dead, Egyptian ceremony of opening the, ii. 15

Ezekiel on the mourning for Tammuz, i. 11, 17, 20;
  on the Assyrian cavalry, 25 _n._ 3;
  on the king of Tyre, 114

False Bride, custom of the ii. 262 _n._ 2

Farnell, Dr. L. R., on Greek religious music, i. 55 _n._ 1 and  3;
  on religious prostitution in Western Asia, 57 _n._ 1, 58 _n._ 2;
  on the position of women in ancient religion, ii. 212 _n._ 1;
  on the Flamen Dialis, 227;
  on the children of living parents in ritual, 236 _sq._;
  on the festival of Laurel-bearing at Thebes, 242 _n._;
  on eunuch priests of Cybele, 258 _n._ 1

Farwardajan, a Persian festival of the dead, ii. 68

Fast from bread in mourning for Attis, i. 272

Fasts observed by the worshippers of Cybele and Attis, i. 280;
  of Isis and Cybele, 302 _n._ 4

Father named after his son, i. 51 _n._ 4;
  of a god, 51, 52;
  dead, worshipped, ii. 175, 184 _sq._;
  the head of the family under a system of mother-kin, 211

---- -deity of the Hittites, the god of the thundering sky, i. 134 _sqq._

---- God, his emblem the bull, i. 164;
  Attis as the, 281 _sqq._;
  often less important than Mother Goddess, 282

---- -kin at Rome, i. 41

----, Mother, and Son divinities represented at Boghaz-Keui, i. 140 _sqq._

Father Sky fertilizes Mother Earth, i. 282

---- and mother, names for, i. 281;
  as epithets of Roman gods and goddesses, ii. 233 _sqq._

Fatherhood of God, the physical, i. 80 _sq._

Fauna, rustic Roman goddess, her relationship to Faunus, ii. 234

Faunus, old Roman god, his relationship to Fauna or the Good Goddess, ii.
            234

Feast of All Saints on November 1st, perhaps substituted for an old pagan
            festival of the dead, ii. 82 _sq._;
  instituted by Lewis the Pious, 83

---- of All Souls, ii. 51 _sqq._;
  the Christian, originally a pagan festival of the dead, 81

---- of the Golden Flower at Sardes, i. 187

---- of Lanterns in Japan, ii. 65

Feet first, children born, custom observed at their graves, i. 93

Felkin, R. W. and C. T. Wilson, on the worship of the dead kings of
            Uganda, ii. 173 _n._ 2

Fellows, Ch., on flowers in Caria, i. 187 _n._ 6

Female kinship, rule of descent of the throne under, ii. 18.
  _See also_ Mother-kin

Fertility of ground thought to be promoted by prostitution, i. 39;
  promoted by marriage of women to serpent, 67;
  goddesses of, served by eunuch priests, 269 _sq._;
  Osiris as a god of, ii. 112 _sq._

Fertilization of the fig, artificial, ii. 98

Festival of "the awakening of Hercules" at Tyre, i. 111;
  of the Dead in Java, 220;
  of Flowers (_Anthesteria_), 234 _sq._;
  of Joy (_Hilaria_) in the rites of Attis, 273;
  of Sais, ii. 49 _sqq._;
  of Crowning at Delphi, 241

Festivals of the Egyptian farmer, ii. 32 _sqq._;
  of Osiris, the official, 49 _sqq._;
  Egyptian readjustment of, 91 _sqq._

Fetishism early in human history, ii. 43

"Field of the giants," i. 158

Fig, artificial fertilization of the, at Rome in July, ii. 98, 259

Fiji, chiefs buried secretly in, ii. 105

Fijian god of fruit-trees, i. 90

---- Lent, i. 90

Fijians, their theory of earthquakes, i. 201

Financial oppression, Roman, i. 301 _n._ 2

Finlay, George, on Roman financial oppression, i. 301 _n._ 2

Fire, purification by, i. 115 _n._ 1, 179 _sqq._;
  Persian reverence for, 174 _sq._;
  death in the, as an apotheosis, 179 _sq._;
  supposed able to impregnate women, ii. 235

Fire, perpetual, in Zoroastrian religion, i. 191;
  worshipped, 191 _sqq._;
  in the temples of dead kings, ii. 174

---- -god, the father of Romulus, Servius Tullius, and Caeculus, ii. 235

---- -walk of the king of Tyre, i. 114 _sq._;
  of priestesses at Castabala, 168

---- -worship in Cappadocia, i. 191 _sq._

Firmicus Maternus, on the mourning for Osiris, ii. 86;
  on use of a pine-tree in the rites of Osiris, 108

First-born, Semitic sacrifice of the, i. 110;
  the sacrifice of, at Jerusalem, ii. 219 _sq._

---- -fruits offered to the Baalim, i. 27;
  offered to the Mother of the Gods, 280 _n._ 1;
  offered to dead chiefs, ii. 191

Firstlings offered to the Baalim, i. 27

Fish, soul of dead in, i. 95 _sq._

Fison, Rev. Lorimer, on Fijian god of earthquakes, i. 202 _n._;
  on secret burial of chiefs in Fiji, ii. 105

Flail or scourge, an emblem of Osiris, ii. 108, 153;
  for collecting incense, 109 _n._ 1

Flamen forbidden to divorce his wife, ii. 229;
  of Vulcan, 232

---- Dialis, the widowed, ii. 227 _sqq._;
  forbidden to touch a dead body, but allowed to attend a funeral, 228;
  bound to be married, 229

---- Dialis and Flaminica, i. 45 _sq._;
  assisted by boy and girl of living parents, ii. 236

Flamingoes, soul of a dead king incarnate in, ii. 163

Flaminica and her husband the Flamen Dialis, i. 45 _sq._, ii. 236

Flax, omens from the growth of, i. 244

Flower of the banana, women impregnated by the, i. 93

"---- of Zeus," i. 186, 187

Flowers and leaves as talismans, ii. 242 _sq._

Flute, skill of Marsyas on the, i. 288

---- music, its exciting influence, i. 54

---- -players dressed as women at Rome, ii. 259 _n._ 3

Flutes played in the laments for Tammuz, i. 9;
  for Adonis, 225 _n._ 3

Food, virgins supposed to conceive through eating certain, i. 96;
  as a cause of conception in women, 96, 102, 103, 104, 105

Foreigners as kings, i. 16 _n._

Fortuna Primigenia, goddess of Praeneste, daughter of Jupiter, ii. 234

Fortune of the city on coins of Tarsus, i. 164;
  the guardian of cities, 164

Fossil bones in limestone caves, i. 152 _sq._;
  a source of myths about giants, 157 _sq._

Foucart, P., identifies Dionysus with Osiris, ii. 113 _n._ 3

Four-handed Apollo, ii. 250 _n._ 2

Fowler, W. Warde, on the celibacy of the Roman gods, ii. 230, 232 _n._ 1,
            234 _n._, 236 _n._ 1

Fra Angelico, his influence on Catholicism, i. 54 _n._ 1

France, harvest custom in, i. 237;
  timber felled in the wane of the moon in, ii. 136

_Fratres Arvales_, ii. 239

Fravashis, the souls of the dead in the Iranian religion, ii. 67 _n._ 2,
            68

French peasants regulate their sowing and planting by the moon, ii. 133
            _n._ 3, 135

Frey, the Scandinavian god of fertility, ii. 100 _sq._

Frigento, Valley of Amsanctus near, i. 204

Frodsham, Dr., on belief in conception without sexual intercourse, i. 103
            _n._ 3

Fruit-trees, worshippers of Osiris forbidden to injure, ii. 111

Fulgora, a Roman goddess, ii. 231

Funeral custom in Madagascar, ii. 247

---- pyre of Roman emperor, i. 126 _sq._

---- rites of the Egyptians a copy of those performed over Osiris, ii. 15;
  of Osiris, described in the inscription of Denderah, 86 _sqq._

Furies, their snakes, i. 88 _n._ 1

Furness, W. H., on the prostitution of unmarried girls in Yap, ii. 266

Gaboon, Mpongwe kings of the, ii. 104;
  negroes of the, regulate their planting by the moon, ii. 134

Gad, Semitic god of fortune, i. 164, 165

Gadabursi, a Somali tribe, ii. 246

Gades (Cadiz), worship of Hercules (Melcarth), at, i. 112 _sq._;
  temple of Melcarth at, ii. 258 _n._ 5

Galelareese of Halmahera, as to human sacrifices to volcanoes, i. 220

Gallas, their worship of serpents, i. 86 _n._ 1

Galli, the emasculated priests of Attis, i. 266, 283

Galton, Sir Francis, on the vale of the Adonis, i. 29

Game with fruit-stones played by kings of Uganda, ii. 224

---- law of the Njamus, ii. 39

Garden of Osiris, ii. 87 _sq._

Gardens of Adonis, i. 236 _sqq._;
  charms to promote the growth of vegetation, 236 _sq._, 239;
  in India, 239 _sqq._;
  in Bavaria, 244;
  in Sardinia, 244 _sq._;
  in Sicily, 245;
  at Easter, 253 _sq._

Gardens of God, i. 123, 159

Gardner, Professor E. A. on date of the corn-reaping in Greece, i. 232
            _n._

Garstang, Professor J., on sculptures at Ibreez, i. 122 _n._ 1, 123 _n._
            2;
  on Hittite sculptures at Boghaz-Keui, 133 _n._, 135 _n._;
  on Arenna, 136 _n._ 1;
  on Syrian god Hadad, 163 _n._ 3

_Gathas_, a part of the _Zend-Avesta_, ii. 84 _n._

Gaul, worship of Cybele in, i. 279

Gazelle Peninsula, New Britain, conduct of the natives in an earthquake,
            i. 201;
  the Melanesians of the, ii. 242 _sq._

Gazelles sacrificed at Egyptian funerals, ii. 15

Gebal, Semitic name of Byblus, i. 13 _n._ 3

Geese sacrificed at Egyptian funerals, ii. 15

Gellius, Aulus, his list of old Roman deities, ii. 232

Gellius, Cnaeus, on Mars and Nerio, ii. 232

Geminus, Greek astronomer, on the vague Egyptian year, ii. 26

Genital organs of Osiris, tradition as to the, ii. 10, 102;
  of dead man used to fertilize the fields, 102 _sq._

_Genius_, Roman, symbolized by a serpent, i. 86

Geographical and climatic conditions, their effect on national character,
            ii. 217

German peasants regulate their sowing and planting by the moon, ii. 135

Germans, the ancient, their regard for the phases of the moon, ii. 141

Germany, harvest custom in, i. 237;
  leaping over Midsummer fires in, 251;
  feast of All Souls in, ii. 70 _sqq._;
  popular superstition as to the influence of the moon in, 133, 140 _sq._,
              149

Gezer, Canaanitish city, excavations at, i. 108

Gezo, King, i. 68

Ghineh, monument of Adonis at, i. 29

Ghost of afterbirth thought to adhere to navel-string, ii. 169 _sq._

Ghosts thought to impregnate women, i. 93;
  of the dead personated by living men, ii. 52, 53, 58

Giants, myths of, based on discovery of fossil bones, i. 157 _sq._

---- and gods, their battle, i. 157

Giaour-Kalesi, Hittite sculptures at, i. 138 _n._

Gilbert Islands, sacred stones in the, i. 108 _n._ 1

Gill, Captain W., on a tribe in China governed by a woman, ii. 211 _n._ 3

Gilyaks of the Amoor eat nutlets of stone-pine, i. 278 _n._ 2

Ginzel, Professor F. K., on the rise of the Nile, ii. 31 _n._ 1

Giraffes, souls of dead kings incarnate in, ii. 162

Glaucus, son of Minos, restored to life, i. 186 _n._ 4

Goat sacrificed by being hanged, i. 292

God, children of, i. 68;
  sons of, 78 _sqq._;
  the physical fatherhood of, 80 _sq._;
  gardens of, 123, 159

----, the burning of a, i. 188 _sq._;
  the hanged, 288 _sqq._

---- of earthquakes, i. 194 _sqq._

Godavari District, Southern India, i. 95

Goddess, identified with priestess, i. 219;
  superiority of the, in the myths of Adonis, Attis, Osiris, ii. 201 _sq._

Goddesses, Cilician, i. 161 _sqq._;
  place infant sons of kings on fire to render them immortal, 180;
  of fertility served by eunuch priests, 269 _sq._;
  their superiority over gods in societies organized on mother-kin, ii.
              202 _sqq._;
  the development of, favoured by mother-kin, 259

Gods, annual death and resurrection of, i. 6;
  personated by priests, 45, 46 _sqq._;
  married to sisters, 316;
  their human wives, ii. 207;
  made by men and worshipped by women, 211

---- and giants, the battle of, i. 157

Gold Coast of West Africa, the Tshi-speaking peoples of the, i. 69

Golden Flower, the Feast of the, i. 185

---- Sea, the, i. 150

Golgi in Cyprus, i. 35

Goliath and David, i. 19 _n._ 2

Gonds, ceremony of bringing back souls of the dead among the, i. 95 _sq._

Good Friday, effigies and sepulchres of Christ on, i. 254 _sqq._

---- Goddess (_Bona Dea_), her relationship to Faunus, ii. 234

Goowoong Awoo, volcano, children sacrificed to, i. 219

Gordias and Midas, names of Phrygian kings, i. 286

Gordon, E. M., on infant burial, i. 94 _sq._;
  on the festival of the dead in Bilaspore, ii. 60

Gouri, an Indian goddess of fertility, i. 241 _sq._

Gournia in Crete, prehistoric shrine at, i. 88 _n._ 1

Grandmother, title of an African priest, ii. 255

---- Earth thought to cause earthquakes, i. 198

Grandparents, dead, worshipped, ii. 175

Grapes as divine emblem, i. 165

Grave of Osiris, ii. 10 _sq._;
  human victims sacrificed at the, 97

---- shrines of Shilluk kings, ii. 161 _sq._;
  of dead kings, 194 _sq._

Graves, milk offered at, i. 87;
  childless women resort to, in order to ensure offspring, 96;
  illuminated on All Souls' Day, ii. 72 _sq._, 74;
  the only places of sacrifice in the country of the Wahehe, 190

---- of kings, chiefs, and magicians kept secret, ii. 103 _sqq._;
  human sacrifices at, 168

"Great burnings" for kings of Judah, i. 177 _sq._

---- Marriage, annual festival of the dead among the Oraons of Bengal, ii.
            59

---- men, history not to be explained without the influence of, i. 311 _n._
            2;
  great religious systems founded by, ii. 159 _sq._;
  their influence on the popular imagination, 199

---- Mother, popularity of her worship in the Roman empire, i. 298 _sq._

---- religious systems founded by individual great men, ii. 159 _sq._;
  religious ideals a product of the male imagination, 211

Greece, date of the corn-reaping in, i. 232 _n._;
  modern, marriage customs in, ii. 245 _sq._

Greek belief in serpents as reincarnations of the dead, i. 86 _sq._

---- Church, ceremonies on Good Friday in the, i. 254

---- feast of All Souls in May, ii. 78 _n._ 1

---- gods, discrimination of their characters, i. 119

---- mythology, Adonis in, i. 10 _sqq._

---- notion as to birth from trees and rocks, i. 107 _n._ 1;
  of the noxious influence of moonshine on children, ii. 148

---- purification for homicide, i. 299 _n._ 2

---- use of music in religion, i. 54 _sq._

---- writers on the worship of Adonis, i. 223 _sq._

Gregory IV. and the feast of All Saints, ii. 83

Grenfell, B. P., and A. S. Hunt on corn-stuffed effigies of Osiris, ii. 90
            _sq._

Grimm, Jacob, on hide-measured lands, ii. 250

Grotto of the Sibyl, at Marsala, i. 247

Growth and decay of all things associated with the waxing and waning of
            the moon, ii. 132 _sqq._, 140 _sqq._

Guarayos Indians of Bolivia, their presentation of children to the moon,
            ii. 145

Guardian spirits in the form of animals, i. 83;
  in serpents, 83, 86

Guaycurus of Brazil, men dressed as women among the, ii. 254 _n._ 2

Guevo Upas, the Valley of Poison, in Java, i. 203 _sq._

Gujrat District, Punjaub, i. 94

Gurdon, Major P. R. T., on the Khasis of Assam, ii. 202, 203 _n._ 1, 210
            _n._ 1

Gwanya, a worshipful dead chief, ii. 177

Gyges, king of Lydia, dedicates double-headed axe to Zeus, i. 182

Gynaecocracy a dream, ii. 211

Hadad, chief male deity of the Syrians, i. 15, 16 _n._ 1;
  Syrian god of thunder and fertility, 163

Hadadrimmon, i. 164 _n._ 1;
  the mourning of or for, 15 _n._ 4

Haddon, A. C., on worship of animal-shaped heroes, i. 139 _n._ 1

Hadrian, human sacrifice suppressed in reign of, i. 146

Hair, sacrifice of women's, i. 38;
  offered to goddess of volcano, 218;
  of head shaved in mourning for dead gods, 225;
  to be cut when the moon is waxing, ii. 133 _sq._

Halasarna in Cos, rites of Apollo and

Hercules at, ii. 259

Halfdan, the Black, King of Norway, dismembered after death, ii. 100

Halicarnassus, worship of Pergaean Artemis at, i. 35 _n._ 2

Hall of the Two Truths, the judgment hall in the other world, ii. 13

Halmahera, the Galelareese of, i. 220

Hamaspathmaedaya, old Iranian festival of the dead, ii. 67

Hamilcar, his self-sacrifice at the battle of Himera, i. 115 _sq._;
  worshipped at Carthage, 116;
  burns himself, 176;
  worshipped after death, 180

Hamilton, Alexander, on dance of hermaphrodites in Pegu, i. 271 _n._

Hamilton, Professor G. L., i. 57 _n._ 1

Hammurabi, the code of, i. 71 _n._ 3, 72 _n._ 1

Handel, the harmonies of, i. 54

Hanged god, the, i. 288 _sqq._

Hanging as a mode of sacrifice, i. 289 _sqq._

Hannah, the prayer of, i. 79

Hannibal, his prayers to Melcarth, i. 113;
  his retirement from Italy, 265

Hanway, J., on worship of perpetual fires at Baku, i. 192

Harmonia, the necklace of, i. 32 _n._ 2;
  turned into a snake, 86 _sq._

Harold the Fair-haired, ii. 100 _n._ 2

Harp, the music of the, in religion, i. 52 _sqq._

Harpalyce, her incest with her father, i. 44 _n._ 1

Harpocrates, the younger Horus, ii. 8, 9 _n._

Harran, mourning of women for Tammuz in, i. 230

Harrison, Miss J. E., on the hyacinth (_Delphinium Ajacis_), i. 314 _n._ 1

Hartland, E. S., on the reincarnation of the dead, i. 91 _n._ 3;
  on primitive paternity, 106 _n._ 1

Harvest, rites of, ii. 45 _sqq._;
  annual festival of the dead after, 61;
  new corn offered to dead kings or chiefs at, 162, 166, 188;
  prayers to the spirits of ancestors at, 175 _sq._;
  sacrifices to dead chiefs at, 191

---- in Egypt, the date of, ii. 32

---- custom of throwing water on the last corn cut as a rain-charm, i. 237
            _sq._;
  of the Arabs of Moab, ii. 48, 96

Hathor, Egyptian goddess, ii. 9 _n._

Hattusil, king of the Hittites, i. 135

_Havamal_, how Odin learned the magic runes in the, i. 290

Hawaii, the volcano of Kirauea in, i. 216 _sqq._

Hawes, Mrs., on date of the corn-reaping in Crete, i. 232 _n._

Hawk, Isis in the form of a, ii. 8;
  the sacred bird of the earliest Egyptian dynasties, 21 _sq._;
  epithet regularly applied to the king of Egypt, 22

---- -town (Hieraconpolis) in Egypt, ii. 21 _sq._

Hawks carved on the bier of Osiris, ii. 20

Hazael, king of Damascus, i. 15

"Head-Feast" among the Dyaks of Borneo, i. 295 _sq._

---- -hunting in Borneo, i. 294 _sqq._

Heads of dead chiefs cut off and buried secretly, ii. 104

----, human, thought to promote the fertility of the ground and of women, i.
            294 _sqq._;
  used as guardians by Taurians and tribes of Borneo, 294 _sqq._

Heathen festivals displaced by Christian, i. 308

---- origin of Midsummer festival (festival of St. John), i. 249 _sq._

Heavenly Virgin or Goddess, mother of the Sun, i. 303

Hebrew kings, traces of their divinity, i. 20 _sqq._

---- names ending in _-el_ or _-iah_, i. 79 _n._ 3

---- prophecy, the distinctive character of, i. 75

Hebrew prophets, their resemblance to those of Africa, i. 74 _sq._

Hebrides, peats cut in the wane of the moon in the, ii. 137 _sq._

Hecaerge, an epithet of Artemis, i. 292

Hecate at Ephesus, i. 291;
  sometimes identified with Artemis, 292 _n._

---- and Zeus worshipped at Stratonicea, ii. 227

Hecatombeus, a Greek month, i. 314

Hehn, V., on derivation of name Corycian, i. 187 _n._ 6

Helen of the Tree, worshipped in Rhodes, i. 292

Heliacal rising of Sirius, ii. 152

Helice, in Achaia, destroyed by earthquake, i. 203;
  Poseidon worshipped at, 203 _n._ 2

Heliodorus, on the priesthood of Apollo and Artemis at Ephesus, ii. 243
            _sq._

Heliogabalus, sun-god at Emesa, i. 35;
  his sacrifice of children of living parents, ii. 248

Heliopolis (Baalbec), in Syria, i. 163 _n._ 2;
  sacred prostitution at, 37, 58

Heliopolis (the Egyptian), trial of the dead Osiris before the gods at,
            ii. 17

Hepding, H., on Attis, i. 263 _n._ 1;
  on Catullus's poem _Attis_, 270 _n._ 2;
  on the bath of Cybele's image, 280

Hephaestus and hot springs, i. 209

Heqet, Egyptian frog-goddess, ii. 9 _n._

Hera's marriage with Zeus, i. 280

Heraclids, Lydian dynasty of the, i. 182, 184;
  perhaps Hittite, 185

Hercules identified with Melcarth, i. 16, 111;
  slain by Typhon and revived by Iolaus, 111;
  burnt on Mount Oeta, 111, 116, 211;
  worshipped at Gades, 112 _sq._;
  women excluded from sacrifices to, 113 _n._ 1;
  identified with Sandan, 125, 143, 161;
  burns himself, 176;
  worshipped after death, 180;
  the itch of, 209;
  his dispute with Aesculapius, 209 _sq._;
  the patron of hot springs, 209 _sqq._;
  altar of, at Thermopylae, 210;
  the effeminate, ii. 257, 258, 259;
  priest of, dressed as a woman, 258;
  vernal mysteries of, at Rome, 258;
  sacrifices to, at Rome, 258 _n._ 5

---- and the lion, i. 184

---- and Omphale, i. 182, ii. 258

---- and Sardanapalus, i. 172 _sqq._

----, the Lydian, identical with the Cilician Hercules, i. 182, 184, 185

---- with the lion's scalp, Greek type of, i. 117 _sq._

Hereditary deities, i. 51

Herefordshire, soul-cakes in, ii. 79

Herero, a Bantu tribe of German South-West Africa, the worship of the dead
            among the, ii. 185 _sqq._

Hermaphrodite son of Sky and Earth, i. 282 _n._

Hermaphrodites, dance of, i. 271 _n._

Hermes and Aegipan, i. 157

Hermesianax, on the death of Attis, i. 264 _n._ 4

Hermus, river, i. 185, 186

Herod resorts to the springs of Callirrhoe, i. 214

Herodes Atticus, his benefaction at Thermopylae, i. 210

Herodotus on sanctuary of Aphrodite at Paphos, i. 34;
  on religious prostitution, 58;
  on wife of Bel, 71;
  on Cyrus and Croesus, 174;
  on the sacrifices of Croesus to Apollo, 180 _n._ 1;
  on so-called monument of Sesostris, 185;
  on the festival of Osiris at Sais, ii. 50;
  on the mourning for Osiris, 86;
  identifies Osiris with Dionysus, 113 _n._ 2;
  on the similarity between the rites of Osiris and Dionysus, 127;
  on human sacrifices offered by the wife of Xerxes, 221

Heroes worshipped in form of animals, i. 139 _n._ 1

Hertz, W., on religious prostitution, i. 57 _n._ 1, 59 _n._ 4

Hesse, custom at ploughing in, i. 239

_Hest_, the Egyptian name for Isis, ii. 50 _n._ 4, 115 _n._ 1

Hettingen in Baden, custom at sowing at, i. 239

Hezekiah, King, his reformation, i. 25, 107;
  date of his reign, 25 _n._ 4

Hibeh papyri, ii. 35 _n._ 1, 51 _n._ 1

Hide-measured lands, legends as to, ii. 249 _sq._

Hieraconpolis in Egypt, ii. 22 _n._ 1;
  representations of the Sed festival at, 151

Hierapolis, the Syrian, festival of the Pyre or Torch at, i. 146;
  sacred doves at, 147;
  great sanctuary of Astarte at, 269;
  eunuch priests of Astarte at, 269 _sq._

----, in the valley of the Maeander, cave of Pluto at, i. 206;
  hot springs at, 206 _sqq._

---- and _Hieropolis_, distinction between, i. 168 _n._ 2

---- -Bambyce, Atargatis the goddess of, i. 137, 162;
  mysterious golden image at, 162 _n._ 2;
  rules as to the pollution of death at, ii. 227

Hieroglyphics, Hittite, i. 124, 125 _n._

High-priest of Syrian goddess, i. 143 _n._ 1

---- Priestess, head of the State, ii. 203

Highlanders, Scottish, on the influence of the moon, ii. 132, 134, 140

_Hilaria_, Festival of Joy in the rites of Attis, i. 273

Hill, G. F., on image of Artemis at Perga, i. 35 _n._ 2;
  on legend of coins of Tarsus, 126 _n._ 2;
  on goddess 'Atheh, 162;
  on coins of Mallus, 165 _n._ 6

Hill Tout, C., on respect shown by the Indians of British Columbia for the
            animals and plants which they eat, ii. 44

Himalayan districts of North-Western India, gardens of Adonis in the, i.
            242

Himera, the battle of, i. 115;
  hot springs of, 213 _n._ 1

Hindoo burial of infants, i. 94;
  marriage custom, old, ii. 246;
  worship of perpetual fire, i. 192

Hindoos of Northern India, their mode of drinking moonshine, ii. 144

Hinnom, the Valley of, i. 178;
  sacrifice of first-born children in, ii. 219

Hippodamia, her incest with her father, i. 44 _n._ 1

Hirpini, valley of Amsanctus in the land of the, i. 204

Hissar District, Punjaub, i. 94

History not to be explained without the influence of great men, i. 311
            _n._ 2

Hittite, correct form of the national name Chatti or Hatti, i. 133 _n._

---- costume, i. 129 _sq._, 131

---- deity named Tark or Tarku, i. 147

---- god of thunder, i. 134, 163

---- gods at Tarsus and Sardes, 185

---- hieroglyphics, i. 124, 125 _n._

---- inscription on Mount Argaeus, i. 190 _n._ 1

---- priest or king, his costume, i. 131 _sq._, 133 _n._

---- sculptures at Carchemish, i. 38 _n._, 123;
  at Ibreez, 121 _sqq._;
  at Bor (Tyana), 122 _n._ 1;
  at Euyuk, 123;
  at Boghaz-Keui, 128 _sqq._;
  at Babylon, 134;
  at Zenjirli, 134;
  at Giaour-Kalesi, 138 _n._;
  at Kara-Bel, 138 _n._;
  at Marash, 173;
  in Lydia, 185

---- seals of treaty, i. 136, 142 _n._ 1, 145 _n._ 2

---- Sun-goddess, i. 133 _n._

---- treaty with Egypt, i. 135 _sq._

Hittites worship the bull, i. 123, 132;
  their empire, language, etc., 124 _sq._;
  traces of mother-kin among the, 141 _sq._

Hkamies of North Aracan, their annual festival of the dead, ii. 61

Ho tribe of Togoland, their kings buried secretly, ii. 104

Hofmayr, W., on the worship of Nyakang among the Shilluks, ii. 164, 166

Hogarth, D. G., on relics of paganism at Paphos, i. 36;
  on the Corycian cave, 155 _n._;
  on Roman remains at Tarsus, 172 _n._ 1

Hogs sacrificed to goddess of volcano, i. 218 _sq._

Hollis, A. C., on serpent-worship of the Akikuyu, i. 67 _sq._;
  on serpent-worship, 84 _sq._

"Holy men" in Syria, i. 77 _sq._

Hommel, Professor F., on the Hittite deity Tarku, i. 147 _n._ 3

Honey and milk offered to snakes, i. 85

Honey-cakes offered to serpent, i. 87

Hope of immortality, the Egyptian, centred in Osiris, ii. 15 _sq._, 90
            _sq._, 114, 159

Hopladamus, a giant, i. 157 _n._ 2

Hora and Quirinus, ii. 233

Horkos, the Greek god of oaths, ii. 231 _n._ 5

Horned cap worn by priest or god, i. 123;
  of Hittite god, 134

---- god, Hittite and Greek, i. 123

---- lion, i. 127

Horns, as a religious emblem, i. 34;
  worn by gods, 163 _sq._

---- of a cow worn by Isis, ii. 50

Horses sacrificed for the use of the dead, i. 293 _sq._;
  Lycurgus, king of the Edonians, torn in pieces by, ii. 98

Horus, the four sons of, in the likeness of hawks, ii. 22;
  decapitates his mother Isis, 88;
  the eye of, 121 with _n._ 3

---- of Edfu identified with the sun, ii. 123

---- the elder, ii. 6

---- the younger, son of Isis and the dead Osiris, ii. 8, 15;
  accused by Set of being a bastard, 17;
  his combat with Set, 17;
  his eye destroyed by Set and restored by Thoth, 17;
  reigns over the Delta, 17

Hose, Ch., and McDougall, W., on head-hunting in Borneo, i. 295 _n._ 1

Hosea on religious prostitution, i. 58;
  on the Baalim, 75 _n._;
  on the prophet as a madman, 77

Hot springs, worship of, i. 206 _sqq._;
  Hercules the patron of, 209 _sqq._;
  resorted to by childless women in Syria, 213 _sqq._

Huligamma, Indian goddess, eunuchs dedicated to her, i. 271 _n._

Human representatives of Attis, i. 285 _sqq._

---- sacrifice, substitutes for, i. 146 _sq._, 285, 289, ii. 99, 221

---- sacrifices in worship of the moon, i. 73;
  to the Tauric Artemis, 115;
  to Diomede at Salamis, 145;
  offered at earthquakes, 201;
  offered at irrigation channels, ii. 38;
  of the kings of Ashantee and Dahomey, 97 _n._ 7;
  offered to Dionysus, 98 _sq._;
  offered by the Mexicans for the maize, 107;
  at the graves of the kings of Uganda, 168;
  to dead kings, 173;
  to dead chiefs, 191;
  to prolong the life of kings, 220 _sq._, 223 _sqq._

Human victims thrown into volcanoes, i. 219 _sq._;
  uses made of their skins, 293;
  as representatives of the corn-spirit, ii. 97, 106 _sq._;
  killed with hoes, spades, and rakes, 99 _n._ 2

Hunger the root of the worship of Adonis, i. 231

Hurons, their burial of infants, i. 91

Huzuls of the Carpathians, their theory of the waning moon, ii. 130;
  their cure for water-brash, 149 _sq._

Hyacinth, son of Amyclas, killed by Apollo, i. 313;
  his flower, 313 _sq._;
  his tomb and festival, 314 _sq._;
  an aboriginal deity, 315 _sq._;
  his sister Polyboea, 316;
  perhaps a deified king of Amyclae, i. 316 _sq._

Hyacinthia, the festival of Hyacinth, i. 314 _sq._

Hyacinthius, a Greek month, i. 315 _n._

Hybristica, an Argive festival, ii. 259 _n._ 3

Hygieia, the goddess, i. 88 _n._ 1

Hymns to Tammuz, i. 9;
  to the sun-god, ii. 123 _sq._

Hyria in Cilicia, i. 41

Ibani of the Niger delta, their sacrifices to prolong the lives of kings
            and others, ii. 222

Ibans or Sea Dyaks, their worship of serpents, i. 83.
  _See_ Sea Dyaks

Ibn Batuta, Arab traveller, on funeral of emperor of China, i. 293 _sq._

Ibreez in Southern Cappadocia, i. 119 _sqq._;
  village of, 120 _sq._;
  Hittite sculptures at, 121 _sqq._

----, the god of, i. 119 _sqq._;
  his horned cap, 164

Idalium in Cyprus, i. 50;
  bilingual inscription of, 49 _n._ 7;
  Melcarth worshipped at, 117

Ideals of humanity, two different, the heroic and the saintly, i. 300;
  great religious, a product of the male imagination, ii. 211

Ideler, L., on the date of the introduction of the fixed Alexandrian year,
            ii. 28 _n._ 1;
  on the Sothic period, 37 _n._

Ignorance of paternity, primitive, i. 106 _sq._

Il Mayek clan of the Njamus, their supposed power over irrigation water
            and the crops, ii. 39

Ilium, animals sacrificed by hanging at, i. 292

Illumination, nocturnal, at festival of Osiris, ii. 50 _sq._;
  of graves on All Souls' Day, 72 _sq._, 74

Ilpirra of Central Australia, their belief in the reincarnation of the
            dead, i. 99

Images of Osiris made of vegetable mould, ii. 85, 87, 90 _sq._, 91

Immortality, Egyptian hope of, centred in Osiris, ii. 15 sq., 90 _sq._,
            114, 159

Impregnation of women by serpents, i. 80 _sqq._;
  by the dead, 91;
  by ghosts, 93;
  by the flower of the banana, 93;
  supposed, through eating food, 96, 102, 103, 104, 105;
  by fire, ii. 235.
  _See also_ Conception

---- of Isis by the dead Osiris, ii. 8, 20

---- without sexual intercourse, belief in, i. 96 _sqq._

Incense burnt at the rites of Adonis, i. 228;
  burnt in honour of the Queen of Heaven, 228;
  collected by a flail, ii. 109 _n._ 1

Incest with a daughter in royal families, reported cases of, i. 43 _sq._

Inconsistency of common thought, i. 4

Increase of the moon the time for increasing money, ii. 148 _sq._

India, sacred women (dancing-girls) in, i. 61 _sqq._;
  impregnation of women by stone serpents in, 81 _sq._;
  burial of infants in, 93 _sq._;
  gardens of Adonis in, 239 _sqq._;
  eunuchs dedicated to a goddess in, 271 _n._;
  drinking moonlight as a medicine in, ii. 142

Indian ceremonies analogous to the rites of Adonis, i. 227

---- prophet, his objections to agriculture, i. 88 _sq._

Indians of tropical America represent the rain-god weeping, ii. 33 _n._ 3;
  of California, their annual festivals of the dead, 52 _sq._;
  of Brazil attend to the moon more than to the sun, 138 _n._;
  of San Juan Capistrano, their ceremony at the new moon, 142;
  of the Ucayali River in Peru, their greeting to the new moon, 142;
  of North America, effeminate sorcerers among the, 254, 255 _sq._

Infant sons of kings placed by goddesses on fire, i. 180

Infants buried so as to ensure their rebirth, i. 91, 93 _sqq._;
  burial of, at Gezer, 108 _sq._

Influence of great men on the popular imagination, ii. 199;
  of mother-kin on religion, 202 _sqq._

Ingarda tribe of West Australia, their belief as to the birth of children,
            i. 104

Ingleborough in Yorkshire, i. 152

Inheritance of property under mother-kin, rules of, ii. 203 _n._ 1

Injibandi tribe of West Australia, their belief as to the birth of
            children, i. 105

Insect, soul of dead in, i. 95 _sq._, ii. 162

Insensibility to pain as a sign of inspiration, i. 169 _sq._

Inspiration, insensibility to pain as sign of, i. 169 _sq._;
  savage theory of, i. 299

----, prophetic, under the influence of music, i. 52 _sq._, 54 _sq._, 74;
  through the spirits of dead kings and chiefs, ii. 171, 172, 192 _sq._

Inspired men and women in the Pelew Islands, ii. 207 _sq._

Intercalation introduced to correct the vague Egyptian year, ii. 26, 27,
            28;
  in the ancient Mexican calendar, ii. 28 _n._ 3

_Inuus_, epithet applied to Faunus, ii. 234 _n._ 3

Invisible, charm to make an army, ii. 251

Iolaus, friend of Hercules, i. 111

Iranian year, the old, ii. 67

Iranians, the old, their annual festival of the dead (Fravashis), ii. 67
            _sq._

Ireland, sacred oaks in, i. 37 _n._ 2

Irle, J., on the religion of the Herero, ii. 186 _sq._

Iron not allowed to touch Atys, i. 286 _n._ 5

Irrigation in ancient Egypt, ii. 31 _sq._;
  rites of, in Egypt, 33 _sqq._;
  sacrifices offered in connexion with, 38 _sq._

Isa or Parvati, an Indian goddess, i. 241

Isaac, Abraham's attempted sacrifice of, ii. 219 _n._ 1

Isaiah, on the king's pyre in Tophet, i. 177, 178;
  possible allusion to gardens of Adonis in, 236 _n._ 1;
  on dew, 247 _n._ 1

Ishtar, great Babylonian goddess, i. 8, 20 _n._ 2;
  in relation to Tammuz, 8 _sq._

---- (Astarte) and Mylitta, i. 36, 37 _n._ 1

Isis, sister and wife of Osiris, ii. 6 _sq._;
  date of the festival of, 26 _n._ 2, 33;
  as a cow or a woman with the head of a cow, i. 50, ii. 50, 85, 88 _n._
              1, 91;
  invoked by Egyptian reapers, i. 232, ii. 45, 117;
  in the form of a hawk, 8, 20;
  in the papyrus swamps, 8;
  in the form of a swallow, 9;
  at Byblus, 9 _sq._;
  at the well, 9, 111 _n._ 6;
  her search for the body of Osiris, 10, 50, 85;
  recovers and buries the body of Osiris, 10 _sq._;
  mourns Osiris, 12;
  restores Osiris to life, 13;
  her tears supposed to swell the Nile, 33;
  her priest wears a jackal's mask, 85 _n._ 3;
  decapitated by her son Horus, 88 _n._ 1;
  her temple at Philae, 89, 111;
  her many names, 115;
  sister and wife of Osiris, 116;
  a corn-goddess, 116 _sq._;
  her discovery of wheat and barley, 116;
  identified with Ceres, 117;
  identified with Demeter, 117;
  as the ideal wife and mother, 117 _sq._;
  refinement and spiritualization of, 117 _sq._;
  popularity of her worship in the Roman empire, 118;
  her resemblance to the Virgin Mary, 118 _sq._;
  Sirius her star, 34 _sq._, 152

Isis and the king's son at Byblus, i. 180;
  and the scorpions, ii. 8

Iswara or Mahadeva, an Indian god, i. 241, 242

Italian myths of kings or heroes begotten by the fire-god, ii. 235

Italy, hot springs in, i. 213;
  divination at Midsummer in, 254

Itch of Hercules, i. 209

Itongo, an ancestral spirit (Zulu term, singular of Amatongo), ii. 184
            _n._ 2, 185

Ivy, sacred to Attis, i. 278;
  sacred to Osiris, ii. 112

Jablonski, P. E., on Osiris as a sun-god, ii. 120

Jackal-god Up-uat, ii. 154

Jackal's mask worn by priest of Isis, 11, 85 _n._ 3

Jamblichus on insensibility to pain as sign of inspiration, i. 169;
  on the purifying virtue of fire, 181

January, the sixth of, reckoned in the East the Nativity of Christ, i. 304

Janus in Roman mythology, ii. 235 _n._ 6

---- -like deity on coins, i. 165

Japan, annual festival of the dead in, ii. 65

Jars, children buried in, i. 109 _n._ 1

Jason and Medea, i. 181 _n._ 1

Jastrow, Professor M., on the festival of Tammuz, i. 10 _n._ 1;
  on the character of Tammuz, 230 _n._

Java, conduct of natives in an earthquake, i. 202 _n._ 1;
  the Valley of Poison in, 203 _sq._;
  worship of volcanoes in, 220 _sq._

Jawbone, the ghost of the dead thought to adhere to the, ii. 167 _sq._

---- and navel-string of Kibuka, the war-god of the Baganda, ii. 197

Jawbones, lower, of dead kings of Uganda preserved and worshipped, ii. 167
            _sq._, 169 _sq._, 171 _sq._;
  the ghosts of the kings supposed to attach to their jawbones, 169

Jayi or Jawara, festival in Upper India, i. 242

_Jebel Hissar_, Olba, i. 151

Jehovah in relation to thunder, i. 22 _n._ 3;
  in relation to rain, 23 _n._ 1

Jensen, P., on rock-hewn sculptures at Boghaz-Keui, i. 137 _n._ 4;
  on Hittite inscription, 145 _n._ 2;
  on the Syrian god Hadad, 163 _n._ 3

Jeremiah, on the prophet as a madman, i. 77;
  on birth from stocks and stones, 107

Jericho, death of Herod at, i. 214

Jerome, on the date of the month Tammuz, i. 10 _n._ 1;
  on the worship of Adonis at Bethlehem, 257

Jerusalem, mourning for Tammuz at, i. 11, 17, 20;
  the Canaanite kings of, 17;
  the returned captives at, 23;
  the Destroying Angel over, 24;
  besieged by Sennacherib, 25;
  the religious orchestra at, 52;
  "great burnings" for the kings at, 177 _sq._;
  the king's pyre at, 177 _sq._;
  Church of the Holy Sepulchre at, Good Friday ceremonies in the, 255
              _n._;
  the sacrifice of first-born children at, ii. 219

Jewish priests, their rule as to the pollution of death, ii. 230

Jews of Egypt, costume of bride and bridegroom among the, ii. 260

Joannes Lydus, on Phrygian rites at Rome, i. 266 _n._ 2

John Barleycorn, i. 230 _sq._

Johns, Dr. C. H. W., on Babylonian votaries, i. 71 _n._ 3 and  5

Johnston, Sir H. H., on eunuch priests on the Congo, i. 271 _n._

Josephus, on worship of kings of Damascus, i. 15;
  on the Tyropoeon, 178

Josiah, reforms of king, i. 17 _n._ 5, 18 _n._ 3, 25, 107

Jualamukhi in the Himalayas, perpetual fires, i. 192

Judah, laments for dead kings of, i. 20

Judean maid impregnated by serpent, i. 81

Julian, the emperor, his entrance into Antioch, i. 227, 258;
  on the Mother of the Gods, 299 _n._ 3;
  restores the standard cubit to the Serapeum, ii. 217 _n._ 1

Julian calendar introduced by Caesar, ii. 37, 93 _n._ 1

---- year, ii. 28

Juno, the Flaminica Dialis sacred to, ii. 230 _n._ 2;
  the wife of Jupiter, 231

Junod, Henri A., on the worship of the dead among the Thonga, ii. 180
            _sq._

Juok, the supreme god and creator of the Shilluks, ii. 165

Jupiter, the husband of Juno, ii. 231;
  the father of Fortuna Primigenia, 234

Jupiter and Juturna, ii. 235 _n._ 6

---- Dolichenus, i. 136

Justice and Injustice in Aristophanes, i. 209

Justin Martyr on the resemblances of paganism to Christianity, i. 302 _n._
            4

Juturna in Roman mythology, ii. 235 _n._ 6

Kabyles, marriage custom of the, to ensure the birth of a boy, ii. 262

Kadesh, a Semitic goddess, i. 137 _n._ 2

Kai of German New Guinea, their belief in conception without sexual
            intercourse, i. 96 _sq._

Kaikolans, a Tamil caste, i. 62

Kaitish of Central Australia, their belief in the reincarnation of the
            dead, i. 99

Kalat el Hosn, in Syria, i. 78

_Kalids_, _kaliths_, deities in the Pelew Islands, ii. 204 _n._ 4, 207

Kalunga, the supreme god of the Ovambo, ii. 188

Kangra District, Punjaub, i. 94

Kantavu, a Fijian island, i. 201

Kanytelideis, in Cilicia, i. 158

Kara-Bel, in Lydia, Hittite sculpture at, i. 138 _n._, 185

Kariera tribe of West Australia, their beliefs as to the birth of
            children, i. 105

Karma-tree, ceremony of the Mundas over a, i. 240

Karo-Bataks, of Sumatra, their custom as to the first sheaf of rice at
            harvest, ii. 239

Karok Indians of California, their lamentations at hewing sacred wood, ii.
            47 _sq._

Karunga, the supreme god of the Herero, ii. 186, 187 _n._ 1

_Katikiro_, Baganda term for prime minister, ii. 168

Kayans, their reasons for taking human heads, i. 294 _sq._

Keadrol, a Toda clan, ii. 228

Keb (Geb or Seb), Egyptian earth-god, father of Osiris, i. 6, 283 _n._ 3

_Kedeshim_, sacred men, i. 38 _n._, 59, 72, 76, 107;
  at Jerusalem, 17 _sq._;
  in relation to prophets, 76

_Kedeshoth_, sacred women, i. 59, 72, 107

Kemosh, god of Moab, i. 15

Kennett, Professor R. H., on David and Goliath, i. 19 _n._ 2;
  on Elisha in the wilderness, 53 _n._ 1;
  on _kedeshim_, 73 _n._ 1;
  on the sacrifice of first-born children at Jerusalem, ii. 219

Kent's Hole, near Torquay, fossil bones in, i. 153

Keysser, Ch., on belief in conception without sexual intercourse, i. 96
            _sq._

Khalij, old canal at Cairo, ii. 38

Khangars of the Central Provinces, India, bridegroom and his father
            dressed as women at a marriage among the, ii. 261

Khasi tribes governed by kings, not queens, ii. 210

Khasis of Assam, their system of mother-kin, i. 46, ii. 202 _sq._;
  goddesses predominate over gods in their religion, 203 _sq._;
  rules as to the succession to the kingship among the, 210 _n._ 1

Khent, early king of Egypt, ii. 154;
  his reign, 19 _sq._;
  his tomb at Abydos, 19 _sqq._;
  his tomb identified with that of Osiris, 20, 197

Khenti-Amenti, title of Osiris, ii. 87, 198 _n._ 2

Khoiak, festival of Osiris in the month of, ii. 86 _sqq._, 108 _sq._

Khyrim State, in Assam, i. 46;
  governed by a High Priestess, ii. 203

Kibuka, the war-god of the Baganda, a dead man, ii. 197;
  his personal relics preserved at Cambridge, 197

Kidd, Dudley, on the worship of ancestral spirits among the Bantus of
            South Africa, ii. 177 _sqq._

King, J. E., on infant burial, i. 91 _n._ 3

King, a masker at Carnival called the, ii. 99

---- of Tyre, his walk on stones of fire, i. 114 _sq._;
  of Uganda, his navel-string preserved and inspected every new moon, ii.
              147 _sq._

Kings as priests, i. 42;
  as lovers of a goddess, 49 _sq._;
  held responsible for the weather and the crops, 183;
  marry their sisters, 316;
  slaughter human victims with their own hands, ii. 97 _n._ 7;
  torn in pieces, traditions of, 97 _sq._;
  human sacrifices to prolong the life of, 220 _sq._, 223 _sqq._

---- and magicians dismembered and their bodies buried in different parts of
            the country to fertilize it, ii. 101 _sq._

----, dead, reincarnate in lions, i. 83 _n._ 1;
  worshipped in Africa, 160 _sqq._;
  sacrifices offered to, 162, 166 _sq._;
  incarnate in animals, 162, 163 _sq._, 173;
  consulted as oracles, 167, 171, 172, 195;
  human sacrifices to, 173;
  worshipped by the Barotse, 194 _sq._

----, divinity of Semitic, i. 15 _sqq._;
  divinity of Lydian, 182 _sqq._

---- of Egypt worshipped as gods, i. 52;
  buried at Abydos, ii. 19;
  perhaps formerly slain in the character of Osiris, 97 _sq._, 102;
  as Osiris, 151 _sqq._;
  renew their life by identifying themselves with the dead and risen
              Osiris, 153 _sq._;
  born again at the Sed festival, 153, 156 _sq._;
  perhaps formerly put to death to prevent their bodily and mental decay,
              154 _sq._, 156

Kings, Hebrew, traces of divinity ascribed to, i. 20 _sqq._

----, Shilluk, put to death before their strength fails, ii. 163

---- of Sweden answerable for the fertility of the ground, ii. 220;
  their sons sacrificed, 51

Kingship at Rome a plebeian institution, i. 45;
  under mother-kin, rules as to succession to the, ii. 210 _n._ 1;
  in Africa under mother-kin inherited by men, not women, 211

Kingsley, Miss Mary H., on secret burial of chief's head, ii. 104

_Kinnor_, a lyre, i. 52

Kirauea, volcano in Hawaii, i. 216 _sq._;
  divinities of, 217;
  offerings to, 217 _sqq._

Kiriwina, one of the Trobriand Islands, annual festival of the dead in, i.
            56;
  snakes as reincarnations of the dead in, 84;
  presentation of children to the full moon in, ii. 144

Kiwai, an island off New Guinea, magic for the growth of sago in, ii. 101

Kiziba, a district of Central Africa, dead kings worshipped in, ii. 173
            _sq._;
  totemism in, 173

Klamath Indians of Oregon, their theory of the waning moon, ii. 130

Kocchs of North-Eastern India, succession to husband's property among the,
            ii. 215 _n._ 2

Kois of Southern India, infant burial among the, i. 95

Komatis of Mysore, their worship of serpents, i. 81 _sq._

Koniags of Alaska, their magical uses of the bodies of the dead, ii. 106

Konkaus of California, their dance of the dead, ii. 53

_Kosio_, a dedicated person, i. 65, 66, 68

Kosti, in Thrace, carnival custom at, ii. 99 _sq._

Kotas, a tribe of Southern India, their priests not allowed to be
            widowers, ii. 230

Kretschmer, Professor P., on native population of Cyprus, i. 145 _n._ 3;
  on Cybele and Attis, 287 _n._ 2

Krishna, Hindoo god, ii. 254

Kuar, an Indian month, ii. 144

Kubary, J., on the system of mother-kin among the Pelew Islanders, ii. 204
            _sqq._

Kuinda, Cilician fortress, i. 144 _n._ 1

Kuki-Lushai, men dressed as women to deceive dangerous ghosts or spirits
            among the, ii. 263

Kuklia, Old Paphos, i. 33, 36

Kundi in Cilicia, i. 144

Kupalo, figure of, passed across fire at Midsummer, i. 250 _sq._;
  a deity of vegetation, 253

Kupole's festival at Midsummer in Prussia, i. 253

Labraunda in Caria, i. 182 _n._ 4

_Labrys_, Lydian word for axe, i. 182

Laconia, subject to earthquakes, i. 203 _n._ 2

Lactantius, on the rites of Osiris, ii. 85

Lagash in Babylonia, i. 35 _n._ 5

Lago di Naftia in Sicily, i. 221 _n._ 4

Lagrange, Father M. J., on the mourning for Adonis as a harvest rite, i.
            231

Laguna, Pueblo village of New Mexico, ii. 54 _n._ 2

Lakhubai, an Indian goddess, i. 243

Lakor, theory of earthquakes in, i. 198

Lamas River in Cilicia, i. 149, 150

Lamentations of Egyptian reapers, i. 232, ii. 45;
  of the savage for the animals and plants which he eats, 43 _sq._;
  of Cherokee Indians "after the first working of the crop," 47;
  of the Karok Indians at cutting sacred wood, 47 _sq._

Laments for Tammuz, i. 9 _sq._;
  for dead kings of Judah, 20;
  for Osiris, ii. 12

Lampblack used to avert the evil eye, ii. 261

Lamps lighted to show the dead the way, ii. 51 _sq._;
  for the use of ghosts at the feast of All Souls, 72, 73

Lancashire, All Souls' Day in, ii. 79

Landen, the battle of, i. 234

Lane, E. W., on the rise of the Nile, ii. 31 _n._ 1

_Lantana salvifolia_, ii. 47

Lanterns, the feast of, in Japan, ii. 65

Lanzone, R. V., on the rites of Osiris, ii. 87 _n._ 5

Larnax Lapethus in Cyprus, Melcarth worshipped at, i. 117

Larrekiya, Australian tribe, their belief in conception without
            cohabitation, i. 103

Lateran Museum, statue of Attis in the, i. 279

Latham, R. G., on succession to husband's property among the Kocchs, ii.
            215 _n._ 2

Laurel, gold wreath of, worn by priest of Hercules, i. 143;
  in Greek purificatory rites, ii. 240 _sq._

---- -bearing, a festival at Thebes, in Boeotia, ii. 241

Leake, W. M., on flowers in Asia Minor, i. 187 _n._ 6

Leaping over Midsummer fires to make hemp or flax grow tall, i. 251

Leaves and flowers as talismans, ii. 242 _sq._

Lebanon, the forests of Mount, i. 14;
  Aphrodite of the, 30;
  Baal of the, 32;
  the charm of the, 235

Lech, a tributary of the Danube, ii. 70

Lechrain, feast of All Souls in, ii. 70 _sq._

Lecky, W. E. H., on the influence of great men on the popular imagination,
            ii. 199

Legend of the foundation of Carthage and similar tales, ii. 249 _sq._

Lehmann-Haupt, C. F., on the historical Semiramis, i. 177 _n._ 1

Lent, the Indian and Fijian, i. 90

Leo the Great, as to the celebration of Christmas, i. 305

Leonard, Major A. G., on sacrifices to prolong the lives of kings and
            others, ii. 222

Leprosy, king of Israel expected to heal, i. 23 _sq._

Lepsius, R., his identification of Osiris with the sun, ii. 121 _sq._

Leti, theory of earthquakes in, i. 198

Letopolis, neck of Osiris at, ii. 11

Letts, their annual festival of the dead, ii. 74 _sq._

Lewis the Pious, institutes the feast of All Saints, ii. 83

Leza, supreme being recognized by the Bantu tribes of Northern Rhodesia,
            ii. 174

Licinius Imbrex, on Mars and Nerio, ii. 232

Lightning thought by Caffres to be caused by the ghost of a powerful
            chief, ii. 177 with _n._ 1;
  no lamentations allowed for persons killed by, 177 _n._ 1;

"Lights of the dead" to enable the ghosts to enter houses, ii. 65

----, three hundred and sixty-five, in the rites of Osiris, ii. 88

Lion, deity standing on a, i. 123 _n._ 2, 127;
  the emblem of the Mother Goddess, 164;
  as emblem of Hercules and the Heraclids, 182, 184;
  carried round acropolis of Sardes, 184, ii. 249

