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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 18:13:26 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 18:13:26 -0700
commitbcf3f5c51f26fc0234db3556d310a1b3bcad4711 (patch)
tree215ba6fba3ef0a3d4a9018eba8cfc6565e845a22 /67214-h
initial commit of ebook 67214HEADmain
Diffstat (limited to '67214-h')
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+ </head>
+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 67214 ***</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_000b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_000b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">IN THE SAURIAN AGE, WHEN THE WORLD’S INHABITANTS WERE
+ GIGANTIC REPTILES</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_000b_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="frontmatter">
+
+<h1>The Book of History</h1>
+
+<p class="s2 center old-style">A History of all Nations</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE PRESENT</p>
+
+<p class="s3 center">WITH OVER 8000 ILLUSTRATIONS</p>
+
+<p class="center mtop2">WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY<br />
+<span class="s3">VISCOUNT BRYCE, <span class="smaller">P.C.</span>,
+<span class="smaller">D.C.L.</span>, <span class="smaller">LL.D.</span>,
+<span class="smaller">F.R.S.</span></span></p>
+
+<p class="center mtop2 mbot1">CONTRIBUTING AUTHORS</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>W. M. Flinders Petrie, LL.D., F.R.S</b><br />
+<span class="s6">UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, LONDON</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Hans F. Helmolt, Ph.D.</b><br />
+<span class="s6">EDITOR, GERMAN “HISTORY OF THE WORLD”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Stanley Lane-Poole, M.A., Litt.D.</b><br />
+<span class="s6">TRINITY COLLEGE, DUBLIN</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Robert Nisbet Bain</b><br />
+<span class="s6">ASSISTANT LIBRARIAN, BRITISH MUSEUM</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Hugo Winckler, Ph.D.</b><br />
+<span class="s6">UNIVERSITY OF BERLIN</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Archibald H. Sayce, D.Litt., LL.D.</b><br />
+<span class="s6">OXFORD UNIVERSITY</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Alfred Russel Wallace, LL.D., F.R.S.</b><br />
+<span class="s6">AUTHOR, “MAN’S PLACE IN THE UNIVERSE”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Sir William Lee-Warner, K.C.S.I.</b><br />
+<span class="s6">MEMBER OF COUNCIL OF INDIA</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Holland Thompson, Ph.D.</b><br />
+<span class="s6">THE COLLEGE OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>W. Stewart Wallace, M.A.</b><br />
+<span class="s6">UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Maurice Maeterlinck</b><br />
+<span class="s6">ESSAYIST, POET, PHILOSOPHER</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Dr. Emile J. Dillon</b><br />
+<span class="s6">UNIVERSITY OF ST. PETERSBURG</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Arthur Mee</b><br />
+<span class="s6">EDITOR, “THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Sir Harry H. Johnston, K.C.B., D.Sc.</b><br />
+<span class="s6">LATE COMMISSIONER FOR UGANDA</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Johannes Ranke</b><br />
+<span class="s6">UNIVERSITY OF MUNICH</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>K. G. Brandis, Ph.D.</b><br />
+<span class="s6">UNIVERSITY OF JENA</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>And many other Specialists</b></p>
+
+<p class="s3 center mtop2"><b>Volume I</b></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center"><b>MAN AND THE UNIVERSE</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 center">The World before History<br />
+The Great Steps in Man’s Development<br />
+Birth of Civilisation and the Growth of Races<br />
+Making of Nations and the Influence of Nature</p>
+
+<hr class="r5" />
+
+<p class="s4 center"><b>JAPAN</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 center">The Country and the People</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">NEW YORK&emsp;<span class="s3">.</span>&emsp;<span class="s3">.</span>&emsp;THE GROLIER SOCIETY</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">LONDON&ensp;<span class="s3">.</span>&ensp;THE EDUCATIONAL BOOK CO.</p>
+
+<p class="s2 center mtop3 break-before">EDITORIAL AND CONTRIBUTING STAFF</p>
+
+<p class="center">OF</p>
+
+<p class="s3 center">THE BOOK OF HISTORY</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Rt. Hon. Viscount Bryce, F.R.S.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Formerly British Ambassador to the United States, Author of “The
+American Commonwealth”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Professor E. Ray Lankester, F.R.S.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">President British Association, 1906&ndash;7; Past Director of South
+Kensington Museum of Natural History</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Dr. Alfred Russel Wallace, F.R.S.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Co-discoverer with Darwin of the Theory of Natural Selection;
+Author of “Man’s Place in the Universe”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Dr. William Johnson Sollas, F.R.S.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Professor of Geology at Oxford University</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Dr. W. M. Flinders Petrie, F.R.S.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Professor of Egyptology, University College, London; Founder of
+British School of Archæology in Egypt</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Professor Wm. Boyd Dawkins, F.R.S.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Professor of Geology at Victoria University, Manchester;
+Author of “Early Man in Britain”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Frederic Harrison, M.A.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Hon. Fellow and formerly Tutor of Wadham College, Oxford;
+Vice-President of the Royal Historical Society</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Dr. Archibald H. Sayce</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Professor of Assyriology at Oxford University</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Sir Harry H. Johnston, K.C.B.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Doctor of Science of Cambridge University; late Commissioner and
+Consul-General for Uganda</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Dr. J. Holland Rose</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Cambridge University Lecturer on Modern History; Author of
+“Development of the European Nations”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Dr. Stanley Lane-Poole</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Professor of Arabic at Trinity College, Dublin</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Sir John Knox Laughton</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Professor of Modern History at King’s College, London University;
+Editor of Lord Nelson’s Despatches</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Oscar Browning, M.A.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Fellow of King’s College, Cambridge; University Lecturer in
+History</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Professor Ronald M. Burrows</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Professor of Greek at University College of South Wales; Author of
+“Discoveries in Crete”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>David George Hogarth, M.A.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Director of Cretan Exploration Fund and Past Director of the British
+School at Athens</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Herbert Paul, M.P.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Author of “A History of Modern England”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Sir Robert K. Douglas</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Professor of Chinese at King’s College, University of London; late
+Keeper of Oriental Books, British Museum</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Dr. Hugo Winckler</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Professor of History and Oriental Languages at the University of
+Berlin</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Sir William Lee-Warner, K.C.S.I.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Member of the Council of India; Formerly Scholar of St. John’s
+College, Cambridge</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Dr. E. J. Dillon</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Author and Journalist; Master of Oriental Languages at the
+University of St. Petersburg</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>William Romaine Paterson, M.A.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Author of “The Nemesis of Nations”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>W. Warde Fowler, M.A.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Scholar and Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford; Author of “The
+City-State of the Greeks and Romans”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Dr. H. F. Helmolt</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Author of “German History” and Editor of the German “History of the
+World”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Professor Konrad Haebler</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Of the Imperial Library of Berlin</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Professor Richard Mayr</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Of the Vienna Academy of Commerce</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Arthur Mee</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Editor of The Book of Knowledge.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Professor Rudolf Scala</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Of the Imperial University of Vienna</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Professor Karl Weule</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Director of the Leipzig Museum of Anthropology</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Professor Wilhelm Walther</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Of the University of Rostock</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Arthur Christopher Benson, M.A.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge; Editor of The
+Correspondence of Queen Victoria</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Major Martin Hume</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Lecturer in Spanish History and Literature at Pembroke College,
+Cambridge</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Robert Nisbet Bain</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Traveller and Historian; Assistant Librarian at the British
+Museum</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Richard Whiteing</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Author of “The Life of Paris”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>His Excellency Max von Brandt</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Ex-German Ambassador to China and Minister in Japan</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Francis H. Skrine</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Traveller and Explorer; late of the Indian Civil Service</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Holland Thompson, Ph. D.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">The College of the City of New York.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Dr. Archdall Reid, F.R.S.E.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Author of “The Principles of Heredity”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Arthur Diósy</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Founder of the Japan Society; Author of “The New Far East”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Dr. K. G. Brandis</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Director of the University Libraries at Jena</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Thomas Hodgkin, D.C.L.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Author of “A Political History of England”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Professor Joseph Kohler</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Professor of Jurisprudence at Berlin University</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Angus Hamilton</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Late Educational Adviser to the Government of Siam</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>J. G. D. Campbell, M.A.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Traveller and Correspondent in the Far East; Author of
+“Afghanistan”</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>W. R. Carles, C.M.G.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Geographer; late British Consul at Tientsin, China</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Professor Johannes Ranke</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Professor of Anthropology, Physiology, and Natural History at
+Munich</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>W. S. Wallace, M. A.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">University of Toronto.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Hon. Bernhard R. Wise</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Scholar of Queen’s College, Oxford; Ex-Attorney-General of New
+South Wales</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>K. W. C. Davis, M.A.</b><br />
+<span class="s5">Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_v"></a>[Pg v]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS_OF_VOLUME_I">CONTENTS OF VOLUME I</h2>
+
+</div>
+
+<table class="toc" summary="Contents, Vol. I">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">THE SAURIAN AGE</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right mright1"><a href="#i_000b">FRONTISPIECE</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="padtop1" colspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><b><a href="#MAN_AND_THE_UNIVERSE">FIRST GRAND
+ DIVISION</a></b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2">
+ <div class="center s4"><b><a href="#MAN_AND_THE_UNIVERSE">MAN AND THE
+ UNIVERSE</a></b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat s6 padtop1">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab s6 padtop1">
+ <div class="right">PAGE</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Editorial Introduction</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#Editorial_Introduction">1</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Plan of the H<span class="smaller">ISTORY</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#Plan_of_the_HISTORY">3</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Plan of First Grand Division</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#Plan_of_First_Grand_Division">6</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">A View across the Ages</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_WORLD_AND_ITS_STORY">7</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Summary of World History</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#SUMMARY_OF_WORLD_HISTORY">60</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Chronology of 10,000 Years</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#Chronology_of_10000_Years">61</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Time-table of the Nations</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_074_075">74</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Contemporary Figures in History</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#CONTEMPORARY_FIGURES_IN_HISTORY">78</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">The Beginning of the Earth</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#MAKING_OF_THE_EARTH">79</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Four Periods of the Earth’s Development</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#FOUR_PERIODS_OF_THE_EARTHS_DEVELOPMENT">89</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Geological Clock of the World’s Life</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#GEOLOGICAL_CLOCK_OF_THE_WORLDS_LIFE">90</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">How Life became possible on Earth</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#HOW_LIFE_BECAME_POSSIBLE_ON_THE_EARTH">91</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Scene from the Prehistoric World</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_096">Plate facing 96</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Beginning of Life on the Earth</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_BEGINNING_OF_LIFE_ON_THE_EARTH">99</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">How Man obtained Mastery of the Earth</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_MASTERY_OF_THE_EARTH_AND_HOW_MAN_OBTAINED_IT">108</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat padtop1">
+ <div class="left"><b><a href="#i_114">THE WORLD BEFORE HISTORY</a></b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab padtop1">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Prehistoric Man attacking Cave Bears</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_114">Plate facing 114</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">The Wonderful Story of Drift Man</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_RISE_OF_MAN">115</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">The Appearance of Man on the Earth</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_WORLD_BEFORE_HISTORY_II">127</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Life of Man in the Stone Age</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_WORLD_BEFORE_HISTORY_III">132</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Primitive Man in the Past and Present</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_WORLD_BEFORE_HISTORY_IV">145</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">The Home Life of Primitive Folk</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_WORLD_BEFORE_HISTORY_V">164</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">When History was dawning</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_WORLD_BEFORE_HISTORY_VI">175</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat padtop1">
+ <div class="left"><b><a href="#THE_GREAT_STEPS_IN_MANS_DEVELOPMENT">THE GREAT
+ STEPS IN MAN’S DEVELOPMENT</a></b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab padtop1">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">The Material Progress of Mankind</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_MATERIAL_PROGRESS_OF_MANKIND">185</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Beginnings of Commerce</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_192a">Plate facing 192</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">The Higher Progress of Mankind</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_HIGHER_PROGRESS_OF_MANKIND">203</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat padtop1">
+ <div class="left"><b><a href="#BIRTH_OF_CIVILISATION_AND_GROWTH_OF_RACES">BIRTH
+ OF CIVILISATION AND GROWTH OF RACES</a></b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab padtop1">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Seven Wonders of Ancient Civilisation</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_SEVEN_WONDERS_OF_ANCIENT_CIVILISATION">225</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Rise of Civilisation in Egypt</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_RISE_OF_CIVILISATION_IN_EGYPT">233</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Rise of Civilisation in Mesopotamia</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_RISE_OF_CIVILISATION_IN_MESOPOTAMIA">259</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi"></a>[Pg vi]</span>
+ <div class="left mleft1">Rise of Civilisation in Europe</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_RISE_OF_CIVILISATION_IN_EUROPE">281</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">The Triumph of Race</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_TRIUMPH_OF_RACE">299</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Alphabet of the World’s Races</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#AN_ALPHABET_OF_RACES">311</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Little Gallery of Races</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#LITTLE_GALLERY_OF_RACES">313</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Types of the Chief Races of Mankind</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#TYPES_OF_THE_CHIEF_RACES_OF_MANKIND">349</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Ethnological Chart of the Human Race</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#ETHNOLOGICAL_CHART_OF_THE_HUMAN_RACE">352</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat padtop1">
+ <div class="left"><b><a href="#MAKING_OF_THE_NATIONS_AND_THE_INFLUENCE_OF_NATURE">MAKING
+ OF NATIONS AND THE INFLUENCE OF NATURE</a></b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab padtop1">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Birth and Growth of Nations</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_BIRTH_GROWTH_OF_NATIONS">353</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Land and Water and Greatness of Peoples</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#LAND_AND_WATER_AND_THE_GREATNESS_OF_PEOPLES">377</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Environment and the Life of Nations</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#ENVIRONMENT_AND_THE_LIFE_OF_NATIONS">387</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">The Size and Power of Nations</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_SIZE_AND_POWER_OF_NATIONS">399</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">The Future History of Man</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_FUTURE_HISTORY_OF_MAN">404</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="padtop1" colspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><b><a href="#SECOND_GRAND_DIVISION_THE_FAR_EAST">SECOND
+ GRAND DIVISION</a></b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2">
+ <div class="center s4"><b><a href="#SECOND_GRAND_DIVISION_THE_FAR_EAST">THE
+ FAR EAST</a></b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat padtop1">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Map of the Far East</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab padtop1">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_406">406</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Plan of the Second Grand Division</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#Plan_of_Second_Grand_Division">408</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Interest and Importance of the Far East</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#THE_INTEREST_AND_IMPORTANCE_OF_THE_FAR_EAST">409</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="padtop1" colspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><b><a href="#JAPAN">JAPAN</a></b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat padtop1">
+ <div class="left"><b>COUNTRY AND PEOPLE</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab padtop1">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Great Dates in Japan</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#Great_Dates_in_Japan">416</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">The Empire of the Eastern Seas</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i417">417</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Map of Japan</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_432">432</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Qualities of the Japanese People</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#QUALITIES_OF_THE_JAPANESE_PEOPLE">433</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii"></a>[Pg vii]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="LIST_OF_SPECIAL_PLATES_IN_THE_BOOK_OF_HISTORY">LIST OF
+SPECIAL PLATES IN THE BOOK OF HISTORY</h2>
+
+</div>
+
+<table class="toc" summary="Special Plates, All Volumes">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat s6">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vat s6">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab s6">
+ <div class="right">PAGE</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Saurian Age</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_000b">Frontispiece, Vol.</a></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_000b">1</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Scene from the Prehistoric World: Early Ice Age</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_096">96</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Prehistoric Men Attacking the Great Cave Bears</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_114">114</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Beginnings of Commerce</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_192a">192</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Carrying Off an Emperor</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Buddha, “The Light of Asia”</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">562</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Four Famous Figures in Chinese History</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">754</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Colour of India</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">3</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Gems of Indian Architecture</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1154</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Indian Temples</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1196</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Nineveh in the Days of Assyria’s Ascendancy</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">4</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Two Indian Scenes</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1364</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Spring Carnival at a Tibetan Monastery</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1436</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Pyramids of Abusir</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">5</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1860</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Palace of an Assyrian King</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1956</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Sphinx</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1996</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Alexander, the World Conqueror</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">6</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Acropolis of Athens</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2504</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">An Arab Storyteller</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">7</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Theodora, the Byzantine Empress</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2906</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Glimpse of the Life in a Turkish Harem</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2994</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Primitive Justice</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">8</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Thaddeus Reyten at the Diet of Warsaw</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">3282</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Roland</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">3484</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Prince Arthur and Hubert</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">9</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Venerable Bede Dictating His Translation of the
+ Gospel of St. John</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">3716</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">“The Vigil”: A Knight of the Middle Ages</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">3788</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Alfred, the Hero King of England</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">3834</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">King John Granting Magna Charta</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">3865</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Crusaders Sighting Jerusalem</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">10</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Wolsey’s Last Interview with Henry VIII</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">4168</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Charles I on His Way to Execution</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">4340</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Charles II Visiting Wren</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">11</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Napoleon the Great</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">4636</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">“Peace with Honour”</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">12</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The French Soldiers’ Unrealised Dream of Victory</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">5104</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Recessional</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">13</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Conqueror’s Gift to London</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">5464</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">King Edward VII</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">“</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">5614</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Clio, “The Muse of History”</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">14</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Flags that Fly in the Four Winds of Heaven</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">5874</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Statue of Liberty</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Frontispiece, Vol.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">15</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Hope</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="center mleft2">Facing</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">Index</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_viii"></a>[Pg viii]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="LIST_OF_MAPS_APPEARING_IN_THE_BOOK_OF_HISTORY">LIST OF MAPS<br />
+<span class="s5">APPEARING IN THE BOOK OF HISTORY</span></h2>
+
+</div>
+
+<table class="toc" summary="List of Maps; All Volumes">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat s6">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab s6">
+ <div class="right">PAGE</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The World as Known to its First Historian</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_008">8</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Shifting of the Centre of the World’s Commerce</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_028b">28</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">How the Mediterranean has Given Place to the Atlantic</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i029b">29</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The First Maps</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_051">51</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Modern Representation of the World</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i052">52</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Europeanisation of the World</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_055">55</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Shaping of the Face of the Earth</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_085">85</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">How Mountain Ranges were formed</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_087">87</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Europe Before the British Isles were Formed</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_118">118</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Submerged Lands of Europe</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_119">119</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Europe in the Ice Age</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_155">155</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Egypt in Three Periods</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_243">243</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Babylonia</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_260">260</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Sea Routes of Ancient Civilisation</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_283">283</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Land Routes of Ancient Civilisation</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_284">284</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">How Civilisation Spread through Europe</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_359">359</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Expansion of White Races</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_361">361</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Island that Rules the Sea</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_378">378</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Oceans of the World</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_383">383</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Effect of Climate on the Course of History</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_391">391</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Political Expansion</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_396">396</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Relation of Rivers and Sea to the Civilisation of Countries</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_397a">397</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft2"><a href="#i_397a">South America</a></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft2"><a href="#i_397a">Africa</a></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left mleft2"><a href="#i_397b">Europe</a></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Far East, and Australia, Oceania and Malaysia</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_406">406</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Island Empire of Japan</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right"><a href="#i_432">432</a></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Japan in the Fifth Century</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">457</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Siberia</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">634</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Movement of the Peoples of Siberia</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">656</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Russia’s Advance in Western Asia</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">676</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Growth of Russia in the Far East</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">677</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Trans-Siberian Line</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">692</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Chinese Empire</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">708</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Korea and its Surroundings</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">858</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Malay Archipelago</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">886</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Islands of Oceania</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">947</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">New Zealand</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">986</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Australia and Tasmania</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1010</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Britain Contrasted with Australia</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1012</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">South-east Australia, Indicating Products</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1013</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Bed of the Pacific Ocean</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1102</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Middle East</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1120</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Modern India</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1161</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">India in 1801</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1266</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Bed of the Indian Ocean and China Sea</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1419</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Suez Canal</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1434</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Mountain Systems In and Around Tibet</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1457</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Approach of Lhasa</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1505</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Early Empires of the Ancient Near East</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1562</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Later Empires of the Ancient Near East</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1563</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Ancient Empires of Western Asia</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">1582</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Modern Africa</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2001</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Races and Religions of Africa</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2005</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Natural Products of Africa</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2009</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Basin of the River Nile</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2022</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Delta of the River Nile</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2024</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Utica as it Was</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2188</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Remains of Utica</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2189</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Ancient States of Mediterranean North Africa</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2191</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Niger River and Guinea Coast</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2229</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Great Britain in South Africa</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2322</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Basin of the Zambesi</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2332</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Basin of the Congo</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2347</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">General Map of Europe</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2356</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Geographical Connection of the Mediterranean Coasts</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2373</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Ancient Greece</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2482</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">World Empire of Alexander the Great</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2561</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Italy in the First Century B.C.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2621</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Roman Empire</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2738</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Origin of the Barbaric Nations</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2797</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Principal Countries of Eastern Europe</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2894</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">World’s Great Empires Between 777 and 814 A.D.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">2934</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Turkey and Surrounding Countries in the 14th and 17th
+ Centuries</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">3082</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Historical Maps of Poland and Western Russia</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">3220</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Western Europe in the Middle Ages</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">4138</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Europe During the Revolutionary Era</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">4636</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Modern Europe</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">4788</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">Britain’s Maritime Enterprise</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">5440</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The British Empire in 1702</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">5462</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The British Empire in 1909</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">5463</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">The Atlantic Ocean</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">5656</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">South America in the Sixteenth Century</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">5915</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">South America as it is To-day</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">5983</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">North Pole, with routes of Explorers</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">6014</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">South Pole</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">6045</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="left">North America</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="right">6431</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[Pg 1]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="s0" id="FIRST_GRAND_DIVISION_MAN_AND_THE_UNIVERSE" title="FIRST
+GRAND DIVISION; MAN AND THE UNIVERSE">&nbsp;</h2>
+
+<h3 class="s0" id="MAN_AND_THE_UNIVERSE" title="MAN AND THE UNIVERSE">&nbsp;</h3>
+
+<h4 class="mtop3" id="Editorial_Introduction" title="Editorial Introduction"></h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_001">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_001.jpg" alt="THE BOOK OF HISTORY" />
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p class="p0"><b>This is the story of the earth from the first thing we know of it
+to the time in which we live. It is the story of man from the first
+thing we know of him to the last thought that the vision of modern
+science can suggest.</b></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">T</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>HERE is no need here to discuss the question how far it is possible
+to write a universal history, or on what lines such a history should
+proceed. These points may well be left where Lord Bryce leaves them in
+his introduction to this book. Nor need we consider what history is;
+the plain man may be left to make up his own mind as to that while the
+philosophers are making up theirs. A word may be said, however, of the
+plan and purpose of this work, especially of that distinction of it
+which is at once the ground of its appeal and its justification.</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center mtop1"><b>A UNIVERSAL HISTORY OF THE UNIVERSE</b></p>
+
+<p>It is a commonplace to say of a great work that it is unique, and there
+would at first sight seem to be peculiar presumption in making such a
+claim for a History of the World. It may be claimed, however, without
+any fear of contradiction, that this work has no rival in the English
+language.</p>
+
+<p>There have been histories of the world before; there are available in
+large numbers histories of all countries well worthy of attention; but
+there is not, and it may be doubted if there has ever been attempted
+before, a scientific World-History. This work is, as far as it can
+possibly be in the present state of knowledge, a universal history of
+the universe.</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center mtop1"><b>SCIENCE AND HISTORY</b></p>
+
+<p>That is a far reaching claim to make, but a mere glance through the
+names of those whose services have been enlisted for the work will
+make its basis clear. The contributors include some of the foremost
+students of science. Many men of eminence whose names do not usually
+come into historical works will be found here. Their function may be
+described as holding the Lamp of Science up to History. It is for
+these authorities to read the story of the earth and to tell the plain
+man what they read there, as Turner read the sunset and painted what
+he saw. The simile is not so unfortunate as it may appear, because,
+although our canvas has not the same room for the artist’s imagination
+as Turner’s had, it will probably be admitted that the imagination
+of the scientist is often nearer to the truth of things than the
+conventional belief.</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center mtop1"><b>THE LIFE-STORY OF ALL NATIONS</b></p>
+
+<p>And the scientist will come into our History whenever and wherever
+science has any light to throw upon its problems. To the creators of
+this work the world is not merely an aggregation of countries under
+more or less settled governments, nor is a country merely the seat of
+a political system. They conceive the earth as a part of the universe,
+as one world among many; and this is the story of a huge ball flying in
+space, on which men and women live and move, on which mighty nations
+rise and rule and pass away, on which great empires crumble into dust.
+It is the entrancing book of man and the universe, the life-story of
+all nations. It begins with the beginning; it regards the universe, as
+modern science has taught us to regard it, as a vast unit, in which the
+life of man is the ultimate consummation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[Pg 2]</span></p>
+
+<p>A history of the world cannot be written in a day. It is like an
+institution&mdash;it must be allowed to grow. It would be a purposeless
+sacrifice in an undertaking of such magnitude to reject any work of
+building-up that is available, and this History has a rare privilege
+in being able to utilise the result of the matchless research, the
+tireless industry, the unequalled knowledge of Dr. Hans Helmolt and
+the distinguished staff of scholars and investigators who have been
+engaged with him for many years in preparing a history of the world on
+precisely the lines laid down in this work.</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center mtop1"><b>THE MATERIAL FOR A WORLD HISTORY</b></p>
+
+<p>It would be impossible to exaggerate the value of the elaborate
+research made for Dr. Helmolt by such of his eminent collaborators as
+Professor Johannes Ranke, Professor Ratzel, Professor Joseph Kohler,
+and others whose names stand for foremost authority wherever the value
+of learning is understood, and it is one of the chief claims of this
+work to recognition that it has behind it all the material collected
+by Dr. Helmolt’s staff, with all the judgment and skill of Dr. Helmolt
+himself in co-ordinating the labour of his assistants.</p>
+
+<p>A work so universal in time and place must engage many minds. Behind
+it there must be the labour and thought of many lives. The materials
+for a world-history cannot be amassed by one man, cannot be gathered
+together in the time that it is possible for one man to devote to
+them. A moment’s reflection reveals the vastness and complexity of the
+arrangements for such a work, the reaching-out into far corners of the
+earth, the ransacking of historical libraries and official archives;
+the placing of the result of all this research into the hands of a
+hundred trained historians, the analysing, sifting, and editing of each
+part as if it were in itself a perfect whole.</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center mtop1"><b>A BOOK OF HUMAN EXPERIENCE</b></p>
+
+<p>All this labour can hardly be measured. And if we add to our reckoning
+the work of illustrating the world’s history in pictures, the task
+of finding illustrations where they are rare as precious stones, or
+of choosing them where their number is bewildering, the labour that
+a world-history involves is, indeed, incalculable. It can only be
+accomplished by the co-operation of many minds, working over a long
+period, drawing upon actual experience in every part of the world.</p>
+
+<p>Especially is this so in the present work. There are histories that
+can be made up from books, but this is not one of them. The
+B<span class="smaller">OOK OF</span> H<span class="smaller">ISTORY</span> is not only a great book of human experience, as every
+history is; it is the <i>product</i> of experience. It could never have been
+written if the men who write it had not helped to make the history that
+they write.</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center mtop1"><b>THE MAKERS OF THE BOOK</b></p>
+
+<p>It is a book of history by writers and makers of history; it is a book
+of action by men of action; it is a book, that is, by men who know
+intimately the real life of the world. When Professor Ratzel writes of
+the making of nations, he writes with perhaps an unequalled knowledge
+of the conditions that have made for human progress; when Dr. Flinders
+Petrie writes of Egypt, when Dr. Sayce writes of Assyria, they write
+with the same authority that Sir Harry Johnston has in writing of those
+parts of the British Empire that he has helped to govern.</p>
+
+<p>The real rulers of the world are not the princes, and among the makers
+of this book are men who, though the fierce light that beats upon a
+throne has not beat upon them, have borne the burden of empire and
+of ruling men. It is the ideal collaboration, that of the brilliant
+investigator, the scientific interpreter, and the man of affairs, and
+it makes possible the achievement of a History which we have claimed to
+be unique.</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center mtop1"><b>THE WORLD YESTERDAY, TO-DAY &amp; TO-MORROW</b></p>
+
+<p>We have the facts from the pens of the men who have dug them up fresh
+from the earth itself or who know them from experience; we have them
+treated by the men who can turn upon them the full light of modern
+science; we have the world as it moves in our own time described by the
+men who know it from the centre, and know it therefore best.</p>
+
+<p>This is the story of the world, then, yesterday and to-day. And, as
+history goes on, as to-day becomes yesterday and to-morrow becomes
+to-day, we shall find in this book a vision of the things that lie
+before. Out of the deeps of Time came man. Through the mists of Time he
+grew. Down the ages of Time he goes. Whence he came we guess; how he
+lives we know; where he goes the wisdom of History does not tell. But
+the history of the world is young, and young men shall see visions.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">T<span class="smaller">HE</span>
+E<span class="smaller">DITORS</span></p>
+
+<div class="frontmatter">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[Pg 3]</span></p>
+
+<h4 id="Plan_of_the_HISTORY" title="Plan of the HISTORY"></h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="s2 center">THE BOOK OF HISTORY</p>
+
+<div class="figleft illowe3" id="i003a1">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_003a.jpg" alt="Decoration" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figright illowe3" id="i003b1">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_003b.jpg" alt="Decoration" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">The Life-Story of the Earth and of All Nations</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center"><b>TOLD IN SEVEN GRAND DIVISIONS</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0">This plan provides a general scheme for the HISTORY, but is not
+intended for reference. It does not follow that the exact order of
+countries here given is maintained throughout the volumes. A full index
+appears at the end of the work</p>
+
+<p class="center mtop2"><b>I&mdash;MAN AND THE UNIVERSE</b></p>
+
+<p class="center">THE WORLD AND ITS STORY</p>
+
+<p><b>A View Across the Ages: Introduction</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Summary of the History of the World</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Chronology of 10,000 Years and Chart of Nations</b></p>
+
+<p class="center mtop1">MAKING OF THE EARTH AND THE COMING OF MAN</p>
+
+<p><b>The Beginning of the Earth</b></p>
+
+<p><b>How Life is Possible on the Earth</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Beginning of Life on the Earth</b></p>
+
+<p><b>How Man Obtained the Mastery of the Earth</b></p>
+
+<p class="center mtop1">THE RISE OF MAN AND THE EVE OF HISTORY</p>
+
+<p><b>The World Before History</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Great Steps in Man’s Development</b></p>
+
+<p class="center mtop1">BIRTH OF CIVILISATION &amp; THE GROWTH OF RACES</p>
+
+<p><b>The Beginnings of Civilisation</b></p>
+
+<p><b>How Civilisation Came to Europe</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Triumph of Race</b></p>
+
+<p><b>An Alphabet of the World’s Races</b></p>
+
+<p class="center mtop1">MAKING OF NATIONS &amp; THE INFLUENCE OF NATURE</p>
+
+<p><b>The Birth and Growth of Nations</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Influence of Land and Water on National History</b></p>
+
+<p><b>How Nations are Affected by Their Environment</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Size and Power of Nations</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Future History of Man</b></p>
+
+<p class="center mtop2"><b>II&mdash;THE FAR EAST</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Interest and Importance of the Far East</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Japan. Siberia. China. Korea</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Malaysia</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Philippines. Malay States. Straits Settlements. Borneo. Sarawak.
+Sumatra. Java. New Guinea, and other Islands of Malay Archipelago</p>
+
+<p><b>Australia</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">New South Wales. Victoria. Queensland. South Australia. West
+Australia. Tasmania</p>
+
+<p><b>Oceania</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">New Zealand. Fiji. Pitcairn. Hawaii. Samoa. Tonga and other
+Islands</p>
+
+<p><b>The Influence of the Pacific Ocean in History</b></p>
+
+<p class="center mtop2"><b>III&mdash;THE MIDDLE EAST</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Importance of the Middle East</b></p>
+
+<p><b>India</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Including Ceylon and the Native States</p>
+
+<p><b>Further India</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Siam. Annam. Burma. Tonking. Cochin China. Cambodia. Champa</p>
+
+<p><b>The Influence of the Indian Ocean in History</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Central Asia</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Afghanistan. Baluchistan. Turkestan. Thibet</p>
+
+<p class="center mtop2"><b>IV&mdash;THE NEAR EAST</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Ancient Empires of Western Asia</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Babylonia. Assyria. Elam</p>
+
+<p><b>Early Nations of Western Asia</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Scythia. Sarmatia. Armenia. Syria. Phœnicia. Israel</p>
+
+<p><b>Western Asia from the Rise of Persia to Mohammed</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Persia. Asia Minor. Syria. Palestine. Arabia. Mediterranean
+Islands</p>
+
+<p><b>Western Asia from the Time of Mohammed</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">The Saracen Dominion. The Turkish Empire in Asia. Persia. Arabia</p>
+
+<p class="center mtop2"><b>V&mdash;AFRICA</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Legacy of Ancient Empires to the Modern World</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Egypt and the Egyptian Sudan</b></p>
+
+<p><b>North Africa</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Tripoli. Tunis. Morocco. Algeria and the French Territories. Sierra
+Leone. Liberia. Gold Coast. Nigeria. German West Africa. Abyssinia.
+Somaliland. Erythrea. British East Africa. Zanzibar</p>
+
+<p><b>South Africa</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Native Races. The Portuguese and Dutch in South Africa. British
+South Africa: Cape Colony. Natal. Transvaal. Orange River Colony.
+Rhodesia. Congo Free State. Portuguese East Africa. Angola. German
+East Africa. German South-West Africa. Madagascar</p>
+
+<p class="center mtop2"><b>VI&mdash;EUROPE</b></p>
+
+<p class="center">1. EUROPE TO THE FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE</p>
+
+<p><b>Mediterranean Influence in the Making of Europe</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Ancient Spirit of Greece and Rome</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Early Peoples of Europe. Ascendancy of the Greeks</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Rise of Rome and the World Empire</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Social Fabric of the Ancient World: Slave States</b></p>
+
+<p class="center mtop1">2. EASTERN EUROPE TO FRENCH REVOLUTION</p>
+
+<p><b>The Byzantine Empire and the Turk in Europe</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Middle Peoples</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Russia, Poland, and the Baltic Provinces</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Social Fabric of the Mediæval World: The Twilight of Nations</b></p>
+
+<p class="center mtop1">3. WESTERN EUROPE IN THE MIDDLE AGES</p>
+
+<p><b>A Survey of Western Mediæval Europe</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Peoples of Western Europe</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Importance of the Baltic Sea</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Emerging of the Nations</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Frankish Dominion and the Empire of Charlemagne. England. Spanish
+Peninsula. Italy. The Papacy. Scandinavia</p>
+
+<p><b>The Development of the Nations</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">The German or Holy Roman Empire. France. England. Spain and
+Portugal. Italy. The Papacy. Scandinavia</p>
+
+<p><b>The Crusades. Industry and Commerce</b></p>
+
+<p class="center mtop1">4. WESTERN EUROPE FROM THE REFORMATION TO THE REVOLUTION</p>
+
+<p><b>A Survey of Western Europe</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Reformation and Wars of Religion</b></p>
+
+<p><b>The Age of Louis XIV.</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">From the Peace of Westphalia to the Treaty of Utrecht</p>
+
+<p><b>The Ending of the Old Order</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">From the Treaty of Utrecht to the Revolution</p>
+
+<p><b>The Importance of the Atlantic to the World Powers</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Religion After the Reformation. Industry and Commerce</b></p>
+
+<p class="center mtop1">5. THE FRENCH REVOLUTION</p>
+
+<p><b>The Revolutionary and Napoleonic Era</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">The Revolution. The Republic at War and the Rise of Napoleon. The
+Zenith of Napoleon and his Fall</p>
+
+<p><b>Great Britain in the Napoleonic Era</b></p>
+
+<p class="center mtop1">6. THE RE-MAKING OF EUROPE</p>
+
+<p><b>Europe After Waterloo</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">The Triumph of Despotism. The Revolt Against Despotism</p>
+
+<p><b>Europe in Revolution</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">The Second French Republic and the Coup d’Etat. The Uprising of the
+Little Nations. National Movements in Germany</p>
+
+<p><b>The Consolidation of the Powers</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Europe and the Second Empire. The Unification of Italy. The
+Unification of Germany. The Franco-German War</p>
+
+<p><b>Great Britain to 1871. Russia and Turkey to 1871. Europe since 1871</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Great Britain. Germany. France. Austria-Hungary. Spain and
+Portugal. Italy. Russia. Turkey. Switzerland. Greece. Belgium.
+Holland. Denmark. Norway. Sweden. Bulgaria. Servia. Roumania.
+Montenegro. Luxemburg. Monaco. San Marino</p>
+
+<p class="center mtop1">7. THE EUROPEAN POWERS TO-DAY</p>
+
+<p><b>Europe in Our Own Time</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Great Britain. Germany. Austria-Hungary. France.</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Italy. Russia. Turkey. Spain and Portugal</b></p>
+
+<p><b>Minor States of Europe:</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Switzerland. Greece. Belgium. Holland. Denmark. Norway. Sweden.
+Bulgaria. Servia. Roumania. Montenegro. Luxemburg. Monaco. San
+Marino</p>
+
+<p class="center mtop2"><b>VII&mdash;AMERICA</b></p>
+
+<p><b>America Before Columbus</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">The Primitive Races of America. The Ancient Civilisation of Central
+America. The Ancient Civilisation of South America</p>
+
+<p><b>The European Colonisation</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">The Discovery. The Spanish Conquest. The Spanish and Portuguese
+Empire in America. The Independence of South and Central America.
+The Pilgrim Fathers and the English Settlement. The Development and
+Expansion of the British Colonies</p>
+
+<p><b>The American Nation</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">The Revolt of the Thirteen Colonies. The Struggle for Independence
+and the War. The Creation of the United States. The Development of
+the American Nation. The United States in Our Own Time</p>
+
+<p><b>British America</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Canada. Newfoundland. British West Indies. British Honduras.
+Bermudas.</p>
+
+<p><b>Central America in the 19th and 20th Centuries</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Cuba. Haiti. Dominica. Porto Rico. Mexico. Guatemala. Honduras. San
+Salvador. Nicaragua. Costa Rica. Panama</p>
+
+<p><b>South America in the 19th and 20th Centuries</b></p>
+
+<div class="figleft illowe3" id="i003a2">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_003a.jpg" alt="Decoration" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figright illowe3" id="i003b2">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_003b.jpg" alt="Decoration" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Colombia. Venezuela. British, French and Dutch Guiana. Brazil.
+Ecuador. Peru. Chili. Bolivia. Paraguay. Argentina. Uruguay</p>
+
+<p><b>The World Around the Poles</b></p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">Greenland. Iceland. Arctic and Antarctic Oceans</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[Pg 5]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s3 center padtop3 break-before">THE BOOK OF HISTORY</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">FIRST GRAND DIVISION</p>
+
+<p class="s2 center">MAN AND THE UNIVERSE</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32" id="i_005">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_005.jpg" alt="Man and the Universe" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[Pg 6]</span></p>
+
+<h4 id="Plan_of_First_Grand_Division" title="Plan of First Grand Division"></h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_006a">
+ <img class="w100 mtop3" src="images/i_006a.jpg" alt="Plan of First Grand Division,
+ Header" />
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="frontmatter">
+
+<p class="s4 center">FIRST GRAND DIVISION</p>
+
+<p class="s3 center">MAN AND THE UNIVERSE</p>
+
+<p class="p0 s5">There can, of course, be neither absolute finality nor entire unanimity
+in the subjects of these chapters, which are designed to enable the
+reader to follow the course of history with greater interest and
+understanding than would be possible without some scientific knowledge
+of life. They are presented as a symposium of modern thought on the
+problems concerning the origin and development of the earth and mankind</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop1"><b>PLAN</b></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">THE WORLD AND ITS STORY</p>
+
+<p><b>A VIEW ACROSS THE AGES</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 mleft8"><b>Rt. Hon. James Bryce</b></p>
+
+<p><b>A SUMMARY OF THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 mleft8"><b>Arthur D. Innes, M.A.</b></p>
+
+<p><b>CHRONOLOGY OF 10,000 YEARS AND CHART OF NATIONS</b></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop1">MAKING OF THE EARTH &amp; THE COMING OF MAN</p>
+
+<p><b>THE BEGINNING OF THE EARTH</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 mleft8"><b>Dr. Wm. Johnson Sollas, F.R.S.</b></p>
+
+<p><b>HOW LIFE BECAME POSSIBLE ON THE EARTH</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 mleft8"><b>Dr. Alfred Russel Wallace, F.R.S.</b></p>
+
+<p><b>HOW MAN OBTAINED THE MASTERY OF THE EARTH</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 mleft8"><b>Dr. Archdall Reid, F.R.S.E.</b></p>
+
+<div class="figleft illowe4" id="i003a3">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_003a.jpg" alt="Plan of the First Grand Division, Decoration" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figright illowe4" id="i003b3">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_003b.jpg" alt="Plan of the First Grand Division, Decoration" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop1">THE RISE OF MAN AND THE EVE OF HISTORY</p>
+
+<p><b>THE WORLD BEFORE HISTORY</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 mleft8"><b>Professor Johannes Ranke</b></p>
+
+<p><b>THE GREAT STEPS IN MAN’S DEVELOPMENT</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 mleft8"><b>Professor Joseph Kohler</b></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop1">BIRTH OF CIVILISATION &amp; THE GROWTH OF RACES</p>
+
+<p><b>THE BIRTH OF CIVILISATION</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 mleft8"><b>Dr. Flinders Petrie, F.R.S.</b></p>
+
+<p><b>HOW CIVILISATION CAME TO EUROPE</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 mleft8"><b>David George Hogarth, M.A.</b></p>
+
+<p><b>THE TRIUMPH OF RACE</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 mleft8"><b>Dr. Archdall Reid, F.R.S.E.</b></p>
+
+<p><b>ALPHABET OF THE WORLD’S RACES</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 mleft8"><b>W. E. Garrett Fisher, M.A.</b></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop1">MAKING OF NATIONS &amp; THE INFLUENCE OF NATURE</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>Professor Friedrich Ratzel</b></p>
+
+<p><b>THE BIRTH AND GROWTH OF NATIONS</b></p>
+
+<p><b>INFLUENCE OF LAND &amp; WATER ON NATIONAL HISTORY</b></p>
+
+<p><b>EFFECT OF ENVIRONMENT ON NATIONS</b></p>
+
+<p><b>THE SIZE AND POWER OF NATIONS</b></p>
+
+<p><b>THE FUTURE HISTORY OF MAN</b></p>
+
+<hr class="r20" />
+
+<p class="s5 center">For full contents and page numbers see <a href="#CONTENTS_OF_VOLUME_I">Index</a></p>
+
+<p class="s5 center">Mr. Kipling’s “Recessional” is quoted in a Frontispiece from “The
+Five Nations,” by permission of the Author and the Publishers,
+Messrs. Methuen</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i006d">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_006d.jpg" alt="Plan of First Grand Division, Footer" />
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[Pg 7]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s1 center mtop3" id="THE_WORLD_AND_ITS_STORY">THE WORLD</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i007">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_007.jpg" alt="THE WORLD AND ITS STORY" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s1 center">AND ITS STORY</p>
+
+<h4 class="s2" id="A_VIEW_ACROSS_THE_AGES"><b>A VIEW ACROSS THE AGES</b></h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="s3 center">AN INTRODUCTION TO THE BOOK OF HISTORY</p>
+
+<p class="s3 center mbot2"><b>BY THE RIGHT HON. VISCOUNT BRYCE</b></p>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">W</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first2">W</span>HEN
+History, properly so called, has emerged from those tales of the
+feats of kings and heroes and those brief entries in the roll of a
+temple or a monastery in which we find the earliest records of the
+past, the idea of composing a narrative which shall not be confined to
+the fortunes of one nation soon presents itself.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The First True Historian</div>
+
+<p>Herodotus&mdash;the first true historian, and a historian in his own line
+never yet surpassed&mdash;took for his subject the strife between Greeks and
+Barbarians which culminated in the Great Persian War of <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>
+480, and worked into his book all he could ascertain regarding most of
+the great peoples of the world&mdash;Babylonians and Egyptians, Persians
+and Scythians, as well as Greeks. Since his time many have essayed to
+write a Universal History; and as knowledge grew, so the compass of
+these treatises increased, till the outlying nations of the East were
+added to those of the Mediterranean and West European world which had
+formerly filled the whole canvas.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Scientific History only now Possible</div>
+
+<p>None of these books, however, covered the field or presented an
+adequate view of the annals of mankind as a whole. It was indeed
+impossible to do this, because the data were insufficient. Till some
+time way down in the nineteenth century that part of ancient history
+which was preserved in written documents could be based upon the
+literature of Israel, upon such notices regarding Egypt, Assyria,
+Babylon, and Iran as had been preserved by Greek or Roman writers,
+and upon those writers themselves. It was only for some of the Greek
+cities, for the kingdoms of Alexander and his successors, and for
+the city and Empire of Rome that fairly abundant materials were then
+available. Of the world outside Europe and Western Asia, whether
+ancient or modern, scarcely anything was known, scarcely anything even
+of the earlier annals of comparatively civilised peoples, such as
+those of India, China, and Japan, and still less of the rudimentary
+civilisations of Mexico and Peru. Nor, indeed, had most of the students
+who occupied themselves with the subject perceived how important a
+part in the general progress of mankind the more backward races have
+played, or how essential to a true History of the World is an account
+of the semi-civilised and even of the barbarous peoples. Thus it was
+not possible, until quite recent times, that the great enterprise
+of preparing such a history should be attempted on a plan or with
+materials suitable to its magnitude.</p>
+
+<p>The last seventy or eighty years have seen a vast increase in our
+materials, with a corresponding widening of the conception of what a
+History of the World should be. Accordingly, the time for trying to
+produce one upon a new plan and enlarged scale seems to have arrived;
+not, indeed, that the years to come will not continue to add to the
+historian’s resources, but that those resources have recently become
+so much ampler than they have ever been before that the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[Pg 8]</span> moment may be
+deemed auspicious for a new departure.</p>
+
+<p>The nineteenth century was marked by three changes of the utmost
+consequence for the writing of history.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30" id="i_008">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_008.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE WORLD AS KNOWN TO ITS FIRST HISTORIAN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The world as known to Herodotus is shown by the white part
+ of this map, indicating the limited range of ancient geographical knowledge.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">New Material and New Methods</div>
+
+<p>That century, in the first place, has enormously widened our knowledge
+of the times hitherto called prehistoric. The discovery of methods
+for deciphering the inscriptions found in Egypt and Western Asia,
+the excavations in Assyria and Egypt, in Continental Greece and in
+Crete, and to a lesser extent in North Africa also, in the course of
+which many inscriptions have been collected and fragments of ancient
+art examined, have given us a mass of knowledge regarding the nations
+who dwelt in these countries larger and more exact than was possessed
+by the writers of classical antiquity who lived comparatively near
+to those remote times. We possess materials for the study not only
+of the political history but of the ethnology, the languages, and
+the culture of the nations which were first civilised incomparably
+better than were those at the disposal of the contemporaries of Vico
+or Gibbon or Herder. Similar results have followed as regards the Far
+East, from the opening up of Sanskrit literature and of the records
+of China and Japan. To a lesser degree, the same thing has happened
+as regards the semi-civilised peoples of tropical America both north
+and south of the Isthmus of Panama. And while long periods of time
+have thus been brought within the range of history, we have also
+learnt much more about the times that may still be called prehistoric.
+The investigations carried on in mounds and caves and tombs and
+lake-dwellings, the collection of early stone and bronze implements,
+and of human skulls and bones found along with those of other animals,
+have thrown a great deal of new light upon primitive man, his way
+of life, and his migrations from one region to another. As history
+proper has been carried back many centuries beyond its former limit,
+so has our knowledge of prehistoric times been extended centuries
+above the furthest point to which history can now reach back. And this
+applies not only to the countries previously little explored, but to
+such well-known districts as Western Europe and the Atlantic coast of
+America.</p>
+
+<p>Secondly, there has been during the nineteenth century a notable
+improvement in the critical method of handling historical materials.
+Much more pains have been taken to examine all available documents
+and records, to obtain a perfect text of each by a comparison of
+manuscripts or of early printed copies, and to study each by the aid
+of other contemporary matter. It is true that, with the exception of
+Egyptian papyri and some manuscripts unearthed in Oriental monasteries
+(besides those Indian, Chinese, and other early Eastern sacred books
+to which I have already referred), not very much that is absolutely
+new has been brought to light. It is also true that a few of the most
+capable students in earlier days, in the ancient world as well as since
+the Renaissance, have fully seen the value of original authorities
+and have applied to them thoroughly critical methods. This is not a
+discovery of our own times. Still, it may be claimed that there was
+never before so great a zeal for collecting and investigating all
+possible kinds of original texts, nor so widely diffused a knowledge of
+the methods to be applied in turning them to account for the purposes
+of history. Both in Europe and in America an unprecedentedly large
+number of competent men have been employed upon researches of this
+kind, and the result of their labours on special topics has been to
+provide the writer who seeks to present a general view of history
+with materials not only larger but far fitter for his use than his
+predecessors ever enjoyed. Then with the improvement<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[Pg 9]</span> in critical
+apparatus, there has come a more cautious and exact habit of mind in
+the interpretation of facts.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_009">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_009.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">“THE FATHER OF HISTORY”</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Herodotus, the first historian, was born between B.C.
+ 470&ndash;480 at Halicarnassus, a Greek colony in Asia Minor</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Thirdly, the progress of the sciences of Nature has powerfully
+influenced history, both by providing new data and by affecting the
+mental attitude of all reflective men. This has happened in several
+ways. Geographical exploration has made known nearly every part of the
+surface of the habitable globe. The great natural features of every
+country, its mountain ranges and rivers, its forest or deserts, have
+been ascertained. Its flora and fauna have been described, and thereby
+its capacity for supporting human life approximately calculated. The
+other physical conditions which govern the development of man, such as
+temperature, rainfall, and the direction of prevalent winds have been
+examined. Thus we have acquired a treasury of facts relating to the
+causes and conditions which help the growth of civilisation and mould
+it into diverse forms, conditions whose importance I shall presently
+discuss in considering the relation of man to his natural environment.
+Although a few penetrating minds had long ago seen how much the
+career of each nation must have been affected by physical phenomena,
+it is only in the last two generations that men have begun to study
+these phenomena in their relation to history, and to appreciate their
+influence in the formation of national types and in determining the
+movement of races over the earth’s surface.</p>
+
+<p>Not less remarkable has been the increase in our knowledge of the
+more remote and backward peoples. Nearly every one of these has now
+been visited by scientific travellers or missionaries, its language
+written down, its customs and religious rites, sometimes its folk lore
+also, recorded. Thus materials of the highest value have been secured,
+not only for completing our knowledge of mankind as a whole, but for
+comprehending in the early history of the now highly civilised peoples
+various facts which had previously remained obscure, but which became
+intelligible when compared with similar facts that can be studied in
+their actuality among tribes whom we find in the same stage to-day as
+were the ancestors of the civilised nations many centuries ago.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Progress of the Sciences</div>
+
+<p>The progress thus achieved in the science of man regarded as a part
+of Nature has powerfully contributed to influence the study of human
+communities as they appear in history. The comparative method has
+become the basis for a truly scientific inquiry into the development of
+institutions, and the connection of religious beliefs and ceremonies
+with the first beginnings of institutions both social and political has
+been made clear by an accumulation of instances. Whether or no there
+be such a thing as a Science of History&mdash;a question which, since it
+is mainly verbal, one need not stop to discuss&mdash;there is such a thing
+as a scientific method applied to history; and the more familiar men
+have become with the methods of inquiry and canons of evidence used in
+physical investigations, so much the more have they tended to become
+exact and critical in historical investigations, and to examine the
+causes and the stages by and through which historical development is
+effected.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Historical Knowledge in Our Time</div>
+
+<p>In noting this I do not suggest that what is popularly called the
+“Doctrine of Evolution” should be deemed a thing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[Pg 10]</span> borrowed by history
+from the sciences of nature. Most of what is true or helpful in that
+doctrine was known long ago, and applied long ago by historical and
+political thinkers. You can find it in Aristotle, perhaps before
+Aristotle. Even as regards the biological sciences, the notion of
+what we call evolution is ancient; and the merit of Darwin and other
+great modern naturalists has lain, not in enouncing the idea as a
+general theory, but in elucidating, illustrating, and demonstrating the
+processes by which evolution takes place. The influence of the natural
+sciences on history is rather to be traced in the efforts we now see to
+accumulate a vast mass of facts relating to the social, economic, and
+political life of man, for the sake of discovering general laws running
+through them, and imparting to them order and unity.</p>
+
+<p>Although the most philosophic and diligent historians have always aimed
+at and striven for this, still the general diffusion of the method in
+our own time, and the greatly increased scale on which it is applied,
+together with the higher standard of accuracy which is exacted by the
+opinion of competent judges, may be, in some measure, ascribed to the
+examples which those who work in the spheres of physics and biology and
+natural history have so effectively set.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, the progress of natural science has in our time, by
+stimulating the production and exchange of commodities, drawn the
+different parts of the earth much nearer to one another, and thus
+brought nearly all its tribes and nations into relations with one
+another far closer and far more frequent than existed before.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Oneness of the Human Race</div>
+
+<p>This has been done by the inventions that have given us steam and
+electricity as motive forces, making transport quicker and cheaper,
+and by the application of electricity to the transmission of words. No
+changes that have occurred in the past (except perhaps changes in the
+sphere of religion) are comparable in their importance as factors in
+history to those which have shortened the voyage from Western Europe to
+America to five and a half days, and made communication with Australia
+instantaneous. For the first time the human race, always essentially
+one, has begun to feel itself one, and civilised man has in every part
+of it become a contemporaneous observer of what passes in every other
+part.</p>
+
+<p>The general result of these various changes has been that while the
+materials for writing a history of the world have been increased, the
+conception of what such a history should be has been at the same time
+both enlarged and defined. Its scope is wider; its lines are more
+clearly drawn. But what do we mean by a Universal History? Briefly, a
+History which shall, first, include all the races and tribes of man
+within its scope; and, secondly, shall bring all these races and tribes
+into a connection with one another such as to display their annals as
+an organic whole.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Importance of the Small Races</div>
+
+<p>Universal history has to deal not only with the great nations, but also
+with the small nations; not only with the civilised, but also with the
+barbarous or savage peoples; not only with the times of movement and
+progress, but also with the times of silence and apparent stagnation.
+Every fraction of humanity has contributed something to the common
+stock, and has lived and laboured not for itself only, but for others
+also, through the influence which it has perforce exercised on its
+neighbours. The only exceptions we can imagine are the inhabitants of
+some remote isle, “far placed amid the melancholy main.” Yet they, too,
+must have once formed part of a race dwelling in the region whence they
+came, even if that race had died out in its old home before civilised
+man set foot on such an oceanic isle in a later age. The world would
+have been different, in however small a measure, had they never
+existed. As in the realm of physical science, so in that of history no
+fact is devoid of significance, though the true significance may remain
+long unnoticed. The history of the backward races presents exceptional
+difficulties, because they have no written records, and often scarcely
+any oral traditions. Sometimes it reduces itself to a description of
+their usages and state of life, their arts and their superstitions, at
+the time when civilised observers first visited them. Yet that history
+is instructive, not only because the phenomena observable among such
+races enlarge our knowledge, but also because through the study of
+those which survive we are able to interpret the scanty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[Pg 11]</span> records we
+possess of the early condition of peoples now civilised, and to go
+some way towards writing the history of what we have hitherto called
+prehistoric man.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_011">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_011.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">ANCIENT EGYPT’S STRANGE BOOKS AND PICTORIAL RECORDS,
+ MADE OF PAPYRUS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Papyrus, a tall, graceful, sedgy plant, supplied the
+ favourite writing material of the ancient world, and many priceless records of
+ antiquity are preserved to us in papyri. The pith of the plant was pressed flat
+ and thin and joined with others to form strips, on which records were
+ written or painted. The above is a photograph of a piece of Egyptian
+ papyrus, showing both hieroglyphics and picture-writing. The oldest
+ piece of papyrus dates back to B.C. 3500.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Thus such tribes as the aborigines of Australia, the Fuegians of
+Magellan’s Straits, the Bushmen of South Africa, the Sakalavas of
+Madagascar, the Lapps of Northern Europe, the Ainos of Japan, the
+numerous “hill-tribes” of India, will all come within the historian’s
+ken. From each of them something may be learnt; and each of them
+has through contact with its more advanced neighbours affected
+those neighbours themselves, sometimes in blood, sometimes through
+superstitious beliefs or rites, frequently borrowed by the higher races
+from the lower (as the Norsemen learnt magic from the Lapps, and the
+Semites of Assyria from the Accadians), sometimes through the strife
+which has arisen between the savage and the more civilised man, whereby
+the institutions of the latter have been modified.</p>
+
+<p>Obviously the historian cannot record everything. These lower races
+are comparatively unimportant. Their contributions to progress, their
+effect on the general march of events, have been but small. But they
+must not be wholly omitted from the picture, for without them it would
+have been different. One must never forget, in following the history of
+the great nations of antiquity, that they fought and thought and built
+up the fabric of their industry and art in the midst of a barbarous or
+savage population surrounding them on all sides, whence they drew the
+bulk of their slaves and some of their mercenary soldiers, and which
+sometimes avenged itself by sudden inroads, the fear of which kept the
+Greek cities, and at certain epochs even the power of Rome, watchful
+and anxious. So in modern times the savages among whom European
+colonies have been planted, or who have been transported as slaves to
+other colonies&mdash;sometimes, as in the case of Portugal in the fifteenth
+century, to</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[Pg 12]</span></p>
+
+<p>Europe itself&mdash;or those with whom Europeans have carried on trade, must
+not be omitted from a view of the causes which have determined the
+course of events in the civilised peoples.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Great Works of Little Peoples</div>
+
+<p>To dwell on the part played by the small nations is less necessary
+here, for even a superficial student must be struck by the fact that
+some of them have counted for more than the larger nations to whose
+annals a larger space is commonly allotted. The instance of Israel is
+enough, so far as the ancient world is concerned, to show how little
+the numbers of a people have to do with the influence it may exert. For
+the modern world, I will take the case of Iceland.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Culture of the Icelanders</div>
+
+<p>The Icelanders are a people much smaller than even was Israel. They
+have never numbered more than about seventy thousand. They live in an
+isle so far remote, and so sundered from the rest of the world by an
+inhospitable ocean, that their relations both with Europe, to which
+ethnologically they belong, and with America, to which geographically
+they belong, have been comparatively scanty. But their history, from
+the first settlement of the island by Norwegian exiles in <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>
+874 to the extinction of the National Republic in <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1264,
+is full of interest and instruction, in some respects a perfectly
+unique history. And the literature which this handful of people
+produced is certainly the most striking primitive literature which any
+modern people has produced, superior in literary quality to that of the
+Continental Teutons, or to that of the Romance nations, or to that of
+the Finns or Slavs, or even to that of the Celts. Yet most histories
+of Europe pass by Iceland altogether, and few persons in Continental
+Europe (outside Scandinavia) know anything about the inhabitants of
+this isle, who, amid glaciers and volcanoes, have maintained themselves
+at a high level of intelligence and culture for more than a thousand
+years.</p>
+
+<p>The small peoples have no doubt been more potent in the spheres
+of intellect and emotion than in those of war, politics, or
+commerce. But the influences which belong to the sphere of creative
+intelligence&mdash;that is to say, of literature, philosophy, religion and
+art&mdash;are just those which it is peculiarly the function of a History
+of the World to disengage and follow out in their far-reaching
+consequence. They pass beyond the limits of the country where they
+arose. They survive, it may be, the race that gave birth to them. They
+pass into new forms, and through these they work in new ways upon
+subsequent ages.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Wide Scope of History</div>
+
+<p>It is also the task of universal history so to trace the march of
+humanity as to display the relation which each part of it bears to the
+others; to fit each race and tribe and nation into the main narrative.
+To do this, three things are needed&mdash;a comprehensive knowledge, a
+power of selecting the salient and significant points, and a talent
+for arrangement. Of these three qualifications, the first is the least
+rare. Ours is an age of specialists; but the more a man buries himself
+in special studies, the more risk does he incur of losing his sense of
+the place which the object of his own study fills in the general scheme
+of things. The highly trained historian is generally able to draw from
+those who have worked in particular departments the data he needs;
+while the master of one single department may be unable to carry his
+vision over the whole horizon, and see each part of the landscape in
+its relations to the rest.</p>
+
+<p>In other words, a History of the World ought to be an account of the
+human family as an organic whole, showing how each race and state
+has affected other races or states, what each has brought into the
+common stock, and how the interaction among them has stimulated
+some, depressed or extinguished others, turned the main current this
+way or that. Even when the annals of one particular country are
+concerned, it needs no small measure of skill in expression as well
+as of constructive art to trace their connection with those of other
+countries. To take a familiar example, he who writes the history of
+England must have his eye always alive to what is passing in France on
+one side, and in Scotland on the other, not to speak of countries less
+closely connected with England, such as Germany and Spain. He must let
+the reader feel in what way the events that were happening in France
+and Scotland affected men’s minds, and through men’s minds affected the
+progress of events in England. Yet he cannot allow himself constantly
+to interrupt his English narra<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[Pg 13]</span>tive in order to tell what was passing
+beyond the Channel or across the Tweed.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_013">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_013.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">VIVID SCENES OF ANCIENT LIFE DEPICTED BY CONTEMPORARY
+ ARTISTS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The walls of the tombs in Egypt form a great picture
+ gallery of the vanished life of that country and are invaluable to the historian.
+ This fragment from the British Museum shows how vividly the domestic figures
+ were realised.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Unity of Universal History</div>
+
+<p>Obviously, this difficulty is much increased when the canvas is widened
+to include all Europe, and when the aim is to give the reader a just
+impression of the general tendencies of a whole age, such an age as,
+for instance, the sixteenth century, over that vast area. If for a
+History of the World the old plan be adopted&mdash;that of telling the
+story of each nation separately, yet on lines generally similar, cross
+references and a copious use of chronological tables become helpful,
+for they enable the contemporaneity of events to be seen at a glance,
+and as the history of each nation is being written with a view to that
+of other nations, the tendencies at work in each can be explained and
+illustrated in a way which shows their parallelism, and gives to the
+whole that unity of meaning and tendency which a universal history must
+constantly endeavour to display. The connection between the progress
+or decline of different peoples is best understood by setting forth
+the various forms which similar tendencies take in each. To do this
+is a hard task when the historian is dealing with the ancient world,
+or with the world outside Europe even in mediæval and post-mediæval
+times. For the modern European nations it is easier, because, ever
+since the spread of Christianity made these nations parts of one great
+ecclesiastical community, similar forces have been at work upon each of
+them, and every intellectual movement which has told upon one has more
+or less told upon the others also.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_014">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_014.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE MASTER-KEY TO THE HIEROGLYPHICS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The inscribed stone found at Rosetta, in the Nile delta,
+ in 1799, now preserved in the British Museum. It gave the key to the hieroglyphic
+ writings of Egypt. It is a decree of Ptolemy Epiphanes, promulgated
+ at Memphis in B.C. 196, and as it is inscribed in hieroglyphic and in
+ the script of the country as well as in Greek, it thus solved the long
+ standing mystery of the hieroglyphics of the monuments, which before
+ its discovery had been quite unintelligible.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Central Line of Human Development<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Study of Human Society<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Each Race a Distinct Entity</div>
+
+<p>Such a History of the World may be written on more than one plan,
+and in the light of more than one general theory of human progress.
+It might find the central line of human development in the increase
+of man’s knowledge, and in particular of his knowledge of Nature and
+his power of dealing with her. Or that which we call culture, the
+comprehensive unfolding and polishing of human faculty and of the
+power of intellectual creation and appreciation, might be taken as
+marking the most real and solid kind of progress, so that its growth
+would best represent the advance of man from a savage to a highly
+civilised condition. Or if the moral and political sphere were selected
+as that in which the onward march of man as a social being, made to
+live in a community, could best be studied, the idea of liberty might
+be made a pivot of the scheme; for in showing how the individual
+emerges from the family or the tribe, how first domestic and then
+also prædial slavery slowly disappears, how institutions are framed
+under which the will of one ruler or of a small group begins to be
+controlled, or replaced as a governing force, by the collective will
+of the members of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[Pg 14]</span> community, how the primordial rights of each
+human creature win their way to recognition&mdash;in tracing out all these
+things the history of human society is practically written, and the
+significance of all political changes is made clear. Another way,
+again, would be to take some concrete department of human activity,
+follow it down from its earliest to its latest stages, and group
+other departments round it. Thus one author might take religion, and
+in making the history of religion the main thread of his narrative
+might deal incidentally with the other phenomena which have influenced
+it or which it has influenced. Or, similarly, another author might
+take political institutions, or perhaps economic conditions&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>,
+wealth, labour, capital, commerce, or, again, the fundamental social
+institutions, such as the family, and the relations of the ranks and
+classes in a community, and build up round one or other of these
+manifestations and embodiments of the creative energy of mankind the
+general story of man’s movement from barbarism to civilisation. Even
+art, even mechanical inventions, might be similarly handled, for both
+of these stand in a significant relation to all the rest of the life of
+each nation and of the world at large. Nevertheless, no one of these
+suggested lines on which a universal history might be constructed
+would quite meet the expectations which the name Universal History
+raises, because we have become accustomed to think of history as being
+primarily and pre-eminently a narrative of the growth and development
+of communities, nations, and states as organised political bodies,
+seeing that it is in their character as bodies so organised that they
+come into relation with other nations and states. It is therefore
+better to follow the familiar plan of dealing with the annals of each
+race and nation as a distinct entity, while endeavouring to show
+throughout the whole narrative the part which each fills in the general
+drama of human effort, conflict, and progress.</p>
+
+<p>A universal history may, however, while conforming to this established
+method, follow it out along a special line, which shall give prominence
+to some one leading idea or principle. Such a line or point of view has
+been found for the present work in the relation of man to his physical
+environment&mdash;that is to say, to the geographical conditions which have
+always surrounded him, and always must surround him, conditions<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[Pg 15]</span> whose
+power and influence he has felt ever since he appeared upon the globe.
+This point of view is more comprehensive than any one of those above
+enumerated. Physical environment has told upon each and every one of
+the lines of human activity already enumerated that could be taken to
+form a central line for the writing of a history of mankind. It has
+influenced not only political institutions and economic phenomena, but
+also religion, and social institutions, and art, and inventions. No
+department of man’s life has been independent of it, for it works upon
+man not only materially but also intellectually and morally.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_015">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_015.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">UNEARTHING THE RUINS OF ANCIENT BABYLON IN THE TWENTIETH
+ CENTURY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This photograph illustrates how present-day exploration
+ brings the remains of the ancient wonder cities of Babylonia to light after the
+ sleep of ages. Much valuable knowledge of Babylon has been acquired
+ quite recently as a result of excavations now being carried on under
+ the supervision of English, American, French, and German explorers.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>As this is the idea which has governed the preparation of the present
+book, as it is constructed upon a geographical rather than a purely
+chronological plan (though, of course, each particular country and
+nation needs to be treated chronologically), some few pages may
+properly be devoted here to a consideration of the way in which
+geography determines history, or, in other words, to an examination of
+the relations of Nature, inorganic and organic, to the life of man.</p>
+
+<p class="s3 center mtop2 mbot1">MAN’S PLACE IN NATURE’S KINGDOM</p>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">T</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>HOUGH
+we are accustomed to contrast man with Nature, and to look upon
+the world outside ourselves as an object to be studied by man, the
+conscious and intelligent subject, it is evident, and has been always
+recognised even by those thinkers who have most exalted the place man
+holds in the Cosmos, that man is also to be studied as a part of the
+physical universe. He belongs to the realm of Nature in respect of his
+bodily constitution, which links him with other animals, and in certain
+respects with all the phenomena that lie within the sphere of biology.</p>
+
+<p>All creatures on our earth, since they have bodies formed from material
+constituents, are subject to the physical laws which govern matter; and
+the life of all is determined, so far as their bodies are concerned,
+by the physical conditions which foster, or depress, or destroy life.
+Plants need soil, moisture, sunshine, and certain constituents of the
+atmosphere. Their distribution over the earth’s surface<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[Pg 16]</span> depends not
+only upon the greater or less extent to which these things, essential
+to their existence, are present, but also upon the configuration of
+the earth’s surface (continents and oceans), upon the greater or
+less elevation above sea level of parts of it, upon such forces as
+winds and ocean currents (occasionally also upon volcanoes), upon the
+interposition of arid deserts between moister regions, or upon the flow
+of great rivers. The flora of each country is the resultant (until man
+appears upon the scene) of these natural conditions.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Natural Conditions of Life</div>
+
+<p>We know that some plants are also affected by the presence of certain
+animals, particularly insects and birds. Similarly, animals depend
+upon these same conditions which regulate their distribution, partly
+directly, partly indirectly, or mediately through the dependence of
+the animal for food upon the plants whose presence or absence these
+conditions have determined. It would seem that animals, being capable
+of moving from place to place, and thus of finding conditions suitable
+for their life, and to some extent of modifying their life to suit the
+nature around them, are somewhat more independent than plants are,
+though plants, too, possess powers of adapting themselves to climatic
+surroundings; and there are some&mdash;such, for instance, as our common
+brake-fern and the grass of Parnassus&mdash;which seem able to thrive
+unmodified in very different parts of the globe.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man the Servant of Nature</div>
+
+<p>The primary needs of man which he shares with the other animals are an
+atmosphere which he can breathe, a temperature which he can support,
+water which he can drink, and food. In respect of these he is as
+much the product of geographical conditions as are the other living
+creatures. Presently he superadds another need, that of clothing. It
+is a sign that he is becoming less dependent on external conditions,
+for by means of clothing he can make his own temperature and succeed
+in enduring a degree of cold, or changes from heat to cold, which
+might otherwise shorten his life. The discovery of fire carries him a
+long step further, for it not only puts him less at the mercy of low
+temperatures, but extends the range of his food supplies, and enables
+him, by procuring better tools and weapons, to obtain his food more
+easily. We need not pursue his upward course, at every stage of which
+he finds himself better and still better able to escape from the
+thraldom of Nature, and to turn to account the forces which she puts
+at his disposal. But although he becomes more and more independent,
+more and more master not only of himself, but of her, he is none the
+less always for many purposes the creature of the conditions with which
+she surrounds him. He always needs what she gives him. He must always
+have regard to the laws which he finds operating through her realm. He
+always finds it the easiest course to obey, and to use rather than to
+attempt to resist her.</p>
+
+<p>Here let me pause to notice a remarkable contrast between the earlier
+and the later stages of man’s relations to Nature. In the earlier
+stages he lies helpless before her, and must take what she chooses to
+bestow&mdash;food, shelter, materials for clothing, means of defence against
+the wild beasts, who are in strength far more than a match for him. He
+depends upon her from necessity, and is better or worse off according
+as she is more or less generous.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man’s Advance in Knowledge</div>
+
+<p>But in the later stages of his progress he has, by accumulating a store
+of knowledge, and by the development of his intelligence, energy, and
+self-confidence, raised himself out of his old difficulties. He no
+longer dreads the wild beasts. They, or such of them as remain, begin
+to dread him, for he is crafty, and can kill them at a distance. He
+erects dwellings which can withstand rain and tempest. He irrigates
+hitherto barren lands and raises abundant crops from them. When he has
+invented machinery, he produces in an hour clothing better than his
+hands could formerly have produced in a week. If at any given time
+he has not plenty of food, this happens only because he has allowed
+his species to multiply too fast. He is able to cross the sea against
+adverse winds and place himself in a more fertile soil or under more
+genial skies than those of his former home. As respects all the primary
+needs of his life, he has so subjected Nature to himself, that he can
+make his life what he will.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_017">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_017.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Neurdein</div>
+ <div class="caption">THE FIRST WANDERERS OF THE EARTH: TRIBAL MIGRATION IN
+ PREHISTORIC TIMES</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the painting of “Cain” by Ferdinand Cormon</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_017_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man the Master of Nature</div>
+
+<p>All this renders him independent. But he now also finds himself drawn
+into a new kind of dependence, for he has now come to take a new view
+of Nature. He perceives in her an enormous storehouse of wealth, by
+using which he can multiply<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[Pg 18]</span> his resources and gratify his always
+increasing desires to an extent practically unlimited. She provides
+forces, such as steam and electricity, which his knowledge enables him
+to employ for production and transport, so as to spare his own physical
+strength, needed now not so much for effort as for the direction of
+the efforts of Nature. She has in the forest, and still more beneath
+her own surface in the form of minerals, the materials by which these
+forces can be set in motion; and by using these forces man can, with
+comparatively little trouble, procure abundance of those materials.</p>
+
+<p>Thus his relation to Nature is changed. It was that of a servant, or,
+indeed, rather of a beggar, needing the bounty of a sovereign. It
+is now that of a master needing the labour of a servant, a servant
+infinitely stronger than the master, but absolutely obedient to the
+master so long as the master uses the proper spell. Thus the connection
+of man with Nature, changed though his attitude be, is really as close
+as ever, and far more complex. If his needs had remained what they
+were in his primitive days&mdash;let us say, in those palæolithic days
+which we can faintly adumbrate to ourselves by an observation of the
+Australian or Fuegian aborigines now&mdash;he would have sat comparatively
+lightly to Nature, getting easily what he wanted, and not caring to
+trouble her for more. But his needs&mdash;that is to say, his desires, both
+his physical appetites and his intellectual tastes, his ambitions and
+his fondness for comfort, things that were once luxuries having become
+necessaries&mdash;have so immeasurably expanded that, since he asks much
+more from Nature, he is obliged to study her more closely than ever.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man’s New Relations to Nature</div>
+
+<p>Thus he enters into a new sort of dependence upon her, because it is
+only by understanding her capacities and the means of using them that
+he can get from her what he wants. Primitive man was satisfied if he
+could find spots where the trees gave edible fruit, where the sun was
+not too hot, nor the winds too cold, where the beasts easy of capture
+were abundant, and no tigers or pythons made the forest terrible.
+Civilised man has more complex problems to deal with, and wider fields
+to search. The study of Nature is not only still essential to him, but
+really more essential than ever. His life and action are conditioned
+by her. His industry and his commerce are directed by her to certain
+spots. That which she has to give is still, directly or indirectly,
+the source of strife, and a frequent cause of war. As men fought long
+ago with flint-headed arrows for a spring of water or a coconut grove,
+so they fight to-day for mineral treasures imbedded in the soil. It
+is mainly by Nature that the movements of emigration and the rise of
+populous centres of industry are determined.</p>
+
+<p>Though Nature still rules for many purposes and in many ways the
+course of human affairs, the respective value of her various gifts
+changes from age to age, as man’s knowledge and power of turning them
+to account have changed. The things most prized by primitive man are
+not those which semi-civilised man chiefly prized, still less are they
+those most sought for now.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Using Natural Wealth</div>
+
+<p>In primitive times the spots most attractive, because most favourable
+to human life, were those in which food could be most easily and
+safely obtained from fruit-bearing trees or by the chase, and where
+the climate was genial enough to make clothing and shelter needless,
+at least during the greater part of the year. Later, when the keeping
+of cattle and tillage had come into use, good pastures and a fertile
+soil in the valley of a river were the chief sources of material
+well-being. Wild beasts were less terrible, because man was better
+armed; but as human enemies were formidable, regions where hills and
+rocks facilitated defence by furnishing natural strongholds had their
+advantages.</p>
+
+<p>Still later, forests came to be recognised as useful for fuel, and
+for carpentry and shipbuilding. Mineral deposits, usually found in
+hilly or mountainous districts, became pre-eminently important sources
+of wealth; and rivers were valued as highways of commerce and as
+sources of motive power by the force of their currents. To the Red
+Indians of the Ohio valley the places which were the most attractive
+camping-grounds were those whither the buffaloes came in vast herds to
+lick the rock salt exposed in the sides of the hills. It is now not the
+salt-licks, but the existence of immense deposits of coal and iron,
+that have determined the growth of huge communities in those regions
+whence the red<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[Pg 19]</span> man and the buffalo have both vanished. England was
+once, as New Zealand is now, a great wool-growing and wool-exporting
+country, whereas she is to-day a country which spins and weaves far
+more wool than she produces.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Ancient Harbours and Modern</div>
+
+<p>So, too, the influence of the sea on man has changed. There was a
+time when towns were built upon heights some way off from the coast,
+because the sea was the broad high road of pirates who swooped down
+upon and pillaged the dwellings of those who lived near it. Now that
+the sea is safe, trading cities spring up upon its margin, and sandy
+tracts worthless for agriculture have gained an unexpected value as
+health resorts, or as places for playing games, places to which the
+inhabitants of inland districts flock in summer, as they do in England
+and Germany, or in winter, as they do on the Mediterranean coasts of
+France. The Greeks, when they began to compete with the Phœnicians in
+maritime commerce, sought for small and sheltered inlets in which their
+tiny vessels could lie safely&mdash;such inlets as Homer describes in the
+Odyssey, or as the Old Port of Marseilles, a city originally a colony
+from the Ionian Phocæa. Nowadays these pretty little rock harbours
+are useless for the large ships which carry our trade. The Old Port
+of Marseilles is abandoned to small coasters and fishing-boats, and
+the ocean steamers lie in a new harbour which is protected, partly by
+outlying islands, partly by artificial works.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The World-Importance of Medicine</div>
+
+<p>So, too, river valleys, though still important as highways of traffic,
+are important not so much in respect of water carriage as because they
+furnish the easiest lines along which railways can be constructed. The
+two banks of the Rhine, each traversed by a railroad, carry far more
+traffic than the great stream itself carried a century ago; and the
+same remark applies to the Hudson. All these changes are due to the
+progress of invention, which may give us fresh changes in the future
+not less far-reaching than those the past has seen. Mountainous regions
+with a heavy rainfall, such as Western Norway or the coast of the
+Pacific in Washington and British Columbia, may, by the abundance of
+water power which they supply, which can be transmuted into electrical
+energy, become sources of previously unlooked-for wealth, especially
+if some cheap means can be devised of conveying electricity with less
+wastage in transmission than is at present incurred. Within the last
+few years considerable progress in this direction has been made. Should
+effective and easily applicable preventives against malarial fever
+be discovered, many districts now shunned, because dangerous to the
+life of white men, may become the homes of flourishing communities.
+The discovery of cinchona bark in the seventeenth century affected
+the course of events, because it provided a remedy against a disease
+that had previously baffled medical skill. If quinine had been at the
+disposal of the men of the Middle Ages, not only might the lives of
+many great men, as for instance of Dante, have been prolonged, but
+the Teutonic emperors would have been partially relieved of one of
+the chief obstacles which prevented them from establishing permanent
+control over their Italian dominions. Rome and the Papal power defended
+themselves against the hosts of the Franconian and Hohenstaufen
+sovereigns by the fevers of the Campagna more effectively than did the
+Roman people by their arms, and almost as effectively as did the Popes
+by their spiritual agencies.</p>
+
+<p>Bearing in mind this principle, that the gifts of Nature to man
+not only increase, but also vary in their form, in proportion and
+correspondence to man’s capacity to use them, and remembering also
+that man is almost as much influenced by Nature when he has become her
+adroit master as when she was his stern mistress, we may now go on to
+examine more in detail the modes in which her influence has told and
+still tells upon him.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Problem of Racial Distinctions</div>
+
+<p>It has long been recognised that Nature must have been the principal
+factor in producing, that is to say, in differentiating, the various
+races of mankind as we find them differentiated when our records begin.
+How this happened is one of the darkest problems that history presents.
+By what steps and through what causes did the races of man acquire
+these diversities of physical and intellectual character which are now
+so marked and seem so persistent? It has been suggested that some of
+these diversities may date back to a time when man, as what is called a
+distinct species, had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[Pg 20]</span> scarcely begun to exist. Assuming the Darwinian
+hypothesis of the development of man out of some pithecoid form to
+be correct&mdash;and those who are not themselves scientific naturalists
+can of course do no more than provisionally accept the conclusions at
+which the vast majority of scientific naturalists have arrived&mdash;it
+is conceivable that there may have been unconnected developments of
+creatures from intermediate forms into definitely human forms in
+different regions, and that some of the most marked types of humanity
+may therefore have had their first rudimentary and germinal beginning
+before any specifically human type had made its appearance. This,
+however, is not the view of the great majority of naturalists. They
+appear to hold that the passage either from some anthropoid apes, or
+from some long since extinct common ancestor of man and the existing
+anthropoid apes&mdash;this latter alternative representing what is now the
+dominant view&mdash;did not take place through several channels (so to
+speak), but through one only, and that there was a single specifically
+human type which subsequently diverged into the varieties we now see.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_020">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_020.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">TREE DWELLERS IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">We must remember that such terms as “The Stone Age,” “The
+ Bronze Age,” and so forth, are only loosely applied. The ages so called did
+ not close at certain periods. There are races now living in all the
+ conditions of these past ages. This photograph, for example, shows the
+ actual tree dwellings of the Papuans in New Guinea to-day&mdash;one of the
+ most primitive forms of human habitation.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>If this be so, it is plain that climate, and the conditions of life
+which depend upon climate, soil, and the presence of vegetables and
+of other animals besides man, must have been the forces which moulded
+and developed those varieties. From a remote antiquity, everybody has
+connected the dark colour of all, or nearly all, the races inhabiting
+the torrid zone with the power of the sun; and the fairer skin of
+the races of the temperate and arctic zones with the comparative
+feebleness of his rays in those regions. This may be explained on
+Darwinian principles by supposing that the darker varieties were
+found more capable of supporting the fierce heat of the tropics. What
+explanation is to be given of the other characteristics of the negro
+and negroid races, of the usually frizzled hair, of the peculiar nose
+and jaw, and so forth, is a question for the naturalist rather than
+for the historian. Although climate and food may be the chief factors
+in differentiation, the nature of the process is, as indeed is the
+case with the species of animals generally, sometimes very obscure.
+Take an instance from three African races which, so far as we can
+tell, were formed under similar climatic conditions&mdash;the Bushmen,
+the Hottentots, and the Bantu, the race including those whom we call
+Kaffirs. Their physical aspect and colour are different. Their size and
+the structure of their bodies are different. Their mental<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[Pg 22]</span> aptitudes
+are different; and one of the oddest points of difference is this, that
+whereas the Bushmen are the least advanced, intellectually, morally,
+and politically, of the three races, as well as the physically weakest,
+they show a talent for drawing which is not possessed by the other two.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33_5" id="i_021">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_021.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE HABITATIONS OF MAN IN ALL AGES OF THE WORLD’S
+ HISTORY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">At first man built twig huts in trees, but becoming better
+ matched with his animal foes he took to caves and underground habitations.
+ Our illustration of the latter shows a section through the soil. Lake
+ dwellings marked a distinct advance. Other varieties of primitive
+ habitations are the leaf hut, the tents of skin, the mud hut, and
+ the beehive hut of stone. Roman villas are still models of beauty.
+ American “skyscrapers” are peculiar to our time; but all early forms
+ of dwellings, while marking progress, have existed contemporaneously
+ throughout history.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_021_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Is the Race Mystery Insoluble?</div>
+
+<p>In this case there is, of course, a vast unknown fore-time during
+which we may imagine the Bantu race, probably originally formed in a
+region other than that which it now occupies (and under more favourable
+conditions for progress), to have become widely differentiated
+from those which are now the lower African races. We still know
+comparatively little about African ethnography. Let us, therefore,
+take another instance in which affinities of language give ground for
+believing that three races, whose differences are now marked, have
+diverged from a common stock. So far as language goes, the Celts,
+the Teutons, and the Slavs, all speaking Indo-European tongues, may
+be deemed to be all nearly connected in origin. They are marked by
+certain slight physical dissimilarities, and by perhaps rather more
+palpable dissimilarities in their respective intellectual and emotional
+characters. But so far as our knowledge goes, all three have lived for
+an immensely long period in the colder parts of the temperate zone,
+under similar external conditions, and following very much the same
+kind of pastoral and agricultural life. There is nothing in their
+environment which explains the divergences we perceive; so the origin
+of these divergences must apparently be sought either in admixture with
+other races or in some other historical causes which are, and will for
+ever remain, in the darkness of a recordless past.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Mixing of the World’s Peoples</div>
+
+<p>How race admixture works, and how it forms a new definite character
+out of diverse elements, is a subject which anyone may find abundant
+materials for studying in the history of the last two thousand years.
+Nearly every modern European people has been so formed. The French,
+the Spaniards, and the English are all the products of a mixture, in
+different proportions, of at least three elements&mdash;Iberian (to use
+a current name), Celts, and Teutons, though the Celtic element is
+probably comparatively small in Spain, and the Teutonic comparatively
+small both in Spain and in Central and Southern France. No small part
+of those who to-day speak German and deem themselves Germans must be
+of Slavonic stock. Those who to-day speak Russian are very largely of
+Finnish, to some small extent of Tartar, blood. The Italians probably
+spring from an even larger number of race-sources, without mentioning
+the vast number of slaves brought from the East and the North into
+Italy between <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> 100 and <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 300. In the cases of
+Switzerland and Scotland the process of fusion is not yet complete.
+The Celto-Burgundian Swiss of Neuchatel is still different from the
+Allemanian Swiss of Appenzell; as the Anglo-Celt of Fife is different
+from the Ibero-Celt of the Outer Hebrides. But in both these cases
+there is already a strong sense of national unity, and in another three
+hundred years there may have arisen a single type of character.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Unique Case of Iceland</div>
+
+<p>An interesting and almost unique case is furnished by Iceland, where
+isolation under peculiar conditions of climate, food, and social life
+has created a somewhat different type both of body and of mental
+character from that of the Norwegians, although so far as blood goes
+the two peoples are identical, Iceland having been colonised from
+Western Norway a thousand years ago, and both Icelanders and Norwegians
+having remained practically unmixed with any other race&mdash;save that
+some slight Celtic infusion came to Iceland with those who migrated
+thither from the Norse settlements in Ireland, Northern Scotland, and
+the Hebrides&mdash;since the separation took place. But by far the most
+remarkable instance of race admixture is that furnished in our own time
+by the United States of North America, where a people of predominantly
+English stock (although there were in the end of the eighteenth century
+a few descendants of Dutchmen, with Germans, Swedes, and Ulster
+Irishmen, in the country) has within the last sixty years received
+additions of many millions of Celts, of Germans and Scandinavians, and
+of various Slavonic races. At least a century must elapse before it
+can be seen how far this infusion of new blood will change the type of
+American character as it stood in 1840.</p>
+
+<p>There are, however, two noteworthy differences between modern race
+fusions<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[Pg 23]</span> and those which belong to primitive times. One is that under
+modern conditions the influence of what may be called the social and
+political environment is probably very much greater than it was in
+early times. The American-born son of Irish parents is at forty years
+of age a very different creature from his cousin on the coast of Mayo.
+The other is that in modern times differences of colour retard or
+forbid the fusion of two races. So far as the Teutonic peoples are
+concerned, no one will intermarry with a negro; a very few with a
+Hindu, a Chinese, or a Malay. In the ancient world there was but little
+contact between white men and black or yellow ones, but the feeling of
+race aversion was apparently less strong than it is now, just as it was
+much less strong among the Spaniards and Portuguese in the sixteenth
+and seventeenth centuries than it is among Americans or Englishmen
+to-day. It is less strong even now among the so-called “Latin races;”
+and as regards the Anglo-Americans, it is much less strong towards the
+Red Indians than towards negroes.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_023">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_023.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE REMARKABLE INFLUENCE OF ENVIRONMENT ON PHYSICAL
+ APPEARANCE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Mr. Bryce points out that the physical features of a
+ people are determined chiefly by their environment. These illustrations show
+ (at top) a typical English settler in the old Colonial days of America,
+ a native Red Indian (left) and a typical American of to-day (right).
+ Without any intermingling of red men and white, the modern American,
+ thanks to climatic conditions, resembles the Red Indian far more
+ closely than he does his own ancestors of the Colonial days.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>As Nature must have been the main agent in the formation of the various
+races of mankind from a common stock, so also Nature has been the chief
+cause of their movements from one part of the earth to another, these
+movements having been in their turn a potent influence in the admixture
+of the races. Some geographers have alleged climate&mdash;that is to say,
+the desire of those who inhabit an inclement region to enjoy a softer
+and warmer air&mdash;as a principal motive which has induced tribes of
+nations to transfer themselves from one region to another.</p>
+
+<p>It is no doubt true that the direction of migrations has almost always
+been either from the north towards the south, or else along parallels
+of latitude, men rarely seeking for themselves conditions more severe
+than those under which they were born. But it is usually not so much
+the wish to escape cold that has been an effective motive as the wish
+to find more and better food, since this means an altogether easier
+life. Scarcity of the means of subsistence, which is, of course, most
+felt when population is increasing, has operated more frequently
+and powerfully than any other cause in bringing on displacements
+of the races of man over the globe. The movement of the primitive
+Aryans into India from the plateaux of West Central Asia, probably
+also the movement of the races which speak Dravidian languages from
+South Central Asia into Southern India, and probably<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[Pg 24]</span> also the mighty
+descent, in the fourth and fifth centuries <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>, of the
+Teutonic races from the lands between the Baltic and the Alps into the
+Roman Empire, had this origin.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Colonising Impulse</div>
+
+<p>In more advanced states of society a like cause leads the surplus
+population of a civilised state to overflow into new lands, where there
+is more space, or the soil is more fertile. Thus the inhabitants of
+Southwestern Scotland, partly, no doubt, at the suggestion of their
+rulers, crossed over into Ulster, where they occupied the best lands,
+driving the aboriginal Celts into the rougher and higher districts,
+where their descendants remain in the glens of Antrim, and in the hilly
+parts of Down, Derry, and Tyrone. Thus the men of New England moved
+out to the West and settled in the Mississippi Valley, while the men
+of Virginia crossed the Alleghanies into Kentucky. Thus the English
+have colonised Canada and Australia and New Zealand and Natal. Thus the
+Russians have spread out from their ancient homes on the upper courses
+of the Dnieper and the Volga all over the vast steppes that stretch
+to the Black Sea and the Caucasus, as well as into the rich lands of
+Southwestern Siberia. Thus the surplus peasantry of Germany has gone
+not only to North America, but also to Southern Brazil and the shores
+of the Rio de la Plata.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Need of Native Labour</div>
+
+<p>In another form it is the excess of population over means of
+subsistence at home that has produced the remarkable outflow of the
+Chinese through the Eastern Archipelago and across the Pacific into
+North America, and that has carried the Japanese to the Hawaiian
+Islands. And here we touch another cause of migration which is
+indirectly traceable to Nature&mdash;namely, the demand in some countries
+for more labour or cheaper labour than the inhabitants of the country
+are able or willing to supply. Sometimes this demand is attributable to
+climatic causes. The Spaniards and Portuguese and English in the New
+World were unfitted by their physical constitutions for out-of-door
+labour under a tropical sun. Hence they imported negroes during the
+sixteenth and two following centuries in such numbers that there are
+now about eight millions of coloured people in the United States alone,
+and possibly (though no accurate figures exist) as many more in the
+West Indies and South America. To a much smaller extent the same need
+for foreign labour has recently brought Indian coolies to the shores
+of the Caribbean Sea, and to the hottest parts of Natal, as it brings
+Polynesians to the sugar plantations of Northern Queensland.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">What Determines Race Movements</div>
+
+<p>Two other causes which have been potent in bringing about displacements
+and mixtures of population are the desire for conquest and plunder
+and the sentiment of religion. But these belong less to the sphere of
+Nature than to that of human passion and emotion, so that they scarcely
+fall within this part of our inquiry, the aim of which has been to
+show how Nature has determined history by inducing a shifting of races
+from place to place. From this shifting there has come the contact
+of diverse elements, with changes in each race due to the influence
+of the other, or perhaps the absorption of one in the other, or the
+development of something new out of both. In considering these race
+movements we have been led from the remote periods in which they began,
+and of which we know scarcely anything except from archæological and
+linguistic data, to periods within the range of authentic history.
+So we may go on to see how Nature has determined the spots in which
+the industry of the more advanced races should build up the earliest
+civilisations, and the lines along which commerce, a principal agent
+in the extension of civilisation, should proceed to link one race with
+another.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_025">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_025.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE MERCHANT MARINERS OF THE ANCIENT WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The earliest agents in the diffusion of trades and the
+ arts were the Phœnicians, who from their great cities of Tyre, Sidon, and
+ Carthage conducted a sea-borne traffic with lands as remote as England, and
+ whose adventurous sailors, despite the smallness of their vessels, are
+ believed even to have succeeded in rounding the Cape of Good Hope.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_025_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Isolation of Eastern Peoples</div>
+
+<p>It was long since observed that the first homes of a dense population
+and a highly developed civilisation lay in fertile river valleys,
+such as those of the Lower Nile, the Euphrates, the Tigris, the
+Ganges, the Yang-tse-kiang. All these are situate in the hotter parts
+of the temperate zone; all are regions of exceptional fertility.
+The soil, especially when tillage has become general, is the first
+source of wealth; and it is in the midst of a prosperous agricultural
+population that cities spring up where handicrafts and the arts arise
+and flourish. The basins of the Lower Nile and of the Lower Euphrates
+and Tigris are (as respects the West Asiatic and Mediterranean world)
+the fountain-heads of material, military, and artistic civilisation.
+From them it spreads over the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[Pg 26]</span> adjacent countries and along the
+coasts of Europe and Africa. On the east, Egypt and Mesopotamia are
+cut off by the deserts of Arabia and Eastern Persia from the perhaps
+equally ancient civilisation of India, which again is cut off by lofty
+and savage mountains from the very ancient civilisation of China.
+Nature forbade intercourse between these far eastern regions and the
+West Asian peoples, while on the other hand Nature permitted Egypt,
+Phœnicia, and Babylon to influence and become teachers of the peoples
+of Asia Minor and of the Greeks on both sides of the Ægean Sea. The
+isolation and consequent independent development of India and of
+China is one of the most salient and significant facts of history. It
+was not till the end of the fifteenth century, when the Portuguese
+reached the Malabar coast, that the Indian peoples began to come into
+the general movement of the world; for the expedition of Alexander
+the Great left hardly any permanent result, except upon Buddhist art,
+and the conquests of Mahmud of Ghazni opened no road to the East from
+the Mediterranean West. Nor did China, though visited by Italian
+travellers in the thirteenth century, by Portuguese traders and Jesuit
+missionaries in the sixteenth and seventeenth, come into effective
+contact with Europe till near our own time.</p>
+
+<p>As the wastes of barren land formed an almost impassable eastern
+boundary to the West Asian civilisations, so on the west the expanse
+of sea brought Egypt and to a less extent Assyria (through Phœnicia)
+into touch with all the peoples who dwelt on the shores of the
+Mediterranean. The first agents in the diffusion of trade and the arts
+were the Phœnicians, established at Tyre, Sidon, and Carthage. The next
+were the Greeks. For more than two thousand years, from <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>
+700 onwards, the Mediterranean is practically the centre of the
+history of the world, because it is the highway both of commerce and
+of war. For seven hundred years after the end of the second century
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, that is to say, while the Roman Empire remained strong,
+it was also the highway of civil administration. The Saracen conquests
+of the seventh century cut off North Africa and Syria from Europe,
+checked transmarine commerce, and created afresh the old opposition
+of East and West in which a thousand years earlier Herodotus had
+found the main thread of world history. But it was not till after the
+discovery of America that the Mediterranean began to yield to the
+Atlantic its primacy as the area of sea power and sea-borne trade.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Influence of the Seas in History</div>
+
+<p>Bordered by far less fertile and climate-favoured countries, and closed
+to navigation during some months of winter, the Baltic has always held
+a place in history far below that of the Mediterranean. Yet it has
+determined the relations of the North European states and peoples. So,
+too, the North Sea has at one time exposed Britain to attack from the
+Danish and Norwegian lords of the sea, and at other times protected
+her from powerful continental enemies. It may indeed be said that in
+surrounding Europe by the sea on three sides, Nature has drawn the main
+lines which the course of events on this smallest but most important of
+the continents has had to follow.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Magellan and American Politics</div>
+
+<p>Of the part which the great bodies of water have played, of the
+significance in the oceans of mighty currents like the Gulf Stream, the
+Polar Current, the Japan Current, the Mozambique Current, it would be
+impossible to speak within reasonable compass. But two remarks may be
+made before leaving this part of the subject. One is that man’s action
+in cutting through an isthmus may completely alter the conditions as
+given by Nature. The Suez Canal has of late years immensely enhanced
+the importance of the Mediterranean, already in some degree restored by
+the decay of Turkish power, by the industrial revival of Italy, and by
+the French conquests in North Africa. The cutting of a canal at Panama
+will change the relations of the seafaring and fleet-owning nations
+that are interested in the Atlantic and the Pacific. And the other
+remark is that the significance of a maritime discovery, however great
+at first, may become still greater with the lapse of time. Magellan,
+in his ever memorable voyage, not only penetrated to and crossed the
+Pacific, but discovered the Philippine Islands, and claimed them for
+the monarch who had sent him forth. His appropriation of them for
+the Crown of Spain, to which during these three centuries and a half
+they have brought no benefit, has been the cause which has<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[Pg 28]</span> led the
+republic of the United States to depart from its traditional policy of
+holding to its own continent by taking them as a prize&mdash;a distant and
+unexpected prize&mdash;of conquest.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33_5" id="i_027">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_027.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">HOW NATURE DETERMINES THE SITES OF CITIES</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Most towns and communities founded more than 300 years ago
+ were on easily defensible hills, by the side of navigable rivers, or inlets of
+ the sea. Our illustrations show (1) Naples, (2) Bonsuna, (3) Old Port
+ and hill of Marseilles, (4) Monaco, (5) St. Cézaire, and (6) the Greek
+ Monastery of St. Balaam.</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Photos. by Frith and Underwood &amp; Underwood</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_027_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_028a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_028a.jpg" alt="Atlantic Ocean" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_028b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_028b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE SHIFTING OF THE CENTRE OF THE WORLD’S COMMERCE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">These two maps, which have been very carefully prepared
+ from the most reliable authorities, indicate at a glance the relative importance
+ of the Mediterranean and the Atlantic as highways of commerce in the time
+ of Julius Cæsar, B.C. 102&ndash;44.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_029a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_029a.jpg" alt="Atlantic Ocean" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i029b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_029b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">HOW THE MEDITERRANEAN HAS GIVEN PLACE TO THE ATLANTIC</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Here is the contrast to the <a href="#i_028b">opposite page</a>. In our time the
+ Atlantic has become the centre of the world’s commerce, and the Mediterranean has
+ sunk in importance. It would be almost deserted but for the routes to
+ India via the Suez Canal.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>A few words may suffice as to what Nature has done towards the
+formation of nations and States by the configuration of the surface
+of the dry land&mdash;that is to say, by mountain chains and by river
+valleys. The only natural boundaries, besides seas, are mountains and
+deserts. Rivers, though convenient frontier lines for the politician
+or the geographer, are not natural boundaries, but rather unite than
+dissever those who dwell on their opposite banks. Thus the great
+natural boundaries in Asia have been the deserts of Eastern<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[Pg 29]</span> Persia,
+of Turkestan, and of Northern Arabia, with the long Himalayan chain
+and the savage ranges apparently parallel to the Irawadi River, which
+separate the easternmost corner of India and Burmah from South-Western
+China. To a less extent the Altai and Thian Shan, and, to a still
+smaller extent, the Taurus in Eastern Asia Minor, have tended to divide
+peoples and States. The Caucasus, which fills the space between two
+great seas, has been at all times an extremely important factor in
+history, severing the nomad races of Scythia from the more civilised
+and settled inhabitants of the valleys of the Phasis and the Kura.
+Even to-day, when the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[Pg 30]</span> Tsar holds sway on both sides of this chain, it
+constitutes a weakness in the position of Russia, and it helps to keep
+the Georgian races to the south from losing their identity in the mass
+of Russian subjects.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Place of Mountains in History</div>
+
+<p>Without the Alps and the Pyrenees, the annals of Europe must have been
+entirely different. The Alps, even more than the Italian climate,
+proved too much for the Romano-Germanic Emperors of the Middle Ages,
+who tried to rule both to the north and to the south of this wide
+mountain region. The Pyrenees have not only kept in existence the
+Basque people, but have repeatedly frustrated the attempts of monarchs
+to dominate both France and Spain. The mass of high moorland country
+which covers most of the space between the Solway Firth and the lower
+course of the Tweed has had something to do with the formation of
+a Scottish nation out of singularly diverse elements. The rugged
+mountains of Northern and Western Scotland, and the similar though less
+extensive hill country of Wales, have enabled Celtic races to retain
+their language and character in both these regions.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">What Steam-power has Done</div>
+
+<p>On the other hand, the vast open plains of Russia have allowed the
+Slavs of the districts which lie round Novgorod, Moscow, and Kiev to
+spread out among and Russify the Lithuanian and Finnish, to some extent
+also the Tartar, races, who originally held by far the larger part of
+that area. So, too, the Ural range, which, though long, is neither
+high nor difficult to pass, has opposed no serious obstacle to the
+overflow of population from Russia into Siberia. That in North America
+the Alleghanies have had a comparatively slight effect upon political
+history, although they did for a time arrest the march of colonisation,
+is due partly to the fact that they are a mass of comparatively low
+parallel ranges, with fertile valleys between, partly to the already
+advanced civilisation of the Anglo-Americans of the Atlantic seaboard,
+who found no great difficulty in making their way across, against the
+uncertain resistance of small and non-cohesive Indian tribes. A far
+more formidable natural barrier is formed between the Mississippi
+Valley and the Pacific slope by the Rocky Mountains, with the deserts
+of Arizona, Utah, Nevada, and Idaho. But the discovery of steam power
+has so much reduced the importance of this barrier that it does not
+seriously threaten the maintenance of a united American republic.</p>
+
+<p>In one respect the New World presents a remarkable contrast to the
+Old. The earliest civilisations of the latter seem to have sprung up
+in fertile river valleys. Those of the former are found not on the
+banks of streams like the Nile or Euphrates, but on elevated plateaux,
+where the heat of a tropical sun is mitigated by height above sea
+level. It was in the lofty lake basin of Tezcuco and Mexico, and on the
+comparatively level ground which lies between the parallel ranges of
+the Peruvian and Bolivian Andes, that American races had reached their
+finest intellectual development, not in the far richer, but also hotter
+and less healthy river valleys of Brazil, or (unless we are to except
+Yucatan) on the scorching shores of the Caribbean Sea. Nature was in
+those regions too strong for man, and held him down in savagery.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">How Nature fixes Sites of Cities</div>
+
+<p>In determining the courses of great rivers, Nature has determined the
+first highways of trade and fixed the sites of many cities. Nearly all
+the considerable towns founded more than three centuries ago owe their
+origin either to their possessing good havens on the sea-coast, or to
+the natural strength of their position on a defensible hill, or to
+their standing close to a navigable river. Marseilles, Alexandria, New
+York, Rio de Janeiro, are instances of the first; Athens, Edinburgh,
+Prague, Moscow, of the second; Bordeaux, Cologne, New Orleans,
+Calcutta, of the third. Rome and London, Budapest, and Lyons combine
+the advantages of the second with those of the third. This function of
+rivers in directing the lines of commerce and the growth of centres
+of population has become much less important since the construction
+of railroads, yet population tends to stay where it has been first
+gathered, so that the fluviatile cities are likely to retain their
+preponderance. Thus the river is as important to the historian as is
+the mountain range or the sea.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Climate and Commerce</div>
+
+<p>From the physical features of a country it is an easy transition to
+the capacities of the soil. The character of the products of a region
+determines the numbers of its inhabitants and the kind of life they
+lead. A land of forests breeds hunters or lumbermen; a land of pasture,
+which is too rough or too arid or too sterile for tillage, supports
+shepherds or herdsmen probably more or less nomadic. Either kind of
+land<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[Pg 31]</span> supports inhabitants few in proportion to its area. Fertile and
+well-watered regions rear a denser, a more settled, and presumably a
+more civilised population. Norway and Tyrol, Tibet and Wyoming, and the
+Orange River Colony, can never become so densely peopled as Bengal or
+Illinois or Lombardy, yet the fisheries of its coast and the seafaring
+energy of its people have sensibly increased the population of Norway.
+Thus he who knows the climate and the productive capacity of the
+soil of any given country can calculate its prospects of prosperity.
+Political causes may, of course, intervene. Asia Minor and the Valley
+of the Euphrates, regions once populous and flourishing, are now thinly
+inhabited and poverty-stricken because they are ruled by the Turks.</p>
+
+<p>But these cases are exceptional. Bengal and Lombardy and Egypt have
+supported large populations under all kinds of government. The products
+of each country tend, moreover, to establish definite relations between
+it and other countries, and do this all the more as population,
+commerce, and the arts advance. When England was a great wool-growing
+and wool-exporting country, her wool export brought her into close
+political connection with the wool-manufacturing Flemish towns. She is
+now a cotton-manufacturing country, needing cotton which she cannot
+grow at all, and consuming wheat which she does not grow in sufficient
+quantities. Hence she is in close commercial relations with the United
+States on one side, which give her most of her cotton and much of her
+wheat, and with India, from which she gets both these articles, and to
+which she exports a large part of her manufactured cotton goods.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Common Needs make for Peace</div>
+
+<p>So Rome, because she needed the corn of Egypt, kept Egypt under a
+specially careful administration. The rest of her corn came from
+Sicily and North Africa, and the Vandal conquest of North Africa dealt
+a frightful blow to the declining Empire. In these cases the common
+interest of sellers and buyers makes for peace, but in other cases
+the competition of countries desiring to keep commerce to themselves
+occasions war. The Spanish and Dutch fought over the trade to India in
+the earlier part of the seventeenth century, when the Portuguese Indies
+belonged to Spain, as the English and French fought in the eighteenth.
+And a nation, especially an insular nation, whose arable soil is not
+large enough or fertile enough to provide all the food it needs, has
+a powerful inducement either to seek peace or else to be prepared for
+maritime war. If such a country does not grow enough corn or meat at
+home, she must have a navy strong enough to make sure that she will
+always be able to get these necessaries from abroad. Attica did not
+produce all the grain needed to feed the Athenians, so they depended on
+the corn ships which came down from the Euxine, and were practically at
+the mercy of an enemy who could stop those ships.</p>
+
+<p>Of another natural source of wealth, the fisheries on the coast of
+a country, no more need be said than that they have been a frequent
+source of quarrels and even of war. The recognition of the right of
+each state to the exclusive control and enjoyment of the sea for three
+miles off its shores has reduced, but not entirely removed, the causes
+of friction between the fishermen of different countries.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Minerals and Civilisation</div>
+
+<p>Until recently, the surface of the soil was a far more important source
+of wealth than was that which lies beneath the surface. There were
+iron mines among the Chalybes on the Asiatic coast of the Euxine in
+ancient times; there were silver mines here and there, the most famous
+being those at Laurium, from which the Athenians drew large revenues,
+gold mines in Spain and Dacia, copper mines in Elba, tin mines in the
+south-west corner of Britain. But the number of persons employed in
+mining and the industries connected therewith was relatively small both
+in the ancient world and, indeed, down till the close of the eighteenth
+century. The immense development of coal-mining and of iron-working
+in connection therewith has now doubled, trebled, or quadrupled the
+population of large areas in Britain, Germany, France, Belgium, and
+the United States, adding vastly to the wealth of these countries
+and stimulating in them the growth of many mechanical arts. This new
+population is quite different in character from the agricultural
+peasantry who in earlier days formed the principal substratum of
+society. Its appearance has changed the internal politics of these
+countries, disturbing the old balance of forces and accelerating the
+progress of democratic principles.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i032">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_032.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE PLACE OF MOUNTAINS IN HISTORY: NATURE’S BARRIERS TO
+ MAN’S EXPANSION</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Without the Alps the annals of Europe must have been
+ entirely different. The mountains were too much for the emperors of the Middle
+ Ages, although Hannibal, the great Carthaginian general, succeeded
+ in crossing them two centuries before Christ, a feat which Napoleon
+ repeated 2,000 years later. Our engraving illustrates Napoleon crossing
+ the Alps.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_032_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[Pg 33]</span></p>
+
+<p>Nor have minerals failed to affect the international relations of
+peoples and States. It was chiefly for the precious metals that the
+Spaniards explored the American Continent and conquered Mexico and
+Peru. It was for the sake of capturing the ships bringing those metals
+back to Europe that the English sea-rovers made their way to the
+American coasts and involved England in wars with Spain. It was the
+discovery in 1885 of extensive auriferous strata unexampled in the
+certainty of their yield that drew a swarm of foreign immigrants into
+the Transvaal, whence arose those difficulties between them and the
+Dutch inhabitants previously established there which, coupled with the
+action of the wealthy owners of the mines, led at last to the war of
+1899 between Britain and the two South African Republics.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man’s Fight with Nature</div>
+
+<p>The productive capacity of a country is, however, in one respect very
+different from those great physical features&mdash;such as temperature,
+rainfall, coast configuration, surface character, geological structure,
+and river system&mdash;which have been previously noted. Those features are
+permanent qualities which man can affect only to a limited extent,
+as when he reduces the rainfall a little by cutting down forests, or
+increases it by planting them, or as when he unites an isle, like
+that of Cadiz, to the mainland, cuts through an isthmus, like that
+of Corinth, or clears away the bar at a river mouth, as that of the
+Mississippi has been cleared.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Exhausting the Mineral Wealth</div>
+
+<p>But the natural products of a country may be exhausted and even
+the productive capacity of its soil diminished. Constant tillage,
+especially if the same crop be raised and no manure added, will wear
+out the richest soils. This has already happened in parts of Western
+America. Still the earth is there; and with rest and artificial help
+it will recover its strength. But timber destroyed cannot always be
+induced to grow again, or at least not so as to equal the vigour
+of primeval forests. Wild animals, once extirpated, are gone for
+ever. The buffalo and beaver of North America, the beautiful lynxes
+of South Africa and some of its large ruminants, are irrecoverably
+lost for the purposes of human use, just as much as the dinornis,
+though a few individuals may be kept alive as specimens. So, too, the
+mineral resources of a country are not only consumable, but obviously
+irreplaceable. Already some of the smaller coalfields of Europe have
+been worked out, while in others it has become necessary to sink much
+deeper shafts, at an increasing cost. There is not much tin left in
+Cornwall, not much gold in the gravel deposits of Northern California.
+The richest known goldfield of the world, that of the Transvaal
+Witwatersrand, can hardly last more than thirty or forty years. Thus in
+a few centuries the productive capacity of many regions may have become
+quite different from what it is now, with grave consequences to their
+inhabitants.</p>
+
+<p>These are some of the ways in which Nature affects those economic,
+social, and political conditions of the life of man the changes in
+which make up history. As we have seen, that which Nature gives to
+man is always the same, in so far as Nature herself is always the
+same&mdash;an expression which is more popular than accurate, for Nature
+herself&mdash;that is to say, not the laws of Nature, but the physical
+environment of man on this planet&mdash;is in reality always changing. It is
+true that this environment changes so slowly that a thousand years may
+be too short a period in which man can note and record some forms of
+change&mdash;such, for instance, as that by which the temperature of Europe
+became colder during the approach of the glacial period and warmer
+during its recession&mdash;while ten thousand years may be too short to note
+any diminution in the heat which the sun pours upon the earth, or in
+the store of oxygen which the earth’s atmosphere holds.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Progress of Modern Invention<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Man Cannot Disregard Nature</div>
+
+<p>But as we have also seen, the relation to man of Nature’s gifts
+differs from age to age as man himself becomes different, and as his
+power of using these gifts increases, or his need of them becomes
+either less or greater. Every invention alters those relations. Water
+power became less relatively valuable when steam was applied to the
+generation of motive force. It has become more valuable with the new
+applications of electricity. With the discovery of mineral dyes, indigo
+and cochineal are now less wanted than they were. With the invention
+of the pneumatic tyre for bicycles and carriages, caoutchouc is more
+wanted. Mountains have become, since the making of railways, less of
+an obstacle to trade<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[Pg 34]</span> than they were, and they have also become more
+available as health resorts. Political circumstances may interfere
+with the ordinary and normal action of natural phenomena. A race may
+be attracted to or driven into a region for which it is not physically
+suited, as Europeans have gone to the West Indies, and negroes were
+once carried into New York and Pennsylvania. The course of trade which
+Nature prescribes between different countries may be hampered or
+stopped by protective tariffs; but in these cases Nature usually takes
+her eventual revenges. They are instances which show, not that man can
+disregard her, but that when he does so, he does so to his own loss.</p>
+
+<p>It would be easy to add further illustrations, but those already given
+are sufficient to indicate how multiform and pervading is the action
+upon man of the physical environment, or in other words, how in all
+countries, and at all times, geography is the necessary foundation
+of history, so that neither the course of a nation’s growth, nor its
+relations with other nations, can be grasped by one who has not come to
+understand the climate, surface, and products of the country wherein
+that nation dwells.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">There is no Unmixed Race left</div>
+
+<p>This conception of the relation of geography to history is, as has been
+said, the leading idea of the present work, and has furnished the main
+lines which it follows. It deals with history in the light of physical
+environment. Its ground plan, so to speak, is primarily geographical,
+and secondarily chronological. But there is one difficulty in the way
+of such a scheme, and of the use of such a ground plan, which cannot
+be passed over. That difficulty is suggested by the fact already
+noted&mdash;that hardly any considerable race, and possibly no great nation,
+now inhabits the particular part of the earth’s surface on which it was
+dwelling when a history begins. Nearly every people has either migrated
+bodily from one region to another, or has received such large infusions
+of immigrants from other regions as to have become practically a new
+people. Hence it is rare to find any nation now living under the
+physical conditions which originally moulded its character, or the
+character of some at least of its component elements. And hence it
+follows that when we study the qualities, aptitudes, and institutions
+of a nation in connection with the land it inhabits, we must always
+have regard not merely to the features of that land, but also to those
+of the land which was its earlier dwelling-place. Obviously, this
+brings a disturbing element into the study of the relations between
+land and people, and makes the whole problem a far more complicated one
+than it appeared at first sight.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Nature’s Race Factory</div>
+
+<p>Where a people has migrated from a country whose physical conditions
+were similar to those under which its later life is spent, or where it
+had reached only a comparatively low stage of economic and political
+development before the migration, the difficulties arising from this
+source are not serious. The fact that the English came into Britain
+from the lands round the mouth of the Elbe is not very material to
+an inquiry into their relations to their new home, because climate
+and soil were similar, and the emigrants were a rude, warlike race.
+But when we come to the second migration of the English, from Britain
+to North America, the case is altogether different. Groups of men
+from a people which had already become highly civilised, had formed
+a well-marked national character, and had created a body of peculiar
+institutions, planted themselves in a country whose climate and
+physical features are widely diverse from those of Britain.</p>
+
+<p>If, for the sake of argument, we assume the Algonquin aborigines of
+Atlantic North America as they were in <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1600 to have been
+the legitimate product of their physical environment&mdash;I say “for the
+sake of argument,” because it may be alleged that other forces than
+those of physical environment contributed to form them&mdash;what greater
+contrast can be imagined than the contrast between the inhabitants
+of New England in this present year and the inhabitants of the same
+district three centuries earlier, as Nature, and Nature alone, had
+turned them out of her factory? Plainly, therefore, the history of the
+United States cannot, so far as Nature and geography are concerned,
+be written with regard solely, or even chiefly, to the conditions of
+North American nature. The physical environment in which the English
+immigrants found themselves on that continent has no doubt affected<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[Pg 35]</span>
+their material progress and the course of their politics during the
+three centuries that have elapsed since settlements were founded in
+Virginia and on Massachusetts Bay.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Beginnings of Race History</div>
+
+<p>But it is not to that environment, but to earlier days, and especially
+to the twelve centuries during which their ancestors lived in England,
+that their character and institutions are to be traced. Thus the
+history of the American people begins in the forests of Germany,
+where the foundations of their polity were laid, and is continued in
+England, where they set up kingdoms, embraced Christianity, became one
+nation, received an influx of Celtic, Danish, and Norman-French blood,
+formed for themselves that body of customs, laws, and institutions
+which they transplanted to the new soil of America, and most of which,
+though changed and always changing, they still retain. The same thing
+is true of the Spaniards (as also of the Portuguese) in Central
+and South America. The difference between the development of the
+Hispano-Americans and that of their English neighbours to the north is
+not wholly, or even mainly, due to the different physical conditions
+under which the two sets of colonists have lived.</p>
+
+<p>It is due to the different antecedent history of the two races. So a
+history of America must be a history not only of America, but of the
+Spaniards, Portuguese, French, and English&mdash;one ought in strictness
+to add of the negroes also&mdash;before they crossed the Atlantic. The only
+true Americans, the only Americans for whom American nature can be
+deemed answerable, are the aboriginal red men whom we, perpetuating the
+mistake of Columbus, still call Indians.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Geography as a Basis of History</div>
+
+<p>This objection to the geographical scheme of history writing is no
+doubt serious when a historical treatise is confined to one particular
+country or continent, as in the instance I have taken of the Continent
+of North America. It is, however, less formidable in a universal
+history, such as the present work, because, by referring to another
+volume of the series, the reader will find what he needs to know
+regarding the history of the Spaniards, English, and French in those
+respective European homes where they have grown to be that which they
+were when, with religion, slaughter, and slavery in their train, they
+descended upon the shores of America.</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly the difficulty I have pointed out does not disparage the
+idea and plan of writing universal history on a geographical basis.
+It merely indicates a caution needed in applying that plan, and a
+condition indispensable to its utility&mdash;viz., the regard that must be
+had to the stage of progress at which a people has arrived when it is
+subjected to an environment different from that which had in the first
+instance helped to form its type.</p>
+
+<p class="s3 center mtop2 mbot1">THE GROWTH OF MODERN KNOWLEDGE</p>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">W</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first2">W</span>E
+have now considered some of the ways in which a universal history,
+written with special reference to the physical phenomena of the earth
+as geographical science presents them, may bring into strong relief
+one large and permanent set of influences which determine the progress
+or retrogression of each several branch of mankind. Upon the other
+principles which preside over and direct the composition of such a
+work, not much need be said. They are, of course, in the main, those
+which all competent historians will follow in writing the history of
+any particular people.</p>
+
+<p>But a universal history which endeavours to present in a short compass
+a record of the course of events in all regions and among all peoples,
+since none can safely be omitted, is specially exposed to two dangers.
+One is that of becoming sketchy and viewy. When a large object has to
+be dealt with on a small scale, it is natural to sum up in a few broad
+generalisations masses of facts which cannot be described or examined
+in detail. Broad generalisations are valuable when they proceed from a
+thoroughly trained mind&mdash;valuable, even if not completely verifiable,
+because they excite reflection. But it is seldom possible to make them
+exact. They necessarily omit most of the exceptions, and thus suggest a
+greater uniformity than exists.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_036">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_036.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Neurdein</div>
+ <div class="caption">THE STONE AGE: HUNTERS RETURNING FROM THE CHASE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the painting by Ferdinand Cormon</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_036_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Need of Care in History</div>
+
+<p>The other danger is that of sacrificing brightness and charm of
+presentation. When an effort is made to avoid generalisations, and
+to squeeze into the narrative as many facts as the space will admit,
+the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[Pg 37]</span> narrative is apt to become dry, because compression involves
+the curtailment of the personal and dramatic element. These are the
+rocks between which every historian has to steer. If he has ample
+space, he does well to prefer the course of giving all the salient
+facts and leaving the reader to generalise for himself. If, however,
+his space is limited, as must needs be the lot of those who write a
+universal history, the impossibility of going into minute detail makes
+generalisations inevitable, for it is through them that the result
+and significance of a multitude of minor facts must be conveyed in a
+condensed form.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">New Minds and New Facts</div>
+
+<p>All the greater, therefore, becomes the need for care and sobriety in
+the forming and setting forth every summarising statement and general
+conclusion or judgment. Probably the soundest guiding principle
+and best safeguard against error is to be found in shunning all
+preconceived hypotheses which seek to explain history by one set of
+causes, or to read it in the light of one idea. The habit of magnifying
+a single factor, such as the social factor, or the economic, or
+the religious, has been a fertile source of weakness in historical
+writing, because it has made the presentation of events one-sided,
+destroying that balance and proportion which it is the highest merit
+of any historian to have attained. Theory and generalisation are the
+life-blood of history. They make it intelligible. They give it unity.
+They convey to us the instruction which it always contains, together
+with so much of practical guidance in the management of communities
+as history is capable of rendering. But they need to be applied with
+reserve, and not only with an impartial mind, but after a painstaking
+examination of all the facts&mdash;whether or no they seem to make for the
+particular theory stated&mdash;and of all the theories which any competent
+predecessor has propounded.</p>
+
+<p>For the historian, though he must keep himself from falling under the
+dominion of any one doctrine by which it is sought to connect and
+explain phenomena, must welcome all the light which any such doctrine
+can throw upon facts. Even if such a doctrine be imperfect, even if it
+be tainted by error, it may serve to indicate relations between facts,
+or to indicate the true importance of facts, which previous writers
+had failed to observe, or had passed too lightly over. It is thus
+that history always needs to be re-written. History is a progressive
+science, not merely because new facts are constantly being discovered,
+not merely because the changes in the world give to old facts a new
+significance, but also because every truly penetrating and original
+mind sees in the old facts something which had not been seen before.</p>
+
+<p>A universal history is fitted to correct such defects as may be
+incident to that extreme specialism in historical writing which is now
+in fashion. The broad and concise treatment which a history of all
+times and peoples must adopt naturally leads to efforts to characterise
+the dominant features and tendency of an epoch or a movement, whether
+social, economic, or political.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Side Streams of History</div>
+
+<p>Yet even here there is a danger to be guarded against. No epoch, no
+movement, is so simple as it looks at first sight, or as one would
+gather from even the most honest contemporary writer. There is always
+an eddy at the side of the stream; and the stream itself is the
+resultant of a number of rivulets with different sources, whose waters,
+if the metaphor may be extended, are of different tints. Let any man
+study minutely a given epoch, such as that of the Reformation in
+Germany, or that of the Revolutionary War in America, and he will be
+surprised to find how much more complex were the forces at work than
+he had at first supposed, and on how much smaller a number of persons
+than he had fancied the principal forces did in fact directly operate.
+Or let any one&mdash;for this is perhaps the best, if the most difficult,
+method of getting at the roots of this complexity&mdash;study thoroughly
+and dispassionately the phenomena of his own time. Let him observe how
+many movements go on simultaneously, sometimes accelerating, sometimes
+retarding, one another, and mark how, the more fully he understands
+this complex interlacing, so much the less confident do his predictions
+of the future become. He will then realise how hard it is to find
+simple explanations and to deliver exact statements regarding critical
+epochs in the past.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe27_5" id="i_038">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_038.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Mercier</div>
+ <div class="caption">THE FIRST INDUSTRIES: POTTERY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the painting by Ferdinand Cormon</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_038_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe27" id="i_039">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_039.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Mercier</div>
+ <div class="caption">THE FIRST INDUSTRIES: THE FORGE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the painting by Ferdinand Cormon</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_039_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[Pg 40]</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Main Stream of History</div>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, the task of summarising and explaining is one to which
+the writer of a History of the World must address himself. If he has
+the disadvantage of limited space, he has the advantage of being able
+to assume the reader’s knowledge of what has gone before, and to invite
+the reader’s attention to what will come after. Thus he stands in a
+better position than does the writer who deals with one country or one
+epoch only for making each part of history illustrate other parts,
+for showing how similar social tendencies, similar proclivities of
+human nature, work similarly under varying conditions and are followed
+by similar, though never identical, results. He is able to bring out
+the essential unity of history, expunging from the reader’s mind the
+conventional and often misleading distinctions that are commonly drawn
+between the ancient, the mediæval, and the modern time. He can bring
+the contemporaneous course of events in different countries into a
+fruitful relation. And in the case of the present work, which dwells
+more especially on the geographical side of history, he can illustrate
+from each country in succession the influence of physical environment
+on the formation of races and the progress of nations, the principles
+which determine the action of such environment being everywhere
+similar, though the forms which that action takes are infinitely
+various.</p>
+
+<p>Is there, it may be asked, any central thread in following which the
+unity of history most plainly appears? Is there any process in tracing
+which we can feel that we are floating down the main stream of the
+world’s onward movement? If there be such a process, its study ought to
+help us to realise the unity of history by connecting the development
+of the numerous branches of the human family.</p>
+
+<p>One such process has already been adverted to and illustrated. It is
+the gradual and constant increase in man’s power over Nature, whereby
+he is emancipated more and more from the conditions she imposes on
+his life, yet is brought into an always closer touch with her by the
+discovery of new methods of using her gifts. Two other such processes
+may be briefly examined. One goes on in the sphere of time, and
+consists in the accumulation from age to age of the strength, the
+knowledge, and the culture of mankind as a whole. The other goes on in
+space as well as in time, and may be described as the contraction of
+the world, relatively to man.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Great Increase of Population</div>
+
+<p>The accumulation of physical strength is most apparent in the increase
+of the human race. We have no trustworthy data for determining the
+population, even of any one civilised country, more than a century
+and a half ago; much less can we conjecture that of any country
+in primitive or prehistoric times. It is clear, however, that in
+prehistoric times&mdash;say, six or seven thousand years ago, there were
+very few men on the earth’s surface. The scarcity of food alone would
+be sufficient to prove that; and, indeed, all our data go to show it.
+Fifty years ago the world’s population used to be roughly conjectured
+at from seven to nine hundred millions, two-thirds of them in China and
+India. It is now estimated at over fifteen hundred millions. That of
+Europe alone must have tripled within a century, and can hardly be less
+than four hundred millions. That of North America may have scarcely
+exceeded four or five millions in the time of Christopher Columbus, or
+at the date of the first English settlements, though we have only the
+scantiest data for a guess. It may now be 130,000,000, for there are
+over a hundred millions in the United States alone, about fifteen in
+Mexico, and eight in Canada, besides the inhabitants of Central America.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Prolific Power of White People<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Physical &amp; Intellectual Power</div>
+
+<p>The increase has been most swift in the civilised countries, such
+as Britain, Germany, Russia, and the United States; but it has
+gone on in India also since India came under British rule (famines
+notwithstanding), and in the regions recently colonised by Europeans,
+such as Australia, Siberia, and Argentina, the disappearance of
+aborigines being far more than compensated for by the prolific power
+of the white immigrants. Some regions, such as Asia Minor and parts
+of North Africa, are more thinly peopled now than they were under the
+Roman Empire, and both China and Peru may have no larger population
+than they had five, or ten, or fifteen centuries ago. But taking
+the world at large, the increase is enormous, and will apparently
+continue. Even after the vacant cultivable spaces which remain in
+the two Americas,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[Pg 41]</span> Northern Asia, and Australasia have been filled,
+the discovery of new modes of enlarging the annually available stock
+of food may maintain the increase. It is most conspicuous among the
+European races, and is, of course, due to the greater production in
+some regions of food, and in others of commodities wherewith food can
+be purchased. It means an immense addition to the physical force of
+mankind in the aggregate, and to the possibilities of intellectual
+force also&mdash;a point to be considered later. And, of course, it
+also means an immense and growing preponderance of the civilised
+white nations, which are now probably one half of mankind, and may,
+in another century, when they have risen from about five hundred
+to, possibly, one thousand or fifteen hundred millions, be nearly
+two-thirds.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Modern Man Stronger than his Ancestors</div>
+
+<p>As respects the strength of the average individual man, the inquiry
+is less simple. Palæolithic man and neolithic man were apparently
+(though here and there may have been exceptions) comparatively feeble
+creatures, as are the relics of the most backward tribes known to us,
+such as the Veddas of Ceylon, the Bushmen, the Fuegians. Some savages,
+as, for instance, the Patagonians, are men of great stature, and some
+of the North American Indians possess amazing powers of endurance. The
+Greeks of the fifth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, and the Teutons of the time
+of Julius Cæsar, had reached a high physical development. Pheidippides
+is said to have traversed one hundred and fifty miles on foot in
+forty-eight hours. But if we think of single feats of strength, feats
+have been performed in our own day&mdash;such as Captain Webb’s swimming
+across the Straits of Dover&mdash;equal to anything recorded from ancient
+or mediæval times. To swim across the much narrower Hellespont was
+then deemed a surprising exploit. Nor do we know of any race more to
+be commended for physical power and vigour of constitution than the
+American backwoodsmen of Kentucky or Oregon to-day. The swords used by
+the knights of the fifteenth century have usually handles too small for
+many a modern English or German hand to grasp.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">America’s Mingled Races</div>
+
+<p>Isolated feats do not prove very much, but there is good reason to
+believe that the average European is as strong as ever he was, and
+probably more healthy, at least if longevity is a test of health.
+One may fairly conclude that with better and more abundant food,
+the average of stature and strength has improved over the world at
+large, so that in this respect also the force of mankind as a whole
+has advanced. Whether this advance will continue is more doubtful. In
+modern industrial communities the law of the survival of the fittest
+may turn out to be reversed, for it is the poorer and lower sections
+of the population that marry at an early age, and have the largest
+families, while prudential considerations keep down the birth-rate
+among the upper middle-class. In Transylvania, for instance, the
+Saxons are dying out, because very few children are born to each pair,
+while the less educated and cultured Rumans increase fast. In North
+America, the Old New England stock of comparatively pure British blood
+has begun to be swamped by the offspring of the recent immigrants,
+mostly Irish or French Canadians; and although the sons of New England,
+who have gone West, continue to be prolific, it is probable that the
+phenomena of New England will recur in the Mississippi Valley, and
+that the newcomers from Europe who form the less cultivated strata
+of the population&mdash;Irish, Germans, Italians, Czechs, Poles, Slovaks,
+Rumans&mdash;will contribute an increasing proportion of the inhabitants.
+Some of these, and especially the Irish and the Germans and the
+Scandinavians, are among the best elements in the American population,
+and have produced men of the highest distinction. But the average
+level among them of versatile aptitude and of intellectual culture is
+slightly below that of the native Americans.</p>
+
+<p>Now, the poorer sections are in most countries, though of course not
+always to the same extent, somewhat inferior in physical as well as in
+mental quality, and more prone to suffer from that greatest hindrance
+to physical improvement, the abuse of alcoholic drinks.</p>
+
+<p>We come next to another form of the increase of human resources, the
+accumulation of knowledge, and of what may be called intellectual
+culture and capacity, for it is convenient to distinguish these two
+latter from knowledge.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i042">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_042.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">PIONEERS OF MODERN CIVILISATION</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The discovery of precious metals is a great factor in
+ progress. Seekers after gold are chief among the pioneers who help to carry
+ civilisation into new lands.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Inventions Mean Progress</div>
+
+<p>In knowledge there has been an advance, not merely a tolerably
+steady<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[Pg 42]</span> and constant advance, but one which has gone on with a sort
+of geometrical progression, moving the faster the nearer we come to
+our own time. Whatever may have befallen in the prehistoric darkness,
+history knows of only one notable arrest or setback in the onward
+march&mdash;that which marks the seventh, eighth, and ninth centuries of
+the Christian era. Even this set-back was practically confined to
+Southern and Western Europe, and affected only certain departments
+of knowledge. It did not, save, perhaps, as regards a few artistic
+processes, extinguish that extremely important part of the previously
+accumulated resources of mankind which consisted in the knowledge of
+inventions. It is in respect of inventions, especially mechanical and
+physical or chemical inventions, that the accumulation of knowledge has
+been most noteworthy and most easy to appreciate.</p>
+
+<p>A history of inventions is a history of the progress of mankind, of a
+progress to which every race may have contributed in primitive times,
+though all the later contributions have come from a few of the most
+civilised. Every great invention marks one onward step, as one may see
+by enumerating a few, such as the use of fire, cooking, metal working,
+the domestication of wild animals, the tillage of the ground, the use
+of plough and mattock and harrow and fan, the discovery of plants
+or trees useful for food or for medicine, the cart, the wheel, the
+water-mill (overshot, undershot, and turbine), the windmill, the
+distaff (followed long, long after by the spinning-wheel), the loom,
+dyestuffs, the needle, the potter’s wheel, the hydraulic press, the
+axe-handle, the spear, the bow, the shield, the war-chariot, the
+sling, the cross-bow, the boat, the paddle, the oar, the helm, the
+sail, the mariner’s compass, the clock, picture-writing, the alphabet,
+parchment, paper,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[Pg 43]</span> printing, photography, the sliding keel, the
+sounding-lead, the log, the brick, mortar, the column, the arch, the
+dome, till we come down to explosives, the microscope, the cantilever,
+and the Röntgen rays.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_043">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_043.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE FIRST SETTLEMENT OF A NEW CITY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Many flourishing cities in South Africa, Australia, and
+ America have grown up around the sites where the first gold-seekers pegged out
+ their claims in unexploited territories and began digging for the precious
+ metal.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The history of the successive discovery, commixture, and applications
+of the metals, from copper and bronze down to manganese, platinum, and
+aluminium, or of the successive discovery and utilisation of sources of
+power&mdash;the natural sources, such as water and wind, the artificially
+procured, such as steam, gas, and electricity&mdash;or of the production and
+manufacture of materials available for clothing, wool, hair, linen,
+silk, cotton, would show how every step becomes the basis for another
+step, and how inventions in one department suggest or facilitate
+inventions in another. Recent discoveries in surgery and medicine, such
+as the use of antiseptics, tend to improve health and to prolong life;
+and in doing so, they increase the chances of further discoveries being
+made.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Prolonging of Life</div>
+
+<p>Who can tell what the world may have lost by the early death of many a
+man of genius? One peculiar line of discovery which at first seemed to
+have nothing to do with practice has proved to be of signal service;
+the working out of mathematical methods of calculation by means of
+which the mechanical and physical sciences have in recent times made a
+progress in their practical application undreamt of by those who laid
+the foundations of geometry and algebra many centuries ago. It may,
+indeed, be said that all the sciences need one another, and that none
+has been without its utilities for practice, since even that which
+deals with the heavenly bodies has been used for the computation of
+time, was used by the agriculturist before he had any calendars to
+guide him, and has been of supreme value to the navigator. It has also
+been suggested that an observation of sun spots may enable the advent
+of specially hot seasons, involving droughts, to be predicted.</p>
+
+<p>Another kind of knowledge also grows by the joint efforts of many
+peoples, that which records the condition of men in the past and the
+present, including history, economics, statistics, and the other
+so-called social sciences. This kind also is useful for practice, and
+has led to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[Pg 44]</span> improvements by which nearly all nations have profited,
+such as an undebased currency, banking and insurance, better systems
+of taxation, corporations, and joint stock companies. With this we may
+couple the invention of improved political institutions.</p>
+
+<p>The accumulation of knowledge, especially of scientific knowledge
+applied to the exploitation of the resources of Nature, means the
+accumulation of wealth&mdash;that is to say, of all the things which
+men need or use. The total wealth of the world must have at least
+quadrupled or quintupled within the last hundred years. Nearly all of
+it is in the hands or under the control of the civilised nations of
+European stock, among whom the United States stands foremost, both
+in rate of economic growth and in the absolute quantity of values
+possessed.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Knowledge Means Wealth</div>
+
+<p>Two further observations belong to this part of the subject. One is
+that this stock of useful knowledge, the accumulation of which is the
+central fact of the material progress as well as of the intellectual
+history of mankind, now belongs to (practically) all races and states
+alike. Some, as we shall note presently, are more able to use it than
+others, but all have access to it. This is a new fact. It is true
+that most races have contributed something to the common stock; and
+that even among the civilised peoples, no one or two or three (except
+possibly the Greeks as respects ancient times) can claim to have
+contributed much more than the others. But in earlier ages there were
+peoples or groups of peoples who were for a time the sole possessors
+of inventions which gave them great advantages, especially for war.
+Superior weapons as well as superior drill enabled Alexander the Great,
+and afterward the Romans, to conquer most of the civilised world.
+Horses and firearms, with courage and discipline, enabled two Spanish
+adventurers to seize two ancient American empires with very scanty
+forces, as they enabled a handful of Dutch Boers to overcome the hosts
+of Mosilikatze and Dingaan. So there were formerly industrial arts
+known to or practised by a few peoples only. But now all inventions,
+even those relating to war, are available even to the more backward
+races, if they can learn how to use them or can hire white men to do
+so for them. The facilities of communication are so great, the means
+of publicity so abundant, that everything becomes speedily known
+everywhere.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Inventions are now Universal</div>
+
+<p>The other observation is that there is now no risk that any valuable
+piece of knowledge will be lost. Every public event that happens, as
+well as every fact of scientific consequence, is put on record, and
+that not on a single stone or in a few manuscripts, but in books, of
+which so many copies exist that even the perishable nature of the
+material will not involve the loss of the contents, since, if these
+contents are valuable, they will be transferred to and issued in other
+books, and so <i>ad infinitum</i>. Thus every process of manufacture is
+known to so many persons that while it continues to be serviceable it
+is sure to be familiar and transmitted from generation to generation
+by practice as well as by description. We must imagine a world totally
+different from the world we know in order to imagine the possibility of
+any diminution, indeed of any discontinuance of the increase, of this
+stock of knowledge which the world has been acquiring, and which is not
+only knowledge but potential wealth.</p>
+
+<p>When one passes from knowledge considered as a body of facts
+ascertained and available for use to the thing we call intellectual
+aptitude or culture&mdash;namely, the power of turning knowledge to
+account and of producing results in spheres other than material&mdash;and
+when we inquire whether mankind has made a parallel advance in this
+direction, it becomes necessary to distinguish three different kinds of
+intellectual capacity.</p>
+
+<p>The first may be called the power of using scientific methods for
+investigating phenomena, whether physical or social.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">No Decrease of Knowledge is now Likely</div>
+
+<p>The second is the power of speculation, applied to matters which
+have not hitherto been found capable of examination by the methods
+of science, whether observational, experimental, or mathematical.
+The third is the power of intellectual creation, whether literary or
+artistic.</p>
+
+<p>The methods of scientific inquiry may almost be classed with the
+ascertained facts of science or with inventions, as being parts of
+the stock of accumulated knowledge built up by the labour of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[Pg 45]</span> many
+generations. They are known to everybody who cares to study them, and
+can be learnt and applied by everybody who will give due diligence.
+Just as every man can be taught to fire a gun, or steer a ship, or
+write a letter, though guns, helms, and letters are the result of
+discoveries made by exceptionally gifted men, so every graduate in
+science of a university can use the methods of induction, can observe
+and experiment with a correctness which a few centuries ago even the
+most vigorous minds could scarcely have reached.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Original Thinkers are still Rare</div>
+
+<p>Because the methods have been so fully explained and illustrated as to
+have grown familiar, a vast host of investigators, very few of whom
+possess scientific genius, are at work to-day extending our scientific
+knowledge. So the methods of historical criticism&mdash;so the methods
+of using statistics&mdash;are to-day profitably applied by many men with
+no such original gift as would have made them competent critics or
+statisticians had not the paths been cut by a few great men and trodden
+since by hundreds of feet. All that is needed is imitation&mdash;intelligent
+and careful imitation. Nevertheless, there remains this sharp contrast
+between knowledge of the facts of applied science and knowledge of
+the methods, that whereas there is no radical difference between the
+ability of one man and that of another to use a mechanical invention,
+such as a steam plough or an electric motor-car, there is all the
+difference in the world between the power of one intellect and another
+to use a method for the purposes of fresh discovery. Knowledge
+fossilised in a concrete invention or even in a mathematical formula is
+a sort of tool ready to every hand. But a method, though serviceable
+to everybody, becomes eminently fruitful only when wielded by the same
+kind of original genius as that which made discoveries by the less
+perfect methods of older days. This is apparent even in inquiries which
+seem to reside chiefly in collection and computation. Everybody tries
+nowadays to use statistics. Many people do use them profitably. But the
+people who by means of statistics can throw really fresh and brilliant
+light on a problem are as few as ever they were.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Advantage of Modern over Old Thinkers</div>
+
+<p>When we turn to the exercise of speculative thought on subjects not
+amenable to strictly scientific&mdash;that is to say, to exact&mdash;methods,
+the gain which has come to mankind by the labour of past ages is of
+a different order. Metaphysics, ethics, and theology, to take the
+most obvious examples, are all of them the richer for the thoughts of
+philosophers in the past. A number of distinctions have been drawn,
+and a number of classifications made, a number of confusions, often
+verbal, have been cleared up, a number of fallacies detected, a number
+of technical terms invented, whereby the modern speculator enjoys a
+great advantage over his predecessor. His mind has been clarified, and
+many new aspects of the old problems have been presented, so that he is
+better able to see all round the old problems.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Living Thought of Past Ages</div>
+
+<p>None of the great thinkers, from Pythagoras down to Hegel, has
+left metaphysics where he found it. Yet none can be said to have
+built on the foundations of his predecessors in the same way as the
+mathematicians and physicists and chemists have added to the edifice
+they found. What the philosophers have done is to accumulate materials
+for the study of man’s faculties and modes of thinking, and of his
+ideas regarding his relations to the universe, while also indicating
+various methods by which the study may be pursued. Each great product
+of speculative thought is itself a part of these materials, and for
+that reason never becomes obsolete, as the treatises of the old
+physicists and chemists have mostly become. Aristotle, for instance,
+has left us books on natural history, on metaphysics and ethics, and
+on politics. Those on natural history are mere curiosities, and no
+modern biologist or zoologist needs them. Those on metaphysics and
+ethics still deserve the attention of the student of philosophy,
+though he may in a certain sense be said to have got beyond them. The
+treatise on politics still keeps its place beside Montesquieu, Burke,
+and Tocqueville. Or, to take a thinker who like Aristotle seems very
+far removed from us, though fifteen hundred years later in date, St.
+Thomas of Aquinum discusses questions from many of which the modern
+world has moved away, and discusses them by methods which many do not
+now use, starting from premises which many do not accept. But he marks
+a remarkable stage in the history of human<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[Pg 46]</span> thought, and as a part of
+that history, and as an example of extraordinary dialectical ingenuity
+and subtlety, he remains an object of interest to those least in
+agreement with his conclusions.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Every Great Thinker Affects Others</div>
+
+<p>Every great thinker affects other thinkers, and propagates the impulse
+he has received, though perhaps in a quite different direction.
+The teaching of Socrates was the starting point for nearly all
+the subsequent schools of Greek philosophy. Hume became the point
+of departure for Kant, who desired to lay a deeper foundation for
+philosophy than that which Hume seemed to have overturned. All these
+great ones have not only enriched us, but are still capable of
+stimulating us. But they have not improved our capacity for original
+thinking. The accumulation of scientific knowledge has, as already
+observed, put all mankind in a better position for solving further
+physical problems and establishing a more complete dominion over
+Nature. The accumulation of philosophic thought has had no similar
+effect. In the former case each man stands, so to speak, on the
+shoulders of his predecessors. In the latter he stands on his own feet.
+The value of future contributions to philosophy will depend on the
+original power of the minds that make them, and only to a small extent
+(except by way of stimulus) on what such minds may have drawn from
+those into whose labours they have entered.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Ebb-Tides of Intellectual Culture</div>
+
+<p>When we come to the products of literary and artistic capacity, we
+find an even vaster accumulation of intellectual treasure available
+for enjoyment, but a still more marked absence of connection between
+the amount of treasures possessed and the power of adding fresh
+treasures to them. Since writing came into use, and, indeed, even in
+the days when memory alone preserved lays and tales, every age and
+many races have contributed to the stock. There have been ebbs and
+flows both in quantity and quality. The centuries between <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>
+600 and <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1100 have left us very little of high merit in
+literature, though something in architecture; and the best of that
+little in literature did not come from the seats of Roman civilisation
+in Italy, France, Spain, and the East Roman Empire.</p>
+
+<p>Some periods have seen an eclipse of poetry, others an eclipse of art
+or a sterility in music. Literature and the arts have not always
+flourished together, and musical genius in particular seems to have
+little to do with the contemporaneous development of other forms of
+intellectual power. The quantity of production bears no relation to
+the quality, not even an inverse relation; for the pessimistic notion
+that the larger the output the smaller is the part which possesses
+brilliant excellence, has not been proved. Still less does the amount
+of good work produced in any given area depend upon the number of
+persons living in that area. Florence, between <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1250 and
+<span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1500 gave birth to more men of first-rate poetical and
+artistic genius than London has produced since 1250; yet Florence had
+in those two and a half centuries a population of probably only from
+forty to sixty thousand. And Florence herself has since <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>
+1500 given birth to scarcely any distinguished poets or artists, though
+her population has been larger than it was in the fifteenth century.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i046">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_046.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Mansell</div>
+ <div class="caption">THE MIND OF THE ANCIENT WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Aristotle (B.C. 384&ndash;322) whose influence is greater
+ in some lines than that of St. Thomas of Aquinum, who represents mediæval thought,
+ 1500 years later.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The increase in the world’s stock of intellectual wealth is one of the
+most remarkable facts in history, for it represents a constant increase
+in the means of enjoyment. Such losses as there have been nearly all
+occurred during the Dark Ages; but there is now little risk<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[Pg 47]</span> that
+anything of high literary or musical value will perish, though, of
+course, works of art, and especially buildings and carvings, suffer or
+vanish.</p>
+
+<p>The increase does not, however, tend to any strengthening of the
+creative faculty. There is a greater abundance of models of excellence,
+models of which form the taste, afford a stimulus to sensitive minds,
+and establish a sort of technique with well-known rules. The principles
+of criticism are more fully investigated. The power of analysis grows,
+and the appreciation both of literature and of art is more widely
+diffused. Their influence on the whole community becomes greater, but
+the creative imagination which is needed for the production of original
+work becomes no more abundant and no more powerful. It may, indeed, be
+urged, though our data are probably insufficient for a final judgment,
+that the finer qualities of poetry and of pictorial and plastic art
+tend rather to decline under the more analytic habit of mind which
+belongs to the modern world. Simplicity, freshness, spontaneity come
+less naturally to those who have fallen under the pervasive influence
+of this habit.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_047">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_047.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Mansell</div>
+ <div class="caption">THE MIND OF THE MEDIÆVAL WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">St. Thomas of Aquinum, 1500 years later than Aristotle,
+ represents mediæval thought. St. Thomas, however, influences the life and thought
+ of many thousands to-day.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Effect of Thought on Mankind</div>
+
+<p>There remains one other way in which the incessant play of thought
+may be said to have increased or improved the resources of mankind.
+Certain principles or ideas belonging to the moral and social
+sphere&mdash;to the moral sphere by their origin, to the social sphere by
+their results&mdash;make their way to a more or less general acceptance, and
+exert a potent influence upon human life and action. They are absent
+in the earliest communities of which we know, or are present only in
+germ. They emerge, sometimes in the form of customs gradually built
+up in one or more peoples, sometimes in the utterances of one gifted
+mind. Sometimes they spread impalpably; sometimes they become matter
+for controversy, and are made the battle-cries of parties. Sometimes
+they end by being universally received, though not necessarily put into
+practice. Sometimes, on the other hand, they continue to be rejected
+in one country, or by one set of persons in a country, as vehemently
+as they are asserted by another. As instances of these principles or
+ideas or doctrines, whatever one is to call them, the following may be
+taken: The condemnation of piracy, of slavery, and of treaty-breaking,
+of outrages on the bodies of dead enemies, of cruelty to the lower
+animals, of the slaughter of prisoners in cold blood, of polygamy,
+of torture to witnesses or criminals; the recognition of the duty of
+citizens to obey the laws, and of the moral responsibility of rulers
+for the exercise of their power, of the right of each man to hold
+his own religious opinion and to worship accordingly, of the civil
+(though not necessarily of the political) equality of all citizens;
+the disapproval of intoxication, the value set upon female chastity,
+the acceptance of the social and civil (to which some would add the
+political) equality of women.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Men who Contributed to Progress<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Slavery was Destroyed by Sentiment</div>
+
+<p>All these dogmas or ideas or opinions&mdash;some have become dogmas in
+all civilised peoples, others are rather to be described as opinions
+whose truth or worth is denied or only partially admitted&mdash;are the
+slow product of many generations. Most of them are due to what we may
+call the intelligence and sentiment of mankind at large, rather than
+to their advocacy by any prominent individual thinkers. The teachings
+of such thinkers have, of course, done much to advance them. Everybody
+would name Socrates and Confucius as among the men who have contributed
+to their progress; some would add such names as those of Mohammed and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[Pg 48]</span>
+St. Francis of Assisi. Christianity has, of course, made the largest
+contributions. How much is due to moral feeling, how much to a sense
+of common utility, cannot be exactly estimated. Economic reasonings
+and practical experience would have probably in the long run destroyed
+slavery, but it was sentiment that did in fact destroy it in the
+civilised States where it had longest survived.</p>
+
+<p>How much these doctrines, even in the partial and imperfect application
+which most of them have secured, have done for humanity may be
+perceived by anyone who will imagine what the world would be if they
+were unknown. They form one of the most substantial additions made to
+what may be called the intellectual and moral capital with which man
+has to work this planet and improve his own life upon it. And the most
+interesting and significant crises in history are those which have
+turned upon the recognition or application of principles of this kind.
+The Reformation of the sixteenth century, the French Revolution, the
+War of Secession in the United States, are familiar modern examples.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Intellect Mightier than Population</div>
+
+<p>Putting all these forms of human achievement together&mdash;the extension
+of the scientific knowledge of Nature with consequent mastery over
+her, the scientific knowledge of social phenomena in the past and
+the present, the records of philosophic speculation, the mass of
+literary and artistic products, the establishment, however partial and
+imperfect, of regulative moral and political principles&mdash;it will be
+seen that the accumulation of this vast stock of intellectual wealth
+has been an even more important factor than the increase of population
+in giving man strength and dignity over against Nature, and in opening
+up to him an endless variety of modes of enjoying life&mdash;that is to say,
+of making it yield to him the most which its shortness and his own
+physical infirmities permit. The process by which this accumulation has
+been carried along is the central thread of history. The main aim of a
+history of the world must be to show what and how each race or people
+has contributed to the general stock. To this aim political history,
+ecclesiastical history, economic history, the history of philosophy,
+and the history of science, are each of them subordinate, though it is
+only through them that the process can be explained.</p>
+
+<p>In these last few pages intellectual progress has been considered apart
+from the area in which it has gone on, and apart from the conditions
+imposed on it by the natural features of that area. A few words are,
+however, needed regarding its relation to the surface of the earth. The
+movement of civilisation must be considered from the side of space as
+well as from that of time.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Contraction of the World</div>
+
+<p>Space is a material element in the inquiry because it has divided
+the families of mankind from one another. Some families, such as the
+Chinese and the Peruvians, have developed independently, some, such as
+the South and West European peoples, in connection with, or perhaps
+in dependence on, the development of other races or peoples. Hence
+that which each achieved was in some cases achieved for itself only,
+in other cases for its neighbours as well. The contributions made by
+different races have&mdash;at any rate during the last four thousand years,
+and probably in earlier days also&mdash;been very unequal; yet none can
+have failed to contribute something if only by way of influencing the
+others. Inequality in progress would seem to have become more marked
+in the later than in the earlier periods. Indeed, some races, such as
+those of Australia, appear during many centuries, possibly owing to
+their isolation, to have made no progress at all. They may even have
+receded.</p>
+
+<p>When we regard the evolution and development of man from the side of
+his relations to space, three facts stand out&mdash;the contraction of the
+world, the overflow of the more advanced races, and the consequent
+diffusion all over the world of what is called civilisation.</p>
+
+<p>By the contraction of the world, I mean the greater swiftness, ease,
+and safety with which men can pass from one part of it to another, or
+communicate with one another across great intervening spaces. This has
+the effect of making the world smaller for most practical purposes,
+while the absolute distance in latitude and longitude remains the same.
+The progress of discovery is worth tracing, for it shows how much
+larger the small earth, which was known to the early nations, must have
+seemed to them than the whole earth, which we know, seems to us.</p>
+
+<hr class="r95" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[Pg 49]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_049a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_049a.jpg" alt="Genius of Two Cities, Header" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="frontmatter">
+
+<p class="s3 center">THE ARTISTIC GENIUS OF TWO CITIES</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">A COMPARISON OF THE NATIVE POETS &amp; ARTISTS OF FLORENCE
+&amp; LONDON</p>
+
+<p class="p0">“The quantity of production,” says Mr. Bryce, “bears no relation
+to the quality. Still less does the amount of good work produced
+in any given area depend upon the number of persons living in
+that area. Florence between A.D. 1250 and A.D. 1500 gave birth to
+more men of first-rate poetical and artistic genius than London
+has produced since 1250; yet Florence had in those two and a
+half centuries a population of probably only from forty to sixty
+thousand. And Florence herself has since A.D. 1500 given birth to
+scarcely any distinguished poets or artists, though her population
+has been larger than it was in the fifteenth century.”</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">THE GENIUS OF THE GOLDEN AGE OF FLORENCE, 1250 TO 1500, FAR EXCEEDED
+THAT OF LONDON FROM 1250 TO THE PRESENT DAY</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>Poets and Artists Born in Florence from 1250&ndash;1500</b></p>
+
+<ul class="artists">
+ <li>Alberti, Leon Battista, 1404&ndash;1472, architect, painter</li>
+ <li>Albertinelli, Mariotto, 1474&ndash;1515, painter</li>
+ <li>Andrea del Sarto, 1487&ndash;1531, painter</li>
+ <li>Angelico da Fiesole, Fra Giovanni, 1387&ndash;1455, painter</li>
+ <li>Botticelli, Alessandro, 1447&ndash;1510, painter</li>
+ <li>Cavalcanti, Guido, 1255&ndash;1300, poet, philosopher</li>
+ <li>Cimabue, Giovanni, 1240&ndash;1302, painter</li>
+ <li>Credi, Lorenzo di, 1459&ndash;1537, painter</li>
+ <li>Dante, Alighieri, 1265&ndash;1321, poet</li>
+ <li>Donatello, 1386&ndash;1466, sculptor and painter</li>
+ <li>Ghiberti, Lorenzo, 1378&ndash;1455, sculptor</li>
+ <li>Ghirlandajo, Domenico, 1449&ndash;1494, painter</li>
+ <li>Gozzoli, Benozzo, 1420&ndash;1498, painter</li>
+ <li>Leonardo da Vinci, 1452&ndash;1519, painter, sculptor</li>
+ <li>Lippi, Fra Filippo, 1412&ndash;1469, painter</li>
+ <li>Lippi, Filippino, 1459&ndash;1504, painter</li>
+ <li>Lorenzo, Don, 1370&ndash;1425, painter</li>
+ <li>Medici, Lorenzo de, 1448&ndash;1492, poet</li>
+ <li>Orcagnia, Andrea di Cione, 1329&ndash;1368? sculptor, painter</li>
+ <li>Perugino, Vannucci Pietro, 1446&ndash;1524, painter</li>
+ <li>Pesellino, Francesco di, 1422&ndash;1457, painter</li>
+ <li>Pesello, Giuliano, 1367&ndash;1446, painter, sculptor</li>
+ <li>Pollajuolo, Antonio, 1429&ndash;1498, sculptor, painter</li>
+ <li>Pollajuolo, Piero, 1443&ndash;1496, sculptor, painter</li>
+ <li>Robbia, Andrea della, 1437&ndash;1528, sculptor</li>
+ <li>Robbia, Luca della, 1399&ndash;1482, sculptor</li>
+ <li>Rossi, Giovanni Battista de, 1494&ndash;1541, sculptor, painter</li>
+ <li>Ruccellai, Giovanni, 1475&ndash;1525, poet</li>
+ <li>Spinello, Aretino, 1334&ndash;1410, painter</li>
+ <li>Ucello, Paolo, 1397&ndash;1475, painter</li>
+ <li>Verocchio, Andrea, 1435&ndash;1488, sculptor, painter</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="s4 center">THE LAST FOUR HUNDRED YEARS OF FLORENTINE CULTURE HAVE BEEN LESS
+PRODUCTIVE THAN THE PRECEDING TWO AND A HALF CENTURIES</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>Poets and Artists Born in Florence since 1500</b></p>
+
+<ul class="artists">
+ <li>Allori, Christofano, 1577&ndash;1621, painter</li>
+ <li>Bronzino, Angelo, 1502&ndash;1572, painter</li>
+ <li>Cellini, Benvenuto, 1500&ndash;1571, sculptor</li>
+ <li>Cigoli, Luigi Cardi da, 1559&ndash;1613, painter</li>
+ <li>Cortona, Pietro da, 1596&ndash;1669, architect, painter</li>
+ <li>Dolci, Carlo, 1616&ndash;1686, painter</li>
+ <li>Doni, Antonio Francesco, 1513&ndash;1574, author</li>
+ <li>Furini, Francesco, 1604&ndash;1646, painter</li>
+ <li>Ligozzi, Jacobino, 1543&ndash;1627, painter</li>
+ <li>Poccetti, Bernardino, 1542&ndash;1612, painter</li>
+ <li>Salviati, Francesco, 1510&ndash;1563, painter</li>
+ <li>San Giovanni, Giovanni da, 1599&ndash;1636, painter</li>
+ <li>Santi di Tito, 1538&ndash;1603, painter</li>
+ <li>Tacco, Pietro, 1580&ndash;1640, sculptor</li>
+ <li>Venusti, Marcello, 1515&ndash;1579, painter</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>The Only Great Poet Born in London from 1250&ndash;1500</b></p>
+
+<ul class="artists">
+ <li>Chaucer, Geoffrey, 1328&ndash;1400</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>Poets and Artists Born in London since 1500</b></p>
+
+<ul class="artists">
+ <li>Blake, William, 1757&ndash;1827, poet and painter</li>
+ <li>Browning, Robert, 1812&ndash;1889, poet</li>
+ <li>Byron, Geo. Gordon Noel, Lord, 1788&ndash;1824, poet</li>
+ <li>Defoe, Daniel, 1659&ndash;1731, author</li>
+ <li>Ford, Edward Onslow, 1852&ndash;1901, sculptor</li>
+ <li>Gilbert, Alfred, R.A., 1854&ndash; &mdash;, sculptor</li>
+ <li>Gray, Thomas, 1716&ndash;1771, poet</li>
+ <li>Hogarth, William, 1697&ndash;1764, painter</li>
+ <li>Hood, Thomas, 1799&ndash;1845, poet</li>
+ <li>Hunt, William Holman, 1827&ndash;1910, painter</li>
+ <li>Jonson, Ben, 1573&ndash;1637, poet and dramatist</li>
+ <li>Keats, John, 1795&ndash;1821, poet</li>
+ <li>Lamb, Charles, 1775&ndash;1834, essayist</li>
+ <li>Linnell, John, 1792&ndash;1882, painter</li>
+ <li>Lucas, John Seymour, 1849&ndash; &mdash;, painter</li>
+ <li>Milton, John, 1608&ndash;1674, poet</li>
+ <li>Morland, George, 1763&ndash;1804, painter</li>
+ <li>Pope, Alexander, 1688&ndash;1744, poet</li>
+ <li>Richmond, Sir William Blake, 1843&ndash; &mdash;, painter</li>
+ <li>Rossetti, Dante Gabriel, 1828&ndash;1882, poet, painter</li>
+ <li>Ruskin, John, 1819&ndash;1900, author and art critic</li>
+ <li>Spenser, Edmund, 1552&ndash;1599, poet</li>
+ <li>Stothard, Thomas, 1755&ndash;1834, painter, illustrator</li>
+ <li>Swinburne, Algernon, 1837&ndash;1909, poet</li>
+ <li>Walker, Frederick, 1840&ndash;1875, painter</li>
+ <li>Watts, George F., 1817&ndash;1904, painter, sculptor</li>
+</ul>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_049b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_049b.jpg" alt="Genius of Two Cities, Footer" />
+</div>
+
+<hr class="r95" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[Pg 50]</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Small World of the Ancients</div>
+
+<p>The most ancient records we possess from Assyria, Egypt, Palestine,
+and from the Homeric poems, show how very limited was the range of
+geographical knowledge possessed by that small civilised world from
+which our own civilisation has descended. Speaking roughly, that
+knowledge seems in the tenth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> to have extended
+about one thousand miles in each direction from the Isthmus of Suez.
+However, the best point of departure for the peoples of antiquity is
+the era of Herodotus, who travelled and wrote <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> 460&ndash;440.
+The limits of the world as he knew it were Cadiz and the Straits of
+Gibraltar on the west, the Danube and the Caspian on the north, the
+deserts of Eastern Persia on the east, and the Sahara on the south,
+with vague tales regarding peoples who lived beyond, such as Indians
+far beyond Persia, and pygmies beyond the Sahara. He reports, however,
+not without hesitation, a circumnavigation of Africa by Phœnicians in
+the service of Pharaoh Necho.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe27_5" id="i_050">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_050.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE FIRST KNOWN MAP OF THE WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This Babylonian map is probably of the eighth century B.C.
+ The two circles are supposed to represent the ocean, while the River Euphrates
+ and Babylon are shown inside them. The upper part of the tablet is a
+ cuneiform inscription.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Discovery advanced very slowly for many centuries, though the march
+of Alexander opened up part of the East, while the Roman conquests
+brought the Far North-West, including Britain, within the range of
+civilisation; and occasional voyages, such as that of Hanno along
+the coast of West Africa, that of Nearchus through the Arabian Sea,
+and that of Pythias to the Baltic, added something to knowledge.