---- -god at Boghaz-Keui, the mystery of the, i. 139 _sq._;
  of Lydia, 184

---- -slaying god, statue of, i. 117

Lions, dead kings reincarnate in, i. 83 _n._ 1, ii. 163;
  carved, at gate, i. 128;
  as emblems of the great Asiatic Mother-goddess, 137;
  deities seated on, 162;
  spirits of dead chiefs reincarnated in, ii. 193

Living parents, children of, in ritual, ii. 236 _sqq._

Loeboes, a tribe of Sumatra, exchange of costume between boys and girls
            among the, ii. 264

Loryma in Caria, Adonis worshipped at, i. 227 _n._

Lots, Greek custom as to the drawing of, ii. 248

Lovers, term applied to the Baalim, i. 75 _n._

Low, Hugh, on Dyak treatment of heads of slain enemies, i. 295

Lua and Saturn, ii. 233

Luangwa, district of Northern Rhodesia, prayers to dead ancestors in, ii.
            175 _sq._

Lucian, on religious prostitution, i. 58;
  on image of goddess at Hierapolis-Bambyce, 137 _n._ 2;
  on the death of Peregrinus, 181;
  on dispute between Hercules and Aesculapius, 209 _sq._;
  on the ascension of Adonis, 225 _n._ 3

Lugaba, the supreme god of the Bahima, ii. 190

Lunar sympathy, the doctrine of, ii. 140 _sqq._

Lung-fish clan among the Baganda, ii. 224

Luritcha of Central Australia, their belief in the reincarnation of the
            dead, i. 99

Lushais, men dressed as women, women dressed as men, among the, ii. 255
            _n._ 1

Luxor, temples at, ii. 124

Lyall, Sir Charles J., on the system of mother-kin among the Khasis, ii.
            202 _sq._

Lycaonian plain, i. 123

Lycia, flowers in, i. 187 _n._ 6;
  Mount Chimaera in, 221;
  mother-kin in, ii. 212 _sq._

Lycian language, question of its affinity, ii. 213 _n._ 1

---- men dressed as women in mourning, ii. 264

Lycurgus, king of the Edonians, rent in pieces by horses, ii. 98, 99

Lycus, valley of the, i. 207

Lydia, prostitution of girls before marriage in, i. 38, 58;
  the lion-god of, 184;
  the Burnt Land of, 193 _sq._;
  traces of mother-kin in, ii. 259

Lydian kings, their divinity, i. 182 _sqq._;
  held responsible for the weather and the crops, 183

Lyell, Sir Charles, on hot springs, i. 213 _n._ 4;
  on volcanic phenomena in Syria and Palestine, 222 _n._ 1

Lyre as instrument of religious music, i. 52 _sq._, 54 _sq._;
  the instrument of Apollo, 288

Lysimachus scatters the bones of the kings of Epirus, ii. 104

Ma, goddess of Comana in Pontus, i. 39, 265 _n._ 1

Macalister, Professor R. A. Stewart, on infant burial at Gezer, i. 109
            _n._ 1

Macdonald, Rev. James, on the worship of ancestors among the Bantus, ii.
            176

Mace of Narmer, representation of the Sed festival on the, ii. 154

McLennan, J. F., on brother and sister marriages, i. 44 _n._ 2, ii. 216
            _n._ 1

Macrobius, on the mourning Aphrodite, i. 30;
  on the Egyptian year, ii. 28 _n._ 3;
  on Osiris as a sun-god, 121;
  his solar theory of the gods, 121, 128;
  on the influence of the moon, 132

Madagascar, vicarious sacrifice for a king in, ii. 221;
  men dressed as women in, 254

Madonna and Isis, ii. 119

Maeander, the valley of the, subject to earthquakes, i. 194;
  sanctuaries of Pluto in the valley of the, 205, 206

Mafuie, the Samoan god of earthquakes, i. 200

Magarsus in Cilicia, i. 169 _n._ 3

Magic and religion, combination of, i. 4

Magical ceremonies for the regulation of the seasons, i. 3 _sqq._

---- dramas for the regulation of the seasons, i. 4 _sq._

---- uses made of the bodies of the dead, ii. 100 _sqq._

Magnesia, on the Maeander, worship of Zeus at, ii. 238

Mahadeo and Parvati, Indian deities, i. 242, 251

Mahadeva, Indian god, i. 241

Mahdi, an ancient, i. 74

Mahratta, dancing-girls in, i. 62

Maia or Majestas, the wife of Vulcan, ii. 232 _sq._

Maiau, hero in form of crocodile, i. 139 _n._ 1

Maiden, the (Persephone), the descent of, ii. 41

Malagasy use of children of living parents in ritual, ii. 247

Malay Peninsula, the Mentras or Mantras of the, ii. 140

Mallus in Cilicia, deities on coins of, i. 165 _sq._

Malta, bilingual inscription of, i. 16;
  Phoenician temples of, 35

Mamre, sacred oak or terebinth at, i. 37 _n._ 2

Mandingoes of Senegambia, their attention to the phases of the moon, ii.
            141

Maneros, chant of Egyptian reapers, ii. 45, 46

Manes, first king of Lydia, i. 186 _n._ 5

Manetho, on the Egyptian burnt-sacrifice of red-haired men, ii. 97;
  on Isis as the discoverer of corn, 116;
  quoted by Diodorus Siculus, 120

Manichaeans, their theory of earthquakes, i. 197

Manichaeus, the heretic, his death, i. 294 _n._ 3

Manipur, the Tangkul Nagas of, ii. 57 _sq._

Mantinea, Poseidon worshipped at, i. 203 _n._ 2

Maori priest catches the soul of a tree, ii. 111 _n._ 1

Marash, Hittite monuments at, i. 173

March, festival of Attis in, i. 267

----, the twenty-fifth of, tradition that Christ was crucified on, i. 306

Marduk, human wives of, at Babylon, i. 71

Mariette-Pacha, A., on the burial of Osiris, ii. 89 _n._

Marigolds used to adorn tombstones on All Souls' Day, ii. 71

Marks, bodily, of prophets, i. 74

Marriage as an infringement of old communal rights, i. 40;
  of the Sun and Earth, 47 _sq._;
  of women to serpent-god, 66 _sqq._;
  of Adonis and Aphrodite celebrated at Alexandria, 224;
  of Sky and Earth, 282 with _n._ 2;
  of the Roman gods, ii. 230 _sqq._;
  exchange of dress between men and women at, 260 _sqq._

----, sacred, of priest and priestess as representatives of deities, i. 46
            _sqq._;
  represented in the rock-hewn sculptures at Boghaz-Keui, 140;
  in Cos, ii. 259 _n._ 4

---- customs of the Aryan family, ii. 235;
  use of children of living parents in, 245 _sqq._;
  to ensure the birth of boys, 262

Marriages of brothers with sisters in ancient Egypt, ii. 214 _sqq._;
  their intention to keep the property in the family, 215 _sq._

Mars, the father of Romulus and Remus, ii. 235

---- and Bellona, ii. 231

---- and Nerio, ii. 232

Marsala in Sicily, Midsummer customs at, i. 247

Marseilles, Midsummer custom at, i. 248 _sq._

Marshall, Mr. A. S. F., on the felling of timber in Mexico, ii. 136 _n._ 3

Marsyas, his musical contest with Apollo and his death, i. 288 _sq._;
  perhaps a double of Attis, 289

---- and Apollo, i. 55

----, the river, i. 289

Martin, M., on the cutting of peat in the Hebrides, ii. 138

Masai, of East Africa, their belief in serpents as reincarnations of the
            dead, i. 82, 84;
  their ceremonies at the new moon, ii. 142 _sq._

---- boys wear female costume at circumcision, ii. 263

---- rule as to the choice of a chief, ii. 248

Masnes, a giant, i. 186

_Masoka_, the spirits of the dead, ii. 188 _sq._

Maspero, Sir Gaston, edits the Pyramid Texts, ii. 4 _n._ 1;
  on the nature of Osiris, 126 _n._ 2

Masquerade at the Carnival in Thrace, ii. 99 _sq._

Masquerades at festivals of the dead, ii. 53

Massacres for sick kings of Uganda, ii. 226

Massaya, volcano in Nicaragua, human victims sacrificed to, i. 219

_Massebah_ (plural _masseboth_), sacred stone or pillar, i. 107, 108

Maternal uncle in marriage ceremonies in India, i. 62 _n._ 1

Maternity and paternity of the Roman deities, ii. 233 _sqq._

"Matriarchate," i. 46

Maui, Fijian god of earthquakes, i. 202 _n._

Maundrell, H., on the discoloration of the river Adonis, i. 225 _n._ 4

Maury, A., on the Easter ceremonies compared with those of Adonis, i. 257
            _n._ 1

Maximus Tyrius, on conical image at Paphos, i. 35 _n._

May, modern Greek feast of All Souls in May, ii. 78 _n._ 1

---- Day, ceremony at Meiron in Galilee on the eve of, i. 178

---- -pole or Midsummer-tree in Sweden and Bohemia, i. 250

Medea and her magic cauldron, i. 180 _sq._

Medicine-men of Zulus, i. 74 _n._ 4;
  of Wiimbaio, 75 _n._ 4

Mefitis, Italian goddess of mephitic vapours, i. 204, 205

Megalopolis, battle of gods and giants in plain of, i. 157

Megassares, king of Hyria, i. 41

Meiners, C., on purification by blood, i. 299 _n._ 2

Meiron, in Galilee, burnings for dead Jewish Rabbis at, i. 178 _sq._

Mela's description of the Corycian cave, i. 155 _n._, 156

Melanesia, belief in conception without sexual intercourse in, i. 97 _sq._

Melanesian magicians buried secretly, ii. 105

Melanesians, mother-kin among the, ii. 211;
  of New Britain, their use of flowers and leaves as talismans, 242 _sq._

Melcarth, the god of Tyre, identified with Hercules, i. 16, 111;
  worshipped at Amathus in Cyprus, 32, 117;
  the burning of, 110 _sqq._;
  worshipped at Gades, 112 _sq._, ii. 258 _n._ 5

Melchizedek, king of Salem, i. 17

_Melech_ and Moloch, ii. 219 _sq._

Meles, king of Lydia, banished because of a dearth, i. 183;
  causes lion to be carried round acropolis, 184

Melicertes, a form of Melcarth, i. 113

Melite in Phthia, i. 291

Melito on the father of Adonis, i. 13 _n._ 2

Memnonium at Thebes, ii. 35 _n._

Memorial stones, ii. 203

Memphis, head of Osiris at, ii. 11;
  oath of the kings of Egypt at, 24;
  festival of Osiris in the month of Khoiak at, 108;
  Apis the sacred bull of, 119 _n._;
  the sanctuary of Serapis at, 119 _n._

Men, make gods, ii. 211;
  dressed as women at marriage, 262 _sqq._;
  dressed as women to deceive dangerous spirits, 262 _sq._;
  dressed as women at circumcision, 263

---- and women inspired by the spirits of dead kings and chiefs, ii. 171,
            172, 192 _sq._

---- "of God," prophets, i. 76

Men Tyrannus, Phrygian moon-god, i. 284;
  custom as to pollution of death at his shrine, ii. 227

Mentras or Mantras of the Malay Peninsula, their tradition as to primitive
            man, ii. 140

Mephitic vapours, worship of, i. 203 _sqq._

Mercurial temperament of merchants and sailors, ii. 218

Mesha, king of Moab, i. 15;
  sacrifices his first-born, 110

Messiah, "the Anointed One," i. 21

Meteor as signal for festival, i. 259

Metharme, daughter of Pygmalion, i. 41

_Methide_ plant growing over grave of Osiris, ii. 111

Mexican calendar, its mode of intercalation, ii. 28 _n._ 3

Mexicans, their human sacrifices for the maize, ii. 107

Mexico, rule as to the felling of timber in, ii. 136

Meyer, Professor Eduard, on prophecy in Canaan, i. 75 _n._ 5;
  on the Hittite language, 125 _n._;
  on costume of Hittite priest or king, 133 _n._, 141 _n._ 1;
  on the rock-hewn sculptures of Boghaz-Keui, 133 _n._;
  on Anubis at Abydos, ii. 18 _n._ 3;
  on the hawk as an Egyptian emblem, 22 _n._ 1;
  on the date of the introduction of the Egyptian calendar, 36 _n._ 2;
  on the nature of Osiris, 126 _n._ 2;
  on the relation of Byblus to Egypt, 127 _n._ 1;
  on the Lycian language, 213 _n._ 1

Michael Angelo, the Pieta of, i. 257

Michaelmas, 29th September, ii. 74

Midas, the tomb of, i. 286

---- and Gordias, names of Phrygian kings, i. 286

Midsummer, old heathen festival of, in Europe and the East, i. 249 _sq._;
  divination at, 252 _sq._

---- bathing, pagan origin of the custom, i. 249

---- Bride and Bridegroom in Sweden, i. 251

---- Day or Eve, custom of bathing on, i. 246 _sqq._

---- fires and couples in relation to vegetation, i. 250 _sq._;
  leaping over the fires to make flax or hemp grow tall, 251

Milcom, the god of Ammon, i. 19

Milk, serpents fed with, i. 84 _sqq._, 87;
  offered at graves, 87

Mill, women mourning for Tammuz eat nothing ground in a mill, i. 230

Milne, Mrs. Leslie, on the Shans, ii. 136

Milton on the laments for Tammuz, i. 226 _n._

Minoan age of Greece, i. 34

Minucius Felix on the rites of Osiris, ii. 85 _n._ 3

Miraculous births of gods and heroes, i. 107

"Mistress of Turquoise," goddess at Sinai, i. 35

Mitani, ancient people of Northern Mesopotamia, i. 135 _n._

Mithra, Persian deity, popularity of his worship in the Roman Empire, i.
            301 _sq._;
  identified with the Unconquered Sun, 304

Mithraic religion a rival to Christianity, i. 302;
  festival of Christmas borrowed from it, 302 _sqq._

Miztecs of Mexico, their annual festival of the dead, ii. 54 _sq._

Mnevis, sacred Egyptian bull, ii. 11

Moa, theory of earthquakes in, i. 198

Moab, Mesha, king of, i. 15;
  the wilderness of, 52 _sq._;
  the springs of Callirrhoe in, 214 _sqq._

----, Arabs of, their custom at harvest, ii. 48, 96;
  their remedies for ailments, 242

Moabite stone, the inscription on the, i. 15 _n._ 3, 20 _n._ 2, 163 _n._ 3

Moabites burn the bones of the kings of Edom, ii. 104

Models in cardboard offered to the dead instead of the things themselves,
            ii. 63 _sq._

Mohammedan peoples of North Africa, their custom of bathing at Midsummer,
            i. 249

---- saints as givers of children, i. 78 _n._ 2

Mohammedanism, ii. 160

Mohammedans of Oude, their mode of drinking moonshine, ii. 144

Moire, sister of Tylon, i. 186

Moloch, meaning of the name, i. 15;
  sacrifices of first-born children to, 178;
  the king, ii. 219 _sqq._

---- and _Melech_, ii. 219 _sq._

Mommsen, Th., on the date of the festival of Osiris at Rome, ii. 95 _n._ 1

Mongols, funeral customs of the, i. 293

Monmouthshire, All Souls' Day in, ii. 79

Monomotapa, a Caffre king, his way of prolonging his life, ii. 222 _sq._

Montanists, their view as to the date of Creation, i. 307 _n._ 2

Months, the Egyptian, table of, ii. 37 _n._

Moon, human victims sacrificed to the, i. 73;
  albinoes thought to be the offspring of the, 91;
  popularly regarded as the cause of growth and decay, ii. 132, 138;
  practical rules based on a theory of the influence of the, 132 _sqq._,
              140 _sqq._;
  popularly regarded as the source of moisture, 137 _sq._;
  worshipped by the agricultural Indians of tropical America, 138 _sq._;
  viewed as the husband of the sun, 139 _n._;
  Athenian superstition as to an eclipse of the, 141;
  children presented to the, 144 _sqq._;
  thought to have a harmful influence on children, 148

----, the new, ceremonies at, ii. 141 _sqq._;
  dances at, 142;
  custom of showing money to, or turning it in the pocket, 148 _sq._

----, the waning, theories to explain, ii. 130;
  thought to be broken or eaten up, 130

---- Being of the Omahas, ii. 256

----, the infant god, ii. 131, 153

---- -god conceived as masculine, i. 73;
  inspiration by the, 73;
  in ancient Babylonia, ii. 138 _sq._

Moonshine drunk as a medicine in India, ii. 144;
  thought to be beneficial to children, ii. 144

Moooi, Tongan god who causes earthquakes, i. 201

Moore, G. F., on the burnt sacrifice of children, ii. 219 _n._ 1

Moravia, the feast of All Souls in, ii. 73

Moret, Alexandre, on Amenophis IV., ii. 123 _n._ 1;
  on the Sed festival, 155 _sq._

Mori, a district of Central Celebes, belief of the natives as to a spirit
            in the moon, ii. 139 _n._

Moriah, Mount, traditionally identified with Mount Zion, ii. 219 _n._ 1

Morning Star, appearance of, perhaps the signal for the festival of
            Adonis, i. 258 _sq._

Morocco, custom of prostitution in an Arab tribe in, i. 39 _n._ 3

Morrison, Rev. C. W., on belief of Australian aborigines as to childbirth,
            i. 103 _n._ 3

Mostene in Lydia, double-headed axe at, i. 183 _n._

Mota, belief as to conception in women in, i. 97 _sq._

"Mother" and "Father" as epithets applied to Roman goddesses and gods, ii.
            233 _sqq._

----, dead, worshipped, ii. 175, 185

---- Earth, festival in her honour in Bengal, i. 90;
  fertilized by Father Sky, myth of, 282

---- Goddess of Western Asia, sacred prostitution in the worship of the, i.
            36;
  lions as her emblems, 137, 164;
  her eunuch priests, 206;
  of Phrygia conceived as a Virgin Mother, 281

---- -kin, succession in royal houses with, i. 44;
  trace of, at Rome and Nemi, 45;
  among the Khasis of Assam, 46, ii. 202 _sqq._;
  among the Hittites, traces of, i. 141 _sq._;
  and Mother Goddesses, ii. 201 _sqq._, 212 _sqq._;
  and father-kin, 202, 261 _n._ 3;
  favours the superiority of goddesses over gods in religion, 202 _sqq._,
              211 _sq._;
  its influence on religion, 202 _sqq._;
  among the Pelew Islanders, 204 _sqq._;
  does not imply that government is in the hands of women, 208 _sqq._;
  among the Melanesians, 211;
  in Africa, 211;
  in Lycia, 212 _sq._;
  in ancient Egypt, 213 _sqq._;
  traces of, in Lydia and Cos, 259;
  favours the development of goddesses, 259.
  _See also_ Female kinship

---- of a god, i. 51, 52

---- of the gods, first-fruits offered to the, i. 280 _n._ 1;
  popularity of her worship in the Roman Empire, 298 _sq._

---- Plastene on Mount Sipylus, i. 185

"Mother's Air," a tune on the flute, i. 288

"Mothers of the Clan" in the Pelew Islands, ii. 205, 206

Motlav, belief as to conception in women in, i. 98

Mournful character of the rites of sowing, ii. 40 _sqq._

Mourning for Attis, i. 272;
  for the corn-god at midsummer, ii. 34

---- costume of men in Lycia, ii. 264;
  perhaps a mode of deceiving the ghost, 264

Mouth of the dead, Egyptian ceremony of opening the, ii. 15

Moylar, male children of sacred prostitutes, i. 63

Mpongwe kings of the Gaboon, buried secretly, ii. 104

_Mugema_, the earl of Busiro, ii. 168

Mukasa, the chief god of the Baganda, probably a dead man, ii. 196 _sq._;
  gives oracles through a woman, 257

_Mukuru_, an ancestor (plural _Ovakuru_, ancestors), ii. 185 _sq._

Mueller, Professor W. Max, on Hittite name for god, i. 148 _n._

Mundas of Bengal, gardens of Adonis among the, i. 240

Mungarai, Australian tribe, their belief in the reincarnation of the dead,
            i. 101

Murder of children to secure their rebirth in barren women, i. 95

Murli, female devotee, i. 62

Music as a means of prophetic inspiration, i. 52 _sq._, 54 _sq._, 74;
  in exorcism, 54 _sq._;
  and religion, 53 _sq._

Musquakie Indians, infant burial among the, i. 91 _n._ 3

Mutilation of dead bodies of kings, chiefs, and magicians, ii. 103 _sqq._;
  to prevent their souls from becoming dangerous ghosts, 188

Mycenae, royal graves at, i. 33, 34

Mycenaean age of Greece, i. 34

Mylasa in Caria, i. 182 _n._ 4

Mylitta, Babylonian goddess, sacred prostitution in her worship, i. 36, 37
            _n._ 1

Myrrh or Myrrha, the mother of Adonis, i. 43, 227 _sq._

---- -tree, Adonis born of a, i. 227, ii. 110

Mysore, sacred women in, i. 62 _n._;
  the Komatis of, 81 _sq._

Mysteries of Sabazius, i. 90 _n._ 4;
  of Attis, 274 _sq._

Myth and ritual of Attis, i. 263 _sqq._

Myths supposed to originate in verbal misapprehensions or a disease of
            language, ii. 42

----, Italian, of kings or heroes begotten by the fire-god, ii. 235

Naaburg, in Bavaria, custom at sowing at, i. 239

"Naaman, wounds of the," Arab name for the scarlet anemone, i. 226

Nabopolassar, king of Babylon, i. 174

_Naga_, serpent god, i. 81

Naga-padoha, the agent of earthquakes, i. 200

Nahanarvals, a German tribe, priest dressed as a woman among the, ii. 259

Nahr Ibrahim, the river Adonis, i. 14, 28

Namal tribe of West Australia, their belief as to the birth of children,
            i. 105

Names, royal, signifying relation to deity, i. 15 _sqq._;
  Semitic personal, indicating relationship to a deity, 51;
  Hebrew, ending in _-el_ or _-iah_, 79 _n._ 3

Nana, the mother of Attis, i. 263, 269, 281

Nandi, the, of British East Africa, their belief in serpents as
            reincarnations of the dead, i. 82, 85;
  their ceremony at the ripening of the eleusine grain, ii. 47;
  boys dressed as women and girls dressed as men at circumcision among
              the, 263

Nanjundayya, H. V., on serpent worship in Mysore, i. 81 _sq._

Naples, grotto _del cani_ at, i. 205 _n._ 1;
  custom of bathing on St. John's Eve at, 246

Narmer, the mace of, ii. 154

National character partly an effect of geographical and climatic
            conditions, ii. 217

Nativity of the Sun at the winter solstice, i. 303 _sqq._

Natural calendar of the husbandman, shepherd, and sailor, ii. 25

Nature of Osiris, ii. 96 _sqq._

Navel-string of the king of Uganda preserved and inspected every new moon,
            ii. 147 _sq._

Navel-strings of dead kings of Uganda preserved, ii. 167, 168, 171;
  ghosts of afterbirths thought to adhere to, 169 _sq._;
  preserved by the Baganda as their twins and as containing the ghosts of
              their afterbirths, 169 _sq._

Ndjambi, Njambi, Njame, Zambi, Nyambe, etc., name of the supreme god among
            various tribes of Africa, ii. 186, with note 5

---- Karunga, the supreme god of the Herero, ii. 186

Nebseni, the papyrus of, ii. 112

Neith or Net, an Egyptian goddess, i. 282 _n._, ii. 51 _n._ 1

Nekht, the papyrus of, ii. 112

Nemi, Dianus and Diana at, i. 45

Nephthys, Egyptian goddess, sister of Osiris and Isis, ii. 6;
  mourns Osiris, 12

Neptune and Salacia, ii. 231, 233

Nerio and Mars, ii. 232

New birth through blood in the rites of Attis, i. 274 _sq._;
  savage theory of, 299;
  of Egyptian kings at the Sed festival, ii. 153, 155 _sq._

---- Britain, theory of earthquakes in, i. 201

---- Guinea, German, the Kai of, i. 96;
  the Tami of, 198

---- Mexico, the Pueblo Indians of, ii. 54

---- moon, ceremonies at the, ii. 141 _sqq._

---- World, bathing on St. John's Day in the, i. 249;
  All Souls' Day in the, ii. 80

---- Year's Day, festival of the dead on, ii. 53, 55, 62, 65

---- Zealand, Rotomahana in, i. 207, 209 _n._

Newberry, Professor P. E., on Osiris as a cedar-tree god, ii. 109 _n._ 1

Newman, J. H., on music, i. 53 _sq._

Ngai, God, i. 68

Ngoni, their belief in serpents as reincarnations of the dead, i. 82

Nguruhi, the supreme god of the Wahehe, ii. 188 _sq._

Niambe, the supreme god of the Barotse, ii. 193

Nias, conduct of the natives of, in an earthquake, i. 201 _sq._;
  head-hunting in, 296 _n._ 1

Nicaragua, Indians of, sacrifice human victims to volcanoes, i. 219

Nietzold, J., on the marriage of brothers with sisters in ancient Egypt,
            ii. 216 _n._ 1

Nigmann, E., on the religion of the Wahehe, ii. 188 _sq._

Nikunau, one of the Gilbert Islands, sacred stones in, i. 108 _n._ 1

Nile, the rise and fall of the, ii. 30 _sqq._;
  rises at the summer solstice in June, 31 _n._ 1, 33;
  commanded by the King of Egypt to rise, 33;
  thought to be swollen by the tears of Isis, 33;
  gold and silver thrown into the river at its rising, 40;
  the rise of, attributed to Serapis, 216 _sq._

----, the "Bride" of the, ii. 38

Nilsson, Professor M. P., on custom of sacred prostitution, i. 37 _n._ 2,
            57 _n._ 1, 58 _n._ 2;
  on the sacrifice of a bull to Zeus, ii. 239 _n._ 1

Nineveh, the end of, i. 174

Njamus, the, of British East Africa, their sacrifices at irrigation
            channels, ii. 38 _sq._

Normandy, rolling in dew on St. John's Day in, i. 248

Northern Territory, Australia, beliefs as to the birth of children in the,
            i. 103 _sq._

Nottinghamshire, harvest custom in, i. 238 _n._

November, festivals of the dead in, ii. 51, 54, 69 _sqq._;
  the month of sowing in Egypt, 94

Novitiate of priests and priestesses, i. 66, 68

Nullakun tribe of Australia, their belief as to the birth of children, i.
            101

Nut, Egyptian sky-goddess, mother of Osiris, i. 283 _n._ 3, ii. 6, 16;
  in a sycamore tree, 110

Nutlets of pines used as food, i. 278 _n._ 2

Nutritive and vicarious types of sacrifice, ii. 226

Nyakang, the first of the Shilluk kings, worshipped as the god of his
            people, ii. 162 _sqq._;
  incarnate in various animals, 163 _sq._;
  his mysterious disappearance, 163;
  his graves, 163, 166;
  historical reality of, 164, 166 _sq._;
  his relation to the creator Juok, 164 _sq._;
  compared to Osiris, 167

Nymphs of the Fair Crowns at Olympia, ii. 240

Nysa, in the valley of the Maeander, i. 205, 206 _n._ 1;
  sacrifice of bull at, 292 _n._ 3

Nyuak, L., on guardian spirits of Sea Dyaks, i. 83

Oak or terebinth, sacred at Mamre, i. 37 _n._ 2

Oath of Egyptian kings not to correct the vague Egyptian year by
            intercalation, ii. 26

Obelisk, image of Astarte, i. 14

Obelisks, sacred, at Gezer, i. 108

Obscene images of Osiris, ii. 112

Octennial cycle, old, in Greece, ii. 242 _n._

October, the first of, a great Saxon festival, ii. 81 _n._ 3

Odilo, abbot of Clugny, institutes feast of All Souls, ii. 82

Odin, hanged on a tree, i. 290;
  human victims dedicated by hanging to, 290;
  king's sons sacrificed to, ii. 220

Oenomaus, king of Pisa, his incest with his daughter, i. 44 _n._ 1

Oeta, Mount, Hercules burnt on, i. 111, 116, 211

Offerings to dead kings, ii. 194

Oil, holy, poured on king's head, i. 21;

poured on sacred stones, 36;
  as vehicle of inspiration, 74

Olba, priestly kings of, i. 143 _sqq._, 161;
  the name of, 148;
  the ruins of, 151 _sq._

Old Woman of the corn, mythical being of the Cherokee Indians, ii. 46
            _sq._

Olive of the Fair Crown at Olympia, ii. 240

---- -branches carried in procession and hung over doors at Athens, ii. 238

Olo Ngadjoe, the, of Borneo, i. 91

Olonets, Russian Government of, festival of the dead in, ii. 75

Olympia, the quack Peregrinus burns himself at, i. 181;
  the cutting of the olive-branches to form the victors' crowns at, ii.
              240

Olympic festival based on an octennial cycle, ii. 242 _n._ 1

Olympus, Mount, in Cyprus, i. 32

Omahas, Indian tribe of North America, effeminate men among the, ii. 255
            _sq._

Omonga, a rice-spirit who lives in the moon, ii. 139 _n._

Omphale and Hercules, i. 182, ii. 258

On, King of Sweden. _See_ Aun.

Oodeypoor, in Rajputana, gardens of Adonis at, i. 241 _sq._

Opening the eyes and mouth of the dead, Egyptian funeral rite, ii. 15

Operations of husbandry regulated by observation of the moon, ii. 133
            _sqq._

Ops, the wife of Saturn, ii. 233;
  in relation to Consus, 233 _n._ 6

Oracles given by the spirits of dead kings, ii. 167, 171, 172

Oraons of Bengal, their annual marriage of the Sun and Earth, i. 46
            _sqq._;
  gardens of Adonis among the, 240;
  their annual festival of the dead, ii. 59

Orcus, Roman god of the lower world, his marriage celebrated by the
            pontiffs, ii. 231

Ordeal of chastity, i. 115 _n._ 2

Orestes at Castabala, i. 115

Orgiastic rites of Cybele, i. 278

Oriental mind untrammelled by logic, i. 4 _n._ 1

---- religions in the West, i. 298 _sqq._;
  their influence in undermining ancient civilization, 299 _sqq._;
  importance attached to the salvation of the individual soul in, 300

Origen, on the refusal of Christians to fight, i. 301 _n._ 1

Origin of Osiris, ii. 158 _sqq._

Orion, appearance of the constellation, a signal for sowing, i. 290 _sq._

Orpheus, prophet and musician, i. 55;
  the legend of his death, ii. 99

Orwell in Cambridgeshire, harvest custom at, i. 237 _n._ 4

Oschophoria, vintage festival at Athens, ii. 258 _n._ 6

Osirian mysteries, the hall of the, at Abydos, ii. 108

Osiris identified with Adonis and Attis, i. 32, ii. 127 _n._;
  myth of, ii. 3 _sqq._;
  his birth, 6;
  introduces the cultivation of corn and the vine, 7, 97, 112;
  his violent death, 7 _sq._;
  at Byblus, 9 _sq._, 22 _sq._, 127;
  his body rent in pieces, 10;
  the graves of, 10 _sq._;
  his dead body sought and found by Isis, 10, 50, 85;
  tradition as to his genital organs, 10, 102;
  mourned by Isis and Nephthys, 12;
  invited to come to his house, 12, 47;
  restored to life by Isis, 13;
  king and judge of the dead, 13 _sq._;
  his body the first mummy, 15;
  the funeral rites performed over his body the model of all funeral rites
              in Egypt, 15;
  all the Egyptian dead identified with, 16;
  his trial and acquittal in the court of the gods, 17;
  represented in art as a royal mummy, 18;
  specially associated with Busiris and Abydos, 18;
  his tomb at Abydos, 18 _sq._, 197 _sq._;
  official festivals of, 49 _sqq._;
  his sufferings displayed in a mystery at night, 50;
  his festival in the month of Athyr, 84 _sqq._;
  dramatic representation of his resurrection in his rites, 85;
  his images made of vegetable mould, 85, 87, 90 _sq._, 91;
  the funeral rites of, described in the inscription of Denderah, 86
              _sqq._;
  his festival in the month of Khoiak, 86 _sqq._, 108 _sq._;
  his "garden," 87 _sq._;
  ploughing and sowing in the rites of, 87, 90, 96;
  the burial of, in his rites, 88;
  the holy sepulchre of, under Persea-trees, 88;
  represented with corn sprouting from his dead body, 89;
  his resurrection depicted on the monuments, 89 _sq._;
  as a corn-god, 89 _sqq._, 96 _sqq._;
  corn-stuffed effigies of, buried with the dead as a symbol of
              resurrection, 90 _sq._, 114;
  date of the celebration of his resurrection at Rome, 95 _n._ 1;
  the nature of, 96 _sqq._;
  his severed limbs placed on a corn-sieve, 97;
  human victims sacrificed by kings at the grave of, 97;
  suggested explanations of his dismemberment, 97;
  sometimes explained by the ancients as a personification of the corn,
              107;
  as a tree-spirit, 107 _sqq._;
  his image made out of a pine-tree, 108;
  his emblems the crook and scourge or flail, 108, 153, compare 20;
  his backbone represented by the _ded_ pillar, 108 _sq._;
  interpreted as a cedar-tree god, 109 _n._ 1;
  his soul in a bird, 110;
  represented as a mummy enclosed in a tree, 110, 111;
  obscene images of, 112;
  as a god of fertility, 112 _sq._;
  identified with Dionysus, 113, 126 _n._ 3;
  a god of the dead, 113 _sq._;
  universal popularity of his worship, 114;
  interpreted by some as the sun, 120 _sqq._, reasons for rejecting this
              interpretation, 122 _sqq._;
  his death and resurrection interpreted as the decay and growth of
              vegetation, 126 _sqq._;
  his body broken into fourteen parts, 129;
  interpreted as the moon by some of the ancients, 129;
  reigned twenty-eight years, 129;
  his soul thought to be imaged in the sacred bull Apis, 130;
  identified with the moon in hymns, 131;
  represented wearing on his head a full moon within a crescent, 131;
  distinction of his myth and worship from those of Adonis and Attis, 158
              _sq._;
  his dominant position in Egyptian religion, 158 _sq._;
  the origin of, 158 _sqq._;
  his historical reality asserted in recent years, 160 _n._ 1;
  his temple at Abydos, 198;
  his title Khenti-Amenti, 198 _n._ 2;
  compared to Charlemagne, 199;
  the question of his historical reality left open, 199 _sq._;
  his death still mourned in the time of Athanasius, 217;
  his old type better preserved than those of Adonis and Attis, 218

Osiris, Adonis, Attis, their mythical similarity, i. 6, ii. 201

---- and Adonis, similarity between their rites, ii. 127

---- and Dionysus, similarity between their rites, ii. 127

---- and the moon, ii. 129 _sqq._

"---- of the mysteries," ii. 89

---- -Sep, title of Osiris, ii. 87

Ostrich-feather, king of Egypt supposed to ascend to heaven on an, ii.
            154, 155

Otho, the emperor, addicted to the worship of Isis, ii. 118 _n._ 1

Oulad Abdi, Arab tribe of Morocco, i. 39 _n._ 3

Oura, ancient name of Olba, i. 148, 152

Ourwira, theory of earthquakes in, i. 199

Ovambo, the, of German South-West Africa, their ceremony at the new moon,
            ii. 142;
  the worship of the dead among the, 188

Ovid, on the story of Pygmalion, i. 49 _n._ 4

Owl regarded as the guardian spirit of a tree, ii. 111 _n._ 1

Ox substituted for human victim in sacrifice, i. 146;
  embodying corn-spirit sacrificed at Athens, 296 _sq._;
  black, used in purificatory ceremonies after a battle, ii. 251 _sq._

Ozieri, in Sardinia, St. John's festival at, i. 244

Pacasmayu, the temple of the moon at, ii. 138

Padmavati, an Indian goddess, i. 243

Pagan origin of the Midsummer festival (festival of St. John), i. 249
            _sq._

Paganism and Christianity, their resemblances explained as diabolic
            counterfeits, i. 302, 309 _sq._

{~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, a boy whose parents are both alive, ii. 236 _n._ 2

Palatinate, the Upper, the feast of All Souls in, ii. 72

Palestine, religious prostitution in, i. 58;
  date of the corn-reaping in, 232 _n._

Palestinian Aphrodite, i. 304 _n._

Palestrina, the harmonies of, i. 54

Pampa del Sacramento, Peru, earthquakes in, i. 198

Pampas, bones of extinct animals in the, i. 158

Pamyles, an Egyptian, ii. 6

Pandharpur, in the Bombay Presidency, i. 243

Panaghia Aphroditessa at Paphos, i. 36

Panku, a being who causes earthquakes, i. 198

Papas, a name for Attis, i. 281, 282

Paphlagonian belief that the god is bound fast in winter, ii. 41

Paphos in Cyprus, i. 32 _sqq._;
  sanctuary of Aphrodite at, 32 _sqq._;
  founded by Cinyras, 41

Papyrus of Nebseni, ii. 112;
  of Nekht, 112

---- swamps, Isis in the, ii. 8

Parilia and the festival of St. George, i. 308

Parr, Thomas, i. 56

Parvati or Isa, an Indian goddess, i. 241, 242

Pasicyprus, king of Citium, i. 50 _n._ 2

Patagonia, funeral customs of Indians of, i. 294

Patagonians, effeminate priests or sorcerers among the, ii. 254

Paternity, primitive ignorance of, i. 106 _sq._;
  unknown in primitive savagery, 282

---- and maternity of the Roman deities, ii. 233 _sqq._

Paton, W. R., on modern Greek feast of All Souls in May, ii. 78 _n._ 1

Patrae, Laphrian Artemis at, i. 126 _n._ 2

Pausanias on the necklace of Harmonia, i. 32 _n._ 2;
  on bones of superhuman size, 157 _n._ 2;
  on offerings to Etna, 221 _n._ 4;
  on the Hanged Artemis, 291 _n._ 2

Payne, E. J., on the origin of moon-worship, ii. 138 _n._ 2

Pegasus and Bellerophon, i. 302 _n._ 4

Pegu, dance of hermaphrodites in, i. 271 _n._

Peking, Ibn Batuta at, i. 289

Pele, goddess of the volcano Kilauea in Hawaii, i. 217 _sqq._

Pelew Islanders, their system of mother-kin, ii. 204 _sqq._;
  predominance of goddesses over gods among them, 204 _sqq._;
  customs of the, 253 _sqq._

---- Islands and the ancient East, parallel between, ii. 208;
  prostitution of unmarried girls in, 264 _sq._;
  custom of slaying chiefs in the, 266 _sqq._

Pelion, Mount, sacrifices offered on the top of, at the rising of Sirius,
            ii. 36 _n._

Peloponnese, worship of Poseidon in, i. 203

Pelops restored to life, i. 181

Peneus, the river, at Tempe, ii. 240

Pennefather River in Queensland, belief of the natives as to the birth of
            children, i. 103

Pentheus, king of Thebes, rent in pieces by Bacchanals, ii. 98

Peoples of the Aryan stock, annual festivals of the dead among the, ii. 67
            _sqq._

Pepi the First, ii. 5;
  his pyramid, 4 _n._ 1

Perasia, Artemis, at Castabala, i. 167 _sqq._

Peregrinus, his death in the fire, i. 181

Perga in Pamphylia, Artemis at, i. 35

Periander, tyrant of Corinth, his burnt sacrifice to his dead wife, i. 179

Perigord, rolling in dew on St. John's Day in, i. 248

Peritius, month of, i. 111

Perpetual holy fire in temples of dead kings, ii. 174

---- fires worshipped, i. 191 _sqq._

Perrot, G., on rock-hewn sculptures at Boghaz-Keui, i. 138 _n._

Persea-trees in the rites of Osiris, ii. 87 _n._ 5;
  growing over the tomb of Osiris, 88

Persephone, name applied to spring, ii. 41

---- and Aphrodite, their contest for Adonis, i. 11 _sq._

---- and Pluto, temple of, i. 205

Perseus, the virgin birth of, i. 302 _n._ 4

Persian reverence for fire, i. 174 _sq._

---- festival of the dead, ii. 68

Persian fire-worship and priests, 191

Personation of gods by priests, i. 45, 46 _sqq._

Peru, earthquakes in, i. 202;
  sacrifice of sons in, ii. 220 _n._ 4

Peruvian Indians, their theory of earthquakes, i. 201

Pescara River, in the Abruzzi, i. 246

Pescina in the Abruzzi, Midsummer custom at, i. 246

Pessinus, image of Cybele at, i. 35 _n._ 3;
  priests called Attis at, 140;
  local legend of Attis at, 264;
  image of the Mother of the Gods at, 265;
  people of, abstain from swine, 265;
  high-priest of Cybele at, 285

Petrarch at Cologne on St. John's Eve, i. 247 _sq._

Petrie, Professor W. M. Flinders, on the date of the corn-reaping in Egypt
            and Palestine, i. 231 _n._ 3;
  on the Sed festival, ii. 151 _n._ 3, 152 _n._ 3, 154 _sq._;
  on the marriage of brothers with sisters in Egypt, 216 _n._ 1

Petrified cascades of Hierapolis, i. 207

Petroff, Ivan, on a custom of the Koniags of Alaska, ii. 106

Phamenoth, an Egyptian month, ii. 49 _n._ 1, 130

Phaophi, an Egyptian month, ii. 49 _n._ 1, 94

Pharnace, daughter of Megassares, i. 41

Phatrabot, a Cambodian month, ii. 61

Phidias, his influence on Greek religion, i. 54 _n._ 1

Philadelphia, subject to earthquakes, i. 194 _sq._

Philae, Egyptian relief at, ii. 50 _n._ 5;
  mystic representation of Osiris in the temple of Isis at, 89;
  sculptures in the temple of Isis at, 111;
  the grave of Osiris at, 111;
  the dead Osiris in the sculptures at, 112

Philo of Alexandria on the date of the corn-reaping, i. 231 _n._ 3

Philocalus, calendar of, i. 303 _n._ 2, 304 _n._ 3, 307 _n._, ii. 95 _n._
            1

Philosophy, school of, at Tarsus, i. 118

Philostephanus, Greek historian, i. 49 _n._ 4

Phoenician temples in Malta, i. 35;
  sacred prostitution in, 37

---- kings in Cyprus, i. 49

Phoenicians in Cyprus, i. 31 _sq._

Phrygia, Attis a deity of, i. 263;
  festival of Cybele in, 274 _n._;
  indigenous race of, 287

Phrygian belief that the god sleeps in winter, ii. 41

---- cap of Attis, i. 279

---- cosmogony, i. 263 _sq._

---- kings named Midas and Gordias, i. 286

Phrygian moon-god, i. 73

---- priests named Attis, i. 285, 287

Phrygians, invaders from Europe, i. 287

_Pieta_ of Michael Angelo, i. 257

Pig's blood used in exorcism and purification, i. 299 _n._ 2

Pigs sacrificed annually to the moon and Osiris, ii. 131.
  _See also_ Swine

Pillars as a religious emblem, i. 34;
  sacred, in Crete, 107 _n._ 2

Pindar on the music of the lyre, i. 55;
  on Typhon, 156

Pine-cones symbols of fertility, i. 278;
  thrown into vaults of Demeter, 278;
  on the monuments of Osiris, ii. 110

---- seeds or nutlets used as food, i. 278

---- -tree in the myth and ritual of Attis, i. 264, 265, 267, 271, 277
            _sq._, 285, ii. 98 _n._ 5
  Marsyas hung on a, i. 288;
  in relation to human sacrifices, ii. 98 _n._ 5;
  Pentheus on the, 98 _n._ 5;
  in the rites of Osiris, 108

Pipiles of Central America expose their seeds to moonlight, ii. 135

Piraeus, processions in honour of Adonis at, i. 227 _n._

Pirates, the Cilician, i. 149 _sq._

_Pitr Pak_, the Fortnight of the Manes, ii. 60

Pitre, G., on Good Friday ceremonies in Sicily, i. 255 _sq._

Placenta, Egyptian standard resembling a, ii. 156 _n._ 1
  _See also_ Afterbirth.

Placianian Mother, a form of Cybele, worshipped at Cyzicus, i. 274 _n._

Plastene, Mother, on Mount Sipylus, i. 185

Plato, on gardens of Adonis, i. 236 _n._ 1

Plautus on Mars and Nerio, ii. 232

Pleiades worshipped by the Abipones, i. 258 _n._ 2;
  the setting of, the time of sowing, ii. 41

Pliny, on the date of harvest in Egypt, ii. 32 _n._ 2;
  on the influence of the moon, 132;
  on the grafting of trees, 133 _n._ 3;
  on the time for felling timber, 136 _n._

Plotinus, the death of, i. 87

Ploughing, Prussian custom at, i. 238;
  and sowing, ceremony of, in the rites of Osiris, ii. 87

Ploughmen and sowers drenched with water as a rain-charm, i. 238 _sq._

Plutarch on the double-headed axe of Zeus Labrandeus, i. 182;
  on the myth of Osiris, ii. 3, 5 _sqq._;
  on Harpocrates, 9 _n._;
  on Osiris at Byblus, 22 _sq._;
  on the rise of the Nile, 31 _n._ 1;
  on the mournful character of the rites of sowing, 40 _sqq._;
  his use of the Alexandrian year, 49, 84;
  on an Egyptian ceremony at the winter solstice, 50 _n._ 4;
  on the date of the death of Osiris, 84;
  on the festival of Osiris in the month of Athyr, 91 _sq._;
  on the dating of Egyptian festivals, 94 _sq._;
  on the rites of Osiris, 108;
  on the grave of Osiris, 111;
  on the similarity between the rites of Osiris and Dionysus, 127;
  on the Flamen Dialis, 229 _sq._;
  on the Flaminica Dialis, 230 _n._ 2

Pluto, the breath of, i. 204, 205;
  places or sanctuaries of, 204 _sqq._;
  cave and temple of, at Acharaca, 205

_Plutonia_, places of Pluto, i. 204

Pollution of death, ii. 227 _sqq._

Polo, Marco, on custom of people of Camul, i. 39 _n._ 3

Polyboea, sister of Hyacinth, i. 314, 316;
  identified with Artemis or Persephone, 315

Polyidus, a seer, i. 186 _n._ 4

Polynesian myth of the separation of earth and sky, i. 283

Pomegranate causes virgin to conceive, i. 263, 269

Pomegranates forbidden to worshippers of Cybele and Attis, i. 280 _n._ 7

Pomona and Vertumnus, ii. 235 _n._ 6

Pompey the Great, i. 27

Pondomisi, a Bantu tribe of South Africa, ii. 177

Pontiffs, the Roman, their mismanagement of the Julian calendar, ii. 93
            _n._ 1;
  celebrated the marriage of Orcus, 231

Pontus, sacred prostitution in, i. 39, 58

Populonia, a Roman goddess, ii. 231

Port Darwin, Australia, i. 103

Porta Capena at Rome, i. 273

Poseidon the Establisher or Securer, i. 195 _sq._;
  the earthquake god, 195, 202 _sq._

---- and Demeter, i. 280

Possession of priest or priestess by a divine spirit, i. 66, 68 _sq._, 72
            _sqq._;
  by the spirits of dead chiefs, ii. 192 _sq._

Potniae in Boeotia, priest of Dionysus killed at, ii. 99 _n._ 1

Pots of Basil on St. John's Day in Sicily, i. 245

Potter in Southern India, custom observed by a, i. 191 _n._ 2

Potters in Uganda bake their pots when the moon is waxing, ii. 135

Praeneste, Fortuna Primigenia, goddess of, ii. 234;
  founded by Caeculus, 235

Prague, the feast of All Souls in, ii. 73

Prayers to dead ancestors, ii. 175 _sq._, 178 _sq._, 183 _sq._;
  to dead kings, 192

Pregnancy, causes of, unknown, i. 92 _sq._, 106 _sq._;
  Australian beliefs as to the causes of, 99 _sqq._

Priestess identified with goddess, i. 219;
  head of the State under a system of mother-kin, ii. 203

Priestesses more important than priests, i. 45, 46

Priesthood vacated on death of priest's wife, i. 45;
  of Hercules at Tarsus, 143

Priestly dynasties of Asia Minor, i. 140 _sq._

---- king and queen personating god and goddess, i. 45

---- kings, i. 42, 43;
  of Olba, 143 _sqq._, 161;
  Adonis personated by, 223 _sqq._

Priests personate gods, i. 45, 46 _sqq._;
  tattoo-marks of, 74 _n._ 4;
  not allowed to be widowers, ii. 227 _sqq._;
  the Jewish, their rule as to the pollution of death, 230;
  dressed as women, 253 _sqq._

---- of Astarte, kings as, i. 26

---- of Attis, the emasculated, i. 265, 266

---- of Zeus at the Corycian cave, i. 145, 155

Procession to the Almo in the rites of Attis, i. 273

Processions carved on rocks at Boghaz-Keui, i. 129 _sqq._;
  in honour of Adonis, 224 _sq._, 227 _n._, 236 _n._ 1

Procreation, savage ignorance of the causes of, i. 106 _sq._

Procris, her incest with her father Erechtheus, i. 44

Profligacy of human sexes supposed to quicken the earth, i. 48

Property, rules as to the inheritance of, under mother-kin, ii. 203 _n._
            1;
  landed, combined with mother-kin tends to increase the social importance
              of women, 209

Prophecy, Hebrew, distinctive character of, i. 75

Prophet regarded as madman, i. 77

Prophetesses inspired by dead chiefs, ii. 192 _sq._;
  inspired by gods, 207

Prophetic inspiration under the influence of music, i. 52 _sq._, 54 _sq._,
            74;
  through the spirits of dead kings and chiefs, ii. 171, 172, 192 _sq._

---- marks on body, i. 74

---- water drunk on St. John's Eve, i. 247

Prophets in relation to _kedeshim_, i. 76;
  or mediums inspired by the ghosts of dead kings, ii. 171, 172

----, Hebrew, their resemblance to those of Africa, i. 74 _sq._

Prophets of Israel, their religious and moral reform, i. 24 _sq._

Propitiation of deceased ancestors, i. 46

Prostitution, sacred, before marriage, in Western Asia, i. 36 _sqq._;
  suggested origin of, 39 _sqq._;
  in Western Asia, alternative theory of, 57 _sqq._;
  in India, 61 _sqq._;
  in Africa, 65 _sqq._

---- of unmarried girls in the Pelew Islands, ii. 264 _sq._;
  in Yap, one of the Caroline Islands, 265 _sq._

Provence, bathing at Midsummer in, i. 248

Prussia, customs at ploughing and harvest in, i. 238;
  divination at Midsummer in, 252 _sq._

Pteria, captured by Croesus, i. 128

Ptolemy Auletes, king of Egypt, i. 43

Ptolemy and Berenice, annual festival in honour of, ii. 35 _n._ 1

Ptolemy I. and Serapis, ii. 119 _n._

Ptolemy III. Euergetes, his attempt to correct the vague Egyptian year by
            intercalation, ii. 27

Ptolemy V. on the Rosetta Stone, ii. 152 _n._

Ptolemy Soter, i. 264 _n._ 4

Pueblo Indians of New Mexico, their annual festival of the dead, ii. 54

Pumi-yathon, king of Citium and Idalium, i. 50

Punjaub, belief in the reincarnation of infants in the, i. 94

Puppet substituted for human victim, i. 219 _sq._

Purification by fire, i. 115 _n._ 1, 179 _sqq._;
  by pig's blood, 299 _n._ 2;
  of Apollo at Tempe, ii. 240 _sq._

Purificatory ceremonies after a battle, ii. 251 _sq._

Pyanepsion, an Athenian month, ii. 41

Pygmalion, king of Citium and Idalium in Cyprus, i. 50

----, king of Cyprus, i. 41, 49

----, king of Tyre, i. 50

---- and Aphrodite, i. 49 _sq._

Pymaton of Citium, i. 50 _n._ 2

Pyramid Texts, ii. 4 _sqq._, 9 _n._;
  intended to ensure the life of dead Egyptian kings, 4 _sq._;
  Osiris and the sycamore in the, 110;
  the mention of Khenti-Amenti in the, 198 _n._ 2

Pyramus, river in Cilicia, i. 165, 167, 173

Pyre at festivals of Hercules, i. 116;
  at Tarsus, 126;
  of dead kings at Jerusalem, 177 _sq._

---- or Torch, name of great festival at the Syrian Hierapolis, i. 146

Pythian games, their period, ii. 242 _n._ 1

Python worshipped by the Baganda, i. 86

---- -god, human wives of the, i. 66

Pythons worshipped in West Africa, i. 83 _n._ 1;
  dead chiefs reincarnated in, ii. 193

"Quail-hunt," legend on coins of Tarsus, i. 126 _n._ 2

Quails sacrificed to Hercules (Melcarth), i. 111 _sq._;
  migration of, 112

Quatuordecimans of Phrygia celebrate the Crucifixion on March 25th, i. 307
            _n._

Queen of Egypt the wife of Ammon, i. 72

---- of Heaven, i. 303 _n._ 5;
  incense burnt in honour of the, 228

Queensland, aborigines of, their beliefs as to the birth of children, i.
            102 _sq._

Quirinus and Hora, ii. 233

Ra, the Egyptian sun-god, ii. 6, 8, 12;
  identified with many originally independent local deities, 122 _sqq._

Rabbah, captured by David, i. 19

Rabbis, burnings for dead Jewish, i. 178 _sq._

Rain procured by bones of the dead, i. 22;
  excessive, ascribed to wrath of God, 22 _sq._;
  instrumental in rebirth of dead infants, 95;
  regarded as the tears of gods, ii. 33;
  thought to be controlled by the souls of dead chiefs, 188

---- -charm in rites of Adonis, i. 237;
  by throwing water on the last corn cut, 237 _sq._

---- -god represented with tears running from his eyes, ii. 33 _n._ 3

Rainbow totem, i. 101

Rainless summer on the Mediterranean, i. 159 _sq._

Rajaraja, king, i. 61

Rajputana, gardens of Adonis in, i. 241 _sq._

Rambree, sorcerers dressed as women in the island of, ii. 254

Rameses II., his treaty with the Hittites, i. 135 _sq._;
  his order to the Nile, ii. 33

Ramman, Babylonian and Assyrian god of thunder, i. 163 _sq._

Rams, testicles of, in the rites of Attis, i. 269

Ramsay, Sir W. M., on rock-hewn sculptures at Boghaz-Keui, i. 134 _n._ 1,
            137 _n._ 4;
  on priest-dynasts of Asia Minor, 140 _n._ 2;
  on the god Tark, 147 _n._ 3;
  on the name Olba, 148 _n._ 1;
  on _Hierapolis_ and _Hieropolis_, 168 _n._ 2;
  on Attis and Men, 284 _n._ 5;
  on cruel death of the human representative of a god in Phrygia, 285
              _sq._

Raoul-Rochette on Asiatic deities with lions, i. 138 _n._;
  on the burning of doves to Adonis, 147 _n._ 1;
  on apotheosis by death in the fire, 180 _n._ 1

Ratumaimbulu, Fijian god of fruit-trees, i. 90

Readjustment of Egyptian festivals, ii. 91 _sqq._

Reapers, Egyptian, their lamentations, i. 232, ii. 45;
  invoke Isis, 117

Rebirth of infants, means taken to ensure the, i. 91, 93 _sqq._;
  of the dead, precautions taken to prevent, 92 _sq._;
  of Egyptian kings at the Sed festival, ii. 153, 155 _sq._

Red the colour of Lower Egypt, ii. 21 _n._ 1

---- -haired men burnt by Egyptians, ii. 97, 106

Reform, the prophetic, in Israel, i. 24 _sq._

Reformations of Hezekiah and Josiah, i. 25

Rehoboam, King, his family, i. 51 _n._ 2

Reincarnation of the dead, i. 82 _sqq._;
  in America, 91;
  in Australia, 99 _sqq._

Rekub-el, Syrian god, i. 16

Relations, spirits of near dead, worshipped, i. 175, 176;
  at death become gods, ii. 180

Religion, volcanic, i. 188 _sqq._;
  how influenced by mother-kin, ii. 202 _sqq._

---- and magic, combination of, i. 4;
  and music, 53 _sq._

Religious ideals a product of the male imagination, ii. 211

---- systems, great permanent, founded by great men, ii. 159 _sq._

Remission of sins through the shedding of blood, i. 299

Remus, the birth of, ii. 235

Renan, E., on Tammuz and Adonis, i. 6 _n._ 1;
  his excavations at Byblus, 14 _n._ 1;
  on Adom-melech, 17;
  on the vale of the Adonis, 29 _n._;
  on the burnings for the kings of Judah, 178 _n._ 1;
  on the discoloration of the river Adonis, 225 _n._ 4;
  on the worship of Adonis, 235

Renouf, Sir P. le Page, on Osiris as the sun, ii. 126

Resemblance of the rites of Adonis to the festival of Easter, i. 254
            _sqq._, 306

Resemblances of paganism to Christianity explained as diabolic
            counterfeits, i. 302, 309 _sq._

Reshef, Semitic god, i. 16 _n._ 1

Resurrection of the dead conceived on the pattern of the resurrection of
            Osiris, ii. 15 _sq._

---- of Attis at the vernal equinox, i. 272 _sq._, 307 _sq._

---- of Hercules (Melcarth), i. 111 _sq._

---- of Osiris dramatically represented in his rites, ii. 85;
  depicted on the monuments, 89 _sq._;
  date of its celebration at Rome, 95 _n._ 1;
  symbolized by the setting up of the _ded_ pillar, 109

Resurrection of Tylon, i. 186 _sq._

Rhine, bathing in the, on St. John's Eve, i. 248

Rhodes described by Strabo, i. 195 _n._ 3;
  worship of Helen in, 292

Rhodesia, Northern, the Bantu tribes of, their worship of ancestral
            spirits, ii. 174 _sqq._;
  their worship of dead chiefs or kings, 191 _sqq._

Rhodians, the Venetians of antiquity, i. 195

Rice, the soul of the, in the first sheaf cut, ii. 239

Ridgeway, Professor W., on the marriage of brothers with sisters, ii. 216
            _n._ 1

Rites of irrigation in Egypt, ii. 33 _sqq._;
  of sowing, 40 _sqq._;
  of harvest, 45 _sqq._

Ritual, children of living parents in, ii. 236 _sqq._;
  of the Bechuanas at founding a new town, 249

---- of Adonis, i. 223 _sqq._

Rivers as the seat of worship of deities, i. 160;
  bathing in, at Midsummer, 246, 248, 249;
  gods worshipped beside, 289

Rivers, Dr. W. H. R., as to Melanesian theory of conception in women, i.
            97 _sq._;
  on the sacred dairyman of the Todas, ii. 228

Rizpah and her sons, i. 22

Robinson, Edward, on the vale of the Adonis, i. 29 _n._

Roccacaramanico, in the Abruzzi, Easter ceremonies at, i. 256 _n._ 2

Rock-hewn sculptures at Ibreez, i. 121 _sq._;
  at Boghaz-Keui, 129 _sqq._

Rockhill, W. Woodville, on dance of eunuchs in Corea, i. 270 _n._ 2

Rohde, E., on purification by blood, i. 299 _n._ 2;
  on Hyacinth, 315

Roman deities called "Father" and "Mother," ii. 233 _sqq._

---- emperor, funeral pyre of, i. 126 _sq._

---- expiation for prodigies, ii. 244

---- financial oppression, i. 301 _n._ 2

---- _genius_ symbolized by a serpent, i. 86

---- gods, the marriage of the, ii. 230 _sqq._;
  compared to Greek gods, 235

---- law, revival of, i. 301

---- marriage custom, ii. 245

---- mythology, fragments of, ii. 235, with _n._ 6

Romans adopt the worship of the Phrygian Mother of the Gods, i. 265;
  correct the vague Egyptian year by intercalation, ii. 27 _sq._

Rome, high-priest of Cybele at, i. 285;
  the celebration of the resurrection of Osiris at, ii. 95 _n._ 1

Romulus cut in pieces, ii. 98;
  the birth of, 235

Roper River, in Australia, i. 101

Roscoe, Rev. John, on serpent-worship, i. 86 _n._ 1;
  on the rebirth of the dead, 92 _sq._;
  on potters in Uganda, ii. 135;
  on the religion of the Bahima, 190 _sq._;
  on the worship of the dead among the Baganda, 196;
  on Mukasa, the chief god of the Baganda, 196 _sq._;
  on massacres for sick kings of Uganda, 226

Rose, the white, dyed red by the blood of Aphrodite, i. 226

Rosetta stone, the inscription, ii. 27, 152 _n._

Roth, W. E., on belief in conception without sexual intercourse, i. 103
            _n._ 2

Rotomahana in New Zealand, pink terraces at, i. 207, 209 _n._

Rugaba, supreme god in Kiziba, ii. 173

Rules of life based on a theory of lunar influence, ii. 132 _sqq._, 140
            _sqq._

Rumina, a Roman goddess, ii. 231

Runes, how Odin learned the magic, i. 290

Russia, annual festivals of the dead in, ii. 75 _sqq._

Russian Midsummer custom, i. 250 _sq._

Rustic Calendars, the Roman, ii. 95 _n._ 1

Sabazius, mysteries of, i. 90 _n._ 4

Sacrament in the rites of Attis, i. 274 _sq._

Sacred harlots in Asia Minor, i. 141

---- marriage of priest and priestess as representing god and goddess, i. 46
            _sqq._;
  represented in the rock-hewn sculptures at Boghaz-Keui, 140;
  in Cos, ii. 259 _n._ 4

"---- men" (_kedeshim_), at Jerusalem, i. 17 _sq._;
  and women, 57 _sqq._;
  in West Africa, 65 _sqq._;
  in Western Asia, 72 _sqq._;
  at Andania, 76 _n._ 3

---- prostitution, i. 36 _sqq._;
  suggested origin of, 39 _sqq._;
  in Western Asia, alternative theory of, 55 _sqq._;
  in India, 61 _sqq._;
  in West Africa, 65 _sqq._

---- slaves, i. 73, 79

---- stocks and stones among the Semites, i. 107 _sqq._

---- women in India, i. 61 _sqq._;
  in West Africa, 65 _sqq._;
  in Western Asia, 70 _sqq._;
  at Andania, 76 _n._ 3

Sacrifice of virginity, i. 60;
  of virility in the rites of Attis and Astarte, 268 _sq._, 270 _sq._;
  other cases of, 270 _n._ 2;
  nutritive and vicarious types of, ii. 226

Sacrifices to earthquake god, i. 201, 202;
  to volcanoes, 218 _sqq._;
  to the dead distinguished from sacrifices to the gods, 316 _n._ 1;
  offered at the rising of Sirius, ii. 36 _n._;
  offered in connexion with irrigation, 38 _sq._;
  to dead kings, 101, 162, 166 _sq._;
  to ancestral spirits, 175, 178 _sq._, 180, 181 _sq._, 183 _sq._, 190;
  of animals to prolong the life of kings, 221;
  without shedding of blood, 222 _n._ 2

Sacrifices, human, offered at earthquakes, i. 201;
  offered to Dionysus, ii. 98 _sq._;
  at the graves of the kings of Uganda, 168;
  to dead kings, 173;
  to dead chiefs, 191;
  to prolong the life of kings, 220 _sq._, 223 _sqq._

Sadyattes, son of Cadys, viceroy of Lydia, i. 183

Saffron at the Corycian cave, i. 154, 187

Sago, magic for the growth of, ii. 101

Sahagun, B. de, on the ancient Mexican calendar, ii. 28 _n._

St. Denys, his seven heads, ii. 12

St. George in Syria, reputed to bestow offspring on women, i. 78, 79, 90;
  festival of, and the Parilia, 308, 309

St. John, Sweethearts of, in Sardinia, i. 244 _sq._

St. John, Spenser, on reasons for head-hunting in Sarawak, i. 296

St. John's Day or Eve (Midsummer Day or Eve), custom of bathing on, i. 246
            _sqq._

---- Midsummer festival in Sardinia, i. 244 _sq._

---- wort gathered at Midsummer, i. 252 _sq._

St. Kilda, All Saints' Day in, ii. 80

St. Luke, the festival of, on October 18th, ii. 55

Saint-Maries, Midsummer custom at, i. 248

S. Martinus Dumiensis, on the date of the Crucifixion in Gaul, i. 307 _n._

St. Michael in Alaska, ii. 51

St. Simon and St. Jude's day, October 28th, ii. 74

St. Vitus, festival of, i. 252

Saintonge, feast of All Souls in, ii. 69

Saints as the givers of children to women, i. 78 _sq._, 91, 109

Sais, the festival of, ii. 49 _sqq._

Sakkara, pyramids at, ii. 4

_Sal_ tree, festival of the flower of the, i. 47

Salacia and Neptune, ii. 231, 233

Salamis in Cyprus, human sacrifices at, i. 145;
  dynasty of Teucrids at, 145

Salem, Melchizedek, king of, i. 17

Salii, priests of Mars, rule as to their election, ii. 244

Salono, a Hindoo festival, i. 243 _n._ 1

Salvation of the individual soul, importance attached to, in Oriental
            religions, i. 300

Samagitians, their annual festival of the dead, ii. 75

Samal, in North-Western Syria, i. 16

Samaria, the fall of, i. 25

Samoa, conduct of the inhabitants in an earthquake, i. 200

Samuel consulted about asses, i. 75;
  meaning of the name, 79

---- and Saul, i. 22

San Juan Capistrano, the Indians of, their ceremony at the new moon, ii.
            142

Sanda-Sarme, a Cilician king, i. 144

Sandacus, a Syrian, i. 41

Sandan of Tarsus, i. 124 _sqq._;
  the burning of, 117 _sqq._, 126;
  identified with Hercules, 125, 143, 161;
  monument of, at Tarsus, 126 _n._ 2

---- (Sandon, Sandes), Cappadocian and Cilician god of fertility, i. 125

---- and Baal at Tarsus, i. 142 _sq._, 161

Sandon, or Sandan, name of the Lydian and Cilician Hercules, i. 182, 184,
            185;
  a Cilician name, 182

Sandu'arri, a Cilician king, i. 144

Santa Felicita, successor of Mefitis, i. 205

Santiago Tepehuacan, Indians of, their custom at sowing, i. 239;
  their annual festival of the dead, ii. 55

Santorin, island of, its volcanic activity, i. 195

Sappho on the mourning for Adonis, i. 6 _n._ 2

Saracus, last king of Assyria, i. 174

Sarawak, head-hunting in, i. 295 _sq._

Sardanapalus, monument of, at Tarsus, i. 126 _n._ 2;
  his monument at Anchiale, 172;
  the burning of, 172 _sqq._;
  the effeminate, ii. 257

---- and Hercules, i. 172 _sqq._

Sardes, captured by Cyrus, i. 174;
  lion carried round acropolis of, i. 184, ii. 249

Sardinia, gardens of Adonis in, i. 244 _sq._

Sargal, in India, gardens of Adonis at, i. 243

Sarpedonian Artemis, i. 167, 171

Sasabonsun, earthquake god of Ashantee, i. 201

Saturn, the husband of Ops, ii. 233

---- and Lua, ii. 233

Saturn's period of revolution round the sun, ii. 151 _sq._

Saturnine temperament of the farmer, ii. 218

Sauks, an Indian tribe of North America, effeminate sorcerers among the,
            ii. 255

Saul, burial of, i. 177 _n._ 4

---- and David, i. 21

Saul's madness soothed by music, i. 53, 54

Savages lament for the animals and plants which they eat, ii. 43 _sq._

Sawan, Indian month, i. 242

Saxons of Transylvania, harvest custom of the, i. 238

Sayce, A. H., on kings of Edom, i. 16;
  on name of David, 19 _n._ 2

Schaefer, H., on the tomb of Osiris at Abydos, ii. 198 _n._ 1

Schlanow, in Brandenburg, custom at sowing at, i. 238 _sq._

Schloss, Mr. Francis S., on the rule as to the felling of timber in
            Colombia, ii. 136 _n._ 4

Schwegler, A., on the death of Romulus, ii. 98 _n._ 2

Scipio, his fabulous birth, i. 81

Scorpions, Isis and the, ii. 8

Scotland, harvest custom in, i. 237

Scottish Highlanders on the influence of the moon, ii. 132, 134, 140

Scythian king, human beings and horses sacrificed at his grave, i. 293

Scythians, their belief in immortality, i. 294;
  their treatment of dead enemies, 294 _n._ 3

Sea, custom of bathing in the, on St. John's Day or Eve, i. 246, 248

---- Dyaks or Ibans of Borneo, their worship of serpents, i. 83;
  their festivals of the dead, ii. 56 _sq._;
  effeminate priests or sorcerers among the, 253, 256

---- Dyaks of Sarawak, their reasons for taking human heads, i. 295 _sq._

Season of festival a clue to the nature of a deity, ii. 24

Seasons, magical and religious theories of the, i. 3 _sq._

Seb (Keb or Geb), Egyptian earth-god, i. 283 _n._ 3, ii. 6

Secret graves of kings, chiefs, and magicians, ii. 103 _sqq._

Sed festival in Egypt, ii. 151 _sqq._;
  its date perhaps connected with the heliacal rising of Sirius, 152
              _sq._;
  apparently intended to renew the king's life by identifying him with the
              dead and risen Osiris, 153 _sq._

Segera, a sago magician of Kiwai, dismembered after death, ii. 101, 102

Seker (Sokari), title of Osiris, ii. 87

Seler, Professor E., on the ancient Mexican calendar, ii. 28 _n._

Seleucus, a grammarian, i. 146 _n._ 1

---- Nicator, king, i. 151

---- the Theologian, i. 146 _n._ 1

Self-mutilation of Attis and his priests, i. 265

Seligmann, Dr. C. G., on the five supplementary Egyptian days, ii. 6 _n._
            3;
  on the divinity of Shilluk kings, 161 _n._ 2;
  on custom of putting Shilluk kings to death, 163

Selwanga, python-god of Baganda, i. 86

Semiramis at Hierapolis, i. 162 _n._ 2;
  as a form of Ishtar (Astarte), 176 _sq._;
  said to have burnt herself, 176 _sq._;
  the mythical, a form of the great Asiatic goddess, ii. 258

Semites, agricultural, worship Baal as the giver of fertility, i. 26
            _sq._;
  sacred stocks and stones among the, 107 _sqq._;
  traces of mother-kin among the, ii. 213

Semitic gods, uniformity of their type, i. 119

---- kings, the divinity of, i. 15 _sqq._;
  as hereditary deities, 51

---- language, Egyptian language akin to the, ii. 161 _n._ 1

---- personal names indicating relationship to a deity, i. 51

---- worship of Tammuz and Adonis, i. 6 _sqq._

_Semlicka_, festival of the dead among the Letts, ii. 74

Seneca, on the offerings of Egyptian priests to the Nile, ii. 40;
  on the marriage of the Roman gods, 231;
  on Salacia as the wife of Neptune, 233

Senegal and Niger region of West Africa, belief as to conception without
            sexual intercourse in, i. 93 _n._ 2;
  myth of marriage of Sky and Earth in the, 282 _n._ 2

Senegambia, the Mandingoes of, ii. 141

Sennacherib, his siege of Jerusalem, i. 25;
  said to have built Tarsus, 173 _n._ 4

Separation of Earth and Sky, myth of the, i. 283

Serapeum at Alexandria, ii. 119 _n._;
  its destruction, 217

Serapis, the later form of Osiris, ii. 119 _n._;
  the rise of the Nile attributed to, 216 _sq._;
  the standard cubit kept in his temple, 217

Serpent as the giver of children, i. 86;
  at rites of initiation, 90 _n._ 4

---- -god married to human wives, i. 66 _sqq._;
  thought to control the crops, 67

Serpents reputed the fathers of human beings, i. 80 _sqq._;
  as embodiments of Aesculapius, 80 _sq._;
  worshipped in Mysore, 81 _sq._;
  as reincarnations of the dead, 82 _sqq._;
  fed with milk, 84 _sqq._, 87;
  thought to have knowledge of life-giving plants, 186;
  souls of dead kings incarnate in, ii. 163, 173

Servius, on the death of Attis, i. 264 _n._ 4;
  on the marriage of Orcus, ii. 231;
  on Salacia as the wife of Neptune, 233

---- Tullius, begotten by the fire-god, ii. 235

Sesostris, so-called monument of, i. 185

Set, or Typhon, brother of Osiris, ii. 6;
  murders Osiris, 7 _sq._;
  accuses Osiris before the gods, 17;
  brings a suit of bastardy against Horus, 17;
  his combat with Horus, 17;
  reigns over Upper Egypt, 17;
  torn in pieces, 98.
  _See also_ Typhon

Sety I., King of Egypt, ii. 108

Shamash, Babylonian sun-god, his human wives, i. 71

---- Semitic god, i. 16 _n._ 1

Shamashshumukin, King of Babylon, burns himself, i. 173 _sq._, 176

Shammuramat, Assyrian queen, i. 177 _n._ 1

Shans of Burma, their theory of earthquakes, i. 198;
  cut bamboos for building in the wane of the moon, ii. 136

Shark-shaped hero, i. 139 _n._ 1

Sheaf, the first cut, ii. 239

Sheep to be shorn when the moon is waxing, ii. 134;
  to be shorn in the waning of the moon, 134 _n._ 3

_Sheitan dere_, the Devil's Glen, in Cilicia, i. 150

Shenty, Egyptian cow-goddess, ii. 88

Shifting dates of Egyptian festivals, ii. 24 _sq._

Shilluk kings put to death before their strength fails, ii. 163

Shilluks, their worship of dead kings, ii. 161 _sq._;
  their worship of Nyakang, the first of the Shilluk kings, 162 _sqq._

Shoulders of medicine-men especially sensitive, i. 74 _n._ 4

Shouting as a means of stopping earthquakes, i. 197 _sqq._

Shropshire, feast of All Souls in, ii. 78

Shu, Egyptian god of light, i. 283 _n._ 3

Shuswap Indians of British Columbia eat nutlets of pines, i. 278 _n._ 2

Siam, catafalque burnt at funeral of king of, i. 179;
  annual festival of the dead in, ii. 65

Siao, children sacrificed to volcano in, i. 219

Sibitti-baal, king of Byblus, i. 14

Sibyl, the Grotto of the, at Marsala, i. 247

Sibylline Books, i. 265

Sicily, Syrian prophet in, i. 74;
  fossil bones in, 157;
  hot springs in, 213;
  gardens of Adonis in, 245, 253 _sq._;
  divination at Midsummer in, 254;
  Good Friday ceremonies in, 255 _sq._

Sick people resort to cave of Pluto, i. 205 _sq._

Sicyon, shrine of Aesculapius at, i. 81

Sidon, kings of, as priests of Astarte, i. 26

_Siem_, king, among the Khasis of Assam, ii. 210 _n._ 1

Sigai, hero in form of shark, i. 139 _n._ 1

Sihanaka, the, of Madagascar, funeral custom of the, ii. 246

Sinai, "Mistress of Turquoise" at, i. 35

Sinews of sacrificial ox cut, ii. 252

Sins, the remission of, through the shedding of blood, i. 299

Sinsharishkun, last king of Assyria, i. 174

Sipylus, Mother Plastene on Mount, i. 185

Siriac or Sothic period, ii. 36

Sirius (the Dog-star), observed by Egyptian astronomers, ii. 27;
  called Sothis by the Egyptians, 34;
  date of its rising in ancient Egypt, 34;
  heliacal rising of, on July 20th, 34 _n._ 1, 93;
  its rising marked the beginning of the sacred Egyptian year, 35;
  its rising observed in Ceos, 35 _n._ 1;
  sacrifices offered at its rising on the top of Mount Pelion, 36 _n._

---- the star of Isis, ii. 34, 119;
  in connexion with the Sed festival, 152 _sq._

Sis in Cilicia, i. 144

Sister of a god, i. 51

Sisters, kings marry their, i. 316

Sizu in Cilicia, i. 144

Skin, bathing in dew at Midsummer as remedy for diseases of the, i. 247,
            248;
  of ox stuffed and set up, 296 _sq._;
  body of Egyptian dead placed in a bull's, ii. 15 _n._ 2;
  of sacrificial victim used in the rite of the new birth, 155 _sq._

Skinner, Principal J., on the burnt sacrifice of children, ii. 219

Skins of human victims, uses made of, i. 293;
  of horses stuffed and set up at graves, 293, 294

Skull, drinking out of a king's, in order to be inspired by his spirit,
            ii. 171

Sky conceived by the Egyptians as a cow, i. 283 _n._ 3

---- and earth, myth of their violent separation, i. 283

---- -god, Attis as a, i. 282 _sqq._;
  married to Earth-goddess, 282, with _n._ 2;
  mutilation of the, 283

Slaughter of prisoners often a sacrifice to the gods, i. 290 _n._ 2

Slave Coast of West Africa, sacred men and women on the, i. 65, 68;
  Ewe-speaking peoples of the, 83 _n._ 1

Slaves, sacred, in Western Asia, i. 39 _n._ 1

Slaying of the Dragon by Apollo at Delphi, ii. 240 _sq._

Sleep of the god in winter, ii. 41

Smell, evil, used to avert demons, ii. 261

Smeroe, Mount, volcano in Java, i. 221

Smith, George Adam, on fertility of Bethlehem, i. 257 _n._ 3

Smith, W. Robertson, on the date of the month Tammuz, i. 10 _n._ 1;
  on anointing as consecration, 21 _n._ 3;
  on Baal as god of fertility, 26 _sq._;
  on caves in Semitic religion, 169 _n._ 3;
  on Tophet, 177 _n._ 4;
  on the predominance of goddesses over gods in early Semitic religion,
              ii. 213;
  on the sacrifice of children to Moloch, 220 _n._ 1

Smoking as a mode of inducing inspiration, ii. 172

Snake-entwined goddess found at Gournia, i. 88

Snakes as fathers of human beings, i. 82;
  fed with milk, 84 _sqq._
  _See also_ Serpents

Snorri Sturluson, on the dismemberment of Halfdan the Black, ii. 100

Sobk, a crocodile-shaped Egyptian god, identified with the sun, ii. 123

_Sochit_ or _Sochet_, epithet of Isis, ii. 117

Society, ancient, built on the principle of the subordination of the
            individual to the community, i. 300

Socrates (church historian) on sacred prostitution, i. 37 _n._ 2

Soederblom, N., on an attempted reform of the old Iranian religion, ii. 83
            _n._ 2

Sodom and Gomorrah, the destruction of, i. 222 _n._ 1

Soerakarta, district of Java, conduct of natives in an earthquake, i. 202
            _n._ 1

Sokari (Seker), a title of Osiris, ii. 87

_Sol invictus_, i. 304 _n._ 1

_Solanum campylanthum_, ii. 47

Solomon, King, puts Adoni-jah to death, i. 51 _n._ 2

----, the Baths of, i. 78;
  in Moab, 215 _sq._

Solstice, the summer, the Nile rises at the, ii. 31 _n._ 1, 33

----, the winter, reckoned the Nativity of the Sun, i. 303;
  Egyptian ceremony at, ii. 50

Somali, marriage custom of the, ii. 246, 247

Son of a god, i. 51

Sons of God, i. 78 _sqq._

Sophocles on the burning of Hercules, i. 111

Sorcerers or priests, order of effeminate, ii. 253 _sqq._

Sorrowful One, the vaults of the, ii. 41

Sothic or Siriac period, ii. 36

Sothis, Egyptian name for the star Sirius, ii. 34.
  _See_ Sirius

Soul of a tree in a bird, ii. 111 _n._ 1;
  of the rice in the first sheaf cut, 239

"---- of Osiris," a bird, ii. 110

---- -cakes eaten at the feast of All Souls in Europe, ii. 70, 71 _sq._, 73,
            78 _sqq._

"Souling," custom of, on All Souls' Day in England, ii. 79

"---- Day" in Shropshire, ii. 78

Souls of the dead, reincarnation of the, i. 91 _sqq._;
  brought back among the Gonds, 95 _sq._

----, feasts of All, ii. 51 _sqq._

South Slavs, devices of women to obtain offspring, i. 96;
  marriage customs of, ii. 246

Sowers and ploughmen drenched with water as a rain-charm, i. 238 _sq._

Sowing, Prussian custom at, i. 238 _sq._;
  rites of, ii. 40 _sqq._

---- and ploughing, ceremony of, in the rites of Osiris, ii. 87, 90, 96;
  and planting, regulated by the phases of the moon, 133 _sqq._

Sozomenus, church historian, on sacred prostitution, i. 37

Spain, bathing on St. John's Eve in, i. 248

Sparta destroyed by an earthquake, i. 196 _n._ 4

Spartans, their attempt to stop an earthquake, i. 196

---- their flute-band, i. 196

---- their uniform red, i. 196

---- at Thermopylae, i. 197 _n._ 1

---- their regard for the full moon, ii. 141

---- their brides dressed as men on the wedding night, ii. 260

Spencer, Baldwin, on reincarnation of the dead, i. 100 _n._ 3

Spencer, B., and Gillen, F. J., on Australian belief in conception without
            sexual intercourse, i. 99

Spermus, king of Lydia, i. 183

Spieth, J., on the Ewe peoples, i. 70 _n._ 2

Spirit animals supposed to enter women and be born from them, i. 97 _sq._

---- -children left by ancestors, i. 100 _sq._

Spirits supposed to consort with women, i. 91;
  of ancestors in the form of animals, 83;
  of forefathers thought to dwell in rivers, ii. 38

---- of dead chiefs worshipped by the whole tribe, ii. 175, 176, 177, 179,
            181 _sq._, 187;
  thought to control the rain, 188;
  prophesy through living men and women, 192 _sq._;
  reincarnated in animals, 193.
  _See also_ Ancestral spirits

Spring called Persephone, ii. 41

Springs, worship of hot, i. 206 _sqq._;
  bathing in, at Midsummer, 246, 247, 248, 249

Staffordshire, All Souls' Day in, ii. 79

Standard, Egyptian, resembling a placenta, ii. 156 _n._ 1

Stanikas, male children of sacred prostitutes, i. 63

Star of Bethlehem, i. 259

---- of Salvation, i. 258

---- -spangled cap of Attis, i. 284

Steinn in Hringariki, barrow of Halfdan at, ii. 100

_Stella Maris_, an epithet of the Virgin Mary, ii. 119

Stengel, P., on sacrificial ritual of Eleusis, i. 292 _n._ 3

Stlatlum Indians of British Columbia respect the animals and plants which
            they eat, ii. 44

Stocks, sacred, among the Semites, i. 107 _sqq._

Stones, holed, custom of passing through, i. 36;
  to commemorate the dead, ii. 203

----, sacred, anointed, i. 36;
  among the Semites, 107 _sqq._;
  among the Khasis, 108 _n._ 1

Strabo, on the concubines of Ammon, i. 72;
  on Albanian moon-god, 73 _n._ 4;
  on Castabala, 168 _n._ 6;
  his description of the Burnt Land of Lydia, 193;
  on the frequency of earthquakes at Philadelphia, 195;
  his description of Rhodes, 195 _n._ 3;
  on Nysa, 206 _n._ 1;
  on the priests of Pessinus, 286

Stratonicea in Caria, eunuch priest at, i. 270 _n._ 2;
  rule as to the pollution of death at, ii. 227 _sq._

String music in religion, i. 54

Su-Mu, a tribe of Southern China, said to be governed by a woman, ii. 211
            _n._ 2

Subordination of the individual to the community, the principle of ancient
            society, i. 300

Substitutes for human sacrifices, i. 146 _sq._, 219 _sq._, 285, 289, ii.
            99, 221

Succession to the crown under mother-kin (female kinship), i. 44, ii. 18,
            210 _n._ 1

Sudan, the negroes of, their regard for the phases of the moon, ii. 141

Sudanese, their conduct in an earthquake, i. 198

_Suffetes_ of Carthage, i. 116

Sugar-bag totem, i. 101

Suicides, custom observed at graves of, i. 93;
  ghosts of, feared, 292 _n._ 3

Suk, their belief in serpents as reincarnations of the dead, i. 82, 85

Sulla at Aedepsus, i. 212

Sumatra, the Bataks of, i. 199, ii. 239;
  the Loeboes of, 264

Sumba, East Indian island, annual festival of the New Year and of the dead
            in, ii. 55 _sq._

Sumerians, their origin and civilization, i. 7 _sq._

Summer on the Mediterranean rainless, i. 159 _sq._

---- called Aphrodite, ii. 41

---- festival of Adonis, i. 226, 232 _n._

Sun, temple of the, at Baalbec, i. 163;
  Adonis interpreted as the, 228;
  the Nativity of the, at the winter solstice, 303 _sqq._;
  Osiris interpreted as the, ii. 120 _sqq._;
  called "the eye of Horus," 121;
  worshipped in Egypt, 122, 123 _sqq._;
  the power of regeneration ascribed to the, 143 _n._ 4;
  salutations to the rising, 193

---- and earth, annual marriage of, i. 47 _sq._

---- -god annually married to Earth-goddess, i. 47 _sq._;
  the Egyptian, ii. 123 _sqq._;
  hymns to the, 123 _sq._

---- -goddess of the Hittites, i. 133 _n._

---- the Unconquered, Mithra identified with, i. 304

Superiority of the goddess in the myths of Adonis, Attis, Osiris, ii. 201
            _sq._;
  of goddesses over gods in societies organized on mother-kin, 202 _sqq._;
  legal, of women over men in ancient Egypt, 214

Supplementary days, five, in the Egyptian year, ii. 6;
  in the ancient Mexican year, 28 _n._ 3;
  in the old Iranian year, 67, 68

Supreme gods in Africa, ii. 165, 173 _sq._, 174, 186, with note 5, 187
            _n._ 1, 188 _sq._, 190

_Swastika_, i. 122 _n._ 1

Sweden, May-pole or Midsummer-tree in, i. 250;
  Midsummer bride and bridegroom in, 251;
  kings of, answerable for the fertility of the ground, ii. 220;
  marriage custom in, to ensure the birth of a boy, 262

"Sweethearts of St. John" in Sardinia, i. 244 _sq._

Swine not eaten by people of Pessinus, i. 265;
  not eaten by worshippers of Adonis, 265;
  not allowed to enter Comana in Pontus, 265.
  _See also_ Pigs

Sword, girls married to a, i. 61

Sycamore, effigy of Osiris placed on boughs of, ii. 88, 110;
  sacred to Osiris, 110

Syene (Assuan), inscriptions at, ii. 35 _n._ 1

Symbolism, coarse, of Osiris and Dionysus, ii. 112, 113

Symmachus, on the festival of the Great Mother, i. 298

Syracuse, the Blue Spring at, i. 213 _n._ 1

Syria, Adonis in, i. 13 _sqq._;
  "holy men" in, 77 _sq._;
  hot springs resorted to by childless women in, 213 _sqq._;
  subject to earthquakes, 222 _n._ 1;
  the Nativity of the Sun at the winter solstice in, 303;
  turning money at the new moon in, ii. 149

Syrian god Hadad, i. 15

---- peasants believe that women can conceive without sexual intercourse, i.
            91

---- women apply to saints for offspring, i. 109

---- writer on the reasons for assigning Christmas to the twenty-fifth of
            December, i. 304 _sq._

Ta-uz (Tammuz), mourned by Syrian women in Harran, i. 230

Taanach, burial of children in jars at, i. 109 _n._ 1

Tacitus as to German observation of the moon, ii. 141

Taenarum in Laconia, Poseidon worshipped at, i. 203 _n._ 2

Talaga Bodas, volcano in Java, i. 204

Talbot, P. Amaury, on self-mutilation, i. 270 _n._ 1

Talismans, crowns and wreaths as, ii. 242 _sq._

Tamarisk, sacred to Osiris, ii. 110 _sq._

Tami, the, of German New Guinea, their theory of earthquakes, i. 198

Tamil temples, dancing-girls in, i. 61

Tamirads, diviners, i. 42

Tammuz, i. 6 _sqq._;
  equivalent to Adonis, 6 _n._ 1;
  his worship of Sumerian origin, 7 _sq._;
  meaning of the name, 8;
  "true son of the deep water," 8, 246;
  laments for, 9 _sq._;
  the month of, 10 _n._ 1, 230;
  mourned for at Jerusalem, 11, 17, 20;
  as a corn-spirit, 230;
  his bones ground in a mill and scattered to the wind, 230

---- and Ishtar, i. 8 _sq._

Tangkul Nagas of Assam, their annual festival of the dead, ii. 57 _sqq._

Tanjore, dancing-girls at, i. 61

Tantalus murders his son Pelops, i. 181

Tark, Tarku, Trok, Troku, syllables in names of Cilician priests, i. 144;
  perhaps the name of a Hittite deity, 147;
  perhaps the name of the god of Olba, 148, 165

Tarkimos, priest of Corycian Zeus, i. 145

Tarkondimotos, name of two Cilician kings, i. 145 _n._ 2

Tarkuaris, priest of Corycian Zeus, i. 145;
  priestly king of Olba, 145

Tarkudimme or Tarkuwassimi, name on Hittite seal, i. 145 _n._ 2

Tarkumbios, priest of Corycian Zeus, i. 145

Tarsus, climate and fertility of, i. 118;
  school of philosophy at, 118;
  Sandan and Baal at, 142 _sq._, 161;
  priesthood of Hercules at, 143;
  Fortune of the City on coins of, 164;
  divine triad at, 171

----, the Baal of, i. 117 _sqq._, 162 _sq._

----, Sandan of, i. 124 _sqq._

_Tat_ or _tatu_ pillar. _See_ _Ded_ pillar

Tate, H. R., on serpent-worship, i. 85

Tattoo-marks of priests, i. 74 _n._ 4

Taurians of the Crimea, their use of the heads of prisoners, i. 294

_Taurobolium_ in the rites of Cybele, i. 274 _sqq._;
  or _Tauropolium_, 275 _n._ 1

Taurus mountains, i. 120

Tears of Isis thought to swell the Nile, ii. 33;
  rain thought to be the tears of gods, 33

Tegea, tombstones at, i. 87

Telamon, father of Teucer, i. 145

Tell-el-Amarna letters, i. 16 _n._ 5, 21 _n._ 2, 135 _n._;
  the new capital of King Amenophis IV., ii. 123 _n._ 1, 124, 125

Tell Ta'annek (Taanach), burial of children in jars at, i. 109 _n._ 1

Tempe, the Vale of, ii. 240

Temple-tombs of kings, ii. 161 _sq._, 167 _sq._, 170 _sqq._, 174, 194
            _sq._

Temples of dead kings, ii. 161 _sq._, 167 _sq._, 170 _sqq._, 194 _sq._

Tenggereese of Java sacrifice to volcano, i. 220

Tentyra (Denderah), temple of Osiris at, ii. 86

Ternate, the sultan of, his sacrifice of human victims to a volcano, i.
            220

Tertullian on the fasts of Isis and Cybele, i. 302 _n._ 4;
  on the date of the Crucifixion, 306 _n._ 5

Teshub or Teshup, name of Hittite god, i. 135 _n._, 148 _n._

Teso, the, of Central Africa, medicine-men dressed as women among the, ii.
            257

Testicles of rams in the rites of Attis, i. 269 _n._;
  of bull used in rites of Cybele and Attis, 276

Tet, New Year festival in Annam, ii. 62

_Tet_ pillar. _See_ _Ded_ pillar

Teti, king of Egypt, ii. 5

Teucer, said to have instituted human sacrifice, i. 146

---- and Ajax, names of priestly kings of Olba, i. 144 _sq._, 148, 161

Teucer, son of Tarkuaris, priestly king of Olba, i. 151, 157

----, son of Telamon, founds Salamis in Cyprus, i. 145

----, son of Zenophanes, high-priest of Olbian Zeus, i. 151

Teucrids, dynasty at Salamis in Cyprus, i. 145

Teutonic year reckoned from October 1st, ii. 81

Thargelion, an Attic month, ii. 239 _n._ 1

Theal, G. McCall, on the worship of ancestors among the Bantus, ii. 176
            _sq._

Theban priests, their determination of the solar year, ii. 26

Thebes in Boeotia, stone lion at, i. 184 _n._ 3;
  festival of the Laurel-bearing at, ii. 241

---- in Egypt, temple of Ammon at, i. 72;
  the Memnonium at, ii. 35 _n._;
  the Valley of the Kings at, 90

Theias, a Syrian king, i. 43 _n._ 4;
  father of Adonis, 55 _n._ 4

Theism late in human history, ii. 41

Theocracy in the Pelew Islands, tendency to, ii. 208

Theopompus on the names of the seasons, ii. 41

Thera, worship of the Mother of the Gods in, i. 280 _n._ 1

Thermopylae, the Spartans at, i. 197 _n._ 1;
  the hot springs of, 210 _sqq._

Thesmophoria, i. 43 _n._ 4;
  sacrifice to serpents at the, 88;
  pine-cones at the, 278;
  fast of the women at the, ii. 40 _sq._

Thetis and her infant son, i. 180

Thirty years, the Sed festival held nominally at intervals of, ii. 151

Thonga, Bantu tribe of South Africa, their belief in serpents as
            reincarnations of the dead, i. 82;
  their presentation of infants to the moon, ii. 144 _sq._;
  worship of the dead among the, 180 _sq._

---- chiefs buried secretly, ii. 104 _sq._

Thongs, legends as to new settlements enclosed by, ii. 249 _sq._

Thoth, Egyptian god of wisdom, ii. 7, 17;
  teaches Isis a spell to restore the dead to life, 8;
  restores the eye of Horus, 17

Thoth, the first month of the Egyptian year, ii. 36, 93 _sqq._

Thracian villages, custom at Carnival in, ii. 99 _sq._

Threshing corn by oxen, ii. 45

Threshold, burial of infants under the, i. 93 _sq._

Thucydides on military music, i. 196 _n._ 3;
  on the sailing of the fleet for Syracuse, 226 _n._ 4

{~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} distinguished from {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ZETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, i. 316 _n._ 1

Thunder and lightning, sacrifices to, i. 157;
  the Syrian, Assyrian, Babylonian, and Hittite god of, 163 _sq._

---- -god of the Hittites, with a bull and an axe as his emblems, i. 134
            _sqq._

---- totem, i. 101

Thunderbolt, as emblem of Hittite god, i. 134, 136;
  as divine emblem, 163

---- and ears of corn, emblem of god Hadad, i. 163

Thurston, Edgar, on dancing-girls in India, i. 62

Thyatira, hero Tyrimnus at, i. 183 _n._

Thymbria, sanctuary of Charon at, i. 205

Tiberius, the Emperor, persecuted the Egyptian religion, ii. 95 _n._ 1

Tibullus, on the rising of Sirius, ii. 34 _n._ 1

Tiele, C. P., on rock-hewn sculptures at Boghaz-Keui, i. 140 _n._ 1;
  on the death of Saracus, 174 _n._ 2;
  on Isis, ii. 115;
  on the nature of Osiris, 126 _n._ 2

Tiger's ghost, deceiving a, ii. 263

Tiglath-Pileser III., king of Assyria, i. 14, 16, 163 _n._ 3

Tii, Egyptian queen, mother of Amenophis IV., ii. 123 _n._ 1

Tille, A., on beginning of Teutonic winter, ii. 81 _n._ 3

Timber felled in the waning of the moon, ii. 133, 135 _sq._, 137

Timor, theory of earthquakes in, i. 197

Timotheus, on the death of Attis, i. 264 _n._ 4

Tiru-kalli-kundram, dancing-girls at, i. 61

Titane, shrine of Aesculapius at, i. 81

_Tobolbel_, in the Pelew Islands, ii. 266

Tod, J., on rites of goddess Gouri, i. 241 _sq._

Todas of the Neilgherry Hills, custom as to the pollution of death
            observed by sacred dairyman among the, ii. 228

Togo-land, West Africa, the Ewe people of, i. 282 _n._ 2;
  the Ho tribe of, ii. 104

Tomb of Midas, i. 286;
  of Hyacinth, 314

Tombs of the kings of Uganda, ii. 168 _sq._;
  of kings sacred, 194 _sq._

Tongans, their theory of an earthquake, i. 200 _sq._

Tongue of sacrificial ox cut out, ii. 251 _sq._

Tonquin, annual festival of the dead in, ii. 62

Tophet, at Jerusalem, i. 177

Toradjas of Central Celebes, their theory of rain, ii. 33

Torres Straits Islands, worship of animal-shaped heroes in the, i. 139
            _n._ 1;
  death-dances in the, ii. 53 _n._ 2

Totemism in Kiziba, ii. 173, 174 _n._ 1

Toulon, Midsummer custom at, i. 248 _sq._

Town, charm to protect a, ii. 249 _sqq._

Tozer, H. F., on Mount Argaeus, i. 191

Traditions of kings torn in pieces, ii. 97 _sq._

Tralles in Lydia, i. 38

Transference of Egyptian festivals from one month to the preceding month,
            ii. 92 _sqq._

Transformation of men into women, attempted, in obedience to dreams, ii.
            255 _sqq._;
  of women into men, attempted, 255 _n._ 1

Transition from mother-kin to father-kin, ii. 261 _n._ 3

Transylvania, harvest customs among the Roumanians and Saxons of, i. 237
            _sq._

Travancore, dancing-girls in, i. 63 _sqq._

Treason, old English punishment of, i. 290 _n._ 2

Tree decked with bracelets, anklets, etc., i. 240;
  soul of a, in a bird, ii. 111 _n._ 1

---- of life in Eden, i. 186 _n._ 4

---- -bearers (_Dendrophori_) in the worship of Cybele and Attis, i. 266
            _n._ 2, 267

---- -spirit, Osiris as a, ii. 107 _sqq._

Trees, spirit-children awaiting birth in, i. 100;
  sacrificial victims hung on, 146;
  represented on the monuments of Osiris, ii. 110 _sq._;
  felled in the waning of the moon, 133, 135 _sq._, 137;
  growing near the graves of dead kings revered, 162, 164

---- and rocks, Greek belief as to birth from, i. 107 _n._ 1

Triad, divine, at Tarsus, i. 171

Trident, emblem of Hittite thunder-god, i. 134, 135;
  emblem of Indian deity, 170

Tristram, H. B., on date of the corn-reaping in Palestine, i. 232 _n._

Trobriands, the, i. 84

Trokoarbasis, priest of Corycian Zeus, i. 145

Trokombigremis, priest of Corycian Zeus, i. 145

"True of speech," epithet of Osiris, ii. 21

Trumpets, blowing of, in the rites of Attis, i. 268

Tshi-speaking peoples of the Gold Coast, dedicated men and women among
            the, i. 69 _sq._;
  ordeal of chastity among the, 115 _n._ 2;
  their annual festival of the dead, ii. 66 _n._ 2

_Tubilustrium_ at Rome, i. 268 _n._ 1

Tulava, sacred prostitution in, i. 63

Tully River, in Queensland, belief of the natives as to conception without
            sexual intercourse, i. 102

Tum of Heliopolis, an Egyptian sun-god, ii. 123

Turner, George, on sacred stones, i. 108 _n._ 1

"Turquoise, Mistress of," at Sinai, i. 53

Tusayan Indians, their custom at planting, i. 239

Tuscany, volcanic district of, i. 208 _n._ 1

Tusser, Thomas, on planting peas and beans, ii. 134

Twin, the navel-string of the King of Uganda called his Twin, ii. 147

Twins, precautions taken by women at the graves of, i. 93 _n._ 1

Two-headed deity, i. 165 _sq._

Tyana, Hittite monument at, i. 122 _n._ 1

Tybi, an Egyptian month, ii. 93 _n._ 2

Tylon or Tylus, a Lydian hero, i. 183;
  his death and resurrection, 186 _sq._

Tylor, Sir Edward B., on fossil bones as a source of myths, i. 157 _sq._;
  on names for father and mother, 281

Typhon slays Hercules, i. 111;
  Corycian cave of, 155 _sq._;
  his battle with the gods, 193, 194

---- and Zeus, battle of, i. 156 _sq._

----, or Set, the brother of Osiris, ii. 6;
  murders Osiris, 7 _sq._;
  and mangles his body, 10;
  interpreted as the sun, 129.
  _See also_ Set

Tyre, Melcarth at, i. 16;
  burning of Melcarth at, 110 _sq._;
  festival of "the awakening of Hercules" at, 111;
  king of, his walk on stones of fire, 114 _sq._

----, kings of, their divinity, i. 16;
  as priests of Astarte, 26

Tyrimnus, axe-bearing hero at Thyatira, i. 183 _n._

Tyrol, feast of All Souls in the, ii. 73 _sq._

Tyropoeon, ravine at Jerusalem, i. 178

Ucayali River, the Conibos of the, i. 198;
  their greetings to the new moon, ii. 142

Uganda, the country of the Baganda, ii. 167;
  temples of the dead kings of, 167, 168 _sq._, 170 _sqq._;
  human sacrifices offered to prolong the lives of the kings of, 223
              _sqq._
  _See also_ Baganda

Uncle, dead, worshipped, ii. 175

----, maternal, in marriage ceremonies in India, i. 62 _n._ 1

Uncleanness caused by contact with the dead, ii. 227 _sqq._

Unconquered Sun, Mithra identified with the, i. 304

Unis, king of Egypt, ii. 5

Unkulunkulu, "the Old-Old-one," the first man in the traditions of the
            Zulus, ii. 182

Unnefer, "the Good Being," a title of Osiris, ii. 12

"Unspoken water" in marriage rites, ii. 245 _sq._

Upsala, human sacrifices in the holy grove at, i. 289 _sq._, ii. 220;
  the reign of Frey at, 100

Up-uat, Egyptian jackal-god, ii. 154

Uranus castrated by Cronus, i. 283

Uri-melech or Adom-melech, king of Byblus, i. 14

Usirniri, temple of, at Busiris, ii. 151

Valesius, on the standard Egyptian cubit, ii. 217 _n._ 1

Vallabha, an Indian sect, men assimilated to women in the, ii. 254

Valley of Hinnom, sacrifices to Moloch, in the, i. 178

---- of the Kings at Thebes, ii. 90

---- of Poison, in Java, i. 203 _sq._

Vancouver Island, the Ahts of, ii. 139 _n._ 1

Vapours, worship of mephitic, i. 203 _sqq._

Varro, on the marriage of the Roman gods, ii. 230 _sq._, 236 _n._ 1;
  his derivation of _Dialis_ from Jove, 230 _n._ 2;
  on Salacia, 233;
  on Fauna or the Good Goddess, 234 _n._ 4

Vase-painting of Croesus on the pyre, i. 176

Vatican, worship of Cybele and Attis on the site of the, i. 275 _sq._

Vegetable and animal life associated in primitive mind, i. 5

Vegetation, mythical theory of the growth and decay of, i. 3 _sqq._;
  annual decay and revival of, represented dramatically in the rites of
              Adonis, 227 _sqq._;
  gardens of Adonis charms to promote the growth of, 236 _sq._, 239;
  Midsummer fires and couples in relation to, 250 _sq._;
  Attis as a god of, 277 _sqq._;
  Osiris as a god of, ii. 112, 126, 131, 158

"Veins of the Nile," near Philae, ii. 40

Venus, the planet, identified with Astarte, i. 258, ii. 35

---- and Vulcan, ii. 231

Venus, the bearded, in Cyprus, ii. 259 _n._ 3

Vernal festival of Adonis, i. 226

Verrall, A. W., on the _Anthesteria_, i. 235 _n._ 1

Vertumnus and Pomona, ii. 235 _n._ 6

Vestal Virgin, mother of Romulus and Remus, ii. 235

---- Virgins, rule as to their election, ii. 244

Vicarious sacrifices for kings, ii. 220 _sq._

Vicarious and nutritive types of sacrifice, ii. 226

Victims, sacrificial, hung on trees, i. 146

Victoria Nyanza Lake, Mukasa the god of the, ii. 257

Victory, temple of, on the Palatine Hill at Rome, i. 265

Viehe, Rev. G., on the worship of the dead among the Herero, ii. 187 _n._
            1

Vine, the cultivation of, introduced by Osiris, ii. 7, 112

Vintage festival, Oschophoria, at Athens, ii. 258 _n._ 6

---- rites at Athens, ii. 238

Violets sprung from the blood of Attis, i. 267

Virbius or Dianus at Nemi, i. 45

Virgin, the Heavenly, mother of the Sun, i. 303

---- birth of Perseus, i. 302 _n._ 4

---- Mary and Isis, ii. 118 _sq._

---- Mother, the Phrygian Mother Goddess as a, i. 281

---- mothers, tales of, i. 264;
  of gods and heroes, 107

Virginity, sacrifice of, i. 60;
  recovered by bathing in a spring, 280

Virgins supposed to conceive through eating certain food, i. 96

Virility, sacrifice of, in the rites of Attis and Astarte, i. 268 _sq._,
            270 _sq._;
  other cases of, 270 _n._ 2

Vitrolles, bathing at Midsummer at, i. 248

Viza, in Thrace, Carnival custom at, ii. 91

Volcanic region of Cappadocia, i. 189 _sqq._

---- religion, i. 188 _sqq._

Volcanoes, the worship of, i. 216 _sqq._;
  human victims thrown into, 219 _sq._

Vosges, the Upper, rule as to the shearing of sheep in, ii. 134 _n._ 3

---- Mountains, feast of All Souls in the, ii. 69

Votiaks of Russia, annual festivals of the dead among the, ii. 76 _sq._

Voyage in boats of papyrus in the rites of Osiris, ii. 88

Vulcan, the fire-god, father of Caeculus, ii. 235

----, the husband of Maia or Majestas, ii. 232 _sq._;
  his Flamen, 232

---- and Venus, ii. 231

Wabisa, Bantu tribe of Rhodesia, ii. 174

Wabondei, of Eastern Africa, their belief in serpents as reincarnations of
            the dead, i. 82;
  their rule as to the cutting of posts for building, ii. 137

Wachsmuth, C., on Easter ceremonies in the Greek Church, i. 254

Wagogo, the, of German East Africa, their ceremony at the new moon, ii.
            143

Wahehe, a Bantu tribe of German East Africa, the worship of the dead among
            the, ii. 188 _sqq._;
  their belief in a supreme god Nguruhe, 188 _sq._

Wailing of women for Adonis, i. 224

Wajagga of German East Africa, their way of appeasing ghosts of suicides,
            i. 292 _n._ 3;
  their human sacrifices at irrigation, ii. 38

Wales, All Souls' Day in, ii. 79

Wallachia, harvest custom in, i. 237

Wamara, a worshipful dead king, ii. 174

Waning of the moon, theories to account for the, ii. 130;
  time for felling timber, 135 _sqq._

War, sacrifice of a blind bull before going to, ii. 250 _sq._

---- -dance of king before the ghosts of his ancestors, ii. 192

Warner, Mr., on Caffre ideas about lightning, ii. 177 _n._ 1

Warramunga of Central Australia, their belief in the reincarnation of the
            dead, i. 100;
  their tradition of purification by fire, 180 _n._ 2

Warts supposed to be affected by the moon, ii. 149

Water thrown on the last corn cut, a rain-charm, i. 237 _sq._;
  marvellous properties attributed to, at Midsummer (the festival of St.
              John), 246 _sqq._;
  prophetic, drunk on St. John's Eve, 247

---- of Life, i. 9

Waterbrash, a Huzul cure for, ii. 149 _sq._

Wave accompanying earthquake, i. 202 _sq._

Weaning of children, belief as to the, in Angus, ii. 148

Weavers, caste of, i. 62

Weeks, Rev. J. H., on inconsistency of savage thought, i. 5 _n._;
  on the names for the supreme god among many tribes of Africa, ii. 186
              _n._ 5

_Wellalaick_, festival of the dead among the Letts, ii. 74

Wen-Ammon, Egyptian traveller, i. 14, 75 _sq._

West, Oriental religions in the, i. 298 _sqq._

Westermann, D., on the worship of Nyakang among the Shilluks, ii. 165

Whalers, their bodies cut up and used as charms, ii. 106

Wheat forced for festival, i. 243, 244, 251 _sq._, 253

---- and barley, the cultivation of, introduced by Osiris, ii. 7;
  discovered by Isis, 116

Whip made of human skin used in ceremonies for the prolongation of the
            king's life, ii. 224, 225

Whitby, All Souls' Day at, ii. 79

White, Rev. G. E., on dervishes of Asia Minor, i. 170

White, Miss Rachel Evelyn (Mrs. Wedd), on the position of women in ancient
            Egypt, ii. 214 _n._ 1, 216 _n._ 1

White the colour of Upper Egypt, ii. 21 _n._ 1

---- birds, souls of dead kings incarnate in, ii. 162

---- bull, soul of a dead king incarnate in a, ii. 164

---- Crown of Upper Egypt, ii. 20, 21 _n._ 1;
  worn by Osiris, 87

---- roses dyed red by the blood of Aphrodite, i. 226

Whydah, King of, his worship of serpents, i. 67;
  serpents fed at, 86 _n._ 1

Wicked after death, fate of the, in Egyptian religion, ii. 14

Widow-burning in Greece, i. 177 _n._ 3

Widowed Flamen, the, ii. 227 _sqq._

Wiedemann, Professor A., on Wen-Ammon, i. 76 _n._ 1;
  on the Egyptian name of Isis, ii. 50 _n._ 4

Wigtownshire, harvest custom in, i. 237 _n._ 4

Wiimbaio tribe of South-Eastern Australia, their medicine-men, i. 75 _n._
            4

Wilkinson, Sir J. G., on corn-stuffed effigies of Osiris, ii. 91 _n._ 3

Wilson, C. T., and R. W. Felkin, on the worship of the dead kings of
            Uganda, ii. 173 _n._ 2

Winckler, H., his excavations at Boghaz-Keui, i. 125 _n._, 135 _n._

Winged deities, i. 165 _sq._

---- disc as divine emblem, i. 132

Winnowing-fans, ashes of human victims scattered by, ii. 97, 106

Winter called Cronus, ii. 41

---- sleep of the god, ii. 41

---- solstice reckoned the Nativity of the Sun, i. 303;
  Egyptian ceremony at the, ii. 50

Wissowa, Professor G., on introduction of Phrygian rites at Rome, i. 267
            _n._;
  on Orcus, ii. 231 _n._ 5;
  on Ops and Consus, 233 _n._ 6;
  on the marriage of the Roman gods, 236 _n._ 1

Wives of dead kings sacrificed at their tombs, ii. 168

Wives, human, of gods, i. 61 _sqq._, ii. 207;
  in Western Asia and Egypt, 70 _sqq._

Wiwa chiefs reincarnated in pythons, ii. 193

Wogait, Australian tribe, their belief in conception without cohabitation,
            i. 103

Woman feeding serpent in Greek art, i. 87 _sq._;
  as inspired prophetess of a god, ii. 257

Woman's dress assumed by men to deceive dangerous spirits, ii. 262 _sq._

Women pass through holed stones as cure for barrenness, i. 36, with _n._
            4;
  impregnated by dead saints, 78 _sq._;
  impregnated by serpents, 80 _sqq._;
  fear to be impregnated by ghosts, 93;
  impregnated by the flower of the banana, 93;
  excluded from sacrifices to Hercules, 113 _n._ 1;
  their high importance in the social system of the Pelew Islanders, ii.
              205 _sqq._;
  the cultivation of the staple food in the hands of women (Pelew
              Islands), 206 _sq._;
  their social importance increased by the combined influence of
              mother-kin and landed property, 209;
  their legal superiority to men in ancient Egypt, 214;
  impregnated by fire, 235;
  priests dressed as, 253 _sqq._;
  dressed as men, 255 _n._ 1, 257;
  excluded from sacrifices to Hercules, 258 _n._ 5;
  dressed as men at marriage, 262 _sqq._;
  dressed as men at circumcision, 263.
  _See also_ Barrenness, Childless, _and_ Sacred Women

---- as prophetesses inspired by dead chiefs, ii. 192 _sq._;
  inspired by gods, 207

----, living, regarded as the wives of dead kings, ii. 191, 192;
  reputed the wives of gods, 207

Women's hair, sacrifice of, i. 38

_Wororu_, man supposed to cause conception in women without sexual
            intercourse, i. 105

Worship of ancestral spirits among the Bantu tribes of Africa, ii. 174
            _sqq._;
  among the Khasis of Assam, 203

---- of the dead perhaps fused with the propitiation of the corn-spirit, i.
            233 _sqq._;
  among the Bantu tribes, ii. 174 _sqq._

---- of dead kings and chiefs in Africa, ii. 160 _sqq._;
  among the Barotse, 194 _sq._;
  an important element in African religion, 195 _sq._

---- of hot springs, i. 206 _sqq._

---- of mephitic vapours, i. 203 _sqq._

---- of volcanoes, i. 216 _sqq._

Worshippers of Osiris forbidden to injure fruit-trees and to stop up
            wells, ii. 111

"Wounds between the arms" of Hebrew prophets, i. 74 _n._ 4

"---- of the Naaman," Arab name for the scarlet anemone, i. 226

Wreaths as amulets, ii. 242 _sq._

Wuensch, R., on the _Anthesteria_, i. 235 _n._ 1;
  on modern survivals of festivals of Adonis, 246;
  on Easter ceremonies in the Greek church, 254 _n._

Wyse, W., ii. 35 _n._ 1, 51 _n._ 1

Xenophanes of Colophon on the Egyptian rites of mourning for gods, ii. 42,
            43

Yam, island of Torres Straits, heroes worshipped in animal forms in, i.
            139 _n._ 1

Yap, one of the Caroline Islands, prostitution of unmarried girls in, ii.
            265 _sq._

Yarilo, a personification of vegetation, i. 253

Year, length of the solar, determined by the Theban priests, ii. 26

----, the fixed Alexandrian, ii. 28, 49, 92

----, the Celtic, reckoned from November 1st, ii. 81

----, the Egyptian, a vague year, not corrected by intercalation, ii. 24
            _sq._

---- of God, a Sothic period, ii. 36 _n._ 2;
  began with the rising of Sirius, 35

----, the old Iranian, ii. 67

----, the Julian, ii. 28

----, the Teutonic, reckoned from October 1st, ii. 81

Yehar-baal, king of Byblus, i. 14

Yehaw-melech, king of Byblus, i. 14

Ynglings, a Norse family, descended from Frey, ii. 100

Yombe, a Bantu tribe of Northern Rhodesia, their sacrifice of first-fruits
            to the dead, ii. 191

Youth restored by the witch Medea, i. 180 _sq._

Yucatan, calendar of the Indians of, ii. 28 _n._

Yukon River in Alaska, ii. 51

Yungman tribe of Australia, their belief as to the birth of children, i.
            101

Yuruks, pastoral people of Cilicia, i. 150 _n._ 1

Zambesi, the Barotse of the, ii. 193

Zas, name of priest of Corycian Zeus, i. 155

Zechariah, on the mourning of or for Hadadrimmon, i. 15 _n._ 4;
  on wounds of prophet, 74 _n._ 4

Zekar-baal, king of Byblus, i. 14

_Zend-Avesta_, on the Fravashis, ii. 67 _sq._

Zenjirli in Syria, Hittite sculptures at, i. 134;
  statue of horned god at, 163

Zer, old Egyptian king, his true Horus name Khent, ii. 20 _n._ 1, 154.
  _See_ Khent

Zerka, river in Moab, i. 215 _n._ 1

Zeus, god of Tarsus assimilated to, i. 119, 143;
  Cilician deity assimilated to, 144 _sqq._, 148, 152;
  the flower of, 186, 187;
  identified with Attis, 282;
  castrates his father Cronus, 283;
  the father of dew, ii. 137;
  the Saviour of the City, at Magnesia on the Maeander, 238

----, Corycian, priests of, i. 145, 155;
  temple of, 155

---- and Hecate at Stratonicea in Caria, i. 270 _n._ 2, 227

----, Labrandeus, the Carian, i. 182

----, Olbian, ruins of his temple at Olba, i. 151;
  his cave or chasm, 158 _sq._;
  his priest Teucer, 159;
  a god of fertility, 159 _sqq._

----, Olybrian, i. 167 _n._ 1

---- Papas, i. 281 _n._ 2

Zeus and Typhon, battle of, i. 156 _sq._, 160

Zimmern, H., on Mylitta, i. 37 _n._ 1

Zimri, king of Israel, burns himself, i. 174 _n._ 2, 176

Zion, Mount, traditionally identified with Mount Moriah, ii. 219 _n._ 1

Zoroastrian fire-worship in Cappadocia, i. 191

Zulu medicine-men or diviners, i. 74 _n._ 4, 75;
  their charm to fertilize fields, ii. 102 _sq._

Zulus, their belief in serpents as reincarnations of the dead, i. 82, 84;
  their observation of the moon, ii. 134 _sq._;
  the worship of the dead among the, 182 _sqq._;
  their sacrifice of a bull to prolong the life of the king, 222






FOOTNOTES


   M1 Osiris the Egyptian counterpart of Adonis and Attis.
   M2 The myth of Osiris. The Pyramid Texts.