+Procopius in <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 540 can tell us little more regarding
+the regions beyond Roman influence than Strabo does five and a half
+centuries earlier. The journeys of Marco Polo and Rubruquis throw only
+a passing light on the Far East. It is with the Spanish occupation of
+the Canary Isles, beginning in 1602, and with the Portuguese voyages
+of the fifteenth century, that the era of modern discovery opens. The
+re-discovery of America in 1492, for it had been already visited by
+the Northmen of Greenland and Iceland in the eleventh century, and the
+opening of the Cape route to India in 1497&ndash;1498, were hardly equal
+to the exploit of Magellan, whose circumnavigation of the globe in
+1519&ndash;1520 marks the close of this striking period. Thereafter discovery
+proceeds more slowly. Some of the isles of the central and southern
+Pacific were not visited till the middle of the eighteenth century,
+and the north-west coast of America as well as the north-east Coast of
+Asia, remained little known till an even later date. Those explorations
+of the interior of North America, of the interior of Africa, of the
+interior of Australia, and of East Central Asia, which have completed
+our knowledge of the earth, belong to the nineteenth century. The first
+crossing of the North American Continent north of latitude 40° was not
+effected till <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1806.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Thirst for New Territories</div>
+
+<p>The desire for new territory, for the propagation of religion, and,
+above all, for the precious metals, were the chief motives which
+prompted the voyages of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. These
+motives have remained operative; and to them has been added in more
+recent times the spirit of pure adventure and the interest in science,
+together with, increasing measure, the effort to secure trade. But the
+extension of trade followed slowly in the wake of discovery. China and
+Japan remained almost closed. The policy of Spain sought to restrict
+her American waters to her own ships, and the commerce<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[Pg 53]</span> they carried
+was scanty. Communication remained slow and dangerous across the oceans
+till the introduction of steam vessels (1825&ndash;1830).</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe37" id="i_051">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_051.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE FIRST MAPS: SOME EARLY GEOGRAPHERS’ IDEAS OF THE WORLD</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_051_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i052">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_052.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE MODERN REPRESENTATION OF THE WORLD: SHOWN ON THREE
+ DIFFERENT PROJECTIONS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">In each case the British Empire is shaded</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_052_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe38_5 nohtml" id="i_052_left">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_052_left.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2 u">Modern Representation of the
+ World; Western Part</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe38_5 nohtml" id="i_052_right">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_052_right.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2 u">Modern Representation of the
+ World; Eastern Part</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Round the World in 40 Days!</div>
+
+<p>Land transport, though it had steadily increased in Europe, remained
+costly as well as slow till the era of railway construction began in
+1829. The application of steam as a motive power and of electricity as
+a means of communicating thought has been by far the greatest factor
+in this long process of reducing the dimensions of the world, which
+dates back as far as the domestication of beasts of burden, and the
+invention, first of paddles and oars, and then of sails. The North
+American Continent can now be crossed in five days, the South American
+(from Valparaiso to Buenos Ayres) in under two, the Transandine tunnel
+having now been pierced. The Continent which stretches from the Baltic
+to the North Pacific can now be traversed in twelve days. By means of
+the Trans-Siberian line and its steamship connection with the ports
+of Japan, it is now possible to go round the globe in less than fifty
+days. Indeed, the journey has recently been done in forty days. Nor
+is this acceleration of transit more remarkable than its practical
+immunity, as compared with earlier times, not only from the dangers
+for which Nature is answerable, but from those also which man formerly
+interposed.</p>
+
+<p>The increase of trade which has followed in the track first of
+discovery and latterly (with immensely larger volume) of the
+improvement of means of transport, has been accompanied not only by the
+seizure of transoceanic territories by the greater civilised States,
+but also by an outflow of population from those States into the more
+backward or more thinly-peopled parts of the earth. Sometimes, as
+in the case of North America, Siberia, and Australia, the emigrants
+extinguish or absorb the aboriginal population.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Europeanisation of the World</div>
+
+<p>Sometimes, as in the case of India, Africa, and some parts of
+South America, they neither extinguish nor blend with the previous
+inhabitants, but rule them and spread what is called civilisation
+among them&mdash;this civilisation consisting chiefly in a knowledge
+of the mechanical arts and of deathful weapons accompanied by the
+destruction, more or less gradual, of their pre-existing beliefs
+and usages. Sometimes, again, as in the case of China, and to some
+extent also of the Mussulman East, though political dominion is not
+established, the process of substituting a new civilisation for the old
+one goes on despite the occasional efforts of the backward people to
+resist the process. The broad result is everywhere similar. The modern
+European type of civilisation is being diffused over the whole earth,
+superseding, or essentially modifying, the older local types. Thus,
+in a still more important sense than even that of communications, the
+world is contracted and becomes far more one than it has ever been
+before. The European who speaks three or four languages can travel over
+nearly all of it, and he can find on most of its habitable coasts, and
+in many parts of the lately-discovered interior, the appliances which
+are to him necessaries of life. The world is, in fact, becoming an
+enlarged Europe, so far as the externals of life and the material side
+of civilisation are concerned. The dissociative forces of Nature have
+been overcome.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Triumph of Natural Science</div>
+
+<p>Putting together the two processes, the process in time and the
+process in space, which we have been reviewing, it will be seen that
+the main line of the development of mankind may be described as the
+transmission and the expansion of culture&mdash;that is to say, of knowledge
+and intellectual capacity. The stock of knowledge available for use and
+enjoyment has been steadily increased, and what each people accumulated
+has been made available for all. With this there has come assimilation,
+the destruction of weaker types of civilisation, the modification by
+constant interaction of the stronger types, the creation of a common
+type tending to absorb all the rest. Assimilation has been most
+complete in the sphere ruled by natural science&mdash;that is to say, in
+the material sphere, less complete in that ruled by the human sciences
+(including the sphere of political and social institutions), still
+less complete in the sphere of religious, moral, and social ideas, and
+as respects the products of literature and art. Or, in other words,
+where certainty of knowledge is attainable and utility in practice
+is incontestable, the process of assimilation has moved fastest and
+furthest.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Nature &amp; the Unity of Mankind</div>
+
+<p>The process has been a long one, for its beginnings reach back beyond
+our historical knowledge. So far as it lies within<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[Pg 54]</span> the range of
+history, it falls into two periods, the earlier of which supplies an
+instructive illustration of the later one which we know better. The
+effort which Nature&mdash;that is to say, the natural tendencies of man as a
+social being&mdash;has been making towards the unification of mankind during
+the last few centuries, is her second great effort. The first was in
+progress from the time when the most ancient records begin down to the
+sixth and seventh centuries of the Christian era.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_054">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_054.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE FIRST TRAVELLER ROUND THE GLOBE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The great exploit of Ferdinand Magellan, who
+ circumnavigated the globe in 1519&ndash;1520, ranks among the events of world
+ importance, and was the culminating achievement of the greatest period of
+ discovery in the world’s history.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Greek civilisation, which itself had drawn much from Egypt, as well
+as from Assyria, Phœnicia, and the peoples of Asia Minor, permeated
+the minds and institutions (except the legal institutions), of the
+Mediterranean and West European countries, and was propagated by the
+governing energy of the Romans. In its Romanised form it transformed
+or absorbed and superseded the less advanced civilisations of all
+those countries, creating one new type for the whole Roman world. With
+some local diversities, that type prevailed from the Northumbrian
+Wall of Hadrian to the Caucasus and the deserts of Arabia. The still
+independent races on the northern frontier of the Empire received a
+tincture of it, and would doubtless have been more deeply imbued had
+the Roman Empire stood longer.</p>
+
+<p>Christianity, becoming dominant at a time when the Empire was already
+tottering, gave a new sense of unity to all whom the Greco-Roman type
+had formed, extended the influence of that type still further, and
+enabled much that belonged to it (especially its religious, its legal,
+and its literary elements) to survive the political dominion of the
+Emperors and to perpetuate itself among practically independent States
+which were springing up. The authority of Papal Rome helped to carry
+this sense of unity among civilised men through a period of ignorance,
+confusion, and semi-barbarism which might otherwise have extinguished
+it. Nevertheless, we may say, broadly speaking, that the first effort
+towards the establishment of a common type of civilisation was, if not
+closed, yet arrested by the dissolution of the Roman Empire in the
+West. Close thereupon came the rise of Islam, tearing away the Eastern
+provinces, and creating a rival type of civilisation&mdash;though a type
+largely influenced by the Greco-Roman&mdash;which held its ground for some
+centuries, and has only recently shown that it is destined to vanish.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Conquest and Civilisation</div>
+
+<p>The beginnings of the second effort toward the unification of civilised
+mankind may be observed as far back as the eleventh and twelfth
+centuries. Its effective and decisive action may, however, be assigned
+to the fifteenth, when the spread of literary and philosophic culture,
+and the swift extension of maritime discovery, ushered in the modern
+phase wherein we have marked its irresistible advance. This phase
+differs from the earlier one both in its range&mdash;for it embraces the
+whole earth and not merely the Mediterranean lands&mdash;and in its basis,
+for it rests not so much upon conquest and religion as upon scientific
+knowledge, formative ideas, and commerce. Yet even here a parallelism
+may be noted between the ancient and the modern phase. Knowledge and
+ideas had brought about a marked assimilation of various parts of the
+ancient world to each other before Roman conquest completed the work,
+and what conquest did was done chiefly among the ruder races. So now,
+while it is knowledge and ideas that have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[Pg 55]</span> worked for the creation of
+a common type among the peoples of European stock, conquest has been a
+potent means of spreading this type in the outlying countries and among
+the more backward races whose territories the European nations have
+seized.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_055">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_055.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE EUROPEANISATION OF THE WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption">European civilisation is being diffused all over the earth,
+ superseding or essentially modifying the older local types. The solid black
+ portions of this map represent territory under Anglo-Saxon control; the
+ shaded parts are under other European control, and the dotted parts
+ under Asiatic and African control.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Language a Unifying Influence</div>
+
+<p>The diffusion of a few forms of speech has played a great part in both
+phases. Greek was spoken over the eastern half of the Roman world
+in the second century <span class="smaller">A.D.</span>, though not to the extinction of such
+tongues as Syriac and Egyptian. Latin was similarly spoken over the
+western half, though not to the extinction of the tongues we now call
+Basque and Breton and Welsh; and Latin continued to be the language
+of religion, of law, of philosophy, and of serious prose literature
+in general till the sixteenth century. So now, several of the leading
+European tongues are spoken far beyond the limits of their birthplace,
+and their wide range has become a powerful influence in diffusing
+European culture. German, English, Russian, Spanish, and French are
+available for the purposes of commerce, and for those who read books
+over nineteen-twentieths of the earth’s surface. The languages of the
+smaller non-European peoples are disappearing in those places where
+they have to compete with these greater European tongues, except in
+so far as they are a medium of domestic intercourse. Arabic, Chinese,
+and in less degree Persian are the only non-European languages
+which retain a world importance. English, German, and Spanish are
+pre-eminently the three leading commercial languages. They gain ground
+on the rest, and it is English that gains ground most swiftly. The
+German merchant is no doubt even more ubiquitous (if the expression be
+permitted) than is the English; but the German more frequently speaks
+English than the Englishman or American speaks German.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Linking the Nations Together</div>
+
+<p>It has already been observed that assimilation has advanced least
+in the sphere of institutions, ideas, and literature. The question
+might, indeed, be raised whether the types of thought, of national
+character, and of literary activity represented by the five or six
+leading nations are not rather tending to become more accentuated.
+The self-consciousness of each nation, taking the form of pride or
+vanity, leads it to exalt its own type and to dwell with satisfaction
+on whatever differentiates it from other types. Nevertheless there are
+influences at work in the domain of practice as well as of thought,
+which, in creating a common body of opinion and a sense of common
+interest among large classes belonging to these leading nations, tend
+to link the nations themselves together. Religious sympathy, or a
+common attachment to certain doctrines, such as, for instance, those
+of Collectivism, works in this direction among the masses, as the
+love of science or of art does among<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[Pg 56]</span> sections of the more educated
+class. As regards the peoples not of European stock, who are, broadly
+speaking, the more backward, it is not yet possible to say what will be
+the influence of the European type of culture upon their intellectual
+development.</p>
+
+<p>The material side of their civilisation will after a time conform to
+the European type, though, perhaps, to forms that are not the most
+progressive; and even such faiths as Buddhism and Islam may lose their
+hold on those who come most into contact with Europeans. But whether
+these peoples will produce any new types of thought or art under the
+stimulus of Europe, as the Teutons and Slavs did after they had been
+for centuries in contact with the relics of Greco-Roman culture, or
+whether they will be overborne by and merely imitate and reproduce what
+Europeans teach them&mdash;this is a question for conjecture only, since the
+data for predictions are wanting.</p>
+
+<p>It is a question of special interest as regards the Japanese, the
+one non-European race which, having an old civilisation of its own,
+highly developed on the artistic side, has shown an amazing aptitude
+for appropriating European institutions and ideas. Already a Japanese
+physiologist has taken high rank among men of science by being one of
+the discoverers of the bacillus of the Oriental plague.</p>
+
+<p class="s3 center mtop2 mbot1">DOES HISTORY MAKE FOR PROGRESS?</p>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">O</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first3">O</span>NE
+of the questions which both the writers and the readers of a
+History of the World must frequently ask themselves is whether the
+course of history establishes a general law of progress. Some thinkers
+have gone so far as to say that this must be the moral of history
+regarded as a whole, and a few have even suggested that without the
+recognition of such a principle and of a sort of general guidance of
+human affairs towards this goal, history would be unintelligible, and
+the doings of mankind would seem little better than the sport of chance.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">What is the Test of Progress?<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+What Mankind has Achieved</div>
+
+<p>Whatever may be thought of these propositions as matters of theory,
+the doctrine of a general and steady law of progress is one to which
+no historian ought to commit himself. His business is to set forth and
+explain the facts exactly as they are; and if he writes in the light
+of a theory he is pretty certain to be unconsciously seduced into
+giving undue prominence to those facts which make for it. Moreover,
+the question is in itself a far more complex one than the simple word
+“progress” at first sight conveys. What is the test of progress? In
+what form of human advance is it to be deemed to consist? Which of
+these forms is of the highest value? There can be no doubt of the
+advance made by man in certain directions. There may be great doubt
+as to his advance in other directions. There may possibly be no
+advance but even retrogression, or at least signs of an approaching
+retrogression, in some few directions. The view to be taken of the
+relative importance of these lines of movement is a matter not so much
+for the historian as for the philosopher, and its discussion would
+carry us away into fields of thought not fitted for a book like the
+present. Although, therefore, it is true that one chief interest of
+history resides in its capacity for throwing light on this question,
+all that need here be said may be expressed as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p><b>There has been a marvellous advance in man’s knowledge of the laws
+of Nature and of his consequent mastery over Nature.</b></p>
+
+<p><b>There has been therewith a great increase in population, and, on
+the whole, in the physical vigour of the average individual man.</b></p>
+
+<p><b>There has been, as a further consequence, an immense increase in
+the material comfort and well-being of the bulk of mankind, so that
+to most men necessaries have become easier of attainment, and many
+things which were once luxuries have become necessaries.</b></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>Against this is to be set the fact that some of the natural resources
+of the world are being rapidly exhausted. This would at one time have
+excited alarm; but scientific discoveries have so greatly extended
+man’s capacity to utilise other sources of natural energy, that people
+are disposed to assume that the loss of the resources aforesaid will be
+compensated by further discoveries.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Gain and the Loss</div>
+
+<p>As to progress other than material&mdash;that is to say, progress in
+intellectual<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[Pg 57]</span> capacity, in taste, in the power of enjoyment, in virtue,
+and generally in what is called happiness&mdash;every man’s view must
+depend on the ideal which he sets before himself of what constitutes
+happiness, and of the relative importance to happiness of the ethical
+and the non-ethical elements which enter into the conception. Until
+there is more agreement than now exists or has ever existed on these
+points, there is no use in trying to form conclusions regarding the
+progress man has made. Moreover, it is admitted that nearly every
+gain man makes is accompanied by some corresponding loss&mdash;perhaps a
+slight loss, yet a loss. When we attempt to estimate the comparative
+importance of these gains and losses, questions of great difficulty,
+both ethical and non-ethical, emerge; and in many cases our experience
+is not yet sufficient to determine the quantum of loss. There is room
+both for the optimist and for the pessimist, and in arguing such
+questions nearly everybody becomes an optimist or a pessimist. The
+historian has no business to be either.</p>
+
+<p>There is another temptation besides that of delivering his opinion on
+these high matters, of which the historian does well to be aware&mdash;I
+mean the temptation to prophesy. The study of history as a whole,
+more inevitably than that of the history of any particular country
+or people, suggests forecasts of the future, because the broader the
+field which we survey the more do we learn to appreciate the great and
+wide-working forces that are guiding mankind, and the more therefore
+are we led to speculate on the results which these forces, some of them
+likely to be permanent, will tend to bring about.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Modern Mastery of Nature</div>
+
+<p>This temptation can seldom have been stronger than it is now, when we
+see all mankind brought into closer relations than ever before, and
+more obviously dominated by forces which are essentially the same,
+though varying in their form. Yet it will appear, when the problem is
+closely examined, that the very novelty of the present situation of
+the world&mdash;the fact that our mastery of Nature has been so rapidly
+extended within the last century, and that the phenomena of the
+subjugation of the earth by Europeans and of the ubiquitous contact
+of the advanced and the backward races are so unexampled in respect
+of the area they cover&mdash;that all predictions must be uttered with the
+greatest caution, and due allowance made for elements which may disturb
+even the most careful calculations. It may, indeed, be doubted whether
+any predictions of a definitely positive kind&mdash;predictions that such
+and such things will happen&mdash;can be safely made, save the obvious ones
+which are based on the assumption that existing natural conditions
+remain for some time operative.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A Glimpse into the Future</div>
+
+<p>Taking this assumption to be a legitimate one, it maybe predicted that
+population will continue to increase, at least till the now waste but
+habitable parts of the earth have been turned to account; that races,
+except where there is a marked colour line, will continue to become
+intermingled; that the small and weak races, and especially the lower
+set of savages, will be absorbed or die out; that fewer and fewer
+languages will be spoken; that communications will become even swifter,
+easier, and cheaper than they are at present; and that commerce and
+wealth will continue to grow, subject, perhaps, to occasional checks
+from political disturbance.</p>
+
+<p>There are also some negative predictions on which one may venture,
+and with a little more confidence. No new race can appear, except
+possibly from a fusion of two or more existing races, or from the
+differentiation of a branch of an existing race under new conditions,
+as the Americans have been to some slight extent differentiated from
+the English, and the Brazilians from the Portuguese (there having been
+in the latter case a certain admixture of negro blood), and as the
+Siberians of the future may be a different sort of Russians. Neither
+is any new language likely to appear, except, mere trade jargons (like
+Chinook or pigeon English), because the existing languages of the
+great peoples are firmly established, and the process of change within
+each of these languages has, owing to the abundance of printed matter,
+become now extremely slow. Conditions can hardly be imagined under
+which such a phenomenon as the development of the Romance languages out
+of Latin, or of Danish and Swedish out of the common Northern tongue of
+the eleventh century, could recur.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[Pg 58]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_058">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_058.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE PEOPLES OF THE WORLD AT PEACE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the statuary groups on the Albert Memorial.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_058_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It may seem natural to add the further prediction that the great States
+and the great religions will continue to grow and to absorb the small
+ones. But when we touch topics into which human opinion or emotion
+enters, we touch a new kind of matter, where the influences now at work
+may be too much affected by new influences to permit of any forecast.
+Conditions might conceivably come into action which would split up some
+or most of the present great States, and bring the world back to an age
+of small political communities.</p>
+
+<p>So, too, though the lower forms of paganism are fast vanishing, and
+the four or five great religions are extending<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[Pg 59]</span> their sway, it is
+conceivable that new prophets may arise, founding new faiths, or that
+the existing religions may be split up into new sects widely diverse
+from one another. Even the supremacy of the European races, well
+assured as it now appears, may be reduced by a variety of causes,
+physiological or moral, when some centuries have passed.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_059">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_059.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE PEOPLES OF THE WORLD AT PEACE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the statuary groups on the Albert Memorial.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_059_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Whoever examines the predictions made by the most observant and
+profound thinkers of the past will see reason to distrust almost all
+the predictions, especially those of a positive order, which shape
+themselves in our minds to-day.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">J<span class="smaller">AMES</span>
+B<span class="smaller">RYCE</span></p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[Pg 60]</span></p>
+
+<h4 class="mtop3" id="SUMMARY_OF_WORLD_HISTORY" title="Summary of World History"></h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i060">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_060.jpg" alt="SUMMARY OF WORLD HISTORY" />
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="s2 center noebook">SUMMARY OF WORLD HISTORY</p>
+
+<p class="center noebook">WITH</p>
+
+<p class="s3 center noebook">A CHRONOLOGY OF TEN THOUSAND YEARS</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mbot2 noebook">By Arthur D. Innes, M.A.</p>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">W</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first2">W</span>ITHIN
+the memory of living men, the most advanced peoples of the world
+believed that the world itself had been created not 6,000 years ago. We
+have all learned now that the globe itself, that life&mdash;and long later
+mankind&mdash;came into being thousands, hundreds of thousands&mdash;it may be
+millions&mdash;of years ago.</p>
+
+<p>How long precisely, none can tell. What we do know with certainty is
+that before the continents finally emerged in their present shape there
+was an Ice Age, immediately preceded by what is called the Drift Age,
+and that as early as the Drift Age man, the maker of implements, lived,
+and did battle with the cave bear and other monsters. Where man first
+came into being, how he spread over the globe, how the great races
+acquired their characteristics, we can only conjecture.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Birth of the Nations</div>
+
+<p>Wherever and whenever man appeared, the earliest traces show him
+to have been a sociable animal living in communities. The earliest
+unmistakable traces of civilisation, order, polity, are found in the
+basins of the Nile and the Euphrates, dating probably as far back as
+ten thousand years ago. The people who built the Pyramids had already
+advanced far in the knowledge which gives man the mastery over Nature;
+and the Pyramids were built certainly 3,000, and probably nearer 5,000,
+years before the Christian era. And while those pristine civilisations
+rose and fell in Egypt, civilisations were rising and passing away in
+Mesopotamia also.</p>
+
+<p>In the fourth millennium there appears first a people with new
+characteristics&mdash;the Semitic race, gradually dominating the
+Mesopotamian civilisation, spreading westward in successive waves to
+the Mediterranean, surging into Egypt and out again; creating the
+Empires of Babylonia and of Assyria, and the Phœnician and Canaanite
+nations. And while the Semite Empires rose and fell, and Egypt held
+upon her ancient way, still mightier nations were coming to birth.
+The great Aryan or Indo-European migrations began, the Celt, the
+Latin, and the Hellene rolling westward by the Euxine and the Northern
+Mediterranean; while another group passed southward, to the East of
+the Semites, spreading the Aryan conquest over the greater part of the
+Indian peninsula.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Conflicts of Ancient Peoples</div>
+
+<p>Of the doings of the great Semitic Powers in the second millennium
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> we have some knowledge from the Hebrew records; and
+year by year fresh light is thrown on those records by inscriptions
+and tablets newly discovered or newly deciphered, Egyptian, Assyrian,
+or Hittite. Of the Hittite or early Syrian dominion we know little
+enough, except that it successfully defied the invading armies of
+Assyrian kings and Egyptian Pharaohs. Before 1500 the Semite conquerors
+of Egypt, the Hyksos, were driven out&mdash;an event associated by some
+authorities with the Hebrew Exodus. From this time the ebb and flow of
+Egyptian and Assyrian dynasties are more definitely recorded. In the
+closing centuries the prosperity of Tyre and Sidon reached its height,
+and the theocratic Hebrew nationality formed a kingdom. We become aware
+of Hellenic or kindred Powers in Asia Minor, at Troy, in Crete, at
+Mycenæ; of Achæans and Danaans in Egypt.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The First Formation of States</div>
+
+<p>Before another five hundred years had passed, throughout the
+coasts and islands of the Ægean Sea, Æolians, Ionians, Dorians
+established themselves in cities, and every city rapidly grew into a
+highly-organised State. Over the Mediterranean, to Southern Italy, to
+Sicily, to Marseilles, the new Greek civilisation carried its commerce
+and its culture. In Italy the Latin races were in like manner forming
+themselves into city-states, developing conceptions of Government
+undreamed of by Oriental minds. Rome was founded, and acquired a
+leadership. Throughout the Hellenic and the Latin world the idea of
+civic freedom took root; the primitive monarchical systems disappeared,
+and, through revolutions and temporary despotisms, sometimes peaceful
+and sometimes violent, the States took on for the most part a
+Republican form.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[Pg 61]</span></p>
+
+<table class="time_table" id="Chronology_of_10000_Years" summary="Time-Table of the World; B.C. 8000&ndash;500">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="3">
+ <div class="s3 center">TIME-TABLE OF THE WORLD: B.C. 8000 to 500</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bb" colspan="3">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>This Chronology, prepared as a companion to the
+ Summary of the World’s History, sets forth in tabular form for ready reference
+ the events dealt with in the narrative on opposite pages</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bc_ad br vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>B.C.<br />
+ 8000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vab">
+ <div class="s0">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="bc_ad vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>B.C.<br />
+ 8000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left mtop1">Early civilisation of the Nile Basin. Egypt before
+ the Pyramids.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>7000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>7000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left mtop1">Asiatic invasion of Egypt<br />
+ Pre-Semitic civilisations of the Euphrates Basin. Susa founded.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>6000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>6000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Invasion of Egypt by dynastic race, 5800. Mena rules all
+ Egypt. First dynasty, 5500.<br />
+ Babylonian kingdoms of Sumer and Akkad. Ea founds Eridu and civilises
+ Babylonia.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>5000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>5000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Egypt. The Pyramid builders. Great Pyramid built by
+ Khufu (Cheops), 4700.<br />
+ Earliest monuments to kings in Babylonia, 4700.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>4000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>4000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Egypt invaded from the north. First, or Babylonian,
+ Semitic wave in the Euphrates Valley. Rise of Babylonian kingdoms. Sargon and
+ Naram-Sin, Semitic rulers of Akkad. Middle kingdom of Egypt. Revival of art.
+ Twelfth dynasty (3400).<br />
+ Gudea’s rule in Babylon. Development of commerce, 3300.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>3000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>3000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Egypt invaded by the Hyksos, nomadic Semitic conquerors,
+ the “Shepherd Kings.” Fifteenth Dynasty (2500). Second Hyksos movement (2250).<br />
+ Conquest of Babylon by Elamites. Rule of Hammurabi (Amraphel of Gen. xiv.),
+ 2129.<br />
+ Second, or Canaanite, Semitic wave, extending to the Mediterranean.<br />
+ First Aryan migration westward over Europe, and southward; conquest of
+ Hindostan.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>2000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>2000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">The Hyksos dominate Egypt. New kingdom. Eighteenth
+ dynasty, 1580.<br />
+ Expulsion of the Hyksos, about 1560.<br />
+ Rise of Assyria.<br />
+ The Kassite dynasty in Babylon, about 1750&ndash;1130.<br />
+ Hittite Empire in Syria.<br />
+ Latin and Hellenic entry into Europe and Asia Minor.<br />
+ Third (Aramæan) Semitic wave, dominating W. Asia, but absorbed in existing
+ states.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">F<span class="smaller">AR</span> E<span class="smaller">AST</span>: Beginning of
+ definite Chinese history, with the Chau dynasty.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">GYPT</span>: Nineteenth dynasty, Sethos and the
+ Ramesides; struggle with Hittite Empire.<br />
+ W<span class="smaller">ESTERN</span> A<span class="smaller">SIA</span>:
+ Burnaburiash, 1380. Pashe dynasty in Babylon, 1130&ndash;1000.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Period of Phœnician prosperity.</span><br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Rise of the United Kingdom of the Hebrews.</span><br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Crete, Troy, and Mycenæ. The Ionic and Doric migrations.</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">W<span class="smaller">ESTERN</span>
+ A<span class="smaller">SIA</span>: The Hebrew kingdom divided into Judah
+ and Israel or Samaria.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Rise of Aramæan kingdom of Syria. Chaldean domination
+ in Babylon.</span><br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Assyrian Middle Empire.</span><br />
+ E<span class="smaller">GYPT</span>: Twenty-second dynasty (“Shishak” king
+ of Egypt).</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;900</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;900</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">E<span class="smaller">UROPE</span>: Early monarchical
+ governments replaced usually by aristocracies.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Probable period of the Homeric poems.</span><br />
+ W<span class="smaller">ESTERN</span> A<span class="smaller">SIA</span>:
+ Successful resistance of Syria to Assyria.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Appearance of the (Aryan) Medes in the East.</span><br />
+ A<span class="smaller">FRICA</span>: Founding of Carthage.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">E<span class="smaller">GYPT</span>: Domination of
+ Ethiopians or Cushites.<br />
+ W<span class="smaller">ESTERN</span> A<span class="smaller">SIA</span>:
+ Assyrian New Empire; conquest of Syria, Samaria, and Babylon.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Lydian and Phrygian kingdoms in Asia Minor.</span><br />
+ E<span class="smaller">UROPE</span>: Development of city
+ states in Greece and Italy. Lycurgan legislation of Sparta, about 800.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Rome founded as a monarchy, 753.</span><br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Spread of Greek colonies along Mediterranean coasts and
+ islands.</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">W<span class="smaller">ESTERN</span>
+ A<span class="smaller">SIA</span>:Extension of Lydian kingdom in Asia Minor
+ 687&ndash;546.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Irruption of Cimmerians from the North.</span><br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Repulse of Sennacherib before Jerusalem. Decline of
+ Assyria.</span><br />
+ E<span class="smaller">GYPT</span>: Invasion by Esarhaddon. Expulsion of
+ Cushites. The Saitic dynasty.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">UROPE</span>: Between 700 and 500, sporadic
+ displacement of aristocracies by “tyrannies,” followed either by an
+ oligarchical restoration or by democracies.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Rome becomes head of the League of Latin cities.</span><br />
+ F<span class="smaller">AR</span> E<span class="smaller">AST</span>: Japanese
+ history begins.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="br vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;500</b><br />
+ B.C.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">W<span class="smaller">ESTERN</span>
+ A<span class="smaller">SIA</span>:Narbonaid, King of Babylon (556&ndash;538).
+ Overthrow of Assyrian by New Babylonian Empire; the Babylonish captivity.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Rise of Media, of which Cyrus, the Persian, makes
+ himself master.</span><br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Persian Empire: Overthrow of Lydia, New Babylonia, and
+ Egypt. Aahmes (Amasis), 570&ndash;526.</span><br />
+ F<span class="smaller">AR</span> E<span class="smaller">AST</span>: Confucius
+ and Lao-Tse in China, and Buddha in India.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">UROPE</span>: Greek states consolidated. Athens: Solon
+ 594. Pisistratidæ expelled, 510.<br />
+ R<span class="smaller">OME</span>:Expulsion of the kings, about 510. The
+ Commonwealth. Administration aristocratic: Army and legislative assembly on
+ basis of land-ownership.
+ <span class="mleft1">Etruscan—pre-Latin—domination in Italy.</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;500</b><br />
+ B.C.</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[Pg 62]</span></p>
+
+<p>In the East an Aryan Power overthrew the last of the
+Assyrian-Babylonian dynasties; but these Persian conquerors became
+assimilated to the conquered nations. Fundamentally their empire was of
+the same type as its predecessors. The Persian sway, however, extended
+not only into Egypt but over the partly Hellenised Asia Minor; and the
+Ionic revolt, in the first year of the fifth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>
+brought the spirit of the East and the spirit of the West into fierce
+collision. The great king hurled his hosts against defiant Hellas; at
+Marathon and at Salamis, Athens shattered his army and his fleets.
+Thenceforth, for a thousand years, the West was the aggressor.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Athens and the Greek Immortals</div>
+
+<p>But the rolling back of the “barbarian” tide was not the only glory
+that fell to Athens; in that same century the little state bore sons
+whose names stand in the front rank of the immortals for all time:
+Æschylus and Sophocles, Phidias, Pericles, Socrates, and Plato; in the
+next half century, Demosthenes; with others almost if not quite, on the
+same plane. The character of Athens, idealised, no doubt, is epitomised
+by Thucydides in the speech of Pericles. She was the sum of all that
+was best and noblest in Hellenism&mdash;its love of freedom, of beauty, of
+energy, of harmony, and its public spirit. Politically, the story of
+the period which followed Salamis is mainly one of the rivalry between
+Athens and Sparta; until the rise of Macedon, when King Philip made
+himself master of all Hellas.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Coming-up of Alexander</div>
+
+<p>Then, with the beginning of the last quarter of the fourth century,
+Alexander the Great blazed upon the world, toppled the empires of
+Western Asia before him, conquered Egypt, and swept over the great
+mountain-barriers into India, where Buddhism had already begun to
+displace the ancient Brahmanism of the first Aryans. The Greek
+influences did not long linger in the far East after the great
+conqueror’s death. His empire broke up. Asia west of the Euphrates
+remained, indeed, under the dominion mainly of one Grecian dynasty, the
+Seleucidæ; Egypt under that of another, the Ptolemies. Yet Alexander’s
+attempts to blend East and West failed. Orientalism abode, unconquered,
+ineradicable; Hellenism prevailed almost after the fashion of British
+domination in India to-day, in the land, but not of it.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the struggle between Aryans and non-Aryans had been running
+a partly separate course in the West. The Phœnicians of Carthage and
+the pre-Aryan Etruscans, the dominant power in Italy, made a joint
+assault on the Greeks of Sicily and the Latins of the mainland at
+the beginning of the fifth century. They were beaten back, but for a
+century the struggle continued between Rome and Veii. The great Celtic
+incursion of the Gauls threatened destruction to Rome, but completed
+the destruction of Etruria. In the fourth century and the first half
+of the third century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Rome was chiefly engaged in the
+double task of achieving supremacy, passing into actual dominion among
+the Latin states, and of establishing the great Senatorial oligarchy,
+against whose stubborn resolution the Epirote Pyrrhus hurled himself in
+vain.</p>
+
+<p>Just sixty years after Alexander’s death began the sixty years’
+struggle between Rome and Carthage, in the latter years of which the
+genius of Hannibal was pitted against the grim persistence of the Roman
+oligarchy. Carthage fell; Rome triumphed, and with her triumph entered
+on her career of extended conquest.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Triumph of Rome</div>
+
+<p>The organisation which had ruled the city-state itself not ill, and
+raised it to an immense pre-eminence, sufficed also to maintain its
+powers of conquest, but not its political virtue. Rome’s armies subdued
+the divided and disorganised realms which more or less recognised the
+over-lordship of Macedon; they made the Ptolemies and the Seleucidæ
+acknowledge their supremacy; they shattered the new barbarian hordes,
+which began to pour across the Alpine passes, and the African tribes of
+Numidia. But the lofty public spirit was gone which had made Rome so
+great when she was battling for life. Reformers arose, only to prove
+that there was no power in the constitution strong enough to enforce
+reform. Victorious generals with their legions behind them began to
+dictate legislation; Marius and Sulla, democrats or reactionaries,
+signalised their political successes by slaughtering hecatombs of their
+opponents.</p>
+
+<p>At last, statesmanship and generalship found their supreme
+incarnation in one person, Julius Cæsar. For many years one of the
+two foremost men in the Republic, he finally crushed his rival
+Pompeius and became acknowledged head of the state. Before he could
+complete the work of reconstruction, Cæsar fell beneath the daggers
+of Republican enthusiasts; but ere many years had passed his adopted
+son Octavian triumphed over all rivals, and established the Principate
+or Empire, the absolute dominion of one ruler over the whole Roman
+world&mdash;although that dominion was still maintained under the
+Republican forms.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[Pg 63]</span></p>
+
+<table class="time_table" summary="Time-Table of the World; B.C. 500&ndash;1">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="4">
+ <div class="s3 center">TIME-TABLE OF THE WORLD: B.C. 500 to 1</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bb" colspan="4">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>Collision of East and West. The Glory of Greece.
+ Alexander and His Conquests. The Rise of Rome. Overthrow of Carthage and the
+ Establishment of the Roman Empire</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bc_ad br vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>B.C.<br />
+ &#8199;500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vam">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>The East and Africa</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vam">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>Europe</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="bc_ad vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>B.C.<br />
+ &#8199;500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">G<span class="smaller">REECE</span>: Revolt of
+ Ionian Greeks from Persia, 499.<br />
+ Liberation from Persia of Greek States in Asia Minor.<br />
+ Revolt of Egypt from Persia: re-conquest.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">G<span class="smaller">REECE</span>: Repulse of
+ Persia at Marathon (490), Salamis (480) and Plataea (479) and of Carthage by
+ Syracuse at Himera (480).<br />
+ R<span class="smaller">OME</span>: Increase of political power of Plebeians.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Tribunes. First Roman Legal Code (the XII.
+ Tables).</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;450</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;450</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Egypt again independent of Persia.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">G<span class="smaller">REECE</span>: Age of Pericles,
+ the great Athenian dramatists, and Phidias.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Struggle for supremacy between Athens and Sparta.</span><br />
+ R<span class="smaller">OME</span>: Decadence of Etruscan power.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Progress of Plebeians in obtaining administrative
+ power.</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vab">
+ <div class="s5 left">Revival of Persian energy under Artaxerxes Ochus.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">G<span class="smaller">REECE</span>: Socrates and Plato.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Spartan and Theban supremacies.</span><br />
+ R<span class="smaller">OME</span>: Invasion by the Gauls.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">The land question: the Licinian Laws.</span><br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Establishment of new “Senatorial” oligarchy.</span><br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Extension of Roman military settlements or
+ colonies.</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;350</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;350</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Overthrow of Persia by Alexander; India invaded.<br />
+ Partition of Alexander’s Empire. The Ptolemies in Egypt, and the Seleucidæ
+ in Asia.<br />
+ Friendly relations between Seleucus and Chandragupta of Hindostan.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">G<span class="smaller">REECE</span>: Philip of Macedon.
+ Demosthenes at Athens. Aristotle.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Conquests of Alexander the Great, 334&ndash;322.</span><br />
+ R<span class="smaller">OME</span>: Second Roman treaty with Carthage.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Dissolution of Latin League. Supremacy of Rome in Italy.
+ Samnite wars.</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Contests between Syria (Seleucidæ) and Egypt
+ (the Ptolemaic dynasty).</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">R<span class="smaller">OME</span>: Legislative power of
+ Plebeian Comitia. Tributa established.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Pyrrhus in Italy and Sicily.</span><br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Treaty between Rome and Egypt.</span><br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Senatorial supremacy at Rome.</span><br />
+ <span class="mleft1">First Punic War (264&ndash;241).</span><br />
+ G<span class="smaller">REECE</span>: Rise of the Achæan League.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;250</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;250</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Asoka, king of Maghada (Hindostan), Buddhist.<br />
+ Extension of the Seleucid dominion under Antiochus the Great.<br />
+ Rise of the Parthian dominion of the Arsacidæ.<br />
+ Fall of Carthage, 202.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Carthaginian power established in Spain.<br />
+ R<span class="smaller">OME</span>: Second Punic War, 218&ndash;201. Hannibal in
+ Italy, 218&ndash;203. Scipio in Spain, 211&ndash;206. Zama, 202.<br />
+ Extension of Roman dominion over Spain and North Africa.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vab">
+ <div class="s5 left">Wars between Parthia and the Seleucidæ.<br />
+ Maccabean revolt of Judæa.<br />
+ Antiochus Epiphanes conquers Egypt, but retires.<br />
+ Egypt and Syria become Roman protectorates.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Organisation of provinces subject to the Imperial
+ Republic.<br />
+ History of Europe merges in that of R<span class="smaller">OME</span>.<br />
+ Collision of Rome with (1) Macedon; (2) the Syrian kingdom of the Seleucidæ.<br />
+ Macedon becomes a Roman province.<br />
+ Rome assumes protectorate of Egypt and Syria.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;150</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;150</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vab">
+ <div class="s5 left">Nabatæan State in Arabia.<br />
+ A Tartar kingdom established in east of Parthia.<br />
+ Jugurthan War in Africa.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Third Punic War, and destruction of Carthage, 146.<br />
+ Greek States absorbed into province of Macedonia.<br />
+ Development of political power of (1) demagogues; (2) soldiers.<br />
+ The Gracchi, 133&ndash;121.<br />
+ Conquest of South Gaul: defeat of Teutones and Cimbri by Marius.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vab">
+ <div class="s5 left">Mithradatic wars, 88&ndash;63.<br />
+ The East, to the Euphrates, brought under Roman dominion.<br />
+ Judæa: fall of the Maccabees.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Social war. Marius and Sulla. The Proscriptions.<br />
+ The Sullan Constitution, 81.<br />
+ Pompey. Rise of Julius Cæsar.<br />
+ The East brought under Roman dominion.<br />
+ Cæsar conquers Gaul; lands in Britain.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;&#8199;50</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;&#8199;50</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="br vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;&#8199;&#8199;1<br />
+ B.C.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Scythian or Tartar incursion into India, and
+ admixture with Punjab races.<br />
+ Egypt becomes a Roman province, 30.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Overthrow of Pompey: Cæsar virtual emperor.<br />
+ Murder of Cæsar, 44.<br />
+ Rivalry of Antony and Octavian, 43&ndash;30.<br />
+ The Principate, or Empire, established under Augustus (Octavian) in virtue of
+ the Imperium Proconsulare (27) and Tribunicia Potestas (23). The Empire
+ organised.<br />
+ Cicero, Virgil Livy, Horace.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;&#8199;&#8199;1<br />
+ B.C.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[Pg 64]</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Birth of Christ</div>
+
+<p>A tremendous event in itself, the reign of Augustus also witnessed
+one which has had a great influence on the history of the world&mdash;the
+birth of Christ. His ministry, to which perhaps the term event should
+be applied, was during the reign of the second Emperor, Tiberius. The
+new faith born on the soil of Judæa was to modify profoundly all the
+ideals, social and political as well as theological and personal, of
+the entire Western world; but for many years its adherents remained
+nothing more than a persecuted yet steadily growing sect; suspected and
+hated as anarchists rather than as misbelievers, in a world where the
+rankest and wildest superstitions lived side by side with a general
+intellectual scepticism.</p>
+
+<p>For four centuries the Imperial city ruled over nearly the whole known
+world. Beyond the Euphrates on the east, beyond the Rhine and the
+Danube, she could maintain no permanent footing; within her own borders
+it seemed as though her sway became a part of the natural order&mdash;so
+much so that when her power had passed away her very conquerors did her
+homage and took upon themselves titles as her officers.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Rome in her Decline</div>
+
+<p>But the overthrow was yet a long way off. The reconstruction organised
+by Augustus and his Ministers was developed by able rulers&mdash;Tiberius,
+Trajan, Hadrian, the Antonines&mdash;during some two hundred years, in spite
+of intervals when a murderous tyranny or a feeble incompetence occupied
+the throne of the Cæsars. From the Pillars of Hercules to the river
+of Mesopotamia, northward as far as Britain, southward to the deserts
+of Africa, Roman civilisation, Roman law and justice, Roman military
+discipline, and Roman roads maintained the Roman peace.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Fall of Rome and Rise of Goths</div>
+
+<p>Then came an era when the Imperial purple became the prize of
+successful generals acclaimed by their legions; and the frontier
+armies, themselves largely formed out of Teutonic or other
+semi-“barbarian” tribes, found themselves face to face with new
+barbarian hordes which for another century and a half they held in
+check. But the tremendous external pressure on frontiers so vast made
+it imperative that the Government should be somewhat decentralised. At
+the end of the third century Diocletian parted the empire into four
+great divisions. The new system could not endure; Constantine the
+Great again became sole emperor. Under him Christianity was at length
+adopted as the state religion; the Church herself became a fundamental
+factor in the political system; and the political centre of gravity was
+transferred from Rome to Byzantium.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Beginning of Byzantium</div>
+
+<p>Again the empire was partitioned, and then, for a brief while
+before the end of the fourth century, united again under Theodosius.
+But the end was at hand. For a few years the great general Stilicho
+held the Teutonic Goths at bay in Italy, while Vandals and Sueves
+poured through Gaul into Spain. Then, early in the fifth century,
+Stilicho died. Alaric led his conquering hordes to the gates of Rome,
+and sacked the Eternal City. His successor, Ataulf, took his Goths
+away, to drive the Vandals out of Spain into Africa, and set up a
+great western kingdom on their own account. But after the Goths, fresh
+barbarians swarmed in&mdash;Tartar Huns under Attila, who wrought huge
+devastation and then vanished for ever; then fresh Teutonic armies,
+which took possession of Italy, though in the East the Empire still
+held its own. And in Gaul the (German) Franks under their king, Clovis
+(Chlodwig, Ludwig), established the dominion which was to give its
+name to France when the Frankish element had almost passed out of the
+country. Far-away Britain had already been abandoned, and was falling a
+prey to the Saxons and the Angles, the “English” who were driving the
+earlier Celtic inhabitants before them into the mountain fastnesses
+of the west and north. Again, in the East, in the sixth century, the
+empire centred at Byzantium asserted its power. Justinian is memorable
+for that great codification of Roman Law on which the legal systems of
+half the jurists in Europe have been based. His reign is famous also
+for the exploits of his brilliant general, Belisarius, who destroyed
+the Vandal kingdom in Africa, restored the Imperial rule in Italy, and
+recovered provinces in Asia which had been in danger of falling into
+the grip of the now aggressive rulers of Persia. But in the West, the
+success was only temporary. Under pressure of Tartar or Slavonic hosts
+from the East, a fresh Teutonic swarm, the Lombards, entered Italy and
+mastered the North. The significance of Rome now lay in the supremacy
+of her pontificate, unacknowledged in the East.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[Pg 65]</span></p>
+
+<table class="time_table" summary="Time-Table of the World; A.D. 1&ndash;500">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="4">
+ <div class="s3 center">TIME-TABLE OF THE WORLD: A.D. 1 to 500</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bb" colspan="4">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>Organisation of the Roman Empire. The Rise of
+ Christianity. Partition of the Empire. The Barbarian Invasion and Fall of
+ the Western Empire. Rise of the Franks</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bc_ad br vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.<br />
+ &#8199;&#8199;&#8199;1</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vam">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>The East and Africa</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vam">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>Europe</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="bc_ad vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.<br />
+ &#8199;&#8199;&#8199;1</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Beginning of the Christian Era.<br />
+ Imperial system completed under Tiberius.<br />
+ Rhine, Danube, and Euphrates form frontiers of the Empire.<br />
+ Caligula and Claudius emperors.<br />
+ B<span class="smaller">RITAIN</span>: Roman occupation.<br />
+ Spread of Christianity.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;&#8199;50</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;&#8199;50</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left mtop1">Destruction of Jerusalem by Titus, 70.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Nero emperor: Galba, Otho, Vitellius.<br />
+ Vespasian: the “Flavian” emperors.<br />
+ Nerva chosen by Senate in succession to Domitian. The “Five good Emperors,”
+ 96&ndash;180.<br />
+ Succession of Trajan, 98.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Arabia designated as a Roman province.<br />
+ Trajan’s expedition to the Persian Gulf unsuccessful. Eastward expansion of
+ Rome checked.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Trajan’s campaigns in Dacia.<br />
+ Administration organised under Hadrian.<br />
+ Roman law systematised by Salvius Julianus.<br />
+ Antoninus Pius.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;150</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;150</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left"><div class="mbot1">Establishment of Roman supremacy in
+ Armenia.</div>
+ Successful campaigns of Severus against Parthians.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Development of Roman civilisation in Gaul and Spain.<br />
+ Campaigns of Marcus Aurelius in Pannonia.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">The legions in Illyria, largely composed of
+ “barbarians,” acquire power.</span>
+ After Commodus, series of emperors by military selection.<br />
+ Severus temporarily assigns the West to Clodius Albinus.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Persian kingdom of the Sassanides displaces the Parthian
+ Empire.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Further systematising of Roman law by the
+ <i>juris consulti</i>, Ulpian, etc.<br />
+ Increasing pressure of Teutonic tribes on the frontier. Campaigns of
+ Maximinus.<br />
+ Decius emperor: official persecution of Christianity.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;250</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;250</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Overthrow of Emperor Valerian in the East by the
+ Persians.<br />
+ Destruction of Palmyra in the reign of Zenobia.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Advance of the Goths and Alemanni checked by Claudius
+ and Aurelian.<br />
+ Diocletian emperor. Division of the Empire under a subordinate “Augustus”
+ and two subordinate “Cæsars”.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Extension of Buddhism in China.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Last persecution of Christians under Diocletian.<br />
+ Constantine the Great.<br />
+ Constantinople (New Rome, Byzantium) is made the centre of the Empire.<br />
+ Christianity established as the State religion<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Council of Nicæa.</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;350</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;350</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Unsuccessful Roman campaign against Persia.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Temporary revival of Paganism under Julian the Apostate.<br />
+ Advance of the Goths checked by Theodosius.<br />
+ Empire separated into East and West, 396.<br />
+ Alaric the Visigoth held in check in the Western Empire by Stilicho.<br />
+ Westward movement of Vandals through Gaul to Spain.<br /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vab">
+ <div class="s5 left">Vandals, expelled from Spain, established in Africa.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Sack of Rome by Alaric, after death of Stilicho.<br />
+ End of the Roman occupation of Britain.<br />
+ The Goths withdraw westwards. Establishment of the Visigothic kingdom of
+ Theoderic in Spain and Aquitania.<br />
+ Irruption of the Huns under Attila.<br /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;450</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;450</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="br vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;500<br />
+ A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">B<span class="smaller">RITAIN</span>: The coming of the
+ Saxons.<br />
+ Barbarian “Patricians” set up and depose Western Emperors.<br />
+ Odoacer, “King” in Italy, recognises supremacy of the Eastern Emperor Zeno.<br />
+ Theoderic the Ostrogoth founds a Teutonic State in Italy.<br />
+ Rise of the Franks in Gaul, under Clovis.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;500<br />
+ A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[Pg 66]</span></p>
+
+<p>In Spain, the Gothic supremacy gave promise of an orderly and just
+government. In the wide realms of the Franks anarchy and bloodshed were
+almost ceaseless. In neither did the dominant Teutons drive out the
+older Iberian and Celtic populations, as the English were doing in the
+open lands of the northern island. In both, the German institutions
+were developing into that feudal system which was utterly incompatible
+with the maintenance of a strong central rule, since it enabled a
+powerful vassal to bid defiance to his nominal suzerain. Throughout the
+sixth and seventh centuries progress was stayed in ancient Gaul; in
+Spain it was to be revolutionised by a new invader.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Islam in Being</div>
+
+<p>Eastward, at the end of the sixth century, the Slavonic wave was
+surging upon the empire’s northern frontier; in Asia, Persia was
+again forcing her way towards the Mediterranean. Both were checked by
+the Emperor Heraclius early in the seventh century. But, meantime, a
+new Power had come into being. Mohammed had arisen. Inspired by the
+fanatical fervour of Islam, the warriors of Arabia, soon to be known as
+the Saracens, swept all before them. They did not at first make Europe
+their objective; the Caliphs carried their conquering arms over Western
+Asia, into Egypt, and along the southern coasts of the Mediterranean.
+Then they began to beat against the empire itself. The eighth century
+had hardly opened when they poured into Spain; dissensions among the
+Gothic chiefs gave them prompt victory. They swept up to the Pyrenees;
+but their advance was stayed by Charles Martel, the virtual lord of the
+Frankish kingdom. On the East their armies assailed Constantinople, but
+were disastrously repulsed by the Emperor Leo the Isaurian.</p>
+
+<p>Now, for the first time, Papal sanction was demanded and obtained for a
+change of dynasty. The last Merovingian king of the Franks was deposed
+in favour of Pepin, the son of Charles Martel. He was succeeded by his
+son, Karl, a German of the Germans, despite the French form of his
+popular title Charlemagne.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Charlemagne and His Empire</div>
+
+<p>During his long reign the Moors in Spain were driven back beyond the
+Ebro; the Saxon tribes across the Rhine were forced to submit and to
+accept Christianity; the Lombard oppressors of Italy were vanquished;
+and on the Pope’s initiative, Charlemagne himself was acclaimed and
+crowned at Rome as emperor and successor of the Cæsars. All of the West
+that remained to Byzantium was Southern Italy. The revived empire came
+into being on Christmas Day, <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 800.</p>
+
+<p>The great dominion and the organisation constructed by Charlemagne fell
+into divisions after his death. The lands east of the Rhine remained
+German; on the west, the Teutonic forces yielded to the Latinised
+Celtic spirit. Slowly France and Germany emerged. In England the
+supremacy among the rival peoples passed from the Angles of Northumbria
+or of the Midlands to the Saxon house of Wessex. Hungary was held
+by the Mongolian Avars, presently to be displaced by their Magyar
+kinsmen; otherwise Eastern Europe, Illyria, as well as the Trans-Danube
+districts, was being gradually possessed by the Slavonic races. Their
+westward movement was decisively stayed in the tenth century by Henry
+the Fowler and Otto the Great, who, for the second time, revived the
+“Holy Roman Empire” in the West in a form which effectively translated
+it into the “German Empire.” Meanwhile, the Vikings from the north
+first ravaged the western coasts, then wrung great provinces from the
+kings of England, and of “Francia,” preparing for the day when the
+Norman spirit should set the tone of Western Europe.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Birth of Feudalism in Europe</div>
+
+<p>In the Eastern Mohammedan world the Saracen dominion was passing
+to Tartar races&mdash;to the Seljuk Turks or the Ghaznavid Turks, and
+later to the Ottomans; the genuine Saracens had seen their greatest
+days in the times of Harun-al-Raschid, when the Frankish Empire of
+Charlemagne was being dismembered. Europe in the eleventh century had
+passed, or was passing, into what is distinctively known as the Feudal
+Period, or later Middle Ages. Everywhere it became the object of the
+great rulers to establish a strong central government, and of the
+Papacy to establish a supremacy over all governments. Feudalism and the
+Papacy were the rivals of the centralising tendency.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[Pg 67]</span></p>
+
+<table class="time_table" summary="Time-Table of the World; A.D. 500&ndash;1000">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="4">
+ <div class="s3 center">TIME-TABLE OF THE WORLD: A.D. 500 to 1000</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bb" colspan="4">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>Teutonic Races Dominate the West. Rise of Mohammed:
+ extension of Mohammedan Rule from Cordova to Kabul. Western Empire Revived by
+ Charlemagne and again by Otto</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bc_ad br vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.<br />
+ &#8199;500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vam">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>The East and Africa</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vam">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>Europe</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="bc_ad vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.<br />
+ &#8199;500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Overthrow of the African Vandal kingdom by
+ Belisarius, general of Justinian.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Franks predominant on Rhine and in Gaul.<br />
+ Justinian emperor at Constantinople.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Roman Law codified in the Institutes.</span><br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Overthrow of Gothic kingdom in Italy by Belisarius.</span><br />
+ Advance of Saxons (South) and Angles (East) in England.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;550</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;550</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Buddhism introduced in Japan.
+ <div class="mtop2">Advance of Persia against the Eastern Empire.</div></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Lombard conquest of North Italy.<br />
+ Spread of Celtic Christianity in Britain by St. Columba.<br />
+ Pontificate of Gregory the Great.<br />
+ Latin Christianity introduced into Kent by St. Augustine, 597.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Overthrow of Persia by Emperor Heraclius.<br />
+ M<span class="smaller">OHAMMED</span>. The Hegira (622).<br />
+ Conquest of Egypt and Syria by the Caliphs Abu-bekr and Omar.<br />
+ Conquest of Persia, and extension of Caliphate over West Asia.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Supremacy of
+ Northumbria.<br />
+ I<span class="smaller">TALY</span>: North under Lombard dominion;
+ South attached to the Eastern Empire.<br />
+ Avar dominion in Hungary.<br />
+ Slavonic settlement in Servia.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;650</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;650</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Saracens (Caliphate) attack the Empire in the East and
+ in Africa.<br />
+ Rise of the Shiite sect of Mohammedans.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Final overthrow
+ of Paganism.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Triumph of Roman over Celtic Christianity.</span>
+ F<span class="smaller">RANKS</span>: Dukes of Austrasia (East Franks)
+ dominate the Merovingian kings.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Revival in India of Brahmanism, gradually
+ developing into modern Hinduism.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Saracens (or Moors) overrun Spain.<br />
+ Saracen advance checked by Emperor Leo the Isaurian at Constantinople, and
+ by Charles Martel at Tours.<br />
+ Beginning of the Iconoclastic controversy. Discussions between Papacy and
+ Eastern Church.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;750</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;750</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Division of the Caliphate into Eastern (Abassid)
+ at Bagdad and Western (Ommeiad) at Cordova.<br />
+ Rise of the Turks in the Caliphate armies.<br />
+ Harun-al-Raschid Caliph at Bagdad.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Supremacy of Mercia.<br />
+ F<span class="smaller">RANKS</span>: Fall of the Merovingian dynasty.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Pepin the Short founds the Karling or Carolingian Dynasty.</span><br />
+ Empress Irene at Constantinople.<br />
+ F<span class="smaller">RANKS</span>: Karl the Great (Charlemagne) succeeds
+ Pepin as king of the Franks. He drives the Moors beyond the Ebro, conquers
+ the Lombards, and is crowned as Roman Emperor by the Pope. (800).</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left mtop1">Increasing power of the Western Caliphate.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Subjugation of the Saxons by Charlemagne.<br />
+ Division of Charlemagne’s dominion among his grandsons.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Supremacy of Wessex under Egbert.<br />
+ The Danes, or Northmen, harry the coasts of Europe.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;850</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;850</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Fatemide Mohammedan dynasty established in Egypt.<br />
+ Decline of the Abassid Caliphs.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Carolingian dominion divided into West (Francia), East
+ (Franconia, Germany), Central (Burgundy) and Italy.<br />
+ Pressure of Slavonic peoples on East Germany.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Alfred the Great. Settlement of
+ the Danes in the Danelagh. Organisation of Government, Law, etc.<br />
+ Advance of Magyars in Hungary.<br />
+ Iceland colonised, 874&ndash;950.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;900</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;900</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span>: Duchy of Normandy
+ ceded to Rollo.<br />
+ N<span class="smaller">ORWAY</span> united under Harold Haarfager.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: House of Wessex kings of all England.<br />
+ G<span class="smaller">ERMANY</span>: Henry the Fowler, Saxon King of
+ Germany, and his son Otto the Great, check the Magyar advance.<br />
+ Pressure of Slavs on Eastern Empire.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;950</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;950</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="br vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1000<br />
+ A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Recovery of Eastern Provinces from the Saracens
+ by the Byzantine Empire.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">E<span class="smaller">MPIRE</span>: Otto becomes King
+ of Italy and Roman Emperor. The Holy Roman Empire is from this time
+ definitely German.<br />
+ F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span>: The Capet dynasty replaces the
+ Carolingian.<br />
+ Slavs driven back by Eastern Emperors. Russians Christianised. Slav dominion
+ established in Poland.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1000<br />
+ A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[Pg 68]</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">England and France</div>
+
+<p>In England, where a Norman dynasty and Norman aristocracy established
+themselves, the unifying process was astonishingly rapid. The country
+was comparatively shielded from Papal interposition by distance. A
+series of vigorous and able monarchs prevented pure feudalism from
+ever getting developed; it resulted that in the thirteenth century
+baronage and people made common cause in imposing not feudalism, but
+constitutional control over the kings. In France, the victory of the
+crown over feudalism was far slower; the feudatories were too powerful,
+and among them were the kings of England, as dukes or counts of great
+territories within France. The Hundred Years’ War was, in fact, not so
+much a contest for the French crown as a struggle between the French
+kings and their mightiest vassals. It was not till the English had
+been finally expelled that Louis XI. was enabled to make the crown
+supreme in France. There, as in England, the monarchy never submitted
+to the Papacy; it was so far victorious in that struggle that in the
+fourteenth century the seat of the Roman pontificate was transferred
+to Avignon, and the Pontiff himself became literally the creature of
+France.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Christendom and the Crusades</div>
+
+<p>Spain and Byzantium alike remained for the most part outside the
+general European current. They were the buffers between Christendom and
+Islam. In the Spanish Peninsula the Moors were held more or less at
+bay, but the land was not freed from their dominion till the close of
+the fifteenth century. Byzantium held the Turks at bay till the middle
+of the same century; then she fell for ever. Between the eleventh
+and thirteenth centuries, Christendom carried on against Islam the
+long contest of the Crusades; but the warriors who took part in those
+wars neither fought nor organised as though themselves forming an
+organic body; the Christian hosts in Palestine were mere miscellaneous
+gatherings, united only in the temporary fits of enthusiasm. The Holy
+Sepulchre was gained, but within a century it was lost again; the
+crusading cause was one to which not states, but individuals only,
+devoted themselves. Conquest would have been possible only if the
+Crusaders had gone forth prepared to make their own homes in Asia. The
+East could not be held by garrisons with no abiding interest there.</p>
+
+<p>Islam, then, held, and more than held, its own against the West; while
+during these same centuries it swept east and south through the passes
+of the Punjab into India, establishing Turk and Afghan kingdoms over
+most of the great peninsula; though the vast bulk of the population
+there held to the Hinduism which, born of the earlier Brahmanism, had
+almost expelled the Buddhist religion, which, however, had established
+itself permanently in Further India and China.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Empire, Feudalism, &amp; Papacy</div>
+
+<p>The might of Islam could have been overthrown only by a united
+Christendom, and for that the disintegrating forces were too great.
+England and, more slowly, France freed themselves from feudalism. But
+Christendom required one head. If the Papacy had stood by the empire,
+feudalism might have been broken down, and the emperor have become
+that head. But the Papacy aimed at supremacy for itself&mdash;the spiritual
+power was at war with the temporal. Anti-imperial factions claimed
+the support of the Church; the efforts at consolidation of the great
+Hohenstaufen Emperors, Barbarossa and Frederick II., were unsuccessful.
+The empire itself became only a congeries of kingdoms and dukedoms,
+counties, bishoprics, free cities, and leagues of cities, under the
+Austrian house of Hapsburg; while Rome, mighty from the days of Gregory
+VII. to Innocent III., lost its prestige in the captivity at Avignon
+and by the Great Schism which followed. In England Wycliffe’s voice
+was raised; on the south-east of the empire the Hussite wars raged,
+premonitory of the Reformation.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">End of the Middle Ages</div>
+
+<p>In 1453 Constantinople fell, and the Turk was permanently
+established in the east of Europe. As a counterstroke, in the west, not
+forty years later, the Moorish dominion in Spain was wiped out, Spain
+emerging as a united Christian kingdom. Before the end of the century
+Columbus and Gama had discovered America, and virtually rediscovered
+India. Across the ocean a new, almost unlimited field for expansion,
+for enterprise, for rivalry had been opened to the European peoples.
+Already in the realms of intellect old forgotten knowledge had been
+gradually recovered by the Renascence, the revival of learning and
+letters; with the intellectual expansion and the invention of the
+printing press paths to new knowledge were being opened. Men were
+shaking themselves free from the shackles of authority and tradition.
+Hence, the sixteenth century witnessed that revolt of half Western
+Christendom from Rome which we call the Reformation; in its essence,
+though by no means in its form at the first, a revolt against the
+interposition of any human authority between the individual man and
+his Maker. With that revolt political and national divisions were
+inextricably blended, while the whole was complicated by the new
+conditions of political supremacy created by the New World.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[Pg 69]</span></p>
+
+<table class="time_table" summary="Time-Table of the World; A.D. 500&ndash;1000">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="4">
+ <div class="s3 center">TIME-TABLE OF THE WORLD: A.D. 1000 to 1500</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bb" colspan="4">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>Development of Feudalism. The Rise and Decadence of
+ the Papacy. The Crusades. Holy Roman Empire. The Organisation of England,
+ France, and Spain. The Renaissance</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bc_ad br vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.<br />
+ 1000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vam">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>The Non-Christian World</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vam">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>Christendom</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="bc_ad vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.<br />
+ 1000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Mahmud of Ghazni. Beginning of Mohammedan invasions
+ of India.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Scandinavian power: Canute, King of Norway, Sweden,
+ Denmark, and England.<br />
+ Franconian line of emperors; Burgundy reunited to Empire.<br />
+ Dynasty of Hugh Capet in France.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1050</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1050</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left mtop2">Power of the Seljuk Turkish Dynasty.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: The Norman
+ conquest, 1066.<br />
+ Norman conquests in Sicily and S. Italy.<br />
+ Power of the Empire under Henry III.<br />
+ Pontificate of Gregory VII. (Hildebrand).<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Beginning of the struggle between Papacy and Empire
+ (Henry IV.)</span><br />
+ First Crusade.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left mtop2">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Development of Papal power.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Organisation of central government
+ under Henry I. checked under Stephen.<br />
+ Norman kingdom of Sicily.<br />
+ Conrad, first Hohenstaufen emperor. Beginning of Guelphs (Papal) and
+ Ghibellines (Imperial).</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1150</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1150</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Establishment of Mohammedan (Ghori) dynasty
+ at Delhi.<br />
+ Conquests of the Saracens under the Seljuk Saladin.<br />
+ Third Crusade (Cœur-de-Lion).</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">The Angevin dominion of Henry II., comprising half
+ France.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: End of feudal anarchy. Maximum
+ power of Crown. Henry worsted in the struggle with the Church.<br />
+ Chivalry typified in Richard Cœur-de-Lion.<br />
+ Frederick Barbarossa emperor, 1155&ndash;1190.<br />
+ City development. Lombard League; and German Free Cities.<br />
+ Advance of Moors in Spain.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Genghis Khan: Tartar conquests in Asia and irruption
+ into Europe.<br />
+ Buddhism obsolescent in India.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Highest power of Papacy, under Innocent III.<br />
+ Francis of Assisi: institution of Mendicant Friars.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Magna Charta; contest of Crown
+ and Barons. Loss of Angevin dominion.<br />
+ F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span>: Development of central power under
+ Louis VIII. and IX.<br />
+ Institution of the Teutonic knights.<br />
+ Break up of the Eastern Empire. Venice.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1250</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1250</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Rise of the Ottoman (Othman) Turks.<br />
+ Khublai Khan in Eastern Asia.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Decadence of Imperial power. First Habsburg emperor.<br />
+ End of the Crusading period.<br />
+ I<span class="smaller">TALY</span>: Rise of Florence. Dante. Giotto.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Establishment of Parliament (Montfort
+ and Edward I.). Organisation of the English nation.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Mameluke Sultans in Egypt.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">The Papacy “in captivity” at Avignon.<br />
+ Independence of Scotland.<br />
+ Independence of Switzerland.<br />
+ Ottoman Turks establish a footing in Europe.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND AND</span> F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span>:
+ Beginning of the 100 Years’ War.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1350</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1350</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Rise of the Ming dynasty in China: expulsion of
+ Mongols.<br />
+ <div class="mtop1">Conquests of Timur the Tartar (Tamerlane)</div></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">The Jacquerie in France.<br />
+ The Great Schism: period of dual Papacy.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Peasant revolt. Failure of Richard
+ II.’s attempt at absolutism. Wycliffe.<br />
+ Union of Lithuania with Poland.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Empires of Mexico and Peru.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">End of Great Schism. Hussite wars.<br />
+ English conquest of France, and subsequent expulsion. Increasing powers
+ of Parliament.<br />
+ Invention of printing press.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1450</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1450</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="br vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1500<br />
+ A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Discovery of America by Christopher Columbus;
+ and of Cape route to India by Vasco da Gama.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Turks capture Constantinople.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Wars of the Roses, 1455&ndash;1485.<br />
+ Maritime greatness of P<span class="smaller">ORTUGAL</span>.<br />
+ S<span class="smaller">PAIN</span> consolidated under Ferdinand and
+ Isabella.<br />
+ F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span> consolidated under Louis XI.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span> consolidated under Henry VII.
+ Establishment of absolutism under constitutional forms.<br />
+ Revival of learning. Humanists. Savonarola.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1500<br />
+ A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[Pg 70]</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Growth of Modern Nations</div>
+
+<p>The next two centuries, then, saw France, already a consolidated state,
+develop into the first military Power under the most absolute monarch
+in Europe&mdash;through a stage of prolonged religious strife which ended
+by establishing the tolerationist Bourbon, Henry IV., on the throne,
+through the rule of the two great cardinals, Richelieu and Mazarin, to
+the intolerant autocracy of Louis XIV., with a close aristocracy no
+longer in opposition to the crown but allied to it.</p>
+
+<p>In England the development was on different lines. There we find an
+absolutist movement, the outcome of the Wars of the Roses. But however
+autocratic the Tudors were, they held by constitutional forms, and
+preserved the intense loyalty of their people. On Elizabeth’s death,
+a century-old matrimonial alliance placed the sceptres of England and
+Scotland in a single hand.</p>
+
+<p>Then, on the theory of Divine right, the Crown attempted to override
+the constitution; the Civil War gave the power neither to king nor
+parliament, but to a military dictator. On his death the country
+reverted to a compromise between Crown and Parliament; the Stuarts,
+again, with the aid of their cousin, the autocrat of France,
+attempted to recover absolutism. They were driven from the country,
+and constitutionalism&mdash;in effect, government by an oligarchy of
+landowners&mdash;was decisively established. The religious problem had found
+a decisively Protestant solution at an early stage; but Anglicanism
+and Puritanism soon grew mutually intolerant; it was only with the
+Revolution of 1688 that toleration and constitutionalism definitely
+triumphed together.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Europe in Development</div>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, in the reign of Elizabeth, England had asserted her
+intellectual eminence by giving birth to Shakespeare and to Bacon; and
+had decisively displaced Spain from the rulership of the seas. In
+the next century her colonisation of North America counterbalanced the
+Spanish dominion in the south and centre of the Western Hemisphere,
+though it was not unchallenged by France. In the East a great
+commercial rivalry had grown up between English, Dutch, and French&mdash;a
+rivalry still to be fought out.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Collision of the Dynasties</div>
+
+<p>In the early years of the sixteenth century matrimonial alliances had
+joined Spain, the Low Countries, and the empire under a single ruler,
+a Hapsburg of the (Austrian) Imperial house. The vast dominion was
+extended by the acquisition of the golden territories of the American
+continent. The Empire passed to one Hapsburg branch, Spain and her
+dependencies to another. In the empire, a temporary <i>modus vivendi</i>
+was established between Roman Catholics and Protestants; but Spain,
+the colossus which threatened to dominate Europe, was split by the
+revolt of the Netherlands, and her power shaken to its foundations
+by the collision with England. In the sixteenth century, Germany was
+devastated by the religious Thirty Years’ War; Austria emerged only as
+the chief among a number of German states, and Holland won a naval and
+commercial position second only to that of England. The Ottoman Turks,
+still aggressive, were still held in check. In India, a Turkish dynasty
+known as the Moguls (Mughàls, Mongols) extended its sway from Kabul to
+the mouth of the Ganges, and almost to Cape Comorin.</p>
+
+<p>At the opening of the eighteenth century the aggressive Continental
+policy of Louis XIV. involved Europe in the “War of the Spanish
+Succession.” The French king’s armies were shattered by repeated blows
+at the hands of Marlborough and Eugene, but he finally obtained his
+primary object, the recognition of his grandson as king of Spain. The
+threat of a Hapsburg domination passed into the threat of a Bourbon
+domination. In the east of Europe a final limit was set to the Ottoman
+aggression. In Britain, the incorporation of Scotland was completed,
+formally by the Union of 1707, effectively by the suppression of
+Jacobitism in 1746.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[Pg 71]</span></p>
+
+<table class="time_table" summary="Time-Table of the World; A.D. 1500&ndash;1700">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="4">
+ <div class="s3 center">TIME-TABLE OF THE WORLD: A.D. 1500 to 1700</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bb" colspan="4">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>New World Entered, and East Re-entered. The
+ Reformation. Organisation of European Nations under Absolute Monarchies.
+ Constitutional Struggle in England. English Naval Supremacy.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bc_ad br vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.<br />
+ 1500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vam">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>Asia and Africa</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vam">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>Europe and America</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="bc_ad vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.<br />
+ 1500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">The New World bestowed on Spain and Portugal by the Bull
+ of Pope Alexander VI.<br />
+ Portuguese dominion established in the Indian seas by Albuquerque.<br />
+ Conquest of Egypt by Ottoman Turks. <br />
+ Safid dynasty in Persia (“The Sofy”).</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Raphael, Michael Angelo, and Titian.<br />
+ Rivalry of Henry VIII. (1509&ndash;47), Francis I. (1515&ndash;47), and
+ Charles V. (1519&ndash;56), who combines Spain, Burgundy, and the Empire.<br />
+ Luther challenges the Papacy, 1517&ndash;20.<br />
+ The Reformation era opens.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1520</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1520</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">First circumnavigation completed, 1522.<br />
+ Invasion of Hindostan (Northern India) by Baber, the first “Mogul”
+ emperor, 1526.<br />
+ <div class="mtop1">Expulsion of Moguls: dynasty of Sher Shah at Delhi,
+ 1540.</div></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Turkish advance under Solyman the Magnificent.<br />
+ Gustavus Vasa in Sweden, 1523&ndash;60.<br />
+ Spain conquers Mexico (1520) and Peru (1533).<br />
+ R<span class="smaller">EFORMATION</span>: Subjection of Church to Crown
+ (England). Confession of Augsburg: Protestant League. Calvin creates
+ Presbyterianism.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1540</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1540</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left mtop1">François Xavier in Japan.<br />
+ <div class="mtop1">Restoration of Moguls, 1556.</div></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">R<span class="smaller">USSIA</span>: Ivan the Terrible.<br />
+ Order of Jesuits formally established.<br />
+ G<span class="smaller">ERMANY</span>: Contest between Charles V. and
+ Protestant princes of Germany ended by compromise at Peace of Augsburg.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Protestant Revolution (Edward VI.)
+ followed by Romanist reaction (Mary), and final establishment of Protestantism
+ (Elizabeth) in England and Scotland.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1560</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1560</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Rule of Akbar, 1556&ndash;1605.<br />
+ Toleration of Hinduism.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">S<span class="smaller">PAIN</span>: Philip II. and the
+ Inquisition.<br />
+ Council of Trent defines limits of Roman Catholicism.<br />
+ F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span>: Series of civil wars of religion,
+ 1562&ndash;95.<br />
+ Revolt of Netherlands from Spain.<br />
+ Turkish advance checked at Lepanto, 1571.<br />
+ P<span class="smaller">ORTUGAL</span> absorbed by Spain.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1580</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1580</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Mogul dominion established and organised throughout
+ Northern India.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Gradual success of the Netherlands revolt.<br />
+ English naval supremacy proved by the Armada 1588.<br />
+ Decadence of Spain.<br />
+ F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span>: Toleration secured by Henri IV.<br />
+ Spenser, Marlowe, and Shakespeare.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Development of Japanese Feudalism.<br />
+ Reign of Jehan Gir in Hindostan, 1605&ndash;27.<br />
+ First English factory at Surat, 1611.<br />
+ First English Embassy to Delhi, 1615.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Galileo and Bacon.<br />
+ Union of English and Scottish Crowns, 1603.<br />
+ Dutch and English commerce in the East Indies.<br />
+ Virginia, first successful British colony in North America, 1606.<br />
+ H<span class="smaller">OLLAND</span>: Independence established, 1609.<br />
+ G<span class="smaller">ERMANY</span>: Thirty Years’ War begins, 1618&ndash;48.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1620</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1620</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Reign of Shah Jehan, 1627&ndash;58.<br />
+ The Taj Mahal built.<br />
+ End of the Portuguese power in the East.<br />
+ Extension of the Mogul dominion into the Deccan.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Gustavus Adolphus.<br />
+ F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span>: Richelieu organises absolutism.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Constitutional struggle between
+ Charles I. and Parliament. The Petition of Right, 1628.<br />
+ P<span class="smaller">ORTUGAL</span> recovers independence.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1640</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1640</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Rise of the Manchu (Tartar) dynasty in China.
+ <div class="mtop1">Reign of Aurangzib, 1658&ndash;1707.<br />
+ Rise of the Mahrattas under Sivaji.</div></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span>: Rule of Mazarin:
+ absolutism established.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Civil War, resulting in military
+ protectorate.<br />
+ Thirty Years’ War ended by Peace of Westphalia.<br />
+ Commercial and naval rivalry of English and Dutch.<br />
+ Development of France into the leading military power.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1660</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1660</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">France enters the field in India.<br />
+ Revival of intolerant Mohammedanism by Aurangzib.<br />
+ Expansion of the Mogul Empire over Southern India.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span>: Louis XIV. initiates
+ policy of aggression.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Charles II. undermines supremacy
+ of Parliament. Repression of Nonconformity by Parliament.<br />
+ Louis XIV. attacks Holland, with occasional support from Charles II.<br />
+ E<span class="smaller">NGLAND</span>: Attack on Romanism.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1680</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1680</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="br vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1700<br />
+ A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Aggressive movement of Turkey.<br />
+ F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span>: Louis XIV. revokes Edict of Nantes,
+ 1685.<br />
+ Constitutionalism established in England by the revolution of 1688.<br />
+ Wars of England and Holland against France.<br />
+ R<span class="smaller">USSIA</span>: Peter the Great.<br />
+ Newton and Leibnitz.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1700<br />
+ A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[Pg 72]</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Settling Down of the Powers</div>
+
+<p>From 1739 to 1763 Europe was again plunged into wars, with an eight
+years’ interval. The motives of those wars, and of the combinations
+of states on either side, were complicated; the results were simple.
+Prussia, under Frederick the Great, emerged as a first-class Power;
+France lost her North American Colonies to Great Britain; the British
+East India Company defeated the attempt of the French to establish a
+paramount influence with the native princes, the Mogul Empire having
+broken up into a congeries of practically independent satrapies; and
+the British themselves became established as a territorial Power by
+the conquest of Bengal. Russia also, organised at the beginning of the
+century by Peter the Great, had taken her place definitely among the
+great Powers.</p>
+
+<p>During the next twenty years (1763&ndash;1783) Poland was absorbed by her
+neighbours. The British Empire was sundered by the revolt of the older
+American Colonies, which were established as the United States of
+America; while Canada remained loyal. By this time the whole of Europe
+was practically governed by absolute monarchies; but a cataclysm was
+at hand. France became the scene of a tremendous revolution. Crown and
+aristocracy were toppled into the abyss.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Napoleon and the Revolution</div>
+
+<p>France proclaimed herself the liberator of the peoples; the monarchs
+of Europe combined to suppress the proletariat. During the last decade
+of the century one revolutionary constitution after another was set
+up in Paris, while the revolutionary armies shattered monarchical
+armies, and turned the “liberated” peoples into subject dependencies
+of the Republic. On the seas, however, Britain successfully asserted
+her supremacy. Of the commanders of the Republic, the most brilliant
+was the Corsican Bonaparte. He dreamed of making Egypt the basis for
+achieving an Asiatic empire, and thence overwhelming Europe; but
+the dream was shattered when he found himself isolated by Nelson’s
+destruction of the French fleet at Aboukir in the Battle of the Nile.
+Returning to Paris, he transformed the republic into an empire; he set
+up his brothers or his generals as rulers over half the kingdoms in
+Europe; he dictated terms to every government except Britain. Britain
+annihilated his fleets, and fought and beat his generals in the Spanish
+Peninsula. He conquered the kings, but the nations rose against him,
+and overthrew him; his last effort was crushed at Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p>Absolutism was reinstated, but the proletariats had learnt to demand
+freedom. Steam-power and steam-traction so changed the conditions
+of production as to revolutionise the relations between labour and
+capital, and between the landed and the manufacturing interests.
+In Great Britain political power passed from the landowners to the
+manufacturers with the great Reform Bill of 1832, and from the wealthy
+to the labouring classes with the Franchise Bills of 1867 and 1884.
+Every monarchy has been compelled to submit to limitations of its own
+powers more or less copied from Britain.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The World as it is</div>
+
+<p>Britain herself, not untaught by the breach with America, has learned
+to establish responsible government in her Colonies, making them
+virtually free states; and among those states the idea of federation
+has taken root and is bearing fruit. In India, challenged by one native
+race after another, she has extended her sway over the whole peninsula,
+and has abolished the anomaly of governing her great dependency through
+a trading company. In the West her kinsmen have raised the United
+States into a mighty nation.</p>
+
+<p>In Europe France has passed through monarchy and republic and second
+empire into a stable republic; Italy has revolted against foreign
+rulers, and become a united nation; the small peoples of the Balkan
+Peninsula have now achieved by arms their liberty from Turkish rule.
+Prussia has won the hegemony of the German states, and established
+a new German Empire. Russia, the bogey of the West, and of Britain
+in particular, has shown her weakness in collision with the sudden
+development of Japan.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, the Dark Continent has been explored and partitioned: in the
+south, after a sharp conflict, British and Dutch are on the way to
+become a united people; in the north, Egypt has been reorganised under
+British administration. We end, as we began, with the land of the
+Pyramids.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">A<span class="smaller">RTHUR</span>
+D. I<span class="smaller">NNES</span>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[Pg 73]</span></p>
+
+<table class="time_table" summary="Time-Table of the World; A.D. 1700&ndash;1914">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="4">
+ <div class="s3 center">TIME-TABLE OF THE WORLD: A.D. 1700 to 1914</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bb" colspan="4">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>Struggle for Colonial Supremacy. French Revolution
+ and Napoleonic Wars. Growth of Democracy and Consolidation of European States.
+ Colonial Extension of Responsible Government</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bc_ad br vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.<br />
+ 1700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vam">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>Asia, Africa, and Australasia</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vam">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>Europe and America</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="bc_ad vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.<br />
+ 1700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">War of Spanish Succession, 1702&ndash;13. Bourbons
+ established in Spain.<br />
+ Career of Charles XII. of Sweden, 1697&ndash;1718.<br />
+ G<span class="smaller">REAT</span> B<span class="smaller">RITAIN</span>:
+ Incorporating union of England and Scotland, 1707.<br />
+ Turkish advance decisively stopped by Eugene, 1717.<br />
+ Alliance of France and Great Britain.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1720</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1720</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Anglo-Spanish War, combined with War of the Austrian
+ Succession, 1739&ndash;48.<br />
+ Development of Prussian military power under Frederick William.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1740</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1740</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Struggle between British and French in Southern
+ India, 1746&ndash;61.
+ <div class="mtop1">Clive conquers Bengal; beginning of British territorial
+ power in India, 1757.</div></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">G<span class="smaller">REAT</span>
+ B<span class="smaller">RITAIN</span>: End of Jacobitism (the Forty-five)
+ consolidates the union.<br />
+ Seven Years’ War (1756&ndash;63): Prussia and Great Britain against France,
+ Austria, and Russia.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Achievements of Frederick. Overthrow of France at sea,
+ and in Canada and India.</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1760</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1760</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">British dominion receives Mogul’s sanction.
+ <div class="mtop1">Haidar Ali in Mysore.<br />
+ Governor-Generalship of Warren Hastings (1774&ndash;85), establishes the
+ British power.</div></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Treaties of Paris and Hubertsburg exclude France from
+ America and India, and confirm the position of Prussia.<br />
+ Partition of Poland.<br />
+ G<span class="smaller">REAT</span> B<span class="smaller">RITAIN</span>:
+ Quarrel with Colonies; leading to War of American Independence,
+ 1775&ndash;83.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1780</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1780</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Dual control in India by East India Company and
+ Parliamentary Board of Control set up by Pitt’s India Act.<br />
+ Administration of British India systematised.<br />
+ Overthrow of Mysore, and institution of subsidiary alliances by Lord
+ Wellesley.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">British recovery of naval predominance.<br />
+ U<span class="smaller">NITED</span> S<span class="smaller">TATES</span>:
+ Independence established 1783.<br />
+ F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span>: French Revolution, 1789.<br />
+ War between European Coalitions and French Republic, 1792&ndash;1802. Rise of
+ Bonaparte. Triumphs of French Army and British Navy.<br />
+ G<span class="smaller">REAT</span> B<span class="smaller">RITAIN</span>:
+ Legislative Union with Ireland.<br />
+ Kant and Goethe.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Overthrow of Mahratta power by Lord Hastings (1819):
+ extensive annexations.<br />
+ Acquisition of Cape Colony from Holland by Great Britain.<br />
+ Gradual planting of Australasian Colonies.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">War renewed (1803) between European Coalitions and
+ Emperor Napoleon (1804).<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Trafalgar and Austerlitz, 1805. Peninsula War,
+ 1808&ndash;13. Moscow Campaign, 1812. Waterloo Campaign, 1815.</span><br />
+ European reconstruction. Absolutist reaction: the Holy alliance.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1820</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1820</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vab">
+ <div class="s5 left">Aggressive Eastward movement of Persia checked at
+ Herat.<br />
+ First Afghan Wars, 1839&ndash;42.<br />
+ C<span class="smaller">HINA</span>: First collision with Europe.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Independence of South and Central American States.<br />
+ Greek War of Independence, 1822&ndash;29.<br />
+ F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span>: Constitutional Monarchy under
+ Louis Philippe, 1830&ndash;48.<br />
+ G<span class="smaller">REAT</span> B<span class="smaller">RITAIN</span>:
+ Parliamentary Reform and manufacturing development. Railways.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1840</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1840</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Sikh Wars, 1845&ndash;49.<br />
+ Annexations under Dalhousie.<br />
+ Indian Mutiny, 1857. Transfer of Indian Government to British Crown, 1858.<br />
+ J<span class="smaller">APAN</span>: Admission of foreign traders.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Charles Darwin.<br />
+ Revolutionary movements in Europe.<br />
+ F<span class="smaller">RANCE</span>: Republic (1849) passing to Empire
+ of Napoleon III. (1852).<br />
+ Crimean War, 1854&ndash;56.<br />
+ Establishment of responsible government in British Colonies.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1860</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1860</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">J<span class="smaller">APAN</span>: Revived power of the
+ Mikado.<br />
+ Advance of Russia in Central Asia towards India.<br />
+ <div class="mtop1">Second Afghan War, 1878&ndash;80.</div></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">American Civil War, 1861&ndash;65. Abolition of
+ Slavery.<br />
+ Independence of United Italy under Victor Emmanuel.<br />
+ Prussia acquires leadership of German States 1866.<br />
+ Franco-Prussian War, 1870&ndash;71. New German Empire, and new French
+ Republic.<br />
+ Russo-Turkish War, 1877&ndash;78.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1880</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1880</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vat">
+ <div class="s5 left">Mahdism in the Eastern Sudan; ended at Omdurman in 1898.
+ British control established.<br />
+ Partition of Africa into “Spheres of Influence.”<br />
+ War between China and Japan.<br />
+ Annexation of Philippines by United States.<br />
+ South African War (1899&ndash;1902) and incorporation of Dutch States into
+ British Empire.<br />
+ Federation of Australian Colonies, 1901.<br />
+ War between Russia and Japan, 1904&ndash;5.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">British control established in Egypt.<br />
+ Repeated disturbances in the Balkan States established by the Russo-Turkish
+ War.
+ <div class="mtop1">First Peace Conference of European powers at the Hague,
+ 1899.</div>
+ <div class="mtop1">Norway separates from Sweden and elects King Haakon, 1905.</div>
+ Second Peace Conference at the Hague, 1907.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1910</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1910</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="br vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">C<span class="smaller">HINA</span>: Revolution: Manchu
+ dynasty displaced by Republic, 1912.<br />
+ Tripoli annexed by Italy from Ottoman Empire, 1912.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Allied Balkan States defeat Turkey, 1912.<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Creation of Albania as independent state, 1914.</span><br />
+ Revolution in Mexico, 1913&ndash;14.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h4 class="mtop3" id="TIME-TABLE_OF_THE_NATIONS">A TIME-TABLE OF THE NATIONS OF
+THE WORLD</h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">FROM THE BEGINNING OF HISTORY TO THE PRESENT DAY</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center"><b>Showing at a glance the fate of all nations, their rise, their sway,
+their decline, and their successors</b></p>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>On this double-page are shown the empires of the ancient world to
+the rise of Rome, and on the succeeding double-page the ruling
+powers from Rome until the present day. The chronology is in
+divisions of a hundred years, except the first four, which, for
+convenience of space, are shown in longer periods</b></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe35" id="i_074_075">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_074_075.jpg" alt="Time-Table of the Nations;
+ First Double Page" />
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_074_075_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe35" id="i_076_077">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_076_077.jpg" alt="Time-Table of the Nations;
+ Second Double Page" />
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_076_077_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<table class="time_table" summary="Time-Table of the Nations; B.C. 8000&ndash;1">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="3">
+ <div class="s4 center bb">N<span class="smaller">OTABLE</span>
+ E<span class="smaller">VENTS</span></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bc_ad br vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>B.C.<br />
+ 8000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vab">
+ <div class="s0">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="bc_ad vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>B.C.<br />
+ 8000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">The earliest civilisation known is that of Egypt,
+ traces of which have been found dating back to 7,000 or 8,000 B.C. Equally
+ early civilisations were probably established in the Euphrates Valley.<br />
+ In the fifth millennium Khufu built the Great Pyramids; in the fourth a
+ Semitic migration, spreading westward from Asia, peopled Babylonia, Assyria,
+ Canaan, and Phœnicia afresh, establishing new nations and kingdoms.<br />
+ The third millennium saw the Aryan invasion of India; the beginning of Chinese
+ history; and Aryan and Semitic waves of migration towards Europe.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>2000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>2000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Egypt was conquered by the Hyksos, a Semitic
+ nomadic race.<br />
+ Hittite Empire established in Syria.<br />
+ During the next three hundred years, of which the history is obscure, the
+ dynasty of the Ramesides was established in Egypt, which waged wars with the
+ Hittite Empire. Rameses II. is popularly identified with the Pharaoh of the
+ Exodus, an event which is also identified with the expulsion of the Hyksos.
+ The supremacy in the Mesopotamian regions alternates between Assyrian and
+ Babylonian dynasties.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Rise of a Hebrew nation.<br />
+ Age of Phœnician prosperity; commercial importance of Sidon and Tyre.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Ionic and Doric migrations.<br />
+ Predominance of Phrygia among kingdoms of Asia Minor.<br />
+ 1048 B.C. David captures Jerusalem and becomes King over all Israel.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1000</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">975 B.C. Division of the Hebrew kingdom into Judah and
+ Israel after the death of Solomon.<br />
+ Growth of the Hellenic States.<br />
+ The age of Homer.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;900</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;900</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">850 B.C. Foundation of Carthage.<br />
+ Beginnings of the Latin and Etruscan peoples.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Assyrian conquest of Babylon, Syria, and Israel.<br />
+ 753 B.C. The foundation of Rome.<br />
+ Rapid spread of the Greek Colonies.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Beginnings of the Macedonian kingdom.<br />
+ Rise of Media.<br />
+ Beginnings of Japanese history.<br />
+ Decline of Assyria, fall of Nineveh, and establishment of new Babylonian
+ Empire.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Cyrus, King of Persia, conquers Media, establishes his
+ empire over Lydia, Assyria, and Babylonia (538 B.C.). His son Cambyses
+ conquers Egypt, 525 B.C.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">The Greek States revolt against Persia and are
+ triumphant.<br />
+ Egypt regains independence.<br />
+ Steady growth of Roman ascendancy in Italy.<br />
+ Struggle between Athens and Sparta.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Conquests of Alexander the Great (334&ndash;322 B.C.).
+ He conquers Persia, masters Egypt, and invades India. At his death his empire
+ is divided: Egypt falls under the Ptolemies, Syria under the Seleucidæ.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Babylon absorbed by Parthian Empire.<br />
+ Carthage dominates Spain.<br />
+ Wars between Rome and Carthage. Overthrow of Carthage (202 B.C.).</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Judea attains independence under the Maccabees.<br />
+ Growing power of Rome. Macedon a Roman province; Egypt and Syria made
+ Roman protectorates. The Greek States are absorbed into province of Macedon.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="br vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;B.C.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Cæsar conquers Gaul and lands in Britain.<br />
+ Egypt becomes a Roman province.<br />
+ Augustus Cæsar. Establishment of the Roman Empire.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;B.C.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="s3 center mtop3 break-before">A TIME-TABLE OF THE NATIONS OF
+THE WORLD</p>
+
+<p class="center">continued from the preceding pages</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE CHRISTIAN ERA TO THE PRESENT DAY</p>
+
+<table class="time_table" summary="Time-Table of the Nations; A.D. 1 to the
+Present Day">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="3">
+ <div class="s4 center bb">N<span class="smaller">OTABLE</span>
+ E<span class="smaller">VENTS</span></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="bc_ad br vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br vab">
+ <div class="s0">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="bc_ad vat">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">For the first four centuries of the Christian era the
+ Roman Empire absorbed the “known” world, bounded in Europe by the ocean, the
+ Rhine, and the Danube, and in Asia by the Euphrates, and including the
+ Mediterranean districts of Africa. Germanic tribes bore with ever-increasing
+ pressure upon her European borders, and the Parthians defied her in the East.
+ At the close of the third century the centre of political gravity was passing
+ from Rome itself to Byzantium, preparing for the scission of the Empire, into
+ Eastern and Western, which was practically at the close of the fourth century,
+ when it was becoming increasingly clear that Rome could not stand against the
+ Barbarian invaders, notably the Goths under Alaric.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">In the fifth century the Empire, long weakened by
+ corruption and the tyranny of the army, was overwhelmed by the Barbarians.
+ Vandals, Western Goths, and Suevi poured into Spain; Franks and Alemanni
+ spread over Gaul; Ostro-Goths and Lombards settled in North Italy; Huns and
+ Avars attacked Thrace.<br />
+ Britain was invaded by Saxons, Jutes, and Angles.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">The seventh and eighth centuries were marked by the
+ rapid rise of Mohammedanism in Arabia; the conquests of the Saracens in
+ Egypt, Africa, and West Asia; the establishment of the Caliphate at Bagdad;
+ and their invasion of Spain. Here they were checked by the Franks.<br />
+ Charlemagne, son of Pippin, King of the Franks in Germany and Gaul, was
+ crowned in 768, conquered Lombardy in 774, calling himself “King of the
+ Franks and Lombards and Patrician of the Romans.” His empire was divided
+ after his death; from it emerged modern France and Germany. His coronation by
+ the Pope at Rome (A.D. 800) originated the idea of the Holy Roman Empire.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;900</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;900</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Disintegration of the Empire of the Caliphs, and rise
+ in Asia Minor of the Seljuk Turks, making war against the Byzantine Empire
+ and the Crusaders, and conquering Egypt.<br />
+ India is invaded by Mohammedan Afghan rulers, who eventually establish a
+ dynasty at Delhi.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">The Kingdoms of Hungary, Bohemia, and Poland, converted
+ to Christianity in the tenth century, come into increasing prominence.<br />
+ The Kings of Castile, Navarre, Aragon and Portugal war against the Moors, who
+ (A.D. 1248) are restricted to Granada.<br />
+ The Mamelukes (Slave kings) conquer Egypt (1252).<br />
+ Switzerland attains independence.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Failure of England to absorb Scotland, or to conquer
+ France. The Hundred Years’ War.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">The Turks capture Constantinople (1453).<br />
+ The Netherlands (Burgundy) united to the House of Hapsburg. (1477).<br />
+ Spain united; overthrow of the Moorish dominion.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Bohemia and Hungary united to Austria. Spain and
+ Portugal take possession of the New World. Mogul Empire established in
+ Hindostan. The Reformation leads to revolt of the Netherlands from Spain;
+ Spain absorbs Portugal.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Union of English and Scottish crowns (1603); followed by
+ legislative union (1707). Disruption of Germany in the Thirty Years’ War.
+ Establishment of English Colonies in America. Portugal recovers
+ independence.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Spain becomes a Bourbon Power. Rise of Russia and
+ Prussia. Partition of Poland between Russia, Prussia and Austria. Further
+ disintegration of German Empire. British dominion in India and North America.
+ Independence of United States.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">France predominant under Napoleon. Rise of South
+ American States. Establishment of British India. Italy independent. Egypt,
+ Greece, and Balkan States freed from Turkey. Foundation of German Empire.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0">
+ &nbsp;
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="dte br" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1900</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s0 bb br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="dte" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>1900</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s0 br">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="br vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="events br">
+ <div class="s5 left">Independence of Norway (1905).</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab">
+ <div class="s5 center"><b>&#8199;A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h4 class="mtop3" id="CONTEMPORARY_FIGURES_IN_HISTORY">CONTEMPORARY FIGURES IN
+HISTORY</h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<table class="time_table s5" summary="Contemporary Figures in History; HTML Version">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center">T<span class="smaller">IME</span><br />
+ <b>B.C.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>India</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>China</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>Persia</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>Greece</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>Rome</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>Judah</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>Egypt</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>Macedon</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center">T<span class="smaller">IME</span><br />
+ <b>B.C.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Buddha</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Confucius</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Darius</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Æschylus</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Tarquin the Proud</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Haggai</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Xerxes</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Themistocles</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Zechariah</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;450</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Artaxerxes</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Socrates</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Nehemiah</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;450</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Plato</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Ezra</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Pericles</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Herodotus</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Thucydides</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Sophocles</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="right">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Euripides</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;350</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Aristotle</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Philip</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;350</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Demosthenes</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Alexander</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Hannibal</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Judas Maccabæus</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;&#8199;50</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Julius Cæsar</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Cleopatra</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;&#8199;50</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Cicero</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>Jesus</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Augustus</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">John the Baptist</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>Jesus</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>Christ</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Tiberius</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>Christ</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Horace</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="left">Virgil, Livy</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>Britain</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>France</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>Germany</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>Switzerland</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>Rome, Italy</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>Spain</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>Netherlands</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>Africa &amp; East</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center"><b>A.D.</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;&#8199;50</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Boadicea</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Seneca</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Josephus</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;&#8199;50</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">St. Paul</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Constantine</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Athanasius</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Alaric</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Augustine</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;400</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Chas. Martel</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Mahomet</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Bede</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Alfred</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Charlemagne</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Haroun-al-Raschid</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&#8199;800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">The Cid</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Omar Khayyam (Persia)</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1100</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">St. Francis</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1200</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Chaucer</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">William Tell</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Aquinas</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Tamerlane</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1300</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Dante</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1350</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Wycliffe</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Froissart</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Arnold von Winkelried</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Petrarch</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Hafiz (Persia)</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1350</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Boccaccio</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1450</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Caxton</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Da Vinci</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1450</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Knox</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Rabelais</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Luther</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Calvin</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Columbus</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Ignatius Loyola</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Erasmus</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1500</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Latimer</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Copernicus</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Savonarola</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">St. Theresa</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Machiavelli</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Ferdnd. &amp; Isabella</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Cortez</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>Russia</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1550</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Philip Sidney</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Montaigne</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Cellini</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Alva</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">William the Silent</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Ivan the Terrible</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1550</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Spenser</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Scaliger</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Tasso</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Shakespeare</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Corneille</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Kepler</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Galileo</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Cervantes</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Rubens</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1600</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Raleigh</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Richelieu</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>Scandinavia</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Bacon</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Descartes</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Gustavus Adolphus</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Van Dyck</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Jonson</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Grotius</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1650</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Cromwell</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Pascal</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Peter the Gt. [&amp; Catherine]</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1650</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Milton</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Racine</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Leibnitz</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Spinoza</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Bunyan</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Molière</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Dryden</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Fénélon</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Locke</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Rochefoucauld</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Hobbes</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Louis XIV.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Swift</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1700</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Steele</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Handel</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Holberg</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Addison</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Walpole</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>America</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1750</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Chatham</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Fredk the Gt</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Rousseau</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Franklin</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1750</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Burke</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Voltaire</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Goethe</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Gessner</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Washington</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Pitt and Fox</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Lavoisier</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Schiller</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Pestalozzi</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Wesley</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Napoleon</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Haydn</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Pestalozzi</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Burns</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Mozart</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Goldsmith</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Kant</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Sheridan</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Dr. Johnson</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Coleridge</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Flaxman</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Reynolds</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Gainsboro’gh</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Nelson</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Wellington</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Faraday</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Hegel</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Tegner</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Scott</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Beethoven</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Thorwaldsen</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Byron</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Keats</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Shelley</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Wordsworth</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Lamb</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1825</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Gladstone</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Balzac</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Wagner</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Garibaldi</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Hans Andersen</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Irving</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1825</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Macaulay</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Dumas</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Heine</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Mazzini</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Runeberg</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Emerson</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Disraeli</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Victor Hugo</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Bismarck</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Cavour</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Wergeland</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Longfellow</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Landseer</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Georges Sand</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Moltke</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Victor Emmanuel</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Welhaven</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Whittier</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Mill</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Lesseps</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Bunsen</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Ibsen</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Lowell</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Livingstone</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Napoleon 3</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">William I.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Bjornson</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Holmes</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Ruskin</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Gambetta</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Lincoln</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Dickens</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Turgenieff</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Carlyle</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Thackeray</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Tolstoy</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Browning</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Tennyson</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Darwin</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>Hungary</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Huxley</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Kossuth</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Spencer</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>&nbsp;</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center"><b>1900</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><b>1900</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[Pg 79]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s2 center mtop3" id="MAKING_OF_THE_EARTH">MAKING OF THE EARTH</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_079">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_079.jpg" alt="MAKING OF THE EARTH AND THE COMING
+ OF MAN" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s2 center">AND THE COMING OF MAN</p>
+
+<h4 class="padtop1" id="THE_BEGINNING_OF_THE_EARTH">THE BEGINNING OF THE EARTH</h4>
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center mbot1">BY PROFESSOR SOLLAS</p>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">T</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>HE
+origin of our planet is a problem which has appealed to the
+intellect of thoughtful men from the most remote times, and the
+earliest recorded speculations concerning it&mdash;those of the Mosaic
+cosmogony&mdash;possess a peculiar interest, since they embody the views of
+the ancient Chaldeans, who were not only systematic observers of the
+heavens, but made practical use of their results.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Beginning of a Famous Theory</div>
+
+<p>The Mosaic cosmogony is not unworthy of the great people among whom
+it took its rise; it recognises the fact that the earth had a history
+antecedent to the advent of man, and its account of the order of
+events in this history is not only remarkable as a feat of <i>a priori</i>
+reasoning, but accords in some respects with the results achieved after
+much labour by modern science.</p>
+
+<p>It was not until the middle of the eighteenth century that the reign
+of evolution began, and attempts were made to trace the history of
+a planetary system from its source in a primeval nebula on purely
+mechanical grounds. Swedenborg (1735) was the pioneer in this
+direction, then came Thomas Wright (1750) of Durham, whose work
+furnished inspiration to Emanuel Kant (1755), and led him to construct
+a consistent scheme of the Universe. The last of this group of cosmic
+philosophers is Laplace (1796), whose admirable description of the
+evolution of the solar system was arrived at independently, and without
+knowledge of the previous work of Kant.</p>
+
+<p>Laplace assumed as his starting-point the existence of a nebula formed
+of incandescent gas, and extending beyond the limits of the outermost
+planet of our system. It was in rotation about a central axis, and
+possessed in consequence a disc-like or lenticular form. Radiating
+its heat away in all directions through surrounding space, it grew
+continually colder, and in cooling diminished in bulk. As a consequence
+of this contraction its rate of rotation increased, till at length the
+centrifugal force of the outermost part became so great that this could
+no longer continue to follow the contracting mass within, and thus
+remained behind as a great rotating ring. The continued contraction
+of the internal mass, and the resulting increase in the velocity of
+rotation, again brought about the same condition of things, and a fresh
+ring was left behind.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Cooling of the Nebula</div>
+
+<p>This process was repeated time after time, till as many rings were
+formed as there are planets in the solar system; the central mass
+which survived within the innermost ring condensed to form the sun.
+The rings were highly unstable&mdash;that is to say, a slight disturbing
+force was sufficient to destroy their continuity; they broke across and
+rolled up into great nebulous globes, which revolved round the sun in
+the same direction as the original nebula, and rotated on their axes
+in the same direction as that in which they revolved. Most of them
+repeated the behaviour of the original nebulæ, leaving behind rings
+as they contracted, and these rings either rolled up to form moons or
+satellites, or, in the solitary instance of Saturn’s rings, retained
+their annular form. The rings are now known to consist of a multitude
+of solid bodies, as proved by Clerk-Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[Pg 80]</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Temperature of the Earth</div>
+
+<p>By this hypothesis, so beautiful in its simplicity, an explanation was
+afforded embracing all the more important facts of our system; the
+revolution of all the planets in nearly circular orbits and in the
+same direction as that in which the sun rotates, and the revolution of
+their satellites, also in circular orbits and in the same direction
+as their primaries; the comparatively high temperature and consequent
+low density of the larger planets and the sun, as well as a variety of
+other phenomena, all seem to follow naturally from it. The fundamental
+assumption seems to be in harmony with a number of known facts. Thus
+in the case of our own planet the volcanoes distributed around the
+margins of the oceans, and the hot springs scattered irregularly over
+the whole terrestrial surface, suggest that great stores of heat exist
+beneath our feet, a presumption which finds confirmation in the fact
+that whenever we descend towards the interior of the earth, as in
+deep mines or wells, the temperature continues steadily to rise after
+we have passed a depth below which seasonal and diurnal changes of
+temperature cease to be felt, the rise being in some cases as much as 3
+deg. for 100 ft., in others only 1 deg. for the same distance, but on
+the average 1 deg. for 60 ft. or 70 ft. If this increase of temperature
+continues down to great depths, and there seems to be no reason why it
+should not, then a point will be reached, say, at thirty or forty miles
+down, where the interior will attain a white heat.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Earth as a Star</div>
+
+<p>Thus the earth might be regarded as a white hot body surrounded with a
+film of rock growing continually cooler towards the surface. But such a
+hot body suspended in space must be cooling, just as all bodies which
+are hotter than their surroundings. It is cooler to-day than it was
+yesterday, or&mdash;what is the same thing&mdash;it was hotter yesterday than it
+is to-day, and so of all previous yesterdays. And thus as we travel
+backwards in time we perceive that the earth will be growing hotter,
+the level of white heat will be mounting upwards towards the surface,
+and will at last reach it, so that the earth, instead of being, as it
+now is, a dark body shining only with the reflected light of the sun,
+will be self-luminous, a tiny star of a magnitude so diminutive as to
+have awakened resentment on the part of some terrestrial inhabitants,
+who have regarded it as disproportionate to their dignity. But we
+cannot arrest imagination at this stage; our thought still extends
+its retrospective glance into the abyss of past time, and we perceive
+the earth still growing hotter, till its temperature transcends
+those limits at which it can exist in the solid state. It becomes
+molten&mdash;nay, more, it becomes gaseous, and thus resumes the nebular
+state from which it sprang. Precisely the same argument applies to
+the sun; our mighty luminary is also a cooling body, and if we could
+restore to it the heat which it has lost in the course of past æons
+it would resume a completely gaseous state. Modified in one way or
+another, this chain of reasoning seemed irrefragable in those happy
+days which preceded the discovery of radium.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Universe still in Evolution</div>
+
+<p>The question may be considered from another point of view. On searching
+the heavens we find that many of the stages which are assumed in
+Laplace’s hypothesis are still represented by actual existences. There
+are, to begin with, those immense diffused nebulæ, almost incapable of
+definition, which are proved, on spectroscopic examination, to emit
+that kind of light which is characteristic of glowing gas; from these
+we pass to others which are resolvable by the telescope into a central
+and more condensed nucleus, with two mighty nebulous arms whirled round
+in a spiral, and bearing more condensed masses in their midst; even
+ring nebulæ are known to exist; and, finally, there are nebulous halos
+which surround some of the stars. Then we come to the stars themselves,
+which are suns of various degrees of magnitude, some immensely larger
+than our own luminary, and these are evidently in various stages of
+existence. Some are blue, and afford evidence of a higher temperature
+than that of our sun; others are yellow, and make a nearer approach
+to the solar temperature; while, again, others are red, and certainly
+colder.</p>
+
+<p>These, in conjunction with other considerations, lead to the conviction
+that the universe is in a state of evolution, and that the solar
+system at one time existed in a nebular state. But whether Laplace’s
+description of the series of events through which the original nebula
+passed is the true one or not is a very different matter; it presents
+so many difficulties that scarcely any student now supports it.</p>
+
+<div class="figcontainer">
+
+<div class="figsub illowe25" id="i_081a">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_081a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">In the beginning, it is supposed that the earth was part
+ of a vast nebula of gaseous matter and meteorites, resembling the nebula of
+ Argo, illustrated above.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe25" id="i_081b">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_081b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">Later, as the cooling process advanced, the nebula assumed
+ a rotatory movement in the form of a spiral. The nebula of Andromeda affords an
+ excellent illustration of this.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe25" id="i_081c">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_081c.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">Another stage would be as in the annular nebula of Aquaris, the
+mass forming into a ball with the outer ring attached.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe25" id="i_081d">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_081d.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">Or, like the nebula of Cygni, with the central sun well
+ formed and the gaseous ring far removed, the earth would begin to shape, and
+ the ring would roll up to form the moon.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe25" id="i_081e">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_081e.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">Jupiter, which is in a molten state, wreathed in thick
+ vapour, with the “great red spot” indicating the beginning of the solidifying
+ process, shows what the earth was like before it assumed its present solid
+ condition.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe25" id="i_081f">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_081f.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">This shows the earth and the moon in their relative sizes;
+ while the diagram below it illustrates the distance apart.</div>
+ </div>
+
+<div class="caption center mbot1 mtop1">HOW THE HEAVENS TELL THE STORY OF THE ORIGIN OF
+ THE EARTH</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[Pg 82]</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Laplace’s Theory Abandoned</div>
+
+<p>A fundamental difficulty is the extreme tenuity of the gas which is
+assumed to have formed the planetary rings. A second difficulty, which
+has been emphasised by Professors Chamberlin and Moulton, is to be
+found in the comparatively small amount of rotational energy which
+the system at present possesses, for this is less than <span class="numerator">1</span>&frasl;<span class="denominator">200</span> of that
+which, on the most favourable assumption, must have been contained
+within the original nebula. Less fundamental, but equally fatal, is the
+fact that one of the satellites of Saturn revolves round its primary
+in a direction opposed to that of the rotation of the planet itself.
+[Recently Mr. Stratton, following out a suggestion of Professor W. H.
+Pickering, has shown that this is quite consistent, and, indeed, is a
+natural deduction from Laplace’s hypothesis.] Hence for these and other
+reasons we are reluctantly compelled to abandon an hypothesis which
+for over a century has exercised an influence on our conception of the
+cosmos not less profound, penetrating, and far-reaching than that of
+the famous Darwinian doctrine of natural selection, now on its trial.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">What are the Nebulæ?</div>
+
+<p>At present, unanimity of opinion, even on questions of the most primary
+kind, is far to seek. Philosophers are not even agreed as to the
+constitution of the nebulæ. It is questioned whether even those least
+resolvable and most diffused forms which give bright line spectra
+really consist of masses of incandescent gas. Many observers, among
+them Sir Norman Lockyer, now maintain that they are formed of swarms of
+meteorites, which, moving with prodigious velocity, meet in frequent
+collision, and by their impact evolve sufficient heat to become
+self-luminous. Others, again, like the distinguished investigator
+Arrhenius, while admitting the gaseous nature of these nebulæ, deny
+that they are incandescent, and assert that their temperature is not
+much above that of surrounding space. Their exterior parts consist of
+the lighter gases in a highly rarefied state, and minute particles of
+negative electricity, which are always careering through space, on
+penetrating these gases produce a luminous discharge. A nebula composed
+of swarms of meteorites would, as Sir George Darwin has shown, behave
+very much in the same way as one composed of gas, and if in rotation
+would rotate as a solid mass. The meteorites would stand in the same
+relation to the nebula as molecules to a gas, and thus the question of
+the constitution of the nebula, although of great interest in itself,
+becomes of subsidiary importance in tracing its subsequent history.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Shaping of the Planets</div>
+
+<p>One of the latest attempts to frame a nebular hypothesis is that of
+Professor J. H. Jeans. His reasoning is of a highly mathematical
+character, and his conclusions are expressed in the most general terms.
+Starting with a spherical nebula of gas or meteorites endowed with a
+small amount of rotation, he shows that as it cools or loses energy
+the temperature of the interior will not fall continuously in precise
+correspondence with the cooling of the outer parts, and this “lag” of
+the interior temperature will bring about a tendency to instability.
+The contraction of the nebula due to cooling will increase the velocity
+of rotation, and this again will tend to instability. As a result of
+the instability so produced the nebula will change its form, and become
+more or less pear-shaped. The narrow end of the pear will then separate
+from the body and assume an independent existence as a primitive
+planet. This process will recur again and again till the nebula is
+resolved into a sun with its attendant planets. The planets, existing
+at first as gaseous masses or quasi-gaseous masses, will be liable
+to the same kind of transformation, and may thus bud off moons or
+satellites.</p>
+
+<p>If the nebula were not in rapid rotation, a slight disturbing cause,
+acting at the critical moment when a planet was being ejected, might
+determine the inclination of the planet’s orbit, which might thus be
+very oblique to the equatorial plane of the nebula. Thus the hypothesis
+is not open to one of the objections which have been urged against
+that of Laplace&mdash;namely, that the orbits of some of the planets in the
+solar system are inclined at a large angle with the plane of the sun’s
+equator.</p>
+
+<div class="figcontainer">
+ <div class="figsub illowe50" id="i_083a">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_083a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">This illustrates Laplace’s theory, which conceived of a
+ vast nebula filling the whole space of the solar system and rotating around a
+ central axis. The outer and thinner part had much greater movement than the
+ denser central mass, finally being thrown off as a ring, which in turn rolled
+ up into a ball, still following the same course as the ring had followed. Thus
+ the earth broke off from the sun and the moon from the earth. The theory is,
+ however, no longer credited by scientists.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe50" id="i_083b">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_083b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">The pear-shaped nebula is the theory of a young English
+ mathematician, Professor J. H. Jeans. Starting with a spherical nebula, he argues
+ that in cooling it will assume the form illustrated above, and that the smaller
+ part will separate and form a satellite rotating independently but within a
+ distance influenced by the parent mass.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe50" id="i_083c">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_083c.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">The spiral nebula in Canes Venatici, a revolving mass of
+ gas or meteorites, supplies, according to the nebular hypothesis of Messrs.
+ Chamberlin and Moulton, an excellent example of how the earth and moon were
+ formed. We may reasonably imagine the smaller spiral to represent the moon in
+ the act of being thrown off by the earth.</div>
+ </div>
+
+<div class="caption center mbot1">THREE FAMOUS THEORIES OF THE BEGINNING OF
+ THE EARTH</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Heavenly Bodies in Collision</div>
+
+<p>Jeans mentions two disturbing causes in particular which might easily
+arise&mdash;one the penetration of the nebula by a wandering meteorite,
+which might precipitate an event already on the verge<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[Pg 84]</span> of happening,
+and simultaneously determine both the birth of a planet and the
+obliquity of its orbit; the second, the presence of some distant
+mass, such as a star, which, by raising a quasi-tide in the nebula,
+would give the final touch required to overturn its equilibrium. The
+influence of a distant body, such as a passing star, has been invoked
+by Moulton in another version of the nebular hypothesis. In conjunction
+with Chamberlin, he calls special attention to the spiral nebulæ, which
+are by far the commonest kind, as presenting the closest approach to
+the conditions which obtain when planets are actually in course of
+formation. Chamberlin and Moulton enter on a detailed account of the
+manner in which they suppose the planets to have grown by the gradual
+accretion of meteoric masses as these encountered each other while
+moving in various elliptical orbits.</p>
+
+<p>At present it would seem impossible to speak with certainty as to
+the precise history of the solar system. Meanwhile, we may console
+ourselves with the closing words of Professor Jeans’ paper, to the
+effect that “no difficulty need be experienced in referring existing
+planetary systems to a nebulous or meteoric origin on the ground
+that the configurations of these systems are not such as could have
+originated out of a rotating mass of liquid.”</p>
+
+<p>An investigation by Sir George Darwin, which has furnished inspiration
+to such hypotheses as that of Jeans, brings us nearer the immediate
+subject of this essay, since it treats of one of the last acts in the
+great drama of planetary existence, and attempts to derive the earth
+and moon from a common origin in a single rotating sphere.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Why the Day is Growing Longer</div>
+
+<p>It is well known that, owing to the frictional effects produced by the
+tides, the earth is being gradually slowed down as it rotates upon
+its axis. Thus the day is constantly getting longer, so that in a few
+millions of years it will have increased in length from twenty-four
+to twenty-five hours. On the other hand, in past time it must have
+been shorter than at present: a few millions of years ago it was only
+twenty-three hours in length, and many millions of years earlier it
+was still less, only some five hours or so. At that time the earth
+was hotter than it is now, less rigid, more yielding, and, owing to
+its rapid rotation, less stable. The action on the moon of the tides
+produced in it by the earth is similar, and the rotation of the moon
+has been so far diminished by them that its day has become as long as
+the month&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, our satellite only turns once round on its axis in
+the time that it takes to revolve once round the earth; it is for this
+reason that our satellite keeps always the same face turned towards us.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Moon Was Part of Our Sphere</div>
+
+<p>The retardation of the earth in its rotation has, however, a very
+remarkable effect on the revolution of the moon; it involves&mdash;by the
+principle of the conservation of moment of momentum&mdash;a corresponding
+acceleration of the moon in its orbit, and, as a consequence of this,
+an enlargement of this orbit&mdash;that is, the moon is pushed away from us,
+as it were, and thus becomes more remote. But if so, the moon must have
+been nearer to us in times past. It is possible to trace the approach
+of the moon to the earth as we go backwards in time till the distance
+between them was only two and a half terrestrial radii instead of the
+sixty radii which now separate them. Mathematics do not take us farther
+back than this. But it is difficult to resist the suggestion that in
+the immediately preceding stage of development the earth and moon
+formed together a single sphere.</p>
+
+<p>If we may adopt this view, then we must regard the sphere as subject to
+the tidal influence of the sun. It was much hotter, and therefore more
+yielding, than the present earth; it was also rotating much faster,
+probably once in about four or five hours. It would be contracting as a
+consequence of cooling, and the contraction would lead to instability
+(gravitational instability); its rapid rotation would also tend toward
+instability (rotational instability). It is difficult to say which
+of these two, gravitational or rotational instability, would be the
+most effective; but the combined result would be to give a pear-shaped
+form to the rotating mass, and eventually to deepen the constriction
+between the narrow and the broad end, till the smaller protuberance
+became completely dissevered from the larger mass, and so entered on
+an independent existence as the moon. This<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[Pg 85]</span> final step in the process
+would probably depend on the tide-producing power of the sun; the
+larger mass remained behind as the earth, whose individual existence
+may be said to date from this event.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">How the Moon Broke Away</div>
+
+<p>The young earth would be subject to very much the same conditions after
+as before the ejection of the moon, and might very possibly again pass
+into a pear-shaped form, but without proceeding further through those
+subsequent changes, which would have led to the formation of another
+satellite; and while possessing some such form as this, she might
+very well have consolidated. With advancing years she would lose, as
+we have seen, the activity of her youth, the drag of the tides would
+cause her to spin ever more slowly on her axis, till the day would
+become prolonged to the twenty-four hours of the present. With this
+diminished rate of spin, the earth, if free to yield, would lose the
+pear-shaped form and become an oblate spheroid, and the oblateness of
+this spheroid would continually diminish, so that it would continually
+approach towards a true sphere. Suppose, however, that the earth as it
+cooled lost its power of readily yielding&mdash;and at present it is more
+rigid than a globe of steel&mdash;then it would pass from form to form,
+not by a flowing movement, but by a series of ruptures, and its form
+at any moment might be a little in arrear of that which it would have
+possessed if it had been in the fluid state.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it might indeed be possible still to discover some trace of an
+old-fashioned form in the existing planet; and a careful examination
+of the distribution of land and sea as represented on a terrestrial
+globe does, in fact, reveal a remarkable symmetry, in which we seem
+to recognise a surviving vestige of its early state. The great
+continent of Africa projects like the narrow end of a pear; around it
+are oceans&mdash;the Atlantic, the Indian Ocean, and the Mediterranean Sea,
+which was once of far greater extent; then comes a great dismembered
+ring of land, the two Americas, the Antarctic continent, Australia,
+Asia, and Europe. Within these, on the side opposite to Africa, is the
+great Pacific Ocean, which covers over the broad end of the pear.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe35" id="i_085">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_085.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE SHAPING OF THE FACE OF THE EARTH</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Soon after the earth had cooled down, so that the oceans
+ were formed, the shaping of the great continents began. The action of moving
+ water in the making of new land is well illustrated by the vast delta of the
+ Mississippi, where an area larger than Wales has been formed by debris
+ deposited by the river.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Earth’s Unknown Changes</div>
+
+<p>A line drawn from somewhere in Central Africa to its antipodes in the
+Pacific, through the centre of the earth, would correspond to the long
+axis of the pear; a second, at right angles to this, would correspond
+to its breadth; and a third, at right angles to both, would correspond
+to the axis on which it rotates. A diameter of the earth taken through
+the equator is almost 8,000 miles in length, the Polar diameter is
+about sixteen miles shorter, and this slight difference measures the
+oblateness of the spheroid, or the departure of the form of the earth
+from a true sphere. Further, it would appear that the diameter drawn
+through Africa is about half a mile longer than the equatorial diameter
+taken at right angles to it, and this insignificant quantity measures
+the departure of the form of the earth from that of an oblate spheroid
+to that of a pear, so nearly complete is the adjustment of its form to
+existing conditions. Before this nice adjustment was reached, the earth
+must have suffered many changes, passed through many times of stress
+and storm, and witnessed many geological revolutions.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">An Age of Red-hot Rain!</div>
+
+<p>If, at the beginning of her career, the earth was molten, or at a
+very high temperature, she must have been surrounded by a very deep
+and dense atmosphere, for all the waters which now rest on her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[Pg 86]</span>
+surface&mdash;oceans, lakes, and rivers&mdash;would have contributed to it in the
+state of steam; and not till the temperature of the ground had fallen
+to 380 deg. C. could liquid water have begun to accumulate. Then a
+steady downpour of almost red-hot rain would have set in, filling up
+the neck of the pear and extending far and wide over its broad end.</p>
+
+<p>The temperature would now fall somewhat rapidly, and in a short space
+of time the surface of the earth would have become as cool as it is at
+the present day. Directly the waters of the firmament had collected
+into the oceans, leaving behind an atmosphere like that which now
+exists, geological agencies of the kind we are now familiar with would
+begin their sway. Air and rain would exert their insidious power upon
+the rocks, sapping their strength, converting the hardest granite into
+soft sand and clay, which would be washed away by the rain through
+brooks and rivulets into the channels of many rivers, all hastening
+with their burden of sediment, to deposit it finally in the sea. Here
+it would accumulate, layer after layer, building up those mighty masses
+of strata which now form the greater part of the visible land. While
+this general action was everywhere in progress, wearing down continents
+and islands towards the level of the sea, more specialised activities
+were assisting to the same end.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_086">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_086.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">TWO STAGES IN THE LIFE OF THE EARTH</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This illustrates in striking manner, based on the
+ calculations of the best authorities, the comparative sizes of the earth, first
+ as a gaseous mass, and, second, after it had cooled down and solidified into
+ the planet on which we live. The small dot represents 8,000 miles, the
+ earth’s diameter.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The waves which fall upon our coasts are now constantly undermining
+the cliffs and extending the margin of the sea at the expense of the
+land, and rivers not only serve to transport sediment, but cut down
+their channels deep into the rock, and so carve out the most varied
+landscapes of hill and valley from monotonous tableland.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Action of Winds and Tides</div>
+
+<p>When we enter into calculations we are astonished at the rapidity
+with which these agents perform their work even at the present day;
+but as we proceed farther back into the past, when the earth was full
+of youthful energy, their power must have been greatly enhanced. We
+might almost take the measure of the day as the measure of their
+work, for they probably accomplished as much during the eight hours’
+day which once existed as they do now in twenty-four hours. A little
+consideration will make this clear. It is the winds which, blowing
+over the surface of the ocean, produce the sea waves, and it is these
+falling on our coasts that perform the work of marine denudation. But
+the winds are due in the first place to the heat of the sun, and the
+difference of temperature established at the equator and the poles;
+and, in the next place, to the rotation of the earth. Thus, with the
+increased rapidity of rotation which we know to have existed, and
+with increased radiation from the sun, a very probable contingency,
+the winds would increase in strength and more powerfully erode our
+coasts. Again, with the moon in greater proximity, and with a more
+rapid rotation of the earth, the tides would be much higher and more
+frequent, and these, raising and lowering the cutting edge of the sea,
+greatly assist it in its work of destruction. The winds and the tides
+produce various marine currents, and these help to distribute the
+sediment which the rivers deliver into the sea, so that when stronger
+currents flowed as a result of more powerful tides and more violent
+winds, the sediments would be strewn over wider areas; hence, the more
+ancient strata of our planet are far more widely distributed than are
+those of later time.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[Pg 87]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_087">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_087.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THREE VIEWS OF THE GLOBE SHOWING HOW THE GREAT MOUNTAIN
+ RANGES WERE FORMED</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">In the days when the earth’s crust had formed but was
+ still unstable, the process of cooling not having gone far enough, there would
+ not be the mountains which now characterise it. These came when the earth
+ contracted and crumpled up along certain well defined lines, which are
+ now represented by the three great mountain chains of the world.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Building Up the Earth</div>
+
+<p>Finally, a heavier rainfall would result from a more active atmospheric
+circulation, creating larger rivers, and thus, at the beginning, all
+those denuding agents which are engaged in wearing the land down into
+the sea would be working at a more rapid pace. Correspondingly, all
+the agents which are occupied in building up deposits of sediments
+would have extended their operations over a wider area, laying down a
+foundation broad and deep.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, the contraction of the earth, due to the loss of
+its energy of rotation as well as of its internal heat, would also
+have proceeded more rapidly, new land would have emerged from the sea,
+old lands would have been submerged beneath it far less slowly than at
+the present day; ruptures of the crust, accompanied by earthquakes and
+volcanic action, would have been more frequent and thus, by the more
+rapid loss of its intrinsic energy, the renovation of the earth would
+have kept pace with its accelerated destruction.</p>
+
+<p>One effect of the contraction of the earth which has manifested itself
+in even late geological times is the crumpling up of the terrestrial
+crust into the sharp folds of mountain chains; but at the beginning
+this crumpling must have been far more universal and energetic. In this
+connection it is interesting to observe that the most ancient rocks
+known to us&mdash;the Archæan&mdash;never present themselves under any other form
+than as intensely plicated masses. They originally consisted of lava
+flows and volcanic ashes, of ancient sediments and limestones, into
+which subterranean masses of granite and other molten, deep-seated
+rocks have been injected; but under the intense pressures to which
+they were subjected after their formation they and the invading
+granite have entirely lost their original character, and have been
+metamorphosed into gneisses, schists, and marble, all sharply and
+closely folded together. In any given district the direction of their
+folding is maintained with wonderful constancy over great distances.
+There is no succeeding system of rocks that has been so completely
+transformed, so universally plicated, as this ancient Archæan complex.</p>
+
+<p>In later times we can pass from stratum to stratum of the sedimentary
+series and read their history almost as we turn over the pages of a
+book; in the Archæan all are kneaded together into a state of such
+desperate entanglement as to defy the powers of human ingenuity to
+unravel them. Thus the line of demarcation between the Archæan and
+subsequent sedimentary systems is the sharpest and most absolute that
+is known to us in the history of the earth. It marks the close of our
+planet’s infancy, the several events of which have passed into oblivion
+as profound as that of our own forgetfulness of our earliest days.
+Later events, on the other hand, are recorded in the stratified series
+with a faithfulness which increases as we approach existing times.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">How We Know These Wonders<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Ocean 100 million Years old!<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Part Radium may play</div>
+
+<p>A history without dates must seem very unsatisfactory to a historian,
+and the question will naturally arise whether we can assign any
+definite time to the various critical events recorded in the
+evolution of the earth. At present we can only make more or less
+plausible estimates. Thus, from a consideration of the thickness of
+the sedimentary crust, and the rate at which sediments are now being
+deposited, it has been asserted that the interval<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[Pg 88]</span> which separates
+us from the close of the Archæan era may amount to about twenty-six
+millions of years. Professor Joly, basing his argument on the undoubted
+fact that the ocean derives the greater part of its salt from the
+dissolved material contributed to it by rivers, comes to the conclusion
+that the ocean first came into existence about one hundred millions
+of years ago. As regards the birth of the moon, Sir George Darwin has
+given a minimum limit of fifty-four millions of years, but he adds that
+it may have taken place many hundreds of millions of years before this.
+Lord Kelvin has attempted to determine the time which has elapsed since
+the earth first acquired a solid crust. If we only knew the rate at
+which the earth is cooling we might calculate back to this time with
+some assurance of certainty, always, however, on the assumption that
+the earth is simply a hot body cooling like any other hot body&mdash;such,
+say, as a red-hot cannonball. But a few years ago it began to be
+seriously suspected that this assumption was a very doubtful one, for
+a new element&mdash;radium&mdash;was discovered in 1898, which possesses the
+remarkable property of spontaneously liberating heat, and this not in
+small quantities, but at an astonishing rate. One gramme of radium, for
+example, gives out enough heat in one hour to raise the temperature of
+one gramme of water to boiling point; hour after hour, year in, year
+out, this wonderful substance is setting free the energy it contains,
+and will continue to do so until, some thousands of years hence,
+it has exhausted its store. If this element should happen to exist
+in sufficient quantity within the earth, then the earth could not be
+said to be cooling just like a piece of hot iron, and the increase of
+temperature we experience as we descend towards the interior of the
+earth might possibly be due to the heat set free from radium. Indeed,
+the argument is not confined to the earth; it may apply also to the
+sun, and much of the heat we derive from that luminary may be provided
+by bursting atoms of radium. This was pointed out by Sir George Darwin
+and Professor Joly in 1903.</p>
+
+<p>It became obviously a question of the first importance to discover
+what proportion of the earth’s crust consists of radium, and an
+investigation was undertaken for this purpose by the Hon. R. J.
+Strutt, who finds that the rocks composing the earth’s crust contain
+a superabundance of radium&mdash;sufficient, if this element is uniformly
+distributed through the whole earth in the same proportion as it occurs
+at the surface, not only to make good the heat which is radiated away
+into space, but actually to raise the temperature of our planet, which,
+on this evidence, should, therefore, be growing not colder, but hotter.</p>
+
+<p>This is a result as disconcerting at first sight as it is astonishing,
+and its effects are very wide-reaching. Of course, it completely
+destroys the validity of Lord Kelvin’s argument, but it also deprives
+the nebular hypothesis of one of its cherished lines of evidence&mdash;a
+loss which the force of the general argument enables us to bear with
+equanimity.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">On the Eve of great Events</div>
+
+<p>In any case, the vast body of facts bearing on the history of the earth
+suffices to show that its temperature cannot be rising. Mr. Strutt
+has, therefore, imagined that the radium is not uniformly distributed
+throughout the mass of the planet, and supposes that it is restricted
+to an external zone forty-five miles in thickness; this would suffice
+to maintain the earth at its existing temperature. If, however, we
+admit a restriction of this kind, we are in no way bound to fix the
+limit at forty-five miles. All we can say is that we do not know how
+far downwards the radium reaches&mdash;for aught we know five miles, or even
+less, is as likely a limit as forty-five miles. Professor Joly, indeed,
+maintains that the radium we meet with is not proper to the earth at
+all, but comes from the sun.</p>
+
+<p>Radium is a short-lived element, its existence being limited to a
+few thousand years; but as fast as it decays it is reproduced at the
+expense of another element&mdash;uranium&mdash;the lifetime of which is measured
+by hundreds of millions of years.</p>
+
+<p>The last quarter of a century has proved fertile in great
+discoveries&mdash;more so than any corresponding period in the past. As a
+result, the whole world of scientific thought has been thrown into
+commotion; old-established theories, and even the most fundamental
+notions, seem to be in a state of flux. Under the stimulus of new ideas
+great questions, such as the constitution of matter, the origin of
+species, and the birth of worlds are being re-investigated with renewed
+energy, and we seem to be on the eve of great events.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">W<span class="smaller">ILLIAM</span>
+J<span class="smaller">OHNSON</span> S<span class="smaller">OLLAS</span></p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[Pg 89]</span></p>
+
+<h4 class="padtop3" id="FOUR_PERIODS_OF_THE_EARTHS_DEVELOPMENT">FOUR PERIODS OF THE
+EARTH’S DEVELOPMENT</h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>A Postscript to Professor Sollas’s Chapter on the Wonderful Story
+of the World’s Birth, beginning on <a href="#MAKING_OF_THE_EARTH">page 79</a></b></p>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">T</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>HE
+earth was once “a fluid haze of light.” The whole solar system
+once formed a vast nebula, consisting of glowing gas, or a swarm of
+meteoroids. Our planet was slowly shaped into a globe out of this
+primitive nebula.</p>
+
+<p>This globe was at first intensely hot, and probably liquid. A solid
+crust formed on the surface as heat was lost by radiation, and this
+crust consisted of the oldest rocks of igneous formation like the
+granites and gneisses. During this Archæan or Eozoic Period, the earth
+acquired its atmosphere and its oceans, and it is probable that the
+mysterious origin of life took place.</p>
+
+<p>The later history of the earth since the stratified rocks began to
+appear, and life existed, is divided into four main periods, of which
+the first is known as Primary, or Palæozoic.</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop1"><b>The First Period of the Earth</b></p>
+
+<p>C<span class="smaller">AMBRIAN</span> S<span class="smaller">YSTEM</span>. The rocks formed in the Cambrian Age are
+mainly grits, quartzites, and conglomerates, with shales, schists, and
+limestones. The earth was then mostly covered by seas, and the first
+well-defined forms of life were of marine origin.</p>
+
+<p>S<span class="smaller">ILURIAN</span> S<span class="smaller">YSTEM</span>. The Silurian rocks are mostly sandstones,
+shales, and slates deposited in the seas. The first vertebrates made
+their appearance as fishes, whilst insects began to flutter in the air,
+and occasionally to alight on the emerging land.</p>
+
+<p>D<span class="smaller">EVONIAN</span> S<span class="smaller">YSTEM</span>. This was the age of the old red sandstone.
+Fishes reached a high state of development, whilst the first traces
+appeared of land vegetation, ferns and lycopods.</p>
+
+<p>C<span class="smaller">ARBONIFEROUS</span> S<span class="smaller">YSTEM</span>. This system is exceptionally important,
+because its chief rock is coal, the fossilised remains of the luxuriant
+vegetation which grew in tropical swamps. The first terrestrial
+animals, true air breathers, now appeared.</p>
+
+<p>P<span class="smaller">ERMIAN</span> S<span class="smaller">YSTEM</span>. The last of the primary systems gave us the
+new red sandstone, distinguished from the old by lying above the coal
+measures. The Permian Age was apparently unfavourable to life, and is
+only notable for the first appearance of the land reptiles into which
+the amphibians developed.</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop1"><b>The Second Period of the Earth</b></p>
+
+<p>The Secondary Period marks the emergence of the dry land into
+importance greater than that of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>T<span class="smaller">RIASSIC</span> S<span class="smaller">YSTEM</span>. The Triassic rocks chiefly consist of
+sandstones and hardened clays laid down in shallow sea basins. Land
+vegetation now first began to assume a modern type, with conifers and
+cycads. The seas were still richly peopled, and the land first gave a
+home to huge reptiles, or dinosaurs.</p>
+
+<p>J<span class="smaller">URASSIC</span> S<span class="smaller">YSTEM</span>. This system is marked by a great variety
+of limestones, the product of dead sea creatures. It is essentially
+the age of reptiles. The ichthyosaurus disputed the seas with the
+plesiosaurus; the pterodactyl ruled the air; whilst on land, huge
+monsters like the brontosaur and diplodocus browsed on tropical
+vegetation. From these reptiles the birds were developing, whilst small
+marsupials, the oldest of the great mammalian race, skipped under the
+branches.</p>
+
+<p>C<span class="smaller">RETACEOUS</span> S<span class="smaller">YSTEM</span>. This was the age of the great chalk
+deposits. The birds, now emerging from their reptilian ancestry,
+dominated its life, and the first modern plants appeared on the land.</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop1"><b>The Third Period of the Earth</b></p>
+
+<p>The Tertiary Period marks the true beginning of modern geological
+history, when the great outlines of geography were laid down, and
+the first representatives of modern plants and animals made their
+appearance.</p>
+
+<p>E<span class="smaller">OCENE</span> S<span class="smaller">YSTEM</span>. The Eocene rocks are mainly limestones, with
+sandstone and hardened clays. We owe them to the sea and its organisms.
+Modern evergreen trees now first appeared. The mammals come to the
+front, with the tapir-like palæotherium and the first recognisable
+ancestor of the horse.</p>
+
+<p>M<span class="smaller">IOCENE</span> S<span class="smaller">YSTEM</span>. The Miocene Age was a mountain-building
+period, when the great chain which runs from the Alps into Central
+Asia received its final uplift. Deciduous trees, like the beech and
+elm, now made their appearance. The giant mastodon and the formidable
+sabre-toothed tiger roamed the Miocene forest, and true apes&mdash;man’s
+first forerunners&mdash;mopped and mowed in the boughs.</p>
+
+<p>P<span class="smaller">LIOCENE</span> S<span class="smaller">YSTEM</span>. The last of the Tertiary ages set the final
+stamp on the geological moulding of the earth’s crust. Its plants were
+transitional to the flora of modern Europe. Great herds of herbivora
+now appeared.</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop1"><b>The Fourth Period of the Earth</b></p>
+
+<p>The Quaternary Period is that in which we are still living. Its
+outstanding feature is the appearance of man.</p>
+
+<p>P<span class="smaller">LEISTOCENE OR</span> G<span class="smaller">LACIAL</span> S<span class="smaller">YSTEM</span>. Its essential feature was the
+appearance of glacial conditions over most of the northern hemisphere,
+when great ice sheets rubbed our land into shape. The vegetation was
+Arctic, and only animals like the reindeer and the hairy mammoth could
+endure the cold.</p>
+
+<p>H<span class="smaller">UMAN OR</span> R<span class="smaller">ECENT</span> S<span class="smaller">YSTEM</span>. The precise antiquity of man is still
+uncertain, but it was only after the close of the Glacial Period that
+he made his home in Europe, where he shared a precarious existence
+with mammoth, cave-bear, and rhinoceros. Man developed through the
+<i>Palæolithic</i> and <i>Neolithic</i> ages of stone implements to the <i>Bronze</i>
+and <i>Iron</i> ages, when metal was first worked. In the last of these we
+live.</p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[Pg 90]</span></p>
+
+<h4 class="padtop3" id="GEOLOGICAL_CLOCK_OF_THE_WORLDS_LIFE">GEOLOGICAL CLOCK
+OF THE WORLD’S LIFE</h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="p0">This page is an effort, based on Professor Lester Ward’s calculations
+in “Pure Sociology,” to show the comparative length of each geological
+period, and the thin white line between Tertiary and Archæan indicates
+the period of human history. Thin as this line is&mdash;and we could not
+show it thinner&mdash;it is too thick, and out of proportion to the rest
+of the clock. If we assume that from the beginning of the world&mdash;from
+its first forming into a solid sphere&mdash;to the present, time may be
+represented by a day of twenty-four hours, the time occupied by human
+history does not exceed twelve seconds. This is reckoning human history
+as ten thousand years. There is, of course, no possibility of obtaining
+more than relative figures for such a scheme as this, which should be
+regarded in connection with the <a href="#FOUR_PERIODS_OF_THE_EARTHS_DEVELOPMENT">previous page</a> and the chart of the
+Beginnings of Life, <a href="#i_096">facing page 96</a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_090">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_090.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">The thin white line between the Tertiary and the Archæan
+periods represents the duration of human history</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">TABLE SHOWING PROPORTIONS OF YEARS AND HOURS</p>
+
+<table class="geo_periods" summary="Geological Periods">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam bb br">
+ <div class="center">Geological Periods</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center">Years</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb br">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center">Hours</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Archæan</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">18,000,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;6</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Laurentian</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">18,000,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;6</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Cambrian</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;6,000,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;2</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Silurian</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;6,000,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;2</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Devonian</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;6,000,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;2</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Carboniferous</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;6,000,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;2</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Triassic</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;3,000,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;1</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Jurassic</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;3,000,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;1</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Cretaceous</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;3,000,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;1</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Tertiary and Quaternary</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;3,000,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br bb">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;1</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center s5">The Quaternary Period<br />
+ is that in which we live</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">72,000,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" colspan="2">
+ <div class="center">=</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">24</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&ensp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<table class="geo_periods" summary="Tertiary and Quaternary">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam bb" colspan="5">
+ <div class="center">TERTIARY AND QUATERNARY PERIODS</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam bb" colspan="5">
+ <div class="center">At a rough guess, three million years may be<br />
+ allowed for the Tertiary and Quaternary periods</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam bb br">
+ <div class="center">Geological Periods</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb br">
+ <div class="center">Years</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb br">
+ <div class="center">Hrs.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb br">
+ <div class="center">Min.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center">Sec.</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Tertiary</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">2,600,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">&mdash;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">52</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&mdash;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Pleistocene</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;&nbsp;300,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">&mdash;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;6</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&mdash;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Human</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb br">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;&nbsp;100,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb br">
+ <div class="center">&mdash;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb br">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;2</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center">&mdash;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam bb br">
+ <div class="left mleft2">Total</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb br">
+ <div class="center">3,000,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb br">
+ <div class="center">1</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb br">
+ <div class="center">&mdash;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bb">
+ <div class="center">&mdash;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam br">
+ <div class="left">Human History</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;&nbsp;&#8199;10,000</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">=</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">=</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">12</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[Pg 91]</span></p>
+
+<h4 class="s0" title="HOW LIFE BECAME POSSIBLE ON THE EARTH">&nbsp;</h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="HOW_LIFE_BECAME_POSSIBLE_ON_THE_EARTH">
+ <img class="w100 mtop3" src="images/i_091.jpg" alt="How Life became Possible on the
+ Earth" />
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="s0 center mbot2" title="BY DR. ALFRED RUSSEL WALLACE">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="drop-cap2">E</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">E</span>ARLY
+writers on the relation of man and animated nature to the
+material universe not only assumed that the latter existed for the
+former, but that both alike were the results of special acts of
+creation.</p>
+
+<p>Furthermore, they usually took it for granted that all things were
+created very much in the condition in which we now see them, and that
+any changes that have since taken place are but slight superficial
+modifications of a permanent and unchanging whole. Not only were the
+sun and moon and stars created as appanages of the earth, but the earth
+itself in all its details of sea and land, hills and valleys, mountains
+and precipices, swamps and deserts, was made and fashioned just as we
+now see it, and every feature of its surface was supposed to have some
+purpose in connection with man.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Old Ideas of Creation</div>
+
+<p>These purposes we could, in some cases, understand, while in others
+they seemed wholly unintelligible, and much ingenuity was bestowed
+by the natural theologian and others to explain more and more of the
+observed facts from this point of view. The same opinions prevailed in
+regard to the infinite variety of animals and plants, each individual
+species being supposed to have been an independent creation, and all to
+have some definite and preordained purpose in relation to mankind.</p>
+
+<p>These views, however absurd they seem to most people now, were almost
+universally held so recently as during the seventeenth and eighteenth
+centuries, and were thus coincident with one of the most brilliant
+epochs of our literature and our dawning science. It was only towards
+the beginning of the nineteenth century, when geology became widely
+studied and its results were fully appreciated, that the more rational
+conception of a very slow development of the earth’s surface during
+countless ages began to be generally accepted.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Changing Conditions of the Earth</div>
+
+<p>The grand nebular hypothesis of Laplace came to reinforce the views of
+the geologists, by showing how the earth itself may have originated
+as a gaseous or molten globe; and its slow process of cooling, with
+the reaction of the interior and exterior on each other, served to
+elucidate the facts of the heated interior, as shown by hot springs and
+volcanoes, as well as many of the phenomena presented by the distorted
+and metamorphosed strata which formed its crust. Hence it gradually
+came to be perceived that the condition of the earth, with all its
+endless variations of surface, of continents and oceans, of seas and
+islands, of vast plateaux and lofty mountain ranges and extensive low
+plains, with their ravines and cataracts, their great lakes and stately
+rivers, was subject to perpetual change from that remote epoch when it
+seems to have been actually the case that “the earth was without form
+and void,” and that owing to the greater density of the vapour-laden
+atmosphere, “darkness was upon the face of the deep.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Changing Forms of Life</div>
+
+<p>Another field of geological research forced us to the conclusion that
+the same continued process of change had affected the forms of life
+upon the earth. When carefully investigated, the crust was found
+to abound in the fossilised remains of animals and plants. Careful
+study of these showed that the oldest of all were of comparatively
+simple structure, and that the higher forms only appeared in more
+recent epochs; while the highest of all were probably very little
+older than man himself. It is only during the last half century that
+the theory of Evolution has been elaborated and has become generally
+accepted as applicable to the whole of the vast cosmic process&mdash;from
+the development of the nebulæ into stars and suns and systems, with a
+corresponding development of planets from an early condition of intense
+heat, through a more or less lengthy period of cooling and contraction,
+to an ultimate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[Pg 92]</span> state of refrigeration, the earlier and later stages
+being alike unsuited to the existence of life.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Theory of Natural Selection</div>
+
+<p>More important still, the discovery of the theory of Natural Selection
+by Darwin&mdash;and at a later period by myself&mdash;has led to a satisfactory
+explanation of the successive appearance of higher and more complex
+forms of life, and also of that wonderfully minute and complex
+<i>adaptation</i> of every species to its conditions of existence and to
+its organic as well as its inorganic environment, which all other
+theories&mdash;even the most recent&mdash;have failed to grapple with.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Wonderful Complexity of the Universe</div>
+
+<p>The logical completeness as well as the extreme simplicity of this
+explanation of organic evolution has led great numbers of thoughtful
+but ill-informed persons to reject it, because it seems to render
+unnecessary the existence of a primary intelligent cause; while
+another equally large but, as I think, equally ill-informed class&mdash;the
+so-called monists&mdash;use it to demonstrate the non-existence, or, at all
+events, the needlessness, of any such cause. Both alike err, because
+they fail to take cognisance of the fact that every form of evolution,
+and pre-eminently that of the organic world, is an explanation of a
+process of change, a law of development, not in any sense or by any
+possibility an explanation of fundamental laws, causes, or origins.
+It presupposes the existence not only of matter&mdash;itself a thing whose
+nature is becoming more and more mysterious and unthinkable with the
+advance of physical science&mdash;but of all the vast complex of laws
+and forces which act upon it&mdash;mechanical, physical, chemical, and
+electrical laws and forces&mdash;all more or less dependent on the still
+more mysterious, all-pervading ether. Thus, the universe in its purely
+physical and inorganic aspect is now seen to be such an overwhelmingly
+complex organism as to suggest to most minds some vast intelligent
+power pervading and sustaining it.</p>
+
+<p>Persons to whom this seems a logical necessity will not be much
+disturbed by the dilemma of the agnostics&mdash;that, however wonderful the
+material universe may be, a being who could bring it into existence
+must be more wonderful, and that they prefer to hold the lesser
+marvel to be self-existent rather than the greater. When, however,
+we pass from the inorganic to the organic world, governed by a new
+set of laws, and apparently by some regulating and controlling forces
+altogether distinct from those at work in inorganic nature; and when,
+further, we see that these organisms originated at some definite epoch
+when the earth had become adapted to sustain them, and thereafter
+developed into two great branches of non-sentient and sentient
+life, the latter gradually acquiring higher and higher senses and
+faculties till it culminated in man&mdash;a being whose higher intellectual
+and moral nature seems adapted for, even to call for, indefinite
+development&mdash;this logical necessity for some higher intelligence to
+which he himself owes his existence, and which alone rendered the
+origin of sentient life possible, will seem still more irresistible.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Mind Behind the World</div>
+
+<p>The preceding remarks are intended to suggest that the theory of
+evolution, combined with the quite recent and very startling advances
+in physical science, so far from making the universe around us more
+intelligible as a self-sustaining and self-existent whole, has really
+rendered it less so, by showing that it is infinitely more complex
+than we had formerly supposed; and further, that matter itself,
+instead of being, as was once believed, a comparatively simple thing,
+eternal and indestructible, is in all its various forms subject to
+decay and disintegration. We now see that the only thing known to us
+that we can conceive as having unending existence is mind itself; and,
+just as Darwin’s theory of Natural Selection has opened up to us an
+infinite field of study and admiration in the forms and colours and
+mutual relations of the various species of animals and plants, so does
+modern science open up to us new and unfathomable depths in the inner
+structure of matter and of the cosmos, and thus compels us more and
+more to recognise a mental rather than a mere physical substratum to
+account for its existence.</p>
+
+<p>There is, however, another set of relations which have been hitherto
+very little studied&mdash;those between the organic and the inorganic
+worlds in their broader aspects. These are now found to be very much
+more complex and more remarkable than is usually supposed, and they
+also have an important bearing upon the great problem of the origin
+and destiny of man. This is a subject<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[Pg 93]</span> which opens up a variety of
+considerations of extreme interest, showing that the exact adaptations
+of our earth&mdash;and presumably of any other planets&mdash;to enable it to
+sustain organic life, from its first appearance and through its long
+course of development, is as varied and complex and as much beyond
+the possibilities of chance coincidences as are any of the individual
+adaptations of animals and plants to their immediate environment. Most
+of these latter adaptations have been made known to us by Darwin and
+his followers, and they have excited the admiration and astonishment
+of all lovers of Nature. When the antecedent and grander relations of
+planet to life are studied with equal care, these also will, I believe,
+excite deeper admiration, still more profound astonishment, because
+any secondary laws that could have brought them about are less easy to
+discover, or even to imagine.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Essential Conditions of Life</div>
+
+<p>Before we can form any adequate idea of the nature of a world which
+shall be able to support and develop organic life, we must consider
+what are the special conditions that alone render such life possible.
+We, of course, refer to the whole of the organic world, from the lowest
+to the highest, not to the few exceptional cases in which life may be
+possible under conditions that would be fatal to the higher as well as
+to most of the lower forms.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Miracle of Human Life</div>
+
+<p>The one striking speciality of the higher animals&mdash;and to a less
+degree of the higher plants&mdash;is that of continuous, all-pervading
+motion, every portion of their substance being in a state of flux:
+each particle itself moving, growing, living and dying, and being
+replaced by other particles of the same nature and fulfilling the
+same functions. To keep up this growth, and to enable every part of
+the structure to be continually renewed, food is required. This is
+taken into the stomach of animals in the solid or liquid form, is
+then decomposed and recomposed, that which is useless or superfluous
+being thrown off by the intestines, while what is needed for growth
+is transformed into blood and by a wonderfully intricate system of
+branching tubes is carried to every part of the body, furnishing
+nourishment and repair alike to bone and muscle, to all the internal
+organs and all the outward integuments, and to that marvellously
+complex nervous system which also permeates every part of the body and
+is essential to the higher manifestations of life&mdash;to the exertion of
+force, voluntary motion, and, apparently, to thought itself. Add to
+this the constant influx of air, which at once purifies the blood and
+supplies animal heat, and is so important that its cessation for a
+few minutes is usually fatal, and we have a machine so complex in its
+structure and mode of action that the most elaborate of human machines
+is but as a grain of sand to a world in comparison.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Basis of Physical Life</div>
+
+<p>Now the very possibility of such a material organism as this depends
+upon a highly complex form of matter termed protoplasm, which is at
+once extremely plastic and of extreme instability, and is yet capable
+of secreting or building up its atoms into such solid and apparently
+durable forms as bone, horn, and hair, besides the various liquids and
+semi-solids which build up the organism. This fundamental organic
+substance consists of only four chemical elements&mdash;nitrogen, hydrogen,
+oxygen and carbon, and almost all animal and vegetable structures and
+products have the same elemental constitution, though with such widely
+different characteristics. Four other elements&mdash;sulphur, lime, silicon,
+and phosphorus&mdash;also occur in small quantities in organic tissues,
+to supply special needs; but these are not essential to all forms of
+life, and are only taken up and utilised by the living protoplasm when
+required. Protoplasm is undoubtedly the basis of physical life, yet
+it only exists in, and is produced by, living organisms. The moment
+such an organism dies, disorganisation and decay set in, and the whole
+mass becomes gradually changed into more stable compounds, or into its
+constituent elements. It appears, therefore, that some agency&mdash;usually
+termed “vital force”&mdash;must be at work, first to produce this wonderful
+compound, then to form it into “cells”&mdash;the physiological units of
+all organisms&mdash;and afterwards to direct the energies supplied by heat
+and light so as to build up the excessively complex structures, with
+all their wonderful powers and potentialities, which we term animals
+and plants. All this seems to imply not “a force” only, but very many
+forces, all of which must<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[Pg 94]</span> have some kind of mind in or behind them,
+to direct these forces to such infinitely varied yet perfectly defined
+ends.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A Marvel of Every Day</div>
+
+<p>Consider for a moment one of the simplest of these cases. Let us take
+the minute seed of one of the great tropical fig-trees, and another
+seed of a strawberry, or of garden cress. Both will be about the same
+size and shape, and the most acute microscopist would not find any
+difference in the internal structure that could intelligibly account
+for the different results when these little grains of protoplasm are
+exposed to identical conditions. For, even if planted near each other,
+and exposed to the same amount of heat and moisture, to the very same
+atmosphere, and the same kind of water, as well as identically the
+same soil, yet invariably the one will grow into a large tree, the
+other into a small herb, and in the course of time, still with no
+change whatever of the physical conditions to which both are exposed,
+each will produce its peculiar foliage, and flowers, and fruit, very
+different in all their characters from those of the other. Were this
+result not so common as to seem to us “natural,” we should call it
+a miracle; and it is really and essentially as inexplicable as many
+things which are termed miracles only because they are unfamiliar and
+inexplicable.</p>
+
+<p>Now, this wonderful substance, the physical base of all life&mdash;and as
+it is the only base that exists, or has ever existed, on the earth, we
+may fairly assume that no other is possible&mdash;can only maintain itself
+and perform its functions under certain very definite conditions, which
+conditions are now maintained on our earth’s surface, and must have
+been maintained throughout the long geological periods during which
+life has been slowly developing. What these conditions are we will now
+proceed to show.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The First Essential for Life</div>
+
+<p>The first essential for organic life is a certain very limited range of
+temperature. We are so accustomed to consider the change of temperature
+from winter to summer, from day to night, and that which occurs when we
+pass from the tropics to the Polar regions as being very great, that we
+do not realise what a small proportion such changes bear to the whole
+range of temperature that exists in the known universe. The absolute
+zero of temperature is calculated to be minus 461° F., while the heat
+of the sun has been determined to be over 10,000° F., and many of the
+stars are known to be much hotter than the sun. The actual range of
+temperature is therefore enormous; but any development of organic life
+is possible only within the very narrow limits of the freezing and
+boiling points of water, since within those temperatures only is the
+existence of liquid water possible. But a much less range than this
+is really required, because albumen, one of the commonest forms of
+protoplasm, is coagulated or solidified at a temperature of about 160°
+F. Now, if, as is generally believed, the earth has been once a liquid
+or even a gaseous mass and has since cooled to its present temperature
+on the surface, and the sun is undergoing a similar process of cooling,
+we are able to understand that the very limited range of temperature
+within which life development is possible implies an equally limited
+period of time as compared with that occupied by the whole process of
+solar and planetary development.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">We Live by the Heat of the Sun</div>
+
+<p>It must be understood, however, that the present temperature of the
+earth’s surface is due entirely to sun-heat, and that if that were
+withdrawn or greatly diminished the whole surface of the globe would
+be permanently far below the freezing point and all the oceans be
+frozen for a considerable depth; so that all organic life would become
+extinct. Under such conditions no renewed development of life would be
+possible; and it is therefore quite certain that the sun has actually
+maintained the uniform moderate temperature required, and must continue
+to maintain it for whatever future period man is destined to continue
+his existence upon the earth.</p>
+
+<p>But it is not only a certain amount of heat that is required, but also
+a sufficient quantity of light; and this implies a further restriction
+of conditions, because light is due to vibrations of a limited range of
+wave-length, and without these particular rays plants cannot take the
+carbon from the carbonic acid in the atmosphere, and by its means build
+up the wonderful series of carbon compounds, including protoplasm,
+which are essential for the life of animals. What is commonly termed
+dark heat, therefore, would not be sufficient for the development
+of any but the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[Pg 95]</span> lowest forms of life, even though it produced the
+necessary temperature during a sufficient period of time.</p>
+
+<p>All organisms, from the lowest to the highest, whether plant or animal,
+consist very largely of water, and its constant presence either in the
+liquid or gaseous form is essential for organic life. On our earth
+oceans and seas occupy the greater part of the surface, while their
+average depth is so great that the quantity of water is sufficient to
+cover the whole of the globe free from inequalities two miles deep.
+It is this enormous amount of water that supplies the air with ample
+moisture, such as renders the life of the tropics so luxuriant. Yet
+even now the inequality of water-supply is such that large areas in all
+parts of the earth are what we term deserts, only supporting a very few
+forms of life that have become specially adapted to them, and certainly
+unfitted for the continuous development of life from lower to higher
+forms.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Water and the Atmosphere</div>
+
+<p>Water is also of immense importance as an equaliser of temperature, the
+currents of the ocean conveying the warmth of the tropics to ameliorate
+the severity of temperate and Polar regions, while the amount of
+water-vapour in the atmosphere acts as a retainer of heat during the
+night, without which it is probable that the surface of the earth would
+freeze every night even in the tropics. When we consider that water
+consists of two gases&mdash;oxygen and hydrogen&mdash;in definite proportions,
+and that without their presence in these proportions and in the
+necessary quantity the development of organic life would have been
+impossible, we find that we have here a remarkable and very complex set
+of conditions which must be fulfilled in any planet to enable it to
+develop life.</p>
+
+<p>But this is not all. The atmosphere is so intimately associated with
+water in its life-relations, and is itself so absolutely essential to
+the existence from moment to moment of the higher animals, that the two
+require to be duly proportioned to each other and to the globe of which
+they form a part.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">How Water Protects Earth by Night</div>
+
+<p>In the first place the atmosphere must be of a sufficient density,
+this being needed in order that it may be an adequate storer up of
+solar heat, and also in order that it may be able to supply sufficient
+oxygen, water-vapour, and carbonic-acid gas for the requirements of
+both vegetable and animal life. We have a striking example of the use
+of air as a storer-up and distributor of heat and moisture in the
+very different character of our south-west and north-east winds. The
+effect of the density of the air is equally well shown when we ascend
+lofty mountains where we find perpetual snow and ice, due simply to
+the fact that the air is not dense enough to retain the heat of the
+sun&mdash;which is actually greater than at low levels&mdash;so that at night
+the temperature regularly falls below the freezing point. On the other
+hand a very much denser atmosphere would absorb so much water vapour as
+probably to shut out the light of the sun, and thus have a prejudicial
+effect on vegetable life.</p>
+
+<p>Again, there is good reason to believe that the proportions of the
+various gases in the atmosphere are, within certain narrow limits, such
+as are most favourable not only for the life that actually exists, but
+for any life that could be developed from the elements that constitute
+the universe. Oxygen has properties which seem absolutely essential to
+organic life; but nitrogen, though only serving to dilute the oxygen
+so far as the higher animals are directly concerned, is yet indirectly
+essential for them, since it is in vegetables a constituent of that
+protoplasm which is the very substance of their bodies.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Use of Thunderstorms<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Wonder of the Atmosphere</div>
+
+<p>Now, plants obtain their nitrogen mainly from the minute proportion
+of ammonia that exists in the atmosphere, and this ammonia is formed
+by the union of the nitrogen of the air with the hydrogen of the
+water-vapour under the influence of electric discharges&mdash;that is,
+of thunderstorms. It is evident, then, that the required amount of
+this essential compound will depend upon a due adjustment of the
+quantities of nitrogen and aqueous vapour always present; while the
+electric discharges seem to be due to the friction of various strata
+of air with each other and with the earth’s surface, due to the winds
+and storms; and winds are due to highly complex causes, involving
+the rate of the earth’s rotation, the rise and fall of the tide, the
+density of the atmosphere, the quantity of its aqueous vapour, and the
+amount of solar heat which it receives. Unless all these very diverse
+factors existed in their due proportion, some of the results<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[Pg 96]</span> might be
+highly prejudicial if not quite inimical to the development of life.
+To these various adaptations of our gaseous envelope we must add one
+other. Carbonic acid gas in the atmosphere is absolutely essential
+to vegetable life, while it is directly antagonistic to that of the
+higher animals. Its quantity must, therefore, be strictly proportionate
+to the needs of both; and that beneficial proportion must have been
+preserved throughout the whole period of the existence of the higher
+air-breathing animals.</p>
+
+<p>These various considerations show us that our atmosphere, consisting
+as it does mainly of two common gases mixed together, and therefore
+seeming to most people one of the simplest things possible, is really a
+wonderfully complex arrangement which is adapted to serve the purposes
+of living organisms in a great variety of ways. But this by no means
+exhausts the subject of its adaptation to support and develop organic
+life, because its very existence on the earth in a suitable quantity
+and composed of the essential elements can be shown to depend on other
+and deeper relations which will now be pointed out.</p>
+
+<p>The older writers on the subject of the habitability of the planets
+took no account whatever of the importance of size, distance from the
+sun, period of rotation, and obliquity of the ecliptic as determining
+the possibility of organic life, but simply assumed that, because the
+earth possessed an abundant life-development, all the other planets
+must also possess it. But we know that the above-mentioned factors are
+of very high importance, as we will proceed briefly to point out.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Earth’s Envelope of Gas</div>
+
+<p>It is now believed that the amount of atmosphere possessed by a
+planet is due mainly, perhaps entirely, to the planet’s mass, and its
+consequent gravitative power. Spectrum-analysis has shown that vast
+masses of gaseous matter exist in the universe, and it is probable
+that, in a state of extreme tenuity, these are very widely diffused.
+Just as meteoric dust is constantly attracted to the earth, and
+periodically in larger quantities, so are gases, and supposing the
+aggregations of free gaseous matter to have been distributed with some
+approach to uniformity, then, as planets grew in size, they would also
+tend to secure a larger amount of the diffused gases, thus forming
+deeper atmospheres. The observed facts agree with this view. The
+largest planets, Jupiter and Saturn, have such a depth of atmosphere as
+permanently to obscure any solid interior they may possess. The only
+planet closely approaching the earth in size and density&mdash;Venus&mdash;has
+an atmosphere which appears to be loftier than ours, but it may be
+composed of different gases. Mars, which has only one-ninth the mass
+of the earth, has a lofty but very tenuous atmosphere, and probably no
+water, the Polar snows being due probably to the freezing of some dense
+gas. The climate and physical condition of Mars is, however, still a
+subject of much controversy, which I hope to discuss in a separate work
+dealing with the arguments of Professor Lowell [see <a href="#Professor_Lowell">page 105</a>]. In that
+volume the reader will find, fully set forth my reasons, on scientific
+grounds, against the supposed habitability of Mars.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Earth Selects and Uses Gas</div>
+
+<p>But, besides attracting cosmic masses of gaseous matter to form its
+atmosphere, there is another equally important function of the mass of
+a planet&mdash;its selective power on the kind of gases it can permanently
+retain in a free state. The molecules of gases are in a condition of
+rapid motion in all directions, which explains the elastic force they
+exhibit. The speed of this motion has been determined for all the chief
+gases, and also the gravitative force necessary to prevent them from
+continually escaping into space from the upper limit of the atmosphere.
+Thus the moon, which has a mass only one-eightieth that of the earth,
+can retain no free gas whatever on its surface. Mars can retain only
+the very heavy gases, but neither hydrogen nor water-vapour. The earth,
+however, has force enough to retain all the gases except hydrogen,
+which is just beyond its limit; and this may explain why it is that
+there is no free hydrogen in the atmosphere, although this gas is
+continually produced in small quantities by submarine volcanoes, is
+emitted sometimes from fissures in volcanic regions, and is a product
+of decaying vegetation. Once united with oxygen to form water, it
+becomes amenable to gravity in the form of invisible aqueous vapour,
+and is thenceforth a permanent possession for us in its most valuable
+form.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_096">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_096.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">EARLY ICE AGE, WHEN MAMMOTHS ROAMED THE EARTH AND MAN
+ WAS ARISING</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_096_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The very accurate adjustments that render our earth suitable for
+the production<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[Pg 97]</span> and long-continued development of organic life,
+culminating in man, may be well shown by another consideration. If our
+earth had been 9,600 miles instead of 8,000 miles in diameter&mdash;a very
+small increase in view of the immense range of planetary magnitudes
+from Mercury to Jupiter&mdash;with a slight proportionate increase in
+density, due to its greater force of gravitative compression, its
+mass would have been about double what it is now. This would probably
+have led to its having attracted and retained double the amount of
+gases, in which case the water produced would have been double what
+it is&mdash;perhaps even more, because hydrogen gas would not then escape
+into space as it does now. But the surface of the globe would have
+been only one-half greater than at present; so that, unless the ocean
+cavities were twice as deep as they actually are, the whole surface of
+the earth&mdash;except, perhaps, a few tops of submarine volcanoes&mdash;would
+have been covered several miles deep in water, and all terrestrial life
+would have been impossible.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Deep Atmosphere of Venus</div>
+
+<p>From the various considerations here set forth it appears clear to me
+that no other planet of the solar system makes any approach to the
+conditions essential for the development of a rich and varied organic
+life such as adorns our earth. One only&mdash;Venus&mdash;has a sufficient bulk
+and density to give it the needful atmosphere; but as it receives
+about twice as much solar heat as does the earth, it is probable that
+its very deep atmosphere may be mainly due to the fact that a large
+proportion of its water is held in a state of vapour, its seas and
+oceans being proportionately reduced in extent. Judging from what
+happens on the earth, this would probably lead to an excessive area
+of deserts, and thus be inimical to life. But this planet appears to
+possess one feature which renders it fundamentally unsuitable for
+organic life.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Why there is no Life on Venus</div>
+
+<p>Several modern observers have found that the older astronomers were
+all in error in giving Venus a rotation-period almost exactly the
+same as ours, an error due to the indefinite and variable markings
+of its surface. They have now deduced a period about equal to that
+of its revolution round the sun&mdash;a rate which has been confirmed by
+spectrum-analysis, and further confirmed by the fact that this planet
+has no measurable polar compression. As during transits of Venus over
+the sun’s disc the conditions for the accurate measurement of the
+compression, if any exist, are the best possible, and as none has been
+found, this alone affords a demonstration that the rate of rotation
+must be very slow, because the laws of motion <i>necessitate</i> a definite
+amount of equatorial protuberance corresponding to that rate. Half the
+surface has, therefore, perpetual day and the other half perpetual
+night, leading to violent contrasts of heat and cold for the two
+hemispheres with, in all probability, correspondingly violent winds,
+rains, and electrical disturbances&mdash;conditions so entirely opposed
+to the uniformity of temperatures and stability of meteorological
+phenomena during long geological epochs which are essential for the
+full development of organic life, that such development is perhaps less
+probable on this planet than on any other.</p>
+
+<p>I think I have now shown not only that no other planet in the solar
+system makes any approach to the possession of the varied and complex
+adaptations which are essential for a full development of organic life,
+but also that on the Earth itself the conditions are so numerous and so
+nicely balanced that very moderate deviations in excess or defect of
+what actually exists in the case of any one of them&mdash;and of others not
+referred to here&mdash;might have rendered it equally unsuitable, so that
+either no organic life at all, or only a very low type of life, could
+have been developed or supported.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">There is Purpose in our World</div>
+
+<p>If, then, the more superficial indications of design in the relations
+of animals to their environment, and of man to the universe, have been
+shown by modern science to have required no <i>special</i> interference of
+a higher power to bring them about, but that they have been due to
+natural laws acting in accordance with and in subordination to the
+deeper laws and forces that determine the very constitution of matter
+and the unknown power and principle we term “life,”&mdash;yet, on the other
+hand, we find that a more careful study of the outer universe, or
+cosmos, reveals a new set of adaptations not less wonderful or more
+easily explicable by chance coincidence than those presented by the
+organic world.</p>
+
+<p>Even the very brief sketch of the subject here given suggests the
+idea of <i>purpose</i> in a world so precisely and uniquely<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[Pg 98]</span> adapted to
+develop organic life, and to support that life during the countless
+ages required for the completed evolution of man. But that suggestion
+becomes a logical induction when the whole of the available evidence
+is set forth, as I have attempted to set it forth in my work on “Man’s
+Place in the Universe.” I have there shown not only that the cumulative
+evidence for the earth being the only supporter of a fully-developed
+organic life within the solar system is irresistible, but that there
+is some direct, and much more indirect, evidence that this uniqueness
+extends to the whole stellar universe; and it is certain that no
+particle of <i>direct</i> evidence for the existence of organic life
+elsewhere has been, or is likely to be, adduced.</p>
+
+<p>I have also shown (in an appendix to the second edition of my book)
+that the purely biological argument for the uniqueness of the
+development of man&mdash;as the culminating point of one line of descent
+throughout the diverging ramifications of the animal kingdom&mdash;is
+overwhelmingly strong; hence the logical conclusion from the whole
+of the evidence is that man is the one supreme product of the whole
+material universe.</p>
+
+<p>My object in the present essay has been limited to showing that,
+besides and beyond the special adaptations of the various kinds of
+animals and plants to their special environments, there exist in the
+earth as a planet, in its various physical and cosmical relations, a
+whole series of adaptations of a very remarkable character which, so
+far as we can judge, are essential to its function as a life-producing
+world. The study of these adaptations, therefore, may be considered
+to be appropriate here, as constituting a preliminary chapter in the
+natural history of the Earth and of Mankind.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">A<span class="smaller">LFRED</span>
+R<span class="smaller">USSEL</span> W<span class="smaller">ALLACE</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i098">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_098.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">IN THE DAYS OF THE SEA MONSTERS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Reproduced from a plate in Hawkins’ “Book of the Great
+ Sea Dragons.”</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[Pg 99]</span></p>
+
+<h4 class="s0" title="THE BEGINNING OF LIFE ON THE EARTH">&nbsp;</h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="THE_BEGINNING_OF_LIFE_ON_THE_EARTH">
+ <img class="w100 mtop3" src="images/i_099.jpg" alt="How Life became Possible on the
+ Earth" />
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="s0 center mbot2" title="BY DR. C. W. SALEEBY">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Earth Without Life</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap2">F</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">F</span>OR
+some decades past we have been faced with a critical difficulty
+at the most critical and important point in the history of the earth.