    1 See Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 12-20; R. V. Lanzone, _Dizionario di
      Mitologia Egizia_ (Turin, 1881-1884), vol. ii. pp. 692 _sqq._; A.
      Erman, _Aegypten und aegyptisches Leben im Altertum_ (Tuebingen,
      N.D.), pp. 365-369; _id._, _Die aegyptische Religion_2 (Berlin,
      1909), pp. 38 _sqq._; A. Wiedemann, _Die Religion der alten Aegypter_
      (Muenster i. W. 1890), pp. 109 _sqq._; _id._, _Religion of the
      Ancient Egyptians_ (London, 1897), pp. 207 _sqq._; G. Maspero,
      _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient Classique_, i. 172
      _sqq._; E. A. Wallis Budge, _The Gods of the Egyptians_ (London,
      1904), ii. 123 _sqq._; _id._, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_
      (London, 1911), i. 1 _sqq._

    2 J. H. Breasted, _Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient
      Egypt_ (London, 1912), pp. vii. _sq._, 77 _sqq._, 84 _sqq._, 91
      _sqq._ Compare _id._, _History of the Ancient Egyptians_ (London,
      1908), p. 68; Ed. Meyer, _Geschichte des Altertums_,2 i. 2. pp. 116
      _sq._; E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_
      (London, 1911), i. 100 _sqq._ The first series of the texts was
      discovered in 1880 when Mariette's workmen penetrated into the
      pyramid of King Pepi the First. Till then it had been thought by
      modern scholars that the pyramids were destitute of inscriptions.
      The first to edit the Pyramid Texts was Sir Gaston Maspero.

   M3 The Pyramid Texts intended to ensure the blissful immortality of
      Egyptian kings.

    3 J. H. Breasted, _Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient
      Egypt_, pp. 91 _sq._ Among the earlier works referred to in the
      Pyramid Texts are "the chapter of those who ascend" and "the chapter
      of those who raise themselves up" (J. H. Breasted, _op. cit._ p.
      85). From their titles these works would seem to have recorded a
      belief in the resurrection and ascension of the dead.

   M4 The story of Osiris in the Pyramid Texts.

    4 This has been done by Professor J. H. Breasted in his _Development
      of Religion and Thought in Ancient Egypt_, pp. 18 _sqq._

   M5 Osiris a son of the earth-god and the sky-goddess.

    5 In Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 12, we must clearly read {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} with Scaliger and Wyttenbach for the {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} of the
      MSS.

    6 Herodotus, ii. 4, with A. Wiedemann's note; L. Ideler, _Handbuch der
      mathematischen und technischen Chronologie_ (Berlin, 1825-1826), i.
      94 _sqq._; A. Erman, _Aegypten und aegyptisches Leben im Altertum_,
      pp. 468 _sq._; G. Maspero, _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de
      l'Orient Classique_, i. 208 _sq._

    7 The birth of the five deities on the five supplementary days is
      mentioned by Diodorus Siculus (i. 13. 4) as well as by Plutarch
      (_Isis et Osiris_, 12). The memory of the five supplementary days
      seems to survive in the modern Coptic calendar of Egypt. The days
      from the first to the sixth of Amshir (February) are called "the
      days outside the year" and they are deemed unlucky. "Any child
      begotten during these days will infallibly be misshapen or
      abnormally tall or short. This also applies to animals so that
      cattle and mares are not covered during these days; moreover, some
      say (though others deny) that neither sowing nor planting should be
      undertaken." However, these unlucky days are not the true
      intercalary days of the Coptic calendar, which occur in the second
      week of September at the end of the Coptic year. See C. G.
      Seligmann, "Ancient Egyptian Beliefs in Modern Egypt," _Essays and
      Studies presented to William Ridgeway_ (Cambridge, 1913), p. 456. As
      to the unluckiness of intercalary days in general, see _The
      Scapegoat_, pp. 339 _sqq._

   M6 Osiris introduces the cultivation of corn and of the vine. His
      violent death. Isis searches for his body.

    8 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 13; Diodorus Siculus, i. 14, 17, 20;
      Tibullus, i. 7. 29 _sqq._

    9 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 13 _sq._

   M7 She takes refuge in the papyrus swamps. Isis and her infant son
      Horus.

   10 A. Erman, _Aegypten und aegyptisches Leben im Altertum_, p. 366;
      _id._, _Die aegyptische Religion_2 (Berlin, 1909), p. 40; A.
      Wiedemann, _Religion of the Ancient Egyptians_ (London, 1897), pp.
      213 _sq._; E. A. Wallis Budge, _The Gods of the Egyptians_, i. 487
      _sq._, ii. 206-211; _id._, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_
      (London, 1911), i. 92-96, ii. 84, 274-276. These incidents of the
      scorpions are not related by Plutarch but are known to us from
      Egyptian sources. The barbarous legend of the begetting of Horus by
      the dead Osiris is told in unambiguous language in the Pyramid
      Texts, and it is illustrated by a monument which represents the two
      sister goddesses hovering in the likeness of hawks over the god,
      while Hathor sits at his head and the Frog-goddess Heqet squats in
      the form of a huge frog at his feet. See J. H. Breasted,
      _Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient Egypt_, p. 28, with
      note 2; E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_,
      i. 280. Harpocrates is in Egyptian _Her-pe-khred_, "Horus the child"
      (A. Wiedemann, _Religion of the Ancient Egyptians_, p. 223).
      Plutarch, who appears to distinguish him from Horus, says that
      Harpocrates was begotten by the dead Osiris on Isis, and that he was
      born untimely and was weak in his lower limbs (_Isis et Osiris_,
      19). Elsewhere he tells us that Harpocrates "was born, incomplete
      and youthful, about the winter solstice along with the early flowers
      and blossoms" (_Isis et Osiris_, 65).

   M8 The body of Osiris floats to Byblus, where it is recovered by Isis.
      The body of Osiris dismembered by Typhon, and the pieces recovered
      by Isis. Diodorus Siculus on the burial of Osiris.

   11 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 8, 18.

   12 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 18.

   13 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 18. Compare Hippolytus, _Refutatio
      omnium haeresium_, v. 7, p. 142, ed. L. Duncker and F. G.
      Schneidewin (Goettingen, 1859).

   14 Diodorus Siculus, i. 21. 5-11; compare _id._, iv. 6. 3; Strabo,
      xvii. 1. 23, p. 803.

   M9 The various members of Osiris treasured as relics in various parts
      of Egypt.

   15 H. Brugsch, "Das Osiris-Mysterium von Tentyra," _Zeitschrift fuer
      aegyptische Sprache und Alterthumskunde_, xix. (1881) pp. 77 _sqq._;
      V. Loret, "Les fetes d'Osiris au mois de Khoiak," _Recueil de
      Travaux relatifs a la Philologie et a l'Archeologie Egyptiennes et
      Assyriennes_, iii. (1882) pp. 43 _sqq._; R. V. Lanzone, _Dizionario
      di Mitologia Egizia_, pp. 697 _sqq._; A. Wiedemann, _Herodots
      zweites Buch_ (Leipsic, 1890), pp. 584 _sqq._; _id._, _Die Religion
      der alten Aegypter_, p. 115; _id._, _Religion of the Ancient
      Egyptians_, pp. 215 _sqq._; A. Erman, _Aegypten und aegyptisches
      Leben im Altertum_, pp. 367 _sq._

   16 J. Rendel Harris, _The Annotators of the Codex Bezae_ (London,
      1901), p. 104, note 2, referring to Dulaure.

  M10 Osiris mourned by Isis and Nephthys.

   17 A. Erman, _Die aegyptische Religion_2 (Berlin, 1909), pp. 39 _sq._;
      E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, ii. 59
      _sqq._

   18 A. Wiedemann, _Religion of the Ancient Egyptians_, p. 211.

  M11 Being brought to life again, Osiris reigns as king and judge of the
      dead in the other world. The confession of the dead.

   19 A. Erman, _Die aegyptische Religion_,2 pp. 39 _sq._; G. Maspero,
      _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient Classique_, i. 176; E. A.
      Wallis Budge, _The Gods of the Egyptians_, ii. 140, 262; _id._,
      _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 70-75, 80-82. On Osiris
      as king of the dead see Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 79.

   20 Miss Margaret A. Murray, _The Osireion at Abydos_ (London, 1904),
      pp. 8, 17, 18.

   21 On Osiris as judge of the dead see A. Wiedemann, _Die Religion der
      alten Aegypter_, pp. 131 _sqq._; _id._, _Religion of the Ancient
      Egyptians_, pp. 248 _sqq._; G. Maspero, _Histoire ancienne des
      Peuples de l'Orient Classique_, i. 187 _sqq._; E. A. Wallis Budge,
      _The Book of the Dead_2 (London, 1909), i. pp. liii. _sqq._; _id._,
      _The Gods of the Egyptians_, ii. 141 _sqq._; _id._, _Osiris and the
      Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 305 _sqq._; A. Erman, _Die aegyptische
      Religion_,2 pp. 116 _sqq._

_   22 The Book of the Dead_, ch. cxxv. (vol. ii. pp. 355 _sqq._ of
      Budge's translation; P. Pierret, _Le Livre des Morts_, Paris, 1882,
      pp. 369 _sqq._); R. V. Lanzone, _Dizionario di Mitologia Egizia_,
      pp. 788 _sqq._; A. Wiedemann, _Die Religion der alten Aegypter_, pp.
      132-134; _id._, _Religion of the Ancient Egyptians_, pp. 249 _sqq._;
      G. Maspero, _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient Classique_,
      i. 188-191; A. Erman, _Die aegyptische Religion_,2 pp. 117-121; E. A.
      Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 337 _sqq._;
      J. H. Breasted, _Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient
      Egypt_, pp. 297 _sqq._

   23 A. Erman, _Die aegyptische Religion_,2 p. 121. Compare A. Wiedemann,
      _Die Religion der alten Aegypter_, pp. 134 _sq._; _id._, _Religion of
      the Ancient Egyptians_, p. 253.

   24 A. Wiedemann, _Religion of the Ancient Egyptians_, p. 254; E. A.
      Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 305 _sqq._;
      G. Maspero, _op. cit._ i. 194 _sq._; A. Erman, _Die aegyptische
      Religion_,2 pp. 121 _sqq._; E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the
      Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 97 _sq._, 100 _sqq._; E. Lefebure, "Le
      Paradis Egyptien," _Sphinx_, iii. (Upsala, 1900) pp. 191 _sqq._

  M12 The fate of the wicked.

   25 A. Wiedemann, _Religion of the Ancient Egyptians_, p. 249. Compare
      A. Erman, _Die aegyptische Religion_,2 pp. 117, 121; E. A. Wallis
      Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 317, 328.

  M13 In the resurrection of Osiris the Egyptians saw a pledge of their
      own immortality.

   26 G. Maspero, "Le rituel du sacrifice funeraire," _Etudes de
      Mythologie et d'Archeologie Egyptiennes_ (Paris, 1893-1912), i. 291
      _sq._

   27 G. Maspero, _op. cit._ pp. 300-316. Compare A. Wiedemann, _Die
      Religion der alten Aegypter_, pp. 123 _sqq._; _id._, _Religion of the
      Ancient Egyptians_, pp. 234 _sqq._; E. A. Wallis Budge, _The Book of
      the Dead_2 (London, 1909), i. pp. iiii. _sqq._; _id._, _The Gods of
      the Egyptians_, ii. 126, 140 _sq._; _id._, _Osiris and the Egyptian
      Resurrection_, i. 66 _sqq._, 101 _sq._, 176, 305, 399 _sq._; A.
      Moret, _Du Caractere religieux de la Royaute Pharaonique_ (Paris,
      1902), p. 312; _id._, _Kings and Gods of Egypt_ (New York and
      London, 1912), pp. 91 _sqq._; _id._, _Mysteres Egyptiens_ (Paris,
      1913), pp. 37 _sqq._ "In one of the ceremonies of the 'Opening of
      the Mouth' the deceased was temporarily placed in a bull's skin,
      which was probably that of one of the bulls which were offered up
      during the celebration of the service. From this skin the deceased
      obtained further power, and his emergence from it was the visible
      symbol of his resurrection and of his entrance into everlasting life
      with all the strength of Osiris and Horus" (E. A. Wallis Budge,
      _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 400).

  M14 Every dead Egyptian identified with Osiris.

   28 A. Erman, _Aegypten und aegyptisches Leben im Altertum_, p. 416; J.
      H. Breasted, _History of the Ancient Egyptians_, pp. 149 _sq._;
      Margaret A. Murray, _The Osireion at Abydos_ (London, 1904), p. 31.
      Under the earlier dynasties only kings appear to have been
      identified with Osiris.

   29 A. Moret, _Mysteres Egyptiens_ (Paris, 1913), p. 40.

   30 A. Erman, _Die aegyptische Religion_,2 pp. 111-113. However, in later
      times the body with which the dead came to life was believed to be a
      spiritual, not a material body; it was called _sahu_. See E. A.
      Wallis Budge, _The Book of the Dead_,2 i. pp. lvii. _sqq._; _id._,
      _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, ii. 123 _sq._

  M15 Combat between Set and Horus, the brother and the son of Osiris, for
      the crown of Egypt.

   31 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 19 and 55; A. Erman, _Aegypten und
      aegyptisches Leben im Altertum_, p. 368; _id._, _Die aegyptische
      Religion_,2 pp. 41 _sq._; A. Wiedemann, _Die Religion der alten
      Aegypter_, p. 114; _id._, _Religion of the Ancient Egyptians_, pp.
      214 _sq._; G. Maspero, _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient
      Classique_, i. 176-178; E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian
      Resurrection_, i. 62 _sq._, 64, 89 _sqq._, 309 _sqq._

  M16 The legend of their contest may be a reminiscence of dynastic
      struggles.

_   32 The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings_, ii. 290 _sqq._

  M17 Osiris represented as a king in tradition and art. The tomb of
      Osiris at Abydos.

   33 A. Wiedemann, _Religion of the Ancient Egyptians_, p. 217. For
      details see E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian
      Resurrection_, i. 30 _sqq._

   34 J. H. Breasted, _History of the Ancient Egyptians_ (London, 1908),
      p. 61; _id._, _Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient
      Egypt_, p. 38; E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian
      Resurrection_, i. 37, 67, 81, 210, 212, 214, 290, ii. 1, 2, 8-13,
      82-85; A. Erman, _Die aegyptische Religion_,2 pp. 21, 23, 110; A.
      Wiedemann, _Religion of the Ancient Egyptians_, p. 289; Ed. Meyer,
      _Geschichte des Altertums_,2 i. 2. pp. 70, 96, 97. It appears to be
      now generally held that the original seat of the worship of Osiris
      was at Busiris, but that at Abydos the god found a second home,
      which in time eclipsed the old one in glory. According to Professors
      Ed. Meyer and A. Erman, the god whom Osiris displaced at Abydos was
      Anubis.

   35 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 20; A. Erman, _Aegypten und aegyptisches
      Leben im Altertum_, p. 417; J. H. Breasted, _History of the Ancient
      Egyptians_ (London, 1908), pp. 148 _sq._; Ed. Meyer, _Geschichte des
      Altertums_,2 i. 2. p. 209; E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the
      Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 68 _sq._, ii. 3.

  M18 The tombs of the old kings at Abydos. The tomb of King Khent
      identified with the tomb of Osiris. The sculptured effigy of Osiris.
      The hawk the crest of the earliest dynasties.

   36 Ed. Meyer, _Geschichte des Altertums_,2 i. 2. p. 125.

   37 J. H. Breasted, _History of the Ancient Egyptians_, pp. 43, 50 _sq._
      The excavations were begun by E. Amelineau and continued by W. M.
      Flinders Petrie (Ed. Meyer, _Geschichte des Altertums_,2 i. 2. p.
      119). See E. Amelineau, _Le Tombeau d'Osiris_ (Paris, 1899); W. M.
      Flinders Petrie, _The Royal Tombs of the Earliest Dynasties_, Part
      ii. (London, 1901). The excavations of the former have been
      criticized by Sir Gaston Maspero (_Etudes de Mythologie et
      d'Archeologie Egyptiennes_, vi. (Paris, 1912) pp. 153-182).

   38 Ed. Meyer, _Geschichte des Altertums_,2 i. 2. pp. 119, 124; E. A.
      Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, ii. 8. The
      place is now known by the Arabic name of Umm al-Ka'ab or "Mother of
      Pots" on account of the large quantity of pottery that has been
      found there.

   39 Ed. Meyer, _Geschichte des Altertums_,2 i. 2. pp. 119, 125, 127,
      128, 129, 209. The king's Horus name has sometimes been read Zer,
      but according to Professor Meyer (_op. cit._ p. 128) and Dr. Budge
      (_Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, ii. 83) the true reading is
      Khent (Chent). The king's personal name was perhaps Ka (Ed. Meyer,
      _op. cit._ p. 128).

   40 E. Amelineau, _Le Tombeau d'Osiris_ (Paris, 1899), pp. 107-115; W.
      M. Flinders Petrie, _The Royal Tombs of the Earliest Dynasties_,
      Part ii. (London, 1901) pp. 8 _sq._, 16-19, with the frontispiece
      and plates lx. lxi.; G. Maspero, _Etudes de Mythologie et
      d'Archeologie Egyptiennes_ (Paris, 1893-1912), vi. 167-173; J. H.
      Breasted, _History of the Ancient Egyptians_ (London, 1908), pp. 50
      _sq._, 148; E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian
      Resurrection_, ii. 8-10, 13, 83-85. The tomb, with its interesting
      contents, was discovered and excavated by Monsieur E. Amelineau. The
      masses, almost the mountains, of broken pottery, under which the
      tomb was found to be buried, are probably remains of the vessels in
      which pious pilgrims presented their offerings at the shrine. See E.
      Amelineau, _op. cit._ pp. 85 _sq._; J. H. Breasted, _op. cit._ pp.
      51, 148. The high White Crown, worn by Osiris, was the symbol of the
      king's dominion over Upper Egypt; the flat Red Crown, with a high
      backpiece and a projecting spiral, was the symbol of his dominion
      over Lower Egypt. On the monuments the king is sometimes represented
      wearing a combination of the White and the Red Crown to symbolize
      his sovereignty over both the South and the North. White was the
      distinctive colour of Upper, as red was of Lower, Egypt. The
      treasury of Upper Egypt was called "the White House"; the treasury
      of Lower Egypt was called "the Red House." See Ed. Meyer,
      _Geschichte des Altertums_,2 i. 2. pp. 103 _sq._; J. H. Breasted,
      _History of the Ancient Egyptians_ (London, 1908), pp. 34 _sq._, 36,
      41.

   41 A. Moret, _Mysteres Egyptiens_ (Paris, 1913), pp. 159-162, with
      plate iii. Compare Victor Loret, "L'Egypte au temps du totemisme,"
      _Conferences faites au Musee Guimet, Bibliotheque de Vulgarisation_,
      xix. (Paris, 1906) pp. 179-186. Both these writers regard the hawk
      as the totem of the royal clan. This view is rejected by Prof. Ed.
      Meyer, who, however, holds that Horus, whose emblem was the hawk,
      was the oldest national god of Egypt (_Geschichte des Altertums_,2
      i. 2. pp. 102-106). He prefers to suppose that the hawk, or rather
      the falcon, was the emblem of a god of light because the bird flies
      high in the sky (_op. cit._ p. 73; according to him the bird is not
      the sparrow-hawk but the falcon, ib. p. 75). A similar view is
      adopted by Professor A. Wiedemann (_Religion of the Ancient
      Egyptians_, p. 26). Compare A. Erman, _Die aegyptische Religion_,2
      pp. 10, 11. The native Egyptian name of Hawk-town was Nechen, in
      Greek it was Hieraconpolis (Ed. Meyer, _op. cit._ p. 103). Hawks
      were worshipped by the inhabitants (Strabo, xvii. 1. 47, p. 817).

   42 According to the legend the four sons of Horus were set by Anubis to
      protect the burial of Osiris. They washed his dead body, they
      mourned over him, and they opened his cold lips with their fingers.
      But they disappeared, for Isis had caused them to grow out of a
      lotus flower in a pool of water. In that position they are sometimes
      represented in Egyptian art before the seated effigy of Osiris. See
      A. Erman, _Die aegyptische Religion_,2 p. 43; E. A. Wallis Budge,
      _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 40, 41, 327.

  M19 The association of Osiris with Byblus.

   43 See above, pp. 9 _sq._

   44 E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 16
      _sq._

   45 Cyril of Alexandria, _In Isaiam_, lib. ii. Tomus iii. (Migne's
      _Patrologia Graeca_, lxx. 441).

  M20 The date of a festival sometimes furnishes a clue to the nature of
      the god.
  M21 The year of the Egyptian calendar a vague or movable one.

   46 As to the Egyptian calendar see L. Ideler, _Handbuch der
      mathematischen und technischen Chronologie_ (Berlin, 1825-1826), i.
      93 _sqq._; Sir J. G. Wilkinson, _Manners and Customs of the Ancient
      Egyptians_ (London, 1878), ii. 368 _sqq._; R. Lepsius, _Die
      Chronologie der Aegypter_, i. (Berlin, 1849) pp. 125 _sqq._; H.
      Brugsch, _Die Aegyptologie_ (Leipsic, 1891), pp. 347-366; A. Erman,
      _Aegypten und aegyptisches Leben im Altertum_, pp. 468 _sq._; G.
      Maspero, _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient Classique_, i.
      207-210; Ed. Meyer, "Aegyptische Chronologie," _Abhandlungen der
      koenigl. Preuss. Akademie der Wissenschaften_, 1904, pp. 2 _sqq._;
      _id._, "Nachtraege zur aegyptischen Chronologie," _Abhandlungen der
      koenigl. Preuss. Akademie der Wissenschaften_, 1907, pp. 3 _sqq._;
      _id._, _Geschichte des Altertums_,2 i. 2. pp. 28 _sqq._, 98 _sqq._;
      F. K. Ginzel, _Handbuch der mathematischen und technischen
      Chronologie_, i. (Leipsic, 1906) pp. 150 _sqq._

   47 Herodotus, ii. 4, with A. Wiedemann's note; Geminus, _Elementa
      Astronomiae_, 8, p. 106, ed. C. Manitius (Leipsic, 1898);
      Censorinus, _De die natali_, xviii. 10.

   48 Geminus, _Elementa Astronomiae_, 8, pp. 106 _sqq._, ed. C. Manitius.

  M22 Thus the official calendar was divorced from the natural calendar,
      which is marked by the course of the seasons.

   49 Diodorus Siculus, i. 50. 2; Strabo, xvii. i. 46, p. 816. According
      to H. Brugsch (_Die Aegyptologie_, pp. 349 _sq._), the Egyptians
      would seem to have denoted the movable year of the calendar and the
      fixed year of the sun by different written symbols. For more
      evidence that they were acquainted with a four years' period,
      corrected by intercalation, see R. Lepsius, _Chronologie der
      Aegypter_, i. 149 _sqq._

   50 Geminus, _Elementa Astronomiae_, 8, p. 106, ed. C. Manitius. The
      same writer further (p. 108) describes as a popular Greek error the
      opinion that the Egyptian festival of Isis coincided with the winter
      solstice. In his day, he tells us, the two events were separated by
      an interval of a full month, though they had coincided a hundred and
      twenty years before the time he was writing.

_   51 Scholia in Caesaris Germanici Aratea_, p. 409, ed. Fr. Eyssenhardt,
      in his edition of Martianus Capella (Leipsic, 1866).

  M23 Attempt of Ptolemy III. to reform the Egyptian calendar by
      intercalation.

   52 Copies of the decree in hieroglyphic, demotic, and Greek have been
      found inscribed on stones in Egypt. See Ch. Michel, _Recueil
      d'Inscriptions Grecques_ (Brussels, 1900), pp. 415 _sqq._, No. 551;
      W. Dittenberger, _Orientis Graeci Inscriptiones Selectae_ (Leipsic,
      1903-1905), vol. i. pp. 91 _sqq._, No. 56; J. P. Mahaffy, _The
      Empire of the Ptolemies_ (London, 1895), pp. 205 _sqq._, 226 _sqq._
      The star mentioned in the decree is the Dog-star (Sirius). See
      below, pp. 34 _sqq._

   53 W. Dittenberger, _Orientis Graeci Inscriptiones Selectae_, vol. i.
      pp. 140 _sqq._, No. 90, with note 25 of the editor.

  M24 Institution of the fixed Alexandrian year by the Romans.

   54 On the Alexandrian year see L. Ideler, _Handbuch der mathematischen
      und technischen Chronologie_, i. 140 _sqq._ That admirable
      chronologer argued (pp. 153-161) that the innovation was introduced
      not, as had been commonly supposed, in 25 B.C., but in 30 B.C., the
      year in which Augustus defeated Mark Antony under the walls of
      Alexandria and captured the city. However, the question seems to be
      still unsettled. See F. K. Ginzel, _Handbuch der mathematischen und
      technischen Chronologie_, i. 226 _sqq._, who thinks it probable that
      the change was made in 26 B.C. For the purposes of this study the
      precise date of the introduction of the Alexandrian year is not
      material.

   55 In demotic the fixed Alexandrian year is called "the year of the
      Ionians," while the old movable year is styled "the year of the
      Egyptians." Documents have been found which are dated by the day and
      the month of both years. See H. Brugsch, _Die Aegyptologie_, pp. 354
      _sq._

   56 L. Ideler, _op. cit._ i. 149-152. Macrobius thought that the
      Egyptians had always employed a solar year of 365-1/4 days (_Saturn._
      i. 12. 2, i. 14. 3). The ancient calendar of the Mexicans resembled
      that of the Egyptians except that it was divided into eighteen
      months of twenty days each (instead of twelve months of thirty days
      each), with five supplementary days added at the end of the year.
      These supplementary days (_nemontemi_) were deemed unlucky: nothing
      was done on them: they were dedicated to no deity; and persons born
      on them were considered unfortunate. See B. de Sahagun, _Histoire
      generale des choses de la Nouvelle-Espagne_, traduite par D.
      Jourdanet et R. Simeon (Paris, 1880), pp. 50, 164; F. S. Clavigero,
      _History of Mexico_ (London, 1807), i. 290. Unlike the Egyptian
      calendar, however, the Mexican appears to have been regularly
      corrected by intercalation so as to bring it into harmony with the
      solar year. But as to the mode of intercalation our authorities
      differ. According to the positive statement of Sahagun, one of the
      earliest and best authorities, the Mexicans corrected the deficiency
      of their year by intercalating one day in every fourth year, which
      is precisely the correction adopted in the Alexandrian and the
      Julian calendar. See B. de Sahagun, _op. cit._ pp. 286 _sq._, where
      he expressly asserts the falsehood of the view that the bissextile
      year was unknown to the Mexicans. This weighty statement is
      confirmed by the practice of the Indians of Yucatan. Like the
      Aztecs, they reckoned a year to consist of 360 days divided into 18
      months of 20 days each, with 5 days added so as to make a total of
      365 days, but every fourth year they intercalated a day so as to
      make a total of 366 days. See Diego de Landa, _Relation des choses
      de Yucatan_ (Paris, 1864), pp. 202 _sqq._ On the other hand the
      historian Clavigero, who lived in the eighteenth century, but used
      earlier authorities, tells us that the Mexicans "did not interpose a
      day every four years, but thirteen days (making use here even of
      this favourite number) every fifty-two years; which produces the
      same regulation of time" (_History of Mexico_, Second Edition,
      London, 1807, vol. i. p. 293). However, the view that the Mexicans
      corrected their year by intercalation is rejected by Professor E.
      Seler. See his "Mexican Chronology," in _Bulletin 28_ of the Bureau
      of American Ethnology (Washington, 1904), pp. 13 _sqq._; and on the
      other side Miss Zelia Nuttall, "The Periodical Adjustments of the
      Ancient Mexican Calendar," _American Anthropologist_, N.S. vi.
      (1904) pp. 486-500.

  M25 In Egypt the operations of husbandry are dependent on the annual
      rise and fall of the Nile.

   57 Herodotus, ii. 36, with A. Wiedemann's note; Diodorus Siculus, i.
      14-1, i. 17. 1; Pliny, _Nat. Hist._ v. 57 _sq._, xviii. 60; Sir J.
      Gardiner Wilkinson, _Manners and Customs of the Ancient Egyptians_
      (London, 1878), ii. 398, 399, 418, 426 _sq._; A. Erman, _Aegypten
      und aegyptisches Leben im Altertum_, pp. 577 _sqq._; A. de Candolle,
      _Origin of Cultivated Plants_ (London, 1884), pp. 354 _sq._, 369,
      381; G. Maspero, _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient
      Classique_, i. 66.

   58 Herodotus, ii. 14; Diodorus Siculus, i. 36; Strabo, xvii. 1. 3, pp.
      786-788; Pliny, _Nat. Hist._ xviii. 167-170; Seneca, _Natur.
      Quaest._ iv. 2. 1-10; E. W. Lane, _Manners and Customs of the Modern
      Egyptians_ (Paisley and London, 1895), pp. 17 _sq._, 495 _sqq._; A.
      Erman, _op. cit._ pp. 21-25; G. Maspero, _op. cit._ i. 22 _sqq._
      However, since the Suez Canal was cut, rain has been commoner in
      Lower Egypt (A. H. Sayce on Herodotus, ii. 14).

   59 G. Maspero, _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient Classique_,
      i. 22-26; A. Erman, _Aegypten und aegyptisches Leben im Altertum_,
      p. 23. According to Lane (_op. cit._ pp. 17 _sq._) the Nile rises in
      Egypt about the summer solstice (June 21) and reaches its greatest
      height by the autumnal equinox (September 22). This agrees exactly
      with the statement of Diodorus Siculus (i. 36. 2). Herodotus says
      (ii. 19) that the rise of the river lasted for a hundred days from
      the summer solstice. Compare Pliny, _Nat. Hist._ v. 57, xviii. 167;
      Seneca, _Nat. Quaest._ iv. 2. 1. According to Prof. Ginzel the Nile
      does not rise in Egypt till the last week of June (_Handbuch der
      mathematischen und technischen Chronologie_, i. 154). For ancient
      descriptions of Egypt in time of flood see Herodotus, ii. 97;
      Diodorus Siculus, i. 36. 8 _sq._; Strabo, xvii. 1. 4, p. 788;
      Aelian, _De natura animalium_, x. 43; Achilles Tatius, iv. 12;
      Seneca, _Natur. Quaest._ iv. 2. 8 and 11.

  M26 Irrigation, sowing, and harvest in Egypt.

   60 Sir J. Gardiner Wilkinson, _Manners and Customs of the Ancient
      Egyptians_ (London, 1878), ii. 365 _sq._; E. W. Lane, _Manners and
      Customs of the Modern Egyptians_ (Paisley and London, 1895), pp. 498
      _sqq._; G. Maspero, _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient
      Classique_, i. 23 _sq._, 69. The last-mentioned writer says (p. 24)
      that the dams are commonly cut between the first and sixteenth of
      July, but apparently he means August.

   61 Sir J. D. Wilkinson, _op. cit._ ii. 398 _sq._; Prof. W. M. Flinders
      Petrie, cited above, vol. i. p. 231, note 3. According to Pliny
      (_Nat. Hist._ xviii. 60) barley was reaped in Egypt in the sixth
      month from sowing, and wheat in the seventh month. Diodorus Siculus,
      on the other hand, says (i. 36. 4) that the corn was reaped after
      four or five months. Perhaps Pliny refers to Lower, and Diodorus to
      Upper Egypt. Elsewhere Pliny affirms (_Nat. Hist._ xviii. 169) that
      the corn was sown at the beginning of November, and that the reaping
      began at the end of March and was completed in May. This certainly
      applies better to Lower than to Upper Egypt.

  M27 The events of the agricultural year were probably celebrated with
      religious rites.
  M28 Mourning for Osiris at midsummer when the Nile begins to rise.

   62 Pausanias, x. 32. 18.

   63 E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, ii. 278.

   64 N. Adriani en Alb. C. Kruijt, _De Bare'e-sprekende Toradjas van
      Midden-Celebes_ (Batavia, 1912), i. 273. The more civilized Indians
      of tropical America, who practised agriculture and had developed a
      barbaric art, appear to have commonly represented the rain-god in
      human form with tears streaming down from his eyes. See T. A. Joyce,
      "The Weeping God," _Essays and Studies presented to William
      Ridgeway_ (Cambridge, 1913), pp. 365-374.

   65 This we learn from inscriptions at Silsilis. See A. Moret, _Mysteres
      Egyptiens_ (Paris, 1913), p. 180.

   66 E. W. Lane, _Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians_ (Paisley
      and London, 1895), ch. xxvi. pp. 495 _sq._

  M29 Sirius regarded as the star of Isis. The rising of Sirius marked the
      beginning of the sacred Egyptian year. The observation of the
      gradual displacement of Sirius in the calendar led to the
      determination of the true length of the solar year.

   67 L. Ideler, _Handbuch der mathematischen und technischen
      Chronologie_, i. 124 _sqq._; R. Lepsius, _Die Chronologie der
      Aegypter_, i. 168 _sq._; F. K. Ginzel, _Handbuch der mathematischen
      und technischen Chronologie_, i. 190 _sq._; Ed. Meyer, "Nachtraege
      zur aegyptischen Chronologie," _Abhandlungen der koenigl. Preuss.
      Akademie der Wissenschaften_, 1907 (Berlin, 1908), pp. 11 _sq._;
      _id._, _Geschichte des Altertums_,2 i. 28 _sq._, 99 _sqq._ The
      coincidence of the rising of Sirius with the swelling of the Nile is
      mentioned by Tibullus (i. 7. 21 _sq._) and Aelian (_De natura
      animalium_, x. 45). In later times, as a consequence of the
      precession of the equinoxes, the rising of Sirius gradually diverged
      from the summer solstice, falling later and later in the solar year.
      In the sixteenth and fifteenth century B.C. Sirius rose seventeen
      days after the summer solstice, and at the date of the Canopic
      decree (238 B.C.) it rose a whole month after the first swelling of
      the Nile. See L. Ideler, _op. cit._ i. 130; F. K. Ginzel, _op. cit._
      i. 190; Ed. Meyer, "Nachtraege zur aegyptischen Chronologie," pp. 11
      _sq._ According to Censorinus (_De die natali_, xxi. 10), Sirius
      regularly rose in Egypt on the twentieth of July (Julian calendar);
      and this was true of latitude 30 deg. in Egypt (the latitude nearly of
      Heliopolis and Memphis) for about three thousand years of Egyptian
      history. See L. Ideler, _op. cit._ i. 128-130. But the date of the
      rising of the star is not the same throughout Egypt; it varies with
      the latitude, and the variation within the limits of Egypt amounts
      to seven days or more. Roughly speaking, Sirius rises nearly a whole
      day earlier for each degree of latitude you go south. Thus, whereas
      near Alexandria in the north Sirius does not rise till the
      twenty-second of July, at Syene in the south it rises on the
      sixteenth of July. See R. Lepsius, _op. cit._ i. 168 _sq._; F. K.
      Ginzel, _op. cit._ i. 182 _sq._ Now it is to be remembered that the
      rising of the Nile, as well as the rising of Sirius, is observed
      earlier and earlier the further south you go. The coincident
      variation of the two phenomena could hardly fail to confirm the
      Egyptians in their belief of a natural or supernatural connexion
      between them.

   68 Diodorus Siculus, i. 27. 4; Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 21, 22, 38,
      61; Porphyry, _De antro nympharum_, 24; Scholiast on Apollonius
      Rhodius, ii. 517; Canopic decree, lines 36 _sq._, in W.
      Dittenberger's _Orientis Graeci Inscriptiones Selectae_, vol. i. p.
      102, No. 56 (lines 28 _sq._ in Ch. Michel's _Recueil d'Inscriptions
      Grecques_, p. 417, No. 551); R. V. Lanzone, _Dizionario di Mitologia
      Egizia_, pp. 825 _sq._ On the ceiling of the Memnonium at Thebes the
      heliacal rising of Sirius is represented under the form and name of
      Isis (Sir J. G. Wilkinson, _Manners and Customs of the Ancient
      Egyptians_, London, 1878, iii. 102).

   69 Porphyry and the Canopic decree, _ll.cc._; Censorinus, _De die
      natali_, xviii. 10, xxi. 10. In inscriptions on the temple at Syene,
      the modern Assuan, Isis is called "the mistress of the beginning of
      the year," the goddess "who revolves about the world, near to the
      constellation of Orion, who rises in the eastern sky and passes to
      the west perpetually" (R. V. Lanzone, _op. cit._ p. 826). According
      to some, the festival of the rising of Sirius and the beginning of
      the sacred year was held on the nineteenth, not the twentieth of
      July. See Ed. Meyer, "Aegyptische Chronologie," _Abhandlungen der
      koenigl. Preuss. Akademie der Wissenschaften_, 1904, pp. 22 _sqq._;
      _id._, "Nachtraege zur aegyptischen Chronologie," _Abhandlungen der
      koenigl. Preuss. Akademie der Wissenschaften_, 1907, pp. 7 _sqq._;
      _id._, _Geschichte des Altertums_,2 i. 2. pp. 28 _sqq._, 98 _sqq._

_   70 Eudoxi ars astronomica, qualis in charta Aegyptiaca superest_, ed.
      F. Blass (Kiliae, 1887), p. 14, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH DASIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}[{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}]{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}[{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}]{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH DASIA~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}[{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}] {~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}[{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}]{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}[{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}]{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PSILI~}[{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}] {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}[{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}]{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}[{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}]{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH DASIA AND OXIA~}[{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}]{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}[{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}]{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PSILI~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}[{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}],
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}. This statement of Eudoxus
      or of one of his pupils is important, since it definitely proves
      that, besides the shifting festivals of the shifting official year,
      the Egyptians celebrated other festivals, which were dated by direct
      observation of natural phenomena, namely, the annual inundation, the
      rise of Sirius, and the phases of the moon. The same distinction of
      the fixed from the movable festivals is indicated in one of the
      Hibeh papyri, but the passage is unfortunately mutilated. See _The
      Hibeh Papyri_, part i., edited by B. P. Grenfell and A. S. Hunt
      (London, 1906), pp. 145, 151 (pointed out to me by my friend Mr. W.
      Wyse). The annual festival in honour of Ptolemy and Berenice was
      fixed on the day of the rising of Sirius. See the Canopic decree, in
      W. Dittenberger's _Orientis Graeci Inscriptiones Selectae_, No. 56
      (vol. i. pp. 102 _sq._).

      The rise of Sirius was carefully observed by the islanders of Ceos,
      in the Aegean. They watched for it with arms in their hands and
      sacrificed on the mountains to the star, drawing from its aspect
      omens of the salubrity or unhealthiness of the coming year. The
      sacrifice was believed to secure the advent of the cool North winds
      (the Etesian winds as the Greeks call them), which regularly begin
      to blow about this time of the year, and mitigate the oppressive
      heat of summer in the Aegean. See Apollonius Rhodius, _Argon._ ii.
      516-527, with the notes of the Scholiast on vv. 498, 526;
      Theophrastus, _De ventis_, ii. 14; Clement of Alexandria, _Strom._
      vi. 3. 29, p. 753, ed. Potter; Nonnus, _Dionys._ v. 269-279;
      Hyginus, _Astronomica_, ii. 4; Cicero, _De divinatione_, i. 57. 130;
      M. P. Nilsson, _Griechische Feste_ (Leipsic, 1906), pp. 6-8; C.
      Neumann und J. Partsch, _Physikalische Geographie von Griechenland_
      (Breslau, 1885), pp. 96 _sqq._ On the top of Mount Pelion in
      Thessaly there was a sanctuary of Zeus, where sacrifices were
      offered at the rising of Sirius, in the height of the summer, by men
      of rank, who were chosen by the priest and wore fresh sheep-skins.
      See [Dicaearchus,] "Descriptio Graeciae," _Geographi Graeci
      Minores_, ed. C. Mueller, i. 107; _Historicorum Graecorum Fragmenta_,
      ed. C. Mueller, ii. 262.

   71 Above, pp. 24 _sq._

   72 We know from Censorinus (_De die natali_, xxi. 10) that the first of
      Thoth coincided with the heliacal rising of Sirius on July 20
      (Julian calendar) in the year 139 A.D. Hence reckoning backwards by
      Sothic periods of 1460 solar years we may infer that Sirius rose on
      July 20th (Julian calendar) in the years 1321 B.C., 2781 B.C., and
      4241 B.C.; and accordingly that the civil or vague Egyptian year of
      365 days was instituted in one of these years. In favour of
      supposing that it was instituted either in 2781 B.C. or 4241 B.C.,
      it may be said that in both these years the rising of Sirius nearly
      coincided with the summer solstice and the rising of the Nile;
      whereas in the year 1321 B.C. the summer solstice, and with it the
      rising of the Nile, fell nineteen days before the rising of Sirius
      and the first of Thoth. Now when we consider the close causal
      connexion which the Egyptians traced between the rising of Sirius
      and the rising of the Nile, it seems probable that they started the
      new calendar on the first of Thoth in a year in which the two
      natural phenomena coincided rather than in one in which they
      diverged from each other by nineteen days. Prof. Ed. Meyer decides
      in favour of the year 4241 B.C. as the date of the introduction of
      the Egyptian calendar on the ground that the calendar was already
      well known in the Old Kingdom. See L. Ideler, _op. cit._ i. 125
      _sqq._; F. K. Ginzel, _op. cit._ i. 192 _sqq._; Ed. Meyer,
      "Nachtraege zur aegyptischen Chronologie," _Abhandlungen der koenigl.
      Preuss. Akademie der Wissenschaften_, 1907 (Berlin, 1908), pp. 11
      _sq._; _id._, _Geschichte des Altertums_,2 i. 2. pp. 28 _sqq._, 98
      _sqq._ When the fixed Alexandrian year was introduced in 30 B.C.
      (see above, pp. 27 _sq._) the first of Thoth fell on August 29,
      which accordingly was thenceforth reckoned the first day of the year
      in the Alexandrian calendar. See L. Ideler, _op. cit._ i. 153 _sqq._
      The period of 1460 solar or 1461 movable Egyptian years was
      variously called a Sothic period (Clement of Alexandria, _Strom._ i.
      21. 136, p. 401 ed. Potter), a Canicular year (from _Canicula_, "the
      Dog-star," that is, Sirius), a heliacal year, and a year of God
      (Censorinus, _De die natali_, xviii. 10). But there is no evidence
      or probability that the period was recognized by the Egyptian
      astronomers who instituted the movable year of 365 days. Rather, as
      Ideler pointed out (_op. cit._ i. 132), it must have been a later
      discovery based on continued observations of the heliacal rising of
      Sirius and of its gradual displacement through the whole length of
      the official calendar. Brugsch, indeed, went so far as to suppose
      that the period was a discovery of astronomers of the second century
      A.D., to which they were led by the coincidence of the first of
      Thoth with the heliacal rising of Sirius in 139 A.D. (_Die
      Aegyptologie_, p. 357). But the discovery, based as it is on a very
      simple calculation (365 x 4 = 1460), could hardly fail to be made as
      soon as astronomers estimated the length of the solar year at 365-1/4
      days, and that they did so at least as early as 238 B.C. is proved
      conclusively by the Canopic decree. See above, pp. 25 _sq._, 27. As
      to the Sothic period see further R. Lepsius, _Die Chronologie der
      Aegypter_, i. 165 _sqq._; F. K. Ginzel, _op. cit._ i. 187 _sqq._

      For the convenience of the reader I subjoin a table of the Egyptian
      months, with their dates, as these fell, (1) in a year when the
      first of Thoth coincided with July 20 of the Julian calendar, and
      (2) in the fixed Alexandrian year.

      Egyptian Months, Sothic Year beginning July 20, Alexandrian Year.
      1 Thoth, 20 July, 29 August
      1 Phaophi, 19 August, 28 September
      1 Atbyr, 18 September, 28 October
      1 Khoiak, 18 October, 27 November
      1 Tybi, 17 November, 27 December
      1 Mechir, 17 December, 26 January
      1 Phamenoth, 16 January, 25 February
      1 Pharmuthi, 15 February, 27 March
      1 Pachon, 17 March, 26 April
      1 Payni, 16 April, 26 May
      1 Epiphi, 16 May, 25 June
      1 Mesori, 15 June, 25 July
      1 Supplementary, 15 July, 24 August

      See L. Ideler, _op. cit._ i. 143 _sq._; F. K. Ginzel, _op. cit._ i.
      200.

   73 The Canopic decree (above, p. 27) suffices to prove that the
      Egyptian astronomers, long before Caesar's time, were well
      acquainted with the approximately exact length of the solar year,
      although they did not use their knowledge to correct the calendar
      except for a short time in the reign of Ptolemy Euergetes. With
      regard to Caesar's debt to the Egyptian astronomers see Dio Cassius,
      xliii. 26; Macrobius, _Saturn_, i. 14. 3, i. 16. 39; L. Ideler,
      _Handbuch der mathematischen und technischen Chronologie_, i. 166
      _sqq._

  M30 Ceremonies observed in Egypt at the cutting of the dams early in
      August. The Bride of the Nile. Sacrifices offered by savages at the
      cutting of dams.

   74 E. W. Lane, _Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians_ (Paisley
      and London, 1895), ch. xxvi. pp. 499 _sq._

   75 Bruno Gutmann, "Feldbausitten und Wachstumsbraeuche der Wadschagga,"
      _Zeitschrift fuer Ethnologie_, xlv. (1913) pp. 484 _sq._

   76 Hon. K. R. Dundas, "Notes on the tribes inhabiting the Baringo
      District, East Africa Protectorate," _Journal of the Royal
      Anthropological Institute_, xl. (1910) p. 54.

  M31 Modern Egyptian ceremony at the cutting of the dams.

   77 E. W. Lane, _op. cit._ pp. 500-504; Sir Auckland Colvin, _The Making
      of Modern Egypt_ (London, 1906), pp. 278 _sq._ According to the
      latter writer, a dressed dummy was thrown into the river at each
      cutting of the dam.

   78 Seneca, _Naturales Quaestiones_, iv. 2. 7. The cutting of the dams
      is mentioned by Diodorus Siculus (i. 36. 3), and the festival on
      that occasion ({~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}) is noticed by Eudoxus (or one of his
      pupils) in a passage which has already been quoted. See above, p.
      35, note 2.

   79 Sir Auckland Colvin, _l.c._

  M32 The sowing of the seed in November. Plutarch on the mournful
      character of the rites of sowing. The sadness of autumn.

   80 {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}. Plutarch derives the name from {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, "pain," "grief."
      But the etymology is uncertain. It has lately been proposed to
      derive the epithet from {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}, "nourishment." See M. P. Nilsson,
      _Griechische Feste_ (Leipsic, 1906), p. 326. As to the vaults
      ({~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}) of Demeter see Pausanias, ix. 8. 1; Scholiast on Lucian,
      _Dial. Meretr._ ii. pp. 275 _sq._, ed. H. Rabe (Leipsic, 1906).

   81 In antiquity the Pleiades set at dawn about the end of October or
      early in November. See L. Ideler, _Handbuch der mathematischen und
      technischen Chronologie_, i. 242; Aug. Mommsen, _Chronologie_
      (Leipsic, 1883), pp. 16, 27; G. F. Unger, "Zeitrechnung der Griechen
      und Roemer," in Iwan Mueller's _Handbuch der klassischen
      Altertumswissenschaft_, i.1 (Noerdlingen, 1886) pp. 558, 585.

   82 {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PSI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}.

   83 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 69-71. With the sleep of the Phrygian
      gods we may compare the sleep of Vishnu. The toils and anxieties of
      the Indian farmer "are continuous, and his only period of
      comparative rest is in the heavy rain time, when, as he says, the
      god Vishnu goes to sleep, and does not wake till October is well
      advanced and the time has come to begin cutting and crushing the
      sugar-cane and boiling down the juice" (W. Crooke, _Natives of
      Northern India_, London, 1907, p. 159).

  M33 Plutarch's view that the worship of the fruits of the earth sprang
      from a verbal misunderstanding.

   84 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 77.

  M34 His theory is an inversion of the truth: for fetishism is the
      antecedent, not the corruption, of theism. Lamentations of the
      savage for the animals and plants which he kills and eats.
  M35 Respect shown by savages for the fruits and the animals which they
      eat.

_   85 Spirits of the Corn and of the Wild_, ii. 204 _sqq._

   86 C. Hill Tout, "Report on the Ethnology of the Stlatlum Indians of
      British Columbia," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xxxv.
      (1905) pp. 140 _sq._

  M36 Thus the lamentations of the sower become intelligible.

   87 Psalm cxxvi. 5 _sq._ Firmicus Maternus asks the Egyptians (_De
      errore profanarum religionum_, ii. 7), "_Cur plangitis fruges terrae
      et crescentia lugetis semina?_"

  M37 Lamentations of the Egyptian corn-reapers.

   88 As to the Egyptian modes of reaping and threshing see Sir J.
      Gardiner Wilkinson, _Manners and Customs of the Ancient Egyptians_
      (London, 1878), ii. 419 _sqq._; A. Erman, _Aegypten und aegyptisches
      Leben im Altertum_, pp. 572 _sqq._

   89 Diodorus Siculus, i. 14. 2.

   90 Herodotus, ii. 79; Julius Pollux, iv. 54; Pausanias, ix. 29. 7;
      Athenaeus, xiv. 11 _sq._, pp. 618-620. As to these songs see
      _Spirits of the Corn and of the Wild_, i. 214 _sqq._

   91 H. Brugsch, _Adonisklage und Linoslied_ (Berlin, 1852), p. 24,
      corrected by A. Wiedemann, _Herodots zweites Buch_, p. 336. As to
      the lamentations for Osiris see above, p. 12.

  M38 Similar ceremonies observed by the Cherokee Indians in the
      cultivation of the corn. The Old Woman of the corn and the laments
      for her death.

   92 J. Mooney, "Myths of the Cherokee," _Nineteenth Annual Report of the
      Bureau of American Ethnology_ (Washington, 1900), pp. 423 _sq._ I do
      not know what precisely the writer means by "the last working of the
      crop" and "the first working of the corn."

_   93 Spirits of the Corn and of the Wild_, i. 180 _sqq._

   94 A. C. Hollis, _The Nandi_ (Oxford, 1909), p. 46.

  M39 Lamentations of Indians at cutting sacred wood.

   95 S. Powers, _Tribes of California_ (Washington, 1877), p. 25.

  M40 Arab ceremony of burying "the old man" at harvest.

   96 A. Jaussen, "Coutumes Arabes," _Revue Biblique_, 1er avril 1903, p.
      258; _id._, _Coutumes des Arabes au pays de Moab_ (Paris 1908), pp.
      252 _sq._

  M41 With the adoption of the Alexandrian year in 30 B.C. the Egyptian
      festivals ceased to rotate through the natural year.

   97 Thus with regard to the Egyptian month of Athyr he tells us that the
      sun was then in the sign of the Scorpion (_Isis et Osiris_, 13),
      that Athyr corresponded to the Athenian month Pyanepsion and the
      Boeotian month Damatrius (_op. cit._ 69), that it was the month of
      sowing (_ib._), that in it the Nile sank, the earth was laid bare by
      the retreat of the inundation, the leaves fell, and the nights grew
      longer than the days (_op. cit._ 39). These indications agree on the
      whole with the date of Athyr in the Alexandrian calendar, namely
      October 28-November 26. Again, he says (_op. cit._ 43) that the
      festival of the beginning of spring was held at the new moon of the
      month Phamenoth, which, in the Alexandrian calendar, corresponded to
      February 24-March 26. Further, he tells us that a festival was
      celebrated on the 23rd of Phaophi after the autumn equinox (_op.
      cit._ 52), and in the Alexandrian calendar Phaophi began on
      September 28, a few days after the autumn equinox. Once more, he
      observes that another festival was held after the spring equinox
      (_op. cit._ 65), which implies the use of a fixed solar year. See G.
      Parthey in his edition of Plutarch's _Isis et Osiris_ (Berlin,
      1850), pp. 165-169.

   98 H. Brugsch, _Die Aegyptologie_, p. 355.

  M42 The sufferings of Osiris displayed as a mystery at Sais. The
      illumination of houses throughout Egypt on the night of the festival
      suggests that the rite was a Feast of All Souls.

   99 Herodotus, ii. 170.

  100 Herodotus, ii. 129-132.

  101 Herodotus, ii. 41, with Prof. A. Wiedemann's note (_Herodots zweites
      Buch_, pp. 187 _sqq._); Diodorus Siculus, i. 11. 4; Aelian, _De
      natura animalium_, x. 27; Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 19 and 39.
      According to Prof. Wiedemann "the Egyptian name of the cow of Isis
      was _hes-t_, and this is one of the rare cases in which the name of
      the sacred animal agrees with that of the deity." _Hest_ was the
      usual Egyptian form of the name which the Greeks and Romans
      represented as Isis. See R. V. Lanzone, _Dizionario di Mitologia
      Egizia_, pp. 813 _sqq._

  102 In this form she is represented on a relief at Philae pouring a
      libation in honour of the soul of Osiris. See E. A. Wallis Budge,
      _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 8. She is similarly
      portrayed in a bronze statuette, which is now in the Louvre. See G.
      Perrot et Ch. Chipiez, _Histoire de l'Art dans l'Antiquite_, i.
      (Paris, 1882) p. 60, fig. 40.

  103 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 52. The interpretation is accepted by
      Prof. A. Wiedemann (_Herodots zweites Buch_, p. 482).

  104 Herodotus, ii. 62. In one of the Hibeh papyri (No. 27, lines
      165-167) mention is made of the festival and of the lights which
      were burned throughout the district. See _The Hibeh Papyri_, part
      i., ed. B. P. Grenfell and A. S. Hunt (London, 1906), p. 149
      (pointed out to me by Mr. W. Wyse). In the papyrus the festival is
      said to have been held in honour of Athena (_i.e._ Neith), the great
      goddess of Sais, who was there identified with Isis. See A.
      Wiedemann, _Die Religion der alten Aegypter_, pp. 77 _sq._; _id._,
      _Religion of the Ancient Egyptians_, pp. 140 _sq._

  105 In the period of the Middle Kingdom the Egyptians of Siut used to
      light lamps for the dead on the last day and the first day of the
      year. See A. Erman, "Zehn Vortraege aus dem mittleren Reich,"
      _Zeitschrift fuer aegyptische Sprache und Alterthumskunde_, xx. (1882)
      p. 164; _id._, _Aegypten und aegyptisches Leben im Altertum_, pp.
      434 _sq._

  M43 Annual festival of the dead among the Esquimaux. The lighting of the
      lamps for the dead. Annual festivals of the dead among the Indians
      of California. Annual festivals of the dead among the Choctaws and
      Pueblo Indians.

  106 E. W. Nelson, "The Eskimo about Bering Strait," _Eighteenth Annual
      Report of the Bureau of Ethnology_, Part i. (Washington, 1899) pp.
      363 _sqq._

  107 S. Powers, _Tribes of California_ (Washington, 1877), pp. 328, 355,
      356, 384.

  108 Kostromitonow, "Bemerkungen ueber die Indianer in Ober-Kalifornien,"
      in K. F. v. Baer and Gr. v. Helmersen's _Beitraege zur Kenntniss des
      russischen Reiches_, i. (St. Petersburg, 1839) pp. 88 _sq._ The
      natives of the western islands of Torres Straits used to hold a
      great death-dance at which disguised men personated the ghosts of
      the lately deceased, mimicking their characteristic gait and
      gestures. Women and children were supposed to take these mummers for
      real ghosts. See A. C. Haddon, in _Reports of the Cambridge
      Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits_, v. (Cambridge, 1904)
      pp. 252-256; _The Belief in Immortality and the Worship of the
      Dead_, i. 176 _sqq._

  109 S. Powers, _Tribes of California_, pp. 437 _sq._

  110 Bossu, _Nouveaux Voyages aux Indes Occidentales_ (Paris, 1768), ii.
      95 _sq._

  111 T. G. S. Ten Broeck, in H. R. Schoolcraft's _Indian Tribes of the
      United States_ (Philadelphia, 1853-1856), iv. 78. The Pueblo village
      to which the writer particularly refers is Laguna.

  M44 Annual festival of the dead among the Miztecs of Mexico.

  112 Brasseur de Bourbourg, _Histoire des nations civilisees du Mexique
      et de l'Amerique-Centrale_ (Paris, 1857-1859), iii. 23 _sq._; H. H.
      Bancroft, _Native Races of the Pacific States_ (London, 1875-1876),
      ii. 623. Similar customs are still practised by the Indians of a
      great part of Mexico and Central America (Brasseur de Bourbourg,
      _op. cit._ iii. 24, note 1).

  113 "Lettre du cure de Santiago Tepehuacan ason eveque," _Bulletin de la
      Societe de Geographie_ (Paris), IIme Serie, ii. (1834) p. 179.

  M45 Annual festival of the dead in Sumba.

  114 S. Roos, "Bijdrage tot de kennis van taal, land en volk op het
      eiland Soemba," _Verhandelingen van het Bataviaasch Genootschap van
      Kunsten en Wetenschappen_, xxxvi. (1872) pp. 63-65.

  M46 Annual festival of the dead in Kiriwina. Festival of the dead among
      the Sea Dyaks of Borneo.

  115 Rev. S. B. Fellows, quoted by George Brown, D.D., _Melanesians and
      Polynesians_ (London, 1910), p. 237.

  116 E. H. Gomes, _Seventeen Years among the Sea Dyaks of Borneo_
      (London, 1911), pp. 216-218. For another and briefer account of this
      festival see _The Scapegoat_, p. 154.

  M47 Annual festival of the dead among the Nagas of Manipur.

  117 Rev. Wm. Pettigrew, "Kathi Kasham, the 'Soul Departure' feast as
      practised by the Tangkkul Nagas, Manipur, Assam," _Journal and
      Proceedings of the Asiatic Society of Bengal_, N.S. vol. v. 1909
      (Calcutta, 1910), pp. 37-46; T. C. Hodson, _The Naga Tribes of
      Manipur_ (London, 1911), pp. 153-158.

  M48 Annual festival of the dead among the Oraons of Bengal.

  118 Rev. P. Dehon, S.J., "Religion and Customs of the Uraons," _Memoirs
      of the Asiatic Society of Bengal_, vol. i. No. 9 (Calcutta, 1906),
      p. 136. Compare Rev. F. Hahn, "Some Notes on the Religion and
      Superstition of the Oraos," _Journal of the Asiatic Society of
      Bengal_, lxxii. Part iii. (Calcutta, 1904) pp. 12 _sq._ According to
      the latter writer the pots containing the relics of the dead are
      buried, not in the sand of the river, but in a pit, generally
      covered with huge stones, which is dug for the purpose in some field
      or grove.

  M49 Annual festival of the dead in Bilaspore.

  119 E. M. Gordon, _Indian Folk Tales_ (London, 1908), p. 18. According
      to Mr. W. Crooke, the Hindoo Feast of Lamps (_Diwali_) seems to have
      been based on "the idea that on this night the spirits of the dead
      revisit their homes, which are cleaned and lighted for their
      reception." See W. Crooke, _The Popular Religion and Folk-lore of
      Northern India_ (Westminster, 1896), ii. 295 _sq._

  M50 Annual festival of the dead among the Bghais and Hkamies.

  120 Rev. F. Mason, D.D., "Physical Character of the Karens," _Journal of
      the Asiatic Society of Bengal_, 1866, Part ii. pp. 29 _sq._ Lights
      are not mentioned by the writer, but the festival being nocturnal we
      may assume that they are used for the convenience of the living as
      well as of the dead. In other respects the ceremonies are typical.

  121 R. F. St. Andrew St. John, "A Short Account of the Hill Tribes of
      North Aracan," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, ii.
      (1873) p. 238. At this festival the dead are apparently not supposed
      to return to the houses.

  M51 Annual festival of the dead in Cambodia.

  122 E. Aymonier, _Notice sur le Cambodge_ (Paris, 1875), p. 59; A.
      Leclere, _Le Buddhisme au Cambodge_ (Paris, 1899), pp. 374-376. The
      departure of the souls is described only by the latter writer.
      Compare E. Aymonier, "Notes sur les coutumes et croyances
      superstitieuses des Cambodgiens," _Cochinchine Francaise, Excursions
      et Reconnaissances_, No. 16 (Saigon, 1883), pp. 205 _sq._

  123 Mariny, _Relation nouvelle et curieuse des royaumes de Tunquin et de
      Lao_ (Paris, 1666), pp. 251-253.

  M52 Annual festival of the dead in Annam.

  124 Le R. P. Cadiere, "Coutumes populaires de la vallee du Nguon-So'n,"
      _Bulletin de l'Ecole Francaise d'Extreme-Orient_, ii. (Hanoi, 1902)
      pp. 376-379; P. d'Enjoy, "Du droit successoral en Annam," etc.,
      _Bulletins de la Societe d'Anthropologie de Paris_, Ve Serie, iv.
      (1903) pp. 500-502; E. Diguet, _Les Annamites_ (Paris, 1906), pp.
      372-375.

  M53 Annual festival of friendless ghosts in Annam.

  125 E. Diguet, _Les Annamites_ (Paris, 1906), pp. 254 _sq._; Paul Giran,
      _Magie et Religion Annamites_ (Paris, 1912), pp. 258 _sq._ According
      to the latter writer the offerings to the vagrant souls are made on
      the first and last days of the month, while sacrifices of a more
      domestic character are performed on the fifteenth.

  M54 Annual festivals of the dead in Cochinchina, Siam and Japan.

  126 L. E. Louvet, _La Cochinchine religieuse_ (Paris, 1885), pp.
      149-151.

_  127 The Scapegoat_, pp. 149 _sqq._

  M55 Annual festivals of the dead among the Chewsurs and Armenians.

  128 C. v. Hahn, "Religioese Anschauungen und Totengedaechtnisfeier der
      Chewsuren," _Globus_, lxxvi. (1899) pp. 211 _sq._

  129 M. Abeghian, _Der armenische Volksglaube_ (Leipsic, 1899), pp. 23
      _sq._

  M56 Annual festivals of the dead in Africa.

  130 Fred. E. Forbes, _Dahomey and the Dahomans_ (London, 1851), ii. 73.
      Compare John Duncan, _Travels in Western Africa_ (London, 1847), i.
      125 _sq._; A. B. Ellis, _The Ewe-speaking Peoples of the Slave
      Coast_ (London, 1890), p. 108. The Tshi-speaking peoples of the Gold
      Coast and Ashantee celebrate an annual festival of eight days in
      honour of the dead. It falls towards the end of August. The
      offerings are presented to the departed at their graves. See A. B.
      Ellis, _The Tshi-speaking Peoples of the Gold Coast_ (London, 1887),
      pp. 227 _sq._; E. Perregaux, _Chez les Achanti_ (Neuchatel, 1908),
      pp. 136, 138. According to the latter writer the festival is
      celebrated at the time of the yam harvest.

  131 W. Munzinger, _Ostafrikanische Studien_ (Schaffhausen, 1864), p.
      473.

_  132 The Scapegoat_, pp. 136 _sq._

  M57 Annual festivals of the dead among peoples of the Aryan stock.
      Annual festival of the dead (the Fravashis) among the old Iranians.
      Annual festival of the dead among the Persians.

  133 On the worship of the dead, and especially of ancestors, among Aryan
      peoples, see W. Caland, _Ueber Totenverehrung bei einigen der
      indo-germanischen Voelker_ (Amsterdam, 1888); O. Schrader,
      _Reallexikon der indogermanischen Altertumskunde_ (Strasburg, 1901),
      pp. 21 _sqq._; _id._, _s.v._ "Aryan Religion," in Dr. J. Hastings's
      _Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics_, ii. (Edinburgh, 1909) pp. 16
      _sqq._

  134 As to the Iranian calendar see W. Geiger, _Altiranische Kultur im
      Altertum_ (Erlangen, 1882), pp. 314 _sqq._; as to the Iranian
      worship of the sainted dead (the Fravashis) see _id._ pp. 286 _sqq._
      As to the annual festival of the dead (Hamaspathmaedaya) see W.
      Caland, _Ueber Totenverehrung bei einigen der indo-germanischen
      Voelker_ (Amsterdam, 1888), pp. 64 _sq._; N. Soederblom, _Les
      Fravashis_ (Paris, 1899), pp. 4 _sqq._; J. H. Moulton, _Early
      Zoroastrianism_ (London, 1913), pp. 256 _sqq._ All these writers
      agree that the Fravashis of the _Zend-Avesta_ were originally the
      souls of the dead. See also James Darmesteter, _Zend-Avesta_, Part
      ii. (Oxford, 1883) p. 179: "The Fravashi is the inner power in every
      being that maintains it and makes it grow and subsist. Originally
      the Fravashis were the same as the _Pitris_ of the Hindus or the
      _Manes_ of the Latins, that is to say, the everlasting and deified
      souls of the dead; but in course of time they gained a wider domain,
      and not only men, but gods and even physical objects, like the sky
      and the earth, etc., had each a Fravashi." Compare _id._, _Ormazd et
      Ahriman_ (Paris, 1877), pp. 130 _sqq._; N. Soederblom, _La Vie Future
      d'apres Le Mazdeisme_ (Paris, 1901), pp. 7 _sqq._ A different view
      of the original nature of the Fravashis was taken by C. P. Tiele,
      according to whom they were essentially guardian spirits. See C. P.
      Tiele, _Geschichte der Religion im Altertum_ (Gotha, 1896-1903), ii.
      256 _sqq._

_  135 The Zend-Avesta_, translated by James Darmesteter, Part ii.
      (Oxford, 1883) pp. 192 _sq._ (_Sacred Books of the East_, vol.
      xxiii.).

  136 Albiruni, _The Chronology of Ancient Nations_, translated and edited
      by Dr. C. Edward Sachau (London, 1879), p. 210. In the _Dinkard_, a
      Pahlavi work which seems to have been composed in the first half of
      the ninth century A.D., the festival is spoken of as "those ten days
      which are the end of the winter and termination of the year, because
      the five Gathic days, among them, are for that purpose." By "the
      five Gathic days" the writer means the five supplementary days added
      at the end of the twelfth month to complete the year of 365 days.
      See _Pahlavi Texts_ translated by E. W. West, Part iv. (Oxford,
      1892) p. 17 (_The Sacred Books of the East_, vol. xxxvii.).

  M58 Feast of All Souls in Brittany and other parts of France.

  137 A. le Braz, _La Legende de la Morten Basse-Bretagne_ (Paris, 1893),
      pp. 280-287. Compare J. Lecoeur, _Esquisses du Bocage Normand_
      (Conde-sur-Noireau, 1883-1887), ii. 283 _sqq._

  138 L. F. Sauve, _Le folk-lore des Hautes-Vosges_ (Paris, 1889), pp. 295
      _sq._

  139 J. L. M. Nogues, _Les moeurs d'autrefois en Saintonge et en Aunis_
      (Saintes, 1891), p. 76. As to the observance of All Souls' Day in
      other parts of France see A. Meyrac, _Traditions, coutumes, legendes
      et contes des Ardennes_ (Charleville, 1890), pp. 22-24; Ch.
      Beauquier, _Les mois en Franche-Comte_ (Paris, 1900), pp. 123-125.

  M59 Feast of All Souls in Belgium.

  140 Above, p. 52.

  141 W. Crooke, _The Natives of Northern India_ (London, 1907), p. 219.

  142 Reinsberg-Dueringsfeld, _Calendrier Belge_ (Brussels, 1861-1862), ii.
      236-240; _id._, _Das festliche Jahr_ (Leipsic, 1863), pp. 229 _sq._

  M60 Feast of All Souls in Lechrain.

  143 Karl Freiherr von Leoprechting, _Aus dem Lechrain_ (Munich, 1855),
      pp. 198-200.

  M61 Soul-cakes and All Souls' Day in Southern Germany.

  144 O. Freiherr von Reinsberg-Dueringsfeld, _Das festliche Jahr_
      (Leipsic, 1863), p. 330. As to these cakes (called "souls") in
      Swabia see E. Meyer, _Deutsche Sagen, Sitten und Gebraeuche aus
      Schwaben_ (Stuttgart, 1852), p. 452, § 174; Anton Birlinger,
      _Volksthuemliches aus Schwaben_ (Freiburg im Breisgau, 1861-1862),
      ii. 167 _sq._ The cakes are baked of white flour, and are of a
      longish rounded shape with two small tips at each end.

  145 Adalbert Kuhn, _Mythologische Studien_, ii. (Guetersloh, 1912) pp. 41
      _sq._, citing F. Schoenwerth, _Aus der Oberpfalz_, i. 283.

  M62 Feast of All Souls in Bohemia.

  146 O. Freiherr von Reinsberg-Dueringsfeld, _Fest-Kalender aus Boehmen_
      (Prague, N.D.), pp. 493-495.

  147 Alois John, _Sitte, Brauch und Volksglaube im deutschen Westboehmen_
      (Prague, 1905), p. 97.

  M63 Feast of All Souls in Moravia.

  148 Willibald Mueller, _Beitraege zur Volkskunde der Deutschen in Maehren_
      (Vienna and Olmuetz, 1893), p. 330.

  M64 Feast of All Souls in the Tyrol and Baden.

  149 Ignaz V. Zingerle, _Sitten, Braeuche und Meiningen des Tiroler
      Volkes_2 (Innsbruck, 1871), pp. 176-178.

  150 Christian Schneller, _Maerchen und Sagen aus Waelschtirol_ (Innsbruck,
      1867), p. 238.

  151 Elard Hugo Meyer, _Badisches Volksleben im neunzehnten Jahrhundert_
      (Strasburg, 1900), p. 601.

  M65 Annual festivals of the dead among the Letts and Samagitians.

  152 P. Einhorn, "Historia Lettica," in _Scriptores Rerum Livonicarum_,
      ii. (Riga and Leipsic, 1848) pp. 587, 598, 630 _sq._, 645 _sq._ See
      also the description of D. Fabricius in his "Livonicae Historiae
      compendiosa series," _ib._ p. 441. Fabricius assigns the custom to
      All Souls' Day.

  153 J. Lasicius, "De diis Samagitarum caeterorumque Sarmatarum," in
      _Magazin herausgegeben von der lettisch-literaerischen Gesellschaft_,
      xiv. 1. (Mitau, 1868), p. 92.

  154 F. J. Wiedemann, _Aus dem inneren und aeussern Leben der Ehsten_ (St.
      Petersburg, 1876), pp. 366 _sq._; Boecler-Kreutzwald, _Der Ehsten
      aberglaeubische Gebraeuche, Weisen und Gewohnheiten_ (St. Petersburg,
      1854), p. 89.

  M66 Festival of the dead in Russia.

  155 W. R. S. Ralston, _Songs of the Russian People_2 (London, 1872), pp.
      321 _sq._ The date of the festival is not mentioned. Apparently it
      is celebrated at irregular intervals.

  M67 Annual festivals of the dead among the Votiaks of Russia.

  156 M. Buch, _Die Wotjaeken_ (Stuttgart, 1882), p. 145.

  157 J. Wasiljev, _Uebersicht ueber die heidnischen Gebraeuche, Aberglauben
      und Religion der Wotjaeken_ (Helsingfors, 1902), pp. 34 _sq._
      (_Memoires de la Societe Finno-Ougrienne_, xviii.). As to the Votiak
      clans see the same work, pp. 42-44.

  M68 Feast of All Souls in the Abruzzi.

  158 G. Finamore, _Credenze, Usi e Costumi Abruzzesi_ (Palermo, 1890),
      pp. 180-182. Mr. W. R. Paton writes to me (12th December 1906): "You
      do not mention the practice[s] on the modern Greek feast {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PSI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}
      (in May) which quite correspond. The {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} is made in every house
      and put on a table laid with a white tablecloth. A glass of water
      and a taper are put on the table, and all is left so for the whole
      night. Our Greek maid-servant says that when she was a child she
      remembers seeing the souls come and partake. Almost the same rite is
      practised for the {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} made on the commemoration of particular
      dead."

  M69 Soul-cakes on All-Souls' Day in England. "Souling Day" in
      Shropshire.

  159 John Brand, _Popular Antiquities of Great Britain_ (London,
      1882-1883), i. 393.

  160 John Aubrey, _Remaines of Gentilisme and Judaisme_ (London, 1881),
      p. 23.

  161 Miss C. S. Burne and Miss G. F. Jackson, _Shropshire Folk-lore_
      (London, 1883), p. 381. The writers record (pp. 382 _sqq._) some of
      the ditties which were sung on this occasion by those who begged for
      soul-cakes.

  162 J. Brand, _Popular Antiquities of Great Britain_, i. 392, 393; W.
      Hone, _Year Book_ (London, N.D.), col. 1288; T. F. Thiselton Dyer,
      _British Popular Customs_ (London, 1876), pp. 405, 406, 407, 409; J.
      Harland and T. T. Wilkinson, _Lancashire Folk-lore_ (London, 1882),
      p. 251; Elizabeth Mary Wright, _Rustic Speech and Folk-lore_
      (Oxford, 1913), p. 300.

  163 Marie Trevelyan, _Folk-lore and Folk-stories of Wales_ (London,
      1909), p. 255. See also T. F. Thiselton Dyer, _British Popular
      Customs_ (London, 1876), p. 410, who, quoting Pennant as his
      authority, says that the poor people who received soul-cakes prayed
      God to bless the next crop of wheat.

_  164 County Folk-lore_, vol. ii. _North Riding of Yorkshire, York, and
      the Ainsty_ (London, 1901), quoting George Young, _A History of
      Whitby and Streoneshalth Abbey_ (Whitby, 1817), ii. 882.

  165 T. F. Thiselton Dyer, _British Popular Customs_, p. 410.

  166 M. Martin, "Description of the Western Islands of Scotland," in John
      Pinkerton's _Voyages and Travels_ (London, 1808-1814), iii. 666.

  M70 Feast of All Souls among the Indians of Ecuador.

  167 Dr. Rivet, "Le Christianisme et les Indiens de la Republique de
      l'Equateur," _L'Anthropologie_, xvii. (1906) pp. 93 _sq._

  M71 The nominally Christian feast of All Souls on Nov. 2 appears to be
      an old Celtic festival of the dead adopted by the Church in 998 A.D.
      Institution of the Feast of All Souls by the Abbot of Clugny.

  168 See above, pp. 53, 55, 62, 65.

  169 Sir John Rhys, _Celtic Heathendom_ (London and Edinburgh, 1888), pp.
      460, 514 _sq._; _id._, "Celtae and Galli," _Proceedings of the
      British Academy, 1905-1906_ (London, N.D.), p. 78; _Balder the
      Beautiful_, i. 224 _sq._

  170 K. Muellenhoff, _Deutsche Altertumskunde_, iv. (Berlin, 1900) pp. 379
      _sq._ The first of October seems to have been a great festival among
      the Saxons and also the Samagitians. See Widukind, _Res gestae
      Saxonicae_, i. 12 (Migne's _Patrologia Latina_, cxxxvii. 135); M. A.
      Michov, "De Sarmatia Asiana atque Europea," in S. Grynaeus's _Novus
      Orbis Regionum ac Insularum veteribus incognitarum_ (Bale, 1532), p.
      520. I have to thank Professor H. M. Chadwick for pointing out these
      two passages to me. Mr. A. Tille prefers to date the Teutonic winter
      from Martinmas, the eleventh of November. See A. Tille, _Die
      Geschichte der deutschen Weihnacht_ (Leipsic, N.D.), pp. 23 _sqq._;
      O. Schrader, _Reallexikon der indogermanischen Altertumskunde_
      (Strasburg, 1901), p. 395.

  171 A. J. Binterim, _Die vorzueglichsten Denkwuerdigkeiten der
      Christ-Katholischen Kirche_, v. 1 (Mayence, 1829), pp. 493 _sq._; J.
      J. Herzog und G. F. Plitt, _Real-Encyclopaedie fuer protestantische
      Theologie und Kirche_,2 i. (Leipsic, 1877), pp. 303 _sq._; W. Smith
      and S. Cheetham, _Dictionary of Christian Antiquities_ (London,
      1875-1880), i. 57 _sq._

  M72 The feast of All Saints on Nov. 1 seems also to have displaced a
      heathen festival of the dead.

  172 A. J. Binterim, _op. cit._ v. 1, pp. 487 _sqq._; J. J. Herzog und G.
      F. Plitt, _op. cit._ i. p. 303; W. Smith and S. Cheetham,
      _Dictionary of Christian Antiquities_, i. 57. In the last of these
      works a passage from the _Martyrologium Romanum Vetus_ is quoted
      which states that a feast of Saints (_Festivitas Sanctorum_) on the
      first of November was celebrated at Rome. But the date of this
      particular Martyrology is disputed. See A. J. Binterim, _op. cit._
      v. 1, pp. 52-54.

  173 J. J. Herzog und G. F. Plitt, _op. cit._ i. 304. A similar attempt
      to reform religion by diverting the devotion of the people from the
      spirits of their dead appears to have been made in antiquity by the
      doctors of the Persian faith. For that faith "in its most finished
      and purest form, in the _Gathas_, does not recognize the dead as
      objects worthy of worship and sacrifice. But the popular beliefs
      were too firmly rooted, and the Mazdeans, like the sectaries of many
      other ideal and lofty forms of religion, were forced to give way. As
      they could not suppress the worship and get rid of the primitive and
      crude ideas involved in it, they set about the reform in another
      way: they interpreted the worship in a new manner, and thus the
      worship of the dead became a worship of the gods or of a god in
      favour of the loved and lost ones, a pious commemoration of their
      names and their virtues." See N. Soederblom, _Les Fravashis_ (Paris,
      1899), pp. 6 _sq._ The _Gathas_ form the oldest part of the
      _Zend-Avesta_. James Darmesteter, indeed, in his later life startled
      the learned world by a theory that the _Gathas_ were a comparatively
      late work based on the teaching of Philo of Alexandria. But this
      attempt of a Jew to claim for his race the inspiration of the
      Persian scriptures has been coldly received by Gentile scholars. See
      J. H. Moulton, _Early Zoroastrianism_ (London, 1913), pp. 8 _sqq._

  M73 Festival of the death and resurrection of Osiris in the month of
      Athyr. The finding of Osiris.

  174 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 39. As to the death of Osiris on the
      seventeenth of Athyr see _ib._ 13 and 42. Plutarch's statement on
      this subject is confirmed by the evidence of the papyrus Sallier
      IV., a document dating from the 19th dynasty, which places the
      lamentation for Osiris at Sais on the seventeenth day of Athyr. See
      A. Wiedemann, _Herodots zweites Buch_, p. 262; _id._, _Die Religion
      der alten Aegypter_, p. 112; _id._, _Religion of the Ancient
      Egyptians_, pp. 211 _sq._

  175 See above, p. 50.

  176 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 39. The words which I have translated
      "vegetable mould" are {~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, literally, "fruitful earth." The
      composition of the image was very important, as we shall see
      presently.

  177 Lactantius, _Divin. Institut._, i. 21; _id._, _Epitome Inst. Divin._
      23 (18, ed. Brandt and Laubmann). The description of the ceremony
      which Minucius Felix gives (_Octavius_, xxii. 1) agrees closely
      with, and is probably copied from, that of Lactantius. We know from
      Appian (_Bell. Civ._ iv. 6. 47) that in the rites of Isis a priest
      personated Anubis, wearing a dog's, or perhaps rather a jackal's,
      mask on his head; for the historian tells how in the great
      proscription a certain Volusius, who was on the condemned list,
      escaped in the disguise of a priest of Isis, wearing a long linen
      garment and the mask of a dog over his head.

  178 The suggestion is due to Prof. A. Wiedemann (_Herodots zweites
      Buch_, p. 261).

  179 Firmicus Maternus, _De errore profanarum religionum_, 2. Herodotus
      tells (ii. 61) how the Carians cut their foreheads with knives at
      the mourning for Osiris.

  180 In addition to the writers who have been already cited see Juvenal,
      viii. 29 _sq._; Athenagoras, _Supplicatio pro Christianis_, 22, pp.
      112, 114, ed. J. C. T. Otto (Jena, 1857); Tertullian, _Adversus
      Marcionem_, i. 13; Augustine, _De civitate Dei_, vi. 10.

  M74 The great Osirian inscription at Denderah.

  181 W. Smith, _Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography_, ii. 1127.

  182 For complete translations of the inscription see H. Brugsch, "Das
      Osiris-Mysterium von Tentyra," _Zeitschrift fuer aegyptische Sprache
      und Alterthumskunde_, 1881, pp. 77-111; V. Loret, "Les fetes
      d'Osiris au mois de Khoiak," _Recueil de Travaux relatifs a la
      Philologie et a l'Archeologie Egyptiennes et Assyriennes_, iii.
      (1882) pp. 43-57, iv. (1883) pp. 21-33, v. (1884) pp. 85-103. On the
      document and the festivals described in it see further A.
      Mariette-Pacha, _Denderah_ (Paris, 1880), pp. 334-347; J. Duemichen,
      "Die dem Osiris im Denderatempel geweihten Raeume," _Zeitschrift fuer
      aegyptische Sprache und Alterthumskunde_, 1882, pp. 88-101; H.
      Brugsch, _Religion und Mythologie der alten Aegypter_ (Leipsic,
      1885-1888), pp. 616-618; R. V. Lanzone, _Dizionario di Mitologia
      Egizia_, pp. 725-744; A. Wiedemann, _Herodots zweites Buch_, p. 262;
      _id._, "Osiris vegetant," _Le Museon_, N.S. iv. (1903) p. 113; E. A.
      Wallis Budge, _The Gods of the Egyptians_, ii. 128 _sq._; _id._,
      _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, ii. 21 _sqq._; Miss Margaret
      A. Murray, _The Osireion at Abydos_ (London, 1904), pp. 27 _sq._

  M75 The rites of Osiris in the month of Khoiak represented the god as
      dead, dismembered, and then reconstituted by the union of his
      scattered limbs.

  183 R. V. Lanzone, _op. cit._ p. 727.

  184 H. Brugsch, in _Zeitschrift fuer aegyptische Sprache und
      Alterthumskunde_, 1881, pp. 80-82; A. Wiedemann, in _Le Museon_,
      N.S. iv. (1903) p. 113. The corn used in the making of the images is
      called barley by Brugsch and Miss M. A. Murray (_l.c._), but wheat
      (_ble_) by Mr. V. Loret.

  185 H. Brugsch, _op. cit._ pp. 99, 101.

  186 H. Brugsch, _op. cit._ pp. 82 _sq._; R. V. Lanzone, _op. cit._ p.
      728; Miss Margaret A. Murray, _op. cit._ p. 27.

  187 H. Brugsch, _op. cit._ pp. 90 _sq._, 96 _sq._, 98; R. V. Lanzone,
      _op. cit._ pp. 743 _sq._; E. A. Wallis Budge, _The Gods of the
      Egyptians_, ii. 128. According to Lanzone, the ploughing took place,
      not on the first, but on the last day of the festival, namely, on
      the thirtieth of Khoiak; and that certainly appears to have been the
      date of the ploughing at Busiris, for the inscription directs that
      there "the ploughing of the earth shall take place in the Serapeum
      of _Aa-n-beh_ under the fine Persea trees on the last day of the
      month Khoiak" (H. Brugsch, _op. cit._ p. 84).

  188 Miss Margaret A. Murray, _The Osireion at Abydos_, p. 28; H.
      Brugsch, _op. cit._ pp. 83, 92. The headless human image in the cow
      may have stood for Isis, who is said to have been decapitated by her
      son Horus, and to have received from Thoth a cow's head as a
      substitute. See Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 20; G. Maspero,
      _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient Classique_, i. 177; Ed.
      Meyer, _s.v._ "Isis," in W. H. Roscher's _Lexikon der griech. und
      roem. Mythologie_, ii. 366.

  189 H. Brugsch, _op. cit._ pp. 92 _sq._; R. V. Lanzone, _op. cit._ pp.
      738-740; A. Wiedemann, _Herodots zweites Buch_, p. 262; Miss M. A.
      Murray, _op. cit._ p. 35. An Egyptian calendar, written at Sais
      about 300 B.C., has under the date 26 Khoiak the following entry:
      "Osiris goes about and the golden boat is brought forth." See _The
      Hibeh Papyri_, Part i., edited by B. P. Grenfell and A. S. Hunt
      (London, 1906), pp. 146, 153. In the Canopic decree "the voyage of
      the sacred boat of Osiris" is said to take place on the 29th of
      Khoiak from "the sanctuary in the Heracleum" to the Canopic
      sanctuary. See W. Dittenberger, _Orientis Graeci Inscriptiones
      Selectae_, No. 56 (vol. i. pp. 105, 108). Hence it would seem that
      the date of this part of the festival varied somewhat in different
      places or at different times.

  190 H. Brugsch, _op. cit._ p. 99; E. A. Wallis Budge, _The Gods of the
      Egyptians_, ii. 129; compare Miss Margaret A. Murray, _op. cit._ p.
      28, who refers the ceremony to the twenty-fifth of Khoiak.

  191 H. Brugsch, _op. cit._ pp. 94, 99; A. Mariette-Pacha, _Denderah_,
      pp. 336 _sq._; R. V. Lanzone, _op. cit._ p. 744. Mariette supposed
      that after depositing the new image in the sepulchre they carried
      out the old one of the preceding year, thus setting forth the
      resurrection as well as the death of the god. But this view is
      apparently not shared by Brugsch and Lanzone.

  M76 The resurrection of Osiris represented on the monuments.

  192 A. Mariette-Bey, _Denderah_, iv. (Paris, 1873) plates 65, 66, 68,
      69, 70, 71, 72, 88, 89, 90; R. V. Lanzone, _Dizionario di Mitologia
      Egizia_, pp. 757 _sqq._, with plates cclxviii.-ccxcii.; E. A. Wallis
      Budge, _The Gods of the Egyptians_, ii. 131-138; _id._, _Osiris and
      the Egyptian Resurrection_, ii. 31 _sqq._

  193 H. Brugsch, _Religion und Mythologie der alten Aegypter_, p. 621; R.
      V. Lanzone, _Dizionario di Mitologia Egizia_, plate cclxi.; A.
      Wiedemann, "L'Osiris vegetant," _Le Museon_, N.S. iv. (1903) p. 112;
      E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 58.
      According to Prof. Wiedemann, the corn springing from the god's body
      is barley. Similarly in a papyrus of the Louvre (No. 3377) Osiris is
      represented swathed as a mummy and lying on his back, while stalks
      of corn sprout from his body. See R. V. Lanzone, _op. cit._ pp. 801
      _sq._, with plate ccciii. 2; A. Wiedemann, "L'Osiris vegetant," _Le
      Museon_, N.S. iv. (1903) p. 112.

  194 Hippolytus, _Refutatio omnium haeresium_, v. 8, p. 162 ed. L.
      Duncker and F. G. Schneidewin (Goettingen, 1859). See _Spirits of the
      Corn and of the Wild_, i. 38 _sq._

  195 Prof. A. Erman rightly assumes (_Die aegyptische Religion_,2 p. 234)
      that the images made in the month of Khoiak were intended to
      germinate as a symbol of the divine resurrection.

  M77 Corn-stuffed effigies of Osiris buried with the dead to ensure their
      resurrection.

  196 A. Wiedemann, "L'Osiris vegetant," _Le Museon_, N.S. iv. (1903) p.
      111; _Egyptian Exploration Fund Archaeological Report, 1898-1899_,
      pp. 24 _sq._; A. Moret, _Kings and Gods of Egypt_ (New York and
      London, 1912), p. 94, with plate xi.; _id._, _Mysteres Egyptiens_
      (Paris, 1913), p. 41.

  197 B. P. Grenfell and A. S. Hunt, in _Egyptian Exploration Fund
      Archaeological Report, 1902-1903_, p. 5.

  198 Miss Margaret A. Murray, _The Osireion at Abydos_, pp. 28 _sq._

  199 Sir J. Gardiner Wilkinson, _A Second Series of the Manners and
      Customs of the Ancient Egyptians_ (London, 1841), ii. 300, note §.
      The writer seems to have doubted whether these effigies represented
      Osiris. But the doubt has been entirely removed by subsequent
      discoveries. Wilkinson's important note on the subject is omitted by
      his editor, S. Birch (vol. iii. p. 375, ed. 1878).

  200 A. Erman, _Die aegyptische Religion_,2 pp. 209 _sq._

  M78 The festivals of Osiris in the months of Athyr and Khoiak seem to
      have been substantially the same.

  201 See above, pp. 24 _sq._, 27 _sq._, 49 _sq._

  M79 The old festival of Khoiak may have been transferred to Athyr when
      the Egyptians adopted the fixed Alexandrian year in 30 B.C.
  M80 The transference would be intelligible if we suppose that in 30 B.C.
      the dates of all the Egyptian festivals were shifted backward by
      about a month in order to restore them to their natural places in
      the calendar.

  202 So it was reckoned at the time. But, strictly speaking, Thoth in
      that year began on August 31. The miscalculation originated in a
      blunder of the ignorant Roman pontiffs who, being charged with the
      management of the new Julian calendar, at first intercalated a day
      every third, instead of every fourth, year. See Solinus,
      _Collectanea_, i. 45-47 (p. 15, ed. Th. Mommsen, Berlin, 1864);
      Macrobius, _Saturn_, i. 14. 13 _sq._; L. Ideler, _Handbuch der
      mathematischen und technischen Chronologie_, i. 157-161.

  203 Theoretically the shift should have been 40, or rather 42 days, that
      being the interval between July 20 and August 29 or 31 (see the
      preceding note). If that shift was actually made, the calendar date
      of any festival in the old vague Egyptian year could be found by
      adding 40 or 42 days to its date in the Alexandrian year. Thus if
      the death of Osiris fell on the 17th of Athyr in the Alexandrian
      year, it should have fallen on the 27th or 29th of Khoiak in the old
      vague year; and if his resurrection fell on the 19th of Athyr in the
      Alexandrian year, it should have fallen on the 29th of Khoiak or the
      1st of Tybi in the old vague year. These calculations agree nearly,
      but not exactly, with the somewhat uncertain indications of the
      Denderah calendar (above, p. 88), and also with the independent
      evidence which we possess that the resurrection of Osiris was
      celebrated on the 30th of Khoiak (below, pp. 108 _sq._). These
      approximate agreements to some extent confirm my theory that, with
      the adoption of the fixed Alexandrian year, the dates of the
      official Egyptian festivals were shifted from their accidental
      places in the calendar to their proper places in the natural year.

      Since I published in the first edition of this book (1906) my theory
      that with the adoption of the fixed Alexandrian year in 30 B.C. the
      Egyptian festivals were shifted about a month backward in the year,
      Professor Ed. Meyer has shown independent grounds for holding "that
      the festivals which gave rise to the later names of the (Egyptian)
      months were demonstrably held a month later in earlier ages, under
      the twentieth, eighteenth, indeed partly under the twelfth dynasty;
      in other words, that after the end of the New Kingdom the festivals
      and the corresponding names of the months were displaced one month
      backwards. It is true that this displacement can as yet be proved
      for only five months; but as the names of these months and the
      festivals keep their relative position towards each other, the
      assumption is inevitable that the displacement affected not merely
      particular festivals but the whole system equally." See Ed. Meyer,
      _Nachtraege zur aegyptischen Chronologie_ (Berlin, 1908), pp. 3 _sqq._
      (_Abhandlungen der koenigl. Preuss. Akademie der Wissenschaften vom
      Jahre 1907_). Thus it is possible that the displacement of the
      festivals by a month backward in the calendar took place a good deal
      earlier than I had supposed. In the uncertainty of the whole
      question I leave my theory as it stood.

  204 If the results of the foregoing inquiry be accepted, the
      resurrection of Osiris was regularly celebrated in Egypt on the 15th
      of November from the year 30 B.C. onward, since the 15th of November
      corresponded to the 19th of Athyr (the resurrection day) in the
      fixed Alexandrian year. This agrees with the indications of the
      Roman Rustic Calendars, which place the resurrection (_heuresis_,
      that is, the discovery of Osiris) between the 14th and the 30th of
      November. Yet according to the calendar of Philocalus, the official
      Roman celebration of the resurrection seems to have been held on the
      1st of November, not on the 15th. How is the discrepancy to be
      explained? Th. Mommsen supposed that the festival was officially
      adopted at Rome at a time when the 19th of Athyr of the vague
      Egyptian year corresponded to the 31st of October or the 1st of
      November of the Julian calendar, and that the Romans, overlooking
      the vague or shifting character of the Egyptian year, fixed the
      resurrection of Osiris permanently on the 1st of November. Now the
      19th of Athyr of the vague year corresponded to the 1st of November
      in the years 32-35 A.D. and to the 31st of October in the years
      36-39; and it appears that the festival was officially adopted at
      Rome some time before 65 A.D. (Lucan, _Pharsalia_, viii. 831
      _sqq._). It is unlikely that the adoption took place in the reign of
      Tiberius, who died in 37 A.D.; for he is known to have persecuted
      the Egyptian religion (Tacitus, _Annals_, ii. 85; Suetonius,
      _Tiberius_, 36; Josephus, _Antiquit. Jud._ xviii. 3. 4); hence
      Mommsen concluded that the great festival of Osiris was officially
      adopted at Rome in the early years of the reign of Caligula, that
      is, in 37, 38, or 39 A.D. See Th. Mommsen, _Corpus Inscriptionum
      Latinarum_, i.2 Pars prior (Berlin, 1893), pp. 333 _sq._; H. Dessau,
      _Inscriptiones Latinae Selectae_, vol. ii. p. 995, No. 8745. This
      theory of Mommsen's assumes that in Egypt the festivals were still
      regulated by the old vague year in the first century of our era. It
      cannot, therefore, be reconciled with the conclusion reached in the
      text that the Egyptian festivals ceased to be regulated by the old
      vague year from 30 B.C. onward. How the difference of date between
      the official Roman and the Egyptian festival of the resurrection is
      to be explained, I do not pretend to say.

  M81 Osiris in one of his aspects a personification of the corn. Osiris a
      child of Sky and Earth. The legend of the dismemberment of Osiris
      points to the dismemberment of human beings, perhaps of the kings,
      in the character of the corn-spirit.

  205 See above, p. 48.

  206 See above, p. 6.

  207 See above, p. 7.

  208 Servius on Virgil, _Georg._ i. 166.

_  209 The Dying God_, p. 250.

_  210 Spirits of the Corn and of the Wild_, i. 236 _sqq._

  211 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 73, compare 33.

  212 Diodorus Siculus, i. 88. 5. The slaughter may have been performed by
      the king with his own hand. On Egyptian monuments the king is often
      represented in the act of slaying prisoners before a god. See A.
      Moret, _Du caractere religieux de la royaute Pharaonique_ (Paris,
      1902), pp. 179, 224; E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian
      Resurrection_, i. 197 _sqq._ Similarly the kings of Ashantee and
      Dahomey used often themselves to cut the throats of the human
      victims. See A. B. Ellis, _The Tshi-speaking Peoples of the Gold
      Coast_ (London, 1887), p. 162; _id._, _The Ewe-speaking Peoples of
      the Slave Coast_ (London, 1890), pp. 125, 129.

  M82 Roman and Greek traditions of the dismemberment of kings. Modern
      Thracian pretence of killing a man, who is sometimes called a king,
      for the good of the crops.

_  213 Scholia in Caesaris Germanici Aratea_, in F. Eyssenhardt's edition
      of Martianus Capella, p. 408 (Leipsic, 1866).

  214 Dionysius Halicarnasensis, _Antiquit. Rom._ ii. 56. 4. Compare Livy,
      i. 16. 4; Florus, i. 1. 16 _sq._; Plutarch, _Romulus_, 27. Mr. A. B.
      Cook was, I believe, the first to interpret the story as a
      reminiscence of the sacrifice of a king. See his article "The
      European Sky-God," _Folk-lore_, xvi. (1905) pp. 324 _sq._ However,
      the acute historian A. Schwegler long ago maintained that the
      tradition rested on some very ancient religious rite, which was
      afterwards abolished or misunderstood, and he rightly compared the
      legendary deaths of Pentheus and Orpheus (_Roemische Geschichte_,
      Tuebingen, 1853-1858, vol. i. pp. 534 _sq._). See further W. Otto,
      "Juno," _Philologus_, lxiv. (1905) pp. 187 _sqq._

_  215 The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings_, ii. 313 _sqq._

  216 Euripides, _Bacchae_, 43 _sqq._, 1043 _sqq._; Theocritus, xxvi.;
      Pausanias, ii. 2. 7; Apollodorus, _Bibliotheca_, iii. 5. 1 _sq._;
      Hyginus, _Fab._ 132 and 184. The destruction of Lycurgus by horses
      seems to be mentioned only by Apollodorus. As to Pentheus see
      especially A. G. Bather, "The Problem of the Bacchae," _Journal of
      Hellenic Studies_, xiv. (1904) pp. 244-263.

  217 Nonnus, _Dionys._ vi. 165-205; Clement of Alexandria, _Protrept._
      ii. 17 _sq._, p. 15 ed. Potter; Justin Martyr, _Apology_, i. 54;
      Firmicus Maternus, _De errore profanarum religionum_, 6; Arnobius,
      _Adversus Nationes_, v. 19. According to the Clementine
      _Recognitiones_, x. 24 (Migne's _Patrologia Graeca_, i. 1434)
      Dionysus was torn in pieces at Thebes, the very place of which
      Pentheus was king. The description of Euripides (_Bacchae_, 1058
      _sqq._) suggests that the human victim was tied or hung to a
      pine-tree before being rent to pieces. We are reminded of the effigy
      of Attis which hung on the sacred pine (above, vol. i. p. 267), and
      of the image of Osiris which was made out of a pine-tree and then
      buried in the hollow of the trunk (below, p. 108). The pine-tree on
      which Pentheus was pelted by the Bacchanals before they tore him
      limb from limb is said to have been worshipped as if it were the god
      himself by the Corinthians, who made two images of Dionysus out of
      it (Pausanias, ii. 2. 7). The tradition points to an intimate
      connexion between the tree, the god, and the human victim.

  218 Porphyry, _De abstinentia_, ii. 55. At Potniae in Boeotia a priest
      of Dionysus is said to have been killed by the drunken worshippers
      (Pausanias, ix. 8. 2). He may have been sacrificed in the character
      of the god.

  219 Lucian, _De saltatione_, 51; Plato, _Symposium_, 7, p. 179 D, E;
      Pausanias, ix. 30. 5; Ovid, _Metam._ xi. 1-43; O. Gruppe, _s.v._
      "Orpheus," in W. H. Roscher's _Lexikon der griech. und roem.
      Mythologie_, iii. 1165 _sq._ That Orpheus died the death of the god
      has been observed both in ancient and modern times. See E. Rohde,
      _Psyche_3 (Tuebingen and Leipsic, 1903) ii. 118, note 2, quoting
      Proclus on Plato; S. Reinach, "La mort d'Orphee," _Cultes, Mythes et
      Religions_, ii. (1906) pp. 85 _sqq._ According to Ovid, the
      Bacchanals killed him with hoes, rakes, and mattocks. Similarly in
      West Africa human victims used to be killed with spades and hoes and
      then buried in a field which had just been tilled (J. B. Labat,
      _Relation historique de l'Ethiopie occidentale_, Paris, 1732, i.
      380). Such a mode of sacrifice points to the identification of the
      human victim with the fruits of the earth.

  220 Apollodorus, _Bibliotheca_, iii. 5. 1.

  221 R. M. Dawkins, "The Modern Carnival in Thrace and the Cult of
      Dionysus," _Journal of Hellenic Studies_, xxvi. (1906) pp. 191-206.
      See further _Spirits of the Corn and of the Wild_, i. 25 _sqq._

  M83 Norwegian tradition of the dismemberment of a king, Halfdan the
      Black. Frey, the Scandinavian god of fertility, buried at Upsala.

  222 Snorri Sturluson, _Heimskringla, Saga Halfdanar Svarta_, ch. 9. I
      have to thank Professor H. M. Chadwick for referring me to this
      passage and translating it for me. See also _The Stories of the
      Kings of Norway (Heimskringla)_, done into English by W. Morris and
      E. Magnusson (London, 1893-1905), i. 86 _sq._ Halfdan the Black was
      the father of Harold the Fair-haired, king of Norway (860-933 A.D.).
      Professor Chadwick tells me that, though the tradition as to the
      death and mutilation of Halfdan was not committed to writing for
      three hundred years, he sees no reason to doubt its truth. He also
      informs me that the word translated "abundance" means literally "the
      produce of the season." "Plenteous years" is the rendering of Morris
      and Magnusson.

  223 As to the descent of Halfdan and the Ynglings from Frey, see
      _Heimskringla_, done into English by W. Morris and E. Magnusson, i.
      23-71 (_The Saga Library_, vol. iii.). With regard to Frey, the god
      of fertility, both animal and vegetable, see E. H. Meyer,
      _Mythologie der Germanen_ (Strasburg, 1903), pp. 366 _sq._; P.
      Hermann, _Nordische Mythologie_ (Leipsic, 1903), pp. 206 _sqq._

_  224 Heimskringla_, done into English by W. Morris and E. Magnusson, i.
      4, 22-24 (_The Saga Library_, vol. iii.).