+In the first place, it has been definitely established that in the
+earlier period of its history there was no life whatever&mdash;as the word
+is usually understood&mdash;upon the earth, as is abundantly shown elsewhere
+in this work. None of the conditions that make life possible, as we
+know it, were satisfied. As a recent French writer has said, life is
+an aquatic phenomenon, absolutely incapable of existence except in the
+presence of liquid water; and there was an age of vast duration in the
+history of the earth when all its water must have been in the gaseous
+state. Other reasons of equal cogency may be at present ignored. The
+broad fact is that, however widely students of this matter may differ
+on other points, there is absolute agreement upon the cardinal and
+initial fact that whereas there is life upon the earth now, there was a
+time when there was none.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A Gap in the Philosophy of Evolution</div>
+
+<p>Now, in the ever memorable year 1859, Charles Darwin published a
+volume, the main thesis of which is now universally accepted, wherein
+the following is the last sentence: “There is grandeur in this view of
+life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the
+Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has
+gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple
+a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been,
+and are being evolved.” “The Origin of Species” may be said, in a
+word, to establish the doctrine of the evolution of living organisms
+upon the earth “by laws acting around us”&mdash;to use Darwin’s own phrase.
+But Darwin’s work begins with and assumes the existence of life as an
+established planetary fact. There obviously remains a tremendous gap in
+the evolutionary philosophy as it stands in our statement of it thus
+far; and the first fact which we have to note is that the existence
+and recognition of this supposed gap, so far from being a matter of
+common recognition from the earliest times, so far from being an
+observation made by the critics of the doctrine of evolution, is, on
+the contrary, a special doctrine peculiar to scientific study and of
+quite recent origin, being indeed established&mdash;as was supposed&mdash;within
+the memory of many now living.</p>
+
+<p>If we turn to the first chapter of Genesis, we shall see no suggestion
+or recognition of the supposed difficulty involved in the beginning of
+life upon the earth. In this immortal piece of ancient poetry it is
+stated that after the creation of the heaven and the earth, which were
+at first “without form and void,” God said, “Let the earth bring forth
+grass ... and it was so”; and later God said, “Let the waters bring
+forth abundantly the moving creature that hath life ... let the earth
+bring forth the living creature after his kind.” Here we have suggested
+to us the natural origin of living creatures in earth and sea under the
+will and direction of the Creator as conceived by the poet.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">First Ideas on the Origin of Life<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Coming of Darwin</div>
+
+<p>Partly to the influence of Genesis, partly to the apparent facts of
+observation, and partly to the views which would naturally be held by
+poets and thinkers, we may attribute the belief which has been held
+by man, simple and philosophic alike, since first men began to think,
+until, we may say, the third quarter of the nineteenth century&mdash;the
+belief that the lowest of living things arose by a natural genesis or
+so-called spontaneous generation in suitable materials already provided
+on the land or in the sea. It was not suggested or believed that very
+large and conspicuous living creatures were thus bred, though it is
+true that the ancients thought even crocodiles to be generated by the
+action of the sun upon the slime of the Nile. The living creatures
+supposed to arise naturally in the womb of earth&mdash;the all-mother&mdash;were
+mostly small crea<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[Pg 100]</span>tures, like insects and worms. The ordinary belief of
+the uninstructed to-day&mdash;a belief which they share with the greatest
+thinkers of antiquity and the Renaissance&mdash;is that the cheese-mite, for
+instance, is evolved from the substance of the cheese. Now, it is of
+particular moment to observe the vast contrast between the significance
+of this belief prior to the publication of “The Origin of Species” and
+its significance to-day. Before we accepted the doctrine of organic
+evolution, the supposed spontaneous origin of the cheese-mite in
+cheese, or of the maggot in putrid meat, was of no very great moment;
+a maggot or a cheese-mite is an extremely insignificant object. So far
+as the great problems of the universe are concerned, a cheese-mite, as
+we say, is neither “here nor there,” and its spontaneous generation was
+not regarded as a fact of any great moment.</p>
+
+<p>But then there arose Darwin, who, in establishing the doctrine of
+organic evolution already supported by his own grandfather, by Lamarck,
+and Goethe, and Herbert Spencer, gave an entirely new importance to
+the question. He demonstrated how we could conceive the evolution of
+all organisms, including man, from a “few simple forms,” under the
+continuous influence of natural law; and thus such forms ceased to
+be insignificant, and the manner of their genesis came to be a vital
+problem in more senses than one. Such organisms&mdash;the mite, the maggot,
+and even the mould&mdash;could no longer be regarded as insignificant, for
+they were revealed as not unlike the ancestors of man himself.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Evolution a Continuous Process</div>
+
+<p>The question of the beginning of life upon the earth had only to be
+satisfactorily answered for the establishment of the belief in a
+continuous process of evolution by natural law, even from the very
+beginning of the earth itself “without form and void,” until the
+production of the highest living organisms which it displays in our
+own time. And all ages, even by the mouths of their great thinkers and
+closest observers, had agreed in giving an apparently satisfactory
+answer to this question. It might well have been thought that Darwin
+was quite entitled to ignore altogether, as he did, the question of
+the origin of life. Everyone knew, so to say, that simple living
+organisms were every day evolved in organic refuse and elsewhere.
+Darwin himself, if we may judge from a casual remark in a letter,
+regarded the question apparently as purely speculative, and of small
+real moment. It is all rubbish, he says, thinking about the origin of
+life; we might as well argue about the origin of matter. We must beware
+of illegitimately attributing opinions to the immortal dead, but this
+remark, though a casual one, does seem to suggest that Darwin regarded
+these two questions as on all-fours, if not, indeed, as different forms
+of the same question, and that, if he had actually formulated his
+views, they would have taken the shape of the doctrine which asserts
+that life is implicit and potential in matter; in other words, that
+when suitable conditions arose&mdash;such, for instance, as the presence of
+liquid water&mdash;matter would display the properties of life.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">An Abyss that could not be Bridged</div>
+
+<p>Now, the remarkable fact&mdash;one of the most striking in the history of
+science&mdash;is that the time-honoured belief in spontaneous generation
+should have been attacked, and attacked with apparent success, just
+at the very time when it would otherwise have begun to assume real
+philosophic importance. For ages it had been accepted, taken as a
+matter of course, and not regarded as having any particular bearing
+upon the supreme questions. Then there came the time when this belief
+would have been an all-important link, without which the chain of
+evolution could not be completed, a link without which we were left
+to contemplate a perfect chain of inorganic evolution&mdash;the history of
+the earth before life&mdash;and a perfect chain of organic evolution&mdash;the
+history of life upon the earth, with an abyss between the two that
+could not be bridged, for how came life where there was no life? A
+series of experiments were made, experiments in which, strikingly
+enough, some of the greatest evolutionists of the day took a leading
+part, and these seemed to upset, just when it was most wanted by
+themselves for the establishment of their new doctrine, the belief
+which had gone without question for so many ages.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Is Life only Self-movement?</div>
+
+<p>Now, some may be inclined to wonder how it should be that certain
+pioneers of the new doctrine of evolution, such as Tyndall and Huxley,
+should devote themselves with such persistence and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[Pg 101]</span> labour and force
+to the overthrow of a doctrine which was so necessary for the complete
+establishment of their own case&mdash;so much so, that when they had
+overthrown it, they found themselves, as regards their own doctrine
+of evolution, placed in a difficulty from which they did not live to
+emerge. It is my own belief that this question can be answered, and
+the answer is of strict relevance to our present inquiry. I believe
+that Huxley and Tyndall were largely impelled by the desire to oppose
+a doctrine of the nature of life which was current in their time and
+is usually called “vitalism.” We shall not begin to understand the
+question of the beginning of life upon the earth, as that question may
+be legitimately stated to-day, unless we fully realise in what terms
+the doctrine of spontaneous generation was accepted in the past, and
+an understanding of this will teach us that the present-day revival of
+this doctrine presents it in a form very different from that which it
+so long held. Our discussion must be somewhat philosophic in character,
+but the question at issue is a highly philosophic one, and the reason
+why we have made so little progress in answering it hitherto is that
+men of science have too frequently discussed it without paying any
+serious attention to the profound philosophic questions which really
+underlie it. We have permitted ourselves to talk freely about life and
+matter, whilst claiming the right to take for granted the absolute
+validity of our conceptions of life and our conceptions of matter.</p>
+
+<p>It was universally held by those, philosophic and simple, who also held
+throughout so many centuries the belief in spontaneous generation, that
+there is an overwhelming contrast between living and lifeless matter,
+and it was their belief in this overwhelming contrast that led them
+to give to the doctrine of spontaneous generation, as they held it, a
+form which cannot possibly be defended. The great character of life was
+conceived to be self-movement, this self-movement being displayed in
+the matter which composed the living organisms. But it was universally
+held that matter, as it was seen otherwise than in living organisms,
+was obviously and notoriously inert, gross, brute, and dead.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Influence of Plato</div>
+
+<p>The great influence of Plato taught men to despise matter in this
+fashion, and there was the everyday experience that a stone lies where
+it is placed until something from outside moves it, being, therefore,
+inert, whilst a living creature such as a bird moves freely at its own
+will. The more strongly men held the natural matter of which the earth
+is composed to be inert, the more necessary was it to suppose that
+when life was displayed in it the difference consisted in the taking
+possession of this dull clay by a vital force&mdash;a mystic and wonderful
+principle of quickening&mdash;which endowed even gross, inert matter with
+activity and power. From the time of Plato until the last few years of
+the nineteenth century thinkers vied with one another in insisting upon
+the impotence and grossness and inertness of matter, and each fresh
+insistence upon this doctrine rendered more necessary a corresponding
+doctrine of vital force or vitalism, which should explain the amazing
+transformation undergone by, let us say, the gross and inert matter
+composing food, when that food was converted by the “living principle”
+into the tissue of a living creature, and then displayed self-movement.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Philosophy of Dead Matter<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Great Work of Pasteur</div>
+
+<p>This doctrine of vitalism, which held sway for so long, was naturally
+invoked to explain the origin of life upon the earth, when the advance
+of astronomy and geology demonstrated a natural evolution for the
+earth and proved that there must have been a time when no life was
+possible upon it. The prevalent conception of matter came in at this
+point and denied altogether any such monstrous doctrine as that the
+wonderful thing called life could spontaneously arise in the despicable
+thing called matter. The material of the earth, whether solid, liquid
+or gaseous, consisted of eternal, unchangeable, and indestructible
+atoms. These were moved as forces from outside moved them. They had
+no energy or power of their own. Men simply thought of them as of
+incredibly minute grains of sand of various shapes and sizes, and it
+was as impossible to conceive of life being spontaneously generated
+in a chance heap of inert atoms as to conceive that a heap of grains
+of sand should organise themselves into a little organism. As for
+spontaneous generation occurring on the earth to-day, the development
+of mites<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[Pg 102]</span> from cheese and so forth, that was a very different matter,
+men must have thought&mdash;in so far as they thought at all&mdash;since cheese
+and flesh and so forth were themselves products of life. It is well
+worth noting that the common doctrine of spontaneous generation was
+always held in reference to organic materials, such as the slime of the
+Nile&mdash;not the dry sand of the desert. The reader may be inclined to say
+that men’s beliefs on this subject in the past generation make very
+confused reading, and indeed, that is true. But the fact is that their
+beliefs were most confused. The work of Darwin had staggered everybody,
+and straightforward, systematic, unprejudiced thinking was very nearly
+impossible in the welter of controversy. Nevertheless, something
+apparently definite was done. The doctrine of the beginning of life
+upon the earth was left almost undiscussed, and the accepted notion
+of the nature of matter&mdash;a notion which to us who know radium seems
+puerile&mdash;was left unchallenged in all its falsity. But the work of the
+great French chemist Pasteur led to a close examination of the belief
+that humble forms of life are daily produced from lifeless organic
+materials, and the conclusion was reached that no such spontaneous
+generation occurs.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Every Living Thing from a Living Thing</div>
+
+<p>This conclusion is of great importance in the history of modern
+thought, and it was proclaimed with much rejoicing and vigour as a
+great achievement of science, whilst some of its chief advocates
+seemed at times to forget the extreme awkwardness of the inferences
+which had to be made from it. The doctrine may be stated in Latin in
+the form of the familiar dogma, “Omne vivum ex vivo,” every living
+thing from a living thing. Just as the existence of a man is quite
+sufficient to prove to us the prior existence of living human parents,
+just as we feel sure that every beast of the field has had living
+parents and that every oak has sprung from an acorn developed in a
+previous oak, so, according to the doctrine of “Omne vivum ex vivo,”
+we must believe that every living creature, whether human, animal, or
+vegetable, whether as big as the mammoth or as small as the smallest
+microbe not one-twenty-thousandth part of an inch in diameter, has
+sprung from living parents. Nature, according to this doctrine, was
+divided&mdash;as Nature, being a mighty whole, can never be divided&mdash;into
+two absolute categories, the living and the lifeless, or living matter
+and dead matter. Dead matter was notoriously dead and impotent, and
+life could not conceivably arise in it, though it could be used by life
+for purposes of food. On the other hand, living matter rejoiced in the
+possession of all those great attributes which lifeless matter lacked,
+and, in accordance with the contrast between the two kinds of matter,
+the living could never be produced from the lifeless but only from the
+living: for every creature, microbe or mammoth or man, we must trace
+back in imagination a series of living ancestors, differing perhaps in
+various characters, but always living. This series must be traced back
+and back and back until&mdash;&mdash;?</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Life Evolved from the Lifeless</div>
+
+<p>And there the difficulty arose. For the uninhabitableness of the
+primitive earth was a fact of which men of science were as certain
+as if from some habitable planet they had been able to gaze upon it.
+Notwithstanding the dogma of “Omne vivum ex vivo,” it was impossible to
+assert that every living creature has an <i>endless</i> series of ancestors.
+How, then, did life begin?</p>
+
+<p>What we may call the doctrine of the older orthodoxy&mdash;the doctrine of
+special creation, of supernatural interposition for the introduction
+of a new entity into the scheme of things&mdash;offered one alternative. To
+accept it, however, would be to abandon the whole modern conception
+of natural law and of a universe which was not created once on a day,
+and has not been tinkered with subsequently, but from everlasting to
+everlasting is the continuous expression to us of the Infinite and
+Eternal Power which to some eyes it veils and to others it reveals.
+Unless we are to abandon our philosophy, this alternative cannot be
+accepted, and it is now accepted by no philosophic thinker.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_103">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_103.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">MASTER THINKERS WHO HAVE CONTRIBUTED TO OUR KNOWLEDGE
+ OF LIFE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Photos by Gerschel, Maull &amp; Fox, E. Walker, London
+ Stereoscopic, Barraud, and Mills</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_103_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Thus, whether “Omne vivum ex vivo” be true or false to-day, we are
+compelled to accept the only other alternative, which is that it has
+not always been true, or, in other words, that life was spontaneously
+evolved from the lifeless (so-called) at some remote age in the past.
+Just at the present time philosophic biology is out of fashion. Minds
+of the great cast which endeavour to see things in their eternal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[Pg 104]</span>
+aspect have been lacking to the science of life since the days when
+Huxley and Spencer were in the plenitude of their powers. Anyone who
+cares to compare the principal reviews of the last decade with those
+same reviews from the year of, say, 1875 to 1890, can readily see
+this fact for himself. In the absence of that deliberate thought and
+discussion without which clear ideas on any subject are impossible,
+what may be called the official opinion of biology at the present time
+is thus most remarkable and contradictory. On the one hand, it is
+strenuously asserted as a matter of dogma that at the present day no
+life is produced or producible upon the earth except by the process of
+reproduction of previously existing life; and on the other hand it is
+asserted&mdash;when the direct question is put, though otherwise the subject
+is simply ignored&mdash;that life must somehow or other have been naturally
+evolved in the past, presumably once and for all. I have called this
+opinion contradictory, and it is indeed far more contradictory and
+unsatisfactory than it may at present appear. The obvious question that
+the critic asks is, “If then, why not now?”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“If then, why not now?”<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Is Life Now Arising from the Lifeless?</div>
+
+<p>The answer alleged is that, of course, the experiments of Pasteur and
+Tyndall, to which some reference must afterwards be made here, merely
+demonstrated the impossibility of the spontaneous generation of life
+in our own day or under any conditions similar to those of our own
+day; but doubtless the first few simple forms of living matter arose
+by natural processes at some distant epoch “when the conditions were
+very different from those that obtain to-day.” Now it happens to be
+true that every difference between past and present conditions which
+physics and geology and chemistry can assert tends to the probability
+that if spontaneous generation is impossible now, it must have been a
+hundredfold more impossible a hundred million years ago. Yet for some
+three decades the great majority of biologists have been content to
+believe that spontaneous generation is impossible now, even though
+land and sea and sky are packed with organic matter under the very
+conditions which obviously favour life&mdash;as the all but omnipresence
+of life abundant to-day demonstrates&mdash;but that spontaneous generation
+was possible in the past when, by the hypothesis, there was no
+organic matter present at all, and when life had to arise in the union
+and architecture of such simple substances as inorganic carbonates!
+Such biologists are like those who know that the human organism can
+be developed from the microscopic germ in a few years, but find it
+incredible that man can have been developed from lowly organisms in
+æons of æons. Nor has any living biologist even attempted to make an
+adequate answer to the question, why what is impossible now should
+have been possible a hundred million years ago. On the contrary, so
+soon as the matter is looked at philosophically, we see that all the
+probabilities, all the analogies, all the great generalisations of
+science, are in favour of the belief that life must be arising from the
+lifeless now, as in the past, whenever certain conditions, such as the
+assemblage of carbon, oxygen, nitrogen and hydrogen in the presence of
+liquid water, are satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>For the moment, however, I propose to postpone this question of the
+truth of “Omne vivum ex vivo” at the present day, for I desire to
+throw into the forefront of my argument two quite recent developments
+of science, unreckoned with because non-existent in the controversy
+of the ’seventies, and in my judgment not yet duly appraised to-day.
+In the present and future discussion of the manner and causation of
+that supreme event in the earth’s history, the beginning of life upon
+it, we must reckon with two new orders of inquiry relating to facts
+unthinkably contrasted in physical magnitude yet equally relevant to
+our subject. The first series of facts with which I will deal are
+<i>astronomic</i>, and the second <i>atomic</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Evidence from Other Worlds<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Vegetable Life on Mars</div>
+
+<p>In discussing the origin of life upon the earth, we of the twentieth
+century must recognise such facts as may be obtainable in regard to
+life upon other orbs than ours. Now, in the first place, there is at
+least one illustrious contemporary astronomer, Professor Pickering,
+the chief living student of the moon, in whose opinion there are many
+evidences upon our satellite of the action of vegetation, either past
+or present. This, of course, is not the place for a discussion of
+that evidence; it is, however, the place to record the most highly
+qualified opinion at present<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[Pg 105]</span> obtainable, and to remind ourselves of
+the certainty that when the moon was first borne&mdash;or born&mdash;from the
+earth, life cannot possibly have been evolved, since the conditions
+of temperature alone, to name one factor, were such as life could not
+sustain, no liquid water being extant. There is some reason to suppose,
+then, that, whatever the present case may be, life was at one time
+spontaneously evolved upon the moon.</p>
+
+<p id="Professor_Lowell">The second piece of astronomical evidence relevant to our inquiry is
+afforded by the planet Mars. This, of course, is a much controverted
+question, which cannot receive any discussion here. It suffices to
+note that Professor Lowell, who is admittedly the greatest living
+authority on Mars, has observed and photographed, not merely to
+his own satisfaction, but to that of an ever increasing number of
+astronomers, signs of vegetation upon Mars. I will say nothing here
+as to the existence of intelligent beings there. That fascinating and
+momentous question, upon which there will doubtless be difference
+of opinion for some time to come, does not now concern us. It is of
+quite sufficient significance for our present purpose if the existence
+of merely vegetable life, and no more, upon the planet Mars can be
+demonstrated, and there are now very few astronomers indeed who
+question this demonstration, however chary they may be of going any
+further. I submit that the question of the beginning of life upon
+the earth should not be considered without reference to the evidence
+which suggests the spontaneous origin of life upon the moon, and to
+the practically positive demonstration of the present existence, with
+seasonal alternations, as on our own earth, of vegetable life in the
+watered areas of Mars.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Earth’s Crumbling “Foundations”</div>
+
+<p>These considerations were entirely unknown to the great
+controversialists of a generation ago; but there is another order of
+facts, entirely unimagined by them, which are now demonstrable and
+admitted. For them, or for most of them, the ancient conception of
+matter which we trace to Plato was substantially true; nay, more.
+The recent work of the physicists and chemists had endowed that
+ancient conception of matter as gross and inert and dead with a new
+concreteness and vividness. One of the greatest physicists of the age,
+James Clerk-Maxwell, in his famous address to the British Association,
+spoke of atoms as the “foundation stones of the visible universe, which
+have existed since the creation unbroken and unworn.” The accepted
+conception of an atom was that of a passive thing; it had its own
+inherent shape and properties, which were impressed upon it at its
+creation. It had “the stamp of the manufactured article,” as Sir John
+Herschell said, and throughout its endless history it responded to and
+behaved under the influence of external forces in due accordance with
+its shape and size. But it was unchangeable, inert and brute, the sport
+of its surroundings, like the mote in the sun-beam.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Immeasurable Ocean of Energy</div>
+
+<p>But to-day we stand amazed at such conceptions. We have learnt that
+within the atoms of matter there is a fund of energy so incalculably
+vast that the sum total of all the energies previously recognised, and
+now to be styled extra-atomic, is as nothing compared with it. This
+is a change indeed, that all the energies hitherto known to us should
+be merely the overflow trickling from the immeasurable ocean of the
+intra-atomic energy, the very existence of which has been formally and
+repeatedly denied by practically all thinkers from Plato down to our
+own time. Matter is not gross and inert, brute and dead. The atom, the
+so-called unchangeable foundation stone, is, on the contrary, itself
+an organism, the theatre of Titanic forces about which we at present
+know practically nothing except that they certainly exist, and are
+powerful beyond all our previous conceptions. The atom is no atom, but
+a microcosm; it is no more the unit of inorganic matter than the cell
+is really the unit of living matter.</p>
+
+<p>Now it is surely evident on consideration, though the significance
+of the change has been ignored, that the whole discussion of the
+spontaneous origin or evolution of life in matter takes an entirely
+new shape when our old and widely erroneous conception of matter is
+abandoned, and a true one is substituted. Life is a marvellous and
+characteristic demonstration of energy. When the origin of this energy
+in matter was formerly discussed, we were told that the constituent
+parts of matter contain no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[Pg 106]</span> energy at all, but now we know that a quite
+overwhelming proportion of the sum total of universal energy is to be
+found there, and nowhere else. This is one of the most revolutionary
+advances in the whole history of thought, and its full significance has
+yet to be recognised.</p>
+
+<p>There must also be added an essential to any future discussion of this
+question, the extraordinary achievement of synthetic chemistry, of
+which Professor Berthelot was the grand master. As long ago as 1828
+it was shown that there was at least one exception to the doctrine of
+the vitalists, that chemical compounds characteristic of living matter
+cannot be built up except by the living organism. To-day chemistry
+has succeeded in building up alcohols, starches, sugars, and even the
+forerunners of the proteids themselves, from the inorganic elements in
+the laboratory, under the action of non-vital forces. This fact could
+not be reckoned with a generation ago.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Can Chemistry Build Up Life?</div>
+
+<p>We are now entitled to state very briefly the sequence of events
+which may reasonably be imagined as culminating in the origin of life
+upon the earth <i>for the first time</i>. Whatever we may hold as to the
+present, we have to recognise that the origin of life for the first
+time constituted a fact utterly different in certain essentials from
+any origin of life that may be expected to be occurring to-day. The
+capital fact is that in the beginning there was no organic matter
+to serve as food material. If ever there was a case in which it is
+the first step that costs, it is here. Nothing can be easier than
+to imagine the spontaneous origin of life in organic matter to-day,
+favoured with sun and water and air. The case is far different when a
+primary origin in inorganic matter has to be conceived. But of some
+things we are certain. We are certain, for instance, that so long as
+the earth’s surface temperature was above that of boiling water, no
+life was possible. It was not until the gaseous water in the atmosphere
+became liquefied by the lowering of the earth’s temperature that the
+production of life became possible. The first seas were seas of boiling
+water, or rather water infinitesimally below the boiling point, and
+we may reasonably suppose, with Buffon, that the Polar seas, being
+the first to cool, must have provided the first “nest” for life upon
+the earth. I assume, of course, that this essay will be read in
+conjunction with that of Professor Sollas upon the formation of the
+earth [<a href="#THE_BEGINNING_OF_THE_EARTH">page 79</a>], and that of Dr. Wallace upon the exquisite adaptation
+between life and the earth to-day [<a href="#HOW_LIFE_BECAME_POSSIBLE_ON_THE_EARTH">page 91</a>].</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Study of Ferments</div>
+
+<p>But how were those complex organic bodies formed, especially those
+vastly complex proteids with which all life whatsoever, as we know it,
+is invariably associated? Apart from the laboratories of the synthetic
+chemists of to-day, these compounds are always the products of
+pre-existing life, and yet without them there could be no pre-existing
+life.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Mystery of the Cell<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Is the Cell a Product of Evolution?</div>
+
+<p>It is my belief that this most difficult question, which quite baffles
+us, will seem simple and straightforward in another generation, when
+science has devoted itself on a large scale to a study now in its
+very infancy&mdash;I mean the study of those curious bodies which chemists
+call ferments. The properties of ferments are shared both by the
+familiar ferments, such as trypsin and pepsin, and also by certain
+inorganic substances, such as the metal platinum. Now, though pepsin
+is a product of living cells, platinum is certainly not. Altogether
+apart from the living world there are substances which have powers of
+fermentation; and ferments do not act exclusively, as is erroneously
+supposed, in breaking down complex compounds, but also build them
+up from their constituents. The powers of a ferment, moreover, are,
+so far as we know, inexhaustible. All life whatever is exercised by
+ferments, and it is true that life, chemically considered, is “a series
+of fermentations.” Now, there is quite recent evidence already which
+seems to show that certain ferments, acting in suitable material, have
+the power of reproducing themselves&mdash;that is to say, of converting that
+material into their like. These facts are highly suggestive, and it is
+difficult to refrain from suggesting that the gap between living and
+lifeless matter, which seemed so absolute to our ancestors, and which
+even to us, who have a new conception of matter, seems wide enough, may
+yet be bridged by the ferments. We are far too apt, I think, to assume
+that when we can see no intermediate stage there were no intermediate
+stages, and thus to make difficulties for ourselves. We declare that
+life began as a single cell, which was the starting-point of organic
+evolution.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[Pg 107]</span> I myself believe rather that the cell constitutes the acme
+of a vast epoch of evolution, which may yet be reproduced in brief in
+the laboratory. Denying or declining to think of this, the biologist
+who knows the amazing complexity and intricacy of the architecture of
+the cell may well decline to believe that such a thing could spring
+with a single jump from inorganic matter. We preach and go on preaching
+that Nature does nothing by jumps, and in the same breath we declare
+that life began as a simple cell. In another hundred years we may begin
+to realise that a cell in its own measure and on its own scale is an
+organism, as complex and mature a product of evolution as a society,
+or, for the matter of that, as the atom of modern chemistry!</p>
+
+<p>But the reader will legitimately declare that so long as the
+spontaneous generation of life to-day in the most favourable
+circumstances is a proved impossibility, he cannot be expected to
+accept the doctrine of its spontaneous origin in the past. There are
+signs, however, that the biologists are now beginning to listen to Dr.
+Charlton Bastian, the sole survivor from the great controversy of the
+’seventies, whose book, “The Evolution of Life,” was published only a
+few months ago. Against Pasteur and Tyndall and Huxley, Dr. Bastian
+maintained that their experiments, asserted to be conclusive, were not
+conclusive&mdash;the facts observed were certainly facts, but the deductions
+were unwarrantable. The experiments only proved the impossibility under
+the experimental conditions. The difference is the difference between
+proving what you set out to prove, and begging the whole question.
+First establish conditions under which spontaneous generation is
+impossible, then demonstrate its non-occurrence under those conditions,
+and thence infer that it is impossible under any conditions.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Creed of the Future</div>
+
+<p>The student is right in declining to believe in the spontaneous
+beginning of life upon the earth so long as the possibility of
+spontaneous generation to-day is denied, but there are not a few who
+think that the most conservative attitude that can be adopted is one of
+suspended judgment.</p>
+
+<p>The present philosophic tendency is undoubtedly in the direction of a
+return to the ancient conception that matter is not without its own
+degree of life, and that the distinction between the organic and the
+inorganic is a distinction of degree and not radical. Nature does not
+admit of being sorted into any of our puny categories. As the facts
+accumulate they point more and more definitely towards the opinion that
+hylozoism, or the doctrine of potential life in all matter, will be
+part of the scientific creed of the future.</p>
+
+<p>Controversies as to the origin of life, judged in the light of this
+great conception, seem to become trivial if not puerile. Knowing,
+as we now do, that Plato’s conception of matter was as false as it
+possibly could be, and having had revealed to us by radio-activity the
+omnipresence within the very atoms of matter, of forces incessant and
+stupendous, we find the doctrine of vitalism, however stated, to be
+wholly meaningless; we find that the gap between the living and the
+lifeless is by no means abysmal or impassable.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">How Long Has Life Existed?</div>
+
+<p>And the definition of life as self-movement seems to become almost
+comical, for on that definition surely the whole physical universe,
+the only perpetual motion machine we know of, is itself alive. A
+discussion of this question can at the utmost only be suggestive. Very
+few positive assertions have been made, nor can their number be added
+to, in reference to a question which is bound to be asked: How long has
+life existed on the earth? The study of radium and its presence in the
+earth’s crust alone suffices to abolish altogether the old estimates,
+and new ones cannot yet be substituted. Only it is certain that the
+past history of planetary life may be far longer than any previous
+estimate has indicated. It now seems that the earth is not only not
+self-cooling, but actually self-heating, and if on the older assumption
+Lord Kelvin could talk of a hundred million years since, so to speak,
+water first became wet, and life, as we know it, possible, who shall
+say of how long periods we may speculate now? Meanwhile, the glass-eyed
+stare vacantly around them and declare that the progress of science
+means the destruction of the spirit of wonder and reverence. To them we
+reply in the words of the Earth Spirit in Goethe’s “Faust”:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container s5">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse">“At the whirring loom of Time unawed,</div>
+ <div class="verse">&ensp;I weave the living garment of God.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="right mright2">C. W. S<span class="smaller">ALEEBY</span></p>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[Pg 108]</span></p>
+
+<h4 class="s0" title="How Man Obtained Mastery of the Earth">&nbsp;</h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="THE_MASTERY_OF_THE_EARTH_AND_HOW_MAN_OBTAINED_IT">
+ <img class="w100 mtop3" src="images/i_108.jpg" alt="The Mastery of the Earth and
+ How Man Obtained It" />
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="s0 center mbot2" title="BY DR. ARCHDALL REID">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="drop-cap2">A</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first2">A</span>LL
+the world&mdash;at any rate, all that part of the world which is
+acquainted with the facts&mdash;is now agreed that man is a product of
+evolution, and that his remote ancestors were of different bodily make
+and shape, and of different mental type and calibre, from their late
+descendants. No study of human kind can be comprehensive that does not
+include a survey of the mode by which the faculties that have given man
+the mastery of the earth were evolved.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">We Know the Present by the Past</div>
+
+<p>A history of his evolution, based, like a political history, on
+episodes, cannot, of course, be written. But man is a bundle of parts
+and capabilities. By comparing the civilised being with the savage and
+the savage with lower animals, we are able to trace, in many important
+particulars at least, his natural history with a degree of certainty to
+which, I think, no political history can aspire. As our comprehension
+of adult man is helped by a knowledge of the development of the child,
+so our understanding of our species is aided by a study of its past.
+Armed with some clear conceptions of what man was, and is, we shall
+be the better fitted to investigate social and political change, and
+to perceive how it happens that while some nations have inherited the
+earth and the fruits thereof, others have stagnated or fallen into
+decay.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">How Man Learns by Experience</div>
+
+<p>At a certain stage in his development the caterpillar builds himself
+a cocoon. His dwelling is a wonderful structure, but from our human
+point of view the remarkable thing is that he does not learn to build
+it. He may never have seen a cocoon before, and he constructs only
+one in his life. Yet his work is perfect, or at least very excellent,
+and it is as good in its beginnings as in its endings. Evidently he
+owes nothing to experience, but is impelled and guided throughout by
+a faculty which we term <i>instinct</i>. An instinct may be defined as an
+innate, inherited impulse, an inclination to do a certain definite
+act, the instinctive act, on receipt of a certain definite stimulus
+or incitement to action. In the case of the caterpillar the stimulus
+appears to be the sight at the proper time of a suitable spot in which
+to build a cocoon. Since this particular impulse does not appear at the
+beginning of conscious life, it is termed a deferred instinct. Man,
+on the other hand, cannot build his house unless he first learns how
+to build. He depends, not on instinct, but on experience. The faculty
+by means of which experience is stored in the mind is <i>memory</i>. The
+faculty by means of which we use stored experience to guide present
+or future conduct is <i>intelligence</i>. When the contents of memory are
+very vast, and the processes of thought by which they are utilised
+comparatively difficult and complex, intelligence is termed <i>reason</i>.
+Intelligence and reason depend, therefore, on memory, on ability to
+learn, on capacity to profit by experience. Memory is not the whole of
+intelligence, but it is the basis of it. Without memory there could be
+feeling and emotion, but no thought, for the materials of thought would
+be lacking.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Instinct in Place of Memory<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Basis of Rational Action</div>
+
+<p>We always measure the intelligence of an animal by its power of
+profiting by experience. Thus, a cat is more intelligent than a rabbit
+because it can learn more; a dog, for the same reason, is still more
+intelligent. A purely instinctive animal, one that has no memory, can
+have no conception of its past, and therefore no idea of its future.
+It lives wholly in the immediate present; feeling, but not thinking.
+It acts entirely on inclination, not on reflection. It makes provision
+for the future, not with any notion of providing, but simply because
+it has an impulse to a certain course of action, the performance of
+which gives it pleasure of the kind a child derives from playing or
+eating, and with the ultimate result of which it is no more consciously
+concerned than a child. If a caterpillar sheltered in a hole with the
+idea, founded on past experience,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[Pg 109]</span> of avoiding danger, his action would
+be intelligent. If, appealing to a memory in which a great number of
+complex experiences were stored, he took thought and designed himself
+a shelter in which provision was made for all sorts of <i>remembered</i>
+dangers, his action would be rational. But if, making no appeal to the
+past nor taking thought for the future, he builds only because impelled
+by an innate impulse, then, no matter how elaborate the edifice he
+rears, his action is instinctive.</p>
+
+<p>Animals low in the scale of life&mdash;for example, most insects&mdash;appear
+incapable of learning. But often they are wonderfully equipped by
+instinct. The details of the behaviour of a small beetle, as quoted
+from Professor Lloyd Morgan, may not have been quite correctly
+ascertained, but they are sufficiently accurate for our purpose.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>A certain beetle (Sitaris) lays its eggs at the entrance of the
+galleries excavated by a kind of bee (Anthophora), each gallery
+leading to a cell. The young larvæ are hatched as active little
+insects, with six legs, two long antennæ, and four eyes, very
+different from the larvæ of other beetles. They emerge from the egg
+in the autumn, and remain in a sluggish condition till the spring.
+At that time (in April) the drones of the bee emerge from the
+pupæ, and as they pass out through the gallery the Sitaris larvæ
+fasten upon them. There they remain till the nuptial flight of
+the Anthophora, when the larva passes from the male to the female
+bee. Then again they wait their chance. The moment the bee lays an
+egg, the Sitaris larva springs upon it. Even while the poor mother
+is carefully fastening up her cell, her mortal enemy is beginning
+to devour her offspring, for the egg of the Anthophora serves not
+only as a raft, but as a repast. The honey, which is enough for
+either, would be too little for both, and the Sitaris, therefore,
+at its first meal, relieves itself from its only rival. After
+eight days the egg is consumed, and on the empty shell the Sitaris
+undergoes its first transformation, and makes its appearance in a
+very different form.... It changes into a white, fleshy grub, so
+organised as to float on the surface of the honey, with the mouth
+beneath and the spiracles above the surface.... In this state
+it remains until the honey is consumed, and, after some further
+metamorphoses, develops into a perfect beetle in August.</p></div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Wonderful Instinct of the Beetle</div>
+
+<p>The beetle has sense organs; therefore she feels. But we have no reason
+to suppose that she remembers or thinks. Memory would be of little use
+to her; therefore parsimonious Nature bestows little or none. Cast
+adrift in a hostile world, she must come into existence ready armed by
+instinct for the battle of life. She has no time to learn, and during
+the rapid and strange changes in her career has little opportunity of
+acquiring knowledge that could beneficially guide her future conduct.
+Since memory and its corollary reflection are most developed in the
+highest animals, and are imperceptible in the lower, they are clearly
+later and higher products of evolution than instinct.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man’s Helplessness at Birth</div>
+
+<p>Family life is a product of memory, for the mate and offspring are
+<i>re</i>-cognised; therefore it always implies some degree of intelligence.
+The young are watched and protected, and taught by the higher animals.
+Opportunities are thus afforded of learning about the world, and more
+particularly of acquiring the traditions, the stored experiences,
+of the race. With the opportunity to profit by experience comes the
+ability to profit by it, and with the latter a gradual decay of
+instinct. Intelligence is substituted, more or less, for unthinking
+impulse. All the instincts are not lost, but in the higher animals we
+find no such elaborate innate impulses as in the lower. “Sitaris” is
+able to fend for herself from the first; but just in proportion as
+animals are highly placed in the scale of life, so they are helpless
+at the beginnings of consciousness, but correspondingly capable later.
+A young pig can run as soon as it is born, but the acquirements of the
+most learned pig are small compared to that of a dog, which, though
+more helpless than the pig at birth, is so teachable that he becomes
+the companion of man. Our domestic animals are all teachable, otherwise
+we could not tame them.</p>
+
+<p>Of living beings man is by far the most helpless at birth. He cannot
+even seek the breast. In him instinct is at its minimum. For him more
+than any other animal prolonged and elaborate tuition is necessary;
+but so vast is his memory, and so great his power of utilising its
+stored experience, that in later life he is beyond comparison the most
+capable of the inhabitants of the earth. Compare what even a dull
+man knows, including the words of a language and its inflections and
+articulations, with what is acquired by the cleverest dog, and the
+immensity of the difference is at once apparent. We may take a solitary
+frog and rear him from the egg in an aquarium. If, subsequently, we
+remove him to a pond, he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[Pg 110]</span> will take his place with his fellows at
+once. He has little, if anything, to learn. Instinctively he knows his
+food, and how to seek it; his enemies and rivals, and how to escape or
+fight them; his mate, and how to deal with her; and she knows how to
+dispose of her eggs. But how forlorn and helpless would be a man reared
+from infancy in a dark cell out of sight and sound of his kind, and
+then turned into a world where his <i>experienced</i> fellows struggle for
+existence!</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Fear is the Result of Experience</div>
+
+<p>Traditional knowledge&mdash;knowledge, that is, imparted by one generation
+to the next&mdash;is common enough amongst the higher of the lower animals,
+and forms no inconsiderable part of their mental equipment. Thus we
+may see the hen teaching her chickens how to seek food, and the cat
+instructing her kitten how to ambush mice. Birds and mammals inhabiting
+desert islands have none of that fear of man which in our country they
+acquire from dire experience. We have a saying, “as wild as a hawk”;
+but Darwin relates how he almost pushed a hawk from its perch with
+his gun in the Galapagos Islands. Round our coasts the sea-birds are
+exceedingly shy; in a harbor they feed from the hand. Formerly the
+Arctic seals, impelled by fear of bears, inhabited the outer margin
+of the floes; at the present day they have retreated from the more
+dangerous neighbourhood of man to the landward edge. Antarctic seals,
+harried by the great carnivora of the ocean, are watchful in the water;
+on land or on the surface of the ice, where till lately they met no
+danger, they may be slaughtered like sheep in a shambles. They are
+capable of profiting by experience; but they are slow to learn, and
+can acquire but little. Judged by our human standard, they are very
+stupid. The means of escape adopted by Arctic seals, and the means of
+capturing them, the ships and guns adopted by man, furnish a measure of
+the intellectual difference.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Slavery in the World of Insects</div>
+
+<p>When animals are social, and so have the opportunity of learning, not
+only from their parents, but from other members of the species, the
+power of making useful mental acquirements is correspondingly great. It
+reaches a remarkable degree of development even amongst insects, some
+species of which live together in great communities. Young ants, for
+example, are tended with anxious care. It is said that they are led
+about the nest and instructed by older individuals. They are reported
+to be playful. Most significant of all is the fact that some species
+have the habit of capturing slaves belonging to other species, which
+they take as pupæ, never as adult ants, and to whom, as they develop,
+they teach their duties. The slaves are neuter individuals, and have no
+offspring, the supply being maintained by fresh captures. It follows
+that the slaves must <i>learn</i> their work, and therefore that their
+performance of it is not instinctive, but intelligent.</p>
+
+<p>It is a fair inference that many of the so-called instincts of ants
+are really acquired habits, bits of knowledge and ways of thinking
+and acting which are handed down from one generation to the next, not
+by actual inheritance, but traditionally and educationally, just as
+children receive from us language, or religion, or a trade. Indeed,
+there is reason to believe that the power of making mental acquirements
+has evolved to a greater degree in the favourable environment of the
+ant-nest than among any other species except man.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man’s Essential Instincts</div>
+
+<p>The instincts of man, though comparatively few and simple, are yet
+essential to his existence. He has the instinct of hunger and the
+instinctive recognition of food as food, the instincts to sleep
+periodically, to rest when tired, and to sport when rested, the
+instincts of curiosity and imitativeness, and the deferred instincts
+of sexual and parental love, and perhaps one or two others. All these
+innate impulses he shares with the lower animals, but those which impel
+him to store and use his vaster memory are more developed in him than
+in any other type. Thus the instinct of sport urges him, not only to
+develop his limbs, but, through experience, to acquire dexterity and
+much besides. The little girl turns naturally to her doll, which she
+handles as she will her baby. The play of a boy as naturally involves
+contests, which foreshadow the grimmer battles of adult life. As he
+grows older the character of his sport changes. More and more it
+becomes an appeal to the wits, an appeal to wider experience and a
+means of adding to it.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A Child’s Play Fits it for the Future</div>
+
+<p>The higher amongst the lower animals also have their sports, which, in
+every instance, are adapted to fit the members<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[Pg 111]</span> of the species for the
+future business of life. Compare, for example, the ambush and pounce
+of the kitten, the ardent chase and overthrow of the puppy, and the
+climbing proclivities of the kid. As a general rule, in proportion as
+an animal is capable of becoming intelligent, and as long as it is
+so capable, it is inclined to sport. A cat loses the desire early in
+life, a man retains it to the end. A child’s play, therefore, is no
+indication of mere frivolity. It is the outward and visible sign of an
+eager and splendidly directed mental activity. Curiosity also prompts
+the child to store its memory. Imitativeness impels him to acquire
+those mental traits which enabled his progenitors to survive in their
+world. Parental love prompts to the care and instruction of offspring.
+Very illuminating and beautiful is the instinctive delight of some dull
+and careworn mother in babyish play with her infant, and her joy when
+it first “takes notice,” and in its earliest beginnings of speech and
+locomotion.</p>
+
+<p>Every animal species is fitted by its structures and their associated
+faculties to its particular place in Nature. In some cases it holds
+its own largely through the evolution of some one structure or group
+of structures. Thus, the bat is especially distinguished by the
+great development of its fingers and of the web between them, and
+the elephant by its trunk. The principal distinguishing physical
+peculiarity of man is the enormous relative size in him of that upper
+part of the vertebrate brain which is termed the cerebrum, and, we have
+every reason to believe, constitutes the organ of memory and thought.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Evolution of Man’s Powers</div>
+
+<p>Associated in a special way with his great brain are his organs of
+speech and manipulation. These three structures, the brain, the vocal
+apparatus, and the hand, undoubtedly underwent concurrent evolution
+by the constant survival, during a period of intense competition, of
+those individuals who were naturally the best capable of receiving
+and storing experience, of using it for the intelligent manipulation
+of objects, and of communicating it to their fellows and descendants
+through the medium of speech. Even the highest of the lower animals are
+able to learn from one another only by example or through such very
+elementary verbal signs as calls, growls, or cries of alarm, which
+express no more than simple emotions.</p>
+
+<p>Their traditional knowledge, therefore, is as nothing compared with
+that of man, who by means of articulated speech communicates not only
+information concerning sense impressions and emotions, but complex
+items of knowledge and processes of thought which have been garnered,
+elaborated, and systematised during tens of thousands of years by
+millions of predecessors. Without speech, or some such method of
+communicating abstruse information, his great brain would be useless.
+But knowledge and powers of thought are of no avail unless they can be
+translated into action; and for this the hands are necessary. To set
+free the fore limbs, which had hitherto been organs of locomotion, for
+their new function of manipulation, man became a biped, and assumed
+the erect posture&mdash;by no conscious effort, however, but solely by the
+survival of the fittest in each generation.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man Paves His Way to Greatness</div>
+
+<p>Savage man, then, differs from the lower animals in that he has a
+larger brain, a more capacious memory, and greater powers of utilising
+and communicating its contents. Modern man differs from ancient man
+because he is the heir of longer experience. Civilised man differs from
+the savage chiefly in that he has invented and more or less perfected
+certain artificial aids to speech, written symbols by means of which
+he is able to store in an available form knowledge immensely more
+abstruse and voluminous than would otherwise be possible. His books are
+artificial memories and vehicles of communication of unlimited capacity
+and unerring accuracy. Moreover, by means of these symbols he is able,
+as in the mathematics, to perform feats of thinking quite beyond the
+powers of his unaided mind; just as by means of machinery and other
+mechanical contrivances he is able to perform physical feats beyond the
+unaided powers of his body.</p>
+
+<p>To memory, then, is due the advance of the savage beyond the lower
+animal; to tradition, the child of memory, the advance of modern
+man beyond ancient man; to tradition stored in books the advance of
+civilised men beyond the savage. To written symbols are due also man’s
+vast powers for future advance. The brute, the mammoth, the mastodon,
+the whale, the elephant, and the tiger, became ever<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[Pg 112]</span> more and more
+helpless in the presence of a knowledge and an ingenuity that gathered
+with the rolling years, and, though accumulated for ages, were yet
+relatively new things in this enormously old world.</p>
+
+<p>Low animals, in proportion as they lack memory, move in a narrow,
+instinctive groove. Their mental traits are all inherited, and
+therefore each individual follows exactly in the footsteps of its
+predecessor. Since they cannot learn, they cannot adapt themselves to
+circumstances. Removed from the ancestral environment they perish. Cast
+in a rigid, inexpansive mould, every individual resembles every other
+of the same species, as much mentally as physically.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man can Revert to Savagery</div>
+
+<p>It is different with man. He is preeminently the educable, the
+reflective, the adaptive animal. Since the experiences of no two men
+are quite similar, they differ in knowledge, ideas, and aspirations,
+and, therefore, none are very closely alike mentally. The child does
+not follow exactly in the footsteps of the parent. So great is human
+adaptability that, though the mind of the savage differs immensely in
+all except instinct and power of learning from that of the civilised
+man, yet, were the child of the latter trained from birth by the
+former, he could not be other than a savage.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, utter savages&mdash;for example, the Maories of New
+Zealand&mdash;have passed in a single generation from barbarism to
+civilisation. The average individual amongst us may be trained to fill
+the rôle of a beggar or a king, a scientist or a monk, a thief or a
+legislator. He is able to dwell in the Tropics or in the Arctic, in the
+town or in the wild. Memory, knowledge, intelligence, adaptability, are
+all links in a single chain of efficiency.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Dawn of Human Life</div>
+
+<p>Memory is of two sorts, conscious and unconscious. The conscious memory
+contains experiences which can be recollected, such as the words of a
+language or the sights we have seen. The unconscious memory contains
+impressions which cannot be recalled to mind, but which are none the
+less important. Thus, we learn to use our limbs, a process which
+involves a precise but quite unconscious adjustment of the actions of
+numerous nerves and muscles, the very names and existences of which
+are known only to the anatomist. So, also, in youth we unconsciously
+imitate our fellows, adopting in great measure their mental tones and
+attitudes without knowing how or when we were influenced. Much, too,
+that was once capable of being recalled is added to that hidden store,
+and, though apparently lost, remains potent for good or evil. Our
+minds are like floating icebergs, of which the visible part is but a
+fraction of the whole, and are moved by deep currents in a seemingly
+unaccountable way. At birth the mind of a child, unlike that of a
+beetle, is practically blank. Sights and sounds and the other feelings
+convey no meanings to it. But soon the messages sent by the sensation
+are understood. In a few weeks the child evolves order out of chaos,
+and comprehends to a wonderful degree the world around it. It learns to
+move its muscles in a purposeful way, and in a year or two is able to
+walk and speak a language, and do a vast deal more besides. In these
+early years, the period of man’s greatest mental activity, are made
+his most valuable and indispensable acquirements. But as he becomes
+more and more completely equipped for the battle of life, his powers
+of adding to the store slowly decline. In adult life the gains are
+balanced by the losses. In old age the losses exceed the gains. Compare
+the perfection with which the young acquire the manners of society,
+and every accent, inflection, and intonation of a language, with the
+imperfections displayed when learning is undertaken later.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Habits are Imitation Instincts</div>
+
+<p>We learn to do new things, acquire new knowledge, and think new
+thoughts with toil. But practice brings facility. In the end we perform
+with ease that which was acquired with difficulty. We cannot, however,
+unlearn as we learnt, by an act of will. The facility lingers, and,
+as a consequence, our actions and thoughts, our mental attitudes, our
+whole outlook on life becomes more or less automatic and stereotyped.
+In other words, our acquirements come at last to resemble instincts,
+and are often so misnamed, as when a boy who has learned to dodge is
+said to avoid a blow instinctively. A being from another planet who
+for the first time saw a man walking or cycling could not distinguish
+the nature of these acquirements from such instinctive movements as
+the running or flying of an insect. The patriotism of a Spartan or a
+Japanese differs from that of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[Pg 113]</span> a bee only in its mode of origin. In
+brief, the low animal is a creature of instincts, the man is a creature
+of habits, which are nothing other than imitation instincts.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Mankind’s Substitutes for Instinct</div>
+
+<p>A principal function, then, of our faculty of making mental
+acquirements, of our conscious and unconscious memories, is to supply
+us with those automatic ways of thinking and acting which are our
+substitutes for instincts. Our conscious memories supply us with our
+stereotyped mental attitudes&mdash;desires, beliefs, aspirations, habitual
+way of thinking, and so forth. Our unconscious memories supply our
+stereotyped ways of acting&mdash;the automatic ways of acting we have just
+considered. It is a principal business of our lives to acquire them;
+but, though a great advantage is thus gained, one almost as great is
+lost. We act and think more quickly in familiar situations, but in
+proportion as we grow older we lose our splendid human capacity for
+learning. Beyond the verge of our imitation instincts spreads a domain,
+very wide in the infant, but narrowing as we pass towards old age,
+which is the real realm of the active intellect. Here, where thoughts
+and actions are not yet stereotyped, memory gathers fresh harvests,
+imagination plays, and reason ponders. Here man is a rational being in
+the strict sense of the word.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Mind and Memory</div>
+
+<p>A little thought renders it evident that a feeble-minded person, an
+idiot, or an imbecile, is always one with a defective memory. He is
+unable to profit like the normal individual from experience. The truth
+that the higher faculties are more often absent in the feeble-minded
+than the lower is due entirely to the fact that they can be acquired
+only by people whose receptive powers are well developed. In effect
+and in fact the feeble-minded person is an instance of reversion to a
+prehuman mental state. Judged by the human standard, every monkey is
+an idiot. But the reversion is not complete, for, though the imbecile
+loses some part of his power of profiting by experience, he regains no
+part of the lost power of being guided by instinct. Therefore he is
+correspondingly helpless as compared with a lower animal.</p>
+
+<p>Owing to the constitution of the human mind, some decay of the faculty
+of profiting by experience accompanies advancing age. But it need
+seldom be so great as it usually is, and never so great as it often
+is. Certain mental attitudes, certain systems of education, certain
+environments, leave the mind of the man almost as open as that of a
+little child; others inflict on it premature senility. An Aristotle or
+a Darwin learns to the last year of his long life; a Mohammedan or a
+Tibetan ecclesiastic is old before he has ceased to be young. Convinced
+that pestilence is due directly to the wrath of God, he scorns the
+notion that sanitation can be right or useful; believing that the earth
+is flat, no evidence will convince him that it is round; holding his
+sacred religion with a steadfast faith, he will murder the heretic
+rather than think out his propositions.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">How the Minds of Men Differ</div>
+
+<p>But habits of stupidity are not confined to particular regions of
+thought. Becoming almost as incapable of mental change as a beetle,
+a man may undergo an arrest of mental development which differs from
+that of the idiot only because it occurs later in life, is less
+complete, and is acquired, not innate. In his ordinary surroundings he
+appears a normal person; but placed among people of more open mind,
+his brute-like inability to learn suggests sharply the resemblance
+to the feeble-minded child. Let us sum up. Man has conquered the
+earth because he is pre-eminently the educable, the adaptive animal.
+His educability&mdash;indeed, his whole thinking capacity&mdash;depends
+on his memory. He has few instincts, a fact which increases his
+mental ductility; but one of the most important of his instincts is
+imitativeness, which impels him to copy not only such obvious things as
+the speech of his predecessors, but their mental attitudes as well. In
+this way not only the actual knowledge and beliefs but also the habits
+of thought of one generation are handed on to the next. Apart from a
+few instincts which are more active in the child than in the adult, and
+two or three others whose appearance is deferred till later life, the
+whole mental difference between the child and the adult lies in the
+fact that the former has a great memory in the sense that it is very
+capable of storing experience, whereas the latter has a great memory
+in the sense that it has already stored much experience. As parent to
+child, so one racial generation hands on its acquirements to the next,
+but with greater certainty; for the parent is not the only influence
+in the life of the child,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[Pg 114]</span> who imitates many other people, sometimes
+more closely than the parent; whereas, since few individuals travel
+during youth, the young are seldom influenced by others than by members
+of their own race. Except in times of great change, therefore, racial
+generations resemble one another even more closely than parents and
+children.</p>
+
+<p>Like individuals, races differ in their mental characteristics. The
+English have one set of characters, the Japanese another, and the
+Russians a third. The problem of the extent to which these characters
+are inborn or acquired is very important to the student of history.
+Accordingly as we believe they are the one or the other we are driven
+to accept one or other of two very different readings of the past.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Influences in a Child’s Life</div>
+
+<p>Are races, then, brave or cowardly, energetic or slothful, enlightened
+or savage, and so forth, by nature or by training? Are the qualities
+that have enabled some races to flourish, while others are decadent,
+transmitted as instincts or handed on, as knowledge is? The reader
+has now materials of a kind not usually found in historical works on
+which to found a judgment. He must bear in mind that, while an American
+infant reared by cannibals would retain the bodily characteristics
+of his race mentally, he could not be other than a savage. He must
+remember also that some races have altered their mental characteristics
+very rapidly. Thus, in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries,
+immediately after the long Dark Ages, the British and several other
+European races suddenly became intellectually active and socially
+progressive. The Japanese supply a more modern, the Greeks and Romans
+more ancient, instances. The latter quite as suddenly sank into abysmal
+degradation. Innate mental characters, such as the instincts, usually
+change so slowly that not merely historical but geological time elapses
+before the alteration is perceptible. Again, the reader must note that,
+while the <i>opinion</i> that racial traits are inborn is nearly universal,
+most men <i>act</i> as if they knew them to be acquired; for nearly all men
+are careful in training their children, especially with respect to
+those traits that contribute to the formation of character.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Great Facts to Remember</div>
+
+<p>Doubtless, races of men differ innately in mind as they do in body, but
+these differences can occur only within narrow limits. The instincts
+of all races are, of course, very similar, for all the instincts
+are essential to the preservation of life. But races may differ in
+strength of instinct, and more especially in powers of memory. Thus
+it is possible, or probable, that the English, for example, are more
+capable of profiting by experience than Australian blacks. Certainly,
+their brains are larger. On the other hand, the brain grows under the
+stimulus of use, and therefore the larger size of the English brain may
+be due to more arduous labour.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Real Value of History</div>
+
+<p>Lastly, the reader must ask himself the question: What mental effects
+have centuries of freedom or slavery, or of civilisation, or of
+barbarism, on races? Do they produce innate changes, or do they merely
+render certain acquirements so nearly universal that their perpetuation
+by imitation is insured? If he supposes that the changes are innate,
+he must ask himself the additional question whether they arose through
+the transmission of parental acquirements to offspring, or through the
+actual and constant destruction in certain environments of certain
+definite types of individuals who were thus prevented from leaving
+offspring and so perpetuating their like. The former hypothesis is now
+generally repudiated by science. The latter may be true, but as yet
+has not been supported by evidence; or at any rate is supported only
+by such evidence as that which Mill and Buckle denounced. In either
+case, though history may furnish him with intellectual occupation,
+it will supply few lessons of practical value. If, on the other
+hand, he has perceived the greatness of the part played in the human
+mind by acquirement, if he has noted that man is man, a thinking and
+rational being, the conqueror of the earth, only because he is the
+most impressionable and therefore the most adaptable of living types,
+the reader will learn from the racial see-saw of the past what kinds
+of mental training have conduced to success and happiness and what to
+ruin, and so perhaps he may find himself in a position to help the
+fortunes of his people and his children. The real value of history,
+as in the last analysis of all experience, lies in its educational
+applications.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">G. A<span class="smaller">RCHDALL</span>
+R<span class="smaller">EID</span></p>
+
+<h3 class="s0" title="THE WORLD BEFORE HISTORY">&nbsp;</h3>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32" id="i_114">
+ <img class="w100 mtop3" src="images/i_114.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">PREHISTORIC MEN ATTACKING THE GREAT CAVE BEARS</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_114_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[Pg 115]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s2 center mtop3" id="THE_RISE_OF_MAN">THE RISE OF MAN</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_115">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_115.jpg" alt="The Rise of Man and the Eve of History" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s2 center">AND THE EVE OF HISTORY</p>
+
+<p class="s3 center">THE WORLD BEFORE HISTORY</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">By Professor Johannes Ranke</p>
+
+<h4 id="THE_WONDERFUL_STORY_OF_DRIFT_MAN">THE WONDERFUL STORY OF
+DRIFT MAN</h4>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Nature’s Great Book of History</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">T</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>HE
+history of the world is the history of the human mind. The oldest
+documents affording us knowledge of it lie buried in those most mighty
+and comprehensive historical archives, the geological strata of our
+planet. Natural philosophy has learned to read these stained, crumpled,
+and much-torn pages that record the habitation of the earth by living
+beings; but only a few sections of this book of the universe have yet
+been perused, and these appear but fragmentary in comparison with the
+whole task. The passages that relate to the human race are small in
+number and often even ambiguous, and it is only the last pages that can
+give an account of it.</p>
+
+<p>The oldest undisputed traces of the presence of man on the earth that
+have hitherto been discovered are met with in the strata of the Drift
+Epoch, and it is only during the last generation that the existence of
+“Drift Man” has been palæontologically proved beyond dispute. The late
+Sir J. Prestwick believed, however&mdash;and his results have been confirmed
+by later discoveries&mdash;in the existence of evidence of the presence of
+man in Western Europe before the present river system of our land was
+established, long before the age of the “Drift” relics. The evidence
+consists of rudely shaped pieces of flint, apparently artificially
+chipped along one or more edges. These supposed implements are termed
+“Eoliths.” They were first discovered by Mr. Benjamin Harrison in the
+high-level plateau, probably of the Upper Pliocene Age, in Kent, and
+their significance is now widely accepted.</p>
+
+<p>Up to the middle of last century research appeared to have established
+as a positive fact that man could not be traced back to the older
+geological strata; remains of man were said to be found only in the
+newest stratum of the earth’s formation&mdash;in the alluvial, or “recent”
+stratum. The bones of man were accordingly claimed to be sure guides
+to the geological formations of the present time, as the bones of the
+mammoth and cave-bear were to the strata of the Drift. Where traces of
+man were found it was considered as proved by natural science that the
+particular stratum in which they occurred was to be allotted to the
+most recent system, which we see forming and being transformed under
+our eyes at the present day.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_116">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_116.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A PAGE FROM NATURE’S HISTORY BOOK</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">It is in the successive layers of the earth’s strata with
+ their human and animal remains that we read the story of the past. Embedded in
+ the earth itself we have the existence of “Drift Man” established. Our
+ illustration is that of a section of the famous Kent’s Cavern, near Torquay,
+ which is rich in prehistoric remains.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Theory of Natural Catastrophes</div>
+
+<p>While it was declared that man belonged to the alluvial stratum, it
+was at the same time stated, according to the doctrine of Cuvier,
+which had the weight of a dogma, that man could not have belonged to
+an older geological stratum or era, and therefore not even to the next
+older one, the Drift. The beginning and the end of geological eras are
+marked by mighty transformations which have caused a local interruption
+in the formation of the strata of the earth’s surface. In many cases
+we can point to volcanic eruptions as the chief causes, but more
+especially to a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[Pg 116]</span> change in the distribution of land and water. Cuvier
+had conceived these changes involving the transformation to have been
+violent terrestrial revolutions, the collapse of all existing things,
+in which all living beings belonging to the past epoch must have been
+annihilated. It appeared impossible that a living thing could have
+survived this hypothetical battle of the elements, and passed from an
+older epoch into the next one; and the new epoch was supposed to have
+received plants and animals by re-creation. All this had to be applied
+to man also; he was supposed to have come into existence only in the
+alluvial period. Not without consideration for the Mosaic account of
+the Creation, which, like the creation legends of numerous peoples
+scattered far and wide over all the continents of the earth, tells of
+a great deluge at the beginning of the present age, the Pleistocene
+Epoch of the earth’s formation preceding the present period had been
+termed the Flood Epoch, or Diluvium. In its stratifications it was
+thought that the effects of great deluges could largely be recognised;
+but the human eye could not have beheld these, for, according to the
+catastrophe theory, it appeared out of the question that man could have
+been “witness of the Flood.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">What Actually Happened</div>
+
+<p>Here modern research in the primeval history or palæontology of mankind
+begins, starting from the complete transformation of the doctrine of
+the geological epochs brought about by Lyell and his school. Proofs
+of terrestrial revolutions, as local phenomena and epoch marks, are
+doubtless to be found, imposing enough to make the views of the older
+school appear intelligible; but, generally speaking, a complete
+interruption of the existing conditions did not take place between the
+periods. Everything tends to prove that even in the earlier eras the
+transformation of the earth’s surface went on in practically the same
+way as we see it going on before our eyes to-day in a degree that is
+slight only to appearance. The effects of volcanic action; the rising
+and sinking of continents and islands, and the alteration in the
+distribution of sea and land caused thereby; the inroads of the sea
+and its work in the destruction of coasts; the formation of deltas and
+the overflowing of rivers; the action of glaciers and torrents in the
+mountains, and so forth, are constantly working, more or less, at the
+transformation of the earth’s surface.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Nature’s Unbroken Chain</div>
+
+<p>As we see these newest alluvial deposits being formed, so in principle
+have the strata of the earlier eras also been formed, and their
+miles of thickness prove, not the violence of extreme and sudden
+catastrophes, but only the length of time that was necessary to remove
+such mighty masses here and pile them up there. It was not sudden
+general revolutions of great violence, but the slowly working forces,
+small only to appearance, well known from our present-day surroundings,
+which destroy in one place and build up again in another with the
+material obtained from the destruction&mdash;it was these which were the
+causes of the gradual transformation of the earth in all periods of its
+history comparable to the present. According to this new conception of
+geological processes, a general destruction of plants and animals at
+the end of eras, and a new creation at the beginning of the following
+ones, was no longer a postulate of science as it had been. The living
+creatures of the earliest eras could now be claimed as ancestors of
+those<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[Pg 118]</span> living to-day; the chain seems nowhere completely broken. The
+ancestors of the human race were also to be sought in the strata of the
+earlier geological periods.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_117a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_117a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">This indicates a vast stretch of the lost land of
+ England, looking towards the Scilly Isles from Land’s End. All between the
+ broken lines was once land as far as Scilly, thirty miles away and fifty
+ miles thence to Lizard Point.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcontainer">
+ <div class="figsub illowe14" id="i_117b">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_117b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">In old maps Bavent was formerly the most easterly point
+ of England; now that is Lowestoft.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe37_5" id="i_117c">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_117c.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">The coast of England is being slowly worn away by the sea.
+ In many places houses have been swallowed up. Here we see the disintegrating
+ process going on at Holderness, where the sea front presented this appearance
+ after a gale.</div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_117d">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_117d.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">SLOW INFLUENCES THAT DESTROY IN ONE PLACE AND BUILD UP
+ IN ANOTHER</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The coming of the sea over the land is so slow as to be
+ almost imperceptible, but these pictures illustrate its progress. The pictures
+ <a href="#i_117a">in the upper half of the page</a> show how the sea is encroaching on the coast; the
+ opposite result is shown in the bottom view from Reigate Hill, where we see an
+ ancient arm of the sea now a rich and populous valley.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Among the forces which we find attended by a transformation of the
+fauna and flora of the earth’s eras, the influences of climatic changes
+in particular are clearly and surely shown. In that primeval period in
+which the coal group was formed the climate in widely different parts
+of the earth was comparatively equable, little divided into zones, and
+of a moist warmth; this is proved by the really gigantic masses of
+plant growth implied by the formation of many coal strata, in which the
+remains of a luxuriant cryptogamic flora are everywhere embedded. In
+Greenland, in the strata belonging to the chalk period, and even in the
+deposits of the Tertiary Period, which immediately precedes the Drift
+Era, the remains of higher dicotyledonous plants of tropical character
+are found. The occurrence of palæozoic coral reefs in high latitudes
+also goes to prove that the temperature of the sea water there was
+higher at that time: in fact, that a tropical climate existed in the
+farthest north&mdash;an extreme contrast to the present ice-sheet on its
+land and the icebergs of its seas.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe31" id="i_118">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_118.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">EUROPE BEFORE THE BRITISH ISLES WERE FORMED</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This map and section illustrate the coast line of
+ Prehistoric Europe when the British Isles were part of the Continent and the
+ North Sea did not exist. The black parts of the section were all above the
+ level of the Atlantic.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe31" id="i_119">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_119.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE SUBMERGED LANDS OF EUROPE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This map and section show how the Continental shelf of
+ Europe runs out to the Atlantic, and how enormous is the area now submerged in
+ the comparatively shallow water of the North Sea, the Irish Sea, and the
+ Channel.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>In Central Europe the climatic conditions can have been only slightly
+different. During the middle Tertiary Period palms grew in Switzerland;
+and even at the end of the Tertiary Period, as it was slowly passing
+into the Drift Era, the climate in Central Europe was still warmer than
+now, being much like that of Northern Italy, and its protected west
+coast the Riviera. There was also a rich flora, partly evergreen,
+and a fauna adapted to such mild surroundings. Even in the oldest
+(Preglacial) strata, and again in the middle (Interglacial) strata of
+the Central European drift, there was still an abundant plant-growth
+requiring a temperate climate, at any rate not more severe than Central
+Europe possesses at the present day. Our chief forest trees grew even
+then&mdash;the pine, fir, larch, and yew, and also the oak, maple, birch,
+hazel, etc. On the other hand, Northern and Alpine forms are absent
+among the plants. The same holds good of the animal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[Pg 119]</span> world, which was
+certainly much farther removed than the plant world from the conditions
+prevailing now. The gigantic forms&mdash;the elephant, rhinoceros, and
+hippopotamus&mdash;appear particularly strange to us, as also the large
+beasts of prey&mdash;the hyena, lion, etc. But besides these, and the giant
+deer with its powerful antlers, and two large bovine species&mdash;the bison
+and the urus&mdash;there were also the majority of the present wild animals
+of Central and Northern Europe that were originally natives&mdash;as the
+horse, stag, roe, wild boar, and beaver, with the smaller rodents and
+insectivora, and the wolf, fox, lynx, and bears, of which last the
+cave-bear was far larger than the present brown bear, and even than the
+Polar and grizzly bears.</p>
+
+<p>We have sure proofs that through a decrease in the yearly temperature
+a glacial period set in over Europe, North Asia, and North America,
+burying vast areas under a sheet of ice, of the effect and extent of
+which Northern Greenland, with its ground-relief veiled in inland ice,
+can give us an idea.</p>
+
+<p>The immediate consequence of this total climatic change was an
+essential change in the fauna. Forms that were not suited to the
+deteriorated climate, that could neither stand it nor adapt themselves
+to it, were first compelled to retire, and then were exterminated.
+This fate befell the hippopotamuses, and also one of the two elephant
+species, <i>Elephas antiquus</i>, with its dwarf breeds in Sicily and Malta,
+probably thus developed by this retreat; then the rhinoceros-like
+<i>Elasmotherium</i>, a species of beaver; the <i>Trogontherium</i>, and the
+powerful cat <i>Machairodus</i> or <i>Trucifelis</i>, which still lived in
+England, France, and Liguria during the Drift Period. Other animals,
+like the lion and hyena, withdrew to more southerly regions, not
+affected by the increasing cold and more remote from its effects.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Older Drift Animals</div>
+
+<p>On the other hand, according to Von Zittel’s description, an
+immigration of cold-loving land animals took place, which at the
+present day live either in the Far North or on the wild Asiatic
+steppes, or in the high mountain ranges. These new immigrants mixed
+with the surviving forms<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[Pg 120]</span> of the older drift fauna. The latter lived,
+as we have seen, by no means in a warm climate, but only in a temperate
+“northerly” one, even in the warmer periods of the epoch. So we can
+understand that many of this older animal community were well able
+to adapt themselves to colder climatic conditions, and among them
+two of the large Drift pachydermata, the elephant and rhinoceros,
+whose kin we now find only in the warmest climes. But a thick
+woolly coat made these two Drift animals well fitted to defy a raw
+climate&mdash;namely, the woolly-haired mammoth, <i>Elephas primigenius</i>, one
+of the two Drift species of elephants of Europe, and the woolly-haired
+rhinoceros, <i>Rhinoceros antiquitatis</i>. A second species of rhinoceros,
+<i>Rhinoceros merckii</i>, was also preserved, and maintained its region of
+distribution. The horse was now more largely distributed, and inhabited
+the plains in herds; but, above all, the reindeer immigrated along
+with other animals that now belong only to Far Northern and Arctic
+regions, and pastured in large herds at the edges of the glaciers.
+With the reindeer, although less frequent, was the musk-ox of the Far
+North, besides many other cold-loving species, such as the lemming,
+snow-mouse, glutton, ermine, and Arctic fox. Many of the animal
+forms that were very frequent then, in the Drift Period, appear now
+in Central Europe only as Alpine dwellers, living on the borders of
+eternal snow, such as the ibex, chamois, marmot, and Alpine hare.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Animal Invasion of Europe<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Change of the Ice Age Climate</div>
+
+<p>Of special importance for our main question is the great invasion of
+Europe by Central Asiatic animals; immigrants direct from the Asiatic
+steppes pushed westward “as in a migration of nations,” among them the
+wild ass, saiga antelope, bobac, Asiatic porcupine, zizel, jumping
+mouse, whistling hare, and musk shrew-mouse. According as the glaciers
+and inland ice grew or shrank, the animals of the glacial period
+advanced more or less far to the North or retired more to the South,
+extending or reducing their range of distribution. The Glacial Period
+was no invariable climatic phenomenon. It is perfectly certain that a
+first Glacial Period with a low yearly temperature, under the influence
+of which the ice-masses, with their moraines, advanced a long way
+from the North and from the high mountains, so that in Germany, for
+instance, only a comparatively narrow strip remained free and habitable
+for higher forms of life between the two opposing rivers of ice&mdash;was
+succeeded by at least one period of warmer climate, and that certainly
+not a short one. The mean yearly temperature had increased so much
+that the ice-masses melted to a considerable extent, and had to retire
+far to the North and into the high valleys of the Alps. In this warmer
+Interglacial Period, as it is called, the Drift animals advanced far
+to the North, especially the mammoth, which, with the exception of
+the greater part of Scandinavia and Finland (districts which remained
+covered with ice during the Interglacial Period), is distributed
+throughout the drift strata of the whole of Europe and North Africa,
+and as far as Lake Baikal and the Caspian Sea in Northern Asia. Even
+the older Drift fauna, so far as it had not yet died out or retired,
+returned to its old habitats, so that the Interglacial fauna of Central
+Europe appear very similar to the Preglacial fauna. A long-sustained
+decrease of temperature led once more to the growth of the ice, which
+in this second Glacial Period almost reconquered the territory it had
+won at first.</p>
+
+<p>In consequence of these oscillations in the climatic conditions of the
+Drift Era as a whole, we have to distinguish the Preglacial Era and
+the Interglacial Era, as warmer sub-periods of the Drift, from the
+real Glacial Periods. The latter appear as a first, or earlier, and a
+second, or later Glacial Period, as remains of which the zone of the
+older moraines and the zone of the later ones clearly mark the limits
+of the former glaciation.</p>
+
+<div class="figcontainer">
+ <div class="figsub illowe25" id="i_121d">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_121d.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">Alpine Hares</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe25" id="i_121b">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_121b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">The Chamois</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe25" id="i_121a">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_121a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">The Ibex</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe25" id="i_121c">
+ <img class="mtop1" src="images/i_121c.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Dando</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The Marmot</div>
+ </div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe50">
+<div class="caption mtop1">TYPES OF ANIMALS SURVIVING IN CENTRAL
+ EUROPE FROM THE DRIFT PERIOD</div>
+<div class="caption_2 mbot1">Many of the animal forms that were
+ very frequent in the Drift Period appear now in Central Europe only as Alpine
+ dwellers, living on the borders of eternal snow. Such are the ibex, chamois,
+ marmot, and Alpine hare.</div>
+ </div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Breaking up of the Earth</div>
+
+<p>It was this second deterioration of the climate, with the fresh
+advances made by the glaciers and masses of inland ice, which
+definitely did away with the older Drift fauna that was not equal to
+the sudden climatic change. Nor did the woolly-haired rhinoceros, the
+<i>Rhinoceros merckii</i>, and the cave-bear survive the climax of the new
+Glacial Period. Even the woolly-haired mammoth succumbed. It and the
+woolly-haired rhinoceros, accompanied by the musk-ox and bison, had
+made their way into the Far North of Asia. But while the two last
+species bore the inclemencies of the climate, the rhino<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[Pg 121]</span>ceroses and
+elephants met their end here. And yet they had long preserved their
+lives on the borders of eternal ice. Whole carcases, both of the
+woolly-haired and Merckian rhinoceroses, and also of the woolly-haired
+mammoth, the bison, and the musk-ox, with skin and hair and
+well-preserved soft parts, have been discovered in the ice and frozen
+ground between the Yenisei and Lena, and on the New Siberian Islands
+at the mouth of the Lena. The carcases of the mammoth and rhinoceros
+found imbedded in the ice were covered with a coat of thick woolly hair
+and reddish-brown bristles ten inches long; about thirty pounds of hair
+from such a mammoth were placed in the St. Petersburg Natural History
+Museum. A mane hung from the animal’s neck almost to its knees, and on
+its head was soft hair a yard long. The animals were therefore in this
+respect well equipped for enduring a cold climate. As regards their
+food they were also adapted to a cold climate, traces<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[Pg 122]</span> of coniferæ and
+willows&mdash;that is, “Northern plants”&mdash;having been found in the hollows
+of the molar teeth of mammoths and rhinoceroses. The mammoth proves to
+have had greater resisting power, and to have been more fit for further
+migrations, than the rhinoceros. The latter’s range of distribution
+extended over the whole of Northern and Temperate Europe, China and
+Central Asia, and Northern Asia and Siberia. But, as we have seen, the
+mammoth penetrated not only into North Africa, but, what is of the
+highest importance for the proper understanding of the settling of the
+New World, even into North America.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Companions of the Mammoth<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Mammoth’s Arrival in Europe</div>
+
+<p>The connection which in earlier geological periods had united
+Europe, Asia, Africa, and North America in the greatest homogeneous
+zoogeographical kingdom, the Arctogæa, was broken during the Tertiary
+and Drift Periods, so that several zoogeographical provinces were
+formed. The connection with North America was the first to be broken,
+so that even in the last two divisions of the Tertiary Period, the
+Miocene and Pliocene Epochs, the Old and the New Worlds stood in the
+relation of independent zoogeographical provinces to one another.
+Now, it is of the greatest importance to note that during the Drift
+Period North America again received some Northern immigrants from
+the Old World, according to Von Zittel “probably viâ Eastern Asia.”
+Consequently, during the Drift Period communication existed, at least
+temporarily, between Asia and North America in the region of Bering
+Strait, sufficient to allow the mammoth and some companions to migrate
+from the one continent to the other. In Kotzebue Sound mammoth remains
+are found in the “ground-ice formation,” together with those of the
+horse, elk, reindeer, musk-ox and bison. Mammoth remains are also known
+to have been found in the Bering Islands, St. George in the Pribylov
+group, and Unalaska, one of the Aleutian Islands. In that period the
+mammoth arrived in the New World as a colonist driven from the Old.
+It spread widely over British North America, Alaska, and Canada; it
+has also been found in Kentucky. A relatively recent union of the
+circumpolar regions of the Northern Hemisphere&mdash;of Europe, Asia, and
+North America&mdash;is also proved by the occurrence of animals that we
+recognise as companions of the mammoth, but which, surviving the
+Glacial Period, are still distributed over the whole region, such as
+the reindeer, elk, and bison. The absence in Asia of several animals
+specially characteristic of the European Drift (the hippopotamus, ibex,
+chamois, fallow-dear, wildcat, and cave-bear) explains also their
+absence in the North American Drift fauna. It is particularly strange
+that the cave-bear did not reach Northern Asia. It is otherwise the
+most frequent beast of prey of the Drift Period, and hundreds of its
+carcases often lie buried in the caves and clefts it once inhabited.
+In Southern Russia numerous remains of it are found, whereas in the
+English caves it is rarer, the cave-hyena predominating here. Apart
+from the exceptions just mentioned, J. F. Brandt considers North
+Asia and the high Northern latitudes to be the region in which the
+European, North Asiatic, and North American land fauna had concentrated
+during the Tertiary and Drift Periods, and whence their migrations and
+advances took place according as it grew older. As the northern fauna
+spread over more southern latitudes during the Drift Period, they
+took possession of the habitats of the species there belonging to the
+Tertiary Period, drove them back into tropical and subtropical regions,
+and formed the real stock of the Drift fauna, as described by Von
+Zittel in his “Palæozoology.”</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_123a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_123a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">AN ACTUAL PHOTOGRAPH OF THE PREHISTORIC MAMMOTH</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This stuffed carcase of a mammoth is the rarest treasure
+ of St. Petersburg Academy. Skeletons of these creatures exist in plenty, but
+ actual carcases are very rare. This was found embedded in the ice on the New
+ Siberian Islands. One carcase so embedded was discovered five years before it
+ could be freed from the ice.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>One thing is certain&mdash;namely, that the northern borders of Siberia
+were not the real home of the mammoth and its companions; the
+original habitat of these animals points to the far interior of Asia,
+particularly to the wild table-lands, where they so far steeled
+themselves in enduring the climate that in the course of the Glacial
+Period half the world became accessible to them. As far as is known
+to-day, the mammoth arrived in Europe earlier than on the northern
+borders of Asia, where, protected by climatic conditions, its remains
+are most numerous and best preserved. The number of these gigantic
+animals must have been very considerable in this Far Northern region
+for a time, judging from the abundance of bones found there. In Central
+Europe only a few places are known&mdash;such as Kannstatt, Predmost in
+Moravia, etc.&mdash;where the mammoth is found with similar frequency. The
+mammoth attained its widest dis<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[Pg 123]</span>tribution in the Interglacial Period.
+In that period it crossed the Alps, and arrived on the other side, in
+North Asia, at the border of the “stone-ice” masses of inland ice that
+were still preserved from the first Glacial Period. The vegetation
+there was richer then than it is to-day; now only the vegetation of
+the tundra can exist. Animals found coniferæ, willows, and alders in
+sufficient quantity to enable them to keep in herds. All the same, we
+have not to imagine the climate on the borders of the ice to have been
+“genial,” for from that period originate the mammoth carcases that are
+found frozen entire in crevasses of the ice-fields. When the new period
+of cold&mdash;the second Glacial Period&mdash;began, these Far Northern regions
+must have become unsuitable for the mammoth owing to the want of food.
+Von Toll, who has examined the fossil ice-beds and, their relation to
+the mammoth carcases particularly on New Siberian Islands, says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>The mammoths and their contemporaries lived where their remains
+are found; they died out gradually in consequence of physical
+geographical changes in the region they inhabited, and through no
+catastrophe; their carcases were deposited during low temperatures,
+partly on the river-terraces, and partly on the banks of lakes or
+on glaciers (inland ice), and covered with mud; like the ice-masses
+that formed the foundation of their graves, their mummies were
+preserved to the present day, thanks to the persistent or
+increasing cold.</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_123b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_123b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">SKELETON OF A MAMMOTH</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">in the Natural History Museum, South Kensington.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The woolly-haired mammoth did not survive the second Glacial Period<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[Pg 124]</span>
+anywhere; in the post-Glacial Period its traces have disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>The Drift series of strata are nowhere so clearly exemplified as in
+the New Siberian Islands, where the Drift stone-ice still forms very
+extensive high “ice-cliffs,” always covered with a layer of loam, sand,
+and peat, and having precipices often of great height&mdash;in one place
+seventy-two feet.</p>
+
+<p>Embedded in these cliffs of stone-ice have been found the mammoth
+carcases, which formerly sank into crevices in the ice. These crevices
+are partly filled up with snow, which has turned into “firn” and
+finally into ice, but partly also with loam or sand, which are merged
+above immediately into the strata overlying the stone-ice. In the year
+1860 Bojavski, the mammoth-hunter, found a mammoth, with all its soft
+parts preserved, sticking upright in a crevice in the ice filled with
+loam; in 1863 it was thrown down, together with the coast-wall that
+sheltered it, and washed away by the sea.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_124">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_124.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A SURVIVOR OF THE DRIFT PERIOD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Only one representative of the great Drift fauna, the
+ musk-ox, has been able to preserve its life to the present day on the larger
+ remnants of its former vast home, such as Greenland and Grinnell Land.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Tunguse Schumachow had been more fortunate as early as 1799.
+During his boating expeditions along the coast, on the look-out for
+mammoth-tusks, he observed one day, between blocks of ice, a shapeless
+block which was not at all like the masses of driftwood that are
+generally found there. In the following year the block had melted a
+little, but it was only at the end of the third summer that the whole
+side and one of the tusks of a mammoth appeared plainly out of the ice;
+the animal, however, still remained sunk in the ice-masses. At last,
+towards the end of the fifth year, the ice between the ground and the
+mammoth melted more quickly than the rest, the base began to slope, and
+the enormous mass, impelled by its own weight, glided down on to the
+sand of the coast. Here Adams found the carcase in 1806, or as much as
+the dogs and wild animals had left of it. The whole skeleton, with a
+portion of the flesh, skin, and hair, has since formed one of the chief
+ornaments of the collection in the Academy at St. Petersburg. According
+to Von Toll, who personally visited the site of Bojavski’s discovery,
+the following profile presented itself there: first the tundra stratum;
+then an alternation of thin strata of loam and ice; under these a
+peat-like layer of grass, leaves, and other vegetation, that had been
+washed together; then a fine layer of sand, with remains of <i>Salix</i>,
+etc., and finally stone-ice. At another place, in Gulf Anabar, in 73°
+north latitude, Von Toll also found the ground-moraine under a fossil
+ice-bed, which appears to prove his theory of a Drift region of inland
+ice, of which the stone-ice beds of New Siberia and Eschscholtz Bay are
+remains.</p>
+
+<p>Of these strata the frozen loam deposits over the stone-ice, containing
+the willow and the alder, are doubtless Interglacial. Some of the
+remains of the alder are in such wonderful preservation that there are
+still leaves and whole clusters of catkins on the branches.</p>
+
+<p>The land-mass to which the present New Siberian Islands belong was
+only dismembered at the end of the Interglacial Period, when colder
+sea-currents procured an entrance, and the accumulation of snow-masses
+diminished simultaneously with the sinking of the land, whereas the
+cold increased. The flora died off, says Von Toll, and the animal world
+was deprived of the possibility of roaming freely over vast areas. Only
+one representative of the great Drift fauna, the musk-ox, has been able
+to preserve its life to the present day on the larger<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[Pg 125]</span> remnants of its
+former vast home, such as Greenland and Grinnell Land.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Remains of the Ice Age</div>
+
+<p>As we have said, the geological and climatic conditions in all regions
+of the earth affected by the Glacial Period were closely similar to
+those just described. In other places the Drift stone-ice has long
+disappeared, but the ground-moraines of the former inland ice-masses,
+and the surface-moraines (terminal and lateral) of the former gigantic
+glaciers, constitute its unobliterated traces. On the moraines of the
+earlier Glacial Period we find the strata of the Interglacial Period
+deposited, and on the later moraines of the second (last) Glacial
+Period lie the remains of the post-Glacial Period, in the course of
+which a continual increase in the yearly temperature&mdash;probably only
+a few degrees of the thermometer&mdash;caused the glaciers to melt and
+retreat, and opened the way for the return of plants and animals to
+what had been deserts of snow and ice. The place formerly occupied by
+the Interglacial and Glacial fauna is then taken by the post-Glacial
+fauna, which proves considerably different.</p>
+
+<p>A number of the most characteristic species of the former sections
+of the Drift Period are already absent in the earliest post-Glacial
+deposits; the fauna approaches nearer and nearer in its composition to
+that of the present day. The inland ice-masses and gigantic glaciers
+began to melt away, and gradually retired to the present limits of the
+glaciation that forms the remains of the Glacial Period of the Drift.
+The animal forms of the beginning of the post-Glacial Period are still
+living, and the plants characterising this final stage of the Drift
+Period are still growing on the borders of the ice at the present day.
+In the post-Glacial Period a few Northern forms&mdash;such as the reindeer,
+lemming, ringed lemming, glutton, zizel, whistling hare, and jumping
+mouse&mdash;still retained for a time their habitats in Central Europe.
+Part of the Drift fauna&mdash;as the horse, wild ass, saiga antelope, and
+Asiatic porcupine&mdash;concentrated again in the Asiatic steppes, from
+which they had formerly won their territory of the Drift Period;
+the specific Glacial forms&mdash;the reindeer and his above-mentioned
+companions&mdash;followed the retreating ice-masses into the Far North, and
+even into Polar regions. Another part&mdash;the specially Alpine forms, such
+as the ibex, chamois, marmot, and Alpine hare&mdash;migrated with the Alpine
+glaciers into the high valleys of the Alps, where they could continue
+the life they had led in the lowlands during the Glacial Period. The
+mammoth, woolly-haired rhinoceros, and cave-bear are extinct.</p>
+
+<p>The present-day mammalian fauna of Europe and North Asia accordingly
+bears a comparatively young character; during the Drift, and
+especially in consequence of the Glacial Period, it underwent the most
+considerable transformations.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Coming of Man upon the Scene</div>
+
+<p>It is in the middle of this great drama of a gigantic animal world
+struggling and fighting for its existence with the superior powers of
+Nature, during the Interglacial period of the Drift, that man suddenly
+appears upon the scene in Europe like a <i>deus ex machina</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Whence he came we do not know.</p>
+
+<p>Did he make his entrance into Europe in company with the Drift fauna
+that immigrated from Central Asia, or have we to seek his original home
+in the New World?</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe38" id="i_125">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_125.jpg" alt="Tailpiece" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe34 break-before" id="i_126">
+ <img class="w100 mtop3" src="images/i_126.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE FIRST TENANTS OF THE WORLD: CREATURES THAT LIVED
+ BEFORE MAN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This page represents the most typical of the giant
+ creatures that inhabited the world before man. With possibly one exception,
+ they had disappeared before man came and, through long centuries, slowly won
+ dominion over the earth.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_126_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[Pg 127]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop3" id="THE_WORLD_BEFORE_HISTORY_II">THE WORLD BEFORE
+HISTORY&mdash;II</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe44" id="i_127">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_127.jpg" alt="The World Before History--II" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">Professor JOHANNES RANKE</p>
+
+<h4 id="THE_APPEARANCE_OF_MAN_ON_THE_EARTH">THE APPEARANCE OF MAN ON THE EARTH</h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Mystery of a Human Skull</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">T</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>HE
+remains of the Drift fauna are usually found mixed up and washed
+together in caves and rock-crevices. From the investigation of the
+caves in Thuringia, Franconia, and elsewhere practically proceeded
+the first knowledge of the Drift fauna of Central Europe. Here,
+right among the bones of primeval animals, were also found bones and
+skulls of man. The strata in which they were discovered appeared
+undisturbed; that they came into the old burial-places of the Drift
+fauna subsequently&mdash;perhaps by an intentional burial of relatively
+recent times&mdash;was thought to be out of the question. The discovery
+that became most famous was Esper’s, in one of the richest caves of
+“Franconian Switzerland,” the Gaillenreuth cave. There, in 1774, Esper
+found a man’s lower jaw and shoulder-blade at a perfectly untouched
+spot protected by a stone projection in the cave wall, in the same loam
+as bones of the cave-bear and other Drift animals. Later, a human skull
+with some rude potsherds of clay came to light in another place. Esper
+argued thus:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>As the human bones (lower jaw and shoulder-blade) lay among the
+skeletons of animals, of which the Gaillenreuth caves are full, and as
+they were found in what is in all probability the original stratum, I
+presume, and I think not without sufficient reason, that these human
+limbs are of equal age with the other animal fossils.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>The Cuvier catastrophe theory could not allow this inference; according
+to that theory it was a “scientific postulate” that man could not have
+appeared on the earth until the alluvial period, and therefore after
+the Drift fauna had become extinct. Therefore, in spite of appearances,
+the human bones must have been more recent; and it was indeed
+absolutely proved that the skull that Esper had found in the cave with
+the rude clay potsherds originated from a burial in the floor of the
+cave. As this was full of remains of Drift animals, the corpse, which
+had been covered with the earth that had been thrown up in digging the
+grave, was necessarily surrounded by these remains, and even appeared
+embedded in them.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Story of the Caves</div>
+
+<p>It was ascertained that in very early times, but yet long after the
+Drift Period, the dwellers near by had had a predilection for using
+the caves as burial-places, so that the fact of human bones coming
+together with bones of Drift animals in the floor of the same cave is
+easily explained. Moreover, it was found that from the earliest times
+down to the present day the caves had been used by hunters, herdsmen,
+and others as places of shelter in bad weather, as cooking-places,
+and sometimes even&mdash;especially in very early times&mdash;as regular
+dwelling-places for longer periods, so that refuse of all kinds, and
+often of all ages and forms of civilisation that the land has seen
+from the Drift Period down to modern times, must have got into the
+floors of the caves. If these were damp and soft, the remains of every
+century were trodden in and got to lie deeper and deeper, so that, for
+instance, the fragments of a cast-iron saucepan were actually found
+right among the bones of regular Drift animals in a cave in Upper
+Franconia.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Caves do not Prove Drift Man</div>
+
+<p>The discoveries of human remains in caves appeared discredited by
+this, and to be of no value as proofs of the co-existence of man with
+the Drift fauna. And indeed this position must practically be still
+taken at the present day: all cave-finds are to be judged with the
+greatest caution. They in themselves would never have been sufficient
+to establish the existence of Drift Man, although, according to the
+general change in scientific thought that led to the overthrow of
+Cuvier’s theory, Drift Man is now just as much a postulate of science
+as was formerly the case for the opposite assumption.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Finding the First Drift Man</div>
+
+<p>The first sure proofs were adduced in France by Boucher de Perthes,
+in the Drift beds of the Somme valley, near Abbeville, at the end of
+the third decade<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[Pg 128]</span> of the nineteenth century. Fully recognising the
+inadequacy of proof given by cave-finds, he had sought for the relics
+of man in the undisturbed Drift beds of gravel and coarse sand that
+contains the bones of Drift animals, which by their covering and depth
+precluded all suspicion of having been subsequently dug over. And he
+was successful. He had argued in exactly the same manner as Esper
+had formerly done, but with better right. In the stratified Drift
+formations every period is sharply defined by the layers of differently
+coloured and differently composed strata horizontally overlying one
+another. Here the proofs begin. They are irrefutable if it is shown
+that the relics of man have been there since the deposit. Being no less
+immovable than this stratum in which they lie, as they came with it,
+they were likewise preserved with it; and as they have contributed to
+its formation, they existed before it.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Overthrow of Cuvier’s Famous Theory</div>
+
+<p>That is the line of thought according to which Boucher de Perthes was
+able, in 1839, to lay before the leading experts in Paris&mdash;at their
+head Cuvier himself&mdash;his discoveries proving the former existence of
+Drift man. But his demonstrations were not then sufficient to break
+the old ban of prejudices that were apparently founded on such good
+scientific bases; his proofs of the presence of man in the Somme
+valley at the time of the Drift, contemporaneously with the extinct
+Drift animals, were ridiculed. It was twenty years before these
+long-neglected discoveries in the Somme valley concerning the early
+history of man were recognised by the scientific world. This was only
+made possible by Lyell, whose authority as a geologist had risen
+above Cuvier’s, placing the whole weight of it on Boucher’s side,
+after having personally travelled over the Somme valley three times
+in the year 1859, and having himself examined all the chief places
+where relics of Drift Man had been discovered. According to Lyell’s
+description, the Somme valley lies in a district of white chalk, which
+forms elevations of several hundred feet in height. If we ascend to
+this height we find ourselves on an extensive tableland, showing only
+moderate elevations and depressions, and covered uninterruptedly for
+miles with loam and brick earth about five feet thick and quite devoid
+of fossils. Here and there on the chalk may be noticed outlying
+patches of Tertiary sand and clay, the remains of a once extensive
+formation, the denudation of which has chiefly furnished the Drift
+gravel material in which the relics of man and the bones of extinct
+animals lie buried. The Drift alluvial deposit of the Somme valley
+exhibits nothing extraordinary in its stratification or outward
+appearance, nor in its composition or organic contents. The stratum
+in which the bones of the Drift fauna are found intermingled with the
+relics of man is partly a marine and partly a fluviatile deposit. The
+human relics in particular are mostly buried deep in the gravel; almost
+everywhere one has to pass down through a mass of overlying loam with
+land shells, or a fine sand with fresh-water molluscs, before coming to
+beds of gravel, in which the relics of Drift Man are found.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Animals of the Ice Age</div>
+
+<p>Everything shows that the relics of man are here in a secondary
+<i>situs</i>, deposited in the same way as the bones of extinct animals
+and the whole geological material in which everything is embedded.
+That is the reason why the finds cannot be more exactly dated. They
+doubtless belong to the general drift, but whether to the Postglacial
+Period, or the warmer Interglacial Period, cannot be decided. The fauna
+admits of no absolute limitation, owing to its being mixed from both
+periods. The mammalia most frequently found in the strata in question
+are the mammoth, Siberian rhinoceros, horse, reindeer, ure-ox, giant
+fallow-deer, cave-lion, and cave-hyena. In very similar Drift deposits
+of the Somme near Amiens traces of man were found beside the bones of
+the hippopotamus and the elephant.</p>
+
+<p>These animals were chiefly prevalent in France and Germany in the
+Preglacial and Interglacial Periods of the Drift. Part of the animal
+remains found near Abbeville, particularly those of the cave-lion
+and cave-hyena, also point to the warmer Interglacial Period; on the
+other hand, the mammoth, Siberian rhinoceros, and especially the
+reindeer, appear to indicate with all certainty the second Glacial and
+Postglacial Periods. The bones of the older Drift animals may have been
+washed out of other primary <i>situs</i>; the reindeer had certainly already
+taken possession of those parts of France when the relics of man were
+embedded.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[Pg 129]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_129">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_129.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE OVERTHROW OF A FAMOUS THEORY OF THE ORIGIN OF THE EARTH
+ AND MAN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">When Cuvier was supreme among geologists his theory that
+ the great geological ages ended with sudden catastrophes which annihilated all
+ life, and that all life was then created afresh, was universally accepted. One
+ result of this theory was the disbelief in the existence of man before the Glacial
+ Age. Boucher de Perthes sought to establish the former existence of Drift Man on
+ finding human relics in the Somme Valley; but not until Sir Charles Lyell threw
+ his influence on the side of De Perthes was the Preglacial existence of man
+ admitted, and the long-accepted theory of Cuvier overthrown.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>In spite of the most eager search for similar relic-beds affording sure
+evidence of Drift Man, only a very few have as yet been discovered
+that can be placed by the side of those in the Somme valley. Two are
+in Germany, and are the more valuable as a more exact date can be
+given to them within the Drift Period. One is near Taubach (Weimar),
+the other at the source of the Schussen. The one at Taubach belongs
+to the Interglacial Period, that at the source of the Schussen to
+the Postglacial Period. The former lies on the moraines of the first
+Glacial Period, which was followed by the Interglacial Period; the
+latter on the moraines of the second Glacial Period, which slowly
+passed into the Postglacial Period.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Climate of the Ice Age</div>
+
+<p>The Drift relic-bed in the calc-tufa near Taubach lies, as we have
+said, over the remains of the first Glacial Period, and according to
+Penck, one of the best authorities on the Drift, belongs to the warmer
+intermediate epoch between the two great periods of glaciation. The
+proofs given by the plant and animal remains agree entirely with the
+proofs given by the conditions of stratification. In the rich fauna
+found there, animals indicating a cold climate are entirely absent, and
+a comparison of the whole of the finds proves that at the time when
+man was present there no kind of arctic conditions can have prevailed.
+There is no reindeer, no lemming. The roe, stag, wolf, brown bear,
+beaver, wild boar, and aurochs were at that time inhabitants of these
+regions, and the only inference they allow is that of a temperate
+climate. The mollusc fauna, in which also all Glacial forms are absent,
+also leads to the same conclusion; all that occur are familiar to us
+from those of the present day in the same district. The fauna would
+really appear quite modern were it not that a very ancient stamp is
+imparted to it by several extinct types. With the modern animals
+enumerated are associated the cave-lion, cave-hyena, ure-elephant, and
+Merckian rhinoceros, characterising the whole deposit as a distinctly
+Drift one, which is still further proved stratigraphically by the
+covering of “loess.” The Taubach relic-bed is a typical illustration<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[Pg 130]</span>
+of the climatic and biological conditions of the warmer Interglacial
+Period; the regions of Central Europe, which had been covered with
+masses of ice in the first Glacial Period, had, after the ice melted,
+become once more accessible to the banished plants and animals of
+the Preglacial Period, until they were annihilated, or at least
+driven definitely from their old habitats by the second Glacial
+Period. The celebrated relic-bed at the source of the Schussen, near
+Schussenried, at a little distance from Ulm, brings us&mdash;in strong
+contrast to Taubach&mdash;into quite glacial surroundings. It was on the
+glacier-moraines of the last great glaciation, and belongs, therefore,
+to that period which must still be reckoned as part of the Drift&mdash;the
+Postglacial Period, which gradually passed into the warmer present
+period. Under the tufa and peat at the source of the Schussen we find
+the type of a purely northern climate, with exclusively northern flora
+and fauna; everything corresponds to climatic conditions such as
+prevail nowadays on the borders of eternal snow and ice, or begin at
+70° north latitude.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Flora and Fauna of the Ice Age</div>
+
+<p>Schimper, one of the best authorities on mosses at the present day,
+found among the plant-remains under the tufa at the source of the
+Schussen only mosses of northern or high Alpine forms. Among them was a
+moss brought from Lapland by Wahlenberg, which, according to Schimper,
+occurs in Norway near the chalets on the Dovrefjeld, on the borders of
+eternal snow, and also in Greenland, Labrador, and Canada, and on the
+highest summits of the Tyrolese Alps and the Sudetic Mountains. It has
+a special preference for the pools in which the water of the snow and
+glaciers flows off with its fine sand. There were also found mosses
+which have now emigrated to cold regions, to Greenland and the Alps.
+The most numerous animals were the reindeer, and yellow and Arctic
+foxes, as distinctly Arctic forms; and there were also the brown bear
+and wolf, a small ox, the hare, the large-headed wild horse&mdash;which
+always occurs in the Drift as the companion of the reindeer&mdash;and,
+lastly, the whistling swan, which now breeds in Spitzbergen or Lapland.
+There is an absence of all the present animal forms of Upper Swabia, as
+well as of the extinct Drift animals, either of which would indicate a
+warmer climate.</p>
+
+<p>More decided climatic or biological contrasts than those afforded by
+the relic-beds at Taubach and the source of the Schussen could not be
+imagined; here we have with certainty two perfectly different periods
+before us, but both belonging to the general Drift Era.</p>
+
+<p>Although almost all the other places where Drift Man has been found
+exhibit peculiarities, Taubach and the source of the Schussen seem the
+best representatives of the two chief types in Europe. Places giving
+better proof have not yet come to light anywhere in the Old World.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_131">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_131.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">REVEALING THE UNKNOWN LIFE OF THE PREHISTORIC PAST</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">A section of the earth, representing excavators in the act
+ of discovering the remains of mammals in a cave in the South of England. Our
+ illustration is reproduced from Buckland’s “Reliquiæ Diluvianæ,” London, 1822.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Evidence from South America</div>
+
+<p>At first sight the palæontological strata of South America, in which
+the presence of man has been proved by Ameghino, appear to give a very
+different picture. The animal forms occurring here contemporaneously
+with man deviate to such an extent from those familiar to us in
+the Drift of the Old World that it required the keen eye and the
+complete grasp of the whole palæontological material of the world that
+characterise Von Zittel to recognise and establish the connections
+here, while the discoverer himself thought that he must date his
+discoveries of man back to the Tertiary Period. The strata in which
+the earliest traces of man as yet appear to be proved in South America
+are the extensive “loess-like” loam deposits of the so-called “pampas”
+formation in Argentina and Uruguay, with their almost incomparable
+wealth of animal remains, particularly conspicuous among which are
+gigantic representatives of edentates that now occur only in small
+species in South America: Glyptodontia (with the gigantic <i>Glyptodon
+reticulatum</i>) and dasypoda; also of the gravigrada, the giant sloth
+(<i>Megatherium americanum</i>). The toxodontia were also large animals, now
+extinct. But besides the specifically South American forms, numerous
+“North American immigrants” also appear in the pampas formation. It was
+only at the close of the Tertiary Period that the southern and northern
+halves of America grew together into one continent, and the faunæ of
+North and South America, so characteristically different, then began to
+intermingle with one another. The South American autochthons migrate
+northward; on the other hand, North American types&mdash;as the horse, deer,
+tapir, mastodon, <i>Felis</i>, <i>Canis</i>, etc.&mdash;use the newly-opened passage
+to extend their range of distribution. The northern<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[Pg 131]</span> animal forms are
+very conspicuous among the animal world of South America, hitherto
+cut off from North America and characterised by the above-mentioned
+wonderful and, in part, gigantic edentates, marsupials, platyrhine
+apes, etc. Of the great elephantine animals of North America only
+the mastodon crossed over to South America. In the middle and latest
+Tertiary formations the genus mastodon is widely distributed over
+Europe, North Africa, and South Asia. In North America the oldest
+species of the mastodon appear in the Middle Tertiary (Upper Miocene),
+but the most species are found in the latest Tertiary (Pliocene) and
+the Drift (Pleistocene); in South America the mastodon is limited to
+the time of the pampas formation. Its tusks are long and straight, or
+slightly curved upward; its lower jaw also possesses two tusks, which
+project in a straight direction, but are considerably less than the
+upper tusks in size. From the results of Ameghino’s investigations man
+appears to have come to South America with these northern immigrants,
+especially with the mastodon. In Ameghino’s lists of the animals of
+the pampas formation Von Zittel describes man, like the animal forms
+enumerated above, as an immigrant from North America, and as a northern
+type.</p>
+
+<p>According to Von Zittel’s statements there is no longer any doubt that
+the pampas formation, and with it early man, of South America, is to be
+assigned to the Drift Era; he sums up the case in these words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>In South Asia and South America the Tertiary Period is followed
+by Drift faunæ, which in the main are composed of species still
+existing at the present day, but yet show somewhat closer relations
+to their Tertiary predecessors.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[Pg 132]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop3" id="THE_WORLD_BEFORE_HISTORY_III">THE WORLD BEFORE
+HISTORY&mdash;III</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe44" id="i_132">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_132.jpg" alt="The World Before History--III" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">Professor JOHANNES RANKE</p>
+
+<h4 id="THE_LIFE_OF_MAN_IN_THE_STONE_AGE">THE LIFE OF MAN IN THE STONE AGE</h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man a Witness of the Flood</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">T</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>HE
+oldest remains affording us knowledge of man are not parts of his
+body&mdash;not the skeleton from which, in the case of primeval animals, we
+have learned to reconstruct their frame&mdash;but evidences of the human
+mind. Until the discoveries of Boucher de Perthes turned the scale,
+search had been made in vain among the bones of the fossil fauna for
+remains of the skeleton of fossil man of undoubtedly the same age; it
+was not bones, but tools, by which the Abbeville antiquary proved that
+man had been a “witness of the Flood” in Europe; tools which taught
+irrefutably that the mental powers of fossil man of the Drift were
+similar in kind to, if possibly less in degree than, those of living
+members of mankind. The Drift tools prove that, even in that early
+epoch to which we have learned from Boucher to trace him back, man was
+distinctively man.</p>
+
+<p>Boucher de Perthes was an expert archæologist, and he knew that in
+Europe, in a very early period of civilisation, men had made their
+tools and weapons of stone, as many tribes and races in a backward
+state of civilisation&mdash;for example in South America, the South Sea
+Islands, and many other places&mdash;do at the present day. These stone
+implements are practically indestructible, and from ancient times
+manifold superstitions have attached to the curious articles that the
+peasant turns up out of the earth in ploughing. Such stone weapons were
+called lightning-stones by the Romans, as they are by country-folk at
+the present day. Scientific archæology occupied itself with them at an
+early date. In 1778 Buffon declared the so-called lightning-stones, or
+thunder-stones, to be the oldest art-productions of primeval man, and
+as early as 1734, Mahudel and Mercati had pronounced them to be the
+weapons of antediluvian man. Such views determined the line of thought
+in Boucher’s researches. From the very beginning he sought, in the
+undisturbed Drift beds of his home, not so much for the bones of Drift
+Man as for his tools, which he suspected to be of the form of the
+lightning-stones, although he knew that, so far as was hitherto known,
+these belonged to a very much later epoch&mdash;that is, specially to the
+Alluvial or “Recent” Period.</p>
+
+<p>His expectations were crowned with success. Deep below the mass of
+overlying loam and sand, right in the strata of gravel and coarse sand,
+he found stone tools, which without the slightest doubt had been worked
+by the hand of man for definite and easily recognisable purposes as
+implements and weapons. Although to a certain extent ruder, they are
+practically the same forms as the tools, weapons, and implements of
+stone that we see in use among so-called “savages” of the present day.
+It is the tool artificially prepared for a certain purpose that raises
+man above the animal world to-day, as it did in the time of the Drift.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Drift Man’s Three Kinds of Tools<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Chief Forms of Tools</div>
+
+<p>Upon his first visit to the relic-beds near Abbeville in the spring
+of 1859, Lyell had obtained seventy specimens of these stone tools
+from the chief of them. The tools were all of flint, which occurs in
+abundance in the chalk of the district, and is still obtained and
+worked for technical purposes at the present day. The worked stones
+that Boucher found were termed flint or silex tools, according to the
+material of which they were made. They occurred in the particular beds,
+as Lyell expressed it, in wonderful quantities. The famous geologist
+distinguished three chief forms. The first is the spear-head form, and
+varies in length from six to eight inches. The second is the oval form,
+not unlike many stone implements and weapons that are still used as
+axes and tomahawks at the present day&mdash;for instance, by the aborigines
+of Australia. The only difference is that the edge of the Australian
+stone axes, like that of the European implements of later periods of
+civilisation known as thunderbolts or lightning-stones, is mostly
+produced by grinding, whereas on the stone axes from the drift of the
+Somme valley it has always been obtained by simply chipping the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[Pg 133]</span> stone,
+and by repeated, skilfully directed blows. According to Tylor the stone
+implements of the old Tasmanians were entirely of Drift form and make,
+all without traces of grinding, being simply angular stones whose
+cutting-edge had been sharpened by being worked with a second stone.
+Some of these stone implements of Drift Man may have been simply used
+in the hand when the natural form of the stone offered a convenient
+end, but the majority were certainly fastened in a handle in some way
+or other, to serve as weapons&mdash;spear-heads or daggers&mdash;both for war and
+the chase. Lyell’s second chief form would have been used as an axe for
+such purposes as digging up roots, felling trees, and hollowing out
+canoes, or to cut holes in the ice for fishing and for getting drinking
+water in the winter. In the hand of the hunter and warrior the stone
+axe also became a weapon. As the third form of stone implements Lyell
+distinguished knife-shaped flakes, some pointed, others of oval form
+or trimmed evenly at one end, obviously intended partly as knives and
+arrow-heads, and partly as scrapers for technical purposes.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_133">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_133.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">HOW PREHISTORIC MANKIND IS REVEALED</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Most of our knowledge of the earliest life of man has been
+ revealed by the excavator. When at a certain depth below the earth’s surface the
+ skeleton of a man is found, surrounded with rude stone weapons, ornaments, and
+ the remains of domestic animals, a whole chapter in the life of Prehistoric Man
+ stands revealed at one glance. Our photograph shows an actual skeleton and grave
+ of the Stone Age, as discovered in the year 1875 near Mentone.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Although there are many variations between the first two chief forms,
+yet the typical difference indicating the different purpose of their
+use is always easily recognised in well-finished examples. A large
+number of very rude specimens have also been found, of which many
+may have been thrown away as spoiled in the making, and others may
+have been only rubbish produced in the working. Evans has practically
+proved that it is possible to produce such stone implements in their
+remarkable agreement of form without the use of metal hammers. He made
+a stone hammer by fastening a flint in a wooden handle, and worked
+another piece of flint with this until it had assumed the shape of the
+axe form&mdash;the second, oval form&mdash;of the Drift implements.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Lyell’s Find in the Somme Valley</div>
+
+<p>Lyell draws attention to the fact that, in spite of the relatively
+great frequency of stone implements, it would be a great mistake to
+rely on finding a single specimen, even if one occupied himself for
+weeks together in examining the Somme valley. Only a few lay on the
+surface, the rest not coming to light until after removing enormous
+masses of sand, loam, and gravel. As we may presume with Lyell that the
+larger number of the Drift stone implements of Abbeville and Amiens
+were brought into their position by the action of the river, this
+sufficiently explains why so many were found at great depths below the
+surface; for they must naturally have been buried in the gravel with
+the other stones in places where the stream had still sufficient force
+or rapidity to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[Pg 134]</span> wash stones away. They can, therefore, not be found in
+deposits from still water, in fine sediment and overflow mud.</p>
+
+<p>Bones of Drift Man are absent from the deposits of the Somme valley,
+in spite of the wonderful abundance of stone implements. The “lower
+jaw from Moulin-Quignon, near Abbeville,” had been fraudulently placed
+there by workmen. But proof of the existence of man is undeniably
+assured by the objects, so unpretentious in themselves, that have been
+recognised as the work of his hands.</p>
+
+<p>When once the recognition of Drift Man, founded on the authority of
+Lyell, was achieved, search for further relic-beds was made in England
+and France with success. Yet scarcely one of the newly discovered
+stations was to be compared to those of the Somme valley as regards
+purity of stratification and conditions of discovery. The relics of the
+“earliest Stone Age” or “Palæolithic Period,” as the period of Drift
+Man was called, frequently came from caves and grottos, whose primary
+conclusiveness Boucher had rightly doubted.</p>
+
+<p>Under these circumstances it was of the greatest importance that in
+Germany Drift Man was discovered in two places, where not only was the
+geological stratification just as clear as at Abbeville and Amiens,
+but where also the relics of Drift Man were found, not in a secondary
+<i>situs</i>, as they were then, but in a primary one. In addition to this
+the two German relic-beds may be safely assigned to the last two great
+divisions of the Drift Period, to the warmer Interglacial Period, and
+to the cold Glacial Period proper, with its Postglacial Period; and
+their climatic conditions were made clear from the remains of plants
+and animals found in them.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe18" id="i_134">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_134.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Mercier</div>
+ <div class="caption">A WORKER IN THE STONE AGE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Making an axehead of flint, like that photographed <a href="#i_135">on the
+ opposite page</a>. From the painting by F. Cormon.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_134_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>From the occurrence, in the deposits of the Somme, of reindeer that
+contain the stone implements of Drift Man, we can not, as we saw,
+exactly settle in what part of the Drift Era man lived there, whether
+in the Interglacial Period, to which numerous animal remains found
+there doubtless belong, or not until the “Reindeer” Period, as the last
+Glacial and early Postglacial Periods were called, when the reindeer
+was most largely distributed over France and Central Europe. One is
+inclined to date man’s habitation of the Somme valley back to the
+Interglacial Period; but it is certain<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[Pg 135]</span> that the relic-bed near Taubach
+is the first, and, as far as I can see, the only one hitherto, that
+has given sure proof of Interglacial Man in Europe. There the oldest
+vestiges of man in Europe were found that have yet been absolutely
+proved. We have not hitherto succeeded in Europe in tracing man farther
+back than the Interglacial Period. Relics of him are hitherto as absent
+in the older Drift as they are in the Tertiary.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe27_5" id="i_135">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_135.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A WORKMAN’S TOOL IN THE STONE AGE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Flint implement found in Gray’s Inn, London; now in
+ British Museum.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Taubach relic-bed also furnished no bones of Drift Man among all
+the parts of skeletons of Drift animals that we have mentioned. Here,
+too, as in the Somme valley, the proof of the presence of man is
+based on the works of his hand and mind. Here, too, stone implements
+and stone weapons are the chief things to be mentioned. But whereas,
+in the chalk district of France, flints of every size were to be had
+in the greatest abundance for the preparation of weapons and tools,
+corresponding stones are not exactly wanting at the two standard
+German places, though they occur in limited number and size. It is
+due to this that the larger forms of flint implements, which are
+most in evidence in the Somme valley, are absent at Taubach. On the
+other hand, smaller “knives and flakes”&mdash;Lyell’s third form of Drift
+flint implements&mdash;occur here with comparative frequency and variety
+of form. Next to the usual lancet-shaped knife, worked flint flakes,
+of triangular prismatic form, with sharp corners, are most numerous
+at Taubach, and scrapers, chisels, awls, and the chipping-stones with
+which the stone implements were produced may also be distinguished
+among other things. The material for the implements was supplied by
+the older Drift débris of the valley&mdash;namely, flint, flinty slate, and
+quartz porphyry.</p>
+
+<p>Besides the stone implements which alone were observed in the Somme
+valley, still further important relics were found here in their primary
+<i>situs</i>. Above all, numerous finds of charcoal and burnt bones prove
+that the Drift Men of Taubach not only knew how to kindle fire, but
+were also accustomed to roast the flesh of the animals they killed
+in the chase. Stones and pieces of shell limestone also occur which
+have become reddish and hard from the action of heat. These are to be
+regarded as the floors and side-walls of the fireplaces on which the
+food was then and there prepared. The animal bones, especially those
+that were taken up from around the fireplace, appear in most cases to
+be remains of meals. This is shown at once by the fact that bones of
+young representatives of the large beasts of the chase&mdash;such as the
+rhinoceros, elephant, and bear&mdash;are very frequent as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[Pg 136]</span> compared with the
+rare occurrence of full-grown animals.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Hunters of the Stone Age<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+How Drift Man Killed the Great Animals</div>
+
+<p>It appears that in the hunting and capture of animals the young
+ones were most easily killed, and therefore served chiefly as food.
+Whenever a large animal was killed, it was probably cut up on the spot
+by the fortunate hunters, who consumed at once part of its flesh;
+the trunk was then left at the scene of the killing, while the head,
+neck, and fore and hind legs, on which was the most muscular flesh,
+and which were at the same time easier to carry away, were taken to
+the settlement. This may explain why, among the many large bones of
+the rhinoceros that have hitherto been found, the ribs and the dorsal
+and lumbar vertebræ are almost entirely absent. Some of the bones of
+the beasts of the chase bear the unmistakable traces of man. They
+are broken in the manner characteristic of “savages” of all ages and
+climes&mdash;for the sake of the marrow, one of the greatest dainties of men
+living chiefly on animal fare. The broken-off heads of the metatarsal
+bones of the bison still show particularly clearly the method of
+breaking. They are broken off transversely exactly where the marrow
+canal ends, and on all these bones there is a roundish depression,
+or hole, at the same place&mdash;namely, in the middle of their front or
+back surface, and just where the end of the marrow canal is, therefore
+about in the centre of the break of the broken-off piece. The hole is
+a “blow-mark” of one inch in diameter, evidently driven in by force
+from without, as several well-preserved specimens still show the edges
+and splinters of bone pressed inward. These splinters and all the
+breaks are old, and have on the surface the same greasy coating, full
+of the sand in which they lay, as the bones themselves. The instrument
+used for breaking the bones in this way might very well have been the
+lower jaw of a bear with its large canine tooth, as Oscar Fraas has
+ascertained to have been the case in other places where Drift Man has
+been found. Such lower jaws were found at Taubach, and the nature and
+size of the hole and its edges agree with this assumption. The long
+bones of the elephant and rhinoceros were whole. Drift Man did not
+succeed in breaking these huge pieces, and where such bones are found
+broken they are accidental fractures. On the other hand, almost all
+bones of the bear and bison are intentionally split&mdash;in almost all
+cases transversely, and seldom lengthways.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Drift Man at his Meals</div>
+
+<p>In the Somme valley we have only the flint implements&mdash;which, although
+rude, are very regularly and uniformly made for different recognisable
+purposes&mdash;to tell us of the life and state of Drift Man; but the finds
+at Taubach afford us a rather closer insight into the conditions of
+his life and culture. What we had suspected from the first finds is
+confirmed here. During the Interglacial Period we see near Taubach, on
+the old watercourse of the Ilm, which had there at that time become
+dammed up into a kind of pond, a human settlement. This was occupied
+for a long period, as is proved by the large number of bones, evidently
+remains of meals, and by the quantity of charcoal. Immediately on the
+bank were the fireplaces&mdash;rude hearths built of the stones obtained
+without trouble in the neighbourhood. Here the flesh of the beasts
+of the chase, the bison and the bear, and also the elephant and
+rhinoceros, was broiled in a crude manner in the hot ashes, as is still
+done by savages on the level of the Fuegians and primitive tribes of
+Central Brazil at the present day. For this no utensils are required,
+a sharpened rod or thin pointed stick being sufficient for turning
+and taking out the pieces of meat. The ashes that the gravy causes to
+adhere supply the place of salt and other seasoning. The meat was cut
+up with the stone knives, and many traces of cuts on the bones may also
+be attributable to these instruments. For cutting out larger portions a
+powerful and very suitable instrument was at hand, in the lower jaw of
+the bear, with its strong canine tooth, which also served for breaking
+bones to obtain the marrow. In spite of the apparent meanness of the
+weapons, remains of which we have found, the Drift Men of Taubach were
+yet able, as their kitchen refuse proves, not only to kill the bison
+and bear, but also the gigantic elephant and rhinoceros, both young and
+full grown.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_137">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_137.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">REINDEER HUNTING IN THE LATER ICE AGE. After a picture
+ by W. Kranz</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The reindeer was the most familiar animal of the Later Ice
+ Age, its body supplying food, clothing, and implements for Glacial Man.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_137_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i138">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_138.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">WEAPONS OF THE CHASE USED BY PREHISTORIC MAN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">A collection of neolithic lance and arrow heads found in
+ Ireland, now to be seen in the British Museum.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Drift Man after the Hunt</div>
+
+<p>This shows man to have been then, as he is to-day, master even of
+the gigantic animal forms which so far surpass him in mechanical
+strength. It is the mind<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[Pg 138]</span> of man that shows itself superior to the
+most powerful brute force, even where we meet him for the first time.
+From the finds in the Somme valley it appears that Drift Man already
+possessed spear, dagger, and axe, besides the knife, as weapons. There
+the blades were of stone. The relatively small blades of the Taubach
+stone implements are, it is true, of the same character as the stone
+implements of Abbeville and Amiens, but they are chiefly, as we have
+said, merely knife-like articles, very suitable as blades for knives,
+scrapers, and daggers, and as arrow-heads, but not strong enough as
+hunting-weapons for such big game. The hunt must, therefore, have
+been more a matter of capture in pits and traps, as practised at the
+present day where similar large types of animals are hunted by tribes
+armed only with defective weapons. The kitchen refuse also proves
+that the settlement by the Ilm pond, near Taubach, was a permanent
+one, to which the hunters returned after their expeditions, bringing
+their game and trophies so far as they were easily transportable. But
+there is no trace of domestic animals. They could not have completely
+disappeared, any more than remains of clay vessels, which are still
+less destructible than bones, and in this respect may be compared to
+stone implements. There was no trace of potsherds either.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Best “Find” of the Ice Age</div>
+
+<p>The finds in the Somme valley and near Taubach are of incalculable
+importance as sure, indisputable proofs of Drift Man in Europe; but as
+regards the wealth of information to be derived from them respecting
+man’s psychical condition in that first period in which we can prove
+his existence, they are far and away surpassed by the find at the
+source of the Schussen, which Oscar Fraas, the celebrated geologist,
+has personally inventoried and described. Fraas has rightly given to
+his description of this find of Glacial Man&mdash;the most important and
+best examined hitherto&mdash;the title “Contributions to the History of
+Civilisation During the Glacial Period.”</p>
+
+<p>The geognostic stratification of the relic-bed on one of the farthest
+advanced moraines of the Upper Swabian plateau proves that it
+belongs to the Glacial Period, and that this had already pushed its
+glacier-moraines to the farthest limit ever reached. In point of time
+the finds are, therefore, to be placed at the end of the Glacial
+Period, as it was passing into the Postglacial Period; everything still
+points to Far Northern conditions of life. The finds at the source of
+the Schussen are thus decidedly more recent,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[Pg 140]</span> geologically, than those
+made at Taubach. They are a typical, or, better, <i>the</i> typical example
+of the so-called “Reindeer Period” of the end of the Drift.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe35" id="i_139">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_139.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">IMPLEMENTS OF THE STONE AGE AND THEIR MAKING</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The methods of holding a hammer-stone and of making a flint
+ by pressure are illustrated at the top, those of using a chopping tool at the
+ bottom, of this plate. The other objects are spear-heads, axes, and hammers of
+ stone and flint, and javelin-heads of horn, the latter being smooth and barbed.
+ The method of tying a flint chisel to a wooden handle is shown at the right (×).
+ Most of these objects are to be seen in the British Museum.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_139_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>From Fraas’s description there seems to be no doubt whatever that the
+relic-bed, with its remains of civilisation, was perfectly undisturbed,
+and its palæontological contents plainly show its great geological
+age. It was perfectly protected by Nature. On the top lies peat, the
+same that covers the lowlands of the whole neighbourhood for miles,
+and forms the extensive moorlands of Upper Swabia, on which no other
+formations are to be seen than the gravel drift-walls thrown up by
+glaciers of the Drift Period. Under the peat lies a layer of calc-tufa,
+four to five feet thick, a fresh-water formation from the water-courses
+that now unite with the source of the Schussen. Under this protecting
+cover of tufa were the remains of the Glacial Period and Glacial Man.
+The tufa covered a bed of moss of a dark brown colour, inclining to
+green, the moss still splendidly preserved. Under this bed of moss was
+the glacier drift. The moss was dripping full of and intermingled with
+moist sand. In it were the relics of Glacial Man&mdash;all lying in heaps as
+fresh and firm as if they had been only recently collected. A sticky,
+dark-brown mud filled the moss and sand and the smallest hollow spaces
+of antlers and bones, and emitted a musty smell.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe15" id="i140a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_140a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">EARLY DRINKING VESSEL</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Reindeer’s skull used as drinking vessel by men of the
+ Stone Age. British Museum collection.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30" id="i140b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_140b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">TREASURE-STORES OF PRIMEVAL KNOWLEDGE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Such to-day are the mounds of prehistoric rubbish
+ accumulated by the people of the Stone Age. These Danish “kitchen middens”
+ have vastly enriched our knowledge of the remote past.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Glacial Man had used the place as a refuse-pit. Among the bones and
+splinters of bone of animals that had been slaughtered and consumed by
+man, among ashes and charred remains, among smoke-stained hearthstones
+and the traces of fire, there lay here, one upon the other, numerous
+knives, arrow-heads, and lance-heads of flint, and the most varied
+kinds of hand-made articles of reindeer horn. All this was in a shallow
+pit about seven hundred square yards in extent, and only four to
+five feet deep in the purest glacier drift, clearly showing that the
+excellent preservation of the bones and bone implements was solely due
+to the water having remained in the moss and sand. The bank of moss was
+like a saturated sponge; it closed up its contents hermetically from
+the air, and preserved in its ever-damp bosom what had been entrusted
+to it thousands of years before.</p>
+
+<p>Under the peat and tufa at the source of the Schussen we find only the
+type of a purely Northern climate, with Northern flora and Northern
+fauna. There are no remains of domestic animals&mdash;not even of the
+dog, nor any bones of the stag, roe, chamois, or ibex. Everything
+corresponds to a Northern climate, such as begins to-day at 70° north
+latitude. We see Upper Swabia traversed by moraines and melting
+glaciers, whose waters wash the glacier-sand into moss-grown pools. We
+find a Greenland moss covering the wet sands in thick banks; between
+the moraines of the glaciers we have to imagine wide green pastures,
+rich enough to support herds of reindeer, which roved about there as
+they do in Greenland, or on the forest borders of Norway and Siberia,
+at the present day. Here, also, are the regions of the carnivora
+dangerous to the reindeer&mdash;the glutton and the wolf, and, in the second
+rank, the bear and Arctic fox.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe36" id="i_141">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_141.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A FAMILY GROUP IN THE STONE AGE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">It was thus that the Danish kitchen middens illustrated
+ <a href="#i140b">on the opposite page</a> were created. Each family group cast its refuse, in the
+ shape of shells, bones, wood, etc., on the midden near at hand, and these heaps
+ of rubbish in process of time became valuable records of the people’s life, in
+ which the archæologist can read for us the story of the past.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_141_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">History in a Rubbish Heap</div>
+
+<p>According to Fraas, it is on this scene that man of the Glacial Period
+appears; in all probability, a hunter, invited by the presence of the
+reindeer to spend some time&mdash;probably only the better portion of the
+year&mdash;on the borders of ice and snow. It is true that the relic-bed
+that tells of his life and doings is only a refuse-pit, which contains
+nothing good in the way of art productions, but only broken or spoiled
+articles and refuse from the manufacture of implements. The bulk of the
+material<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[Pg 142]</span> consists of kitchen refuse, such as, besides charcoal and
+ashes, opened marrow-bones and broken skulls of game. Not one of the
+bones found here shows a trace of any other instrument than a stone. It
+was on a stone that the bone was laid, and it was with a stone that the
+blow was struck. Such breaking-stones came to light in large numbers.
+They were merely field stones collected on the spot, particular
+preference being given to finely rolled quartz boulders of about the
+size of a man’s fist. Others were rather rudely formed into the shape
+of a club, with a kind of handle, such as is produced half accidentally
+and half intentionally in splitting large pieces. Larger stones were
+also found&mdash;gneiss slabs, from one to two feet square, slaty Alpine
+limes, and rough blocks of one stone or another, which had probably
+represented slaughtering-blocks, or done duty as hearthstones, as on
+many of them traces of fire were visible. Where these stones had stood
+near the fire they were scaled, and all were more or less blackened
+by charcoal. Smaller pieces of slate and slabs of sandstone blackened
+by fire may have supplied the place of clay pottery in many respects;
+for, with all the blackened stones, not a fragment of a clay vessel was
+found in the layers of charcoal and ashes of the relic-bed.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Making Drift Man’s Tools</div>
+
+<p>The flint implements are of the form familiar to us from Taubach and
+the Somme valley, being simply chipped, not ground or polished. At
+the source of the Schussen, also, only comparatively small pieces of
+the precious raw material were found for the manufacture of stone
+implements. So that here, too, as at Taubach, Lyell’s third form, the
+knife or flake, was practically the only one represented. They fall
+into two groups&mdash;pointed lancet-shaped knives and blunt saw-shaped
+stones. The former served as knife-blades and dagger-blades, and
+lance-heads and arrow-heads; the latter represented the blades of the
+tools required for working reindeer horn. The larger implements are
+between one and a quarter and one and a half inches broad and three
+to three and a half inches long; but the majority of them are far
+smaller, being about one and a half inches long and only three-eighths
+of an inch broad. The various flint blades appear to have been used
+in handles and hafts of reindeer horn. Numerous pieces occur which
+can only be explained as such handles, either ready or in course of
+manufacture.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, owing to the want of larger flints, numerous weapons,
+instruments, and implements were carved from reindeer horn and bone
+for use in the chase and in daily life. Fraas has ascertained exactly
+the technical process employed in producing articles of reindeer horn,
+and we see with wonder how the Glacial men of Swabia handled their
+defective carving-knives and saws on the very principle of modern
+technics. They are principally weapons&mdash;for example, long pointed
+bone daggers, otherwise mostly punchers, awls, plaiting-needles (of
+wood), and arrow-heads with notched grooves. These may possibly be
+poison-grooves; other transverse grooves may have served partly for
+fastening the arrow-head by means of some thread-like binding material,
+probably twisted from reindeer sinews, as is done by the Reindeer Lapps
+at the present day; other scratches occur as ornaments.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Skilled Workman of the Drift</div>
+
+<p>The forms of the bone implements show generally a decided sense
+of symmetry and a certain taste. For instance, a dagger, with a
+perforated knob for suspension, and a large carefully-carved fish-hook.
+Groove-like or hollow spoon-shaped pieces of horn were explained by
+Fraas to be cooking and eating utensils; probably they also served
+for certain technical purposes&mdash;as for dressing skins for clothing
+and tents, like the stone scrapers found in the Somme valley. A
+doubly perforated piece of a young reindeer’s antler appears to be an
+arrow-stretching apparatus, like those generally finely ornamented,
+used by the Esquimaux for the same purpose. A branch of a reindeer’s
+antlers, with deep notches filed in, is declared by the discoverer to
+be a “tally.” The notches are partly simple strokes filed in to the
+depth of a twelfth of an inch, and partly two main strokes connected by
+finer ones. “The strokes,” says Fraas, “are plainly numerical signs&mdash;a
+kind of note, probably, of reindeer or bears killed, or some other
+memento.” Among the objects found were also pieces of red paint of the
+size of a nut&mdash;clearly fabrications of clayey ironstone, ground and
+washed, and probably mixed with reindeer fat and kneaded into a paste.
+The paint crumbled between the fingers, felt greasy, and coloured the
+skin an intense red. It may have been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[Pg 143]</span> used in the first instance for
+painting the body. The Glacial men at the source of the Schussen were,
+according to the results of these finds, fishermen and hunters, without
+dogs or domestic animals and without any knowledge of agriculture and
+pottery. But they understood how to kindle fire, which they used for
+cooking their food. They knew how to kill the wild reindeer, bear,
+and other animals of the district they hunted over; their arrows hit
+the swan, and their fish-hooks drew fish from the deep. They were
+artists in the chipping of flint into tools and weapons; with the
+former they worked reindeer horn in the most skilful manner. Traces of
+binding material indicate the use of threads, probably prepared from
+reindeer sinews; the plaiting-needle may have been employed for making
+fishing-lines. Threads and finely-pointed pricking instruments indicate
+the art of sewing; clothing probably consisted of the skins of the
+animals killed.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe46" id="i_143">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_143.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Mercier</div>
+ <div class="caption">HUNTING FOR FOOD IN THE LATER ICE AGE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the painting by Ferdinand Cormon</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>To this material concerning Drift Man, scientifically vouched for,
+coming from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[Pg 144]</span> Drift strata that have certainly never been disturbed,
+other countries have hitherto made no equal contributions really
+enlarging our view. Yet the numerous places where palæolithic&mdash;that
+is, only rudely chipped&mdash;implements of flint, such as were doubtless
+used by Drift Man, have been found must not remain unmentioned here. We
+know of them in Northern, Central, and Southern France, in the South of
+England, in the loess at Thiede, near Brunswick, and in Lower Austria,
+Moravia, Hungary, Italy, Greece, Spain, Portugal, North Africa, and
+Russia.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_144a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_144a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">IMPLEMENTS OF THE STONE AGE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The upper illustrations show handles of celt or
+ stone-cutting instruments and method of hafting; the lower picture is
+ that of a handmill of sandstone.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_144b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_144b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A HUT-CIRCLE OF THE BRONZE AGE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">One of the earliest forms of habitation in Britain.
+ From the British Museum “Guide to the Bronze Age.”</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>It is of special importance to note that similar flint tools have also
+been found along with extinct land mammalia in the stratified drift
+of the Nerbudda valley, in South India, as the supposition more than
+suggests itself that Drift Man came to our continent with the Drift
+fauna that immigrated from Asia. The possibility that man also got
+from North Asia to North America with the mammoth during the Drift
+Period can no longer be dismissed after the results of palæontological
+research. It explains at once the close connection between the build of
+the American and the great Asiatic (Mongolian) races.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_144c">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_144c.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">REMAINS OF A STONE AGE MANSION</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">These remains of a large pile hut discovered in
+ Germany show that Stone Age Man had made good progress in building. The
+ lower diagram shows a transverse section.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_144d">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_144d.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE EARLIEST EFFORTS AT BOAT-BUILDING</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The dug-out canoe, hollowed from a single trunk, was
+ the far-off parent of the ocean-going ship. The upper picture represents a
+ prehistoric canoe found in Sussex and the lower example is taken from a
+ German specimen.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Stone implements of palæolithic form have been found in Drift strata
+in North America, and the same applies also, as we have seen, to South
+America. The best finds there were those made by Ameghino in the
+pampas formation of Argentina. Here marrow-bones, split, worked, and
+burnt, and jaws of the stag, glyptodon, mastodon, and toxodon have
+been repeatedly found along with flint tools of palæolithic stamp;
+and Santiago Roth, who took part in these researches, supposes that
+fossil man in South America occasionally used the coats of mail of
+the gigantic armadillos as dwellings. But the civilisation of South
+American man is doubtless identical with that of European fossil
+man&mdash;tools and weapons of the stone types familiar in Europe, the
+working of bones, the use of fire for cooking, and animal food, with
+the consequent special fondness for fat and marrow.</p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[Pg 145]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop3" id="THE_WORLD_BEFORE_HISTORY_IV">THE WORLD BEFORE
+HISTORY&mdash;IV</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe44" id="i_145">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_145.jpg" alt="The World Before History--IV" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">Professor JOHANNES RANKE</p>
+
+<h4 id="PRIMITIVE_MAN_IN_THE_PAST_THE_PRESENT">PRIMITIVE MAN IN THE PAST &amp;
+THE PRESENT</h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">T</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>O
+the picture of Drift Man that has been drawn for us by the
+discoveries of human activity in deposits of uniform character and
+sharply defined age, the much richer but far less reliable finds in the
+bone caves add scarcely any entirely new touches. Von Zittel says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>The evidence of the caves is unfortunately shaken by the
+uncertainty that, as a rule, prevails with regard to the manner in
+which their contents were washed into them or otherwise introduced,
+and also with regard to the beginning and duration of their
+occupation; moreover, later inhabitants have frequently mixed up
+their relics with the heritage of previous occupants.</p></div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">First Dwellers in Caves</div>
+
+<p>This doubt strikes us particularly forcibly as regards man’s
+co-existence with the extinct animals of the earlier periods of the
+Drift, the Preglacial and Interglacial Periods. On the other hand, the
+habitation of the caves by man during the Reindeer Period appears in
+many cases to be perfectly established, and, according to Von Zittel,
+the oldest human dwellings in caves, rock-niches, and river-plains in
+Europe belong for the most part to the Reindeer Period&mdash;that is, the
+second Glacial and, in particular, the Postglacial Period.</p>
+
+<p>In the caves there is also no domestic animal, and no pottery or
+trace of potsherds, in the best-defined strata where Drift Man has
+been found. In the Hohlefels cave, in the Ach valley in Swabia, a new
+utensil was found in the form of a cup for drinking purposes or for
+drawing water, made out of the back part of a reindeer’s skull. Also
+a new tool in the form of a fine sewing-needle with eye, from the
+long bone of a swan, such as have also been found in the caves of the
+Périgord. Teeth of the wild horse and lower jaws of the wildcat, which
+are found in the caves, perforated for suspending either as ornaments
+or amulets, are also hitherto unknown, it appears, in the stratified
+Drift. As both animals are at a later period connected with the deity
+and with witchcraft, one could imagine that similar primitive religious
+ideas existed among the old cave-dwellers. In the stratum of the
+Reindeer Period at the Schweizerbild, near Schaffhausen, Nüesch found a
+musical instrument, “a reindeer whistle,” and shells pierced for use as
+ornaments.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Drift Man’s Working Materials</div>
+
+<p>The finds in the French cave districts prove that man was able to
+develop certain higher refinements of life, even during the Drift in
+the real flint districts&mdash;where a very suitable material was at man’s
+disposal in the flint that lay about everywhere or was easily dug up;
+which was worked with comparative ease into much more perfect and
+efficient weapons and implements than those supplied by the wilder
+stretches of moor and fen of Germany, with their scarcity of flint.</p>
+
+<p>If we compare the small, often tiny, knives and flint flakes from the
+German places with the powerful axes and lance-heads of those regions,
+it is self-evident how much more laborious life must have been for the
+man who used the former. What labour he must have expended in carving
+weapons and implements out of bone and horn, while flint supplied the
+others with much better and more lasting ones with less expenditure
+of time and trouble! In this light a wealth of flint was a civilising
+factor of that period which is not to be under-estimated. In the flint
+districts not only are the stone implements better worked, answering in
+a higher degree the purpose of the weapon and the tool, but delight in
+ornament and decoration is also more prominent.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Life in the Caves<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Drift Man as Artist</div>
+
+<p>Life in the caves and grottos and under the rock shelters in the
+neighbourhood of rivers was by no means quite wretched. The remains
+left in the caves by their former inhabitants give almost as clear an
+idea of the life of man in those primeval times as the buried cities of
+Herculaneum and Pompeii do of the manners and customs of the Italians
+in the first century of the Christian era. The floors of these caves
+in which men formerly lived appear to consist entirely of broken bones
+of animals killed in the chase, intermixed with rude implements<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[Pg 146]</span> and
+weapons of bone and unpolished stone, and also charcoal and large burnt
+stones, indicating the position of fireplaces. Flints and chips without
+number, rough masses of stone, awls, lance-heads, hammers, and saws of
+flint and chert lie in motley confusion beside bone needles, carved
+reindeer antlers, arrow-heads and harpoons, and pointed pieces of horn
+and bone; in addition to which are also the broken bones of the animals
+that served as food, such as reindeer, bison, horse, ibex, saiga
+antelope, and musk-ox. The reindeer supplied by far the greater part of
+the food, and must at that time have lived in Central France in large
+herds and in a wild state, all trace of the dog being absent.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Pictures from the Drift World</div>
+
+<p>Among these abundant remains of culture archæologists were surprised
+to find real objects of art from the hand of Drift Man, proving that
+thinking about his surroundings had developed into the ability to
+reproduce what he saw in drawing and modelling. The first objects of
+this kind were found in the caves of the Périgord. They are, on the one
+hand, drawings scratched on stones, reindeer bones, or pieces of horn,
+mostly very naïve, but sometimes really lifelike, chiefly representing
+animals, but also men; on the other hand imitations plastically carved
+out of pieces of reindeer horn, bones, or teeth. Such engravings also
+occurred on pieces of ivory, and plastic representations in this
+material have been preserved. On a cylindrical piece of reindeer horn
+from the cave excavations in the Dordogne is the representation of
+a fish, and on the shovel-piece of a reindeer’s horn are the head
+and breast of an animal resembling the ibex. Illustrations of horses
+give faithful reproductions of the flowing mane, unkempt tail, and
+disproportionately large head of the large-headed wild horse of
+the Drift. The most important among these representations are such
+as endeavour to reproduce an historical event. An illustration of
+this kind represents a group consisting of two horses’ heads and an
+apparently naked male figure; the latter bears a long staff or spear
+in his right hand, and stands beside a tree, which is bent down almost
+in coils in order to accommodate itself to the limited space, and
+whose boughs, indicated by parallel lines, show it to be a pine or
+fir. Connected with the tree is a system of vertical and horizontal
+lines, apparently representing a kind of hurdlework. On the other
+side of the same cylindrical piece are two bisons’ heads. Doubtless
+this picture tells a tale; it is picture-writing in exactly the same
+sense as that of the North American Indians. Our picture already
+shows the transition to abbreviated picture-writing, as, instead of
+the whole animals&mdash;horses and bisons&mdash;only the heads are given. The
+message-sticks of the Australians bear certain resemblances; Bastian
+has rightly described them as the beginnings of writing.</p>
+
+<p>If we have interpreted them aright, the finds that have been made, with
+the tally from the source of the Schussen and the message-stick from
+the caves of the Dordogne, place the art of counting, the beginnings of
+writing, the first artistic impulses, and other elements of primitive
+culture right back in the Drift period.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Emerging of the Human Mind</div>
+
+<p>“None of the animals whose remains lie in the Drift strata,” says
+Oscar Fraas, “were tamed for the service of man.” On the contrary, man
+stood in hostile relation to all of them and only knew how to kill
+them, in order to support himself with their flesh and blood and the
+marrow of their bones. It was not so much his physical strength which
+helped man in his fight for existence, for with few exceptions the
+animals he killed were infinitely superior to him in strength; indeed
+it is not easy, even with the help of powder and lead, to kill the
+elephant, rhinoceros, grizzly bear, and bison, or to hunt down the
+swift horse and reindeer. It was a question of finding out, with his
+mental superiority, the beast’s unguarded moments, and of surprising it
+or bringing it down in pits and snares. All the more wonderful does the
+savage of the European Drift Period appear to us, “for we see that he
+belongs to the first who exercised the human mind in the hard battle of
+life, and thereby laid the foundation of all later developments in the
+sense of progress in culture.” And yet, in the midst of this poor life,
+a sense of the little pleasures and refinements of existence already
+began to develop, as proved by the elegantly carved and decorated
+weapons and implements, and there were even growing a sense of the
+beauty of Nature and the power of copying it. The bone needles with
+eyes and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[Pg 147]</span> the fine awls are evidences of the art of sewing, and the
+numerous scrapers of flint and bone teach us that Drift Man knew how to
+dress skins for clothing purposes, and did it according to the method
+still used among the Esquimaux and most northern Indians at the present
+day. Spinning does not seem to have been known. On the other hand Drift
+Man knew how to twist cords, impressions and indentations of which are
+conspicuous on the bone and horn implements; on which also thread-marks
+were imitated as a primitive ornament. Pottery was unknown to Drift
+Man. Indeed, even to-day the production of pottery is not a commonly
+felt want of mankind. The leather bottle, made of the skin of some
+small animal stripped off whole without a seam, turned inside out as
+it were, takes the place of the majority of the larger vessels; on the
+other hand, liquids can also be kept for some time in a tightly-made
+wicker basket.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe43" id="i_147">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_147.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Mercier</div>
+ <div class="caption">PRIMITIVE NATURE FOLK ENGAGED IN FISHING</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the painting by Ferdinand Cormon.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The art of plaiting was known to Drift Man. This is shown by the
+ornaments on weapons and implements, the plaiting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[Pg 148]</span>-needle from the find
+at the source of the Schussen, and the hurdlework represented on the
+message-stick mentioned above, which may be either a hurdle made of
+boughs and branches or a summer dwelling house. To these acquirements,
+based chiefly on an acquaintance with serviceable weapons and
+implements, is added the art of representing natural objects by drawing
+and carving. This results in the attempt to retain historical <i>momenta</i>
+in the form of abridged illustrations for the purpose of communicating
+them to others&mdash;incipient picture-writing. The tally shows the method
+of representing numbers&mdash;generally only one stroke each, but also
+two strokes connected by a line to form a higher unit. Of the art of
+building not a trace is left to us apart from the laying together of
+rough stones for fireplaces; nor have tombs of that period of ancient
+times been discovered.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe44" id="i_148">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_148.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Mercier</div>
+ <div class="caption">EARLY AGRICULTURISTS, WITH IMPLEMENTS OF BONE, STONE, AND
+ BRONZE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the painting by Ferdinand Cormon.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The civilisation of Drift Man and his whole manner of life do not
+confront the present human race as something strange, but fit perfectly
+into the picture exhibited by mankind at the present day. Drift
+Man nowhere steps out of this frame. If<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[Pg 149]</span> a European traveller were
+nowadays to come upon a body of Drift men on the borders of eternal
+ice, towards the north or south pole of our globe, nothing would
+appear extraordinary and without analogy to him; indeed it would be
+possible for him to come to an understanding with them by means of
+picture-writing, and to do business with them by means of the tally.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe43" id="i_149">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_149.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Mercier</div>
+ <div class="caption">AN EMIGRATION OF THE GAULS IN THE BRONZE AGE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the painting by Ferdinand Cormon.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The manner of life led by man beyond the borders of higher
+civilisation, especially under extreme climatic conditions, depends
+almost exclusively on his outward surroundings and the possibility of
+obtaining food. The Esquimaux, who, like Drift Man of Central Europe
+in former times, live on the borders of eternal ice with the Drift
+animals that emigrated thither,&mdash;the reindeer, musk-ox, bear, Arctic
+fox, etc.&mdash;are restricted, like him, to hunting and fishing, and to
+a diet consisting almost entirely of flesh and fat; corn-growing and
+the keeping of herds of domestic animals being self-prohibitive. Their
+kitchen refuse exactly resembles that from the Drift. Before their
+acquaintance with the civilisation of modern Europe they used stone
+and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[Pg 150]</span> bone besides driftwood for making their weapons and implements,
+as they still do to a certain extent at the present day, either
+from preference or from superstitious ideas. Their binding material
+consisted of threads twisted from reindeer sinews, with which they
+sewed their clothes and fastened their harpoons and arrows, the latter
+resembling in form those of Drift Man. They knew no more than he the
+arts of spinning and weaving, their clothes being made from the skins
+of the animals they hunted; pots were unknown and unnecessary to them.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30" id="i_150">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_150.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">PRIMITIVE ART OF OUR OWN DAY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The picture-writing of the American Indians in our own
+ day offers an interesting parallel to that of the primitive peoples of the
+ remotest past. The Pawnees decorate their buffalo robes with such drawings as
+ these, representing a procession of medicine men, the foremost giving freedom
+ to his favourite horse as a sacrifice to the Great Spirit.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>It has often been thought that we should have a definite criterion of
+the period if it could be proved that fresh mammoth ivory was employed
+at the particular time for making implements and weapons, or ornaments,
+carvings, and drawings. There can be no doubt that when Drift Man
+succeeded in killing a mammoth he used the tusks for his purposes.
+But on the borders of eternal ice, where alone we could now expect to
+find a frozen Drift Man, no conclusion could be drawn from objects
+of mammoth ivory being in the possession of a corpse to determine
+the great age of the latter. For the many mammoth tusks which have
+been found and used from time immemorial in North Siberia, on the New
+Siberian Islands, and in other places, are absolutely fresh, and are
+even employed in the arts of civilised countries in exactly the same
+way as fresh ivory. Under the name of “mammoth ivory” the fossil tusks
+dug up by ivory-seekers, or mammoth-hunters, form an important article
+of commerce.</p>
+
+<p>The same conditions as many parts of Northern Siberia still exhibit
+at the present day prevailed over the whole of Central Europe at
+the end of the Glacial Period and the beginning of the Postglacial
+Period. Here man lived on frozen ground on the borders of ice-fields
+with the reindeer and its companions, as he does to-day in Northern
+Asia, and here, too&mdash;as he does there to-day&mdash;he must have found the
+woolly-haired mammoth preserved by the cold in the ice and frozen
+ground. The Drift reindeer-men of Central Europe presumably searched
+for mammoth tusks just as much as the present reindeer-men in North
+Asia. The great field of mammoth carrion at Predmost was, therefore, a
+very powerful attraction, not only for the beasts of prey&mdash;chief among
+them wolves&mdash;but also for man.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe36" id="i_151">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_151.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE EARLIEST ART: MANKIND’S FIRST EFFORTS IN
+ PICTURE-MAKING</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">These illustrations are of engravings on stone and bone
+ and scratchings on rocks made by prehistoric man, chiefly in France. The figures
+ of the reindeer and those of the mammoth and the bison, the two latter found at
+ Dordogne, are astonishingly good, and indicate genuine power of draughtsmanship
+ at a remote period of human life.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_151_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Drift Man Compared with Modern Man</div>
+
+<p>In France especially many primitive works of art of the “Ivory Epoch”
+have been found, and even the nude figure of woman is not wanting;
+but no proof is given that these carvings belong to the time when the
+mammoth still lived. Much sensation has been caused by an engraving
+on a piece of mammoth ivory representing a hairy mammoth with its
+mane and strongly-curved tusks. This illustration has been taken as
+unexceptionable proof that the artist of the Drift Period who did it
+saw and portrayed the mammoth alive. But could the mammoth hunter
+Schumachow&mdash;the Tunguse who, in 1799, discovered, in the ice of the
+peninsula of Tumys Bykow at the mouth of the Lena, the mammoth now
+erected in the collection at the St. Petersburg Academy [see <a href="#i_123a">page
+123</a>]&mdash;have pictured the animal otherwise when it was freshly melted out
+of the ice? And the Madelaine cave in the Périgord, where the piece
+of ivory with the picture of the mammoth was found, certainly belongs
+to the Reindeer Period. Had we not independent proofs that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[Pg 152]</span> Drift
+Man lived in Central Europe&mdash;for instance, at Taubach&mdash;with the great
+extinct pachydermata, neither the finds in the “loess” near Predmost,
+nor the articles of ivory, nor the illustration of the mammoth itself,
+could prove it. They furnish absolute proof of the existence of Drift
+Man only back to the Reindeer Period. To decide whether a corpse
+frozen in the stone-ice belonged to a Drift Man, the examination of
+the corpse itself, its skull, bones, and soft parts, would no more
+suffice than clothing, implements, and ornament. For at least so much
+is confidently asserted by many palæontologists, that all the skulls
+and bones hitherto known to have been ascribed to Drift Man by the
+most eminent palæontologists, geologists, and anthropologists, cannot
+be distinguished from those of men of the present day. Von Zittel, the
+foremost scholar in the field of palæontology in Germany, says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>The only remains of Drift Man of reliable age are a skull from
+Olmo, near Chiana, in Tuscany; a skull from Egisheim, in Alsace;
+a lower jaw from the Naulette cave near Furfooz, in Belgium; and
+a fragment of jaw from the Schipka cave in Moravia. This material
+is not sufficient for determining race, but all human remains of
+reliable age from the drift of Europe, and all the skulls found in
+caves, agree in size, form, and capacity with <i>Homo sapiens</i>, and
+are well formed throughout. In no way do they fill the gap between
+man and ape.</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30" id="i_152">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_152.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">PRIMITIVE PEOPLE OF TO-DAY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Until they came in touch with European travellers the
+ Esquimaux were in precisely the same condition as Drift Man: they were living
+ in the Ice Age. They are but little more advanced now, and the difference between
+ them and prehistoric men is slight. This is a group of young Esquimau women.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>“On the other hand,” writes Dr. Chalmers Mitchell, “a large majority
+of modern anatomists and palæontologists accept the antiquity of such
+skulls as the Neanderthal specimen, and agree that these point to the
+existence of a human race inferior to any now existing. This race
+comprised powerfully-built individuals, with low foreheads, prominent,
+bony ridges above the eyes, and retreating chins. The radius and ulna
+were unusually divergent, so that the forearms must have been heavy and
+clumsy. The thigh-bones were bent and the shin-bones short, so that the
+race must have been bow-legged and clumsy in gait.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A Type Between Man and Ape?</div>
+
+<p>“The intermediate position of these primitive types has received
+extraordinary confirmation by the discovery of what may truly be called
+the link, no longer missing, between man and the apes. In 1894, Dr.
+Eugene Dubois discovered in the Island of Java in a bed of volcanic
+ashes containing the remains of Pliocene animals the roof of a small
+skull, two grinding-teeth, and a diseased femur. These remains indicate
+an animal which, when erect, stood not less than 5 ft. 6 in. high.
+The teeth and thigh-bones were very human, and the skull, although
+very human, had prominent eyebrow ridges like those of the Neanderthal
+type, and a capacity of about 1,000 cubic centimetres&mdash;that is to
+say, much greater than that of the largest living apes, and falling
+short by about 100 cubic centimetres of the largest skull capacities
+of existing normal human beings. This creature, regarded at first by
+some anatomists as a degenerate man, by others as a high ape, has now
+been definitely accepted as a new type of being, intermediate between
+man and the apes and designated as <i>Pithecanthropus erectus</i>.” There
+is no doubt that Asia, Europe, North Africa, and North America, so
+far as their ice-covering allowed of their being inhabited, form one
+continuous region for the distribution of Palæolithic Man, in which
+all discoveries give similar results. In this vast region the lowest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[Pg 154]</span>
+and oldest prehistoric stratum that serves as the basis of historical
+civilisation is the homogeneous Palæolithic stratum. In the Drift
+Period, Palæolithic Man penetrated into South America, as into a new
+region, with northern Drift animals. In Central and South Africa and
+Australia, Palæolithic Man does not yet seem to be known. All the more
+important is it that in Tasmania Palæolithic conditions of civilisation
+existed until the middle of the last century.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe47" id="i_153a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_153a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE HOMES OF PRIMITIVE PEOPLE OF THE PRESENT DAY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">There are people still living in dwelling-places of
+ prehistoric type. This photograph of Esquimau stone and turf huts, in
+ Greenland, shows exactly the kind of dwellings used by prehistoric men in
+ the Ice Age.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_153b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_153b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE GRADUAL EXTINCTION OF PRIMITIVE PEOPLES</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The Yukaghirs, natives of Siberia, a division of the
+ Mongolic family, were formerly a wide-spread race, and, according to their
+ national tradition, were so numerous that “the birds flying over their camp
+ fires became blackened with smoke.” The Jesup Expedition found them reduced
+ to 700 in number. Hunger had forced some of them to cannibalism and suicide.
+ They are a primitive people, but considerably superior to the Esquimaux.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_154">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_154.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A CREATURE BETWEEN APE AND MAN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The skull of the Fossil Ape-man found in 1894, in the
+ island of Java; restored by Dr. Eugene Dubois.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Backward Races of Europe</div>
+
+<p>The palæontology of man has hitherto obtained good geological
+information of the oldest Palæolithic culture-stratum of the Drift in
+only a few parts of the earth, and only in Tasmania does this oldest
+stratum appear to have cropped out free, and still uncovered by other
+culture strata, down to our own times. Otherwise it is everywhere
+overlaid by a second, later culture-stratum of much greater thickness,
+which, although opened up in almost innumerable places, is not spread
+over the whole earth as is the Palæolithic stratum. As opposed to
+the earliest Stone Age of the Drift, which we have come to know as
+the Palæolithic Period, this has been called the Later Stone Age or
+Neolithic Period.</p>
+
+<p>The Neolithic Period is also ignorant of the working of metals; for
+weapons and implements, stone is the exclusive hard material of which
+the blades are made. But geologically and palæontologically the two
+culture-strata are widely and sharply separated.</p>
+
+<p>As regards Europe, and a large part of the other continents, the second
+stratum of the culture of the human race still lies at prehistoric
+depth. But in other extensive parts of the earth the stratum of
+Neolithic culture was not covered by other culture-strata until far
+into the period of written history. Even a large part of Europe was
+still inhabited by history-less tribes of the later Stone Age at the
+time when the old civilised lands of Asia and of Africa, and the
+coasts of the Mediterranean, had everywhere&mdash;on the basis of the
+same Neolithic elements, with the increasing use of metals&mdash;already
+risen to that higher stage of civilisation which, with the historical
+written records of Egypt and Babylonia, forms the basis of our present
+chronology.</p>
+
+<p>When these civilised nations came into direct contact with the more
+remote nations of the Old World, they found them, as we have said,
+still, to a certain extent, at the Neolithic stage of civilisation,
+just as, when Europeans settled in America, the great majority of the
+aborigines had not yet passed the Neolithic stage, at which, indeed,
+the lowest primitive tribes of Central Brazil still remain. Australia,
+and a large part of the island world of the South Sea, had not yet
+risen above the Neolithic stage (Tasmania, probably, not even above
+the Palæolithic) when they were discovered. There the Stone Age, to a
+certain extent, comes down to modern times; likewise in the far north
+of Asia, in Greenland, in the most northern parts of America, and at
+the south point of the New Continent among the Fuegians.</p>
+
+<p>The men of the later Stone Age are the ancestors of the civilised men
+of to-day. Classical antiquity among Greeks and Romans had still a
+consciousness of this, at least partly; it was not entirely forgotten
+that the oldest weapons of men did not consist of metal, but of stone,
+and even inferior material. The worked stones which the people then,
+as now, designated as weapons of the deity, as lightning-stones or
+thunderbolts, were recognised by keener-sighted men as weapons of
+primeval inhabitants of the land.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">What the Kitchen Middens Tell Us</div>
+
+<p>The “kitchen middens” on the Danish coasts mark places of more or less
+permanent settlement, consisting of more or less numerous individual
+dwellings. From these middens a rich inventory of finds has been made,
+affording a glimpse of the life and doings of those ancient times.
+The heaps consist principally of thousands upon thousands of opened
+shells of oysters, cockles, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[Pg 155]</span> other shellfish still eaten at the
+present day, mingled with the bones of the roe, stag, aurochs, wild
+boar, beaver, seal, etc. Bones of fishes and birds were also made
+out, among the latter being the bones of the wild swan and of the now
+extinct great auk, and, what is specially important in determining
+the geological age of these remains, large numbers of the bones of
+the capercailzie. Domestic animals are absent with the exception of
+the dog, whose bones, however, are broken, burnt, gnawed in the same
+way as those of the beasts of the chase. Everything proves that on
+the sites of these middens there formerly lived a race of fishers and
+hunters, whose chief food consisted of shellfish, the shells of which
+accumulated in mounds around their dwellings. Proofs of agriculture and
+cattle-rearing there are none; the dog alone was frequently bred not
+only as a companion in the chase, but also for its flesh.</p>
+
+<p>The state of civilisation of the old Danish shellfish-eaters was not
+quite a low one in spite of its primitive colouring, and in essential
+points was superior to that of Palæolithic Man. Not only had they tamed
+a really domestic animal, the dog, but they made and used clay vessels
+for cooking and storing purposes. The cooking was done on fireplaces.
+They could work deer-horn and bone well. Of the former hammer-axes
+with round holes were made, and of animal bones arrow-heads, awls, and
+needles, with the points carefully smoothed. Small bone combs appeared
+to have served not so much for toilet purposes as for dividing animal
+sinews for making threads, or for dressing the threads in weaving.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_155">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_155.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">EUROPE IN THE ICE AGE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The map illustrates the extent of the Ice Age in Europe.
+ It will be noticed that in England the ice-cap did not extend south of the
+ position of London though it occurred much further south in the mountain regions
+ of the Pyrenees, the Alps, Tyrol, the Carpathians and the Caucasus. The dark
+ portions of the map represent the extent of the ice.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Drift Man and His Adversaries</div>
+
+<p>In the way of ornaments there were perforated animal teeth. The fish
+remains found in the middens belong to the plaice, cod, herring, and
+eel. To catch these<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[Pg 156]</span> deep-sea fish the fishermen must have gone out
+to sea, which implies the possession of boats of some kind. Nor was
+only small game hunted, but also large game. Ninety per cent. of the
+animal bones occurring in the shell-mounds consist of those of large
+animals, especially the deer, roe, and wild boar. Even such dangerous
+adversaries as the aurochs, bear, wolf, and lynx were killed, likewise
+the beaver, wildcat, seal, otter, marten, and fox. The very numerous
+fragments of clay vessels belong partly to large pot-like vessels
+without handles and with pointed or flat bottoms, and partly to small
+oval bowls with round bottoms. All vessels were made with the free
+hand of coarse clay, into which small fragments of granitic stone were
+kneaded; as ornament they have in a few cases incisions or impressions,
+mostly made with the finger itself on the upper edge.</p>
+
+<p>The great importance of the Danish middens in the general history of
+mankind is due to the fact that their age is geologically established,
+so that they can serve as a starting-point for chronology. It is
+to Japetus Steenstrup that the early history of our race owes this
+chronological fixing of an initial date.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The First Elements of Civilisation</div>
+
+<p>The earliest inhabitants of the North of Europe during the Stone
+Age, as recorded by these kitchen-middens of the Danish period, were
+scarcely superior to Palæolithic Man in civilisation, judging from
+outward appearances. But a closer investigation taught us that,
+in spite of the poverty of their remains, a higher development of
+civilisation is unmistakable. And this superiority of the Neolithic
+over the Palæolithic Epoch becomes far more evident if we take as our
+standard of comparison, not the poor fisher population, who probably
+first reached the Danish shores as pioneers, but the Neolithic
+civilisation that had been fully developed in sunnier lands and
+followed closely upon these trappers or squatters. Next to hunting
+and fishing, cattle-breeding and agriculture are noticeable as the
+first elements of Neolithic civilisation, and in connection with
+them the preparation of flour and cooking; and as technical arts,
+chiefly carving and the fine working of stone, of which weapons and
+the most various kinds of tools were made; with the latter wood,
+bone, deer-horn, etc., could be worked. The blades are no longer
+sharpened merely by chipping, but by grinding, and are made in various
+technically perfect forms. Special importance was attached to providing
+them with suitable handles, for fixing which the stone implement or
+weapon was either provided with a hole, or, as in America especially,
+with notches or grooves.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Mental Life of Ancient Days</div>
+
+<p>In addition to these, there are the primitive arts of man&mdash;the ceramic
+art, spinning, and weaving. In the former, especially, an appreciation
+of artistic form and decoration by ornament is developed. The ornament
+becomes a kind of symbolical written language, the eventual deciphering
+of which appears possible in view of the latest discoveries concerning
+the ornamental symbolism of the primitive races of the present day.