  M84 Segera, a magician of Kiwai, said to have been cut up after death
      and the pieces buried in gardens to fertilize them.

_  225 Totemism and Exogamy_, ii. 32 _sq._, from information supplied by
      Dr. C. G. Seligmann.

  M85 Apparently widespread custom of dismembering a king or magician and
      burying the pieces in different parts of the kingdom.
  M86 In this dismemberment a special virtue seems to have been ascribed
      to the genital organs.

  226 See above, p. 10.

  227 Dudley Kidd, _Savage Childhood_ (London, 1906), p. 291.

  228 Above, p. 97.

  229 Above, pp. 268 _sq._

  M87 The Egyptian kings probably opposed the custom and succeeded in
      abolishing it. Precautions taken to preserve the bodies of kings
      from mutilation.

  230 See my notes on Pausanias, i. 28. 7 and viii. 47. 5 (vol. ii. pp.
      366 _sq._, vol. iv. pp. 433 _sq._).

  231 R. F. Harper, _Assyrian and Babylonian Literature_ (New York, 1901),
      p. 116; C. Fossey, _La Magie Assyrienne_ (Paris, 1902), pp. 34 _sq._

  232 Amos ii. 1.

  233 Pausanias, i. 9. 7 _sq._

  M88 Graves of kings and chiefs in Africa kept secret. Burial-place of
      chiefs in Fiji kept secret. Graves of Melanesian magicians kept
      secret.

  234 P. B. du Chaillu, _Explorations and Adventures in Equatorial Africa_
      (London, 1861), pp. 18 _sq._

  235 J. Spieth, _Die Ewe-Staemme_ (Berlin, 1906), p. 107.

  236 Mary H. Kingsley, _Travels in West Africa_ (London, 1897), pp. 449
      _sq._ In West African jargon the word ju-ju means fetish or magic.

  237 Father Porte, "Les reminiscences d'un missionnaire du Basutoland,"
      _Missions Catholiques_, xxviii. (1896) pp. 311 _sq._ As to the
      _Baloi_, see A. Merensky, _Beitraege zur Kenntniss Sued-Afrikas_
      (Berlin, 1875), pp. 138 _sq._; E. Gottschling, "The Bawenda,"
      _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xxxv. (1905) p. 375. For
      these two references I have to thank Mr. E. S. Hartland.

  238 Henri A. Junod, _The Life of a South African Tribe_ (Neuchatel,
      1912-1913), i. 387 _sq._

  239 Lorimer Fison, "Notes on Fijian Burial Customs," _Journal of the
      Anthropological Institute_, x. (1881) pp. 141 _sq._

  240 R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), p. 269.

  M89 Among the Koniags of Alaska the bodies of dead whalers were cut up
      and used as talismans.

  241 Ivan Petroff, _Report on the Population, Industries, and Resources
      of Alaska_, p. 142. The account seems to be borrowed from H. J.
      Holmberg, who adds that pains were taken to preserve the flesh from
      decay, "because they believed that their own life depended on it."
      See H. J. Holmberg, "Ueber die Voelker des russischen Amerika," _Acta
      Societatis Scientiarum Fennicae_, iv. (Helsingfors, 1856) p. 391.

  M90 Assimilation of human victims to the corn.

  242 Above, p. 97.

  243 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 31; Herodotus, ii. 38.

  244 Herrera, quoted by A. Bastian, _Die Culturlaender des alten Amerika_
      (Berlin, 1878), ii. 639; _id._, _General History of the vast
      Continent and Islands of America_, translated by Capt. J. Stevens
      (London, 1725-26), ii. 379 _sq._ (whose version of the passage is
      inadequate). Compare Brasseur de Bourbourg, _Histoire des nations
      civilisees du Mexique et de l'Amerique Centrale_ (Paris, 1857-59),
      i. 327, iii. 525.

  245 E. Lefebure, _Le mythe Osirien_ (Paris, 1874-75), p. 188.

  246 Firmicus Maternus, _De errore profanarum religionum_, 2,
      "_Defensores eorum volunt addere physicam rationem, frugum semina
      Osirim dicentes esse, Isim terram, Tyfonem calorem: et quia
      maturatae fruges calore ad vitam hominum colliguntur et divisae a
      terrae consortio separantur et rursus adpropinquante hieme
      seminantur, hanc volunt esse mortem Osiridis, cum fruges recondunt,
      inventionem vero, cum fruges genitali terrae fomento conceptae annua
      rursus coeperint procreatione generari._" Tertullian, _Adversus
      Marcionem_, i. 13, "_Sic et Osiris quod semper sepelitur et in
      vivido quaeritur et cum gaudio invenitur, reciprocarum frugum et
      vividorum elementorum et recidivi anni fidem argumentantur_."
      Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 65, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH DASIA AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK KORONIS~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PERISPOMENI~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER OMICRON WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH DASIA AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI AND YPOGEGRAMMENI~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI AND YPOGEGRAMMENI~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH DASIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI AND PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK KORONIS~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH DASIA AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}. Eusebius,
      _Praeparatio Evangelii_, iii. 11. 31, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH DASIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER OMICRON WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK KORONIS~} {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PSILI AND VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ZETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI AND YPOGEGRAMMENI~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH YPOGEGRAMMENI~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK KORONIS~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}. Athenagoras, _Supplicatio pro Christianis_, 22, pp. 112, 114
      ed. J. C. T. Otto, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~},
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PERISPOMENI~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}
      {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER OMICRON WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} ({~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI AND YPOGEGRAMMENI~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PSILI AND VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI AND YPOGEGRAMMENI~} {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}. {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}). See also the passage
      of Cornutus quoted above, vol. i. p. 229, note 2.

  M91 Osiris as a tree-spirit. His image enclosed in a pine-tree.

_  247 De errore profanarum religionum_, 27.

  248 See above, vol. i. pp. 267, 277.

  249 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 21, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER XI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}.
      Again, _ibid._ 42, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER XI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER OMICRON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ZETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI~}.

  250 See above, p. 9.

  M92 The setting up of the _ded_ pillar at the great festival of Osiris
      in the month of Khoiak. The setting up of the pillar may have been
      an emblem of the god's resurrection.

  251 As to the _tet_ or _ded_ pillar and its erection at the festival see
      H. Brugsch in _Zeitschrift fuer aegyptische Sprache und
      Alterthumskunde_, 1881, pp. 84, 96; _id._, _Religion und Mythologie
      der alten Aegypter_, p. 618; A. Erman, _Aegypten und aegyptisches
      Leben im Altertum_, pp. 377 _sq._; _id._, _Die aegyptische
      Religion_,2 pp. 22, 64; C. P. Tiele, _History of the Egyptian
      Religion_ (London, 1882), pp. 46 _sq._; Sir J. Gardiner Wilkinson,
      _Manners and Customs of the Ancient Egyptians_ (London, 1878), iii.
      pp. 67, note 3, and 82; A. Wiedemann, _Religion of the Ancient
      Egyptians_, pp. 289 _sq._; G. Maspero, _Histoire ancienne des
      Peuples de l'Orient Classique_, i. 130 _sq._; A. Moret, _Du
      caractere religieux de la royaute Pharaonique_, p. 153, note 1;
      _id._, _Mysteres Egyptiens_, pp. 12-16; E. A. Wallis Budge, _The
      Gods of the Egyptians_, ii. 122, 124, _sq._; _id._, _Osiris and the
      Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 6, 37, 48, 51 _sqq._; Miss Margaret A.
      Murray, _The Osireion at Abydos_, pp. 27, 28; Ed. Meyer, _Geschichte
      des Altertums_,2 i. 2, p. 70. In a letter to me (dated 8th December,
      1910) my colleague Professor P. E. Newberry tells me that he
      believes Osiris to have been originally a cedar-tree god imported
      into Egypt from the Lebanon, and he regards the _ded_ pillar as a
      lopped cedar-tree. The flail, as a symbol of Osiris, he believes to
      be the instrument used to collect incense. A similar flail is used
      by peasants in Crete to extract the ladanum gum from the shrubs. See
      P. de Tournefort, _Relation d'un Voyage du Levant_ (Amsterdam,
      1718), i. 29, with the plate. For this reference I am indebted to
      Professor Newberry.

  252 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 15. See above, p. 9.

_  253 The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings_, ii. 88-90.

  M93 Osiris associated with the pine, the sycamore, the tamarisk, and the
      acacia.

  254 A. Mariette-Bey, _Denderah_, iv. pl. 66.

  255 A. Mariette-Bey, _Denderah_, iv. pl. 72. Compare E. Lefebure, _Le
      mythe Osirien_, pp. 194, 196, who regards the tree as a conifer. But
      it is perhaps a tamarisk.

  256 E. Lefebure, _op. cit._ pp. 195, 197.

  257 S. Birch, in Sir J. G. Wilkinson's _Manners and Customs of the
      Ancient Egyptians_ (London, 1878), iii. 84.

  258 Sir J. G. Wilkinson, _op. cit._ iii. 62-64; E. A. Wallis Budge, _The
      Gods of the Egyptians_, ii. 106 _sq._; G. Maspero, _Histoire
      ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient Classique_, i. 185.

  259 J. H. Breasted, _Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient
      Egypt_ (London, 1912), p. 28.

  260 A. Moret, _Kings and Gods of Egypt_ (New York and London, 1912), p.
      83.

  261 Above, vol. i. pp. 227 _sq._

  262 Sir J. G. Wilkinson, _op. cit._ iii. 349 _sq._; A. Erman, _Aegypten
      und aegyptisches Leben im Altertum_, p. 368; H. Brugsch, _Religion
      und Mythologie der alten Aegypter_, p. 621.

  263 We may compare a belief of some of the Californian Indians that the
      owl is the guardian spirit and deity of the "California big tree,"
      and that it is equally unlucky to fell the tree or to shoot the
      bird. See S. Powers, _Tribes of California_ (Washington, 1877), p.
      398. When a Maori priest desires to protect the life or soul (_hau_)
      of a tree against the insidious arts of magicians, he sets a
      bird-snare in the tree, and the first bird caught in the snare, or
      its right wing, embodies the life or soul of the tree. Accordingly
      the priest recites appropriate spells over the bird or its wing and
      hides it away in the forest. After that no evil-disposed magician
      can hurt the tree, since its life or soul is not in it but hidden
      away in the forest. See Elsdon Best, "Spiritual Concepts of the
      Maori," _Journal of the Polynesian Society_, ix. (1900) p. 195. Thus
      the bird or its wing is the depository of the external soul of the
      tree. Compare _Balder the Beautiful_, i. 95 _sqq._

  264 Sir J. G. Wilkinson, _op. cit._ iii. 349 _sq._; H. Brugsch,
      _Religion und Mythologie der alten Aegypter_, p. 621; R. V. Lanzone,
      _Dizionario di Mitologia Egizia_, tav. cclxiii.; Plutarch, _Isis et
      Osiris_, 20. In this passage of Plutarch it has been proposed by G.
      Parthey to read {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} (tamarisk) for {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} (_methide_), and the
      conjecture appears to be accepted by Wilkinson, _loc. cit._

  265 E. Lefebure, _Le mythe Osirien_, p. 191.

  266 E. Lefebure, _op. cit._ p. 188.

  267 R. V. Lanzone, _Dizionario di Mitologia Egizia_, tav. ccciv.; G.
      Maspero, _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient Classique_, ii.
      570, fig.

  M94 Osiris in relation to fruit-trees, wells, the vine, and ivy.

  268 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 35. One of the points in which the myths
      of Isis and Demeter agree is that both goddesses in the search for
      the loved and lost one are said to have sat down, sad at heart and
      weary, on the edge of a well. Hence those who had been initiated at
      Eleusis were forbidden to sit on a well. See Plutarch, _Isis et
      Osiris_, 15; Homer, _Hymn to Demeter_, 98 _sq._; Pausanias, i. 39.
      1; Apollodorus, _Bibliotheca_, i. 5. 1; Nicander, _Theriaca_, 486;
      Clement of Alexandria, _Protrept._ ii. 20, p. 16 ed. Potter.

  269 Tibullus, i. 7. 33-36; Diodorus Siculus, i. 17. 1, i. 20. 4.

  270 E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 38,
      39.

  271 E. A. Wallis Budge, _op. cit._ i. 19, 45, with frontispiece.

  272 Diodorus Siculus, i. 17. 4 _sq._

  M95 Osiris perhaps conceived as a god of fertility in general.

  273 Herodotus, ii. 48; Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 12, 18, 36, 51;
      Diodorus Siculus, i. 21. 5, i. 22. 6 _sq._, iv. 6. 3.

  274 Hippolytus, _Refutatio omnium haeresium_, v. 7, p. 144 ed. Duncker
      and Schneidewin.

  275 A. Mariette-Bey, _Denderah_, iv. plates 66, 68, 69, 70, 88, 89, 90.
      Compare R. V. Lanzone, _Dizionario di Mitologia Egizia_, tavv.
      cclxxi., cclxxii., cclxxvi., cclxxxv., cclxxxvi., cclxxxvii.,
      cclxxxix., ccxc.; E. A. Wallis Budge, _The Gods of the Egyptians_,
      ii. 132, 136, 137.

  276 Miss Margaret A. Murray, _The Osireion at Abydos_, p. 27.

  277 That the Greek Dionysus was nothing but a slightly disguised form of
      the Egyptian Osiris has been held by Herodotus in ancient and by Mr.
      P. Foucart in modern times. See Herodotus, ii. 49; P. Foucart, _Le
      culte de Dionysos en Attique_ (Paris, 1904) (_Memoires de l'Academie
      des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres_, xxxvii.).

  M96 As god of the corn Osiris came to be viewed as the god of the
      resurrection.

  278 Above, pp. 13 _sq._

  279 Above, pp. 90 _sq._

  280 1 Corinthians xv. 36-38, 42-44.

  M97 Great popularity of the worship of Osiris.

  281 Herodotus, ii. 42. Compare E. A. Wallis Budge, _The Gods of the
      Egyptians_, ii. 115 _sq._, 203 _sq._; _id._, _Osiris and the
      Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 22 _sq._

  M98 Multifarious attributes of Isis.

  282 H. Brugsch, _Religion und Mythologie der alten Aegypter_, p. 645; W.
      Dittenberger, _Orientis Graeci Inscriptiones Selectae_, vol. ii. p.
      433, No. 695; _Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum_, iii. p. 1232, No.
      4941. Compare H. Dessau, _Inscriptiones Latinae Selectae_, vol. ii.
      Pars i. p. 179, No. 4376 A. In Egyptian her name is _Hest_ or _Ast_,
      but the derivation and meaning of the name are unknown. See A.
      Wiedemann, _The Religion of the Ancient Egyptians_, pp. 218 _sq._

  283 C. P. Tiele, _History of Egyptian Religion_ (London, 1882), p. 57.

  284 E. A. Wallis Budge, _The Gods of the Egyptians_, ii. 203 _sq._

  M99 How Isis resembled yet differed from the Mother Goddesses of Asia.
      Isis perhaps originally a goddess of the corn.

  285 Diodorus Siculus, i. 14. 1 _sq._ Eusebius (_Praeparatio Evangelii_,
      iii. 3) quotes from Diodorus a long passage on the early religion of
      Egypt, prefacing it with the remark that Diodorus's account of the
      subject was more concise than that of Manetho.

  286 Augustine, _De civitate Dei_, viii. 27. Tertullian says that Isis
      wore a wreath of the corn she had discovered (_De corona_, 7).

  287 Diodorus Siculus, i. 14. 2.

  288 See above, p. 45, and vol. i. p. 232.

  289 H. Brugsch, _Religion und Mythologie der alten Aegypter_, p. 647; E.
      A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, ii. 277.

  290 H. Brugsch, _op. cit._ p. 649. Compare E. A. Wallis Budge, _The Gods
      of the Egyptians_, ii. 216.

  291 H. Brugsch, _loc. cit._

  292 Herodotus, ii. 59, 156; Diodorus Siculus, i. 13, 25, 95;
      Apollodorus, _Bibliotheca_, ii. 1. 3; J. Tzetzes, _Schol. on
      Lycophron_, 212. See further W. Drexler, _s.v._ "Isis," in W. H.
      Roscher's _Lexikon der griech. und roem. Mythologie_, ii. 443 _sq._

_  293 Anthologia Planudea_, cclxiv. 1.

_  294 Epigrammata Graeca ex lapidibus conlecta_, ed. G. Kaibel (Berlin,
      1878), No. 1028, pp. 437 _sq._; _Orphica_, ed. E. Abel (Leipsic and
      Prague, 1885), pp. 295 _sqq._

  295 W. Drexler, _op. cit._ ii. 448 _sqq._

 M100 Refinement and spiritualization of Isis in later times: the
      popularity of her worship in the Roman empire. Resemblance of Isis
      to the Madonna.

  296 Otho often celebrated, or at least attended, the rites of Isis, clad
      in a linen garment (Suetonius, _Otho_, 12). Commodus did the same,
      with shaven head, carrying the effigy of Anubis. See Lampridius,
      _Commodus_, 9; Spartianus, _Pescennius Niger_, 6; _id._,
      _Caracallus_, 9.

  297 L. Preller, _Roemische Mythologie_3 (Berlin, 1881-1883), ii. 373-385;
      J. Marquardt, _Roemische Staatsverwaltung_ (Leipsic, 1885), iii.2
      77-81; E. Renan, _Marc-Aurele et la fin du Monde Antique_ (Paris,
      1882), pp. 570 _sqq._; J. Reville, _La religion romaine a Rome sous
      les Severes_ (Paris, 1886), pp. 54-61; G. Lafaye, _Histoire du culte
      des divinites d'Alexandrie_ (Paris, 1884); E. Meyer and W. Drexler,
      _s.v._ "Isis," in W. H. Roscher's _Lexikon der griech. und roem.
      Mythologie_, ii. 360 _sqq._; S. Dill, _Roman Society in the Last
      Century of the Western Empire_2 (London, 1899), pp. 79 _sq._, 85
      _sqq._; _id._, _Roman Society from Nero to Marcus Aurelius_ (London,
      1904), pp. 560 _sqq._ The chief passage on the worship of Isis in
      the West is the eleventh book of Apuleius's _Metamorphoses_. On the
      reputation which the goddess enjoyed as a healer of the sick see
      Diodorus Siculus, i. 25; W. Drexler, _op. cit._ ii. 521 _sqq._ The
      divine partner of Isis in later times, especially outside of Egypt,
      was Serapis, that is Osiris-Apis (_Asar-Hapi_), the sacred Apis bull
      of Memphis, identified after death with Osiris. His oldest sanctuary
      was at Memphis (Pausanias, i. 18. 4), and there was one at Babylon
      in the time of Alexander the Great (Plutarch, _Alexander_, 76;
      Arrian, _Anabasis_, vii. 26). Ptolemy I. or II. built a great and
      famous temple in his honour at Alexandria, where he set up an image
      of the god which was commonly said to have been imported from Sinope
      in Pontus. See Tacitus, _Histor._ iv. 83 _sq._; Plutarch, _Isis et
      Osiris_, 27-29; Clement of Alexandria, _Protrept._ iv. 48, p. 42 ed.
      Potter. In after ages the institution of the worship of Serapis was
      attributed to this Ptolemy, but all that the politic Macedonian
      monarch appears to have done was to assimilate the Egyptian Osiris
      to the Greek Pluto, and so to set up a god whom Egyptians and Greeks
      could unite in worshipping. Serapis gradually assumed the attributes
      of Aesculapius, the Greek god of healing, in addition to those of
      Pluto, the Greek god of the dead. See G. Lafaye, _Histoire du culte
      des divinites d'Alexandrie_, pp. 16 _sqq._; A. Wiedemann, _Herodots
      zweites Buch_, p. 589; E. A. Wallis Budge, _The Gods of the
      Egyptians_, ii. 195 _sqq._; A. Erman, _Die aegyptische Religion_,2
      pp. 237 _sq._

  298 The resemblance of Isis to the Virgin Mary has often been pointed
      out. See W. Drexler, _s.v._ "Isis," in W. H. Roscher's _Lexikon der
      griech. und roem. Mythologie_, ii. 428 _sqq._

  299 W. Drexler, _op. cit._ ii. 430 _sq._

  300 Th. Trede, _Das Heidentum in der roemischen Kirche_ (Gotha,
      1889-1891), iii. 144 _sq._

  301 On this later aspect of Isis see W. Drexler, _op. cit._ ii. 474
      _sqq._

 M101 Osiris interpreted as the sun by many modern writers.

  302 P. E. Jablonski, _Pantheon Aegyptiorum_ (Frankfort, 1750-1752), i.
      125 _sq._

  303 Diodorus Siculus, i. 11. 1.

  304 See p. 116, note 2.

  305 See Macrobius, _Saturnalia_, bk. i.

_  306 Saturn._ i. 21. 11.

  307 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 10 and 51; Sir J. G. Wilkinson, _Manners
      and Customs of the Ancient Egyptians_ (London, 1878), iii. 353; R.
      V. Lanzone, _Dizionario di Mitologia Egizia_, pp. 782 _sq._; E. A.
      Wallis Budge, _The Gods of the Egyptians_, ii. 113 _sq._; J. H.
      Breasted, _Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient Egypt_,
      pp. 11 _sq._ Strictly speaking, the eye was the eye of Horus, which
      the dutiful son sacrificed in behalf of his father Osiris. "This act
      of filial devotion, preserved to us in the Pyramid Texts, made the
      already sacred Horus-eye doubly revered in the tradition and feeling
      of the Egyptians. It became the symbol of all sacrifice; every gift
      or offering might be called a 'Horus-eye,' especially if offered to
      the dead. Excepting the sacred beetle, or scarab, it became the
      commonest and the most revered symbol known to Egyptian religion,
      and the myriads of eyes, wrought in blue or green glaze, or even cut
      from costly stone, which fill our museum collections, and are
      brought home by thousands by the modern tourist, are survivals of
      this ancient story of Horus and his devotion to his father" (J. H.
      Breasted, _op. cit._ p. 31).

  308 E. A. Wallis Budge, _The Gods of the Egyptians_, i. 467; A. Erman,
      _Die aegyptische Religion_,2 p. 8.

_  309 Isis et Osiris_, 52.

_  310 De errore profanarum religionum_, 8.

 M102 The later identification of Osiris with Ra, the sun-god, does not
      prove that Osiris was originally the sun. Such identifications
      sprang from attempts to unify and amalgamate the many local cults of
      Egypt.

  311 Lepsius, "Ueber den ersten aegyptischen Goetterkreis und seine
      geschichtlich-mythologische Entstehung," in _Abhandlungen der
      koeniglichen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin_, 1851, pp. 194
      _sq._

  312 The view here taken of the history of Egyptian religion is based on
      the sketch in Ad. Erman's _Aegypten und aegyptisches Leben im
      Altertum_, pp. 351 _sqq._ Compare C. P. Tiele, _Geschichte der
      Religion im Altertum_ (Gotha, 1896-1903), i. 79 _sq._

 M103 Most Egyptian gods were at some time identified with the sun.
      Attempt of Amenophis IV. to abolish all gods except the sun-god.
      Failure of the attempt.

  313 On this attempted revolution in religion see Lepsius, in
      _Verhandlungen der koenigl. Akad. der Wissenschaften zu Berlin_,
      1851, pp. 196-201; A. Erman, _Aegypten und aegyptisches Leben im
      Altertum_, pp. 74 _sq._, 355-357; _id._, _Die aegyptische Religion_,2
      pp. 76-84; H. Brugsch, _History of Egypt_ (London, 1879), i. 441
      _sqq._; A. Wiedemann, _Aegyptische Geschichte_ (Gotha, 1884), pp.
      396 _sqq._; _id._, _Die Religion der alten Agypter_, pp. 20-22;
      _id._, _Religion of the Ancient Egyptians_, pp. 35-43; C. P. Tiele,
      _Geschichte der Religion im Altertum_, i. 84-92; G. Maspero,
      _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient Classique_, i. 316
      _sqq._; E. A. Wallis Budge, _The Gods of the Egyptians_, ii. 68-84;
      J. H. Breasted, _History of the Ancient Egyptians_ (London, 1908),
      pp. 264-279; A. Moret, _Kings and Gods of Egypt_ (New York and
      London, 1912), pp. 41-68. A very sympathetic account of this
      remarkable religious reformer is given by Professor J. H. Breasted
      (_Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient Egypt_, pp.
      319-343). Amenophis IV. reigned from about 1375 to 1358 B.C. His new
      capital, Akhetaton, the modern Tell-el-Amarna, was on the right bank
      of the Nile, between Memphis and Thebes. The king has been described
      as "of all the Pharaohs the most curious and at the same time the
      most enigmatic figure." To explain his bodily and mental
      peculiarities some scholars conjectured that through his mother,
      Queen Tii, he might have had Semitic blood in his veins. But this
      theory appears to have been refuted by the discovery in 1905 of the
      tomb of Queen Tii's parents, the contents of which are of pure
      Egyptian style. See A. Moret, _op. cit._ pp. 46 _sq._

 M104 Identification with the sun is no evidence of the original character
      of an Egyptian god.
 M105 The solar theory of Osiris does not explain his death and
      resurrection.

  314 P. Le Page Renouf, _Lectures on the Origin and Growth of Religion_2
      (London, 1884), p. 113.

  315 The late eminent scholar C. P. Tiele, who formerly interpreted
      Osiris as a sun-god (_History of Egyptian Religion_, pp. 43 _sqq._),
      afterwards adopted a view of his nature which approaches more nearly
      to the one advocated in this book. See his _Geschichte der Religion
      im Altertum_, i. 35 _sq._, 123. Professor Ed. Meyer also formerly
      regarded Osiris as a sun-god; he now interprets him as a great
      vegetation god, dwelling in the depths of the earth and causing the
      plants and trees to spring from it. The god's symbol, the _ded_
      pillar (see above, pp. 108 _sq._), he takes to be a tree-trunk with
      cross-beams. See Ed. Meyer, _Geschichte des Altertums_, i. p. 67, §
      57 (first edition, 1884); _id._, i.2 2. pp. 70, 84, 87 (second
      edition, 1909). Sir Gaston Maspero has also abandoned the theory
      that Osiris was the sun; he now supposes that the deity originally
      personified the Nile. See his _Histoire ancienne_4 (Paris, 1886), p.
      35; and his _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient Classique_,
      i. (Paris, 1895), p. 130. Dr. E. A. Wallis Budge also formerly
      interpreted Osiris as the Nile (_The Gods of the Egyptians_, i. 122,
      123), and this view was held by some ancient writers (Plutarch,
      _Isis et Osiris_, 32, 34, 36, 38, 39). Compare Miss M. A. Murray,
      _The Osireion at Abydos_ (London, 1904), p. 29. Dr. Budge now
      explains Osiris as a deified king. See his _Osiris and the Egyptian
      Resurrection_, vol. i. pp. xviii, 30 _sq._, 37, 66 _sq._, 168, 254,
      256, 290, 300, 312, 384. As to this view see below, pp. 158 _sqq._

 M106 The death and resurrection of Osiris are more naturally explained by
      the annual decay and growth of vegetation.

  316 For the identification of Osiris with Dionysus, and of Isis with
      Demeter, see Herodotus, ii. 42, 49, 59, 144, 156; Plutarch, _Isis et
      Osiris_, 13, 35; Diodorus Siculus, i. 13, 25, 96, iv. 1; _Orphica_,
      Hymn 42; Eusebius, _Praepar. Evang._ iii. 11. 31; Servius on Virgil,
      _Aen._ xi. 287; _id._, on Virgil, _Georg._ i. 166; J. Tzetzes,
      _Schol. on Lycophron_, 212; {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}, xxii. 2, in _Mythographi
      Graeci_, ed. A. Westermann (Brunswick, 1843), p. 368; Nonnus,
      _Dionys._ iv. 269 _sq._; Cornutus, _Theologiae Graecae Compendium_,
      28; Ausonius, _Epigrammata_, 29 and 30. For the identification of
      Osiris with Adonis and Attis see Stephanus Byzantius, _s.v._
      {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}; Damascius, "Vita Isodori," in Photius, _Bibliotheca_, ed.
      Im. Bekker (Berlin, 1824), p. 343_a_, lines 21 _sq._; Hippolytus,
      _Refutatio omnium haeresium_, v. 9. p. 168 ed. Duncker and
      Schneidewin; _Orphica_, Hymn 42. For the identification of Attis,
      Adonis, and Dionysus see Socrates, _Historia Ecclesiastica_, iii. 23
      (Migne's _Patrologia Graeca_, lxvii. 448); Plutarch, _Quaestiones
      Conviviales_, iv. 5. 3; Clement of Alexandria, _Protrept._ ii. 19,
      p. 16 ed. Potter.

  317 Lucian, _De dea Syria_, 7. According to Professor Ed. Meyer, the
      relations of Egypt to Byblus were very ancient and close; he even
      suggests that there may have been from early times an Egyptian
      colony, or at all events an Egyptian military post, in the city. The
      commercial importance of Byblus arose from its possession of the
      fine cedar forests on the Lebanon; the timber was exported to Egypt,
      where it was in great demand. See Ed. Meyer, _Geschichte des
      Altertums_,2 i. 2. pp. xix, 391 _sqq._

  318 Herodotus, ii. 49.

  319 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 35.

  320 Osiris, Attis, Adonis, and Dionysus were all resolved by him into
      the sun; but he spared Demeter (Ceres), whom, however, he
      interpreted as the moon. See the _Saturnalia_, bk. i.

 M107 Osiris was sometimes interpreted by the ancients as the moon.

  321 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 41.

  322 On Osiris as a moon-god see E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the
      Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 19-22, 59, 384 _sqq._

  323 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 13, 42.

_  324 Ibid._ 18, 42. The hieroglyphic texts sometimes speak of fourteen
      pieces, and sometimes of sixteen, or even eighteen. But fourteen
      seems to have been the true number, because the inscriptions of
      Denderah, which refer to the rites of Osiris, describe the mystic
      image of the god as composed of fourteen pieces. See E. A. Wallis
      Budge, _The Gods of the Egyptians_, ii. 126 _sq._; _id._, _Osiris
      and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 386 _sq._

  325 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 8.

  326 A. S. Gatschet, _The Klamath Indians of South-Western Oregon_
      (Washington, 1890), p. lxxxix.

  327 S. R. Riggs, _Dakota Grammar, Texts, and Ethnography_ (Washington,
      1893), p. 16.

  328 R. F. Kaindl, _Die Huzulen_ (Vienna, 1894), p. 97.

  329 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 43.

_  330 Ibid._ 43.

_  331 Ibid._ 20, 29.

  332 Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 43; _id._, _Quaest. Conviv._ viii. 1. 3.
      Compare Herodotus, iii. 28; Aelian, _Nat. Anim._ xi. 10; Mela, i. 9.
      58.

  333 Herodotus, ii. 47; Plutarch, _Isis et Osiris_, 8. As to pigs in
      relation to Osiris, see _Spirits of the Corn and of the Wild_, ii.
      24 _sqq._

  334 P. J. de Horrack, "Lamentations of Isis and Nephthys," _Records of
      the Past_, ii. (London, N.D.) pp. 121 _sq._; H. Brugsch, _Religion
      und Mythologie der alten Aegypter_, pp. 629 _sq._; E. A. Wallis
      Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 389. "Apart from
      the fact that Osiris is actually called _Asar Aah_, _i.e._ 'Osiris
      the Moon,' there are so many passages which prove beyond all doubt
      that at one period at least Osiris was the Moon-god, that it is
      difficult to understand why Diodorus stated that Osiris was the sun
      and Isis the moon" (E. A. Wallis Budge, _op. cit._ i. 21).

  335 E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 59.

 M108 The identification of Osiris with the moon appears to be based on a
      comparatively late theory that all things grow and decay with the
      waxing and waning of the moon.

  336 According to C. P. Tiele (_Geschichte der Religion im Altertum_, i.
      79) the conception of Osiris as the moon was late and never became
      popular. This entirely accords with the view adopted in the text.

  337 Pliny, _Nat. Hist._ ii. 221.

  338 Macrobius, _Comment. in somnium Scipionis_, i. 11. 7.

  339 Aulus Gellius, xx. 8. For the opinions of the ancients on this
      subject see further W. H. Roscher, _Ueber Selene und Verwandtes_
      (Leipsic, 1890), pp. 61 _sqq._

  340 John Ramsay of Ochtertyre, _Scotland and Scotsmen in the Eighteenth
      Century_, edited by A. Allardyce (Edinburgh and London, 1888), ii.
      449.

  341 J. G. Campbell, _Witchcraft and Second Sight in the Highlands and
      Islands of Scotland_ (Glasgow, 1902), pp. 306 _sq._

 M109 Practical rules founded on this lunar theory. Supposed influence of
      the phases of the moon on the operations of husbandry.

  342 Palladius, _De re rustica_, i. 34. 8. Compare _id._ i. 6. 12; Pliny,
      _Nat. Hist._ xviii. 321, "_omnia quae caeduntur, carpuntur,
      tondentur innocentius decrescente luna quam crescente fiunt_";
      _Geoponica_, i. 6. 8, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ZETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER XI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}.

  343 J. Brand, _Popular Antiquities of Great Britain_ (London,
      1882-1883), iii. 144, quoting Werenfels, _Dissertation upon
      Superstition_ (London, 1748), p. 6.

  344 A. Wuttke, _Der deutsche Volksaberglaube_3 (Berlin, 1869), § 65, pp.
      57 _sq._ Compare J. Grimm, _Deutsche Mythologie_4 (Berlin,
      1875-1878), ii. 595; Montanus, _Die deutsche Volksfeste,
      Volksbraeuche und deutscher Volksglaube_ (Iserlohn, N.D.), p. 128; M.
      Praetorius, _Deliciae Prussicae_ (Berlin, 1871), p. 18; O. Schell,
      "Einige Bemerkungen ueber den Mond im heutigen Glauben des bergischen
      Volkes," _Am Ur-quell_, v. (1894) p. 173. The rule that the grafting
      of trees should be done at the waxing of the moon is laid down by
      Pliny (_Nat. Hist._ xvii. 108). At Deutsch-Zepling in Transylvania,
      by an inversion of the usual custom, seed is generally sown at the
      waning of the moon (A. Heinrich, _Agrarische Sitten und Gebraeuche
      unter den Sachsen Siebenbuergens_, Hermannstadt, 1880, p. 7). Some
      French peasants also prefer to sow in the wane (F. Chapiseau,
      _Folk-lore de la Beauce et du Perche_, Paris, 1902, i. 291). In the
      Abruzzi also sowing and grafting are commonly done when the moon is
      on the wane; timber that is to be durable must be cut in January
      during the moon's decrease (G. Finamore, _Credenze, Usi e Costumi
      Abruzzesi_, Palermo, 1890, p. 43).

  345 P. Sebillot, _Traditions et Superstitions de la Haute-Bretagne_
      (Paris, 1882), ii. 355; L. F. Sauve, _Folk-lore des Hautes-Vosges_
      (Paris, 1889), p. 5; J. Brand, _Popular Antiquities of Great
      Britain_, iii. 150; Holzmayer, "Osiliana," _Verhandlungen der
      gelehrten Estnichen Gesellschaft zu Dorpat_, vii. (1872) p. 47.

  346 The rule is mentioned by Varro, _Rerum Rusticarum_, i. 37 (where we
      should probably read "_ne decrescente tendens calvos fiam_," and
      refer _istaec_ to the former member of the preceding sentence); A.
      Wuttke, _l.c._; Montanus, _op. cit._ p. 128; P. Sebillot, _l.c._; E.
      Meier, _Deutsche Sagen, Sitten und Gebraeuche aus Schwaben_
      (Stuttgart, 1852), p. 511, § 421; W. J. A. von Tettau und J. D. H.
      Temme, _Die Volkssagen Ostpreussens, Litthauens und Westpreussens_
      (Berlin, 1837), p. 283; A. Kuhn, _Maerkische Sagen und Maerchen_
      (Berlin, 1843), p. 386, § 92; L. Schandein, in _Bavaria, Landes- und
      Volkskunde des Koenigreichs Bayern_ (Munich, 1860-1867), iv. 2, p.
      402; F. S. Krauss, _Volksglaube und religioeser Brauch der Suedslaven_
      (Muenster, i. W. 1890), p. 15; E. Krause, "Aberglaeubische Kuren und
      sonstiger Aberglaube in Berlin," _Zeitschrift fuer Ethnologie_, xv.
      (1883) p. 91; R. Wuttke, _Saechsische Volkskunde_2 (Dresden, 1901),
      p. 369; C. S. Burne and G. F. Jackson, _Shropshire Folk-lore_
      (London, 1883), p. 259. The reason assigned in the text was probably
      the original one in all cases, though it is not always the one
      alleged now.

  347 F. S. Krauss, _op. cit._ p. 16; Montanus, _l.c._; Varro, _Rerum
      Rusticarum_, i. 37 (see above, note 2). However, the opposite rule
      is observed in the Upper Vosges, where it is thought that if the
      sheep are shorn at the new moon the quantity of wool will be much
      less than if they were shorn in the waning of the moon (L. F. Sauve,
      _Folk-lore des Hautes-Vosges_, p. 5). In the Bocage of Normandy,
      also, wool is clipped during the waning of the moon; otherwise moths
      would get into it (J. Lecoeur, _Esquisses du Bocage Normand_,
      Conde-sur-Noireau, 1883-1887, ii. 12).

  348 Father Lejeune, "Dans la foret," _Missions Catholiques_, xxvii.
      (1895) p. 272.

  349 S. Johnson, _Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland_ (Baltimore,
      1810), p. 183.

  350 J. G. Campbell, _Witchcraft and Second Sight in the Highlands and
      Islands of Scotland_, p. 306.

  351 Thomas Tusser, _Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandry_, New Edition
      (London, 1812), p. 107 (under February).

  352 Fairweather, in W. F. Owen's _Narrative of Voyages to explore the
      Shores of Africa, Arabia, and Madagascar_ (London, 1833), ii. 396
      _sq._

  353 A. Wuttke, _Der deutsche Volksaberglaube_,3 § 65, p. 58; J. Lecoeur,
      _loc. cit._; E. Meier, _Deutsche Sagen, Sitten und Gebraeuche aus
      Schwaben_, p. 511, § 422; Th. Siebs, "Das Saterland," _Zeitschrift
      fuer Volkskunde_, iii. (1893) p. 278; Holzmayer, _op. cit._ p. 47.

  354 H. H. Bancroft, _Native Races of the Pacific States_ (London,
      1875-1876), ii. 719 _sq._

  355 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), p. 402.

 M110 The phases of the moon in relation to the felling of timber.

  356 Cato, _De agri cultura_, 37. 4; Varro, _Rerum Rusticarum_, i. 37;
      Pliny, _Nat. Hist._ xvi. 190; Palladius, _De re rustica_, ii. 22,
      xii. 15; Plutarch, _Quaest. Conviv._ iii. 10. 3; Macrobius,
      _Saturn._ vii. 16; A. Wuttke, _l.c._; _Bavaria, Landes- und
      Volkskunde des Koenigreichs Bayern_, iv. 2, p. 402; W. Kolbe,
      _Hessische Volks-Sitten und Gebraeuche_2 (Marburg, 1888), p. 58; L.
      F. Sauve, _Folk-lore des Hautes-Vosges_, p. 5; F. Chapiseau,
      _Folk-lore de la Beauce et du Perche_, i. 291 _sq._; M. Martin,
      "Description of the Western Islands of Scotland," in J. Pinkerton's
      _Voyages and Travels_, iii. 630; J. G. Campbell, _Witchcraft and
      Second Sight in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland_, p. 306; G.
      Amalfi, _Tradizioni ed Usi nella peninsola Sorrentina_ (Palermo,
      1890), p. 87; K. von den Steinen, _Unter den Naturvoelkern
      Zentral-Brasiliens_ (Berlin, 1894), p. 559. Compare F. de Castelnau,
      _Expedition dans les parties centrales de l'Amerique du Sud_ (Paris,
      1851-1852), iii. 438. Pliny, while he says that the period from the
      twentieth to the thirtieth day of the lunar month was the season
      generally recommended, adds that the best time of all, according to
      universal opinion, was the interlunar day, between the old and the
      new moon, when the planet is invisible through being in conjunction
      with the sun.

  357 J. Lecoeur, _Esquisses du Bocage Normand_, ii. 11 _sq._

  358 Mrs. Leslie Milne, _Shans at Home_ (London, 1910), p. 100.

  359 Letter of Mr. A. S. F. Marshall, dated Hacienda "La Maronna," Cd.
      Porfirio Diaz, Coah., Mexico, 2nd October 1908. The writer gives
      instances confirmatory of this belief. I have to thank Professor A.
      C. Seward of Cambridge for kindly showing me this letter.

  360 Letter of Mr. Francis S. Schloss to me, dated 58 New Cavendish
      Street, W., 12th May 1912. Mr. Schloss adds that "as a matter of
      practical observation, timber, etc., should only be felled when the
      moon is waning. This has been stated to me not only by natives, but
      also by English mining engineers of high repute, who have done work
      in Colombia."

  361 O. Baumann, _Usambara und seine Nachbargebiete_ (Berlin, 1891), p.
      125.

  362 Montanus, _Die deutsche Volksfeste, Volksbraeuche und deutscher
      Volksglaube_, p. 128.

 M111 The moon regarded as the source of moisture.

  363 Plutarch, _Quaest. Conviv._ iii. 10. 3; Macrobius, _Saturn._ vii.
      16. See further, W. H. Roscher, _Ueber Selene und Verwandtes_
      (Leipsic, 1890), pp. 49 _sqq._

  364 Plutarch and Macrobius, _ll.cc._; Pliny, _Nat. Hist._ ii. 223, xx.
      1; Aristotle, _Problemata_, xxiv. 14, p. 937 B, 3 _sq._ ed. I.
      Bekker (Berlin).

  365 Macrobius and Plutarch, _ll.cc._

  366 L. F. Sauve, _Folk-lore des Hautes-Vosges_, p. 5.

  367 Above, p. 136.

  368 M. Martin, "Description of the Western Islands of Scotland," in J.
      Pinkerton's _Voyages and Travels_, iii. 630.

 M112 The moon, being viewed as the cause of vegetable growth, is
      naturally worshipped by agricultural peoples.

  369 E. J. Payne, _History of the New World called America_, i. (Oxford,
      1892) p. 495. In his remarks on the origin of moon-worship this
      learned and philosophical historian has indicated (_op. cit._ i. 493
      _sqq._) the true causes which lead primitive man to trace the growth
      of plants to the influence of the moon. Compare Sir E. B. Tylor,
      _Primitive Culture_2 (London, 1873), i. 130. Payne suggests that the
      custom of naming the months after the principal natural products
      that ripen in them may have contributed to the same result. The
      custom is certainly very common among savages, as I hope to show
      elsewhere, but whether it has contributed to foster the fallacy in
      question seems doubtful.

      The Indians of Brazil are said to pay more attention to the moon
      than to the sun, regarding it as a source both of good and ill. See
      J. B. von Spix und C. F. von Martius, _Reise in Brasilien_ (Munich,
      1823-1831), i. 379. The natives of Mori, a district of Central
      Celebes, believe that the rice-spirit Omonga lives in the moon and
      eats up the rice in the granary if he is not treated with due
      respect. See A. C. Kruijt, "Eenige ethnografische aanteekeningen
      omtrent de Toboengkoe en de Tomori," _Mededeelingen van wege het
      Nederlandsche Zendelinggenootschap_, xliv. (1900) p. 231.

  370 E. A. Budge, _Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon, on
      recently-discovered inscriptions of this King_, pp. 5 _sq._; A. H.
      Sayce, _Religion of the Ancient Babylonians_, p. 155; M. Jastrow,
      _Religion of Babylonia and Assyria_, pp. 68 _sq._, 75 _sq._; L. W.
      King, _Babylonian Religion and Mythology_ (London, 1899), pp. 17
      _sq._ The Ahts of Vancouver Island, a tribe of fishers and hunters,
      view the moon as the husband of the sun and as a more powerful deity
      than her (G. M. Sproat, _Scenes and Studies of Savage Life_, London,
      1868, p. 206).

 M113 Thus Osiris, the old corn-god, was afterwards identified with the
      moon.
 M114 The doctrine of lunar sympathy.
 M115 Theory that all things wax or wane with the moon. The ceremonies
      observed at new moon are often magical rather than religious, being
      intended to renew sympathetically the life of man.

  371 This principle is clearly recognized and well illustrated by J.
      Grimm (_Deutsche Mythologie_,4 ii. 594-596).

  372 D. F. A. Hervey, "The Mentra Traditions," _Journal of the Straits
      Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society_, No. 10 (Singapore, 1883), p.
      190; W. W. Skeat and C. O. Blagden, _Pagan Races of the Malay
      Peninsula_ (London, 1906), ii. 337.

  373 Rev. J. Grant (parish minister of Kirkmichael), in Sir John
      Sinclair's _Statistical Account of Scotland_ (Edinburgh, 1791-1799),
      xii. 457.

  374 A. Kuhn und W. Schwartz, _Nord-deutsche Sagen, Maerchen und
      Gebraeuche_ (Leipsic, 1848), p. 457, § 419.

  375 Tacitus, _Germania_, 11.

  376 Caesar, _De bello Gallico_, i. 50.

  377 Herodotus, vi. 106; Lucian, _De astrologia_, 25; Pausanias, i. 28.
      4.

  378 Thucydides, vii. 50.

  379 Le capitaine Binger, _Du Niger au Golfe de Guinee_ (Paris, 1892),
      ii. 116.

  380 Mungo Park, _Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa_5 (London,
      1807), pp. 406 _sq._

  381 W. Smythe and F. Lowe, _Narrative of a Journey from Lima to Para_
      (London, 1836), p. 230.

  382 Father G. Boscana, "Chinig-chinich," in _Life in California, by an
      American_ [A. Robinson] (New York, 1846), pp. 298 _sq._

  383 Merolla, "Voyage to Congo," in J. Pinkerton's _Voyages and Travels_,
      xvi. 273.

  384 H. Schinz, _Deutsch-Suedwest-Afrika_ (Oldenburg and Leipsic, N.D.),
      p. 319.

  385 A. C. Hollis, _The Masai_ (Oxford, 1905), p. 274.

  386 H. Cole, "Notes on the Wagogo of German East Africa," _Journal of
      the Anthropological Institute_, xxxii. (1902) p. 330.

  387 John H. Weeks, _Among Congo Cannibals_ (London, 1913), p. 142.

  388 J. G. Kohl, _Die deutsch-russischen Ostseeprovinzen_ (Dresden and
      Leipsic, 1841), ii. 279. Compare Boecler-Kreutzwald, _Der Ehsten
      aberglaeubische Gebraeuche, Weisen und Gewohnheiten_ (St. Petersburg,
      1854), pp. 142 _sq._; J. Grimm, _Deutsche Mythologie_,4 ii. 595,
      note 1. The power of regeneration ascribed to the moon in these
      customs is sometimes attributed to the sun. Thus it is said that the
      Chiriguanos Indians of South-Eastern Bolivia often address the sun
      as follows: "Thou art born and disappearest every day, only to
      revive always young. Cause that it may be so with me." See A.
      Thouar, _Explorations dans l'Amerique du Sud_ (Paris, 1891), p. 50.

  389 W. Woodville Rockhill, "Notes on some of the Laws, Customs, and
      Superstitions of Korea," _The American Anthropologist_, iv.
      (Washington, 1891), p. 185.

 M116 Attempts to eat or drink the moonlight.

  390 W. Crooke, _Popular Religion and Folk-lore of Northern India_
      (Westminster, 1896), i. 14 _sq._

 M117 The supposed influence of moonlight on children: presentation of
      infants to the new moon.

  391 George Brown, D.D., _Melanesians and Polynesians_ (London, 1910), p.
      37.

  392 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), p. 58.

  393 Henri A. Junod, _The Life of a South African Tribe_ (Neuchatel,
      1912-1913), i. 51.

 M118 Infants presented to the moon by the Guarayos Indians of Bolivia and
      the Apinagos Indians of Brazil.

  394 A. d'Orbigny, _Voyage dans l'Amerique Meridionale_, iii. 1re Partie
      (Paris and Strasburg, 1844), p. 24.

  395 F. de Castelnau, _Expedition dans les parties centrales de
      l'Amerique du Sud_ (Paris, 1850-1851), ii. 31-34.

 M119 The presentation of infants to the moon is probably intended to make
      them grow.
 M120 Baganda ceremonies at new moon.

  396 J. Roscoe, "Further Notes on the Manners and Customs of the
      Baganda." _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xxxii. (1902)
      pp. 63, 76; _id._, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911) pp. 235 _sq._ In the
      former passage the part of the king's person which is treated with
      this ceremony is said to be the placenta, not the navel-string.

 M121 Baleful influence supposed to be exercised by the moon on children.

  397 M. Abeghian, _Der armenische Volksglaube_ (Leipsic, 1899), p. 49.

  398 Plutarch, _Quaestiones Conviviales_, iv. 10. 3. 7.

  399 J. B. von Spix und C. F. Ph. von Martius, _Reise in Brasilien_
      (Munich, 1823-1831), i. 381, iii. 1186.

  400 J. Jamieson, _Dictionary of the Scottish Language_, New Edition
      edited by J. Longmuir and D. Donaldson (Paisley, 1879-1882), iii.
      300 (_s.v._ "Mone").

 M122 Use of the moon to increase money or decrease sickness.

  401 F. Panzer, _Beitrag zur deutschen Mythologie_ (Munich, 1848-1855),
      ii. 260; P. Drechsler, _Sitte, Brauch und Volksglaube in Schlesien_,
      ii. (Leipsic, 1906) p. 131; W. Henderson, _Folk-lore of the Northern
      Counties of England_ (London, 1879), p. 114; C. S. Burne and G. F.
      Jackson, _Shropshire Folk-lore_ (London, 1883), p. 257; W. Gregor,
      _Folk-lore of the North-East of Scotland_ (London, 1881), p. 151.

  402 C. R. Conder, _Heth and Moab_ (London, 1883), p. 286.

  403 P. Sebillot, _Traditions et Superstitions de la Haute-Bretagne_
      (Paris, 1882), ii. 355.

  404 A. Kuhn, _Maerkische Sagen und Maerchen_ (Berlin, 1843), p. 387, § 93.

_  405 Die gestriegelte Rockenphilosophie_ (Chemnitz, 1759), p. 447.

  406 F. Panzer, _Beitrag zur deutschen Mythologie_, ii. 302. Compare J.
      Grimm, _Deutsche Mythologie_,4 ii. 596.

  407 R. F. Kaindl, "Zauberglaube bei den Huzulen," _Globus_, lxxvi.
      (1899) p. 256.

 M123 Osiris personated by the king of Egypt.

  408 See above, vol. i. pp. 16 _sq._, 48 _sqq._, 110, 114, 170 _sq._, 172
      _sqq._, 176 _sqq._, 179 _sqq._, 285 _sqq._, 288 _sqq._

  409 See above, pp. 97 _sq._, 101 _sq._

 M124 The Sed festival celebrated in Egypt at intervals of thirty years.

  410 A. Moret, _Du caractere religieux de la royaute Pharaonique_ (Paris,
      1902), pp. 235-238. The festival is discussed at length by M. Moret
      (_op. cit._ pp. 235-273). See further R. Lepsius, _Die Chronologie
      der Aegypter_, i. 161-165; Miss M. A. Murray, _The Osireion at
      Abydos_, pp. 32-34; W. M. Flinders Petrie, _Researches in Sinai_
      (London, 1906), pp. 176-185. In interpreting the festival I follow
      Professor Flinders Petrie. That the festival occurred, theoretically
      at least, at intervals of thirty years, appears to be
      unquestionable; for in the Greek text of the Rosetta Stone Ptolemy
      V. is called "lord of periods of thirty years," and though the
      corresponding part of the hieroglyphic text is lost, the demotic
      version of the words is "master of the years of the Sed festival."
      See R. Lepsius, _op. cit._ pp. 161 _sq._; W. Dittenberger, _Orientis
      Graeci Inscriptiones Selectae_, No. 90, line 2 (vol. i. p. 142); A.
      Moret, _op. cit._ 260. However, the kings appear to have sometimes
      celebrated the festival at much shorter intervals, so that the dates
      of its recurrence cannot safely be used for chronological purposes.
      See Ed. Meyer, _Nachtraege zur aegyptischen Chronologie_ (Berlin,
      1908), pp. 43 _sq._ (_Abhandlungen der koenigl. Akademie der
      Wissenschaften vom Jahre 1907_); _id._, _Geschichte des Altertums_,2
      i. 2. pp. xix. 130.

  411 This was Letronne's theory (R. Lepsius, _op. cit._ p. 163).

  412 See above, pp. 24 _sqq._, 34 _sqq._

  413 This was in substance the theory of Biot (R. Lepsius, _l.c._), and
      it is the view of Professor W. M. Flinders Petrie (_Researches in
      Sinai_, pp. 176 _sqq._).

  414 W. M. Flinders Petrie, _Researches in Sinai_, p. 180.

 M125 Intention of the Sed festival to renew the king's life.

  415 A. Moret, _Du caractere religieux de la royaute Pharaonique_, pp.
      255 _sq._

 M126 The king identified with the dead Osiris at the Sed festival.

  416 W. M. Flinders Petrie, _Researches in Sinai_, p. 181.

  417 A. Moret, _op. cit._ p. 240; Miss M. A. Murray, _The Osireion at
      Abydos_, pp. 33 _sq._, with the slip inserted at p. 33; W. Flinders
      Petrie, _op. cit._ p. 184.

  418 A. Moret, _op. cit._ p. 242.

  419 Miss M. A. Murray, _op. cit._, slip inserted at p. 33.

  420 W. M. Flinders Petrie, _Researches in Sinai_, p. 183.

  421 W. M. Flinders Petrie, _l.c._ As to the king's name (Khent instead
      of Zer) see above, p. 20, note 1.

  422 J. Capart, "Bulletin critique des religions de l'Egypte," _Revue de
      l'Histoire des Religions_, liii. (1906) pp. 332-334. I have to thank
      Professor W. M. Flinders Petrie for calling my attention to this
      passage.

 M127 Professor Flinders Petrie's explanation of the Sed festival.