+Discoveries of dwellings prove an advanced knowledge of primitive
+architecture; entrenchments and tumuli acquaint us with the principles
+of their earthworks; and the giant chambers, built of colossal blocks
+of stone piled upon one another, prove that the builders of those
+times were not far behind the much-admired Egyptian builders in
+transporting and piling masses of stone. The burials, whose ceremonies
+are revealed by opened graves, afford a glimpse of the mental life
+of that period. From the skulls and skeletons that have been taken
+from the Neolithic graves, science has been able to reconstruct the
+physical frame of Neolithic Man, which has in no way to fear comparison
+with that of modern man. Of the ornaments of the Stone Age the most
+important and characteristic are perforated teeth of dogs, wolves,
+horses, oxen, bears, boars, and smaller beasts of prey. How much in
+favour such ornaments were is proved by the fact that even imitations
+or counterfeits of them were worn. Numerous articles of ornament,
+carved from bone and deer-horn, were universal: ornamental plates and
+spherical, basket-shaped, square, shuttle-like, or chisel-shaped beads
+were made of these materials and formed into chains.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i157">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_157.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE ICE AGE IN THE PRESENT DAY: AN ESQUIMAU WATCHING A
+ SEAL HOLE</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_157_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In the Swiss lake-dwellings of the Stone Age have been found skilfully
+carved ear-drops, needles with eyes, neat little combs of boxwood, and
+hairpins, some with heads and others with pierced side protuberances.
+Remains of textile fabrics, even finely twilled tissue, and also
+leather, were yielded by the excavations of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[Pg 158]</span> lake-dwellings of
+that period, so that we have to imagine the inhabitants adorned with
+clothes of various kinds.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man’s First and Oldest Animal Friend</div>
+
+<p>What raises man of the later Stone Age so far above Palæolithic Man is
+the possession of domestic animals and the knowledge of agriculture.
+As domestic animals of the later Stone Age we have proof of the dog,
+cow, horse, sheep, goat, and pig. Among the animals that have attached
+themselves to man as domestic, the first and oldest is undoubtedly the
+dog. It is found distributed over the whole earth, being absent from
+only a few small islands. Among many races the dog was, and is still,
+the only domestic animal in the proper sense of the word. This applies
+to all Esquimau tribes, to the majority of the Indians of North and
+South America, and to the continent of Australia.</p>
+
+<p>We have no certain proofs that Palæolithic Man possessed the dog as a
+domestic animal. In the Somme valley, at Taubach, and at the source
+of the Schussen, bones of the domestic dog are absent. And yet, among
+Drift fauna in caves remains of dogs have been repeatedly met with,
+which have been claimed to be the direct ancestors of the domestic dog.
+The dog’s attachment to man may have taken place at different times
+in different parts. Man and dog immigrate to South America with the
+foreign Northern fauna simultaneously&mdash;in a geological sense&mdash;during
+the Drift. In Australia, man and dog (dingo), as the most intimate
+animal beings, are opposed to an animal world that is otherwise
+anomalous and, to the Old World, quite antiquated; probably man and dog
+also came to Australia together. We know of fossil remains of the dingo
+from the Drift, but no reliable finds have yet proved the presence of
+man during that period.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Dog in the Stone Age</div>
+
+<p>In the later Stone Age the dog already occurs as the companion of
+man wherever it occurs in historic times. In Europe its remains have
+been found in the Danish kitchen-middens, in the northern Neolithic
+finds, in the lake-dwellings of Switzerland, in innumerable caves of
+the Neolithic Period, in the terramare of Upper Italy, etc. It was
+partly a comparatively small breed, according to Rütimeyer similar to
+the “wachtelhund” (setter) in size and build. Rütimeyer calls this
+breed the lake-dwelling dog, after the lake-dwellings, one of the
+chief places where it has been found. Like all breeds of animals of
+primitive domestication, the dog at this period, according to Nehring,
+is small&mdash;stunted, as it were. With the progress of civilisation the
+dog also grows larger.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Great Value of the Dog to Man</div>
+
+<p>In the later prehistoric epochs, beginning with the so-called “Bronze”
+Period, we find throughout almost the whole of Europe a rather
+larger and more powerful breed with a more pointed snout&mdash;the Bronze
+dog&mdash;whose nearest relative seems to be the sheep-dog. At the present
+day the domestic dog is mostly employed for guarding settlements and
+herds and for hunting. In the Arctic regions the Esquimaux also use
+their dogs, which are like the sheep-dog, for personal protection and
+hunting; they do particularly good service against the musk-ox, while
+the wild reindeer is too fast for them. But the Esquimau dog is chiefly
+used for drawing the sledge, and, where the sledge cannot be used,
+as a beast of burden, since it is able to carry fairly heavy loads.
+In China and elsewhere, as formerly in the old civilised countries
+of South America, the dog is still fattened and killed for meat. So
+that the domestic dog serves every possible purpose to which domestic
+animals can be put, except, it seems, for milking, although this would
+not be out of the question either. The dog was also eaten by man in
+the later Stone Age, as is proved by the finds in his kitchen refuse.
+The reindeer is now restricted to the Polar regions of the Northern
+Hemisphere&mdash;Scandinavia, North Asia, and North America, whereas in the
+Palæolithic Period it was very numerous throughout Russia, Siberia,
+and temperate Europe down to the Alps and Pyrenees. It does not seem
+ever to have been definitely proved that the reindeer existed in the
+Neolithic Period of Central and Northern Europe, although according to
+Von Zittel it lived in Scotland down to the eleventh century and in
+the Hercynian forest until the time of Cæsar. The earliest definite
+information we appear to have of the tamed reindeer, which at the
+present day is a herd animal with the Lapps in Europe, and with the
+Samoyedes and Reindeer Tunguses in Asia, is found in Ælian, who speaks
+of the Scythians having tame deer.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[Pg 159]</span></p>
+
+<p>Oxen at present exist nowhere in the wild state, while the tame ox
+is distributed as a domestic animal over the whole earth, and has
+formed the most various breeds. In the European Drift a wild ox, the
+urus, distinguished by its size and the size of its horns, was widely
+distributed, and it still lived during the later Stone Age with the
+domestic ox. In the later prehistoric ages, and even in historic times,
+the urus still occurs as a beast of the forest.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Taming of the Wild Horse</div>
+
+<p>In the later Stone Age the horse, too, is no longer merely a beast of
+the chase, but occurs also in the tame state. During the Drift the
+horse lived in herds all over Europe, North Asia, and North Africa.
+From this Drift horse comes the domestic horse now found all over the
+earth. Even the wild horses of the Drift exhibit such considerable
+differences from one another that, according to Nehring’s studies,
+these are to be regarded as the beginning of the formation of local
+breeds. The taming and domestication of the wild horse of the Drift,
+which began in the Stone Age, led to the domestic horse being split up
+later into numerous breeds. The old wild horse was comparatively small,
+with a large head; a similar form is still found here and there on the
+extensive barren moors of South Germany in the moss-horse, or, as the
+common people call it, the moss-cat. At the present day the genus of
+the domestic horse falls, like the ox, into two chief breeds&mdash;a smaller
+and more graceful Oriental breed, and a more powerful and somewhat
+larger Western breed with the facial bones more strongly developed.
+The horse of the later Stone Age of Europe exhibits only comparatively
+slight differences from the wild horse; it is generally a small,
+half-pony-like form with a large head, evidently also a stunted product
+of primitive breeding under comparatively unfavourable conditions.
+Two species extant in the Stone Age still live wild on the steppes of
+Central Asia at the present day; one of them also occurs as a fossil in
+the European Drift, although only rarely. That the ass occurred in the
+European Drift is probable, but not proved. It has not yet been found
+in the Neolithic Period of Europe.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Did the Horse come from Asia?</div>
+
+<p>A survey of the palæontology of the domestic animals shows that they
+come from wild Drift species which&mdash;at any rate, as regards the ox,
+horse, and dog&mdash;are now extinct, so that these most important domestic
+animals now exist only in the tame state. Some of the domestic animals
+came from Asia, and, according to Von Zittel, were imported into Europe
+from there; this applies to the peat-ox and the domestic goat and pig.
+The Asiatic origin of the domestic horse and sheep is probable, but not
+proved; the sheep is found wild in South Europe as well as in Asia.
+The tarpan, a breed of horse very similar to the wild horse, lives in
+herds independent of man on the steppes of Central Asia. This has been
+indicated as being probably the parent breed of the domestic horse, and
+the origin of the latter has accordingly also been traced to Asia.</p>
+
+<p>One thing is certain: a considerable number of animal forms that
+co-exist with man in Europe at the present day&mdash;for instance, almost
+all the forms of our poultry and the fine kinds of pigs and sheep&mdash;have
+originally come from Asia. Our investigations show a similar state of
+things even in the Neolithic Period.</p>
+
+<p>In the North of Europe, which has furnished us with our standard
+information regarding the Neolithic culture-stratum, the certain proofs
+that have hitherto been found of agriculture and the cultivation of
+useful plants having been practised at that time (to which civilisation
+owes no less than to the breeding of useful tame animals) consist not
+so much of plant remains themselves as of stone hand-mills and spinning
+and weaving implements, which indicate the cultivation of corn and flax.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">History in the Lake Dwellings</div>
+
+<p>Our chief knowledge of Neolithic agriculture and plant culture has been
+furnished by the lake-dwellings, especially those of Switzerland, which
+have preserved the picture of the Neolithic civilisation of Central
+Europe, sketched for us, as it were, in the North, in its finest lines.
+So far we can prove the cultivation of the following useful plants
+in the later Stone Age; their remains were chiefly found, as we have
+said, well preserved in the Stone Age lake-dwellings of Switzerland,
+which have been described in classical manner by Oswald Heer. Of
+cereal grasses Heer determined, in the rich Stone Age lake-dwellings
+of Wangen, on Lake Constance, and Robenhausen, in Lake Pfäffikon,
+three sorts of wheat and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[Pg 161]</span> two varieties of barley&mdash;the six-rowed and
+two-rowed. Flax was also grown by Neolithic Man. This was, it seems, a
+rather different variety from our present flax, being narrow-leaved,
+and still occurs wild, or probably merely uncultivated, in Macedonia
+and Thracia. Flax has also been found growing wild in Northern India,
+on the Altai Mountains, and at the foot of the Caucasus.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe34" id="i_160">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_160.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE HORSE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The horse which was common in the Stone Age was a wild
+ ancestor of our own domestic horse, but not quite so large or so strong as the
+ average well-bred creature familiar in our modern life. Its remotest ancestor
+ was the Hyracotherium, or Orohippus, while an intermediary stage was that of the
+ Hypparion, or Protohippus, in which, as shown in the diagram, the change from
+ the foot to the hoof had advanced to a very great extent.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_160_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The common wheat occurring in the lake-dwellings of the Stone Age is a
+small-grained but mealy variety; but the so-called Egyptian wheat with
+large grains also occurs.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Gardening in the Stone Age</div>
+
+<p>Traces of regular gardening and vegetable culture are altogether
+wanting. Some finds, however, seem to indicate primitive arboriculture,
+apples and pears having been found dried in slices in the
+lake-dwellings of the Stone Age; there even appears to be an improved
+kind of apple besides the wild-growing crab. But although they are
+chiefly wild unimproved fruit-trees of whose fruit remains have been
+found, we can imagine that these fruit-trees were planted near the
+settlements, and the great nutritious and health-giving properties
+of the fruit, as a supplement to a meat fare, must have been all the
+more appreciated owing to the lack of green vegetables. The various
+wild cherries, plums, and sloes were eaten, as also raspberries,
+blackberries, and strawberries. Beechnut and hazelnut appear as wild
+food-plants.</p>
+
+<p>The original home of the most important cereals&mdash;wheat, spelt, and
+barley&mdash;is not known with absolute certainty; probably they came from
+Central Asia, where they are said to be found wild in the region of
+the Euphrates. The real millet came from India; peas and the other
+primeval leguminous plants of Europe, such as lentils and beans,
+came likewise from the East, partly from India. So that, apart from
+flax, which probably has a more northern home, the regular cultivated
+plants of the Stone Age of Central Europe&mdash;cereal grasses, millet, and
+lentils&mdash;indicate Asia as their original home. We have therefore a
+state of things similar to that observed in the case of the domestic
+animals.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Beginning of the Potter’s Art</div>
+
+<p>The potter’s art was probably entirely unknown to Palæolithic Man, for
+in none of the pure Drift finds have fragments of clay vessels been
+found. So where clay vessels or fragments of them occur, they appear
+as the proof of a post-Drift period. On the other hand, pottery was
+quite general in the Neolithic Age of Europe. Still, the need of clay
+vessels is not general among all races of the earth even at the present
+day; up to modern times there were, and still are, races and tribes
+without pots. From their practices it is evident that the European
+Stone men of the Drift could also manage to prepare their food, chiefly
+meat, by fire without cooking vessels. The Fuegians lay the piece of
+meat to be roasted on the glowing embers of a dying wood fire, and turn
+it with a pointed forked branch so as to keep it from burning. Meat
+thus prepared is very tasty, as it retains all the juice and only gets
+a rind on the top, and the ashes that adhere to it serve as seasoning
+in lieu of salt. On a coal fire not only can fish be grilled, stuck on
+wooden rods, but whole sheep can be roasted on wooden spits, precisely
+as people have the dainty of roast mutton in the East. To these may be
+added a large number of other methods of roasting, and even boiling,
+without earthen or metal vessels, which are partly vouched for by
+ethnography and partly by archæology, and some of which, like the
+so-called “stone-boiling,” are still practised at the present day.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">No Perfect Pottery in the Stone Age</div>
+
+<p>Although, according to this, pottery is not an absolute necessary
+of life for man, yet it is certain that even those poorly equipped
+pioneers who first settled in Denmark in the Pine Period, in spite of
+their having an almost or quite exclusive meat fare, had clay pottery
+in general use for preparing their food, and probably also for storing
+their provisions. As we have already shown, the remains that have been
+preserved in the kitchen-middens are the oldest that have been found
+in Denmark. Simple and rude as the numerous potsherds that occur may
+appear, they are of the highest importance on account of the proof of
+their great age. Unfortunately, as we have already seen, not a single
+perfect vessel has come to light. The fragments are very thick, of
+rough clay with bits of granite worked in, and are all made by hand
+without the use of the potter’s wheel. The pieces partly indicate
+large vessels, some with flat bottoms, and others with the special
+characteristic of pointed bottoms, so that the vessel could not be
+stood up as it was.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[Pg 163]</span> Smaller bowls, frequently of an oval form, also
+occurred with rounded bottoms, so that they also could not stand by
+themselves. It is very important to note that on these fragments of
+pottery we find only extraordinarily scanty and exceedingly simple
+ornamental decorations, consisting merely of incisions, or impressions
+made with the fingers, on the upper edge.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_162">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_162.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">MAN’S FIGHT WITH THE GIANT ANIMALS OF THE ANCIENT
+ WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the painting, “The Slaughter of a Mammoth,” by
+ V. M. Vasnetsov, now in the Russian Historical Museum at Moscow.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_162_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>We shall see how far this oldest pottery of the Stone Age
+is distinguished by its want of decoration from that of the
+fully-developed Stone Age. But it is very important to notice that
+this rudest mode of making clay vessels, which we here see forming the
+beginning of a whole series that rises to the highest pitch of artistic
+perfection, remained in vogue not only during the whole Stone Age, but
+even in much later times.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Stone Age Potter’s Handwork</div>
+
+<p>It is true that in the fully developed neolithic Stone Age of Europe
+the clay pottery is also all made by hand, without the potter’s wheel,
+the oldest and rudest forms still occurring everywhere, as we have
+said; but besides these a great variety is exhibited in the size, form,
+and mode of production of the pottery. The clay is often finer, and
+even quite finely worked and smoothed, and the vessels have thin sides
+and are burnt right through. The thick fragments are generally only
+burnt outside, frequently only on one side, and so much that the clay
+has acquired a bright red colour, whereas the inside, although hard,
+has remained only a greyish black. We have numerous perfectly preserved
+vessels of the later Neolithic Age. They are frequently distinguished
+by an artistic finish and beauty of form, and on their surfaces we find
+ornaments incised or imprinted, but rarely moulded on them, which,
+although the style is only geometrical, cannot be denied a keen sense
+of beauty and symmetry. The clay vessels also show the beginning of
+coloured decoration. The incised strokes, dots, etc., are often filled
+out with white substance (chalk or plaster), which brings the patterns
+out into bold ornamental relief from the black or red ground of the
+surface.</p>
+
+<p>After that it is no wonder that pottery advanced to the real coloured
+painting of the vessels during the Neolithic Period, at least in some
+places.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Growth of Artistic Taste</div>
+
+<p>On these vessels the handle now appears, in its simplest form as a
+wart-like or flatter projection from the side of the vessel, pierced
+either vertically or horizontally with a narrow opening just large
+enough to admit of a cord being passed through. Other handles, just
+like those in use at the present day, are bowed out broad, wide, and
+high for holding with the hand. These generally begin quite at the top,
+at the rim of the vessel, and are continued from there down to its
+belly, whereas the first-mentioned are placed lower, frequently around
+the greatest circumference of the vessel.</p>
+
+<p>There is no doubt whatever that in the main these clay vessels were
+made on the spot where we find their remains at the present day. This
+easily explains the local peculiarity that we recognise in various
+finds, by which certain groups may be defined as more or less connected
+with one another. Different styles may be clearly distinguished by
+place and group. But, this notwithstanding, wherever we meet with
+neolithic ceramics, they cannot conceal their homogeneous character. In
+spite of all peculiarities this general uniform style of the ceramics
+of the Stone Age, which we can easily distinguish and determine even
+under its various disguises, goes over the whole of Europe.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Proofs of Man’s Mental Development</div>
+
+<p>In finds that lie nearer to the old Asiatic centres of civilisation and
+to the coasts of the Mediterranean&mdash;as, for instance, at Butmir&mdash;the
+vessels are in part better worked, and the ornaments are richer and
+more elegant, and the spirals more frequent and more regular, and
+are sometimes moulded on, and sometimes, as we have mentioned, even
+painted in colour. But the general character remains unmistakably
+Neolithic, and may be found not only on the European coasts of the
+Mediterranean and the islands of the Ægean Sea, but in certain respects
+also in Mesopotamia and Egypt. The oldest Trojan pottery also exhibits
+unmistakable points of agreement with it.</p>
+
+<p>Not only the stone weapons and implements, but, as far as we can see,
+even the remains of the oldest ceramics, show that uniform development
+of the culture of the Neolithic Period which proves a like course of
+mental development in mankind.</p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[Pg 164]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop3" id="THE_WORLD_BEFORE_HISTORY_V">THE WORLD BEFORE
+HISTORY&mdash;V</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe44" id="i_164">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_164.jpg" alt="The World Before History--V" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">Professor JOHANNES RANKE</p>
+
+<h4 id="THE_HOME_LIFE_OF_PRIMITIVE_FOLK">THE HOME LIFE OF PRIMITIVE FOLK</h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">What the Lake Dwellings Tell</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">A</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first2">A</span>
+PICTURE, of unequalled clearness of delineation, of the general
+conditions of the life and culture of Central European Man during the
+Neolithic Period, was given, according to the results of the celebrated
+researches of Ferdinand Keller and his school of Swiss archæologists,
+by the lake-dwellings in the Alpine lowlands. Whereas in cave districts
+the caves and grottos often served the men of the later Stone Age as
+temporary and even as permanent winter dwellings, in the watery valleys
+of Switzerland the Neolithic population built its huts on foundations
+of piles in lakes and bogs. In that period we have to imagine the
+Alpine lowlands still extensively covered with woods and full of wild
+beasts; at that time the huts standing on piles in the water must have
+afforded their inhabitants a security such as scarcely any other place
+could have given. The first founders and inhabitants of settlements of
+pile-dwellings in Switzerland belong to the pure Stone Period. In spite
+of their lake-dwellings the old Neolithic men of Switzerland appear
+to have possessed almost all the important domestic animals, but they
+also knew and practised agriculture. They lived by cattle-rearing,
+agriculture, hunting, and fishing, and on wild fruit and all that the
+plant world freely offered in the way of eatables. Their clothing
+consisted partly of skins, but partly also of stuffs, the majority of
+which seem to have been prepared from flax.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Beginnings of a Social Order</div>
+
+<p>The endeavour of the settlers to live together in lasting homes
+protected from surprises, and in large numbers, is an unmistakable
+proof that they were aware of the advantages of a settled mode of life,
+and that we have not to imagine the inhabitants of the pile-dwellings
+as nomadic herdsmen, and still less as a regular race of hunters and
+fishermen. The permanent concentration of a large number of individuals
+at the same point, and of hundreds of families in neighbouring inlets
+of the lakes, could not have taken place if there had not been through
+all the seasons a regular supply of provisions derived principally
+from cattle-rearing and agriculture, and if there had not existed the
+elements of social order. Even the establishment of the lake-settlement
+itself is not possible for the individual man; a large community must
+have here worked with a common plan and purpose. Herodotus describes
+a pile-village in Lake Prosias, in Thracia, which was inhabited by
+Pæones, who defended it successfully against the Persian general
+Megabazos. The scaffold on which the huts were built stood on high
+piles in the middle of the lake; it was connected with the bank only by
+a single, easily removable bridge. Herodotus says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>The piles on which the scaffolds rest were erected in olden times
+by the citizens in a body; the enlargement of the lake-settlement
+took place later, according as it was necessitated by the formation
+of new families.</p></div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Lake Dweller At Home</div>
+
+<p>According to the large number of lake-dwellings of the Stone Age in
+the Alpine lowlands, and according to the large quantity of products
+of primitive industry that have been found there, centuries must have
+elapsed between the moment when the first settlers rammed in the piles
+on which to build their dwellings and the end of the Stone Period.</p>
+
+<p>The huts of the settlements of the Stone Age were partly round and
+partly quadrangular, and, like the pile-hut discovered by Frank near
+Schussenried, were divided into two compartments&mdash;one for the cattle,
+and the other, with a hearth built of stones, for the dwelling of man.
+The floor of the hut was made of round timber with a mud foundation,
+and perhaps also with a mud flooring; in Frank’s hut the walls were
+formed of split tree-trunks, standing vertically with the split sides
+turned inward, firmly put together between corner posts. The round huts
+had walls of roughly intertwined branches, covered with clay inside and
+out; of this clay-plaster numerous pieces have been preserved, hardened
+by fire, with the marks<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[Pg 165]</span> of the branches. The pile huts of the lakes
+were connected with the water by block or rung ladders. Victor Cross
+found such a ladder in one of the oldest stations; it consisted of a
+long oak pole provided at fairly regular intervals with holes in which
+the rungs were inserted.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">First Traces of Textiles<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+In a Stone Age Kitchen</div>
+
+<p>Of special importance in estimating the degree of civilisation attained
+by the lake-dwellers of the Stone Age are the remains of spinning and
+weaving implements and of webs and textile fabrics, plaited work,
+etc. Flax has been found wound on the implements made of ribs, that
+we mentioned above as flax combs; we have also mentioned the fixing
+of blades with flax, or threads made of it, and the numerous wide and
+narrow nets made of threads. For spinning the thread, spindles were
+used just like those of the present day, a spindle-stick of wood being
+fastened into a spinning-whorl made of stone, deer-horn, or clay. The
+distaff was probably not yet known; a loom has not yet been found,
+either; but numerous weaver’s weights, which served for spinning
+the threads, have been. Excellent webs, some of them twilled, were
+produced, of which we have many fragments. Remains of mats and baskets
+prove that those were manufactured from the materials still employed
+at the present day. Corn was baked into a kind of bread consisting of
+coarsely ground grains. The millstones that were used for grinding the
+corn are found in large numbers. They are rather worn, hollowed slabs
+of stone, and smaller flat stones rounded on the top, with which the
+grains of corn were crushed on the larger slabs. Some of the kitchen
+utensils we find already much improved. Large and small pots for
+storing purposes, earthen cooking pots, and dishes, and large wooden
+spoons and twirling-sticks&mdash;the latter probably for churning&mdash;have been
+preserved. Vessels like strainers served for making cheese; they are
+pots in whose sides and bottoms a number of small holes were made for
+pouring off the whey from the cheese.</p>
+
+<p>Here, in the fully developed Neolithic Period we find the early
+inhabitants of Switzerland to be a settled agricultural and farming
+population. Although hunting and fishing still furnished an important
+part of their food, so that in some places even more deer bones have
+been found among the cooking remains than bones of the ox, yet the
+milk, cheese, and butter of the cows, sheep, and goats, the flesh of
+these and of the hog, and bread and fruit, already formed the basis of
+their subsistence.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_165">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_165.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A PRIMITIVE STYLE OF DWELLING STILL WIDESPREAD IN SAVAGE
+ LANDS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The lake dwellings still in use in New Guinea, illustrated
+ in this reproduction from an old work, D’Urville’s “Voyage of the Astrolabe,”
+ are exactly like the lake dwellings of prehistoric Europe.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[Pg 166]</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man Learning the Art of Living</div>
+
+<p>The results of cave research are almost as rich and varied as the
+results yielded by the study of the lake-dwellings in their bearing on
+the Neolithic stratum. Where there is a Drift stratum in the cave-earth
+the confusion of Palæolithic and Neolithic objects can, as we have
+said, scarcely be avoided. But there are numerous grottos and small
+caves in which the Neolithic stratum is the oldest, so that mistakes
+are out of the question. In a large number of such places in the cave
+district of the Franconian-Bavarian Jura the conditions under which
+finds have been made in the Neolithic stratum have proved almost as
+pure and unmixed as in the lake-dwellings.</p>
+
+<p>The cave-dwellers of the later Stone Age in the Franconian Jura were,
+like the Swiss lake-dwellers of the Stone Age, mainly a pastoral race.
+They possessed all the important domestic animals that the latter
+possessed&mdash;dog, cow, horse, sheep, goat, pig&mdash;and likewise practised
+agriculture, or, at any rate, flax-growing; at the same time hunting
+and fishing formed a considerable part of their means of subsistence.
+So that, not only on artificial pile-works on the shores of lakes, but
+also on the banks of South German rivers, there formerly lived a race
+which, although still mainly restricted to hunting and fishing, and
+using no metal, but exclusively stone and bone tools, already practised
+cattle-breeding and primitive agriculture, and was able to increase
+the means of existence afforded it by Nature by the first technical
+arts&mdash;by the chipping and grinding of stone instruments, bone carving,
+and, above all, pottery-making, tanning, and the arts of sowing,
+weaving and plaiting.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Beginning of Weaving and Knitting</div>
+
+<p>Of most importance, as showing the state of civilisation of the
+Neolithic rock-dwellers, are the numerous articles carved from bone
+that must be looked upon as instruments for weaving and net-knitting.
+For the latter purpose there were large, finely-smoothed bone
+crochet-needles, some of them carved from the rib of a large ruminant.
+The handle-end is smoothed by use, and the end with the hook is rounded
+from the same cause. The end is frequently perforated, so that it might
+be hung up. Still more numerous were shuttles of various forms.</p>
+
+<p>According to the numerous finds of perforated clay weaver’s weights,
+the loom, like that of the lake-dwellers, must have been like the
+ancient implement that, according to Montelius, was in use on the
+Faröe Islands a comparatively short time ago. Spinning-whorls are very
+numerous, being partly flat, round discs of bone pierced in the centre,
+and partly thick bone rings or large beads of bone and deer-horn and
+flat burr-pieces of deer-antlers.</p>
+
+<p>It was formerly thought that the Neolithic Europeans did not possess
+the arts of engraving and carving animals and human figures which
+the Palæolithic Men had understood in such conspicuous manner. The
+progress of research has now produced more and more proof that in the
+later Stone Age the arts of carving and engraving had not died out.
+We have the celebrated amber carvings of the later Stone Age from
+the Kurisches Haff, near Schwarzort, some of which probably served a
+religious purpose; those of ivory, bone, stalactite, etc., from the
+caves of France and the Polish Jura; the figures from Butmir, and other
+evidences.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Fortified Settlements in Stone Age</div>
+
+<p>In Italy, in Lombardy, and Emilia, another group of settlements of
+the Stone Age has been found, which again exhibit the civilization
+and all other signs of the later Stone Age, and in many respects more
+closely resemble the lake-dwellings than do the cave-dwellings. These
+are the “terramare,” whose inhabitants, however, had already to some
+extent advanced to the use of bronze. A sharp division of strata into
+habitation of the pure Stone Age and habitation of the Metal Age has
+not yet been made. The huts stood on pile-work on dry land, the piles
+being six to ten feet high; the whole settlement was fortified with
+trench and rampart, generally with palisades, and was of an oblong
+or oval plan. Besides many natural and artificial caves in Italy the
+dwelling-pits, which may formerly have borne the superstructure of a
+hut, also belong to the pure Stone Age.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33_5" id="i_167">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_167.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">LAKE-DWELLERS RETURNING FROM THE HUNT IN THEIR DUG-OUT
+ CANOES</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From a painting by Hippolyte Coutau, in the Geneva
+ Museum.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_167_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Strange Homes of Early Man</div>
+
+<p>Such dwelling-pits of the Stone Age seem to have been distributed all
+over Europe. Burnt wall-plaster with impressions of interwoven twigs,
+has frequently been found near or in the pits, doubtless indicating
+hut-building. In Mecklenburg, where the dwelling-pits were first
+carefully examined by Liesch, they have a circular outline of ten
+to fifteen yards, and are five to six and a half feet deep. At the
+bottom<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[Pg 168]</span> of the pit lie burnt and blackened stones, hearthstones,
+charcoal, potsherds, broken bones of animals, and a few stone
+implements, the latter being mostly found in larger numbers in the
+vicinity of the dwellings. The same circular dwelling-pits of the Stone
+Age are found in France. Smaller hearth-pits were recently found in
+very large numbers in the Spessart, in Bavaria, with hundreds of stone
+hatchets and perforated axe-hammers, some of the former being very
+finely made of jadeite.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">America before History</div>
+
+<p>During the Neolithic Period dwellings were frequently made on heights,
+and it seems that even at that time they were to a certain extent
+walled round and fortified. Such settlements are numerous all over
+Southern and Central Germany, in Austria-Hungary, especially in the
+coast-country, and in Italy and France. Many of these stations belong
+purely to the Stone Age; indeed, the majority were inhabited already
+during the Stone Age, and furnish the typical Neolithic relics familiar
+from the foregoing. On the other hand, they continue to be inhabited
+even in the later metal periods, and in some cases right down to modern
+times. The rock near Clausen, in the Eisack valley, in the Tyrol, on
+which the large Säben monastery now stands, was a mediæval castle, and
+during the times of the Romans a fortified settlement called Sobona
+stood there; and when excavations were made in 1895, for adding new
+buildings to the monastery, a well-ground stone hatchet of the later
+Stone Age came to light. On many hills in Central Germany are found
+traces of the ancient presence of men who lived on them or assembled
+on them for sacrificial feasts; the earth is coloured black by charred
+remains and organic influences, and this “black earth on heights and
+hills” contains frequently, as we have said, the traces of Neolithic
+men. In Italy, many finds on such heights&mdash;for instance, those made
+on the small castle-hill near Imola&mdash;seem to exhibit that stage of
+the Stone Age that is missing in the terramare, and that precedes the
+beginning of the Metal Age of the terramare, but corresponds to it in
+every essential except in the possession of metal.</p>
+
+<p>But the view that is opened up is still wider. The prehistoric times
+of the New World also exhibit a Neolithic stage, corresponding to
+that of Europe, as the basis of the further development of the ancient
+civilised lands of America. And where a higher civilisation did not
+develop autochthonously in America, European discoverers found the
+Neolithic civilisation still in active existence, as they did in the
+whole Australian world. Accordingly in these vast regions, which
+have never risen above the Stone Age of themselves, the same stage
+of civilisation which in the old civilised lands belongs to a grey,
+immemorial, prehistoric period, here stands in the broad light of
+historic times. The study of modern tribes in an age of stone throws
+many a ray of light on the conditions of the prehistoric Stone Age; and
+this study, on the other hand, shows us that the primitive conditions
+of civilisation of those tribes stand for a general stage of transition
+in the development of all mankind.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Foundations of Society</div>
+
+<p>The lake-dwelling stations, and the land settlements resembling them,
+prove of themselves how far the culture of the early inhabitants of
+Europe was advanced even in that ancient period which was formerly
+imagined to be scarcely raised above half-animal conditions. Such
+structures could not be erected unless men combined into large social
+communities, which is indeed indicated by the very fact of the number
+of dwellings that were crowded into a comparatively small space. For
+the first ramming-in of the pile-works a large number of men working
+together on a common plan was absolutely necessary. The same applies
+to the construction of the artificial islands, protected by pile-works
+and partly resting on piles, termed “crannoges” by Irish archæologists,
+and to the Italian villages called “terramare,” which likewise once
+rested on piles and were protected by ditches. From the extent of
+the pile-works we are able to estimate the number of the former
+inhabitants of the settlements supported by them. Quite as clear an
+idea of the number of the former inhabitants is also given by the early
+circumvallations on the tops of hills and shoulders of rock, which were
+likewise made and inhabited during the Stone Age.</p>
+
+<p>The co-operation of a large number of men for a common purpose is
+also shown in the often huge stone structures to which, on account
+of the size of the stones employed in their construction, the name<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[Pg 169]</span>
+“megalithic” structures, or gigantic stone structures, has been
+given. In Northern Europe they, too, belong to the Stone Age proper.
+The majority of these gigantic structures were originally tombs; the
+principle on which they are built is often repeated even in far less
+imposing tombs.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_169">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_169.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE FAMOUS GIANT CHAMBER NEAR ROSKILDE IN DENMARK</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">That the men of the later Stone Age had developed a
+ considerable degree of culture is proved by such remains as these. The erection
+ of these giant chambers must have called for a vast amount of co-operation,
+ skill, and ingenuity. The means whereby the massive stones were placed into
+ position, and so fixed to withstand the shocks of thousands of years, have not
+ yet been satisfactorily explained by archæology.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The stone blocks of which these gigantic structures are piled now
+often lie bare. Large stones placed crosswise, which represent, as
+it were, the side-walls of a room, support a roof of one or several
+“covering-stones” of occasionally colossal size. For the erection of
+these in their present position without the technical resources at the
+disposal of modern builders, human strength appears inadequate; in
+popular opinion only giants could have made such structures. Some of
+the stones are really so large, and the covering-stones especially so
+enormous, that these buildings have defied destruction, for thousands
+of years, by their very weight.</p>
+
+<p>In the time of their construction these giants’ graves were mostly
+buried under mounds. They were the inner structures of large tumuli,
+in which the reverence of the men of the Stone Age once buried its
+heroes. One of the finest “giant’s chambers” is probably that near Öm,
+in the neighbourhood of Roskilde, in Denmark. The building material
+consists merely of erratic stone blocks of enormous size. The rough
+blocks were mostly set up by the side of one another, without any
+further working, so as to support one another as far as possible; at
+the same time all of them, as Sophus Müller observes, are slightly
+inclined inward, so that they are kept more firmly in position by their
+own weight. The stones thus erected, forming the parallel side-walls
+of the whole structure, stand so far apart that a huge erratic block,
+reaching from one wall to the other, could be placed on them as a roof.
+The distance between the side-walls of the giant’s chambers attains
+a maximum of eight to nine feet; the covering-stones placed on them
+are some ten to eleven feet long. The pressure of the covering-stones
+from above helps considerably to hold the whole structure together.
+In order to distribute the pressure of the covering-stones regularly,
+smaller stones were carefully inserted under the wall-stones where they
+had to stand on the ground. How exactly these proportions of weight
+were judged is proved by the fact that these structures of heavy and
+irregular stones, resting on their natural, differently shaped sides
+and edges, have held together until the present day. The inner walls
+of the chambers were made as carefully as possible. Where, as on the
+outside, the rough and irregular form of the stone block projects,
+either the naturally smooth side was turned inward or the roughness was
+chipped off.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_170">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_170.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE MARVELLOUS MEMORIALS OF THE STONE AGE AT CARNAC IN
+ BRITTANY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">On the plain near the little town of Carnac, in Brittany,
+ stand eleven thousand immense monoliths in eleven rows, erected probably for
+ religious purposes in the Stone Age.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_170_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>These are the beginnings of a real architecture, seen also in the
+regular wedging with small stones of the spaces left between the
+wall-stones and covering-stones and between the wall-stones themselves.
+These small stones were frequently built in, in regular wall-like
+layers. Sandstone was often used for the purpose, being more easily
+split into regular pieces, which gave this masonry a still more
+pleasing appearance. The number of stone blocks used for the wall-sides
+varies according to the size of the giant’s chambers, as does also
+the number of covering-stones. For smaller chambers, with six to nine
+wall-stones, two or three covering-stones were required. But far larger
+stone chambers occur, as many as seventeen wall-stones having been
+counted. Such large chambers require a whole row of covering-stones
+beside one another. The door-opening often shows a special regard for
+architectonics. The two door-post stones are rather lower than the
+other wall-stones; on them a stone was laid horizontally, which kept
+them apart and distributed the pressure of the covering-stone equally
+on both posts.</p>
+
+<p>Very often there was also a stone as a threshold. Leading to the door
+is a low passage, made in similar manner to the chamber, but of far
+smaller stones. The passage is only high enough to allow one to creep
+through, whereas the chamber itself is about as high as a man, so that
+one could stand<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[Pg 170]<br /><a id="Page_171"></a>[Pg 171]</span> upright in most of them. Larger stone chambers are
+rarely without this passage, and from it such grave-structures have
+been named “passage-graves.” Besides the building-in of small stones,
+the holes still remaining between the stones were also coated over on
+the outside with mud to keep the rain-water from soaking in; mud was
+also frequently used for making a rough plaster floor for the chamber
+if the natural floor could not be made level enough. On the floor is
+frequently found a compact layer of small flints, or a regular pavement
+of flat stones, often rough-hewn, or roundish stones fitting one
+another as nearly as possible, which were then probably also covered
+with a thick layer of mud.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_171a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_171a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">“THE MERCHANTS’ TABLE”: AN IMMENSE DOLMEN ERECTED IN THE
+ STONE AGE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Archæologists are not entirely agreed as to the purpose
+ of these dolmens. They were more likely graves, or chambers associated with
+ religious rites, than residences. This example is at Locmariaquer, near Carnac,
+ in Brittany.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>So that in these giant’s chambers we have real buildings, which imply
+high technical accomplishments and have preserved for us the usual
+form of the dwellings of those early times. In what manner the huge
+covering-stones were placed on the side-walls of the giant’s chambers
+is a problem still unsolved. Doubtless many hands were occupied on
+such structures; and the history of building teaches us that with the
+proper use of human strength&mdash;as, for instance, in ancient Egypt&mdash;great
+weights can be raised and placed in position with very simple
+tools&mdash;round pieces of wood as rollers, ropes, and handspikes.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30" id="i_171b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_171b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">INTERIOR OF THE “MERCHANTS’ TABLE”</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This is the interior of the above dolmen. It will be seen
+ that the earth has slowly risen a great height since it was erected, nearly
+ covering the dolmen, thus indicating immense age. The principal supporting
+ stone is covered with sculpture.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Some of these giant’s chambers, which were originally enclosed in
+mounds or barrows, are still preserved at the present day, and
+splendidly too. Very often the chamber was quite covered with earth
+outside; it then formed the centre of what was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[Pg 173]</span> generally a circular
+barrow, often regular small hills ten to fifteen feet high and
+frequently over ninety feet in circumference.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_172">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_172.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A PALACE UNDER A CLIFF: A REMARKABLE MONUMENT OF THE STONE
+ AGE IN CLIFF PALACE CAÑON, COLORADO</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This is perhaps the most noteworthy of all the remains
+ of the cliff dwellers, and indicates how considerable was the culture of those
+ early people in America.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_172_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The corpses were buried, not cremated. They were frequently in a
+crouching attitude, or that of a sleeper lying sideways with the
+legs drawn up to the body. The smaller graves often represent single
+interments; the larger or largest ones are mostly family tombs, in
+which numerous corpses were interred one after the other at different
+times. But this repeated use of the graves is found also with smaller
+ones, and even with stone cists. Only the last corpse then lies in a
+normal position, while, through the repeated opening of the grave and
+the later interments, the skeletons belonging to previously interred
+corpses appear more or less disturbed or intentionally put aside.
+The skulls of the corpses interred in the Neolithic graves are well
+formed, their size indicating a very considerable brain development.
+The corpses were no bigger than the present inhabitants of the same
+districts, and the form of the head corresponds partly with that of the
+present population of those countries. Nor do the skeletons otherwise
+differ from those of modern men.</p>
+
+<p>In America, also, gigantic structures were erected by the aborigines
+who lived in the Stone Age, to commemorate and to protect their dead.
+They consist partly of large mounds of stones and earth, which are
+likewise often regular small hills, and partly of stone structures
+reminding one of the giants’ chambers. The majority of the mounds were
+doubtless mainly sepulchral; others may have been temple-hills or
+sacrificial mounds, defensive works or observatories.</p>
+
+<p>The objects buried with the occupants belong mostly to the Neolithic
+Period, and consist chiefly of stone weapons and tools, some rude, but
+others finely worked and polished. Some are of pure natural copper,
+which was beaten into shape cold with stone hammers. Besides these,
+and ornaments and pottery, an American specialty is found in the form
+of tobacco-pipes carved from stone, some of which give interesting
+representations of men and animals; this seems to prove that tobacco
+also played a part in the American funeral rites of those times.</p>
+
+<p>The graves of the Neolithic Period not only indicate that mankind
+generally was endowed with the same gifts as regards the first
+principles of the art of building, but they also afford us a glimpse
+of the mental life of that period of civilisation which at a more
+or less distant period was spread over the whole earth. What is so
+characteristic is the affectionate care for the corpse, for whose
+protection no amount of labour and trouble appeared too great. We
+can have no doubt that this reverence was based on a belief in the
+immortality of the soul&mdash;a belief which we find also at the present day
+among the most backward and abandoned “savages.” That the prehistoric
+men of the Stone Age held this belief is proved by the ornaments,
+weapons, implements, and food placed with the dead for use in the next
+world. Their burial customs certainly express a kind of worship of
+departed souls which has played and still plays so important a part in
+the religious ideas of all primitive peoples, and is one of the oldest
+fundamental notions common to mankind.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_173">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_173.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">G. Nordenskiöld</div>
+ <div class="caption">HOW STONE AGE MAN WAS BURIED</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Photograph of an actual skeleton, in position of burial,
+ taken from a prehistoric mound grave in North America.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_174">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_174.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE STRANGE RELIGION OF THE STONE AGE: A DRUID CEREMONY
+ AT STONEHENGE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">A vivid illustration, from an old print, of the purposes of
+ the mysterious stone circles common in Celtic countries.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_174_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[Pg 175]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop3" id="THE_WORLD_BEFORE_HISTORY_VI">THE WORLD BEFORE HISTORY&mdash;VI</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe44" id="i_175">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_175.jpg" alt="The World Before History--VI" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">Professor JOHANNES RANKE</p>
+
+<h4 id="WHEN_HISTORY_WAS_DAWNING">WHEN HISTORY WAS DAWNING</h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">T</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>HE
+discovery of Drift Man, his distinction from man of the later
+Stone Age, the investigation of the Palæolithic and Neolithic strata
+of culture of Europe and of the whole earth, and the scientific
+reconstruction of the earliest forms of civilisation based on these,
+are due solely to the natural-science method of research.</p>
+
+<p>It was only when the exact methods of palæontology and geology had been
+brought to bear with all their rigour on the study of ancient man by
+savants schooled in natural science that solid results were obtained.
+On this sure foundation the science of history now continues building,
+and uses, even for the later periods, so far as recorded information is
+not available, and to supplement it, the same methods of palæontology
+and natural science which were applied so successfully to the earliest
+stages of the evolution of mankind.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Time-Table of Prehistoric Periods</div>
+
+<p>The first point is to collect the relics of the periods of the
+evolution of culture which follow on the later Stone Age, and to
+separate them according to geological strata, uninfluenced by those
+older pseudo-historic fancies by which the deepening of our historical
+knowledge has so long been hindered. By carefully separating and
+tracing the earth’s strata till we come to those that furnish remains
+of times recorded in history, it has been possible to establish first
+a relative chronology of the so-called later prehistoric periods of
+Central Europe, whose offshoots pass immediately into recorded history.</p>
+
+<p>By digging, after the same method of palæontological science,
+through stratum after stratum in the oldest centres of culture,
+especially in the Mediterranean countries, and by arranging the
+products by strata&mdash;uninfluenced by historical hypotheses&mdash;after
+the same natural-science method of research which has produced such
+remarkable results in Central Europe, the most surprising conformity
+in the evolution of culture in widely remote regions has been shown.
+It was found that in the Mediterranean countries, and also in Egypt
+and Babylonia, forms of culture already belong to the time of real
+history which were first recognised in Central Europe as preliminary
+prehistoric stages of historical strata; so that it was possible also
+to establish an absolute historical chronology for those instead of the
+relative prehistoric one.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Europe’s Prehistoric Night</div>
+
+<p>Thus times which, as regards Central Europe, were hitherto wrapped in
+prehistoric night are enlightened by history. Although, as regards
+Central and Northern Europe, we cannot name the peoples who were the
+bearers of those forms of culture, and although we disdain to give them
+a premature nomenclature of hypothetical names, yet their conditions of
+life and culture and the progressive development of these, in manifold
+contact and intercourse with neighbouring and even far remote historic
+peoples and periods, have risen from the darkness of thousands of
+years; and their relation in time to the latter has been recognised.</p>
+
+<p>Thus prehistoric times have themselves become history. The historical
+account of every single region has henceforth to begin with the
+description of the oldest antiquities of the soil that tell of man’s
+habitation, in order thereby to obtain the chronological connection
+with the evolution of the history of mankind generally. That is the
+palæontological method of historical research.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Landmarks of Early Culture</div>
+
+<p>The palæontology of man has proved the Stone Age to be a general
+primary stage of culture for the whole human race. All further general
+progress in culture was affected by the discovery of the art of
+metal-working&mdash;the extraction of the metals from their ores and the
+casting and forging of them. The later and latest eras of culture are
+the Metal Ages, as opposed to the Stone Ages. It is not the use of
+metal in itself, but the above-mentioned metallurgical arts, that form
+the criterion of the advance of culture beyond the bounds of the Stone
+Age. Where, as in some parts of America, native copper was found in
+abundance, this red<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[Pg 176]</span> malleable mineral could probably be worked in the
+same way as stone, without any further progress necessarily developing
+therefrom. The same may apply to meteor-iron, which is said to have
+been used for arrows, together with stone points, by American tribes
+who were otherwise in the age of stone and but poorly civilised.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe27" id="i_176a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_176a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">From stone to metallic form</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe27" id="i_176b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_176b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">Growth of the stop-ridge</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe27" id="i_176c">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_176c.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">Growth of the wings</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe27">
+ <div class="caption">THE TRANSITION FROM STONE TO IRON</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This series of diagrams, reproduced from specimens in
+ the British Museum, by permission of the Trustees, shows how the stone axehead
+ was used as the model for the metal axe or celt, and how that in turn was
+ modified as workers gained experience in the use of the metal</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>In civilised lands it is chiefly metal casting and the forging of the
+heated metal which have made it possible to produce better weapons and
+tools and more valuable ornaments. The worked metals are first copper,
+then the alloy of copper and tin that bears the name of classical
+bronze, and to these are soon added gold and&mdash;especially in districts
+rich in the metal, as in Spain&mdash;silver. Later on the extraction of iron
+from its ores and the forging of that metal are discovered.</p>
+
+<p>According to this course of metallurgical progress the first metal
+period is distinguished as the Bronze Period, which is begun by a
+Copper Period lasting more or less long in different places. The second
+or later metal period is the Iron Period, in which we are living at the
+present day. In the course of time, by gradually displacing bronze and
+copper from the rank of metals worked for weapons and tools, this Iron
+Age has developed to its present stage.</p>
+
+<p>In Central Europe the pile-dwellings in the lakes of Western
+Switzerland again present us with specially clear and uninterrupted
+series of illustrations of the progress of culture from the Stone
+Age to the Iron Age. Ending the Stone Age, we find first a period
+of transition, in which, while stone continued to be principally
+employed, a few ornaments, weapons, and tools of metal began to be
+used. This metal is at first almost exclusively copper, with only
+very little bronze; iron is quite absent. Copper objects have been
+found in Western Switzerland by Victor Gross, most extensively in
+Fenel’s lake-dwelling station, which otherwise still belongs to the
+Stone Age. The majority of these are small daggers, formed after the
+pattern of the flint daggers; some already possess rivetings for
+fastening the blade to a handle. There are also chisels and small awls
+in bone handles, beads, and small ornamental leaves, and hatchets
+of the form of the simplest stone hatchets, with the edge hammered
+out and broadened. Much has proved the existence of a Copper Period
+corresponding to this description in the lake-dwelling in the Mond
+See in Austria, and in Hungary the remains of a Copper Period are
+particularly frequent. Parallel cases also occur in many other parts of
+Europe, particularly, as Virchow has proved, in the Spanish Peninsula,
+and in the Stone Age graves of Cujavia in Prussian Poland. These are
+the more important as they are most closely related to the conditions
+of culture discovered in the ancient strata of Hissarlik-Troy. Further
+unmistakable analogies occur with very ancient finds in Cyprus, and
+probably even with the oldest remains of Babylonian culture hitherto
+known. Here, too, we may include the finds of copper in the Stone Age
+of America.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Passing of the Stone Age</div>
+
+<p>So that in the normal and complete evolution of culture there seems to
+be first a stratum of copper as the connecting link between the Stone
+and Metal Ages; and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[Pg 177]</span> this must be missing in those regions in which
+progress from the stone to the metal culture was only brought about at
+a relatively later period by external influences. This applies not only
+to all modern races in an age of stone, who obtained metal in recent
+times only through contact with European nations who had been living in
+the Iron Period for thousands of years, but, curiously enough, also to
+the greater part of Africa, where the use of iron was prevalent at a
+prehistoric period.</p>
+
+<p>Just as the modern Stone races passed straight from the Stone Age
+into the most highly-developed Iron Age of the most advanced culture,
+so also the stone stratum of Central and South Africa is immediately
+overlaid by a stratum of iron culture, which was brought there in
+ancient times, probably direct from Egypt. As there is in Egypt and
+throughout North Africa a regular development from the Copper-bronze
+Period to the complete iron culture, corresponding to the progress
+of the metal cultures of Europe and Asia, the point of time is thus
+chronologically fixed at which this important element of culture was
+transmitted from Europe to the blacks of Central and South Africa.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_177">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_177.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">WEAPONS USED BY MAN IN THE PERIODS OF DAWNING HISTORY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Reproduced chiefly from specimens in the British Museum.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Advancing Civilisation in Bronze Age</div>
+
+<p>In Western Switzerland the transition period of copper is followed
+without a gap in the development by the Bronze Period proper. With the
+introduction of bronze all the conditions of life were more highly
+developed in the sense of increased culture. With better tools the
+stations of the Bronze Age could be erected at a greater distance from
+the bank, often two hundred to three hundred yards; the space they
+take up is also much greater. The piles are not only better preserved,
+according as the time of their being driven in more nearly approaches
+our own, but they are also better worked, are often square, and the
+points that are rammed into the lake-bottom are better cut. The
+settlements of the Bronze Age often cover an area of several hundred
+square yards, and are no longer comparatively mean villages, as in the
+Stone Age; the pile settlements of the Bronze Age are well-organised
+market towns and even flourishing small cities, where a certain luxury
+already prevails. The products of their industry are graced by that
+beauty and elegance of form that only an advanced civilisation can
+create. As in the Stone Age, so also in the Bronze<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[Pg 178]</span> Age of Central
+and Northern Europe, the most important working-implement, which
+was, however, also used as a weapon, was the axe, or celt. The most
+primitive forms of axes, like the above-mentioned copper axes, still
+resemble the simple stone axes: like these, they have no special
+contrivance for fastening the handle. In more developed forms of axes
+such contrivances for fastening the handle appear first in the form of
+slight flanges, which become wider and wider; finally they develop into
+regular wings, which, by curving towards one another, develop into two
+almost closed lateral semi-canals on the upper side of the celt. In the
+hollow celts a simple socket for the handle was cast in the making; an
+additional means of fastening the handle was provided in a loop, which
+also occurs on winged celts. Besides the celt, or axe-blade, broad
+and narrow chisels of bronze occur in various forms for working wood.
+A second chief type of instrument is the one-edged bronze knife with
+elegantly curved back and a handle tongue.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_178">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_178.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE HILL OF TROY, IN WHICH IS RECORDED A WONDERFUL STORY
+ OF MAN’S PROGRESS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Seven towns of Troy were built upon this hill, one above
+ the ruins of the other, the earliest dating from 3000 B.C.; and the brilliant
+ excavations of Dr. Henry Schliemann, which have won him immortal fame, have
+ contributed more to our knowledge of the history of mankind than any other
+ excavations in our time, as on this site is concentrated a continuous record of
+ man’s progress from the late Stone Age to the height of Greek civilisation.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The manner in which iron was found in the lake-dwellings, as mentioned
+above, shows the gradual development of a period of transition between
+a Bronze and an Iron Age. In spite of the difference in the material
+which the lake-dwellers used for making their weapons and tools in the
+periods of transition, they still imitate the old forms received from
+their forefathers. Just as the first metal axes of copper are copies
+of the stone axes, so also, when iron first became known, were weapons
+made of this metal which corresponded in form to the bronze weapons
+that had hitherto been used.</p>
+
+<p>The Bronze Period was first proved to have been a complete form of
+culture in the North of Europe&mdash;in North Germany and Scandinavia. We
+have now succeeded in establishing the fact that it was a preliminary
+stage of the Iron Age, in locally original development, in all ancient
+centres of culture. It is very remarkable that the civilised states
+of the New World also employed only copper and bronze as working
+metals. Thus the Peruvians did not know iron any more than the other
+American peoples until they came in contact with European influences.
+Besides copper and bronze they had tin and lead, gold and silver. The
+Peruvian bronzes contain silver to the extent of five to ten per cent.
+There are axes or celts of bronze similar to the rudest of the first
+European beginnings in metal corresponding in form to the simple stone
+axe. Many of the other forms of weapons and implements familiar in the
+Bronze<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[Pg 179]</span> Age of the Old World were also made of bronze or copper in
+America; semi-lunar knives with a handle in the middle, lance-heads
+and arrow-heads, swords, war-clubs like morning stars, etc. At the same
+time weapons and implements of stone still remained in use.</p>
+
+<p>In the Old World progress beyond bronze is everywhere due to iron.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe39" id="i_179b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_179b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">EXCAVATIONS IN THE TEMPLE OF ATHENA AT TROY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Dr. Schliemann’s discoveries in the ruins of this temple
+ and the ruins of older buildings beneath it were among the richest in the entire
+ annals of archæological research.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>One place has been found and most completely investigated after the
+method of palæontological research, with all the help afforded by
+archæological and historical science, where, in overlying geological
+strata, the evidences have been found of a progressive development
+of culture from the end of the Stone Age down to the brilliant days
+of Græco-Roman history. There the chronological connection has been
+obtained, not only for the metal periods, but also for the end of the
+Neolithic Period. This most important place is Troy, the citadel-hill
+of Hissarlik, by the excavation of which Henry Schliemann has won
+immortal fame. Schliemann’s excavations, supplemented and completed
+in decisive manner by Dörpfeld, have brought about the most important
+advancement of the history of mankind that our age can show.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe37" id="i179a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_179a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A WINE MERCHANT’S CELLAR IN ANCIENT TROY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Nine colossal earthen jars were discovered by Dr.
+ Schliemann in the depths of the Temple of Athena. They had evidently belonged
+ to some wine merchant’s cellar in the pre-Hellenic period.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Virchow’s name is inseparably associated with Schliemann’s.
+Furtwängler, in his account, based on personal observation, of the
+results of the excavations at Troy, has accomplished the great service
+of exactly determining the chronological connections of the prehistoric
+with the historic eras, and thereby linking the former to history.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[Pg 180]</span></p>
+
+<p>On the spot on which tradition placed Homeric Troy (says Furtwängler)
+there really has stood a stately citadel, which was contemporaneous
+with the golden age of Mycenæ, the epoch of the Agamemnon of legend,
+was intimately related to Mycenæan culture, and at the same time
+corresponds most exactly to the idea of Troy underlying the old epic.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Seven Towns on One Hill</div>
+
+<p>The citadel-hill of Troy terminates a ridge of heights stretching
+westward from Mount Ida, almost parallel to the Hellespont, and
+slopes steeply into the Trojan plain or the valley of the Scamander.
+The natural hill itself is not very high, but it was overlaid by
+enormous layers of ruins of buildings and walls, whereby it has been
+considerably increased not only in height, but also in breadth. Stratum
+after stratum lies one upon the other like the leaves of a bud, so that
+the history of the habitation of this venerable place from the most
+ancient times can be read from these strata which have been opened up
+by Schliemann and Dörpfeld, as from the leaves of a book. The original
+ground of the hill-plateau now lies some sixty feet above the plain,
+but the latter may have been raised something like sixteen to twenty
+feet by alluvial deposits since the Trojan War. The whole stratum
+of ruins lying on the original ground of the hill, which Schliemann
+opened up, amounts to about fifty-two and a half feet. Schliemann
+distinguished seven or eight different layers or strata, corresponding
+to as many towns which were successively built on this hill, one on the
+ruins of the other.</p>
+
+<p>The lowest stratum, lying immediately on the original ground, belongs
+accordingly to the oldest, or first town, on the citadel-hill of Troy.
+Furtwängler says:</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The First Town of Troy</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>By moderate computation this settlement must belong to the first
+half of the third millennium before Christ, but it may very well
+date back even to the fourth millennium. The inhabitants already
+used copper implements in addition to stone ones. Their whole
+culture is most closely connected with that which prevailed in
+Central Europe during the Copper Period. Clay vessels of the Copper
+Period from Lake Mond, in Austria, agree completely with those of
+the first Trojan town. Troy represents only an offshoot of Central
+European culture, and its inhabitants were in all probability of
+European origin.</p></div>
+
+<p>We have already learned that the Copper Period is the end of the
+Neolithic Period and the beginning of the Metal Age. In the first
+Trojan town there is still extraordinarily little metal used, the
+axes, hatchets, knives, and saws still being of stone, of the familiar
+Central European types, and of the same materials, among which nephrite
+is particularly frequent. Other materials are serpentine, diorite,
+porphyry, hematite, flint, etc.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The First Period of Troy’s Glory</div>
+
+<p>The forms of these implements correspond entirely to those of the later
+Stone Age of Europe. The character of the ceramics also conforms in
+many respects, according to Virchow, to that of the European Stone
+Age; and the Stone Age finds at Butmir, in Bosnia, and similar ones
+in Transylvania seem especially to offer close analogies. It would be
+a highly important step toward connecting history with the Neolithic
+Period if the first town could be even more closely investigated,
+and perhaps more sharply divided from that second stratum which lies
+between it and the stratum described by Schliemann as the second or
+burnt city, and which Schliemann afterward separated into two strata,
+corresponding to two towns. Perhaps the metal comes only from the
+second or higher stratum under the burnt city. In that case the oldest
+would belong purely to the Stone Age. The ceramics would seem to
+contradict this. Furtwängler continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>High above the first town, a deep layer of débris, is the level
+surface of the second town, which must at least be dated back to
+the second half of the third millennium before Christ. It was the
+first period of Troy’s glory. Mighty walls protected the citadel.
+Three different building periods may be distinguished. The walls
+were brought out a long way and strengthened, and magnificent new
+gates were built. During the third period of this second city a
+prince, fond of splendour, had the old narrow gateway replaced by
+magnificent propylæa and a large hall-erection with a vestibule.
+A great conflagration destroyed his citadel. A treasure was found
+by Schliemann&mdash;he called it Priam’s treasure&mdash;in the upper part of
+the citadel wall, which was made of straw bricks. The tools of the
+second city are still partly of stone, but also partly of bronze,
+so that they already belong to the Bronze Age.</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe34" id="i181">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_181.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE EXCAVATIONS AT TROY: REVEALING THE WALL OF THE
+ ACROPOLIS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">A view of the great substruction wall of the acropolis
+ of the second city of Troy, on the west side, close to the south-west gate:
+ (a) is the paved road, which leads from the S.W. gate down to the plain; (b) is
+ the continuation of the great acropolis-wall of the second city on the west side
+ of the S.W. gate; (c) is the foundation of the paved road and the quadrangular
+ pier to strengthen it; (d) marks the masonry added by the third settlers.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_181_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Early Culture of Troy</div>
+
+<p>The general character of culture is, according to Furtwängler, still
+essentially Central European. And yet many an individuality has
+developed, and the influence of Babylonian culture is everywhere
+apparent, although it does not go very deep. To this influence our
+authority chiefly attributes the occurrence of a few pots turned on the
+wheel, especially flat dishes; for the potter’s wheel was still quite<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[Pg 182]</span>
+unknown at that time in Europe, and even at a post so far advanced
+toward the East as Cyprus, while in Egypt and Babylonia it had been in
+use from the earliest times. In this period also Troy inclines more to
+Central Europe as its centre of gravity, but remains far behind the
+peculiar development that bronze work attained there; in the metal
+tools no advance is made on the forms of the Copper Period. Into any
+close relation with Cyprus it does not come; only the basis of their
+culture is common to both. But this basis had a wide range, relics from
+German districts being often more closely related to the Trojan ones
+than are those from Cyprus.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_182">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_182.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">TROY: THE GREAT TOWER OF ILIUM</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The top of the tower is 26 ft. below the surface of the
+ hill. The foundation is on the rock 46 ft. deep; the height of the tower is
+ 20 ft.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>The brilliant period of the second city is followed by a long
+period of decline for Troy. Ruins are piled upon ruins, walls
+rise upon walls, but each poorer than the others; no new citadel
+walls, no gates, no palaces belong to this period, in which three
+strata&mdash;the third, fourth, and fifth towns&mdash;are distinguished. The
+first half of the second millennium before Christ must at least be
+regarded as the time of this deposit. The inhabitants evidently
+remained the same, and their culture is that of the second city.
+But no progress was made; nothing but stagnation; the same forms of
+vessels continue to be made, the same decorated whorls. Naturally,
+no active intercourse with abroad could develop in this period.
+And yet this was the time when an active civilised life began to
+develop on the islands of the Ægean Sea and on the east coast of
+Greece, which was to bloom in all its splendour in the following
+period. To this time the finds at Thera belong, where the pottery,
+all turned on the wheel, is already painted with a so-called
+varnish colour which shines like metal, and in which plants,
+flowers, and animals are treated in quite a new and promising
+naturalistic style hitherto unheard of in Europe. In Cyprus, too,
+the decoration of pottery developed exceedingly in wealth and
+variety in this period of the Bronze Age. Troy, on the other hand,
+is poor and degenerate.</p>
+
+<p>But a new period of prosperity arrived for Troy, too; this is the
+sixth town. Rich and powerful princes again ruled in this citadel.
+They enlarged it far beyond its former compass. They built strong
+new walls&mdash;the old ones had long since sunk in ruins&mdash;not of small
+stones and straw bricks as before, but of large, smooth blocks, and
+gates and turrets. They did not have the sloping mound of ruins
+levelled, as the lords of the second city had done; they let the
+new buildings rise in terraces, on the ruins of the old; stately
+mansions with wide, deep halls, covered the acropolis. Constant
+intercourse existed with the princes of Greece, who at that
+time&mdash;the second half of the second millennium before Christ&mdash;built
+their citadels with cyclopean walls. The Trojans employed the same
+peculiar, constantly-recurring small projections in their walls
+that we find in a Mycenæan town on Lake Copaïs in Bœotia.</p>
+
+<p>And, above all, the Trojans now provided themselves with those
+beautiful vessels painted with shining colour that characterise
+Mycenæan culture in Greece, and whose natural style had so
+wonderfully developed there on the basis of the attempts that
+we found at Thera. In Troy these<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[Pg 183]</span> things caused some imitation,
+but the results remained far behind the originals. The living,
+imaginative conception of the natural was closed to the Trojan; the
+home-made pottery kept, on the whole, to its unpainted vessels,
+although these were now almost entirely made on the wheel.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe35" id="i_183">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_183.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE TREASURE OF PRIAM, KING OF TROY: A COLLECTION
+ REVEALED BY THE EXCAVATIONS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This remarkable collection of regal treasure comprises
+ the key of the treasure-house (at top of picture in centre); and, under and
+ about the key, a number of golden diadems, fillets, earrings, and smaller
+ jewels. On the shelf below there are a number of silver talents and vessels
+ of silver and gold; while below them is a series of silver vases and a curious
+ plate of copper. A variety of weapons and helmet crests of copper and bronze
+ are displayed beneath, and on the floor are a vessel, a cauldron and a shield,
+ all made of copper.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>Yet what chiefly interests us is the historical. The sixth town,
+too, was suddenly given up, destroyed, and burnt. What follows it
+are again only poor settlements. Its destruction must have taken
+place about the end of the Mycenæan epoch of culture. The seventh
+town, which is built immediately on the ruins of the sixth, shows,
+already, other and later culture. It had long been suspected that
+a historical kernel was concealed in the legend of Troy&mdash;now we
+have the monumental confirmation. There really was a Troy, which
+was strong and great at the same time as the rulers of Mycenæ,
+rich in gold and treasure, held<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[Pg 184]</span> way in Greece. And that Troy was
+destroyed&mdash;we may now safely affirm, from this agreement between
+relics and legend&mdash;by Greek princes of the Mycenæan epoch, whom the
+legend calls Agamemnon and his men.</p></div>
+
+<p>The seventh and eighth towns, built soon after the destruction of the
+sixth, show an interruption in the intercourse with Greece. There the
+Mycenæan period was broken by the displacement of peoples known as
+the Doric migration, and that rich civilised life was replaced by a
+relapse into the semi-barbaric conditions of the North. In Troy, too,
+we perceive a period of decline, “a relapse into a stage long since
+past; black hand-made vessels, which in their form and decoration are
+strikingly like the home-made pots usual in Italy, especially Etruria
+and Latium, in the first part of the first millennium before Christ.”
+Finally, the seventh town also furnishes inferior imported Greek vases
+with painting, though coming not from Greece itself, but from the coast
+of Asia Minor, where Greeks had settled in connection with the Doric
+migration. “The Æolic colonisation of Troas brought Ilium no fresh
+prosperity. Other places rose, Troy remained a miserable village.
+In the Hellenistic period the sky clears over Troy. What Alexander
+intended, Lysimachus carried out; he restores Ilium to the place of a
+real city with new walls, and erects a magnificent temple to Athene
+on the top of the acropolis.... Yet artistic creation came to no real
+perfection. It was only when the great men of Rome, mindful of their
+Trojan ancestors, began to interest themselves in the place, that new
+life bloomed on Troy’s ruins.”</p>
+
+<p class="mtop2">Thus the geological-archæological method relates history, merely
+relying upon the monuments of the soil, without requiring written
+evidences. Pre-history has here attained its end; it has become history.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">J<span class="smaller">OHANNES</span>
+R<span class="smaller">ANKE</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_184">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_184.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A VIEW SHOWING THE REMARKABLE CHARACTER OF THE
+ EXCAVATIONS AT TROY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Some idea of the enormous work involved in unearthing
+ ancient Troy will be gathered from the fact, made clear in this view, that
+ the ground-level before excavating was above the height of these buildings.
+ A deep trench was cut, as shown in the illustration, through the whole hill
+ of Hissarlik, the citadel town.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[Pg 185]</span></p>
+
+<h3 class="s0" id="THE_GREAT_STEPS_IN_MANS_DEVELOPMENT" title="THE GREAT STEPS
+IN MAN’S DEVELOPMENT">&nbsp;</h3>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_185a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_185a.jpg" alt="The Great Steps In Man’s
+ Development" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="p0" title="BY PROFESSOR JOSEPH KOHLER">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h4 id="THE_MATERIAL_PROGRESS_OF_MANKIND">THE MATERIAL PROGRESS OF
+MANKIND</h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">T</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>HE
+opinion that our own circumstances and affairs are the only
+standard for judging universal history has long been obsolete. Our day,
+with its conceptions, beliefs, hopes, and endeavours, is but a tiny
+portion of the past; for thousands of years peoples have existed who
+have lived in other intellectual spheres than ours, who have pursued
+other ideals.</p>
+
+<p>The study of history does not consist in an examination of the past
+projected, as it were, into the present; it is the study of the past
+considered as a part of the constant coming and going of men. And in
+order to become qualified as historians we must first of all attain
+a point of view from which we may, independently of time, behold
+history with all its great events file by; as though we were men who
+had ascended to some elevation in the universe from which they could
+look down upon the whole earth lying as a unity before them. This
+is rendered possible through the power of abstraction gained from a
+study of history; it enables us, on the one hand, to adapt ourselves
+to strange times and beliefs, and, on the other, to look upon our own
+day&mdash;all time to its contemporary men&mdash;objectively, as a mere hour
+of the ages of human development. We must learn to escape from the
+present, to withdraw ourselves from that which we may call the tyranny
+of our own time.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_185b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_185b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE PRIMITIVE ART OF WEAVING</div>
+ <div class="caption">The art of weaving arose from plaiting, and soon developed
+ to perfection, the American Indians and most primitive peoples of our own day
+ being skilled weavers.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>From universal history we obtain a picture of the development of
+humanity&mdash;that is, the development of the various active germs or
+principles inherent in man. By these are meant the active principles
+innate in mankind in the aggregate, in contradistinction to those which
+may exist in single individuals or in single races.</p>
+
+<p>The result of development is called “civilisation”&mdash;the state of
+intellectual being, and of outward, material life, attained by a
+people through evolution. Although spiritual and material culture flow
+into each other, they may be separated to this extent: as a physical
+being endowed with senses, man endeavours to obtain satisfaction of
+his needs, and strives for a position in relation to his environment
+corresponding with the efforts he has made to obtain welfare; as
+a feeling, inquiring, spiritual being he contains within him an
+ever-present desire to fuse the multitude of separate impressions he
+receives into unity, and to struggle forward until he arrives at a
+conception of the world and of life.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe17_5" id="i_186">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_186.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">OUR OWN DAY COMPARED WITH THE HISTORIC PAST</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Our day, with its conceptions, beliefs, hopes, and
+ endeavours, is but a tiny portion of the past; for thousands of years peoples
+ have existed who have lived in other intellectual spheres than ours, who have
+ pursued other ideals.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_186_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>“Material civilisation” is the mode of life through which the obstacles
+opposed to humanity may be overcome. By the surmounting of obstacles is
+meant the conquering of enemies, particularly of hostile animals, the
+obtaining of means for the preservation of existence, and the employing
+of these means for the increase of bodily<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[Pg 186]</span> welfare. In respect of
+material civilisation man passes through stages that differ widely from
+one another, that vary according to the manner in which the necessities
+for existence are obtained, and according to the way in which enemies
+are withstood for the safeguarding of life, welfare, and acquisitions
+already gained. Races are spoken of as supporting themselves by the
+chase and fishing, or by cattle-breeding and farming, according to
+whether they are accustomed to derive subsistence directly from “nature
+unadorned,” or by means of the cultivation and utilisation of natural
+products.</p>
+
+<p>No sharp line of distinction, however, may be drawn. It is inadmissible
+to speak of races as supporting themselves solely by hunting and
+fishing, for the very same peoples feed on products of the soil
+wherever they are found and recognised as means of subsistence. They
+live, it is true, upon flesh and fish, but also upon roots and the
+fruit of wild trees. While in this state of civilisation, man avails
+himself only of that which Nature places before him; he neither adapts
+Nature to his desire, to his needs, or to his manner of living, nor
+understands how to do it. He can make no further use of Nature than
+to acquire a knowledge of the sources of supply, of how to seize time
+and opportunity, and to overcome the obstacles of life in his own
+territory. He ascertains the haunts of game, discovers how to obtain
+fish, explores for wild honey or edible roots, learns to climb the
+tallest trees and to let himself down into the deepest caves; but
+he lacks the ability to cultivate Nature, to cause her to produce
+according to his will.</p>
+
+<p>Gradually the one phase amalgamates with the other. It is not seldom
+that hunting tribes have small tracts of land on which they raise a few
+edible plants. Observation of Nature teaches them that germs develop
+from fallen seeds, and leads of itself to the idea that it is not best
+to allow plants to grow up wild, and that it would be expedient to
+clear the surrounding ground for their better growth. And when this
+stage is reached, the next step&mdash;not to allow seeds to spring up by
+chance, but to place them in the soil one’s self&mdash;is not very far off;
+and thus the mere acquisition of Nature’s raw vegetable products gives
+place to agriculture. Often enough we observe instances of the men of
+a group carrying on hunting operations,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[Pg 187]</span> while the women are not only
+occupied with their domestic employments, but also till the soil; thus
+the men are hunters and fishers, and the women are agriculturists.
+Domestic work led the latter to take up the cultivation of plants,
+even as it led them to the other light feminine handicrafts; while
+the repairing of weapons and of contrivances used for the capture of
+animals lay within the province of the men.</p>
+
+<div class="figcontainer">
+<div class="figsub illowe35" id="i_187a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_187a.jpg" alt="Habits of Dress (1/3)" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe35" id="i_187b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_187b.jpg" alt="Habits of Dress (2/3)" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe35" id="i_187c">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_187c.jpg" alt="Habits of Dress (3/3)" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe50">
+ <div class="caption">MANKIND’S PROGRESS IN HABITS OF DRESS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This series of typical pictures is intended roughly to
+ illustrate the upward progress of man from the almost nude savage to the neatly
+ and conveniently dressed gentleman of to-day. The Elizabethan dandy is, of
+ course, as fully dressed as man can be, and is introduced only as indicating
+ the great change of sartorial ideas in modern times.</div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>The discovery of how to produce fire by artificial means, independently
+effected in all parts of the world&mdash;as was also the discovery of the
+art of navigation&mdash;was of the greatest importance for the entire
+future. Fire was first a result of chance.</p>
+
+<p>When lightning set a portion of the forest in flames, and caused a
+multitude of animals or fruits to be roasted, men put it to practical
+use. They recognised the advantage that fire gave them and sought to
+preserve it. The retention of the fire which had been sent down from
+heaven became one of the most weighty and significant of functions. Man
+learned how to keep wood-fibres smouldering, and how to blow them into
+flame at will; he also learned that it was possible to convey fire, or
+the potentiality of fire, along with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[Pg 188]</span> him in his wanderings. But even
+then success was uncertain until a lucky chance led him to discover
+how to produce flames at will, by rubbing two sticks together or by
+twirling one against the other. These actions were originally performed
+for other purposes&mdash;to bore holes in a piece of wood, or to rub it into
+fibres; finally, one or the other was carried out with such vigour that
+a filament began to burn, and the discovery was made. Sparks from flint
+must have suggested a second method of kindling a fire; certainly
+the art of igniting soft filaments of wood by means of a spark&mdash;thus
+enabling the very smallest source of combustion to be used for human
+purposes&mdash;was known to man in the earliest times. The obvious results
+of the use of fire are means of obtaining warmth and of cooking food.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_188">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_188.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right padtop1">AN INGENIOUS INDIAN FIRE DRILL</div>
+ <div class="caption_left">ESQUIMAU MAKING FIRE BY FRICTION</div>
+ <div class="caption_right">THE GAUCHO’S WAY OF GETTING A LIGHT</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_188_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Self-defence had already led to the use of weapons, and, at the same
+time, the contrivances for hunting and fishing must have become
+more and more perfect. A very low degree of civilisation is that of
+races unacquainted with the bow and arrow, and familiar with club or
+boomerang only&mdash;who know how to make use merely of the weight of a
+substance, or, as in the case of the boomerang, of a peculiar means of
+imparting motion.</p>
+
+<p>The time previous to the discovery of the art of working in metal was
+the Age of Stone. It was a natural transition period during which men
+began to learn to make use of the malleable metals, which could be
+hammered and beaten into various shapes, and finally discovered how
+to work in iron. Iron, by being placed in the fire, brought to a white
+heat, and smelted, was rendered capable of being put to such uses as
+were impossible in the case of brittle materials&mdash;bone or stone, for
+example. Many races never acquired the art of working even in the
+softer metals, and procured metallic implements from other peoples.
+The great importance of metal-working is borne out by the fact that
+the position of the smith, even in legendary times, has been of the
+utmost significance. The Ages of Stone and of Metal belong to the most
+important stages of civilisation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[Pg 189]</span></p>
+
+<p>Having made himself weapons, man did not employ them in fights with
+animals only; he also used them on his fellow-men, and at the same time
+arose the necessity for protective coverings&mdash;that is, the need for a
+means of neutralising the effect of weapons on the body. Thus followed
+the invention of the shield as a portable shelter, of the coat of mail
+and of the helmet, and of armour in general in all its different forms
+and varieties.</p>
+
+<p>Together with weapons, utensils are characteristic of material culture.
+Utensils are implements used in the arts of peace, domestic and
+industrial; they are instruments which enable us to increase power
+over Nature. Some utensils have undergone the same transformations as
+have weapons; others have their own independent history. Just as the
+edges of shells served as patterns for knife-blades, so did hollow
+stones, the shells of crustaceans or of tortoises, become models for
+dishes and basins. From the discovery of the imperviousness of dried
+earth, the potter’s art developed; it became possible to mould clay
+into desired shapes while moist, and then, when dry, to employ it in
+its new form as a vessel for holding liquids; for that which has always
+been of the greatest importance in the making of utensils has been
+the taking advantage of two opposite characteristics displayed by a
+material during the different stages of its manufacture&mdash;plasticity,
+which admits of its first being moulded into various forms, and another
+quality, which causes it afterward to stiffen into solidity and
+strength.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_189">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_189.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right"><span class="s5">Mansell</span><br />
+ THE MAN WITH THE HOE<br />
+ <span class="s5 mright1">From the painting by Millet</span></div>
+ <div class="caption_left"><span class="s5 mleft18">Underwood &amp; Underwood</span><br />
+ <span class="mleft3">THE WONDERFUL ADVANCE IN AGRICULTURE</span><br />
+ <span class="s5 mright2">These pictures present a striking contrast: the
+ sullen clod with his primitive<br />
+ hoe, and the great Canadian reaper drawn by thirty horses, both in
+ use to-day.</span></div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_189_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Growth of the Textile Arts</div>
+
+<p>A further acquisition was the art of braiding and plaiting, the joining
+together of flexible materials in such a way that they held together
+by force of friction alone. Thus coherent, durable fabrics may be
+produced, and by joining together small parts into an aggregate it is
+also possible to give a definite<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[Pg 190]</span> form to the whole and to adapt it to
+various uses. The quality of adaptability is especially developed in
+the products of plaiting, but the quality of imperviousness is lacking.
+Wickerwork was used not only in the form of baskets, but also in other
+shapes, as means for protection and shelter, as material for sails, as
+well as for tying and binding. The art of weaving arises from plaiting,
+and along with it come methods for spinning thread. It thus becomes
+possible to make an immense number of different useful articles out of
+shapeless vegetable material. Fibres are rendered more durable by being
+bound together, and textures formed from threads are adapted to the
+most various uses of life. This has an influence on the development of
+weapons also: bow-strings, slings, and lassos presuppose a rudimentary
+knowledge, at least, of the textile arts; and as knowledge increases,
+so are the products improved in turn.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i190">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_190.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">MAN’S METAL DRESS: THE DEVELOPMENT OF ARMOUR FROM
+ ANCIENT TO MEDIÆVAL TIMES</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The way in which man has protected himself against his
+ foes in battle, and the gradual progress and decline of such methods, is shown
+ in these pictures. The first is from the monuments of Nineveh, and shows the
+ earliest form of chain mail. In the second we see the armour of the Roman
+ legionary, while the third shows the heavy accoutrement of a mediæval warrior.
+ A helmet of the same period is also shown.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Means for conveyance are also invented, that difficulties arising
+from distance may be overcome. At first men carry burdens upon their
+backs, heads, or shoulders, or in the hand, placing whatever they
+wish to transport in a utensil&mdash;a basket or a piece of cloth&mdash;thus
+producing a coherent whole; later, in order to render conveyance
+still more convenient, handles are invented. Objects are dragged
+along the ground, and from an effort to save them from injury the
+idea of sledges develops. Things that are round enough are rolled
+to their destinations; this leads to the invention of rollers and
+wheels, materials of required form being brought into combination with
+rudimentary agents of circular motion, and thus, through a rotary, a
+horizontal movement is obtained; and so the force of gravity is made
+use of, consistency of motion procured, and the hindering effect of
+friction overcome to the greatest possible degree.</p>
+
+<p>Means for carrying inanimate objects once invented, it is not long
+before they are put to use for the conveyance of man himself; thus
+methods for the transportation of human beings are discovered in the
+same manner as the means for the carriage of goods.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man’s First Boats</div>
+
+<p>In primitive times transportation by water is employed to a far greater
+extent than by land. Man learns how to swim in the same way as other
+animals do, by discovering how to repress his struggles, transforming
+them into definite, regular movements. The sight of objects afloat
+must, through unconscious analysis&mdash;experience&mdash;have taught men to make
+light, water-tight structures for the conveyance of goods upon water,
+and, later, for the use of man himself. The pole by which the first
+raft was pushed along developed into the rudder. Kayaks and canoes were
+built of wood, of bark, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[Pg 191]</span> of hides. In this connection, moreover,
+an epoch-marking invention was that of cloths in which to catch the
+wind&mdash;sails; and this, too, was a result of observation and experience.
+Man had known the effect of the wind upon fluttering cloth, to his
+loss, long enough before he hit upon the idea of employing it to his
+advantage. Finally he learned that by adjusting the sails he might make
+use of winds blowing from any direction.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_191">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_191.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">MAN’S METAL DRESS: THE GRADUAL MODIFICATION OF ARMOUR IN
+ MODERN TIMES</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The invention of gunpowder and firearms rendered the
+ protection of armour useless, and by the sixteenth century it had been greatly
+ modified. The first of these pictures shows the slight armour worn by James II.
+ The second is a suit of Japanese armour, discarded in our own time; while the
+ last is a portrait of a present day Life-guardsman, whose cuirass is more
+ ornamental than useful.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man’s First Houses</div>
+
+<p>Habitations are structures built in order to facilitate and assure
+the existence of man and the preservation of his goods. Indeed, the
+presence of caverns caused men to recognise the protective virtue of
+roof and wall, and the knowledge thus acquired gave rise in turn to
+the making of artificial caves. Holes beneath overhanging banks and
+precipices led to the building of houses with roofs extending beyond
+the rambling walls. Perhaps the protection afforded by leafy roofs,
+and the walls formed by the trunks of trees in primeval forests, may
+also have turned men’s thoughts to the construction of dwellings.
+Houses of various forms were built, circular and rectangular; some with
+store-rooms and hearths. The use of dwellings presupposes a certain
+amount of consistency in the mode of living, the presence of local
+ties, and a general spirit favouring fixed and permanent residence.
+Nomadic races use movable or temporary shelters only&mdash;waggons, tents,
+or huts.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Home and Dress</div>
+
+<p>The houses of stationary peoples become more and more firm and stable.
+At first they are built of earth and wickerwork, later of stone, and
+finally of bricks, as among the Babylonians. Foundations are invented,
+dwellings are accurately designed as to line and angle; the curved line
+is introduced, bringing with it arches both round and pointed, as may
+be seen in the remains of Roman and Etruscan buildings. The structure
+is adorned, and it becomes a work of art.</p>
+
+<p>But man also dwelt over the water, sometimes erecting his habitations
+upon rafts and floats, often upon structures that rose from beneath the
+surface. Thus was he, dwelling in communities of various sizes, secure
+from the attacks of land enemies. Even to-day there are uncivilised
+peoples who live over water, constructing their homes upon piles.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Taming of the Wild</div>
+
+<p>Clothing, however, was invented partly that in cold climates men might
+survive the winter, partly for the sake of ornament. In tropical
+regions man originally had no knowledge of the necessity for clothing:
+garments are masks, disguises; they bear with them a charm; they
+are the peculiar property of the medicine-men or of those who in
+the religious dance invoke the higher powers. Modesty is a derived<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[Pg 192]</span>
+feeling; it cannot exist until a high state of individualisation has
+been attained, until each man desires exclusive possession of his wife,
+and therefore wishes to shield her from the covetousness of other men.
+With the knowledge of dress, a desire for adornment, the effort to
+assist Nature in producing certain definite æsthetic effects, arises.
+Less uniformity in the appearance of the body is wanted, and this
+brings tattooing and the use of ornament into vogue. Later there is a
+fusing of these several aims; clothing becomes protection, veil, and
+ornament in one, fulfilling all three functions at the same time.</p>
+
+<p>Another epoch-marking discovery, often arrived at while races are
+still in the state of subsistence by hunting, is the domestication of
+animals. This may have originated in the practice of provoking one
+beast to attack another in order to vanquish them both the more easily.
+Further development, bringing with it the idea of totemism and the
+notion that the soul of an animal dwells in man, drew him nearer to his
+animal neighbours; and he sought them out as comrades and attendants.
+The taming of wild creatures arose from two sources&mdash;human egoism, and
+the innate feeling of unity and identification with Nature common to
+all savages; hence on the one hand, the subjugation of animals, and,
+on the other, their domestication. Neither employment rendered it by
+any means less possible for men to hold animals in reverence, or to
+attribute to them virtue as ancestral spirits.</p>
+
+<p>Such acquisitions of external culture accompany man during the
+transition from his subsistence by the pure products of Nature
+to the cultivation of natural resources, cattle-breeding and
+agriculture&mdash;occupations necessitating the greatest unrest and
+mobility. The simple life in Nature incites men to wander forth that
+they may discover land adapted for their support; they rove about in
+search of roots as well as of living prey. The breeding of domestic
+animals also causes them to travel in the hope of finding ground for
+pasture; nor does agriculture in its primitive form tend to establish
+permanence of residence, although it contains within itself latent
+possibilities of developing a settled life, one of the most important
+factors in the progress of mankind.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32" id="i192">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_192.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">PRIMITIVE DWELLINGS OF TO-DAY: HOUSE-BOATS AT CANTON</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Not only are there lake-dwellers to-day, as we have seen,
+ but even large communities, as at Canton, in China, live in boats.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Mankind “Settling” Down</div>
+
+<p>Only fixed, domestic peoples are able to create great and lasting
+institutions, to store up the results of civilisation for distant
+later races, and to establish a developed, well-organised commercial
+and civil life. The transition from nomadism to life in permanent
+residences has, therefore, been one of the greatest steps in the
+development of humanity. At the time of the beginnings of agriculture,
+however, man was still a periodic wanderer. According to the
+field-grass system of cultivation, seed is sown in hastily-cleared
+ground, which soon becomes exhausted and is then abandoned. A migration
+follows and new land is cleared. This system continues until men learn
+to cultivate part of the land in a district, allowing the remainder
+to lie fallow for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[Pg 193]</span> a time in order that the soil may recover; thus
+they remain fixed in their chosen district. Various circumstances&mdash;for
+example, the danger of enemies from without, and the difficulties
+attending migration&mdash;must have led to this change, the transition to
+the system of alternation of crops. The wanderings are confined to less
+extensive regions, the same fields are returned to after a few years,
+until finally the relation of patches under cultivation to fallow land
+is reduced to a system, and the time of wandering is past.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_192a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_192a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE BEGINNINGS OF COMMERCE: PRIMITIVE PEOPLE BARTERING
+ IVORY TUSKS AND BULL-HIDES</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_192a_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The coming of the Craftsman</div>
+
+<p>With fixed residence the forms of communities alter. The group settles
+in a certain district, homes are built close to one another, and the
+patriarchal organisation gives place to the village, which, with
+its definite boundaries, is thenceforth the nucleus of the social
+aggregate. Often several village communities have fields and forests in
+common, and a common ownership of dams and canals; Nature takes care
+that they do not become isolated, but unite together in close contact
+for common defence and protection. With agriculture is associated the
+working up of raw products. These are fashioned into materials for the
+support of life and for enjoyment; furniture for dwellings, clothing,
+tools, utensils, and weapons are made. For, however much agriculture
+favours a life of peace, so rarely does man live in friendship with
+his fellows that agricultural peoples also find it necessary to arm
+themselves for war.</p>
+
+<p>At first manufacture is not separated from farming; the agriculturist
+himself prepares the natural products, assisted by the members of
+his family. Later, it is easily seen that some individuals are
+more skilled than others; it is also recognised that skill may be
+developed by practice and that employments must be learned. Therefore
+it is requisite that special individuals of the community should
+prepare themselves for particular activities in the working up of raw
+products and pursue these activities in consistency with the needs
+of the society&mdash;trade or craft. The craftsman at first labours for
+the community; in every village the tailor, cobbler, smith, barber,
+and schoolmaster is supported by society at large. The craftsman
+receives his appointed income&mdash;that is, his portion of the common
+supply of food; and, in addition, every one for whom he expends his
+labour gives him something in compensation, or finds him food while
+employed about his house, until, finally, a systematic method of
+exchange is established; and with this another advance&mdash;an epoch for
+civilisation&mdash;is arrived at.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The First Labour Problem</div>
+
+<p>This is the division of labour. It is found advantageous not only that
+the craftsman be employed as he is needed, but also that he produce a
+supply of products peculiar to his trade; for the times of labour do
+not in the least harmonise with the times of demand. Although during
+the first periods of industrial life men sought more or less to adjust
+these factors, in later times they become wholly separate from one
+another. There is always, in addition, labour ready to be expended on
+casual needs; in more advanced phases of civilisation this condition of
+affairs is not avoided; but wherever labour can be disassociated from
+fortuitous necessity, the capacity for production is greatly increased.
+Commodities are manufactured during the best seasons for production
+and are preserved until the times of need; thus men become independent
+of the moment. Here also, as in other problems of civilisation, it is
+necessary to surmount the incongruities of chance, and to render all
+circumstances serviceable to our purposes.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Crafts and Trades Developing</div>
+
+<p>Exchange and division of labour are the great factors of the progress
+of a civilisation based upon industrialism. Crafts and trades develop
+and improve; greater and greater skill is demanded, and consequently
+the time of preparation necessary for the master craftsman becomes
+longer and longer. The worker limits himself to a definite sphere of
+production and carries his trade forward to a certain perfection. His
+wares will then be more eagerly sought for than those made by another
+hand; they are better, yet cheaper, for his labour is lightened by his
+greater skill. His various fellow craftsmen, and the agriculturist
+also, must exchange their goods for his; for the more specialised the
+work of an individual, the more necessary the community is to him, in
+order that he may satisfy all his various requirements. Exchange is
+at first natural; that is, commodities are traded outright, each<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[Pg 196]</span>
+individual giving goods directly in return for the goods he receives.
+The production of the community as a whole has become far richer, far
+more perfect. The labour of the organised society produces more than
+the activity of separate individuals.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_194">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_194.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE BEARERS OF MAN’S BURDENS: PRIMITIVE AND NATURAL
+ METHODS OF CARRYING</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">These illustrations show a palanquin borne by horses;
+ the Chinese single-wheel cart and the same assisted by a donkey and a sail;
+ pack mules and camels; and a sledge drawn by Esquimau dogs.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_194_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_195">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_195.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">SOME METHODS OF CONVEYANCE IN VARIOUS AGES AND COUNTRIES</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">In this plate are illustrated a caravan of yaks; the
+ elephant with a howdah; the African litter; reindeers as pack animals; and the
+ familiar bullock waggon of France&mdash;a few of the many methods of carrying
+ used by man.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_195_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32" id="i196">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_196.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">PRIMITIVE MONEY: SELLING A SLAVE FOR COWRIES</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Cowries, which are small shells, are a very primitive
+ form of money, still used in parts of Africa and in Siam. They were formerly
+ so used in India, where $150,000 worth used to be imported annually. In Africa
+ 5,000 shells are equivalent to $1.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Here, again, is shown the impulse of man to free himself from the
+exigencies of the moment, to lift himself above the fortuitous
+differences that arise between supply and demand. The more varied the
+production, the more difficult it becomes to find men who are able to
+offer the required commodity in exchange for what has been brought
+to them. An escape from this embarrassment lies in the discovery of
+a universal measure of exchange value and medium of exchange&mdash;money.
+Money is the means of adjustment which renders traffic between men
+independent of individual requirements.</p>
+
+<p>Mediums of exchange, particularly necessary for the carrying on of
+traffic between different communities, which exist in large quantities
+and can be divided up into parts, make their appearance in very early
+times. At first their values are more or less empirical, dependent
+upon the conditions of individual cases, until gradually a medium
+obtains general recognition and thus becomes money. The same need for
+surmounting the lack of uniformity in individual requirements has led
+the most different peoples in the world to the invention of money.
+Naturally, many different things have been employed as mediums of
+exchange; these vary according to geographical situations, conditions
+of civilisation, and the customs of races. Pastoral tribes at first
+employed cattle; but tobacco, cowries, strings of flat shells, bits of
+mother-of-pearl, rings, and hides are also used. At last it is found
+that metal is stable, durable, divisible, and of generally recognised
+value; and finally the precious metals take precedence of all others.
+Finally this form of money is adopted by all civilised races.</p>
+
+<p>Division of labour originates in the development of the handicrafts, in
+the distinction made between the labour of working up the raw material
+and that of its production. With the help of a currency it leads to a
+complete transformation, not only of economic relations, but also of
+the social conditions of men.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe34" id="i_197">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_197.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE BEGINNING OF MONEY: SOME OF THE EARLIEST KNOWN COINS IN
+ EXISTENCE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Of these coins, chiefly from the British Museum, the
+ South England iron currency bars are perhaps most interesting. Our reproduction
+ of these is one-tenth actual size. It will be noticed that the handles and the
+ sizes vary.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_197_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_198a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_198a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE BEGINNING OF PRINTING: STRADANUS’S PRINTING OFFICE
+ AT ANTWERP IN THE YEAR 1600</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From a very rare engraving in the British Museum.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_198b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_198b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE DEVELOPMENT OF PRINTING: THE LARGEST PRESS IN THE
+ WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">How great has been the progress in the art of printing is
+ seen from these two pictures. The modern Hoe printing press is a marvel of
+ mechanism. The first editions of this History were printed on a similar machine.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Markets and Prices</div>
+
+<p>Country becomes city; centres of population which rest upon an
+industrial basis arise; in many cases growth of the various
+manufacturing industries is furthered by unfavourable agricultural
+conditions. Such industrial centres require markets and market-places;
+it is necessary for the producers of raw materials to come to market
+from the country with their goods, in order that they may meet<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[Pg 199]</span>
+together with the craftsmen of the city, and with other producers from
+the country who offer their wares in turn. The market town is the
+point of departure for further culture. Here, too, the endeavour to
+harmonise individual incongruities exists. Fruit is sent to market;
+each man has his choice; an exchange value is determined by means of
+comparison, through analysis of the individual prices which themselves
+do not furnish any rational determination of worth, and therefore
+expose both buyer and seller to chance. Thus a market-price develops.
+The city is the living agency promoting industry and exchange; it
+brings its population into contact with the population of the country
+by means of the market, and prevents men from separating into isolated,
+unsympathetic, or even hostile groups.</p>
+
+<p>Here industry flourishes&mdash;arts, crafts, and large manufactures. In
+the latter, division of labour is developed to a maximum degree,
+and production in factories derives a further impulse through the
+introduction of machinery. Machines, in contrast to implements and
+utensils, are inanimate but organised instruments for labour, requiring
+subordinate human activity only (attendance) so that they may impart
+force and motion in a manner corresponding with the designs of the
+inventor. Machinery is originally of simple form, dependent on water or
+wind for motive power&mdash;rude mills, and contrivances for the guiding of
+water in canals or conduits belong to its primitive varieties.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Use of Natural Forces</div>
+
+<p>But man’s power of invention increases, and in the higher stage of
+industrial evolution the facilities for labour are enormous. We have
+but to think of steam and of electricity with all their tremendous
+developments of power. Finally the discovery of the unity of force
+leads men to look upon Nature as a storehouse of energy and to devise
+means by which natural forces may be guided, one form of energy
+converted into another and transferred from place to place; and thus
+man becomes almost all-powerful. He is not able to create, it is true,
+but he may at least mould and shape to his desire that which Nature
+has already formed. Thus the discovery how to direct the forces of
+Nature enables us again, according to the principle already cited, to
+escape the disabilities of human differentiation with its attendant
+incongruities.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Boundless Growth of Commerce</div>
+
+<p>As already stated, division of labour leads to exchange; exchange leads
+to commerce. Commerce is exchange on a large scale, organised into a
+system with special regard to the production of a store, or supply. The
+latter requires a certain knowledge of trade; the centres of demand
+must be sought out, and the goods transported to these centres. In this
+way a fruitful reciprocal action develops; and as production influences
+trade, so may trade influence production, governing it according to
+the fluctuations of demand, and leading to the creation of stores of
+commodities for which a future market is to be expected. Thus commerce
+presupposes special knowledge and special skill; it develops a special
+technique through which it is enabled to execute its complicated
+tasks. Men who live by trade become distinct from craftsmen; and the
+mercantile class results. Merchants are men whose task is to effect
+an organised exchange of natural and manufactured products. Commerce
+always displays an impulse to extend itself beyond the borders of
+single nations&mdash;not to remain inland only, but to become a foreign
+trade also; for the products of foreign countries and climates, however
+valuable they may be, would be inaccessible except for commerce.
+Thus trade becomes both import and export. The first step is for the
+tradesman or his representative to travel about peddling goods, or for
+an owner of wares or money to offer capital to an itinerant merchant
+with the object that the latter may divide the profits with him later
+on. This leads to the sending of merchandise to a middleman, who
+places it on the market in a distant region&mdash;commission business. The
+establishment of a branch or agency in a foreign country, in order to
+trade there while in immediate connection with the main business house,
+follows; and, finally, merchants deal directly with foreign houses
+without the intervention of middlemen, thus entering into direct export
+trade. This, of course, presupposes a great familiarity with foreign
+affairs and confidence in their soundness; consequently it is possible
+only in a highly developed state of civilisation.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_200">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_200.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">“THE SHIP OF THE DESERT”: THE CARAVAN IS THE OLDEST
+ EXISTING MEANS OF COMMUNICATION BETWEEN PEOPLES</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From J. F. Lewis’s picture “The Halt in the Desert,” in
+ the South Kensington Museum</div>
+ <div class="caption_right">(Photo, Mansell)</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_200_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Birth of New Trades and Institutions</div>
+
+<p>Foreign trade is carried on overland by means of caravans, and,
+in later times,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[Pg 201]</span> by railways; over sea, through a merchant
+marine&mdash;sailing vessels and steamships. The magnitude of commerce, its
+peculiar methods, and its manifold, varying phases combine to produce
+new and surprising phenomena: traffic by sea leads to insurance and
+to different forms of commercial associations; intercourse by caravan
+gives rise to the construction of halting-stations, establishments for
+refreshment and repair, that finally develop into taverns and inns. And
+that which first arose from necessity is subsequently turned to use
+for other purposes: insurance is one of the most fruitful ideas of the
+present day; hotels are an absolute necessity.</p>
+
+<p>Commerce is able to bring further contrivances and institutions into
+being, here, again, overcoming individual incongruity by means of
+combination. Trade cannot always be carried on directly between the
+places of production and of consumption; one district requires more,
+another less; it would be difficult to supply all from one centre
+of distribution. Thus an intermediate carrying trade is developed,
+rendering the surmounting of obstacles less difficult and increasing
+the stability of the market. The demands of the middleman are
+compensated for by these advantages.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Commerce Brings the World Together</div>
+
+<p>Thus the world’s commerce develops, and that which is accomplished
+by market traffic in lesser districts is brought about by the
+concentrative influence of bourses, or exchanges, in the broadest
+spheres. Here, as in the smaller markets, the tendency is for all
+prices to seek a level, to become as independent as possible of
+individual conditions; and so commerce between nations, and the
+possibility of ordering goods from the most distant lands, bring with
+them an adjustment: world prices are formed; and to establish these,
+is the business of the exchanges. The exchange is a meeting together
+of merchants for the transaction of business by purchase or sale. It
+has acquired still more the character of a world institution since
+men have been able to interchange advices by means of telegraph and
+telephone; it is possible for the bourses of different countries to
+transact business with one another from moment to moment, so that the
+ruling prices of the world can be immediately known. It has already
+been stated that commerce leads to a taking up of residence in foreign
+countries; it also leads to colonisation, and it is chiefly due to
+commerce that civilisation is introduced into foreign lands.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Supply of Human Labour</div>
+
+<p>In earlier centuries the labour question was settled by means of the
+legal subjection of certain classes of men, until complete injustice
+was reached in slavery. The system was rendered still more efficient
+by making slave-ownership hereditary. Slavery, originated in wars and
+man-hunting, in times when there were but few domesticated animals
+and no machines, when utensils, were very imperfect and a more or
+less developed mode of life could only be conducted by means of the
+manual labour of individuals. Therefore, in order to obtain labourers,
+men resorted to force, introducing a slave population of which the
+individuals were either divided among households or kept in special
+slave habitations. The industry of the slave was often increased by the
+promise of definite privileges or private possessions. He was often
+granted a home and family life, and thus he became a bondman&mdash;burdened
+and taxed and bound to the soil, it is true, but otherwise looked
+upon as a man possessed of ordinary rights and privileges. Even
+during the days of slavery there were instances of emancipation, and
+the possibility was opened up of rising to the social position of a
+slave-owner.</p>
+
+<p>The evolution of a free working class, with recompense for labour,
+is one of the most important chapters in the history of modern
+civilisation. The chief sphere of development is that of the crafts
+and trades. The power of guilds often induces legislation in their
+favour; thus they become monopolies, and only such individuals as are
+members of an association may adopt its particular trade or craft
+as a profession. Sometimes the unity of a guild is broken, and the
+individual right to form judgments enters in place of the rules laid
+down by the corporation. From this results competition, which finally
+leads up to free competition. Through free competition, the encumbering
+rigidity of the guilds is avoided; it leads to a high development
+of the individual, and is therefore a great source of progress; it
+discloses the secrets of the craft, freeing men from deeply-rooted
+prejudices in regard to different vocations; and it increases man’s
+inventive capacity, producing new methods for carrying on trades and
+new combinations and connections.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_202">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_202.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE PROMISE OF PEACE: THE HAGUE CONFERENCE OF THE
+ NATIONS OF THE WORLD IN 1907</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Nothing could more effectively illustrate the ideal of
+ international peaceful co-operation to which hopeful historians look forward
+ than this photograph of the representatives of all the leading Powers of the
+ world, met together at The Hague, in the year 1907, to promote the amity of
+ nations and the eventual abolition of war.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_202_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[Pg 203]</span></p>
+
+<p class="p0" id="THE_HIGHER_PROGRESS_OF_MANKIND" title="STEPS IN MAN’S DEVELOPMENT
+II">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_203a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_203a.jpg" alt="Steps In Man’s
+ Development II" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="p0" title="Professor JOSEPH KOHLER">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h4>THE HIGHER PROGRESS OF MANKIND</h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">S</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">S</span>PIRITUAL
+culture may develop in the directions of knowing and of
+feeling. These two forms of the manifestation of consciousness are
+originally not to be separated from each other; but as time goes on,
+a preponderance of one or the other becomes noticeable. Language is
+the first result of spiritual culture: the communication of thoughts
+by means of words (sound pictures of ideas). Language arises from the
+necessities of life, from the need for communication among the members
+of a social aggregate.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_203b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_203b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">GUTENBERG, THE INVENTOR OF PRINTING</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Nothing has eclipsed the printing press as an agency of
+ man’s intellectual and spiritual advancement.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>A much later acquisition, the art of writing, or the fixation of
+language in a definite, permanent form, stands in close connection with
+speech. Writing develops according to two systems: the one based on
+the symbolising or picturing of ideas&mdash;picture-writing, hieroglyphics;
+and the other on the breaking up of the speech-sounds of a language
+into a notation of syllables or letters&mdash;syllabic or letter writing.
+According to the first method thoughts are directly pictured; according
+to the second, sounds, not ideas, are represented by symbols&mdash;that is,
+the sounds which stand for the ideas are transformed into signs. The
+transition from sign to syllabic writing comes about in this manner:
+if, during its development, a language uses the same sound to express
+various conceptions, men represent this sound by one sign; and whenever
+a foreign word is reproduced in writing it is first separated into
+syllables, and the syllables are then pictured by the same signs as
+are employed to represent similar sounds&mdash;but different ideas&mdash;in the
+native speech. Thus symbols are employed more and more phonetically,
+and less and less meaning comes to be attached to them. This process
+must continue its development if the pronunciation changes as time
+goes on; the old writing, with its national symbol-method, may be
+retained; but with the changing of speech-sounds the new writing is
+altered; syllables are now represented by signs, and combinations
+of syllables are reproduced by means of a combination of their
+corresponding symbols. Thus phonetic writing was not an invention, but
+a gradual development. Together with the phonetic symbols, ideograms or
+hieroglyphs also exist, as in Babylonian. It is especially interesting,
+and indicative of the unity of the human mind, that the transition to
+syllabic writing has been arrived at independently by different races;
+the Aztecs, for example, exhibit a wholly independent development.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Spreading of Ideas</div>
+
+<p>Communication by writing may be either single or private, or general
+and public; in the latter case plurality is attained through such
+methods as the affixing of bills and placards, or by means of
+transcripts or reproductions of the original copy. At first the latter
+are made in accordance with the ordinary methods of writing; and in
+slave-holding communities&mdash;Rome, for example&mdash;slaves who wrote to
+dictation were employed as scribes. The discovery of a method by which
+to obtain a plurality of copies through a single mechanical process was
+epoch-making. The printing-press<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[Pg 204]</span> has performed a far greater service
+to humanity than have most inventions; for, with the possibility of
+producing thousands of copies of a communication, the thoughts embodied
+in it become forces; they may enter the minds of many individuals who
+are either convinced or actually guided by them. Ideas become active
+through their suggestion on the masses of the population. This may lead
+to a one-sided rule of public opinion; but a healthy race will travel
+intellectually in many directions, and various beliefs supplement one
+another, struggle together, conquer, and are conquered. In this manner
+thoughts awaken popular movements, rousing a people to a hitherto
+unknown degree, and forcing men to think and to join issues. Thus the
+Press becomes a factor in civilisation of the very first importance.
+The necessity for periodic communication, together with curiosity
+that refuses to wait long for information, leads to the establishment
+of regularly recurrent publications; and thus, in addition to the
+book-press, the newspaper-press, that has learned how to hold great
+centres of population under its control, appears. Naturally this method
+of aiding the progress of civilisation has its disadvantages, as have
+all other methods; the conception of the world becomes superficial;
+individuality loses in character; not only a certain levelling of
+education, but also a levelling of views of life and of modes of
+thought, results. But, on the whole, knowledge is spread abroad as it
+never was before.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe40" id="i_204">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_204.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">EXAMPLES OF AZTEC HIEROGLYPHIC SCULPTURE AND WRITING</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The hieroglyphics and script of the Aztecs were
+ independently developed. The first illustration is from a sculpture in Mexico,
+ and the other is a small reproduction of a page of the Maya manuscript at
+ Dresden. In both cases the symbolism is only imperfectly understood at
+ present.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Man, as a thinking being, craves for a conception of life; and in his
+inmost thoughts he seeks for an explanation of the double relationship
+of Man to Nature and of Nature to Man, striving to bring all into
+harmony. This he finds in religion.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30" id="i_205">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_205.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Frith</div>
+ <div class="caption">THE GREAT BUDDHA AT KAMAKURA, IN JAPAN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Professor Kohler points out that in the history of the
+ world’s religions, although the belief in the omnipotence of God has become so
+ widespread, it is not thought inconsistent that a Buddha, claiming to incarnate
+ the Supreme Being completely within himself, should appear.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man’s Craving for Religion<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Beginnings of Nature Worship<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Realm of Shadows</div>
+
+<p>Religion is belief in God; that is, belief in spiritual forces
+inseparable from and interwoven through the universe&mdash;forces that
+render all things distinct and separate, yet make all coalescent and
+firm, permeating all, and giving to every object its individuality.
+Man is impelled by Nature to conceive of the universe as divine. This
+idea exhibits itself universally among primitive folk in the form
+of animism&mdash;a belief that the entire internal and external world is
+animated, filled with supernatural beings that have originally no
+determinate nature, but which may appear in the most varied of forms,
+may vanish and may create themselves anew, as clouds arise from unseen
+vapour in the air. Spirits are supposed to be not far removed from
+man; families as well as individuals consider themselves to stand more
+or less in connection with them; and men, too, have a share in the
+invisible world<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[Pg 205]</span> when they have cast aside the garment of the body in
+dream or in death. Thus, every man is thought to have his protecting
+spirit, his <i>manitou</i>, that reveals itself to him through signs and
+dreams. Special incarnations, objects in which supernatural beings
+are inherent or with which they are in some way connected, are called
+“fetiches”; hence arises fetichism, in regard to which the strangest
+ideas were held in previous centuries when the science of anthropology
+was unknown. Trees, rocks, rivers, bits of wood, images of one’s own
+making&mdash;any of these are thought capable of containing beings of divine
+nature. Naturally, the tree or the fragment of wood or of stone is not
+worshipped, as men formerly thought, but the spirit that is believed
+to have entered it. In many cases the belief approaches worship of
+Nature, especially among agricultural peoples. Divinity is recognised
+in the shape of factors essential to agriculture&mdash;sun, sky, lightning,
+thunder; these being the beneficent deities, in contrast to whom are
+the earth-spirits who bring pestilences, earthquakes, and other evils
+to mankind. Thus the cult is refined; spirits are no longer attached
+to fetiches, but men worship the heavens, and the earth also. Religion
+accompanies man from birth to death. Spirits both for good and for evil
+are supposed to hover about him at his very birth. The soul of some
+being&mdash;perhaps an animal, perhaps an ancestor&mdash;enters into the new-born
+child, and from this spirit he receives his name.</p>
+
+<p>Oftentimes there is a new consecration at the time of marriage;
+often when an heir-apparent succeeds to the chieftainship. At his
+decease primitive folk believe that man enters the realm of shadows.
+At first he hovers over the sea or river of death, and often only
+after having passed through many hardships does he arrive in the new
+kingdom, where he either continues to live after the manner of his
+former existence, or, according to whether his life on earth has been
+good or evil, inhabits a higher or a lower supernatural sphere. To
+the dead are consecrated their personal possessions&mdash;horses, slaves,
+wives even&mdash;that they may make use of them during the new existence;
+men go head-hunting in order to send them new helpmates. On the other
+hand great care is often taken that the spirits of the departed,
+satisfied with their new existence, may no longer molest the world of
+the living: propitiative offerings are made; men avoid mentioning the
+name of the departed, that he may not be tempted to visit them with
+his presence; they seek to make themselves unrecognisable during the
+time immediately following his death, wear different clothes, and adopt
+other dwelling-places. Sometimes the light placed near the deceased for
+the purpose of guiding him back to his old<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[Pg 206]</span> home is moved further and
+further away, so that his ghost, unable to find the right path, shall
+never return.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the belief in spirits encompasses primitive man, following him
+step by step.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Belief in Many Gods<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Happiness found in Religion</div>
+
+<p>From animism develops worship of heroes and polytheism, with their
+attendant mythological narrations. The idea of the unity of the
+supernatural world becomes lost; and the indefinite forms of spirit
+become separate, independent beings, that are developed more and
+more in the direction of the souls either of animals or of men.
+This splitting up of the deity, which destroys the tendency toward
+unity in religion, is followed by a reaction that comes about partly
+through a belief in creation by a father of the gods, partly through
+acceptance of a historical origin of the mythological world from a
+single source (theogonic myths), and partly through direct banishment
+of the plurality of gods and a new formation of the belief in a unity
+according either to theistic or to pantheistic ideas. In spite of the
+conception of a world permeated and pervaded by God alone, the belief
+that certain persons and places are more powerful in respect to the
+divinity than others is retained; and the appearance from time to time
+of a Buddha who incarnates and manifests the Supreme Being directly and
+completely within himself&mdash;in a special manner apart from other natural
+phenomena&mdash;is also not looked upon as inconsistent.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_206">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_206.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A STRANGE RELIGIOUS RITE: FUNERAL SACRIFICE OF THE TODAS
+ IN SOUTHERN INDIA</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The elaborate and extraordinary funeral rites of the Todas
+ illustrate admirably the older notions of life and death. A funeral endures for
+ several days; the body is cremated; last of all the buffaloes of the deceased
+ are slaughtered at the grave and thought to enter into mystic reunion with their
+ master. In olden times a whole troop would be slaughtered, but under British
+ influence the number has been limited to one for a common person and two for a
+ chief.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Religion is a thing of the emotions, not merely in the sense of having
+its origin in fear, or in the remembrance of lasting sensations derived
+from visions or dreams, but emotional in so far that it satisfies
+the necessity felt by men for a consistent life-conception&mdash;not an
+intellectual but an emotional conception. It is not the matter-of-fact
+desire for knowledge that finds its expression in religion, but the
+joy of the heart in a supreme power, the call for help of the needy,
+and the consciousness of our own insignificance and our<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[Pg 207]</span> mortality.
+Judgment is not yet abstracted from the other psychic functions;
+indeed, it really retires behind the emotions.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_207">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_207.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">NOAH’S SACRIFICE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the painting by Daniel Maclise, R.A.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Basis of Worship<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Growth of the Priesthood</div>
+
+<p>When men thus believe in divinity, if the belief have an active
+influence on the emotions, it follows that the individual must
+establish some connection between himself and the object of his
+worship. This is brought about through certain actions, or through the
+creation of circumstances in which special conditions of consecration
+are perceived, and therewith the possibility of a close relationship
+with the Supreme Being. The acts through which this relationship may be
+brought about, taken collectively, are embraced in the word “worship,”
+and if performed according to a strict system they are called “rites.”
+Sacrifice has an important place among the ceremonies observed in
+accordance with ritual. It is based on a conception of the wants and
+necessities of the higher beings, and, in later times, is refined
+into a representation of man’s ethical feelings&mdash;unselfishness and
+gratitude, which give pleasure to the Deity and thus contribute to
+its happiness. But sacrifice does not retain its unselfish character
+for any great length of time. Man thinks of himself first: he makes
+offerings to the good spirits, but more particularly to the evil
+gods, in order to pacify their fury and appease their evil desires.
+Sacrifices are also offered to the dead, and from such offerings and
+memorials is developed the idea of a “family” or “clan,” which outlives
+the individual.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, emotion is the principal active agent; but intellectual power
+also must gradually lay its hold on the system of belief. The
+principles discovered are formulated into a science and the cultivation
+of this science becomes the special duty of the priesthood, often as
+a secret art&mdash;esoteric system&mdash;in which concealment is conducive to
+the maintenance of the exclusiveness and peculiar power of the priest
+class. The science becomes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[Pg 208]</span> partly mythologic-historical, partly
+dogmatic, and partly ritualistic.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Out of Religion Came Art</div>
+
+<p>The artistic instinct develops partly in connection with worship,
+partly in the direction of its practical application to life; and
+although no very sharp line of distinction is drawn between the two
+tendencies, the germ at least of the difference between the fine
+and the industrial arts is thus in existence from the very earliest
+times. Worship gives rise to images and pictures, at first of the
+very roughest form. They are not mere symbols; they are the garments
+or habitations with which the spirit invests itself. The spirit
+may take up its abode anywhere according to the different beliefs
+of man&mdash;in a plant, an animal, a stone, above all, in a picture or
+effigy that symbolically reflects its peculiarities. Therefore, the
+ghosts of ancestors are embodied in ancestral images. Just as skulls
+were reverenced in earlier times, in later days the images of the
+dead (<i>korwar</i>) are worshipped. Such images are the oldest examples
+of the art of portraiture; and the oldest dolls are the rude puppets
+which according to the rites of many races&mdash;the American Indians, for
+example&mdash;widows must wear about them as tokens, or as the husks or
+wrappers of their husbands’ doubles.</p>
+
+<p>Religion itself becomes poetry. The belief in the identity of spirits
+of the departed with animals, and the myths of metamorphosis, take
+the form of fables and fairy tales; the cosmogonic and theogonic
+conceptions develop into mythologies; hero sagas become epics; the
+myths of life in Nature become a glorification of the external world,
+an expression of unity with Nature, and thus a form of lyric poetry.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Artistic Expression of Life</div>
+
+<p>Everyday life, too, demands artistic expression. At first the childish
+passion for the changing pictures that correspond with different ideas
+of the imagination joins with the desire to impress others, and finery
+in dress and ornamentation result. This has developed in every clime.
+Tattooing arises not only from a religious motive, but also from the
+desire for ornament. The painting of men’s bodies, the often grotesque
+ideas, such as artificial deformation of the head, knocking out and
+blackening of teeth, ear ornaments and mutilation of ears, pegs thrust
+through the lips, and various methods of dressing the hair, may be in
+part connected with religious conceptions, for here the most varied of
+motives co-operate to the same end. Yet, on the other hand, there is no
+doubt that they are also the outcome of a craving for variation in form
+and in colour. In the same way the dance is not only an act of worship;
+it is also a means of giving vent to latent animal spirits: thus,
+dances are often expressions of the tempestuous sensual instincts of a
+people.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Birth of the Drama</div>
+
+<p>The dance exhibits a special tendency to represent the ordinary affairs
+of life in a symbolic manner; thus there are war and hunting dances,
+and especially animal dances in which each of the participants believes
+himself to be permeated by the spirit of some animal which throughout
+the dance he endeavours to mimic. In this way dramatic representation,
+which is certainly based on the idea of personification, on the notion
+that a man for the time being may be possessed by the spirit of some
+other creature that speaks and acts through him, originates. Thus
+arose the primitive form of masques, in which men dressed themselves
+up to resemble various creatures, real or imaginary, as in the case
+of the animal masques of old time; for according to the popular idea
+the spirit dwells in the external, visible form, and through the
+imitation or adoption of its outward appearance we become identified
+with the spirit whose character we assume. Among many races not only
+masks proper were worn, but also the hides and hair or feathers of the
+creatures personated. Dramatic representation was furthered by the
+dream plays&mdash;especially popular among the American Indians&mdash;in which
+the events of dreams are adapted for acting and performed. Even as men
+seek illumination in dreams as to questions both divine and mundane, so
+do they anticipate through dreams the dramatic representations which
+shall be performed on holidays as expressions of life.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_209">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_209.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">SAVAGE DANCES: THE FAR-OFF BEGINNINGS OF THE DRAMA</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The dance is an effort to give symbolic expression to
+ affairs and moods of everyday life. Thus the Zulu wedding dance is self-evident
+ in its purpose. The second illustration depicts a strange religious dance of the
+ Australian natives, associated with totemism or animism. The third picture shows
+ dancers in Kandy endeavouring to banish evil spirits, and the last illustrates an
+ Australian corroboree. From such sources the drama has been slowly evolved.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_209_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Art &amp; Play in the Life of Man</div>
+
+<p>Play is a degeneration of the dance, and it arises less from
+the instinct for beauty than from a desire to realise whatever
+entertainment and excitement may be got from any incident or
+occurrence. From another special inclination originate those satirical
+songs of Northern peoples, written in alternating verses,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[Pg 210]</span> in which
+the national tribunal and the voice of the people are given expression
+at the same time. Thus they have a truly educative character. These are
+the preliminary steps to the free satire and humour that gleam through
+the lives of civilised peoples, now like the flicker of a candle, now
+like a purifying lightning flash, freeing men from life’s monotony, and
+illuminating the night of unsolved questions. Capacity for organised
+play is a characteristic that lifts man above the lower animals. The
+expression of individuality without any particular object in view,
+the elevation of self above the troubles of life, and free activity,
+uncoerced by the necessities of existence, are characteristic both of
+play and of art. Thus play, as well as art, exhibits to a pre-eminent
+degree man’s consciousness of having escaped, if only temporarily,
+from the coercion of environing nature; being without definite object,
+it proves that he can find employment when released from the pressure
+of the outer world&mdash;that is, when he is momentarily freed from his
+endeavour to establish a balance between himself and the necessities
+of life, with a view to overcoming the latter. Man stands in close
+connection with his environment and with the immutable laws of nature;
+but in play and in art he develops his own personality&mdash;a development
+that neither in direction nor in object is influenced by the outer
+world and its constraint.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Fall of Man and Rise of the Race</div>
+
+<p>The step that leads to the overcoming of custom is the recognition
+of right. “Right” is that which society strictly demands from every
+individual member. Not all that is customary is exacted by right;
+a multitude of the requirements of custom may be ignored without
+opposition from the community as a whole, although, of course, detached
+individuals may express their displeasure. The aggregate, however,
+grants immunity to all who do not choose to follow the custom. In other
+words, the separation of custom from right signifies the development
+of a sharper line of demarcation between that which is and that which
+ought to be. In primitive times “is” and “ought to be” are fairly
+consonant terms; but gradually a spirit of opposition is developed;
+cases arise in which custom is opposed, in which the actions of men
+run counter to a previous habit. Man is conscious of the possibility
+of raising himself above the unreasoning tendencies toward certain
+modes of conduct, and he takes pleasure in so doing&mdash;the good man as
+well as the evil. Whoever oversteps the bounds of custom, even through
+sheer egotism, is also a furtherer of human development; without sin
+the world would never have evolved a civilisation; the Fall of Man was
+nothing more than the first step toward the historical development of
+the human race.</p>
+
+<p>This leads to the necessity for extracting from custom such rules
+as must prove advantageous to mankind, and this collection of
+axioms&mdash;which “ought to be”&mdash;becomes law.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Custom, Right, and Morality</div>
+
+<p>The distinction between right and custom was an important step. The
+relativity of custom was exposed with one stroke. Many, and by no means
+the worst members of communities, emancipate themselves from custom. It
+is the opening in the wall through which the progress of humanity may
+pass. Nor do the demands of right remain unalterable and unyielding.
+A change in custom brings with it a change in right; certain rules of
+conduct gradually become isolated owing to the recession of custom,
+and to such an extent that they lose their vitality and decay. And
+as new customs arise, so are new principles of right discovered.
+In this manner an alteration in the one is a cause of change in
+the other&mdash;naturally, in conformity with the degree of culture and
+contemporary social relations. Custom and right mutually further each
+other, and render it possible for men to adapt themselves to newly
+acquired conditions of civilisation.</p>
+
+<p>Together with right and custom a third factor appears&mdash;morality. This
+is a comparatively late acquisition. It, too, contains something of
+the “ought to be,” not because of the social, but by virtue of the
+divine authority or order based on philosophical conceptions. Morals
+vary, therefore, as laws vary, according to peoples and to times. The
+rules of morality form a second code, set above the social law, and
+they embody a larger aggregate of duties. The reason for this is that
+men recognise that the social system of rules for conduct is not the
+only one, that it is only relative and cannot include all the duties
+of human beings, and that over and beyond the laws of society ethical
+principles exist.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[Pg 211]</span></p>
+
+<p>Naturally conflicts arise between right and morals, and such struggles
+lead to further development and progress.</p>
+
+<p>The late appearance of ideas of morality proves that ethical
+considerations were originally foreign to the god-conceptions. The
+spirits, fetiches, and world-creators of different beliefs are at
+first neutral so far as morals are concerned; myths and legends are
+invented partly from creation theories, partly from historic data, and
+partly through efforts of the imagination. In primitive beliefs there
+is no trace of an attempt to conceive of deities as being good in the
+highest&mdash;or even in a lower&mdash;sense; and it would not be in accordance
+with scientific ethnology to appraise, or to wish to pass judgment
+on, religions according to the point of view of ethics. Not until the
+importance of morality in life is realised, and the profound value
+of a life of moral purity recognised, do men seek in their religious
+beliefs for higher beings of ethical significance, for morally perfect
+personalities among the gods.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_211">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_211.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Underwood &amp; Underwood</div>
+ <div class="caption">THE EMBLEM OF A TRIBE: ALASKAN INDIAN TOTEM</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This mysterious “totem” distinguishes a family or tribe of
+ the old Hydah Indians and is erected at Wrangel in Alaska.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Different elements of civilisation vary greatly in their development
+in different civilised districts; one race may have a greater tendency
+toward intellectual, another toward material culture. No race has
+approached the Hindoos in philosophic speculation, yet they are as
+children in their knowledge of natural science. One people may develop
+commerce to the highest extent, another poetry and music, a third the
+freedom of the individual. The language of the American Indians is in
+many respects richer and more elegant than English. Therefore nothing
+is farther from the truth than to say that, in case one institution of
+civilised life is found to exist in a hunting people, another in an
+agricultural race, or the one in an otherwise higher, and the other
+in an otherwise lower nation or tribe, the institution in question
+must have reached a state of perfection corresponding with the general
+development of the people possessing it. According to this, the
+monogamic uncivilised races were further advanced than the polygamous
+Aryans of India and the Mohammedans; and the Polynesians, with their
+skill in the industrial arts and their dramatic dances, perhaps in a
+higher state of civilisation than Europeans!</p>
+
+<p>Development fulfils itself in communities of men. Except in a human
+aggregate it cannot come to pass; for the germs of development which
+are brought forth by the potentiated activity of the many may exist
+only in a society of individuals.</p>
+
+<p>It has therefore been a significant fact that from the very beginning
+men have joined together in social aggregates, partly on account of an
+instinctive impulse, partly because of the necessity for self-defence.
+Thus it came about that primitive men lived together in wandering,
+predatory hordes, or packs. The individuals were bound to one another
+very closely; there was no private life; and the sex-relationships were
+promiscuous. Men not only dwelt together in groups, but the groups
+themselves assimilated with one another, inasmuch as marriages were
+reciprocally entered into by them. So far as we are able to determine,
+one of the earliest of social institutions was that of group-marriage.
+Individuals did not first unite in pairs, and then join together
+in groups&mdash;such would soon have fallen asunder; on the contrary,
+group-marriage itself created the bond that held the community
+together; the most violent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[Pg 212]</span> instinct of mankind not only united the few
+but the many, indeed, complete social aggregates.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_212">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_212.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE BEGINNINGS OF MONARCHY: AFRICAN CHIEF SEATED IN
+ STATE AMONG HIS HEADMEN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The tribal state has a fixed form of government. The
+ chiefs or patriarchs of the various families stand at the head of affairs, the
+ position of chief being either hereditary or elective. In most cases, however,
+ it is determined by a combination of both methods, a blood descendant being
+ chosen, provided he is able to give proof of his competence.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Group-marriage is the form of union established by the association of
+two hordes, or packs, according to which the men of one group marry the
+women of the other; not a marriage of individual men with individual
+women, but a promiscuous relationship, each man of one group marrying
+all the women of the other group&mdash;at least in theory&mdash;and vice versâ;
+not a marriage of individuals, but of aggregates. Certainly with such
+a sex-relationship established, sooner or later regulations develop
+from within the community, through which the marital relationships of
+individuals are adjusted in a consistent manner; but the principle
+first followed was, as community in property, so community in marriage;
+and this must of itself lead to kinships entirely different from those
+with which we are familiar.</p>
+
+<p>Group-marriage was closely bound up with religious conceptions; single
+hordes, or packs, considered themselves the embodiment of a single
+spirit. And since at that time spirits were only conceived of as things
+that existed in nature, the horde felt itself to be a single class of
+natural object&mdash;some animal or plant, for example; and the union of
+one pack with another was analogous to the union of one animal with
+another. Each group believed itself to be permeated by the spirit of
+a certain species of animal, borrowed its name thence and the animal
+species itself was looked upon as the protecting spirit. The ancestral
+spirit was worshipped in the animal, and the putting to death or
+injuring of an individual of the species was a serious offence.</p>
+
+<p>Such a belief is called Totemism. “Totem”&mdash;a word borrowed from the
+language of the Massachusetts Indians&mdash;is the natural object or animal
+assumed as the emblem of the horde or tribe, and correspondingly the
+group symbolised by the class of animal or natural object is called a
+Totem-group.</p>
+
+<p>This belief led to a close union of all who were partakers of the
+spirit of the same animal; it also strictly determined which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[Pg 213]</span> groups
+could associate with one another. And as the totem-group mimicked the
+animal in its dances, and fancied itself to be possessed by its spirit,
+it also ordered the methods of partaking of food, and all marriage,
+birth, and death ceremonies in accordance with this conception. It
+is said that, the totem being exogamous, marriages were not possible
+within the totem, but only without it. Precisely so; for the original
+conception was not that individuals formed unions, but that the whole
+totem entered the marriage relationship; a single marriage would have
+been considered an impossibility.</p>
+
+<p>To which totem the children belonged&mdash;to the mother’s, to the father’s,
+or to a third totem&mdash;was a question that offered considerable
+difficulty. All three possibilities presented themselves; the last
+mentioned, however, only in case the child belonged to another group,
+a sub-totem, and in that event its descendants could return to the
+original totem.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The First Ideas of Kinship</div>
+
+<p>Descent in the male or in the female line occasioned in later times
+the rise of important distinctions between nations. If a child follow
+the mother’s totem, we speak of “maternal kinship”; conversely, of
+“paternal kinship” in case of heredity through the father. Which of
+these is the more primitive, or did tribes from the very first adopt
+either one or the other system, thus making them of equal antiquity, is
+a much-vexed question. There is reason to believe that maternal kinship
+is the more primitive form, and that races have either passed with more
+or less energy and rapidity to the system of descent through males, or
+have kept to the original institution of maternal succession. There
+are many peoples among whom both forms of kinship exist, and in such
+instances the maternal is undoubtedly the more primitive; from this it
+appears very probable that development has thus taken place, the more
+so since there are traces of maternal kinship to be found in races
+whose established form is paternal.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Growth of Marriage</div>
+
+<p>As time passed, marriage of individuals developed from group-marriage
+or totemism. Such unions may be polygamous&mdash;one man having several
+wives&mdash;or polyandrous&mdash;one woman having several husbands. Both forms
+have been represented in mankind, and, indeed, polygamy is the general
+rule among all races, excepting Occidental civilised peoples. The
+form of marriage toward which civilisation is advancing is certainly
+monogamy; through it a complete individual relationship is established
+between man and wife; and although both individualities may have
+independent expression, each is reconciled to the other through the
+loftier association of both. Nearly associated with</p>
+
+<p>monogamy is the belief in union after death; it arises from the
+religious beliefs prevalent among many peoples. Among other races there
+is at least the custom of a year of mourning, sometimes for husband,
+sometimes for wife, often for both.</p>
+
+<p>Marriage of individuals has developed in different ways from group
+or totem marriage: sometimes it was brought about through lack of
+subsistence occasioned by many men dwelling together; sometimes it
+arose from other causes. One factor was the practice of wife-capture:
+whoever carried off a wife freed her, as it were, from the authority
+of the community, and established a separate marriage for himself.
+Marriage by purchase was an outcome of marriage by capture and of the
+paying of an indemnity to the relatives of the bride; men also learned
+to agree beforehand as to the equivalent to be paid. The practice of
+acquiring wives by purchase developed in various directions, especially
+in that of trading wives and in the earning of wives by years of
+service. Gradually the purchase became merely a feigned transaction;
+and a union of individuals has evolved&mdash;now sacerdotal, now civil in
+form&mdash;from which every trace of traffic and of exchange has disappeared.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Religion Ennobles Marriage</div>
+
+<p>Thus already in early times marriage had become ennobled through
+religion. It is a widespread idea that through partaking of food in
+common, blood-brotherhood, or similar procedures, a mystic communion of
+soul may be established; and in case of marriages brought about by the
+mediation of a priesthood the priest invokes the divine consecration.
+Marriage is thereby raised above the bulk of profane actions of life;
+it receives a certain guarantee of permanency; indeed, in many cases,
+by reason of the mystic communion of souls, it is looked upon as
+absolutely indissoluble.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe34" id="i_214">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_214.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE IDEA OF MARRIAGE: WEDDING CUSTOMS IN MANY LANDS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">In countries where women are subservient to men the idea
+ of marriage by capture or by compulsion prevails. The Bedouin bride (2) makes a
+ pretence of escaping and is pursued by the bridegroom and his kinsmen. Some
+ Africans (4) show their love by knocking down their prospective brides. The
+ Moorish bride (6) shrouded and seated in bed is an object of curiosity. 1, 3,
+ and 5 represent respectively the marriage customs of Persians, Chinese, and
+ Moslems.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_214_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The ownership of property also was originally communistic, and the
+idea of individual possession has been a gradual development. The idea
+of the ownership<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[Pg 215]</span> of land, especially when developed by agricultural
+peoples, is of a communistic nature; and, from common possession,
+family and individual ownership gradually comes into being. It is
+brought about in various ways, chiefly through the division of land
+among separate families: at first only temporary, held only until the
+time for a succeeding division arrives; later, owned in perpetuity. Nor
+was it a rare method of procedure to grant land to any one who desired
+to cultivate it&mdash;an estate that should be his so long as he remained
+upon it and cultivated the soil, but which reverted to the community,
+on his leaving it. There gradually developed a constant relationship
+between land and cultivator as agriculture became more extended and
+lasting improvements were effected on the soil. Land became the
+permanent property of the individual; it also became an article of
+commerce.</p>
+
+<p>Ownership of movable property even was at first of communistic
+character. Clothing and weapons, enchantments effectual for the
+individual alone, such as medicine-bags or amulets, were, to be sure,
+assigned to individuals in very early times; but all property obtained
+by labour, the products of the chase or of fishing, originally belonged
+to the community, until in later days each family was allowed to claim
+the fruits of its own toil, and was only pledged to share with the
+others under certain conditions. Finally, individuals were permitted
+to retain or to barter property which they had produced by labour; and
+exchange, especially exchange between individuals, attained special
+significance through the division of labour.</p>
+
+<p>The individualisation of the ownership of movable property was
+especially furthered by members of families performing other labour,
+outside the family, in addition to their work within the family circle.
+Although the fruit of all labour accomplished within the family was
+shared by the members in common, the results of work done outside
+became the property of the particular individual who had performed the
+labour. Consequent expansion of the conception of labour led men to
+one of the greatest triumphs of justice, to the idea of establishing
+individual rights in ideas and in combinations of ideas, to the
+recognition of intellectual or immaterial property&mdash;right of author or
+inventor&mdash;one of the chief incentives to modern civilisation.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_215">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_215.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE CHURCH AND MARRIAGE: A WEDDING SCENE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">In very early times marriage had assumed a religious
+ significance and came to be regarded among the sacred as opposed to the secular
+ functions of life.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>On the other hand, individual rights in transactions led to conceptions
+concerning obligations and debts. Exchange, either direct or on terms
+of credit, brought with it duties and liabilities for which originally
+the persons and lives of the individuals concerned were held in pledge,
+until custody of the body&mdash;which also included possession of the corpse
+of a debtor&mdash;was succeeded by public imprisonment for debt, and finally
+by the mere pledging of property, imprisonment for debt having been
+abolished&mdash;a course of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[Pg 216]</span> development through which the most varied of
+races have passed.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Rights of Property</div>
+
+<p>The relation of the individual to his possessions led men at first to
+place movable property in graves, in order that it might be of service
+to the departed owner during the life beyond; hence the universal
+custom of burning on funeral pyres, not only weapons and utensils, but
+animals, slaves, and even wives. In later times men were satisfied with
+symbolic immolations, or possessions were released from the ban of
+death and put into further use. The property of the deceased reverted
+to his family, and thus the right of inheritance arose. There was no
+right of inheritance during the days of communism; on the death of a
+member of the family a mere general consolidation of property resulted;
+with individual property arose the reversion of possessions to the
+family from which they had been temporarily separated. Thus property
+either reverted to the family taken as a whole, or to single heirs,
+certain members of the family; hence a great variety of procedure
+arose. Up to the present day inheritance by all the children, or
+inheritance by one alone, exists in Eastern Asia as in Western nations.</p>
+
+<p>In like manner criminal responsibility was originally collective;
+the family or clan was held responsible for the actions of all its
+individual members except those who were renounced and made outcasts.
+Such methods of collective surety still exist among many exceedingly
+developed peoples; but the system is gradually dying away, the tendency
+being for the entire responsibility to rest upon the individual alone.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Beginning of the Community</div>
+
+<p>The state is a development of tribal, or patriarchal, society. The
+tribal group is a community of intermarried families, all claiming
+descent from a common ancestor. From tribal organisation the principle
+is developed that participation in the community is open only to such
+individuals as belong to one or other of the families of which it is
+composed; and the political body thus made up of individuals related
+either by blood or through marriage is called a patriarchal, or
+tribal, state. This form of community was enlarged even in very early
+times, advantage being taken of the possibility of adopting strangers
+into the circle of related families, and of amalgamating with them.
+Still, the fundamental idea that the community is composed of related
+families always remains uppermost in the minds of uncivilised peoples.
+The tribal state gradually develops into the territorial state. The
+connection of the community with a definite region becomes closer;
+strange tribes settle in the same district; they are permitted to
+remain provided tribute is paid and services are performed, and are
+gradually absorbed into the community, the strangers and the original
+inhabitants&mdash;plebeians and patricians&mdash;united together into one
+aggregate. Thus arises the conception of a state which any man may join
+without his being a member of any one of the original clans or families.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Growth of the Idea of a State</div>
+
+<p>In this way the idea of a state becomes distinct from that of a people
+bound together by kinship, the latter being especially distinguished by
+a certain unity of external appearance, custom, character, and manner
+of thought. This is not intended to suggest that an amalgamation of
+different race elements in a state and an assimilation of different
+modes of thought and of feeling are not desirable, or that a spirit
+analogous to the sense of unity in members of the same family is not
+to be sought for; such a condition is most likely to be attained
+if a certain tribe or clan take precedence of the others, as the
+most progressive, to which the various elements of the people annex
+themselves.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe34" id="i_217">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_217.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">“IN THE NAME OF JUSTICE”: SOME OLD METHODS OF TORTURE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">These pictures represent: 1. Roman gaolers cutting off a
+ Christian’s ears. 2. The cangue as still used in China. 3. A prisoner on the rack
+ in Mediæval England. 4. Torture of the Iron Chair. 5. The ordeal of fire and
+ branding.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_217_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Tribes and their Chiefs</div>
+
+<p>The tribal state has a fixed form of government. The chiefs or
+patriarchs of the various families stand at the head of affairs, the
+position of chief being either hereditary or elective. In most cases,
+however, it is determined by a combination of both methods, a blood
+descendant being chosen provided he is able to give proof of his
+competence. In addition there is often the popular assembly. In later
+times many innovations are introduced. Passion for power united to a
+strong personality often leads to a chieftainship in which all rights
+and privileges are absorbed or united in the person of one individual;
+so that he appears as the possessor of all prerogatives and titles,
+those of other men being entirely secondary, and all being more or
+less dependent upon his will. Religious conceptions, especially,
+have had great influence in this connection. Nowhere is this so
+clearly shown as in “teknonymy,” an institution formerly prevalent
+in the South Pacific<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[Pg 218]</span> islands, according to which the soul of the
+father is supposed to enter the body of his eldest son at the birth
+of the latter, and that therefore, immediately from his birth, the
+son becomes master, the father continuing the management of affairs
+merely as his proxy. Other peoples have avoided such consequences
+as these by supposing the child to be possessed by the soul of his
+grandfather, therefore naming first-born males after their grandfathers
+instead of after their fathers. Another outcome of the institution of
+chieftainship is the chaotic order of affairs which rules among many
+peoples on the death of the chieftain, continuing until a successor
+is seated on the throne&mdash;a lawless interval of anarchy followed by a
+regency.</p>
+
+<p>The power of a chieftain is, however, usually limited by class rights;
+that is, by the rights of sub-chieftains of especially distinguished
+families, and of the popular assembly, among which elements the
+division of power and of jurisdiction is exceedingly varied. These
+primitive institutions are rude prototypes of future varieties of
+coercive government, of kingship, either of aristocratic or of
+republican form, in which the primitive idea of chieftainship as the
+absorption of all private privileges is given up, and in its place the
+various principles of rights and duties of government enter.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Growth of Military Classes</div>
+
+<p>Class-differentiation with attendant privileges and prerogatives is
+especially developed in warlike races, and in nations which must be
+ever prepared to resist the attacks of enemies, by the establishment of
+a militant class. The militant class occupies an intermediate position
+between the governing, priest, and scholar classes on the one hand,
+and the industrial class&mdash;agriculturists, craftsmen, merchants&mdash;on the
+other. Employment in warfare, necessary discipline, near association
+with the chieftain, and the holding of fiefs for material support give
+to this class a unique position. Thus the warrior castes developed
+in India, the feudal and military nobility in Japan, the nobility in
+Germany, with obligations and service to feudal superiors and to the
+Court. This system survives for many years, until at last feudal tenure
+gradually disappears, and its attendant prerogatives are swallowed up
+by all classes through a universal subjection to military service;
+although even yet a distinct class of professional soldiers remains at
+the head of military affairs and operations, and will continue to do
+so as long as there is a possibility of internal or external warfare.
+However, here too the militant class is absorbed into a general body
+of officials. Officials are citizens who not only occupy the usual
+position of members of the state, but to whom in addition is appointed
+the execution of the life functions of the nation, as its organs; in
+other words, such functions as are peculiar to the civic organisation
+in contradistinction to the general functions exercised and actions
+performed by individual citizens as independent units. Officialism
+includes to a special degree duty to its calling and to the public
+trust, and there are also special privileges granted to officials
+within the sphere appointed for them.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Birth of Parliaments</div>
+
+<p>In a society governed by a chieftain, as well as in a monarchy, there
+is a popular assembly or consultative body; either an unorganised
+meeting of individuals, or an organised convention of estates founded
+on class right. A modern development, that certainly had its prototype
+in the patriarchal state, is the representative assembly, an assembly
+of individuals chosen to represent the people in place of the popular
+gathering. The English Government, with its representative legislative
+bodies, is a typical example in modern civilisation.</p>
+
+<p>One of the chief problems encountered not only in a society ruled by a
+chieftain, but also in states of later development, whether governed
+by a potentate or by an aristocracy, is the relation of temporal to
+spiritual power. Sometimes both are united in the head of the state, as
+in the cases of the Incas of Peru and of the Caliphate. Sometimes the
+spiritual head is distinct and separate from the temporal; frequently
+the two forces are nearly associated, a member of the imperial family
+being chosen for the office of high-priest, as among the Aztecs.
+Often, however, the two functions are completely independent of each
+other, as among many African races, the medicine-man occupying a
+position entirely independent of the chieftain. Such separation may, of
+course, lead to friction and civil war; it may also become an element
+furthering to civilisation, a source of new ideas, opening the way
+to alliances between nations, and setting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[Pg 219]</span> bounds to the tyranny of
+individuals, as exemplified in the relation of the Papacy to the Holy
+Roman Empire.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">State Justice a Momentous Step Forward</div>
+
+<p>The form of state in which the functions of government are exercised
+by a chieftain contributes greatly to state control and enforcement
+of justice. The realisation of right had been from the first a social
+function; but its enforcement was incumbent on the unit group of
+individuals (families or tribes bound together by friendship). The
+acquisition by the state of the power to dispense justice and to make
+and enforce law is one of the greatest events of the world’s history.
+The idea of all right being incorporated in the chieftain (and social
+classes) played an important part in bringing about this condition of
+affairs; for as soon as this conception receives general acceptance,
+the chieftain, and with him the state, become interested in the
+preservation and enforcement of justice, even in its lower forms in
+the common rights of the subjects. On the other hand, not only the
+interests of chieftainship, but also those of agriculture and commerce,
+are furthered by the preservation of internal peace; and internal peace
+calls for state control of justice and enforcement of law.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_219">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_219.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Mansell</div>
+ <div class="caption">AN EARLY EGYPTIAN REPRESENTATION OF JUSTICE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">“The Judgment of the Dead” as illustrated by innumerable
+ paintings on the walls of Egyptian temples and tombs.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Moreover the religious element worked to the same end. Wickedness was
+held to be an injury to the deity, whose anger would be visited upon
+the entire land&mdash;a conception that lasted far into the Middle Ages,
+and according to which the fate of Sodom and Gomorrah was held to be
+typical of the effect of the curse of God. Already in primitive times
+religion led to a strange idea of justice&mdash;secret societies consecrated
+by the deity took upon themselves the function of enforcing right,
+instituting reigns of terror in their districts, maintaining order in
+society, and claiming authorisation from the god with whose spirit
+they were permeated. Later, influenced by all these causes, the social
+aggregate took over the control of justice. It was already considered
+to be the upholder of right, the servant of the deity, the maintainer
+of public peace, the dispenser of atoning sacrifices, etc.; and so
+the various elements conceived of as justice, which had previously
+been distributed among the single families, tribes, associations, and
+societies, were combined, and placed under state control.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_220">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_220.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">AN EARLY CONCEPTION OF THE SPIRIT OF JUSTICE: THE
+ JUDGMENT OF SOLOMON</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Reproduced from the picture by the French artist, Nicolas
+ Poussin, who flourished in the first half of the seventeenth century.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_220_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_221">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_221.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE MODERN IDEAL OF JUSTICE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the fresco by Gerald Moira in the New Central
+ Criminal Court, London. Most of the figures are studies from well-known public
+ men of recent years.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_221_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Terror &amp; Tyranny of Religion<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Ordeal and the Curse</div>
+
+<p>Certain forms for the dispensation of justice, judging of crimes, and
+determining of punishments were developed. Thus arose the different
+forms of judicial procedure, which, for a long time bore a religious
+character. The deity was called upon to decide as to right and
+wrong&mdash;divinity in the form of natural forces. Hence the judgments
+of God through trial by water, fire, poison, serpents, scales,
+or&mdash;especially in Germany during the Middle Ages&mdash;combat, or decision
+by the divining eye, that was closely allied to the so-called trial by
+hazard. A peculiar variety of ordeal is that of the bier, according
+to which the body of a murdered man is called into requisition, the
+soul of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[Pg 222]</span> victim assisting in the discovery of the murderer.
+Ordeals are undergone sometimes by one individual, sometimes by two.
+An advance in progress is the curse, which takes the place of the
+ordeal, the curse of God being called down upon an individual and
+his family in case of wrongdoing or of perjury. The curse may be
+uttered by an individual in co-operation with the members of families.
+Thus arise ordeals by invocation and by oath with compurgators.
+Originally a certain period of time was allowed to pass&mdash;a month, for
+example&mdash;for the fulfilment of the curse. In later times, whoever
+took the oath&mdash;oath of innocence&mdash;was held guiltless. Witnesses
+succeeded to conjurers; divining looks were replaced by circumstantial
+evidence; and, instead of a mystic, a rational method of obtaining
+testimony was adopted. The development was not attained without certain
+attendant abuses; and the abolition of ordeal by God was among many
+peoples&mdash;notably the inhabitants of Eastern Asia, the American Indians,
+and the Germans of the Middle Ages&mdash;succeeded by the introduction of
+torture. In many lands torture stood in close connection with the
+judgment of God; in others it originated either directly or indirectly
+in slavery. According to the method of obtaining evidence by torture,
+the accused was forced through physical pain to disclosures concerning
+himself and his companions, and, in case he himself were considered
+guilty, to a confession. However barbarous and irrational, this system
+was employed in Latin and Germanic nations excepting England, until the
+eighteenth century, in some instances even until the nineteenth.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Slow Building up of Law<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Evolution of the Modern State</div>
+
+<p>Judgment was first pronounced in the name of God; in later times,
+in the name of the people or of the ruler who appeared as the
+representative of God. The principles of justice, the validity of which
+at first depends upon custom, are in later times proclaimed and fixed
+as commands of God. Thus systems of fixed right come into being first
+in the form of sacred justice, then as commands of God, and finally
+as law. Law is a conception of justice expressed in certain rules and
+principles. Originally there were no laws; the standard for justice was
+furnished to each individual by his own feelings; only isolated cases
+were recorded. As time advanced, and great men who strove to bring
+about an improvement in justice arose above the generality of mankind;
+when the ruling class became differentiated from the other classes;
+when it was found necessary to root out certain popular customs&mdash;then,
+in addition to the original collection of precedents, there arose law
+of a higher form: law that stood above precedent, that altered custom,
+and opened up new roads to justice. Great codes of law have not been
+compilations only; they have led justice into new paths. Originally a
+law was looked upon as an inviolable command of God, as unalterable
+and eternal; its interpretation alone was earthly and transitory.
+As years passed, men learned to recognise that laws themselves were
+transitory; and it became a principle that later enactments could alter
+earlier rules. The relations of later statutes to already established
+law, and how the laws of different nations influence one another, are
+difficult, much-vexed questions for the solution of which special
+sciences have developed&mdash;transitory and international law. Judgment and
+law are intimately concerned with justice, the conception of right as
+evolved from the double action of life and custom. To this development
+of justice is united an endeavour of the state or government not only
+to further welfare by means of the creation and administration of
+law, but also to take under its control civilising institutions of
+all sorts. This was originally a feature of justice itself; certain
+practices inimical to civilisation were interdicted and made punishable
+offences. Already in the Middle Ages systems of police played a great
+part among governmental institutions, especially in the smaller states.
+Subsequently the idea was developed that not only protection through
+the punishment of crime, but also superintendence of and promotion of
+the public weal, should be administered by law; and thus the modern
+state developed with its policy of national welfare. With this arose
+the necessity for a sharper distinction to be drawn between justice and
+the various actions of an administration; and thus in modern times men
+have come to the system&mdash;based on Montesquieu&mdash;of the separation of
+powers and independence of justice.</p>
+
+<p>Justice varies according to the development of civilisation, and
+according to the function that it must perform in this development; in
+like manner every age<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[Pg 223]</span> creates its own material and spiritual culture.
+Every poet is a poet of his own time.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Right Way to View History</div>
+
+<p>The notion of natural right, however unhistorical it was in itself,
+characterised a period of transition in so far as it enabled men to
+form a historical conception&mdash;a conception of what might be: for, by
+contrasting actual with ideal justice, we are enabled to escape the
+bonds of the opinions of a particular time, and to look upon such
+opinions and views objectively and independently. Yet it is certainly
+a foolish proceeding to consider an ideal, deduced principally from
+conceptions and opinions of the present, to be a standard by which
+to measure the value of historical events of all times, sitting in
+judgment over the great names of the past with the air of an inspector
+of morals. The office of the historian as judge of the dead is quite
+differently constituted. Every age must be judged in accordance with
+the relation which it bears to the totality of development; and every
+historical personage is to be looked upon as a bearer of the spirit of
+his day, as a servant of the ideas of his time. Thus it is quite as
+wrong to pronounce moral censure on the men of history, as it is wrong
+to judge an era merely according to its good or evil characteristics.
+A period must be estimated according to what it has either directly or
+indirectly accomplished for mankind.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Conception of a United World</div>
+
+<p>There are common factors of civilisation shared by nations themselves,
+through which many contradictions disappear. The religious
+civilisations of Christianity, Mohammedanism, Judaism, Buddhism and
+Confucianism have been the determining factors of the intellectual and
+emotional life, even influencing the course of events, in vast regions.
+And thus it is also comprehensible that in the judicial life of nations
+there is an endeavour for a closer approach, and also the existence
+of equalising tendencies. In spite of countless variations in detail,
+there is a certain unity of law in the entire Mohammedan world; and
+although the hope of establishing the unity of Roman canonistic law
+over the whole of Christendom has not been realised none the less it
+was a tremendous idea: that of a universal empire founded on the Roman
+law of the imperators, and placed under the rule of the German emperor,
+thus ensuring the continuance of the law of the Roman people&mdash;an idea
+that swayed the intellects of the Middle Ages up to the fourteenth,
+even to the fifteenth century, and according to which the emperor
+would have been the head of all Europe, the other sovereigns merely
+his vassals or fief-holders. This idea, once advocated by such a great
+spirit as that of Dante, has, like many others, passed into oblivion;
+and in its place has arisen the conception of independent laws of
+nations. Yet the original idea has had great influence: it has led to
+a close union of Christian peoples; it opened a way for Roman law to
+become universal law, although, to be sure, English law, completely
+independent of that of Rome, has grown to unparalleled proportions as a
+universal system, entirely by reason of the marvellous success of the
+English people as colonists. Likewise international commerce will of
+itself lead to a unification of mercantile, admiralty, copyright, and
+patent law.</p>
+
+<p>Then the idea of an international league must develop, arising from
+the idea of the unity of Christian nations. We have advanced a great
+distance beyond the time when every foreigner was considered an enemy,
+and when all foreign phenomena were looked upon as strange or with
+antipathy. Rules for international commerce are developed; state
+alliances are entered into for the furtherance of common interests and
+for the preservation of peace. Many tasks which in former times would
+have been executed by the empire are now undertaken by international
+associations; and the time for the establishment of international
+courts of arbitration for the adjustment of differences between states
+is already approaching.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Common Interests of Mankind</div>
+
+<p>It also seems probable that states will unite to form political
+organisations, wholly or partially renouncing their separate positions.
+Thus nations will be replaced by a federal state, and a multitude of
+unifying ideas which would otherwise be accomplished with difficulty
+will come to easy realisation. Federal states were already in existence
+during the times of patriarchal communities: an especially striking
+example is that of the admirably constituted federation of the Iroquois
+nations.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[Pg 224]</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Universal Transmission of Culture</div>
+
+<p>The vision of no man may pierce through to the ultimate end of
+the processes of history, and to advance hypotheses is a vain
+endeavour&mdash;quite as vain as it would be to expect Plato to have
+foretold the life of modern civilisation or the imperial idea of
+mediæval times, or Dante to have foreseen modern industrialism or the
+character of industrial peoples. To-day we are more certain than ever
+that no process of development, however simple it may have been, has
+ever taken place according to a fixed model; all developments have had
+their own individualities according to place and to time. Thus we must
+forego discussion of the future.</p>
+
+<p>However, there is another point of view. Development of nations as well
+as of individuals leads either to progress or to decay. No people may
+hope to live eternally; and how many acquisitions already gained will
+be lost in the future it is impossible to say. If a nation declines,
+it either becomes extinct or is annihilated by another state; it
+becomes identified with the newer nation, and disappears with its own
+character; thus its civilisation may also disappear. This is a serious
+possibility. It is the Medusa head of the world’s history which we must
+face&mdash;and without stiffening to stone.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Influence of Peoples on One Another</div>
+
+<p>There is one truth, however, the knowledge of which fills us with hope
+for the future: it is the fact that the results of development and
+civilisation are often transfused from one people to another, so that
+a given development need not start again from the very beginning. This
+is owing to the capacity which races have for absorbing or borrowing
+civilisations. Absorption of culture is by no means universal; it
+does not prevent the occasional disappearance of civilisation,
+for every civilisation has before it at least the possibility of
+death. Nevertheless the transmission and assimilation of culture is
+constantly taking place. There are various ways in which it may be
+brought about. A conquering nation may bring its own civilisation
+with it to the conquered; culture is often forced upon the latter
+by coercive measures. The conquerors may acquire culture from the
+vanquished; or assimilation of culture may come about without the
+subjection of a people, through the unconscious adoption of external
+customs and internal modes of thought. Finally, culture may be
+borrowed consciously from one nation by another, the one state becoming
+convinced of the outward advantages and inner significance of the
+foreign civilisation.</p>
+
+<p>In this way the problem of development becomes very complicated; many
+institutions of vanished races thus continue to live on. Certainly the
+race that acquires a foreign civilisation must, among other things,
+be so constituted in its motives and aspirations as to lose the very
+nerves of its being, its very stability, in order that, intoxicated
+with the joy of a new life, all traces of its past existence may be
+allowed to break up and disappear. On the other hand, many a promising
+germ of culture possessed by a vigorous people may come to grief, owing
+to the influence of acquisitions from without. But, in return, a race
+that knows how to assimilate foreign culture may obtain a civilisation
+of such efficiency as it would never before have been capable of
+attaining, by reason of the fact that its power is established on a
+recently acquired basis, and because it has been spared a multitude of
+faltering experiments.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Progress Goes on For Ever</div>
+
+<p>Civilisation may be mutually obtained from reciprocal action, nations
+both giving and taking. Such a relation naturally arises when states
+enter into intercourse with one another, when they have become
+acquainted with one another’s various institutions and are able to
+recognise the great merits of foreign organisations and the defects
+of their own. Especially the world’s commerce, in which every nation
+wishes to remain a competitor, compels towards mutual acceptance of
+custom and law; no nation desires to be left behind; and each discovers
+that it will fall to the rear unless it borrow certain things from the
+others. Such reciprocal action will be the more effective the more like
+nations are to one another, the better they understand each other, and
+the more often they succeed not only in adopting the outward forms,
+but in absorbing the principles of foreign institutions into their own
+beings.</p>
+
+<p>Thus we may hope that even if the nations of to-day decay and
+disappear, the labour of the world’s progress will not be lost; it will
+constantly reappear in new communities which may rejoice in that for
+which we have striven, and which we have acquired by the exertion of
+our own powers.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">J<span class="smaller">OSEPH</span>
+K<span class="smaller">OHLER</span></p>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[Pg 225]</span></p>
+
+<h3 class="s0" id="BIRTH_OF_CIVILISATION_AND_GROWTH_OF_RACES" title="BIRTH OF
+CIVILISATION AND GROWTH OF RACES">&nbsp;</h3>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_225a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_225a.jpg" alt="Decoration, Top" />
+</div>
+
+<h4 id="THE_SEVEN_WONDERS_OF_ANCIENT_CIVILISATION" title="SEVEN
+WONDERS OF ANCIENT CIVILISATION">THE SEVEN WONDERS OF ANCIENT CIVILISATION</h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="s5 center">From the French of Victor Hugo</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">By HAROLD BEGBIE</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2"><b>The Temple of Diana at Ephesus speaks:</b></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2">The sun standeth in the high places of the mountains,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Full of brightness and mirth is the dawn.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">But my loveliness is not shamed by him,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Neither is it dimmed;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">For, behold and consider well, the sun is not more than thought.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">That which yesterday I was, to-morrow I shall be:</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">I live: I wear upon my brow the moving ages and the spirit of man,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And genius, and art:</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">These things are more wonderful than the sun.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2">Senseless is the stone in the earth,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And the granite is not more than the formless night;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The alabaster knoweth not the dayspring,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Porphyry is blind,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And marble is without understanding;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">But let Ctesiphon pass,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Or Dædalus, or Chresiphon,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And fix his eyes, full of the divine flash,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Upon the ground where the rocks slumber,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And lo, they awake, they tremble, they are stricken with understanding;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The granite, lifting some vague and troubled eyelid,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Struggleth to behold his master:</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The rock feeleth within himself the breathing of the unhewn statue,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The marble stirs in the midnight of his darkness,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Because that he is aware of the soul of a man.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The buried alabaster desireth to rise up from the grave,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Earth shudders, it trembleth violently,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">It feels upon it the will of a man;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And behold, beneath the gaze of him who passeth with creation in his eyes,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">From the deeps of the sacred earth</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The sublime palace comes forth and mounts upward.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2"><b>When she has made an end, the Gardens of Babylon
+ sing their laud of Semiramis:</b></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2">Glory to Semiramis,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Who reared us up on the arches of the great bridges</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Whose span outraceth time.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">This great queen was wont to delight herself beneath our floating branches;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">In the midst of the ruin of two empires</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">She laughed in our groves,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">She was happy in our green places;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">She conquered the kings of far countries,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And when the man had humbled himself before her,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Lo, she would go upon her way,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">She would come hither,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">She would sigh gleefully under our branches,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Very pleasantly would she lie down on the skins of panthers.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2"><b>And after the Gardens have sung, there is heard
+ the voice of the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus:</b></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2">I am the monument of a heart that knew itself infinite;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Death is not death beneath my dome of blue,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Beneath my dome, death is victory,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Death is life.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Here hath death so much of gold and of precious stone</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">That he boasteth himself thereof;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Behold, I am the burial which is a pageant,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And the sepulchre which is a palace.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2"><b>Then, like a great thunder, the voice of
+ Jupiter:</b></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2">I am the Olympian,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The lord of the muses;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">All that which hath life, or breath, or love, or thought, or growth.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Groweth, thinketh, liveth, loveth, and breatheth in me.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The incense of supplication which rises to my feet</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Trembles with terror and affright;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The slope of my brow doth touch the axis of the world;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The tempest speaketh with me before he troubles the waters;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">I endure without age;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">I exist without pang;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Unto me one thing only is impossible&mdash;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">To die.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2"><b>After Jupiter, from the island of Pharos sounds
+ the voice of the great Lighthouse:</b></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2">In the midst of the mighty waters</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">I tarry for the ceasing of the centuries.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Sostratus the Cnidian built me,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">He built me that there might be thrown</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Across the rolling waters,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And through the darkness where lurketh destruction,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">A rebuke to the lovely vanity of the stars.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2"><b>After the Lighthouse, the Colossus at
+ Rhodes:</b></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2">I am the true Lighthouse.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Rhodes lies at my threshold.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Before the steadfast gaze of my unsleeping eyes</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Winter maketh white the mountains.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">I behold the deep waters in their cavernous mists;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">I am the sentinel whom none cometh to relieve;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">I look forth upon the coming of the night,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And upon the coming of the dawn</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">I behold the lifting of the mists,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">I behold the terror of the sea,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">With the immense dreaming of Colossus.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2"><b>And last speaks the Pyramid of Cheops:</b></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2">The desert, spread like a table, lieth beneath my foundations.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Lo, from some mysterious gateway of the night</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">I lift unto heaven my stair of terror,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And out of the darkness itself seemeth it that I am builded.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The sphinxes dropped their broods in the caverns;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The centuries went by; the winds passed sighing;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And Cheops said again: I am eternal!</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2"><b>Then, after a profound silence, the creeping worm
+ of the sepulchre lifteth up his voice:</b></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2">I say unto you Buildings that ye rise, and arise still more!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Set ye up a stone above a stone,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Above cities lift yourselves up, O temples!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Lift up yourselves, like Babel!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Column above column;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Higher and yet higher;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Let palaces arise upon the hollow places</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And let nothingness be fastened upon the foundations of night!</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2">Ye are like smoke,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Therefore exalt yourselves with the clouds!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Set not an end to your boasting!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Mount up, mount up, for ever!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Lo, in the dust beneath your feet I crawl and wait.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Small am I, O mighty ones,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And yet I say unto you,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">From the going down of the sun to his rising up,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">From all the corners of the earth,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Everything which hath substance and which hath being,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The thing which is sorrowful,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And the thing which is glad,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Descend unto me.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And I only have strength, and I only endure for ever,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">For behold, I am death.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_225b">
+ <img class="w100 mbot3" src="images/i_225b.jpg" alt="Decoration, Bottom" />
+</div>
+
+<h4 class="s0" title="Seven Wonders of Ancient Civilisation">&nbsp;</h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe35" id="i_226">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_226.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE HANGING GARDENS OF BABYLON</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The Hanging Gardens have been attributed to Semiramis,
+ although Nebuchadnezzar is also said to have built them to please one of his
+ wives, who, coming from a hilly country to Babylon, in the midst of a vast and
+ barren plain, sighed for some reminder of the leafy beauty of her old home. The
+ gardens, built in the form of a square extending some 700 feet on each side,
+ rose to a great height in terrace upon terrace supported by massive pillars. A
+ remarkable hydraulic system kept their multitudinous plants and trees in almost
+ perpetual verdure.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_226_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe35" id="i_227">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_227.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE PYRAMIDS OF EGYPT</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">For six thousand years the Pyramids have thrown their
+ shadow across the sands of Egypt. The stone of which they are built would make
+ a great wall from Cairo to New York; the white marble which covered them would
+ have built more king’s palaces than Egypt has had need of. The building of the
+ Great Pyramid employed 100,000 slaves for 30 years, and the geometrical perfection
+ of it is a marvel to this day. Khufu, or Cheops, who built the Great
+ Pyramid&mdash;probably as his tomb&mdash;reigned about 4700 B.C., so that the
+ pyramid is more than three times as old as the Roman Empire.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_227_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe35" id="i_228">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_228.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE MAUSOLEUM AT HALICARNASSUS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This famous monument of antiquity was erected in the year
+ 354 B.C. to the memory of King Mausolus of Caria by his widow Artemisia, at
+ Halicarnassus, the beautiful Greek city-colony on the shores of the Ægean Sea.