  423 W. M. Flinders Petrie, _Researches in Sinai_, p. 185. As to the
      Coptic mock-king see C. B. Klunzinger, _Bilder aus Oberaegypten, der
      Wueste und dem Rothen Meere_ (Stuttgart, 1877), pp. 180 _sq._; _The
      Dying God_, pp. 151 _sq._ For examples of human sacrifices offered
      to prolong the lives of kings see below, vol. ii. pp. 219 _sqq._

 M128 Alexandre Moret's theory that at the Sed festivals the king was
      supposed to die and to be born again.

  424 A. Moret, _Mysteres Egyptiens_ (Paris, 1913), pp. 187-190. For a
      detailed account of the Egyptian evidence, monumental and
      inscriptional, on which M. Moret bases his view of the king's
      rebirth by deputy from the hide of a sacrificed animal, see pp. 16
      _sqq._, 72 _sqq._ of the same work. Compare his article, "Du
      sacrifice en Egypte," _Revue de l'Histoire des Religions_, lvii.
      (1908) pp. 93 _sqq._ In support of the view that the king of Egypt
      was deemed to be born again at the Sed festival it has been pointed
      out that on these solemn occasions, as we learn from the monuments,
      there was carried before the king on a pole an object shaped like a
      placenta, a part of the human body which many savage or barbarous
      peoples regard as the twin brother or sister of the new-born child.
      See C. G. Seligmann and Margaret A. Murray, "Note upon an early
      Egyptian standard," _Man_, xi. (1911) pp. 165-171. The object which
      these writers take to represent a human placenta is interpreted by
      M. Alexandre Moret as the likeness of a human embryo. As to the
      belief that the afterbirth is a twin brother or sister of the
      infant, see above, vol. i. p. 93, and below, pp. 169 _sq._; _The
      Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings_, i. 82 _sqq._

      Professor J. H. Breasted thinks that the Sed festival is probably
      "the oldest religious feast of which any trace has been preserved in
      Egypt"; he admits that on these occasions "the king assumed the
      costume and insignia of Osiris, and undoubtedly impersonated him,"
      and further that "one of the ceremonies of this feast symbolized the
      resurrection of Osiris"; but he considers that the significance of
      the festival is as yet obscure. See J. H. Breasted, _Development of
      Religion and Thought in Ancient Egypt_ (London, 1912), p. 39.

 M129 Osiris personated by the king of Egypt.
 M130 How did the conception of Osiris as a god of vegetation and of the
      dead originate?
 M131 While Adonis and Attis were subordinate figures in their respective
      pantheons, Osiris was the greatest and most popular god of Egypt.
 M132 The personal devotion of the Egyptians to Osiris suggests that he
      may have been a real man; for all the permanent religious or
      semi-religious systems of the world have been founded by individual
      great men.
 M133 The historical reality of Osiris as an old king of Egypt can be
      supported by modern African analogies.

  425 It is maintained by the discoverer of the tomb of Osiris at Abydos,
      Monsieur E. Amelineau, in his work _Le Tombeau d'Osiris_ (Paris,
      1899) and by Dr. E. A. Wallis Budge in his elaborate treatise
      _Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection_, in which the author pays
      much attention to analogies drawn from the religion and customs of
      modern African tribes.

  426 G. Maspero, _Histoire ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient Classique_,
      i. 43 _sqq._; J. H. Breasted, _History of the Ancient Egyptians_,
      pp. 29 _sq._; Ed. Meyer, _Geschichte des Altertums_,2 i. 2. pp. 41
      _sqq._ The affinity of the Egyptian language to the Semitic family
      of speech seems now to be admitted even by historians who maintain
      the African origin of the Egyptians.

 M134 The spirits of dead kings worshipped by the Shilluks of the White
      Nile. Sacrifices to the dead kings.

_  427 The Dying God_, pp. 17 _sqq._ The information there given was
      kindly supplied by Dr. C. G. Seligmann, who has since published it
      with fuller details. See C. G. Seligmann, _The Cult of Nyakang and
      the Divine Kings of the Shilluk_ (Khartoum, 1911), pp. 216-232
      (reprint from _Fourth Report of the Wellcome Tropical Research
      Laboratories, Gordon Memorial College, Khartoum_); W. Hofmayr,
      "Religion der Schilluk," _Anthropos_, vi. (1911) pp. 120-131;
      Diedrich Westermann, _The Shilluk People, their Language and
      Folk-lore_ (Berlin, preface dated 1912), pp. xxxix. _sqq._ In what
      follows I have drawn on all these authorities.

 M135 Worship of Nyakang, the first of the Shilluk kings.

  428 C. G. Seligmann, _The Cult of Nyakang_, p. 221.

  429 D. Westermann, _The Shilluk People_, p. xlii.

  430 D. Westermann, _l.c._

 M136 The spirit of Nyakang supposed to manifest itself in certain
      animals.

  431 W. Hofmayr, "Religion der Schilluk," _Anthropos_, vi. (1911) pp. 123
      _sq._; C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 230; D. Westermann, _op. cit._
      p. xliii.

  432 C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ pp. 229 _sq._

  433 W. Hofmayr, _op. cit._ p. 125.

 M137 The deified Nyakang seems to have been a real man. Relation of
      Nyakang to the creator Juok.

  434 W. Hofmayr, _op. cit._ p. 123. This writer spells the name of the
      deified king as Nykang. I have adopted Dr. Seligmann's spelling.

  435 Diederich Westermann, _The Shilluk People, their Language and
      Folklore_ (Berlin, preface dated 1912), pp. xlii, xliii. Mr.
      Westermann gives the names of the demi-god and the god as Nyikang
      and Jwok respectively. For the sake of uniformity I have altered
      them to Nyakang and Juok, the forms adopted by Dr. C. G. Seligmann.

  436 C. G. Seligmann, _The Cult of Nyakang and the Divine Kings of the
      Shilluk_ (Khartoum, 1911), p. 220.

  437 C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 231.

 M138 The belief in the former humanity of Nyakang is confirmed by the
      analogy of his worship to that of the dead Shilluk kings.

  438 W. Hofmayr, _op. cit._ p. 125. "It must be remembered that the due
      growth of the crops, _i.e._ of the most important part of the
      vegetable world, depends on the well-being of the divine king" (C.
      G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 229).

  439 C. G. Seligmann, _op. cit._ p. 227.

 M139 Comparison of Nyakang with Osiris.
 M140 The spirits of dead kings worshipped by the Baganda of Central
      Africa.

  440 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), p. 283.

  441 Rev. J. Roscoe, _op. cit._ pp. 113, 282.

  442 Rev. J. Roscoe, _op. cit._ pp. 110, 282, 285.

  443 Rev. J. Roscoe, _op. cit._ pp. 104, 252 _sq._; L. F. Cunningham,
      _Uganda and its People_ (London, 1905), p. 226.

 M141 Tombs of the dead kings of Uganda.

  444 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_, pp. 104-107, _id._, "Notes on the
      Manners and Customs of the Baganda," _Journal of the Anthropological
      Institute_, xxxi. (1901) p. 129; _id._, "Further Notes on the
      Manners and Customs of the Baganda," _ibid._, xxxii. (1902) pp. 44
      _sq._ Compare L. F. Cunningham, _Uganda and its People_ (London,
      1905), pp. 224, 226.

 M142 Ghosts of the dead kings of Uganda supposed to adhere to their lower
      jawbones and their navel-strings, which are accordingly preserved in
      temples dedicated to the worship of the kings.

  445 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_, pp. 109 _sq._

  446 Above, p. 147.

  447 Rev. J. Roscoe, "Kibuka, the War God of the Baganda," _Man_, vii.
      (1907) pp. 164 _sq._; _id._, _The Baganda_, pp. 235 _sq._

 M143 The temples of the dead kings of Uganda.

  448 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_, pp. 110-112, 283 _sq._

  449 Rev. J. Roscoe, "Notes on the Manners and Customs of the Baganda,"
      _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xxxi. (1901) pp. 129
      _sq._; _id._, "Further Notes on the Manners and Customs of the
      Baganda," _ibid._, xxxii. (1902) p. 45.

 M144 Oracles given by the dead kings of Uganda by the mouth of an
      inspired prophet.

  450 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_, p. 283.

  451 Rev. J. Roscoe, "Notes on the Manners and Customs of the Baganda,"
      _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xxxi. (1901) p. 130;
      _id._, "Further Notes on the Manners and Customs of the Baganda,"
      _ibid._, xxxii. (1902) p. 46; _id._, _The Baganda_, pp. 283-285.

 M145 Visit paid by the living king to the temple of his dead father.
      Human victims sacrificed in order that their ghosts might serve the
      ghost of the dead king.

  452 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_, pp. 112, 284.

  453 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_, p. 112. It may be worth while to
      quote an early notice of the worship of the Kings of Uganda. See C.
      T. Wilson and R. W. Felkin, _Uganda and the Egyptian Soudan_
      (London, 1882), i. 208: "The former kings of the country appear also
      to be regarded as demi-gods, and their graves are kept with
      religious care, and houses are erected over them, which are under
      the constant supervision of one of the principal chiefs of the
      country, and where human sacrifices are also occasionally offered."
      The graves here spoken of are no doubt the temples in which the
      jawbones and navel-strings of the dead kings are kept and
      worshipped.

 M146 The souls of dead kings worshipped in Kiziba.

  454 Hermann Rehse, _Kiziba, Land und Leute_ (Stuttgart, 1910), pp. 4-7,
      106 _sqq._, 121, 125 _sqq._, 130. Among the totems of the people are
      the long-tailed monkey (_Cercopithecus_), a small species of
      antelope, the locust, the hippopotamus, the buffalo, the otter,
      dappled cows, and the hearts of all animals. The members of the clan
      which is charged with the duty of burying the king's body have for
      their totem the remains of a goat that has been killed by a leopard.
      See H. Rehse, _op. cit._ pp. 5 _sq._

 M147 The worship of ancestral spirits among the Bantu tribes of Northern
      Rhodesia.

  455 C. Gouldsbury and H. Sheane, _The Great Plateau of Northern
      Rhodesia_ (London, 1911), pp. 80 _sq._

  456 C. Gouldsbury and H. Sheane, _The Great Plateau of Northern
      Rhodesia_, pp. 82 _sq._

  457 C. Gouldsbury and H. Sheane, _op. cit._ pp. 84 _sq._

 M148 The worship of ancestral spirits is apparently the main practical
      religion of all the Bantu tribes.
 M149 The worship of ancestral spirits among the Bantu tribes of South
      Africa.

  458 Rev. James Macdonald, "Manners, Customs, Superstitions, and
      Religions of South African Tribes," _Journal of the Anthropological
      Institute_, xix. (1890) p. 286. Compare _id._, _Light in Africa_2
      (London, 1890), p. 191.

  459 G. McCall Theal, _Records of South-Eastern Africa_, vii. (1901) pp.
      399 _sq._ With regard to the ghost who controls lightning see Mr.
      Warner's notes in Col. Maclean's _Compendium of Kafir Laws and
      Customs_ (Cape Town, 1866), pp. 82 _sq._: "The Kafirs have strange
      notions respecting the lightning. They consider that it is governed
      by the _umshologu_, or ghost, of the greatest and most renowned of
      their departed chiefs; and who is emphatically styled the _inkosi_;
      but they are not at all clear as to which of their ancestors is
      intended by this designation. Hence they allow of no lamentation
      being made for a person killed by lightning; as they say that it
      would be a sign of disloyalty to lament for one whom the _inkosi_
      had sent for, and whose services he consequently needed; and it
      would cause him to punish them, by making the lightning again to
      descend and do them another injury."

  460 G. McCall Theal, _op. cit._ vii. 400.

 M150 Sacrifices to the dead among the Bantu tribes of South Africa.

  461 Dudley Kidd, _The Essential Kafir_ (London, 1904), pp. 88-91.

 M151 Worship of the dead among the Basutos.

  462 Rev. E. Casalis, _The Basutos_ (London, 1861), pp. 248-250.

 M152 Worship of the dead among the Thonga.

  463 Henri A. Junod, _The Life of a South African Tribe_ (Neuchatel,
      1912-1913), ii. 347.

  464 H. A. Junod, _op. cit._ ii. 385.

  465 H. A. Junod, _op. cit._ ii. 344.

  466 H. A. Junod, _op. cit._ ii. 385.

  467 H. A. Junod, _op. cit._ ii. 348 _sq._

  468 H. A. Junod, _op. cit._ ii. 341.

  469 H. A. Junod, _op. cit._ ii. 346.

 M153 Sacrifices to dead chiefs among the Basutos and Bechuanas.

  470 A. Merensky, _Beitraege zur Kenntnis Sued-Afrikas_ (Berlin, 1875), p.
      130.

 M154 Worship of the dead among the Zulus.

  471 Rev. H. Callaway, _The Religious System of the Amazulu_, i. (Natal,
      Springvale, etc., 1868) pp. 1 _sq._

  472 Rev. Joseph Shooter, _The Kafirs of Natal and the Zulu Country_
      (London, 1857), p. 159.

  473 Rev. J. Shooter, _op. cit._ p. 161.

 M155 Sacrifices and prayers to the dead among the Zulus.

  474 Rev. Lewis Grout, _Zulu-land, or Life among the Zulu-Kafirs_
      (Philadelphia, N.D.), pp. 137, 143-145.

 M156 A native Zulu account of the worship of the dead.

  475 "That is, they suggest to the Itongo [ancestral spirit, singular of
      Amatongo], by whose ill-will or want of care they are afflicted,
      that if they should all die in consequence, and thus his worshippers
      come to an end, he would have none to worship him; and therefore for
      his own sake, as well as for theirs, he had better preserve his
      people, that there may be a village for him to enter, and meat of
      the sacrifices for him to eat."

  476 Rev. Henry Callaway, _The Religious System of the Amazulu_, Part
      ii., _Amatongo or Ancestor Worship as existing among the Amazulu, in
      their own words, with a translation into English_ (Natal,
      Springvale, etc., 1869), pp. 144-146.

 M157 The worship of the dead among the Herero of German South-West
      Africa. Ancestral spirits (_Ovakuru_) worshipped by the Herero.

  477 Missionar J. Irle, _Die Herero, ein Beitrag zur Landes- Volks- und
      Missionskunde_ (Guetersloh, 1906), pp. 72 _sq._

  478 J. Irle, _op. cit._ p. 73.

_  479 Ovakuru_, the plural form of _Mukuru_.

  480 J. Irle, _op. cit._ p. 74.

  481 J. Irle, _op. cit._ p. 75. The writer tells us (_l.c._) that the
      Herero name for the good celestial God, whom they acknowledge but do
      not worship, is common, in different forms, to almost all the Bantu
      tribes. Among the Ovambo it is Kalunga; among tribes of Loango, the
      Congo, Angola and Benguela it is Zambi, Njambi, Ambi, Njame, Onjame,
      Ngambe, Nsambi; in the Cameroons it is Nzambi, etc. Compare John H.
      Weeks, _Among Congo Cannibals_ (London, 1913), pp. 246 _sq._: "We
      have found a vague knowledge of a Supreme Being, and a belief in
      Him, very general among those tribes on the Congo with which we have
      come into contact.... On the Lower Congo He is called _Nzambi_, or
      by His fuller title _Nzambi a mpungu_; no satisfactory root word has
      yet been found for _Nzambi_, but for _mpungu_ there are sayings and
      proverbs that clearly indicate its meaning as, most of all, supreme,
      highest, and _Nzambi a mpungu_ as the Being most High, or Supreme.
      On the Upper Congo among the Bobangi folk the word used for the
      Supreme Being is _Nyambe_; among the Lulanga people, _Nzakomba_;
      among the Boloki, _Njambe_; among the Bopoto people it is
      _Libanza_.... It is interesting to note that the most common name
      for the Supreme Being on the Congo is also known, in one form or
      another, over an extensive area of Africa reaching from 6 deg. north of
      the Equator away to extreme South Africa; as, for example, among the
      Ashanti it is _Onyame_, at Gaboon it is _Anyambie_, and two thousand
      miles away among the Barotse folk it is _Niambe_. These are the
      names that stand for a Being who is endowed with strength, wealth,
      and wisdom by the natives; and He is also regarded and spoken of by
      them as the principal Creator of the world, and the Maker of all
      things.... But the Supreme Being is believed by the natives to have
      withdrawn Himself to a great distance after performing His creative
      works; that He has now little or no concern in mundane affairs; and
      apparently no power over spirits and no control over the lives of
      men, either to protect them from malignant spirits or to help them
      by averting danger. They also consider the Supreme Being (_Nzambi_)
      as being so good and kind that there is no need to appease Him by
      rites, ceremonies or sacrifices. Hence they never pray to this
      Supreme One, they never worship Him, or think of Him as being
      interested in the doings of the world and its peoples."

  482 J. Irle, _op. cit._ p. 77. Mr. Irle's account of the religion of the
      Herero or Ovaherero is fully borne out by the testimony of earlier
      missionaries among the tribe. See Rev. G. Viehe, "Some Customs of
      the Ovaherero" _(South African) Folk-lore Journal_, i. (Cape Town,
      1879) pp. 64 _sq._: "The religious customs and ceremonies of the
      Ovaherero are all rooted in the presumption that the deceased
      continue to live, and that they have a great influence on earth, and
      exercise power over the life and death of man. This influence and
      power is ascribed especially to those who have been great men, and
      who become _Ovakuru_ after death. The numerous religious customs and
      ceremonies are a worshipping of the ancestors." Further, Mr. Viehe
      reports that "the Ovaherero have a slight idea of another being
      (Supreme being?) which differs greatly from the _Ovakuru_, is
      superior to them, and is supposed never to have been a human being.
      It is called _Karunga_.... _Karunga_ does only good; whilst the
      influence of the _Ovakuru_ is more feared than wished for; and,
      therefore, it is not thought necessary to bring sacrifices to
      _Karunga_ to guard against his influence." He is situated so high,
      and is so superior to men "that he takes little special notice of
      them; and so the Ovaherero, on their part, also trouble themselves
      little about this superior being" (_op. cit._ p. 67 note 1). Similar
      evidence is given by another missionary as to the belief of the
      Herero in a superior god Karunga and their fear and worship of
      ancestral spirits. See the Rev. H. Beiderbecke, "Some Religious
      Ideas and Customs of the Ovaherero" _(South African) Folk-lore
      Journal_, ii. (Cape Town, 1880) pp. 88 _sqq._

 M158 The worship of the dead among the Ovambo.

  483 Hermann Toenjes, _Ovamboland, Land, Leute, Mission_ (Berlin, 1911),
      pp. 193-197.

 M159 The worship of the dead among the Wahehe of German East Africa.

  484 E. Nigmann, _Die Wahehe_ (Berlin, 1908), pp. 22 _sq._ The writer
      does not describe the Wahehe as a Bantu tribe, but from the
      characteristic prefixes which they employ to designate the tribe,
      individual tribesmen, the country, and so forth (_op. cit._ p. 124)
      we may infer that the people belong to the Bantu stock.

  485 E. Nigmann, _Die Wahehe_, pp. 23 _sq._

  486 E. Nigmann, _op. cit._ p. 35.

  487 E. Nigmann, _op. cit._ p. 39.

  488 E. Nigmann, _op. cit._ pp. 24 _sqq._, 35 _sqq._

 M160 The worship of the dead among the Bahima of Ankole, in Central
      Africa.

  489 Rev. J. Roscoe, "The Bahima, a Cow Tribe of Enkole," _Journal of the
      Royal Anthropological Institute_, xxxvii. (1907) pp. 108 _sq._ The
      supreme god Lugaba is no doubt the same with the supreme god Rugaba
      worshipped by the Bahimas in Kiziba. See above, p. 173. With regard
      to the religion of the Baganda the same authority tells us that "the
      last, and possibly the most venerated, class of religious objects
      were the ghosts of departed relatives. The power of ghosts for good
      or evil was incalculable" (_The Baganda_, p. 273).

 M161 The worship of dead chiefs or kings among the Bantu tribes of
      Northern Rhodesia.

  490 C. Gouldsbury and H. Sheane, _The Great Plateau of Northern
      Rhodesia_, p. 83.

  491 C. Gouldsbury and H. Sheane, _op. cit._ p. 11.

  492 C. Gouldsbury and H. Sheane, _op. cit._ p. 292.

  493 C. Gouldsbury and H. Sheane, _op. cit._ pp. 294 _sq._

  494 J. H. West Sheane, "Wemba Warpaths," _Journal of the African
      Society_, No. xli. (October, 1911) pp. 25 _sq._

 M162 Among these tribes the spirits of dead chiefs or kings are thought
      sometimes to take bodily possession of men and women or to be
      incarnate in animals.

  495 C. Gouldsbury and H. Sheane, _The Great Plateau of Northern
      Nigeria_, p. 83.

  496 C. Gouldsbury and H. Sheane, _op. cit._ p. 84.

 M163 Belief of the Barotse in a supreme god Niambe.

  497 Eugene Beguin, _Les Ma-rotse_ (Lausanne and Fontaines, 1903), pp.
      118 _sq._

 M164 The worship of dead kings among the Barotse.

  498 Eugene Beguin, _Les Ba-rotse_, pp. 120-123. Compare _Totemism and
      Exogamy_, iv. 306 _sq._

 M165 Thus the worship of dead kings has been an important element in the
      religion of many African tribes.
 M166 Perhaps some African gods, who are now distinguished from ghosts,
      were once dead men.

  499 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), p. 271.

  500 Rev. J. Roscoe, _op. cit._ pp. 290, 291. In the worship of Mukasa
      "the principal ceremony was the annual festival, when the king sent
      his presents to the god, to secure a blessing on the crops and on
      the people for the year." (J. Roscoe, _op. cit._ p. 298).

 M167 The human remains of Kibuka, the war-god of the Baganda.

  501 Rev. J. Roscoe, "Kibuka, the War God of the Baganda," _Man_, vii.
      (1907) pp. 161-166; _id._, _The Baganda_, pp. 301-308. Among the
      personal relics of Kibuka kept in his temple were his genital
      organs; these also were rescued when the Mohammedans burned down his
      temple in the civil wars of 1887-1890. They are now with the rest of
      the god's, or rather the man's, remains at Cambridge.

 M168 Thus it is possible that Osiris and Isis may have been a real king
      and queen of Egypt, perhaps identical with King Khent and his queen.

  502 This consideration is rightly urged by H. Schaefer as a strong
      argument in favour of the antiquity of the tradition which
      associated the grave of Osiris with the grave of King Khent. See H.
      Schaefer, _Die Mysterien des Osiris in Abydos_ (Leipsic, 1904), pp.
      28 _sq._

  503 One of the commonest and oldest titles of Osiris was Chent
      (Khent)-Ament or Chenti (Khenti)-Amenti, as the name is also
      written. It means "Chief of those who are in the West" and refers to
      the Egyptian belief that the souls of the dead go westward. See R.
      V. Lanzone, _Dizionario di Mitologia Egizia_, p. 727; H. Brugsch,
      _Religion und Mythologie der alten Aegypter_, p. 617; A. Erman, _Die
      aegyptische Religion_,2 pp. 23, 103 _sq._; J. H. Breasted,
      _Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient Egypt_, pp. 38, 143
      (who spells the name Khenti-Amentiu); E. A. Wallis Budge, _Osiris
      and the Egyptian Resurrection_, i. 31 _sq._, 67. "Khenti-Amenti was
      one of the oldest gods of Abydos, and was certainly connected with
      the dead, being probably the ancient local god of the dead of Abydos
      and its neighbourhood. Now, in the Pyramid Texts, which were written
      under the VIth dynasty, there are several mentions of Khenti-Amenti,
      and in a large number of instances the name is preceded by that of
      Osiris. It is quite clear, therefore, that the chief attributes of
      the one god must have resembled those of the other, and that Osiris
      Khenti-Amenti was assumed to have absorbed the powers of
      Khenti-Amenti. In the representations of the two gods which are
      found at Abydos there is usually no difference, at least not under
      the XVIIIth and XIXth dynasties" (E. A. Wallis Budge, _op. cit._ i.
      31). However, it would be unsafe to infer that the resemblance
      between the name of the god and the name of the king is more than
      accidental.

 M169 Suggested parallel between Osiris and Charlemagne.

  504 W. E. H. Lecky, _History of European Morals from Augustus to
      Charlemagne_, Third Edition (London, 1877), ii. 271.

 M170 The question of the historical reality of Osiris left open.
 M171 Essential similarity of Adonis, Attis, and Osiris.
 M172 The superiority of the goddesses associated with Adonis, Attis, and
      Osiris points to a system of mother-kin.
 M173 Mother-kin and father-kin. The Khasis of Assam have mother-kin, and
      among them goddesses predominate over gods and priestesses over
      priests.

  505 I have adopted the terms "mother-kin" and "father-kin" as less
      ambiguous than the terms "mother-right" and "father-right," which I
      formerly employed in the same sense.

_  506 The Khasis_, by Major P. R. T. Gurdon, I.A., Deputy Commissioner
      Eastern Bengal and Assam Commission, and Superintendent of
      Ethnography in Assam (London, 1907).

  507 "The Khasi saying is, '_long jaid na ka kynthei_' (from the woman
      sprang the clan). The Khasis, when reckoning descent, count from the
      mother only; they speak of a family of brothers and sisters, who are
      the great grandchildren of one great grandmother, as _shi kpoh_,
      which, being literally translated, is one womb, _i.e._ the issue of
      one womb. The man is nobody" (P. R. T. Gurdon, _The Khasis_, p. 82).
      "All land acquired by inheritance must follow the Khasi law of
      entail, by which property descends from the mother to the youngest
      daughter, and again from the latter to her youngest daughter.
      Ancestral landed property must therefore be always owned by women.
      The male members of the family may cultivate such lands, but they
      must carry all the produce to the house of their mother, who will
      divide it amongst the members of the family" (_op. cit._ p. 88).
      "The rule amongst the Khasis is that the youngest daughter 'holds'
      the religion, '_ka bat ka niam_.' Her house is called, '_ka iing
      seng_,' and it is here that the members of the family assemble to
      witness her performance of the family ceremonies. Hers is,
      therefore, the largest share of the family property, because it is
      she whose duty it is to perform the family ceremonies, and
      propitiate the family ancestors" (_op. cit._ p. 83).

  508 Sir C. J. Lyall, in his Introduction to _The Khasis_, by Major P. R.
      T. Gurdon, pp. xxiii. _sq._ Sir C. J. Lyall himself lived for many
      years among the Khasis and studied their customs. For the details of
      the evidence on which his summary is based see especially pp. 63
      _sqq._, 68 _sq._, 76, 82 _sqq._, 88, 106 _sqq._, 109 _sqq._, 112
      _sq._, 121, 150, of Major Gurdon's book. As to the Khasi
      priestesses, see above, vol. i. p. 46.

 M174 Again, the Pelew Islanders have mother-kin, and the deities of their
      clans are all goddesses.

  509 J. Kubary, _Die socialen Einrichtungen der Pelauer_ (Berlin, 1885),
      pp. 35 _sq._ The writer calls one of these kins indifferently a
      _Familie_ or a _Stamm_.

  510 J. S. Kubary, "Die Todtenbestattung auf den Pelau-Inseln,"
      _Original-Mittheilungen aus der ethnologischen Abtheilung der
      koeniglichen Museen zu Berlin_, i. (Berlin, 1885) p. 7.

  511 J. Kubary, _Die socialen Einrichtungen der Pelauer_, p. 40.

  512 J. Kubary, "Die Religion der Pelauer," in A. Bastian's _Allerlei aus
      Volks- und Menschenkunde_ (Berlin, 1888), i. 20-22. The writer says
      that the family or clan gods of the Pelew Islanders are too many to
      be enumerated, but he gives as a specimen a list of the family
      deities of one particular district (Ngarupesang). Having done so he
      observes that they are all goddesses, and he adds that "this is
      explained by the importance of the woman for the clan. The deity of
      the mother is inherited, that of the father is not" (_op. cit._ p.
      22). As he says nothing to indicate that the family deities of this
      particular district are exceptional, we may infer, as I have done,
      that the deities of all the families or clans are goddesses. Yet a
      few pages previously (pp. 16 _sq._) he tells us that a village which
      contains twenty families will have at least forty deities, if not
      more, "for some houses may have two _kalids_ [deities], and every
      house has also a goddess." This seems to imply that the families or
      clans have gods as well as goddesses. The seeming discrepancy is
      perhaps to be explained by another statement of the writer that "in
      the family only the _kalids_ [deities] of the women count" ("_sich
      geltend machen_," J. Kubary, _Die socialen Einrichtungen der
      Pelauer_, p. 38).

  513 J. Kubary, _Die socialen Einrichtungen der Pelauer_, pp. 33 _sq._,
      63; _id._, "Die Religion der Pelauer," in A. Bastian's _Allerlei aus
      Volks- und Menschenkunde_, i. 16.

  514 J. Kubary, "Die Religion der Pelauer," in A. Bastian's _Allerlei aus
      Volks- und Menschenkunde_, i. 15-17, 22, 25-27.

  515 From the passages cited in the preceding note it appears that this
      was Kubary's opinion, though he has not stated it explicitly.

  516 J. Kubary, "Die Religion der Pelauer," in A. Bastian's _Allerlei aus
      Volks- und Menschenkunde_, i. 28 _sq._

 M175 This preference for goddesses is to be explained by the importance
      of women in the social system of the Pelew Islanders.

  517 J. Kubary, _Die socialen Einrichtungen der Pelauer_, p. 38. See also
      above, p. 204, note 4.

  518 J. Kubary, _l.c._

  519 See the statement of Kubary quoted in the next paragraph.

  520 J. Kubary, _Die socialen Einrichtungen der Pelauer_, p. 39.

  521 See the statement of Kubary quoted in the next paragraph.

 M176 The high position of women in the Pelew Islands has also an
      industrial basis; for they alone cultivate the taro, the staple food
      of the people.

  522 J. S. Kubary, _Ethnographische Beitraege zur Kenntniss des Karolinen
      Archipels_ (Leyden, 1895), p. 159. On the importance of the taro or
      sweet potato as the staple food of the people, see _ib._ pp. 156
      _sq._

 M177 Both men and women in the Pelew Islands attain to power by posing as
      the inspired mouthpieces of the gods.

  523 J. Kubary, "Die Religion der Pelauer," in A. Bastian's _Allerlei aus
      Volks- und Menschenkunde_, i. 34.

  524 J. Kubary, "Die Religion der Pelauer," in A. Bastian's _Allerlei aus
      Volks- und Menschenkunde_, i. 30-35. The author wrote thus in the
      year 1883, and his account of the Pelew religion was published in
      1888. Compare his work _Die socialen Einrichtungen der Pelauer_, p.
      81. Great changes have probably taken place in the islands since
      Kubary wrote.

 M178 Parallel between the Pelew Islands of to-day and the religious and
      social state of Western Asia and Egypt in antiquity.

  525 For some other parallels between the state of society and religion
      in these two regions, see Note IV. at the end of the volume.

 M179 Mother-kin does not imply that the government is in the hands of
      women.

  526 Compare E. Stephan und F. Graebner, _Neu-Mecklenburg_ (Berlin,
      1907), p. 107 note 1: "It is necessary always to repeat emphatically
      that the terms father-right and mother-right indicate simply and
      solely the group-membership of the individual and the systems of
      relationship which that membership implies, but that they have
      nothing at all to do with the higher or lower position of women.
      Rather the opposite might be affirmed, namely, that woman is
      generally more highly esteemed in places where father-right prevails
      than in places where mother-right is the rule."

 M180 The inheritance of property, especially of landed property, through
      the mother certainly tends to raise the social importance of women,
      but this tendency is never carried so far as to subordinate men
      politically to women.
 M181 Thus while the Khasis and Pelew Islanders have mother-kin, they are
      governed by men, not by women.

  527 Major P. R. T. Gurdon, _The Khasis_, pp. 66-71. The rule of
      succession is as follows. A _Siem_, or king, "is succeeded by the
      eldest of his uterine brothers; failing such brothers, by the eldest
      of his sisters' sons; failing such nephews, by the eldest of the
      sons of his sisters' daughters; failing such grand-nephews, by the
      eldest of the sons of his mother's sisters; and, failing such first
      cousins, by the eldest of his male cousins on the female side, other
      than first cousins, those nearest in degree of relationship having
      prior claim. If there were no heirs male, as above, he would be
      succeeded by the eldest of his uterine sisters; in the absence of
      such sisters, by the eldest of his sisters' daughters; failing such
      nieces, by the eldest of the daughters of his sisters' daughters;
      failing such grand-nieces, by the eldest of the daughters of his
      mother's sisters; and failing such first cousins, by the eldest of
      his female cousins on the female side, other than first cousins,
      those nearest in degree of relationship having prior claim. A female
      _Siem_ would be succeeded by her eldest son, and so on" (_op. cit._
      p. 71). The rule illustrates the logical precision with which the
      system of mother-kin is carried out by these people even when the
      intention is actually to exclude women from power.

  528 J. Kubary, _Die socialen Einrichtungen der Pelauer_, pp. 35, 39
      _sq._, 73-83. See also above, pp. 204 _sq._

  529 R. H. Codrington, _The Melanesians_ (Oxford, 1891), p. 34.

 M182 The theory of a gynaecocracy and of the predominance of the female
      imagination in religion is an idle dream.

  530 See A. H. Post, _Afrikanische Jurisprudenz_ (Oldenburg and Leipsic,
      1887), i. 140 _sq._ Captain W. Gill reports that the Su-Mu, a
      Man-Tzu tribe in Southern China numbering some three and a half
      millions, is always ruled by a queen (_The River of Golden Sand_,
      London, 1880, i. 365). But Capt. Gill was not nearer to the tribe
      than a six days' journey; and even if his report is correct we may
      suppose that the real power is exercised by men, just as it is in
      the solitary Khasi tribe which is nominally governed by a woman.

 M183 But mother-kin is a solid fact, which can hardly have failed to
      modify the religion of the peoples who practise it.

  531 The theory, or at all events the latter part of it, has been
      carefully examined by Dr. L. R. Farnell; and if, as I apprehend, he
      rejects it, I agree with him. See his article "Sociological
      Hypotheses concerning the position of Women in Ancient Religion,"
      _Archiv fuer Religionswissenschaft_, vii. (1904) pp. 70-94; his
      _Cults of the Greek States_ (Oxford, 1896-1909), iii. 109 _sqq._;
      and _The Hibbert Journal_, April 1907, p. 690. But I differ from
      him, it seems, in thinking that mother-kin is favourable to the
      growth of mother goddesses.

 M184 Mother-kin and mother-goddesses in Western Asia.

  532 The Lycians traced their descent through women, not through men; and
      among them it was the daughters, not the sons, who inherited the
      family property. See Herodotus, i. 174; Nicolaus Damascenus, in
      Stobaeus, _Florilegium_, xliv. 41 (_Fragmenta Historicorum
      Graecorum_, ed. C. Mueller, iii. 461); Plutarch, _De mulierum
      virtutibus_, 9. An ancient historian even asserts that the Lycians
      were ruled by women ({~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PERISPOMENI~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}, Heraclides
      Ponticus, Frag. 15, in _Fragmenta Historicorum Graecorum_, ed. C.
      Mueller, ii. 217). Inscriptions found at Dalisandos, in Isauria, seem
      to prove that it was not unusual there to trace descent through the
      mother even in the third or the fourth century after Christ. See Sir
      W. M. Ramsay, "The Permanence of Religion at Holy Places in the
      East," _The Expositor_, November 1906, p. 475. Dr. L. Messerschmidt
      seems to think that the Lycians were Hittites (_The Hittites_, p.
      20). Scholars are not agreed as to the family of speech to which the
      Lycian language belongs. Some think that it was an Indo-European
      tongue; but this view is now abandoned by Professor Ed. Meyer
      (_Geschichte des Altertums_,2 i. 2. p. 626).

  533 W. Robertson Smith, _Kinship and Marriage in Early Arabia_2 (London,
      1903), p. 306. The hypothesis of the former existence of mother-kin
      among the Semites is rejected by Professor Ed. Meyer (_Geschichte
      des Altertums_,2 i. 2, p. 360) and W. W. Graf Baudissin (_Adonis und
      Esmun_, pp. 46 _sq._).

 M185 Mother-kin in ancient Egypt.

  534 Diodorus Siculus, i. 27. 1 _sq._ In spite of this express testimony
      to the existence of a true gynaecocracy in ancient Egypt, I am of
      opinion that the alleged superiority of the queen to the king and of
      the wife to her husband must have been to a great extent only
      nominal. Certainly we know that it was the king and not the queen
      who really governed the country; and we can hardly doubt that in
      like manner it was for the most part the husband and not the wife
      who really ruled the house, though unquestionably in regard to
      property the law seems to have granted important rights to women
      which it denied to men. On the position of women in ancient Egypt
      see especially the able article of Miss Rachel Evelyn White (Mrs.
      Wedd), "Women in Ptolemaic Egypt," _Journal of Hellenic Studies_,
      xviii. (1898) pp. 238-256.

  535 Herodotus, ii. 35.

 M186 Marriages of brothers with sisters in ancient Egypt.

  536 Sir Gaston Maspero, quoted by Miss R. E. White, _op. cit._ p. 244.

  537 J. Nietzold, _Die Ehe in Aegypten zur ptolemaeisch-roemischen Zeit_
      (Leipzic, 1903), p. 12.

  538 A. Erman, _Aegypten und aegyptisches Leben im Altertum_, pp. 221
      _sq._; U. Wilcken, "Arsinoitische Steuerprofessionen aus dem Jahre
      189 n. Chr.," _Sitzungsberichte der koenig. Preuss. Akademie der
      Wissenschaften zu Berlin_, 1883, p. 903; J. Nietzold, _Die Ehe in
      Aegypten zur ptolemaeisch-roemischen Zeit_, pp. 12-14.

 M187 Such marriages were based on a wish to keep the property in the
      family.

  539 J. F. McLennan, _Studies in Ancient History_ (London, 1886), pp. 101
      _sqq._ Among the Kocchs of North-Eastern India "the property of the
      husband is made over to the wife; when she dies it goes to her
      daughters, and when he marries he lives with his wife's mother" (R.
      G. Latham, _Descriptive Ethnology_, London, 1859, i. 96).

  540 This is in substance the explanation which Miss Rachel Evelyn White
      (Mrs. Wedd) gives of the Egyptian custom. See her paper, "Women in
      Ptolemaic Egypt," _Journal of Hellenic Studies_, xviii. (1898) p.
      265. Similarly Mr. J. Nietzold observes that "economical
      considerations, especially in the case of great landowners, may
      often have been the occasion of marriages with sisters, the
      intention being in this way to avoid a division of the property"
      (_Die Ehe in Aegypten_, p. 13). The same explanation of the custom
      has been given by Prof. W. Ridgeway. See his "Supplices of
      Aeschylus," in _Praelections delivered before the Senate of the
      University of Cambridge_ (Cambridge, 1906), pp. 154 _sq._ I
      understand from Professor W. M. Flinders Petrie that the theory has
      been a commonplace with Egyptologists for many years. McLennan
      explained the marriage of brothers and sisters in royal families as
      an expedient for shifting the succession from the female to the male
      line; but he did not extend the theory so as to explain similar
      marriages among common people in Egypt, perhaps because he was not
      aware of the facts. See J. F. McLennan, _The Patriarchal Theory_,
      edited and completed by D. McLennan (London, 1885), p. 95.

 M188 Thus the traditional marriage of Osiris with his sister Isis
      reflected a real social custom. The passing of the old world in
      Egypt.

  541 Socrates, _Historia Ecclesiastica_, i. 18 (Migne's _Patrologia
      Graeca_, lxvii. 121). The learned Valesius, in his note on this
      passage, informs us that the cubit was again transferred by the
      Emperor Julian to the Serapeum, where it was left in peace till the
      destruction of that temple.

  542 Athanasius, _Oratio contra Gentes_, 10 (Migne's _Patrologia Graeca_,
      xxv. 24).

  543 Socrates, _Historia Ecclesiastica_, v. 16 _sq._ (Migne's _Patrologia
      Graeca_, lxvii. 604 _sq._); Sozomenus, _Historia Ecclesiastica_,
      vii. 15 (Migne's _Patrologia Graeca_, lxvii. 1152 _sq._). These
      events took place under the Emperor Theodosius in the year 391 A.D.

 M189 Egyptian conservatism partly an effect of natural conditions and
      habits of life.
 M190 The old type of Osiris better preserved than those of Adonis and
      Attis.
 M191 Moloch perhaps the human king regarded as an incarnate deity.

  544 See above, vol. i. pp. 17 sqq.

_  545 The Dying God_, pp. 168 _sqq._; G. F. Moore, in _Encyclopaedia
      Biblica_, _s.v._ "Molech." The phrase translated "make pass through
      the fire to Molech" (2 Kings xxiii. 10) means properly, Professor
      Kennett tells me, "make to pass over by means of fire to Molech,"
      where the verb has the sense of "make over to," "dedicate,"
      "devote," as appears from its use in Exodus xiii. 12 ("set apart,"
      English Version) and Ezekiel xx. 26. That the children were not made
      simply to pass through the fire, but were burned in it, is shown by
      a comparison of 2 Kings xvi. 3, xxiii. 10, Jeremiah xxxii. 35, with
      2 Chronicles xxviii. 3, Jeremiah vii. 31, xix. 5. As to the use of
      the verb {~HEBREW LETTER HE~}{~HEBREW LETTER AYIN~}{~HEBREW LETTER KAF~}{~HEBREW LETTER YOD~}{~HEBREW LETTER RESH~} in the sense of "dedicate," "devote," see G. F.
      Moore, _s.v._ "Molech," _Encyclopaedia Biblica_, iii. 3184; F.
      Brown, S. R. Driver, and C. A. Briggs, _Hebrew and English Lexicon
      of the Old Testament_ (Oxford, 1906), p. 718. "The testimony of both
      the prophets and the laws is abundant and unambiguous that the
      victims were slain and burnt as a holocaust" (G. F. Moore, in
      _Encyclopaedia Biblica_, iii. 3184). Similarly Principal J. Skinner
      translates the phrase in 2 Kings xvi. 3 by "dedicated his son by
      fire," and remarks that the expression, "whatever its primary sense
      may be, undoubtedly denoted actual burning" (commentary on Kings in
      _The Century Bible_). The practice would seem to have been very
      ancient at Jerusalem, for tradition placed the attempted
      burnt-sacrifice of Isaac by his father Abraham on Mount Moriah,
      which was no other than Mount Zion, the site of the king's palace
      and of the temple of Jehovah. See Genesis xxii. 1-18; 2 Chronicles
      iii. 1; J. Benzinger, _Hebraeische Archaeologie_ (Freiburg i. Baden
      and Leipsic, 1894), pp. 45, 233; T. K. Cheyne, _s.v._ "Moriah,"
      _Encyclopaedia Biblica_, iii. 3200 _sq._

  546 Leviticus xviii. 21, xx. 2-5; 1 Kings xi. 7; 2 Kings xxiii. 10;
      Jeremiah xxxii. 35.

  547 W. Robertson Smith, _The Religion of the Semites_,2 p. 372, note 1.

  548 "It is plain, from various passages of the prophets, that the
      sacrifices of children among the Jews before the captivity, which
      are commonly known as sacrifices to Moloch, were regarded by the
      worshippers as oblations to Jehovah, under the title of king" (W.
      Robertson Smith, _Religion of the Semites_,2 p. 372, referring to
      Jeremiah vii. 31, xix. 5, xxxii. 35; Ezekiel xxiii. 39; Micah vi.
      7). The same view is taken by Prof. G. F. Moore, in _Encyclopaedia
      Biblica_, _s.v._ "Molech," vol. iii. 3187 _sq._

 M192 The sacrifices to Moloch may have been intended to prolong the
      king's life. Vicarious sacrifices for a king or queen in Sweden,
      Persia, and Madagascar.

_  549 The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings_, i. 366 _sq._

  550 "Ynglinga Saga," 29, in _The Heimskringla or Chronicle of the Kings
      of Norway_, translated by S. Laing (London, 1844), i. 239 _sq._; H.
      M. Chadwick, _The Cult of Othin_ (London, 1899), pp. 4, 27; _The
      Dying God_, pp. 160 _sq._ Similarly in Peru, when a person of note
      was sick, he would sometimes sacrifice his son to the idol in order
      that his own life might be spared. See A. de Herrera, _The General
      History of the Vast Continent and Islands of America_, translated by
      Capt. J. Stevens (London, 1725-1726), iv. 347 _sq._

  551 Micah vi. 6-8.

  552 Herodotus, vii. 114; Plutarch, _De superstitione_, 13.

  553 W. Ellis, _History of Madagascar_ (London, N.D.), i. 344 _sq._

 M193 Other sacrifices for prolonging the king's life appear to be magical
      rather than religious. Custom in the Niger delta.

  554 Major A. G. Leonard, _The Lower Niger and its Tribes_ (London,
      1906), p. 457.

 M194 Customs observed by the Zulus and Caffres to prolong the king's
      life.

  555 D. Leslie, _Among the Zulus and Amatongas_2 (Edinburgh, 1875), p.
      91. This sacrifice may be the one described by J. Shooter, _The
      Kafirs of Natal_ (London, 1857), p. 26. The reason for not stabbing
      the animal is perhaps a wish not to lose any of the blood, but to
      convey its life intact to the king. The same reason would explain
      the same rule which the Baganda observed in killing a human victim
      for the same purpose (see below, p. 224).

  556 J. Dos Santos, _Eastern Ethiopia_, bk. ii. chap. 16 (G. M'Call
      Theal's _Records of South-Eastern Africa_, vii. 289).

 M195 Customs observed by the Baganda to prolong the king's life. Human
      victims killed in order to invigorate the king.

  557 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), pp. 27 _sq._

  558 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_, p. 200.

  559 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_, pp. 209 _sq._

 M196 Chief's son killed to provide the king with anklets.

  560 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_, pp. 210 _sq._

 M197 The king's game.

  561 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_, pp. 211 _sq._ I have abridged the
      account of the ceremonies.

 M198 The whip of human skin.

  562 Rev. J. Roscoe, _op. cit._ pp. 213 _sq._

 M199 Modes in which the strength of the human victims was thought to pass
      into the king.
 M200 Massacres perpetrated when a king of Uganda was ill.

  563 From information furnished by my friend the Rev. J. Roscoe. Compare
      his book, _The Baganda_, pp. 331 _sqq._

 M201 Yet the sacrifices of children to Moloch may be otherwise explained.

  564 See _The Dying God_, pp. 166 _sqq._

 M202 Theory that the resignation of the widowed Flamen Dialis was caused
      by the pollution of death.

  565 See above, vol. i. p. 45.

_  566 The Hibbert Journal_, April 1907, p. 689.

  567 Lucian, _De dea Syria_, 53.

  568 G. Dittenberger, _Sylloge Inscriptionum Graecarum_,2 vol. ii. pp.
      725 _sqq._, Nos. 877, 878.

  569 G. Dittenberger, _op. cit._ vol. ii. pp. 429 _sq._, No. 633.

_  570 Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum_, ed. Aug. Boeckh, etc. (Berlin,
      1828-1877), vol. ii. pp. 481 _sqq._, No. 2715, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER XI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}[{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}]{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PSILI AND PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PSILI AND OXIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH YPOGEGRAMMENI~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~},
      where I understand {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER XI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} to mean "leave of absence."

 M203 Apparent parallel among the Todas.

  571 W. H. R. Rivers, _The Todas_ (London, 1906), pp. 99 _sq._

  572 Aulus Gellius, x. 15. 24.

 M204 But on inspection the analogy breaks down.

  573 Aulus Gellius, _l.c._: "_funus tamen exequi non est religio._"

  574 Gaius, _Instit._ i. 112, "_quod jus etiam nostris temporibus in usu
      est: nam flamines majores, id est Diales, Martiales, Quirinales,
      item reges sacrorum, nisi_ (qui) _ex farreatis nati_ sunt _non
      leguntur: ac ne ipsi quidem sine confarreatione sacerdotium habere
      possunt_"; Servius on Virgil, _Aen._ iv. 103, "_quae res ad
      farreatas nuptias pertinet, quibus flaminem et flaminicam jure
      pontificio in matrimonium necesse est convenire_." For a fuller
      description of the rite see Servius, on Virgil, _Aen._ iv. 374. From
      the testimony of Gaius it appears that not only the Flamen Dialis
      but all the other principal Flamens were bound to be married.
      However, the text of Gaius in this passage is somewhat uncertain. I
      have quoted it from P. E. Huschke's third edition (Leipsic, 1878).

  575 W. H. R. Rivers, _The Todas_, p. 99. According to an old account,
      there was an important exception to the rule, but Dr. Rivers was not
      able to verify it; he understood that during the tenure of his
      office the dairyman is really celibate.

  576 Aulus Gellius, x. 15. 23, "_Matrimonium flaminis nisi morte dirimi
      jus non est_"; Festus, p. 89, ed. C. O. Mueller, _s.v._ "Flammeo";
      Plutarch, _Quaestiones Romanae_, 50. Plutarch mentions as an illegal
      exception that in his own time the Emperor Domitian allowed a Flamen
      to divorce his wife, but the ceremony of the divorce was attended by
      "many awful, strange, and gloomy rites" performed by the priests.

  577 Plutarch, _Quaestiones Romanae_, 50. That the wives of Roman priests
      aided their husbands in the performance of sacred rites is mentioned
      by Dionysius of Halicarnassus, who attributes the institution of
      these joint priesthoods to Romulus (_Antiquit. Rom._ ii. 22).

  578 The epithet Dialis, which was applied to the Flaminica as well as to
      the Flamen (Aulus Gellius, x. 15. 26; Servius, on Virgil, _Aen._ iv.
      137), would of itself prove that husband and wife served the same
      god or pair of gods; and while the word was doubtfully derived by
      Varro from Jove (_De lingua Latina_, v. 84), we are expressly told
      that the Flamen was the priest and the Flaminica the priestess of
      that god (Plutarch, _Quaest. Rom._ 109; Festus, p. 92, ed. C. O.
      Mueller, _s.v._ "Flammeo"). There is therefore every reason to accept
      the statement of Plutarch (_Quaest. Rom._ 86) that the Flaminica was
      reputed to be sacred to Juno, the divine partner of Jupiter, in
      spite of the objections raised by Mr. W. Warde Fowler ("Was the
      Flaminica Dialis priestess of Juno?" _Classical Review_, ix. (1895)
      pp. 474 _sqq._).

 M205 Customs of the Kota and Jewish priests.

  579 E. Thurston, _Castes and Tribes of Southern India_ (Madras, 1909),
      iv. 10.

  580 Leviticus, xxi. 1-3; Ezekiel, xliv. 25.

 M206 The theory that the Roman gods were celibate is contradicted by
      Varro and Seneca.

_  581 The Hibbert Journal_, iv. (1906) p. 932.

  582 Varro, _De lingua Latina_, v. 67, "_Quod Jovis Juno conjux et is
      caelum._"

  583 Augustine, _De civitate Dei_, iv. 32, "_Dicit etiam [scil. Varro] de
      generationibus deorum magis ad poetas quam ad physicos fuisse
      populos inclinatos, et ideo et sexum et generationes deorum majores
      suos, id est veteres credidisse Romanos et eorum constituisse
      conjugia._"

  584 Seneca, quoted by Augustine, _De civitate Dei_, vi. 10, "_Quid quod
      et matrimonia, inquit, deorum jungimus, et ne pie quidem, fratrum ac
      sororum? Bellonam Marti conlocamus, Vulcano Venerem, Neptuno
      Salaciam. Quosdam tamen caelibes relinquimus, quasi condicio
      defecerit, praesertim cum quaedam viduae sint, ut Populonia vel
      Fulgora et diva Rumina; quibus non miror petitorem defuisse._" In
      this passage the marriage of Venus to Vulcan is probably Greek; all
      the rest is pure Roman.

 M207 The marriage of Orcus.

  585 Servius, on Virgil, Georg. i. 344, "_Aliud est sacrum, aliud nuptias
      Cereri celebrare, in quibus re vera vinum adhiberi nefas fuerat,
      quae Orci nuptiae dicebantur, quas praesentia sua pontifices ingenti
      solemnitate celebrabant._"

  586 Servius, on Virgil, _Georg._ i. 344, and on _Aen._ iv. 58. As to the
      prohibition of wine, compare Macrobius, _Saturn._ iii. 11. There
      seems to be no doubt that Orcus was a genuine old Italian god of
      death and the dead. See the evidence collected by R. Peter, _s.v._
      "Orcus," in W. H. Roscher's _Lexikon der griech. und roem.
      Mythologie_, iii. 940 _sqq._, who says that "Orcus was obviously one
      of those old Roman gods who occupied the thoughts of the people in
      the most lively manner." On the other hand, Prof. G. Wissowa
      supposes that Orcus is merely a borrowed form of the Greek Horkos
      (_Religion und Kultus der Roemer_,2 p. 310). But Horkos was not a god
      of death and the dead; he was simply a personified oath ({~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH DASIA AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}; see
      Hesiod, _Works and Days_, 804 {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER OMICRON WITH DASIA AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK KORONIS~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}), an abstract idea which makes no figure in Greek
      mythology and religion. That such a rare and thin Greek abstraction
      should through a gross misunderstanding be transformed into a highly
      popular Roman god of death, who not only passed muster with the
      people but was admitted by the pontiffs themselves to the national
      pantheon and honoured by them with a solemn ritual, is in the last
      degree improbable.

 M208 Evidence of Aulus Gellius as to the marriage of the Roman gods.
      Paternity and maternity of Roman deities.

  587 Aulus Gellius, xiii. 23 (22), 1 _sq._, "_Conprecationes deum
      inmortalium, quae ritu Romano fiunt, expositae sunt in libris
      sacerdotum populi Romani et in plerisque antiquis orationibus. In
      his scribtum est: Luam Saturni, Salaciam Neptuni, Horam Quirini,
      Virites Quirini, Maiam Volcani, Heriem Junonis, Moles Martis
      Nerienemque Martis._" As to this list see Mr. W. Warde Fowler,
      _Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic_ (London, 1899), pp.
      60-62; _id._, _The Religious Experience of the Roman People_
      (London, 1911), pp. 150 _sqq._, 481 _sqq._ He holds (p. 485) that
      the feminine names Salacia, etc., do not designate goddesses, the
      wives of the gods, but that they "indicate functions or attributes
      of the male deity to whom they are attached."

  588 Aulus Gellius, xiii. 23 (22), 11-16.

  589 Macrobius, _Saturn._ i. 12. 18, "_Cingius mensem [Maium] nominatum
      putat a Maia, quam Vulcani dicit uxorem, argumentoque utitur quod
      flamen Vulcanalis Kalendis Maiis huic deae rem divinam facit: sed
      Piso uxorem Vulcani Majestam, non Maiam, dicit vocari._" The work of
      Cincius (Cingius) is mentioned by Macrobius in the same chapter (§
      12, "_Cingius in eo libro quem de fastis reliquit_"). As to the life
      and writings of this old annalist and antiquary see M. Schanz,
      _Geschichte der roemischen Litteratur_,2 i. (Munich, 1898), p. 128;
      G. Wissowa, Muenzer, and Cichorius, _s.v._ "Cincius," in
      Pauly-Wissowa's _Realencyclopaedie der classischen
      Altertumswissenschaft_, iii. 2555 _sqq._ All these writers
      distinguish the old annalist from the antiquary, whom they take to
      have been a later writer of the same name. But the distinction
      appears to be purely arbitrary and destitute of any ancient
      authority.

  590 Macrobius, _Saturn._ i. 12. 18. See the preceding note.

  591 Macrobius, _Saturn._ i. 12. 18. See the passage cited above, p. 232,
      note 3.

  592 Varro, _De lingua Latina_, v. 72, "_Salacia Neptuni a salo_." This
      was probably one of the cases which Varro had in his mind when he
      stated that the ancient Roman gods were married.

  593 Augustine, _De civitate Dei_, vii. 22, "_Jam utique habebat Salaciam
      Neptunus uxorem_"; Servius, on Virgil, _Aen._ x. 76, "_Sane hanc
      Veniliam quidam Salaciam accipiunt, Neptuni uxorem_." As for
      Seneca's evidence see above, p. 231, note 3.

  594 Nonius Marcellus, _De compendiosa doctrina_, p. 125, ed. L.
      Quicherat (Paris, 1872), "_Hora juventutis dea. Ennius Annali[um]
      lib. i. [Teque,] Quirine pater, veneror, Horamque Quirini._"

  595 Livy, viii. 1. 6, xlv. 33. 2.

  596 Festus, p. 186, ed. C. O. Mueller, "_Opima spolia dicuntur originem
      quidem trahentia ab Ope Saturni uxore_"; _id._, p. 187, "_Opis dicta
      est conjux Saturni_"; Macrobius, _Saturnal._ i. 10. 19, "_Hanc autem
      deam Opem Saturni conjugem crediderunt, et ideo hoc mense Saturnalia
      itemque Opalia celebrari, quod Saturnus ejusque uxor tam frugum quam
      fructuum repertores esse creduntur._" Varro couples Saturn and Ops
      together (_De lingua Latina_, v. 57, "_Principes in Latio Saturnus
      et Ops_"; compare _id._, v. 64), but without expressly affirming
      them to be husband and wife. Professor G. Wissowa, however, argues
      that the male partner (he would not say husband) of Ops was not
      Saturn but Consus. See G. Wissowa, "_De feriis anni Romanorum
      vetustissimi observationes selectae_," reprinted in his _Gesammelte
      Abhandlungen zur roemischen Religions- und Stadtgeschichte_ (Munich,
      1904), pp. 156 _sqq._ His view is accepted by Mr. W. Warde Fowler
      (_Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic_, p. 212; _The
      Religious Experience of the Roman People_, p. 482).

  597 Lactantius, _Divin. Instit._ iv. 3, "_Itaque et Jupiter a
      precantibus pater vocatur, et Saturnus, et Janus, et Liber, et
      ceteri deinceps, quod Lucilius in deorum consilio irridet_:

      _Ut nemo sit nostrum, quin aut pater optimus divum_
      _ Ut Neptunus pater, Liber, Saturnus pater, Mars,_
      _ Janus, Quirinus pater nomen dicatur ad unum._"

      Compare Aulus Gellius, v. 12. 5; Servius, on Virgil, _Georg._ ii. 4.
      Roman goddesses who received the title of Mother were Vesta, Earth,
      Ops, Matuta, and Lua. As to Mother Vesta see _The Magic Art and the
      Evolution of Kings_, ii. 229; as to Mother Earth see H. Dessau,
      _Inscriptiones Latinae Selectae_, Nos. 3950-3955, 3960; as to Mother
      Ops see Varro, _De lingua Latina_, v. 64; as to Mother Matuta see L.
      Preller, _Roemische Mythologie_,3 i. 322 _sqq._; G. Wissowa,
      _Religion und Kultus der Roemer_,2 pp. 110 _sqq._; _id._, _s.v._
      "Mater Matuta," in W. H. Roscher's _Lexikon der griech. und roem.
      Mythologie_, ii. 2462 _sqq._ I cite these passages only to prove
      that the Romans commonly applied the titles "father" and "mother" to
      their deities. The inference that these titles implied paternity or
      maternity is my own, but in the text I have given some reasons for
      thinking that the Romans themselves accepted the implication. Mr. W.
      Warde Fowler, on the other hand, prefers to suppose that the titles
      were employed in a merely figurative sense to "imply the dependence
      of the human citizen upon his divine protector"; but he admits that
      what exactly the Romans understood by _pater_ and _mater_ applied to
      deities is not easy to determine (_The Religious Experience of the
      Roman People_, pp. 155-157). He makes at the same time the important
      observation that the Romans never, so far as he is aware, applied
      the terms Father and Mother to foreign gods, but "always to _di
      indigetes_, those on whom the original Roman stock looked as their
      fellow-citizens and guardians." The limitation is significant and
      seems more naturally explicable on my hypothesis than on that of my
      learned friend.

  598 See _Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum_, xiv. Nos. 2862, 2863; H.
      Dessau, _Inscriptiones Latinae Selectae_, Nos. 3684, 3685; R. Peter,
      _s.v._ "Fortuna," in W. H. Roscher's _Lexikon der griechischen und
      roemischen Mythologie_, i. 1542; G. Wissowa, _Religion und Kultus der
      Roemer_,2 p. 259. I have to thank my learned and candid friend Mr. W.
      Warde Fowler for referring me to this good evidence of Jupiter's
      paternal character.

  599 L. Preller, _Roemische Mythologie_3 (Berlin, 1881-1883), i. 379.

  600 The epithet _Inuus_ applied to Faunus was so understood by the
      ancients, and this suffices to prove the conception they had of the
      god's virility, whether the etymology was right or wrong. See
      Servius, on Virgil, _Aen._ vi. 775, "_Dicitur autem Inuus ab ineundo
      passim cum omnibus animalibus._" As to the title see G. Wissowa,
      _Religion und Kultus der Roemer_,2 p. 211, who, however, rejects the
      ancient etymology and the identification of Inuus with Faunus.

  601 Macrobius, _Saturn._ i. 12. 21-24; Lactantius, _Divin. Instit._ i.
      22; Servius, on Virgil, _Aen._ viii. 314; Plutarch, _Caesar_, 9;
      _id._, _Quaest. Roman._ 20. According to Varro, the goddess was the
      daughter of Faunus (Macrobius, _Saturn._ i. 12. 27); according to
      Sextus Clodius she was his wife (Lactantius, _l.c._; compare
      Arnobius, _Adversus nationes_, v. 18).

  602 Livy, i. 4. 2; Plutarch, _Romulus_, 4; Dionysius Halicarnasensis,
      _Antiquit. Roman._ i. 77.

  603 See _The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings_, ii. 195 _sq._

  604 Plutarch, _Romulus_, 2. Plutarch's authority was Promathion in his
      history of Italy. See _The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings_,
      ii. 196.

  605 Servius, on Virgil, _Aen._ vii. 678.

_  606 The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings_, ii. 230 _sq._

 M209 We must conclude that the Roman gods were thought to be married and
      to beget children.

  607 Such, for example, as the loves of Vertumnus for Pomona (Ovid,
      _Metam._ xiv. 623 _sqq._), of Jupiter for Juturna (Ovid, _Fasti_,
      ii. 585 _sqq._), and of Janus for Carna (Ovid, _Fasti_, vi. 101
      _sqq._) and for Camasene (Servius, on Virgil, _Aen._ viii. 330). The
      water-nymph Juturna beloved by Jupiter is said to have been the
      daughter of the river Vulturnus, the wife of Janus, and the mother
      of Fontus (Arnobius, _Adversus nationes_, iii. 29). Janus in
      particular would seem to have been the theme of many myths, and his
      claim to be a genuine Italian god has never been disputed.

  608 The marriage of the Roman gods has been denied by E. Aust (_Die
      Religion der Roemer_, Muenster i. W. 1899, pp. 19 _sq._) and Professor
      G. Wissowa (_Religion und Kultus der Roemer_,2 pp. 26 _sq._), as well
      as by Mr. W. Warde Fowler. On the other hand, the evidence for it
      has been clearly and concisely stated by L. Preller, _Roemische
      Mythologie_,3 i. 55-57. It is with sincere diffidence that I venture
      to differ on a point of Roman religion from the eminent scholars I
      have named. But without for a moment pitting my superficial
      acquaintance with Roman religion against their deep learning, I
      cannot but think that the single positive testimony of Varro on a
      matter about which he could scarcely be ignorant ought to outweigh
      the opinion of any modern scholar, however learned and able.

 M210 Rule of Greek and Roman ritual that certain offices could only be
      held by boys whose parents were both alive.

_  609 The Hibbert Journal_, April 1907, p. 689. Such a boy was called a
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, "a boy blooming on both sides," the metaphor being
      drawn from a tree which sends out branches on both sides. See Plato,
      _Laws_, xi. 8, p. 927 D; Julius Pollux, iii. 25; Hesychius and
      Suidas, _s.v._ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}.

  610 Festus, p. 93, ed. C. O. Mueller, _s.vv._ "Flaminius" and "Flaminia."
      That certain Roman rites had to be performed by the children of
      living parents is mentioned in general terms by Dionysius of
      Halicarnassus (_Antiquit. Rom._ ii. 22).

 M211 But the rule which excludes orphans from certain sacred offices
      cannot be based on a theory that they are ceremonially unclean
      through the death of their parents.

  611 Plutarch, _Quaestiones Romanae_, 50.

 M212 Examples of the exclusion of orphans from sacred offices.
 M213 Boys and girls of living parents employed in Greek rites at the
      vintage, harvest-home, and sowing.

  612 Proclus, in Photius, _Bibliotheca_, p. 322 A, ed. I. Bekker (Berlin,
      1824); Athenaeus, xi. 92, pp. 495 _sq._; Scholiast on Nicander,
      _Alexipharmaca_, 109. Only the last of these writers mentions that
      the boys had to be {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}. As to this and the following custom
      see A. Mommsen, _Feste der Stadt Athen im Altertum_ (Leipsic, 1898),
      pp. 278 _sqq._; W. Mannhardt, Antike _Wald- und Feldkulte_, pp. 214
      _sqq._

  613 Eustathius, on Homer, _Iliad_, xxii. 495, p. 1283; _Etymologicum
      Magnum_, p. 303. 18 _sqq._, _s.v._ {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}; Plutarch, _Theseus_,
      22. According to a scholiast on Aristophanes (_Plutus_, 1054) the
      branch might be either of olive or laurel.

  614 Scholiast on Aristophanes, _Plutus_, 1054.

  615 O. Kern, _Die Inschriften von Magnesia am Maeander_ (Berlin, 1900),
      No. 98; G. Dittenberger, _Sylloge Inscriptionum Graecarum_,2 vol.
      ii. pp. 246 _sqq._, No. 553. This inscription has been well
      expounded by Prof. M. P. Nilsson (_Griechische Feste_, Leipsic,
      1906, pp. 23-27). I follow him and Dittenberger in regarding the
      month of Artemision, when the bull was sacrificed, as the harvest
      month corresponding to the Attic Thargelion.

  616 J. H. Neumann, "Iets over den landbouw bij de Karo-Bataks,"
      _Mededeelingen van wege het Nederlandsche Zendelinggenootschap_,
      xlvi. (1902) p. 381.

 M214 Boys of living parents employed in the rites of the Arval Brothers.

  617 G. Henzen, _Acta Fratrum Arvalium_ (Berlin, 1874), pp. vi. _sq._,
      cix. cx. cxix. cliii. clix. clxxxvii. 12, 13, 15. As to the
      evergreen oaks and laurels of the grove, see _ib._, pp. 137, 138; as
      to the wreaths of corn-ears, see _ib._, pp. 26, 28; Aulus Gellius,
      vii. 7. 8. That the rites performed by the Arval Brothers were
      intended to make the fields bear corn is expressly stated by Varro
      (_De lingua Latina_, v. 85, "_Fratres Arvales dicti sunt, qui sacra
      publica faciunt propterea ut fruges ferant arva_"). On the Arval
      Brothers and their rites see also L. Preller, _Roemische
      Mythologie_,3 ii. 29 _sqq._; J. Marquardt, _Roemische
      Staatsverwaltung_, iii.2 (Leipsic, 1885) pp. 447-462; G. Wissowa,
      _Religion und Kultus der Roemer_,2 pp. 561 _sqq._; J. B. Carter,
      _s.v._ "Arval Brothers," in J. Hastings's _Encyclopaedia of Religion
      and Ethics_, ii. (Edinburgh, 1909) pp. 7 _sqq._

 M215 In fertility rites the employment of such children is intelligible
      on the principle of sympathetic magic.
 M216 Sons of living parents employed to cut the olive-wreath at Olympia
      and the laurel-wreath at Tempe.

  618 Scholiast on Pindar, _Olymp._ iii. 60.

  619 Pausanias, v. 15. 3.

  620 Plutarch, _Quaestiones Graecae_, 12; _id._, _De defectu oraculorum_,
      15; Aelian, _Varia Historia_, iii. 1; Strabo, ix. 3. 12, p. 422. In
      a note on Pausanias (ii. 7. 7, vol. iii. pp. 53 _sqq._) I have
      described the festival more fully and adduced savage parallels. As
      to the Vale of Tempe see W. M. Leake, _Travels in Northern Greece_
      (London, 1835), iii. 390 _sqq._ The rhetoric of Livy (xliv. 6. 8)
      has lashed the smooth and silent current of the Peneus into a
      roaring torrent.

 M217 Sons of living parents acted as Laurel-bearers at Thebes.

  621 Proclus, in Photius, _Bibliotheca_, ed. I. Bekker, p. 321.

  622 O. Crusius, _s.v._ "Kadmos," in W. H. Roscher's _Lexikon der griech.
      und roem. Mythologie_, ii. 830, 838, 839. On an Etruscan mirror the
      scene of Cadmus's combat with the dragon is surrounded with a wreath
      of laurel (O. Crusius, _op. cit._ ii. 862). My learned friend Mr. A.
      B. Cook was the first to call attention to these vase-paintings in
      confirmation of my view that the Festival of the Laurel-bearing
      celebrated the destruction of the dragon by Cadmus. See A. B. Cook,
      "The European Sky-God," _Folk-lore_, xv. (1904) p. 411, note 224;
      and my note on Pausanias, ix. 10. 4 (vol. v. pp. 41 _sqq._).

  623 I have examined both festivals more closely in a former part of this
      work (_The Dying God_, pp. 78 _sqq._), and have shown grounds for
      holding that the old octennial cycle in Greece, based on an attempt
      to harmonize solar and lunar time, gave rise to an octennial
      festival at which the mythical marriage of the sun and moon was
      celebrated by the dramatic marriage of human actors, who appear
      sometimes to have been the king and queen. In the Laurel-bearing at
      Thebes a clear reference to the astronomical character of the
      festival is contained in the emblems of the sun, moon, stars, and
      days of the year which were carried in procession (Proclus, _l.c._);
      and another reference to it may be detected in the legendary
      marriage of Cadmus and Harmonia. Dr. L. R. Farnell supposes that the
      festival of the Laurel-bearing "belongs to the maypole processions,
      universal in the peasant-religion of Europe, of which the object is
      to quicken the vitalizing powers of the year in the middle of spring
      or at the beginning of summer" (_The Cults of the Greek States_, iv.
      285). But this explanation appears to be inconsistent with the
      octennial period of the festival.

  624 We may conjecture that the Olympic, like the Delphic and the Theban,
      festival was at first octennial, though in historical times it was
      quadrennial. Certainly it seems to have been based on an octennial
      cycle. See the Scholiast on Pindar, _Olymp._ iii. 35 (20); Aug.
      Boeckh on Pindar, _Explicationes_ (Leipsic, 1821), p. 138; L.
      Ideler, _Handbuch der mathematischen und technischen Chronologie_,
      i. 366 _sq._; G. F. Unger, "Zeitrechnung der Griechen und Roemer," in
      Iwan Mueller's _Handbuch der klassischen Altertumswissenschaft_, i.
      (Noerdlingen, 1886) pp. 605 _sq._; K. O. Mueller, _Die Dorier_2
      (Breslau, 1844), ii. 483. The Pythian games, which appear to have
      been at first identical with the Delphic Festival of Crowning, were
      held originally at intervals of eight instead of four years. See the
      Scholiast on Pindar, _Pyth. Argum._ p. 298, ed. A. Boeckh (Leipsic,
      1819); Censorinus, _De die natali_, xviii. 6; compare Eustathius on
      Homer, _Od._ iii. 267, p. 1466. 29. As to the original identity of
      the Pythian games and the Festival of Crowning see Th. Schreiber,
      _Apollon Pythoktonos_ (Leipsic, 1879), pp. 37 _sq._; A. B. Cook,
      "The European Sky-God," _Folk-lore_, xv. (1904) pp. 404 _sq._

 M218 If wreaths were originally amulets, we could understand why children
      of living parents were chosen to cut and wear them.

  625 Antonin Jaussen, _Coutumes des Arabes au pays de Moab_ (Paris,
      1908), p. 382.

  626 R. Parkinson, _Dreissig Jahre in der Suedsee_ (Stuttgart, 1907), pp.
      150-152.

  627 On the use of crowns and wreaths in classical antiquity see W.
      Smith's _Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities_,3 i. 545 _sqq._,
      _s.v._ "Corona"; E. Saglio, _s.v._ "Corona," in Ch. Daremberg et E.
      Saglio's _Dictionnaire des Antiquites Grecques et Romaines_, iii.
      1520 _sqq._ In time of mourning the ancients laid aside crowns
      (Athenaeus, xv. 16, p. 675 A); and so did the king at Athens when he
      tried a homicide (Aristotle, _Constitution of Athens_, 57). I
      mention these cases because they seem to conflict with the theory in
      the text, in accordance with which crowns might be regarded as
      amulets to protect the wearer against ghosts and the pollution of
      blood.

 M219 Children of living parents acting as priest and priestess of Apollo
      and Artemis. At Rome the Vestals and the Salii must be the children
      of parents who were alive at the date of the election. Children of
      living parents employed in expiatory rites at Rome.

  628 Heliodorus, _Aethiopica_, i. 22.

  629 Aulus Gellius, i. 12. 2.

  630 Dionysius Halicarnasensis, _Antiquit. Rom._ ii. 67; Plutarch,
      _Numa_, 10. We read of a Vestal who held office for fifty-seven
      years (Tacitus, _Annals_, ii. 86). It is unlikely that the parents
      of this venerable lady were both alive at the date of her decease.

  631 Dionysius Halicarnasensis, _Antiquit. Rom._ ii. 71.

  632 Macrobius, _Sat._ iii. 14. 14. That the rule as to their parents
      being both alive applied to the Vestals and Salii only at the time
      of their entrance on office is recognized by Marquardt (_Roemische
      Staatsverwaltung_, iii.2 228, note 1).

  633 Cicero, _De haruspicum responso_, 11.

  634 Livy, xxxvii. 3; Macrobius, _Saturn._ i. 6. 13 _sq._; Vopiscus,
      _Aurelianus_, 19 (where the words "_patrimis matrimisque pueris
      carmen indicite_" are omitted from the text by H. Peter).

  635 Tacitus, _Histor._ iv. 53. For the sack and conflagration of the
      Capitol see _id._ iii. 71-75.

  636 Flowing water in Hebrew is called "living water" ({~HEBREW LETTER MEM~}{~HEBREW LETTER YOD~}{~HEBREW LETTER FINAL MEM~} {~HEBREW LETTER HE~}{~HEBREW LETTER YOD~}{~HEBREW LETTER YOD~}{~HEBREW LETTER FINAL MEM~}).

 M220 Children of living parents employed at marriage ceremonies in
      Greece, Italy, Albania, Bulgaria, and Africa.

  637 Festus, _De verborum significatione_, ed. C. O. Mueller (Leipsic,
      1839), pp. 244, 245, _s.v._ "Patrimi et matrimi pueri."

  638 Ovid, _Fasti_, vi. 129 _sq._, 165-168.

  639 Zenobius, _Proverb._ iii. 98; Plutarch, _Proverb._ i. 16;
      Apostolius, _Proverb._ viii. 16 (_Paroemiographi Graeci_, ed.
      Leutsch et Schneidewin, i. 82, 323 _sq._, ii. 429); Eustathius, on
      Homer, _Od._ xii. 357, p. 1726; Photius, _Lexicon_, _s.v._ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}.

  640 C. Wachsmuth, _Das alte Griechenland im neuen_ (Bonn, 1864), pp.
      83-85, 86, 87, 100 _sq._

  641 J. G. von Hahn, _Albanesische Studien_ (Jena, 1854), i. 144, 146.

  642 F. S. Krauss, _Sitte und Brauch der Sued-Slaven_ (Vienna, 1885), pp.
      438, 441.

  643 Captain J. S. King, "Notes on the Folk-lore and some Social Customs
      of the Western Somali Tribes," _The Folk-lore Journal_, vi. (1888)
      p. 124. Compare Ph. Paulitschke, _Ethnographie Nordost-Afrikas, die
      materielle Cultur der Danakil, Galla und Somal_ (Berlin, 1893), p.
      200.

  644 The _Grihya-Sutras_, translated by H. Oldenberg, Part ii. (Oxford,
      1892) p. 50 (_The Sacred Books of the East_, vol. xxx.).

 M221 Children of living parents apparently supposed to impart life and
      longevity. Child of living parents employed in funeral rites.

  645 Rev. William Ellis, _History of Madagascar_ (London, N.D.), i. 151
      _sq._

  646 Rev. W. Ellis, _op. cit._ i. 180.

  647 J. Pearse, "Customs connected with Death and Burial among the
      Sihanaka," _The Antananarivo Annual and Madagascar Magazine_, vol.
      ii. (a reprint of the second four numbers, 1881-1884) (Antananarivo,
      1896) p. 152.

 M222 The use of children of living parents in ritual may be explained by
      a notion that they are fuller of life and therefore luckier than
      orphans.

  648 A. C. Hollis, _The Masai_ (Oxford, 1905), p. 299.

  649 Lucian, _Hermotimus_, 57.

  650 A fragmentary list of these youths is preserved in an Athenian
      inscription of the year 91 or 90 B.C. See Ch. Michel, _Recueil
      d'Inscriptions Grecques_, Supplement, i. (Paris, 1912) p. 104, No.
      1544.

  651 Aelius Lampridius, _Antoninus Heliogabalus_, viii. 1 _sq._ The
      historian thinks that the monster chose these victims merely for the
      pleasure of rending the hearts of both the parents.

 M223 The Bechuanas use the hide of a sacrificial ox at founding a new
      town.

  652 See above, vol. i. p. 184.

  653 Rev. W. C. Willoughby, "Notes on the Totemism of the Becwana,"
      _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xxxv. (1905) pp. 303
      _sq._

  654 For more evidence of the sanctity of cattle among the Bechuanas see
      the Rev. W. C. Willoughby, _op. cit._ pp. 301 _sqq._

 M224 The custom may explain the legend of the foundation of Carthage and
      similar tales.

  655 T. Arbousset et F. Daumas, _Voyage d'Exploration au Nord-est de la
      Colonie du Cap de Bonne-Esperance_ (Paris, 1842), p. 49.

  656 Virgil, _Aen._ i. 367 _sq._, with the commentary of Servius; Justin,
      xviii. 5. 9. Thongs cut from the hide of the ox sacrificed to the
      four-handed Apollo were given as prizes. See Hesychius, _s.v._
      {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}; compare _id._, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}. Whether the Greek custom was
      related to those discussed in the text seems doubtful. I have to
      thank my colleague and friend Professor R. C. Bosanquet for calling
      my attention to these passages of Hesychius.

  657 Saxo Grammaticus, _Historia Danica_, ix. vol. i. pp. 462 _sq._ ed.
      P. E. Mueller (Copenhagen, 1839-1858) (where the hide employed is
      that of a horse); J. Grimm, _Deutsche Rechtsalterthuemer_3
      (Goettingen, 1881), pp. 90 _sq._ Compare R. Koehler, "Sage von
      Landerwerbung durch zerschnittene Haeute," _Orient und Occident_,
      iii. 185-187.

  658 Lieutenant-Colonel James Tod, _Annals and Antiquities of
      Rajast'han_, ii. (London, 1832) p. 235; W. Radloff, _Proben der
      Volkslitteratur der tuerkischen Staemme Sued-Sibiriens_, iv. (St.
      Petersburg, 1872) p. 179; A. Bastian, _Die Voelker des oestlichen
      Asien_ (Berlin, 1884-1889), i. 25, iv. 367 _sq._; T. Stamford
      Raffles, _History of Java_ (London, 1817), ii. 153 _sq._; R. van
      Eck, "Schetsen van het eiland Bali," _Tijdschrift voor
      Nederlandsch-Indie_, Feb. 1880, p. 117. The substance of all these
      stories, except the first, was given by me in a note on
      "Hide-measured Lands," _The Classical Review_, ii. (1888) p. 322.

  659 J. Grimm, _Deutsche Rechtsalterthuemer_, pp. 538 _sq._

 M225 The ox whose hide is used is blinded in order that the new town may
      be invisible to its enemies.

  660 Rev. W. C. Willoughby, "Notes on the Totemism of the Becwana,"
      _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xxxv. (1905) p. 304.

  661 Rev. E. Gottschling, "The Bawenda, a Sketch of their History and
      Customs," _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, xxxv. (1905)
      pp. 368 _sq._

 M226 This explanation of the use of a blinded ox is confirmed by a Caffre
      custom.

  662 T. Arbousset et F. Daumas, _Relation d'un Voyage d'Exploration_, pp.
      561-565.

  663 Above, pp. 204 _sqq._

 M227 In the Pelew Islands a man who is inspired by a goddess wears female
      attire and is treated as a woman. This pretended change of sex under
      the inspiration of a female spirit may explain a widespread custom
      whereby men dress and live like women.

  664 J. Kubary, "Die Religion der Pelauer," in A. Bastian's _Allerlei aus
      Volks- und Menschenkunde_ (Berlin, 1888), i. 35.

  665 C. A. L. M. Schwaner, _Borneo_ (Amsterdam, 1853), i. 186; M. T. H.
      Perelaer, _Ethnographische Beschrijving der Dajaks_ (Zalt-Bommel,
      1870), pp. 32-35; Captain Rodney Mundy, _Narrative of Events in
      Borneo and Celebes from the Journals of James Brooke, Esq., Rajah of
      Sarawak_ (London, 1848), ii. 65 _sq._; Charles Brooke, _Ten Years in
      Sarawak_ (London, 1866), ii. 280; H. Low, _Sarawak_ (London, 1848),
      pp. 174-177; The Bishop of Labuan, "On the Wild Tribes of the
      North-West Coast of Borneo," _Transactions of the Ethnological
      Society of London_, N.S. ii. (1863) pp. 31 _sq._; Spenser St. John,
      _Life in the Forests of the Far East_2 (London, 1863), i. 73. In
      Sarawak these men are called _manangs_, in Dutch Borneo they are
      called _bazirs_ or _bassirs_.

  666 Captain R. Mundy, _op. cit._ i. 82 _sq._; B. F. Matthes, _Over de
      Bissoes of heidensche Priesters en Priesteressen der Boeginezen_
      (Amsterdam, 1872), pp. 1 _sq._

  667 Th. Falkner, _Description of Patagonia_ (Hereford, 1774), p. 117; J.
      Hutchinson, "The Tehuelche Indians of Patagonia," _Transactions of
      the Ethnological Society of London_, N.S. vii. (1869) p. 323. Among
      the Guaycurus of Southern Brazil there is a class of men who dress
      as women and do only women's work, such as spinning, weaving, and
      making pottery. But so far as I know, they are not said to be
      sorcerers or priests. See C. F. Ph. v. Martius, _Zur Ethnographie
      Amerikas zumal Brasiliens_ (Leipsic, 1867), pp. 74 _sq._

  668 G. H. von Langsdorff, _Reise um die Welt_ (Frankfort, 1812), ii. 43;
      H. J. Holmberg, "Ueber die Voelker des Russischen Amerika," _Acta
      Societatis Scientiarum Fennicae_, iv. (Helsingfors, 1856) pp. 400
      _sq._; W. H. Dall, _Alaska_ (London, 1870), pp. 402 _sq._; Ross Cox,
      _The Columbia River_2 (London, 1832), i. 327 _sqq._; Father G.
      Boscana, "Chinigchinich," in [A. Robinson's] _Life in California_
      (New York, 1846), pp. 283 _sq._; S. Powers, _Tribes of California_
      (Washington, 1877), pp. 132 _sq._; H. H. Bancroft, _Native Races of
      the Pacific States_ (London, 1875-1876), i. 82, 92, 415, 585, 774;
      Hontan, _Memoires de l'Amerique Septentrionale_ (Amsterdam, 1705),
      p. 144; J. F. Lafitau, _Moeurs des Sauvages Ameriquains_ (Paris,
      1724), i. 52-54; Charlevoix, _Histoire de la Nouvelle France_
      (Paris, 1744), vi. 4 _sq._; W. H. Keating, _Expedition to the Source
      of St. Peter's River_ (London, 1825), i. 227 _sq._, 436; George
      Catlin, _North American Indians_4 (London, 1844), ii. 214 _sq._;
      Maximilian Prinz zu Wied, _Reise in das innere Nord-America_
      (Coblentz, 1839-1841), ii. 132 _sq._; D. G. Brinton, _The Lenape and
      their Legends_ (Philadelphia, 1885), pp. 109 _sq._; J. G. Mueller,
      _Geschichte der amerikanischen Urreligionen_2 (Bale, 167), pp. 44
      _sq._, 418. Among the tribes which permitted the custom were the
      Illinois, Mandans, Dacotas (Sioux), Sauks, and Foxes, to the east of
      the Rocky Mountains, the Yukis, Pomos, and Pitt River Indians of
      California, and the Koniags of Alaska.

  669 Lieut. W. Foley, "Journal of a Tour through the Island of Rambree,"
      _Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal_, iv. (Calcutta, 1835) p.
      199.

  670 Monier Williams, _Religious Life and Thought in India_ (London,
      1883), p. 136. Compare J. A. Dubois, _Moeurs, Institutions, et
      Ceremonies des Peuples de l'Inde_ (Paris, 1825), i. 439.

  671 O. Dapper, _Description de l'Afrique_ (Amsterdam, 1686), p. 467.

  672 J. B. Labat, _Relation historique de l'Ethiopie Occidentale_ (Paris,
      1732), ii. 195-199. Wherever men regularly dress as women, we may
      suspect that a superstitious motive underlies the custom even though
      our authorities do not mention it. The custom is thus reported among
      the Italmenes of Kamtschatka (G. W. Steller, _Beschreibung von dem
      Lande Kamtschatka_, Frankfort and Leipsic, 1774, pp. 350 _sq._), the
      Lhoosais of South-Eastern India (Capt. T. H. Lewin, _Wild Races of
      South-Eastern India_, London, 1870, p. 255), and the Nogay or
      Mongutay of the Caucasus (J. Reinegg, _Beschreibung des Kaukasus_,
      St. Petersburg, Gotha, and Hildesheim, 1796-1797, i. 270). Among the
      Lhoosais or Lushais not only do men sometimes dress like women and
      consort and work with them (T. H. Lewin, _l.c._), but, on the other
      hand, women sometimes dress and live like men, adopting masculine
      habits in all respects. When one of these unsexed women was asked
      her reasons for adopting a masculine mode of life, she at first
      denied that she was a woman, but finally confessed "that her
      _khuavang_ was not good, and so she became a man." See the extract
      from the _Pioneer Mail_ of May 1890, quoted in _The Indian
      Antiquary_, xxxii. (1903) p. 413. The permanent transformation of
      women into men seems to be much rarer than the converse change of
      men into women.

 M228 Such transformations seem to have been often carried out in
      obedience to intimations received in dreams or in ecstasy.
      Transformed medicine-men among the Sea Dyaks and Chukchees.

  673 Maximilian Prinz zu Wied, _Reise in das innere Nord-America_, ii.
      133.

  674 W. H. Keating, _Expedition to the Source of St. Peter's River_, i.
      227 _sq._

  675 Rev. J. Owen Dorsey, "A Study of Siouan Cults," _Eleventh Annual
      Report of the Bureau of Ethnology_ (Washington, 1894), p. 378.

  676 E. H. Gomes, _Seventeen Years among the Sea Dyaks of Borneo_
      (London, 1911), p. 179; Ch. Hose and W. McDougall, _The Pagan Tribes
      of Borneo_ (London, 1912), ii. 116.

  677 Waldemar Bogoras, _The Chukchee_ (Leyden and New York, 1904-1909),
      pp. 448-453 (_The Jesup North Pacific Expedition_, vol. vii.;
      _Memoir of the American Museum of Natural History_).

  678 Rev. A. L. Kitching, _On the Backwaters of the Nile_ (London, 1912),
      p. 239, with the plate.

 M229 Women inspired by a god dress as men.

  679 For this information I have to thank my friend the Rev. J. Roscoe.
      He tells me that according to tradition Mukasa used to give his
      oracles by the mouth of a man, not of a woman. To wear two bark
      cloths, one on each shoulder, is a privilege of royalty and of
      priests. The ordinary man wears a single bark cloth knotted on one
      shoulder only. With the single exception mentioned in the text,
      women in Uganda never wear bark cloths fastened over the shoulders.

  680 Rev. J. Roscoe, _The Baganda_ (London, 1911), p. 297.

 M230 The theory of inspiration by a female spirit perhaps explains the
      legends of the effeminate Sardanapalus and the effeminate Hercules,
      both of whom may have been thought to be possessed by the great
      Asiatic goddess Astarte or her equivalent.

_  681 The Scapegoat_, pp. 387 _sqq._

  682 Catullus, lxiii. This is in substance the explanation of the custom
      given by Dr. L. R. Farnell, who observes that "the mad worshipper
      endeavoured thus against nature to assimilate himself more closely
      to his goddess" ("Sociological hypotheses concerning the position of
      women in ancient religion," _Archiv fuer Religionswissenschaft_, vii.
      (1904) p. 93). The theory is not necessarily inconsistent with my
      conjecture as to the magical use made of the severed parts. See
      above, vol. i. pp. 268 _sq._

  683 Plutarch, _Quaestiones Graecae_, 58.

  684 Apollodorus, _Bibliotheca_, ii. 6. 2 _sq._; Athenaeus, xii. 11, pp.
      515 F-516 B; Diodorus Siculus, iv. 31; Joannes Lydus, _De
      magistratibus_, iii. 64; Lucian, _Dialogi deorum_, xiii. 2; Ovid,
      _Heroides_, ix. 55 _sqq._; Statius, _Theb._ x. 646-649.

  685 On Semiramis in this character see above, vol. i. pp. 176 _sq._;
      _The Scapegoat_, pp. 369 _sqq._

  686 Joannes Lydus, _De mensibus_, iv. 46, p. 81, ed. I. Bekker (Bonn,
      1837). Yet at Rome, by an apparent contradiction, women might not be
      present at a sacrifice offered to Hercules (Propertius, v. 9. 67-70;
      see further above, vol. i. p. 113, note 1), and at Gades women might
      not enter the temple of Melcarth, the Tyrian Hercules (Silius
      Italicus, iii. 22). There was a Greek proverb, "A woman does not go
      to a temple of Hercules" (Macarius, _Cent._ iii. 11; _Paroemiographi
      Graeci_, ed. Leutsch et Schneidewin, i. 392, ii. 154). Roman women
      did not swear by Hercules (Aulus Gellius, xi. 6).

  687 Lucian, _Calumniae non temere credendum_, 16; Hesychius and Suidas,
      _s.v._ {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}. At the Athenian vintage festival of the
      Oschophoria a chorus of singers was led in procession by two young
      men dressed exactly like girls; they carried branches of vines laden
      with ripe clusters. The procession was said to be in honour of
      Dionysus and Athena or Ariadne. See Proclus, quoted by Photius,
      _Bibliotheca_, p. 322_a_, ed. I. Bekker (Berlin, 1824); Plutarch,
      _Theseus_, 23.

  688 Clement of Alexandria, _Protrept._ ii. 34, pp. 29 _sq._, ed. Potter;
      Arnobius, _Adversus Nationes_, v. 28; _Mythographi Graeci_, ed. A.
      Westermann (Brunswick, 1843), p. 368; J. Tzetzes, _Scholia on
      Lycophron_, 212. As to the special association of the fig with
      Dionysus, see Athenaeus, iii. 14, p. 78. As to the artificial
      fertilization of the fig, see _The Magic Art and the Evolution of
      Kings_, ii. 314 _sq._ On the type of the effeminate Dionysus in art
      see E. Thraemer, _s.v._ "Dionysos," in W. H. Roscher's _Lexikon der
      griech. und roem. Mythologie_, i. 1135 _sqq._

  689 Tacitus, _Germania_, 43. Perhaps, as Professor Chadwick thinks, this
      priest may have succeeded to a priestess when the change from
      mother-kin to father-kin took place. See H. M. Chadwick, _The Origin
      of the English Nation_ (Cambridge, 1907), p. 339.

  690 In Cyprus there was a bearded and masculine image of Venus (probably
      Astarte) in female attire: according to Philochorus, the deity thus
      represented was the moon, and sacrifices were offered to him or her
      by men clad as women, and by women clad as men. See Macrobius,
      _Saturn._ iii. 7. 2 _sq._; Servius on Virgil, _Aen._ ii. 632. A
      similar exchange of garments took place between Argive men and women
      at the festival of the Hybristica, which fell in the month of
      Hermes, either at the new moon or on the fourth of the month. See
      Plutarch, _De mulierum virtutibus_, 4; Polyaenus, viii. 33. On the
      thirteenth of January flute-players paraded the streets of Rome in
      the garb of women (Plutarch, _Quaestiones Romanae_, 55).

  691 For traces of mother-kin in Lydia see _The Magic Art and the
      Evolution of Kings_, ii. 281 _sq._ With regard to Cos we know from
      inscriptions that at Halasarna all who shared in the sacred rites of
      Apollo and Hercules had to register the names of their father, their
      mother, and of their mother's father; from which it appears that
      maternal descent was counted more important than paternal descent.
      See H. Collitz und F. Bechtel, _Sammlung der griechischen
      Dialekt-Inschriften_, iii. 1 (Goettingen, 1899), pp. 382-393, Nos.
      3705, 3706; G. Dittenberger, _Sylloge Inscriptionum Graecarnum_,2
      vol. ii. pp. 396 _sqq._, No. 614; Ch. Michel, _Recueil
      d'Inscriptions Grecques_, pp. 796 _sq._, No. 1003; J. Toepffer,
      _Attische Genealogie_ (Berlin, 1889), pp. 192 _sq._ On traces of
      mother-kin in the legend and ritual of Hercules see A. B. Cook, "Who
      was the wife of Hercules?" _The Classical Review_, xx. (1906) pp.
      376 _sq._ Mr. Cook conjectures that a Sacred Marriage of Hercules
      and Hera was celebrated in Cos. We know in fact from a Coan
      inscription that a bed was made and a marriage celebrated beside the
      image of Hercules, and it seems probable that the rite was that of a
      Sacred Marriage, though some scholars interpret it merely of an
      ordinary human wedding. See G. Dittenberger, _Sylloge Inscriptionum
      Graecarum_,2 vol. ii. pp. 577 _sqq._, No. 734; R. Dareste, B.
      Haussoulier, Th. Reinach, _Recueil d'Inscriptions Juridiques
      Grecques_, Deuxieme Serie (Paris, 1898), No. xxiv. B, pp. 94 _sqq._;
      Fr. Back, _De Graecorum caerimoniis in quibus homines deorum vice
      fungebantur_ (Berlin, 1883), pp. 14-24.

 M231 But the exchange of costume between men and women has probably been
      practised also from other motives, for example, from a wish to avert
      the Evil Eye. This motive seems to explain the interchange of male
      and female costume between bride and bridegroom at marriage.

_  692 Panjab Notes and Queries_, i. (1884) §§ 219, 869, 1007, 1029; _id._
      ii. (1885) §§ 344, 561, 570; _Journal of the Anthropological Society
      of Bombay_, i. (1886) p. 123; _North Indian Notes and Queries_, iii.
      (1893) § 99. Compare my notes, "The Youth of Achilles," _The
      Classical Review_, vii. (1893) pp. 292 _sq._; and on Pausanias, i.
      22. 6 (vol. ii. p. 266).

  693 Plutarch, _Quaestiones Graecae_, 58.

  694 Plutarch, _Lycurgus_, 15.

  695 Plutarch, _De mulierum virtutibus_, 4.

  696 B. F. Matthes, _Bijdragen tot de Ethnologie van Zuid-Celebes_ (The
      Hague, 1875), p. 35. The marriage ceremonies here described are
      especially those of princes.

  697 Sepp, _Altbayerischer Sagenschatz_ (Munich, 1876), p. 232, referring
      to Maimonides.

  698 E. Thurston, _Ethnographic Notes in Southern India_ (Madras, 1906),
      p. 3. The pseudo-bridegroom is apparently the bride in masculine
      attire.

_  699 Central Provinces, Ethnographic Survey_, iii. _Draft Articles on
      Forest Tribes_ (Allahabad, 1907), p. 31.

_  700 Central Provinces, Ethnographic Survey_, i. _Draft Articles on
      Hindustani Castes_ (Allahabad, 1907), p. 48.

  701 Elsewhere I have conjectured that the wearing of female attire by
      the bridegroom at marriage may mark a transition from mother-kin to
      father-kin, the intention of the custom being to transfer to the
      father those rights over the children which had previously been
      enjoyed by the mother alone. See _Totemism_ (Edinburgh, 1887), pp.
      78 _sq._; _Totemism and Exogamy_, i. 73. But I am now disposed to
      think that the other explanation suggested in the text is the more
      probable.

 M232 The same explanation may account for the interchange of male and
      female costume between other persons at marriage.

_  702 Central Provinces, Ethnographic Survey_, iii. _Draft Articles on
      Forest Tribes_ (Allahabad, 1907), p. 31.

_  703 Central Provinces, Ethnographic Survey_, iii. _Draft Articles on
      Forest Tribes_ (Allahabad, 1907), p. 48.

_  704 Central Provinces, Ethnographic Survey_, vi. _Draft Articles on
      Hindustani Castes_, Second Series (Allahabad, 1911), p. 50.

  705 Compare W. Crooke, _Popular Religion and Folk-lore of Northern
      India_ (Westminster, 1896), ii. 8, who proposes, with great
      probability, to explain on a similar principle, the European
      marriage custom known as the False Bride. For more instances of the
      interchange of male and female costume at marriage between persons
      other than the bridegroom see Capt. J. S. King, "Social Customs of
      the Western Somali Tribes," _The Folk-lore Journal_, vi. (1888) p.
      122; J. P. Farler, "The Usambara Country in East Africa,"
      _Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society_, N.S. i. (1879) p.
      92; Major J. Biddulph, _Tribes of the Hindoo Koosh_ (Calcutta,
      1880), pp. 78, 80; G. A. Grierson, _Bihar Peasant Life_ (Calcutta,
      1885), p. 365; A. de Gubernatis, _Usi Nuziali in Italia_2 (Milan,
      1878), p. 190; P. Sebillot, _Coutumes Populaires de la
      Haute-Bretagne_ (Paris, 1886), p. 438.

  706 L. Lloyd, _Peasant Life in Sweden_ (London, 1870), p. 85.

  707 J. Liorel, _Kabylie du Jurjura_ (Paris, N. D.), p. 406.

 M233 Women's dress assumed by men for the purpose of deceiving demons and
      ghosts.

  708 Rev. J. H. Weeks, _Among Congo Cannibals_ (London, 1913), p. 267.
      Compare _id._, "Anthropological Notes on the Bangala of the Upper
      Congo River," _Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute_, xl.
      (1910) pp. 370 _sq._

  709 Lieut.-Colonel J. Shakespear, "The Kuki-Lushai Clans," _Journal of
      the Royal Anthropological Institute_, xxxix. (1909) pp. 380 _sq._

 M234 Exchange of costume between the sexes at circumcision.

  710 A. C. Hollis, _The Masai_ (Oxford, 1905), p. 298.

  711 A. C. Hollis, _The Nandi_ (Oxford, 1909), pp. 53-58. Mr. Hollis
      informs me that among the Akikuyu, another tribe of British East
      Africa, the custom of boys dressing as girls at or after
      circumcision is also observed.

 M235 Other cases of the interchange of male and female costume.

  712 Plutarch, _Consolatio ad Apollonium_, 22; Valerius Maximus, ii. 6.
      13.

  713 Plutarch, _l.c._

  714 J. Kreemer, "De Loeboes in Mandailing," _Bijdragen tot de Taal-
      Land- en Volkenkunde van Nederlandsch-Indie_, lxvi. (1912) p. 317.

 M236 Conclusion.
 M237 The systematic prostitution of unmarried girls for hire in the Pelew
      Islands seems to be a form of sexual communism and of
      group-marriage.

  715 J. Kubary, _Die socialen Einrichtungen der Pelauer_, pp. 50 _sq._

  716 J. Kubary, _op. cit._ p. 51.

  717 J. Kubary, _op. cit._ pp. 51-53, 91-98.

 M238 The custom supports by analogy the derivation of the similar Asiatic
      custom from a similar state of society.

  718 See above, vol. i. pp. 39 _sqq._

 M239 Somewhat similar custom observed in Yap, one of the Caroline
      Islands.

  719 F. W. Christian, _The Caroline Islands_ (London, 1899), pp. 290
      _sq._ Compare W. H. Furness, _The Island of Stone Money, Uap of the
      Carolines_ (Philadelphia and London, 1910), pp. 46 _sqq._

  720 W. H. Furness, _op. cit._ pp. 46 _sq._

  721 W. H. Furness, _op. cit._ pp. 49 _sq._

 M240 In the Pelew Islands the heir to the chieftainship of a clan has a
      formal right to slay his predecessor.

  722 J. Kubary, _Die socialen Einrichtungen der Pelauer_, p. 43. The
      writer does not translate the word _tobolbel_, but the context
      sufficiently explains its meaning.

 M241 The plot of death and its execution.
 M242 Ceremonies observed before the assassin is recognized as chief in
      room of his victim.
 M243 But the formalities which a chief has to observe at his accession
      are much more complicated and tedious if he has not murdered his
      predecessor.

  723 J. Kubary, _Die socialen Einrichtungen der Pelauer_, pp. 43-45,
      75-78.

 M244 The Pelew custom shows how regicide may be regarded as an ordinary
      incident of constitutional government.





***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GOLDEN BOUGH (THIRD EDITION, VOL. 6 OF 12)***



CREDITS


January 26, 2013

            Project Gutenberg TEI edition 1
            Produced by David Edwards, David King, and the Online
            Distributed Proofreading Team at <http://www.pgdp.net/>. (This
            file was produced from images generously made available by The
            Internet Archive.)



A WORD FROM PROJECT GUTENBERG


This file should be named 41923.txt or 41923.zip.

This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:


    http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/4/1/9/2/41923/


Updated editions will replace the previous one -- the old editions will be
renamed.

Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no one
owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation (and
you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without permission
and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth in the
General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to copying and
distributing Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works to protect the Project
Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered
trademark, and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you
receive specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of
this eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given away
-- you may do practically _anything_ with public domain eBooks.
Redistribution is subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
redistribution.



THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE


_Please read this before you distribute or use this work._

To protect the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} mission of promoting the free
distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work (or
any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project Gutenberg"),
you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~}
License (available with this file or online at
http://www.gutenberg.org/license).


Section 1.


General Terms of Use & Redistributing Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works


1.A.


By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic work,
you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to and accept all the
terms of this license and intellectual property (trademark/copyright)
agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all the terms of this
agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy all copies of
Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works in your possession. If you paid a fee
for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic work
and you do not agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement, you may
obtain a refund from the person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set
forth in paragraph 1.E.8.


1.B.


"Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be used on or
associated in any way with an electronic work by people who agree to be
bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few things that you can
do with most Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works even without complying
with the full terms of this agreement. See paragraph 1.C below. There are
a lot of things you can do with Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works if you
follow the terms of this agreement and help preserve free future access to
Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.


1.C.


The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation" or
PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an individual
work is in the public domain in the United States and you are located in
the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from copying,
distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative works based on
the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of
course, we hope that you will support the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} mission of
promoting free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project
Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for
keeping the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} name associated with the work. You can
easily comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License when you
share it without charge with others.


1.D.


The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern what you
can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in a constant
state of change. If you are outside the United States, check the laws of
your country in addition to the terms of this agreement before
downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or creating
derivative works based on this work or any other Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} work.
The Foundation makes no representations concerning the copyright status of
any work in any country outside the United States.


1.E.


Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:


1.E.1.


The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate access
to, the full Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License must appear prominently whenever
any copy of a Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} work (any work on which the phrase
"Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project Gutenberg"
is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, copied or
distributed:


    This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
    almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away
    or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License
    included with this eBook or online at http://www.gutenberg.org


1.E.2.


If an individual Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic work is derived from the
public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is posted with
permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied and
distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees or
charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work with the
phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you
must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7
or obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~}
trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.


1.E.3.


If an individual Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic work is posted with the
permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution must comply
with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional terms imposed
by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked to the Project
Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License for all works posted with the permission of the
copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.


1.E.4.


Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License
terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this work or any
other work associated with Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~}.


1.E.5.


Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this electronic
work, or any part of this electronic work, without prominently displaying
the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with active links or immediate
access to the full terms of the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License.


1.E.6.


You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, compressed,
marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any word
processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} work in a format other than
"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version posted
on the official Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} web site (http://www.gutenberg.org),
you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other form.
Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License as
specified in paragraph 1.E.1.


1.E.7.


Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, performing,
copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} works unless you comply
with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.


1.E.8.


You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing access to or
distributing Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works provided that

    - You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
      the use of Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} works calculated using the method you
      already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed to
      the owner of the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} trademark, but he has agreed to
      donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project Gutenberg
      Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid within 60
      days following each date on which you prepare (or are legally
      required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty payments
      should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project Gutenberg
      Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in Section 4,
      "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
      Archive Foundation."

    - You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
      you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
      does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License.
      You must require such a user to return or destroy all copies of the
      works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue all use of and
      all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} works.

    - You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
      any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
      electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
      receipt of the work.

    - You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
      distribution of Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} works.


1.E.9.


If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic
work or group of works on different terms than are set forth in this
agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from both the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael Hart, the owner of the
Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in
Section 3 below.


1.F.


1.F.1.


Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable effort to
identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread public domain
works in creating the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} collection. Despite these
efforts, Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works, and the medium on which they
may be stored, may contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to,
incomplete, inaccurate or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright
or other intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk
or other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot
be read by your equipment.


1.F.2.


LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES -- Except for the "Right of
Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~}
trademark, and any other party distributing a Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~}
electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all liability to you for
damages, costs and expenses, including legal fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE
NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH
OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE
FOUNDATION, THE TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT
WILL NOT BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL,
PUNITIVE OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY
OF SUCH DAMAGE.


1.F.3.


LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND -- If you discover a defect in this
electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can receive a refund
of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a written explanation to
the person you received the work from. If you received the work on a
physical medium, you must return the medium with your written explanation.
The person or entity that provided you with the defective work may elect
to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a refund. If you received the
work electronically, the person or entity providing it to you may choose
to give you a second opportunity to receive the work electronically in
lieu of a refund. If the second copy is also defective, you may demand a
refund in writing without further opportunities to fix the problem.


1.F.4.


Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth in
paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS,' WITH NO OTHER
WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.


1.F.5.


Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied warranties or the
exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. If any disclaimer or
limitation set forth in this agreement violates the law of the state
applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be interpreted to make
the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by the applicable state
law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any provision of this agreement
shall not void the remaining provisions.


1.F.6.


INDEMNITY -- You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the trademark
owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone providing copies of
Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works in accordance with this agreement, and
any volunteers associated with the production, promotion and distribution
of Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs
and expenses, including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from
any of the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of
this or any Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} work, (b) alteration, modification, or
additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} work, and (c) any Defect
you cause.


Section  2.


           Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~}


Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} is synonymous with the free distribution of electronic
works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers including
obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists because of the
efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from people in all walks
of life.

Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the assistance
they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~}'s goals and ensuring
that the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} collection will remain freely available for
generations to come. In 2001, the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
Foundation was created to provide a secure and permanent future for
Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} and future generations. To learn more about the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations
can help, see Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation web page at
http://www.pglaf.org.


Section 3.


   Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation


The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the state of
Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal Revenue Service.
The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification number is 64-6221541.
Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf. Contributions to the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full
extent permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.

The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr.
S. Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809 North
1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact information
can be found at the Foundation's web site and official page at
http://www.pglaf.org

For additional contact information:


    Dr. Gregory B. Newby
    Chief Executive and Director
    gbnewby@pglaf.org


Section 4.


  Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
                                Foundation


Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} depends upon and cannot survive without wide spread
public support and donations to carry out its mission of increasing the
number of public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
in machine readable form accessible by the widest array of equipment
including outdated equipment. Many small donations ($1 to $5,000) are
particularly important to maintaining tax exempt status with the IRS.

The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United States.
Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a considerable
effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up with these
requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations where we have not
received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND DONATIONS or
determine the status of compliance for any particular state visit
http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate

While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we have
not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition against
accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who approach us
with offers to donate.

International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make any
statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from outside the
United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.

Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation methods
and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other ways including
checks, online payments and credit card donations. To donate, please
visit: http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate


Section 5.


      General Information About Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works.


Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~}
concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared with
anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~}
eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.

Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} eBooks are often created from several printed editions,
all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S. unless a copyright
notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily keep eBooks in compliance
with any particular paper edition.

Each eBook is in a subdirectory of the same number as the eBook's eBook
number, often in several formats including plain vanilla ASCII, compressed
(zipped), HTML and others.

Corrected _editions_ of our eBooks replace the old file and take over the
old filename and etext number. The replaced older file is renamed.
_Versions_ based on separate sources are treated as new eBooks receiving
new filenames and etext numbers.

Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:


    http://www.gutenberg.org


This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~}, including how
to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation,
how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email
newsletter to hear about new eBooks.






***FINIS***