+ Some idea of its size will be gathered from the fact that it was surrounded by
+ an esplanade which measured over three hundred feet on each side, while its total
+ height was nearly a hundred and fifty feet. The statue existed almost intact
+ until the fourth century of our own era, and was finally destroyed in the Middle
+ Ages by the Turks.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_228_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_229">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_229.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE COLOSSUS OF RHODES</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This short-lived achievement of ancient art dated from about
+ 300 B.C. It was the largest of a hundred statues to the sun-god raised in the
+ island of Rhodes, any one of which, said Pliny, would have made famous the place
+ where it stood. Dedicated to Apollo, who was thought to have delivered Rhodes
+ from Demetrius Poliorcetes, it was made from the engines of war which that
+ besieger left behind. One finger of it was larger than an ordinary statue. An
+ earthquake in 224 B.C. destroyed it, but even in its broken and fallen state it
+ was long the wonder of Rhodes.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_229_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe35" id="i_230">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_230.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE TEMPLE OF DIANA AT EPHESUS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">“Great is Diana of the Ephesians.” Her temple was burned
+ down in 356 B.C., and subsequent to that year the great temple famed in history
+ was erected by the Ionians. It is said to have taken 220 years to construct, and
+ measured about 400 feet in length and 200 feet in width, while it contained no
+ fewer than 127 Ionic columns nearly 65 feet high. The temple was despoiled by
+ Nero and destroyed by the Goths in 262 A.D., but some of its ruins still
+ remain.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_230_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe35" id="i_231">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_231.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE STATUE OF JUPITER ON OLYMPUS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The world-famous statue of Jupiter was the work of the great
+ sculptor Phidias. It measured 43 feet in height above the base. The body of the
+ god was carved from ivory, and the drapery was of solid gold. No other statue of
+ such magnitude, of such artistic perfection, or of such precious material, has
+ been known to history. Among the ruins of the temple are still to be seen the
+ remains of the black marble mosaic on which the statue stood.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_231_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe36" id="i_232">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_232.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE LIGHTHOUSE OF ALEXANDRIA</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">On the island of Pharos, close to Alexandria, stood the
+ famous lighthouse erected by Ptolemy Philadelphus about 280 B.C. Constructed of
+ white marble, in a series of vast stages of vaulted masonry, it reached the
+ height of 520 feet, and in its summit burned night and day, an immense beacon
+ fire of wood, which could be seen 30 miles at sea. The lighthouse was gradually
+ destroyed by earthquakes and the action of the sea, but existed in some condition
+ to the end of the 13th century.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_232_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[Pg 233]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s2 center" id="THE_RISE_OF_CIVILISATION_IN_EGYPT">BIRTH OF CIVILISATION</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_233">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_233.jpg" alt="Birth of Civilisation and the
+ Growth of Races" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s2 center">AND THE GROWTH OF RACES</p>
+</div>
+
+<h4>THE RISE OF CIVILISATION IN EGYPT</h4>
+
+<p class="s4 center mbot2">BY PROFESSOR FLINDERS PETRIE</p>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">I</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first4">I</span>N
+looking back to the beginning of civilisation in any country, we
+have to deal with the physical changes which the land has undergone,
+and to consider the conditions which promoted or hindered the advance
+of its inhabitants. The nature of a country largely rules the nature of
+its people, both bodily and mentally; and it may even be true that, if
+sufficient time be given, the same character and structure will always
+be produced by equal conditions.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Civilisation 10,000 Years ago<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+How we can Fix the Date</div>
+
+<p>From historical records, and the cemeteries that have been examined, it
+appears that the beginning of a continuous civilisation in Egypt must
+be set as far back as about 10,000 years ago, or 8000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>
+The question then is how far the condition of the country at that
+age was similar to that now seen? The present state is quite new,
+geographically speaking, as the deposit of mud by the Nile, providing
+a suitable soil, is only a matter of a few thousand years. The
+accumulation of deposit is about 5 in. in a century (4·7 at Naukratis,
+5·1 at Abusir, 5·5 at Cairo); and the depth of it is not less than
+26 ft., and varies in different places down to 62 ft. The lower
+depths are, however, often mixed with sand beds, and do not show the
+continuous mud deposit; hence the average depth of 39 ft. is too large,
+and if we accept 35 ft., it will certainly be a full estimate. At the
+average rate of deposit, this would be formed in 6,000 years. But, on
+the other hand, the deposit may have been slower at the beginning, and
+hence the age would be earlier. Also, the full depth may be greater,
+owing to some borings hitting on ground which was originally above the
+river. Hence the extreme limits of age of Nile deposit in different
+positions are perhaps 7,000 to 15,000 years, and probably about 10,000
+years may be a likely age for the beginning of continuous Nile mud
+stratification. Hence it is clear that the start of the civilisation
+was about contemporary with the first cultivable ground.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Stone Age in Egypt<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The First Dwellers in the Land</div>
+
+<p>Earlier than the Nile deposits there must have been some rainfall,
+enough to keep up the volume of the river, and to prevent its
+slackening, so as to deposit its burden. We must picture, then, the
+country as having enough rainfall for a scanty vegetation in the
+valleys, while the Nile flowed down a mighty stream, filling the whole
+bed as it now does in flood, and bearing its mud out to the sea, except
+in some backwaters which were shoaling up. Such a land would support a
+small population of hunters, who followed the desert game and snared
+hippopotami in the marshes. The Nile had been in course of recession
+for a long period before it began to rise again by filling its bed.
+The gravels high above the present Nile contain flints flaked by human
+work; much as in Sinai such flakes are found, deep in the filling of
+the valleys which belong to a pluvial<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[Pg 234]</span> period. Yet after the Nile had
+retreated down to the present level, man appears to have been still
+in the Palæolithic stage, as freshly flaked, unrolled flints have
+been found at the lowest surface level of the desert. As the country,
+while drying up, and before mud deposits were laid down, would have
+only been suited for occupation by hunters, it seems probable that
+Palæolithic Man had continued in Egypt until the beginning of the
+Nile deposits&mdash;that is to say, till the beginning of the continuous
+civilisation as discovered in the cemeteries.</p>
+
+<p>B<span class="smaller">USHMAN</span> T<span class="smaller">YPE</span>.
+On turning to the remains of the earliest
+burials, we find that in many cases female figures of the Bushman&mdash;or
+more precisely Koranna&mdash;type, were placed in the graves; while at
+the same time long, slender figures of the European type are also
+found. The inference is that the Palæolithic race of the Koranna
+type was known to the earliest civilised race in Egypt, and that
+they were being expelled and exterminated, as only female figures
+are found&mdash;representing captive slave women&mdash;and even these soon
+disappear. Thus it would seem that Egypt, as an almost desert region,
+before the formation of the cultivable mud flats, was the last home
+on the Mediterranean of the hunters who continued in the Palæolithic
+stage. The physical type of the figures which we can attribute to this
+earliest population has the Bushman characteristics of fatness of the
+thighs and hips, with a deep lumbar curve; and a line of whisker covers
+the jaws of the female figures, akin to the fur on the bodies of women
+on the Brassempouy and Laugerie-Basse ivory carvings. This indicates
+that they belonged to a cold climate, and had not been developed in
+Egypt. As, however, man had certainly dwelt in the Nile valley for
+long ages, this northern indication points to a comparatively recent
+invasion from a colder to a warmer climate, such as has been the rule
+throughout historical times.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Time Without Dates</div>
+
+<p>P<span class="smaller">REHISTORIC</span> P<span class="smaller">ERIOD</span>.
+The beginning of the continuous
+civilisation of the country must be placed at about 8000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>
+The written history extends back to the first dynasty, and places that
+at 5500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, and this is checked at the sixth, twelfth, and
+eighteenth dynasties by records of the rising of Sirius, and of the
+seasons in the shifting year, which agree to this dating in general.
+For the length of the prehistoric age before these written records
+there is no exact dating. But, as in a given district of Egypt, where
+all the desert has been searched, the prehistoric graves are about as
+numerous as those made during the six thousand years of the historic
+time, at least 2,000 or 3,000 years must be allowed. The amount of
+change in every kind of production during this age is considerable; and
+as we can trace two cycles of civilisation, which usually occupy about
+1,500 years each in the later times, it is likely that 2,500 years
+is too little rather than too long a period. As no definite scale of
+years can be used, the dating of the graves of this age is treated as a
+matter of sequence. From a careful statistical classing of the pottery,
+it is practicable to put about a thousand of the fullest graves into
+their original order; this series is then divided into 50 equal parts,
+and these are numbered from 30 to 80. Thus, sequence date 30 is the
+earliest type of graves yet found, and <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 80 is of the age
+of Mena, the founder of the first dynasty. The sequence dates are given
+below for each stage of the prehistoric times.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_234">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_234.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE FIRST INHABITANTS OF EGYPT</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">As female figures of the Bushman type are found in the
+ very earliest Egyptian graves, it is thought that this race was native to the
+ country and was gradually expelled by the first civilised people. The photograph
+ illustrates one of the figures taken from a grave.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>E<span class="smaller">ARLIEST</span> B<span class="smaller">URIALS</span>.
+The earliest graves found are shallow
+circular hollows on the desert, about 30 in. across, and a foot deep.
+The body lies closely doubled up, wrapped in goat-skins. There are very
+few objects placed with these burials; a single cup of pottery, red,
+with black top; rarely, a slate palette for grinding face-paint; and,
+in one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[Pg 235]</span> grave, a copper pin to fasten the goat-skin. Pottery was in a
+simple stage, and weaving was quite unknown. These graves are classed
+as sequence date 30.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_235">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_235.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">POTTERY OF FIRST EGYPTIAN CIVILISATION</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The pottery of the first period of Egyptian civilisation
+ is characterised by raised white lines on a red body, and from the fact that it
+ closely resembles the pottery of the Kabyle people, who live in North Africa
+ to-day, it is thought the first Egyptian civilisation may have come from the
+ west. These examples are before 7000 B.C.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Civilisation Emerging from the Mists</div>
+
+<p>F<span class="smaller">IRST</span> C<span class="smaller">IVILISATION</span>.
+The next period is that of the white
+patterns on red (<span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 31 to 34). This use of lines of raised
+white slip is the same as on the present Kabyle pottery, and the
+patterns are so closely alike on the ancient and modern that this
+forms a strong evidence for a Western connection of the people. In
+this period the main lines of the civilisation become clearly marked.
+The fine flint chipping with delicate serrated edges; the polished
+red pottery, of circular and of fancy forms; the tall round-bottomed
+stone vases; the slate palettes for face-paint, of animal forms and of
+rhombic shape; the use of sandals; the ivory combs with animal figures;
+the disc-shaped mace-head&mdash;all of these were in use with the white
+cross-lined pottery, and stamp the general type of the beginning of
+the civilisation. We have before us a settled population, with strong
+artistic taste in handicraft, but not in copying Nature; with patience
+for very long and skilful work, and probably organised, therefore,
+under chiefs who commissioned such labour; yet with sufficient general
+demand for fine things to have raised hand pottery to its highest
+level; with strong beliefs about a future life, as shown by the uniform
+detail of the position of the body and the nature of the offerings in
+the grave; with the arts of spinning and weaving; fairly clothed, as
+shown by the use of sandals; fighters, with finely-made and treasured
+weapons; with the use of personal marks for property&mdash;altogether much
+in the stage which we now see in the highest races of the Pacific or
+Central Africa.</p>
+
+<p>E<span class="smaller">ASTERN</span> I<span class="smaller">NVASION</span>.
+This civilisation had lasted for a few
+centuries when we see a change come over it. On searching the types
+of pottery we see many new forms arising from <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 38 to 43,
+while many older types disappear between <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 40 and 44.
+These changes serve to stamp the point of the change, but it is in
+other respects that the differences are most visible. The black-topped
+pottery, red polished, and fancy forms of pottery cease to develop
+after 43, whereas the decorated pottery, with brown line patterns on
+buff ware, is scarcely known till 40, and the late class of pottery
+begins at 43. In the stone vases the forms of tall tubular shape,
+with handles, cease at 40, and the barrel forms begin at 39, and are
+dominant by 42. In flint work the various new types begin from 39 to
+45; the disc mace dies out about 40, and the pear-shaped mace begins at
+42. In the slate palettes old types vanish and new ones arise from 37
+to 42. The same is seen in ivories. Foreign intercourse was increased,
+as silver (from Asia Minor?), lazuli (from Persia?), serpentine and
+hæmatite (from Sinai?) all come into use from 38 to 40. In copying
+Nature, the steatopygous figures of the Bushman type are only found
+before 38, and human figure amulets are known from down to 44. Animal
+figure amulets begin in 45. Multiple burials in graves are common down
+to 40, and continue till 43; only single burials are known later.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Invasion from the East<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+What Mythology Says</div>
+
+<p>The racial changes that are thus indicated by these widespread
+differences can only be traced by the different products. The white
+line pottery characteristic of the earliest people is closely like
+that of the Kabyles, and the similarity of the skull measurements
+show that there is no bar to accepting the connection with the North
+African race. But the details of the new people, using animal amulets,
+a face veil, wavy-handled pottery like that of early Palestine, and the
+Asiatic silver and lazuli, all point to their coming in from the East.
+This change may be further linked with the religious traditions. This
+later mythology taught that Osiris had found the Egyptians in a brutal
+existence, and he had taught them agriculture, laws, and worship; this
+appears to be the tradition<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[Pg 236]</span> of the bringing in of cultivation by
+the earliest civilisation at <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 30. His worshippers were
+allied with those of Isis, who were a kindred tribe. Hence Osiris is
+said to have married his sister Isis. The myth further shows that this
+civilisation was attacked treacherously by the tribe who worshipped
+Set, in confederacy with an Ethiopian queen, and they succeeded in
+suppressing the worship of Osiris and removing his remains to Byblos in
+Syria. This seems to agree to the influx of Asiatic influence, about
+<span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 40, which we have noticed above. The correction of the
+calendar from 360 to 365 days, is attributed to the beginning of the
+civilisation (at <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 30) by the myth that Osiris and his
+cycle of gods were born on the extra five days.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_236">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_236.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">PREHISTORIC SHIPS: THE EARLIEST PICTURES OF EGYPTIAN
+ VESSELS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The pottery of the second period of Egyptian civilisation
+ is rich in representations of prehistoric ships. The vessels are shown with many
+ oars, and the cabins are placed amidship with a gangway between. It is gathered
+ from these crude drawings that in prehistoric times there was a considerable
+ shipping trade along the coast of Egypt.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>S<span class="smaller">ECOND</span> C<span class="smaller">IVILISATION</span>.
+The second prehistoric civilisation, of
+which we have traced the Asiatic source, is specially marked by the use
+of a hard buff pottery, on which designs are often painted in brown
+outline. The art of these has no connection with that of the early
+white line designs; the habit of covering figures with cross lines, and
+the imitation of basket-work, have entirely disappeared; and, on the
+contrary, the plant, ostrich, and ship designs are quite new.</p>
+
+<p>What, then, were the connections of these people? One indication
+is gleaned from carvings at the close of the prehistoric age. Two
+tributaries of the new king of Egypt are shown bearing stone vases
+of the style of those of the second prehistoric civilisation,
+<span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 45&ndash;75. They have large pointed noses, and wear pigtails,
+and another tributary of the same type wears a long robe. Hence we may
+see that they came from a cold region where stone vases were wrought;
+and that by the form of the vase they were probably the same people as
+the later prehistoric stock. Yet, on the other hand, we occasionally
+find pottery vases of that people in the earlier prehistoric age, so
+that they must have been in touch with Egypt throughout. The more
+likely source for them was the mountainous region, where snow sometimes
+lies, between Egypt and the Red Sea; and certainly this was the source
+of the rare igneous rocks used for the prehistoric vases.</p>
+
+<p>The general conclusion would be, then, that a people occupying the
+mountainous region east of Egypt had an independent civilisation, and
+were in touch with the early prehistoric people of the Nile valley.
+Then about <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 38 they began to push down into Egypt, and
+fully entered it by <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 44, bringing with them various
+different points of their own civilisation, and expelling the Osiris
+worship in favour of Set, who was their god. They probably brought in
+the Semitic elements to the Egyptian language, along with the other
+Asiatic connections.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Fleet of Prehistoric Ships</div>
+
+<p>S<span class="smaller">HIPPING</span>.
+Under this new order of things we see much more
+foreign and maritime connection. The introduction of silver from Asia,
+of lazuli from Persia, of hæmatite from Sinai, of serpentine from
+the Arabian desert&mdash;all show this. On the vases we see the starfish
+painted, and one of the most usual decorations was the figure of a
+great galley or ship. These ships are shown with oars on the pottery
+vases, and without oars or sails on the tomb paintings. From the
+proportion of the figures they appear to have been as much as 50 ft,
+long, and this is confirmed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[Pg 237]</span> by the oars, which number up to sixty.
+Neither indication is exact; but the tendency would be to exaggerate
+the size of the figures, and certainly not to diminish them, and so
+aggrandise the ship. The shipbuilding in the early history may prepare
+us for the earlier rise of such work, when we read of Senefru building
+sixty ships of a hundred feet long in one year.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">What the Ships Were Like</div>
+
+<p>These prehistoric ships were all of one pattern. Amidships were the
+large cabins, and there was no poop or forecastle structure, probably
+because of the want of support fore and aft, the flotation being mainly
+in the middle. The two cabins were separated by a broad gangway across
+the boat, and joined above the gangway by a bridge from roof to roof.
+Lesser cabins projected fore and aft from the main cabins. On the roofs
+were rails at the corners, so as to secure top cargo without getting
+in the way of loading it up. In a large ship there was an upper cabin
+on the hinder main one, a light shelter shaded with branches. From the
+back of the hinder cabin stood up a tall pole bearing a solid object as
+a standard, which we shall notice below. At the stern was the steersman
+seated by an upright post, to which was probably lashed the steering
+oar, as in the historical boats. In the bows was a low platform, with a
+rail round it, for the look-out, shaded with branches. The cabins were
+narrower than the beam, and left free space for rowers on each side.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Trade in Those Days</div>
+
+<p>F<span class="smaller">OREIGN</span> I<span class="smaller">MPORTS</span>.
+Vessels of this large size certainly imply a
+corresponding importance of commerce. We have noted already the foreign
+imports into Egypt; and others imply more distinctly a sea intercourse.
+From <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 33 down to <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 68 there is found black
+pottery with incised basket-work patterns [<a href="#i_238">page 238</a>] filled in with
+white. It is always rare, only occurring in less than 1 per cent.
+of the graves, and in only one case was there more than a solitary
+example. It is entirely disconnected from the Egyptian types, but it
+is closely akin to pottery found on the north of the Mediterranean,
+in Spain (Ciempozuelos), in Bosnia, and in the earliest town of Troy.
+At the close of the prehistoric age the black pottery of the late
+Neolithic city of Knossos is found in the lowest levels of the temple
+at Abydos. And in the royal tombs of the first dynasty there many
+vases and pieces have been found which are clearly of the earliest age
+of painted Ægean pottery. Considering that the bulk of the trade must
+have been for perishable goods&mdash;oil and skins from Crete and Greece,
+corn and beans from Egypt&mdash;it is not to be expected that a great amount
+of breakable pottery would pass and be preserved in burials. There
+are, moreover, some tallies left to us besides the northern pottery.
+Throughout the later prehistoric age emery was regularly in use for
+all the grinding and polishing of stone vases and of carnelian beads;
+and so common that one excelsior spirit in search of a tour de force
+had even cut a vase out of block emery, as being the hardest known
+material. This emery, so far as we know, must have come from Smyrna.
+Again, the gold of the first dynasty contains a large amount of silver.
+This points to its source from the Pactolus region, where electrum was
+found, rather than from Nubia, where the gold is free from silver.</p>
+
+<p>C<span class="smaller">ONNECTION OF THE</span> S<span class="smaller">HIPPING</span>.
+When we look at the evidence of
+the ships themselves we see that it points to their having been used
+at sea rather than on the Nile. It is impossible to row a ship up
+against the Nile stream, which runs at three miles an hour, and sailing
+or towing is the only way to go southward in Egypt. But in only one
+instance is a ship with a sail represented, while there are many dozens
+of figures of rowing vessels. The galley has always been the type of
+business ship on the Mediterranean. All through the classical wars
+the rowing galley was the mainstay of power. The Homeric catalogue
+of ships, the Phœnician coinage, the Assyrian sculptures, the Greek
+fleets, the Carthaginian navy and its destroyers of Rome, the pirates
+of Liburnia and Lycia, down to the Venetian fleet and the French
+galleys of a couple of centuries ago, all show the dominance of the oar.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe34" id="i_238">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_238.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">ARTICLES ILLUSTRATIVE OF THE EARLY CIVILISATION OF
+ EGYPT</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">(1) Slate palettes on which paint for rubbing round the
+ eyes was ground; (2) adze heads and harpoons, the harpoons at the sides being of
+ bone, the others of copper; (3) beautifully flaked flint knife; (4) serpent
+ amulet of stone; (5) maces of quartzose rock, very effective weapons; (6) forked
+ lances of flint; (7) combs of ivory; (8) vases carved from hard stone; (9) black
+ incised pottery, a foreign import into early Egypt.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_238_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Port Ensigns Carried</div>
+
+<p>The nature of the standards upon poles carried by the ships has been
+variously interpreted. We can distinguish the elephant, bird on a
+crescent, and fish; the two or four pair of horns, the bush, and the
+branch; the rows of two, three, four, or five hills; the crossed
+arrows, and the harpoon, besides other forms which we cannot identify.
+The question is, what view will account for these most completely?<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[Pg 239]</span>
+Some have thought they were emblems of gods, and that the boats
+were sacred to divinities; but there are many which cannot be thus
+explained. Others have thought that they indicated tribes; but the
+rarity of repetitions, and the absence of any duplicates together, are
+against this. Marks of personal ownership have been suggested; and this
+is not impossible, as they might be well dedicated to special gods. But
+the prominence of the groups of hills as signs agrees best with their
+being marks of the ports from which they hailed; the divine emblems
+would naturally be those of the god of the port, the number of hills
+would be very likely to distinguish different ports, the elephant, the
+bush, or the fish might well be the mark of a port. And the parallel
+in later times of such being distinctive ensigns for ports&mdash;as in
+the ensign of Gades found in the Red Sea&mdash;agrees to this usage. The
+carrying of a port ensign in an age of independent city-states was
+equivalent to a national flag in later times; and it was essential for
+showing friends or foes.</p>
+
+<p>We have dwelt at length on the detail of this shipping, as it is the
+most important subject for showing the extent and character of the
+early civilisation. It takes two to trade as well as to quarrel; and
+these large ships were not rowed about the Mediterranean unless there
+was a paying trade to be done on those coasts, a people civilised
+enough to produce goods that were wanted and to require foreign stuff
+in exchange, and a society stable enough to enable goods to be stocked
+in bulk and traded without any serious risk of fraud or force.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Ingenuity of the Hunters<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Mode of Ostrich Hunting</div>
+
+<p>H<span class="smaller">UNTING</span>. The main occupation represented in the prehistoric
+paintings is hunting. The bow and arrow was used. The bow was a single
+piece of wood, painted red and covered with zigzag white lines; the
+arrow was of reed, with a point several inches long of hard wood.
+The forked lance of flint was also a favourite weapon [p. 238]; it
+was inserted at the end of a wooden shaft, which was controlled by a
+long thong of leather ending in alabaster knobs which kept it from
+entirely flying from the fingers. Thus the lance could be thrown by
+a man in ambush to cut the legs of a gazelle, while, if it missed,
+it was jerked back by the elastic thong, and so saved from breaking
+the delicate edge of flint. These forked lances are found throughout
+nearly all the prehistoric time; and they continued in use in North
+Africa till the Roman Age, when Commodus borrowed thence their use for
+hunting the ostrich. This lance retained by a thong was the parallel
+to the favourite harpoon used in fishing. Another mode of hunting was
+the trap. This is represented as being formed of pointed splints or
+stakes, lashed together like spokes of a wheel, with the points around
+a central hollow. Such traps to catch the legs of animals are used now
+in Africa, and an example was found at the Ramesseum, dating perhaps
+from the twentieth dynasty. Sticks or clubs were used in hunting and in
+fighting.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30" id="i_239">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_239.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">STANDARDS OF EGYPTIAN SHIPS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">There has been much speculation as to the significance of
+ the standards carried by the most ancient of the Egyptian vessels, as recorded
+ on pottery and elsewhere. Some examples of these standards are here given. The
+ most reasonable supposition is that these devices indicated the port from which
+ the vessel sailed.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>F<span class="smaller">IGHTING</span>. The earliest representation of fighting is on a
+vase of the white slip on red, at the beginning of the prehistoric
+age. On that a man with long, wavy hair appears to be spearing another
+man in the side. Later, there are the fighters on the Hierakonpolis
+tomb, at about <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 63. On this hooked sticks are used, and
+the fighters are clad with a spotted animal’s hide on the back. One
+man has been killed, and another is hard pressed, fallen on one knee.
+To save himself from blows he has taken off the hide and is holding it
+up, thus anticipating the use of the shield. It seems likely that the
+Egyptian shields of hide stretched on a frame of sticks were directly
+copied from this use of the hide that was otherwise worn on the body.
+In another group a black man is holding three red captives bound with a
+black cord, while two red men approach him to deliver their kindred.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Fighting with Maces</div>
+
+<p>The weapons mostly found are the stone maces [<a href="#i_238">page 238</a>]. These were
+sharp-edged discs in the earlier age, a form which is very effective
+in a mixed fight, as it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[Pg 240]</span> cannot be turned aside like a battleaxe, but
+must cut in whatever direction it falls. These maces were usually made
+of porphyry and other quartzose rocks. The mace used in the later age
+was of a pear shape, and this form was continued into the historic
+times, and perpetuated in the conventional scene of the king striking
+an enemy, even in the latest times. The handle holes in these maces are
+very small, and this shows that probably the handles were dried thongs
+of hide. Nothing else would be sufficiently tough and elastic. The
+flint dagger was probably also used, and certainly the copper dagger. A
+very fine example of this, dated to <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 55 or 60, is wrought
+with a quadrangular blade, giving the utmost strength and lightness, a
+better design than that of any daggers of the historic times.</p>
+
+<div class="figcontainer">
+<div class="figsub illowe10" id="i_240a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_240a.jpg" alt="Earliest Representation of
+ Fighting; I" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe30" id="i_240b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_240b.jpg" alt="Earliest Representation of
+ Fighting; II" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe50">
+ <div class="caption">THE FIRST PICTURES OF FIGHTING</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The earliest representation of fighting, at the beginning
+ of the prehistoric age, shows a man with long, wavy hair, spearing another man in
+ the side. Later, are fighters on the Hierakonpolis tomb, using hooked sticks and
+ clad in piebald hides of animals.</div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>T<span class="smaller">OOLS</span>. Tools of metal begin with small, square chisels of
+copper at <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 38. The intermediate examples have not been
+found till we reach a fine large chisel of copper at the close of the
+prehistoric. Adzes of copper [<a href="#i_238">p. 238</a>] begin at <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 56, or
+earlier, and increase in size down to historic times; they continued
+to be the favourite tool of the Egyptians for both wood and stone
+working until Greek times. Borers are usually tapered, to work in soft
+material. Needles of copper appear as early as <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 48, and
+the fastening pins of copper begin with the very earliest graves of
+<span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 30.</p>
+
+<p>Flint working was the greatest artistic industry of the prehistoric
+age. The surfaces were not merely reduced by haphazard flaking, but
+the flints were ground into form, and then reflaked in a marvellously
+regular manner with uniform parallel grooves [<a href="#i_238">page 238</a>]. The finishing
+of the edges by deep serrations of the fineness of forty to the inch,
+and the chipping out of delicate armlets of flint, show also the same
+astonishing skill and perfection of hand work. The Scandinavian flint
+chipping used to be regarded as the most perfect, but the Egyptian work
+entirely surpasses it in regularity and boldness.</p>
+
+<p>S<span class="smaller">TONE</span> V<span class="smaller">ASES</span>.
+Hard stones were largely employed for making
+vases [<a href="#i_238">page 238</a>]. In the earlier age tall, cylindrical forms were
+used, and in the later age barrel forms. The earlier material was
+usually basalt, but syenite, porphyry, alabaster and limestone were
+also used. The later materials included slate, grey limestone, breccia,
+serpentine, and diorite. The hollowing out of these vases was by
+grinding, but the outside was entirely formed by chipping and polishing
+without rotary motion. The perfect regularity of the forms, and the
+fine taste shown in the curves of the outlines, as well as the hardness
+of the material, place the vase working higher than any work of the
+historic times.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">1,000 Forms of Pottery</div>
+
+<p>P<span class="smaller">OTTERY</span>. Pottery was greatly developed, although the wheel
+was not used, and all the forms were entirely modelled by hand and
+eye without mechanical guidance. The outlines are true and fine, the
+circularity is astonishingly regular, although all the trimming and
+polish runs vertically; and it was as easy in such a mode of building
+to make oval, doubled, or square forms, all of which are found. The
+specially later pottery is the decorated, with brown-red lines on a
+hard buff body. The forms are clearly copied from those of the stone
+vases; and the patterns are derived from the fossils and veins in
+the stone, or from the cordage net in which the vases were slung for
+carrying. Next appear aloes and other bushes, and figures of ships,
+which we have already noticed. Rows of ostriches and of hills are also
+favourite designs.</p>
+
+<p>Other pottery of this ware, but not decorated, has a curious type
+of projecting ledge, wavy up and down, for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[Pg 241]</span> handles. Beginning at
+<span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 40 as a globular vessel, the type narrows to an upright
+jar; by <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 60 the handles dwindle, becoming united around
+it as a wavy band of pattern; by <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 70 the jar at last
+becomes a cylinder; by <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 75 the band becomes a mere line;
+and then after <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 80&mdash;in the first dynasty&mdash;the jar dwindles
+to a rough tube like a thumbstall. The contents of such jars similarly
+deteriorate. At first, perfumed ointment was put in them, then it was
+covered with a layer of mud to retain the scent; the mud increased
+until it was merely scented mud, then only plain mud was used, and
+lastly they were left empty. Beside many other forms of this hard ware
+there was also a long series of types in a rough brown pottery, which
+passed on into the ordinary pottery of the first dynasty. As there are
+over a thousand different forms of this prehistoric pottery known, and
+their study has been the key to the whole arrangement of that age, this
+subject is a very wide one, which we have barely noticed here.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe28" id="i_241">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_241.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">PREHISTORIC POTTERY OF EGYPT</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The later pottery of the prehistoric period is
+ characterised by brown-red lines on a hard buff body. The forms and
+ decorations have been copied from earlier stone vases, and from the nets in
+ which they were carried.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A Constant Personal Possession</div>
+
+<p>S<span class="smaller">LATE</span> P<span class="smaller">ALETTES</span>.
+A constant personal possession was the slab
+of slate upon which the green malachite or red ochre was ground for
+colouring around the eyes. Usually a brown pebble crusher accompanies
+it; and the dead often have a little leather bag of malachite in the
+hands. These slate palettes begin with a plain rhomb form, probably
+derived from the natural cleavages of the slate rock. Well-formed
+animal figures were also carved as slate silhouettes; the deer,
+hippopotamus, and turtle are the oldest, and the fish also comes into
+the earlier age. The double bird type begins with the second age,
+and all the types continuously degrade by repeated copying until
+their original form is quite indistinguishable at the close of the
+prehistoric age [<a href="#i_238">page 238</a>].</p>
+
+<p>P<span class="smaller">ERSONAL</span> O<span class="smaller">BJECTS</span>.
+Ivory carving is common, mainly for long
+combs to fasten up the hair. These usually have an animal on the top
+of them; but they only belong to the earlier age, suggesting that
+the hair was worn shorter in the second period. Decorated tusks of
+ivory are also early; they were fastened on to leather work, probably
+to close the openings of water skins. Ivory spoons belong only to the
+second period, as likewise do the forehead pendants of shell.</p>
+
+<p>Amulets of animal forms were frequent in the second period. They are
+generally cut in stone, carnelian, serpentine, porphyry, and coloured
+limestones. The forms are the bull’s head (which continued in use into
+historic times), the hawk, serpent [<a href="#i_238">p. 238</a>], frog, fly, scorpion, claw,
+vase, and spear head. The meanings attached to them are quite unknown.</p>
+
+<p>Games are found, as shown by the ivory draughtsmen, the small balls
+or marbles, the stone gateway and ninepins [<a href="#i_242">page 242</a>], the figures of
+lions and hares, and the throwing slips for obtaining a count as with
+dice.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">What the People Wore</div>
+
+<p>C<span class="smaller">LOTHING</span>. The clothing of men was, at most, the kilt of linen,
+or an animal’s hide put over the body. Often only a belt was worn,
+with three narrow strips hanging down in front. A usual covering was
+a belt with a sheath attached to it to hold up the genitals. With the
+pleated kilt was also worn a belt having apparently a jackal tail hung
+behind. On some figures there is merely a double rope round the waist.
+These various forms may belong to different peoples and periods; but
+there are hardly enough examples to prove any distinctions, as the
+varying circumstance of the figures, captive and conquered, resting and
+working, rich and poor, in heat and in cold, may easily have led to the
+different dress that we see. Women are represented with a white linen
+petticoat from the waist to the feet. Leather was a favourite material
+for clothing, as well as for bags. It was painted with patterns, and
+decorated with beads, reminding us of the North American work.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Oldest Capital of Egypt</div>
+
+<p>D<span class="smaller">ECAY OF</span> C<span class="smaller">IVILISATION</span>.
+All of this civilisation gradually
+decayed; the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[Pg 242]</span> pottery is seen becoming coarser, good work dying out in
+rougher copying, new types seldom appearing, cheaper and poorer objects
+being more usual. There is ground, however, for supposing that at some
+time in this age there was a central rule at Heliopolis. There are many
+traditions of a principality there, which must certainly have been
+before the dynasties. The sacred emblem preserved in the temple was the
+shepherd’s crook, <i>haq</i>, which served for the title of “prince” in all
+later times; the other sacred emblem was the whip, and these two were
+the royal emblems of Osiris. The title of the nome was “the princes’
+territory,” and this capital retained in later ages the reputation of
+being the centre of learning and theology. And on the fragment of the
+early annals known as the “Palermo Stone” there is shown a long row of
+kings of Lower Egypt before the dynasties; these cannot have ruled at
+Memphis, as that was a new foundation by Menes.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_242">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_242.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE EARLIEST GAME OF NINEPINS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">These ninepins, the gate to play through, and the porphyry
+ balls were all found in a child’s grave.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">History as Reflected in Mythology<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+End of Prehistoric Times</div>
+
+<p>H<span class="smaller">ISTORY IN</span> M<span class="smaller">YTHOLOGY</span>.
+Of the breakup of this civilisation we
+may trace some relation in the mythology. After Isis had recovered
+the body of Osiris, and the worship of the Osiris and Isis tribes
+had revived again from the Semitic invasion of Set worshippers, Set
+again attacked the Osiris worship, and scattered the body of Osiris
+into fourteen parts in different places. This refers probably to
+the distribution of parts of the body to different districts, when
+it was cut up in the funeral ceremonies, according to prehistoric
+usage. These parts of Osiris were kept at sixteen nomes in Egypt in
+historic times, six in the Nile valley and ten in the Delta, probably
+the original nomes of the country. The civil discord implied in this
+persecution must have weakened the land; and then came the attack by
+the hawk worshippers from the south. In the legend of Horbehudti, or
+Horus of Edfu, we read that the crocodiles and hippopotami (animals of
+Set), attacked him, and his servants, armed with metal weapons, smote
+and conquered them, slaying 381 before the city of Edfu. Then the
+worshippers of Horus allied themselves with the sun worshippers, and
+“Horbehudti changed his form into that of a winged sun disc,” and “took
+with him Nekhebt the goddess of the South and Uazet, the goddess of
+the North, in the form of two serpents, that they might destroy their
+enemies in the bodily forms of crocodiles and hippopotami.” That is
+to say, the Horus, Ra, and serpent goddess tribes were all allied to
+attack the domination of the Set tribe. They gradually drove them back,
+and “Set went forth and cried out horribly”; he was finally struck down
+at <i>Pa-rehehu</i>. “Thus did Horbehudti, together with Horus, the son of
+Isis, who had made his form like unto that of Horbehudti.” That is to
+say, the rest of the Horus worshippers joined the Horus-Ra party.</p>
+
+<p>The final battle and expulsion of Set was at Zaru on the eastern
+frontier of Egypt. This, in mythological form, seems to give the
+history of the driving out of the Semitic population of the later
+prehistoric age, by the dynastic race descending from Upper Egypt, at
+the close of the prehistoric period. An actual result of this war,
+all through later times, was the multitude of towns named Samhud, or
+“United to Behudti,” marking the allies of the Horus party.</p>
+
+<p>H<span class="smaller">ISTORICAL</span> S<span class="smaller">LATE</span>
+P<span class="smaller">ALETTES</span>. Of the period of the conquest by
+the dynastic races, which closed the prehistoric age, there is an
+invaluable series of monuments carved on slate. These carved slates
+are the elaborated outcome of the slate palettes used for grinding
+the face paints throughout the prehistoric age. A similar elaboration
+of a simple article is familiar in modern times in the snuff-box. A
+plain receptacle of bone or wood was decorated, plated, made of silver
+and of gold, inlaid with diamonds and painted with the costliest
+miniatures, and yet&mdash;it was but a snuff-box. So the plain slip of
+slate was carved into animal outlines, had animals scratched on it,
+then<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[Pg 243]</span> signs in relief upon it, and at last was covered with the most
+elaborate carvings, and yet&mdash;it was but a paint grinder, and had always
+the pan for colour carved on it, exactly of the shape of the pans on
+the painters’ palettes of that age. Every stage can be shown, from a
+formless slate to an artistic scene in relief. There are many stages to
+be seen in the artistic development.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>A. In the prehistoric age are the scratched outlines.</p>
+
+<p>B. The well-incised elephant is as early as <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 33&ndash;41;
+and with it are those signs in low relief.</p>
+
+<p>C. The high relief sign is of <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 60&ndash;63.</p>
+
+<p>D. On the boat slate, the drawing is much more detailed than on the
+boats of the Hierakonpolis tomb of <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 63. We can hardly
+separate this from the work of the artistic new-comers, and it may
+well be about <span class="allsmcap">S.D.</span> 70&ndash;75.</p>
+
+<p>E. The animal slate seems to be next, as the treatment of the
+lion’s hair is unlike the following.</p>
+
+<p>F. The four-dog slate, being a coarser but more elaborated design
+of the same type, may well be next.</p>
+
+<p>G. The hut slate shows for the first time the arrangement of lion’s
+mane as on the ivory lions of King Zer.</p>
+
+<p>H. The gazelle slate shows the same treatment more advanced.</p>
+
+<p>J. The towns slate shows the wiry detail of muscles, beginning to
+appear in archaic manner.</p>
+
+<p>K. The bull slate has the same style carried out fully and finely.</p>
+
+<p>L. The Narmer slate has a less forcible and smoother treatment of
+the bull, and brings us down to touch with the historic times.</p></div>
+
+<p>The figures can be seen in Capart’s “Primitive Art in Egypt,” where
+they may be identified by these letters, corresponding to the
+paragraphs above: A, B, figures 61, 62; C, 63; D, 169; E, 171&ndash;2; F,
+173&ndash;4; G, 170; H, 177&ndash;80; J, 175&ndash;6; K, 181&ndash;2; L, 183&ndash;4.</p>
+
+<p>R<span class="smaller">ACIAL</span> T<span class="smaller">YPES</span>.
+These slate carvings not only show the art of
+the time, but they present the different races and the details of their
+life, more fully than we find them for many centuries later. We see
+six different types of physiognomy in the early remains, and learn how
+complex the racial history must be at the most remote period accessible
+to us.</p>
+
+<p>A. The <i>aquiline</i> type is that of the principal prehistoric race,
+closely like the Libyan on the west and the Amorite on the east.
+When mixed with negro it produced the exact type of a European-Negro
+mulatto. Probably equal to the Libyan. [See Heads 1 to 4 on <a href="#i_244">next page</a>.]</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe18_5" id="i_243">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_243.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">EGYPT IN THREE PERIODS OF ITS CIVILISATION</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This map of Egypt shows Egypt in three of its early
+ periods. (1) The earliest centres of culture were at the places where parts of
+ Osiris were preserved in the prehistoric age, here named. (2) The second period
+ is shown by other centres being placed in the right geographical order, all here
+ numbered I to XIX, following down each branch of the Nile. (3) The third period
+ is when other centres were inserted in the lists in the wrong order, here
+ numbered 8 to 20. These three stages of Egypt’s history are all before the
+ monarchy.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_243_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30 nohtml" id="i_243a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_243a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">[Northern Part of Preceding Map]</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30 nohtml" id="i_243b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_243b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">[Southern Part and Legend of Preceding Map]</div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[Pg 244]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_244">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_244.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE EARLIEST PORTRAITS OF VARIOUS RACES IN EGYPT</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Numbers 1 and 2 are the aquiline type, similar to 3, the
+ Libyan, and 4 the Amorite. 5 is the curly hair type, 6 the sharp-nosed type,
+ 7 the short-nosed type, 8 the forward beard type, 9&ndash;11 the straight-faced type
+ of dynastic conquerors. 12 is King Khafra of the Pyramid age, reverting to the
+ original type of 1 and 2.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>B. The <i>sharp-nosed</i> type, firstly, with the hair in a pigtail,
+bringing stone vases as tribute, and sometimes dressed in long robe;
+secondly, with bushy hair and armed with spear, throw-stick, mace, bow
+and arrows. Probably the Arabian mountain race mixed with Libyan. See
+figure 6 on <a href="#i_244">this page</a>.</p>
+
+<p>C. The <i>curly hair</i> type, with plaited beard, conquered and destroyed
+by type B. Probably from North Syria, by sculptures there. See figure 5
+on <a href="#i_244">this page</a>.</p>
+
+<p>D. The <i>forward beard</i> type, with close-cut hair; much like the
+figures on early Naukratite vases. Probably a coast people of Libyan
+connection. See figure 8 on <a href="#i_244">this page</a>.</p>
+
+<p>E. The <i>short-nosed</i> type, a variety of D, apparently belonging to the
+Fayum. <a href="#i_244">Fig. 7</a>.</p>
+
+<p>F. The <i>straight-faced</i> type of the dynastic conquerors. See figures
+9&ndash;11 on <a href="#i_244">this page</a>.</p>
+
+<p>All of these different peoples were in continual mixture and struggle
+during the few centuries before the first dynasty. Looking to the
+tribal hints given by the mythology, it seems probable that:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>A represents the early Osiris and Isis worshippers; B the first
+dominance of Set; C the second irruption of Set; D and E the allied
+Osiris and Isis worshippers of the Delta and coast who helped to
+expel Set; and F the hawk Horus worshippers, who took the lead in
+driving out B and C by alliance with A, D and E.</p></div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Earliest Promise of Greatness</div>
+
+<p>D<span class="smaller">YNASTIC</span> R<span class="smaller">ACE</span>.
+The most essential difference between the
+prehistoric and the dynastic people is in their artistic capacity.
+The earlier peoples, though highly skilled in mechanical detail and
+handling, were yet very crude in their copying of any natural forms.
+But as soon as we reach the dynastic race we find that there is an
+artistic sense and power in their work, which puts even the roughest
+of it far above all that had gone before. The earliest examples<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[Pg 245]</span> of
+their sculpture appear to be the colossal figures of the god Min, found
+at Koptos. These are of the most primitive style possible, the limbs
+scarcely marked off from the trunk, and no details of form attempted.
+But on the side of each there is a patch of hammer-work outlining some
+figures, perhaps a copy of embroideries on a skin pouch hung at the
+side. These are figures of a deer’s head and pteroceras shells on one,
+swordfish, shells, and standards of the god on another, and the same
+objects, together with an ostrich, elephant, hyena, and calf on the
+third. All are but roughly hammered round, yet the spirit and correct
+forms of the animals are of an entirely different order from anything
+that had yet appeared in Egypt. The promise of all the artistic
+triumphs of thousands of years to come is clearly seen in these
+decorations of the rudest statues known.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Mystery of Dynastic Race</div>
+
+<p>The source of this dynastic race can only be inferred. Though marked
+off from the earlier inhabitants by their artistic taste, and by their
+use of hieroglyphic writing, we know so very little of the early
+history of any other lands near Egypt that we cannot yet trace any
+link to their original source. On looking in various directions, it
+seems at least clear that they do not belong to the southern tribes, to
+which they have no resemblance; nor can we suppose that the Libyans,
+who appear to be one with the prehistoric people, would also supply
+a race so different in face and in habits. The north and Syria seem
+barred by the earliest centres being at Abydos and Hierakonpolis in the
+south of Egypt, from which they conquered the north.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i245">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_245.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE FIRST PROMISE OF THE ARTISTIC TRIUMPHS OF EGYPT</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">These animal figures were wrought by hammering around on the
+ surface of the colossal statue of the god Min, found at Koptos, and show the
+ beginning of the wonderful art of Ancient Egypt. It is the work of the earliest
+ dynastic people, who have passed beyond the stage of making rude scratches on
+ walls and on pottery, and have arrived, as the figures of the ox and the hyæna
+ prove, at a real conception of the methods of sculpture.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Way the Conquerors Came</div>
+
+<p>Lastly, no source seems open except the East, the road from which
+joined the Nile at Koptos. It is there that the earliest statues have
+been found, and the decoration on those comprises the swordfish and
+pteroceras shell belonging to the Red Sea. Such seems to have been
+the road of the dynastic race into Egypt; but the origin of that race
+yet awaits research. There are undoubtedly some Babylonian elements
+in their culture, and somewhere at the south end of the Red Sea lay
+Punt&mdash;the “divine land” of the Egyptians. Thus we are tempted to
+look to some migration from Southern Arabia, whence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[Pg 246]</span> also may have
+proceeded the kindred Sumerian culture, a few centuries later. From
+this centre in Pūn, or Punt, it may have conquered and colonised Egypt,
+and then later passed on up the Red Sea to the coast of the Pœni and
+their later Punic colony&mdash;Phœnicia and Carthage. Such is a pleasing
+co-ordination, but whether we shall ever recover the evidence to prove
+or disprove it hangs upon the chance of the past and the activity of
+the future.</p>
+
+<p>C<span class="smaller">ONQUEST OF</span> E<span class="smaller">GYPT</span>.
+The conquest of Egypt spread down from the
+south to the north. The earliest centres were Abydos and Hierakonpolis.
+Probably Edfu was as important, or more so; but the great Ptolemaic
+temple there being still complete, the remains of the earliest kingdom
+are sealed beneath its pavements. The conquest must have been a gradual
+process; it is described as such in the myth, many times and in many
+successive places was Set defeated and repelled. And the probability is
+that tribal war of such a kind would only gradually transfer district
+after district from one holder to the next. We know how in England the
+conquest occupied three centuries, from the Saxon landing to the first
+Saxon king of all the land. So it may well have been in Egypt.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Kings Before History</div>
+
+<p>We read in Manetho of ten kings of Thinis (Abydos) who ruled for 350
+years before the first dynasty of kings of all Egypt. And we know, from
+the fragment of the Palermo Stone, that at least thirteen kings of
+Lower Egypt were recorded before the first dynasty. It is obvious from
+this, and from the probabilities of the conquest, that there were Kings
+of Upper Egypt before the first dynasty; and there is no reason for not
+accepting this statement of Manetho as being equally correct with his
+account of the first dynasty, which we can verify. Of the actual course
+of the conquest, one fragment of carved slate has preserved the record.
+Seven towns are represented upon it, each attacked by one animal of
+the standards of the allies. These towns may be tolerably identified
+by comparing the hieroglyphics placed within them with the names known
+in historic times. The upper row of four towns seem to be Mem in the
+Fayum, Hipponon, Pa-rehehui, and possibly Abydos; and the lower three
+towns were probably in the delta, though there are the uncertainties
+of two northern similar names.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Graves of Unknown Kings</div>
+
+<p>D<span class="smaller">YNASTY</span> O. The contemporary remains that appear to belong to
+this age of the Kings of Abydos (which we may call Dynasty O) are the
+tomb chambers and funeral objects in the royal cemetery at Abydos. The
+plan of that cemetery shows a sequence of each later tomb being placed
+next to the previous tomb, and generally a receding further back into
+the desert as time went on. Now, in front of the tomb of Zer, the
+second king of the first dynasty, there are three large tombs alike,
+and four lesser ones. As objects of Mena, the first king, were found
+here, the other tombs are presumably those of six kings before the
+first dynasty, by their position. The actual objects found in these
+tombs are all of a more archaic style than those of Mena or any later
+king. The tombs themselves are all lesser and simpler than those of Zer
+and later kings. And the names of kings found here are all without the
+vulture and uræus title, but with only <i>neb neb</i>, the double lordship
+of Egypt. The whole of the evidence, therefore, goes to show that we
+have six tombs of the Thinite kings before Menes.</p>
+
+<p>The names of these earlier kings, so far as we trace them, are Ka,
+Ro, Zeser, Zar, Nar, and Sma. Of these, Nar, or Narmer, has the most
+important remains&mdash;part of an ebony tablet, and an alabaster jar
+from his tomb, and the great slate palette, a great mace head, with
+scene of a festival, and an ivory cylinder, from Hierakonpolis. The
+next in importance is Zar, or the “Scorpion King,” of whom there is
+a great carved mace head, and also some vases. The objects of the
+carvings appear to be celebrations of the <i>sed</i> festival; this appears
+originally to have been the slaying of the king every thirty years,
+making him Osiris, one with the god, while his daughter was married
+to the new king. By the time of these carvings, it appears that the
+king took the place of Osiris in the ceremonials, and his successor
+masqueraded as the new king, and was henceforth the crown prince&mdash;the
+heir to the kingdom.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i247">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_247.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A FESTIVAL SCENE OVER 7,000 YEARS AGO, IN THE REIGN OF
+ KING NARMER, 5,500 B.C.</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">A record of the festival of Narmer, a king of Abydos, who
+ reigned before the first dynasty of kings of all Egypt. It indicates that when
+ the festival of his own death was celebrated, in accordance with the ancient
+ custom of killing the king every thirty years to make him one with Osiris the
+ god, no fewer than 120,000 captives, 400,000 oxen, and 1,422,000 goats were
+ offered. The numerical system is here seen to be complete up to millions.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Planting and Building</div>
+
+<p>There were brought to the festival of Narmer 120,000 captives, 400,000
+oxen, 1,422,000 goats; and the system of numeration was as complete
+before Menes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[Pg 247]</span> as it was in any later time. The other mace head of
+King Zar shows part of the festival, and also the ceremony of the
+king hoeing the bank of a canal, probably at the inundation. We see
+the reclamation of the land, with men busy embanking the canals, and
+cultivating a palm tree in an enclosure of reeds, while they lived in
+reed huts with plaited dome tops, and used boats with a very high,
+upright stem. The carved slate palette of Narmer shows him grasping the
+chief of the Fayum, prepared to smite him, a scene which was repeated
+for five thousand years in all the Egyptian triumphs. The metal
+water-pot and sandals are carried behind the king by his body servant.
+On the other side of the palette is the king going to a triumphal
+ceremony, preceded by the scribe, <i>thet</i>, and four men of different
+types bearing the standards of the army, possibly connected with the
+four territorial divisions of the army found under Ramessu II. Before
+them lie ten slain enemies, with their heads cut off and put between
+their legs. The carving of the detail, and particularly the muscular
+anatomy of the king’s figure, is extraordinarily fine and firm, and as
+true as any work of later time.</p>
+
+<p>W<span class="smaller">RITTEN</span> H<span class="smaller">ISTORY</span>.
+Having now dealt with the history as drawn
+from the remains which have come to light, we now enter from this
+point on the continuous written history, which has come down from hand
+to hand without a break to our own times, during over seven thousand
+years. This history was compiled by the high-priest and scribe Manetho
+of Sebennytos in the Delta, and only a fragment of his work has been
+preserved on its full scale; but three later writers have given
+epitomes of it, and it is on their lists that we have to depend. These
+are Julius Africanus (221 <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>), Eusebius (326 <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>),
+and George the Syncellus (792 <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>).</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Men Who Handed Down the Story<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+An Ancient Historian and His Figures</div>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, much confusion has been caused by scholars not being
+content to accept Manetho as being substantially correct in the main,
+though with many small corruptions and errors. Nearly every historian
+has made large and arbitrary assumptions and changes, with a view to
+reducing the length of time stated. But recent discoveries seem to
+prove that we must accept the lists as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[Pg 248]</span> having been correct, however
+they may have suffered in detail. A favourite supposition has been that
+the dynasties named were arbitrary divisions of later times; but the
+earlier lists also show such divisions as far back as the eighteenth
+dynasty, and kings founding a dynasty used to copy the titles of the
+founder of the previous dynasty, showing that the change was recognised
+at the time.</p>
+
+<p>Another idea has been that the dynasties were contemporary. But, on
+the contrary, in the overlapping of the tenth and eleventh and also
+the twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth dynasties, we can trace that Manetho
+was very careful to cut off from one dynasty all the time which he
+allows to another. As regards the general character of the whole length
+of time, we can show that Manetho’s version in 271 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> at
+Sebennytos was the same as that given to Herodotus two hundred years
+earlier at Memphis. Herodotus was told that from Menes to his time were
+330 kings, and the totals of Manetho are 192 + 96 + 50 to Artaxerxes =
+338, so that, in spite of corruption in detail, the totals seem to have
+been correctly maintained.</p>
+
+<p>In earlier times we can compare Manetho with the fragments of the
+Turin papyrus, written in the eighteenth dynasty; and here, in one of
+the most disputable points&mdash;the kings of the thirteenth dynasty&mdash;the
+average of eleven reigns legible in the papyrus is 6½ years, and
+Manetho states sixty kings in 453 years, or 7½ years’ average. The
+general character of a great number of short reigns in this age is
+quite supported. Then in the eighteenth dynasty there is a rising of
+Sirius in the movable calendar, in the twelfth dynasty another rising
+of Sirius, and some seasonal dates, and in the sixth dynasty are two
+seasonal dates. [Owing to the ignoring of leap year, the Egyptian
+months shifted round the seasons in 1,460 years; hence any seasonal
+date can only recur once in 1,460 years, and fixes an absolute date in
+that cycle.] All of these agree with Manetho; and though the seasonal
+dates are vague, they at least show that there is not an error of
+several centuries in the total. In the earliest times there is the
+account of the first dynasty, the names and succession of which are
+verified by the sculptured lists in the nineteenth dynasty and by the
+actual graves of the kings. Every accurate test that we can apply shows
+the general trustworthiness of Manetho, apart from minor corruptions.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30" id="i_248">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_248.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE EARLIEST DETAILED SCULPTURE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This carved slate palette of King Narmer shows him
+ grasping the chief of the Fayum, prepared to smite him, a scene which was
+ repeated for five thousand years in all the Egyptian triumphs. The sculpture
+ shows anatomical treatment for the first time in art.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Material for History of Early Times</div>
+
+<p>It is naturally a question what sort of material existed for an
+accurate history of the early times. The fragment of annals known as
+the Palermo Stone was engraved in the fifth dynasty, and it recorded
+the principal events of all the years back to the beginning of the
+kingdom, a thousand years before, the height of the Nile for every
+year, the length of every king’s reign and of interregnum to the exact
+days. With such a record of the most remote times carefully maintained
+we have every reason to suppose that the high-priests and sacred
+scribes had adequate information as to the general course of their
+history. And we can see by the Turin papyrus how in the eighteenth
+dynasty there was a full historical list of all the kings, with their
+length of reigns, dynasties, and summations of numbers and years
+at each of the large divisions. Thus it is proved that there were
+historians at various periods who compiled and edited<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[Pg 249]</span> the history, and
+so provided a solid groundwork for later writers, such as Manetho.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_249">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_249.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A RECORD OF EVENTS IN 4750 B.C.</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">A part of early annals known as the Palermo Stone. Each
+ compartment contains the events of one year, with the height of the Nile in cubits
+ stated below it. The lower right division records: “Building of a ship 170 feet
+ long, and of 60 ships 100 feet long. Conquest of negroes, bringing 4,000 men,
+ 3,000 women, and 200,000 cattle. Building a wall of the palaces of King Sneferu.
+ Bringing 40 ships of cedar (from Syria).” The left division reads: “Making 35
+ hunting lodges and 122 tanks for cattle. Building a ship of cedar 170 feet long,
+ and two other ships of 170 feet. 7th census of cattle.”</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Witness to Early Civilisation</div>
+
+<p>The materials that we have for studying the civilisation of the early
+dynasties are the royal tombs and steles, the tablets of the annals,
+the sealings of officials, the inscribed stone bowls, glazed pottery,
+ivory, and wood, the rock steles of Sinai, fragments of buildings of
+the second dynasty and onward, the steles of private persons and their
+graves.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">In the Kings’ Tombs</div>
+
+<p>R<span class="smaller">OYAL</span> T<span class="smaller">OMBS</span>.
+The tombs show that brickwork was familiar on
+a large scale. The prehistoric houses and tomb chambers were by no
+means slight. The town at Naqada has house-walls about two feet thick,
+and a town wall nearly eight feet thick. The brick-lined tombs are
+sometimes as large as 8 ft. by 12 ft. The kings’ tombs of Dynasty O
+are about 10 ft. by 20 ft. Those of Narmer, Sma, and Mena are about
+17 ft. by 26 ft., with walls 5 ft. to 7 ft. thick. Under Zer there is
+a great extension; the brick pit is 39 ft. by 43 ft.; it contained a
+wooden chamber 28 ft. by 34 ft., and it was surrounded by many rows
+of graves&mdash;318 in all. The later tombs of the first dynasty are less
+imposing. At the end of the second dynasty the tomb of Khasekhemui
+consisted of fifty-eight chambers covering a ground 223 ft. long and
+40 ft. wide. The sizes of bricks were between 9 in. and 10 in. long,
+half as wide, and under 3 in. thick, in the prehistoric and through the
+first and second dynasties. Wood was used on a large scale. The royal
+tombs show beams for framing of about 10 in. wide and 7 in. deep, and
+18 ft. or 20 ft. long, and these beams supported chamber sides and
+floors formed of planks 2 in. or 3 in. thick. The roof was made of
+similar beams, covered with boards and mats, which sustained 3 ft. or
+4 ft. of sand laid over the tomb. Such was an extension of the roofs
+of poles and brushwood which were laid over the prehistoric tombs, and
+over the lesser tombs of the officials of the early kings. The sign for
+royal architect in the earliest inscriptions is that of a carpenter,
+the “two-axe man.”</p>
+
+<p>The stone steles were of limestone in the first dynasty, and in the end
+of the first dynasty the steles of Oa are of black quartzose stone.
+Those of Perabsen in the second dynasty are of very tough syenite.
+The carving of all these is in high relief, finely and boldly cut in
+a simple, clear style. At the end of the second dynasty a stone-built
+chamber appears for the first time; the blocks have naturally cloven
+surfaces so far as possible, and the rest of the faces are dressed
+with a flint adze. Of the same reign of Khasekhemui there is a granite
+door-jamb with signs in high relief. Granite had already been wrought
+flat for pavements in the previous dynasty, at the tomb of Den.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Egypt’s Annual Record<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Honour that Kings Died for</div>
+
+<p>T<span class="smaller">ABLETS OF</span> A<span class="smaller">NNALS</span>.
+The greater part of the inscriptions of
+this age are on small square tablets of ebony and of ivory, which were
+found in the royal tombs. These each have a hole in the top corner,
+and the sign of a year&mdash;the palm stick&mdash;down the side, as there is
+by the side of the entries of the events of each year on the early
+annals. They thus appear to be each the record of a year, and to have
+been strung together by the corner holes. There has not yet been any
+authoritative study of the meaning of these earliest inscriptions,
+which are very difficult to understand, owing to the transitory
+condition of ideographs having not yet yielded to syllabic<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[Pg 250]</span> usage.
+We can, however, glean many points about the civilisation from them.
+The towns were fortified with battlemented walls. The shrines were
+small sanctuaries, with a large court in front, like the temple courts
+of later times. At the entrance to the court were two tall poles,
+apparently with flags, which later developed into the row of masts
+with streamers in front of the pylon. The great festival at the close
+of each thirty years was one of the most important, already noticed
+here under Narmer. The sanctuary for it had two shrines back to back,
+each with a flight of steps, apparently for Upper and Lower Egypt. The
+dancing of the new king, or the crown prince as king, before the old
+Osirified king in the shrine, was one of the main events of the feast.
+The types of temple furniture were already fixed in the forms which
+lasted for several thousand years; the barks of Harakhti are shown with
+the same hangings at the prow, and are double&mdash;for the E. and W.&mdash;as
+in the temple of Sety I. Large bowls of electrum were offered in the
+temples by the king. Wild cattle were hunted by trap nets, as was done
+much later in Greece. And there is shown a long road, with resthouses
+and palm-trees, leading up to the great temple in the reign of King Zer.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_250">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_250.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A RECORD OF A YEAR’S EVENTS: EBONY TABLET OF KING MENA,
+ 5500 B.C.</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The greater part of the inscriptions of the first dynasty
+ are on small square tablets of ebony and of ivory. These each have a hole in the
+ top corner, and the sign of a year&mdash;the palm stick&mdash;down the side. They
+ thus appear to be each the record of a year, and to have been strung together by
+ the corner holes. They were found scattered in the tombs.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Officers of the Empire</div>
+
+<p>S<span class="smaller">EALINGS</span>. The clay sealings of officials show much of the
+organisation of the country. The oldest titles, under Zer, are the
+“Commander of the Inundation” and “Commander of the Cattle.” In the
+reign of Zet we find a “Commander of the Elders” and “Archon,” or chief
+of the city; also the temple property, or “Inheritance of the Chief
+God,” is named. Under Merneit and Den there is a prince (<i>ha</i>). The
+vizier was “Commander of the Centre,” probably the major domo of the
+Court, and also “Over-head of the Commanders.” There are further named
+a “Royal Sealer of the Vat of Neit,” the “winepress of the north,” and
+a “Deputy of the Treasury.” In later reigns there is an “Over-head” of
+a city. And under the second dynasty the titles are “Royal Sealer of
+all Deeds,” “Scribe of Accounts of Provisions,” “Sealer of Northern
+Tribute,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[Pg 251]</span> “Collector of Lotus Seed,” and “Chief Man Under the King.”
+These titles are from but a very small part of the bureaucracy, only
+those whose seals were affixed to the royal provision which was placed
+in the tomb; but they suffice to show the regular organisation of the
+government at that age.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_251a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_251a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE SEAL OF AN EGYPTIAN OFFICIAL</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Much exact knowledge of the life of ancient Egypt is
+ derived from the clay seals of high officials. The oldest known titles are those
+ of “Commander of the Inundation.” The seal here is that of the “Southern Sealer
+ of all Documents of King Sekhem-ab,” 5100 B.C.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>S<span class="smaller">TONE</span> V<span class="smaller">ASES</span>.
+The stone vases for the royal palaces were
+cut in many kinds of hard rock. The rarer kinds are rock crystal,
+serpentine, and basalt; limestones, porphyry and syenite were more
+usual; and the commonest materials were metamorphic rocks formed from
+volcanic ash verging into slate, dolomite, marble, and alabaster. These
+materials were mostly selected for their beauty. The red porphyry is
+the rarest, being only known in a bowl of the time of Mena, and two
+prehistoric pieces. Black porphyry with very large detached white
+crystals belongs only to the age of Mena. Pink granite, blue-grey
+volcanic ash, the quartz crystal, and the pink limestones are all very
+beautiful materials. The hardness does not seem to have been aught but
+an attraction, as the finest work is always put on the best materials;
+whereas the soft alabaster and slate did not seem to challenge any
+great amount of care. The working of the inside was always done by
+grinding with blocks, sometimes having first removed the axis by a tube
+drill hole. The outside was dressed by chipping, hammer-dressing, and
+hand polishing; sometimes done by circular motion on a block, but often
+by crossing work by hand. The readiness with which oval forms were made
+shows how little depended on circular motion.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe40" id="i_251b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_251b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">TOMBS OF KING ZER OF THE FIRST DYNASTY, 5400 B.C.</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Brickwork was common in the houses and tomb-chambers of
+ the prehistoric period, and in the time of the kings of Abydos the building of
+ the tombs was greatly extended. Here are seen the brick partitions to contain
+ offerings, around a wooden chamber now destroyed. Beyond this all round were
+ 318 graves of the royal servants.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Two-Colour Glazing</div>
+
+<p>The use of glazing had been already invented early in the prehistoric
+age, as far back as <span class="allsmcap">S.D</span>. 31; but it was only applied to beads
+and small amulets. The earliest glazed pottery vase known is of Mena,
+and this has his name in violet glaze inlaid in the green glazed body.
+Glazed vases continued to be made throughout the first and second
+dynasties, but became rarer, and they have not been found revived till
+much later times. But ivory and wood were largely used for carved
+objects, sometimes of elaborate design. One of the most distinguishing
+points of the age of the early kings was the minute carving in
+imitation of leafage and basket-work, which was mainly done in slate,
+but also in wood. The fragments which remain show most elaborate
+patterns worked out with minute attention to detail. Nothing of the
+same kind is known in any other age.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[Pg 252]</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Remains of the Oldest Sculpture</div>
+
+<p>M<span class="smaller">ONUMENTS</span>. There are but few monumental remains from these
+early dynasties. The great rock-cut scene of Semerkhet conquering
+a Bedawy chief in Sinai is the main example. The figures are only
+summarily cut in the natural face of the sandstone; but the truth of
+the outline is better than in any of the more pretentious work of later
+times in that region. The scene of Sanekht&mdash;early third dynasty&mdash;is
+much poorer, and that of his successor, Zeser, is scarcely legible, the
+work is so rude and slight. The private tablets which were put over the
+graves around the royal tombs show that the fine work was limited to
+a small number of royal artists in the first dynasty, and that there
+was no general school of able men such as arose in later times. The
+figures and hieroglyphics are rudely hammered out, and the drawing is
+but clumsy. There is seldom more than just the name of the deceased. By
+the time of Den many are distinguished as the <i>Akhu-ka</i>, the “glorious
+soul”; while there is also a class apparently named “people of King
+Setui, daughter of the captive”&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, slaves born of captives taken
+in his wars.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe20" id="i_252">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_252.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE EARLIEST SCULPTURE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">There are but few monumental remains from the early
+ dynasties. The great rock-cut scene of Semerkhet, of which this shows a part,
+ is the main example. The figures are only summarily cut in the natural face of
+ the sandstone; but the truth of the outline is better than in any of the more
+ pretentious work of later times in the same region.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>It appears that the use of fine materials was at its height under
+Mena and Zer. Zer has the largest and best-built tomb, Zet shows the
+greatest delicacy in work, and Den seems to have had the most showy
+objects. The changes in about five generations here were much like
+those in an equal time from Amenhotep I. to III. in the eighteenth
+dynasty. Then decay markedly set in, and there was no revival until the
+Pyramid kings. But some development in the use of materials went on;
+and Zeser, of the third dynasty, is said to have built a stone palace;
+while Khasekhemui, a generation earlier, had a limestone chamber for
+his tomb, and carved granite for the door-jambs of his temple, at
+about 4950 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> These instances are the earliest use of stone
+for construction that are yet known; though as early as the middle of
+the first dynasty King Den had a pavement of red granite in part of his
+tomb.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Age of the Pyramid Builders</div>
+
+<p>P<span class="smaller">YRAMID</span> B<span class="smaller">UILDING</span>.
+We now approach to the well-known age of
+the pyramid builders, when the civilisation appears at its highest
+development in most respects. We shall not deal with this in detail, as
+it falls into the ordinary historical period which appears elsewhere in
+this work [see Egypt]. But it may be useful to give the most essential
+facts of the material civilisation, which may otherwise be lost sight
+of in the mass of the history.</p>
+
+<p>In stonework the accuracy reached its highest point in the fourth
+dynasty, when the Pyramid of Khufu was constructed with an average
+error of less than 1 in 15,000 of length, and even less in angle. The
+later work fell off from this accuracy; but in the twelfth dynasty
+the granite sarcophagus of Senusret II. was wrought with an average
+error in straightness and parallelism of under seven-thousandths of
+an inch, and an error of proportions between different parts of less
+than three-hundredths of an inch. There was no attempt to reach this
+high degree of accuracy in the later work. In sculpture the main
+character of the work of the Pyramid kings is its dignity and grandeur,
+representing individualism on the highest plane of abstraction.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe36" id="i_253">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_253.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE BUILDING OF THE PYRAMIDS IN THE ZENITH OF EGYPTIAN
+ CIVILISATION</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The age of the Pyramid builders may be regarded as the
+ height of Egyptian civilisation. The greatest accuracy in stonework was reached
+ during the fourth dynasty, when the Pyramid of Cheops, or Khufu, was constructed
+ with an average error of less than 1 in 15,000 of length, and of even less in
+ angle. In the twelfth dynasty the granite sarcophagus of Senusret II. was wrought
+ with an average error in straightness and parallelism of under seven-thousandths
+ of an inch.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_253_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Great Navy of Egypt</div>
+
+<p>Under the twelfth dynasty the personality is weaker and the style that
+of a formal school, highly trained but dependent upon training. In the
+eighteenth dynasty the vivacity of expression is directed to a purely
+personal appeal,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[Pg 254]</span> more of emotion than of character. After that there
+is nothing but copying, good or bad. The growth of shipping at the
+early date of Sneferu, the end of the third dynasty, is surprising;
+and the record that we happen to have shows how much probably went on
+at other times, there being built, in one year sixty ships of 100 ft.
+long, in the next year two of 170 ft. long.</p>
+
+<p>M<span class="smaller">ETALS</span>. The use of copper is as remote as the beginning of
+the continuous civilisation in the prehistoric age, about 8000 B.C.
+It increased in quantity down to the eighteenth dynasty, and it was
+hardened by using arsenical copper ores, and leaving oxide in it; this,
+with hammering made it equal to soft steel for working purposes. Rare
+instances of tin, probably derived from natural mixture in the ore, are
+known from the third dynasty; but there was no regular use of it until
+we find pure tin, also known about 1500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Thence bronze
+was the main material until Roman times. Iron had been sporadically
+found in the fourth, sixth, twelfth, and other dynasties, and was known
+for about 4,000 years before it came into general use in Greek times.
+This agrees with its having been obtained from native masses rarely
+discovered, as has been the case in North and South America. Such
+native iron is the result of volcanic action on iron ore in contact
+with carboniferous strata. All these conditions exist in Sinai, and
+hence native iron might be found there. By about 800 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> iron
+was used for knives, but with a handle of bronze cast upon it to save
+the rarer metal. The iron tools in Egypt from the seventh to fifth
+century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> are all Assyrian or Greek, and it is not till
+Ptolemaic or Roman times that bronze tools disappear.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_254">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_254.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">TOOLS OF ANCIENT EGYPTIANS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The plain strip of copper used for an adze in the early
+ prehistoric age became in historic times widened at the edge, and had a slight
+ contraction at the top; but the straight strip was kept up for 7,000 years
+ without any attempt at a haft, simply lashed on to a bent handle. It is not
+ till about 800 B.C. that any use of a haft occurs in Egypt, and then only for
+ a hoe. The different dynasties are indicated in the examples here given.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Oldest Rock Drills</div>
+
+<p>The forms of tools varied very little. The plain strip of copper, which
+was used for an adze in the early prehistoric age, became in historic
+times widened at the edge, and had a slight contraction at the top to
+assist in binding it on; but the straight strip was kept up for 7,000
+years without any attempt at a haft, simply lashed on to a bent handle.
+It is not till about 800 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, or later, that any use of a
+haft occurs in Egypt, and then only for a hoe; while in Babylonia axes
+cast with a strong haft were used before 3000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Nor was a
+haft used for a hammer&mdash;a smooth stone in the hand was the only beating
+tool; while for striking tools a wooden mallet was used, cut out of a
+block. The axe began as a plain rectangle of copper, sharp on one edge;
+projections at the back were added, until they were half as long as the
+breadth of the axe, but no haft was attempted. The saw was used before
+the pyramid period; and also the saw and tube drill set with hard
+stones for cutting granite. Drills for boring vases were usually blocks
+of stone fed with sand and water, or probably emery for cutting the
+harder stones. Socketted chisels were an Italian invention in the later
+Bronze Age, about 900 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, and were copied by the Greeks, in
+iron, about 500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>; but they were never used except under
+Greek influence in Egypt. Shears are also Western, and were unknown
+till Greek times in Egypt.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_255">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_255.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">ONE OF THE WORLD’S OLDEST MONUMENTS: THE GREAT STEP
+ PYRAMID AT SAKKARA</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This pyramid was built by King Neterkhet of the third
+ dynasty, about 4900 B.C.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_255_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe18" id="i256">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_256.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE BEGINNING OF THE ALPHABET</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The signary which was used in various early ages is here
+ shown, as it has been gathered from examples of over 100 signs found in Egypt.
+ Closely related to these are the early alphabets of Karia and Spain, the latter
+ alphabet containing over 30 signs. It is from this prehistoric signary that the
+ present Roman alphabet has been gradually selected during past ages.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_256_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>G<span class="smaller">LAZING AND</span> G<span class="smaller">LASS</span>.
+The very ancient art of glazing, already
+used in two colours under Mena, did not take any new form till the
+eighteenth dynasty, when it was greatly varied by new colours and
+new applications. Large objects, five feet high, were covered with a
+single fusing of glaze; minute ornaments, for stitching on garments,
+blazed with the brightest red, green, blue, or yellow; while whole
+inscriptions were executed in coloured glaze hieroglyphs, inlaid in
+the white stone walls. Glass, however, was not made separately until
+about the time of Tahutmes III., 1500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> There is no earlier
+example of true glass, nor any representation of working glass. All
+the truly Egyptian glass was wrought pasty, and never blown.</p>
+
+<p>Blown vases belong entirely to the Roman age and later times. The large
+blown glass lamps of Arab age, covered with fusible enamel designs, are
+highly skilled pieces of work. The uses of glass to the Egyptian were
+mainly for beads, for coloured inlays in wood of shrines or coffins,
+and for variegated glass vases. The beads were made by winding a thread
+of glass on a wire; the vases, likewise, were made by modelling on an
+infusible core, held on a mandrel, and winding coloured glass threads
+on the body. The inlays were often of one colour, generally deep blue
+imitating lazuli; but often mosaics were used, made of a bundle of
+glass threads fused together, drawn out, and then cut off in slices.
+Such are all of Greek or Roman age. An important use of glass in Roman
+and Arab times was for weights, and for stamps impressed on glass
+bottle measures, inscribed with the names of the ruler and the maker.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Taste of the Times</div>
+
+<p>Lastly we may note the variations in the nature of the Egyptian
+literature, as reflecting the civilisation. The earliest tales are
+those of magical powers, belonging to the pyramid age. Next, in the
+Middle Kingdom, comes the contrast between town and country, and the
+tales of adventure in foreign lands. In the New Kingdom the contrasts
+of character are the main interest, and, in the late tales, the
+pseudo-historical romance of the great tournament of the Delta, or the
+antiquarian interests of a priest. These subjects of romance varied as
+much or more than the actual grammar and language.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_257">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_257.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE WANDERERS OF THE DESERT, AMONG WHOM EGYPTIAN
+ CIVILISATION GREW UP</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_257_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i258">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_258.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">PYRAMID OF MEIDUM: BUILT BY SENEFERU, LAST KING OF THE
+ THIRD DYNASTY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This tomb was begun as a square block of masonry, and was
+ enlarged by successive coats, which are here seen. Then one smooth coating
+ of sloping blocks was put over all from bottom to top, and so the first real
+ pyramid appeared in 4700 B.C. The pyramid coating has been destroyed and only
+ the base remains under the rubbish mounds.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>A<span class="smaller">LPHABET</span>. One subject of great European interest should be
+noted here, as Egypt has thrown much light upon it. The origin of the
+alphabets of the Mediterranean has been disputed, without historical
+knowledge of the examples of such signs in early ages. The Egyptian
+hieratic and the archaic Babylonian signs may have, perhaps, added a
+few to the Mediterranean signary, but neither source can at all account
+for it. The alphabet is by no means a clean cut series of 22 signs;
+it is a very complex tangle of parallel groups of signs in different
+lands, more or less alike. Of these groups two of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[Pg 256]<br /><a id="Page_258"></a>[Pg 258]</span> largest are
+those of Karia and Spain, comprising over 30 signs, and these have many
+points of peculiarity in common. This is sufficient to show that the
+fuller alphabet is the original form, from which the shorter lists have
+been selected. Now, in Egypt there are found scratched on pottery and
+woodwork over 100 signs, and these comprise the forms of the fuller
+alphabet. Moreover, these Egyptian examples are found at about 1200
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, or only a few centuries before the Karian and Spanish
+alphabets, again in 3000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, in 5500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, and
+before 7000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Of 41 alphabetic signs, 19 occur in 1200&ndash;1400
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, 32 in 3000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, 27 in 5500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>,
+and 31 in 7000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> As we have not a very large amount of
+material, the occurrence of from 19 to 32 out of 41 signs is as much
+as we could expect, as all the 41 occur in one period or another.
+The early date of these puts all derivation from the subsequent
+hieroglyphics entirely out of the question. We can as yet only say that
+a large signary of 40 or more linear forms was in continuous use from
+before 7000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> downwards, and that these furnish all the
+forms of the fuller alphabets, those of the short Phœnician and Greek
+list of later time.</p>
+
+<p>We have now outlined the rise of civilisation in Egypt, apart from the
+history of the country, which is dealt with separately; and we turn
+to the other great valley of early civilisation, in Mesopotamia, to
+compare the resemblances and the differences between the two lands.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">W. M. F<span class="smaller">LINDERS</span>
+P<span class="smaller">ETRIE</span></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop2">NOTABLE DATES OF ANCIENT CIVILISATION</p>
+
+<table class="notable" summary="Notable Dates">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ <div class="center">EGYPT</div>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ <div class="center br padright1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ <div class="center padleft1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ <div class="center">BABYLONIA</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center">B.C.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center mleft1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ <div class="center br padright1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center mleft2">B.C.</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">8000&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="left vat mleft1">Continuous civilisation of prehistoric
+ age began</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="left br padright1"><span class="smaller mleft1">S.D.</span>&nbsp;30</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab padleft3">
+ <div class="center mleft1">Before</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">7000&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Asiatic invasion</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1"><span class="smaller mleft1">S.D.</span>&nbsp;40</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft1">
+ <div class="center mleft1">6000&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Susa founded</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">5800&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Invasion of dynastic race</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1"><span class="smaller">&nbsp;</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft3">
+ <div class="center padleft1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">5500&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Mena rules all Egypt</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1"><span class="smaller mleft1">S.D.</span> 80</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft3">
+ <div class="center padleft1">5000&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Ea founds Eridu and civilises the land</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">4700&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Khufu builds Great Pyramid</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft3">
+ <div class="center padleft1">4700&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Earliest monuments of Kings</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft3">
+ <div class="center padleft1">4500&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Urnina</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">4000&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Invasion from north</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft3">
+ <div class="center padleft1">3800&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Sargon and Naramsin, Semitic rule</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">3400&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Middle Kingdom, twelfth dynasty</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft3">
+ <div class="center padleft1">3300&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Gudea</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">2500&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Hyksos invasion, fifteenth dynasty</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft3">
+ <div class="center padleft1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">2250&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Second Hyksos movement</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft3">
+ <div class="center padleft1">2280&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Elamites conquer Babylonia</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft3">
+ <div class="center padleft1">2129&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Hammurabi</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">1580&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">New Kingdom, eighteenth dynasty</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft3">
+ <div class="center padleft1">1572&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Kassite dynasty</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">1380&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Tell el Amarna letters</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft3">
+ <div class="center padleft1">1380&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Burnaburiash</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;701&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Taharqa (Tirhakah)</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft3">
+ <div class="center padleft1">&#8199;690&ensp;&#8199;&#8199;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Sennacherib</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5 vat">
+ <div class="center">&#8199;570&ndash;26</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Aahmes (Amasis)</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left br padright1">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vat padleft3">
+ <div class="center padleft1">&#8199;556&ndash;38</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5 vab">
+ <div class="left mleft1">Nabonaid, fall of Babylon</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[Pg 259]</span></p>
+
+<h4 class="s0" id="THE_RISE_OF_CIVILISATION_IN_MESOPOTAMIA" title="THE RISE OF
+CIVILISATION IN MESOPOTAMIA">&nbsp;</h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_259">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_259.jpg" alt="Rise of Civilisation in
+ Mesopotamia" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s0" title="BY PROFESSOR FLINDERS PETRIE">&nbsp;</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap2">T</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>HE
+first impression that strikes the reader in passing from the
+Egyptian to the Mesopotamian civilisation is the lack of that unity and
+conciseness which makes history in the Nile valley so intelligible, and
+its problems so well defined.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Disunion of Early Babylonia</div>
+
+<p>In place of the well ordered history of Manetho, with its numbered
+dynasties, and totals stated throughout, there is practically nothing
+stated before Nabunasir in 747 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> The mythological extracts
+from Berosus, and the list of Ktesias, which cannot be identified with
+any known facts, give no help in arranging the outlines of the history.
+In place of the uniform language and writing, which develops without a
+break during the whole history of Egypt, there is the entire break from
+Sumerian to Semitic. In place of the continuous importance of Egyptian
+capitals, there is the change from the principalities to Babylon, and
+thence to Nineveh. In place of the unified kingdom of the Nile valley,
+through the whole written history, the greater part of the documentary
+period is filled with rival principalities, within thirty or forty
+miles of each other, the tops of whose temples must have been visible
+over the entire territory of their respective states.</p>
+
+<p>As the general scale of Egypt is so familiar to the modern reader and
+traveller, it will be well to compare Mesopotamia with that. Babylon
+was twice as far from the sea as Cairo; and from Babylon to Nineveh
+was the distance from Cairo to Sohag. Or in other terms, starting from
+the sea, Babylon was as distant as Oxyrhynchos, Nineveh in place of
+Thebes, and the highlands of Carchemish, Commagene, and Lake Van were
+the equivalent of Nubia. The old land of Shumer was just the size of
+the Delta, and Akkad as large as Middle Egypt. The principalities of
+Eridu, Lagash, Ur, Erech, and others, were as far apart as those of the
+Delta&mdash;Bubastis, Benha, Sais, or Sebennytos. Indeed, it seems as if
+this were a natural unit-size of early dominions in a fertile plain.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Nile and the Euphrates</div>
+
+<p>Though the relative age of the beginning of civilisation on the Nile
+and the Euphrates is yet an uncertain matter, still it is clear
+that the unification of Egypt long preceded that of Babylonia. The
+earliest date of the scattered Sumerian kings is about that of the
+fourth dynasty; the earliest Semitic dynasty&mdash;Sargon and Naramsin&mdash;was
+contemporary with the ninth dynasty, and the rise of the dynasties of
+Babylon is of the later Hyksos age of the sixteenth dynasty.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Sea-shore Moved 47 Miles</div>
+
+<p>E<span class="smaller">UPHRATES</span> V<span class="smaller">ALLEY</span>.
+The conditions of the Euphrates valley are
+very different from those of the Nile. On the Egyptian coast the river
+runs into a strong current in the Mediterranean, which sweeps away
+its sediment and prevents any continuous growth of the coast. But the
+Mesopotamian rivers reach the sea-level at the head of a deep bay,
+the Persian Gulf, and hence there has been a continuous formation of
+new land at the estuary. The Mesopotamian valley and the Persian Gulf
+form one long drainage valley gently sloping down to a distance about
+twenty miles outside Hormuz, where the valley bottom drops suddenly
+three miles into the floor of the Indian Ocean. The slope of this
+valley so far as submerged, is about 1 ft. to the mile, and it is
+probably even less in the Babylonian plain, where sea-shells are found
+as far up as Babylon. This valley has been filled, and the sea-shore
+pushed downward, 47 miles in 2,200 years, or 115 ft. yearly, since
+Spasinus Charax&mdash;now Mohammerah&mdash;was founded on the shore in the time
+of Alexander. The account of a sea expedition to Elam by Sennacherib
+is usually interpreted as showing a more rapid growth; but in the
+uncertainty how far he went down a channel before entering the Persian
+Gulf, it is not decisive.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[Pg 260]</span></p>
+
+<p>How far back the extension of land has been going on, and whether
+it was continuous to above Babylon, has not yet been proved. The
+appearance of the map much suggests that the original drainage bed
+ended&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, the valley was submerged&mdash;at about the nearing of the
+two rivers by Sippara, and that all below this is the filling up of the
+estuary. Should this growth have extended uniformly back so far, it
+would give limits to the possible ages of cities&mdash;5000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>
+for Eridu, 8000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> for the whole plain of Shumer, 10,000
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> for Nippur, and earlier for the site of Babylon. This
+would bar the southern region from being as old as Memphis, and Eridu
+was probably open sea when Menes laid out his capital.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_260">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_260.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE PLAIN OF BABYLONIA: ITS EXTENT AT DIFFERENT PERIODS
+ IN HISTORY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This map shows how the Plain of Babylonia has been
+ extended down by silting since 10,000 B.C. The dotted lines, marked 330 B.C. and
+ 1830 A.D., show the known positions of the coast, as it shifted by silting up.
+ These give an approximate scale of dating for the coast-line of earlier ages,
+ which is marked here at each thousand years.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>R<span class="smaller">ANGE OF</span> C<span class="smaller">IVILISATION</span>.
+In looking for the earliest movements
+of people that we can trace, it seems that the Semites must have
+extended from Northern Arabia into Upper Mesopotamia and Assyria. In
+short, Semitica stretched up to the mountain ranges of Armenia and
+Media. But the culture was barbaric, and probably they were nomads who
+had no fixed centres of life or stable organisation which could resist
+any united movement. At this period the Persian Gulf probably extended
+as far as Babylon. On their eastern flank were the mountain tribes, in
+what is known as Parthia and Media, south of the Caspian. How remote
+is the beginning of civilisation in this region has been found in the
+last few years. On the north-east extremity of Parthia, in the far end
+of Hyrcania, stands a group of mounds, near the modern Askabad, not far
+from the celebrated Turkoman stronghold of Geok Tepe. Here are 14 ft.
+of town ruins with iron, 15 ft. with copper and lead, about 70 ft. of
+ruins with wheel-made pottery and domesticated animals, and 45 ft. of
+remains with only rude hand-made pottery. What ages these represent we
+cannot judge until the full account by Prof. Pumpelly is issued. But
+in any case a very long period is involved. If the accumulation is at
+the rate found in Palestine, 4½ ft. per century, the periods would
+be perhaps 1,500 years for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[Pg 261]</span> wheel pottery, and 1,000 years for the
+rough pottery, before the beginning of the age of copper.</p>
+
+<p>At the other side of these countries stands the great mound of Susa,
+with over 80 ft. of ruins. The inscriptions show that about 26 ft. of
+the height was accumulated between about 4500 and 500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, or
+in about 4,000 years. Yet before that there is a depth of about 50 ft.
+comprising three periods. In the upper of these is elementary cuneiform
+writing on tablets. Below that is a period of rather rough, thick
+pottery, painted with chequer patterns and closely-crossed lines, of
+the style common in early Syria and Cyprus. And at the bottom of all is
+a great quantity of very fine, thin wheel-made pottery of buff tints,
+with decoration of thin diagonal lines, rows of ostriches, and various
+patterns all derived from basket-work.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Measuring the Depths of Time</div>
+
+<p>If the scale of accumulation of the historic times were to apply
+here, it would reach back to 12,000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>; but if the far
+quicker scale found in Palestine applied, it would hardly reach 6000
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> In any case we have here evidence of a civilisation
+apparently much earlier than that of Babylonia, and none of this
+earliest fine pottery has been found in the great plains. The highland
+civilisation may have begun as early, or earlier, than that of Egypt;
+but that of Babylonia started probably later than the North African
+culture on the Nile. Seeing, then, that there was a very early
+civilisation at Susa on the west of Media, and that further east on the
+limits of Parthia we meet another early centre, it is not surprising
+that the inhabitants of these regions united to spread down into the
+fertile plain which was created by the growing delta of Mesopotamia.
+These people belonged neither to the Semite of Arabia nor to the Aryan
+of Persia and India, but used an agglutinative language of entirely
+different structure from these others, and most akin to Turkish or
+Finnish. Having descended from their mountain homes, the people were
+known as Akkadu, probably meaning “highlanders,” though there are
+other open derivations. And hence the northern part of the Babylonian
+plain, next to the Semitic Assyrians, was the land of Akkad; while the
+southern part, next to the sea, was known by the native Babylonian name
+of Sumer, or Shumer.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">China’s Links with Babylon</div>
+
+<p>S<span class="smaller">UMERIANS</span>. The civilisation of the Sumerians was more akin to
+that of the Chinese than to western types, especially in its art, its
+picture writing and devotion to literature, its capacity for town life,
+and its religious ideas. The cognate origins of the people may well
+account for this, and some more precise resemblances led Terrien de
+Lacouperie to the view that Chinese civilisation was an offshoot from
+the Sumerian stock in its old Parthian home.</p>
+
+<p>The elements of life were well developed by the Sumerians. They were
+great agriculturists, and wrote works on the main industry of man, much
+as the Carthaginians wrote standard works prized later by the Romans.
+They fermented the grape and corn, and had alcoholic drinks. Cattle of
+all kinds were raised, and prized as stock, which was fed on grass or
+grain or oilcake. The horse is mentioned first in Semitic times, Abut
+2000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Dates and figs were the principal fruits grown; and,
+indeed, the date palm seems to have had a far more important place in
+the civilisation than it did in that of Egypt. Both wool and leather
+were used for clothing, as might be expected.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Materials for the Great Buildings</div>
+
+<p>B<span class="smaller">UILDING</span>. The main structural industry of the country was
+that of brickmaking and building. Immense piles of brickwork were
+made to support the temples, marking clearly the custom of the
+highlander Akkadi worshipping on the hilltops. The brick <i>ziggurat</i>,
+or five-stepped pyramid, at Nippur was 190 ft. by 128 ft., and about
+a hundred feet high. The earliest baked bricks are 8·7 in. by 5·6 in.
+by 2·2 in., and they were enlarged to 12 in. by 7·8 in. by 1·9 in.
+within the Sumerian age. Toward the close of that time large square
+bricks were used. Sargon made baked bricks 18 in. square and 3½ in.
+thick. From the time of Ur-Engur (3200 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) onward the baked
+bricks were 11 in. or 12 in. square. Beside the baked brick used for
+pavements, drains, facings, and important work, the great bulk was
+made up of crude brick as in Egypt. For important purposes, such as
+store-rooms, the inside of chambers was lined with a coat of bitumen,
+rendering them damp-proof; and such a lining was used on tanks. Pottery
+is abundant in all ages, but we still need a study of the pottery such
+as has been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[Pg 262]</span> made in Egypt, so that it can be used to date excavations
+in general. Stands for jars, framed of wood, were used as in Egypt; and
+also the clay sealings were of the same type in both lands. Stone vases
+were made to imitate pottery; and this suggests that the highlanders
+were only using basket-work when they descended into the plain, and
+therefore did not possess any types of stonework.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_262">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_262.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE ANCIENT BABYLONIANS AND THEIR WEAPONS OF WAR</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">There is a fine study of weapons on a carving of Eannatum
+ (4400 B.C.), where spears about 7 ft. long, with blade heads, are figured.
+ Shields are shown reaching from the neck to the ankles, straight-sided, used
+ edge to edge as a shield wall by a phalanx of soldiers. The heads of the men are
+ covered by well-formed peaked helmets reaching down to the nape of the neck,
+ with nose pieces.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>T<span class="smaller">OOLS AND</span> W<span class="smaller">EAPONS</span>.
+The common tools were used, such as knives
+and drills; and great skill was developed in seal engraving upon hard
+stone cylinders. Of weapons there is a fine study on a carving of
+Eannatum (4400 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>), where spears of about 7 ft. long, with
+blade heads, are shown; also shields reaching from the neck to the
+ankles, straight-sided, and used edge to edge as a shield wall by a
+phalanx of soldiers; while the heads are covered by well-formed peaked
+helmets, with nose pieces, and reaching down to the nape of the neck.
+Bows and arrows and daggers were also used; and stone mace-heads, of
+the pear shape used in Egypt, were important ceremonially, and often
+bear inscriptions. Woodwork was elaborated with carving, and used for
+bed-steads and stools, as seen in the seats of the gods figured on
+seals and tablets.</p>
+
+<p>C<span class="smaller">LOTHING</span>. Clothing varied a good deal. A primitive custom of
+nudity when offering to the gods was continued down to the close of the
+Sumerian age, as shown on the tablet of Ur-en-lil. The kilt was worn
+with a fringe, not reaching the knee; or it was worn from the waist to
+the ankles, as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[Pg 263]</span> by shepherds. A robe over the left shoulder reaching to
+the knee was used with a deep fringe all down the front edge and round
+the bottom. A long robe reaching to the ankles is shown on the figures
+of Gudea. But the most characteristic dress was that of ribbed woollen
+stuff, much like that of the fifth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> in Greece,
+as on the Running Maiden. This stuff was worn as a flounced petticoat
+(Urnina 4500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>), or in a longer form over the left shoulder
+and down to the ankles, as by Eannatum and Naram-Sin. A splendid
+flounced cape and long robe of this stuff is shown as worn by Ishtar on
+the Anubanini rock stele, about 3600 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span></p>
+
+<p>S<span class="smaller">CIENCE AND</span> A<span class="smaller">RT</span>.
+The system of number, weight, and measure
+was peculiarly Babylonian. Some people have theorised about all later
+standards having been derived in various intricate ways from those of
+Babylon. But it is very unlikely that standards should not arise in
+different centres, and still more unlikely that the complex derivations
+should be formed when the whole object would be to maintain a system in
+common.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Science in Sumeria</div>
+
+<p>But there is no question of the great advance of the Sumerian in these
+matters. The sexagesimal system, which is far more convenient for many
+purposes than the decimal, and which we still retain for time and
+for angle, was due to the Sumerian intellect, while the standards of
+weight, the talent, maneh, and shekel, were also from the same source.
+And we cannot doubt that the cubit was already in use by a people
+living in cities and carrying on business.</p>
+
+<p>The style of art was clumsy, owing to the habit of crowding together
+as much as possible into the space, in order to form the record. The
+human forms are thick and short, and detail is firmly and perseveringly
+repeated. It entirely lacks, in its early stages, the spontaneous truth
+of the early dynastic work in Egypt. At the close of the Sumerian age,
+under Naramsin, there is a fine bold design in groups of figures, well
+proportioned, and with good action, recalling curiously the spirit of
+late Greek work from Praxiteles to the Pergamene warriors. The stages
+of change cannot yet be distinguished, owing to the scarcity of the
+dated examples that we have.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Loss of History</div>
+
+<p>L<span class="smaller">ITERATURE AND</span> W<span class="smaller">RITINGS</span>.
+It is in literature that we know
+the Sumerian best. Unhappily, other branches of archæology have been
+neglected, and even destroyed, in the eager search for tablets, and yet
+more tablets. By the thousand they are found, and hurriedly removed,
+while the architecture, crafts, and art-history are thrown aside in the
+process. The hunter for tablets in Babylonia, and for papyrus in Egypt,
+is a heartless wrecker, without any interests beyond his own line.
+When so much has been sacrificed for the written record, we must glean
+all we can from it for the history of the civilisation, as most of the
+other material that might have been preserved has been sacrificed.
+The Sumerian language was the sole language of civilisation, until,
+at about 4000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, the Semite began to conquer and to take
+part in the advance of the world. Yet the older tongue was by no means
+extinguished; it held its place as the official religious and literary
+language, like Latin in Europe. The literature of the world was in
+Sumerian, and only gradually did the new Semite intruders translate the
+older works or rise to writing a literature of their own.</p>
+
+<p>The Sumerian literature was for long accompanied by a Semitic
+translation, like Latin and Saxon gospels; and syllabaries,
+vocabularies, and grammatical lists were written to teach the Semite
+the old religious language. Legal documents were drawn up in Sumerian,
+and it only gradually lost its precedence from 4000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> down
+to 1600 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, when it was almost extinct, being only revived
+as a literary curiosity in the seventh century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">How the Semite Made His Notes</div>
+
+<p>The writing was a pictorial system like the Egyptian hieroglyphics. And
+so long as the Sumerian used it he clung to the pictorial origin even
+though obscured by the lineal style of drawing. On papyrus or parchment
+it is easy to make curved forms, and such were adopted in drawing the
+signs originally. But on clay, which was the all-available material in
+the Babylonian plain, impressing lines is far neater than scratching
+them up; and the handy tool for making impressions was a slip of wood
+with a square end. Hence all the curves tended to become four or
+five-sided outlines, and all the detail became built up of little lines
+tapering off to one end, or “digs” with the corner of the stylus. Yet
+down to the close of the Sumerian age the forms of the objects can
+still be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[Pg 265]</span> discerned, and they are still pictures rather than mere
+immaterial symbols.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32" id="i_264">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_264.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Mansell</div>
+ <div class="caption">THE FINEST EARLY BABYLONIAN ART: TRIUMPH OF KING NARAMSIN,
+ 3750 B.C.</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This work, found in Susa, is curiously free and pictorial;
+ it is unrivalled by any early carvings, and most resembles the action and spirit
+ of late Greek sculpture. It marks the great period of the fusion of the Sumerian
+ and Semite.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_264_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Semite, however, changed all this. He learned merely the sound
+values of certain forms, their meaning could not appeal to him, and
+he built up his words out of these sounds or syllables. He found it
+inconvenient to write in vertical columns, which was the constant
+Sumerian habit, and turned his tablet sideways to his hand, so as to
+make his signs along a horizontal line of writing. Hence these signs
+became familiar to him on their sides, and as they had to him no
+pictorial values, the position was indifferent. Lastly, he produced a
+syllabary of signs written with combinations of four forms of impress,
+a long line wider at one end, a short line, a tall triangle, and a
+small equilateral triangle, written in horizontal lines; and each sign
+was standing on what had originally been its side. The wedge-shaped
+form of these lines has given rise to the name of wedge-writing, or
+cuneiform writing for this system.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Story of a Language</div>
+
+<p>The knowledge of this writing survived Greek influence for some four
+centuries after Alexander, only becoming extinct at the close of the
+first century of our era. In its long history, double that of the Roman
+alphabet at present, it had been used for very diverse languages. The
+Sumerian inventor had handed it on to the Semitic intruder, and he had
+passed it to the Syrian, the Mitannian, the Hittite, and the Vannic
+peoples. Probably it had kept its hold in its first home in Elam, where
+it is found in historic times, and thence it became the writing of
+Persia, and even of the Parthian, before it became extinct. The variety
+of languages and the extent of country which it covered is much like
+the scope of the Roman alphabet in Europe to-day.</p>
+
+<p>L<span class="smaller">AW AND</span> R<span class="smaller">ELIGION</span>.
+In matters of law the Sumerian was well
+advanced. The needs of city life which he had developed necessarily
+required a full definition of rights and duties. The first law book was
+that of Ea, the god of civilisation, the Oannes of the later legends
+of Berosus. The decisions of judges were kept in abstract, and such
+case-made law served as a body of precedent to guide decisions. The
+position of women was on a level with that of men; in the Sumerian
+hymns the woman takes precedence, and one of the great Sumerian
+divinities was Ishhtar, who became Ashtaroth of Syria, Athtar of
+Arabia, and hence Hathor of Egypt. In the Semitic system the goddess
+is but a feeble companion of a god; but Ishtar was the great divinity
+of war, to whom the kings owed their triumphs, as well as the queen of
+love, who ruled the course of nature.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_265">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_265.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE DECAY OF PICTURE-WRITING</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This illustrates the decay of pictures into signs, and shows
+ very clearly how the cuneiform writing was developed from the earlier
+ hieroglyphics. It will be noticed that the word originally rendered by a crude
+ drawing of the object&mdash;“fish,” for example&mdash;retains even in its final
+ cuneiform style some resemblance to the tail of a fish. The cuneiform lettering
+ was necessary to the Babylonians, as clay was the most abundant material in their
+ land and could best be marked upon in lines without curves.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The religion of the Sumerians was like that of other Turanian races.
+These peoples have an aversion to the idea of a personal god, to
+which the Semitic peoples cling. The Samoyede believes in a multitude
+of local spirits, the Chinese<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[Pg 266]</span> have their impersonal Heaven and the
+host of gnomes or earth spirits. Thus also the Sumerian thought of
+all objects as having a <i>zi</i> or spirit, good or evil, which needed to
+be appeased by the weak or commanded by the sorcery of the strong.
+Shamanism was the type of religion; and books of exorcisms and magic
+spells were in permanent use. The importance of the principalities
+naturally led to their local spirits being of general importance; and
+hence the political changes brought Sin the moon god of Ur, or Utuki
+the sun god of Sippar and Larsa, or Marduk of Babylon, into a leading
+position, and led toward the Semitic type of deities. How far this
+change was due to the beginning of Semitic influence we cannot now say.
+Other native gods were less personal, such as Ana the sky, Enlila the
+earth, and Ea the sea.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_266a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_266a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE SUMERIAN TYPE OF BABYLONIAN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The fact that the shaven type of face appears in all the
+ monuments back to 4500 B.C. indicates that the Sumerians were shaven as they
+ were the older of the two main races in Babylonia.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_266b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_266b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE SEMITIC TYPE OF BABYLONIAN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Men with full beards are not represented on Babylonian
+ monuments until 3750 B.C.; hence it is clear that such figures represented
+ people of the Semitic type. This portrait is from a sculpture of King
+ Hammurabi.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>T<span class="smaller">YPES OF</span> R<span class="smaller">ACES</span>.
+The physical type of the people is shown to us
+by the early monuments, though we hardly yet know enough of the early
+history to understand them fully. Two main types stand out entirely
+apart, the shaven and the full-haired. And when it is seen that the
+shaven type is that of all the earliest human figures, dating from 4500
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> and extending down to even 2100 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, while the
+full-haired type is not found on men before 3750 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, it is
+clear that the shaven is the Sumerian and the bearded is the Semitic
+type. The remarkable point is that the gods are represented with long
+hair tressed up and long beards from 4400 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>; and as early
+as we can go back there is never a figure of a beardless god. The
+reason probably is that personal gods were of Semitic origin, their
+worship was borrowed, and hence their forms. If so, we must see a large
+Semitic influence already acting on the earliest known Sumerian art.
+The variations of type may perhaps lead to some further distinctions.
+The full, curly, square-ended beard and long hair are usual for the
+gods, as seen under Eannatum (4400), Urenlil (4000), Gudea (3300), and
+Hammurabi (2100). The same beard, but with the hair done up into a disc
+(as on the Tello heads and Hammurabi), is worn by the King Anubanini
+(3600). The long and rather pointed beard is seen on Naramsin (3750),
+and Hammurabi (2100). The short, square beard is seen on the god, under
+Eannatum (4400), and on men about Naramsin’s age [see the seal of
+Ubilishtar]. The shaven type has a wide face, with a large prominent
+aquiline nose, best seen in the head from Tello. This type is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[Pg 267]</span> that of
+all the human figures on the scenes of Urnina (4500), Eannatum (4400),
+and Urenlil (4000); and in the figures of the Scribe Kalhi (cylinder,
+3750), Gudea (stele, 3300), the heads of the same age from Tello, and
+the later head of beautiful work at Berlin. The general conclusions may
+be that the beard was worn and admired by Semites, who elaborated a
+very full type for the gods; and that the Semitic influx, though ruling
+under Naramsin at Sippara, north of Babylon, was yet subordinate at the
+later date of Gudea, in the Sumerian south.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe43" id="i_267">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_267.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE FAMILIAR BEARDED TYPE OF ASSYRIAN GODS AND MEN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Although the full-haired faces are later in appearing on
+ the monuments of Babylonia, all figures of gods are shown as possessed of full
+ beards and a wealth of hair. A familiar example is here reproduced. It is
+ supposed that the Semitic race in Assyria was the first to personalise the
+ deities, and hence the resemblance of the images to the features of the
+ Semites.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>S<span class="smaller">EMITIC</span> A<span class="smaller">GE</span>.
+We now turn to the later stage of the
+civilisation, as it flourished under the mixed race of Sumerians and
+Semites, partaking of the culture of the older race and the higher
+moral tone of the less advanced people. The Sumerians, as we have
+noted, had pushed down from the Median highlands into the growing
+plain of Babylonia, while the earlier Semites remained to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[Pg 268]</span> north
+in Assyria, and to the west in Naharaina and Syria. Sooner or later
+a fusion was inevitable; as we have seen already, the gods were of a
+Semitic type at a very early time, and gradually the union took place
+during three thousand years, until in the later times the product was
+unified in one strong civilisation which spread its strength far and
+wide to the Crimea, to Egypt, and to the deserts of Central Asia.</p>
+
+<p>B<span class="smaller">UILDING</span>. The old skill and abilities found a wide scope in
+this larger frame of life. The fundamental craft of brickwork was
+carried on to a vast extent. Every city had its great pile of an
+artificial hill of bricks, built in stages to support the temple of
+its god high above all. Immense walls surrounded the cities; those of
+Babylon were some nine miles around, and are stated to have been 85 ft.
+high and 340 ft. thick, surrounded by a moat lined with burnt brick
+laid in bitumen. Not only was brickwork used on this great scale in the
+Babylonian plain where stone was a luxury, but the force of example was
+so strong that the Assyrian, in his highland home, kept up the same
+scale of brickbuilding as his teachers, and used brick for his palaces
+and temples when stone would have been much more easily available.</p>
+
+<p>In Babylonia, as in Egypt, the supply of material for brickmaking on
+a large scale is a serious question. For the great walls of cities,
+obviously a surrounding ditch was an advantage; but for the materials
+of houses, temples, and ziggurats, great pits had to be dug, or older
+buildings pulled down. At Nippur it was found that the later builders
+had torn down a long piece of the disused city wall and dug out a great
+pit below and around it. So in Egypt the outskirts of every village has
+its perilous hole where the bricks are made, which, in course of time,
+becomes a stagnant pond, and every ancient temple, with its fortifying
+wall, was built out of a large pit at its side which became the sacred
+lake of the temple.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe35" id="i_268">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_268.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A TEMPLE PLATFORM, OR ZIGGURAT, OF BABYLONIA</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This restoration of the Temple of Bel at Nippur, from the
+ designs of Hilprecht and Fisher, gives a good idea of the massive character of
+ Assyrian architecture. The portion marked (1) consists of a stage tower with a
+ shrine at top and a long stairway leading thereto; (2) is the temple proper;
+ (3) house for “honey, cream and wine”; (4) “place for the delight of Bur-sin”;
+ (5) is the inner wall and (6) the massive outer walls.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>A higher branch of building was the use of glazed bricks. In Egypt
+the use of glazed tiles for coating walls was boldly carried out in
+the earliest dynasties, before 5000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>; but there was no
+glazing of the bricks, because in so dry a climate the Egyptian was
+never induced to burn his bricks. In the wet and damp of Babylonia,
+on the contrary, burnt bricks were usual, and all the facings and
+main divisions of structure were in the indissoluble material, which
+held together and protected the mass of crude brickwork within it.
+It was, however, mainly, or only, in the later times&mdash;from the ninth
+century onwards&mdash;that bricks glazed on the outer face were used for
+building. It seems that this was done not so much for utility&mdash;like our
+modern use of glazed bricks&mdash;as for the artistic effect of colours and
+designs. The grandest example of such work that is known is the façade
+of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[Pg 269]</span> coloured glazed brick in relief, representing the royal archers,
+from Susa of the Persian age, now in Paris, restored from the fragments.</p>
+
+<p>Beside baked brick, pottery was used on a large scale. Great jars
+occur in the earliest times, and cylindrical drains of large size,
+sufficiently wide for a man to descend in them for repair. In later
+times coffins of baked pottery of the Parthian age, and glazed coffins
+of slipper shape, dating from the Sassanian period, are very common on
+most of the city ruins. Unfortunately, sufficient attention has not yet
+been given to the pottery of any age.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_269a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_269a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A KING’S EMBROIDERIES</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This illustrates the richness of the decoration on the
+ breast of an Assyrian king, whose complete attire is seen in the
+ <a href="#i_269b">other picture</a> on this page.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Wood was largely used in the more wealthy ages, but it was always
+valuable, as large timber had to be brought from a distance. The great
+halls of the palaces were all roofed with timber beams, and panels of
+cedar lined the walls where stone was not used. Probably palm trunks
+and palm leaves served for ordinary roofing, as in Egypt at present.</p>
+
+<p>C<span class="smaller">LOTHING</span>. Clothing became far more elaborate than in earlier
+ages, and the dominance of the more northern people brought a fuller
+dress into customary use. The Assyrian covered the whole body with a
+tunic down to the knees, and the upper classes wore a robe to the feet.
+Rich embroideries were usual among both Babylonians and Assyrians,
+and the splendour of Babylonian garments was spread far in other
+lands by trade. The cap was either cylindrical or conical, and the
+royal head-dress in Assyria was practically the modern tarbush, which
+has again been imposed on the East by the Turk. Sandals were used in
+Assyria, and the boot so characteristic of the Hittite was also brought
+in from the cold mountainous country. Women wore a long, thin robe
+to the feet, covered sometimes by a tunic and a cape. But Ishtar is
+always shown in a ribbed dress flounced from top to bottom. This is the
+regular women’s dress of the western Semites; and its use, like that of
+the beard for the male deities, points to the strong Semitic influence
+on the appearance and character of the divinities.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_269b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_269b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">DRESS IN ASSYRIA’S GOLDEN AGE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Rich embroideries were usual among Babylonians and
+ Assyrians, and the splendour of Babylonian garments was spread far in other
+ lands by trade. The royal head-dress in Assyria was practically the modern
+ tarbush, which has again been imposed on the East by the Turk.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The armour of the Assyrian was much the same as that in the early
+Sumerian days. The pointed helmet became rather taller, and did not
+cover the back of the head. The spear, and the bow and arrow, were
+the main weapons as before. The old straight-sided shield was also
+used in Assyrian times, but was partly superseded by the round shield
+considerably coned. The extension of the kingdom<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[Pg 270]</span> brought in various
+auxiliaries, who differed from the older Babylonians. Slingers,
+northern horsemen clad in leather, and mountaineers with woodman’s
+axes, all added new branches to the army.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Sculpture 5,000 Years Ago</div>
+
+<p>A<span class="smaller">RT</span>. The arts were carried to great perfection by the mixed
+population. Broadly speaking, the best work is that of the early
+age of Naramsin (3750 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>), and that of the late age of
+Ashur-bani-pal (640 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>). Though not so fine, yet probably
+the Hammurabi sculptures are the highest between the early and late
+schools. This would give intervals of 1,650 and 1,460 years between the
+successive waves of art, and about 1,450 years more to the glories of
+Baghdad, a period much like that found on the Mediterranean, though not
+coincident with it.</p>
+
+<p>The finest work of Naramsin (3750 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) is his great stele
+from Susa, now in Paris. It is remarkably pictorial in style, agreeing
+in this with the pieces of a limestone stele representing rows of
+combatants from Tello, also in Paris. The figure of the king is lithe,
+active, romantic in attitude, the enemies and his soldiers are full of
+animation. No Oriental sculpture has had quite the same life in it; and
+it recalls the pictorial style of Crete and the later Greek sculpture.
+The art of Gudea (3300 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) is more cold and formal, and has
+not the same fine sense of proportion; it is distinctly a period of
+survival and not of artistic instinct, as seen, for instance, on the
+limestone relief in Berlin. The age of Hammurabi (2100 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>)
+shows careful portraiture, but not the spirit of the earlier age;
+the work is well finished, and there was no hesitation in handling
+materials boldly, as on the great black stele of the laws, now in
+Paris. There was a fine sympathetic treatment in private sculpture, as
+shown in the beautiful limestone head of a Sumerian in Berlin [see <a href="#i_266a">page
+266</a>].</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Fine Later Art</div>
+
+<p>The last great age was that of the Assyrian Empire. Under
+Ashur-nazir-pal (885) the work is fine and severe, but without much
+expression. Shalmaneser III. (860) troubled more about history than
+about art, and his principal remains are the long records of the black
+obelisk and the Balawat gates, which are but clumsy in the forms. Under
+Sennacherib (705) there is a breadth of composition, as in the siege
+of Lachish, which is worthily aided by a more pictorial style, while
+under Ashur-bani-pal (668&ndash;626) the art reaches both grace and vigour,
+as in the splendid natural scenes of the wild-ass hunt, in the lion
+hunt, and in the garden feast with the queen.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_270">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_270.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">GUDEA LED BY A GOD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This shows the Babylonian art at 3300 B.C., inferior to
+ the earlier style of Naramsin. The original is in Berlin Museum.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>M<span class="smaller">ECHANICS</span>. The mechanical arts were also greatly developed.
+The large size of the buildings, the great quantities of stone
+transported for the sculptures, and the immense size of many
+blocks&mdash;the bulls weigh nearly 50 tons each&mdash;all show that there was
+not only considerable skill, but also large ideals and directive
+ability. Layard found that three hundred men were wanted for drawing
+his cart bearing the great bull; and the sledge used by the Assyrians
+for the transport must have needed as many, or more. Long levers are
+represented as having been used in a very effective manner; but the
+placing of such great blocks exactly in the right position required far
+more ability than the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[Pg 271]</span> mere transport. The forms of tools were much in
+advance of those used by the Egyptians. As far back as Naramsin, the
+copper axes were all well hafted, generally with rings raised round the
+edges of the haft hole to strengthen the band and prevent it splitting.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_271">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_271.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">AN ARTISTIC TRIUMPH OF ASSYRIAN SCULPTURE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Under Ashur-bani-pal (668&ndash;636 B.C.) Assyrian art reached
+ both grace and vigour, as is manifest in the splendid natural scene of the
+ wild-ass hunt, which is here reproduced from the original in the British
+ Museum.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Modern Tools of Ancient Workers</div>
+
+<p>The forms of the iron tools are also excellent; and iron seems to have
+been common in Assyria at an earlier date than in any other country,
+probably from the tenth or twelfth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Certainly the
+set of Assyrian tools left at Thebes by an armourer of Esarhaddon in
+670 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, show that the principles, and even the exact forms,
+of modern tools had already been reached. The chisels and rasp have
+not been improved since; the saw is the same as the modern Oriental
+pull-saw, but the teeth have not an alternate set; the centre-bits and
+files anticipate our forms, but have not reached the complete stage.
+The material of most of the edge tools is steel, showing that the
+hardening was then understood. The cutting of seals in hard stones
+was an early art, but it was well maintained, and some of the most
+beautiful specimens are the chalcedony cylinders such as that of
+Sennacherib in London. The engraving of the inscriptions also shows
+that cutting in hard stones was freely done on a great scale; but the
+writing, being entirely in straight lines, was much easier to engrave
+than the figures of natural objects of the Egyptian signs. Probably
+emery powder or copper was the means used, as in Egypt.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Books of Babylonia</div>
+
+<p>The use of an official stamp of guarantee on uniform pieces of silver
+was adopted by the time of Nebuchadnezzar, but as this is two centuries
+later than Greek coinage it was probably copied from that. In one
+respect the Mesopotamian never equalled the Egyptian. The Memphite
+school of work had attained to a mechanical accuracy which we can
+scarcely gauge; their errors on large pieces of work were only a
+matter of thousandths of an inch. But the Mesopotamian never did a
+piece of passably square or regular stonework; the inequalities and
+skew angles are glaring, even in highly elaborated works of art. The
+sense of accuracy was quite untrained, and neither Semite nor Sumerian
+show any ability in this line. Egypt, on the contrary, started with
+a prehistoric race which excelled in exquisitely true handwork and
+dexterous flint flaking, and with the artistic sense of the dynastic
+people added, the combination was one of the highest that the world has
+seen.</p>
+
+<p>L<span class="smaller">ITERATURE</span>. To give any adequate idea of the literature of
+Babylonia is far beyond our scope, and only the main classes of it can
+be named in this outline. These were:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>1. Theology and Omens. 2. History. 3. Despatches and
+Correspondence. 4. Language and Translation. 5. Mathematics. 6.
+Astronomy. 7. Geography and Natural History. 8. Medicine.</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_272">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_272.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">HOW THE GREAT STATUES WERE MOVED: A CONTEMPORARY RECORD
+ FROM THE MONUMENTS OF NINEVEH</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The large size of the buildings of Assyria, the great
+ quantities of stone transported for the sculptures, and the immense size of many
+ blocks&mdash;the bulls weighing nearly 50 tons each&mdash;all show that there was
+ not only considerable skill, but also large ideals and directive ability. Layard
+ found that 300 men were wanted for drawing his cart bearing the great bull; and
+ the sledge used by the Assyrians for the transport must have needed as many or
+ more. The tools used were much in advance of those of the Egyptians.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_272_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The striking omission is that of literature in the form of tales or
+poetry of actual life; there seems, amid all the myriads of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[Pg 273]</span> tablets,
+to be nothing similar to the tales of the various periods of Egypt. We
+look in vain for the tales of the magicians, the romances of adventure,
+of love, or of history, which restore to us the living view of Egyptian
+thought. The Babylonian was severely commercial or scientific, and his
+poetical ideas were only developed in his theology; he seems to have
+had no play of fancy or taste for the excitement of story-telling.
+Similarly in the Middle Ages the “Thousand and One Nights,” though
+often referring to Baghdad, are yet tales of entirely Egyptian source
+and idea.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Wonderful Training of Babylonians</div>
+
+<p>But for his own purposes the Babylonian was well educated from a
+literary point of view, and, considering the complexity of his
+writing, he was probably better trained than any modern people except
+the Chinese. The hundreds of signs which he had to remember had long
+lost their pictorial significance, and needed an attentive memory and
+long training; yet not only in public documents, but also in private
+letters, mistakes are but rarely found. Classification of the signs,
+classified lists of words of Sumerian and Semitic, grammatical works,
+and reading books were the apparatus used. Even the peasantry and
+sometimes the slaves learned to write, and there was hardly more
+need of a professional scribe than there is in England to-day. But
+this general education belonged to the Sumerian stock, and was much
+diminished where the Semite was in the majority, so that in Assyria
+only the upper classes could write, and nail-marks of contracting
+parties are common. The feeling for literature kept the names of great
+writers in remembrance, and the authors of the main religious pieces,
+such as the Epic of Gilgames, are still known. The Egyptian, on the
+other hand, has not preserved the name of a single author; even Pentaur
+was probably only a scribe. The honouring of literature led to the
+Assyrian kings amassing great libraries, and to the princes becoming
+librarians and secretaries. The copying of ancient tablets for the new
+libraries was a large business, carefully planned; and the scribe was
+required to exactly state where his original was defective and what
+uncertainties existed in the reading. Even private persons sought to
+obtain favour by presenting copies of works to the temple libraries.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Shall We Find an Assyrian State History?</div>
+
+<p>Of the classes of writings, the religious works are noticed later; the
+historical writings are mainly Assyrian, recording the constant wars
+with other lands, and the tribute and booty brought from them. That
+there was a complete State history is shown by the ready allusions to
+the time since certain events had happened. Ashur-bani-pal recounts
+1,635 years since the Elamite king had carried off an image. Nabonidus
+searched for and found the tablet of Naramsin, which he says had
+not been seen for 3,200 years; he recites that there were 800 years
+from his time to Shagarakti-buriash, and 700 years from Burnaburiash
+to Hammurabi. These references show that we may hope to recover a
+complete State history from Assyria, as we may hope yet for a complete
+historical papyrus from Egypt.</p>
+
+<p>The despatches and correspondence give full light on detail of politics
+and affairs, showing the conditions of various countries; and where
+a sufficient number have been preserved together it is possible to
+build up a continuous history of a period, as in the case of the
+Tellal-Amarna letters. The yearly annals of a reign belong more to the
+historical division, and such records of Sennacherib, Ashur-bani-pal,
+and others are of the highest value. The private letters give a full
+view of the current life; and the business documents, especially
+receipts, are the commonest of all records, showing the trade, the law,
+and the business of the country in all its fulness.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Beginning of Astronomy</div>
+
+<p>The tablets dealing with the Sumerian and Semitic languages together,
+and the translations from one to the other, we have noted already. The
+mathematical tablets are multiplication tables, lists of multiples of
+measures, tables of squares and cubes, and plans with measurements
+along the sides, which show the practical use of the science. The
+astronomical records were already tabulated in the time of the early
+Semitic Empire, Sargon having compiled for his library a work in
+seventy-two books, the title of which is rendered “The Observations
+of Bel.” The purpose of this was astrological, like the great mass of
+short tablets reporting observations of a later date. But the inquiries
+involved a considerable familiarity with astronomical movements, and
+a mass of records which became of great value to the student. The
+astronomical tablets of the Seleucid<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[Pg 274]</span> period are of special value, as
+they often contain valuable historical matter.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_274">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_274.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A KING’S LETTER OF 1400 B.C.</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">A clay tablet letter from Tushratta, King of Mitani, to
+ Amenophis III., King of Egypt, announcing the despatch of valuable gifts and
+ begging Amenophis to send him a large quantity of gold as payment for expenses
+ incurred by his grandfather in sending gifts to the King of Egypt, and also as
+ a gift in return for his daughter, a princess of Mitani, whom Amenophis had
+ married.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>L<span class="smaller">AW</span>. In the domain of law the Babylonian had early formulated
+a code from the actual working of decisions. Case-made law was his
+basis, as in most countries, and abstracts of important cases were
+carefully preserved as precedents. No torture was used upon witnesses,
+and ample investigation of the right of a case seems to have been
+usual, with full cross-examination. High penalties were stipulated for
+the infringement of sales or contracts. The status of women was equal
+to that of men in the Sumerian, but became inferior in the Semitic
+law. Slavery was rather an assignation of labour than a control of the
+person, as a slave family could not be separated. Slaves could hold
+property, own other slaves, give witness, and were sometimes well
+educated. The family union was strong, as inherited land could not be
+sold without assent of relatives, and boys and girls alike inherited
+intestate property.</p>
+
+<p>The detail of the laws form a long study, but we may here note the main
+sections of the great code of Hammurabi, showing the scope of the laws,
+and stating the number of enactments.</p>
+
+<ul class="law">
+ <li>Witchcraft 2</li>
+ <li>Legal falsehood 3</li>
+ <li>Theft 3</li>
+ <li>Loss 5</li>
+ <li>Child and slave stealing 7</li>
+ <li>Robbery 5</li>
+ <li>Royal messengers and officers 16</li>
+ <li>Agriculture 24</li>
+ <li>Accounts 8</li>
+ <li>Licensed traders 6</li>
+ <li>Marriage property 19</li>
+ <li>Women 32</li>
+ <li>Votaries property 7</li>
+ <li>Adoption 10</li>
+ <li>Assault 20</li>
+ <li>Doctors 13</li>
+ <li>Builders 6</li>
+ <li>Shipping 7</li>
+ <li>Cattle 12</li>
+ <li>Hire 25, and</li>
+ <li>Slaves 5</li>
+ <li>Distraint &amp; deposit 13</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p>Thus the whole scope of an agricultural and commercial community was
+well safeguarded, and little doubt left as to general principles and
+penalties. All this must have been the product of innumerable cases and
+difficulties for two or three thousand years, before such a complete
+code was set up.</p>
+
+<p>H<span class="smaller">ISTORY IN</span> M<span class="smaller">YTHOLOGY</span>.
+The religion has usually occupied a
+large part of the attention and interest given to Mesopotamia; it
+is comparatively well known owing to the quantity of documents and
+representations. Here we need only mention such points as bear on the
+general civilisation. We have already noticed how the purely Sumerian
+Shamanism, or belief in the spirit of every object, which needed to be
+appeased, had been tinctured by the worship of personal deities of the
+Semitic neighbours, and how this influence was shown by borrowing the
+Semitic beard for the gods and flounced robe for the goddesses, and
+occasionally for the gods. Thus the Semite was the missionary of theism
+as against animism.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_275">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_275.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">SIR A. H. LAYARD’S EXCAVATORS LOWERING ONE OF THE GREAT
+ WINGED BULLS FOUND IN NINEVEH</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">These bulls weighed fifty tons each. Layard found that three
+ hundred men were necessary to pull the cart on which the bulls were placed.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_275_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30" id="i_276a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_276a.jpg" alt="Camp Scene; Ground Plan" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_276b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_276b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A CAMP SCENE IN THE DAYS OF NINEVEH’S POWER</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The interior of a castle, indicated by a kind of
+ ground-plan with towers and battlements, is divided into four compartments. In
+ each is a group of figures, either engaged in domestic occupations or in
+ preparations for a religious ceremony. The pavilion is supported by columns,
+ probably of painted wood, and the canopy is adorned with a fringe of alternate
+ flowers and buds, like the usual Egyptian border. Beneath the canopy is a groom
+ cleaning a horse with a curry-comb. A eunuch at the entrance is receiving four
+ prisoners. Above are two mummers dressed in the skins of lions, while a figure
+ with a staff appears to be the keeper of these monsters.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>On the other hand, the civilisation of Babylonia is expressly stated to
+have been given by Ea, or Oannes, who rose from the sea of the Persian
+Gulf; he passed the day among men, and taught letters and sciences
+and arts&mdash;the building of cities and temples, and the use of laws and
+geometry. Also he showed the uses of seeds and fruits, and softened
+and humanised the people, who had lived in a lawless manner like wild
+beasts. This full ascription of civilisation to sea immigrants shows
+that it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[Pg 276]</span> cannot be set down as an indigenous growth, or as due to
+the Sumerian, or still less to the Semite. The date of this movement
+is roughly indicated by Ea, belonging to the city of Eridu; and 5000
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> is the earliest date at which we can suppose the ground
+of that city to have been dry land. Such must be taken as the extreme
+limit of the early civilisation, and what we find of the early kings
+of about 4700 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> is the first efficient rise of monumental
+history in the land. All this is parallel to the early civilisation
+in Egypt. That also came in apparently from the Red Sea at about 5800
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, as the civilising movement which changed the prehistoric
+age to the dynastic. And it came only a few centuries earlier than the
+mission of Ea. It may be possible that there is one common source of a
+seafaring people for both civilisations, and, if so, we might look to
+Hadhramot as being in the most likely common centre. At least, it is
+always convenient to explain the unknown by the unknown.</p>
+
+<p>The nature gods of Apsu and Tiamat, the ocean and the chaos, described
+in the first tablet of the Creation series, belong to the primitive
+Sumerian. “The waters of these mingled in union, and no fields were
+embanked, no islands were seen; when the gods had not come forth, not
+one; when they neither had being nor destinies.” And afterward “Evil
+they plotted against<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[Pg 277]</span> the great gods.” After an attempt of Anshar
+(perhaps the same as the Egyptian Anher, the sky god) to subdue Tiamat
+(tablet 2), Marduk, the sun god, gains the victory; and in tablets 3
+and 4, the supremacy of Marduk is finally confirmed by all the gods. In
+this we seem to have the echoes of a tribal history as in the Egyptian
+theology. The Shamanistic worship of a confused host of warring and
+malignant spirits, is at last subdued by the worshippers of personal
+gods under Semitic influence, and of these the people of the sun god
+take in the end the leading place. All of these changes were, however,
+long before the political domination of the Semite, which began about
+3800 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, with Sargon.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_277a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_277a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A CHASE IN THE DESERT, RECORDED ON THE MONUMENTS OF
+ NINEVEH</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The series of which this bas-relief formed a part appears
+ to have recorded the conquest by the Assyrians of an Arab tribe or nation who
+ made use of the camel in war as a beast of burden. This sculpture belongs to a
+ later period than the bas-relief from the North-West Palace at Nineveh
+ <a href="#i_277b">reproduced below</a>.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_277b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_277b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">ROYAL SPORT IN THE DAYS OF ANCIENT NINEVEH</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This bas-relief probably formed part of a subject
+ representing the King of Nineveh in his chariot hunting the wild bull. The
+ warrior rides on one horse and leads a second, richly caparisoned, for the use
+ of the monarch. Numerous small marks on the body of the animal probably denote
+ long and shaggy hair.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_278">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_278.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">BABYLON: THE WONDER CITY OF ANCIENT CIVILISATION AT THE
+ HEIGHT OF ITS POWER</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_278_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_279">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_279.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">NIMRUD: ALL THAT IS LEFT OF ONE OF THE WONDER CITIES OF
+ ANCIENT BABYLONIA</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">A view of Birs Nimrud, the traditional site of the Tower of
+ Babel. On the plain below are the silent ruins of the ancient city, once filled
+ with a teeming population.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_279_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[Pg 280]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_280a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_280a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A VIEW OF HILLAH, THE MODERN BABYLON</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>We have now reviewed the questions of the rise of civilisation, as
+apart from the ordinary history of the countries, which is dealt with
+in its proper place in this work. Though it is difficult, and rather
+misleading, to look at civilisation and the political history apart,
+yet, so much has come to light in recent years to clear our view of the
+origins of culture that we may be allowed to focus our attention on
+that view of man, apart from his better known history. We seem at last
+to have reached back to a definite beginning of arts and capacities on
+both the Nile and the Euphrates, and to have touched a condition of
+things that seems to point in both lands to some external source of a
+yet pre-existing culture, which yet has to be traced. I am happy to add
+that one of our greatest Babylonian scholars, Dr. Pinches, concurs in
+the view of his subject which is here presented.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">W. M. F<span class="smaller">LINDERS</span>
+P<span class="smaller">ETRIE</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_280b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_280b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE EXILES IN BABYLON</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">“By the rivers of Babylon there we sat down; yea, we wept.”
+ From the painting by Bendemann.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[Pg 281]</span></p>
+
+<h4 class="s0" id="THE_RISE_OF_CIVILISATION_IN_EUROPE" title="THE RISE OF
+CIVILISATION IN EUROPE">&nbsp;</h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_281">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_281.jpg" alt="Rise of Civilisation in
+ Europe" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s0" title="BY DAVID GEORGE HOGARTH, M.A.">&nbsp;</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap2"><span class="s6a vatt">“</span>O</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>UT
+of the East came Light” has been the text on which all great
+historians of civilisation have preached, from the authors of the
+Mosaic literature down through Greek and Roman times to our own. Hebrew
+writers have looked back to Mesopotamia; Greek writers to Egypt; Roman
+writers to Greece; writers of Western and Northern Europe and the
+New World to Rome, Greece, and Palestine. Their belief is justified
+in so far as it is based on two great facts. Man first found in the
+warm, alluvial valleys of Southern Asia and North-Eastern Africa the
+conditions of climate and soil most favourable to his upward progress
+from the savage state; and from these regions, so soon as with increase
+of numbers he was moved to migrate, his steps were turned by the
+geographical conditions surrounding his early homes, in a general way,
+westward. He knew not yet how to cross broad seas; deserts, sandy
+steppes, high mountains and tropical forests and swamps were equally
+deterrent. The Polar ice-sheet, which had extended in Pleistocene
+times to the Caspian, Black Sea, and Danube basins, and still lay,
+in the dawn of human civilisation, far south of its present limits,
+probably rendered, with its wide fringe of impassable moraine, forest,
+and tundra country, all the lands included in the present Empire of
+Russia singularly inhospitable. Whoso looks at the map of the Western
+Hemisphere, bearing these facts in mind, will see at once that the
+line of least resistance, and, indeed, the only possible line, led
+the men of the great sub-tropic river valleys towards and along the
+Mediterranean coasts.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Civilisation from Without</div>
+
+<p>In so far, therefore, as European civilisation is a state of things
+due to influences from without, it is due to the East; but that is
+very far from the whole explanation of its origin. The impulse to rise
+above savagery has not always&mdash;not, indeed, usually&mdash;come to peoples
+from without; and probably in primitive time, when communications
+were slow and difficult to a degree which we can hardly realise, the
+origin of local culture was seldom or never to be accounted for thus.
+In modern days there have been obvious instances to the contrary; but
+even now it remains to be seen how far civilisations originated among
+absolutely barbarous peoples by contact with higher races are real and
+living growths. Examples of the modification and possible elevation
+of ancient indigenous societies by incoming aliens, such as have been
+seen in Mexico or Peru, India or Japan, Egypt or Barbary, are not
+in point; for in these cases local civilisations certainly existed
+long before the foreign influence. We must look to the history of the
+relations of white and negro, or other savage, races in the homes of
+the latter, and the results of such inquiries are far from conclusive.
+Does civilisation so originated grow and thrive? Do even the races
+thus civilised themselves any longer thrive and grow? Our antipodean
+colonies, and the story of the native races of North America, if there
+were no other instances, would not admit a categorical affirmative.
+Nay, rather, the evidence so far available tends to discount the
+permanence of transferred civilisation, and to throw doubt on the
+continued vitality of races so civilised.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Escape from Savagery<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Conditions Essential for Civilisation</div>
+
+<p>It is necessary to raise this question at the outset of the present
+essay because it has been too often assumed, both implicitly and
+explicitly, by historians of our civilisation, that all the cultural
+development of Central, Western, and Northern Europe has been due to
+alien influence, exerted from the south and south-east, and mainly by
+the agency of the Greek, Græco-Roman, and Græco-Romano-Semitic (the
+Christian) systems. Maine’s famous dictum that “Nothing moves in the
+world which is not Greek in origin” has long dominated our thoughts.
+Yet that magnificent generalisation is contrary<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[Pg 282]</span> not only to inherent
+probability, but to known fact. Escape from the savage state, as Buckle
+showed, depends in the first place on the existence of such conditions
+of geographical environment as favour the accumulation of wealth and
+the development of a leisured class&mdash;that is, such as conduce to the
+production of a good deal more than the minimum necessary for life.
+It can, therefore, have taken place wherever man found comparatively
+genial climate and remunerative soil, and, in process of time, made for
+himself, by clearing forests or draining swamps, an arable area which
+would feed him and his more abundantly than was absolutely necessary.</p>
+
+<p>Where these conditions were presumably present it is unreasonable to
+suppose that the beginnings of civilisation were deferred age after
+age, until late in time some stimulus chanced to be imparted by an
+alien race or races which had, after all, advanced towards their
+own civilisation, albeit earlier, through the operation of similar
+conditions elsewhere. In the European areas inhabited by the Celtic
+and Germanic peoples, for instance, long before we have the slightest
+reason to believe that these can have come into intimate relation with
+the civilisations of the South and East, both climate and soil were
+unquestionably favourable, and local civilisations cannot but have been
+originated independently. As has been well said, “Man everywhere has
+the same humble beginnings”; and, up to a certain point, which is found
+to be, in fact, far later than the inception of some kind of culture,
+he will satisfy his primitive needs and desires in very much the same
+ways.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Spontaneous Civilisation in Europe</div>
+
+<p>Under certain conditions, known to have arisen independently in
+many different regions of the earth, articles of luxury and art,
+irrefragable witnesses to incipient civilisation, begin to be produced
+spontaneously. To what remote periods have not cave deposits thrown
+back the history of artistic effort in the valleys of Gaul? And what
+credit, in reason, can be given to Greece, or even to Rome, for the
+elaborate social order of the Teutonic tribes, which was of ancient
+standing when first the Romans penetrated beyond the Danube and Rhine?
+So well rooted in the soil, so potent and so widely diffused were
+the Teutonic and Celtic social systems, that in the history of our
+actual civilisation they are factors as worthy of consideration as the
+influences of Rome, Greece, or Palestine. If Græco-Roman Christianity
+came greatly to modify them in the end, they had, perhaps, ere that,
+modified Christianity itself hardly less; and the social superiority
+of the northern and western adherents of the now dominant religion is
+probably as much due to character and habits developed before ever its
+creed was formulated, as the dominance of the Turkish peoples in the
+Islamic system is undoubtedly due to social characteristics evolved in
+the oases and steppe-lands of Central Asia far back in the “Times of
+Ignorance.”</p>
+
+<p>Let it, therefore, be understood that in the following pages it is not
+necessarily the whole origin of European civilisation that is being set
+forth, but the modification and heightening of probably pre-existent
+European culture by the first influences of the Nearer East which
+can be supposed to have reached it. Of these influences the effect
+is to some extent a matter of inference only. We cannot always, or,
+indeed, often, point with any assurance to actual results of their
+action. In great part we must still be content with little more than a
+demonstration that directly along certain lines of communication, or
+indirectly through certain intermediaries, the civilisations of the
+South could, or did, come into relation with European areas at an early
+age.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Two Great Sea Routes</div>
+
+<p>The sea routes which were most likely to be used in ruder ages by
+Levantine mariners, after leaving the Nile estuaries or the Syrian
+ports&mdash;which, as a matter of fact, are known to have been most
+used&mdash;are: that which followed the littoral of Asia Minor to Rhodes,
+whence it bifurcated, to Crete on the one hand, and to the Ægean isles
+and coasts on the other; or that striking across the narrow strait
+to Cyprus, and thence by way of Rhodes, or directly, to Crete. In
+connection with both these routes, the importance of Crete and Rhodes,
+and especially the former, must be obvious. Thence the Cyrenean and
+Carthaginian projections of Africa were reached with greater ease than
+by way of the littoral to west of Egypt, which, for some hundreds of
+miles, is desert, reef-girt, almost harbourless, and pitilessly vexed
+by an on-shore wind. From Carthage, Sicily and the Italian<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[Pg 283]</span> peninsula
+were readily accessible, or the Gibraltar strait and the Iberian shores
+could be made after coasting a littoral much kinder to navigation than
+that between Egypt and the western bight of the Syrtis.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_283">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_283.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE GREAT SEA ROUTES OF ANCIENT CIVILISATION</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Along the routes marked in this map lay the course of
+ Ægean and Phœnician civilisation. The importance of Crete and Rhodes in the
+ spreading of civilisation is clearly seen; they may be called the “half-way
+ houses” between Mesopotamian culture, with its seat in the valley of the
+ Euphrates, and Egyptian culture, in the valley of the Nile.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Two Great Land Routes</div>
+
+<p>The land routes in chief were also two. The Nile valley, closed by
+desert on the western side, had comparatively easy access to the great
+natural road which, leading northwards through Syria, passes at first
+along the Palestinian littoral, and then through the central cleft
+between the Lebanons to the Orontes valley. Mesopotamian traders,
+following up the Euphrates till they had left the desert part of its
+course behind them, fell into this same road in the region of Aleppo
+and Antioch. Thence by the easy passes which turn the southern end of
+Mount Amanus, the combined caravans reached Tarsus, penetrated Taurus
+by the gap of the Cilician Gates, and found themselves on the plateau
+of Asia Minor with a choice of easy routes leading either to the rich
+western littoral, or the north-western straits, and from any and
+every point offering safe passage to South-eastern Europe. This was
+the only land route for Egyptian civilisation. But the Mesopotamian
+had an alternative one, leading by way of the upper Tigris valley to
+the north of Taurus and the Cappadocian plateau, whence it descended
+the Sangarius and debouched, like the first route, on either the
+north-western or the western coast of Anatolia.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Royal Road up into Asia</div>
+
+<p>In speaking of such land routes, we do not, of course, mean to imply
+the existence of any made road, nor even of a single track. When most
+definite, they probably resembled the Syrian Pilgrim Way&mdash;a skein of
+separate paths now spreading widely, now running into and across one
+another; and doubtless the early tracks diverged far more than this,
+and making great elbows, followed now one valley, now another, to meet
+again only after many days. One of the great lines from Mesopotamia to
+the western Anatolian coast, that described last in our enumeration,
+came to be defined more strictly than the rest, perhaps by the Kings
+of Nineveh and their “Hittite” rivals and allies in Cappadocia, and
+was known in the Persian era to the Greeks as the Royal Road “of all
+who go up into Asia.” But at the much earlier time with which we are
+most concerned, the influences of the East did not rush westward
+torrent-wise in one bed, but soaked slowly, finding a way now here, now
+there, in one general westward direction, and sending offshoots far out
+to right and left of the main streams.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_284">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_284.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">LAND ROUTES OF ANCIENT CIVILISATION</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The great natural roads along which lay the path of
+ Egyptian and Mesopotamian culture are marked in white lines on this map. A
+ study of the map, with a careful reading of this chapter, will make clear
+ the way in which civilisation spread in Egypt and Babylon. It is along these
+ lines that there are found evidences of the influence exerted upon Europe by
+ the civilisation of the valley of the Nile and the Euphrates.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_284_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30 nohtml" id="i_284_a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_284_a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">[Western Part of Preceding Map]</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30 nohtml" id="i_284_b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_284_b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">[Eastern Part and Legend of Preceding Map]</div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[Pg 285]</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Half-way Houses of Civilisation</div>
+
+<p>It has been said that there is evidence of the routes just indicated
+having been, in fact, those most used. It is upon these lines, and
+no others, that we find certain remarkable focuses of early culture
+disposed as half-way houses between the Mesopotamian and Egyptian
+civilisations on the one hand, and continental Europe on the other.
+These are, in relation to the sea routes, first, the prehistoric
+Ægean civilisation, focused from the first in Crete, but extended
+to all isles and peninsulas of South-eastern Europe from Cyprus to
+Sardinia and Spain; and, secondly, the Phœnician, originated on the
+Syrian coast, but focused also at a later time at a second point
+much farther west&mdash;namely, on that Carthaginian projection, whence
+lay easy sea-ways to Sicily and Italy and all the western seas. Hard
+by the Egyptian land route lay this same Phœnician society; while
+all about its point of junction with the Euphrates road, on both its
+continuations north-westward, and on the northern road from Mesopotamia
+so soon as this had passed Euphrates, was established the singular
+but as yet little understood civilisation which we call Hittite. How
+early we may assume the latter’s existence in North Syria is still
+doubtful; but since the discoveries of Winckler at Boghaz Keui,
+there is little question that it was focused in prehistoric time in
+Northern Cappadocia, whence its influence seems to have radiated
+southward to the confines of Palestine, and westward to Lydia and
+almost the shore of the Ægean Sea. It is to this North Cappadocian
+region that the Tigris route from Assyria and Babylonia, which was
+afterwards the Persian “Royal Road,” tended. Among these civilisations
+the most important for our present purpose is the Ægean, because its
+geographical area touched at some point all the westward roads, whether
+by sea or land; and, moreover, because it is the one which actual
+evidence both dates from the remotest antiquity and most clearly proves
+to have been operative on Europe, especially on the most expansive of
+its early cultures, the Hellenic. The recent exploration of Crete, due
+in the main to Messrs. Arthur Evans and Federico Halbherr, has enhanced
+enormously the significance of the civilisation revealed to the modern
+world at Hissarlik and Mycenæ by the faith and fervour of Henry
+Schliemann.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Far-back Evidences of Culture</div>
+
+<p>We are now assured of certain facts of much moment to our inquiry.
+Firstly, that this civilisation was developed originally from its
+rudest beginnings within the Ægean area itself. This is proved by
+evidence of the uninterrupted evolution of fabrics and decoration,
+especially in ceramic ware, produced at Cnossus from the dawn of the
+historic Hellenic period right back to Neolithic time. At various
+points in this long retrocession we can place the Cnossian culture
+in synchronic relation with the Egyptian by the presence both of
+Egyptian objects in the Ægean strata, and Ægean in the Egyptian. These
+points correspond with the highest developments respectively of the
+New, Middle, and Old Pharaonic Empires&mdash;moments at which we should
+naturally expect to find evidence of international communication. The
+earliest point indicated by these synchronisms lies possibly as far
+back as the First Dynasty, if certain vases, exported apparently from
+the Ægean as vehicles for colouring matter, and found by Dr. Petrie at
+Abydos, are accepted as of the remote date to which their discoverer
+attributed them; but in any case the contemporaneity of some part of
+the Old Empire period with the Ægean civilisation is assured, and that,
+moreover, when the latter was already far advanced beyond its rudest
+origins, as represented by the contents of the thick strata of yellow
+clay which underlie the earliest structures at Cnossus.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Ægean Civilisation is Native</div>
+
+<p>Thus is the indigenous origin of Ægean civilisation assured. So also
+is the independence of its after development. The typical Cretan
+pottery, known as the “Kamares” style and lineally descended from
+Neolithic ware, which attained, about the acme of the Pharaonic
+Middle Empire a perfection both of fabric and ornament worthy of the
+highest ceramic products of any age, remained absolutely distinct.
+The same independence characterises a later ceramic product of the
+Ægean, a glazed ware with monochrome decoration, which went into Egypt
+abundantly under the Eighteenth Dynasty, and especially when Amenhotep
+IV., “Khuenaten,” was reigning in his new capital at Tell-el-Amarna.
+Nor is Ægean art distinctive only in its humbler products. The
+frescoes, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[Pg 286]</span> plaster reliefs, the chased work in precious metals,
+the ivory carvings, and the gem intaglios of the Ægean area, of which
+Sir Charles Newton said thirty years ago that they were not to be
+confounded with products of any other glyptic art, show the development
+and retention of an individual naturalistic style&mdash;a style which
+reacted on the fresco paintings of Egypt itself under Khuenaten.
+Finally, to clinch the proof of its independence with the strongest
+possible argument, the Ægean civilisation, as soon as it became
+articulate, evolved for itself, in Crete at any rate, a system of
+writing, displayed to us on some thousands of surviving clay documents,
+which was purely its own, and cannot be interpreted by comparison with
+any other known script.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe39" id="i_286a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_286a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THESEION TEMPLE, ATHENS: DORIC ORDER OF ARCHITECTURE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The perfection of the Hellenic style, derived from Ægean
+ architecture. 5th century B.C.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30" id="i_286b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_286b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">TEMPLE OF WINGLESS VICTORY: IONIC ORDER</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The perfection of the second Hellenic style, refined
+ from the Doric, probably in the first place by Asiatic Greeks. Fifth century
+ B.C.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Contact of Early Civilisations</div>
+
+<p>Secondly, it is now known that this civilisation, of remote indigenous
+origin and independent development, reached a very high point of
+achievement in many respects which afford the best-known tests of
+culture&mdash;namely, in its artistic products, extant examples of which
+offer ample evidence of wonderfully close study of natural forms, of
+mastery of decorative principles and their execution, and of a sort
+of idealistic quality, which has been rightly called “a premonition
+of the later Hellenic”; also, in architectural construction and
+the organisation of domestic comfort, as displayed in the palaces
+at Cnossus and Phæstus, with their superposed stories, their broad
+stairways of many flights, their rich ornament, their arrangements
+for admitting air and light, and their astonishing systems of
+sanitation and drainage. The written documents found, though still
+undeciphered, plainly attest an advanced knowledge of account-keeping
+and correspondence. The frescoes and gem scenes, as well as many
+surviving objects of luxury, attest the existence of a leisured and
+pleasure-loving class; and, lastly, the tribute-tallies of Cnossus
+support the inference which is legitimately drawn from the uniformity
+of certain material objects all over the Ægean area at certain
+periods<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[Pg 287]</span>&mdash;notably that contemporaneous with the earlier part of the
+Eighteenth Egyptian Dynasty&mdash;and also from the wide range of certain
+place-names, that there was an extensive imperial organisation.
+The centre of this empire, as well as the original focus of the
+civilisation, was almost beyond question in Crete. The prejudice in
+favour of other focuses raised by the priority of Ægean discoveries
+elsewhere, especially those made in the Argolid, has been greatly
+weakened by demonstration of the superior catholicity and quality of
+Cretan culture, and by recognition of the failure of Mycenæ to offer
+evidence of anything like the same antiquity. And no more need be
+said here to counteract it than that, if Buckle’s statement of the
+climatic and geographical conditions necessary to the first development
+and upward progress of culture be sound, those conditions were never
+present in plenitude anywhere in the Ægean area except in Crete. There
+are found in the most conspicuous degree the combination of these
+geographical features&mdash;large tracts of fertile and deep lowland soil;
+mountains so situated as to cause abundant precipitation, and so high
+as to store snow against the early summer; absence of both swamps and
+desert areas; and a climate not prone to extremes.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">What Crete has Taught us</div>
+
+<p>Like all other high civilisations the Ægean both borrowed and lent.
+Since its debts could be contracted only with contemporary cultures as
+high as its own, they were owed mainly to Egypt and Babylonia, while
+its loans went out chiefly to lower civilisations further removed
+than itself from the eastern centres, those, namely, of the European
+continent. As regards Egypt, something has been said already of its
+intercourse with the Ægean in all ages of the latter’s prehistoric
+period. The evidence of that intercourse, known even before the
+exploration of Crete, was fairly abundant, though limited almost
+entirely to later ages of Ægean culture, often called particularly
+“Mycenæan.” The “pre-Cretan” case was set forth very concisely in a
+paper read before the Royal Society of Literature in 1897 by Professor
+Flinders Petrie, who enumerated the objects of Egyptian fabric or style
+found on Ægean sites, notably at Mycenæ, and in Cyprus and Rhodes; and
+of objects of Ægean style or fabric found in Egypt, notably at Thebes,
+Memphis and Tell-el-Amarna and in the Fayum. One word of warning only
+may be added&mdash;that the occurrence of such imported objects, especially
+if they be of the amulet class, on a site of a certain date does not
+necessarily imply exact contemporaneity with the period at which the
+objects were actually produced; for they may well have been carried
+hither and thither in the stream of trade for some time ere coming to
+rest, and been long preserved afterwards. Some of the Cypriote and
+Rhodian tombs, for example, in which scarabs and other Egyptian objects
+of the Eighteenth Pharaonic Dynasty have been found, are probably
+considerably later than that dynasty.</p>
+
+<p>Crete has largely reinforced this evidence, not only by throwing it
+back to a much earlier time than that of the Eighteenth Dynasty, but by
+proving that in its later periods Ægean art had come to be considerably
+modified, both in forms and in motives and treatment of decoration,
+by the art of Egypt. We have then to do, not merely with mutually
+imported objects, but, much more than was previously understood, with
+the mutual action of influences&mdash;the strongest possible proof of close
+intercourse. On the Ægean side, our sole concern at present, are now
+found scenes represented in fresco-painting or metal-work&mdash;for example,
+the mural scene with a river and palms at Cnossus, and the well-known
+cat-hunting scene inlaid on a Mycenæan poniard&mdash;and also decorative
+motives which are of obvious Egyptian parentage. Other motives proclaim
+their alien origin by more or less mistaken treatment. The best
+instance in point is the use made of the lotus motive in Greece and the
+isles, where the flower was never domiciled.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe29" id="i_288">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_288.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">PALLAS ATHENA, THE MAIDEN GODDESS OF ATHENS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">One of the chief glories of the art of ancient Greece left
+ to the modern world. Athena was the goddess and protectress of Athens, and her
+ statue stood at the height of the Acropolis, dominating the city.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_288_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe29" id="i_289">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_289.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE SUPREME MONUMENT OF ANCIENT GREECE LEFT TO THE
+ MODERN WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The Venus of Milo, one of the noblest examples of Greek
+ art, and one of the most famous statues extant. Found at Milo, in Crete, about
+ 100 B.C., and now in the Louvre, Paris.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_289_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Influence of Egypt and Mesopotamia</div>
+
+<p>For influences of the Mesopotamian civilisation we have to look in the
+main to the early civilisations of Syria and Asia Minor; but evidence
+is not wholly wanting on Ægean sites. A Babylonian cylinder came to
+light at Cnossus; the fashion of dress, especially female, as shown in
+Ægean frescoes and gems, is very like the Babylonian, from whatever
+primitive garments it had been developed; and in other respects also
+the intaglio class of Ægean art products shows at least as much
+Mesopotamian as Egyptian influence. It has borrowed the decoration of
+both cylinders and scarabs; but it proves<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[Pg 290]</span> its essential independence
+all the time by never adopting the forms of either of those
+characteristic alien vehicles of glyptic art.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Religious Ideas of Early Times</div>
+
+<p>Lastly, in the most important of all aspects of early civilisation&mdash;the
+religious&mdash;we now know that the Ægean approximated very closely to the
+old civilisations to south and east of it. The main idea of its cult
+was that which seems to have been the oldest and the most dominant in
+such cults&mdash;namely, the worship of the reproductive force of Nature.
+This idea was embodied, as soon as divinities were imagined in human
+shape, in feminine form, the desired relation of divinity to humanity
+being expressed by the addition of a son-consort. How far other
+features of this cult, common to the south-eastern lands&mdash;such as the
+descent of the son to the human race, his periodical death at the hands
+of the latter, and his joyful resurrection&mdash;were present, we do not yet
+know. It would probably be false to ascribe the presence of this cult
+idea in Ægean civilisation to any foreign influence, for it seems to
+be a necessary expression of the religious sense of many peoples, and
+is as likely to have been as indigenous in the case of Rhea and Zeus
+(to give the Divine pair their possible Ægean names) as in those of
+Isis and Osiris, or Ashtaroth and Tammuz-Adon. But we may note first
+that here was a vital bond of affinity between the Ægean folk and their
+mainland neighbours on east and south, and second, that long before
+historic Hellenic times, the former had arrived at that essential
+condition of progressive civilisation, an anthropomorphic conception of
+divinity.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Greek Debt to Ægean Civilisation</div>
+
+<p>Enough has now been said to show that Ægean civilisation was both a
+broad channel through which influences of Asiatic and Egyptian culture
+could and did flow, and also in itself of such importance as to be
+likely to exert influence on nascent civilisation in Europe. To see
+whether it did so, we look first to the culture which succeeded it in
+its own area, the Hellenic culture of the historic age, about whose
+action, exerted indirectly on all subsequent civilisation, there is
+no possible doubt. And at the outset stress must be laid on the fact
+that we are dealing, in respect of the two civilisations in question,
+with one and the same geographical area. There is here no question of
+alien influences dependent on short or long communications by sea
+or land. The Hellenic race, if indeed to be distinguished from all
+elements in the earlier Ægean, came into the very domain of the latter,
+and experienced by actual contact the full force of the pre-existent
+culture. This being so, the probability of heavy debts having been
+contracted by the later culture to the earlier is enormous; and it
+becomes all but certainty when the few facts which we know about the
+early history of the Hellenic peoples proper come to be considered
+in the light of ascertained general laws governing the relations of
+intermingled races.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Emerging of Historic Hellenism</div>
+
+<p>It is clear that the Hellenic tradition of a great descent of peoples
+from the north into mainland Greece and the western isles, about 1000
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, enshrines substantial fact. These peoples, possessed of
+iron weapons, were superior to the Ægean folk in war, but evidently
+inferior in the softer social arts. The Greeks called them Dorians, a
+name afterwards associated with the most distinctive, but the least
+cultivated, of the historic races of the peninsula&mdash;a race, however,
+possessed in its full form of the conception of the city-state; which
+implied the subordination of the individual to the corporate body, and
+was the chief social message to be taught thereafter by the Greek to
+the world.</p>
+
+<p>Without calling these invaders by any one name, or supposing Northern
+folk to have made then their first appearance in the Ægean area, we may
+safely see in this Greek tradition the record of a cataclysmic change
+out of which historic Hellenism was to issue at the last. In proof of
+the invader’s inferiority in the useful arts we have the undoubted
+fact that the command of the Greek seas, formerly held by Cretans and
+other Ægean folk, passed for some centuries into Semitic hands&mdash;the
+hands of those Sidonian Phœnicians whose coming, but as yet incomplete,
+“thalassocracy,” is reflected in the most important of contemporary
+documents, the Homeric lays, and, under the lead of the Tyrians, was to
+grow greater yet. To illustrate their inferiority in the luxurious arts
+we have the dry, uninventive style of artistic decoration known as the
+“Geometric,” which also lasted for some centuries. It is evident that
+the newcomers were conquering soldiers, who destroyed, but could not of
+their own virtue create.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_291">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_291.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A GREAT CITY OF ANCIENT CIVILISATION: THE BUILDING OF
+ CARTHAGE BY DIDO</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the painting by Turner, in the National Gallery.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_291_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[Pg 292]</span></p>
+
+<p>Now, the course of events after all such conquests, if permanent but
+not exterminative, is the same. The rude military invaders, finding
+themselves deficient in woman-folk, take not only slaves but wives from
+the civilised people of the soil. The resultant children tend more
+and more, as time goes on, to be influenced by their native mothers.
+In them previous culture begins to revive, and ere many generations
+are past, so completely is the new race assimilated by the old that
+the language in general use is that not of the conquerors but of the
+conquered.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Hellas and its Conquerors<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The New Civilisation in Greece</div>
+
+<p>For a crucial instance we need look no further than to the after
+history of the Norman invaders of Britain; and we might almost assume,
+were there no actual memorials of the fact, that the civilisation which
+arose anew in the Ægean area, after the tumultuous period reflected in
+the Homeric lays and the Greek tradition of early Asiatic colonisation,
+was largely influenced by what had been there in the Ægean Age. There
+is, however, proof that such was indeed the fact. As will presently
+be pointed out, the long period of unrest had allowed other alien
+influences to enter Hellas notably the Semitic from Phœnicia. But
+beside what appears to be Asiatic, and also beside what was new and
+distinctively Hellenic in the historic culture, which became prominent
+from the ninth century onwards (and this includes such all-important
+features as the conceptions of a supreme Father-God, and of the
+city-state&mdash;an idea of social order as obdurate to southern influences
+as our own Germanic social order has proved)&mdash;beside all this, the
+“non-Hellenic” elements in the civilisation are almost entirely such
+as may be referred to Ægean prototypes. Hellenic art, which flourished
+pre-eminently among the non-Dorian inhabitants, is distinguished from
+Eastern art by just those distinctive qualities of both realism and
+idealism which distinguished the highest art of the Ægean Age. Hellenic
+religion has for its oldest, most universal, and most popular deities
+various feminine impersonations, indistinguishable from the earlier
+Mother-Goddess. The chief of these is the unwedded Artemis-Aphrodite,
+supreme patroness of life all through the historic period of pagan
+Greece, the essential features of whose cult are still dominant in the
+observance of the Greek peasant-worshippers of the Christian Virgin.
+Hellenic cult is full of interesting survivals of the Tree and Stone
+ritual amply attested in Ægean cult. Hellenic custom retained many
+traces of a matriarchal system, appropriate to a society exclusively
+devoted to the Great Mother, whom Hellas took in name and actual
+primitive form to her pantheon under the names of Rhea and Kybéle. The
+Dorian and Ionian styles of architecture can be directly affiliated
+to the Ægean as revealed in Mycenæan tombs and Cnossian frescoes, and
+the Greek house is a development of the earlier domestic plan. Certain
+notable exceptions go far to prove the rule. The dress of the upper
+class, and the fashion of body-armour and weapons, seem to have been
+determined henceforth by the new folk. These are just the features
+in civilisation which conquering invaders would naturally introduce
+and retain. It is hardly necessary to add that if Ægean civilisation
+seriously influenced that of historic Hellas, it seriously influenced
+at second hand that of Western and Central Europe.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_293">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_293.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">ATHENS IN THE HEIGHT OF HER CIVILISATION: THE MARKET
+ PLACE RECONSTRUCTED WITH THE ACROPOLIS IN THE BACKGROUND</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_293_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Other Ægean Influences in Europe<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Commercial Communication with Europe</div>
+
+<p>Hellenic civilisation, however, was perhaps not the only medium
+through which Ægean influence affected inner Europe. In Scandinavian
+tomb-furniture certain presumably foreign decorative motives, notably
+the returning spiral and the <i>triquetra</i>, which are identical with
+characteristic Ægean types, make their appearance in the first part of
+the local Bronze Age; and these have been noticed also, at a slightly
+later period, in the art of early Ireland, at that time the most
+civilised of the British Isles. In point of form also some Northern
+weapons in bronze resemble those of the Far South. If the spiral motive
+stood alone, the affiliation of this distant decorative art to the
+Ægean would be very doubtful, since Nature, whether through the forms
+assumed by vegetable tendrils or animal horns, or through those of
+shavings of wood or metal, might easily have suggested the ornament
+independently. But taken together with other related motives, and
+the evidence of assimilation of weapon-forms, these spirals raise a
+presumption in favour of an early obligation of North Europe to Ægean
+civilisation. A possible explanation of this fact, if fact it be, has
+been found in the communication which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[Pg 294]</span> appears to have been created
+by the Ægean demand for Baltic amber; and early ways for this traffic
+have been traced by Dr. Arthur Evans up the Adriatic, and also overland
+from the Ægean shores to the Danube basin, whence, from a point near
+the later Carnuntum, a combined route ran up the Moldau to the Elbe
+system. Further, it is the opinion of Professor Montelius and some
+other archæologists that not only certain bronze forms and decorative
+motives, but the usage of this metal itself was derived in Scandinavia
+from the south, somewhere before 1000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Since pure copper
+and pure tin hardly occur in Sweden among objects of this age, it has
+been held that the bronze was imported ready made in the mass. But
+Sweden contains large natural copper deposits, and tin is also found;
+and, therefore, this opinion is not universally accepted. Indeed, some
+authorities reverse the debt, and actually derive Ægean knowledge of
+bronze from Europe. If, however, the first derivation be ever proved,
+we shall have to refer the first use of metal weapons&mdash;an enormous step
+forward in social progress&mdash;in North and Central Europe to the Southern
+civilisations, such as the Egyptian, which had certainly known and used
+bronze for at least a thousand years before we find it in Sweden. It
+is sometimes maintained that Cyprus was the first, and long the sole,
+source of copper, which travelled north by way of Asia Minor and the
+Ægean to Hungary and inner Europe; but this is not proved. In any case,
+for some reason, bronze seems to have become known to the Scandinavians
+and Danes earlier than to the Gallic peoples.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Influences in Western Europe</div>
+
+<p>Yet more evidence is there of possible Ægean communication with Central
+Europe after the introduction of iron, which seems not to have reached
+Scandinavia till almost the Christian Era. Transylvanian, Russian,
+and Balkan graves have yielded to recent explorers abundance of both
+weapons and decorated articles of personal use and adornment, closely
+resembling fabrics in the later periods of Ægean civilisation. Further
+into the European continent we have again the various evidence of
+the early Iron Age graves of the Salzkammergut on the south-eastern
+fringe of the Bavarian plain. This “Hallstatt” culture, as it is
+called, from the location of the chief cemetery, presents both in
+character and development an extraordinarily close parallel to that
+of the Ægean Geometric Age. About the same period we know also that a
+civilisation was in progress in the fertile lands round the head of
+the Adriatic, which is called Veneto-Illyrian, and shows even stronger
+evidence of Ægean influence than the Hallstatt culture; as, indeed,
+might be expected, if it be remembered that in Southern and Central
+Italy, as well as Sicily, forms and decoration, obviously learned from
+Ægean civilisation, as well as actual imported Ægean objects, had
+been plentiful ever since the bloom of the Ægean age. A visit to the
+local collections in Syracuse, Bari, and Ancona, will establish this
+fact to the satisfaction of any archæologist. These two civilisations,
+that of the Salzkammergut and that of the North Adriatic lands, have
+important bearing on the development of all Western Europe; for we
+know that the Celtic peoples, who penetrated south of the Alps in the
+sixth and fifth centuries <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, learned much from both, and
+especially from the second; and graves, furnished after they had been
+pressed back again into Switzerland and Gaul, show abundant evidence
+of what is called “sub-Ægean” influence&mdash;that is, of form and ornament
+probably derived ultimately from Ægean culture, but indirectly, or
+after undergoing considerable degradation. Through various subsequent
+intermediaries, notably the Belgic tribes, these derivatives passed
+ultimately to our own islands, and we find their influence operative on
+early English art.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Civilisations Help One Another</div>
+
+<p>At the same time it is necessary to add that this derivation of the
+higher developments of mid-European and Scandinavian culture in the
+Bronze and Early Iron ages from the influence of Ægean civilisation
+is far from certain, whatever be the case for the Adriatic lands.
+Knowledge obtained since Dr. Evans and Dr. Montelius first expressed
+their views, especially in regard to the so-called Neolithic or
+“Butmir” pottery, which has a very wide range in South-Eastern Central
+Europe, has not strengthened their case, but rather tended to suggest
+that the continental culture developed independently to, though in a
+parallel direction with, that of the southern peninsulas and isles. If<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[Pg 295]</span>
+this view ultimately prevail, it will illustrate the opinion, to which
+we personally incline, that the derivation of civilisations, one from
+another in early times, is the exception and not the rule, except in
+respect of minor matters.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Vigorous Hittite Civilisation</div>
+
+<p>Two other intermediary civilisations of the South-east remain to
+be considered&mdash;the Hittite and the Phœnician. The first is still,
+unfortunately, very little known to us, and we are hardly in a position
+to say much about its influence on Europe until more small objects of
+use and ornament have been discovered on Hittite sites. The general
+facts so far ascertained, which make such influence probable, are
+these. This civilisation, characterised and distinguished from all
+others by a very individual art, and by a system of writing apparently
+independent of the Mesopotamian and Egyptian systems, but in its later
+development showing kinship to Mediterranean systems, lay across all
+the mainland routes from inner Asia and Egypt to South-eastern Europe.
+Its monuments have been found scattered thickly from the valley of the
+Syrian Orontes northwards, to within 150 miles of the Black Sea, and
+westward to the last passes which lead down from the Anatolian plateau
+to the Ægean littoral. So far as we can judge at present, its place
+of origin was Cappadocia, but its later focus was possibly in North
+Syria; while its period of florescence ranges back from about the sixth
+century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> for at least a thousand years.</p>
+
+<p>It was, as we know from many written records, in frequent collision
+with both Egypt and Assyria, and in its southern home and latest period
+came under Mesopotamian domination. As is to be expected, therefore,
+its monuments show very strong Mesopotamian, and less strong Egyptian,
+influence. At the last, indeed, those of North Syria approximate very
+closely indeed to the contemporary Assyrian of the Sargonid Age. At the
+same time, however, they retain sufficient individuality never to be
+mistaken for other than Hittite; they represent facial types, dress,
+and fashion of arms which are peculiar; and the inscriptions they bear
+are always couched in a script having no relation to cuneiform writing.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Europe and Hittite Influence</div>
+
+<p>This vigorous civilisation, occupying the great land bridge from Asia
+into Europe in the dawn of the historic Hellenic period, and eminently
+receptive of Mesopotamian influences, cannot but have been a medium
+through which these reached the Ægean Sea, and so told on Europe. But
+this did not take place to any appreciable extent in what is known as
+the prehistoric period. The Cretan products, and those of the other
+Ægean Isles and mainland Greece, betray very little Mesopotamian
+influence, and none that we can reasonably trace to the Hittites. So
+far as we can see, the Ægean culture was much more ancient than the
+Hittite, and if there was kinship between them we are bound, on the
+evidence, to derive the latter from the former, and not vice versa.
+There is a certain relation between late Ægean art and products
+of inland Asia Minor, but it indicates influence passing eastward
+rather than westward; and even on the remoter Ægean sites of Asia
+Minor&mdash;Hissarlik, for instance&mdash;non-Ægean traces are but slight, and do
+not suggest the influence of a strong civilisation focused inland.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Hittite Pathway of Civilisation<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Part Played by the Phœnicians</div>
+
+<p>In the early Hellenic Age, on the other hand, we have to note
+considerable Mesopotamian influence on Greek culture, and, at the
+same time, certain evidence of counter influence, both sub-Ægean and
+Græco-Lydian, on Mesopotamia, which is as yet not fully understood.
+But whether both or either of these respective influences were
+transmitted through the Hittite civilisation is still very doubtful.
+The Egyptian influence on archaic Anatolia, especially on Rhodes, and
+even on the Greek mainland, seems clearly to have come by way of the
+sea; and considering the part which the Phœnicians had been playing
+for some time previously as transmitters of things eastern, there is a
+probable alternative westward route for Mesopotamian influence also.
+In Cyprus, at any rate, this influence, which at a certain period
+has left strong traces, certainly came for the most part through the
+western Semites. The claim of the Hittites, however, is not to be
+denied altogether. Their script seems undoubtedly to have been the
+parent of the Lycian and other local Anatolian systems. Phrygian art
+and writing attest Græco-Lydian influence inland; Ionian culture was
+certainly not unaffected by the Lydian in which many students recognise
+a western offshoot of the Hittite; and there are a few features in
+Ionian cult and in cult representations which seem to be owed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[Pg 296]</span> rather
+to the religious system of the central plateau than to that native to
+the Ægean area. In this state of suspense we must leave the question,
+adding only these final remarks, that Greek tradition itself ascribed
+some of the arts and luxuries of its civilisation&mdash;for example, the
+coining of money&mdash;to Lydian invention, and also affiliated to Lydia a
+whole western culture, that of Etruria; while it is an undoubted fact
+that a Mesopotamian standard of weight-currency travelled to the Ægean,
+and thence affected all western commerce, but by what channel we do not
+certainly know. There is an unknown quantity in all this problem&mdash;viz.,
+Lydia. We have reason to suspect the latter of a considerable influence
+on early Hellenic civilisation, both as creator and transmitter, but
+must await further evidence.</p>
+
+<p>The part played by the Phœnicians in transmitting influences of
+civilisation from East to West is far more certain, and is now much
+better understood than it was a few years ago. Much vague exaggeration
+of it has been swept away by recent demonstration that there is
+practically nothing of probable Phœnician origin in the remains of
+the Ægean culture. The script of the latter is wholly independent;
+the typical Phœnician vehicles of glyptic art, the cylinder and the
+scarab, were never naturalised in the early Ægean; the whole path of
+the latter’s artistic development was distinct; and the Ægean religious
+representations, once regarded as Semitic, are now seen to be native.
+On the other hand, decadent and derived Ægean forms and motives appear
+among the earliest Phœnician known to us. Influence, if it passed at
+all, between the Ægean and the Syrian coast lands, in the prehistoric
+age, moved from west to east.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Origin of Our Written Language<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Semitic Influence in Greek Art</div>
+
+<p>In short, we now know that the Phœnicians did not begin to spread over
+the western sea and influence Europe till the break up of the Ægean
+civilisation. The Homeric lays and Hellenic myths reflect the inception
+of a Semitic expansion, which must be placed after 1100 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>
+Even in Homer there is more mention of Greek ships than of Sidonian,
+and the Tyrian power is yet to come. The latter pushed westward later,
+and the founding of Carthage, usually dated in the eighth century,
+marks its first great achievement along those distant sea-routes,
+which certainly the Semites had been coming to know during a couple of
+centuries of huckstering trade, even if the dependence of the early
+Hellenes on Phœnician knowledge of these waters has been overrated.
+But, in any case, during the interval between the fall of Ægean power
+and the rise of the Hellenic maritime cities these Semites counted
+for much. Even in the light of Cretan discovery, we need not question
+their responsibility for the Greek alphabet, and thus, indirectly, for
+the ultimate medium of written communication used throughout European
+civilisation; nor need it be doubted that Hellenic writers, who trace
+early instruction in trade and barter to visits of Semitic ships to
+their coasts, show real, though limited, knowledge of fact. Phœnician
+factories were certainly established on Greek shores, and left Semitic
+forms among later Greek place-names; and it is quite possible that
+political power was exercised at one time by Semitic colonists in parts
+of Hellas. Sufficient Phœnician art products have been found on archaic
+Hellenic sites, to prove that, in the period between 1000 and 500
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, the Ægean coasts were often visited by these Semites.
+Such objects are especially numerous in Rhodes, a convenient stage on
+the westward sea route, and they radiate over not only Ionia and the
+Hellenic lands, but also into the further Mediterranean, to Sicily and
+its neighbouring islands, to Italy and South Gaul, and to Sardinia and
+Spain. Carthage probably had much to say in their western distribution.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_297">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_297.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">ÆNEAS AND DIDO: THE QUEEN OF CARTHAGE LISTENING TO THE
+ STORY OF THE SIEGE OF TROY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">From the Painting by P. Guerin, in the Louvre.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_297_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">No Phœnician Influence in Britain</div>
+
+<p>Of Semitic influence on archaic Greek art there is considerable
+evidence. After the Geometric Age, we find in the Greek lands pottery
+and metal-work showing certain motives and arrangement of decoration
+foreign to Ægean art, and referable ultimately to the Mesopotamian and
+Egyptian. Such are the animals and monsters disposed in concentric
+friezes and zones on Cypriote bowls, Corinthian vases, and the Cretan
+shields of the Idaean Cave. But this influence, strong and undoubted
+as it was, must not be over estimated. As the Hellenes rose to power,
+their instinct of sincerity and naturalism, inherited from Ægean
+civilisation, revolted against, and triumphed over, this parasitic
+Semitic art, and already in the ninth or eighth century we find a
+Græco-Lydian influence,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[Pg 298]</span> which owes nothing to Phœnician, breaking
+back to the east and creating the ivories of the Sargonid Age at
+Nineveh. Phœnician objects thenceforward become fewer and fewer in
+Hellenic strata, and in the sixth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> they virtually
+vanish. By this time Phœnicia had become a subject country, about to
+give up the last ghost of its independence to the Greeks themselves, as
+its western offshoot, Carthage, was also to surrender a little later to
+another civilisation near akin to the Greek. But, needless to say, the
+Semite has had his full revenge for the short tenure of his earliest
+predominance in European waters. The fall of Phœnicia cleared the way
+for another Semitic family to capture international trade, and, first
+with one creed and then another, to conquer the Greeks, the Romans, and
+the World.</p>
+
+<p>There are, of course, possibilities of direct Phœnician intercourse
+with non-Mediterranean Europe&mdash;for example, with England’s
+south-western coasts; but they need not detain us. For whether certain
+Semites came to Cornwall in quest of tin or no, it is certain that
+by these no lasting influence of civilisation passed in to England.
+Neither the religion, the speech, nor the script of Britain owed them
+anything. Recent scholarship tends to discredit any Semitic element
+even in English south-western place-names.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Origins of our Civilisations</div>
+
+<p>Such, in brief outline, are the channels through which the
+civilisations of the South-eastern river-valleys could communicate
+with primitive Europe. It is easier to point them out than to say
+exactly what flowed along them. Seldom can so definite a debt be
+recorded as that under which we lie to the Semites of Phœnicia, for the
+names and the forms of the written characters which, presumably, they
+themselves had borrowed from Egypt, and modified ere they passed them
+westwards. Usually the obligation must be stated much more vaguely,
+being confined, as in the case of Ægean influences, to little more than
+a general responsibility for the spirit, and for many forms of the
+expression, of the first great artistic growth on the mainland soil of
+Europe, as well as for certain persistent and dynamic features in South
+European cults.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, it becomes even more apparent at the end of our discussion than
+it was at the beginning that when all has been said about influences of
+Egypt and Mesopotamia, and influences of the intermediate civilisations
+of the Ægean, Syria, and Asia Minor, only a very small part of the
+whole story of incipient European civilisation has been told. Nor is
+it to be expected that the origin of our culture should be capable
+of being adequately expressed in terms of other cultures, developed
+at a great distance and under different geographical conditions.
+Civilisations, destined to be living growths, spring, it seems, of
+themselves, and the debts which they can incur at the first are very
+small and mostly in small things. It is only when they are come to
+adult estate, have bred men of wealth and leisure with open and
+receptive minds, and have broken through the geographical barriers
+about them, that they begin to borrow at large.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">In the Childhood of Europe</div>
+
+<p>One of the intermediate civilisations of which we have treated, the
+Ægean, the only one whose own origins are fairly well known, offers
+proof in point. Its remains indicate but trifling obligations to
+neighbouring Egypt till a very late period, that which, in Crete,
+we call the Third Minoan. Thereafter, in the space of two or
+three generations, the evidence of its debt increases at a wholly
+disproportionate rate. So too, no doubt, in the misty period of the
+childhood of Central and Western Europe, little was borrowed from
+abroad that was essential to civilisation; and the heavy obligations
+which we owe to the Eastern lands fall in ages much more recent.
+They fall, in fact, in those times which saw the Anatolian cult of
+Kybéle and Attis, the Egyptian cult of Isis and Horus-Harpocrates,
+the Mesopotamian cult of Mithra, and, far more momentous, of course,
+than these, Christianity&mdash;Hebrew in origin if modified by Greek
+conceptions&mdash;brought by a greater intermediary civilisation than any
+with which we have had to deal, to the knowledge of inner European
+races already long emerged from savagery, and able and eager to borrow.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">D<span class="smaller">AVID</span>
+G<span class="smaller">EORGE</span> H<span class="smaller">OGARTH</span></p>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[Pg 299]</span></p>
+
+<h4 class="s0" id="THE_TRIUMPH_OF_RACE" title="THE TRIUMPH OF RACE">&nbsp;</h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_299">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_299.jpg" alt="The Triumph of Race" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s0" title="WHY ONE NATION CONQUERS ANOTHER">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="s0" title="BY DR. G. ARCHDALL REID">&nbsp;</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap2">I</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first4">I</span>T
+is a familiar fact that offspring resemble their parents on the
+whole, but differ from them in details. For example, the child of a
+human being is always another, but never an exactly similar, human
+being.</p>
+
+<p>These differences in detail are of two sorts, <i>inborn</i> and <i>acquired</i>.
+Inborn or innate differences arise “by nature”; the child is inherently
+unlike the parent&mdash;taller or shorter, fairer or darker, and so forth.
+Acquired differences, on the other hand, are due to the conditions
+under which parents and children have lived. Thus, owing to better or
+worse surroundings, the child may develop better or worse than the
+parent and so be taller or shorter, or a greater exposure to weather
+may render him darker or fairer.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Things We Cannot Inherit</div>
+
+<p>It was formerly believed by scientific men, and is still believed by
+the public, that traits acquired by the parent tended to be inherited
+by the child&mdash;that is, reproduced as inborn traits. Thus it was
+supposed that if a man were made strong by exercise, or injured by
+accident, his child would tend to inherit, in some degree at least, the
+acquired benefit or injury, and as a result be naturally stronger or
+more defective than the parent was at the start.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Acquired Traits not Hereditary</div>
+
+<p>But very prolonged and careful investigation has proved that this is
+certainly an error. For example, though for æons human beings have been
+learning to speak and walk, and make a multitude of other acquirements,
+yet none of these are ever inherited. In fact, owing to the evolution
+of memory and the retrogression of instinct, man, of all animals,
+acquires the most and inherits the least. Every child has to begin
+afresh and learn what its ancestors learnt; all are born ignorant;
+none speak or walk “naturally.” Each starts where the parent began,
+not where he left off. The parental traits, if reproduced at all, are
+always of the same kind in the child as in the parents, and appear
+in the same way. That is, the inborn traits of the parent are always
+inborn in the offspring; the acquired traits are never anything but
+acquirements resulting from the same causes as they did in the parent.
+In brief, the acquirements of the parent are never transmuted into
+inborn characteristics in the child. They are never inherited. It is
+admitted on all hands that inborn differences&mdash;<i>variations</i>, as they
+are termed technically&mdash;tend to be inherited.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, if the parent is naturally darker than the grandparent, the
+child tends in colour to resemble the former more than the latter.
+Since the child may vary from the parent in the same direction as the
+latter varied from the grandparent, these inborn differences may be
+accentuated in subsequent generations. It is due to this fact that
+plant and animal breeders have improved domesticated species. They are
+able to benefit the individual by improving his surroundings, but the
+race they can improve only by breeding from the best. In other words,
+when they have the latter end in view, they must build on natural
+variations, not on acquirements.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A Great Problem of Science<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Differences among Kindred</div>
+
+<p>One of the most important problems in the whole range of science is the
+question as to what causes offspring to differ in this inborn, natural
+way from their parents. Many theories have been formulated, and the
+subject is still to some extent under discussion; but the evidence is
+overwhelming that variations&mdash;natural differences&mdash;are not generally
+caused, as most people believe, by anything that happens to the parent
+before the birth of the child, but are “spontaneous.” The subject is
+a large and intricate one, and we have not space to discuss it at
+length. One or two facts, however, may be mentioned. The members of
+a litter of puppies, kittens, or pigs, may differ naturally amongst
+themselves and from their parents<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[Pg 300]</span> in all sorts of ways&mdash;in colour,
+shape, size, hairiness, disposition, and so on. One puppy may present
+points of resemblance to the father, another to the mother, a third to
+some ancestor, while a fourth may be unlike any of its predecessors.
+Since, practically speaking, the puppies were all conditioned alike
+before birth, it is evident that these great differences must be
+“spontaneous.” They cannot have been caused by such things as the good
+or ill health of the parents, their food, or the life they led, for, in
+that case, the puppies would all have varied in the same way.</p>
+
+<p>Again, malaria is, in effect, a universal disease on the West Coast
+of Africa. Individuals differ naturally in their powers of resisting
+it, some taking it lightly and some severely; but almost every negro
+suffers, and many children perish of it. If the sufferings of the
+parents caused children to be born weaker “by nature,” it is evident
+that every individual would start life inferior to his predecessor at
+the start, and the race would thus degenerate and ultimately become
+extinct. On the other hand, if variations are “spontaneous,” if, quite
+unaffected by the sufferings of the parents, some children are born
+naturally different, naturally more or less resistant to malaria than
+their predecessors, it is plain that the weeding out of the unfittest,
+the weak against the disease, would ultimately make the race resistant
+to it. In the one case the race would drift to destruction; in the
+other it would undergo protective evolution. Obviously, the latter is
+what has happened. Negroes show no signs of any kind of degeneration,
+but they are of all races the most resistant to malaria.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Suffering Produces Strength</div>
+
+<p>Similarly, Englishmen who have been much exposed to consumption and
+measles, natives of India who have been much afflicted by enteric
+fever and dysentery, Esquimaux who have suffered from cold, Arabs who
+have endured heat, Chinamen and Jews who have long dwelt under that
+complex of ill conditions found in slums and ghettos, are none of them
+degenerate, but, on the contrary, have become resistant, each race
+to its own particular ill-conditions in proportion to its sufferings
+in the past. In fact, it may be laid down as a general rule that
+races strengthen only when exposed to ill conditions, and deteriorate
+only when the conditions are so favourable that the unfit are not
+eliminated. An example of the latter is seen when prize breeds of
+animals and plants, however well nourished and cared for, are no longer
+bred with care. It follows that races, if not exterminated, are not
+injured but strengthened by ill conditions, by the elimination of the
+unfittest, as gold is refined by fire.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Survival of the Fittest</div>
+
+<p>It is a remarkable fact that many people are able to accomplish the
+surprising feat of knowing that races have become inured to ill
+conditions, and of believing at the same time that the offspring of
+people exposed to such conditions tend, as a rule, to be degenerate.
+It is as if they believed that two and two make four, and two more
+six, but that if a great number of two’s are added together the total
+result is a minus quantity. Obviously the two beliefs are incompatible.
+A race cannot degenerate in every generation and yet emerge in the end
+strengthened from the struggle. The confusion has arisen because the
+two diametrically opposite propositions are seldom considered together,
+and in part also from a mistaken interpretation of what is observed in
+such situations as the slums of cities. Here puny children are seen to
+be derived from puny parents, and it is assumed that the children are
+degenerate because the parents have suffered.</p>
+
+<p>As a fact we have no reason to doubt that the children are affected in
+precisely the same way as the parents. On the one hand, slums are sinks
+into which descend people naturally inferior, people who have varied
+spontaneously from their ancestors in such a way as to be feeble,
+physically or mentally, and who reproduce their like. On the other
+hand, the conditions are such that even the naturally strong, both
+parents and children, develop badly. Doubtless, owing to the constant
+elimination of the unfit, the latter&mdash;the naturally strong&mdash;are by far
+the more numerous. There is nothing to show that, if they were removed
+in early life to better surroundings, they would not develop just as
+well as the offspring of country folk.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">An Evolution that has now Ceased</div>
+
+<p>The fact that races grow resistant to the ill conditions to which
+they are exposed, and degenerate when placed under particularly good
+conditions, is decisive proof that offspring are not, as a rule,
+innately affected by the surroundings of their parents. No doubt
+exceptions occur, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[Pg 301]</span> these are amongst the most unfit, and the race
+is soon purged of them. Thus European dogs are said to degenerate when
+taken to India. But the existence of old-established native races of
+dogs is proof that the degenerative process is not perpetual. Malaria
+and many other ill conditions are quite normal parts of the environment
+of the races exposed to them, and have been so for thousands of years.
+Except for occasional unfavourable variations, which are quickly
+eliminated, they have long purged the races of those strains that
+tended to become degenerate under their influence.</p>
+
+<p>After man&mdash;through the evolution of the structures and faculties
+which distinguish him from the lower animals, the large brain, with
+its accompanying memory, the organs of speech, the hand, the erect
+attitude&mdash;had achieved the conquest of the earth, his selection and
+evolution along the ancestral lines gradually diminished, and has now
+almost ceased. At the present day clever, strong, or active people do
+not on the average have an appreciably more numerous progeny than those
+who are not exceptionally endowed. No modern race is intellectually
+superior to the Greeks who flourished more than two thousand years ago.
+The brains, the hands, the organs of speech, the erect attitude, have
+not altered. Apparently nothing more than traditional knowledge has
+improved.</p>
+
+<p>The gradual accumulation of traditional knowledge during prehistoric
+times enabled man to cultivate animals and plants, and so to increase
+and regulate his supply of food. As a consequence his numbers
+multiplied. Areas of country which formerly supported only a few
+wandering hunters now afforded sustenance to growing multitudes of
+agriculturists, who often dwelt together for mutual protection in
+villages. Commerce followed agriculture, towns and cities arose, and
+civilisation dawned.</p>
+
+<p>Civilisation implies a dense and settled community, protected from
+most of the dangers which beset wild animals, and in which, therefore,
+the elimination of the unfit is no longer of the kind that weeded out
+the brute and the utter savage. Some sort of elimination does occur,
+however, for, even in the most civilised states, multitudes of people
+perish in youth, before they have contributed their full quota of
+offspring to the race.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Natural Selection at Work</div>
+
+<p>We have excellent opportunities of studying this elimination and noting
+whether it results in evolution. Indeed, man presents the only instance
+in Nature in which we are able to observe natural selection actually
+at work. In all modern states statistics are compiled which set out
+the causes of death, the mortality from each cause, and the ages of
+its victims. By comparing races which have been much afflicted by this
+or that cause of mortality with races that have been little or not at
+all affected, we are able to ascertain the resulting racial change, if
+any. As may be noted by everyone, <i>civilised people perish, with rare
+exceptions, of disease</i>.</p>
+
+<h5>MANKIND’S LONG BATTLE AGAINST BACTERIA</h5>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Resistance of Races to Disease</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">W</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first2">W</span>E
+have just seen that every race is resistant to every disease
+precisely in proportion to its past experience of it. It follows that
+the evolution of civilised peoples is against disease. If any other
+kind of evolution is now occurring, no one as yet has been able to
+demonstrate it, though many unproved guesses have been made. Mere
+alterations in traditional knowledge is not evolution. Children may
+derive it just as well from other people as from their parents.</p>
+
+<p>The vast majority of deaths from disease are of zymotic origin. A
+zymotic or microbic disease is caused by the entrance into the body of
+minute animals or plants (microbes), which find their nutriment there.
+There are many species of microbes, each disease being due to one. Some
+species are mainly air-borne, and infect through the breath; others are
+water-borne; others earth-borne; yet others insect-borne; while a few
+pass by actual contact from an infected to a healthy person.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Way Disease is Spread</div>
+
+<p>Some diseases&mdash;for example, consumption and leprosy&mdash;are of indefinite
+but always prolonged duration; others, like measles, are short and
+sharp. In the case of the latter, for reasons we need not dwell on
+here, the body after an attack becomes, for a longer or shorter time,
+an unfit habitation for the microbes of that particular<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[Pg 302]</span> species. The
+rapid recovery which occurs in these “acute” diseases, indeed, implies
+the banishment of the microbes. The air-borne diseases&mdash;measles,
+influenza, smallpox, and the like, all of that acute type which confers
+immunity against subsequent attacks&mdash;are very infective, spreading
+through a susceptible population with great rapidity. Under favourable
+conditions the water-borne diseases also&mdash;cholera, dysentery, enteric
+fever, and the like&mdash;may spread very quickly. Chief amongst the
+earth-borne diseases is consumption. It is contracted chiefly in
+such dark, ill-ventilated, and crowded houses as are built by the
+inhabitants of cold and temperate climates.</p>
+
+<p>The disease-producing microbes are an infinitesimal proportion of the
+total number of bacterial and protozoan species. In Nature it is not
+easy to find a speck of earth or a drop of water from which these
+minute living beings are absent. All decay, by means of which the dead
+bodies of plants and animals are returned to the soil, is due to them.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Immense Antiquity of Diseases</div>
+
+<p>It is a safe assumption that the microbes of human diseases have
+evolved from non-parasitic species. The niche they now occupy in
+Nature is the human body. Two things formed essential parts of
+this evolution&mdash;first, the microbes became capable of existing and
+multiplying for a shorter or longer period in the body; secondly,
+they evolved means of passing from one living body to another. The
+latter must have been the more difficult process. Under favourable
+circumstances several species of microbes&mdash;for example, those of
+putrefaction, which are ordinarily non-parasitic&mdash;are capable of
+entering the human body and becoming virulent; but, since they cannot
+secure passage from one individual to another, they die out, and
+their virulence is lost. Historical evidence renders it probable that
+all known human diseases are of immense antiquity, the so-called new
+diseases being merely newly-observed diseases. It appears probable,
+therefore, that, owing to constant persecution by disease, by continued
+survival of the fittest, humanity has grown so resistant that no
+species of microbe which has not undergone concurrent evolution is now
+able to establish itself as a regular parasite.</p>
+
+<p>Obviously, since the microbes of human diseases draw their nutritive
+supplies from man, they cannot persist except amongst populations
+so crowded that they are able to pass from one individual to another
+in unending succession. When the succession fails, the disease dies
+out, and is not renewed, except from foreign sources. Microbic disease
+is never contracted in desert places far from human settlements, and
+even in modern times it is comparatively rare amongst nomadic tribes,
+and, seemingly, was quite unknown in Arctic regions and in many
+Pacific islands before its introduction by Europeans. These maladies,
+therefore, must have made their appearance only after men had peopled
+certain regions in considerable numbers.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Progress of Sanitary Science</div>
+
+<p>On the other hand, we have no certain evidence that any
+well-established parasitic disease has ever completely died out. The
+chances are all against such an occurrence in the past. When once
+established as parasites, the microbes, owing to the constant growth
+of human population, found a constantly augmented food supply, and
+therefore constantly increased opportunities of reaching fresh fields
+of conquest. Sanitary science is still in its infancy. Preventive
+measures, and perhaps other agencies, have caused the disappearance
+of leprosy from several countries, but it is still prevalent in many
+quarters of the globe. Contagious diseases have spread very widely.
+Earth and air borne diseases have become endemic instead of merely
+epidemic. Consumption is always with us, and almost every child
+contracts measles, whooping-cough, chicken-pox, and common cold.
+Small-pox has been replaced by vaccination, which is merely modified
+small-pox. Malaria has spread but little during the historic epoch, but
+only because its microbes were already present in almost every place
+where the mosquitoes that convey it are able to exist.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32" id="i_303">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_303.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE DAYS OF THE PLAGUE IN LONDON</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Dr. Archdall Reid, in his essay on race supremacy,
+ explains that the evolution of civilised peoples is against disease, and the age
+ of pestilence and plague is passing. This picture of an incident in the greatest
+ plague that has affected London in historical times&mdash;in the year
+ 1665&mdash;is from the painting by F. W. Topham, R. I.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_303_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>All our information indicates the Eastern Hemisphere as the place of
+origin both of man and of his microbic diseases. Parts of it have been
+inhabited by a dense and settled population from a time immensely
+remote. “Behind dim empires ghosts of dimmer empires loom.” Beyond
+the traces of the oldest civilisations we find evidences of primitive
+agricultural communities, and far beyond these the remains of the
+cave-men and hunters of the Stone Age. Even a race of hunters tends
+to increase faster than the food supply. Doubtless the pressure of
+population in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[Pg 304]</span> the Old World led to the colonisation of the New. But
+even in the New World there are signs of a civilisation so ancient that
+some authorities have placed its beginnings as far back as a score
+or more of thousands of years. With the exception of malaria, it is
+extremely doubtful whether any zymotic disease existed in the whole of
+the New World at the time of its discovery by Columbus.</p>
+
+<p>The subject is involved in obscurity; but, while it is evident that
+the European adventurers introduced many diseases, there is no clear
+indication that they found and brought back one. Apparently all the
+diseases which have been prevalent in Europe and America during the
+last four hundred years were prevalent in the former continent before
+the fifteenth century. Venereal disease and yellow fever have sometimes
+been regarded as exceptions. But the former was well known to the
+Roman physicians, and was common during the Middle Ages. Moreover, the
+inhabitants of the New World take the disease in a very acute form, and
+it is not found in remote communities to which Europeans have had no
+access. Yellow fever was first noted with certainty in the West Indies
+in the middle of the seventeenth century. The records of the time “tell
+of the importation of the disease from place to place, and from island
+to island.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Origins of Rare Diseases</div>
+
+<p>Not till more than a century later was it observed on the West Coast
+of Africa. There can be no doubt, however, that the earlier observers
+confused yellow fever with bilious malaria, and that it was present
+both in the West Indies and Africa long before a differential diagnosis
+was made. The fact that of all races negroes are most resistant to the
+disease would seem to indicate West Africa as the place of origin. In
+any case, it is certain that, with the exception of malaria, zymotic
+diseases, if not entirely absent, were extremely rare in the New World.</p>
+
+<h5>THE DISAPPEARANCE OF THE NATIVE RACES</h5>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Age of Pestilence is Passing</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">Z</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">Z</span>YMOTIC
+disease, then, arose amongst the slowly-growing populations of
+the Old World. Air and insect borne diseases may have arisen amongst
+the early hunters and nomads. Similar forms of disease, murrains
+as they were anciently termed&mdash;for example, distemper, rinderpest,
+the horse sickness in South Africa, the rabbit plague in Northern
+Canada, and the cattle fever in Texas&mdash;occur among lower animals,
+when these are present in considerable numbers. With the exception of
+tuberculosis and leprosy, endemic disease was probably almost unknown
+in the sparsely-peopled ancient world. The facts that air and water
+borne diseases spread very rapidly, that the illnesses caused by them
+are comparatively short and sharp, and that recovery is followed by
+immunity, must have caused rapid exhaustion of the food supply of the
+microbes. Under such conditions the persistence of the pathogenic
+species was maintained among the scanty populations by a passage to new
+and perhaps very distant sources of supply.</p>
+
+<p>Introduced by travellers, or spreading from tribe to tribe, they
+appeared suddenly in epidemic form as plagues and pestilences, and,
+disappearing as suddenly, were not known again till a fresh generation
+furnished a fresh supply of food.</p>
+
+<p>When, however, in spite of war, famine, and pestilence, the human race
+increased to such an extent that the number of fresh births furnished a
+perennial supply of food, while at the same time a rising civilisation
+and improved means of communication lessened the isolation of various
+communities, then many diseases slowly passed from an epidemic to an
+endemic form. Pestilence grew rare, but every individual was exposed
+to infection, and, during youth, either perished from, or acquired
+immunity against, the more prevalent forms of disease.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Measles a National Scourge</div>
+
+<p>When endemic, zymotic disease&mdash;at any rate, disease against which
+immunity can be acquired&mdash;is far less terrible than when epidemic.
+Modern examples of ancient epidemics may be seen in isolated regions.
+In Pacific islands, for example, air-borne disease spreads like a
+flame. The whole community is stricken down. The sick are left untended
+and perish in multitudes. The entire business of the community is
+neglected, and famine frequently follows. Under such conditions measles
+or whooping-cough, diseases which we in England are accustomed to
+regard as scarcely more than nuisances, may rise to the level of a
+great national disaster. Thus, in 1749, 30,000 natives perished of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[Pg 305]</span>
+measles on the banks of the Amazon. In 1829 half the population died in
+Astoria. In 1846 measles committed frightful ravages in the Hudson Bay
+territory. More recently a quarter of the total inhabitants was swept
+away in the Fiji group of islands.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Sanitation is Sometimes Powerless</div>
+
+<p>At the dawn of history, long after the evolution of zymotic disease,
+the population of the Eastern Hemisphere was still sparse and
+scattered. Even as late as the Norman Conquest that of England was
+barely two millions&mdash;about one-third of the number now present in
+London. Means of communication were poor and beset by dangers. A
+journey from York to London was then a more serious affair than a
+journey from London to San Francisco to-day. Water and air borne
+diseases were, therefore, absent during long periods of time. When
+they came they spread as epidemics. Accordingly we read of plague and
+pestilence; of diseases suddenly becoming epidemic and sweeping away a
+fourth or half of entire communities. Historians are apt to attribute
+these immense catastrophes partly to the bad sanitation of the period
+and partly to diseases which have died out of the world, or, at any
+rate, out of Europe. Doubtless they are right in a few instances.
+But, apart from diseases which spread under special circumstances
+from tropical centres, had sanitation, under modern conditions of
+intercommunication and crowding, tends to render water-borne disease
+endemic, not epidemic. Over air-borne disease it has no effect.
+Measles, whooping-cough, chicken-pox, influenza, common cold, and
+small-pox (in a modified form) are as common as ever.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Plagues “the Wrath of God”</div>
+
+<p>The character of these ancient epidemics, their special symptoms as
+indicated in old literature, their sudden and portentous appearance,
+which men attributed to the wrath of God, their tremendous infectivity
+and rapid spread, their equally sudden and complete departure as of
+Divine anger assuaged, point rather to air and water borne diseases of
+the types now endemic and comparatively harmless among us, but still
+so fearful in their effects on isolated communities. Like the light
+flashed from a child’s mirror on a darkened wall, so they flickered and
+swept forwards and backwards from end to end of the Old World&mdash;from
+the Malay Peninsula to the North Cape of Norway, from Kamschatka to the
+south point of Africa. A parallel may be found in the recent epidemic
+of rinderpest amongst the herbivorous animals of Africa. Years might
+pass, old men might remember, the peoples might sacrifice to their
+gods; but when a fresh generation of those who knew not the disease
+had arisen, when the harvest of the non-immune was ripe and ready,
+the diseases would return to the dreadful reaping. Behind them the
+earth was heaped with the dead, and the few and stricken survivors
+grubbed for roots to satisfy their hunger. To-day sanitation has nearly
+abolished water-borne diseases, and, in a population largely immune,
+epidemics of air-borne disease, like a light thrown on a sunlit wall,
+are but faint shadows of that which they were in their old days of
+awful power.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Growth of Resisting Power</div>
+
+<p>The progress of consumption was different; it was never truly epidemic.
+Owing to its low infectivity, to its lingering nature, to the fact that
+no immunity could be acquired against it, it did not spread suddenly
+when first introduced, but when once established its virulence did
+not abate within measurable time. In other words, it was endemic from
+the beginning. It made its home in the hovels of the early settlers
+on the land. In such situations&mdash;as in Polynesian villages&mdash;modern
+Englishmen do not take the disease. But their remote ancestors were
+more susceptible; they could be infected by a smaller dose of the
+bacilli. Gradually, as civilisation advanced, the conditions grew
+more stringent; men gathered into larger and denser communities, into
+hamlets and villages in which they built houses ill lighted and worse
+ventilated.</p>
+
+<p>With the rise of towns, and ultimately of great cities, the stringency
+of selection continually increased; and with it, step by step, the
+resisting power of the race. To-day Englishmen dwell under conditions
+as impossible to their remote ancestors as to the modern Red Indians.
+In fact, no race, especially in cold and temperate climates, is now
+able to achieve civilisation, to dwell in dense communities, unless it
+has previously undergone evolution against tuberculosis. But of this
+more anon.</p>
+
+<p>So during the long sweep of the ages microbic diseases strengthened
+their hold<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[Pg 306]</span> on the inhabitants of the Eastern Hemisphere, who in turn
+slowly evolved powers of resistance. In like manner antelopes grew
+swift and wild sheep active when persecuted by beasts of prey. Then,
+when the germs of disease were rife in every home and thick on the
+garments of every man, there occurred the greatest event in human
+history, the vastest tragedy. Columbus, sailing across an untracked
+ocean, discovered the Western Hemisphere. The long separation between
+the inhabitants of the East and West ended. The diseases of the Old
+World burst with cataclysmal results on the New.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">3,500,000 Destroyed by Small-pox</div>
+
+<p>The ancient condition of the Eastern Hemisphere was reproduced in
+the West. Again we read of plague and pestilence, of water-borne and
+air-borne diseases coming and going in great epidemics, and of the
+famines that followed. Measles and cholera piled the earth with the
+dead. The part played by small-pox was even greater. When taken to the
+West Indies in 1507 whole tribes were exterminated. A few years later
+it quite depopulated San Domingo. In Mexico it destroyed three and a
+half millions of people. Prescott describes this first fearful epidemic
+as “sweeping over the land like fire over the prairies, smiting down
+prince and peasant, and leaving its path strewn with the dead bodies of
+the natives, who&mdash;in the strong language of a contemporary&mdash;perished
+in heaps like cattle stricken with murrain.” In 1841 Catlin wrote of
+the United States: “Thirty millions of white men are now scuffling for
+the goods and luxuries of life over the bones of twelve millions of red
+men, six millions of whom have fallen victims to small-pox.”</p>
+
+<p>But the principal part was played by tuberculosis. Air-borne and
+water-borne diseases generally left an immune remnant, but against
+tuberculosis no immunity could be acquired. Red Indians and Caribs
+could not in a few generations achieve an evolution which the
+inhabitants of the Old World had accomplished only after thousands of
+years, and at the cost of hundreds of millions of lives. Civilisation,
+which implies a dense and settled community with cities and towns,
+had suddenly become a necessity, but remained an impossibility to all
+the inhabitants of the temperate parts of the West. It is a highly
+significant fact that throughout the New World no city or town has its
+native quarter, whereas every European settlement in Asia and Africa
+has its native suburbs. The aborigines of the New World are found only
+in remote or inaccessible parts.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A Plague that Spread like Fire</div>
+
+<p>The following is an example of the manner in which tuberculosis went to
+work: “The tribe of Hapaa is said to have numbered some four hundred
+when the smallpox came and reduced them by one-fourth. Six months
+later, a woman developed tubercular consumption; the disease spread
+like fire about the valley, and in less than a year two survivors, a
+man and a woman, fled from the newly-created solitude.... Early in the
+year of my visit, for example, or late in the year before, a first case
+of phthisis appeared in a household of seventeen persons, and by the
+end of August, when the tale was told to me, one soul survived, a boy
+who had been absent on his schooling.”</p>
+
+<p>The Caribs of the West Indies are almost extinct. The Red Indians
+are going fast, as are the aborigines of cold and temperate South
+America. The Tasmanians have gone. The Australians and the Maoris are
+but a dwindling remnant. As surely as the trader with his clothes, or
+the missionary with his church and schoolroom appears, the work of
+extermination begins on Polynesian islands. Throughout the whole vast
+extent of the New World the only pure aborigines who seem destined to
+persist are those which live remote in mountains or in the depths of
+fever-haunted forests, where the white man is unable to build the towns
+and cities with which he has studded the cooler and more “healthy”
+regions of the north and south.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Races that Decline before the Whites</div>
+
+<p>Many explanations, or pseudo-explanations, have been offered to
+account for the disappearance of the natives. We are told that they
+cannot endure “domestication,” that they “pine like caged eagles”
+in confinement, that the change produced by civilisation makes them
+infertile, as the change produced by captivity makes some wild animals
+infertile, and so forth. But the only peoples who are disappearing
+are those of the New World, some of whom were by no means savage. In
+Asia and Africa are many tribes far lower in the scale of civilisation
+who have persisted in constant communication with dense and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[Pg 307]</span> settled
+communities from time immemorial. Notwithstanding all that has been
+written, the people of the New World do not wither away mysteriously
+when brought into contact with the white man. They die as other men
+do of violence, or famine, or old age, or disease. But deaths from
+all these causes, except the last, are now comparatively rare amongst
+them&mdash;much rarer than formerly during the time of their perpetual wars.
+The vast majority die of imported diseases&mdash;exactly the same diseases
+as white men die of. But their mortality is invariably much higher than
+that of white men, and they perish on an average at a younger age.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_307">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_307.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE EVE OF “THE VASTEST TRAGEDY IN HISTORY”: COLUMBUS
+ SIGHTING AMERICA</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">“The greatest event and the vastest tragedy in human
+ history” is Dr. Archdall Reid’s striking description of the discovery of America
+ by Columbus. It ended the long separation between the inhabitants of East and
+ West, and the diseases of the Old World burst with cataclysmal results upon the
+ New. The picture, by George Harvey, shows Columbus approaching America, his
+ rebellious crew pleading for pardon.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>All this is not mere hypothesis. It can be proved by reference to
+carefully collected and tabulated statistics published by every
+department of Public Health in America, Australasia, and Polynesia. The
+cause of the sterility cannot be demonstrated with the same precision;
+but it is hardly necessary to invent fanciful causes when a reasonable
+one is to hand. The high mortality indicates a high sick-rate, and
+presumably illness is as much a cause of sterility in the New World as
+in the Old, among savages as among civilised people.</p>
+
+<p>The Spanish conquest of the West Indies was followed by the swift
+disappearance of the natives. To that end the Spaniards unconsciously
+adopted the most effectual means possible. They satisfied their greed
+by forcing the natives to labour in plantations and in mines, and
+their religious enthusiasm by compelling attendance in churches and
+cathedrals. In other words, they placed the natives under conditions
+the most favourable for acquiring the diseases which they imported by
+every vessel. When the native population dwindled, it was replaced by
+negro slaves from West Africa.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Africans Die in our Civilisation</div>
+
+<p>The history of negro migrations is extremely interesting and
+illuminating. There are no accounts of negro conquest outside the
+limits of Africa, but from very ancient times a constant stream of
+slaves<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[Pg 308]</span> has passed to Southern Europe and Asia, where they have been
+employed mainly in domestic service, and in more modern times to
+America, where their occupation has been mainly agricultural. The
+invasion of Asia has continued to our own day. But one may search
+from Spain to the Malay peninsula and, except in recent importations,
+find scarcely a trace of a negro ancestry. Yet slaves, like cattle,
+are valuable property, more cheaply bred than imported. In Eastern
+countries they have often been kindly treated, and many have attained
+to wealth and power. Like the African soldiers in Ceylon, of whom it
+is recorded that, though many thousands were imported by the Dutch
+and English, hardly a descendant survives, all perished in a few
+generations, the elimination of the unfit being so stringent as to
+cause extinction, not evolution. A permanent colony of native Africans
+in the midst of an ancient consumption-infested civilisation is
+impossible.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Fate of Natives of America</div>
+
+<p>The fate of the negro migrations into America has been different. The
+race had undergone some evolution against consumption in Africa, and,
+therefore, was more resistant than the vanishing aborigines. In its
+new home, employed in agriculture in a hot climate where white men
+and tubercle bacilli, also recent importations, were as yet few in
+numbers, it was placed under the best conditions possible. Gradually,
+as the stringency of selection waxed, it evolved resisting power.
+To-day, American negroes are able to dwell even in Northern cities,
+though it is said “every other adult negro dies of consumption.” After
+the discovery of America the principal maritime races of Western
+Europe competed for its possession. Spain and Portugal, then powerful
+nations, had the first start in the race, and chose the seemingly
+richer tropics. But the forests of the centre and south were defended
+by malaria, which raised a barrier against immigration, and by heat
+and light, which raised a barrier against tuberculosis. Moreover, the
+Spaniards and the Portuguese intermarried freely with the aborigines,
+and the mixed race which resulted inherits in half measure the
+resisting power of both stocks. At the present day this mixed race,
+with a leavening of mulattoes, pure Spaniards, Portuguese, and negroes,
+inhabits the cities and more civilised parts. Even in tropical America
+the pure aborigines are found, speaking generally, only beyond the
+verge of civilisation. Farther south the disappearance of the natives
+has been more complete, and the cooler, healthier, and more open pampas
+are settled by a race more purely European.</p>
+
+<h5>THE TRIUMPH OF THE ANGLO-SAXON PEOPLES</h5>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Expansion of the Anglo-Saxon</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">T</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>HE
+weaker British and French were shouldered into the seemingly
+inhospitable north. But the British won the battle of Quebec, and
+the French immigration soon ceased. That little fight is half
+forgotten, but it is doubtful if any battle in history had results
+half so important. It placed all North America in the grasp of the
+Anglo-Saxon, and gave his race enormous space for expansion. Unchecked
+by malaria, the new-comers gathered into communities and built towns
+and cities such as those which across the Atlantic were the homes of
+tuberculosis. The cold forced them to admit little air and light into
+their dwellings. The aborigines melted away from the borders of the
+settlements. Under the conditions there was little intermarriage. In
+that climate Indian women, and even half-caste children, could not
+exist within stone walls. The few white men who took native wives
+preserved them only while living a wild life remote from their kin.</p>
+
+<p>The British conquest of North America and Australasia resembles the
+Saxon conquest of Great Britain. The natives have been exterminated
+within the area of settlement. It is in sharp contrast to their
+conquests in Asia and Africa. Both in the Old World and in the New
+the subjugation of the natives was accompanied by many wars and much
+bloodshed, and probably the conflicts in the former were more prolonged
+and destructive than those in the latter. But in no part of the Old
+World have the British exterminated the natives. They do not supplant
+them; they merely govern them. Southern Asia and East and West Africa
+are defended by malaria. The British cannot colonise them, and the
+natives have undergone such evolution against tuberculosis that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309"></a>[Pg 309]</span>
+they are capable of resisting the hard conditions imposed by modern
+civilisation. In South Africa, where there is little malaria, Europeans
+share the land with the natives, but the latter are likely to remain in
+an overwhelming majority.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_309">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_309.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">WHERE THE ANGLO-SAXON RACE OBTAINED POSSESSION OF NORTH
+ AMERICA</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">On the Plains of Abraham, outside Quebec, the British and
+ French troops fought in 1759, and the battle placed all North America in the
+ grasp of the Anglo-Saxon, giving his race enormous space for expansion. It is
+ doubtful, says Dr. Archdall Reid, if any battle in history had results half so
+ important as this, although it is half forgotten.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>If history teaches any lesson with clearness it is this&mdash;that conquest,
+to be permanent, must be accompanied with extermination, otherwise in
+the fulness of time the natives expel or absorb the conquerors. The
+Saxon conquest of England was permanent; of the Norman conquest there
+remains scarcely a trace. The Huns and the Franks founded permanent
+empires in Europe; the Roman Empire, and that of the Saracens in Spain,
+soon tumbled into ruins. It is highly improbable, therefore, that
+the British will retain their hold on their Old World dependencies.
+A handful of aliens cannot for ever keep in subjugation large and
+increasing races that yearly become more intelligent and insistent
+in their demands for self-government. But no probable conjunction of
+circumstances can be thought of that will uproot the Anglo-Saxons from
+their wide possession in the New World. The wars of extermination are
+ceasing with the spread of civilisation. We have ransacked the world,
+and now know every important disease. Diseases cannot come to us as
+they came to our forefathers and to the Red Indians, like visitations
+from on high. All the diseases that are capable of travelling have
+very nearly reached their limits; the rest we are able to check. Even
+in the unlikely event of a new disease arising, it would affect other
+races equally. Canada and Australasia, like the United States, may
+separate from the parent stem, but the race will persist. If ever a
+New Zealander broods over the ruins of London, he will be of British
+descent.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Natural History of Mankind</div>
+
+<p>The natural history of man is, in effect, a history of his evolution
+against disease. The story unfolded by it is of greater proportions
+than all the mass of trivial gossip about kings and queens and the
+accounts of futile dynastic wars and stupid religious controversies
+which fill so large a space in his written political history. In the
+latter, as told by historians, groping in obscurity and blinded by
+their own preconceptions, men and events are often distorted out of all
+proportions. A clever but prejudiced writer may pass base metal into
+perpetual circulation as gold. Luther and the Reformation are accepted
+as Divine by many people; they are reviled as diabolical by more.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310"></a>[Pg 310]</span>
+Cromwell was long regarded as accursed; to-day he is half-deified. How
+many of us are able to decide, on grounds of fact, not of fiction,
+whether the Roman Empire perished because the Romans, becoming
+luxurious, sinned against our moral code, as ecclesiastic historians
+would have us believe, or because a disease of intolerance and
+stupidity clouded the clear Roman brain and enfeebled the strong Roman
+hand, as Gibbon would have us think? But the natural history of man
+deals, without obscurity and without uncertainty, with greater matters.
+Study it, and the mists clear away from much even of political history.
+We see clearly how little the conscious efforts of man have influenced
+his destiny. We see forces unrecognised, enormous, uncontrolled,
+uncontrollable, working slowly but mightily towards tremendous
+conclusions&mdash;forces so irresistible and unchanging that, watching them,
+we are able even to forecast something of the future.</p>
+
+<p>The mere political results of man’s evolution against disease are of
+almost incalculable magnitude. The human races of one half of the world
+are dying, and are being replaced by races from the other half. Not
+all the wars of all time taken together constitute so great a tragedy.
+A quite disproportionate part in this great movement has been borne
+by our own race. It has seized on the larger part of those regions in
+which the aborigines were incapable of civilisation, because incapable
+of resisting consumption, and were undefended by malaria. In the void
+created by disease it has more room to spread and multiply than any
+other race.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Disease Mightier than the Sword</div>
+
+<p>Other races may dream of foreign conquests, but the time for founding
+permanent empires is past. There remains for them only temporary
+conquest, in a few malarious parts of the world in which Europeans
+cannot flourish and supplant the natives. Spain and Portugal lost their
+opportunity when they turned from the temperate regions and chose the
+tropics. France lost her opportunity on the Heights of Abraham. Germany
+is more than a century too late in the start. Russia can conquer
+only hardy aliens who will multiply under her rule and ultimately
+assert their supremacy. In times now far remote in the history of
+civilised peoples, the sword was the principal means for digging deep
+the foundations of permanent empires. Its place was taken by a more
+efficient instrument. A migrating race, armed with a new and deadly
+disease, and with high powers of resisting it, possesses a terrible
+weapon of offence. But now disease has spread over the whole world and
+so is losing its power of building empires. The long era of the great
+migrations of the human race, of the great conquests, is closing fast.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Possibilities of the Black Races</div>
+
+<p>It is generally supposed by historians and others that races that
+disappear before the march of civilisation are mentally unfitted for
+it. The assumption is not supported by an iota of real evidence. To be
+mentally incapable a race must be of very defective memory. Recently
+a school of Australian natives, who belong to one of the “lowest”
+of races, took the first place in the colony. Negroes occupy a very
+inferior position in America, especially in Anglo-Saxon territories.
+But they are stamped by glaring physical differences, are treated with
+great contempt and jealousy by the whites, and their acquired mental
+attitudes, therefore, do not develop under good conditions. It is very
+possible that they are mentally inferior to the whites; but not so
+inferior as is commonly believed.</p>
+
+<p>Russian peasants, though not sharply differentiated by physical
+peculiarities from the governing classes, are equally scorned by
+them, and show a mental development hardly, if at all, superior
+to the negroes of United States. The Latins of South America seem
+very incapable of orderly government, but they are the heirs of a
+civilisation older than our own. At any rate, while it is conceivable
+the American negroes and some other races are incapable of building
+up a highly-enlightened society by their own efforts, it is manifest
+that they are able to persist and multiply when civilised conditions
+are imposed on them. Not so the aborigines of the New World, some of
+whom&mdash;for example, the Maoris and the Polynesians&mdash;are admittedly
+of good mental type. They perish swiftly and helplessly of <i>bodily</i>
+ailments.</p>
+
+<p>Very clearly, then, human races are capable or incapable of
+civilisation, not because they are mentally, but because they are
+physically, fit or unfit.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">G. A<span class="smaller">RCHDALL</span>
+R<span class="smaller">EID</span></p>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311"></a>[Pg 311]</span></p>
+
+<h4 class="s0" id="AN_ALPHABET_OF_RACES" title="AN ALPHABET OF RACES">&nbsp;</h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_311">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_311.jpg" alt="An Alphabet of Races" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s0" title="BEING A HANDY DICTIONARY OF MANKIND">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="s0" title="BY W. E. GARRETT FISHER">&nbsp;</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap2">A</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first3">A</span>N
+attempt is made in these pages to compile a dictionary of the main
+existing races of the world, arranged in alphabetical order. The
+accompanying Ethnological Chart on <a href="#ETHNOLOGICAL_CHART_OF_THE_HUMAN_RACE">page 352</a>, will enable the reader
+to see at a glance the relationship of the various main divisions,
+families, and stocks under which these races are distributed. The
+Dictionary and the Chart, if used in conjunction, will thus supply
+information about any race named in the list, and will tell the
+inquirer to what branch of the human race it belongs. It is obviously
+impossible to make the Dictionary inclusive of every tiny and
+out-of-the-way tribe of Africa or South America, but all important
+races are included. If the reader wants to know something about the
+Abyssinians, he will look them up in the Dictionary, and find that they
+are partly Semitic Himyarites, partly Hamitic Gallas, etc. The Chart
+will then show him that the Hamitic and Semitic families belong to the
+great Caucasic Division of mankind, that the Himyarites are one of the
+main stocks of the Semitic family, and that the Gallas belong to the
+Eastern branch of the Hamitic family. The student should familiarise
+himself with the names and places of the families and chief stocks of
+mankind, as given in the Chart, and so greatly facilitate the task of
+reference. The intention of both Chart and Dictionary is, of course, to
+serve as a kind of index to the History proper, which must be consulted
+for further information. As far as can be discovered, no previous
+attempt has been made to summarise the conclusions of modern ethnology
+in this convenient form. The illustrations depict some of the most
+interesting races.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p><b>Ababua.</b> A tribe of Sudanese negroes in Central Africa. See
+<a href="#Welle_Group">W<span class="smaller">ELLE</span> G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Abaka.</b> See <a href="#Nilitic_Group">N<span class="smaller">ILITIC</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Abkhasian"><b>Abkhasians.</b> A Western Caucasian tribe occupying the Black
+Sea coast from Pitzunta to Mingrelia, akin to <a href="#Circassians">C<span class="smaller">IRCASSIANS</span></a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p id="Abo"><b>Abo</b>, or <b>Ibo</b>. See <a href="#Nigerian_Group">N<span class="smaller">IGERIAN</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Abors.</b> An Assamese tribe in the Brahmaputra Valley,
+belonging to the Tibetan branch of the Southern Mongolic family.
+Wild jungle-dwellers.</p>
+
+<p><b>Absarakas.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Abukaya.</b> A negro tribe in the Sudan. See
+<a href="#Nilitic_Group">N<span class="smaller">ILITIC</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Abunda.</b> A settled and fairly civilised race of Bantu
+Negroes, occupying the seaboard and inland districts of Portuguese
+West Africa, south of Ambriz.</p>
+
+<p><b>Abyssinians.</b> A mixed race of Hamitic, Semitic, and Negro
+stock, inhabiting Abyssinia (from Arabic <i>habashi</i>&mdash;mixed). The
+main racial element&mdash;Abyssinians proper&mdash;consists of brown-skinned
+Semitic Himyarites, who probably emigrated from Arabia in
+prehistoric times, and profess themselves descended from the
+Queen of Sheba. Since the sixteenth century Abyssinia has been
+over-run by the Hamitic <a href="#Gallas">Gallas</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), who have largely mingled
+their blood with this older element. There is also a considerable
+admixture of Sudanese Negro blood. Since the fourth century the
+religion of Abyssinia has been a corrupt form of Christianity; the
+mediæval myth of Prester John perhaps relates to this fact.</p>
+
+<p><b>Acadians.</b> French settlers of seventeenth century in Nova
+Scotia.</p>
+
+<p><b>Achcæans.</b> See <a href="#Argives">A<span class="smaller">RGIVES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Achinese"><b>Achinese.</b> A warlike Malay race of Sumatra, long at war with
+the Dutch colonists.</p>
+
+<p><b>Accras.</b> See <a href="#Ga">G<span class="smaller">A</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Achuas"><b>Achuas</b>, or <b>Wochua</b>. A pygmy Negrito race,
+well-proportioned, though dwarfish, inhabiting the forests of
+the Welle and Aruwimi districts in Central Africa, and living by
+hunting.</p>
+
+<p><b>Adamawa Group.</b> A group of Sudanese Negro tribes inhabiting
+the district of the Upper Benue in Northern Nigeria.</p>
+
+<p><b>Adansis.</b> Negro tribe on Guinea coast. See <a href="#Tshi">T<span class="smaller">SHI</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Æolians.</b> See <a href="#Hellenes">H<span class="smaller">ELLENES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Aeta"><b>Aetas.</b> A Negrito race of the Philippine Islands, belonging
+to the Oceanic family of Ethiopic Man. Short of stature,
+black-skinned, with woolly hair, they present many points of
+resemblance to the Negritoes of Central Africa. There are many
+crosses between Aetas and Malays.</p>
+
+<p><b>Afars.</b> A nomadic Turki tribe of Persia. See also
+<a href="#Danakils">D<span class="smaller">ANAKILS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Afghan"><b>Afghans.</b> A race of Iranian stock, belonging to the great
+Aryan family, who form about half the population of Afghanistan.
+They are divided into various tribes, of which the Duranis are the
+dominant one, the Ghilzais the most warlike, and the Yusufzais the
+most turbulent. There are also large tribes known as Pathans, who
+are of the same stock as the Afghans, but are classed separately.
+The Afghans are a handsome and athletic race, inured to war from
+their childhood, lawless and treacherous, but sober and hardy.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312"></a>[Pg 312]</span>
+Throughout the nineteenth century they were a constant source of
+trouble to British India, but a new era seems to have opened under
+the present Amir. For non-Afghan inhabitants of Afghanistan, see
+<a href="#Hazaras">H<span class="smaller">AZARAS</span></a>,
+<a href="#Kizil_Bashis">K<span class="smaller">IZIL</span>-B<span class="smaller">ASHIS</span></a>,
+and <a href="#Tajiks">T<span class="smaller">AJIKS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Afridis.</b> A warlike and turbulent Pathan race, occupying the
+neighbourhood of the Khyber Pass, and often at war with the English.</p>
+
+<p><b>Afrikanders.</b> Persons of European descent born and living in
+South Africa.</p>
+
+<p><b>Agaos.</b> An indigenous Hamitic race of Northern Abyssinia.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ahoms.</b> Primitive inhabitants of Assam, belonging to the
+Indo-Chinese stock of the Southern Mongolic family.</p>
+
+<p id="Ainus"><b>Ainus.</b> An aberrant family of Caucasic Man in the Far East.
+They were probably the aboriginal inhabitants of Japan, but are
+now few in number, and confined to Yezo, the Kurile Islands, and
+part of Sakhalin. They have regular and often handsome features
+of Caucasic type, but are of low stature, and characteristically
+marked by an abundance of coarse, black, wavy or crisp hair on
+head, face, and body, whence they are commonly called the “Hairy
+Ainus.”</p>
+
+<p><b>Akawais.</b> See <a href="#Caribs">C<span class="smaller">ARIBS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Akkas.</b> A pygmy Negrito race of the Welle district in Central
+Africa, akin to the <a href="#Achuas">Achuas</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), who are specially interesting
+because they are represented on Egyptian monuments of 3400
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, with their existing racial characters.</p>
+
+<p id="Akkads"><b>Akkads</b>, or <b>Akkadians</b>. An extinct Mesopotamian
+race, founders of the oldest known civilisation in Babylonia,
+who belonged to the Northern Mongolic family, and probably to
+the Turki or Finno-Ugrian stock. They invented the cuneiform
+alphabet, which was adopted by their Semitic successors&mdash;see
+<a href="#Babylonians">B<span class="smaller">ABYLONIANS</span></a>&mdash;and it is thought that they may have been the
+ancestors of the Chinese.</p>
+
+<p><b>Akpas.</b> See <a href="#Nigerian_Group">N<span class="smaller">IGERIAN</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Alani.</b> A warlike nomadic race, probably belonging to the
+Turki stock of the Northern Mongolic family, and allied to the
+<a href="#Tartars">Tartars</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). In the fifth century they made settlements in
+Gaul and Spain, where they were absorbed by the Vandals and the
+Visigoths respectively. The remnant left in the East of Europe were
+conquered in the thirteenth century by the Golden Horde, and their
+name disappeared from history.</p>
+
+<p id="Albanians"><b>Albanians</b>, or <b>Arnauts</b>. The warlike race of
+mountaineers who inhabit Albania, on the western coast of the
+Balkan Peninsula. They are semi-civilised, live in a perpetual
+state of tribal warfare, and make admirable soldiers, forming the
+best part of the Turkish Army. They are probably the oldest of the
+Balkan races, and represent the earliest Aryan immigrants into
+Europe [see <a href="#Illyrians">I<span class="smaller">LLYRIANS</span></a>]. They are partly Christian, partly
+Mohammedan.</p>
+
+<p><b>Albigenses.</b> A heretical sect, mostly of Provençal descent,
+who appeared in the South of France about the eleventh century, and
+were rigidly persecuted until they became extinct in the middle of
+the thirteenth century.</p>
+
+<p id="Alemanni"><b>Alemanni.</b> An ancient German tribe on Upper Rhine, of
+Teutonic stock, from whom the modern Swabians and Swiss are in
+great part descended.</p>
+
+<p><b>Aleutians.</b> Natives of Aleutian Islands, belonging to Eskimo
+stock of Northern American family.</p>
+
+<p><b>Alfuros.</b> A half-breed race between Malays and Papuans: in
+Malaysia, a term given by Malays to their rude non-Mohammedan
+neighbours.</p>
+
+<p id="Algonquian"><b>Algonquian.</b> A group of North American Indian tribes,
+formerly inhabiting the Central and Southern States of America,
+east of the Rocky Mountains, and as far south as South Carolina,
+now gathered into Indian Reservations. They include the Algonquin,
+Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Cree, Delaware, Fox, Illinois, Massachusett,
+Mohican, Ojibway, Sac, Shawnee, and many smaller tribes.</p>
+
+<p><b>Alibamus.</b> See <a href="#Muskhogean">M<span class="smaller">USKHOGEAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ali-Elis.</b> See <a href="#Turkomans">T<span class="smaller">URKOMANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Alsatians.</b> Natives of Alsace, of High German stock, allied
+to the <a href="#Swabian">Swabians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Amadis.</b> See <a href="#Welle_Group">W<span class="smaller">ELLE</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ama.</b> Prefix of many Bantu racial names, as Ama-Zulu,
+Ama-Xosa. See <a href="#Zulu">Z<span class="smaller">ULU</span></a>, etc.</p>
+
+<p><b>American.</b> One of the four main divisions of the human race,
+comprising three families, occupying North, Central, and Southern
+America respectively. Typically red-skinned, with lank, black hair,
+retreating foreheads, high-bridged noses, and either long or broad
+skulls&mdash;dolichocephalic or brachycephalic.</p>
+
+<p><b>Americans.</b> The English-speaking white inhabitants of the
+United States, mainly of Anglo-Saxon descent. See also
+<a href="#Latin_Americans">L<span class="smaller">ATIN</span> A<span class="smaller">MERICANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Amharas.</b> Natives of Central Abyssinia, of Hamitic descent.</p>
+
+<p id="Amorite"><b>Amorites.</b> A branch of the ancient Libyan race, of Semitic
+origin, inhabiting Canaan before the arrival of the Israelites from
+Egypt.</p>
+
+<p><b>Anatolian Turks.</b> See <a href="#Turks">T<span class="smaller">URKS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Andamanese.</b> Natives of Andaman Islands, a race belonging to
+the Oceanic Negrito family, possibly representing the primitive
+type from which both Negroes and Papuans have sprung. They exhibit
+the lowest stage of civilisation.</p>
+
+<p><b>Andis.</b> See <a href="#Lesghians">L<span class="smaller">ESGHIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Angles"><b>Angles.</b> A Teutonic race of Low German stock, who formerly
+inhabited the country round Schleswig, in North Germany. In the
+fifth century they migrated in large numbers to Britain, and with
+the Jutes and Saxons formed the stock of the Anglo-Saxon or English
+people.</p>
+
+<p id="Anglo_Saxon"><b>Anglo-Saxons.</b> A general name now given to the
+English-speaking races of English, Scotch, and even Irish and Welsh
+descent, who inhabit the British Empire; in a wider sense, to all
+people of British descent.</p>
+
+<p id="Annamese"><b>Annamese.</b> Natives of Annam, or Cochin-China, belonging to
+the Indo-Chinese stock of the Southern Mongolic family; now under
+French rule.</p>
+
+<p><b>Apaches.</b> See <a href="#Athabascan">A<span class="smaller">THABASCAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Appalachis.</b> See <a href="#Muskhogean">M<span class="smaller">USKHOGEAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Arabs"><b>Arabs.</b> One of the main branches of the Semitic family,
+inhabiting the Arabian peninsula. They are usually divided into
+two branches, the Ishmaelites of the north and the Joktanides of
+the south. The latter probably represent the oldest Arab stock,
+and may be of African origin. The primitive Arabs were nomadic
+horse-breeders and shepherds, very warlike, and of fine physical
+development. Under Islam they reared an enduring religious
+civilisation, which has had the greatest influence on the world
+after Christianity.</p>
+
+<p><b>Arakanese.</b> Natives of Arakan, in Lower Burma, of
+Indo-Chinese stock.</p>
+
+<p id="Aramaean"><b>Aramæans.</b> One of the main groups of the Semitic family,
+Syro-Chaldeans, who anciently inhabited Syria, Palestine, and the
+Euphrates Valley. The modern <a href="#Syrians">Syrians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) belong to it.</p></div>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313"></a>[Pg 313]</span></p>
+
+<h4 class="s0" id="LITTLE_GALLERY_OF_RACES" title="Little Gallery of
+Races">&nbsp;</h4>
+
+<p class="s0" title="REPRODUCED FROM THE FAMOUS DRAWINGS">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="s0" title="BY SIR DAVID WILKIE, R.A.">&nbsp;</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32" id="i_313">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_313.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A NATIVE OF BRITISH INDIA</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_313_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314"></a>[Pg 314]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_314">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_314.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A CIRCASSIAN LADY</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_314_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315"></a>[Pg 315]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32_5" id="i_315">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_315.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A SPANISH CHILD WITH HER NURSE</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_315_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316"></a>[Pg 316]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32" id="i_316">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_316.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A PERSIAN PRINCE AND HIS NUBIAN SLAVE</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_316_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317"></a>[Pg 317]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_317">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_317.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A DRAGOMAN AT BEYROUT</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_317_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_318"></a>[Pg 318]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32_5" id="i_318">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_318.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A TRAVELLING TARTAR</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_318_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319"></a>[Pg 319]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32_5" id="i_319">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_319.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">AN ARAB SHEIK</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_319_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320"></a>[Pg 320]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i320">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_320.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A LETTER-WRITER OF CONSTANTINOPLE</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_320_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_321"></a>[Pg 321]</span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p id="Araucanian"><b>Araucanians.</b> The chief Indian race of Chili, possessing an
+ancient civilisation like those of Peru and Mexico, though less
+advanced. The Araucanians are probably the finest native race of
+the New World. They are a fierce and warlike people, who have
+always preserved their independence.</p>
+
+<p id="Arawak"><b>Arawaks.</b> A group of South American Indian tribes in the
+Guianas, including Maypuris, Wapisianas, Atorais and others.</p>
+
+<p><b>Arcadians.</b> A race of ancient Greece, inhabiting the central
+highlands of the Peloponnesus, whose seclusion from the world
+caused them to be identified with the quality which we still call
+Arcadian simplicity.</p>
+
+<p><b>Arecunas.</b> See <a href="#Caribs">C<span class="smaller">ARIBS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Argentines.</b> White natives of the Argentine Republic in South
+America, mainly of Spanish descent.</p>
+
+<p id="Argives"><b>Argives.</b> Natives of Argos, the most important state of
+Homeric Greece: hence a generic term for Greeks or Hellenes in the
+Homeric Age. Achæans is another term similarly used.</p>
+
+<p id="Armenian"><b>Armenians.</b> Natives of Armenia, the mountainous country round
+Mount Ararat, now divided between Russia, Persia, and Turkey.
+They belong to the Iranian stock of the Aryan family, blended
+with Semitic blood, and with a still older unknown but probably
+non-Aryan element. They are not warlike, but of quick intelligence
+and specially successful in commerce.</p>
+
+<p><b>Arnauts.</b> See <a href="#Albanians">A<span class="smaller">LBANIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Aryan"><b>Aryans.</b> The most important family of Caucasic Man, to
+which all the chief civilisations of modern times belong. A
+tall, fair-skinned, long-headed race, whose origin is still
+doubtful&mdash;though it was probably in Central Asia&mdash;and who
+spread in prehistoric times over the whole of Europe and parts
+of Asia and Africa. Almost all modern Europeans are of Aryan
+descent. The family is also called I<span class="smaller">NDO</span>-E<span class="smaller">UROPEAN</span> or
+I<span class="smaller">NDO</span>-G<span class="smaller">ERMANIC</span>, but these names are open to objections from
+which the term Aryan is free.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ashantis.</b> See <a href="#Tshi">T<span class="smaller">SHI</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Assamese.</b> Natives of Assam, between India and Burma,
+belonging to the Hindu stock of the Aryan family.</p>
+
+<p><b>Assinaboins.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Assyrian"><b>Assyrians.</b> One of the main branches of the Semitic family.
+The Assyrians founded a great empire in the northern part of
+Mesopotamia, of which Nineveh was the capital, and afterwards
+conquered the older Babylonian state (710 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) and Egypt
+(671 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>), thus forming the first world-empire known to
+history. Within a century Assyria had become a Median province, and
+its people ceased to have an independent existence.</p>
+
+<p id="Athabascan"><b>Athabascan</b> or <b>Tinney</b>. A group of North American
+Indian tribes, formerly inhabiting Alaska and the greatest part of
+Canada. It includes the Apaches, Chippewayans, Hupas, Kutchins,
+Navajos, Tacullis, and Umbquas.</p>
+
+<p><b>Athenians.</b> The most important race of ancient Greece, whose
+city of Athens was the earliest centre of civilisation in the
+historical age of Europe.</p>
+
+<p id="Australian"><b>Australians.</b> The aborigines of Australia, a branch of the
+Oceanic Negro family. Their numerous tribes present a general
+uniformity of physical and mental development, under which two main
+types may be recognised. The earlier of these is probably that
+shown by the extinct <a href="#Tasmanians">Tasmanians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), one of the lowest races
+in point of culture yet discovered, who were probably still in
+the earliest stage of the Stone Age. The other type was perhaps
+akin to the Dravidians of India, or to a very low Caucasic race.
+The Australians are among the lowest of savage races, and present
+many features which have thrown light on the manners, customs and
+beliefs of primitive man.</p>
+
+<p><b>Australians.</b> White inhabitants of Australia, mostly of
+Anglo-Saxon descent.</p>
+
+<p><b>Austrians.</b> Inhabitants of the Austrian empire, including
+a great diversity of races. The name is properly applied only to
+the German-speaking people, of High-German Teutonic stock, who
+predominate in Austria proper.</p>
+
+<p id="Auvergnat"><b>Auvergnats.</b> Natives of Auvergne, in Central France. A short,
+sturdy, dark, round-skulled race, formerly regarded as typical
+Aryan Celts, but possibly descended from an older non-Aryan people.
+Much employed in Paris as porters.</p>
+
+<p><b>Avars.</b> See <a href="#Lesghians">L<span class="smaller">ESGHIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Avars.</b> A Tartar tribe, belonging to the Turki stock of the
+Northern Mongolic family, who appeared in the district round the
+Caspian Sea about the fourth century, and later made predatory
+raids over a large part of Eastern Europe. They were subdued by
+Charlemagne, and disappeared from history in the ninth century.
+They seem to have been closely allied to the Huns, whom they
+resembled in physical characteristics and warlike qualities.</p>
+
+<p><b>Awawandias.</b> Bantu Negroes of the Nyassa plateau in British
+Central Africa.</p>
+
+<p><b>Aymaras.</b> A race of South American Indians in Bolivia,
+probably related to the <a href="#Incas">Incas</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) and perhaps their ancestors.</p>
+
+<p id="Azandeh"><b>Azandeh</b>, or <b>Niam-Niam</b>. Sudanese Negroes of the Welle
+group. Notorious cannibals.</p>
+
+<p id="Aztec"><b>Aztecs.</b> The dominant Indian race in Mexico at the arrival
+of the Spanish invaders. They entered the country about the end of
+the thirteenth century, and founded the city of Mexico in 1325.
+Around it they reared a remarkable civilisation and a sanguinary
+religion. They were warlike, ferocious and cruel, but had a
+considerable aptitude for the arts of peace. Their empire was
+destroyed by Cortes in 1521, and annexed to Spain. Every trace of
+Aztec nationality was suppressed, but their name still lingers
+among the Nahuan Indians, and their blood is mixed with that of
+the conquerors. Many attempts have been made to find an Old World
+origin for Mexican culture, but they are not convincing.</p>
+
+<p id="Babylonians"><b>Babylonians.</b> The Semitic race which founded one of the
+greatest of ancient civilisations in the rich alluvial plains of
+Chaldæa and on the arid plateau of Mesopotamia. Their history is
+too long to summarise here, but it may be stated that the Semitic
+peoples, variously known as Babylonians, Chaldæans, Elamites,
+Medians, and Assyrians, invaded and dispossessed at different times
+the primitive Mongolic race of <a href="#Akkads">Akkads</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). Their earliest
+settlement seems to have been at Ur of the Chaldees, on the right
+bank of the Euphrates. Babylon and Nineveh were afterwards the
+seats of the Babylonian and Assyrian powers, whilst Elamite and
+Median conquerors intervened at various times. These powerful
+Semitic races made great advances in art, science, literature,
+religion, and social policy. Their first incursion, probably
+from Arabia, into the Euphrates Valley dates back to about 3800
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_322"></a>[Pg 322]</span></p>
+
+<p><b>Baggaras.</b> A fierce and warlike race settled in the
+Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, and formerly dominant under the Mahdi.</p>
+
+<p><b>Baghirmis.</b> See <a href="#Lake_Chad_Group">L<span class="smaller">AKE</span>
+C<span class="smaller">HAD</span> G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bakairi.</b> See <a href="#Caribs">C<span class="smaller">ARIBS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bakatla</b>, <b>Bakwena</b>. Bantu Negroes of Bechuana stock.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bakwiri.</b> Bantu Negroes settled in the Cameroons.</p>
+
+<p><b>Balinese.</b> A Malayan race of the East Indian Archipelago.</p>
+
+<p><b>Balolo.</b> Bantu Negroes of the Middle Congo; one of the finest
+negro races.</p>
+
+<p><b>Balong.</b> Bantu Negroes of West Africa.</p>
+
+<p id="Balti"><b>Baltis.</b> A hardy Tibetan race, inhabiting the Alpine valley
+of the Upper Indus.</p>
+
+<p id="Baluba"><b>Baluba</b>, or <b>Basonge</b>. A dominant Bantu Negro race of
+the Kassai basin in Equatorial Africa.</p>
+
+<p id="Baluchis"><b>Baluchis</b>, or <b>Beluchis</b>. Natives of Baluchistan, south
+of Afghanistan, of Iranian (Aryan) descent, with a mingling of
+Tartar (Mongolic) blood. The dominant race of the country is the
+Brahui, aboriginals who are probably of Mongolic descent, allied to
+the <a href="#Dravidians">Dravidians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) of India. The Brahui are of Mongolic type,
+short, with round flat faces, hospitable and generous. They are the
+more settled portion of the inhabitants. The Baluchis are chiefly
+nomads, taller, with more Aryan features, a warlike and predatory
+people.</p>
+
+<p><b>Balunda.</b> Bantu Negroes of South Central Africa, occupying
+the Congo-Zambesi divide.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bamangwato.</b> Bantu Negroes of north Bechuanaland; Khama’s
+semi-civilised people.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bambaras.</b> See <a href="#Mandingan">M<span class="smaller">ANDINGAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Banandi.</b> Bantu Negroes of apish type, in the Semliki forests.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bangalas.</b> Bantu Negroes of Middle Congo, on the Ubangi river.</p>
+
+<p id="Bantu"><b>Bantus.</b> One of the two subdivisions of the African Negro
+family of Ethiopic Man, occupying the southern half of the African
+continent, south of the Cameroons and Albert Nyanza. A Negro race
+modified from the Sudanese type by Hamite influences.</p>
+
+<p><b>Banyai.</b> Bantu Negroes, south of the Middle Zambesi.</p>
+
+<p><b>Banyoro.</b> See <a href="#Wanyoro">W<span class="smaller">ANYORO</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bapedi.</b> Bantu Negroes of Bechuana stock.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bareas.</b> Sudanese Negroes inhabiting the Abyssinian slopes.</p>
+
+<p><b>Barguzins.</b> See <a href="#Buriats">B<span class="smaller">URIATS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Baris.</b> See <a href="#Nilitic_Group">N<span class="smaller">ILITIC</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Barolongs.</b> Bantu Negroes of Bechuana stock, between Vryburg
+and Molopo river. Mafeking is their capital.</p>
+
+<p><b>Barotse.</b> Bantu Negroes of Bechuana stock, about headwaters
+of Molopo river.</p>
+
+<p><b>Barrés.</b> South American Indians in Venezuela and Guiana.</p>
+
+<p><b>Basés.</b> Sudanese Negroes of Abyssinian slopes, a very low
+negroid type.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bashkirs.</b> A branch of the Turki stock of the Northern
+Mongolic family. They are first mentioned in the tenth century as
+a warlike and idolatrous race, noted for their large, round, short
+heads, from which their name is derived. They now inhabit the
+Orenberg and Perm districts of Russia, on the western slopes of the
+Ural. Some are settled agriculturists, others pastoral nomads.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bashukulumbwe.</b> Bantu Negroes of Kafue basin in Zambesia.</p>
+
+<p id="Basimba"><b>Basimba</b> or <b>Cimbebas</b>. Aboriginal Negroes of South
+Angola; a low Bantu type, or possibly Negrito, allied to Bushmen.</p>
+
+<p><b>Basonge.</b> See <a href="#Baluba">B<span class="smaller">ALUBA</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Basque"><b>Basques.</b> One of the few non-Aryan races still existing
+in Europe, where they inhabit the districts on the French and
+Spanish sides of the Western Pyrenees. They originally occupied a
+much wider area in this neighbourhood, and preserve their ancient
+costume and language. Their ethnological affinities are still in
+dispute, but the best opinion is that they represent the ancient
+<a href="#Iberians">Iberians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), a Western Hamitic race, related to the Berbers
+of North Africa on the one hand and to the Picts of Scotland and
+the ancient Irish on the other. Probably they have occupied their
+present home since Neolithic times. They are mainly agriculturists,
+with all the rustic virtues, and make excellent soldiers and
+servants.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bassas.</b> See <a href="#Liberian_Group">L<span class="smaller">IBERIAN</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bastaards.</b> See <a href="#Griquas">G<span class="smaller">RIQUAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bastarnæ.</b> See <a href="#Goths">G<span class="smaller">OTHS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Basutos.</b> The most civilised race of Bantu Negroes, of the
+Bechuana stock, who inhabit the rugged uplands of Basutoland, a
+British Crown Colony. They have long been subjected to European
+and Christian influence, under which they have presented the
+sole instance of a pure negro community, which has made itself
+self-supporting and approximately civilised. They have succeeded in
+assimilating Western culture, and their little State&mdash;which always
+preserved its independence against other natives and Boers&mdash;is a
+very flourishing example of what the negro can do under favourable
+auspices.</p>
+
+<p><b>Batanga.</b> Bantu Negroes of the Cameroons.</p>
+
+<p><b>Batavi.</b> An ancient German race inhabiting the island formed
+by the Meuse and an arm of the Rhine. Ancestors of the modern Dutch.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bateke.</b> Bantu Negroes of Congo, above Stanley Pool.</p>
+
+<p><b>Batjans.</b> See <a href="#Indonesian">I<span class="smaller">NDONESIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Batlapi.</b> Bantu Negroes of Bechuana stock, near Vryburg.</p>
+
+<p><b>Batonga</b> or <b>Batoka</b>. Bantu Negroes of Zambesia,
+Manicaland and Tongaland.</p>
+
+<p><b>Battaks.</b> A pre-Malay race of North Sumatra, probably allied
+to the <a href="#Polynesian">Polynesians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Batwas.</b> A <a href="#Pygmies">pygmy</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) Negrito race south of Congo, allied
+to Bushmen.</p>
+
+<p><b>Batwanas.</b> Bantu Negroes of North Bechuanaland.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bavarians.</b> A branch of the High German stock of the Teutonic
+family, in Bavaria.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bayansis.</b> Bantu Negroes of Middle Congo, on Kwa River.
+Strong negro element.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bechuanas.</b> A main stock of Bantu Negroes, occupying what
+is known as British Bechuanaland. The name is of European origin,
+and has no native significance as applied to the race, but is a
+convenient general term.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bedawi</b> or <b>Bedouins</b>. Nomadic <a href="#Arabs">Arabs</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) who
+inhabit the deserts of Arabia and the neighbouring countries,
+and live by stock-breeding and robbery. Their breed of horses is
+world-famous. They are independent, chivalrous and hospitable. They
+correspond to the Biblical Ishmaelites, whose race and customs they
+preserve practically unchanged.</p>
+
+<p id="Bejas"><b>Bejas.</b> A race of Eastern Hamites, of splendid physique,
+occupying the eastern seaboard of Africa north of Massowah,
+including Bisharis, Hadendowas, and other tribes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_323"></a>[Pg 323]</span></p>
+
+<p id="Belgae"><b>Belgae.</b> The northernmost of the three races occupying Gaul
+in Cæsar’s time, probably of Low German stock, with perhaps a
+Celtic element.</p>
+
+<p><b>Belgians.</b> The inhabitants of Belgium, formerly the Spanish
+or Austrian Netherlands, of very mixed origin. The natives are
+either <a href="#Fleming">Flemings</a> of Teutonic stock, or
+Celtic <a href="#Walloon">Walloons</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).
+Mingled with these are large numbers of German, French and Dutch
+immigrants; and constant crossing of blood has tended to produce a
+truly Belgian type out of all these fluctuating elements. They are
+among the most patient and productive of agriculturists, mostly
+small proprietors; and they possess flourishing manufactures and a
+rich commerce through the great port of Antwerp.</p>
+
+<p><b>Beluchis.</b> See <a href="#Baluchis">B<span class="smaller">ALUCHIS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bengalis.</b> The majority of the natives of Bengal belong to
+the Hindu stock of the Aryan family, which was probably the first
+to develop a true civilisation and a great literature (in the
+ancient Sanscrit tongue). The typical Bengali is quick-witted,
+versatile, and successful in the arts of peace, but not
+warlike&mdash;though the native army of the old East Indian Company
+was largely recruited from Bengal. The Bengali Babu, of the
+professional or lower official class, is well known.</p>
+
+<p><b>Beluchis.</b> See <a href="#Baluchis">B<span class="smaller">ALUCHIS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Benin.</b> See <a href="#Nigerian_Group">N<span class="smaller">IGERIAN</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Berber"><b>Berbers.</b> A Western Hamitic race occupying the Atlas
+Mountains and the Northern Sahara, of predatory and warlike habits.
+They are known in Algeria as Kabyles, and in Sahara as Tuaregs.
+Largely dark-haired and swarthy, with prominent noses, they belong
+to the Melanochroid branch of Caucasic Man. They correspond to the
+ancient Numidians.</p>
+
+<p><b>Betsimisarakas.</b> One of the three main divisions of the
+Malagasy, or Malayo-African race which inhabits Madagascar. They
+occupy the east coast.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bhils.</b> Primitive and still wild non-Aryan inhabitants of
+Central India, of <a href="#Kolarian_family">Kolarian family</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Bisharis.</b> See <a href="#Bejas">B<span class="smaller">EJAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Blackfoot Indians.</b> See <a href="#Algonquian">A<span class="smaller">LGONQUIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bœotians.</b> A branch of the Æolian race in ancient Greece. The
+Bœotians were supposed to be peculiarly dull, and were the typical
+rustic clowns of Greek literature.</p>
+
+<p><b>Boers.</b> White inhabitants of Cape Colony, the Transvaal, and
+the Orange River Colony, mainly of Dutch descent, with a French
+Huguenot element and a sprinkling of Negro blood. They were the
+original colonists of South Africa, which they entered in 1652. A
+race of farmers (Boer is derived from the Dutch boor, peasant),
+they also proved themselves to be hardy pioneers and admirable,
+though not at all romantic, fighters, learning in long native
+wars the arts of strategy, which they exercised so well against
+the English in the South African War of 1899&ndash;1902. They have
+now accepted the English rule, and promise to be among our most
+flourishing African subjects.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bohemians.</b> See <a href="#Czech">C<span class="smaller">ZECH</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bolivians.</b> White natives of Bolivia in South America, of
+Spanish descent, with a considerable admixture of Indian blood.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bongos.</b> See <a href="#Nilitic_Group">N<span class="smaller">ILITIC</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Botocudos.</b> South American Indians on eastern seaboard of
+Brazil.</p>
+
+<p><b>Brahui.</b> See <a href="#Baluchis">B<span class="smaller">ALUCHIS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Brazilians.</b> White natives of Brazil, mainly of Portuguese
+descent, but with a considerable admixture, in many districts, of
+Indian and negro blood.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bretons.</b> Natives of Brittany, descended from a short,
+round-headed, dark race, generally called Celtic, but perhaps
+pre-Aryan.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bribris.</b> South American Indians of Costa Rica.</p>
+
+<p id="Briton"><b>Britons.</b> (1) The ancient Britons were a Celtic race, whose
+remnants are still to be found in the <a href="#Welsh">Welsh</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). They attained
+a considerable degree of civilisation under the Roman conquerors,
+and adopted Christianity. The Anglo-Saxon conquest of Britain
+drove most of them back into Wales, Cornwall, and other outlying
+portions of the island, whilst the remainder were either destroyed
+or assimilated. (2) In the wide modern sense, Britons are the white
+citizens of the British Empire.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bugis</b> or <b>Buginese</b>. Natives of Boni in Celebes; a
+primitive Malay race.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bulalas.</b> See <a href="#Lake_Chad_Group">L<span class="smaller">AKE</span>
+C<span class="smaller">HAD</span> G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Bulgar"><b>Bulgars.</b> A branch of the <a href="#Finn">Finns</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), who were originally
+settled on the banks of the Volga. In the sixth century they
+crossed the Danube and conquered the modern Bulgaria, then occupied
+by the Slavonic <a href="#Slovenian">Slovenians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). A speedy fusion took place
+between the Slovenians and the Bulgars, who adopted the language
+and customs of the former, and rose to greatness as a Slav power.
+In the ninth and tenth centuries they ruled the greater part of
+the Balkan Peninsula, and warred successfully with the Byzantine
+Empire, which, however, subjected them in 1019 under Basil II.,
+“the slayer of the Bulgarians.” Later they passed under the Turkish
+rule, and ceased to have an independent national existence down to
+the nineteenth century.</p>
+
+<p id="Bulgarians"><b>Bulgarians.</b> Inhabitants of the modern Balkan state of
+Bulgaria, descended from the <a href="#Bulgar">Bulgars</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) with considerable
+admixtures of Greek and Turkish blood.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bulloms.</b> See <a href="#Temne_Group">T<span class="smaller">EMNÉ</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Burgundian"><b>Burgundians.</b> An ancient people of Teutonic race (High
+German), who were originally settled between the Oder and Vistula.
+In the fifth century they invaded Gaul, where they formed the first
+kingdom of Burgundy, between the Aar and the Rhone. There were many
+later Burgundian kingdoms and duchies, of which the last and most
+famous was that of Charles the Bold, annexed to France in 1477. The
+Burgundians are now French subjects, but still show traces of their
+Teutonic origin.</p>
+
+<p id="Buriats"><b>Buriats.</b> The Western or Siberian branch of the Mongol stock
+of the Northern Mongolic family. They occupy the vicinity of Lake
+Baikal The majority are nomad pastors, but some have taken to
+agriculture. A peace-loving, but lazy and drunken people; they
+include various tribes, such as the Barguzins, Selengese, Idinese,
+Kudaras and Olkhonese.</p>
+
+<p><b>Burmese</b>, or <b>Burmans</b>. A short-statured, thick-set and
+flat-featured people, approaching the Chinese type, the principal
+race of the Indo-Chinese stock of the Southern Mongolic family.
+They inhabit Burma&mdash;now a British possession&mdash;and are excitable,
+turbulent, and given to dacoity, or highway robbery. They make
+good<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_324"></a>[Pg 324]</span> farmers and shopkeepers, but are not warlike or methodical.</p>
+
+<p><b>Burus.</b> See <a href="#Indonesian">I<span class="smaller">NDONESIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Bushmen"><b>Bushmen.</b> A nomadic Negro race of South Africa, who stand at
+the lowest stage of human culture. They are probably the aborigines
+of South Africa, where they have been dispossessed by Hottentots
+and Bantus from the north. They are thin and wiry, of small
+stature, not unlike the Hottentots in colour and features. They
+live by hunting, and possess a curious mythology. Their artistic
+powers, comparable to those of Palæolithic Man, are shown in the
+remarkable rock-drawings on the walls of their caves.</p>
+
+<p><b>Calchaquis.</b> South American Indians, in Plate River district.</p>
+
+<p><b>Cambojans.</b> Natives of Cambodia, Mongoloid approaching
+Caucasic type.</p>
+
+<p id="Canaanite"><b>Canaanites.</b> One of the main branches of the great Semitic
+family, inhabiting Palestine and the Mauritanian sea-coast in
+ancient times, including <a href="#Jew">Jews</a>, <a href="#Phoenician">Phœnicians</a>,
+<a href="#Carthaginian">Carthaginians</a>, <a href="#Moabite">Moabites</a>,
+<a href="#Amorite">Amorites</a>, <a href="#Idumaean">Idumæans</a> and <a href="#Philistine">Philistines</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). A fierce and warlike
+people, with a remarkable genius for religion, which has greatly
+influenced the modern world.</p>
+
+<p><b>Canadians.</b> White natives of Canada, of mixed French and
+Anglo-Saxon descent.</p>
+
+<p id="Caribs"><b>Caribs.</b> South American Indians, formerly occupying the West
+Indian Islands, and now the shores of the Caribbean Sea, including
+Macusi, Bakairi, Akawai, Arecuna, and Rucuyenne tribes. They are
+strongly built, warlike and fierce, but honourable. The term
+cannibal is supposed to be a corruption of their name based on
+their habits.</p>
+
+<p id="Carthaginian"><b>Carthaginians.</b> Natives of one of the great empires of the
+ancient world, which was founded at Carthage, near the modern
+Bizerta, by Phœnician colonists in the ninth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>,
+and was destroyed by Rome in 146 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Carthage was the
+great rival of Rome as a Mediterranean power. Its inhabitants
+belonged to the Canaanite stock of the Semitic family, and were a
+nation of traders, cruel and gloomy in temperament, worshippers of
+Moloch with human sacrifices. Though in Hannibal they produced one
+of the greatest of generals, they were not warlike, and trusted
+chiefly to mercenaries, wherefore they fell.</p>
+
+<p><b>Catalans.</b> Natives of North-east Spain, mostly of Gothic
+descent, and still distinct from other Spaniards in language and
+costume. Honest and enterprising, turbulent, and intensely devoted
+to liberty.</p>
+
+<p><b>Caucasians.</b> One of the families of Caucasic Man, inhabiting
+the mountainous region of the Caucasus, and divided into
+southern, western, and eastern branches [see <a href="#Georgian">G<span class="smaller">EORGIANS</span></a>,
+<a href="#Circassians">C<span class="smaller">IRCASSIANS</span></a>,
+<a href="#Chechenzes">C<span class="smaller">HECHENZES</span></a>, <a href="#Lesghians">L<span class="smaller">ESGHIANS</span></a>].
+They include a great number of different tribes, who seem to have
+settled there from the earliest historical times. Some of these,
+the Melanochroid highlanders, like the Georgians, Circassians, and
+Lesghians, present an almost ideal standard of physical beauty,
+whilst others are squat and ungainly. Some ethnologists see in the
+Caucasus the primitive home of the Aryan family, from whom the
+Caucasians would, on this view, be an offshoot. The <a href="#Osset">Ossets</a> (<i>q.v.</i>)
+are certainly Aryan. The Caucasians are very warlike, and struggled
+till quite recently with success against the Russian domination.</p>
+
+<p><b>Caucasic.</b> One of the four great divisions of the human race.
+Type, white-skinned, square-jawed (orthognathous), skull between
+broad and long (mesocephalic), hair soft, straight, or wavy; in
+intelligence, enterprise, and civilisation, much superior to other
+divisions.</p>
+
+<p><b>Cayugas.</b> See <a href="#Iroquoian">I<span class="smaller">ROQUOIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Celts.</b> See <a href="#Kelts">K<span class="smaller">ELTS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chakhars.</b> A branch of Eastern Mongols, settled on the
+south-east boundary of the Desert of Gobi.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chaldæans.</b> See <a href="#Babylonians">B<span class="smaller">ABYLONIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chamorros.</b> Aborigines of the Ladrone Islands, so named from
+their thievish propensities. A branch of the Oceanic Mongolic
+family, probably allied to the <a href="#Formosans">Formosans</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Chancas.</b> See <a href="#Incas">I<span class="smaller">NCAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chaudors.</b> A nomad tribe inhabiting the steppes east of the
+Caspian and south of the Oxus. See <a href="#Turkomans">T<span class="smaller">URKOMANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chapogirs.</b> See <a href="#Tunguses">T<span class="smaller">UNGUSES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Charruas.</b> An extinct race of South American Indians in South
+Brazil, peculiar for their extremely black colour with lank hair.</p>
+
+<p id="Chechenzes"><b>Chechenzes.</b> A branch of the Eastern stock of the Caucasian
+family, inhabiting the northern slopes of the Eastern Caucasus.
+Their chief tribes are Ingushis, Kishis, and Tushis.</p>
+
+<p><b>Cheremisses.</b> See <a href="#Finn">F<span class="smaller">INNS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Cherokees.</b> A brave and warlike tribe of North American
+Indians. See <a href="#Iroquoian">I<span class="smaller">ROQUOIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Cheyennes.</b> See <a href="#Algonquian">A<span class="smaller">LGONQUIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chibchas.</b> South American Indians of Bogota.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chichimecs.</b> See <a href="#Nahuans">N<span class="smaller">AHUANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chickasaws.</b> See <a href="#Muskhogean">M<span class="smaller">USKHOGEANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chilians.</b> White natives of Chili, of Spanish descent, with a
+mixture of Araucanian Indian blood.</p>
+
+<p id="Chinese"><b>Chinese.</b> One of the most numerous races of the world,
+inhabiting the Chinese Empire. They are a stock of the Southern
+Mongolic family, and it is thought by some ethnologists that they
+are descended from the Mongolic <a href="#Akkads">Akkads</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) of Mesopotamia.
+There is a remarkable uniformity in the physical type presented by
+the Chinese in all climates and environments; they are the most
+homogeneous of great peoples. They are yellow-skinned, short in
+stature, with obliquely set eyes, high cheek-bones, long skulls,
+and broad faces, with slight prognathism. They possess an ancient
+and highly organised civilisation, which is characterised by
+its conservatism and slowness to accept new ideas&mdash;so different
+in this from the Japanese. The Chinese are naturally frugal,
+industrious, and patient; they are excellent agriculturists, and
+very gregarious; they despise war, but make excellent soldiers when
+drilled by Europeans or Japanese. They are eminently literary, and
+have a high system of morality. There are many local varieties,
+such as the Puntis of the Canton districts, the Hakkas of Swatow,
+the Hoklas of Fohkien, the <a href="#Dungan">Dungans</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), which need not be
+farther particularised.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chinooks.</b> A nearly extinct tribe of North American Indians
+on the Columbia River, on whose language is based the Chinook
+jargon, or traders’ Lingua Franca of British Columbia.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chins.</b> See <a href="#Singpho">S<span class="smaller">INGPHOS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chippewayans.</b> See <a href="#Athabascan">A<span class="smaller">THABASCAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chiquitos.</b> South American Indians of Upper Paraguay basin.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_325"></a>[Pg 325]</span></p>
+
+<p><b>Chiriguanos.</b> South American Indians of Bolivia.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chitralis.</b> Natives of Chitral, in the Hindu Khush, rough,
+hardy hillmen, closely allied to the <a href="#Kafirs">Kafirs</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) of Kafiristan.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chocos.</b> A tribe of South American Indians of Matto Grosso.</p>
+
+<p><b>Choktaws.</b> See <a href="#Muskhogean">M<span class="smaller">USKHOGEAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chontals.</b> Central American Indians of Nicaragua.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chols.</b> See <a href="#Maya_Quiche">M<span class="smaller">AYA</span>-Q<span class="smaller">UICHÉ</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chorasses.</b> See <a href="#Kalmuk">K<span class="smaller">ALMUKS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chorotegans.</b> Central American Indians of Nicaragua.</p>
+
+<p id="Chukchi"><b>Chukchis.</b> A Northern Mongolic race of North-east Siberia,
+closely akin to the American Eskimo in features and customs. They
+are of high character and very independent, but at a low stage of
+civilisation, and live by reindeer-breeding and hunting. A branch
+of the Chukchis, differing mainly in language, is known as the
+Koryaks.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chunchos.</b> South American Indians on tributaries of Beni
+River in Peru.</p>
+
+<p><b>Cimbebas.</b> See <a href="#Basimba">B<span class="smaller">ASIMBA</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Circassians"><b>Circassians</b>, or <b>Tcherkesses</b>. A race of Caucasian
+mountaineers, formerly inhabiting the Black Sea coast between Anapa
+and Pitzunta, of high physical type, who maintained an unavailing
+struggle against Russia till 1864, when their subjugation was
+followed by a wholesale emigration of the Circassian tribes to
+the Turkish Empire. Allied to them are the <a href="#Abkhasian">Abkhasians</a>
+and <a href="#Kabard">Kabards</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Colombians.</b> White natives of Colombia, in Central America,
+mostly of Spanish descent, with an admixture of Indian and negro
+blood.</p>
+
+<p><b>Comanches.</b> See <a href="#Shoshonean">S<span class="smaller">HOSHONEAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Conibos.</b> South American Indians of Peru.</p>
+
+<p id="Copt"><b>Copts.</b> Christian descendants of the ancient <a href="#Egyptian">Egyptians</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>), of middle stature, slender limbs, and pale complexion,
+who inhabit Egypt, and preserve the language and customs of the
+last period of ancient Egyptian civilisation. They are essentially
+townsmen, clerks, or artisans.</p>
+
+<p><b>Coras.</b> See
+<a href="#Opata_Pima">O<span class="smaller">PATA</span>-P<span class="smaller">IMA</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Cornish.</b> A race of Brythonic or P Celts, akin to Welsh
+and Bretons, inhabiting Cornwall in earlier times; now absorbed
+in English stock. Their language became extinct in seventeenth
+or eighteenth century. The crossing of the Cornish Celts with
+Anglo-Saxons has given birth to a singularly fine race of hardy
+fishermen and miners.</p>
+
+<p><b>Corsicans.</b> The aborigines of Corsica were probably a Western
+Hamitic race, allied to the <a href="#Ligurian">Ligurians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). They were followed
+by Ionian invaders, and in turn by Carthaginian, Roman, Vandal,
+Hun, Gothic, Saracenic, and Italian conquerors, each of whom has
+added something to the mixture of blood in the modern Corsicans,
+a turbulent, lawless, and warlike race (now belonging to France),
+whose greatest son was Napoleon.</p>
+
+<p><b>Costa Ricans.</b> White natives of Costa Rica, in Central
+America, mostly of pure Spanish descent.</p>
+
+<p><b>Crees.</b> See <a href="#Algonquian">A<span class="smaller">LGONQUIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Creek Indians.</b> See <a href="#Muskhogean">M<span class="smaller">USKHOGEAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Creoles.</b> Persons born in past or present French, Spanish, or
+Portuguese colonies, of pure European descent.</p>
+
+<p id="Cretans"><b>Cretans.</b> An ancient race of prehistoric culture [see
+<a href="#Mycenaeans">M<span class="smaller">YCENÆANS</span></a>]; in modern times chiefly Greek, mixed with Turk.</p>
+
+<p id="Croat"><b>Croats.</b> Inhabitants of Croatia, now mainly of Slavonic race,
+mingled with an earlier short, dark race of non-Aryan descent.
+One of the motley races of the Austrian Empire. They are warlike,
+turbulent, and eager for independence.</p>
+
+<p><b>Cro-Magnon.</b> A prehistoric race settled in the Vezere
+district of France, which may be taken as the primitive type of
+Caucasic Man. It is only known by a few skulls and other relics,
+and probably dates back to the Glacial Period.</p>
+
+<p><b>Crow Indians.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Cymry.</b> See <a href="#Welsh">W<span class="smaller">ELSH</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Czech"><b>Czechs</b>, or <b>Bohemians</b>. The most westerly branch of the
+Slavonic stock of the Aryan family, now occupying Bohemia, Moravia,
+and other parts of Austria. They are closely allied to the Slovaks
+of Hungary. They migrated from the Upper Vistula district to the
+modern Bohemia in the fifth century. Long an independent kingdom,
+and a bulwark of Christendom against the Turks, Bohemia passed to
+Austria in 1526. During the last century there has been a great
+recrudescence of the Czech nationality and language. The Czechs as
+a race are very musical and artistic.</p>
+
+<p><b>Daflas.</b> A Tibetan race inhabiting the northern border of
+Assam.</p>
+
+<p><b>Dahomans.</b> See <a href="#Ewe">E<span class="smaller">WE</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Dakotas.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Dalmatian"><b>Dalmatians.</b> A Southern Slavonic race, crossed with Gothic
+blood. A fine race of hardy seamen, they manned the Venetian
+fleets, but now belong to Austria.</p>
+
+<p><b>Damaras</b>, or <b>Hau-Khoin</b>. See <a href="#Herero">H<span class="smaller">EREROS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Danakils"><b>Danakils</b>, or <b>Afars</b>. An Eastern Hamitic race settled
+in the vicinity of Obock, between Abyssinia and the Red Sea. They
+are nomad pastors and fishermen, well-built, and slender.</p>
+
+<p><b>Danes.</b> Natives of Denmark, belonging to the Scandinavian
+stock of the Aryan family. Denmark was originally inhabited by
+the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes, who colonised England. On their
+departure, the Danes from Zealand settled on the deserted lands,
+and there reared the kingdom which still exists. The early Danes
+were brave warriors and skilled seamen, who for a time ruled Saxon
+England under Canute. Their descendants, of comparatively pure
+blood, preserve these characteristics, and are also industrious
+agriculturists.</p>
+
+<p id="Dards"><b>Dards.</b> A warlike and hardy race of Aryan descent, inhabiting
+the mountainous country around Gilgit, in North-west India, of whom
+the Hunzas and Nagars are the chief tribes.</p>
+
+<p><b>Dargos.</b> See <a href="#Lesghians">L<span class="smaller">ESGHIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Delawares.</b> A North American Indian race with whom William
+Penn dealt in the 17th century: now fairly civilised. See
+<a href="#Algonquian">A<span class="smaller">LGONQUIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Didos.</b> See <a href="#Lesghians">L<span class="smaller">ESGHIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Dinkas.</b> See <a href="#Nilitic_Group">N<span class="smaller">ILITIC</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Dogras.</b> An Aryan race in the Punjab, between the Chinab and
+the Ravi, who contribute excellent soldiers to the British Native
+Army.</p>
+
+<p><b>Dorians.</b> See <a href="#Hellenes">H<span class="smaller">ELLENES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Dravidians"><b>Dravidas</b>, or <b>Dravidians</b>. Indigenous non-Aryan
+inhabitants of South India, including the Telingas or Telugu of the
+Nizam’s Dominions, the Tamils of Karnatic and Ceylon, the Kanarese
+of Mysore, the Malayalim of Malabar Coast, those wild hunters the
+Gonds of Vindhya Hills, the Sinhalese of Ceylon, and perhaps the
+<a href="#Veddah">Veddahs</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_326"></a>[Pg 326]</span> (<i>q.v.</i>). A Mongoloid race originally, which has been
+assimilated to the Caucasic type by long intermixture of blood.</p>
+
+<p><b>Druses.</b> A brave, handsome and industrious white race, who
+have been settled in the Lebanon district of Syria for at least 800
+years, and owe their unity to the possession of a special religion.
+Their origin is uncertain, but they are probably of a mixed stock,
+to which Arabs, Kurds, and Persians have all contributed. They are
+fair-haired and of light complexion. They are very warlike, have
+always preserved their independence against the Turks, and are the
+inveterate enemies of the <a href="#Maronite">Maronites</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p id="Dungan"><b>Dungans.</b> Southern Mongolic inhabitants of Zungaria, between
+Tian-Shan and Altai. Allied to <a href="#Chinese">Chinese</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Durbats.</b> See <a href="#Kalmuk">K<span class="smaller">ALMUKS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Duranis.</b> See <a href="#Afghan">A<span class="smaller">FGHANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Dyak"><b>Dyaks.</b> The aborigines of Borneo, probably akin to the <a href="#Malay">Malays</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>), whom they resemble physically, though of greater average
+stature. They are active and warlike, and formerly indulged in
+the practice of head-hunting, now dying out. The Sea-Dyaks were
+bold and inveterate pirates. They possess a considerable degree of
+indigenous civilisation, and their moral character is very fine.</p>
+
+<p><b>Easter Islanders.</b> (1) See <a href="#Polynesian">P<span class="smaller">OLYNESIANS</span></a>. (2) Easter
+Island once possessed an older race of inhabitants, now extinct,
+who have left very remarkable traces in the shape of numerous
+colossal statues, thin-lipped and disdainful, standing on platforms
+of Cyclopean masonry, as well as many stone houses with thick
+walls, painted on the inside. Nothing farther is known of their
+race or history.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ecuadorians.</b> White natives of Ecuador, in South America, of
+Spanish descent; noted for their laziness and political instability.</p>
+
+<p><b>Edomites.</b> See <a href="#Idumaean">I<span class="smaller">DUMÆANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Egbas.</b> See <a href="#Yoruba">Y<span class="smaller">ORUBAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Egyptian"><b>Egyptians.</b> (1) The ancient inhabitants of Egypt&mdash;known
+to them as Khem, the Biblical Mizraim&mdash;who reared one of the
+oldest and most important civilised states of the ancient world.
+The aborigines of Egypt were apparently a Palæolithic branch of
+Ethiopic Man, allied to the modern Bushmen. They were dispossessed
+and practically exterminated, probably about 7000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>,
+by a slender, fair-skinned race of European type, belonging to
+the Hamitic family, and resembling the modern <a href="#Berber">Berbers</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) in
+many respects. These were probably the same as the ancient <a href="#Libyan">Libyans</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>). Later this race was modified by the introduction of a
+Semitic element, partly from Syria, partly from the Phœnician
+conquerors who founded dynastic rule in Egypt under Menes, between
+5000 and 4000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Their later history is written on their
+imperishable monuments, and need not be summarised here. In later
+times the Egyptian racial type was modified by Greek and Roman
+influence. The ancient Egyptians were highly skilled in agriculture
+and engineering, warlike but not aggressive, and with a highly
+developed literature and religion. (2) The modern Egyptians are
+partly descended from the ancient Egyptians, whose racial type
+as represented on the monuments is still to be found in purity,
+mingled with Bedouin Arabs, Turks, Syrians, and other races. See
+<a href="#Copt">C<span class="smaller">OPTS</span></a> and
+<a href="#Fellahin">F<span class="smaller">ELLAHIN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>English.</b> Natives of England; used in a wider sense as
+equivalent to citizens of the British Empire [See <a href="#Briton">B<span class="smaller">RITONS</span></a>,
+<a href="#Anglo_Saxon">A<span class="smaller">NGLO</span>-S<span class="smaller">AXONS</span></a>]. The English people are a Low German branch
+of the Teutonic stock of the Aryan family, with a faint Celtic
+element derived from the primitive Britons, a strong Scandinavian
+element (especially in the north-east), derived from the invading
+Danes and Norsemen in the ninth to eleventh centuries, and a
+considerable Norman element&mdash;Norse modified by French culture. The
+typical Englishman is white-skinned and fair-haired, belonging to
+the Xanthochroi, but there are many deviations due to modifying
+influences. The race is eminently warlike and aggressive, and makes
+the most successful colonisers known to the world.</p>
+
+<p><b>Erie Indians.</b> See <a href="#Iroquoian">I<span class="smaller">ROQUOIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Erse.</b> See <a href="#Irish">I<span class="smaller">RISH</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Eshi-Kongo.</b> A semi-civilised race of Bantu Negroes,
+belonging to the ancient Kongo Empire, now Portuguese West Africa.</p>
+
+<p id="Eskimo"><b>Eskimos</b>, or <b>Innuits</b>. An Arctic aboriginal race,
+now inhabiting Greenland and the northern coasts of the American
+continent. They are nomadic, live by hunting and fishing, and are
+inured to extremes of cold. They are very broad-headed, fat, and
+of short stature, with flat quasi-Mongolic features. They seem
+to occupy a place midway between the North American Indian and
+the Mongolic type, and there is some reason to suppose that they
+represent a prehistoric Mongoloid incursion from Northern Asia, or
+perhaps from Indo-Malaysia.</p>
+
+<p id="Esthonian"><b>Esthonians.</b> A branch of Baltic <a href="#Finn">Finns</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) settled in
+Esthonia, and possessing an ancient ballad literature and mythology.</p>
+
+<p id="Ethiopian"><b>Ethiopians.</b> An ancient Berber tribe, settled in Egypt at
+least 5,000 years ago, now represented by the fair Berbers of
+Mauritania. Homer called them “blameless,” because he knew so
+little about them. See <a href="#Nubian">N<span class="smaller">UBIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ethiopic.</b> One of the four great divisions of the human race,
+occupying Africa, Australia, and many islands of the Eastern Ocean.
+Its members are typically black-skinned and woolly haired, with
+projecting jaws and broad skulls.</p>
+
+<p id="Etruscan"><b>Etruscans.</b> An ancient Italian people, inhabiting Etruria
+in North Italy in pre-Roman times. They probably consisted of an
+aboriginal <a href="#Pelasgian">Pelasgian</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) race, modified by a dominant race of
+invaders, who may have been of Mongolic type, or perhaps akin to
+the <a href="#Hittite">Hittites</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). The Etruscans may be classed as Hamitic.
+They had a distinctive civilisation, and made great progress in
+art, of which many monuments remain. The Etruscan confederation,
+of which Veii was the chief city, long warred with the rising
+power of Rome, under whose dominion it fell in the fourth century
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Families of undoubted Etruscan descent are still
+found in North Italy.</p>
+
+<p><b>Europeans.</b> Natives of Europe, mainly Aryan.</p>
+
+<p id="Ewe"><b>Ewe.</b> A group of Sudanese Negro tribes of Guinea Coast. The
+best known are the Dahomans, or natives of the ancient kingdom
+of Dahomey, on the Slave Coast. Of small stature, but robust and
+warlike, they are noted for their great human sacrifices and their
+employment of female warriors or “Amazons.” Now under French rule.
+The Togos are also an Ewe tribe.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_327"></a>[Pg 327]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_327">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_327.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">AN ARAB VILLAGE ON THE BORDERS OF EGYPT</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_327_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><b>Fans.</b> A race of powerful and aggressive warriors, who
+intruded into Gaboon-Ogoway district about the middle of the
+nineteenth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_328"></a>[Pg 328]</span> century; possibly related to
+<a href="#Azandeh">Azandeh</a> or <a href="#Fulah">Fulahs</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>). Cannibals, but otherwise of higher intellect and morality
+than the average Negro, from whom they differ in physical type.</p>
+
+<p><b>Fantis.</b> See <a href="#Tshi">T<span class="smaller">SHI</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Fellahin"><b>Fellahin.</b> The labouring peasantry of modern Egypt,
+industrious but not warlike, descendants of ancient Egyptians, with
+a mixture of Syrian and Arab blood.</p>
+
+<p id="Felup"><b>Felup.</b> A group of Sudanese Negro tribes on Casamanza and
+Cacheo estuaries.</p>
+
+<p><b>Fertits.</b> See <a href="#Nilitic_Group">N<span class="smaller">ILITIC</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Fijians.</b> Natives of Fiji, belonging to the Melanesian stock
+of the Oceanic Negro family. Formerly ferocious cannibals, they are
+now civilised.</p>
+
+<p><b>Filipinos.</b> See <a href="#Philippines">P<span class="smaller">HILIPPINES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Fingus</b>, or <b>Ama-Fingu</b>. Bantu Negroes of the Kafir
+division in South-east Africa, regarded by Zulus and Ama-Xosa as an
+inferior race.</p>
+
+<p id="Finno_Ugrian"><b>Finno-Ugrian.</b> A stock of the Northern Mongolic family,
+including (1) Ugrian or Siberian Finns, of which the chief races
+are <a href="#Soyot">Soyots</a>, <a href="#Ostyak">Ostyaks</a>,
+<a href="#Samoyede">Samoyedes</a>, <a href="#Vogul">Voguls</a>,
+<a href="#Permian">Permian Finns</a>, <a href="#Siryanian">Siryanians</a>,
+and <a href="#Magyar">Magyars</a> (<i>q.v.</i>); (2) European Finns, divided into:
+(<i>a</i>) Volga Finns, (<i>b</i>) Baltic Finns.</p>
+
+<p id="Finn"><b>Finns.</b> The Finns proper are the inhabitants of Finland,
+between Russia and Norway. They are a Northern Mongolic race, of
+Finno-Ugrian stock, who are supposed to have originated beside
+the head waters of the Yenisei River. They entered Finland about
+the end of the seventh century and established themselves there,
+being afterwards annexed, first by Sweden and then by Russia.
+They are a strong, hardy race, who make excellent seamen, with
+round faces, fair hair and blue eyes. They are honest, highly
+moral and religious, and possess a remarkable ballad and folk-tale
+literature, of which the Kalevala is the chief example. The
+Baltic Finns of allied race include <a href="#Esthonian">Esthonians</a>,
+<a href="#Karelian">Karelians</a>, <a href="#Lapp">Lapps</a>,
+<a href="#Livonian">Livonians</a> and <a href="#Tavastian">Tavastians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). The Volga Finns are another
+branch of the same people, whose chief tribe was the ancient
+<a href="#Bulgar">Bulgars</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). The Mordvins and Cheremisses, still settled on
+the banks of the Volga in small communities, belong to the same
+race.</p>
+
+<p id="Flathead"><b>Flathead</b> or <b>Salish Indians</b>. A mixed race of North
+American Indians, in British Columbia and Montana.</p>
+
+<p id="Fleming"><b>Flemings</b>, or <b>Flemish</b>. The inhabitants of Flanders,
+now divided between Belgium and Holland, descended from Belgic
+tribes settled there in Cæsar’s time. They are a Low German branch
+of the Teutonic stock. They are an industrious and honest, though
+phlegmatic, people, who played a great part in mediæval commerce.</p>
+
+<p id="Formosans"><b>Formosans.</b> Natives of Formosa, of mixed Malayan and Negrito
+descent. They were divided into three classes by the Chinese
+invaders: the Pepohwan, civilised agriculturists, under Chinese
+rule; Sekhwan, settled tribes who acknowledged Chinese rule; and
+Chinhwan, the wild savage tribes of the mountains, who waged
+unceasing war against the invaders. The island has now passed under
+Japanese dominion. The Formosans in general approximate to the
+Malay type, but are more sturdily built.</p>
+
+<p><b>Fox Indians.</b> See <a href="#Algonquian">A<span class="smaller">LGONQUIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Frank"><b>Franks.</b> A confederation of Germanic tribes, dwelling on the
+Middle and Lower Rhine in the third century. They belonged to the
+High German branch of the Teutonic stock. In the third and fourth
+centuries they began to invade Gaul, where they established a
+Frankish kingdom under Clovis (481&ndash;511), who adopted Christianity.
+This later developed into the modern State of France. The Franks
+were a brave and stalwart race of warriors, with blue eyes and long
+flowing hair, well-built and large-limbed. They were a nation of
+democratic fighting men, who practised agriculture in the intervals
+of war.</p>
+
+<p><b>French.</b> The inhabitants of modern France, a race of
+mixed origin. Among their ancestors are the Celtic <a href="#Gaul">Gauls</a>, the
+Teutonic <a href="#Belgae">Belgae</a> and <a href="#Frank">Franks</a>,
+the Hamitic <a href="#Iberians">Iberians</a>, the <a href="#Roman">Romans</a>,
+and the Scandinavian <a href="#Norman">Normans</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). They are probably the
+quickest-witted and most intelligent race of modern Europe.
+Extremely warlike and aggressive in earlier days, they are now
+displaying greater devotion to the arts of peace, especially
+agriculture. Paris has long been the chief centre of ideas in
+Europe.</p>
+
+<p><b>Frisians.</b> A Teutonic race of Low German stock, living
+between Scheldt and Weser in Roman times, now belonging to the
+Netherlands.</p>
+
+<p><b>Fuegians.</b> Natives of Tierra del Fuego in South America,
+savages of a very low physical and mental type.</p>
+
+<p id="Fulah"><b>Fulahs.</b> A warlike and predatory race of Saharan Hamites,
+formerly occupying small communities throughout the West and
+Central Sudan, who over-ran the native Hausa States about
+1800&ndash;1810, and founded the empire of Sokoto.</p>
+
+<p><b>Furs.</b> See <a href="#Nuba_Group">N<span class="smaller">UBA</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Ga"><b>Ga.</b> A Sudanese Negro group in Guinea, including Accras and
+Krobos.</p>
+
+<p><b>Gaels.</b> See <a href="#Highlander">H<span class="smaller">IGHLANDERS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Galeka"><b>Gaikas</b> and <b>Galekas</b>. See <a href="#Xosa">X<span class="smaller">OSAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Galchas.</b> Highlanders of Hindu Kush and Turkistan, of Iranian
+descent.</p>
+
+<p><b>Gallegos.</b> Natives of Galicia, in Spain, of Gothic descent.</p>
+
+<p id="Gallas"><b>Gallas.</b> A branch of Eastern Hamites, occupying Gallaland,
+south of Abyssinia. The finest people in all Africa, strongly
+built, of a light chocolate colour. They are distinguished for
+their energy and honesty. They are divided into numerous tribes,
+and are inveterate foes of the Somalis.</p>
+
+<p><b>Gallinas.</b> Sudanese Negroes of Sierra Leone.</p>
+
+<p id="Garamantes"><b>Garamantes.</b> An ancient Hamitic race inhabiting the
+neighbourhood of Tripoli in Roman times.</p>
+
+<p><b>Garhwalis.</b> Tibetan natives of Garhwal, on the border of
+Tibet.</p>
+
+<p><b>Gascons.</b> Natives of Gascony, of Basque descent, modified
+by Frank and French blood. They are notorious for their lively
+imagination and boasting “Gasconades.”</p>
+
+<p id="Gaucho"><b>Gauchos.</b> A mixed race of Spanish and Indian descent,
+admirable horsemen, who are the chief herdsmen of Uruguay and the
+Argentine Republic. See <a href="#Puelche">P<span class="smaller">UELCHES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Gaul"><b>Gauls.</b> In Cæsar’s time the Gauls occupied the central part,
+and formed the chief race, of modern France, which, after them,
+was called Gaul. They probably belonged to the Brythonic division
+of the Celtic stock, being closely allied to the ancient Britons,
+as well as to the modern Welsh and Bretons, who respectively
+represent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_329"></a>[Pg 329]</span> the remnants of the primitive Celtic population of
+England and France. It is possible that there was a still earlier
+Celtic element in France, corresponding to the Goidelic division of
+the Celtic stock. Mingled with the Celtic element in the Gauls were
+traces of the earlier <a href="#Iberians">Iberian</a> and <a href="#Ligurian">Ligurian aborigines</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). The
+Gauls were blue-eyed, fair-haired and long-headed, in distinction
+to the older dark-eyed, black-haired, round-headed type, which is
+more commonly known as Celtic, but is probably characteristic of
+an older race. Under Roman rule the Gauls acquired a considerable
+degree of civilisation. They were dispossessed in the decline of
+the empire by <a href="#Frank">Franks</a>, <a href="#Burgundian">Burgundians</a> and <a href="#Visigoth">Visigoths</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), but
+became in part ancestors of the modern French.</p>
+
+<p id="Georgian"><b>Georgians.</b> The chief race of the Southern Caucasus, a fine
+athletic race of pure Caucasic type, noted for the personal beauty
+of its individuals. The Georgians were formerly fierce and warlike,
+but under Russian rule have become industrious in the arts of
+peace. They are noted for a passionate love of music. They first
+appear in history in the time of Alexander the Great, when they
+were already settled in their mountains. The Georgian kingdom had
+an independent existence for about seven centuries, but suffered
+much from Mongolian and especially Turkish invasions. Georgia
+and Circassia furnished the majority of white slaves for Turkish
+harems. In 1801 Georgia was annexed to Russia. Other important
+South Caucasian races are the Imerians and the Mingrelians, who
+closely resemble the Georgians in physical characteristics, but
+have displayed less aptitude for civilisation.</p>
+
+<p><b>Gepidæ.</b> See <a href="#Goths">G<span class="smaller">OTHS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Getæ.</b> An ancient race of <a href="#Thracian">Thracian</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) descent, who
+settled in Wallachia in the fourth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> They
+were warlike and turbulent, but were conquered by Trajan and
+incorporated in the Roman Empire. In later centuries they appear to
+have been fused with the <a href="#Goths">Goths</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Germans.</b> The Germans first appear in history as a multitude
+of independent and warlike tribes living amongst the dense forests
+which stretched in Roman times from the Rhine to the Vistula.
+They belonged to the Teutonic stock of the Aryan family. They
+were a tall and vigorous race, with long, fair hair and fierce
+blue eyes, who delighted in war and the chase. Their democratic
+social organisation has greatly influenced all Teutonic history;
+their love of liberty was a passion. At an early period they were
+divided into High and Low Germans, differing in type, according as
+they inhabited the central and southern portions of modern Germany
+or the low-lying lands towards the North Sea and the Baltic. The
+chief races of the former were the Goths, Franks, Burgundians,
+Swiss, Swabians, Austrians; of the latter, Saxons, Angles, Jutes,
+Frisians, Flemings, Batavi&mdash;from whom the modern English and
+Dutch are descended, whilst the High Germans represent the modern
+Germans. These are a very enterprising, thorough, and industrious
+race, alike in war and peace, and have thus given birth to one of
+the greatest Powers of the modern world.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ghilzais.</b> See <a href="#Afghan">A<span class="smaller">FGHANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Gilyak"><b>Gilyaks.</b> A Siberian Mongolic race of Saghalien.</p>
+
+<p id="Gipsies"><b>Gipsies.</b> A nomadic race, which was first described as
+appearing in Europe in the fifteenth century, and is now found in
+nearly all civilised countries. At first they were believed to come
+from Egypt, and their name is a corruption of “Egyptians.” They
+have a dark, tawny skin, black hair and eyes, are small-handed
+and often very handsome, and live by tinkering, basket-making,
+fortune-telling, and other arts which can be practised on the
+road. Their chief characteristic is independence and love of a
+wandering life. Their origin is still uncertain; though their
+language, Romany, is known to be a corrupt dialect of Hindi, which
+supports the older theory that they are of Indian descent. A later
+and well-supported theory is that they are the descendants of the
+prehistoric race which introduced metal-working into Europe. On
+this view they must have existed in Europe from time immemorial,
+without being noticed in literature. The gipsy problem still awaits
+solution.</p>
+
+<p><b>Goajiris.</b> See <a href="#Tupi_Guarani">T<span class="smaller">UPI</span>-G<span class="smaller">UARANI</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Golden Hordes.</b> See <a href="#Kipchak">K<span class="smaller">IPCHAKS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Gonaquas.</b> Hottentot Negro half breeds on Kafirland frontier.</p>
+
+<p><b>Goads.</b> See <a href="#Dravidians">D<span class="smaller">RAVIDAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Goths"><b>Goths.</b> One of the chief Teutonic races of ancient times,
+who played a great part in European history from the third to
+the eighth century, but have left no descendants as a distinct
+race. They first appear in history in the third century, as a
+confederation of German tribes who had made a settlement in the
+district north of the Lower Danube. They soon split up into two
+distinct peoples, the East Goths or Ostrogoths, and the West Goths
+or Visigoths. There was a third and unimportant race of Mœsogoths,
+settled in Mœsia, for whom Ulfilas made his famous translation of
+the Scriptures. The Goths were extremely warlike and aggressive,
+a typical race of German warriors. The Ostrogoths remained north
+of the Danube, where they were subjugated for a time by the Huns
+of Attila. Recovering their independence, they invaded Italy,
+destroyed the Western Empire, and established a new kingdom under
+Theodoric. This was conquered by the Byzantine Narses in 552,
+after which the Ostrogoths disappear from history. The Visigoths,
+unwilling to submit to the Huns, crossed the Danube and settled in
+the Roman Empire, where they furnished many recruits for the army.
+In 395 they rebelled, and under Alaric invaded Italy and besieged
+Rome. Afterwards they founded kingdoms in the south of Gaul and in
+Spain, where the Visigoths ruled till the invasion of the Saracens,
+and where their blood is still found incorporated with that of
+the older races. A branch of the Ostrogoths which settled in the
+Crimea preserved its nationality and language down to the sixteenth
+century, or even later. The Bastarnæ, Gepidæ, and perhaps the
+<a href="#Vandals">Vandals</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), were branches of the Gothic race.</p>
+
+<p><b>Greeks.</b> (1) For ancient Greeks, see <a href="#Hellenes">H<span class="smaller">ELLENES</span></a>. (2)
+The modern Greeks are partly descendants of ancient Greeks, with a
+large admixture of Albanian, Wallachian and Slavonic elements. They
+are great in commerce, but not warlike.</p>
+
+<p id="Griquas"><b>Griquas.</b> A race of Hottentot-Dutch half-breeds, also known
+as Bastaards, in Griqualand.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_330"></a>[Pg 330]</span></p>
+
+<p><b>Guaicuris.</b> Central American Indians of Lower California.</p>
+
+<p><b>Guanches.</b> Aborigines of Canary Islands: so-called “White
+Africans,” probably of Berber Hamitic stock.</p>
+
+<p><b>Guatemalans.</b> White natives of Guatemala, in Central America,
+of Spanish descent.</p>
+
+<p><b>Guatusas.</b> Central American Indians of Costa Rica.</p>
+
+<p><b>Guebres.</b> See <a href="#Parsee">P<span class="smaller">ARSEES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Gujeratis.</b> Natives of Gujerat in Western India, Aryans of
+Hindu stock.</p>
+
+<p><b>Gurkas.</b> The dominant race of Nepal, who claim a Hindu
+(Aryan) origin, but have probably acquired a Mongoloid tinge from
+inter-marriages. They are of small stature, yet eminently warlike,
+and supply some of the best troops to our Indian Army.</p>
+
+<p><b>Gypsies.</b> See <a href="#Gipsies">G<span class="smaller">IPSIES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hadendowas.</b> See <a href="#Bejas">B<span class="smaller">EJAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Haidas.</b> North American Indians in British Columbia.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hamites.</b> A family of Caucasic Man, belonging to the
+Melanochroid or dark type, ranging in colour from white to brown,
+and even black; hair soft, straight or wavy; skull, medium
+(mesocephalic); square-jawed (orthognathous); generally of fine
+physical development. Divided into Eastern Hamites&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, Somali,
+and Western Hamites&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, Berbers and Basques. Closely related
+to Semites.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hau-Khoin.</b> See <a href="#Herero">H<span class="smaller">EREROS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hausas.</b> The most important Sudanese Negro race of Northern
+Nigeria. Keen traders, physically well developed, they make
+excellent soldiers, and are largely utilised for this purpose by
+their British rulers. The Hausa States were over-run by the Hamitic
+<a href="#Fulah">Fulahs</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) about 1800&ndash;1810, and now form part of the Empire of
+Sokoto. The Hausa language is the common medium of commerce in the
+Central Sudan.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hawaiians.</b> Natives of Hawaii, of brown Polynesian stock,
+akin to Maoris. A remarkably fine and handsome race, steadily
+decreasing since contact with European civilisation and diseases.
+Peculiarly subject to leprosy.</p>
+
+<p id="Haytian"><b>Haytians.</b> Natives of the negro republic of Hayti, descended
+from negro slaves imported by the earlier Spanish and French
+owners, who freed themselves at the time of the French Revolution.
+The Spanish portion afterwards formed the Dominican Republic in
+the eastern part of the island. Of mixed Bantu and Sudanese Negro
+descent, with a cross of white blood.</p>
+
+<p id="Hazaras"><b>Hazaras.</b> Mountaineers of N.W. Afghanistan, a vigorous and
+turbulent race of Mongolo-Persian descent, often troublesome to
+British India.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hebrews.</b> See <a href="#Jew">J<span class="smaller">EWS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Hellenes"><b>Hellenes.</b> Inhabitants of ancient Greece, which they called
+Hellas. The Proto-Hellenes, or aborigines, were probably of
+Pelasgian origin, belonging to the Western Hamitic family, of
+whom the ancient <a href="#Cretans">Cretans</a> and <a href="#Mycenaeans">Mycenæans</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) may represent the
+ancestral type. These were followed by the true Hellenes&mdash;Achæans
+or Argives&mdash;divided into three main branches&mdash;Dorians, Ionians, and
+Æolians. Later they were divided into many local states, such as
+Athens and Sparta. The modern Greeks are in part descended from the
+Hellenes, crossed with Albanian, Wallachian, and Turkish blood. It
+is to the Hellenes that we owe the first important developments of
+civilisation in Europe.</p>
+
+<p><b>Helveti.</b> Ancient inhabitants of Switzerland in Cæsar’s time,
+probably a German tribe, from whom the modern Swiss are in part
+descended.</p>
+
+<p id="Herero"><b>Hereros</b>, or <b>Ovaherero</b>. Bantu Negroes inhabiting the
+plains of Damaraland, or German South-West Africa. The Damaras or
+Hau-Khoin are a cross between Hereros and the Hottentot aborigines.
+A pastoral nation who migrated thither about two centuries ago from
+the inland districts, and dispossessed the aboriginal Hottentots,
+now represented by the Namas of Namaqualand, with whom they
+are perennially at war. Recently they rose against the German
+authorities, and have given them much trouble. A fine, warlike race.</p>
+
+<p id="Highlander"><b>Highlanders.</b> The Gaelic-speaking inhabitants of Northern
+Scotland, a branch of the Goidelic or Q Kelts, also known as Gaels.
+They are descended from the ancient <a href="#Scots">Scots</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), who originally
+migrated from Ireland in the fifth century. One of the finest races
+of the British Islands, who give them their finest soldiers.</p>
+
+<p id="Himyarite"><b>Himyarites.</b> A branch of the Semitic family (“Red Men,”
+whence the Red Sea), formerly occupying Arabia Felix and Abyssinia;
+they form the main stock of the Abyssinian race. They included the
+kingdoms of the Minæans and Sabæans, the latter being identified by
+some with the Biblical Sheba.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hindus.</b> A stock of the Aryan family, comprising a large
+proportion of the natives of India, described under the headings
+of Kashmiris, Punjabis, Rajputs, Marathas, Bengalis, Sindis,
+Gujeratis, Assamis, etc. The original Hindus entered India&mdash;hence
+called Hindustan&mdash;from the north-west at some prehistoric time, and
+soon became the predominant race in the peninsula.</p>
+
+<p id="Hittite"><b>Hittites.</b> A forgotten but once mighty people of Semitic
+race, who contested the entry of the Israelites into Canaan, and
+waged war with Egypt and Assyria for many centuries. Little is
+known about them, but they seem to have reared a mighty empire
+between Lebanon and the Euphrates, which endured for more than a
+thousand years, and was destroyed by the Assyrian Sargon II. in 717
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span></p>
+
+<p><b>Hondurans.</b> White natives of Honduras, of Spanish descent;
+few in numbers, the population being mostly of mixed blood.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hor-Soks.</b> A primitive Mongol-Turki race of the Tibetan
+plateau.</p>
+
+<p id="Hottentot"><b>Hottentots</b>, or <b>Khoi-Khoin</b>. The aboriginal Negro
+inhabitants of South Africa, which they shared with the <a href="#Bushmen">Bushmen</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>). Possibly the Bushmen are degraded Hottentots, or the
+Hottentots are a cross between the Bantus from the north and the
+Bushmen, who would on this view be the true aborigines. The only
+surviving race of pure Hottentots are the Namas of Namaqualand: the
+Damaras, Griquas, Gonaquas, and Koranas, are other races in which
+Hottentot blood is mixed with that of Bantu Negroes or of Europeans
+(mostly Boers). The Hottentots are a distinct branch of the Negro
+family, marked by extremely long heads and high cheek-bones, a
+brownish-yellow complexion, with other physical peculiarities
+exemplified in the so-called “Hottentot Venus,” and also found in
+the Bushmen. Their language is peculiar for its unique “clicks,”
+which no European can pronounce, and which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_331"></a>[Pg 331]</span> seem to stand between
+articulate and inarticulate speech.</p>
+
+<p id="Hova"><b>Hovas.</b> The dominant Malagasy race of Madagascar, of Malay
+descent, mixed with Bantu Negro blood from Africa. They stand
+nearest to pure Malays of all Malagasy peoples. The existing French
+Protectorate was only established after much fighting with the
+warlike Hovas, who had conquered all the other native tribes.</p>
+
+<p><b>Huastec.</b> See <a href="#Maya_Quiche">M<span class="smaller">AYA</span>-Q<span class="smaller">UICHÉ</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hungarians.</b> See <a href="#Magyar">M<span class="smaller">AGYARS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Hun"><b>Huns.</b> A nomad race of the Northern Mongolic family,
+probably of Turki stock, who settled in the neighbourhood of the
+Volga and the Urals about the dawn of the Christian era. In the
+fourth century they conquered and dispossessed the Ostrogoths and
+Visigoths on the Danube. Under Attila, in the fifth century, they
+invaded Greece and Gaul, and pushed their arms as far as Rome,
+which was only saved by the diplomacy of the Pope. Their cruel
+fierceness in war caused their great leader to be known as the
+Scourge of God. Like the Mongols, they were essentially a race of
+horsemen, and their “deformed figures and hideous Mongolic faces”
+added to the terror which they inspired. After Attila’s death in
+453 the Huns fell to pieces, and soon were absorbed into other
+nations&mdash;especially, perhaps, the Bulgars.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hunzas.</b> See <a href="#Dards">D<span class="smaller">ARDS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hupas.</b> See <a href="#Athabascan">A<span class="smaller">THABASCAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hurons</b>, or <b>Wyandots</b>. A North American Indian race of
+Iroquoian stock, formerly inhabiting the shores of Lake Huron.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hyksos.</b> A Northern Mongolic race who invaded Egypt
+and established the dynasty of the Shepherd kings about 2000
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span></p>
+
+<p><b>Ibeas.</b> A Negro race which recently invaded the Cameroons
+from the East: they bring down ivory from the unexplored interior.
+Either Bantu, or Sudanese&mdash;perhaps connected with the <a href="#Azandeh">Azandeh</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p id="Iberians"><b>Iberi</b>, or <b>Iberians</b>. An ancient race of Western
+Hamites, related to the fair Berbers of Mauritania. The Basques
+are probably descended from them, and there is good reason
+for identifying them with the Picts of Scotland and the Irish
+aborigines.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ibo.</b> See <a href="#Abo">A<span class="smaller">BO</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Icelanders.</b> Inhabitants of Iceland, originally Norwegians,
+who settled there about the end of the ninth century. A typical
+tall, fair-haired, blue-eyed Scandinavian race. The Icelandic Sagas
+form the chief part of ancient Scandinavian literature.</p>
+
+<p id="Idumaean"><b>Idumæans</b> or <b>Edomites</b>. A warlike Semitic race of
+Canaanite stock, thought to be descended from Esau, who were
+conquered by the Israelites under Saul and David, and again by
+Judas Maccabæus in 165 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, after which they disappear
+from history.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ife.</b> See <a href="#Yoruba">Y<span class="smaller">ORUBAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Igorrotes.</b> An industrious agricultural race of the
+Philippine Islands. Indonesians of Malay descent, with a possible
+Chinese or Japanese element.</p>
+
+<p><b>Illinois Indians.</b> See <a href="#Algonquian">A<span class="smaller">LGONQUIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Illyrians"><b>Illyrians.</b> A savage piratical race of the eastern Adriatic
+sea-board, who were conquered by the Romans, and were the last of
+the Balkan peoples to be civilised. Probably the modern Albanians
+are descended from them, and they were among the first Aryan
+immigrants to Europe.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ilocanos.</b> A Malay race of the Philippine Islands.</p>
+
+<p><b>Imerians.</b> See <a href="#Georgian">G<span class="smaller">EORGIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Incas"><b>Incas.</b> The chief of the six Indian races, including the
+Quichuas and the warlike Chancas, which formerly occupied the
+central mountain-region of Peru. The Incas became the dominant
+race about 1000 <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>, and built up a vast and peaceful
+civilisation, in which a purely socialistic government was
+successfully administered. This Inca Empire was destroyed by the
+Spanish under Pizarro in 1533, but the Inca Indians still survive
+as a race in Central Peru, where they are known as industrious and
+honest agriculturists.</p>
+
+<p><b>Indians.</b> Native races (1) of India; (2) of North, Central,
+and South America.</p>
+
+<p><b>Indo-Chinese.</b> A section of the Southern Mongolic family,
+inhabiting the countries between India and China.</p>
+
+<p><b>Indo-European, Indo-German.</b> See <a href="#Aryan">A<span class="smaller">RYAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Indonesian"><b>Indonesians.</b> The light-coloured, non-Malay inhabitants of
+the Eastern Archipelago and South Sea Islands, who are of Caucasic
+type, and are mostly brown-skinned <a href="#Polynesian">Polynesians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). They also
+include the Batjans of Batjan I., the Burus, Korongui, and Suvu of
+the Malay Archipelago, and the <a href="#Mentawey">Mentawey Islanders</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Ingushis.</b> See <a href="#Chechenzes">C<span class="smaller">HECHENZES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Innuits.</b> See <a href="#Eskimo">E<span class="smaller">SKIMOS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ionians.</b> (1) One of the three main Hellenic races of ancient
+Greece. (2) Greek inhabitants of the coast districts and islands of
+Western Asia Minor, forming the Ionian League, who passed in the
+sixth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> under the Persian sway.</p>
+
+<p><b>Iowa Indians.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Iranians.</b> Ancient inhabitants of the Asian plateau bounded
+by the Indus, the Tigris, and the Hindu Kush. A stock of the Aryan
+family, now including <a href="#Persian">Persians</a>, <a href="#Afghan">Afghans</a>,
+<a href="#Baluchis">Baluchis</a>, <a href="#Kurd">Kurds</a>, and
+<a href="#Armenian">Armenians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p id="Irish"><b>Irish.</b> (1) The aborigines of Ireland, probably <a href="#Iberians">Iberians</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>). (2) The later Erse-speaking inhabitants of Ireland,
+a branch of the Goidelic or Q Celts. (3) Modern inhabitants of
+Ireland, mostly Celtic, but largely mixed with Teutonic elements in
+the north.</p>
+
+<p id="Iroquoian"><b>Iroquoian.</b> One of the families of North American Indians,
+including the Iroquois, or “Six Nations,” who comprised the
+Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Senecas, Tuscaroras and Cayugas;
+the Hurons, or Wyandots, including the Eries, and the Cherokees.
+Their territory was Upper Canada, round the great lakes, New York,
+and the Virginian Highlands, and they played a large part in the
+Franco-British warfare of the eighteenth century. They are now few
+in numbers and confined to Indian Reservations in the U.S. and
+Canada.</p>
+
+<p><b>Israelites.</b> See <a href="#Jew">J<span class="smaller">EWS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Italians.</b> (1) Ancient inhabitants of Italy, of Ligurian
+stock, probably Eastern Hamites, related to the Pelasgians [see
+<a href="#Latin">L<span class="smaller">ATINS</span></a> and <a href="#Roman">R<span class="smaller">OMANS</span></a>]. (2) Modern Italians, mostly
+of Latin stock, crossed with Teutonic (Gothic and Lombard) blood.</p>
+
+<p><b>Italic.</b> A stock of the Aryan family, including ancient and
+modern Italians (with ancient Romans), modern French, Spanish,
+Portuguese, and Roumanian, with Latin (Spanish and Portuguese)
+Americans.</p>
+
+<p><b>Jallonké.</b> See <a href="#Mandingan">M<span class="smaller">ANDINGAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Jangalis.</b> An aboriginal Indian tribe, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_332"></a>[Pg 332]</span>habiting the forest
+district north of Cuttack&mdash;the most primitive race in all India.
+Perhaps an early <a href="#Dravidians">Dravidian</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) stock.</p>
+
+<p><b>Japanese.</b> A race of the Northern Mongolian family, probably
+originating in Korea, whence they spread to Japan and dispossessed
+the Ainu aborigines, about the dawn of the Christian era. The
+most enterprising and civilised people in Asia, often called “the
+English of the Far East.” They possess a singularly high standard
+of honour and patriotism, which was the main factor in their recent
+victory over Russia, and they are eminently warlike, besides
+producing industrious agriculturists and enterprising traders.
+Of short but sturdy stature, white skin and yellow or sallowish
+complexion, oblique eyes, black hair.</p>
+
+<p id="Jat"><b>Jats.</b> A numerous agricultural race of the Punjab in
+North-west India. They are probably of an Aryan stock, but
+ethnologists disagree as to their history, assigning them ancient
+Scythian invaders, the Rajputs, or the Gipsies, for ancestors.</p>
+
+<p id="Javanese"><b>Javanese.</b> A Malay race inhabiting Java, where they
+dispossessed the Negrito aborigines [see <a href="#Kalang">K<span class="smaller">ALANGS</span></a>] in
+prehistoric times. The Sundanese and Madurese are allied tribes,
+possessing parts of the island of Java, now under Dutch rule.</p>
+
+<p><b>Jebus.</b> See <a href="#Yoruba">Y<span class="smaller">ORUBAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Jew"><b>Jews</b>, <b>Hebrews</b>, or <b>Israelites</b>. The most
+important of Semitic races, of the ancient Canaanite stock. The
+Israelites descended from Abraham, who came from Mesopotamia to
+Canaan about 2000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>; thence they migrated to Egypt, and
+returned to take possession of Palestine. Their history is familiar
+to all from the Bible. After the Roman capture of Jerusalem under
+Titus, 70 <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>, the Jews&mdash;as they were now called&mdash;were
+dispersed through the world, but they have retained their racial
+characteristics in remarkable purity through long persecutions, and
+now play a great part in the commerce and finance of nearly all
+civilised countries, though they have no national unity or racial
+home.</p>
+
+<p><b>Jivaros.</b> South American Indians, in Peru, on the head-waters
+of the Amazon.</p>
+
+<p><b>Jolofs.</b> See <a href="#Wolof">W<span class="smaller">OLOFS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Jutes.</b> Early inhabitants of Jutland, a Low German branch of
+Teutonic stock, who invaded England in the fifth century and made
+the first Teutonic settlement in that country, in Kent.</p>
+
+<p id="Kabard"><b>Kabards.</b> A Western Caucasian race, allied to the <a href="#Circassians">Circassians</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>) and presenting a high standard of physical beauty.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kabyles.</b> See <a href="#Berber">B<span class="smaller">ERBERS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kacharis.</b> Natives of the Terai at the foot of the Himalayas,
+belonging to the Tibetan stock of the Southern Mongolic family.</p>
+
+<p id="Kafir"><b>Kafirs</b>, or <b>Kaffirs</b>. Generic name of the fierce and
+warlike Bantu Negro races which occupied the south-eastern seaboard
+of South Africa when Europeans first colonised that country. They
+then held all the coast lands from the Gamboos to the Limpopo.
+The southern part (Kaffraria) belonged to the Kafirs proper, and
+the northern (Zululand) to the Zulus, an allied race, but usually
+distinguished from the Kafirs, or Ama-Xosa, whose chief tribes are
+<a href="#Galeka">Galekas</a>, <a href="#Galeka">Gaikas</a>
+and <a href="#Tembu">Tembus</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). Throughout the greater part
+of the nineteenth century the English settlers were engaged in
+constant Kafir wars, which resulted in the gradual subjugation of
+both Kafirs and Zulus.</p>
+
+<p id="Kafirs"><b>Kafirs.</b> Fair-skinned mountaineers of Kafiristan, between
+the Kabul River and Hindu Kush. An offshoot of the Aryan family,
+thought by some to be descendants in part of the Greek troops with
+which Alexander the Great invaded India.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kakhyens.</b> A race of freebooters, inhabiting the northern
+frontiers of Burma, whence they raid the more civilised
+agriculturists of the plains and levy blackmail. A Southern
+Mongolic race of Indo-Chinese stock.</p>
+
+<p id="Kalang"><b>Kalangs.</b> A recently extinct Negrito race of Java, remnants
+of the aborigines of that island; small, black and woolly-haired,
+with very retreating forehead and projecting jaws. The most
+ape-like of human beings, and the nearest approach yet found to the
+“missing link” between man and ape. They belonged to the Oceanic
+Negro family.</p>
+
+<p id="Kalmuk"><b>Kalmuks.</b> The Western Mongol stock of the Northern Mongolic
+family, scattered through Central Asia, and extending into Southern
+Russia. Nomadic pastors, owning large flocks and herds, and living
+in tents on the great steppes, they include the tribes of the
+Chorasses, Turguts, Khoshots, and Durbats. A large horde of Kalmuks
+invaded Russia in 1650, and settled there for a century, but in
+1771 most of them were expelled, and endured great sufferings on
+the march to China, so brilliantly described by De Quincy. These
+were mainly Khoshots and Durbats.</p>
+
+<p id="Kamchadale"><b>Kamchadales.</b> A Siberian branch of the Northern Mongolic
+family, inhabiting Kamchatka; a hardy race of hunters and fishers.</p>
+
+<p id="Kanakas"><b>Kanakas.</b> A name given to South Sea Islanders, generally
+by sailors and traders, and especially to Polynesian labourers
+imported to Queensland.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kanakas</b>, or <b>Bakanaka</b>. Negro aborigines of Angola,
+probably akin to the Bushmen. Other similar tribes are the Korokas,
+Kulabes, Kwandes and Kwisses.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kanarese.</b> Mongoloid aborigines of Mysore in India. See
+<a href="#Dravidians">D<span class="smaller">RAVIDIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kanembu, Kanuris.</b> See <a href="#Lake_Chad_Group">L<span class="smaller">AKE</span>
+C<span class="smaller">HAD</span> G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Kara_Kalpak"><b>Kara-Kalpaks</b>, or <b>Black Bonnets</b>. A branch of the Turki
+stock of the Northern Mongolic family, dwelling on the south-east
+of the Aral Sea and in the Oxus basin. A pacific pastoral race,
+dominated by their warlike relatives, the nomadic Kirghiz, and now
+subject to Russia.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kara-Kirghiz.</b> See <a href="#Kirghiz">K<span class="smaller">IRGHIZ</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Karelian"><b>Karelians.</b> An Eastern branch of Baltic Finns dwelling in
+the eastern parts of Finland and adjoining provinces of Russia.
+Probably a Slavo-Mongolic mixture in which the original Mongolic
+element has been largely eliminated.</p>
+
+<p><b>Karens.</b> Inhabitants of Burma, of the Indo-Chinese branch
+of the Southern Mongolic family. Largely Christianised. Formerly
+oppressed by the Burmans, than whom they are less clever, but more
+industrious. Agriculturists.</p>
+
+<p><b>Karons.</b> A Negrito race of New Guinea, of very degraded type,
+and addicted to cannibalism.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kargos.</b> See <a href="#Nuba_Group">N<span class="smaller">UBA</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kashmiris.</b> Natives of Kashmir, belonging to the Hindu
+branch of the Aryan family. Of fine physique, but corrupt and
+untrustworthy.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kassonké.</b> See <a href="#Mandingan">M<span class="smaller">ANDINGAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kazaks.</b> See <a href="#Kirghiz">K<span class="smaller">IRGHIZ</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_333"></a>[Pg 333]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32_5" id="i_333">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_333.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Underwood &amp; Underwood</div>
+ <div class="caption">A RED INDIAN CHIEF AND HIS FAMILY</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_333_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p id="Kelts"><b>Kelts</b>, or <b>Celts</b>. A stock of the Aryan family which
+settled in France and the British Islands in prehistoric times. The
+Gauls and Belgæ of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_334"></a>[Pg 334]</span> Cæsar’s time and the early Britons represent
+them. They are divided into two branches, Goidelic and Brythonic
+Celts, respectively known also as Q and P Celts, from a linguistic
+peculiarity. The former are represented in modern times by Irish,
+Manx, and Scottish Highlanders; the latter by Welsh, Cornish,
+and Bretons. The typical Celt was probably a tall, broad-headed
+individual, with prominent nose, high cheek-bones, light hair and
+eyes. The small, round-headed, dark race which is also classed as
+Celtic, is more probably an earlier Hamitic type, allied to the
+<a href="#Basque">Basques</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Khulkas.</b> A nomadic race of Eastern Mongols, occupying the
+Gobi desert.</p>
+
+<p><b>Khamtis.</b> An Assamese race&mdash;Indo-Chinese stock of Southern
+Mongolic family&mdash;in the Brahmaputra Valley.</p>
+
+<p><b>Khasis.</b> An Indo-Chinese hill tribe of Southern Mongolic
+family, in Khasi Hills of Assam.</p>
+
+<p><b>Khoi-Khoin.</b> The name given to themselves by the <a href="#Hottentot">Hottentots</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Khoshots.</b> See <a href="#Kalmuk">K<span class="smaller">ALMUKS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kickapoos.</b> See <a href="#Algonquian">A<span class="smaller">LGONQUIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kiowas.</b> A North American Indian race in Oklahoma.</p>
+
+<p id="Kipchak"><b>Kipchaks.</b> A Turki race of Northern Mongolic family, settled
+in eleventh century between Urals and Don. In the middle of the
+thirteenth century, Batu Khan, a son of Genghiz Khan, led them
+to conquer all Central and South Russia, where they founded the
+Empire of the Golden Horde. It was broken up by Tamerlane about
+1390, and from its fragments arose the Khanates of Astrakhan, the
+Crimea, etc., now absorbed by Russia. From the Eastern Kipchaks
+are descended the <a href="#Kirghiz">Kirghiz</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), one of whose hordes is still
+known as Kipchak. The modern Kipchaks are nomadic, and live by
+stock-feeding in the steppes of western Turkestan.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kirantis.</b> A Tibetan race of East Nepal, of Southern Mongolic
+family.</p>
+
+<p id="Kirghiz"><b>Kirghiz.</b> A nomadic people of Central Asia, where they occupy
+the vast steppes which lie to the north of Turkestan. They are
+descended from the <a href="#Kipchak">Kipchaks</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) of the Golden Horde. They
+form a group of the Turki stock of the Northern Mongolic family.
+The Kara-Kirghiz, who inhabit the uplands between the Issik-Kul
+and the Kuen-Lun, are the oldest Turki nomads of whom there is any
+historical record, and are divided into On and Sol&mdash;right and left
+wings. The Kirghiz proper, who call themselves Kazaks, or “riders,”
+roam from Lake Balkash to the Volga, over the vast level steppes,
+where they dwell in skin tents and support themselves by breeding
+camels, horses, oxen, sheep and goats. They live in the saddle, and
+were formerly a warlike people, who once could put 400,000 fighting
+men in the field. They are divided into four hordes&mdash;Great, Middle
+or Kipchak, Little, and Inner. They are all now under Russian
+dominion.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kishis.</b> See <a href="#Chechenzes">C<span class="smaller">HECHENZES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kissis.</b> See <a href="#Temne_Group">T<span class="smaller">EMNÉ</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Kizil_Bashis"><b>Kizil-Bashis.</b> Persianised Turkis of Afghanistan, belonging
+to Turki branch of Northern Mongolic family, who supply the chief
+commercial classes of Afghanistan.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kolajis.</b> See <a href="#Nuba_Group">N<span class="smaller">UBA</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Kolarian_family"><b>Kolarians.</b> One of the three non-Aryan races to which the
+primitive inhabitants of India belonged, of the Indo-Chinese stock
+of the Southern Mongolic family. They entered Bengal from the
+north-east, and are now represented by a few scattered tribes, like
+the Santals, Mundas, Kurkus, and Bhils.</p>
+
+<p><b>Koranas.</b> See <a href="#Hottentot">H<span class="smaller">OTTENTOTS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Koreans.</b> Natives of Korea, belonging to the Koreo-Japanese
+stock of the Northern Mongol family. They stand midway between
+Chinese and Japanese, the latter being probably their descendants,
+and are taller, with lighter complexion and more regular features,
+than the typical Mongol. Their civilisation is of Chinese origin.
+They are not warlike, but are prosperous agriculturists.</p>
+
+<p><b>Korokas.</b> See <a href="#Kanakas">K<span class="smaller">ANAKAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Korungas.</b> See <a href="#Wadai">W<span class="smaller">ADAI</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Koryak"><b>Koryaks.</b> An Arctic race of North-east Siberia, allied to the
+<a href="#Chukchi">Chukchis</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Krej.</b> See <a href="#Nilitic_Group">N<span class="smaller">ILITIC</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Krim-Tartars.</b> See <a href="#Tartars">T<span class="smaller">ARTARS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Krooboy"><b>Krus</b>, or <b>Krooboys</b>. Sudanese Negroes of Liberian
+Group. Bold and skilful boatmen, employed for that purpose all
+along the West African Coast.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kulabes.</b> See <a href="#Kanakas">K<span class="smaller">ANAKAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kulfans, Kunjaras.</b> See <a href="#Nuba_Group">N<span class="smaller">UBA</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Kurd"><b>Kurds.</b> Native of Kurdistan, partly nomad and pastoral,
+partly settled and agricultural. A fierce and warlike people, they
+are much given to raiding, and were utilised by the Sultan to
+oppress the Armenians. They have settled in Kurdistan from time
+immemorial, and belong to the Iranian stock of the Aryan family.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kurile Islanders.</b> See <a href="#Ainus">A<span class="smaller">INUS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kurinis.</b> See <a href="#Lesghians">L<span class="smaller">ESGHIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kurkus.</b> A broken Kolarian tribe, allied to the Santals of
+Central India, belonging to the Indo-Chinese branch of Southern
+Mongolic family.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kutchins.</b> See <a href="#Athabascan">A<span class="smaller">THABASCAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Kwandes, Kwisses.</b> See <a href="#Kanakas">K<span class="smaller">ANAKAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Ladakhi"><b>Ladakhis.</b> Natives of Ladakh in the Upper Indus Valley,
+belonging to the Tibetan stock of the Southern Mongolic family,
+conquered by Kashmir in seventeenth century.</p>
+
+<p id="Lake_Chad_Group"><b>Lake Chad Group.</b> A group of Sudanese Negro tribes,
+inhabiting the districts round Lake Chad, including Kanembus,
+Kanuris, Baghirmis (warlike slave-raiders), Mandaras, Yedinas,
+Logons, Mosgus, Bulalas, Saras, etc.</p>
+
+<p><b>Lampongs.</b> Malay inhabitants of Southern Sumatra.</p>
+
+<p><b>Lamuts.</b> See <a href="#Tunguses">T<span class="smaller">UNGUSES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Landumans.</b> Sudanese Negroes of Senegambia.</p>
+
+<p><b>Laos.</b> See <a href="#Shan">S<span class="smaller">HANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Lapp"><b>Lapps.</b> A branch of the Finno-Ugrian stock of the Northern
+Mongolic family, inhabiting the parts of Norway, Sweden, Finland,
+and Russia collectively known as Lapland. They are the shortest and
+broadest-skulled people in Europe. Most of them are nomads, who
+live by their vast reindeer herds, though some have become settled
+and live by fishing and hunting. They are closely allied to the
+Baltic Finns, and like them show traces of a mixture of Caucasic
+blood.</p>
+
+<p><b>Lascars.</b> A term applied to sailors of Indian and Malay
+seafaring races, employed on British vessels.</p>
+
+<p id="Latin"><b>Latins.</b> The ancient inhabitants of Latium, the district
+of Central Italy which lay between the Tiber and the Liris, and
+included the Roman Campagna. They absorbed the earlier allied races
+of Oscans, Sabines, Samnites and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_335"></a>[Pg 335]</span> Umbrians, and formed a league
+of thirty cities, which warred for some generations with Rome and
+then fell under the Roman dominion. Rome itself was originally a
+Latin city. The ancient population of Italy was divided into three
+grades: Roman citizens&mdash;not necessarily residents in Rome&mdash;Latins,
+and Italians. The Latins are a branch of the Italic stock of the
+Aryan family.</p>
+
+<p><b>Latin</b> or <b>Romance Races</b>. A name often given to the
+modern races which speak a Romance language derived from Latin, and
+belong in whole or part to the Italic stock of the Aryan family.
+They include Italians, French (including Provençals), Spaniards,
+Portuguese, and Roumanians.</p>
+
+<p id="Latin_Americans"><b>Latin Americans.</b> The white inhabitants of South America, of
+Spanish or Portuguese descent, and speaking these languages.</p>
+
+<p><b>Lazes.</b> See <a href="#Georgian">G<span class="smaller">EORGIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Lencan"><b>Lencan.</b> A group of semi-civilised Central American Indian
+tribes, including Chontals, Ramas, Payas, Wulwas, and Guatusas.</p>
+
+<p id="Lepcha"><b>Lepchas.</b> Natives of Sikkim and Bhutan, belonging to the
+Tibetan stock of the Southern Mongolic family.</p>
+
+<p id="Lesghians"><b>Lesghians.</b> A branch of the Eastern stock of the Caucasian
+family, inhabiting the Eastern Caucasus. Wild mountain tribes,
+who long offered an unavailing resistance to the Russian arms
+under Shamyl (1859). Their chief tribes are the Avars (the most
+cultivated and powerful), Andis, Dargos, Didis and Kurinis.</p>
+
+<p id="Lettic"><b>Lettic.</b> A stock of the Aryan family, including Letts,
+Lithuanians and the extinct Pruczi, Borussians, or Old Prussians,
+from whom modern Prussia takes its name. The Letts and Lithuanians
+in the fifteenth century formed a united people, inhabiting the
+south-west of Russia, from Courland to Odessa. Afterwards they
+passed under Polish and then Russian dominion. They are now mostly
+peasant agriculturists. They are fair and well-built, with fine
+features and blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p><b>Letts.</b> See <a href="#Lettic">L<span class="smaller">ETTIC</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Liberian_Group"><b>Liberian Group.</b> Sudanese Negro tribes, inhabiting the Grain
+Coast of West Africa. The Krus or <a href="#Krooboy">Krooboys</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), Queahs and
+Bassas are their chief tribes.</p>
+
+<p id="Liberian"><b>Liberians.</b> Natives of the negro republic of Liberia on the
+Guinea Coast, partly descended from freed slaves of all races, but
+mainly belonging to the Liberian group.</p>
+
+<p id="Libyan"><b>Libyans.</b> An ancient fair-haired and light-skinned race of
+Northern Africa, akin to the modern Berbers, belonging to the
+western stock of the Hamitic family. They are depicted on Egyptian
+monuments of fifteenth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span></p>
+
+<p id="Ligurian"><b>Ligures</b>, or <b>Ligurians</b>. An ancient race of the western
+stock of the Hamitic family, probably the aborigines of North-West
+Italy round Genoa, to whom the Siculi, Sards and Corsicans were
+apparently akin.</p>
+
+<p><b>Limbas.</b> See <a href="#Temne_Group">T<span class="smaller">EMNÉ</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Lithuanians.</b> See <a href="#Lettic">L<span class="smaller">ETTIC</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Livonian"><b>Livonians.</b> A branch of Baltic Finns, belonging to the
+Finno-Ugrian stock of the Northern Mongolic family; a dwindled
+remnant now inhabits the Baltic provinces of Russia.</p>
+
+<p><b>Logons.</b> See <a href="#Lake_Chad_Group">L<span class="smaller">AKE</span>
+C<span class="smaller">HAD</span> G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Lolo"><b>Lolos.</b> A fair-complexioned aboriginal race on the frontiers
+of China and Tibet, belonging to the Chinese stock of the Southern
+Mongolic family.</p>
+
+<p><b>Lombards.</b> A race of Teutonic stock, formerly settled in the
+district of the Lower Elbe, who invaded Italy in 568, and there
+founded a powerful Lombard kingdom under Alboin and his successors.
+The Lombards were at first fierce warriors and little more; but
+they soon fell under the influence of Italian civilisation, and
+were merged into the Italian race when Charlemagne destroyed their
+independence in 774. Their name and some traces of their racial
+character still remain in Lombardy, between the Alps and the Po.</p>
+
+<p><b>Luchuans.</b> Natives of the Luchu or Liu-Kin Archipelago,
+between Japan and Formosa, resembling the Japanese, but with
+differences which are attributed to a cross of the aboriginal Ainu
+blood. They belong to the Koreo-Japanese stock of the Northern
+Mongolic family.</p>
+
+<p><b>Lushais.</b> A warlike race of Tibetan stock inhabiting the
+Lushai Hills on the confines of Assam, Bengal and Burma.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mabas.</b> See <a href="#Wadai">W<span class="smaller">ADAI</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Macedonians.</b> A warlike people of ancient Greece, who
+attained their greatest power under Alexander the Great. They were
+not true Hellenes, but a race of wild mountain tribes probably
+of Hamitic origin. Modern Macedonia is peopled by an extremely
+mixed race of Greeks, Bulgarians, Turks, etc., among whom some
+descendants of the ancient Macedonians may no doubt be found.</p>
+
+<p><b>Macusis.</b> See <a href="#Caribs">C<span class="smaller">ARIBS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Madis.</b> See <a href="#Nilitic_Group">N<span class="smaller">ILITIC</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Madurese.</b> A Malay race inhabiting Java, and allied to the
+<a href="#Javanese">Javanese</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Magars.</b> A Tibetan tribe of Western Nepal.</p>
+
+<p><b>Magwangwaras.</b> A fierce predatory race of Bantu Negroes,
+occupying the head-waters of the Rovuma River in East Central
+Africa.</p>
+
+<p id="Magyar"><b>Magyars.</b> A warlike and now highly civilised race belonging
+to the Finno-Ugrian stock of the Northern Mongolic family. They
+first appeared in Europe about a thousand years ago, being
+probably <a href="#Scythian">Scythian</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) immigrants from the Caspian district.
+They conquered the Roman provinces of Pannonia and Dacia, and
+there founded the Kingdom of Hungary in the year 1000. They are
+still the dominant race in Hungary, which now forms part of the
+Austro-Hungarian Empire, and preserve their Finno-Ugrian speech.
+They are a chivalrous and highly intelligent race, whose Mongolic
+descent is no longer perceptible in their white skins and regular,
+often handsome features. Probably this is due to frequent crossing
+of blood with German, Slav and Roumanian neighbours.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mahrattas.</b> See <a href="#Marathi">M<span class="smaller">ARATHIS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Makololos.</b> A warlike branch of the Basuto race of Bantu
+Negroes who, in 1835, moved north and conquered the Barotses, only
+to be reduced by them to vassalage about 1864.</p>
+
+<p><b>Makuas.</b> A savage cannibal race of Bantu Negroes, living
+north of the Zambesi in Portuguese East Africa.</p>
+
+<p id="Malagasy"><b>Malagasy.</b> A Malayo-African people of mixed blood, inhabiting
+Madagascar. The <a href="#Hova">Hovas</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) are the dominant tribe.</p>
+
+<p id="Malay"><b>Malays.</b> The dominant native race of Malaysia, the chief
+stock of the Oceanic Mongolic family. They are of a distinctly
+Mongolic physical type, of low stature and yellowish colour,
+with high cheek-bones, black lank hair and broad skulls. They
+may be divided into three<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_336"></a>[Pg 336]</span> races: the Orang-Benua, or men of the
+soil, the indigenous Malay tribes at a low stage of culture; the
+Orang-Laut, or men of the sea, who live by fishing and piracy;
+and the Orang-Malayu, or civilised Malays proper. They inhabit
+the southern provinces of Sumatra, the native states of the Malay
+Peninsula (Kelantan, etc.), the British Straits Settlements (Johor,
+Perak, Selangor, etc.), parts of Borneo, Ternate, Tidor and the
+Banda Islands, and many islands of the Malay Archipelago. They
+have wandered as far as Madagascar, where the <a href="#Malagasy">Malagasy</a> (<i>q.v.</i>)
+are Malays crossed with Negro blood. They were formerly warlike
+and much given to piracy, but are now the chief trading race
+of South-eastern Asia. Their origin is dubious, but Sumatra is
+generally regarded as their original home. Of kindred blood are
+many so-called Proto-Malay races, such as the <a href="#Achinese">Achinese</a>,
+<a href="#Javanese">Javanese</a>, <a href="#Sundanese">Sundanese</a>,
+<a href="#Dyak">Dyaks</a>, etc. (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Malayalim.</b> See <a href="#Dravidians">D<span class="smaller">RAVIDIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Manchu"><b>Manchus.</b> The dominant native race of Manchuria, who
+conquered China in the seventeenth century and founded the existing
+Chinese dynasty. They are of the Mongol stock of the Northern
+Mongolic family. They first appear in history in the thirteenth
+century, when a number of nomad Manchu tribes were formed into
+a single people. They probably originated in Siberia, where the
+<a href="#Tunguses">Tunguses</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) represent their primitive stock.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mandans.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mandaras.</b> See <a href="#Lake_Chad_Group">L<span class="smaller">AKE</span>
+C<span class="smaller">HAD</span> G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Mandingan"><b>Mandingans.</b> The chief race of Sudanese Negroes in the
+Western Sudan, with numerous branches between the Upper Niger and
+the coast, including Mandé or Mandingoes, Bambaras, Jallonkés,
+Kassonkés, Masinas, Sarakolés, Solimas, Susus, etc. Timbuctoo was
+formerly the capital of the Mandingan empire, before it fell under
+Berber domination. A large proportion of American Negroes are
+descended from slaves of Mandingan origin.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mangbattu.</b> Sudanese negroes of Welle group, noted for their
+pronounced cannibalism.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mangkassara.</b> Malay natives of Macassar, in Celebes, under
+Dutch rule.</p>
+
+<p><b>Manipuris.</b> Natives of Manipur, between Burma and Assam,
+mostly wild hillmen of mixed Burmese and Hindu blood, but classed
+with the Indo-Chinese stock of the Southern Mongolic family.</p>
+
+<p><b>Man-Tses.</b> Inhabitants of the mountain districts of Sze-chuen
+in China, akin to <a href="#Lolo">Lolos</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). <i>m</i></p>
+
+<p><b>Manx</b> or <b>Manxmen</b>. Inhabitants of the Isle of Man,
+belonging to the Celtic stock of the Aryan family, and the Goidelic
+or Q Celt branch of it. There is a strong Scandinavian element in
+their blood, from the numerous invasions of the old Norse pirates.
+Their customs are also strongly marked by the Scandinavian element.</p>
+
+<p><b>Manyuemas.</b> Warlike Bantu Negroes of the Upper Congo, long
+allied with the Arab slave-traders.</p>
+
+<p id="Maori"><b>Maoris.</b> The aborigines of New Zealand, belonging to the tall
+brown race of <a href="#Polynesian">Polynesians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), a branch of the Indonesian
+family. A brave, generous and warlike people, who are said to have
+reached New Zealand from the Pacific islands about a thousand
+years ago, they are one of the few native races which promise to
+assimilate western civilisation with success.</p>
+
+<p id="Marathi"><b>Marathis</b>, or <b>Mahrattas</b>. A numerous Indian race of
+mixed origin, probably of aboriginal (Dravidian) blood in the main,
+with a Hindu element. They inhabit West and Central India, where
+they became the dominant power under Sivaji in the seventeenth
+century. The English had long and bloody contests with these wild
+and warlike mountaineers, who founded several great native states,
+some of which (Gwalior and Indore) survive to this day.</p>
+
+<p id="Maronite"><b>Maronites.</b> A sturdy, warlike Christian race of mountaineers
+in the Lebanon, belonging to the Syrian branch of the Aramæan stock
+of the Semitic family. Implacable foes of the Druses, with whom
+they are constantly at war.</p>
+
+<p><b>Marquesans.</b> See <a href="#Polynesian">P<span class="smaller">OLYNESIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Masai"><b>Masais.</b> A branch of the Eastern Hamites, settled in British
+East Africa on the Tana River. A finely-built race, whom only
+their chocolate colour and frizzy hair prevent from passing for
+Europeans. Extremely warlike and intelligent, they are confirmed
+raiders and cattle lifters.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mashonas.</b> Natives of Mashonaland, in South-eastern Rhodesia,
+formerly the half-fabulous empire of the Monomotapa, and the home
+of a forgotten civilisation, to which the ruins of Zimbabye and
+other similar relics bear witness. The Mashonas are Bantu Negroes,
+a peaceful, industrious people, who were subjugated about 1838 by
+the Matabeles under Umsilikatzi, and are now under British rule.</p>
+
+<p><b>Massachusett Indians.</b> See <a href="#Algonquian">A<span class="smaller">LGONQUIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Massalits.</b> See <a href="#Wadai">W<span class="smaller">ADAI</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Matabeles.</b> A branch of the Zulu race of Bantu Negroes, which
+was expelled from Zululand in 1838, and conquered the Mashonas, in
+modern Rhodesia, under Umsilikatzi. Like the Zulus, they were proud
+and fearless warriors, who were only subjugated with difficulty by
+the English in 1893, and revolted unsuccessfully in 1896.</p>
+
+<p><b>Matacoans.</b> A South American Indian race on the Vermejo River
+in Argentine.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mauri.</b> See <a href="#Moor">M<span class="smaller">OORS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Maviti.</b> Bantu Negroes of the Upper Shiré in British South
+Central Africa, of Zulu stock, who came as conquerors from the
+south.</p>
+
+<p id="Maya_Quiche"><b>Maya-Quiché.</b> A group of Central American Indian races,
+mostly in Yucatan and Guatemala. It includes the Mayas of Yucatan,
+Zendals and Zotzils of Chiapas, Quichés, Chols, Pokomans, and
+Zutugils of Guatemala, Huastecs and Totonacs of Vera Cruz. Like the
+Aztecs, the Mayas possessed an ancient civilisation and system of
+picture writing.</p>
+
+<p><b>Maypuris.</b> See <a href="#Arawak">A<span class="smaller">RAWAKS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mbengas.</b> Indigenous Bantu Negroes of French Equatorial
+Africa, about Corisco Bay.</p>
+
+<p><b>Melanesians.</b> The indigenous natives of the Western Pacific
+Islands, forming a distinct stock of the Oceanic Negro family of
+Ethiopic Man. They are long-skulled, or dolichocephalic, with the
+lowest cephalic index of all known races, prognathous, broad-nosed,
+of a sooty-black colour, with black frizzy hair, and of low
+stature. They are at a low stage of culture, being very savage,
+bloodthirsty, and treacherous, mostly cannibals and head-hunters,
+with little social organisation. They include the Fijians and the
+natives of the New Hebrides, the Solomon, Admiralty, Bismarck,
+and Loyalty Islands, New Britain, New Ireland, New Caledonia, and
+other islands of the Eastern Pacific. They are closely<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_337"></a>[Pg 337]</span> allied to
+the <a href="#Papuan">Papuans</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), under which name some ethnologists prefer to
+class the whole body of Melanesians.</p>
+
+<p><b>Melanochroi.</b> A suggested division of Caucasic Man, in which
+a pale skin is typically accompanied by dark hair and eyes; it
+would thus include the Hamitic and Semitic families, with the
+Hellenic, Italic, and Celtic stocks of the Aryan family.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mendis.</b> See <a href="#Temne_Group">T<span class="smaller">EMNÉ</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Mentawey"><b>Mentawey Islanders.</b> A remnant of the aboriginal Polynesian
+race dispossessed by the Malays, off the coast of Sumatra.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mestizos.</b> Cross-breeds between Europeans and Indians, in
+Spanish and Portuguese America.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mexicans.</b> See <a href="#Aztec">A<span class="smaller">ZTECS</span></a> and
+<a href="#Nahuans">N<span class="smaller">AHUANS</span></a>. Also the
+modern inhabitants of Mexico, who are of Spanish descent, with a
+strong infusion of Indian blood.</p>
+
+<p><b>Micmacs.</b> An Indian race of Nova Scotia, in whom some
+ethnologists think that a trace of Norse blood, dating from the
+pre-Columbian discovery of America, is perceptible.</p>
+
+<p><b>Minæans.</b> See <a href="#Himyarite">H<span class="smaller">IMYARITES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mingrelians.</b> See <a href="#Georgian">G<span class="smaller">EORGIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Minh-huongs.</b> Franco-Annamese half-breeds in Cochin China, an
+increasing race who make very valuable colonists.</p>
+
+<p><b>Minnetarees.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mishmis.</b> A wild Tibetan hill tribe occupying the
+jungle-covered hills through which the Brahmaputra flows, on the
+northern border of Assam. Warlike and turbulent.</p>
+
+<p><b>Missouri Indians.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mixtecs.</b> An ancient Mexican race, contemporary with the
+<a href="#Toltec">Toltecs</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), probably represented by the modern Miztecs of
+Oajaca.</p>
+
+<p id="Moabite"><b>Moabites.</b> An ancient pastoral race of Semitic origin,
+ethnologically cognate with the Israelites, who dwelt on the east
+of the Dead Sea, and are now extinct.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mœsogoths.</b> See <a href="#Goths">G<span class="smaller">OTHS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mohawks.</b> See <a href="#Iroquoian">I<span class="smaller">ROQUOIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mohicans.</b> One of the most famous and warlike of redskin
+races, immortalised by Fenimore Cooper. See <a href="#Algonquian">A<span class="smaller">LGONQUIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mojos</b>, or <b>Moxos</b>. A yellowish Indian race of Bolivia,
+akin to the Chiquitos.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mokis.</b> See <a href="#Shoshonean">S<span class="smaller">HOSHONEAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Mongol"><b>Mongolic.</b> One of the four great divisions of mankind.
+Typically characterised by yellowish skin, broad, flat features
+with prominent cheek-bones, broad skulls, mesognathous jaws, and
+oblique, almond-shaped eyes, with black, lank and coarse hair. The
+Manchus are a typical Mongolic race. The Mongolic races are mostly
+found in Asia, which is chiefly peopled by their stocks. The name
+“Mongolic” has replaced the older “Turanian.”</p>
+
+<p><b>Mongols.</b> A stock of the Northern Mongolic, otherwise known
+as Mongolo-Tartar or Ural-Altaic, family, from whom the general
+term of Mongolic is derived. The name seems originally to have
+meant “brave,” and the Mongols have provided some of the most
+fierce and warlike races of history. They originated as scattered
+tribes in modern Mongolia. Under Genghiz Khan they were formed
+into a confederacy which conquered the whole of Central Asia in
+the thirteenth century, thanks to an unlimited supply of hardy and
+very mobile horsemen. The existing Mongol tribes, nomad pastors
+of Mongolia in Central Asia, are divided into <a href="#Sharra">Sharras</a> or Eastern
+<a href="#Kalmuk">Kalmuks</a>, or Western <a href="#Buriats">Buriats</a>,
+or <a href="#Siberian">Siberian Mongols</a>, and <a href="#Tunguses">Tunguses</a>,
+including <a href="#Manchu">Manchus</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p id="Montenegrin"><b>Montenegrins.</b> A Servian race of civilised mountaineers,
+inhabiting the rugged district of Montenegro; the only Balkan race
+which preserved independence and Christianity against the Turkish
+conquerors. Their history is one of constant warfare with the
+Turks, and they have thus preserved the primitive virtues of the
+warrior in great perfection.</p>
+
+<p id="Moor"><b>Moors.</b> The ancient Moors, or Mauri, were the inhabitants
+of the Roman province of Mauretania, roughly including the modern
+Algeria and Morocco. They were probably of mixed descent, partly
+Semitic from Arabia, partly Western Hamitic from indigenous
+sources. In modern times the name is applied (1) to the invaders
+and conquerors of Spain in the Middle Ages, who were mostly of Arab
+and Berber stock; (2) to the present inhabitants of Morocco and
+the Barbary States, of the same stocks, with a large infusion of
+Sudanese Negro blood. The Moors have always been a turbulent and
+warlike people, who furnished the most notorious pirates of modern
+history, thanks to their commanding position on the great highway
+of sea-borne commerce.</p>
+
+<p><b>Moquis.</b> See <a href="#Pueblo">P<span class="smaller">UEBLO</span>
+I<span class="smaller">NDIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mordvins.</b> A branch of the <a href="#Finn">Finns</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), forming small
+communities on the banks of the Volga.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mosgus.</b> See <a href="#Lake_Chad_Group">L<span class="smaller">AKE</span>
+C<span class="smaller">HAD</span> G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mossis.</b> See <a href="#Nigerian_Group">N<span class="smaller">IGERIAN</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mpongwes.</b> A Bantu Negro race on the Gaboon Estuary in French
+Equatorial Africa, given to drink and boasting, of little economic
+value, though once powerful.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mulattos.</b> Half-breeds between whites and negroes.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mundas.</b> A Kolarian race of Lower Bengal, with possible
+traces of Negroid blood.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mundrucus.</b> See <a href="#Tupi_Guarani">T<span class="smaller">UPI</span>-G<span class="smaller">UARANI</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mundus.</b> See <a href="#Nilitic_Group">N<span class="smaller">ILITIC</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Mushi-Kongo.</b> Bantu Negroes of Portuguese West Africa, still
+in an absolutely savage state.</p>
+
+<p id="Muskhogean"><b>Muskhogean</b>, or <b>Appalachian</b>. A group of North American
+Indian tribes, formerly occupying the south-eastern corner of the
+present United States, south of Tennessee, and east of Arkansas.
+Formerly a powerful confederacy of warlike hunters, they are now
+extinct or confined to Indian reservations. The chief tribes are
+Alibamus, Apalachis, Chickasaws, Choktaws, Creeks or Muskhogees,
+and Seminoles.</p>
+
+<p id="Mycenaeans"><b>Mycenæans.</b> The inhabitants of ancient Mycenæ, one of the
+chief centres of prehistoric culture in Greece before the Homeric
+age. Recent excavations, at Mycenæ itself, at Cnossos in Crete, and
+other contemporary sites of government, have thrown light on the
+remarkable civilisation which then existed. The Mycenæans, Cretans,
+and their kindred peoples were probably a mixed Caucasic race,
+with affinities to the later Aryan Achæans and to the aboriginal
+Hamitic Pelasgians; but nothing is yet certainly known of their
+ethnological place.</p>
+
+<p><b>Nagars.</b> See <a href="#Dards">D<span class="smaller">ARDS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Nagas.</b> Aborigines of the Naga Hills, in South Assam,
+semi-savage and formerly accustomed to raid the British provinces;
+now under British rule. They are of Tibetan stock.</p>
+
+<p id="Nahuans"><b>Nahuans</b>, or <b>Mexican Indians</b>. The aboriginal
+inhabitants of modern Mexico, whose history dates back to the sixth
+century. The oldest of the Nahuan races was that of the Toltecs,
+who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_338"></a>[Pg 338]</span> established a civilisation marked by architectural and
+artistic monuments still existing, north of the valley of Anahuac.
+They were followed by the ruder Chichimecs and the <a href="#Aztec">Aztecs</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).
+Other branches of the same race are the Pipils and the Niquirans of
+Nicaragua.</p>
+
+<p><b>Naimans.</b> (1) See <a href="#Sharra">S<span class="smaller">HARRAS</span></a>. (2) A tribe of the Middle
+Horde of the Kazaks. See <a href="#Kirghiz">K<span class="smaller">IRGHIZ</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Nairs.</b> A Hindu tribe of Malabar, distinguished by their
+peculiar marriage customs. They practise polyandry, and a Nair’s
+property descends not to his own but to his sister’s children.</p>
+
+<p><b>Namas</b> or <b>Namaquas</b>. A Hottentot tribe of Namaqualand,
+the true aborigines and the principal representatives of the
+<a href="#Hottentot">Hottentots</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). Scattered in small pastoral groups.</p>
+
+<p><b>Natchez Indians.</b> An extinct North American Indian race,
+formerly inhabiting the region of the Lower Mississippi.</p>
+
+<p><b>Navajos.</b> See <a href="#Athabascan">A<span class="smaller">THABASCAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Neanderthal Man.</b> A race of primitive man, represented
+only by a skull and a few bones found in a limestone cave of the
+Neanderthal in Rhenish Prussia in 1856. The most ape-like race yet
+known, and probably the oldest.</p>
+
+<p><b>Negritoes.</b> A branch of Ethiopic Man, found in Central
+Africa, and in the Andamans, the Malay Peninsula and the
+Philippines, akin to negroes but of smaller stature and more
+ape-like. Possibly the primitive stock from which the <a href="#Negroes">Negroes</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>) were developed.</p>
+
+<p id="Negroes"><b>Negroes.</b> The most numerous branch of Ethiopic Man, divided
+into African (Sudanese, Bantu, and Hottentot-Bushman) and Oceanic
+(Papuan, Melanesian, and Australian) sections. American Negroes
+are descended from African slaves, mostly of Sudanese origin. See
+<a href="#Haytian">H<span class="smaller">AYTIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Nempés.</b> See <a href="#Nigerian_Group">N<span class="smaller">IGERIAN</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Nestorians.</b> A Syrian race, belonging to the Aramæan stock of
+the Semitic family, distinguished by a special form of Christian
+belief, who were driven out of the Roman Empire in the fifth
+century, and whose descendants now form a special community in
+the mountain ranges of Kurdistan. They are poor and illiterate. A
+branch of Nestorians is found in Travancore, where they go by the
+name of Syrian Christians.</p>
+
+<p><b>New Guinea Natives.</b> See <a href="#Papuan">P<span class="smaller">APUANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>New Zealanders.</b> (1) Aborigines [see <a href="#Maori">M<span class="smaller">AORIS</span></a>]. (2)
+White inhabitants of New Zealand, of Anglo-Saxon descent.</p>
+
+<p><b>Nez Percés.</b> A tribe of North American Indians, in British
+Columbia and Idaho, part of whom are well advanced in civilisation.</p>
+
+<p><b>Niam-Niam.</b> See <a href="#Azandeh">A<span class="smaller">ZANDEH</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Nicaraguans.</b> White natives of Nicaragua, in Central America,
+of Spanish descent, with Indian and negro elements.</p>
+
+<p><b>Nicobarese.</b> Natives of the Nicobar Islands, of Malay blood
+mixed with that of the Mongolic aborigines. Formerly given to
+piracy.</p>
+
+<p id="Nigerian_Group"><b>Nigerian Group.</b> A group of Sudanese Negro tribes, all of
+allied stocks, inhabiting the Niger Delta, the Oil River, Lower
+Benue, and Niger region, including the Niger Bend. Amongst them are
+the people of Benin&mdash;noted for their vast human sacrifices&mdash;the
+Abo, Nempé, Nupé, Akasa, Qua, Efik, Okrika, Akpa, Mossi, Sienereh,
+and many other tribes.</p>
+
+<p id="Nilitic_Group"><b>Nilitic Group.</b> Another group of Sudanese Negro tribes,
+inhabiting the districts of the White Nile, Sobat, and the northern
+slopes of the Nile-Congo divide. They include the Abaka, Abukaya,
+Bongo, Shuli, Falanj, Madi, Bari, Nuer, Shilluk, Dinka, Mundu,
+Rol, Mittu, Krej, and Fertit tribes. They are mainly hard-working
+agriculturists, from whom the British draw material for excellent
+soldiery.</p>
+
+<p><b>Niquirans.</b> See <a href="#Nahuans">N<span class="smaller">AHUANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Nogais.</b> A race of Caucasian <a href="#Tartars">Tartars</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) inhabiting the
+steppes of the Kuma River; nomadic cattle-breeders.</p>
+
+<p id="Norman"><b>Normans.</b> Natives of Normandy, descended from the <a href="#Norsemen">Norsemen</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>) who settled on the French coast under Rolf the Ganger in
+the beginning of the tenth century. The history of the Normans, who
+conquered England and Sicily, is well known. The modern Normans
+still preserve many signs of their Scandinavian ancestry, which
+distinguish them from their French or Breton neighbours.</p>
+
+<p id="Norsemen"><b>Norsemen</b> or <b>Northmen</b>. A name given in the Middle
+Ages to the piratical emigrants from Denmark, Iceland, Sweden,
+and Norway, who descended on the coasts of England, France,
+Germany, and Southern Europe. They called themselves Vikings. These
+sea-rovers came, in the first instance, for portable plunder, but
+in many cases they were tempted by the look of the more fertile
+lands of the south to make settlements, among which those of the
+Danes in England and Ireland and of the Norwegians in Normandy,
+England, and Sicily were the most lasting and important.</p>
+
+<p><b>Norwegians.</b> A branch of the Scandinavian stock of
+the Aryan family. They are probably descended from Teutonic
+immigrants&mdash;perhaps of Gothic race&mdash;who entered the Scandinavian
+peninsula in prehistoric times, and drove out the aboriginal Lapps
+or Finns. Another theory makes Scandinavia the original home of
+the Aryans, of whom, on this view, the Norwegians would represent
+the primitive stock. Their history begins in the ninth century,
+when a Norwegian kingdom was established by Harold Fairhair.
+The old Norwegians were extremely warlike and piratical [see
+<a href="#Norsemen">N<span class="smaller">ORSEMEN</span></a>]. Their modern descendants are a peaceful and
+industrious race, the most simple and democratic people of Europe,
+who recently threw off the Swedish rule and re-established the
+ancient Norwegian kingdom.</p>
+
+<p><b>Nsakkaras.</b> See <a href="#Welle_Group">W<span class="smaller">ELLE</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Nuba_Group"><b>Nuba Group.</b> A group of Sudanese Negro tribes, occupying
+Nubia, Dar-Fur, and Kordofan, in the Egyptian Sudan. They include
+the Furs, Nubas, Nile Nubians, Tumalis, Kargos, Kulfans, Kolajis,
+and Kunjaras. They are an active and warlike race, in which the
+primitive Negro blood has frequently been modified by Semitic
+(Arab) and Hamitic influences. They supply many of our Sudanese
+regiments.</p>
+
+<p id="Nubian"><b>Nubians.</b> Ancient inhabitants of Nubia, probably identical
+with <a href="#Ethiopian">Ethiopians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), but modified by the infusion of Negro
+blood. They established a Nubian kingdom in the Upper Nile basin
+about the sixth century.</p>
+
+<p><b>Nuers.</b> See <a href="#Nilitic_Group">N<span class="smaller">ILITIC</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Numidians.</b> An ancient Hamitic race, inhabiting the district
+now known as Algeria. They were fine horsemen, warlike, but
+treacherous, and were conquered by Rome <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> 46. See
+<a href="#Berber">B<span class="smaller">ERBERS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Nupés.</b> See <a href="#Nigerian_Group">N<span class="smaller">IGERIAN</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_339"></a>[Pg 339]</span></p>
+
+<p><b>Nutkas.</b> A collective name given to the Indian tribes of
+Vancouver Island and the adjoining districts of British Columbia.</p>
+
+<p><b>Obongos.</b> A Bushman-like race of pygmy Negritoes discovered
+by Du Chaillu on the western coast of equatorial Africa, physically
+and mentally degenerate.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ojibbeways.</b> See <a href="#Algonquian">A<span class="smaller">LGONQUIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Okrikas.</b> See <a href="#Nigerian_Group">N<span class="smaller">IGERIAN</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Olkhonese.</b> A tribe of <a href="#Buriats">Buriats</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) inhabiting the
+district of Lake Baikal.</p>
+
+<p><b>Omaguas.</b> See <a href="#Tupi_Guarani">T<span class="smaller">UPI</span>-G<span class="smaller">UARANI</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Omahas.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Onondagas.</b> See <a href="#Iroquoian">I<span class="smaller">ROQUOIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Opata_Pima"><b>Opata-Pima.</b> A group of Central American Indian races, allied
+to the <a href="#Nahuans">Nahuan group</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), but of lower mental and physical
+type. It includes the Cora, Yuma, Papago, Tarahumara and Tepeguana
+tribes.</p>
+
+<p><b>Orang-Benua, Orang-Lauts.</b> See <a href="#Malay">M<span class="smaller">ALAYS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ordos.</b> See <a href="#Sharra">S<span class="smaller">HARRAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Orochs.</b> A nomadic tribe of the Siberian <a href="#Tunguses">Tunguses</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Osages.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Oscan"><b>Oscans.</b> A primitive Italic race inhabiting Campania, who
+were conquered by and amalgamated with the <a href="#Samnite">Samnites</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) in the
+fifth century, <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Their language was a ruder form of
+Latin.</p>
+
+<p><b>Osmanlis.</b> See <a href="#Turks">T<span class="smaller">URKS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Osset"><b>Ossets.</b> An isolated Aryan race inhabiting the Central
+Caucasus, and differing in language and customs from their
+Caucasian neighbours. They are probably allied to the Iranian
+stock, though some suppose them to be descended from Gothic
+settlers.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ostrogoths.</b> See <a href="#Goths">G<span class="smaller">OTHS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Ostyak"><b>Ostyaks.</b> A Ugrian race of Mongolic physical type, allied
+to the <a href="#Samoyede">Samoyedes</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), inhabiting the Obi basin in Western
+Siberia. They are mainly nomads, hunters and reindeer breeders.
+They are kind, gentle and honest, and show considerable artistic
+power.</p>
+
+<p><b>Otoes.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Otomis.</b> An Indian race of Mexico, assumed on linguistic
+grounds to represent the oldest of American Indian stocks.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ottomans.</b> See <a href="#Turks">T<span class="smaller">URKS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ovaherero.</b> See <a href="#Herero">H<span class="smaller">EREROS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ovampos.</b> The chief Bantu Negro race of German South-west
+Africa, tall and well-proportioned, with regular features&mdash;a fine
+Negro type. They are industrious agriculturists, given to raiding
+and inter-tribal warfare.</p>
+
+<p><b>Oworos, Oyos.</b> See <a href="#Yoruba">Y<span class="smaller">ORUBAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Pampas Indians.</b> See <a href="#Puelche">P<span class="smaller">UELCHES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Pangasinans.</b> A semi-civilised Malayan race in the Philippine
+Islands.</p>
+
+<p><b>Papagos.</b> See <a href="#Opata_Pima">O<span class="smaller">PATA</span>-P<span class="smaller">IMA</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Papuan"><b>Papuans.</b> The savage aborigines of New Guinea and the
+neighbouring islands of the Torres Strait and East Malaysia.
+They belong to the Oceanic division of Ethiopic Man, and are
+allied to the African Negro, though they stand at a somewhat
+higher intellectual level. They are of Negroid physical type,
+characterised specially by their mops of frizzy hair; colour,
+a sooty brown to black, with projecting jaws, thick lips and
+retreating foreheads; nose sometimes flat, but oftener hooked
+and of Jewish appearance. The race has probably been modified by
+Malayan and Polynesian intermixture. Probably the Melanesians and
+the Australian aborigines are closely related to the Papuans. They
+are a fierce and treacherous race, hostile to strangers, and given
+to cannibalism and head-hunting. They show much agricultural skill,
+and in some cases are susceptible of European civilisation.</p>
+
+<p><b>Paraguay Indians.</b> See <a href="#Tupi_Guarani">T<span class="smaller">UPI</span>-G<span class="smaller">UARANI</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Parsee"><b>Parsees.</b> Followers of Zoroaster, of Persian descent, who
+have settled in India, chiefly near Bombay, where they have become
+one of the most thriving sections of the community, owing to their
+marked ability for commerce. A small remnant of Parsees, known as
+Guebres, is still to be found in Persia itself.</p>
+
+<p><b>Parthians.</b> A warlike people of the ancient world, inhabiting
+a district of Northern Persia. They seem to have been of <a href="#Scythian">Scythian</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>) descent, and were noted for their habit of fighting
+on horseback and discharging their most fatal arrows whilst in
+pretended flight. Under Mithridates (171&ndash;138 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>), the
+Parthians became supreme in Persia, and afterwards warred for long
+successfully with the Romans.</p>
+
+<p id="Patagonian"><b>Patagonians</b> or <b>Tehuelches</b>. Natives of the most
+southerly region of the American continent, noted for their great
+stature, in many cases approaching the gigantic. They are one of
+the physically strongest races of the earth, of a yellowish brown
+colour, with well-formed and regular features. They are nomadic
+tribes of <a href="#Araucanian">Araucanian</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) descent, who live by fishing and
+hunting; and peacefully disposed to strangers.</p>
+
+<p><b>Pathans.</b> See <a href="#Afghan">A<span class="smaller">FGHANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Payaguas.</b> A South American Indian race, in the Argentine,
+whose wealth of silver ornaments gave a name to the Rio de la Plata.</p>
+
+<p><b>Pawnees.</b> A brave warlike tribe of North American Indians,
+akin to the <a href="#Shoshonean">Shoshonean group</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) and formerly settled in
+Nebraska.</p>
+
+<p><b>Pechenegs.</b> An ancient Mongolic race of Turki stock, a branch
+of the <a href="#Kipchak">Kipchaks</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p id="Pelasgian"><b>Pelasgians.</b> The pre-Aryan inhabitants of Greece, apparently
+the aborigines of that country, who were dispossessed by the
+Aryan Hellenes. Little or nothing is known of their racial
+characteristics and affinities; but the excavations recently made
+at Mycenæ, Knossos, etc., show that they had reached a high stage
+of civilisation in prehistoric times on the Ægean coast. Probably a
+branch of the Western Hamitic family, resembling <a href="#Berber">Berbers</a> (<i>q.v.</i>)
+in physical type. See <a href="#Mycenaeans">M<span class="smaller">YCENÆANS</span></a> and
+<a href="#Etruscan">E<span class="smaller">TRUSCANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Permian"><b>Permians.</b> A branch of the Finnish race, inhabiting the
+district of Perm in Russia, and closely resembling the <a href="#Karelian">Karelians</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p id="Persian"><b>Persians.</b> The ancient Persians were the main branch of the
+Iranian stock of the Aryan family, a civilised and warlike nation,
+who taught their sons “to ride, to shoot with the bow, and to speak
+the truth.” They reared a great empire under Cyrus (<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>
+537) and his successors, which was destroyed by Alexander the Great
+and divided in 324 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> The modern Persians, known as
+Tajiks, and as Tats on the west of the Caspian, are the descendants
+of the ancient Persians with a considerable admixture of alien
+blood, due to a long period of Arab and Turkish domination.
+They present a fine Aryan type, however, and are cultivated and
+commercial, though not warlike.</p>
+
+<p><b>Peruvian Indians.</b> See <a href="#Incas">I<span class="smaller">NCAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Peruvians.</b> White natives of Peru, partly of pure Spanish
+descent, partly crossed with Indian blood.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_340"></a>[Pg 340]</span></p>
+
+<p id="Philippines"><b>Philippine Islanders.</b> The natives of the Philippines belong
+to three distinct races&mdash;Negritoes, Indonesians and Malays.
+The Negritoes are known as <a href="#Aeta">Aetas</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). The Indonesians are
+confined to the island of Mindanao; they are light-skinned, tall
+and well-developed physically. Their chief tribe is that of the
+Igorrotes. The Malays are brown-skinned, with black hair and flat
+noses, being crossed with Negrito blood. Their chief tribes are the
+Visayans, Tagalogs, Bicols, Ilocanos, Cayagans, Pangasinans and
+Pampangas. These are all Christianised and fairly civilised. The
+interior is occupied by wild and savage tribes of similar race,
+and by the dwarfish and nomadic Negritoes. Many of these tribes
+practise head-hunting, cannibalism, and human sacrifices. The more
+civilised tribes, with the Spanish-Indian half-breeds, known as
+Filipinos, are turbulent and lawless, the source of much trouble to
+the new American as to the old Spanish rulers.</p>
+
+<p id="Philistine"><b>Philistines.</b> An ancient race inhabiting the Mediterranean
+seaboard to the south-west of Judæa, who warred much with the
+Israelites, and were finally subdued by them. They were probably
+a Canaanitish people, belonging to the Semitic family; but some
+regard them as an immigrant Hamitic race, perhaps related to the
+Cretans or Pelasgians. The assumed inferiority of their culture
+to that of the Israelites has given rise to the modern use of
+“Philistine” as a term of reproach.</p>
+
+<p id="Phoenician"><b>Phœnicians.</b> The greatest seafaring and trading nation of
+ancient times, and the earliest of Mediterranean sea-powers.
+A branch of the Canaanite stock of the Semitic family, they
+inhabited the Mediterranean coast between Latakia and Acre, their
+chief cities being Tyre and Sidon. They possessed a remarkable
+polytheistic religion, disfigured by human sacrifices. They were
+an inventive race, to whom we owe glass and Tyrian purple. They
+seem to have entered Phœnicia from the direction of the Red Sea
+in prehistoric times, and were at first subject to Egypt, but
+about 1300 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> reared a great maritime empire, which
+endured for nearly a thousand years and was destroyed by Alexander
+the Great. They were the great traders of the ancient world, and
+carried on a commerce which ranged from Cornwall to Ceylon and
+Senegal. The <a href="#Carthaginian">Carthaginians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) were a colony of Phœnicians.</p>
+
+<p><b>Phrygians.</b> An ancient pastoral people of Asia Minor, closely
+related to the <a href="#Armenian">Armenians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), who were absorbed by the
+Persians in the sixth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span></p>
+
+<p><b>Picts.</b> The aborigines of ancient Scotland, a short,
+round-headed, dark race, probably a branch of the Iberian stock of
+the Western Hamitic family, and thus closely related to the <a href="#Basque">Basques</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>). The Picts were a wild and warlike race, who harassed the
+Roman province of Britain, and were exterminated by the invading
+Scots from Ireland in the early part of the Christian era. The
+whole Pictish problem is still unsolved by ethnologists, some of
+whom hold that the Picts were a Celtic race, allied to the modern
+Welsh or to the Scottish Highlanders of to-day.</p>
+
+<p><b>Picuris.</b> See <a href="#Pueblo">P<span class="smaller">UEBLO</span>
+I<span class="smaller">NDIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Pipils.</b> See <a href="#Nahuans">N<span class="smaller">AHUANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Pitcairn Islanders.</b> Half-breed descendants of Englishmen
+(the mutineers of the “Bounty”) and Tahitian women. A peaceful and
+idyllic race.</p>
+
+<p><b>Pocomans, Poconches.</b> See
+<a href="#Maya_Quiche">M<span class="smaller">AYA</span>-Q<span class="smaller">UICHÉ</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Pole"><b>Poles.</b> A stock of the Western Slavonic family, originally
+dwelling between the Vistula and the Oder. In the tenth century
+Poland became an independent European Power, and remained an
+elective kingdom down to its partition in the eighteenth century
+between Russia, Austria and Prussia. The Polish peasantry have
+always been industrious and successful agriculturists, whilst the
+nobility were turbulent and warlike. The Poles who live under
+Austrian and German rule are fairly contented, but those of
+Russian Poland have carried on a long and often bloody series of
+struggles for liberty. Of late years, Russian Poland has become a
+manufacturing country, under German influence. The Poles have a
+considerable literature, and are eminently musical.</p>
+
+<p id="Polynesian"><b>Polynesians.</b> The chief stock of the <a href="#Indonesian">Indonesian</a> (<i>q.v.</i>)
+family, the tall, brown-skinned race of Caucasic type who inhabit
+the chief islands of the Eastern Pacific, and are generally
+known as South Sea Islanders. Their chief races are the <a href="#Maori">Maoris</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>) of New Zealand, the Marquesans, Tahitians, Tongans and
+Samoans, besides the natives of Easter, Gambier, Hervey, and other
+smaller islands. They are of tall stature&mdash;only surpassed by the
+Patagonians&mdash;muscular frame, regular and often handsome features,
+with brown skins, square jaws, and broad skulls. They probably
+originated in Malaysia, where they are still represented by the
+Battaks of North Sumatra, some Dyak races, and certain tribes
+of the Philippines and Gilolo. They are a gay, pleasure-loving
+people, formerly addicted to cannibalism, but otherwise of pleasing
+manners, and are now rapidly acquiring civilisation, though their
+numbers are everywhere decreasing under the influence of European
+manners and diseases.</p>
+
+<p><b>Poncas.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Portuguese.</b> Natives of Portugal, a mixed race, probably
+of Iberian or Basque origin, with later Celtic elements. After
+falling successively under Roman, Visigothic, and Saracen dominion,
+they formed an independent kingdom in the twelfth century. The
+early Portuguese were enterprising seamen, who contributed largely
+to the exploration of the world, and founded many colonies in
+Africa, which they still possess. Brazil is their chief American
+settlement, now independent.</p>
+
+<p><b>Provençals.</b> Natives of Provence, in the South of France.
+Their primitive <a href="#Ligurian">Ligurian</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) stock was modified by many
+successive influences, such as the Greek colonists, who founded
+Marseilles, the Roman settlers in the Provincia (Provence), and,
+later, Gothic and Saracen invaders. The Provençals are a gay,
+impulsive and pleasure-loving people, markedly distinct from the
+more staid and industrious inhabitants of Northern France.</p>
+
+<p><b>Pruczi</b>, or <b>Old Prussians</b>. See <a href="#Lettic">L<span class="smaller">ETTIC</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Prussians.</b> The earliest inhabitants of Prussia were Slavonic
+tribes [see <a href="#Lettic">L<span class="smaller">ETTIC</span></a>]. The modern Prussians, the dominant
+race of the German Empire, belong to the High German branch of the
+Teutonic stock.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_341"></a>[Pg 341]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_341a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_341a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">WOMEN OF THE NUPÉ TRIBE IN NIGERIA</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The Nupé tribe is a family belonging to the Nigerian
+ group of Sudanese Negroes. They inhabit chiefly the town of Lokoja, in West
+ Africa. [See under <a href="#Nigerian_Group">Nigerian group</a>].</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_341b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_341b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE AINUS, PROBABLY THE ORIGINAL INHABITANTS OF JAPAN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The Ainus are a declining race, now confined to a small
+ area in the Far East. They have, as is seen in this picture, handsome features
+ and an abundance of hair. [See <a href="#Ainus">page 312</a>].</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p id="Pueblo"><b>Pueblo Indians.</b> A semi-civilised race of North American
+Indians, dwelling in New Mexico and Arizona. They inhabit
+“pueblos,” or huge houses, often large enough to contain a whole
+tribe under one roof. They possess<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_342"></a>[Pg 342]</span> interesting religious and
+social customs, much studied by anthropologists. Their chief tribes
+are the Zunis, Teguas, Taos, Picuris, and Tusayas. The Moquis of
+Arizona are closely related to them.</p>
+
+<p id="Puelche"><b>Puelches</b>, or <b>Pampas Indians</b>. A strongly-built,
+dark-skinned race of South American Indians, who inhabit the great
+plains or pampas from the Saladillo to the Rio Negro in Argentina.
+They are expert horsemen, from whom the <a href="#Gaucho">Gauchos</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) are
+derived.</p>
+
+<p><b>Punjabis.</b> Natives of the Punjab, in North-West India, mostly
+<a href="#Jat">Jats</a> and <a href="#Sikh">Sikhs</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) belonging to the Hindu stock of the Aryan
+family. An agricultural and warlike people.</p>
+
+<p><b>Puntis.</b> See <a href="#Chinese">C<span class="smaller">HINESE</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Pygmies"><b>Pygmies.</b> Dwarfish Negrito races of Central Africa, long
+considered to be mythical, but now well known to ethnologists. They
+include the Akkas and Wochuas of the Welle Basin, the Obongos of
+the Gaboon, the Batwas of South Congo, etc. In very early times
+they were known by repute to the Egyptians&mdash;on whose monuments they
+appear in the thirty-fourth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>&mdash;and the Greeks.
+They live by the chase in the Central African forests, and use
+poisoned arrows. Other small races, such as the Bushmen, Lapps,
+Kalangs, Samangs, etc., have contributed to the fame of the Pygmies.</p>
+
+<p><b>Quas.</b> A Sudanese Negro tribe on the Ivory Coast, belonging
+to the <a href="#Nigerian_Group">Nigerian group</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Quapaws.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Queahs.</b> See <a href="#Liberian_Group">L<span class="smaller">IBERIAN</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Quichés.</b> A race of Central American Indians in Guatemala,
+rivalling the Aztecs in the possession of an ancient civilisation
+and a curious mythology. See
+<a href="#Maya_Quiche">M<span class="smaller">AYA</span>-Q<span class="smaller">UICHÉ</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Quichuas.</b> See <a href="#Incas">I<span class="smaller">NCAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Rajput"><b>Rajputs.</b> The predominant race of Rajputana, in Central
+India, belonging to the Hindu stock of the Aryan family. They are a
+proud and warlike aristocracy of soldiers and landowners, who rule
+many native states, of which Jaipur, Jodhpur and Udaipur are the
+most important.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ramas.</b> See <a href="#Lencan">L<span class="smaller">ENCAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Redskins.</b> A term given in common parlance to North American
+Indians, from their colour.</p>
+
+<p><b>Rejangs.</b> A Malayan race of Sumatra, akin to the <a href="#Achinese">Achinese</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Rols.</b> See <a href="#Nilitic_Group">N<span class="smaller">ILITIC</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Roman"><b>Romans.</b> The most powerful and warlike, and in every sense
+the greatest race of ancient Europe, who acquired the dominion of
+the Western world, and laid the foundations of modern civilisation.
+The city of Rome was founded by Alban shepherds, of <a href="#Latin">Latin</a> (<i>q.v.</i>)
+race, in the eighth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> <a href="#Oscan">Oscan</a>,
+<a href="#Sabine">Sabine</a>, <a href="#Samnite">Samnite</a>,
+and <a href="#Umbrian">Umbrian</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) elements were added to the original stock, and
+thus the great Roman character was moulded. Rome later extended her
+power over the whole of Italy, and then over the whole of the known
+world.</p>
+
+<p><b>Romance Races.</b> See <a href="#Latin">L<span class="smaller">ATIN</span>
+R<span class="smaller">ACES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Romansch.</b> Natives of the Grisons in Switzerland, speaking a
+Romance dialect, and probably of Italic race.</p>
+
+<p id="Vlach"><b>Roumanians</b>, or <b>Vlachs</b>. Natives of the modern
+Roumanian kingdom, the leading Balkan State, composed of the older
+principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia, which were long subject
+to the Turks. The Vlachs (Wallachs, a name akin to our Welsh) are
+probably descended from the Latin-speaking inhabitants of the
+ancient Roman province of Dacia, a tribe of Thracian descent,
+which was subjugated by Trajan in the second century. They have
+preserved their language, but their blood has been mingled with
+that of numerous conquerors&mdash;Goths, Huns, Slovenians, Albanians,
+Turks, etc. The Roumanian peasantry are a hardy and thrifty race,
+retaining their old warlike traditions.</p>
+
+<p><b>Rucuyennes.</b> See <a href="#Caribs">C<span class="smaller">ARIBS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Russian"><b>Russians.</b> The chief of the Slavonic races inhabiting
+European Russia, and divided into Great, White, and Little
+Russians. The physical distinction between these races is
+attributed to the mixture of the primitive Russian stock
+respectively with Finnish, Lithuanian, and Turkish blood. The
+original Russians belonged to the Slavonic stock of the Aryan
+family, and seem to have been settled in prehistoric times between
+the Danube, the Elbe, and the south coast of the Baltic. Thus they
+must have entered Russia from the west in the early centuries
+of our era. There they conquered and drove out or assimilated
+the aborigines of Northern Mongolic (Finno-Turkish) stock, and
+established a number of small states, agricultural in character,
+which long suffered from Tartar invasion, notably that of the
+Golden Horde [see <a href="#Kipchak">K<span class="smaller">IPCHAKS</span></a>], and were gradually moulded
+into a single kingdom, with Moscow for its capital. Modern Russia,
+with its vast Asiatic dependencies, is one of the greatest
+Empires in the world, but it is in a state of transition, and its
+civilisation is consequently backward. The Russian peasants are
+very patient, industrious, and thrifty. When well led, they are
+admirable soldiers. Their chief occupation is agriculture.</p>
+
+<p id="Ruthenian"><b>Ruthenians.</b> A branch of the Little Russian race, who inhabit
+the district of the Carpathians in Galicia and Hungary; poor, but
+hardy cultivators of the soil.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sabæans.</b> See <a href="#Himyarite">H<span class="smaller">IMYARITES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Sabine"><b>Sabines.</b> An ancient Italic race, who inhabited the district
+between the Central Apennines&mdash;their ancestral home&mdash;and Rome.
+The Samnites were their descendants or near kinsmen, and the
+Umbrians were less closely related to them. When Rome was founded
+there was a strong Sabine element in its population, as indicated
+by the story of the Rape of the Sabine Women, and the statement
+that several of the early kings of Rome were of Sabine blood. The
+Sabines and Samnites warred against Rome for many years, but both
+were ultimately subdued and incorporated in the Roman State.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sac Indians.</b> See <a href="#Algonquian">A<span class="smaller">LGONQUIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Sakai"><b>Sakais</b>, or <b>Samangs</b>. An aboriginal Negrito race of
+the Malay Peninsula; a wild and uncivilised people, with black
+skins and woolly hair, often approaching the ape-like in physical
+development and intelligence.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sakalavas.</b> One of the principal groups of the Malagasy
+tribes, inhabiting the west coast of Madagascar; of mixed Malay and
+negro blood, and akin to the <a href="#Hova">Hovas</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Salish.</b> See <a href="#Flathead">F<span class="smaller">LATHEADS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Samangs.</b> See <a href="#Sakai">S<span class="smaller">AKAIS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Sambo"><b>Sambos</b>, or <b>Zambos</b>. Half-breeds sprung from Negro and
+Indian parents.</p>
+
+<p id="Samnite"><b>Samnites.</b> See <a href="#Sabine">S<span class="smaller">ABINES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Samoans.</b> A <a href="#Polynesian">Polynesian</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) race, of fine physical
+development, lazy and pleasure-loving, inhabiting the Samoan group
+of islands.</p>
+
+<p id="Samoyede"><b>Samoyedes.</b> A Finno-Ugrian race, inhabiting the Obi basin in
+Siberia, once widely spread over<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_343"></a>[Pg 343]</span> the extreme north of Europe and
+Asia. They are short and dark haired, with Mongolic features, brave
+and honest, live by hunting and fishing, and are still in the Stone
+Age.</p>
+
+<p><b>Samsams.</b> A mixed Malayo-Siamese race, forming a large part
+of the population of the Malayan States of Kedah and Ligor.</p>
+
+<p><b>Santals.</b> A negro-like aboriginal tribe of Orissa in India,
+agriculturists, of the <a href="#Kolarian_family">Kolarian family</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Saracens.</b> A term applied in the Middle Ages to the Moslem
+enemies of Christendom, especially to the nomadic Arabs and
+Bedouins of the Syrian deserts.</p>
+
+<p><b>Saras.</b> See <a href="#Lake_Chad_Group">L<span class="smaller">AKE</span>
+C<span class="smaller">HAD</span> G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sarakolés.</b> See <a href="#Mandingan">M<span class="smaller">ANDINGAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sards</b>, or <b>Sardinians</b>. The aboriginal inhabitants
+of Sardinia, probably of the Western Hamitic family, akin to the
+<a href="#Iberians">Iberians</a> or <a href="#Ligurian">Ligurians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). The modern Sardinians are descended
+from this race, with considerable admixtures of alien blood from
+the Carthaginian, Roman, Saracen, Spanish and Italian owners of the
+island in successive periods.</p>
+
+<p id="Sarmatian"><b>Sarmatians.</b> An ancient nomadic and warlike people, probably
+akin to the <a href="#Scythian">Scythians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), who roamed over the wide plains of
+Eastern Europe. Fine horsemen. They were destroyed by the Goths in
+the fourth century, and disappeared from history.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sassaks.</b> Natives of Lombok in the Sunda Islands, of Malayan
+race.</p>
+
+<p><b>Savoyards.</b> Natives of Savoy, originally a short,
+round-skulled, dark race, akin to the <a href="#Auvergnat">Auvergnats</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), now
+largely mingled with Teutonic blood.</p>
+
+<p><b>Saxons.</b> (1) The Old Saxons originally inhabited the estuary
+of the Elbe and the neighbouring islands. They were a warlike race,
+of Low German stock, whose name is said to be derived from the
+“Saxes,” or heavy knives which they used in war. They were one of
+the most adventurous of Teutonic races, and made many piratical
+and colonising excursions, of which the most important was their
+settlement in Britain in the fifth century, where they united with
+the <a href="#Angles">Angles</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) to lay the foundation of the modern English
+people. (2) The Saxons who remained on the Continent gradually
+extended their dominion till it reached modern Saxony. Under
+Charlemagne the Saxon power was subordinated to that of the Franks.
+Saxony later became an independent duchy, which is still one of
+the chief States of the German Empire. The modern Saxons are less
+adventurous than their ancestors, very industrious, and successful
+in agriculture and industry, and make excellent soldiers.</p>
+
+<p><b>Scandinavians.</b> A main stock of the Aryan family, sometimes
+classed as a branch of the Teutonic stock, including the
+Icelanders, Norwegians, Danes and Swedes, as well as the old
+<a href="#Norsemen">Norsemen</a> and <a href="#Norman">Normans</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). Some ethnologists regard them as
+the original stock of the Aryan family. They are tall, blue-eyed,
+fair-haired, warlike, and good sailors and colonists.</p>
+
+<p id="Scots"><b>Scots</b> or <b>Scotch</b>. (1) The ancient Scots were a
+Celtic race, belonging to the Goidelic or <a href="#Kelts">Q Celts</a> (<i>q.v.</i>),
+originally settled in Ireland&mdash;the ancient Scotia&mdash;whence they
+made settlements in the fifth century in modern Scotland, to which
+they gave their name. They were gradually driven back into the
+Highlands by Anglo-Saxon, Norman and Danish invaders, and are now
+represented by the <a href="#Highlander">Highlanders</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) or Gaels. (2) The modern
+Scots, or Lowland Scots, are mainly of Anglo-Saxon race, modified
+by Norman, Danish, and Flemish elements. They are one of the
+finest and most hardy and industrious races in the world, equally
+successful in the arts of war and peace.</p>
+
+<p id="Scythian"><b>Scythians.</b> An ancient nomadic and warlike race, found in the
+seventh century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> on the vast plains of South-eastern
+Europe, where they lived by cattle-breeding and raiding. They dwelt
+in tent-covered waggons, fought on horseback with bows and arrows,
+and made drinking-cups of their enemies’ skulls. Their origin is in
+dispute. Some regard them as a Mongolic race, which was modified by
+association with Aryan races, and others as an Aryan stock; their
+kinsmen, the <a href="#Sarmatian">Sarmatians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), were almost certainly Aryans.
+They made several incursions into Asia, where they conquered a
+large tract of Northern India and established a kingdom which
+lasted till about the fourth century A.D. The <a href="#Rajput">Rajputs</a> and <a href="#Jat">Jats</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>) are sometimes held to be their descendants.</p>
+
+<p><b>Selengese.</b> See <a href="#Buriats">B<span class="smaller">URIATS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Seljuks.</b> A warlike Turkish people who were settled on
+the Jaxartes in the eleventh century and afterwards founded a
+considerable empire in Western Asia. See <a href="#Turks">T<span class="smaller">URKS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Seminoles.</b> See <a href="#Muskhogean">M<span class="smaller">USKHOGEAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Semites.</b> An important family of Caucasic Man, who probably
+originated in North Africa, from a similar stock to that of the
+Hamites. They are characterised by fine regular features, large
+aquiline noses, black eyes and hair, white skins, long skulls and
+square jaws. They are very intellectual, though less practical
+than the Aryan type; poets, prophets, and dreamers, rather
+than men of action. They have given the world its two greatest
+religions&mdash;Christianity and Islam. Their chief divisions are
+<a href="#Assyrian">Assyrians</a>, <a href="#Aramaean">Aramæans</a>,
+<a href="#Canaanite">Canaanites</a>, <a href="#Arabs">Arabs</a> and <a href="#Himyarite">Himyarites</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).
+In the modern world they are best known from the ubiquitous <a href="#Jew">Jews</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Seneca Indians.</b> See <a href="#Iroquoian">I<span class="smaller">ROQUOIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Serbs.</b> See <a href="#Servian">S<span class="smaller">ERVIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Serers.</b> Sudanese Negroes inhabiting Senegambia in the Cape
+Verde district. They are the tallest of Negro races, with herculean
+frames, and are akin to the <a href="#Wolof">Wolofs</a> (<i>q.v.</i>)</p>
+
+<p id="Servian"><b>Servians</b>, or <b>Serbs</b>. A race of Southern Slavonic
+stock, now inhabiting Servia. They were at first identical with
+the <a href="#Croat">Croats</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), and seem to have originated in the Carpathian
+district, whence they migrated into the Balkan peninsula in
+the seventh century. The Serbs then separated from the Croats,
+and in the twelfth century founded a powerful Servian kingdom,
+which was conquered by the Turks in the fifteenth. The Servians
+recovered their independence in 1830, under Milosh Obrenovitch. The
+Servians are a well-built race, proud and martial in temperament,
+quick-tempered and prone to deeds of violence, as their recent
+revolution witnessed.</p>
+
+<p><b>Shangallas.</b> A mixed negroid race of the Abyssinian slopes.
+Sudanese Negroes with a Hamitic infusion.</p>
+
+<p id="Shan"><b>Shans.</b> Natives of the independent Shan States, lying to
+the north of Siam. They are identical with the Laos, and closely
+related to the <a href="#Siamese">Siamese</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). They belong to the Indo-Chinese
+stock of the Southern Mongolic family, and are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_344"></a>[Pg 344]</span> probably descended
+from an aboriginal race of China, which appeared on the Upper
+Irawadi about 2,000 years ago. They are a peaceful, pleasure-loving
+people, mainly agricultural, but not unwarlike. They have a sallow
+skin and Mongoloid features.</p>
+
+<p id="Sharra"><b>Sharras</b>, or <b>Eastern Mongols</b>. A branch of the
+Mongol stock of the Northern Mongolic family. They are a nomad,
+tent-dwelling, pastoral race, who roam over the great steppes of
+Central Asia. They include the Khalkas, north of the Gobi Desert,
+the Tanguts of Northern Tibet, the Chakars, Barins, Durbans, Uruts,
+Naimans, and Ordos south of the Gobi. They are descended from the
+older <a href="#Mongol">Mongols</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), whom they resemble in physical type.</p>
+
+<p><b>Shawnees.</b> See <a href="#Algonquian">A<span class="smaller">LGONQUIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Shilluks.</b> See <a href="#Nilitic_Group">N<span class="smaller">ILITIC</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Shoshonean"><b>Shoshonean.</b> A group of North American Indian tribes, all
+belonging to the Shoshone or Snake family, formerly occupying
+Idaho, Utah, and Wyoming, with neighbouring districts. They include
+the Shoshones or Snakes, Bannocks, Comanches, Utahs, and Mokis.
+With the exception of the warlike Comanches, they are a peaceful
+race, who have received the white invaders with friendship.</p>
+
+<p><b>Shulis.</b> See <a href="#Nilitic_Group">N<span class="smaller">ILITIC</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Siamese"><b>Siamese.</b> Natives of Siam, belonging to the Indo-Chinese
+stock of the Southern Mongolic family. They are closely related to
+the <a href="#Shan">Shans</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). They are of medium height, olive complexion,
+with slightly flattened noses, prominent lips, and black hair. They
+are a peaceful and indolent race, who have recently shown promise
+of assimilating Western civilisation. Their blood is largely mixed
+with Chinese and Malay. Siam is still independent, forming a buffer
+state between British and French possessions.</p>
+
+<p id="Siberian"><b>Siberian.</b> A stock of the Northern Mongolic family, including
+the <a href="#Chukchi">Chukchi</a>, <a href="#Koryak">Koryak</a>,
+<a href="#Kamchadale">Kamchadale</a>, <a href="#Gilyak">Gilyak</a>,
+and <a href="#Yukaghir">Yukaghir</a> tribes (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Sicani, Siculi.</b> See <a href="#Sicilian">S<span class="smaller">ICILIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Sicilian"><b>Sicilians.</b> The primitive inhabitants of Sicily were the
+Sicani, probably a Hamitic race allied to the <a href="#Ligurian">Ligurians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).
+They were followed by the Siculi, an Aryan race of Italic stock,
+who crossed from Italy about 1000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> They were civilised
+and modified by Phœnician, and especially Greek settlers, with
+later Norman and Saracen influences. Of all these elements the
+modern Sicilians are compounded. They are a handsome, industrious,
+and amiable race, but turbulent, lawless, given to blood-feuds and
+brigandage.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sienerehs.</b> See <a href="#Nigerian_Group">N<span class="smaller">IGERIAN</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Sikh"><b>Sikhs.</b> A powerful and warlike race of Northern India, united
+by a common religious faith, dating from the eighteenth century,
+and mainly of <a href="#Jat">Jat</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) descent. Under Ranjit Singh, at the
+beginning of the eighteenth century, they reared a formidable
+military power in the Punjab, which was conquered by the British
+in 1846&ndash;1849. The Sikhs contribute many of the best and most
+trustworthy troops to the Indian Army.</p>
+
+<p><b>Silurians.</b> A dark, round-skulled, short race who inhabited
+South Wales and the neighbouring districts of England in Roman
+times. They were probably of Iberian stock, related to the ancient
+Picts and modern Basques.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sindis.</b> Natives of Sind in North-West India, of Hindu
+descent.</p>
+
+<p id="Singpho"><b>Singphos.</b> A wild, daring hill-tribe of Tibetan stock
+bordering on the Assam valley, formerly given to raiding, but
+now peaceful agriculturists. The Chins of the Arakan uplands are
+probably an identical race; they are still predatory.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sinhalese.</b> See <a href="#Dravidians">D<span class="smaller">RAVIDIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Siouan"><b>Siouan.</b> A numerous and formerly powerful group of North
+American Indians, inhabiting the western prairies between the
+Mississippi and the Rocky Mountains. Their chief tribe was the
+Sioux or Dakotas, warriors of fine physique, courage, and military
+skill, who long maintained a successful resistance against the
+white settlers. Other allied tribes were the Assinaboins, Omahas,
+Poncas, Kaws, Osages, Quapaws, Iowas, Otoes, Missouris, Winnebagos,
+Mandans, Minnetarees, Absarakas or Crows, Tutelos, and Catawbas.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sioux</b>, or <b>Dakotas</b>. See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Siryanian"><b>Siryanians.</b> A tribe of Ugrian Finns, dwelling on both sides
+of the Northern Urals, resembling the <a href="#Samoyede">Samoyedes</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), except
+in their white colour and fair hair, probably due to a mixture of
+Slavonic blood. See <a href="#Finno_Ugrian">F<span class="smaller">INNO</span>-U<span class="smaller">GRIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Slavonic Races</b>, <b>Slavs</b> or <b>Slavonians</b>. A main
+stock of the Aryan family, occupying the greater part of Eastern
+Europe, and formerly extending as far west as the Elbe. Many
+ethnologists consider them to be the primitive Aryan stock. They
+are a peaceful and industrious agricultural and pastoral race,
+broad-skulled, with fair hair and blue eyes; though the primitive
+type has been much modified by intermixture of blood, especially
+with Mongolic races, who have imprinted a Tartar character on
+many Slavonic physiognomies. The Slavs are divided into Eastern
+(<a href="#Russian">Russians</a> and <a href="#Ruthenian">Ruthenians</a>),
+Western (<a href="#Czech">Czechs</a> and <a href="#Slovak">Slovaks</a>,
+<a href="#Pole">Poles</a> and <a href="#Wend">Wends</a> or Sorbs), and Southern (<a href="#Bulgarians">Bulgarians</a>,
+<a href="#Servian">Servians</a>, and <a href="#Croat">Croats</a>,
+<a href="#Dalmatian">Dalmatians</a>, <a href="#Slovenian">Slovenians</a>,
+and <a href="#Montenegrin">Montenegrins</a>). See under these heads.</p>
+
+<p id="Slovak"><b>Slovaks.</b> See <a href="#Czech">C<span class="smaller">ZECHS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Slovenian"><b>Slovenians.</b> A branch of Southern Slavonic stock, inhabiting
+Styria, Carinthia, and adjoining districts.</p>
+
+<p><b>Solimas.</b> See <a href="#Temne_Group">T<span class="smaller">EMNÉ</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Somalis.</b> An Eastern Hamitic race of Somaliland in North-East
+Africa. They are a pastoral people, of good physique, handsome
+features, and light-brown colour, warlike and independent. The
+original Hamitic stock&mdash;closely akin to that of the <a href="#Gallas">Gallas</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>)&mdash;is modified by Semitic and Negro blood. They make
+excellent soldiers and servants.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sonrhays.</b> A Negro race of the Middle Niger, in whom the
+Sudanese stock is modified by Arab and Berber elements.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sorbs.</b> See <a href="#Wend">W<span class="smaller">ENDS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Soyot"><b>Soyots.</b> A tribe of Ugrian Finns, mixed with Tartar blood, in
+the Sayan Mountains of South Siberia. See <a href="#Finno_Ugrian">F<span class="smaller">INNO</span>-U<span class="smaller">GRIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Spaniards</b>, or <b>Spanish</b>. The earliest known race
+of Spain was the Hamitic <a href="#Iberians">Iberians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), now represented by
+the Basques. They were modified by Celtic invasions, which gave
+birth to the Celt-Iberian races of Central and Western Spain,
+who struggled so long against the Roman arms, by which they were
+finally subjugated and further modified. In the fifth century
+the <a href="#Vandals">Vandals</a> and <a href="#Visigoth">Visigoths</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) invaded Spain, and founded
+a Gothic monarchy, which fell before the Saracens in 711. The
+Visigothic refugees in the northern mountains gradually recovered
+the country, and the kingdoms of Leon, Navarre, Castile, and Aragon
+were ultimately united into a single state. The modern Spaniards
+are thus of mixed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_345"></a>[Pg 345]</span> race, in which the Iberian and Visigothic are
+the predominant elements. They are haughty, brave, and warlike, by
+which qualities they once owned the greatest power in Europe. But
+they are turbulent and lacking in political skill, so that Spain
+has decayed. There are now signs of a return to prosperity.</p>
+
+<p><b>Spanish Americans.</b> White natives of Central and South
+American States, except Brazil.</p>
+
+<p><b>Spartans.</b> Natives of Sparta, the greatest state of ancient
+Greece after Athens, of Dorian stock, eminently warlike and
+patriotic, but wanting in art or literature.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sudanese.</b> Full-blooded Negroes inhabiting the Western,
+Central, and Eastern or Egyptian Sudan&mdash;<i>i.e.</i> most of Africa
+north of the Victoria Nyanza. They are black in colour, with
+woolly hair, projecting jaws, long skulls, broad, flat feet and
+projecting heels, and form one of the main divisions of Ethiopic
+Man. They are less intelligent and susceptible of civilisation
+than the <a href="#Bantu">Bantus</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), in whom the Negro blood is modified by
+Hamitic or Semitic admixtures. They are mostly of strong physique,
+warlike and predatory, fond of music and bright colours, with the
+most elementary notions of art and religion. They may be divided
+for convenience into several racial groups (<i>q.v.</i>), such as <a href="#Wolof">Wolof</a>,
+<a href="#Felup">Felup</a>, <a href="#Toucouleur">Toucouleur</a>, <a href="#Mandingan">Mandingan</a>, <a href="#Temne_Group">Temné</a>, <a href="#Nigerian_Group">Nigerian</a>, <a href="#Nilitic_Group">Nilotic</a>, <a href="#Liberian">Liberian</a>,
+<a href="#Lake_Chad_Group">Lake Chad</a>, <a href="#Wadai">Wadai</a>, <a href="#Welle_Group">Welle</a>, <a href="#Nuba_Group">Nuba</a>, and <a href="#Nilitic_Group">Nilotic</a>, besides the <a href="#Tshi">Tshi</a>, <a href="#Ga">Ga</a>,
+<a href="#Ewe">Ewe</a>, and <a href="#Yoruba">Yoruba</a> peoples of the Guinea district.</p>
+
+<p id="Suevi"><b>Suevi.</b> See <a href="#Swabian">S<span class="smaller">WABIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Sundanese"><b>Sundanese.</b> Natives of the Sunda Islands, of Malayan stock,
+closely allied to <a href="#Javanese">Javanese</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Susus.</b> See <a href="#Mandingan">M<span class="smaller">ANDINGAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sutughils.</b> See
+<a href="#Maya_Quiche">M<span class="smaller">AYA</span>-Q<span class="smaller">UICHÉ</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Swabian"><b>Swabians.</b> Natives of Swabia, an ancient duchy occupying the
+south-western part of the modern German Empire; descended from the
+ancient Suevi, with whom the <a href="#Alemanni">Alemanni</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) were amalgamated. A
+strong, large-boned, and good-humoured race of High German stock.
+The Alsatians are closely allied to them.</p>
+
+<p id="Swahili"><b>Swahilis.</b> Natives of Zanzibar and the adjoining mainland,
+Bantu Negroes, with a strong infusion of Arab blood, which has made
+them superior in intelligence and enterprise to the average negro.
+They play a large part in the commerce of East Africa, and their
+language&mdash;Ki-Swahili&mdash;is the principal medium of communication
+throughout the part of Africa between the Equator and the Zambesi.</p>
+
+<p><b>Swazis.</b> Natives of Swaziland, a native state on the
+south-east of the Transvaal. A cross between Zulus and other
+Kafirs, they are industrious and warlike.</p>
+
+<p><b>Swedes.</b> Natives of Sweden, a branch of the Scandinavian
+stock. They seem to have been originally a Teutonic race, who
+entered Northern Sweden about 3,000 years ago, and drove out the
+aboriginal Lapps and Finns. The inhabitants of Southern Sweden
+were called Goths, and may have been the ancestors of the Teutonic
+Goths. In time they amalgamated with the Swedes, and formed one
+nation, which has been an independent kingdom through most of the
+Christian era. The Swedes are warlike, and successful in commerce
+and industry; they make good sailors, and possess a considerable
+literature.</p>
+
+<p><b>Swiss</b>, or <b>Switzers</b>. The prehistoric inhabitants of
+Switzerland were the unknown builders of the lake dwellings. At the
+dawn of history, in Cæsar’s time, the country was largely occupied
+by a Celtic race, the Helvetii. Later, Switzerland was invaded by
+Teutonic races of High German stock, Alemanni, Burgundians, etc.
+The modern Swiss are mostly descended from these races; there
+is also a considerable mixture of French, Italic and Romansch
+elements. The Swiss have always been a warlike race, who preserved
+the independence of their mountainous country through all ages, and
+in earlier times furnished excellent mercenary soldiers to foreign
+armies. They are now very industrious and successful in many arts
+and crafts, such as watchmaking, wood-carving, hotel-keeping, etc.
+They are a simple and handsome race, possessing in full measures
+the virtues of the mountaineer.</p>
+
+<p id="Syrians"><b>Syrians.</b> The ancient Syrians were a branch of the Aramæn
+stock of the Semitic family, and the modern Syrians are their
+descendants, with some Arab and Turkish elements added. They are
+tall, with white skins and dark complexions, black eyes and hair,
+often very handsome, and approaching the Jewish type. They are not
+warlike, but succeed in commerce.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tacullis.</b> See <a href="#Athabascan">A<span class="smaller">THABASCAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tahitians.</b> Natives of Tahiti, of Polynesian stock;
+pleasure-loving and polite, but immoral and untrustworthy; now
+civilised but formerly noted for their cruelty.</p>
+
+<p><b>Taipings.</b> The Chinese rebels who attacked the dynasty from
+1850 to 1864.</p>
+
+<p id="Tajiks"><b>Tajiks.</b> See <a href="#Persian">P<span class="smaller">ERSIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Talaings.</b> An Indo-Chinese race who preceded the Burmese
+in the Irawadi Delta, and founded a state of which Pegu was the
+capital. They were subjugated by Burmese in the eighteenth century.</p>
+
+<p><b>Talamancas.</b> Wild hunting Indians, perfectly uncivilised, who
+occupy the forest-covered Atlantic slopes of Costa Rica.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tamils.</b> Natives of Northern Ceylon and the Indian Carnatic.
+See <a href="#Dravidians">D<span class="smaller">RAVIDAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Taos.</b> See <a href="#Pueblo">P<span class="smaller">UEBLO</span>
+I<span class="smaller">NDIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tanguts.</b> Nomadic Mongols of Northern Tibet. See
+<a href="#Sharra">S<span class="smaller">HARRAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tarahumaras.</b> See
+<a href="#Opata_Pima">O<span class="smaller">PATA</span>-P<span class="smaller">IMA</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tarascans.</b> A group of Indian tribes inhabiting the province
+of Michoaca in Mexico.</p>
+
+<p id="Tartars"><b>Tartars</b> or <b>Tatars.</b> The modern Tartars are inhabitants
+of the Russian Empire, belonging to the Turki stock of the Northern
+Mongolic family. They are divided into various geographical
+subdivisions, such as the Kazan, Astrakhan, Crimean (or Krim)
+Caucasian and Siberian Tartars. The name has no definite ethnical
+significance. The Tatars&mdash;a Manchu word meaning “archers” or
+“nomads”&mdash;were Mongol tribes who were first so named in the ninth
+century. They formed a large part of the hordes of Genghiz Khan
+[see <a href="#Mongol">M<span class="smaller">ONGOLS</span></a>] and stood in the van of the mediæval Mongol
+incursions into Europe, whence they attracted an attention out of
+proportion to their importance. Europeans called them Tartars,
+confusing the name Tartar with the Greek Tartarus or Hell. See
+<a href="#Turks">T<span class="smaller">URKI</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Tasmanians"><b>Tasmanians.</b> The extinct aborigines of Tasmania, akin to the
+<a href="#Australian">Australians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), but of a still lower Oceanic Negro type. They
+held a place at the very bottom of humanity, alike in physique,
+intelligence and culture, being still in the early Stone Age;
+savage, untamable, and degraded.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tatars.</b> See <a href="#Tartars">T<span class="smaller">ARTARS</span></a>.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_346"></a>[Pg 346]</span></p>
+
+<p><b>Tats.</b> See <a href="#Persian">P<span class="smaller">ERSIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Tavastian"><b>Tavastians.</b> A branch of the Baltic Finns, with thick-set
+figures, small blue eyes, light hair, and white skins, probably
+the consequence of an admixture of German blood with the original
+Finnish stock. They inhabit central Finland.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tazis.</b> See <a href="#Tunguses">T<span class="smaller">UNGUSES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Teguas.</b> See <a href="#Pueblo">P<span class="smaller">UEBLO</span>
+I<span class="smaller">NDIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tehuelches.</b> Another name for the gigantic <a href="#Patagonian">Patagonians</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>) of South America.</p>
+
+<p><b>Telugus.</b> See <a href="#Dravidians">D<span class="smaller">RAVIDIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Tembu"><b>Tembus</b>, <b>Amatembu</b>, or <b>Tambukies</b>. A group of
+<a href="#Kafir">Kafir</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) tribes in Tembuland, to the north of the Kei River
+in Cape Colony. Formerly warlike and troublesome, now settled to
+agriculture and subjected to British rule.</p>
+
+<p id="Temne_Group"><b>Temné Group.</b> A group of Sudanese Negro tribes, inhabiting
+the Sierra Leone district of West Africa, including the Temnés or
+Timnis, Kissis, Sherbros, Gallinas, Bulloms, Solimas, Limbas, and
+Mendis.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tepeguanas.</b> See
+<a href="#Opata_Pima">O<span class="smaller">PATA</span>-P<span class="smaller">IMA</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Teutons.</b> An important stock of the Aryan family, inhabiting
+England and the Scottish Lowlands, with the United States and
+British Empire, Germany, Holland, and parts of Austria and
+Switzerland, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. The Teutonic races are
+divided into Low German and High German divisions, to which some
+add, but others do not, Scandinavians.</p>
+
+<p><b>Thlinkits.</b> A race of North American Indians inhabiting the
+Pacific coast from Mount St. Elias to the Simpson River, and the
+adjacent islands. They live chiefly by fishing and hunting.</p>
+
+<p><b>Thos.</b> An Indo-Chinese race of Lao descent [see
+<a href="#Shan">S<span class="smaller">HANS</span></a>], in the north of Tongking.</p>
+
+<p id="Thracian"><b>Thracians.</b> The ancient inhabitants of Thrace, on the west
+of the Black Sea. Their origin is dubious, but they are generally
+assumed to have belonged to the Aryan family, and been related
+to the Teutons and the Greeks. They were wild hill tribes, who
+acquired in later days a certain amount of Roman culture and spoke
+the Latin language. There is some probability that they were the
+ancestors of the <a href="#Vlach">Vlachs or Roumanians</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Thuringians.</b> A High German tribe inhabiting Thuringia in the
+fifth century, probably a branch of the <a href="#Suevi">Suevi</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). Now merged
+into the modern Saxons.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tibetans</b>, or <b>Bod-Pa</b>. Natives of Tibet, forming
+the Tibetan stock of the Southern Mongolic family, and allied
+to the minor races of <a href="#Lepcha">Lepchas</a>, <a href="#Balti">Baltis</a>,
+<a href="#Ladakhi">Ladakhis</a>, etc. (<i>q.v.</i>).
+The Tibetans are akin to the Burmese, with Mongolic features,
+broad-shouldered and muscular. They are a secluded and archaic
+race, with many curious customs, such as polyandry. Their religion
+is full of elaborate ceremonials, and the land abounds in
+monasteries.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tibbus.</b> A race inhabiting the oases of the Sahara,
+intermediate between Berbers and Negroes; perhaps descended from
+the ancient <a href="#Garamantes">Garamantes</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Timnis.</b> See <a href="#Temne_Group">T<span class="smaller">EMNÉ</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tinné</b>, or <b>Tinney</b>. See <a href="#Athabascan">A<span class="smaller">THABASCAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tobas.</b> A warlike and predatory race of South American
+Indians on the Rio Vermejo in Bolivia.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tocantins.</b> See <a href="#Tupi_Guarani">T<span class="smaller">UPI</span>-G<span class="smaller">UARANI</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Todas.</b> An isolated group of Caucasic race inhabiting the
+Nilgiri Hills, and distinguished from the neighbouring Dravidian
+tribes by their fine physique and regular features of Caucasic
+type; a dying race.</p>
+
+<p><b>Togos.</b> See <a href="#Ewe">E<span class="smaller">WE</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Toltec"><b>Toltecs.</b> The oldest of <a href="#Nahuans">Nahuan</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) races, who
+established a semi-civilised State in Mexico before the Aztecs.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tongans.</b> See <a href="#Polynesian">P<span class="smaller">OLYNESIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tongas</b>, or <b>Amatonga</b>. A Kafir race of peaceful
+agriculturists, occupying Tongaland, to the north of Zululand.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tonkinese.</b> A branch of the <a href="#Annamese">Annamese</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), skilled in
+agriculture and dyke-building.</p>
+
+<p id="Toucouleur"><b>Toucouleurs.</b> Sudanese Negroes of Senegambia, probably
+crossed with Hamitic blood; formerly dominant in the Western Sudan.</p>
+
+<p id="Tshi"><b>Tshi Group.</b> A group of Sudanese Negro tribes of the Guinea
+Coast, including the warlike Ashantis, Fantis and Adansis.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tuaregs.</b> The predatory <a href="#Berber">Berber</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) Nomads of the Sahara.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tudas.</b> See <a href="#Dravidians">D<span class="smaller">RAVIDIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tumalis.</b> See <a href="#Nuba_Group">N<span class="smaller">UBA</span>
+G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Tunguses"><b>Tunguses.</b> A branch of the Mongol stock of the Northern
+Mongolic family, who lead a nomad existence in the mountains of
+East Siberia and the Amur region. They are of Mongolic physical
+type, with square skulls, low stature, and wiry, well-knit figures.
+They are distinguished by fine moral qualities, a fearless race of
+hunters, industrious, trustworthy, and self-reliant. Their main
+tribes are the Lamuts, or “sea people,” Orochs, Chapogirs, Golds,
+and Tazis. The modern Tunguses probably represent the primitive
+stock of the <a href="#Manchu">Manchus</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p id="Tupi_Guarani"><b>Tupi-Guarani.</b> A wide-spread family of South American
+Indians, in Brazil, including numerous distinct tribes, of which
+the Chiriguanas of Bolivia, Caribunas of the Rio Negro, Paraguay
+Indians, Tupinambas of the Para coast, Mundrucus of the Tapajos,
+Omaguas, Goajiris and Tocantins, are the most important. They are
+copper-coloured, thick-set and muscular, with broad features,
+black hair and sometimes obliquely set eyes. They are of apathetic
+nature, and are slow to acquire civilisation.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tupinambas.</b> See <a href="#Tupi_Guarani">T<span class="smaller">UPI</span>-G<span class="smaller">UARANI</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Turanian.</b> An ethnological term, now abandoned, roughly
+corresponding to the Northern Mongolic or Ural-Altaic family.</p>
+
+<p><b>Turguts.</b> See <a href="#Kalmuk">K<span class="smaller">ALMUKS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Turkanas.</b> An African Hamitic race, allied to the <a href="#Masai">Masais</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>), and dwelling between Lake Rudolf and the Nile.</p>
+
+<p id="Turks"><b>Turki</b>, or <b>Turks</b>. An important and wide-spread stock
+of the Northern Mongolic family, dwelling in Central Asia, Asia
+Minor, and in European Turkey. The primitive Turki stock&mdash;the
+Chinese Tu-kiu and ancient Turcæ&mdash;seem to have inhabited the Altai
+region as early as the second century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Thence they
+spread far and wide, and founded many powerful and predatory,
+but unstable empires. The <a href="#Hun">Huns</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) who followed Attila were
+largely of Turki stock. Their chief modern race is that of the
+Ottoman Turks [see <a href="#Turks">T<span class="smaller">URKS</span></a>], who raised their empire on the
+ruins of Constantinople in 1453. Other Turki races are the Yakuts,
+Usbegs, Naimans Andijanis, Nogais, <a href="#Tartars">Tartars</a>, Bashkirs, Kizil-Bashis,
+Anatolian Turks, etc. They are closely allied to the <a href="#Kirghiz">Kirghiz</a>,
+<a href="#Kipchak">Kipchaks</a>,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_347"></a>[Pg 347]</span> <a href="#Kara_Kalpak">Kara-Kalpaks</a> and <a href="#Turkomans">Turkomans</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). The Turki physical
+type, of Mongol origin, has been modified by intermixture with
+Caucasic races.</p>
+
+<p><b>Turks</b>, <b>Osmanlis</b>, or <b>Ottoman Turks</b>. The
+dominant inhabitants of the Turkish Empire in Europe and Asia
+Minor, the most powerful of Turki races. They trace their descent
+from the Seljuks, a confederacy of Turki tribes who were settled
+on the Jaxartes in the eleventh century, and there adopted Islam.
+They conquered Persia and established kingdoms in Syria&mdash;the great
+Saladin was one of their princes&mdash;and Asia Minor, or Anatolia.
+The true Ottoman Turks entered the service of the Seljuk rulers
+in the thirteenth century, being driven from Kharasan by the
+advance of the Mongol hordes, and under Othman and his successors
+they became the dominant Turk race. They reared a great military
+power, and soon invaded Europe, where they destroyed the Eastern
+Empire in the middle of the fifteenth century and founded the still
+existing Turkish Empire. The Ottoman Turks are proud, ignorant
+and fanatical, but honourable and upright. They make admirable
+soldiers, when properly led, but are surpassed in the arts of peace
+by their subject races, Greeks, Bulgarians, Jews, etc.</p>
+
+<p id="Turkomans"><b>Turkomans.</b> A race of Turki nomads who inhabit the steppes
+east of the Caspian and south of the Oxus. They include such tribes
+as the Chaudors, Tekkes (Akhal and Merv), Salors, Yomuds, Goklen,
+and Ali-Elis. They were formerly noted for their predatory and
+man-stealing habits, but under Russian rule have been forced to
+live a more peaceful life. <i>m</i></p>
+
+<p><b>Tusayas.</b> See <a href="#Pueblo">P<span class="smaller">UEBLO</span>
+I<span class="smaller">NDIANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tuscaroras.</b> North American Indians. See <a href="#Iroquoian">I<span class="smaller">ROQUOIAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tushis.</b> See <a href="#Chechenzes">C<span class="smaller">HECHENZES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tushilange.</b> A branch of the <a href="#Baluba">Baluba</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Tutelos.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tyrolese.</b> Natives of the Tyrol, the ancient Rhaetia, a
+mountainous district now belonging to the Austrian Empire. They are
+of High German Teutonic stock, and are noted for their patriotism
+and bravery, illustrated by their resistance under Hofer to the
+arms of Napoleon. They are industrious and thrifty, but backward in
+education, and devout Catholics.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tyrrhenes.</b> An ancient pre-Hellenic race of Greece, found in
+Thrace and Etruria, who probably belonged to the Pelasgian stock of
+the Hamitic family, giving birth to the <a href="#Etruscan">Etruscans</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Ugrian.</b> A branch of the <a href="#Finno_Ugrian">Finno-Ugrian</a> stock (<i>q.v.</i>)
+including the <a href="#Samoyede">Samoyedes</a>, <a href="#Vogul">Voguls</a>,
+<a href="#Ostyak">Ostyaks</a>, <a href="#Soyot">Soyots</a> and <a href="#Siryanian">Siryanians</a> of
+Siberia, the <a href="#Permian">Permian Finns</a> of Russia, and the
+<a href="#Magyar">Magyars</a> of Hungary. See under these heads.</p>
+
+<p><b>Umbquas.</b> See <a href="#Athabascan">A<span class="smaller">THABASCAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Umbrian"><b>Umbrians.</b> An ancient Italic race, perhaps allied to the
+<a href="#Etruscan">Etruscans</a> (<i>q.v.</i>) or the Samnites, afterwards subjugated by Rome.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ural-Altaic.</b> A term applied to the Northern Mongolic family
+of races, corresponding nearly to the older Turanian. It includes
+the Mongol, Turki, Finno-Ugrian, Siberian, and Koreo-Japanese
+stocks.</p>
+
+<p><b>Uruts.</b> See <a href="#Sharra">S<span class="smaller">HARRAS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Utahs.</b> See <a href="#Shoshonean">S<span class="smaller">HOSHONEAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Uzbegs.</b> Nomadic Turki race of the Oxus Basin.</p>
+
+<p><b>Vaalpens.</b> A Negrito race of the Kalahari Desert, probably a
+half-breed between Bechuanas and Bushmen, formerly the serfs of
+the dominant Bantu races, but now freed under British rule.</p>
+
+<p id="Vandals"><b>Vandals.</b> A Teutonic race, settled at the dawn of the
+Christian era in North-east Germany between the Oder and the
+Vistula. Like the Goths, whom they physically resembled, they were
+a warlike and roving race. Early in the fifth century they invaded
+Gaul and formed a settlement in Spain, where Andalusia (anciently
+Vandalitia) preserves their name. Later, under the fierce Genseric,
+they crossed to Africa and over-ran Mauretania, where they
+established a short-lived piratical Empire. In 534 it was destroyed
+by a Byzantine army under Belisarius, and the Vandals thereafter
+disappeared as a separate race. Their name has become a by word on
+account of their turn for devastation.</p>
+
+<p><b>Vaudois.</b> See <a href="#Waldense">W<span class="smaller">ALDENSES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Veddah"><b>Veddahs.</b> A primitive hunting people of Ceylon, who are
+sometimes classed as Dravidian, but more probably represent the
+still older (Negrito?) aborigines of the island. They are dwarfish,
+of dark complexion, with features intermediate between the Hindu
+and Papuan types. They rank among the rudest and least civilised
+of races, being equally unable to laugh, count, or cook. They are
+dying out.</p>
+
+<p><b>Veis</b>, or <b>Vey</b>. A Sudanese Negro race, of Mandingan
+stock, on the West Coast of Africa, who are said to be the only
+Negro race who have invented an alphabet.</p>
+
+<p><b>Venezuelans.</b> White natives of Venezuela, of Spanish descent.
+Most of them are crossed with Indian blood.</p>
+
+<p><b>Vikings.</b> See <a href="#Norsemen">N<span class="smaller">ORSEMEN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Visigoth"><b>Visigoths.</b> See <a href="#Goths">G<span class="smaller">OTHS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Vogul"><b>Voguls.</b> A nomadic Finno-Ugrian race who inhabit both slopes
+of the Urals. They closely resemble the <a href="#Ostyak">Ostyaks</a>
+and <a href="#Samoyede">Samoyedes</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). <i>m</i></p>
+
+<p><b>Vuaregga</b>, <b>Vuarua</b>, <b>Vuarunga</b>, <b>Vuavinza</b>.
+Bantu Negro tribes inhabiting the Congo basin and the Tanganyika
+district.</p>
+
+<p><b>Wachaga.</b> A predatory Bantu race on the southern slopes of
+Kilimanjaro.</p>
+
+<p id="Wadai"><b>Wadai Group.</b> A group of Sudanese Negro tribes inhabiting
+Wadai and East Darfur, including Birkits, Massalits, Korungas,
+Mabas (mixed with Hamitic blood), and other tribes. They are mainly
+of pastoral habit.</p>
+
+<p><b>Waganda.</b> A Bantu Negro race who founded the kingdom of
+Uganda and attained a remarkable degree of civilisation before the
+arrival of white men. They are very intelligent, and their skill in
+the industrial arts has caused them to be called the Japanese of
+Africa. They are also warlike, and formerly indulged in frequent
+plundering and slave hunting raids among the surrounding races.</p>
+
+<p><b>Wagogo.</b> A Bantu Negro race of German East Africa.</p>
+
+<p><b>Wahehe.</b> See <a href="#Wasagara">W<span class="smaller">ASAGARA</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Wa_Huma"><b>Wa-Huma.</b> A conquering pastoral race, of Eastern Hamitic
+stock, who migrated from Gallaland and penetrated as far south
+as Unyamwezi, founding various kingdoms on the way. They are of
+Hamitic features, fair complexion, and tall stature; very warlike.
+The ruling classes of Uganda and Unyoro are of Wa-Huma origin. The
+Wa-Huma are a branch of the <a href="#Gallas">Gallas</a> (<i>q.v.</i>). Among their tribes are
+the Wajiji, Warundi, Waruanda, etc.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_348"></a>[Pg 348]</span></p>
+
+<p><b>Wajiji.</b> See <a href="#Wa_Huma">W<span class="smaller">A</span>-H<span class="smaller">UMA</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Waldense"><b>Waldenses</b>, or <b>Vaudois</b>. A heretical sect which
+originated in the South of France in the twelfth century, and was
+formed into a separate race by persecution; of French, Swiss, and
+Italian elements. They are now settled in Savoy.</p>
+
+<p id="Walloon"><b>Walloons.</b> Natives of South-eastern Belgium, of mixed Celtic
+and Romanic stock, probably descended from the ancient <a href="#Belgae">Belgae</a>
+(<i>q.v.</i>). They are tall, bony, and of strong physique, and are very
+successful in industry, as shown in the great manufacturing town of
+Liege.</p>
+
+<p><b>Wanyamwezi.</b> A warlike Bantu race of German East Africa, who
+formerly composed a powerful predatory state.</p>
+
+<p id="Wanyoro"><b>Wanyoro.</b> Natives of Unyoro, in British East Africa, of Bantu
+race, skilled in industrial arts, and formerly allied with Arab
+slave-traders.</p>
+
+<p><b>Wapisianas.</b> See <a href="#Arawak">A<span class="smaller">RAWAKS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Wapokomo.</b> The chief Bantu race of the Tana basin, skilled
+boatmen and hunters, formerly under Masai domination, now acquiring
+civilisation under British rule.</p>
+
+<p><b>Warraus.</b> An aboriginal Indian race of British Guiana.</p>
+
+<p><b>Warua.</b> A powerful, warlike, and barbarous Bantu race of the
+Lualaba district in the Congo Free State, forming a powerful native
+state, and skilled in industry and rude art.</p>
+
+<p><b>Waruanda</b>, <b>Warundi</b>. See <a href="#Wa_Huma">W<span class="smaller">A</span>-H<span class="smaller">UMA</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Wasagara"><b>Wasagara.</b> A warlike and widespread Bantu people of German
+East Africa; fierce mountaineers, much given to marauding. The
+Wahehe, who claim Zulu affinities, are one of their tribes.</p>
+
+<p><b>Waswahili.</b> See <a href="#Swahili">S<span class="smaller">WAHILIS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Wataveita.</b> A mild and settled agricultural Bantu race
+inhabiting the slopes of Kilimanjaro in German East Africa.</p>
+
+<p id="Welle_Group"><b>Welle Group.</b> A group of Sudanese Negro races inhabiting the
+region of the Upper Welle River in Central Africa, including the
+cannibal Niam-Niam, or Azandeh, the Mangbattu, Nsakkara, Amadi,
+Ababua, and other tribes.</p>
+
+<p id="Welsh"><b>Welsh</b>, or <b>Cymry</b>. The chief surviving branch of the
+Brythonic or P Celts, inhabiting Wales, where they preserve their
+ancient language and customs. They probably represent the ancient
+Britons who inhabited England at the time of the Anglo-Saxon
+immigrations. “An old and haughty nation, proud in arms.”</p>
+
+<p id="Wend"><b>Wends.</b> A stock of the Western Slavonic family, settled in
+the north and east of Germany in the sixth century. They were
+gradually absorbed by the Teutonic Germans. A remnant of the
+Wendish race, preserving their ancient language and customs,
+survives in Lusatia, on the borders of Saxony and Prussia, where
+they are also known as Sorbs.</p>
+
+<p><b>Winnebagos.</b> See <a href="#Siouan">S<span class="smaller">IOUAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Wochuas.</b> See <a href="#Pygmies">P<span class="smaller">YGMIES</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Wolof"><b>Wolofs.</b> Sudanese Negroes, dwelling between Lower Senegal and
+Gambia; very black, but with regular features, indicating a trace
+of Hamitic blood. Their chief branch is that of the Jolofs.</p>
+
+<p><b>Wulwas.</b> See <a href="#Lencan">L<span class="smaller">ENCAN</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Xanthochroi.</b> A suggested division of Caucasic Man, opposed
+to the Melanochroi, characterised by fair hair, blue eyes, and rosy
+complexion. It would thus include the Teutonic, Scandinavian, and
+Slavonic stocks of the Aryan family.</p>
+
+<p id="Xosa"><b>Xosas</b>, or <b>Amaxosa</b>. The southern stock of the <a href="#Kafir">Kafir
+race</a> (<i>q.v.</i>), allied to the Zulus, or northern stock. They are
+eminently warlike, and have an interesting system of social
+organisation. They are of Bantu origin, immigrants from the north,
+who have dispossessed the Hottentot or Bushman aborigines. They are
+tall, well-built, and muscular, with Negro features and complexion,
+and woolly hair. They are semi-nomadic cattle-breeders and hunters,
+but many have taken to the settled pursuits of agriculture. They
+were long at war with the British and Boer settlers, but are now a
+peaceful and contented people under British rule.</p>
+
+<p><b>Yakuts.</b> A Mongolic race of Turki stock, inhabiting the
+province of Yakutsk in East Siberia. They are of middle height,
+with black hair, flat noses, and narrow eyes. They are laborious
+and enterprising, and show more aptitude for civilisation than the
+Buriats or Tunguses. They inhabit log “yurtas” in winter, but camp
+out in summer. Cattle-breeding, and to a less degree agriculture,
+are their chief occupations.</p>
+
+<p><b>Yankees.</b> Natives of the New England States. In a wider
+sense, the northern inhabitants of the United States.</p>
+
+<p><b>Yaos.</b> Agricultural aborigines of French Indo-China, perhaps
+allied to the Chinese proper.</p>
+
+<p><b>Yedinas.</b> See <a href="#Lake_Chad_Group">L<span class="smaller">AKE</span>
+C<span class="smaller">HAD</span> G<span class="smaller">ROUP</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Yomuds.</b> See <a href="#Turkomans">T<span class="smaller">URKOMANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Yoruba"><b>Yorubas.</b> A group of Sudanese Negro races inhabiting the
+eastern half of the Slave Coast district, and united by a common
+Yoruba language, though much broken up by political feuds. They
+are peacefully disposed, industrious, and friendly to strangers.
+Their main pursuit is agriculture, but they also practise many
+industries; they are the best architects in Africa. Their chief
+tribes are those of Egba, Jebu, Oworo, Ondo, Ife, and Oyo.
+Abeokuta, the Egba capital, owes its fame to the success with
+which it held out as a city of refuge against the slave-hunters of
+Dahomey and Ibadan.</p>
+
+<p id="Yukaghir"><b>Yukaghirs.</b> A nomadic tribe of north-east Siberia, probably
+identical with the <a href="#Tunguses">Tunguses</a> (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p><b>Yumas.</b> See
+<a href="#Opata_Pima">O<span class="smaller">PATA</span>-P<span class="smaller">IMA</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Yuruks.</b> A nomadic Turki race in the Konia vilayet of
+Turkey-in-Asia.</p>
+
+<p><b>Yusufzais.</b> See <a href="#Afghan">A<span class="smaller">FGHANS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Zambos.</b> See <a href="#Sambo">S<span class="smaller">AMBOS</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Zaparos.</b> South American Indians, on the Upper Napo in Peru.</p>
+
+<p><b>Zapotecs.</b> Central American Indians of Oajaca in Mexico.</p>
+
+<p><b>Zendals</b>, <b>Zotzils</b>. See
+<a href="#Maya_Quiche">M<span class="smaller">AYA</span>-Q<span class="smaller">UICHÉ</span></a>.</p>
+
+<p id="Zulu"><b>Zulus</b>, or <b>Amazulu</b>. A very warlike Bantu race, allied
+to the Xosas and other Kafir tribes, whom they resemble in physique
+and organisation. Originally a small Kafir clan, the Zulus were
+raised to eminence at the beginning of the nineteenth century by
+the genius of Tchaka, a kind of Negro Napoleon, who established
+a severe military despotism, and dominated South Africa from the
+Zambesi to Cape Colony by the courage and military skill of his
+regiments. Tchaka’s descendants ruled Zululand proper, and waged
+war against Kafirs, Boers, and English, until their country was
+annexed by Britain in 1887. The Zulus are both physically and
+mentally one of the finest of African races.</p>
+
+<p><b>Zunis.</b> See <a href="#Pueblo">P<span class="smaller">UEBLO</span>
+I<span class="smaller">NDIANS</span></a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<h4 id="TYPES_OF_THE_CHIEF_RACES_OF_MANKIND">TYPES OF THE CHIEF LIVING RACES OF
+MANKIND</h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32_5" id="i_349">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_349.jpg" alt="Living Races of Mankind--I" />
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_349_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32_5" id="i_350">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_350.jpg" alt="Living Races of Mankind--II" />
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_350_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32_5" id="i_351">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_351.jpg" alt="Living Races of Mankind--III" />
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_351_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">GROUPED ACCORDING TO PHYSIOLOGICAL RELATIONSHIP</p>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_352"></a>[Pg 352]</span></p>
+
+<div class="bbox">
+
+<h4 id="ETHNOLOGICAL_CHART_OF_THE_HUMAN_RACE">ETHNOLOGICAL CHART OF THE HUMAN
+RACE</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p class="s4 p0">This Chart, intended for reference in connection with the Dictionary
+of Races beginning on <a href="#AN_ALPHABET_OF_RACES">page 311</a>, gives a view of the various main
+divisions, families, and stocks into which the human race is divided
+by ethnologists. It is impossible to give a complete list of the
+individual races within the necessary limits, but the chief typical
+races are named under each stock in the right-hand column. The races
+marked with an asterisk are extinct.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<table class="ethno_chart mtop1" summary="Ethnological Chart; Ethiopic Division">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s4" colspan="5">
+ <div class="center mtop1 mbot1"><b>ETHIOPIC DIVISION</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5" colspan="2">
+ <div class="center">Family</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center">Stock</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center">Typical races</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="13">
+ <div class="center">A<span class="smaller">FRICAN</span><br />
+ N<span class="smaller">EGRO</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="13">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h17em" src="images/i_352_brac12.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><i>Sudanese</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h5em" src="images/i_352_brac4.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Mandingan</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Ashanti</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Hausa</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Azandeh</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="6">
+ <div class="center"><i>Bantu</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="6">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h8em" src="images/i_352_brac6.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Herero</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Wanyamwezi</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Basuto</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Waganda</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Ama-Xosa (Kafir)</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Zulu</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Hottentot-Bushman</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Nama</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Griqua</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Bushman</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center">A<span class="smaller">FRICAN</span><br />
+ N<span class="smaller">EGRITO</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Pygmy</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Wochua</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Akka</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Obongo</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="5">
+ <div class="center">O<span class="smaller">CEANIC</span><br />
+ N<span class="smaller">EGRO</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="5">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h10em" src="images/i_352_brac9.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Papuan</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">New Guinea<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">natives</span></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Melanesian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Fijian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Solomon<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">Islanders</span></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Australian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Australian<br />
+ <span class="mleft1">aborigines</span></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Tasmanian*</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center">O<span class="smaller">CEANIC</span><br />
+ N<span class="smaller">EGRITO</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Negrito</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Andamanese</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Sakai</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Aeta</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<table class="ethno_chart mtop1" summary="Ethnological Chart; Mongolic Division">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s4" colspan="5">
+ <div class="center mtop1 mbot1"><b>MONGOLIC DIVISION</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5" colspan="2">
+ <div class="center">Family</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center">Stock</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center">Typical races</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="19">
+ <div class="center">N<span class="smaller">ORTHERN</span><br />
+ M<span class="smaller">ONGOLIC</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="19">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h28em" src="images/i_352_brac23.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><i>Mongol</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h5em" src="images/i_352_brac4.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Sharra</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Kalmuk</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Buriat</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Tungus</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="5">
+ <div class="center"><i>Turki</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="5">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h6em" src="images/i_352_brac6.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Turks</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Tartars</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Bashkirs</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Kirghiz</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Turkoman</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="5">
+ <div class="center"><i>Finno-Ugrian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="5">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h6em" src="images/i_352_brac6.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Samoyede</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Magyar</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Finn</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Bulgar</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Lapp</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Siberian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Chukchi</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Kamchadale</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Koreo-Japanese</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Korean</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Japanese</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Dravidian(?)</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Tamil</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="10">
+ <div class="center">S<span class="smaller">OUTHERN</span><br />
+ M<span class="smaller">ONGOLIC</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="10">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h12em" src="images/i_352_brac10.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Tibetan</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Tibetan</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Balti</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Lushai</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><i>Indo-Chinese</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h5em" src="images/i_352_brac4.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Burmese</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Siamese</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Bhil</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Annamese</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Chinese</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Chinese</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Punti</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Lolo</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="7">
+ <div class="center">O<span class="smaller">CEANIC</span><br />
+ M<span class="smaller">ONGOLIC</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="7">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h10em" src="images/i_352_brac9.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Malaysian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Malay</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Dyak</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Javanese</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Malagasy</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Hova</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Philippine</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Visayan</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Ilocano</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Formosan</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<table class="ethno_chart mtop1" summary="Ethnological Chart; American Division">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s4" colspan="5">
+ <div class="center mtop1 mbot1"><b>AMERICAN DIVISION</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5" colspan="2">
+ <div class="center">Family</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center">Stock</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center">Typical races</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center">A<span class="smaller">RCTIC</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Eskimo</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Eskimo</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Aleutian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="25">
+ <div class="center">N<span class="smaller">ORTH</span><br />
+ A<span class="smaller">MERICAN</span><br />
+ I<span class="smaller">NDIAN</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="25">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h36em" src="images/i_352_brac36.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Athabascan</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Apache</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Navajo</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Algonquian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Delaware</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Mohican</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Blackfoot</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Iroquioan</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Huron</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Mohawk</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Cherokee</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Thlinkit</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Thlinkit</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Haida</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Haida</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Chinook</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Chinook</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Siouan</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Sioux</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Dakota</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Omaha</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><i>Shoshonean</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h5em" src="images/i_352_brac4.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Shoshone</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Utah</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Comanche</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Pawnee</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Muskhogean</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Choktaw</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Seminole</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Natchez</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Natchez*</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Kiowa</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Kiowa</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Salish</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Flathead</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Pueblo</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Zuni</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Taos</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="18">
+ <div class="center">C<span class="smaller">ENTRAL</span><br />
+ A<span class="smaller">MERICAN</span><br />
+ I<span class="smaller">NDIAN</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="18">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h26em" src="images/i_352_brac23.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Otomi</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Otomi</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Opata-Pima</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Cora</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Tarahumara</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Guaicuri</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Guaicuri</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Tarascan</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Tarascan</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Nahuan</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Toltec</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Aztec</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Mexican</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Maya-Quiché</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Maya</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Quiché</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Huastec</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Lencan</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Chontal</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Guatusa</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Bribri</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Bribri</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Talamanca</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Talamanca</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Zapotec</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Zapotec</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Miztec</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Miztec</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Chorotegan</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Chorotegan</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="30">
+ <div class="center">S<span class="smaller">OUTH</span><br />
+ A<span class="smaller">MERICAN</span><br />
+ I<span class="smaller">NDIAN</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="30">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h42em" src="images/i_352_brac36.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Inca</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Quichua</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Chanca</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Aymara</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Aymara</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Chibcha</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Chibcha</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Choco</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Choco</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Zaparo</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Zaparo</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Jivaro</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Jivaro</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Mojo</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Mojo</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Chiquito</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Chiquito</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Barré</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Barré</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Charrua</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Charrua*</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Chuncho</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Chuncho</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Conibo</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Conibo</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Carib</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Macusi</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Rucuyenne</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Arawak</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Maypuri</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Wapisiana</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Warrau</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Warrau</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Botocudo</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Botocudo</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Tupi-Guarani</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Paraguay</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Caribuna</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Tupinamba</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Payagua</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Payagua</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Matacoan</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Matacoan</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Toba</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Toba</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Araucanian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Araucanian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Puelche</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Puelche</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Gaucho</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Patagonian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Patagonian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Fuegian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Fuegian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<table class="ethno_chart mtop1" summary="Ethnological Chart; Caucasic Division">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s4" colspan="5">
+ <div class="center mtop1 mbot1"><b>CAUCASIC DIVISION</b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="s5" colspan="2">
+ <div class="center">Family</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center">Stock</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="s5">
+ <div class="center">Typical races</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="10">
+ <div class="center">H<span class="smaller">AMITIC</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="10">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h8em" src="images/i_352_brac10.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><i>Eastern</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h5em" src="images/i_352_brac4.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Egyptian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Somali</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Galla</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Masai</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="6">
+ <div class="center"><i>Western</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="6">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h8em" src="images/i_352_brac10.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Numidian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Berber</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Iberian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Basque</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Pict*</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center"><i>Ligurian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Corsican</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><i>Pelasgian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Mycenæan*</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Etruscan*</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="9">
+ <div class="center">S<span class="smaller">EMITIC</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="9">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h12em" src="images/i_352_brac10.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Assyrian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Chaldæan*</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Aramæan</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Syrian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Hittite*</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Canaanite</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Israelite</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Phœnician*</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Carthaginian*</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Arab</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Arab</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Bedouin</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Himyarite</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Abyssinian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="37">
+ <div class="center">A<span class="smaller">RYAN</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="37">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h52em" src="images/i_352_brac36.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Hindu</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Punjabi</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Bengali</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Iranian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h5em" src="images/i_352_brac4.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Afghan</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Persian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Armenian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Kurd</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Hellenic</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Albanian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Greek</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="6" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Italic</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="6">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h7em" src="images/i_352_brac6.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Roman</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Italian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">French</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Spanish</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Portuguese</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Latin American</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="6">
+ <div class="center"><i>Keltic</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="6">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h7em" src="images/i_352_brac6.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center">Goidelic<br />
+ or<br />
+ Q Kelts</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h4em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Irish</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Manx</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Highland Scottish</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center">Brythonic<br />
+ or<br />
+ P Kelts</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h4em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Welsh</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Breton</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Cornish*</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Lettic</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Lithuanian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Lettish</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Slavonic</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h5em" src="images/i_352_brac4.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Russian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Czech</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Polish</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Servian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Scandinavian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h4em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Norwegian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Swedish</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Danish</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="8">
+ <div class="center"><i>Teutonic</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="8">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h10em" src="images/i_352_brac9.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center">Low<br />
+ German</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h5em" src="images/i_352_brac4.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Old Saxon*</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Dutch</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Flemish</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Anglo-Saxon</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center">High<br />
+ German</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h5em" src="images/i_352_brac4.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">German</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Saxon</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Swiss</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Austrian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center">C<span class="smaller">AUCASIAN</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="4">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h5em" src="images/i_352_brac4.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Southern</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Georgian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Western</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Circassian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Eastern</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="2">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h2_5em" src="images/i_352_brac2.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Chechenz</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Lesghian</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center">I<span class="smaller">NDONESIAN</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Polynesian</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" rowspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><img class="h3_5em" src="images/i_352_brac3.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Samoan</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Maori</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Marquesan</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">A<span class="smaller">INU</span></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam" colspan="3">
+ <div class="center"><i>Ainu</i></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam">
+ <div class="left">Ainu</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_353"></a>[Pg 353]</span></p>
+
+<h3 class="s0" id="MAKING_OF_THE_NATIONS_AND_THE_INFLUENCE_OF_NATURE" title="MAKING
+OF THE NATIONS AND THE INFLUENCE OF NATURE">&nbsp;</h3>
+
+<p class="s3 center">MAKING OF THE NATIONS</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_353">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_353.jpg" alt="Decoration" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s3 center">AND THE INFLUENCE OF NATURE</p>
+
+<h4 id="THE_BIRTH_GROWTH_OF_NATIONS">THE BIRTH &amp; GROWTH
+OF NATIONS</h4>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">BY PROFESSOR RATZEL</p>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">I</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first4">I</span>N
+order that the cosmic conception of the life of man may be more
+than a mere isolated idea, incapable of being applied and developed,
+it is necessary to indicate the relation which human life bears to the
+collective life of the earth.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man is Bound up with the Earth</div>
+
+<p>Human existence is based upon the entire development of vegetable
+and animal life; or, as Alexander von Humboldt said, in reality the
+human race partakes of the entire life on earth. Just as plants
+and animals, vegetable and animal remains and products, occupy an
+intermediate position between man and the inanimate substance of the
+earth, so almost without exception the life of man depends not directly
+upon the earth, but upon the animals and plants, which in turn are
+immediately bound to the earth by the necessities of existence. It is
+the dependence of later and more evolved types upon the earlier and
+less evolved. In 1845 Robert Mayer, the German scientist, published
+his epoch-making thesis on “The Relations of Organic Motion to
+Metabolism,” in which he described the vegetable world as a reservoir
+wherein the rays of the sun are transformed into life-supporting
+material and are stored up for use. According to his view the physical
+existence of the human race is inseparably linked together with this
+“economic providence”; and he even went so far as to connect it with
+the instinctive pleasure felt by every eye at the sight of luxuriant
+vegetation.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man’s Fight with Plants and Animals<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Spreading Life Over all the Earth</div>
+
+<p>The history of mankind shows how various are the elements contained
+in this reservoir, and how manifold their action. Originally plants
+and animals share the soil with man, who must struggle with them for
+its possession. The plains favour and the forests obstruct historical
+movement; the inhabitant of the tropics is hardly able to overcome the
+growth of weeds that covers his field; for the Esquimau the vegetable
+world exists but two months in the year, and then only in stunted,
+feeble species. The unequal distribution of edible plants has in a
+large measure been the cause of divergence in the developments of
+different races. Australia and the Arctic countries have received
+almost nothing; the Old World has had abundance of the richest gifts
+showered upon it, Asia receiving more than Africa or Europe. The
+most valuable of domestic animals are of Asiatic origin. America’s
+pre-European history is incomparably more uniform than that of the Old
+World, and this is owing to her moderate endowment of useful plants
+and almost complete lack of domestic animals. The transplanting of
+vegetable species from one part of the earth to another, carried on
+by man, is one of the greatest movements in the collective life of
+the world. Its possibilities of extension cannot be conjectured; for
+the successful diffusion of single cultivated plants&mdash;the banana,
+for example&mdash;over a number of widely separated countries is yet
+problematical. This process can never be considered to have come to an
+end so long as necessity forces man to get a firmer and firmer hold on
+the store of earthly life.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_354"></a>[Pg 354]</span></p>
+
+<p>The relations of man to the earth are primarily the same as those of
+any other form of life. The universal laws of the diffusion of life
+include also the laws of the diffusion of the human species. Hence the
+study of the geographical distribution of man must be looked upon only
+as a branch of the study of the geographical distribution of life, and
+a succession of the conceptions belonging to the latter.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Material Tie that Binds Men Together</div>
+
+<p>To these conceptions belong the main area of distribution, the
+habitable world, and all its various parts: zones, continents, and
+other divisions of the earth’s surface, especially seas, coasts,
+interiors of lands, bordering regions, divisions exhibiting continuity
+with others as links in a chain, and isolated divisions. Also
+relations as to area: the struggle for territory, variations in the
+life development in small or inextensive regions, in insular or in
+continental districts, on heights of land and plateaus, and, in
+addition, the hindrances and the aids to development presented by
+different conformations; the advance development in small, densely
+populated districts; or the protection afforded by isolated situations.
+All must be included. Finally, properties of boundaries must be
+conceived of as analogous to phenomena occurring on the peripheries of
+living bodies.</p>
+
+<p>As races are forms of organic life, it follows that the state cannot
+be comprehended otherwise than as an organised being; every people,
+every state is organic, as a combination of organic units. Moreover
+there is something organic in the internal coherence of the groups and
+individuals from which a state is formed. However, in the case of a
+people and a state, this coherence is neither material nor structural;
+states are spiritual and moral organisms. But, together with the
+spiritual, there is also a material coherence between the individual
+members of a race or a nation. This is the connection with the ground.
+The ground furnishes the only material tie that binds individuals
+together into a state; and it is primarily for this reason that all
+history exhibits a strong and ever-increasing tendency to associate the
+state with the soil&mdash;to root it to the ground, as it were.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The State and the Soil</div>
+
+<p>The earth is not only the connecting principle, but it is also the
+single tangible and indestructible proof of the unity of the state.
+This connection does not decrease during the course of history, as
+might be supposed, owing to the progressive development of spiritual
+forces; on the contrary, it ever becomes closer, advancing from the
+loose association of a few individuals with a proportionately wide
+area in the primitive community, to the close connection of the dense
+population of a powerful state with its relatively small area, as in
+the case of a modern civilised nation. In spite of all disturbances,
+the economic and political end has ever been to associate a greater and
+greater number of individuals with the soil. Hence the law that every
+relation of a race or tribe to the ground strives to take a political
+form, and that every political structure seeks connection with the
+ground. The notion of an unterritorial and a territorial epoch in the
+history of man is incorrect; ground is necessary to every form of
+state, and also to the germs of states, such as a few negroes’ huts
+or a ranch in the Far West. Development consists only in a constant
+increase in the occupation and use of land, and in the fact that, as
+populations grow, so do they become ever more firmly rooted in their
+own soils.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">If One State Embraced the Whole Earth</div>
+
+<p>At the same time the nature of the movements of peoples must change.
+Penetration and assimilation of one race by another occur instead
+of displacement of one by another; and with the rapid decrease of
+unoccupied territory the fate of the late-comers in history is
+irrevocably sealed. Since the state is an organism composed of
+independent individuals and households, its decay cannot be analogous
+to the death and corruption of a plant or an animal. When plants decay,
+the cells of which they are composed decay also. But in a decayed state
+the freed individuals live on and unite together into new political
+organisms; they increase, and the old necessity for growth continues
+in the midst of the ruin. The decay of nations is not destruction;
+it is a remodelling, a transformation. A great political institution
+dies out; smaller institutions arise in its place. Decay is a life
+necessity. Nothing could be more incorrect than the idea that the
+growth of nations would come to an end were one state to embrace the
+whole earth. If this were to happen, long before the great moment of
+union came, there would be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_356"></a>[Pg 356]</span> a multitude of processes of growth already
+in operation, ready to rebuild in case of decadence, and to provide
+for a new organisation if needed. As yet the political expansion of
+the white races over the earth has not resulted in uniformity, but in
+manifoldness.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_355">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_355.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE PEOPLE OF THE MOUNTAINS: SHOWING THE INFLUENCE OF
+ ENVIRONMENT ON CHARACTER</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This picture, by Alexander Johnston, illustrates the
+ keynote of Professor Ratzel’s chapters on the influence of the earth on
+ character. Johnston represents a marriage among the Scottish Covenanters, who,
+ persecuted under the Stuarts, took to the moss-hags and the hills, of whose
+ stern ruggedness their own stern independence was the outcome and counterpart.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_355_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Earth and the Movements of Peoples</div>
+
+<p>All conditions and relations of peoples and states that may be
+geographically described, delineated, surveyed, and, for the greater
+part, even measured, can be traced back to movements&mdash;movements that
+are peculiar to all forms of life, and of which the origin is growth
+and development. However various these movements may be in other
+respects, they are always connected with the soil, and thus must be
+dependent upon the extent, situation, and conformation of the ground
+upon which they take place. Therefore, in every organic movement we
+may perceive the activity of the internal motive forces which are
+peculiar to life, and the influences of the ground to which the life
+is attached. In the movements of peoples, the internal forces are the
+organic powers of motion common to all creatures, and the spiritual
+impulses of the intellect and will of man.</p>
+
+<p>In many a view of history these forces alone appear; but it must not
+be forgotten that they are conditioned by the fact that they cannot be
+active beyond the general limits of life, and they cannot disengage
+themselves from the soil to which life is bound. In order to understand
+historical movements it is first necessary to consider their purely
+mechanical side, which is shown clearly enough by an inquiry into the
+nature of the earth’s surface. Neglect of this occasions a delay in
+the understanding of the true character of such movements. Men merely
+spoke of geography, and treated history as if it were an atmospheric
+phenomenon.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">National Emigrations in History</div>
+
+<p>Nations are movable bodies whose units are held together by a
+common origin, language, customs, locality, and often necessity for
+defence&mdash;the strongest tie of all. A people expands in one direction
+and contracts in another; in case of two adjacent nations, a movement
+in the one betokens a movement in the other. Active movements are
+responded to by passive, and vice versa. Every movement in an area
+filled with life consists in a displacement of individuals. There are
+also currents and counter-currents: when slavery was abolished in the
+Southern States of America, an emigration of white men from the South
+was followed by an influx of ex-slaves from the North, thus causing an
+increase in the black majority of the South.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Why Nations Must Seek New Homes</div>
+
+<p>Such external movements of peoples assume most varied forms. History
+takes a too narrow view in considering only the migrations of nations,
+looking upon them as great and rare events, historical storms as it
+were, exceptional in the monotonous quiet of the life of man. This
+conception of historical movements is very similar to the discarded
+cataclysmic theory in geology. In the history of nations, as in
+the history of the earth, a great effect does not always involve a
+presupposition of its being the immediate result of a mighty cause.
+The constant action of small forces that finally results in a large
+aggregate of effect must be taken into account in history as well as in
+geology. Every external movement is preceded by internal disturbance:
+a nation must grow from within in order to spread abroad. The increase
+of Arabs in Oman led to an emigration to East Africa along highways of
+traffic known to times of old. Merchants, craftsmen, adventurers, and
+slaves left their native land and drew together in Zanzibar, Pemba,
+and on the mainland. The process was repeated from the coast to the
+interior, and as a result of the aggregate labour of individuals as
+merchants, colonists, and missionaries, Arabian states grew up in
+the central regions of Africa. Instances of the occupation of vacant
+territories are of the greatest rarity in history as we are acquainted
+with it. The best example known to us is the settlement of Iceland
+by the Northmen. The rule is, a forcing in of the immigrating nation
+between other races already in possession; the opposition of the latter
+often compels the former to divide up into small groups, which then
+insinuate themselves peacefully among the people already established in
+the land.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_357">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_357.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE NORTHMEN TAKING POSSESSION OF ICELAND</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Instances of peoples taking possession of uninhabited
+ lands and settling therein are extremely rare. Iceland is the best example known.
+ The hardy Northmen took possession of it in the ninth century, but found the
+ country untenanted.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_357_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Human Will Knows no Obstacle</div>
+
+<p>The movements of nations resemble those of fluids upon the earth: they
+proceed from higher altitudes to lower; and obstacles cause a change of
+course, a backward flow, or a division. Though at first there may be a
+series of streams running along side by side, there is a convergence
+at the goal, as shown by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_358"></a>[Pg 358]</span> migration of different peoples to a
+common territory; there is concentration when there are hindrances to
+be overcome, and a spreading out where the ground is level and secure.
+One race draws other races along with it; and, as a rule, a troop of
+wanderers come from a long distance will be found to have absorbed
+foreign elements on its way. But it would be wrong to look upon the
+movements of nations as passive onflowings, or even to deduce a natural
+law from the descent of tribes from the mountains to the river valleys
+and to the sea&mdash;an idea that once led to the acceptance of the theory
+of the Ethiopian origin of Egyptian civilisation. Either the wills
+of individuals unite to form a collective will, or the will of a
+single man imposes itself upon the aggregate. The human will knows no
+insurmountable obstacle within the bounds of the habitable earth.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Bursting Nature’s Barriers</div>
+
+<p>As time goes on, all rivers and all seas are navigated, all mountains
+climbed, and all deserts traversed. But these have all acted as
+obstructions before which movements have either halted or turned aside,
+until finally they have burst the barriers. At least two thousand years
+passed from the time of the first journey of a Phœnician ship out
+through the Pillars of Hercules into the Atlantic until the arrival of
+the day when a voyage across was ventured from Southern Europe. The
+Romans turned at the Alps, both to the right and to the left, seven
+hundred years after their city had been founded, but how many nooks in
+the interior of those mountains were unknown to them even centuries
+later! Yet to-day Europe feels the effect of this circumstance, the
+fact that the Romans did not advance straight through the Central Alps
+into the heart of the Teutonic country. They followed a roundabout way
+through Gaul, and thus Mediterranean culture and Christianity were
+brought to Central Europe from the west instead of from the south;
+hence the dependence of the civilisation of Germany upon that of France.</p>
+
+<p>It is precisely the Romans who, contrasted with barbarians, show us
+that will or design in the movements of nations does not necessarily
+increase with growth of culture, even though culture constantly
+puts more means of action at its disposal, improved methods of
+transportation, by which the way may be lightened. The mounted bands
+of Celts and Germans crossed the Alps quite as easily as did the Roman
+legions; and in spreading about and penetrating to every corner of
+the Alps and the Pyrenees, the barbarians were always superior to the
+Romans.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Great Wanderers of the Earth</div>
+
+<p>Wandering tribes of semi-civilised people are smaller, less
+pretentious, and less encumbered. In every war that has taken place in
+a mountain land, the greater mobility of untrained militia has often
+led to victories over regular troops. Races of inferior culture are
+invariably more mobile than those of a higher grade of civilisation;
+and they are able to equalise the advantages of the superior modes of
+locomotion with which culture has supplied the latter. Mobility also
+indicates a weaker hold upon the ground, and thus uncivilised peoples
+are more easily dislodged from their territories than are nations
+capable of becoming, as it were, more deeply rooted. In nomadic races,
+mobility bound up with the necessity for an extensive territory assumes
+a definite form, and, owing to a constant preparedness for wandering
+and to the possession of an organised marching system, such peoples
+have been among the greatest forces in Old World history.</p>
+
+<p>Movements of nations are often spoken of as if certain definite
+directions were forced upon them by some mysterious power. This view
+not only wraps itself in the garment of prophecy&mdash;for example, when
+announcing that the direction in which the sun travels must also be
+that of history&mdash;but it formally presupposes a necessary east-to-west
+progression of historical movements, endeavouring to substantiate
+its doctrine by citation of examples, from Julius Cæsar to the
+gold-seekers of California. But this necessity remains always in
+obscurity. Not only is it contradicted by frequently confirmed reflex
+movements in historical times, but it is also disproved still more by
+the great migrations which have taken place on the same continent in
+contrary directions. In Asia the Chinese have spread over the entire
+area of interior plain and desert, westward to the nation-dividing
+barriers of the Pamir Mountains; other Asiatic races have overflowed
+into Europe&mdash;also from east to west. Contrariwise, ever since the
+sixteenth century we have seen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_359"></a>[Pg 359]</span> the Russians at work conquering the
+entire northern part of the continent, constantly pressing on towards
+the east. Even the sea proved no obstacle, for they both discovered and
+acquired Alaska during the course of this same movement.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_359">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_359.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">HOW CIVILISATION SPREAD THROUGH EUROPE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The inexorable influence of physical conditions on the
+ life of the peoples is well illustrated by the influence of the Alps in
+ deflecting the path of Mediterranean culture. These mountains hemmed in the
+ north of the Roman Empire and forced the Romans, in their expansion, to the
+ west. Hence Mediterranean culture and Christianity were carried to Central
+ Europe from the west instead of from the south, and the civilisation of Germany
+ depends on that of France. The map shows the route followed by the stream of
+ Roman civilisation.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>We shall not attach any universal significance to such fashionable
+terms employed in historical works as political or historical
+attraction, elective affinity or balance; least of all shall we presume
+to discover occult, mysterious sources for them. It is obvious that a
+powerful nation will overflow in the direction of least resistance; and
+in the case of a strong Power confronting one that is weak there is a
+constant movement toward the latter. Thus, from the earliest times,
+Egypt has pressed on toward the south; and everywhere in the Sudan
+we find traces of similar movements to the south as far as Adamawa,
+where they are still to-day in energetic continuance. The history of
+colonisation in America shows a turning of the streams of immigration,
+in the south as well as in the north, towards the more thinly settled
+regions; the more thickly populated are avoided. The migrations of
+nations, which took place during periods of history when a surplus of
+unoccupied land existed, were determined to a great extent by natural
+causes. The more numerous nations become, the greater the obstacles
+to migration, for most of these obstacles arise from the very nations
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Nations increase with their populations; lands with enlargement of
+territory. So long as a country has sufficient area, the second form
+of growth need not of necessity follow the first&mdash;the race spreads
+out over the gaps which are open in the interior, and thus internal
+colonisation takes place. If there is need for emigration, occupiable
+districts may be found in the lands of another people&mdash;for centuries
+Germans<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_360"></a>[Pg 360]</span> have thus found accommodation in Austria, Hungary, Poland, and
+America.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">How New States are Born</div>
+
+<p>Of course, such colonists gradually become absorbed into the people
+among whom they have settled. This is simple emigration, which is
+therefore connected with the internal colonisation of a foreign land.
+External colonisation first comes into being when a state acquires
+territory under its control, into which territory, if it be suitable, a
+portion of the inhabitants of the state move and settle. Colonisation
+is not necessarily a State affair from the first. If a race inhabit
+a country so sparsely as the Indians did America in the sixteenth
+century, a foreign people, having the power of spreading out, may press
+into the gaps with such success that this initial internal colonisation
+may also be advantageous from a political standpoint. The State then
+intervenes and appropriates the territory over which groups of its
+inhabitants have previously acquired economic control.</p>
+
+<p>The emigrants formed a social aggregate in the new country, and from
+this aggregate a state, or the germ of a state, develops. Since such
+an economic-social preparatory growth greatly assists in the political
+acquirement of land, it is obvious that this form of colonisation
+is especially sound and effectual. The opposite method follows when
+a state first conquers a territory which it occupies later with its
+own forces; this is colonisation by conquest. It can be capable of
+development only when subsequent immigration permanently acquires the
+land as a dwelling-place.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Why Rome’s Empire Endured Long</div>
+
+<p>Conquest that neither can nor will take permanent possession of the
+soil is characteristic of a low stage of culture; thus the Zulu states
+in Africa, surrounded by broad strips of conquered yet uncontrolled
+territory, and the old “world-empires” of Western Asia, exhausted
+themselves in vain efforts to obtain lasting increase of area through
+aggressive expeditions. That the Roman Empire lasted a longer time than
+any of the preceding universal empires was due to the single fact that
+agricultural colonisation invariably followed in the footsteps of its
+political conquests.</p>
+
+<p>The enlargement of a nation’s area is associated with soil and
+inhabitants. If the increase of territory&mdash;for example, through
+conquest&mdash;is much more rapid than the increase of population, an
+inorganic, loosely connected expansion results, which, as a rule,
+is soon lost again. If, on the contrary, population increases at a
+proportionately greater rate than area, a crowding together, checks to
+internal movements, and over-population follow. In consequence, great
+discrepancies between growth of territory and increase of population
+lead to the most varied results. The conquering nation expands over
+extensive regions for which there are no inhabitants. Passive races in
+India and in China become so crowded together that it is impossible for
+their soil to support them any longer; hence a continuous degradation
+and recurrent periods of famine, which may bring with them a relatively
+feeble and unorganised emigration.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Modern Nations as Colonisers</div>
+
+<p>There are nations with whom conquest and colonisation seem to follow
+in most profitable alternation: this appears to have been the case
+with all colonising countries of modern history that have followed the
+example of the Roman Empire. But there are great contrasts presented
+even by these nations. Germany, Austria, and Russia, in immediate
+connection with their conquered provinces, have colonised and expanded
+toward the east. In spite of a rapid increase of population, Germany
+has been backward in establishing trans-marine colonies, while France,
+with a proportionately smaller increase of population, began by
+colonising in all directions, but occupied more land than she was able
+to master; for which reason colonization in the history of France has
+taken more or less the character of conquest. England, on the contrary,
+with a vigorous emigration and an expansive movement in all directions,
+presents an example of the soundest and strongest method of founding
+colonies which has been seen since early times.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_361">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_361.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE EXPANSION OF THE WHITE RACES THROUGHOUT THE WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This map illustrates the extent to which the white races
+ have spread into other than their native lands. The pale tint, as on the British
+ Isles, indicates the native land of the whites; the darker tint shows where
+ whites have settled down; while the black portions represent those parts of the
+ earth where the coloured races predominate.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_361_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Some New National Problems</div>
+
+<p>Through the entire course of history an ever-increasing value attached
+to land may be traced; and in the expansion of nations we may also
+see that mere conquest is growing less and less frequent, while the
+economic acquisition of territory, piece by piece, is becoming the
+rule. The getting of land assumes more and more the character of a
+peaceful insinuation. The taking possession of distant countries<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_362"></a>[Pg 362]</span>
+without consideration for the original inhabitants, who are either
+driven away, or murdered&mdash;speedily with the aid of bullets, or slowly
+with the assistance of gin or contagious diseases or by being robbed of
+their best land&mdash;is to-day no longer possible. Colonisation has become
+a well-ordered administration combined with instruction of the natives
+in useful employments. The old method has left scarcely a single
+pure-blooded Indian east of the Mississippi in the United States, and
+not one native in Tasmania; the new method has before it the problem
+how to share the land with negroes&mdash;in the Transvaal with 74 per cent.
+and in Natal with 82 per cent. Climatic conditions are also to be taken
+into consideration, for Caucasians are able to develop all their powers
+in temperate regions only; a hot climate impels them to ensure the
+co-operation of black labour through coercion.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Mankind Ages with Civilisation</div>
+
+<p>During the course of centuries a motley collection of countries has
+developed, all of which are called colonies, although they stand in
+most striking contrast with one another. Several are nations in embryo,
+to which only the outward form of independence is lacking; not a few
+have once been independent; and many give the impression that they will
+never be fit for self-government. There are some in which the native
+population has become entirely extinct, such as Tasmania, Cuba, and
+San Domingo; others in which the original inhabitants, still keeping
+to their old customs and institutions, are guided and exploited by a
+few white men only; and, finally, colonies in which the rulers and the
+natives have assimilated with one another, as in Siberia. Once upon
+a time such tokens of the youth of races as may be seen in rude but
+remunerative labour on unlimited territory were widespread in many
+colonies. But the new countries fill up visibly, and even they show
+that mankind, as a whole, ages the more rapidly the more the so-called
+progress of civilisation is hastened. However, an examination of the
+peoples of the present day shows that the differences in age between
+mother-countries and colonies will, indeed, continue for a long time
+yet. Such differences exist between west and east Germans as well as
+between New Englanders and Californians; they are even to be detected
+in Australia, between the inhabitants of Queensland and of New South
+Wales. Such differences are shown not only in the characteristics of
+individuals, but also in the division of land and in methods of labour.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Nations Hold fast to Nature</div>
+
+<p>Divergence and differentiation are the great factors of organic
+growth. They govern the increase of nations and states from their
+very beginnings. Since, however, these organisms are composed of
+independent units, differentiation does not consist in an amalgamation
+and transformation of individuals, but in their diffusion and grouping.
+Therefore the differentiation of nations becomes eminently an affair
+of geography. Never yet has a daughter people left its mother-country
+to become an independent state without a previous disjunction having
+taken place. All growth is alteration in area, and, at the same time,
+change in position. The further growth extends away from the original
+situation, the sooner dismemberment follows. In Australia, New South
+Wales spreads out towards the north, and at the new central point,
+Brisbane, a new colony, Queensland, is formed, which already differs
+materially from New South Wales. And Queensland itself expands towards
+the north, beyond the tropic of Capricorn into the torrid zone; and a
+younger, tropical North Queensland develops.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_363">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_363.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">LANDMARKS OF PAST AGES: FAMOUS FORTRESSES THAT HAVE
+ CEASED TO BE OF USE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">With the changing conditions of politics, places once of
+ enormous importance have often become mere curiosities. There are in Europe
+ to-day hundreds of useless castles, fortresses, and harbours. Even Dover Castle
+ is of little strategic value. The fortresses illustrated are (1) Mantua, (2)
+ Dover, (3) Chillon, (4) Calais, (5) Verona.</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Photographs by Frith and Neurdein</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_363_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Genius of the Coloniser</div>
+
+<p>The fact that nations hold fast to their natural conditions of
+existence, even when growth impels them towards expansion in various
+directions, is a great controlling force in historical movement. Russia
+expands in its northern zone to the Pacific ocean; England continues
+its growth on American soil, across the Atlantic, in almost the same
+latitude. The Phœnicians, as a coast-dwelling people, remained on
+the coasts and on the islands; the colonising Greeks ever sought out
+similar situations to those of their native land; the Netherlanders
+are found everywhere in Northern Germany as colonists of the moors
+and marshes. All German colonies beyond the Alps and the Vosges have
+disappeared; and the few Germans that remain are Latinised. Nations
+that are accustomed to a limited territory, as were the Greeks,
+always search for a similar limited area; on the other hand, the
+Romans discovered a main factor of empire-building in their judicious
+agricultural colonisation of broad plains;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_364"></a>[Pg 364]</span> and the Russians sought
+and found in Siberia the endless forests, steppes, and vast rivers
+of their native land. Every nation, in expanding, seeks to include
+within its area that which is of the greatest value to it. The
+victorious state acquires the best positions and drives the conquered
+race into the poorest districts. For this reason competition between
+the colonizing nations has become very keen; they all judge of the
+character of territory according to the same standard. Therefore,
+wherever England has colonised, only a gleaning remains for the rest of
+the Northern and Central European Powers.</p>
+
+<p>Differentiation, arising from the valuation of land, is the cause of
+a constant creation of new political values and of a constant lapsing
+of old. Every portion of the world has its political value, which,
+however, may become dormant, and must then be either discovered or
+awakened. Such a discovery was the selection of the Piræus as the
+harbour for Athens from among a number of bights and bays.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The World is Being Centralised</div>
+
+<p>Every settlement and every founding of a city is at bottom an awakening
+of dormant political value. Capacity for recognizing this value is
+a part of the genius of a statesman, whose policy may be called
+far-seeing partly because he is able to discern the dormant value while
+yet on the most distant horizon. It is obvious that political values
+vary; each is determined by the point of view from which it is looked
+upon. The French and the German valuations of the Rhine borderland
+are very different. Every nation endeavours to realise the political
+value which it recognises; and in respect to political growth, ends are
+set up in the shape of the portions of the earth to which that growth
+aspires. Peculiarities in the conformation of states may be traced
+back to an appreciation of the value of coasts, passes, estuaries, and
+the like. With the spreading out and the concentration of nations,
+such portions of the world as are important from a political point of
+view have marvellously increased both in number and in value. But for
+this very reason a choice of selection has become necessary, and this
+we see in the use of fewer Alpine passes during the age of railways
+than before, and in the concentration of a great commerce into fewer
+seaports&mdash;into such as are capable of accommodating vessels of the
+deepest draught. Others must withdraw from competition. To-day there
+are hundreds of worthless harbours, passes, and fortresses in Europe
+that were once situated on the highways of historical movement; now
+however, they are avoided, deserted by the current of traffic.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">All the Rubbish of Civilisation</div>
+
+<p>There are more things necessary to an understanding of the dependence
+of history on natural conditions than a mere knowledge of the land
+upon which the development has taken place, particularly than a mere
+knowledge of the ground as it was when history found it. Although each
+country is in itself an independent whole, it is at the same time
+a link in a chain of actions. It is an organism in itself, and, in
+respect to a succession or a group of lands forming a whole, of which
+it is a member, it is also an organ. Sometimes it is more organism than
+organ; sometimes the opposite is true; and an eternal struggle goes
+on between organism and organ. If the latter be a subjected province,
+a tributary state, a daughter country, a colony, or member of a
+confederation, the striving for independence is always a struggle for
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>This by no means presupposes a state of war. Not only war, but the
+outwardly peaceful economic development of the world’s industries
+reduces organisms to organs. When the wholesale importation of bad but
+cheap products of European industries into Polynesia or Central Asia
+causes decay in the production of native arts and crafts, it is a loss
+to the life of the whole people; henceforth the race will be placed
+in the same category with tribes that must gather rubber, prepare
+palm-oil, or hunt elephants to supply European demand, and who in
+turn must purchase threadbare fabrics, spirits that contain sulphuric
+acid, worn-out muskets, and old clothes&mdash;in a word, all the rubbish of
+civilisation.</p>
+
+<p>Their economic organisation dies; and in many cases this is also
+the beginning of the decline and extinction of a people. The
+weaker organism has succumbed to the more powerful. Is the case so
+different&mdash;that of Athens, unable to live without the corn, wood, and
+hemp of the lands on the Northern Mediterranean coast?&mdash;or of England,
+whose inhabitants would starve were it not for the importation of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_365"></a>[Pg 365]</span> meat
+and grain from North America, Eastern Europe, and Australia?</p>
+
+<p>In vain have men sought for characteristics in the rocks of the
+earth and in the composition of the air by which one land might be
+distinguished from another.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe34" id="i_365">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_365.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Underwood and Underwood.</div>
+ <div class="caption">MAN’S WONDERFUL TRIUMPH OVER NATURE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">By irrigation the arid desert of California has been made
+ to blossom as the rose in the luxurious orange groves of Riverside. These views
+ show the desert, the method of irrigation, and the result of man’s labour.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_365_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">How Man is Levelling the Earth</div>
+
+<p>The idea of great, lasting, conclusive qualitative variations in
+different parts of the earth is mythical. Neither the Garden of Eden
+nor the land of Eldorado belongs to reality. There is no country
+whose soil bestows wondrous strength upon man or an exuberance of
+fruitfulness upon woman. In India precious stones are as little apt
+to grow out of the cliffs as silver and gold are likely to exude
+from fissures in the earth. Nor is there any basis for the slighter
+differences between the Old World and the New which the philosophers
+of history of the eighteenth century believed they had discovered.
+The opinion that the New World produces smaller plants, less powerful
+animals, and finally a feebler humanity, was not unconditionally
+rejected by even Alexander von Humboldt. The degeneration and wasting
+away of the American Indians would certainly be a less disgraceful
+phenomenon could it be attributed to some great natural law instead
+of to the injustice,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_366"></a>[Pg 366]</span> greed, and vices of the white men. In the
+course of development of the European daughter-nations in America
+we cannot recognise any such great and universal distinction. The
+course of history in America, just as in corresponding periods of
+time in Northern Asia, in Africa, and in Australia, only confirms the
+belief that lands, no matter how distant from one another they may
+be, whenever their climates are similar, are destined to be scenes of
+analogous historical developments.</p>
+
+<p>It is certain that, so far, one of the greatest results of the labour
+of man has been the levelling and overcoming of natural differences.
+Steppes are made fertile through irrigation and manuring; the
+contrast between open and forest land becomes less and less&mdash;indeed
+the destruction of forests is being far too rapidly and widely
+carried out&mdash;the acclimatisation of men, animals, and plants causes
+variations to disappear more and more as time passes. We can look
+forward to a time when only such extremes as mountains and deserts will
+remain&mdash;everywhere else the actions of the earth will be equalised. The
+process by which this is carried out may be described shortly. Man, in
+spite of all racial and national differences, is fundamentally quite as
+much of a unity as the soil upon which he dwells; through his labour
+more and more of this character of unity is transmitted to the earth,
+which, as a result, also becomes more and more uniform.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">History from Heaven to Earth</div>
+
+<p>One of the most powerful of the ties by which history is bound to
+Nature is that of its dependence on the ground. At the first glance
+any given historical development is involved with the earth only&mdash;the
+earth upon which the development takes place. But if we search deeper
+we shall find that the roots of the development extend even to the
+fundamental principles of the planetary system. By this it is not meant
+that every history must be founded on a cosmological basis, that it
+must begin with the creation, or, at least, with the destruction of
+Troy, as was once thought necessary; but it is certainly safe to say
+that a philosophy of the history of the human race, worthy of its name,
+must begin with the heavens and then descend to the earth, filled with
+the conviction that all existence is fundamentally one&mdash;an indivisible
+conception founded from beginning to end on an identical law.</p>
+
+<p>The 316,250,000 square miles of the earth’s surface is the first area
+with which history has to do. Within it all other surface dimensions
+are included; it is the standard for measurement of all other areas,
+and also comprehends the absolute limits of all bodily life. This area
+is fixed and immutable so far as the history of mankind is related to
+it, although in respect to the history of the world it is not to be
+looked upon as having been unalterable in the past, or as being likely
+to remain unchanged in the future.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">316,250,000 Miles of History</div>
+
+<p>The earth’s surface may be divided into three unlike constituent
+parts&mdash;84,250,000 square miles of land, 220,000,000 square miles of
+water, and 13,750,000 square miles of ice-covered, and for the greater
+part unexplored, land and sea in the Northern and Southern Polar
+regions. The land is the natural home of man, and all his historical
+movements begin and end upon it. The size of states is computed
+according to the amount of land which they include; their growth has
+derived its nourishment from the 84,250,000 square miles of earth as
+from a widespread fundamental element. The sea is not to be looked upon
+as an empty space between the divisions of land, merely separating them
+one from another, for the 220,000,000 square miles of water are also of
+historical importance, and the area of every ocean and of every portion
+of an ocean has its historical significance. History has extended
+itself over the sea, from island to island, from coast to coast, at
+first crossing narrow bodies of water, later broad oceans; and states
+whose foundations arose from connections by sea remain dependent on the
+sea. The Mediterranean held together the different parts of the Roman
+Empire just as the oceans unite the Colonies of the British Empire.</p>
+
+<p>The variations of the earth’s form from that of a perfect oblate
+spheroid are so small that they may be entirely disregarded from the
+point of view of history. All portions of the earth’s surface may be
+looked upon as of equal curvature; the pyriform swelling which Columbus
+believed to be a peculiarity of the tropic zones in the New World was
+merely an optical illusion. Thus all portions are practically<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_367"></a>[Pg 367]</span> similar,
+and uniformity obtains over the entire earth to such an extent that
+there is room left only for minor inequalities in configuration. To
+these belong the differences in level between lands and seas, highlands
+and lowlands, mountains and valleys. Such variations amount to very
+little when compared with the earth as a whole; for the height of the
+tallest of the Himalayas added to the earth’s radius would increase its
+length by about <span class="numerator">1</span>&frasl;<span class="denominator">700</span> only; and the same may be said of the greatest
+depressions beneath the level of the sea&mdash;inequalities that cannot be
+represented on an ordinary globe. Their great historical significance
+is due chiefly to the fact that the oceans and seas occupy the
+depressions, from which the greatest elevations emerge as vast islands.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Irregular Surface of the Earth</div>
+
+<p>The remaining irregularities of the earth’s surface are not sufficient
+to produce any permanent variations in the diffusion of races or of
+states. Their influence is merely negative; they may only hinder or
+divert the course of man in his wanderings. Even the Himalayas have
+been crossed&mdash;by the Aryans in the west, and by the Tibetans in the
+east; and British India has extended its boundaries far beyond them to
+the Pamirs. The historian is concerned with but two of the variable
+qualities of the land&mdash;differences in level and differences in contour.
+Variations in constitution, development, elementary constituents,
+and the perpetual phenomena of transformation and dissolution which
+present a thousand problems to the geographer, scarcely exist for the
+historian. Nor are those great inequalities, the depressions in which
+the seas rest, of any interest to him. It is indifferent whether the
+greatest of such depressions be covered by five miles of water, or,
+as we now know, by almost six miles. The fact that the Mediterranean
+reaches its greatest depth in the eastern part of the Ionian Sea has
+nothing whatever to do with the history of Greece.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Depths of The Sea</div>
+
+<p>To be sure, there is a general connection between the depth of the
+Mediterranean, shut up within the Straits of Gibraltar, and the
+climate of the neighbouring regions, which has a direct influence on
+the inhabitants of Mediterranean countries; but it is a very distant
+connection, and it is only mentioned here in order to remind the reader
+that there is not a single phenomenon in Nature that is not brought
+home to mankind at last. Still, as a rule, history is concerned with
+the depths of the sea only in so far as they are the resting-places for
+submarine telegraph cables; and this is a fact of very recent times.
+It may be said that the formation of the earth’s crust occurred at a
+period too</p>
+
+<p>remote to have had any influence on the history of man, and that
+therefore all questions concerning it should be left to geology. The
+first statement may be admitted, but the latter does not follow by
+any means; for if the whole Mediterranean region from the Caucasus to
+the Atlas Mountains, and from the Orontes to the Danube, is a region
+of uniform conformation, it is purely by reason of a uniformity in
+development. In the same manner there is an extensive region of uniform
+conformation to the north, between the Atlantic Ocean and the Sudetic
+Mountains in Austria.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Nature Divides and Unites</div>
+
+<p>There are great features of the earth’s conformation that are so
+extensive that groups of nations share them in common. Russia and
+Siberia occupy the same plain upon which the greater portions of
+Germany, Belgium, and Holland are situated. Germany and France share
+the central mountain system which extends from the Cévennes to the
+Sudeten, or Sudetic Mountains. A mere participation in a common
+geological feature produces such affinity and relationship as may be
+seen in the Alpine states, in Sweden and Norway, and in the nations
+of the Andes. This reminds us of the groups of nations that surround
+seas; but that which separates the Baltic states binds them together;
+and the mountains that unite the Swiss cantons also separate them from
+one another. Lesser features of conformation divide countries and often
+exhibit gaps and breaches in development, for the reason that they
+divide a political whole into separate natural regions. The history
+of the lowlands of North Germany differs greatly from that of the
+mountainous districts of the same country; the lowlands of the Po and
+Apennine Italy are two different lands. The great contrast between the
+hilly manufacturing west of England and the low-lying agricultural
+east extends throughout<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_368"></a>[Pg 368]</span> English history; and in like manner the
+highlands and the lowlands are opposed to each other in Scotland.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_368">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_368.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">SCENERY THAT SHAPES CHARACTER: THE INFLUENCE OF THE
+ MOUNTAINS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The stories of mountain peoples are very similar; the
+ Highlanders of Scotland, Wales, Switzerland, the Cevennes, and Tyrol, have many
+ characteristics in common, owing their rugged nature and independence to
+ environment.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Wherever mountain formations occur largely in a country, the question
+arises whether, in spite of all diversity, they unite to form a whole,
+or whether they exist as separate, independent neighbouring parts.
+The elements of the surface formation of the earth are not only
+historically important in themselves as units, but also on account
+of the way in which they are connected with one another. We have in
+Greece an example of an exceedingly intricate mountain system in which
+barren plateaus are interspersed with fertile valleys and bays. Owing
+to the sea, such bays as those of Attica, Argos, and Lamia are to a
+high degree self-dependent; they became little worlds in themselves,
+independent states, which could never have grown into a united whole
+had they not been subjected to external pressure.</p>
+
+<p>The reverse of this state of disunion, arising from the juxtaposition
+of a great number of different formations, is the division of
+North America into the three great regions of the Alleghanies, the
+Mississippi Valley, and the Rocky Mountain plateau, which gradually
+merge into one another and are bound into a whole by the vast central
+valley. Austria-Hungary includes within itself five different mountain
+features&mdash;the Alps, Carpathians, Sudeten, the Adriatic provinces, and
+the Pannonian plains. Vienna is situated where the Danube, March,
+and Adria meet, and from this centre radiates all political unifying
+power. If a still closer-knit unity is co-existent with a diversified
+geological formation of insular or peninsular nature, as in Ireland or
+Italy, it follows that this unity binds the orographic divisions into
+an aggregate. The discrepancies between Apennine Italy, Italy of the
+Po Valley, and Alpine Italy, which have been evident in all periods of
+history, formed, in their rise and in their final state of subjugation
+to political force, an example of dissimilarity of mountain features
+existing within peninsular unity.</p>
+
+<p>The great continental slopes are also important aids to the overcoming
+of orographic obstacles to political unity. In Germany there is a
+general inclination towards the north, crossed and recrossed by a
+number of mountain chains and successions of valleys. It is not to
+be denied that the intersecting elevations have furthered political
+disunion. Without<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_369"></a>[Pg 369]</span> doubt, a gradual slope from the southern part of
+Germany to the sea, with a consequent partition of the country by
+the rivers into strips extending from east to west, would have been
+attended by a greater political unity. Again, but in another way, the
+preponderance of any one orographic element has a unifying effect on
+all the other elements, as we have seen in North America, where the
+simple, even course of development has been in conformity with the
+existence of geological formations on a large scale.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_369">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_369.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE SOFTENING EFFECT OF THE RICH AND FRUITFUL LOWLANDS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Whereas mountains breed independence and rugged character
+ in their inhabitants, the more fruitful lowlands develop a gentler race, loving
+ the companionship of communities. The lowlands, also, are the homes of mixed
+ races.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>There are internal differences in formation in every mountain range
+and in every plain, all of which have different influences on history.
+The steep fall of the Alps on the Italian side has rendered a descent
+into the plains of the Po far easier than a crossing in the opposite
+direction, where many obstacles in the shape of mountain steeps,
+elevated plateaus, and deep river valleys surround the outer border
+of the Alps. Again, penetration from the plains to the interior of
+the Alps is less difficult in the west, where there are no southern
+environing mountains, than in the east, where there is such a
+surrounding mountain chain. The compact formation of the Alps in the
+west crowds obstacles together into a small space, where they may be
+overcome with greater labour and in a shorter time than in the east,
+among the broadened-out chains of mountains, where there are numerous
+smaller hindrances to progression spread out over a wider territory.
+The route from Vienna to Trieste is twice as long as that from
+Constance to Como.</p>
+
+<p>In mountain passes orographic differences are concentrated within very
+limited areas, and for this reason passes are of great importance in
+history. The value of gorges and defiles increases with their rarity,
+and their number varies greatly in different mountain chains. The
+Pindus range is broken but once, by the cleft of Castoreia, and an easy
+passage from Northern to Central Greece is possible only by way of
+Thermopylæ; the short overland route from Persia to India is through
+the Khyber or Bolan Passes. The Rhætian Alps are rich in defiles and
+gorges; but the mountain ridges are poor in crossing-places, and, as a
+rule, the elevation of the passes decreases towards the east.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Nature’s Place in History</div>
+
+<p>The possibility of journeying over the Himalayas increases as we travel
+westward. During the Seven Years’ War the great difference between
+the accessible, sloping Erz-Gebirge of the Bohemian frontier and the
+precipitous, fissured, sandstone hills of the Elbe was very apparent.
+Mountain passes are always<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_370"></a>[Pg 370]</span> closely connected with valleys and rivers;
+the latter form the ways leading to and from the former. The valleys
+of the Reuss and the Tessin are the natural routes to the pass of St.
+Gothard; and were it not for the gorges of the Inn and the Etsch in
+the northern and the southern Alps, the Brenner Pass would not possess
+anything like its present supreme importance. Wherever such entrances
+to passes meet together or cross one another, important rallying-points
+either for carrying on traffic or for warlike undertakings are formed;
+such places are Valais, Valteline, and the upper valley of the Mur.
+Coire is a meeting-point of not less than five passes&mdash;the Julier,
+Septimer, Splügen, St. Bernardin, and Lukmanier. The value of passes
+varies according to whether they cross a mountain range completely
+from side to side, or extend through only a part of it. When the
+Augsburgers, on the way to Venice, had got through the Fern Pass, or
+that of Leefeld, the Brenner still remained to be crossed; but when the
+Romans had surmounted the difficulties of Mont Genevre, the ridges of
+the Alps were no longer before them; they were in Gaul.</p>
+
+<p>There are also passes through cross ridges that connect mountain
+chains, such as the Arlberg, that pierces a ridge extending between
+the northern and the central Alps. Passes of this sort are of great
+importance to life in the mountains, for, as a rule, they lead from one
+longitudinal valley to another, such valleys extending between ridges
+being the most fertile and protected districts in mountainous regions.
+In this manner the Furka Pass connects Valais, the most prosperous
+country of the Alps during the time of the Romans, with the upper Rhine
+valley; and the Arlberg connects the Vorarlberg with the upper valley
+of the Inn.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Value of Mountain Passes</div>
+
+<p>Mountain passes are not only highways for traffic, they are the
+arteries of the mountains themselves. Commerce along the mountain ways
+leads to settlements and to agriculture at heights where they would
+hardly have developed had it not been for the roads; and the highest
+permanent dwellings are situated in and about passes. The Romans
+established their military colonies in the neighbourhood of passes,
+and the German emperors rendered the Rhætian gorges secure through
+settlements. There are political territories that are practically
+founded on mountain passes. The kingdom of Cottius, tributary to the
+Romans, was the land of the defiles of the Cottian Alps; Uri may be
+designated as the country of the north Gothard, and the Brenner Pass
+connects the food-producing districts of the Tyrol with one another.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Battlefields of Mountain Borderlands</div>
+
+<p>The transition point from one geological formation to another is
+invariably the boundary line between two districts that have different
+histories. The movements in one region bring forces to bear on the
+movements in the other. Hence the remarkable phenomena which occur on
+mountain borderlands. The historical effects of mountainous regions
+are opposed by forces that thrust themselves in from without; external
+powers anchor themselves, as it were, in the mountains, seeking to
+obtain there both protection and frontier lines. Rome encroached more
+and more upon the Alps, first from the south, and then from the west
+and the north, by extending her provinces. Austria, Italy, Germany,
+and France have drawn up to the Alps on different sides; they merely
+fall back upon the mountains, however; their centres lie beyond. The
+same phenomenon is shown in the regions occupied by different races.
+Rhætians, Celts, Romans, Germans, and Slavs have penetrated into the
+Alps; but the bulk of their populations have never inhabited the
+mountainous districts. The question as to which nation shall possess
+a mountain chain or pass is always decided on the borders. Here are
+the battlefields; here, too, are the great centres of traffic whose
+locations put one in mind of harbours situated at points where two
+kinds of media of transmission come into contact with each other. This
+margin, like that of the sea, also has its promontories and bays.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe41" id="i_371">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_371.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE BANDIT’S WIFE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The effect of life in the hills is clearly seen in this
+ picture by Leopold Robert, who painted it after living among the “Brigands of
+ the Mountains” and studying their wild and picturesque life. The association
+ of peoples with mountains develops a rugged character and gives that strength
+ and independence which mountain races have displayed in history.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Height of land obstructs historical movements and lengthens their
+course. The Romans remained at the foot of the Alps for two centuries
+before they made their way into them, forced to it by the constant
+invasion of Alpine robbers who descended from the heights as if
+sallying forth from secure fortresses. Long before this the Romans
+had encircled the western side of the Alps and had begun to turn the
+eastern side. The colonies on the Atlantic coast of America, the
+predecessors of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_371"></a>[Pg 371]</span> United States, had been in existence for almost
+two hundred years before they passed the Alleghanies; and it is certain
+that this damming up of the powerful movement towards the west, which
+arose later, had a furthering influence on the economic and political
+development of the young states. The passes of the Pyrenees occur at
+about two-thirds of the distance from the level ground to the summits
+of the mountains; in the Alps the elevation of the gorges is but
+one-half or one-third that of the mountain tops; hence, as a whole, the
+Alps are more easy of access than the Pyrenees. The Colorado plateau is
+a greater obstacle than the Sierra Nevada range in California, which,
+although of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_372"></a>[Pg 372]</span> much greater elevation, slopes gently and is interspersed
+with broad valleys. It was due rather to the forests than to the
+moderate elevation of the central mountains of Germany that their
+settlement was delayed until the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.
+The influence of the broad, desert tableland of the great basin in
+separating the western from the Mississippi states is greater than
+that of the Rocky Mountains with peaks more than twelve thousand feet
+in height. The extensive glacial formations and the sterility of the
+mountains in Scandinavia have held Sweden and Norway asunder, and at
+the same time have permitted the Lapps and their herds of reindeer to
+force themselves in between like a wedge. The broad, elevated steppes
+of Central Tien-schan enabled the Kirghese to cross the mountains with
+their herds and to spread abroad in all directions.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Little Worlds on the Heights<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Man in Touch with Nature</div>
+
+<p>In such cases the natives of tablelands and mountainous regions,
+who inhabit little worlds of their own on the heights, themselves
+contribute not a little towards rendering it difficult to pass through
+their countries. The most striking example of this is Central Asia
+with its nomadic races, whose influence in separating the great
+coast-nations of the east, west, and south from one another has been
+far more potent than that of the land itself. And these nomads are a
+direct product of the climate and the soil of this greatest plateau
+in the world. The dry tablelands of North America, from the Sierra
+Madre in Mexico to Atacama in the south, were in early times inhabited
+by closely related races, having more or less similar institutions
+and customs. A like effect of life on plateaus, shown in the Caucasus
+Mountains, that have preserved their character as a barrier against
+both Romans and Persians, and have been crossed by the Russians
+only in recent times, points to a further reason for the sundering
+influence of the wall-like position of mountains between the steppes
+and the sea. Phenomena similar to those observed in Central Asia
+and in North America occur on a smaller scale in every mountainous
+country&mdash;extensive uninhabited tablelands in which man and free nature
+come into direct contact with each other. Independent development
+is thus assured to the dwellers on mountains, and to their states a
+preponderance of territory over population. The political importance
+of Switzerland is not owing to its three millions of inhabitants,
+but to the impossibility of occupying one-fourth of the Alps. The
+position&mdash;almost that of a Great Power&mdash;held by Switzerland during
+the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries was due to the union of this
+element of strength (and the fact that Switzerland, by reason of its
+situation, includes many of the most important commercial routes in
+Europe) with the mountain-bred spirit of liberty and independence of
+its people. In other respects, too, mountain states stand pre-eminent
+among nations&mdash;as Tyrol outshone all other Austrian provinces in 1809,
+so the mountain tribes of the Caucasus were the only Asiatics able to
+offer any permanent resistance to the advance of the Russians. The
+broad, rough character of a highland country is an active force; in
+all mountain wars it has led to the spreading out of armies and to the
+lengthening of columns.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Mountains the Friends of Weak Nations</div>
+
+<p>The support afforded by mountains to weak nations that without the
+protection of a great uninhabited region would not have been able to
+maintain their independence can be likened only to the protection
+which, as we have seen, is given by the sea. Switzerland has often
+been compared to the Low Countries; and there is even a still greater
+resemblance between city cantons such as Basle and Geneva and ports
+like Hamburg and Lübeck. It was owing to similar reasons that the
+strongholds of French Protestantism during the sixteenth century
+were the Cévennes, Berne, and La Rochelle. The protection given by
+mountains must not be looked upon as of an entirely passive nature,
+for the rugged nature of mountaineers, and their concentration within
+small areas where a development is possible, rendering them conscious
+of independence and assisting them to preserve it, are also a result
+of life in the highlands. In low-lying countries difference in levels
+cannot exceed a thousand feet; and, as the variations in conformation
+are correspondingly small, the lowlands offer fewer hindrances to
+historical movements than do rivers, seas, and marshes&mdash;thus there is
+a greater opportunity for the development of such movements upon the
+plains. Consequently there is a rapid diffusion of races over extensive
+regions whose<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_373"></a>[Pg 373]</span> boundaries are determined by area rather than by
+conformation.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Effect of Mountains on People</div>
+
+<p>Lowlands hasten historical movements. There is no trace of the
+retarding and protecting effects of the highlands in lands where,
+as Labu said of Saxony, a nation dwells together with its enemies
+on the same boundless level. Nomadism is the form of civilisation
+characteristic of broad plains and extensive tablelands. But the
+Germanic races of history, a great part of which were no longer
+nomads, exhibited a hastening in their movement towards the west when
+they reached the lowlands; for they appeared on the lower Rhine at
+an earlier time than on the upper Rhine, delayed in their wanderings
+towards the latter by the mountainous, broken routes. Long after the
+Celts had disappeared from the lowlands, when their memory only was
+preserved in the names of hills and rivers, they still continued to
+exist in the protected mountain regions of Bohemia. In like manner, in
+later times, the Slavs maintained themselves in natural strongholds
+after they had vanished from the plains of Northern Germany. Compare
+the conquest of Siberia, accomplished in a century, with the endless
+struggles in the Caucasus. And what lowland country can show remnants
+of people equivalent to those of the Caucasus?</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Natural Strongholds of Nomad Races</div>
+
+<p>The lowlands are also regions of the most extensive mingling of races.
+We have but to think of Siberia or the Sudan. In the development of
+states, lowlands take precedence over mountainous district. Rome
+expanded from the sea-coast to the Apennines, and from the valley of
+the Po to the Alps; the conquest of Iberia began in the one great
+plain of the peninsula, in Andalusia, and in the lowlands of the Ebro;
+and foreign control of Britain ended at the mountains of Scotland and
+Wales. In North America colonisation spread out in broad belts at
+the foot of the Alleghanies before it penetrated into the mountains.
+In Southern China the mountains with their unsubdued tribes are like
+political islands in the midst of the Mongolised hills and plains.</p>
+
+<p>The lesser the differences in level, and the smaller the conformations
+of the earth, the more important are those differences that remain
+within heights of less than a thousand feet above the sea. Elevations
+of a dozen yards were of the greatest importance on the battlefields
+of Leipzig, Waterloo, and Metz. The significance of the little rise in
+the land of Gavre, near Ghent, lies in the fact that even at times of
+flood a foundation for a bridge will remain firm upon it. The slightest
+elevation in the lowland cities of Germany and Russia offers such a
+contrast in altitude to its surroundings that a fortress, a cathedral,
+or a kremlin is erected upon it. The two ridges that extend through the
+plains of North Germany are not only very prominent in the landscape,
+but also in history. Owing to their thick forests, their lakes and
+marshes, and small populations, they are peculiarly like barriers; and
+the breaches in them are of importance to the geography both of war and
+of commerce. The battles fought against Sweden and Poland, round about
+the points where the Oder and the Vistula cross these regions, are to
+be counted among the most decisive struggles in the history of Prussia.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Nature at Waterloo</div>
+
+<p>Wherever there are no differences in level, a substitute is sought in
+water. In such cases wide rivers or numerous lakes and marshes form
+the most effective obstacles, boundaries, and strongholds. Finally
+the plains approach the sea and are submerged by it; and here lowland
+countries find a support safer than that of the mountains, and richer
+in political results. North Germany is supported by the sea; South
+Germany by mountains. Which boundary is the more definite, the more
+capable of development, politically and economically? Political
+superiority is ever connected with the protection and support of the
+sea.</p>
+
+<p>The influences of vegetation upon historical movements are often more
+important than those of the earth-formation itself. Wherever extensive
+lowland regions are overgrown with grass, we always find mobile nomadic
+races that, with their large herds and warlike organisations, are
+great causes of disturbance in the development of neighbouring lands.
+Since the form of vegetable growth which covers grass steppes and
+prairies is dependent on climate, it follows that nomadism is prevalent
+throughout the entire northern sub-temperate zone, where such grass is
+abundant&mdash;from the western border of Sahara to Gobi. Nomadic races of
+historical significance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_376"></a>[Pg 376]</span> are even to be seen in the New World&mdash;for
+example, the Gauchos of the Pampas, and the Llaneros of Venezuela.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_374">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_374.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE GREATEST PLATEAU IN THE WORLD: ITS PEOPLE, AND ITS
+ INFLUENCE IN HISTORY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This is a typical scene of life in Central Asia, the
+ greatest plateau in the world, whose people, the direct product of the climate
+ and the soil, inhabiting little worlds of their own on the heights, have
+ exercised an enormous influence in separating the great coast nations of the
+ east, west, and south from one another.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_374_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_375">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_375.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A MOUNTAIN PASS: A NATURAL FACTOR OF VAST IMPORTANCE IN
+ HISTORY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Mountain passes have been of great importance in history.
+ The Romans established their military colonies in the neighbourhood of passes,
+ and there are political territories practically founded on mountain passes. This
+ is a picture of an entrance to the famous Bolan Pass, through which, and through
+ the Khyber Pass, lie the shortest overland routes from Persia to India.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_375_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_376a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_376a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">NOMADIC PEOPLES OF THE NEW WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Wherever there are vast lowland countries covered with
+ grass, nomadic peoples are found moving from place to place with their herds.
+ There are many such peoples in the Old World and a few in the New World,
+ notable among the latter being the Gauchos of the Pampas, types of whom are
+ here seen.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>In comparison with plains and prairies, forests are decided hindrances
+to historical movements. Peoples are separated from one another by
+strips of woodland; the state and the civilisation of the Incas ceased
+at the fringe of primeval forest of the east Andes. Thickly-wooded
+mountains present the most pronounced difficulties to historical
+movements. The appearance of the oldest large states and centres of
+culture on the borders of steppes, in the naturally thinly-wooded
+districts at the mouths of rivers, and on diluvial plains, seems
+natural enough to us when we think of the difficulties presented by
+life in a forest glade to men who had only stone implements and fire at
+their command.</p>
+
+<p>A description of the difficulties encountered during Stanley’s one
+hundred and fifty-seven days’ journey through the primeval woods of
+Central Africa gives us a very clear conception of what are termed
+“hindrances” to historical movements. The early history of Sweden has
+been characterised as a struggle with the forest; and this description
+is valid for every forest country. The forest divides nations from each
+other; it allows only small tribes to unite, and creates but small
+states, or, at the most, loosely bound confederations. It is only where
+a great river system forms natural roads, as in the regions of the
+Amazon and the Congo, that great forest districts may be rapidly united
+to form a state. In other cases settlements in forest clearings and
+road-breaking precede political control.</p>
+
+<p>In this way the Chinese conquered the races of the western half of
+Formosa in two hundred years; in the eastern half the land is still
+under forest and the natives have also retained their independence.
+The existence of small states, with their many obstacles to political
+and economic growth, still continues in forest regions alone; and the
+roaming hordes of hunters inhabiting them belong to the simplest forms
+of human societies.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32_5" id="i_376b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_376b.jpg" alt="Tailpiece" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_377"></a>[Pg 377]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center" id="LAND_AND_WATER_AND_THE_GREATNESS_OF_PEOPLES">THE MAKING OF THE NATIONS&mdash;II</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe44" id="i_377">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_377.jpg" alt="The Making of the Nations, II" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">Professor FREDERICK RATZEL</p>
+</div>
+
+<h4>LAND AND WATER AND THE
+GREATNESS OF PEOPLES</h4>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">S</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">S</span>INCE
+man is a creature capable only of life on land, bodies of water
+must at one time have been the greatest obstacles to his diffusion.
+Thus the original family of human beings could have inhabited only one
+portion of the earth, to which it was restricted by impassable barriers
+of water. We know that in early geological times the division of the
+earth’s surface into land and water was subject to the same general
+laws as to-day; therefore such a portion of the earth could not have
+been more than a part of the total land in existence&mdash;a larger or
+smaller world-island.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Early Man’s Greatest Invention</div>
+
+<p>The first step beyond the bounds of this island was the first step
+towards the conquest of the whole earth by man. The first raft was
+therefore the most important contrivance that man could have invented.
+It not only signified the beginning of the acquisition of all parts of
+the earth to their very farthest limits, but also&mdash;and this is far more
+important&mdash;the potentiality for all possibilities of divergence and
+temporary separation offered by our planet. It brought with it escape
+from the development that always turns back upon itself, travelling in
+a circle, and the progress that constantly consumes itself&mdash;factors
+inseparable from life confined within a small area; it led to the
+creation of fruitful contrasts and differences, and to wholesome
+competition&mdash;in short, to the beginning of the evolution of races and
+peoples. Looked at from this point of view, even the discovery of
+Prometheus has been of less moment to the progress of mankind than that
+of the inventor who first joined logs together into a raft and set out
+on a voyage of discovery to the nearest islet.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Why the Sea is Important</div>
+
+<p>From the time of this first step onward, the development of the human
+race was so intimately connected with the uninhabitable water that
+one of its most powerful incentives lay in the struggle with the sea.
+And so little have we advanced from this condition that the stoutest
+race of the present day is one that from a narrow island commands the
+ocean. England’s strength is a proof of the tremendous importance of
+the sea as a factor of political power and of civilisation. But not
+to exaggerate the significance of the ocean, we may at the same time
+remember that it consists in the fact that, by means of the sea, open
+highways are presented from land to land. Command of the sea is a
+source of greatness to nations, for it facilitates dominion over the
+land.</p>
+
+<p>By reason of its consistency the water is an important agent of
+levelling and equalising effects. As we perceive this in Nature, so
+do we also in history. A race familiar with the sea in one place is
+familiar with it in all regions. The Normans off the coast of Finland,
+and the Spaniards in the Pacific, found the same green, surging
+element, moved by the same tides, subject to the same laws. The ocean
+has an equalising effect upon the coasts even; the dunes of Agadir and
+of the harbour at Vera Cruz awaken memories of home in the mind of the
+sailor from Hela. The diffusion of the sea over three-quarters of the
+earth’s surface must also be taken into account. Thus the influence
+of the ocean in rendering men familiar with different parts of the
+world is far greater than that of the land. From the ocean comes a
+constant unifying influence which ever tends to reduce the disuniting
+effect of the separation of land from land. As yet no attempt to extend
+boundaries beyond the land out over the sea has been followed by
+lasting success.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">No Nation can Possess the Sea<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Sea’s Unifying Influence</div>
+
+<p>No nation can or ever will possess the sea. Carthage and Tarentum
+wished to forbid Italian vessels the passage of the Lacinian capes by
+treaty; the Venetians desired dominion over the Adriatic to be granted
+them by the Pope; Denmark and Sweden strove for a dominion over the
+Baltic Sea; but all this is against the very nature of the sea; it is
+one and indivisible. Only near by the coast, within<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_378"></a>[Pg 378]</span> the three-mile
+limit of international law, and in landlocked bays, may it be ruled as
+land is ruled. The claims of the Americans concerning the sovereignty
+of Behring Sea have never been recognised, and England can retain
+dominion over the Irish Sea only by means of her naval power. The ocean
+has a unifying influence on the land, even when this influence consists
+only in the same ends to be attained being placed before different
+nations. During a time of the greatest disunion, German cities that lay
+far enough from one another were united by Baltic interests. The union
+of scattered land-forces prepared the way for the opening up of wider
+horizons to England in the sixteenth century in the same manner as for
+Italy and Germany in the nineteenth.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_378">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_378.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE LITTLE ISLAND THAT RULES THE SEA</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The command of the sea is the source of national greatness, as it
+ facilitates dominion over land. England from a narrow island dominates the sea.
+ The tiny part of white in the Eastern Hemisphere on this page shows how relatively
+ insignificant Great Britain is to the vast world of waters where her shipping is
+ supreme.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Sea power is far more closely connected with traffic than is land
+power; in fact, the foundation of sea power is trade and commerce. It
+is, however, more than mere commercial power and monopoly of trade.
+In spite of all egoism, greed, and violence there remains one great
+characteristic peculiar to maritime Powers, spared even by Punic faith
+and Venetian covetousness. Even the neighbourhood of the ocean is
+characterised by its vast natural features; rivers broaden as they
+approach the sea, great bays lie within the coasts, and, though the
+latter may be flat, the horizon lines of their low dune landscapes are
+broad. The horizons of maritime races are also broad. Whether it be the
+hope of profit from commerce or of gain from piracy that lures men
+forth, many a ship has returned to port bearing with it inestimable
+benefits to mankind; for the greatest maritime discoveries have not
+been mere explorations of new seas, but of new lands and peoples. Such
+discoveries as these have contributed most to the broadening of the
+historical horizon. Even political questions expand, assume a larger
+character, and often become less acute, when they emerge from the
+narrow limits of continental constraint upon the free and open coasts.
+This is true even of the Eastern Question, to the solution of which
+definite steps were taken upon the Mediterranean when it seemed to have
+come to a deadlock in the Balkan peninsula.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Short-lived Nations of the Sea<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+The Fall of Maritime Nations</div>
+
+<p>The ocean is no passive element to maritime races. By deriving power
+from the sea they become subject to the sea. The more strength they
+draw from the ocean, the less firm becomes their footing upon the
+land. Finally, their power no longer remains rooted in the land,
+but grows to resemble that of a fleet resting upon the waves; it
+may with but small expenditure of effort extend its influence over
+an enormously wide area, but it may also be swept away by the first
+storm. As yet all maritime nations have been short-lived; their rise
+has been swift, often surprisingly so; but they have never remained
+long at the zenith of prosperity, and, as a rule, their decay has been
+as rapid as their elevation to power. The cause of the fall of all
+maritime nations<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_380"></a>[Pg 380]</span> has been the smallness of their basis, their foreign
+possessions, widely separated from one another and difficult to defend,
+and their dependence upon these foreign possessions. In many cases
+the over-balancing of political by economic interests, the neglect
+of materials for defence, and effeminacy resulting from commercial
+prosperity, have also contributed to their destruction.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_379">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_379.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">MAN’S FIRST STEP TOWARDS THE CONQUEST OF THE EARTH</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The most momentous event in the early history of man was
+ the launching of the first raft. That moment was instinct with all the mighty
+ conquests and discoveries yet to be accomplished over seas; and even the
+ discovery of fire, says Professor Ratzel, has been of less moment to the progress
+ of mankind than that of the inventor who first joined logs together into a raft
+ and set out on a voyage of discovery to the nearest islet.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_379_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Special combinations of characteristics arising from the geographical
+positions of oceans, continents, and islands are connected with the
+broad features common to oceanic continuity. These characteristics
+are reflected from the sea back to the land, and there give rise to
+historical groups. The historical significance of such groups is
+expressed in their names even&mdash;Mediterranean World, Baltic Nations,
+Atlantic Powers, and Pacific Sphere of Civilisation. They are
+primarily the results of commerce and exchange, and of the furthering,
+correlating influences of all coasts and islands. When they united all
+peninsulas, islands, and coasts of the Mediterranean into one state the
+Romans merely set a political crown upon the civilised community that
+had developed round about, and by means of, this sea.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Uniqueness of the Mediterranean</div>
+
+<p>And if we wish rightly to estimate the significance of Roman expansion
+from a Central European point of view, we may express our conception
+very shortly&mdash;the diffusion of Mediterranean culture over Western and
+Central Europe. It was at the same time a widening of the horizon of a
+landlocked sea to that of the open ocean. The Atlantic Ocean succeeded
+to the Mediterranean Sea. The Americans and the Russians, and the
+Japanese, repeating their words, maintain that in the same manner the
+Pacific must succeed to the Atlantic; but they forget the peculiar
+features of the Mediterranean, especially its conditions of area. It is
+no more probable that such a compact, isolated development will occur
+again than that the history of Athens will repeat itself on the Korean
+peninsula or at Shantung. The greater the ocean, the farther is it
+removed from the isolated sea. It was not the Atlantic that succeeded
+to the Mediterranean, but the broad world-ocean that succeeded to the
+narrow basin called the Mediterranean Sea. There have always been
+differences between the various divisions of the main sea; and these
+variations will ever continue to be prominent, although constantly
+tending to become less and less so.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The vast Potentialities of the Pacific</div>
+
+<p>The Pacific will always remain by far the greatest ocean, including,
+as it does, forty-five per cent. of the total area of water. Owing to
+its great breadth, the Pacific routes are from three to four times as
+long as those of the Atlantic. The Pacific widens toward the south;
+and Australia and Oceania lie in the opening, thus furnishing the
+Pacific with its most striking peculiarity&mdash;a third continent situated
+in the Southern Hemisphere, together with the richest series of island
+formations on earth. Whatever the Pacific may contribute to history,
+it will be a contribution to the annals of the Southern Hemisphere;
+and if a great independent history develop in the antipodes, it will
+have the Southern Pacific, bounded by Australia, South America, New
+Zealand, and Oceania, for its sphere of action. The area of the
+Atlantic Ocean is but half that of the Pacific. Nor is it for this
+reason alone that in comparison with the latter it is an inland rather
+than a world sea; for, owing to its narrowness between the Old and the
+New Worlds, the branches it puts forth, and the islands and peninsulas
+that it touches, it shortens the routes from one coast to the other.
+In it there is more of a merging of land and sea than a separation;
+and to-day it is chiefly a European-American ocean. The Indian Ocean
+is both geographically and historically but half an ocean. Even though
+important parts of it may be situated north of the equator, it is too
+much enclosed to the north; it widens to the south, and thus belongs to
+the Southern Hemisphere.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_381">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_381.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A STORM SUCH AS MAY SWEEP AWAY A NATION’S POWER</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">All maritime nations, says Professor Ratzel, have been
+ short-lived. The more strength they draw from the ocean the less firm becomes
+ their footing upon the land, and their power grows to resemble that of a fleet
+ resting upon the waves; it may extend its influence over an enormous area, but
+ it may also be swept away by a single storm.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_381_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Coast the Threshold of the Land</div>
+
+<p>The great oceans open up broad areas for historical movements, and
+through their instrumentality peoples are enabled to spread from
+coast to coast in all directions; the inland seas, on the contrary,
+cause the political life of the nations bordering upon them to be
+concentrated within a limited area. The Mediterranean will ever remain
+a focus towards which the interests of almost all European Powers
+concentrate. It has, moreover, become one of the world’s highways
+since the completion of the Suez Canal. The Baltic somewhat resembles
+the Mediterranean; but it would be saying too much to look<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_382"></a>[Pg 382]</span> upon its
+position as other than subordinate to that of the greater sea. The area
+of the Baltic is but one-seventh that of the Mediterranean; and it is
+lacking in the unique intercontinental situation of the latter. In many
+respects it resembles the Black Sea rather than the Mediterranean,
+especially by reason of its eastern relations.</p>
+
+<p>Originally the coast was the threshold of the sea; but as soon as
+maritime races developed it became the threshold of the land. In
+addition it is a margin, a fringe in which the peculiarities of sea
+and land are combined; and for this very reason sea-coasts have a
+historical value greatly disproportionate to their area, especially as
+they constitute the best of all boundaries for the nations that possess
+them. Here harbours are situated, fortresses, and the most densely
+populated of cities. Owing to their close connection with the sea, the
+inhabitants of coasts acquire characteristics which distinguish them
+from all other peoples. Even if of the same nationality as their inland
+neighbours&mdash;as, for example, the Greeks of Thrace and of Asia Minor and
+the Malays of many of the East Indian islands&mdash;their foreign traffic
+nevertheless impresses certain traits and features upon them which in
+the case of the Low Countries led almost to political disruption.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Living and Dead Coasts</div>
+
+<p>A coast is more favoured than an interior in all things relating to
+commerce and traffic; yet neither may enjoy permanent life alone
+without the other. The French departments of the Weser and of the Elbe
+were among the most ephemeral of the political results achieved by the
+short-lived Napoleonic era. With the sea at their backs it is easy for
+the inhabitants of a coast to become detached from their nation, and
+but a simple matter for them to spread over other coasts. Ever since
+the time of the Phœnicians there have been numerous colonists of coasts
+and founders of coast states. The Normans are most typical in European
+history. The expansion of coast colonies towards the interior is one
+of the most striking features of recent African development. Thus
+coasts are to be looked at from within as well as from without. To many
+races&mdash;such as Hottentots and Australians&mdash;the coast is dead compared
+with the interior; for Germany the coast has been politically dead for
+centuries. A river-mouth is best suited to carrying the influences of
+the coast inland.</p>
+
+<p>All ancient historians supposed that the Mediterranean Sea, with
+its many bays, peninsulas, and islands, schooled the Phœnicians in
+seamanship. This, however, is not so. Nautical skill is transmitted
+from one people to another, as may be seen from some of the most
+obvious cases in modern history. No maritime people has become great
+through its own coast alone. It is not the coast of Maine, with its
+numerous inlets and bays, that has produced the best seamen, but the
+coast of Massachusetts, naturally unfavourable for the most part;
+and it has produced the best seamen for the reason that the inland
+districts bounded by it are far more productive and furthering to
+commerce than are the interior regions of Maine.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Place of the Coast in History</div>
+
+<p>Nature has forced races to take to the sea only in such countries as
+Norway and Greece, where the strips of coast are narrow and the inland
+territory poor. In order to have political influence it is sufficient
+to have one foot on the sea-coast. Aigues-Mortes, with its swampy
+environment, was sufficient to extend France to the Mediterranean
+during the reign of St. Louis; Fiume sufficed for Hungary. Forbidding
+desert coasts have had a peculiarly retarding effect on historical
+development. It was necessary to rediscover the Australian mainland,
+to touch at more favourable points, one hundred and thirty years after
+the time of Tasman; thus the history of the settlement of Australia by
+Europeans originated, not with him, but with Cook.</p>
+
+<p>As portions of the general water area, rivers are branches or runners
+of the sea, extending into the land&mdash;lymphatic vessels, as it were,
+bearing nourishment to the ocean from the higher regions of the
+earth. Therefore they form the natural routes followed by historical
+movements from the sea inland and vice versa. A solid foundation of
+truth underlies those rivers of legendary geography that joined one
+sea with another. The connection of the Baltic and the Black Sea via
+Kieff is not that described by Adam of Bremen; but Russian canals have
+established a water-way, following out the plan indicated by Nature,
+just as the Varangians also realised it in a ruder way by dragging
+their boats from the Dwina to the Dnieper. By uniting the Great Lakes
+to the Mississippi<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_383"></a>[Pg 383]</span> by means of the Illinois River, the French provided
+a waterway from the North Atlantic Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico, a line
+of power in the rear of the Atlantic colonies. The latter fell back on
+salt water, the former on fresh. The Nile, flowing parallel to the Red
+Sea from Tanasee in the Abyssinian highlands, shares with the Red Sea
+even to-day in the traffic between Eastern and East-central Africa. The
+railway from Mombasa to Uganda completes a western Mediterranean-Indian
+line of connection, as a road along the Euphrates to the Persian Gulf
+would an eastern, each following the direction of rivers running
+parallel to the Red Sea. We can clearly see the transition of the
+functions of oceans to fresh, shallow water, to sounds and lagoons, in
+which sea traffic is furnished with smoother, quieter routes under the
+shelter of the coasts.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe41" id="i_383">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_383.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE OCEANS OF THE WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This map, on a projection used by mariners, shows the
+ relative sizes of the great oceans, viewed from above. The natural advantage
+ of the position of the British Isles for communicating with the ocean’s highways
+ is clearly seen, and the vast area of the Pacific is strikingly indicated.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>In truth, only portions of the lines of traffic follow rivers; for
+rivers flow from highland to lowland, watersheds breaking their course
+here and there. In comparison with the oceans, rivers are but shallow<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_384"></a>[Pg 384]</span>
+channels, the continuity of which may be broken by every rocky ledge.
+Thus different regions for traffic arise at various points in the same
+stream. Only that part of Egypt which is situated north of the first
+cataract is Egypt proper; the territory to the south was conquered from
+Nubia. The farther we travel up a stream the less water and the more
+rapids and falls we shall find; therefore traffic also decreases in
+the direction toward the river’s source. It may be seen from this that
+there is but little probability of truth in the analogy drawn between
+the flowing of rivers from elevations to plains and the migrations
+of nations and directions in which states expand. History shows that
+migration and development follow a direction contrary from that in
+which rivers flow.</p>
+
+<p>Maritime and terrestrial advantages are concentrated where a river
+joins the sea; especially characteristic of such districts are deltas,
+at an early date rendered more efficient for purposes of commerce
+through canals and dredging. The fertility of the alluvial soil, the
+lack of forest occasioned by frequent floods, and the protection
+afforded by the islands of the delta, may have had not a little
+influence on the choice of such regions as settlements for man. At
+all events, estuaries and deltas, both small and great, were in the
+earliest times centres of civilisation. Egypt and Babylonia both
+testify to this; the colonising Greeks also showed a preference for
+river mouths. Miletus, Ephesus and Rome were states situated at the
+mouths of rivers, and so were the ancient settlements on the Rhone,
+the Guadalquivir, and the Indus. It would not be possible, however,
+to deduce from this proofs of a potamic phase of civilisation and
+formation of nations preceding the Thalassic, or Mediterranean. Estuary
+and delta states are far more a result of the Mediterranean culture.
+The latter led to the settlement of favourable districts on various
+coasts, all of which were finally swallowed up into the Roman Empire
+during the period of its northern and eastern expansion.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe35" id="i_384">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_384.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE ORIGIN OF SEAFARING PEOPLES</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">It is not sufficient to have a favourable sea-coast in
+ order to breed a race of sea-going people. The land behind the coast-line must
+ be fertile and productive, else no inducement exists for seafaring. This
+ condition is everywhere present along the British shores, of which this is a
+ typical coasting scene.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_385">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_385.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE JUNCTIONS OF GREAT RIVERS ARE LANDMARKS OF HISTORY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Where two rivers join, two lines of political tendencies
+ always meet, and their junction is the point whence political forces must be
+ controlled. This is the significance of the situations of Mainz (1 at top),
+ Khartoum (2), Lyons (3), and Belgrade (4)</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Photos: Frith and Photochrome</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_385_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Rivers as Highways of Development</div>
+
+<p>Another much more evident process of development through the
+instrumentality of rivers was shown at the time when traffic began
+to extend itself over wide areas. Rivers are the natural highways
+in countries which abound in water, and are of so much the greater
+importance because in such lands other thoroughfares are frequently
+wanting. Taken collectively, rivers form a natural circulatory system.
+In America at the time of the exploration and conquest, in Siberia, in
+Africa to-day, they are natural arteries by means of which exchange
+and political power may be extended. The more accessible a river is
+to commerce, the more rapidly political occupation increases about
+its basin, as has been shown by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_386"></a>[Pg 386]</span> Varangians in Russia and the
+Portuguese in Brazil. The best example of a country having developed
+through conformity with a natural river system and in connection with
+it is that of the Congo State, with part of its boundaries drawn
+simply along the lines of watersheds. Mastery among rival colonies is
+determined by the results of the struggle for the possession of rivers;
+this has been as clearly shown by the St. Lawrence and the Mississippi
+in America, as by the Niger and the Benuwe in Africa. The influence of
+riverways in furthering the path of political development may be best
+seen in the contrast between South America and Africa; the colonising
+movement came to the latter more than 300 years later than to the
+former continent.</p>
+
+<p>Every river is a route followed by political power, and is therefore
+at the same time a point of attraction and line of direction. The
+Germans have pushed their way along the Elbe between the Danes and the
+Slavs, and along the Vistula between the Slavs and the Lithuanians or
+old Prussians. The river that supports an embryonic nation holds it
+together when developed. The influence of the Mississippi was directed
+against the outbreak of the Civil War in America. As pearls are strung
+along a cord, so the provinces of new and old Egypt are connected
+by the Nile. Austria-Hungary is not the Danube nation only because
+the river was the life nerve of its development, but also because
+eighty-two per cent. of Austro-Hungarian territory is included within
+the regions drained by it. When the natural connection of rivers is
+broken then this power of cohesion ceases. The political and economic
+disunion of the Rhine, the Main, and other German rivers preceded the
+dissolution of the German Empire.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Rivers as Sources of Power</div>
+
+<p>Where two rivers join there is always a meeting of two lines of
+political tendencies, and the place of their junction is the point
+whence the political forces must be controlled and held together. This
+is the significance of the situations of Mainz, Lyons, Belgrade, St.
+Louis, and Khartoum. The course followed by flowing water is far less
+direct than that of historical movements; the latter take the shortest
+way, and do not continue along the stream where a loop is formed; or
+they may follow a tributary that runs on in the original direction of
+the main stream, as in the case of the very ancient highway along the
+Oder and the Neisse to Bohemia. The sides of sharp angles formed by a
+river in its course lead to a salient point as, Regensburg and Orléans.
+A tributary meeting the main stream at this point forms the best route
+to a neighbouring river, or the angle may become a peninsula, so
+bounded by a tributary stream at its base as almost to take the form of
+an island.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Rivers as Dividers of Land</div>
+
+<p>Breaks in the continuity of the land occasioned by rivers are caused
+rather by the channel in which the water flows than by the river
+itself. Thus we often find that dry river-beds are effective agents of
+this dividing up of the land. Permanent inequalities of the earth’s
+surface are intensified by flowing water. Therefore a river system
+separates the land into natural divisions. These narrow clefts are ever
+willingly adopted as boundary lines, especially in cases where it is
+necessary to set general limits to an extensive territory. Thus Charles
+the Great bounded his empire by the Eider, Elbe, Raab, and Ebro.
+Smaller divisions of land are formed by the convergence of tributaries
+and main streams, and again still smaller portions are created by the
+joining together of the lesser branches of tributaries, these taking
+an especially important place in the history of wars: for example,
+those formed by the Rhine, Weser, Elbe, and Oder, and on a lesser
+scale by the Moselle, Seille, and Saar. Fords are always important; in
+Africa they have even been points at which small states have begun to
+develop. Rivers as highways in time of war no longer have the value
+once attributed to them by Frederick the Great, who called the Oder
+“the nurse of the army.” Yet rivers were of such great moment in this
+respect in the roadless interior of America during the Civil War that
+the getting of information as to water-levels was one of the most
+important tasks of the army intelligence department. Rivers will always
+remain superior to railways as lines of communication during time of
+war, at least in one respect, for they cannot be destroyed.</p>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_387"></a>[Pg 387]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center" id="ENVIRONMENT_AND_THE_LIFE_OF_NATIONS">THE MAKING OF THE NATIONS&mdash;III</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe44" id="i_387">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_387.jpg" alt="The Making of the Nations, III" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">Professor FREDERICK RATZEL</p>
+</div>
+
+<h4>THE INFLUENCE OF ENVIRONMENT IN THE
+LIFE OF NATIONS</h4>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">U</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first3">U</span>PON
+the earth, with its varied configuration and formation of land and
+sea, are many kinds of hindrances and limits to life.</p>
+
+<p>The most obvious effect of natural region and natural boundary lies
+in the counteracting forces opposed by the earth through them to a
+formless and unlimited diffusion of life. Isolated territory furthers
+political independence, which, indeed, is of itself isolation. The
+development of a nation upon a fixed territory consists in a striving
+to make use of all the natural advantages of that territory. The
+superiority of a naturally isolated region lies in the fact that
+seclusion itself brings with it the greatest of all advantages. Hence
+the precocious economic and political development of races that dwell
+on islands or on peninsulas, in mountain valleys and on island-like
+deltas.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Rise and Death of Isolated States</div>
+
+<p>Often enough growth that originates under such favourable conditions
+leads to ruin. A young nation deems itself possessed of all so long
+as it has the isolation that ensures independence; it sees too late
+that the latter has been purchased at the price of a suffocating lack
+of space; and it dies of a hypertrophy of development&mdash;a death common
+to minor states. This was the cause of the swift rise and decline of
+Athens and of Venice, and of all powers that restricted themselves to
+islands and to narrow strips of coast.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Natural Boundaries of a State<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+A State must Forsake its Boundaries</div>
+
+<p>The more natural boundaries a state possesses, the more definite are
+the political questions raised by its development. The consolidation
+of England, Scotland, and Wales was simple and obvious, as patent
+as if it had been decreed beforehand, as was also the expansion of
+France over the region that lies between the Alps and the Pyrenees,
+the Mediterranean and the Atlantic Ocean. On the other hand, what a
+fumbling, groping development was that of Germany, with her lack of
+natural boundary in the east! Thus in the great geographical features
+of lands lie pre-ordained movements, constrained by the highest
+necessity&mdash;a higher necessity in the case of some than of others.
+The frontier of the Pyrenees was more necessary to France than that
+of the Rhine; an advance to the Indian Ocean is more necessary to
+Russia than a movement into Central Europe. Growth is soundest when a
+state expands so as to fill out a naturally bounded region&mdash;as, for
+example, the United States, that symmetrically occupy the southern half
+of the continent of North America, or Switzerland, extending to the
+Rhine and Lake of Constance. There are often adjustments of frontiers
+which force the territory of a nation back into a natural region, as
+shown in the case of Chili, which gave up the attempt to extend its
+boundaries beyond the Andes, in spite of its having authorisation to do
+so, founded on the right of discovery, the original Spanish division
+of provinces, and wars of independence. A favourable external form is
+often coincident with a favourable internal configuration which is
+quite as furthering to internal continuity as is the external form to
+isolated development. The Roman Empire, externally uniform as an empire
+of Mediterranean states, was particularly qualified for holding fast
+to its most distant provinces, by reason of the Mediterranean Sea that
+occupied its very centre. Everything that furthers traffic is also
+favourable to cohesion. Hence the significance of waterways for ancient
+states, and of canals and railways for modern nations. Egypt was the
+empire of the Nile, and the Rhine was at one time the life-vein of the
+empire of Charles the Great. A state does not always remain fixed in
+the same natural region. However advantageous they may have been, it
+must, on increasing, forsake the best of boundaries. Since one region
+is exchanged for another, the law of increasing areas comes into force.
+Every land, sea, river region, or valley should always be conceived
+of as an area that must be discovered,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_388"></a>[Pg 388]</span> inhabited, and politically
+realised before it may exert any influence beyond its limits. Thus the
+Mediterranean district had first to complete its internal development
+before it could produce any external effect.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">First Continent State</div>
+
+<p>This internal development first took possession of the small
+territories, and, mastering them, turned to the greater. Thus we may
+see history progress from clearings in forests, oases, islands, small
+peninsulas, such as Greece; and strips of coast, to great peninsulas,
+such as Italy; isthmian situations of continental size, such as Gaul;
+only to come to a halt in half continents such as the United States and
+Canada, and continents. Europe&mdash;next to the smallest continent&mdash;has
+had the richest history of all, but with the greatest breaking up of
+its area into small divisions. Australia, the smallest continent, is
+the earliest to unite its parts into a continental state. Development
+expends all its power in bringing the areas of the three greatest
+land-divisions into play, and in opposing their one hundred and five
+million square miles to the ten and a half million of the smaller
+divisions; their economic action is already felt to a considerable
+degree. Thus there arises an alternation of isolation and expansion,
+which was clearly shown in the history of Rome, whose territory grew
+from the single city, out over the valley of the Tiber, into Apennine
+Italy, into the peninsula, across the islands and peninsulas of the
+Mediterranean, and finally into the two adjacent continents.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_388">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_388.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE HOTTEST PLACE IN THE WORLD IS INHABITED BY MAN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">No climate has triumphed over the endurance of man. Massowah,
+ the most important town in the Italian Colony of Eritrea, in North Africa, is the
+ hottest place in the world, but, like the coldest known place, it is inhabited.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Nature and National Destiny</div>
+
+<p>The boundaries of natural regions are always natural boundaries.
+Although this delicate subject may be left to political geography, it
+is by no means to be neglected by those who are interested in history,
+boundary questions being among the most frequent causes of wars. In
+addition, boundaries are the necessary result of historical movements.
+In case two states strive against each other in expanding, the motion
+of both is impeded, and the boundary lies where the movement comes to
+a halt. It is in the nature of things that growing states are very
+frequently contiguous to uninhabited regions, not to other states.
+This contiguity is always a source of natural boundaries. The most
+natural of all arise from adjacency to uninhabitable regions: first
+the uninhabitable lands, then the sea. The boundary at the edge of the
+uninhabitable world is the safest; for there is nothing beyond. The
+broad Arctic frontiers of Russia are a great source of power. A high
+mountain range, also, may separate inhabited regions&mdash;which are always
+State territory&mdash;by an uninhabited strip of land. After all, the sea,
+marshes, rivers even, are uninhabitable zones. But traffic brings
+connection with it, and the Rhine, which to the Romans was a moat,
+especially well adapted as a defence, is now, with its thirty railway
+bridges and thousands of vessels plying up and down and across, far
+more of a highway and a means of communication than a dividing line.</p>
+
+<p>The position, form, and movements of the earth seem far enough removed
+from the deeds and destinies of peoples, yet the more we contemplate
+the latter, the more we are led to consider the earth’s inclination
+to its axis, its approximately spherical form, and its motion, which,
+combined,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_389"></a>[Pg 389]</span> are the cause of the recurrence in fixed order of day and
+night, summer and winter.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_389a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_389a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">INHABITANTS OF THE COLDEST PLACE IN THE WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Man is the most adaptable of living creatures. There is no
+ climate in the world in which he cannot live. The lowest temperatures taken have
+ been at Verkhoyansk, in Siberia, but the place is inhabited by people, of whom we
+ give a group.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The effects of these great earthly phenomena are differently felt
+in every country; for they vary according to geographical location.
+Practically, that which most conforms to any given situation north
+or south of the equator is the climate of a land. Day and night are
+of more even length at the equator than in our country; but beyond
+the Polar circles there are days that last for months, and nights
+equally long. Scarcely any annual variation in temperature is known to
+the inhabitants of Java, while in Eastern Siberia Januarys of fifty
+degrees below freezing-point and Julys of twenty degrees above zero of
+Centigrade, winters during which the mercury freezes, and summers of
+oppressive sultriness, are contrasted with one another.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_389b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_389b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">MAN’S TRIUMPH OVER CLIMATE: THE COLDEST PLACE IN THE
+ WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Just as man has established himself in the torrid heat of
+ Massowah, so he can endure the highest degree of cold. The coldest place in the
+ world, Verkhoyansk, of which this is a photograph, is the capital of a
+ Siberian province.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>In our temperate region there is rain, as a rule, during all months,
+but as far north as Italy and Greece the year is divided into a dry
+and a wet season. Great effects are produced over the entire earth and
+upon all living creatures by the thus conditioned climatic differences.
+They must be considered at the very beginning of every investigation
+into history. Since we know that a fluctuating distribution of heat is
+caused by the 23½° inclination of the earth’s axis, investigation
+also leads us to a knowledge of further phenomena, to a consideration
+of the dependence of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_390"></a>[Pg 390]</span> winds and of the precipitation of heat upon
+this very same condition.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The First Question about a Country</div>
+
+<p>And thus we come into contact with the thousand connecting threads by
+which man’s economic activity, health, distribution over the earth,
+even his spiritual and his political life, are inseparably bound
+up with the climate. Hence the first question that should be asked
+concerning a country is: What is its geographical situation? A land may
+be interesting for many other reasons besides nearness or remoteness
+from the equator; but that which is of the greatest interest of all
+to the historian is a consideration of the manifold and far-reaching
+effects of climate.</p>
+
+<p>The study of human geography teaches us that climate affects mankind
+in two ways. First, it produces a direct effect upon individuals,
+races, indeed the inhabitants of entire zones, influencing their
+bodily conditions, their characters, and their minds; in the second
+place, it produces an indirect effect by its influence on conditions
+necessary to life. This is due to the fact that the plants and animals
+with which man stands in so varied a relationship, which supply him
+with nourishment, clothing, and shelter, which, when domesticated and
+cultivated, enter his service, as it were, and become most valuable
+and influential assistants and instruments for his development and
+culture, are also dependent upon climate. Important properties of the
+soil, the existence of plains, deserts, and forests, also depend upon
+climate. Effects of climate, both direct and indirect, are united in
+political-geographical phenomena, and are especially manifest in the
+growth of states and in their permanence and strength.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man can Bear all Climates</div>
+
+<p>There is no climate that cannot be borne by man; of all organic beings
+he is one of the most capable of adapting himself to circumstances.
+Men dwell even in the very coldest regions. The place where the lowest
+temperatures have been measured, Verkhoyansk, with a mean January
+temperature of -54° F., is the capital of a Siberian province; and a
+district where the temperature is of the very hottest, Massowah, is the
+most important town in the Italian colony of Eritrea.</p>
+
+<p>However, both heat and cold, when excessive, tend to lessen population,
+the size of settlements, and economic activity. The great issues of
+the world’s history have been decided on ground situated between the
+tropic of Cancer and the Polar circle. The question as to whether the
+northern half of North America should be English or French was decided
+between the parallels of 44° and 48° north latitude; and in the same
+manner the settlement as to whether Sweden or Russia should be supreme
+in Northern Europe took place a little south of 60° north. Holland
+did not lose and regain her Indian possessions in the neighbourhood
+of the equator, but in Europe; and Spain fell from the high estate
+of sovereign over South and Central America because her power as a
+European nation had decayed.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Strange Divergence of a Race</div>
+
+<p>The coldest countries in the world are either entirely uninhabited&mdash;as
+Spitzbergen and Franz Josef’s Land&mdash;or very thinly populated. Some are
+politically without a master&mdash;the two territories just mentioned, for
+example; some are politically occupied, as is Greenland, but are of
+very little value. History teaches that traffic between such colonies
+and the mother country may cease entirely without the mother country
+suffering any loss thereby. The hottest regions in the world are for
+the most part colonies or dependencies of European Powers. This applies
+to the whole of tropical Africa, Asia, Australia, and Oceania, and
+partly to tropical America.</p>
+
+<p>The exclusion of European nations from grasping for possessions in
+America was not determined upon in the compromised territory of
+tropical America, but in the United States, a short distance south of
+39° north latitude. What a difference in the parts played in history
+by the two branches of the Tunguse race, the one held in subjection
+in the cold latitude of Russia, the other conquering China, and now
+the sovereign power in the more temperate climate of that country;
+or between the Turks who, as Yakuts, lead a nomadic life in the Lena
+valley, and the Turks who govern Western Asia! Latham called the region
+extending from the Elbe to the Amoor&mdash;within which dwell Germans,
+Sarmatians, Ugrian Finns, Turks, Mongolians, and Manchurians, peoples
+who strike with a two-edged sword&mdash;a “Zone of Conquest.” Farther to
+the north nations are poor and weak; toward the equator, luxurious
+and enervated. The inhabitants of this central<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_391"></a>[Pg 391]</span> zone have over-run
+their neighbours both to the north and to the south, while never,
+either from the north or from the south, have they themselves suffered
+any lasting injury. The Germans have advanced from the Baltic Sea to
+the Mediterranean; the Slavs inhabit a territory that extends from
+the Arctic Ocean to the Adriatic Sea; the Turks and Mongolians have
+penetrated as far south as India; and there have been times when
+Mongolians ruled from the Arctic Ocean to Southern India. Finally, the
+Manchurians have extended their sphere of influence over Northern Asia
+as far south as the tropic of Cancer.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe35" id="i_391">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_391.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">EFFECT OF CLIMATE ON THE COURSE OF HISTORY</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">A map on which the isothermal lines are drawn is rich in
+ historical instruction. Where the lines diverge we have regions of equal
+ temperature; where they crowd together, districts of different mean annual
+ temperatures lie close together. The crowding of climatic variations in any
+ region enlivens and hastens the course of history.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>These differences occur over again in more restricted areas, even
+within the temperate zone itself. The inhabitants of the colder
+portions of a country have often shown their superiority to the men who
+dwell in the warmer districts. The causes of the contrast between the
+Northerners and the Southerners, which has dominated in the development
+of the United States, may for the most part be clearly traced: the
+South was weakened by the plantation method of cultivation, and
+slavery; its white population increased slowly, and shared to a lesser
+degree than did the Northerners in the strengthening, educating
+influences of agriculture and manufacturing industries. Thus after a
+long struggle that finally developed into a war, the North won the
+place of authority.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Sunbeams and Rainfall in History</div>
+
+<p>In Italy and in France the superiority of the north over the south is
+partially comprehensible; and in Germany the advantages possessed by
+Prussia, at least in area and in sea coast, are obvious. But when in
+English history also the north is found to have been victorious over
+the south, conditions other than climatic must have been the cause. In
+this case elements have been present that are more deeply-rooted than
+in sunbeams and rainfall alone.</p>
+
+<p>We must call to mind the zone-like territories of early times, occupied
+by peoples from which the nations of to-day are descended; the boundary
+lines have disappeared, but the northern elements have remained in the
+north, and the southern elements in the south. It is well known that
+Aristotle adjudged political superiority and the sphere of world-empire
+to the Hellenes because they surpassed the courageous tribes of the
+north in intelligence and in mechanical instinct, and were superior to
+the both intelligent and skilful inhabitants of Asia in courage. “As
+the Hellenic race occupies a central geographical position, so does
+it stand between both intellectually.” The thought that this union of
+extreme intellectuality and power in arms on Hellenic soil could be the
+result of ethnical infiltration did not seem to have occurred to the
+philosopher. The fundamental idea of Aristotle, the aristocratic state,
+in which the talented Hellene alone was to rule over bondmen of various
+origins, who were, above all, to labour for him, could not have been
+possible had his views been otherwise. And yet he had clearly seen that
+the two talents&mdash;for war and for industry&mdash;were unequally distributed
+among the different Hellenic stocks, and that they were also variable
+according to time.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_392"></a>[Pg 392]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe45" id="i_392">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_392.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">HOW THE SAME PEOPLES DIFFER</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The Yakuts, who lead a nomad life in the valley of the Lena,
+ and the Turks who govern Western Asia, are of the same stock, but the genial
+ climate has enabled the Turks to flourish while the cold has kept the Yakuts
+ poor. These groups represent both branches of the stock.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Considering the influence even of slighter differences in climate,
+the locations of regions of similar mean annual temperature, and the
+distances which separate them from one another, cannot be otherwise
+than important. A map on which the isothermal lines are drawn is rich
+in historical instruction. Where the lines diverge we have regions of
+equal temperature; where they crowd together, districts of different
+mean annual temperatures lie close to one another. The crowding of
+climatic variations in any region enlivens and hastens the course of
+history in that region. If the variations occur only at long intervals,
+all parts of a large territory having approximately equal mean annual
+temperatures, then climatic contrasts, which act as a ferment, as it
+were, are not present to any appreciable extent, and their effects lose
+in intensity and are dispelled.</p>
+
+<p>Where are greater combinations of contrasting climatic elements to
+be found than in Greece and in the Alps? The joining together of the
+natives of rich, fruitful Zürich with the poor shepherds of the forests
+and mountains was of the utmost importance to the development of the
+Swiss Confederation. It was also a union of regions of mild and cold
+temperatures. The possession of Central European and Mediterranean
+climates, that shade into one another without any sharp line of
+demarcation, is a great advantage to France. If climatic differences
+approach one another in too great a contrast, clefts in development are
+likely to occur, such as the gap between the Northern and the Southern
+States in America, and that between North and South Queensland. If it
+be possible to adjust the political differences, then the union of
+areas of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_393"></a>[Pg 393]</span> different temperatures has an invigorating effect, as shown
+by the history of the American Southern States since 1865.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe43" id="i_393">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_393.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE EFFECTS OF CLIMATE ON THE POWER OF PEOPLES</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">There is a world of difference between the two branches of
+ the Tunguse race: the one is a poor people living in cold regions and subject to
+ Russia; the other is the ruling race of the Chinese Empire, flourishing in a
+ temperate climate. The upper group is composed of ruling Tunguses in China and
+ the lower group represents Tunguses subject to Russia.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winds blowing in a constant direction for many months at a time were
+of great assistance to navigation during the days of sailing vessels,
+which, indeed, have not yet been entirely supplanted by steamships.
+Before the time of steam vessels all traffic on the Indian Ocean was
+closely connected with the change of the monsoons; and important
+political expansions have followed in the track of the same winds&mdash;for
+example, the diffusion of the Arabs along the east coast of Africa
+and in Madagascar. The influence of the trade winds on the Spanish
+and Portuguese discoveries along the Atlantic coast of America is
+well known. The south-eastern trade winds have been a cause of both
+voluntary and involuntary emigrations of Polynesian races. It may be
+clearly seen from the history of Greece what advantage was obtained by
+the race that won the alliance of the coast of Thrace and the wind that
+blows south from it with constancy during the entire fair season, often
+eight months long.</p>
+
+<p>Where the wind is most variable, visiting entire countries with
+storms, to the great destruction of lives and property, the result is
+a stirring up of the survivors to exertions that cannot fail to be
+strengthening both to body and to mind, and of direct benefit to life
+in general. At the same time that the people of Holland were engaged in
+forcing back the ocean, they won their political liberty. In another
+part of the North Sea coast the Frisians receded farther and farther
+south, owing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_394"></a>[Pg 394]</span> to the invasions of the sea and the attacks of the
+natives of Holstein. The tempest that scattered the armada of Philip
+II. was one of the most important political events of the time; and
+it is not to be denied that the snowstorm in Prussian Eylau, at the
+beginning of the battle in which Napoleon suffered his first defeat,
+contributed not a little to the result.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">One of the Greatest Problems</div>
+
+<p>Acclimatisation is one of the greatest of human problems. In order that
+a nation shall expand from one zone into another, it must be capable
+of adapting itself to new climates. The human race is, as a whole, one
+of the most adaptable of all animal species to different conditions of
+life; it is diffused through all zones and all altitudes up to about
+thirteen thousand feet above the level of the sea. But single nations
+are accustomed to fixed zones and portions of zones; and long residence
+in foreign climates leads to illness and loss of life.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Climate and Will-Power</div>
+
+<p>In some races the individuals are of a more rigid constitution than
+in others, and are thus less capable of adaptation. Chinamen and Jews
+adapt themselves to different climates far more easily than do Germans,
+upon whom residence in the southern part of Spain even, and to a still
+greater degree in Northern Africa, is followed by injurious effects.
+The constant outbreaks of destructive disease before which the German
+troops withered away are to be counted amongst the greatest obstacles
+opposed to the absorption of Italy into the German Empire. During the
+Spanish discoveries and conquests in America in the sixteenth century,
+whole armies wasted away to mere handfuls. The greatest hindrances to
+German colonisation in Venezuela are climatic diseases. Medical science
+has, to be sure, pointed out such deleterious influences as may be
+traced to unsuitable dwelling-places, nutrition, clothing, etc.; and
+the losses to Europe of soldiers and officials in the tropics have been
+greatly reduced. But even to-day deaths, illnesses, and furloughs make
+up the chief items in the reports sent in from every colony in the
+tropics. British India can only be governed from the hills, where the
+officials dwell during the greater part of the year.</p>
+
+<p>Climatic influence is not limited to bodily diseases. One of the first
+effects of life in warm climates upon men accustomed to cold regions
+is relaxation of what is known as will-power. Even the Piedmontese
+soldier loses his erect carriage in a Neapolitan or Sicilian garrison.
+Englishmen in India count on an ability to perform only half the amount
+of work they would be capable of at home. Many inhabitants of northern
+countries escape the bodily diseases of the tropics; but scarcely one
+man of an entire nation is able to resist the more subtle alterations
+in spirit.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Peoples of North and South</div>
+
+<p>Their historical influence extends only the deeper for it. The
+conquering nations that advance from north to south have invariably
+forfeited their power, determination, and activity. The original
+character of the Aryans who descended into the lowlands of India
+has been lost. A foreign spirit rings through the Vedic hymns. West
+Goths and Vandals alike lost their nationalities in Northern Africa
+and Spain, as the Lombards lost theirs in Italy. In spite of all
+emigration, immigration, and wandering hither and thither, there always
+remains a certain fixed difference between the inhabitants of colder
+and those of warmer countries; it is the nature of the land, moulding
+the more ductile character of a people into its own form. There are
+differences also between the northern and the southern stocks of the
+same race, and thus climate exerts here greater and there lesser
+influence upon nations and their destinies.</p>
+
+<p>Since it lies in the nature of climatic influences to produce
+homogeneity among those peoples who inhabit extensive regions of
+similar mean annual temperatures, it follows that a unifying effect
+is also produced on political divisions that might otherwise be
+inclined to separate from one another. In the first place, a similar
+climate creates similar conditions of life, and thus the northern and
+southern races of each hemisphere, with their temperate and their
+hot climates, differ widely. Climate is also the cause of similar
+conditions of production over large territories. Leroy-Beaulieu rightly
+mentioned climate&mdash;above all, the winter, during which almost every
+year the whole land from north to south is covered with snow&mdash;as next
+in importance to the configuration of the country in its unifying,
+cohesive effects on the Russian Empire. Winters are not rare during
+which it is possible<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_395"></a>[Pg 395]</span> to journey from Astrachan to Archangel in
+sledges; and both the Sea of Azov and the northern part of the Caspian
+Sea are frozen over during the cold months, as well as the Bay of
+Finland, the Dnieper as well as the Dwina.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_395">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_395.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A STORM THAT CHANGED THE COURSE OF HISTORY: THE WRECK OF
+ THE ARMADA</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The weather has greatly influenced the course of history
+ and helped to mould the fate of nations. The tempest that scattered the Spanish
+ Armada in 1588 was one of the most important political events of the time. This
+ picture, from the painting by J. W. Carey, illustrates the wreck of the galleon
+ “Girona,” at Giant’s Causeway.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Situation determines the affinities and relations of peoples and
+states, and is for this reason the most important of all geographical
+considerations. Situation is always the first thing to be investigated;
+it is the frame by which all other characteristics are encircled.
+Of what use were descriptions of the influence of the geographical
+configuration of Greece on Grecian history, in which the decisive point
+that Greece occupies a medial position between Europe and Asia, and
+between Europe and Africa, was not insisted upon above all? Everything
+else is subordinate to the fact that Greece stands upon the threshold
+of the Orient. However varied and rich its development may have been,
+it must always have been determined by conditions arising from its
+contiguity with the lands of Western Asia and Northern Africa. Area
+in particular, often over-valued, must be subordinated to location.
+The site may be only a point, but from this point the most powerful
+effects may be radiated in all directions. Who thinks of area when
+Jerusalem, Athens, or Gibraltar is mentioned? When it is found that the
+Fanning Islands or Palmyra Island is indispensable to the carrying out
+of England’s plans in respect to telegraphic connection of all parts of
+the empire with one another, merely because these islands are adapted
+for cable stations on the line between Queensland and Vancouver, is it
+not owing to their location alone, without consideration as to area,
+configuration, or climate?</p>
+
+<p>Every portion of the earth lends its own peculiar qualities to
+the nations and races that dwell upon it, and so does each of its
+subdivisions in turn. Germany, as a first-class Power, is thinkable
+only in Europe. There cannot be either a New York or a St. Petersburg
+in Africa. Our organic conception of nations and states renders it
+impossible for us to look upon situation as something lifeless and
+passive; far rather must it signify active relations of giving and
+receiving. Two states cannot exist side by side without influencing
+each other. It is much more likely that such close relationships result
+from their contiguity; that, for example,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_396"></a>[Pg 396]</span> we must conceive of China,
+Korea, and Japan as divisions of a single sphere of civilisation,
+their history consisting in a transference, transplanting, action, and
+reaction, leading to results of the greatest moment. Some situations
+are, indeed, more independent and isolated than others; but what would
+be the history of England, the most isolated country in Europe, if all
+relations with France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Scandinavia were
+omitted? It would be incomprehensible.</p>
+
+<p>The more self-dependent a situation is, the more is it a natural
+location; the more dependent, the more artificial, and the more it
+is a part of a neighbourhood. Connection with a hemisphere or grand
+division, identity with a peninsula or archipelago, location with
+respect to oceans, seas, rivers, deserts, and mountains, determine the
+histories of countries. It is precisely in the natural locality that
+we must recognise the strongest bonds of dependence on Nature. Apart
+from all other features peculiar to Italy, her central position in the
+Mediterranean alone determines her existence as a Mediterranean Power.
+However highly we may value the good qualities of the German people,
+the best of these qualities will never reach so high a development in
+the constrained, wedged-in, continental situation of their native land
+as they would in an island nation; for Germany’s location is more that
+of a state in a neighbourhood of states than a natural location, and
+for this reason more unfavourable than that of France.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_396">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_396.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">POLITICAL EXPANSION HAS FOLLOWED IN THE TRACK OF THE
+ WINDS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This map illustrating the trade winds and prevailing winds
+ shows how important were these winds before the days of steam vessels. It shows
+ that the outward voyage of Columbus was entirely along the track of the north-east
+ trade winds. Where the arrows cross, as off the North-west of Scotland, we have
+ regions of wind disturbances.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_397a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_397a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">THE RIVERS OF TWO CONTINENTS AND THEIR INFLUENCE IN
+ CIVILISATION</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The influence of riverways in furthering political
+ development may be best seen in the contrast between South America and Africa;
+ the colonising movement came to Africa three hundred years later than to South
+ America.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_397b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_397b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">EUROPEAN COUNTRIES AND THEIR NEARNESS TO THE SEA</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">A country’s prosperity depends greatly upon its relation
+ to the sea. This map shows the boundaries of European countries, and the black
+ lines indicate those countries that lie within 250 and 500 miles from the
+ sea-coast.</div>
+ <div class="caption">THE RELATION OF RIVERS AND THE SEA TO THE CIVILISATION
+ OF COUNTRIES</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Ideal Situation for a State</div>
+
+<p>Natural localities of the greatest importance result from the
+configuration and situation of divisions of the earth’s surface. The
+extremities of continents&mdash;such as the Cape of Good Hope, Cape Horn,
+Singapore, Ceylon, Tasmania, and Key West&mdash;are points from which
+sea power radiates; and at the same time<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_398"></a>[Pg 398]</span> they are the summits of
+triangular territories that extend inland and are governed from the
+apex. In the same way all narrowings of parts of continents are of
+importance. France occupies an isthmian position between ocean and
+sea; Germany and Austria between the North Sea, the Baltic, and the
+Adriatic. Some states are situated on the coast, occupying a bordering
+position; others occupy an intermediate location. And the more isolated
+situations are all fundamentally different, according to whether they
+are insular, peninsular, or continental. Situations in respect to the
+oceans are even more various. How different are Atlantic locations in
+Europe from those on the Mediterranean, the Baltic, or the Black Sea!
+Only a few nations occupy a position fronting on two great oceans. The
+ideal natural situation for a state may be said to be the embracing
+of a whole continent within one political system. This is the deeper
+source of the Monroe Doctrine.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Contrasts and Comparisons</div>
+
+<p>Similar locations give rise to similar political models. Since
+there are several types of location, it follows that the histories
+of such locations assume typical characters. The contrast between
+Rome and Carthage, their association with each other, exhibiting the
+reciprocal action of the characters of the northern and southern
+Mediterranean coasts, is repeated in similarly formed situations in
+Spain and Morocco, in Thrace and Asia Minor, and on a smaller scale
+in the Italian and Barbary ports. In all these places events similar
+to those in Roman and Punic history have taken place. Japan and
+England are unlike in many respects; yet not only the peoples, but
+also the political systems, of the two island nations have insular
+characteristics. Germany and Bornu are as different from each other
+as Europe is from Africa, but central location has produced the same
+peculiarity in each&mdash;a source of power to the strong nation, of ruin to
+the weak.</p>
+
+<p>Contiguity with neighbouring states brings with it important
+relationships. The most striking examples of such contiguity are to
+be seen in nations that are cut off from the coast of their continent
+and completely surrounded by other countries. Owing to the constant
+reaching out for more territory, such a situation in Europe, as well
+as in other continents, signifies unconditional loss of independence.
+Only connection with a great river can prevent the dissolution of a
+nation so situated. The instinctive impulse to extend its boundaries
+to the sea, shown by all nations, arises from the desire to escape
+an insulated continental position. Only the very smallest of states,
+such as Andorra and Liechtenstein&mdash;which, moreover, do not aspire
+to absolute independence&mdash;could have existed for centuries in the
+positions that they occupy. A medial situation held by one country
+between two others is also, in point of risk, comparable to a
+completely encompassed position. France was so situated when Germany
+and Spain were under the same ruler. The alliance of two neighbouring
+lands may place a third state in a similar position.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">What is National Progress?</div>
+
+<p>Whatever the individual locations of neighbouring states may be,
+their number is a matter of great importance. It is better to have a
+multitude of weak neighbours than a few strong ones. The development
+of the United States that gradually ousted France from the south,
+Mexico from the west, and Spain from both south and west, in order
+to be in touch with the sea on three sides, has, with the decrease
+in neighbouring Powers, resulted in an enviable simplification of
+political problems.</p>
+
+<p>A nation covering various dispersed and scattered situations is to be
+seen at the present day only in regions of active colonisation and in
+the interiors of federal states. Powerful nations are consolidated
+into a single territory. We may see everywhere that when the area of
+distribution of a form of life diminishes in extent, it does not simply
+shrink up, but transforms itself into a number of island-like sites,
+giving the appearance that the form, of life is proceeding from a
+centre of the conquest of new territory. In what does the difference
+lie between islands of progress and of recession? With nations and
+states progress lies in the occupation of the most advantageous sites;
+retrogression lies in their loss and sacrifice. The American Indians,
+forced back from oceans, rivers, and fertile regions, form detached
+groups of retrogression; the Europeans who took these sites from
+them formed isles of progress as, one after another, they seized the
+islands, promontories, harbours, river-mouths, and passes.</p>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_399"></a>[Pg 399]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center" id="THE_SIZE_AND_POWER_OF_NATIONS">THE MAKING OF THE NATIONS&mdash;IV</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe44" id="i_399">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_399.jpg" alt="The Making of the Nations, IV" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">Professor FREDERICK RATZEL</p>
+</div>
+
+<h4>THE SIZE AND POWER OF NATIONS</h4>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The State and its Territory</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">I</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first4">I</span>T
+is not without reason that so much importance is attached to extent
+of surface in geography. Area and population represent to us the two
+chief characteristics of a state; and to know them is the simplest
+means&mdash;often too simple&mdash;for obtaining a conception of the size and
+power of a nation. We cannot conceive of any man, much less a human
+community, without thinking of surface or ground at the same time.
+Political science may, through a number of clever conclusions, reduce
+the area of a state to a mere national possession; but we all know that
+territory is too tightly bound up with the very life of a state for
+it to assume a position of so little importance. In a nation, people
+and soil are organically united into one, and area and population
+are the measure of this union. A state cannot exchange or alter its
+area without suffering a complete transformation itself. What wonder,
+then, that wars between nations are struggles for territory? Even in
+war the object is to limit the opponent’s sphere of action; how much
+more does the whole history of nations consist in a winning and losing
+of territory. The Poles still exist as they did in former times; but
+the ground upon which they dwell has ceased to belong to them in a
+political sense, and thus their state has been annihilated.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Vast Modern Empires</div>
+
+<p>During the course of history we constantly see great political areas
+emerging from the struggle for territory. We see nations from early
+times to the present day increasing in area: the Persian and Roman
+Empires were small and mean compared with those of the Russians,
+English, and Chinese. Also the states of peoples of a lower grade of
+culture are insignificant compared with the states of more advanced
+races. The greatest empires of the present day are the youngest;
+the smallest&mdash;Andorra, Liechtenstein, San Marino, Monaco, appear to
+us only as venerable, strange petrifications of an alien time. The
+relation of surface to the growth of spheres of commerce and of means
+of communication is obvious. Communication is a struggle with area;
+and the result of this struggle is the overcoming of the latter. The
+process is complicated because, as control is gained over area, one
+also acquires possession of its contents: advantages of location,
+conformation, fertility, and, by no means least, the inhabitants of
+the territory themselves. But the loss in value of all these things,
+brought about by their being widely scattered throughout an extensive
+area, can be overcome only by a complete control of the region over
+which they are spread.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Traffic Leads to Empire</div>
+
+<p>The development of commerce is the preliminary history of political
+growth. This applies to all races, from Phœnicians to North Americans,
+who point out to us a post of the American Fur Company as the germ
+from which Nebraska developed. Every colony is a result of traffic;
+even in the case of Siberia, merchants from European Russia travelled
+thither as far as the Ob about three centuries before its conquest. The
+phrase “conquests of the world’s commerce” is perfectly legitimate.
+The building of roads is a part of the glory of the founders and
+rulers of nations. To-day, tariff unions and railway politics have
+taken the place of road-making. It has always been so; both state and
+traffic have had the same interest in roads and thoroughfares. Traffic
+breaks the way, and the state improves and completes it. It seems to
+be certain that the firmly organised state in ancient Peru opened
+the roads which were later a service to traffic. In a lower phase of
+development we may see commerce leading directly to the establishment
+of states; in a higher, to victory in war, arising from commercial and
+railway communication. It would be impossible for France to construct
+the Sahara Railway without first subjugating the Tuareg and seizing
+their country.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_400"></a>[Pg 400]</span> Highways of traffic as weapons for hostile states, the
+important part played by commercial nations and the culture of strictly
+industrial and commercial peoples, the endeavour of traffic to be of
+service to the policies of states, and, finally, the powerful reactions
+caused by the removal and disuse of thoroughfares of commerce to races,
+nations, and to entire spheres of civilisation&mdash;can only be indicated
+here.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Every Trader Bears his State with him</div>
+
+<p>Every political movement, whether it be a warlike expedition or a
+peaceful emigration, is preceded by movements which are not political.
+Inquiries must be made and relations instituted; the object must be
+determined, and the road explored. All the while that knowledge of the
+world beyond the bounds of a country is being gained, there is also
+an imperceptible broadening of the geographical horizon; and this not
+only widens out, but becomes clearer. Fabulous tales are circulated as
+to the terrors of strange countries; but the fear gradually vanishes
+as our knowledge increases, and with the latter a spirit of political
+enterprise awakens One can say that every trader who passes the bounds
+of his country bears his state with him in his load of merchandise. To
+be sure, there are both long preparations made and quick leaps taken
+in the processes of commerce. Roman merchants prepared the way to a
+knowledge of Gaul and its conquest. But how different the attitude
+of the Romans to Gaul before and after the time of Cæsar! What a
+difference in the Spanish estimate of the worth of American colonies
+before the days of Cortez and Pizarro, and afterward! The broader and
+clearer the geographical horizon grows, the greater become political
+schemes and standards of policy.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Causes of National Success and Failure</div>
+
+<p>The widening of the geographical horizon and the clearing up of
+mysteries beyond are invariably a result of the travels of individuals
+or of groups for peaceful purposes. The first of these purposes
+is commerce; the chase and fishing are also to be taken into
+consideration; and the involuntary wanderings of the lost and strayed
+are not to be excluded. Europe possessed a Pytheas and a Columbus who
+discovered new worlds; and every primitive community had its explorers,
+too, who cleared paths from one forest glade to another. If such
+pioneers return, they also bring back with them contributions to the
+general stock of knowledge of the world without, and it becomes less
+difficult for others to follow in their footsteps; finally armies
+or fleets may advance, conquering in their tracks. Whenever traffic
+makes busy a multitude of men, and employs extensive means by which to
+carry on its operations, the truth of the saying, “The flag follows
+trade,” is finally established in its broadest sense. With all this
+struggling and labouring, territory does not fall to the state simply
+as a definite number of square miles. Just as single individuals bring
+enlightenment to the state, in the same manner the idea of area arises
+in the intelligence of the aggregate.</p>
+
+<p>When we say that an area increases, we must remember that by this we
+mean that the intelligence which views it and the will that holds it
+together have increased, and naturally, also, that which is requisite
+for rendering intelligence and will capable for their work. In this
+lies one of the greatest differences that exist between nations, one of
+the greatest causes of success and failure in development.</p>
+
+<p>A disposition for expansion that advances boundaries to the farthest
+possible limit is a sign of the highest state of civilisation. It is a
+result of an increase both of population and of intellectual progress.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Small States in Fine Situations</div>
+
+<p>There is something very attractive in the small political models of
+early times: those city-states whose development had in definiteness
+and in precision a great deal of the lucidity and compactness of
+artistic compositions. Lübeck and Venice are more attractive than
+Russia. The concentration of the forces of a small community in a
+limited, beautifully situated, and protected location, is a source of
+a development that takes a deeper hold on all the vital powers of a
+people, employing them more extensively, and therefore ending in a more
+rapid and definite perfection of historical individuality. Thus small
+areas take the lead of large territories in historical development; and
+we may see many examples of a slow but sure transference of leadership
+from the small area to the large, and of the gradual diffusion of
+progress in the latter. Thus Italy followed Greece; Spain, Portugal;
+England, Holland.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_401">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_401.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE COMMAND OF THE SEAS: GREAT BRITAIN’S MIGHTY
+ MACHINERY OF DEFENCE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Great Britain’s strength is a proof of the tremendous
+ importance of the sea as a factor of political power. This is a bird’s-eye view
+ of the British Navy assembled at Spithead.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_401_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_402"></a>[Pg 402]</span></p>
+
+<p>The opposite of this is precocity in growth: the earlier a state
+marks out its limits without consideration for later expansion, the
+sooner the completion of its development. The growth in area of Venice
+and the Low Countries stood still, while all about them territories
+increased in size. The development of small countries flags unless the
+increase of population within a limited area leads to that disquiet and
+emigration and expulsion of citizens especially characteristic of small
+nations: the horizon grows too narrow for the times; patriotism becomes
+local pride; and the most important life forces are impaired. Thus
+minor nations, through which races are separated into little groups,
+develop: the great national economic and religious cohesive forces are
+broken up; and even the political advantages of the ground are reduced
+in value through disintegration.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Founding of States by Strangers</div>
+
+<p>Under such conditions the impulse for new growth must be brought in
+from without. The native, who is acquainted with only one home, is
+always inferior to the foreigner, who has a knowledge of two lands
+at least. It is remarkable how numerous are the traditions of the
+establishment of states by strangers. Sometimes these are mighty
+hunters, as in Africa; often they are superior bearers of civilisation,
+as in Peru; and an especially large number of them have descended
+to the earth from heaven. In the face of history which tells of
+the foundation of a Manchurian dynasty in China and a Turkish in
+Persia, of the establishment of the Russian Empire by wandering North
+Germans, and that of the great nations in the West Sudan by the Fulah
+shepherds&mdash;these mythical accounts, although they may appear decidedly
+incredible when taken singly, as a whole are probable enough. The
+foundation of the nation of Sarawak in Borneo by Brooke is reality and
+corresponds with many of the old legends of the formations of states.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A Great Turning-point in History</div>
+
+<p>The broad conception of a state, which acts as a ferment does on
+a disrupted mass, is introduced from one neighbouring nation into
+another, each sharing in its production. When such territories are
+adjacent, the state situated in the most powerful natural region
+overgrows the other. The more mobile race brings its influence to
+bear on the less mobile, and possibly draws the other along with it.
+The more compact, better organised and armed state intrudes on weaker
+nations, and forces its organisation upon them. A nation left to itself
+has a tendency to split up into small groups, each of which seeks to
+support its own life upon its own soil, heedless of the others; and
+as such groups increase, they always reproduce in their own images:
+families families, and tribes tribes. We find all sorts of measures
+taken by some nations to limit an increase in growth that would carry
+them beyond their old boundaries and place them under new conditions
+of life. Many an otherwise inexplicable custom of taking human life is
+a result of this tendency; perhaps, in some cases, even cannibalism
+itself. This impulse towards limitation would have rendered the growth
+of nations impossible had not the antithetical force of attraction
+of one to another led to growth and amalgamation. Truly, the advance
+from a condition of isolated, self-dependent communities to one of
+traffic between state organisms, which must of necessity lead to ebb
+and flow and union of one group with another, is one of the greatest
+turning-points in the history of man.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Nations as Neighbours</div>
+
+<p>Since the tendency has been for territory to become the exclusive
+reward of victory in the competition of nations, balance of territorial
+possessions has grown to be one of the chief ends of national
+policies. The phrase “balance of power,” which has been so often
+heard since the sixteenth century, is no invention of diplomats, but
+a necessary result of the struggle for expansion. Hence we find an
+active principle of territorial adjustment and balance in all matters
+concerning international politics. It is not yet active in the small
+and simple states of semi-civilised peoples; such states are much more
+uniform, for they have all originated with a uniformly weak capacity
+for controlling territory. In addition, the principle of territorial
+isolation hinders the action of political competition. As soon,
+however, as necessity for increased area leads to the contiguity of
+nations, the conditions alter. The state that occupies but a small
+region strives to emulate its larger neighbour. It either gains so much
+land as is necessary to restore equality, or forces a decrease in the
+neighbour’s territory.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_403"></a>[Pg 403]</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Balance of Power</div>
+
+<p>Both alternatives have been of frequent occurrence. Prussia expanded
+at the expense of Schleswig and Poland in order to become equal in
+territory to the other great Powers. The whole of Europe fought
+Napoleon until France had been forced back within such boundaries as
+were necessary to international balance. Austria lost provinces in
+Italy and replaced them with others in the Balkan Peninsula. This
+loss and gain appears to us, in looking over an easily epitomised
+history, such as that of France, as an alternation of violent waves
+and temporary periods of rest attained whenever a balance is reached.
+Therefore it is not owing to chance that the areas of Austria, Germany,
+France, and Spain may be respectively designated by 100, 86, 84, and
+80, that the area of Holland is to that of Belgium as 100 is to 90, and
+that the United States stands to Canada as 100 to 96. To be effective,
+such balances must presuppose equal civilisations, similar means for
+the acquirement of power. Rome was so superior to her neighbours in
+civilisation that she could not permit any territorial balance. Perhaps
+the adoption of the River Halys as the boundary between Media and Lydia
+was a first attempt to establish a national system on the principle of
+balance instead of “world” dominion.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A New British Empire is not Conceivable</div>
+
+<p>Our standards for measuring the areas of countries have constantly
+increased during the growth of historical territories. The history of
+Greece is to us but the history of a small state; and how many years
+shall pass before that of Germany, Austria, and France will be but the
+history of nations of medium size? England, Russia, China, and the
+United States include the better half of the land of the world; and
+to-day a British Empire in the other half could not be conceivable.
+Development has ever seized on greater and greater areas, and has
+united more and more extensive regions into aggregates. Thus it has
+always remained an organic movement. The village-state repeats itself
+in the city-state, and the family-state in the race-state, the smaller
+ever being reproduced in greater forms. The smallest and greatest
+nations alike retain the same organic characteristics more or less
+closely united to the soil.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Area Does Not Mean Power</div>
+
+<p>The surface of a state bears a certain relation to the surface of the
+globe, and according to this standard is the land measured upon which
+the inhabitants of a nation live, move, and labour. Thus it may be said
+that the 208,687 square miles of the German Empire represent about
+<span class="numerator">1</span>&frasl;<span class="denominator">940</span> of the entire surface of the earth; further, that the empire
+has a population of 60,500,000, from which the ratio of 5·45 acres to
+each individual follows. Although it is true that wholly uninhabited
+or very thinly populated regions, high mountains, forests, deserts,
+etc., may be valuable from a political point of view, nevertheless the
+whole course of the world’s history shows us that, as a general rule,
+the value of territory increases with the number of inhabitants that
+dwell upon it. Thus, before their disunion, Norway-Sweden, with an area
+of 297,000 square miles&mdash;two-fifths greater than that of the German
+Empire&mdash;but with a population of 6,800,000, cannot be looked upon as a
+first-class Power; while Germany closely approaches the Russian Empire
+in strength, for although its area is but <span class="numerator">1</span>&frasl;<span class="denominator">43</span> that of the latter, its
+population is only one-half less. Thus area alone is never the deciding
+factor of political power. In the non-recognition of this fact lies the
+source of the greatest errors which have been made by conquerors and
+statesmen. The powerful influence that small states, such as Athens,
+Palestine, and Venice, have exerted on the history of the world proves
+that a great expanse of territory is by no means indispensable to great
+historical actions. The unequal distribution of mankind over a definite
+area is a much more probable source of political and economic progress.</p>
+
+<p>Civilisation and political superiority have always attended the
+thickly populated districts. Thus the whole of development has been a
+progression from small populations dwelling in extensive regions to
+large populations concentrated in more limited areas. Progress first
+awoke when division of labour began to organise and differentiate among
+heaped-up aggregates, and to create discrepancies promoting life and
+development. A simple increase of bodies and souls only strengthens
+that which is already in existence by augmenting the mass. In China,
+India, and Egypt, population has increased for a long time; but
+development of civilisation and of political power has been unable to
+keep pace with it.</p>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_404"></a>[Pg 404]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center" id="THE_FUTURE_HISTORY_OF_MAN">THE MAKING OF THE NATIONS&mdash;V</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe44" id="i_404">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_404.jpg" alt="The Making of the Nations, V" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center">Professor FREDERICK RATZEL</p>
+</div>
+
+<h4>THE FUTURE HISTORY OF MAN</h4>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Man and the Universe</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">L</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">L</span>OOKING
+back upon the history of man, it appears to us the history of
+the human race as a life phenomenon bound and confined to this planet
+alone. We are thus unable to form any conception of progress into the
+infinite, for every tellurian life-development is dependent upon the
+earth, and must always return to it again. New life must follow old
+roads. Cosmic influences may broaden or narrow the districts within
+which man is able to exist. This was experienced by the human race
+during the Glacial Period, when the ice sheet first drove men toward
+the equator, and later, receding, enabled them once more to spread out
+to the north. The limits of world life in general depend upon earthly
+influences; and thus, for mankind, progress limited by both time and
+space is alone possible.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it would be well, for the elucidation of the question of
+development, were geography to designate as progress only that which
+from sufficient data may be established as such beyond all doubt. Thus,
+to begin with, we have learned to know of a progress in space&mdash;man’s
+diffusion over the earth&mdash;which proceeds in two directions. The
+expansion of the human race signifies not only an extension of the
+boundaries of inhabited land far into the Polar regions, but also the
+growth of an intellectual conception of the whole world.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Manifold Growth of Mankind</div>
+
+<p>Together with this progress there have been countless expansions
+of economic and political horizons, of commercial routes, of the
+territories of races and of nations&mdash;an extraordinarily manifold
+growth that is continually advancing. Increase of population and of
+the nearness of approach of peoples to one another goes hand in hand
+with progressing space. Mankind cannot become diffused uniformly over
+new areas without becoming more and more familiar with the old. New
+qualities of the soil and new treasures have been discovered, and thus
+the human race has constantly been made richer. While these gifts
+enriched both intellect and will, new possibilities were all the while
+arising, enabling men to dwell together in communities; the population
+of the earth increased, and the densely inhabited regions, at first but
+small, constantly grew larger and larger.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">History is the Growth of Differences</div>
+
+<p>With this increase in number, latent abilities came to life; races
+approached one another; competition was entered into; interpenetration
+and mingling of peoples followed. Some races acted mutually in
+powerfully developing one another’s characteristics; others receded
+and were lost, unless the earth offered them a possibility of
+diffusion over better protected regions. Already we see in these
+struggles the fundamental motive of the battle for area; and at the
+same time, on surveying this progress, we may also see the limit set
+to it&mdash;that increase in population is unfavourable to the progress of
+civilisation in any definite area, if the number of inhabitants become
+disproportionately large in respect to the territory occupied. Many
+regions are already over-populated; and the numbers of mankind will
+always be restricted by the limits of the habitable world.</p>
+
+<p>Already in the differences in population of different regions lie
+motives for the internal progress of man; but yet more powerful
+are those incentives to the development of internal differences in
+races furnished by the earth itself through the manifoldness of its
+conformation.</p>
+
+<p>The entire history of the world has thus become an uninterrupted
+process of differentiation. At first arose the difference between
+habitable and uninhabitable regions, and then within the habitable
+areas occurs the action brought about by variations in zones, divisions
+of land, seas, mountains, plains, steppes, deserts, forests&mdash;the whole
+vast multitude of formations, taken both separately and in combination.
+Through these influences arise the differences which must at first
+develop to a certain extent in isolation before it is possible for
+them to act upon<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_405"></a>[Pg 405]</span> one another, and to alter, either favourably or
+unfavourably, the original characteristics of men.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Earth’s Variety Reflected in its Peoples</div>
+
+<p>All the variations in race and in civilisation shown by different
+peoples of the world, and the differences in power shown by states, may
+be traced to the ultimate processes of differentiation occasioned by
+variations in situation, climate, and soil, and to which the constantly
+increasing mingling of races, that becomes more and more complex with
+the diffusion of mankind over the globe, has also contributed. The
+birth of Roman daughter states, and the rise of Hispano-Americans
+and Lusitano-Americans from some of these very daughter nations, are
+evidences of a development that ever strives for separation, for
+diffusion over space, which may be compared only to the trunk of a
+tree developing, and putting forth branches and twigs. But the bole
+that has sent forth so many branches and twigs was certainly a twig
+itself at one time; and thus the process of differentiation is repeated
+over and over again. Progress in respect to population and to occupied
+area is undoubted; but can these daughter nations be compared to Rome
+in other respects? They have shown great powers of assimilation and
+great tenacity, for they have held their ground. Nevertheless, their
+greatest achievement has been to have clung fast to the earth; in other
+words, to have persisted. Certainly this is far more important than the
+internal progress in which the branches might perhaps have been able to
+surpass the older nation.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Decisive Element in a Nation</div>
+
+<p>It is an important principle that since all life is and must be closely
+attached to the soil, no superiority may exist permanently unless it be
+able to obtain and to maintain ground. In the long run, the decisive
+element of every historical force is its relation to the land. Thus
+great forces may be seen to weaken in the course of a long struggle
+with lesser forces whose sole advantage consists in their being more
+firmly rooted in the soil. The warlike, progressive, on-marching
+Mongols and Manchus conquered China, it is true, but they have been
+absorbed into the dense native population and have assumed the native
+customs. The same illustration applies to the founding of nations by
+all nomadic races, especially in the case of the Southern European
+German states that arose at the time of the migration of Germanic
+peoples. The health and promise of the English Colonies in Australia
+present a striking contrast to the gloom that reigns over India, of
+which the significance lies only in a weary governing, conserving, and
+exploiting of three hundred millions of human beings. In Australia the
+soil is acquired; in India only the people have been conquered. Will
+a time ever come when all fertile lands will be as densely populated
+as India and China? Then the most civilised, evolved nation will have
+no more space in which to develop, maintain, and root its better
+characteristics; and the success of a state will not result from the
+possession of active forces, but from vegetative endowments&mdash;freedom
+from wants, longevity, and fertility.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Goal of the Nations</div>
+
+<p>Even though the future may bring with it a union of all nations in the
+world into the one great community already spoken of in the Gospel of
+John, growth may take place only through differentiation. And thus
+there is no necessity for our sharing the fear that a world-state would
+swallow up all national and racial differences, and all variations in
+civilisation.</p>
+
+<p>From the fact that history is movement, it follows that the geographer
+must recognise the necessity for progress in space in the sense of a
+widening out of the historical ground, and a progressive increase of
+the population of this ground; further, a development toward the goal
+of higher forms of life together with an uninterrupted struggle for
+space between the older and newer life-forms. Yet, for all this, the
+definite bounds set to the scene of life by the limited area of our
+planet always remain.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, all development on earth is dependent on the universe, of
+which our world is but a grain of sand, and to the time of which
+what we call universal history is but a moment. There must be other
+connections, definite roads upon which to travel, and distant goals,
+far beyond. We surmise an eternal law of all things; but in order to
+<i>know</i>, we should need to be God himself. To us only the belief in it
+is given.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">F<span class="smaller">REDERICK</span>
+R<span class="smaller">ATZEL</span></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<h2 class="s0" id="SECOND_GRAND_DIVISION_THE_FAR_EAST" title="SECOND GRAND DIVISION;
+THE FAR EAST">&nbsp;</h2>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe34" id="i_406">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_406.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE FAR EAST DIVISION OF THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This History begins with the East and comes westward round
+ the world. Japan is therefore the first country to come into its survey, and from
+ Japan we travel to Siberia, which, though extending far west, must be treated as
+ one. After Siberia come China and Korea; and Australia, Oceania, and Malaysia all
+ come into the “Far East” when thus treated geographically. The whole of the white
+ portion of this map is treated in the Grand Division which now opens.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_406_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32" id="i_407">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_407.jpg" alt="History of the World; The Far East" />
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_407_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_408"></a>[Pg 408]</span></p>
+
+<h3 id="Second_Grand_Division" title="The Second Grand Division">&nbsp;</h3>
+
+<h4 id="Plan_of_Second_Grand_Division" title="Plan of Second Grand Division">&nbsp;</h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_408a">
+ <img class="w100 mtop3" src="images/i_408a.jpg" alt="Plan of Second Grand Division,
+ Header" />
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="frontmatter">
+
+<p class="s4 center">SECOND GRAND DIVISION</p>
+
+<p class="s3 center">THE FAR EAST</p>
+
+<p class="s5">The Far East falls into two sections, Asiatic and Oceanic. The Asiatic
+comprises the insular empire of Japan; and, on the continent, China,
+Korea, and Siberia, the extreme northern territory which, though
+extending far westward, must be treated as one.</p>
+
+<p class="s5">The Oceanic division includes the Australian continent, with the island
+of Tasmania; the Pacific islands grouped under the names of Melanesia,
+Micronesia, and Polynesia, to which last New Zealand is attached, the
+whole being conveniently associated under the name of Oceania; and the
+Malay Archipelago, or Malaysia, lying between Australia and the Asiatic
+continent.</p>
+
+<p class="s5">Of these three sections of Oceanic Far East only Malaysia has a
+record extending over centuries. The history of the other two, till
+the white sea-going races began to settle among them, is inferential,
+conjectural. A doubt was suggested whether New Zealand should be
+attached rather to Australia than to Oceania, for the reason that it
+has developed into one of the group of autonomous states which make up
+so large a portion of the British Empire; but this consideration must
+clearly yield to those based on geography and ethnology.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft illowe4" id="i_408b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_408b.jpg" alt="Plan of the First Grand Division, Decoration" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figright illowe4" id="i_408c">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_408b.jpg" alt="Plan of the First Grand Division, Decoration" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s4 center mtop1 mbot1"><b>PLAN</b></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">THE INTEREST &amp; IMPORTANCE OF THE FAR EAST</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>Angus Hamilton</b></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">JAPAN</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>Arthur Diósy and Max von Brandt</b></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">SIBERIA</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>Dr. E. J. Dillon and other writers</b></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">CHINA</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>Sir Robert K. Douglas, W. R. Carles, C.M.G., and other
+writers</b></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">KOREA</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>Angus Hamilton</b></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">AUSTRALIA &amp; OCEANIA</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>Hon. Bernhard R. Wise and Professor Weule</b></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">MALAYSIA</p>
+
+<p class="s5 center"><b>Basil Thomson and other writers</b></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">INFLUENCE OF THE PACIFIC OCEAN IN HISTORY</p>
+
+<hr class="r20" />
+
+<p class="s5 center">For full contents and page numbers see <a href="#CONTENTS_OF_VOLUME_I">Index</a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_408d">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_408c.jpg" alt="Plan of Second Grand Division,
+ Footer" />
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_409"></a>[Pg 409]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s2 center mtop3" id="THE_INTEREST_AND_IMPORTANCE_OF_THE_FAR_EAST">LANDS &amp;
+PEOPLES</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_409">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_409.jpg" alt="Lands and Peoples of the Far
+ East" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s2 center">OF THE FAR EAST</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<h4>THE INTEREST AND IMPORTANCE OF THE FAR EAST</h4>
+
+<p class="s4 center mbot2">BY ANGUS HAMILTON</p>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">T</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">T</span>HE
+influence of environment upon a people is seldom shown more
+prominently than in the high degree of civilisation attained by the
+early Chinese.</p>
+
+<p>Although the records are shrouded in mystery and marred by
+discrepancies, a consensus of scientific opinion traces the origin of
+the Chinese to a nomad tribe who, setting out from the shores of the
+Caspian, continued to wander until it found a home on the banks of the
+Yellow River and in the plains of Shansi. Under the influence of these
+immigrants, the rude manners of the aboriginals gave way to conditions
+in which a knowledge of the smelting of iron and the resources of
+agriculture was acquired. In the upward process of development, the
+weaving of flax into garments and the spinning of silk from cocoons
+followed; then, with primeval chaos reduced to order and the faculties
+quickened by habits of industry, the beginnings of government were
+made in the separation of the tribes from one another under their own
+leaders.</p>
+
+<p>While conditions of a settled existence were in course of attainment
+within the region which is now known as China Proper, the spectacle
+of a prosperous civilisation, reacting upon the uncouth instincts of
+tribes dwelling among the grassy uplands of Mongolia and the plains
+of Manchuria or amid the ice-clad fastnesses of the mountains and
+forest-strewn valleys of the farthest north, was presently to be
+responsible for the rise of predatory races, who, in the zenith of
+their strength, regarded the teeming cities of the south as lawful
+prizes. While the northern heights of Asia were producing a race that
+was to leave an indelible impression on the whole of the Asiatic
+Continent, the evolution of a no less specific type was proceeding in
+the islands off the coast. Carried by a wave of migration from India,
+which lapped the coast of Malaysia, Indo-China and Polynesia, and
+mingled in the islands of the Yellow Sea with a stream from New Guinea
+so that separate ethnographic identities were lost, were tribes who
+looked to the ocean for their existence much as the earlier Chinese
+relied upon the proceeds of their husbandry and the northern nomads
+upon their flocks.</p>
+
+<p>Glancing at the people living amid the plains, the uplands, and the
+islands, it will be seen that an irresistible force was enveloping the
+several races, moulding their instincts and idiosyncrasies in accord
+with the nature of their environment. Thus, while the Chinese, under
+the incentive of a knowledge of arts and crafts, had already produced,
+in 2356 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, a system of civilisation destined to endure to
+our time, the nomads and the islanders, unqualified by knowledge and
+controlled by climate, were hardly removed from a state of savagery a
+few centuries before the Christian era.</p>
+
+<p>If the passage of 4,000 years has affected the Chinese no more than
+the gliding of an hour, the existence of this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_410"></a>[Pg 410]</span> great impassive people
+has not been without its effect upon the nations of Europe as upon the
+races of the Farthest East.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Eternal Mystery of China</div>
+
+<p>A point of ancient contact between Christendom and the world of
+Confucius, reflecting, in contemporary Japan to-day the more permanent
+qualities of its teaching, China has stirred the spirits of the
+adventurous in all ages by its singular graces of refinement, its
+hidden wealth and the exquisiteness of its artistic perceptions.
+Arousing the curiosity of the Arab traders as early as the eighth
+century, it was known to the ancients, if they journeyed by the
+Southern Sea, as the kingdom of Sin, Chin, Sinæ, or China, in
+corruption, perhaps, of the word Tzin&mdash;under which dynasty occurred,
+in 250 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, the fusion of several petty kingdoms into an
+organic empire; or by the name of Seres if, traversing the longitude
+of Asia, they came by the overland route. Known to the Middle Ages by
+the name of Cathay&mdash;corrupted from Kitai, the name by which China is
+still described by Russia and by the races of Central Asia, but which
+itself sprang from the Khitans, the first of the northern dynasties&mdash;it
+represented to European commerce of the thirteenth century the
+embodiment of wealth, romance, and mystery; much as its position,
+maintained unchanged through long centuries, had made it the actual
+repository of the records of Central, as well as Southern, Asia.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Korea, the Middle Kingdom</div>
+
+<p>Contemporary with the early Egyptians, the Assyrians, and the Hebrews,
+and comprising an empire that in 241 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> represented as
+nearly as possible the present limits of the Eighteen Provinces, the
+Middle Kingdom has been affected by the great upheavals of the Western
+world as little as she herself has troubled to impress her methods and
+manner of government upon the aboriginal races beyond her borders.
+Indeed, filled with a lofty disdain of the outer barbarians, it was
+not until the chance migration to Korea of some five thousand Chinese
+under Ki-tze, in 1122 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, that the ethical, social, and
+political systems in vogue in China were carried further afield. Once
+transplanted, however, the aboriginal life of the cave-dwellers of the
+peninsula gave way before the superior culture of Ki-tze’s followers,
+and within the course of the succeeding thousand years a cluster of
+independent states, fashioned upon the parental model, was firmly
+established.</p>
+
+<p>Although in the centuries just before the Christian era there was
+a constant interchange of communications with these states of the
+Eastern Peninsula, the classic conservatism of the Middle Kingdom was
+unabated by any expression of curiosity or interest in the welfare of
+the unknown islands. Yet the islanders, confronted with a struggle for
+existence, had risked the perils of many voyages to the neighbouring
+coasts, spreading wonderful stories of their own land and returning
+with ample evidences of the power and importance of the Korean kingdom.
+Unconscious of this intercourse, but by reason of it, China, the
+tutor of Korea, became through the agency of her pupil a determining
+factor in the upward progression of the islanders when, between 290
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> and 215 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, in consequence of dynastic
+difficulties, a steady stream of inhabitants from the peninsula passed
+from the Land of Morning Radiance eastwards with the intention of
+settling on the coasts of Japan, with whose inhabitants, in fact, they
+at once merged.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Japan at the Dawn of Our Era</div>
+
+<p>Though at the other end of the pole of human endeavour in comparison
+with the Chinese, and familiar only with the elemental accessories
+to life, the islanders, under the influence of this alien strain, at
+the dawn of our era had emerged from a state of tribal control to
+the recognition of the authority of a single and supreme ruler. Two
+centuries later Japanese arms were strong enough to invade Korea,
+where several victories were gained; but even then the Middle Kingdom
+maintained no communication with the islands of the Yellow Sea, and
+was more or less indifferent to the rise of over-sea relations between
+her vassal and the mariners from the East. It is possible to trace
+to this obliquity in the political vision of the Celestial Empire of
+the day much of the subsequent havoc that the self-same race were to
+inflict upon the coasts of Asia. Impressed with no consideration for
+the interests of the mainland, and troubled by no sense of material
+responsibility, Japanese corsairs harried the Chinese and Korean coasts
+unmercifully, finding in the occupation an outlet for that primitive
+but inherited instinct for aggression that stimulates the race to-day.</p>
+
+<p>Disturbed less by the appearance of an island Power than by a
+confederacy of barbarian clans that, by 1000 <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>, had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_411"></a>[Pg 411]</span>
+exerted a mastery over Mongolia, Tartary, and Manchuria, and a century
+later served as a menace to the safety of the dynasty itself, the
+Celestial Empire was beset on two sides by enemies who were attracted
+by the prosperity of its people. Unmindful to a great degree of the
+dangers which were accumulating, an instinct for and an interest in
+trade, confirmed by the revelation of the self-supporting character of
+an empire that reached to Cochin-China in one direction and the Pamirs
+in another, prompted the Chinese to neglect the arts of war in their
+preference for the triumphs of peace.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Peaceful Path of the Chinese</div>
+
+<p>Characterised by a capacity for infinite pains, and possessed of
+a complete understanding of the varied resources of agriculture,
+the Chinese insensibly pursued a path leading always in a contrary
+direction to those marked out by Nature for the islanders, as for
+the fierce nomads of the steppe. Thus innately addicted to habits of
+peace, centuries upon centuries of undisturbed prosperity chastened
+natures that were never very warlike; whereas the exact inversion of
+this existence propelled those hordes of Tartars, Huns, Turks, Khitans,
+Kins, Mongols, and Manchus to leave the Far North in a disfiguring
+passage through Asia, and bade the islanders release their sails in
+expeditions against Korea. It was not enough for the founder of the
+Tzin dynasty to fortify his northern frontiers by the construction of
+the Great Wall, or for that great warrior Panchow to drive the Huns
+before him to the Oxus itself, or for the rulers in the long period of
+disunion which unites the fall of the Han dynasty to the rise of the
+Sung to compromise with the leaders of successive rushes of barbarian
+horsemen by matrimonial alliances with their families. The cause lay
+in the foundations of the race itself. Yet, such was the insidious
+character of the land against which these mounted hordes so often flung
+themselves that, although the imminence of attack ultimately became
+a thing with which the Government of China was wont to conjure the
+peaceful, well-contented lower classes and the luxury-loving upper
+classes, the effect of each invasion was dissipated so soon as the
+invaders experienced the subtle blandishments of Chinese civilisation.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Swift-moving History in Little Known Lands</div>
+
+<p>Presented with remarkable clearness, we have an array of devastating
+invasions, the one following the other in rapid succession and
+occasionally assuming such dimensions that the operations riveted the
+attention of Europe upon the little-known lands of Asia, which in most
+instances required only the passage of a few centuries for the minutest
+vestige to be obliterated. Thus the Kins, who left no trace, displaced
+the Khitans, equally irrecoverable, and were in turn dispossessed
+by the Mongols, whose wide dominion embraced so much of the earth’s
+surface that in 1227 <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> the whole of High Asia, from the
+Caspian to Korea, and from the Indus to the Yellow Sea, recognised
+its sway&mdash;always excepting the strong but still despised sea-state of
+Japan, whose lusty inhabitants threw back the allied hosts of China,
+Korea, and the Mongol monarch in 1274 and 1281.</p>
+
+<p>Yet if the Mongols, in an effort to wreak their vengeance on the
+Chinese, razed to the ground the cities of the vanquished so that their
+horsemen could ride over their deserted sites without stumbling, none
+the less they earned the acclamations of posterity by the facilities
+that the Mongol domination of Central Asia offered to communications
+between the West and Cathay. Marco Polo was not alone in his knowledge
+of the Court of the Great Khan, although doubtless he was the first
+to visit it. But this liberty of intercourse, existing only by the
+land route to Asia, was measured solely by the duration of the Mongol
+rule; freedom of action along the high-road from West to East stopped
+prematurely when the sway of Islam settled once again over Central
+Asia. Two centuries elapsed before, under the banners of the Manchus,
+bold horsemen of the North, in 1644, flashed once again through the
+plains of China, imposing, by a change of costume and of coiffure,
+perhaps the most striking effect of any that has followed in the train
+of these invasions.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Opening the Gates of the East<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Lifting the Veil in Japan</div>
+
+<p>But if the exclusiveness of the Mohammedan conquerors closed the route
+to Cathay so effectually that for two hundred years nothing more was
+heard of the country, Columbus, Cabot and others set themselves the
+task of opening up communications by water. But it was not Cathay
+that they reached. That was left to the Portuguese Raphael Perestralo
+to accomplish by sailing, in 1511, from Malacca to Canton, and thus
+winning the coveted distinction of first approaching<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_412"></a>[Pg 412]</span> China by sea.
+Fifty years later (1560) the same race succeeded in obtaining a
+settlement at Macao, while the Spaniards gazed with longing eyes from
+their strongholds in the Philippine Islands upon the rich junks
+on the China seas. Such was the effect of these trading visits from
+the West that the Chinese in their turn were emboldened to visit for
+themselves these outlying centres of Western traffic. But it was more
+usually vessels from Japan that were seen, for the Chinese were still
+without any special appetite for Western trade. With the islanders,
+on the other hand, a love of barter, acting on the native instincts
+of a maritime people, caused them to traverse these more distant
+waters; although occasionally the scantiness of the resources in their
+own country moved them, so that they were propelled as much by stern
+necessity as by the lust of war and loot or a passion for trade. At
+first Polynesia, then Malaysia and India were visited. Again, trips
+were made to the remote coasts of Mexico. Still later, a colony founded
+at Goa became the centre of an important trading connection throughout
+the Indian hemisphere. In these voyages we see the attractive influence
+exercised by the Pacific and the Indian Oceans on an island people,
+who, fitted by temperament no less than by position, played in Eastern
+waters the rôle filled by the Elizabethan explorers on the coasts of
+the New World.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Raising the Curtain</div>
+
+<p>As yet the distinctive call of the East had been heard only along the
+byways of Turkestan, and even those who had responded had ventured no
+further than the provinces of Cathay. Thus the isles of the Yellow Sea
+were to the Western mariner at the dawn of the sixteenth century as
+much a terra incognita as the Arctic and Antarctic regions are to the
+sailor of to-day. The spectacle of Japanese junks sailing gaily across
+the heaving waters of the Spanish Main and rounding the heel of India
+aroused the interest of the Western traders, who at once embarked for
+the fortunate lands of the East, arranging relations there even before
+they had been welcomed by the Chinese.</p>
+
+<p>With the arrival of Portuguese traders off Japan in 1542, a curtain was
+raised which was never quite to descend. In the interval a commercial
+entrepôt was established on the island of Hirado, and an intercourse
+set afoot that encouraged a visit from a Spanish squadron towards the
+close of the sixteenth century. This visit was returned in 1602 by
+the despatch of a ceremonial embassy to the Governor-General of the
+Philippines.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Untold Wealth of Asia</div>
+
+<p>Throughout the first half of that century Japan continued to attract
+the adventurous, and the Dutch now followed in the wake of the
+Portuguese and Spanish ships. The reception of the bold spirits was
+unequal, and in 1624 all foreigners except the Dutch and the English
+were banished. By 1641 no traders were allowed but Dutch, who, in spite
+of being restricted to the island of Deshima, enjoyed a monopoly of the
+trade with Japan until 1867. In the meantime, abroad, rumours of the
+untold wealth of Asia had brought the Indies, together with Cathay and
+Japan, into distinct prominence. Under the Chinese Emperor Kien-Lung,
+whose reign of sixty years, 1735&ndash;1795, was remarkable for its conquests
+and successful administration, commercial intercourse with the West
+was regularised, and the founding of recognised trading settlements
+on the China coast ended the era of furtive attempts to open trade
+relations with this exclusive people. From these early trading stations
+have sprung the several commercial capitals that now grace the China
+coast. Hong Kong, Canton, Shanghai, Tientsin, and Newchang are the
+links existing to-day between the magnificence of the merchant princes
+and the sway of the “John Company.” Of course conditions are now much
+altered, yet the memories of the past find a very splendid setting
+in the size, dignity, and importance of the modern treaty ports.
+Although the Far East was already manifesting its powers of holding the
+attention of the civilised world, the centres of interest there were
+concerned for many years solely with the kingdoms of China and Japan.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_413">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_413.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">CALM IN THE FAR EAST: THE SETTING OF THE SUN IN THE
+ MONGOLIAN DESERT</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_413_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">China on the Western Horizon</div>
+
+<p>Australasia was a great unknown when the high latitudes of Asia were
+the fount of many conquering races. Obviously, therefore, the magnet
+of acquisitiveness pointed to the value of investigating the bleak
+northern steppes. Once started, the Pacific and the Amur were reached
+within eighty years under the impetus of an unrelenting progress which
+swept from west to east across the regions of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_414"></a>[Pg 414]</span> North Asia. Begun at
+the instigation of Stroganoff, who pushed the hesitating footsteps of
+Yermak across the Urals in 1580, by 1584 this gallant freebooter was
+offering to Ivan IV. with no uncertain voice the wide dominions of
+Siberia as the price of pardon. Khan after khan was unseated, tribe
+after tribe dispossessed, for neither Tartar nor Turk, Buriat nor
+Tunguse, could offer effective resistance to the Cossacks from the
+Don. In the end this all-conquering advance was stayed by the Chinese,
+who, in the treaty of Nertchinsk, 1689, contracted their first formal
+convention with a foreign Power. For nearly two centuries Russia
+faithfully observed the terms of this engagement, apprehensive of
+endangering the Kiachta trade if she continued her encroachments upon
+Manchu territory. By this action the trade of China, which has now made
+the problem of the Far East of dominating importance, became of more
+than passing interest to a Western Government. As generations passed,
+however, the advance of Russia, to the Pacific in one direction, and
+in search of a warm-water harbour in another, was resumed. First
+Eastern Siberia and then Northern Manchuria were added to her Asiatic
+satrapy, and the Amur ceased to be the containing line. Ultimately her
+frontier rested on the ocean to the north, the east, and the south;
+Vladivostock, Port Arthur, Harbin, and Mukden becoming the centres from
+which her Far Eastern dominions were administered.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The English Find Australia</div>
+
+<p>The spirit of adventure, now inspiring all ranks of society as well as
+most of the civilised races of the world, was by no means satisfied by
+territorial conquest. The wide dominions of the sea, as yet untraced
+and all unknown, embraced an empire which appealed as strikingly to the
+sympathies of geographers as did the prospects of Far Eastern trade to
+the feelings of the East India merchants. Much the same ceaseless quest
+carried the Cossack Dejneff, in 1648, round the north-eastern extremity
+of Asia; Torres, a Spaniard commissioned by the Spanish Government
+of Peru, in 1606 negotiated the strait between New Guinea and the
+mainland; and various Dutch expeditions in 1606, 1616, 1618, 1627 and
+1642 endured the dangers of the reef-bound coasts. But it was not until
+1688 that the English first made their appearance on the Australian
+coast. In some measure the situation was awaiting the man. The
+voyages of Captain Cook (1769&ndash;1777) took up the work of geographical
+exploration in the Southern Hemisphere in a style quite befitting the
+records already elsewhere accomplished.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Pacific and the Destinies of Peoples</div>
+
+<p>If between the continent of Australia and the coasts of China to-day
+there is only a commercial connection, it must not be forgotten that
+Australia is closely identified with the Polynesian races, who in
+turn are related to the early Japanese. New Zealand, Australia, New
+Caledonia, and New Guinea, as parts of one and the same continent,
+which now in many places has disappeared beneath the sea, present an
+ethnographic study of unusual importance and interest. In few other
+parts of the world is so great an ethnographic variation imposed upon a
+single connecting racial family as in the island divisions of the South
+Seas&mdash;Australasia, Polynesia, Micronesia, and Melanesia. It is by the
+existence of this underlying relationship that the Indo-Pacific races,
+whatever their specific origin, undoubtedly link up two hemispheres
+which organically are widely separated. By the abruptly disintegrated
+character of existing racial location, however, it is possible to read
+the impression made by the Pacific Ocean on the history of the world.
+If oceanic influences are represented in other ways to-day, and tribal
+migrations in a body are occurrences of the past, the necessities
+of the age still make such heavy demands on what is, after all, the
+immemorial highway of mankind that the Pacific can still be said to
+mould the destinies of races to-day as easily as it has obliterated
+them in the past.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">What will Happen To-morrow?</div>
+
+<p>Turning to Asia, although the Empires of Russia in Siberia and of
+China have worked out their destinies independently of the Pacific,
+remaining unaffected by it more than all other Eastern states, the
+part that the Pacific has played in the development of Asia since the
+eighteenth century cannot go unnoticed. Japan, in particular, has
+profited by the readiness of communication that the ocean provides to
+rise above prejudices which are usually inseparable from an island
+people and are pre-eminently to be expected among Asiatics. In China
+the absence of any prominent dependence on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_415"></a>[Pg 415]</span> the sea, either for food
+or means of transport, has produced in very sinister form an aversion
+against the West. None the less, under pressure from the Occident,
+and without regarding the example set by Japan, the Celestial Empire
+has permitted much commercial encroachment. Succeeding the galleons
+of the buccaneers have come the stately traders of the merchant
+princes of Europe and America, and these in turn have given place to
+the steamers of industrial trusts, exacting as large a tribute as the
+earliest marauders. While the consequences of industrial expansion
+among Oriental people have made the Pacific the focus of much restless
+energy, Japan, now as great a Power on land as formerly she was, and
+is, at sea, has developed an intelligence that has made her pre-eminent
+among the trading nations of the East. Undeterred by exertion, unmoved
+by expenditure, Japan has displaced the carrying trade of the Pacific
+by her fearless invasion of Western markets. Throughout the isles of
+the Southern Seas, and up and down the face of the Pacific slope,
+the islanders have swarmed, filling the lands of their passage with
+unaccustomed energy.</p>
+
+<p>Looking back, then, at the conditions of Asia in the eighteenth and
+nineteenth centuries, and comparing them with those existing to-day,
+it will be noticed that a wide gulf still separates Japan from China
+in the twentieth century as it formerly separated China from the rest
+of the Far East. On the one side there is China, now emerging from
+revolution; on the other there is Japan, voicing the regeneration of
+Asia with raucous tones.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">China Thirty years Hence</div>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the vast interests of the Occident in the Orient are united
+with either power by frequent political intercourse and a traffic which
+has given to the Pacific priority of place in the battle for commercial
+supremacy. Yet while China is commercially independent of the West,
+and Japan dependent upon it, all branches of foreign industry cannot
+but view with alarm the increasing aggressiveness of the spirit of
+independence now inspiring Asia at the prompting of Japan. Obviously
+these signs are the indication of an approaching cleavage between East
+and West, which, when fully attained, will bear witness to the complete
+severance of the shackles hitherto enthralling Asia to the interests
+and purposes of the West. It must not be forgotten that Japan already
+has achieved her complete regeneration. Thirty years hence China, no
+doubt, will have followed suit, when a federacy of the Far Eastern
+Powers may become an accomplished fact. Even at this moment such a
+union is possible, and its realisation would impose upon all European
+Governments the immediate revision of their Asiatic policies.</p>
+
+<p>At this time such a combination is hampered only by the unwillingness
+of China to accept the suggestions of Japan in anything affecting the
+policy of Asia, although, in spite of this objection, active reforming
+influences are gradually effecting important changes throughout the
+Chinese Empire. For the moment, therefore, Japan is content to tread
+alone the path she has marked out, encouraging her subjects by example
+to exploit Asia for the Asiatics, and to secure recognition of the
+doctrine of equality between the white and Asiatic races.</p>
+
+<p>If the full significance of this movement is not yet discernible,
+there is enough evidence to show that the problem will rank among the
+greatest that the politics of the twentieth century can disclose. Not
+only one part of the civilised globe will be affected by the rise of
+a dominant Asia, for the whole world will be confronted equally with
+the necessity of resisting whatever indications may appear. If it is
+difficult to devise an arrangement short of total exclusion that does
+not admit an annual influx of a large number of Japanese, Chinese,
+Korean, or Indian immigrants into the lands affected by this invasion,
+it is at least tolerably certain that if the existing flow of Asiatics
+across the Pacific to America and Australasia continues unabated for
+a further decade, the areas now menaced will be inhabited by a white
+minority.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Problem of the Century</div>
+
+<p>It appears evident that the continuation of the Far East under existing
+conditions is doubtful, if not impossible, in view of the awakening
+of Asia and the visible prejudices that Western democracy entertains
+against the Asiatic. Yet if the clash of conflicting interests
+ultimately precipitates a struggle between the two great racial
+divisions of the world, there can be no doubt that the moral teachings
+of humanity will be discredited.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">A<span class="smaller">NGUS</span>
+H<span class="smaller">AMILTON</span></p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h3 class="s0" id="JAPAN" title="JAPAN">&nbsp;</h3>
+
+</div>
+
+<h4 id="Great_Dates_in_Japan">GREAT DATES IN THE HISTORY OF JAPAN</h4>
+
+<table class="dates_japan" summary="Dates in Japanese History">
+ <tr>
+ <th class="vam">
+ <div class="center">B.C.</div>
+ </th>
+ <th class="vam bl">
+ <div class="center">To 500 A.D.</div>
+ </th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;660</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Supposed foundation of the Japanese Empire by Jimmu</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class="vam">
+ <div class="center">A.D.</div>
+ </th>
+ <th class="vam bl">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;&#8199;&#8199;3</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Emperor Suinin flourished. Abolition of the practice of
+ burying retainers alive on the master’s death</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;&#8199;59</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Reputed Korean immigration</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;125</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Legendary hero Yamato Daké flourished</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;202</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Reputed conquests in Korea by Empress Jingō Kōgō</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;397</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Probable introduction of Chinese civilisation, through
+ Korea</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </th>
+ <th class="vam bl">
+ <div class="center">500&ndash;1000</div>
+ </th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;552</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Introduction of Buddhism</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;645</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">The Taikwa Laws of Kōtōku</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;675</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Encouragement of Buddhism by Temmu</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;689</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">The Laws reduced to a written code</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;750</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Development of the Samurai class</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;782</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Emperor Kwammu</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;800</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Fusion of Shintō with Buddhism by Kōbō Daishi</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>&#8199;889</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">High offices become hereditary in the Fujiwara family</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class="vat">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </th>
+ <th class="vab bl">
+ <div class="center">1000&ndash;1500</div>
+ </th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1155</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Wars of the Taira and Minamoto clans</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1186</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Victory of the Minamoto</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1192</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">The Minamoto Shogunate established. Japanese feudal
+ system</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1220</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Supremacy of the Hōjō family</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1275</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Attempt of Kublai Khan to invade Japan</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1281</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Destruction of the Chinese (Mongol) Armada</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1333</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Ashikaga revolt and overthrow of the Hōjō</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1337</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Rival Mikados of the North and South for fifty-five years</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </th>
+ <th class="vam bl">
+ <div class="center">1500&ndash;1800</div>
+ </th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1543</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">First appearance of Europeans (Portuguese) in Japan</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1549</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Francis Xavier attempts to introduce Christianity</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1574</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Overthrow of Ashikaga by Nobunaga</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1581</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Rapid development of Christianity</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1582</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Death of Nobunaga. Supremacy of his general Hideyoshi
+ (Taikō Sama)</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1583</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Envoys sent from feudal lords to the Pope</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1592</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Hideyoshi’s invasion of Korea</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1598</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Death of Hideyoshi. Accession to power of Iyeyasu</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1606</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Prohibition of Christianity</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1615</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Restoration of Minamoto Shōgunate</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1617</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Foreign trade limited to two ports</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1621</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bl">
+ <div class="left">Japanese prohibited from foreign travel</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1624</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bl">
+ <div class="left">Decree of expulsion against all foreigners except Dutch
+ and Chinese</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1637</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vam bl">
+ <div class="left">Peasant and Christian revolt</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1641</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Dutch and Chinese restricted to Nagasaki</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1694</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Development of trade-guilds</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1792</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Russian squadron visits Japanese coast</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </th>
+ <th class="vam bl">
+ <div class="center">1800&ndash;1867</div>
+ </th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1804</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Russia attempts unsuccessfully to open relations with Japan</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1818</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Captain Gordon at Yedo Bay</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1844</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Holland makes proposals for extension of trade</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1848</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Visit of American and French warships to Japanese
+ waters</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1853</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Commodore Perry in Yedo Bay</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1854</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">First Japanese Treaty with a Western Power (U.S.A.) in
+ March. First Treaty with Great Britain in October</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1855</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Russian Treaty</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1856</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Dutch Treaty</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1859</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Readmission of Christian missionaries</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1861</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Attack on British Legation</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1862</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Murder of Mr. Richardson<br />
+ Japanese Embassy to the Treaty Powers</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1863</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Bombardment of Kago-shima by British</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1864</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Bombardment of Shimonoseki by international squadron<br />
+ Contest and reconciliation of the two great clans (Sats-cho)</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1866</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Kei-ki, last Shōgun<br />
+ New Conventions with Western Powers</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1867</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Accession of Mutsu-hito as Mikado<br />
+ Appointment of Europeans: French military and British naval instructors<br />
+ Resignation of Shōgun Kei-ki</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class="vam">
+ <div class="center">&nbsp;</div>
+ </th>
+ <th class="vam bl">
+ <div class="center">1868&ndash;1907</div>
+ </th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1868</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Restoration of imperial power</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1869</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">The Emperor takes up residence at Yedo, re-named Tokio.
+ Emperor’s “charter” oath<br />
+ The Daimiyo surrender feudal rights</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1871</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Feudalism abolished</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1872</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Establishment of religious toleration</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1873</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Adoption of Gregorian Calendar<br />
+ Universal Military Service</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1874</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Saga rebellion. Formosan expedition</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1875</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Saghalin exchanged for Kuriles</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1876</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Korean Treaty</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1877</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Revolt and death of Saigo</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1879</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Annexation of Riu-Kiu Islands</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1889</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Promulgation of the Constitution. Establishment of local
+ self-government.<br />
+ Anti-foreign reaction</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1890</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">First Imperial Parliament. New civil and commercial
+ codes</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1894</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">War with China</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1895</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Victory over China. Formosa annexed</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1897</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Revised customs tariff. Gold standard. Freedom of Press
+ and public meetings</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1899</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">New Treaties on terms of equality. Opening of the whole
+ country</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1900</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Expedition against Boxers in China</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1902</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Anglo-Japanese agreement</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1904</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">War with Russia</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1905</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Victory over Russia. Japan obtains Port Arthur, S.
+ Saghalin, control of S. Manchuria, and protectorate of Korea<br />
+ Anglo-Japanese alliance</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1907</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Franco-Japanese Agreement<br />
+ Russo-Japanese Convention</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1910</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Korea annexed</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="vat">
+ <div class="right"><b>1911</b></div>
+ </td>
+ <td class="vab bl">
+ <div class="left">Anglo-Japanese Agreement</div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_417"></a>[Pg 417]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i417">
+ <img class="w100 mtop3" src="images/i_417.jpg" alt="Japan; the Country and the People" />
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="s2 center">JAPAN</p>
+
+<p class="s3 center">THE COUNTRY AND THE PEOPLE</p>
+
+<p class="s4 center">BY ARTHUR DIOSY</p>
+
+<h4 id="THE_EMPIRE_OF_THE_EASTERN_SEAS">THE EMPIRE OF THE EASTERN SEAS</h4>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Length and Breadth of Great Japan</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">A</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first">A</span>SIA’S
+furthest outpost towards the vast waters of the Pacific Ocean,
+a long, narrow chain of rocky, volcanic islands, extends north-east to
+south-west along the eastern coast of the mainland, separated from it
+by the Sea of Japan and the China Seas. A glance at the map shows this
+long string of more than three thousand islands and islets, stretching
+from 51°5′, the latitude of Shumo-shu, the most northern of the Kurile
+group of islands, down to 21°48′, the latitude of the South Cape of
+Formosa, a total length of nearly thirty degrees. Its component parts
+extend from 157°10′ east longitude, at Shumo-shu, as far westwards as
+119°20′, the position of the extreme western islets of the Pescadores,
+or Hokoto, archipelago, a distance of nearly thirty-eight degrees, the
+total breadth of the Empire of Dai Nippon&mdash;Great Japan.</p>
+
+<p>The enormous length of the island empire, the configuration of which is
+likened by the Japanese to the slender body of a dragon-fly, provides
+a great variety of climate, from the Arctic rigour of the Kurile
+Islands and the Siberian climate, with its long and terrible winter
+and its short but fierce summer, obtaining in the larger northern
+islands, to the sweltering, steamy heat of Formosa, the tropic of
+Cancer passing through that island and through the Pescadores. These
+extreme temperatures apart&mdash;and they prevail only at the ends of the
+empire&mdash;Japan possesses a temperate climate, similar to that of the
+northern shores of the Mediterranean, but colder in winter and much
+damper, the excessive humidity causing both heat and cold to be very
+trying, though never dangerous. The rainfall is especially heavy in
+June and in September, but no month is entirely without rain. The
+hottest period of the year is called dō-yō, corresponding to our
+“dog-days,” and follows the rainy season of June and early July.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">What Japan Owes to its Position</div>
+
+<p>Japan owes its great humidity, the consequent fertility of such parts
+of its surface as are cultivable&mdash;about 84·3 per cent. of the whole
+area of Japan proper is too rocky to yield food for man&mdash;and the
+luxuriant verdure that clothes the lower slopes of its wooded hills, to
+its insular position, and, chiefly, to two great factors, a current and
+a wind. The great warm current known as the Kuro-shio, the Black Brine,
+or Black Tide, flowing from the tropical region between the Philippines
+and Formosa, raises the temperature of the east coast, and, where it is
+in part deflected by contact with the southern coast of Kiū-shū, also
+of the west coast, acting in the same beneficent manner as the Gulf
+Stream of the Atlantic. The wind that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_418"></a>[Pg 418]</span> affects the Japanese climate
+most strongly is the north-east monsoon, tempered by the action of the
+dark, warm, ocean current.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_418">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_418.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Keystone View Co.</div>
+ <div class="caption">A GLIMPSE OF THE INLAND SEA, THE LOVELIEST SHEET OF WATER
+ IN JAPAN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Studded with hundreds of islands, every part of the Inland
+ Sea of Japan, stretching 240 miles in length, and widening once to 40 miles,
+ offers an enchanting prospect. The islands occur often in clusters, giving the
+ appearance of lakes.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The geographical position of Japan has had great influence on the
+history of its people, and clearly indicates the supremely important
+part the empire is destined to play in the future development of the
+Far East. Its insular character has preserved it from invasion&mdash;it is
+the proud and legitimate boast of the Japanese that no foe has, within
+historical times, trodden Japanese soil for more than a few hours&mdash;and
+whilst it rendered possible the seclusion in which the nation lived for
+more than two centuries, developing, undisturbed, a high civilisation
+of its own, the basis of many of the qualities displayed by the
+Japanese in our day, it has been, in recent times, the cause of Japan’s
+real might in the world&mdash;her sea-power, naval and commercial.</p>
+
+<p>The map shows the four principal islands of Japan Proper:
+H<span class="smaller">ON</span>-S<span class="smaller">HŪ</span>, or Hon-dō&mdash;“Principal Circuit,” the largest island
+of Japan, commonly called Nippon, really the name of the whole empire,
+meaning “Sun-origin,” equivalent to Sunrise Land; K<span class="smaller">IŪ</span>-S<span class="smaller">HŪ</span>,
+or Nine Provinces; S<span class="smaller">HI</span>-<span class="smaller">KOKU</span>, or Four States; and the great
+northern island of Y<span class="smaller">EZO</span>, the second in size, officially termed
+Hok-kai-dō&mdash;“North Sea Circuit.”</p>
+
+<p>The four islands extend, opposite the mainland, from the coast
+of the Russian Maritime Province, on the north-west, down to the
+southern extremity of the Korean peninsula, on the south-west. North
+of Yezo, facing the mouth of the great River Amur, the long, narrow
+island of Saghalin&mdash;Karafuto, in Japanese&mdash;belongs partly to Russia,
+partly to Japan, its southern districts, up to the fiftieth degree
+of latitude, being ceded to the victors by Article IX. of the Treaty
+of Portsmouth (1905). Separating these islands, important channels
+afford communication between the Sea of Japan and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_419"></a>[Pg 419]</span> the Pacific. The
+Gulf of Tartary divides Saghalin from the mainland, whilst the Strait
+of La Pérouse, or Strait of Tsugaru, separates the island from Yezo.
+The Straits of Korea, between that empire, now under the protectorate
+of Japan, and the main island, Hon-shū, or Nippon, are the way of
+communication joining the Sea of Japan and the eastern part of the
+China Sea, the straits being divided into three channels by the island
+of Iki and by those of Tsu-shima, a name rendered for ever glorious
+by Togo’s great victory on May 27th, 1905. The various straits are
+sufficiently narrow to be easily closed to an enemy by Japan’s splendid
+fleet.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_419">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_419.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Keystone View Co.</div>
+ <div class="caption">A CRATER WITH EIGHTY VILLAGES, IN WHICH TWENTY THOUSAND
+ PEOPLE LIVE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Twenty thousand people live in eighty villages in the
+ outer crater of Aso-san, probably the largest crater on earth, competing, says
+ Professor Milne, with some of the great craters of the moon. The crater of
+ Aso-san is from 10 to 14 miles across, and its wall is everywhere 2,000 feet
+ high, the highest peak being Taka-dake, 5,630 feet.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Although Japan has remained immune from invasion throughout historical
+time, its proximity to the mainland, and especially to the Korean
+peninsula, led, in prehistoric ages, to its receiving from the
+continent an influx of immigrants who gradually conquered the
+insular natives, and whose descendants probably form the main stock
+of the present Japanese race. It was this proximity that brought the
+civilisation of China into Japan, in the first instance through Korea;
+the same route was followed by another mighty invasion of foreign
+thought, the introduction of Buddhism.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_420">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_420.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Keystone View Co.</div>
+ <div class="caption">HAKONÉ LAKE AND THE GATEWAY TO THE INARI TEMPLE IN
+ KIŌTO</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Hakoné Lake, the top picture, is a delightful summer resort.
+ The bottom picture, the avenue of Torii (portals), forming the entrance to a
+ Shintō Temple at Kiōto, is a wonderful sight. There are over 400 Torii, arranged
+ in two colonnades.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_420_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe33" id="i_421">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_421.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Keystone View Co.</div>
+ <div class="caption">A GLIMPSE OF THE BUSY NAGOYA CANAL AND OF THE PARK AT
+ KUMAMOTO</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Nagoya is one of the great manufacturing cities of Japan,
+ and a busy canal links the city with the port of Yokkaichi. The park of Suizenji,
+ in Kumamoto, is a beautiful example of Japanese landscape gardening.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_421_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>No country has been better fashioned by Nature for the acquirement
+of sea-power than the Island Empire of the Rising Sun. Its enormous
+extent of coast-line, with countless indentations, especially numerous
+on the south-eastern coasts of Hon-shū, Shi-koku, and Kiū-shū, its
+many excellent harbours, naturally fortified by reason of the narrow
+entrances to the gulfs in which they are situated&mdash;for example:
+Nagasaki, in Kiū-shū, the naval stations at Sasebo, in the same island,
+Kure, in the Inland Sea, and Yoko-suka, near Tōkio Bay&mdash;and, above all,
+the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_422"></a>[Pg 422]</span> excellence of its seafaring population, supply the elements that
+give Japan the mastery in Far Eastern waters.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Seafaring Qualities of Japanese</div>
+
+<p>In the thousands of hamlets nestling in the bays, large and small,
+and creeks of the Japanese islands, dwells a hardy race of fishermen,
+inured to peril and fatigue, men of brawny strength and indomitable
+pluck, frugal and enduring, as fine material for the manning of
+warships and trading craft as the world has ever known. The persistence
+of those seafaring qualities which the Japanese owe chiefly to the
+natural advantages of their island home&mdash;partly, no doubt, to a
+strain of the blood of Malay sea-rovers, perhaps also of Polynesian
+canoe-men&mdash;is a remarkable phenomenon. In olden times they were
+bold seafarers, roaming as far as the Philippines and the coast of
+Indo-China. The waters of Formosa and of Siam were the scene of their
+piratical exploits, for, like all nations destined to be great at sea,
+they passed through a period when the spirit of adventure, as much as
+the lust for spoil, made them into daring sea-robbers.</p>
+
+<p>But, with the closing of Japan to foreign intercourse&mdash;save on a
+strictly limited scale&mdash;early in the seventeenth century, came the
+enactment of laws devised to prevent the Japanese from visiting foreign
+parts; the tonnage and build of ships were fixed by these decrees in
+such a manner that only fishing and coasting trips were thenceforward
+possible. This prohibition lasted for two centuries and a half; yet, on
+its removal, the germ of the seafaring qualities, supposed to have died
+out, was found to have been only in a state of suspended animation; it
+revived with surprising rapidity. In less than a quarter of a century
+it produced a naval <i>personnel</i> capable of manning a highly efficient
+fleet of thirty-three sea-going fighting-ships; in ten years more the
+amazed world recognised Japan’s Navy as the triumphant victor in the
+greatest battle since Trafalgar, and coupled Admiral Togo’s name with
+that of Nelson.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Sea as Japan’s Friend</div>
+
+<p>The sea has, indeed, ever been Japan’s friend; to this day it supports
+a large number of the population, and, in a sense, it may be said to
+keep the whole nation alive, as the fish that teem in Japanese waters
+supply a considerable part of the people’s food. Every marine product
+available as nutriment is utilised, even seaweed of various kinds
+being largely used as food. Fishing seems to have been practised from
+the earliest times; it is probably in recognition of its antiquity
+and national importance that the Japanese of our day still affix to
+any gift a strip of dried seaweed, passed through a piece of paper
+peculiarly folded, the idea they thus symbolise being, it is said:
+“This is but a trumpery present, but it comes from a cheerful giver; be
+pleased to take it as it is meant. Remember our forefathers were poor
+fisherfolk; this strip of seaweed is to remind you that poverty is no
+crime.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Japan’s Beautiful Scenery</div>
+
+<p>There are many other customs connected with the harvest of the sea, and
+innumerable legends and folk-tales wherein the chief part is played by
+some marine spirit or by a visitor&mdash;deity or mortal&mdash;to the mysterious
+realms of the deep. And deep it is, for, off the eastern coast of
+Northern Japan, the sea-bed falls abruptly to a depression&mdash;the
+famous Tuscarora Deep, called after the United States warship of that
+name&mdash;of 4,655 fathoms, nearly 28,000 ft., or more than five miles,
+probably the deepest sea-bed in the world. The encircling sea forms
+an important part of most of the beautiful pictures the scenery of
+Japan offers to the delighted eye. Whether the waves dash tumultuously
+against the precipitous rocks of the south-eastern side of the main
+islands, especially of Shi-koku and Kiū-shū; whether the waters dance
+in the sunshine in the countless bays and creeks of those coasts
+where the frequency of the shelter afforded to fishing-craft led to
+an earlier and more dense settlement than on the north-west coast of
+Hon-shū; whether the far-famed Inland Sea shines like a mirror under
+the moonbeams, or the Sea of Japan tosses its grey billows or spreads a
+sullen expanse under the pall of fog caused by the meeting of warm and
+cold currents&mdash;in all its moods the ocean forms part of nearly all the
+grandest scenery of Japan.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_423a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_423a.jpg" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_423b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_423b.jpg" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_423c">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_423c.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">SCENES IN JAPAN AFTER AN EARTHQUAKE</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">There is at least one shock of earthquake every day in
+ Japan; there are 500 shocks in a year. As late as 1891 an earthquake wrecked two
+ populous towns and destroyed two smaller ones. These photographs show the havoc
+ of such earthquakes.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_424">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_424.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">YOKOHAMA: THE TOWN AND HARBOUR IN THE EARLY DAYS OF THE
+ GREAT CHANGE</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_424_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_425">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_425.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">OLD TŌKIO: THE CITY OF YEDO, SEAT OF THE GOVERNMENT OF
+ THE SHŌGUNS FOR HUNDREDS OF YEARS</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">The “Japan Bridge,” one of the striking features of the
+ capital of Old Japan, was regarded as the centre of the empire, and from it all
+ distances were measured.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_425_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The “Three Views,” known to every Japanese man, woman and child,
+for they are portrayed in countless pictorial representations, are
+sea-scapes. The 808 islets of Matsu-shima, with the thousand trees from
+which the group derives its name of Pine Islands, are the glory of the
+province of Sen-dai, in Northern Hon-shū; the hoary tori-i, or gateway,
+of the great Shin-tō temple at the sacred island<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_426"></a>[Pg 426]</span> of Miya-jima,
+or Itsuku-shima&mdash;so holy that no birth nor death may take place on
+the island, and no dog is allowed there&mdash;stands firmly amidst the
+very waves of the Inland Sea; Ama-no Hashidaté, the “Sacred Bridge,”
+stretches its slender two-mile length of sandy spit, only 190 ft.
+broad&mdash;crowned, all along, with an avenue of pine-trees&mdash;into the blue
+waters of the gulf of Miya-zu, in the Sea of Japan.</p>
+
+<p>The so-called Inland Sea, 240 miles long from its narrow western
+entrance, only one mile across, between Shimo-no-seki on the main
+island and Mo-ji, the busy colliery port in Kiū-Shū to its eastern
+extremity, where it joins the open sea through the Aka-shi and Naru-to
+Straits&mdash;it widens to forty miles where the Bungo Channel divides
+Shi-koku from Kiū-shū&mdash;is perhaps the most lovely sheet of salt water
+in the world. Studded with many hundreds of islands, every part of
+its expanse offers an enchanting prospect, the islets being often in
+clusters, making many stretches appear like lakes.</p>
+
+<p>Water enters into the beauty of every Japanese landscape; districts
+remote from the sea have their lakes and rivers&mdash;generally short,
+swiftly-flowing streams, almost, sometimes quite, dry in summer,
+exposing beds of pebbles, but rushing torrents in the wet season.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_426">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_426.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Keystone View Co.</div>
+ <div class="caption">MODERN YOKOHAMA: THE HARBOUR, SEEN FROM THE HEIGHTS OF
+ THE TOWN</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Biwa is the largest lake in Japan, and far-famed for its scenery;
+its area is about the same as that of the Lake of Geneva, and it is
+nearly as beautiful. Lake Chū-zen-ji, or Chū-gū-shi, is surrounded by
+luxuriant verdure at an altitude of 4,375 ft. above sea-level, and
+is surpassed in beauty by the smaller Lake Yumoto, higher up, in the
+sulphur-springs region, 5,000 ft. above the sea.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_427"></a>[Pg 427]</span> There are many other
+lovely lakes in Japan, Lake Hakoné amongst them. Those just mentioned
+are singled out because they lie in the mountainous district round
+Nikkō, a region on the main islands, to the north of Tōkio, presenting,
+in their greatest beauty, characteristic features of Japanese inland
+scenery&mdash;imposing mountains, stately, venerable trees, and grand
+waterfalls comparable to those of Norway. The aspect of the Japanese
+islands is, as may be inferred, diversified, stern and rugged amidst
+the dark forests of the north, smiling in the sunlit regions further
+south, beautiful almost everywhere.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_427">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_427.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">OVERLOOKING MODERN TŌKIO, THE CAPITAL OF JAPAN</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcontainer">
+<div class="figsub illowe25" id="i_428a">
+ <img class="w100 mtop1" src="images/i_428a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">Looking over the Bay of 808 Islands</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe30" id="i_428b">
+ <img class="w100 mtop1" src="images/i_428b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">Sunset among the pine-clad rocks</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe30" id="i_428c">
+ <img class="w100 mtop1" src="images/i_428c.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">The White Co.</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">A natural arch</div>
+ <div class="caption">SCENES IN MATSUSHIMA BAY, JAPAN</div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>The land is chiefly mountainous, the ranges running from south-west
+to north-east, interspersed with smiling valleys, fertile plains,
+chequered into regular squares by the narrow, raised embankments
+dividing the rice-fields, with, here and there, wild, desolate moors
+in places where even the untiring industry and agricultural skill of
+the people could not induce the stubborn ground to yield sustenance.
+Where anything useful can possibly be made to grow, the Japanese grow
+it. Beside plants of utility, they grow, to a greater extent than in
+any other land, plants intended only for pleasure, for the delight they
+give the Japanese eye by their beauty.</p>
+
+<p>In no other country are flowers so reverently admired as in Japan;
+nowhere are they more skilfully grown and tended. Every month has a
+special blossom, and what may be termed its flower festival, when the
+people, high and low, rich and poor, go in their tens of thousands
+to seek happiness in the contemplation of Nature’s most delicate
+productions. The plum-blossom appears about a month after the New Year,
+and is followed by the far-famed cherry-flower early in April, when,
+in many ancient groves and on many hillsides, the lightest of delicate
+clouds, faintly pink, seem to have settled on the trees.</p>
+
+<p>No words can do justice to the exquisite beauty of Japan in
+cherry-blossom time; it is then easily to be understood how dear the
+flower of the cherry is to the Japanese heart. To the people of Great
+Japan it is the emblem of patriotism and of chivalry, sharing their
+affections with the chrysanthemum, the badge of the empire. Other
+flowers grown to wonderful perfection are the peony, symbolical of
+valour; the graceful wistaria, the glowing azalea, the slim-stalked
+iris, the convolvulus, or “morning-glory,” in many strange forms, and
+the lotus, the sacred flower of Buddhism. Besides these and other
+cultivated flowers, Japan possesses wild blossoms galore that fleck
+its plains and valleys with colour. The leaves of the maple turn, in
+November, to hues of crimson and gold, clothing the woods with a glory
+to be equalled only in Canada.</p>
+
+<p>The natural, beauty of Japan has undoubtedly fostered the æsthetic
+taste inborn with the Japanese of all classes. High and low, they
+admire and enjoy intensely the lovely scenes amidst which they
+dwell. This admiration and enjoyment are strong incentives to their
+patriotism. It seems to them that their beautiful country must indeed
+be <i>Kami-no-Kuni</i>, “the Land of the Gods.” To travelled Occidentals,
+the scenery of Japan suggests, in places, the Norwegian fjords; in
+others, the smiling shores of the Italian lakes; at some points the
+coves of Devonshire, the rocky coasts of the Channel Islands, or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_428"></a>[Pg 428]<br /><a id="Page_429"></a>[Pg 429]</span> the
+pleasant hills of Surrey. That these impressions are correct is proved
+by the fact that Japanese travellers who visit any of these places
+never fail to recognise their similarity to some favourite spot in
+Japan.</p>
+
+<p>The “backbone” of the southern half of the main island and of the whole
+island of Shikoku consists of rock, principally primitive gneiss and
+schists; Kiū-shū, Yezo and the northern half of the main island are
+partly, the Kurile islands&mdash;Chishima&mdash;entirely, volcanic. Subterranean
+fires still smoulder in many parts of Japan, many of the mountains
+being volcanoes, not all of them extinct. Fuji, the glorious cone so
+dear to the Japanese heart, uplifting its peak 12,365 ft. from the
+surrounding plain, is a volcano that erupted last in January, 1708.
+Fifty-one volcanoes, such as Asama and Bandai-san in Eastern Japan,
+Aso-san in Kiū-shū, Koma-ga-také in Yezo, have been active in recent
+years, some of them, especially Bandai-san, with disastrous results.
+Nor do only volcanoes threaten danger to the inhabitants of Japan:
+earthquakes are frequent&mdash;about 500 shocks yearly&mdash;and sometimes
+appallingly destructive of life and property.</p>
+
+<p>The great earthquake in the Gifu region, in the central provinces
+of the main island, on October 28th, 1891, wrecked two populous
+towns&mdash;Gifu and Ōgaki&mdash;completely destroyed two smaller ones&mdash;Kasamatsu
+and Takegahana&mdash;killed about ten thousand people, and caused more or
+less severe wounds to nearly twenty thousand. In Japanese earthquakes,
+a great part of the destruction arises from the innumerable fires
+that break out when the flimsy houses&mdash;mostly of wood, with paper
+partitions, in sliding frames, between the rooms&mdash;collapse through the
+shock, scattering the glowing charcoal from the kitchens amidst heaps
+of highly inflammable materials. Earth-tremors bring not only fiery
+ruin in their train; they cause at times upheavals of the sea that work
+stupendous havoc. On the evening of June 15th, 1896, the north-eastern
+coasts of the main island were overwhelmed by a so-called “tidal wave.”
+The sea, impelled probably by a seismic convulsion on the bed of the
+Northern Pacific, rose in a wave of towering height and, rushing inland
+with terrific speed, engulfed whole districts. More than 28,000 lives
+were lost, and more than 17,000 people were injured.</p>
+
+<div class="figcontainer">
+<div class="figsub illowe25" id="i_429a">
+ <img class="w100 mtop1" src="images/i_429a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">Sea-girt gateway of Miya-ima, a famous Shintō shrine</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe30" id="i_429b">
+ <img class="w100 mtop1" src="images/i_429b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_2">The Sacred Bridge at Nikko</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figsub illowe30" id="i_429c">
+ <img class="w100 mtop1" src="images/i_429c.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">The White Co.</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">View of Fuji-yama across Motosu</div>
+ <div class="caption">THREE FAMOUS SCENES IN JAPAN</div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_430">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_430.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE CEMETERY HILL AT NAGASAKI BEFORE THE MODERN
+ EXPANSION OF THE TOWN</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_430_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_431">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_431.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE CRATER OF FUJI, THE MOST GLORIOUS MOUNTAIN OF JAPAN,
+ MORE THAN TWO MILES HIGH</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Japan has fifty volcanoes that have been active in recent
+ years; this picture shows the crater of the most famous mountain in the island
+ empire. Fuji, the cone so dear to the Japanese heart, uplifts its peak 12,365
+ feet from the plain. It has not erupted since the beginning of 1708. No other
+ natural feature in Japan comes so often into its pictures as Fuji.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_431_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h4 class="s0" title="Map of Japan">&nbsp;</h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe34" id="i_432">
+ <img class="w100 mtop3" src="images/i_432.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">MAP OF THE ISLAND EMPIRE OF JAPAN</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_432_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter mtop3">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_433"></a>[Pg 433]</span></p>
+
+<p class="s0 center" id="QUALITIES_OF_THE_JAPANESE_PEOPLE" title="JAPAN AND ITS PEOPLE; II"></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe44" id="i_433a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_433a.jpg" alt="Japan and Its People; II" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="s0 center" title="ARTHUR DIÓSY"></p>
+
+<p class="s4 center"></p>
+</div>
+
+<h4>QUALITIES OF THE JAPANESE PEOPLE</h4>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Wonderful Islanders</div>
+
+<div class="drop-cap">I</div>
+
+<p class="p0"><span class="hide-first4">I</span>T
+is in presence of great calamities that the best qualities of the
+Japanese masses shine brilliantly. Their resignation, their patient
+endurance, the altruism that prompts them to mutual help and to
+countless acts of kindness; their self-sacrificing bravery in the work
+of rescue, the proud honesty with which they will content themselves
+with the barest pittance, when relief is distributed, so that enough
+may be left for others in greater need&mdash;these are only some of the fine
+characteristics of the wonderful islanders whose achievements in recent
+times have earned the respectful admiration of the world, even of their
+late foes. There is, of course, another aspect of their character; they
+are not without some of the vices and failings human nature is heir to.
+An attempt is made, later in these pages, to describe their moral and
+mental characteristics, and in so doing to hold the scales impartially.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_433b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_433b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption_right">Underwood &amp; Underwood</div>
+ <div class="caption">THE RISING GENERATION IN JAPAN</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>According to the census of 1913 there were 52,985,423 subjects of the
+Emperor of Japan (excluding Korea), and their number is increasing
+steadily and rapidly. The number of males exceeds that of females by
+well-nigh a million. The population is very dense in the fertile
+regions, and increases so rapidly that emigration is absolutely
+necessary. The masses are healthy and strong, capable of great
+endurance&mdash;a fact brought into striking prominence by the achievements
+of the Japanese forces in the Arctic winter of Manchuria, and in its
+torrid summer. The Japanese can, as a rule, bear cold much better
+than heat. Living thinly clad in unwarmed houses that offer but little
+protection and are by day draughty as bird-cages, they early become
+inured to cold. The average physique of the upper classes is by no
+means so good as that of the manual workers, and is considerably below
+the Occidental standards.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A Race of Little People</div>
+
+<p>The Japanese are a black-haired race, with smooth skins, varying in
+colour through various yellowish shades, from a hue of brown, in the
+case of those working in the sun, to a light tint no darker than that
+of the Southern European, with comparatively large skulls, prominent
+cheek-bones, and a tendency to projecting jaws. They are of small
+stature, the average height of the male being only slightly over five
+feet (5·02 ft.), that of the female slightly over four feet six inches
+(4·66 ft.). In other words, the men are of about the same average
+stature as European females, the women proportionately shorter.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Two Types of Japanese</div>
+
+<p>There are, of course, exceptions, some Japanese being of a height
+that would cause them to be considered tall amongst Occidentals; but
+they appear as giants amongst their diminutive compatriots. Both men
+and women have small hands and feet, those of the upper classes being
+beautifully shaped. Even amongst manual workers it is not rare to find,
+especially amongst females, hands of an aristocratic type. The shapely
+appearance of the feet is often spoiled by thick ankles, probably<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_434"></a>[Pg 434]</span> the
+result of wearing sandals. The black hair is abundant on the head,
+straight and coarse; there is hardly any on the arms, legs and chest.
+The eyelashes are scanty, and grow immediately out of the eyelids,
+without the “hem” that borders the eyelids of Occidental races. The
+eyes are dark, full in the broad-faced, plebeian type, narrow in the
+aristocratic cast of countenance. In the latter they are generally set
+more or less obliquely, their slanting appearance being enhanced by the
+fact that the aperture for the eye seems to have been cut, as it were,
+directly in the smooth skin, tightly stretched over the upper part of
+the face, not, as in the white races, in a very marked depression under
+the brow.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_434">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_434.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE CHILDREN’S FESTIVAL: FEAST OF DOLLS IN A JAPANESE
+ HOME</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Japan is the land of love for children, and many quaint
+ customs are observed for their sake. On the third day of the third month in each
+ year the Feast of Dolls is held in thousands of Japanese homes, and the day is
+ one of great delight.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_435">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_435.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE VARIOUS GRADES OF SOCIETY IN OLD JAPAN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">Society in Old Japan was based on the principle that the
+ producer was worthy of high honour. There were four great classes. At the top
+ were the <i>Shi</i>, the nobility and gentry, warriors, administrators, and
+ scholars. Next were the <i>No</i>, the agricultural class; thirdly came the
+ <i>Ko</i>, craftsmen and artists; and at the bottom were the <i>Sho</i>, traders
+ and bankers. Some of the wealthier classes were thus at the bottom, because they
+ were not producers but only circulators.</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Physique of the Nation<br />
+
+<hr />
+
+Cleanest Nation in the World</div>
+
+<p>There are two plainly distinct types in the nation. The majority are
+“stocky,” rather squat people, with broad, round faces, rather thick
+lips and flat noses; the minority, of the aristocratic type, are more
+slenderly built, with long oval face and aquiline nose. In both types
+the trunk is long as compared with the legs, their shortness being
+probably due, in some measure, to the national habit of sitting on the
+floor, in a kneeling posture, the weight of the body being thrown back
+on to the heels. Sitting on benches, as in school and in barracks,
+necessitated by the introduction of Western educational and military
+methods, has somewhat improved the proportions of the Japanese body in
+this respect. The admirable gymnastic training given in the schools
+to children of both sexes, and, still more, the naval or military
+service to which every able-bodied Japanese adult male is liable,
+have done wonders in improving the physique of the nation. Statistics
+collected by the Army Medical Department clearly show that the race is
+gradually growing taller since the introduction of universal service.
+The Japanese grow to maturity more rapidly than Occidentals; they also
+age earlier. As in other countries, very old women are more numerous
+than very aged men. Both the slender, often weakly, upper classes and
+the stout plebeians are nimble in their movements, have supple limbs
+and remarkably skilful fingers. The workers use their toes to hold
+and steady the material on which they are at work, often sitting at
+their labour where Occidentals would stand. The great toe is well
+separated from the others, owing to the effect of the loop of cord
+passing between them to secure the sandal to the foot, the tabi, or
+sock, of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_435"></a>[Pg 435]</span> cotton-cloth being made with a separate compartment for
+the great toe. The skin of the whole body is generally of satin-like
+smoothness, owing, no doubt, to the very hot baths&mdash;at a temperature
+of about 110° F.&mdash;in which all Japanese indulge at least once a day,
+thus maintaining their well-deserved reputation as the cleanest nation
+in the world. To the Occidental eye, the majority of Japanese men
+are not comely, although there are notable exceptions, presenting
+fine faces, of noble and intellectual type. The women are often very
+pretty, judged by the Occidental standard; they are nearly always
+graceful and charming, owing to their exquisite manners and gentle
+voice. The chief element in their charm is undoubtedly their perfect
+femininity. There is absolutely nothing masculine about their ways or
+their speech, yet, when the need arises, they are capable of courage
+and self-sacrifice that places them on the same high level as their
+heroic fellow-countrymen. It may safely be asserted that there are no
+more dutiful wives, no better mothers. There are certainly no daughters
+with a greater sense of filial piety, a virtue that forms the basis of
+family life in Japan.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32" id="i_436">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_436.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">LIFE AND WORK IN OLD JAPAN: SOME TYPES IN THE ANCIENT
+ CAPITAL</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_436_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe32" id="i_437">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_437.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">SOME TYPES IN OLD JAPAN: CHIEFLY DEPICTED BY NATIVE
+ ARTISTS</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_437_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Chief Qualities of the Race</div>
+
+<p>Throughout the Far East the whole social fabric is based on the family;
+the whole state is, indeed, considered as one great family, with the
+Emperor at its head. It is the mothers who train Japanese children from
+infancy in the spirit of reverence and obedience to parents and elders
+in the family circle, and to the Emperor as the supreme chief of the
+great national family. And well do the children assimilate the lessons
+of obedience and devotion so carefully inculcated by the mother, for
+there are none more docile than the boys and girls of Japan, whose
+respectful, courteous manners, not only towards their parents, but
+towards elder brothers and sisters, earn the admiration of Occidentals.
+The chief qualities of the Japanese race are patriotism&mdash;which is, with
+them, synonymous with loyalty&mdash;courage, filial piety, and cleanliness.
+In love of country, in self-sacrifice for the common weal, in loyalty
+to the sovereign&mdash;with them a cult&mdash;in reckless gallantry, and in
+bodily cleanliness, the Japanese surpass all other nations of our time.
+It may be truly said that patriotism is their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_438"></a>[Pg 438]</span> real religion; it
+inspires their magnificent courage in war, on land and sea; it supplies
+the incentive of their lives in times of peace, all merely personal
+considerations being subordinate to this passionate national feeling.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30" id="i_438">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_438.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">WINTER IN JAPAN; BY A JAPANESE ARTIST</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The people of Japan are distinguished, besides, by quick intelligence,
+a remarkable power of observation&mdash;derived, no doubt, from their close
+study of Nature, of which they are devoted lovers&mdash;by a mastery of
+detail, and a very retentive memory, fostered by the system of learning
+by rote imported from China, together with the writing by means of
+ideographic signs, necessitating the memorising of thousands of
+characters standing for words. In politeness they stand first amongst
+the nations, every incident of life being attended by strictly-defined
+rules of social etiquette, observed by all, not only, as in Occidental
+countries, by the more highly educated classes. Their courtesy, though
+often degenerating into mere hollow formality, is based on a kindly
+regard for the feelings of others, a generous altruism and a consequent
+depreciation of self. They are hospitable and open-handed, the giving
+of presents attending numerous festivals and many occasions in social
+life.</p>
+
+<p>Schooled from babyhood by the rules of their rigid etiquette, Japanese,
+young and old, of all classes, are remarkably quiet in their demeanour,
+the higher ranks being extremely dignified in manner, and completely
+concealing their feelings under an imperturbable mask. They bear pain,
+both physical and mental, with Spartan stoicism, their nerves being
+much less easily excited than those of Occidentals, so that they have
+often been described as “a nation without nerves.” Their apparent
+contempt for death arises chiefly from the fact that, to most of them,
+the passing out of this world does not imply a total severance from
+mundane interests, their general belief being that the spirits of the
+departed have cognisance of the doings of those they leave behind. This
+idea, inseparable from the ancestor-worship that has prevailed amongst
+them from time immemorial, and still prevails, was well exemplified in
+their great struggle with Russia, their forces being buoyed up by the
+conviction that the spirits of all the warriors who had died for Japan
+were fighting side by side with their gallant successors.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Artistic Taste of the Japanese</div>
+
+<p>The love of the beautiful in Nature, common to all members of the
+Japanese race, is probably one of the chief factors in the artistic
+feeling so highly developed among all classes. Their appreciation of
+beauty of form and colour, their exquisite sense of appropriateness in
+decoration, the delicate restraint so evident in the productions of
+their wonderfully skilful, patient artist-craftsmen, are too well known
+to require more than passing mention. Even their commonest household
+utensils are beautiful in shape, elegant, and well adapted to their
+purpose. Their innate good taste has added a delicate refinement to the
+vigorous art they received, in early times, from China, chiefly by way
+of Korea. Their æsthetic perception<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_439"></a>[Pg 439]</span> enables even the poorest Japanese
+to derive intense pleasure from the contemplation of the beautiful,
+thus providing them with many delights unknown to the vast majority of
+modern Occidentals. Combined with the simplicity and frugality of their
+lives, and with their naturally contented spirit, it would seem to
+have enabled the Japanese to solve the great problem “how to be happy,
+though poor.”</p>
+
+<p>A nation possessing, to a high degree, the virtues and qualities
+just enumerated would appear to be living in a perfect Utopia. There
+is, however, shade in the picture as well as bright light. This
+happy, contented, smiling people, pre-eminent in domestic virtues,
+industrious, fond of learning, easily governed, gentle in manners
+and speech, capable of rising, in moments of national emergency,
+to admirable heights of patriotic heroism and self-sacrifice, is,
+after all, human, and consequently tainted with some of the vices
+and many of the defects inherent in human nature. The defects of the
+Japanese character are, to a great extent, inseparable from their very
+virtues and good qualities in their extreme manifestations. Their
+intense patriotism is the cause of the anti-foreign spirit still,
+unfortunately, rife amongst them. Their country is to them “the Land
+of the Gods,” their nation the Elect People, living under the special
+protection of Heaven, whose blessings are transmitted to them by the
+benevolence of a superhuman sovereign, directly descended, in unbroken
+line, from the Sun Goddess.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">National Pride of the Japanese</div>
+
+<p>With this belief firmly rooted in the minds of the great majority
+of the people, it is no wonder that all those who have not the good
+fortune to be born Japanese appear to them not only as foreigners, but
+as Gentiles. The statesmen of New Japan are profuse in their assurances
+that it is the desire of their people to form a unit, on terms of
+equality, in the great family of nations.</p>
+
+<p>This assurance is echoed by many Japanese writers; it is in accordance
+with the spirit of the tolerant, all-embracing, gentle Buddhist faith,
+brimming over with sympathy for all living creatures; it is also in
+agreement with the calm, placid tenets of the Chinese philosophy that,
+with Buddhism, has to such a great extent moulded the thought of Japan.
+Yet those statesmen and writers know full well that in this respect
+neither Buddhism, nor Chinese philosophy, nor the cosmopolitan spirit
+of the middle period of the nineteenth century, nor the brotherhood of
+man inculcated by true Christianity, has succeeded, to any appreciable
+degree, in causing the Japanese to look upon foreigners as brothers, or
+even on the same plane with their own heaven-descended race.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe30" id="i_439">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_439.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">LADY AT HER TOILET: BY A JAPANESE ARTIST</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The reckless bravery of the Japanese, their contempt for death, are
+closely related to the slight value they set upon human life and to the
+national delight in tales of bloodshed. Co-existent with the mildness
+of their manners and the placid tenor of their domestic life, there
+is found, deep in Japanese hearts, a wild delight in carnage, the
+legacy,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_440"></a>[Pg 440]</span> naturally most cherished amongst those of the warrior class,
+of centuries of internecine warfare. The sword, “the living soul of
+the Samurai,” is still held in reverence as the instrument not only
+of national defence against the foreign foe, but of vengeance and
+of the chastisement of one looked upon by the wielder of the weapon
+as an enemy to the State. Hence the indulgence with which political
+assassination is still regarded by the masses in Japan. As the brutal
+instincts, inherited from primeval ancestors, often become manifest
+in an English-speaking crowd watching a football match or a boxing
+contest, so, in Japan, the old savagery reveals itself, time and again,
+at fencing bouts, the excited cries of the combatants recalling the
+bad, wild days of yore.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_440a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_440a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">JAPANESE ON A PILGRIMAGE</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>This fierce spirit seems incompatible with the noble generosity towards
+prisoners of war, and the tender care of the enemy’s wounded and
+sick, that redounded to the glory of the Japanese in both their great
+struggles in our time, the wars against China and against Russia. It is
+difficult to believe that savagery can survive in the breasts of people
+capable of organising such an admirable institution as the Red Cross
+Society of Japan, whose noble work, in war and peace, is one of the
+chief glories of New Japan; but it must be remembered that the young
+Great Power still feels itself to be undergoing probation under the
+eyes of an observant and critical world. The natural instinct of the
+Japanese warrior would lead him utterly to destroy the foe who dared to
+oppose his Emperor’s will, and it requires the application of the most
+severe discipline to make him understand that on his exercise of humane
+forbearance to the vanquished depends, to a great extent, his nation’s
+good repute among the Powers.</p>
+
+<p>This desire to stand well in the opinion of foreign nations has
+been so thoroughly inculcated in the people of New Japan that every
+individual brought into contact with foreigners beyond the boundaries
+of his native land feels that the honour of Japan is dependent on his
+behaviour, even in minute particulars. Hence the high reputation for
+excellent conduct enjoyed by Japanese students and others residing, or
+travelling, abroad.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe25" id="i_440b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_440b.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A FISH HAWKER IN JAPAN</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The altruism and self-effacement, born of the family system, fostered
+by the division of the nation into clans&mdash;now officially abolished, but
+still binding huge groups of families with strong ties&mdash;and culminating
+in the most complete devotion to the head of the national family,
+the Emperor, are the causes of a peculiar defect in the Japanese
+character&mdash;the lack of individuality. It may be said of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_441"></a>[Pg 441]</span> the Japanese
+that, on most important matters, they feel and think by millions.
+The whole system of their civilisation tends to make individual
+effort subservient to the common cause; the reverence and obedience
+inculcated from early childhood are not likely to develop the spirit
+of individuality. Hence the wonderful facility with which the Japanese
+combine to carry out any policy they recognise as needful for the
+public welfare once that course has been clearly indicated by their
+trusted leaders as one that has the Emperor’s approval.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe22" id="i_441">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_441.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A PEASANT IN A RAIN CLOAK</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">(Made of straw.)</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Japan is, for this reason, the land where leagues, unions, guilds,
+trusts and “combines” work with astonishing efficiency, such
+institutions being, by their very nature, well suited to the national
+character. There are, of course, exceptional Japanese who chafe under
+the repression of their strong individuality; these occasionally break
+through the national custom and strike out an independent line. Their
+fate is not encouraging to those who might be tempted to follow their
+example. Public opinion reproves them, and they are soon made to feel
+that their conduct is looked upon as anti-national. Those amongst
+them who will not bow their heads to the popular verdict, and refuse
+to be reduced to the level at which the nation strives to keep the
+individual, soon find life in their own country unbearable. In various
+cities of Europe, still more in those of North America, such Japanese
+individualists may be found living in self-imposed exile, shunned by
+their compatriots, until the day, which comes to most of them, when
+they submit and go home to resume their place in the ranks of a nation
+that abhors eccentricity and expects every man to fit into his proper
+groove in the great national machine.</p>
+
+<p>The mental activity of the Japanese, their respect for knowledge and
+for all intellectual pursuits, causing them to admire keen wits and
+exercise of brainpower, have probably contributed in a large measure
+to form one of the traits in their character that is repellant to
+Occidentals&mdash;their inclination to be cunning and deceitful. In spite of
+the high and pure ideals of their chivalry, they have not our loathing
+for deceit, our contempt for chicanery, our respect for the truth. A
+Japanese convicted of an untruth merely conceals his annoyance at being
+found out by a smile, sometimes by a laugh, and is not deterred from
+another statement at variance with facts should he consider it useful
+to make one. Low cunning is frequently looked upon as cleverness;
+the suppression of facts is so common that there is no other country
+where it is so difficult to arrive at the truth. The national failing
+of intense secretiveness arises, no doubt, from the suspicious nature
+of the people, who distrust not only all foreigners, but even most of
+their own race&mdash;a condition of mind due, to a great extent, to the
+widely ramified system of spying that flourished during the rule of the
+Tokugawa Shōguns, and still exists to a lesser degree.</p>
+
+<p>Their infinite capacity for attention to the most minute details leads
+to a certain pettiness, a disinclination to consider great abstract
+questions, and, consequently, to a narrowness of view that accounts
+for some of the blunders which occur in the execution of the otherwise
+marvellously efficient policy of the rulers of Japan.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Manners of the Haughty Samurai</div>
+
+<p>The exquisite politeness of the Japanese is responsible for a great
+part of that insincerity with which they are taxed by Occidentals
+who have been much in contact with them. This extreme courtesy makes
+them so anxious to avoid any speech that might possibly give offence
+that they frequently distort the truth, suppress it entirely, or
+replace it by polite fiction, intended to give pleasure. It should be
+remembered that, in the knightly times of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_442"></a>[Pg 442]</span> old&mdash;they continued until
+the early ’seventies of the nineteenth century&mdash;a Japanese had to be
+very guarded in his speech and demeanour; quite unintentionally, a word
+lightly spoken, an incautious gesture, might give dire offence to a
+Samurai&mdash;one of the gentry, privileged to wear two swords&mdash;who would be
+quick to resent the fancied slight to his punctilious sense of personal
+dignity. Insults, real, and often imaginary, were wiped out with blood.
+Hence the endeavour to avoid any possible cause of offence, for the
+same reason that made Europeans very circumspect in their behaviour in
+the days when gentlemen wore swords and drew them on small provocation.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_442">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_442.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE END OF A JAPANESE FEAST: BRINGING IN THE SEA-BREAM</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>To such a pitch was punctilio carried amongst Japanese gentlemen until
+quite recent times that they preferred death, inflicted by their own
+hands in the most painful manner&mdash;by self-disembowelment, or hara-kiri,
+more elegantly termed seppuku, or “self-immolation”&mdash;to living with
+a stain on their honour, such stain being often merely inability to
+disprove a slanderous imputation. To this day, the Japanese remain the
+most acutely sensitive people on the point of honour; so “touchy” are
+they that friendly intercourse with Occidentals is thereby rendered
+extremely difficult.</p>
+
+<p>What places an additional bar to perfect cordiality in such relations
+is the deplorable fact that an Occidental may unwittingly give grave
+offence to a Japanese without the latter giving any sign of displeasure
+at the time. Allowance is seldom made for the perfectly unintentional
+error on the part of the offender, whilst the grievance is allowed to
+rankle, is rarely forgiven, and never forgotten. Where an Occidental
+would certainly call his friend’s attention to the fact that he was
+displeased by some remark or action that would, no doubt, be promptly
+atoned for by a sincere apology, thus terminating the incident, the
+Japanese says nothing. He nurses his resentment, sometimes for years,
+until a fitting opportunity presents itself to avenge the real, or
+fancied, wound to his feelings by some particularly unpleasant action
+directed against the Occidental, all unconscious of his offence.</p>
+
+<p>This unfortunate peculiarity of the Japanese character is the outcome
+of two main currents that run through the national temperament&mdash;the
+spirit of secrecy, already alluded to, and the thirst for revenge. The
+latter, possibly due to the strain of Malay blood in the much-mixed
+Japanese race, is one of the chief stumbling-blocks hindering the
+introduction of Christianity, and has prevented<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_443"></a>[Pg 443]</span> Buddhism, also a
+religion teaching meekness, from obtaining a complete hold on the
+people. In its petty forms, this spirit of long-cherished spite is
+merely annoying; in its extreme manifestations it becomes exceedingly
+dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>It may be thought that the admirable magnanimity displayed by the
+Japanese towards the vanquished in their wars with China and with
+Russia affords evidence that the old spirit of revenge is dying out.
+Unfortunately, it is as strong as ever, the explanation of the apparent
+anomaly being that, in both cases, the foe was vanquished, and thus
+became, according to the principles of Japanese chivalry, an object
+for mercy and compassion. As long as the opponent resists, or refuses
+to surrender at the mercy of the conqueror, he is implacably attacked;
+the moment he has, metaphorically speaking, grovelled and placed the
+victor’s foot on his head, he is raised from the ground and treated
+with the greatest consideration.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_443">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_443.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A GROUP OF CIVIL AND MILITARY OFFICIALS IN OLD JAPAN</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>This applies not only to warfare, but to those incidents in civil life,
+already alluded to, in which a Japanese considers himself aggrieved,
+especially when the offender is a foreigner. In such cases, humble
+apology for the slight, however unintentional&mdash;in fact, an attitude
+amounting to “I do not know what I have done to offend; but, in any
+case, I own I am in the wrong, and promise, with sincere apologies, not
+to offend again; deal with me as you think fit,” would generally ensure
+the restoration of good relations, provided the apology be sufficiently
+public to gratify the self-esteem of the Japanese. It is hardly to be
+expected that a self-respecting Occidental would demean himself thus to
+atone for an error unconsciously committed.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Defects of Japanese Character</div>
+
+<p>Japanese self-esteem has just been mentioned; it often becomes
+insufferable arrogance, showing plainly, through a cloak of false
+modesty, “the pride that apes humility.” This arrogance, displayed
+chiefly towards foreigners, but also by Japanese in official positions
+towards their fellow-countrymen of inferior rank, is intimately
+connected with another national failing, excessive vanity. It is less
+noticeable amongst sailors and soldiers than amongst civil officials of
+corresponding rank.</p>
+
+<p>Minor failings of the Japanese are jealousy, envy of those who achieve
+success, and, connected with these faults,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_444"></a>[Pg 444]</span> a great love of gossip and
+a readiness to listen to slander, or to disseminate it.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_444">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_444.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">A STREET SCENE IN A VILLAGE OF OLD JAPAN</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Japanese Ideas of Modesty</div>
+
+<p>There are, finally, two charges to be examined that are frequently
+levelled at the Japanese by those who profess to know them well&mdash;the
+accusations of immorality, sexual and commercial. The first of these
+charges may be disposed of by the statement that the Japanese are about
+as moral in their sexual relations as the Latin nations of Europe,
+with the advantage slightly in favour of the Japanese. What has given
+them an evil repute in this respect is, probably, the fact that they
+consider as natural, and treat accordingly, certain evils that the
+Northern Occidental peoples affect to ignore. The natural, simple
+life led by the vast majority of Japanese predisposes them to take a
+natural, sensible view of matters that the less primitive conditions of
+Western civilisation have imbued with an objectionable significance.
+They see, for instance, no harm in nudity where it is unavoidable,
+as in bathing, or convenient, as in the performance of hard work in
+hot weather. A Japanese woman will feel no shame at being seen naked
+when entering or leaving the daily bath, but would strongly object to
+what she would consider the gross immodesty of exposing a considerable
+surface of her body in Occidental evening dress. In the first case,
+the nudity is looked upon as quite natural; in the second, as useless
+and provocative of pruriency.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">National Honour in Commerce</div>
+
+<p>As to the commercial morality of the Japanese, it is necessary to
+observe the great difference that exists between the position, in this
+respect, of Japanese State institutions, financial and commercial
+corporations, and firms of the first rank on the one hand, and the
+great mass of traders on the other. The Imperial Japanese Government,
+municipal corporations, and the great financial institutions and
+industrial and commercial associations under State control (such as
+subsidised steamship companies), have always met their obligations with
+scrupulous fidelity and are likely to continue to do so. With them
+the national honour is considered at stake; it is certain that the
+last Japanese will part with his last garment sooner than involve the
+national credit in disgrace by failure to meet the nation’s engagements
+towards the foreign creditor.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Results of Old Class Divisions</div>
+
+<p>It is, unfortunately, quite otherwise in the case of the great bulk
+of the trading classes. There are, in Japan, a number of first-class
+firms, some of them established for centuries, whose reputation is
+above reproach; but between these and the majority of the merchants a
+great gulf is fixed. It must be remembered that, until<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_445"></a>[Pg 445]</span> the beginning
+of the New Era, in the early ’seventies of the nineteenth century, the
+trading community formed the lowest of the four classes, then sharply
+and immutably divided one from the other, composing that part of the
+Japanese nation that had full civil rights (below them stood only the
+Eta, who carried on despised occupations, involving contamination by
+contact with dead bodies, human or animal, and the outcast Hi-nin).</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_445">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_445.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">IN THE OUTSKIRTS OF YEDO, NOW TŌKIO, THE CAPITAL OF
+ JAPAN</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The nation was divided into Shi, the nobility and gentry, the military,
+scholarly and administrative class; No, the agriculturists; Ko, the
+craftsmen, with whom the artists were counted; and Sho, the traders,
+placed below farmers and handicraftsmen as non-producers.</p>
+
+<p>The natural consequence of this low place in the social scale was a
+lack of self-respect on the part of those engaged in commerce and
+finance that led them to be unmindful of their good repute. Trade and
+finance were looked upon by the majority as occupations unworthy of
+a gentleman and beneath the callings of the peasant and the workman;
+every trick was considered excusable when practised by the merchant,
+whose whole business was looked upon as a sort of warfare, in which
+cunning stratagem could be legitimately employed to the end of personal
+gain, a purpose appearing most unworthy to the classes swayed by the
+old knightly spirit. The evil effects, on a class as on an individual,
+of a bad reputation and consequent public contempt have, unfortunately,
+outlived the abolition of the old social divisions. The Japanese
+merchants and bankers no longer form a separate and despised class;
+the gentry, even members of the aristocracy, are engaging every day
+more and more in financial, industrial and commercial pursuits, many of
+them with marked success, yet the old taint adheres to the bulk of the
+trading community.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Desire to Trick the Foreigner</div>
+
+<p>There are, of course, many strictly honourable dealers in Japan, even
+amongst the smaller tradespeople and retailers. It is amongst the
+wholesale merchants and the brokers that lapses from the straight
+path of commercial integrity are still frequent, especially in their
+dealings with foreigners. It is, unfortunately, still the case that an
+advantage gained over the foreigner, even by the most shady methods, is
+looked upon as, in some way, a national victory. This deplorable point
+of view is likely to prevail as long as Japanese nationalism exists in
+its extreme form.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Japanese National Finance</div>
+
+<p>The Japanese Government has, time after time, loudly proclaimed, by
+the mouths of its statesmen at home, and its representatives abroad,
+its desire to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_446"></a>[Pg 446]</span> facilitate, in every way, the introduction of foreign
+capital, the vital influence so urgently required for the realisation
+of Japan’s bold schemes of industrial and commercial development.
+Strange to say, this cordial invitation, though energetically responded
+to by the capitalists of Europe, especially of Britain, and by those
+of America, has not, as yet, led to the investment of any very
+considerable sums in Japanese enterprises, although, as is well-known,
+the Japanese Government has easily borrowed many millions sterling in
+London, New York and Paris, for purposes of State. The chief obstacle
+to the investment on a large scale, of foreign capital in Japanese
+enterprises is to be found in the fact that, forgetting that capital
+is, after all, a commodity, therefore subject to the laws of supply and
+demand, the Japanese financial and industrial classes do not realise
+that the capitalist, being virtually the seller, controls the price of
+his property.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Social Qualities of the Japanese</div>
+
+<p>A mistaken impression appears to prevail in Japan that foreign capital
+is <i>obliged</i> to find an outlet in the Empire of the Rising Sun and
+must, therefore, submit to such conditions as may seem suitable to the
+Japanese and accept such security as the Japanese may deem sufficient.
+As long as this erroneous view obtains, there can be no considerable
+influx of foreign money into the coffers of Japanese industrial and
+commercial concerns. Experience is proverbially the best teacher; the
+dearth of funds that is certain to follow, in due time, the abnormal
+and feverish activity which is animating Japanese economic conditions,
+immediately after the successful issue of the great struggle with
+Russia, will undoubtedly induce a more reasonable appreciation of
+the circumstances. Once the Japanese have been taught by experience
+that they must regulate their demands by the lowest terms considered
+acceptable by the foreign holders of capital, a vast and profitable
+field will lie before those Occidental capitalists who have the
+advantage of expert advice in their selection of Japanese investments.</p>
+
+<p>As a general rule, it may be stated that intercourse with the people
+of Japan leaves Occidentals very favourably impressed with the social
+qualities of the inhabitants of the island empire. Their exquisite
+courtesy, their gentle manners, and the thousand ways in which they
+demonstrate that kindness of heart that lubricates the wheels of life’s
+machinery all tend to make ordinary, everyday relations with Japanese a
+delightful experience. It is only when the more serious aspects of life
+are approached that the Occidental begins to feel the wide divergence
+between his point of view, in nearly every important matter, and that
+of the Japanese.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Courtesy of the Japanese</div>
+
+<p>It is exceedingly difficult to specify with exactitude the particular
+feature of the Japanese character which lies at the root of the
+unfortunate fact that nearly all Occidentals who have had serious
+dealings with the people of Dai Nippon have emerged from their
+experience exasperated and often disgusted. It is probable that want of
+candour is the trait that acts as the sharpest irritant, for it must be
+confessed that frankness, so highly prized by Occidentals, especially
+by those of the nations that “push the world along,” is neither
+appreciated at its true value nor generally practised by the Japanese.
+The very nature of their elaborate courtesy makes them shrink from
+that bluff frankness which obtains amongst Occidentals on a footing of
+intimate friendship. Even the Japanese mode of speech is a hindrance
+to direct statement of fact; a Japanese, asked if he has ever been in
+England, will reply, in his own tongue, “Yes,” and, after a pause, “I
+have <i>never</i> visited England.” He would not deem it polite to shock his
+questioner by a direct negative!</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i447">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_447.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">THE AMAZING SUICIDE: A GHASTLY FACT IN THE LIFE OF OLD
+ JAPAN</div>
+ <div class="caption_2">This picture represents the Japanese custom of “Hara-kiri,”
+ or disembowelment, known also as “Seppuku,” or self-immolation, the form of
+ suicide which was the privilege of gentry in Old Japan instead of death at the
+ hands of the executioner. Instances of this ghastly act occurred frequently
+ during the Russo-Japanese war, Japanese destroying themselves rather than
+ surrender. The standing figure in the picture is the best friend of the man
+ about to die, acting as his kai-shaku, or second, ready to strike off his head
+ on receiving the sign from the dying man.</div>
+ <p class="linkedimage"><a href="images/i_447_large.jpg" rel="nofollow">LARGER
+ IMAGE</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Another peculiarity of the Japanese character, that is apt to loom
+large in Occidental eyes as a grave national failing, is the lack
+of the spirit of gratitude, as it is understood by the white races.
+The Japanese have, hitherto, never failed to deal out fair measure,
+according to the letter of the contract, to the numerous Occidentals
+whom they have employed, as advisers and instructors, in adapting
+Western civilisation to the material needs of their re-organised
+empire; their labours, as well as those of friends of Japan who have
+rendered voluntary, unpaid services, have also been recognised by the
+bestowal of marks of Imperial favour; but it is doubtful whether a real
+feeling of what we term gratitude<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_448"></a>[Pg 448]</span> has ever entered the hearts of
+the nation towards the many distinguished men who have given of their
+best to assist in the making of New Japan, or to spread a knowledge of
+its greatness. This doubt does not apply to the Navy and Army; those
+gallant forces, keeping the sacred fire of chivalry alight, show deep
+gratitude to the British sailors and European soldiers&mdash;French and,
+after them, Germans&mdash;who instructed them in the modern art of war.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe34" id="i_448a">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_448a.jpg" alt="" />
+ <div class="caption">TYPICAL JAPANESE OF THE MIDDLE CLASS</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Sympathy with their aspirations is, of course, cordially welcomed from
+every quarter by the Japanese; they are delighted to receive help of
+any kind from Occidental friends at such times as, in their view,
+render such assistance or sympathy necessary. When the occasion has
+passed, and they feel independent of foreign support, they not only
+cease to make any effort to attract, but take no pains to conceal their
+indifference to it. This attitude, induced by the severely practical
+nature of their policy, is repugnant to Occidental feeling, and has
+caused the accusation to be brought against the Japanese that they
+treat their foreign friends “like lemons, to be thrown away once the
+juice has been squeezed out of them.”</p>
+
+<p>This course of conduct should not be judged too harshly; it should be
+remembered that such a proud, hypersensitive nation is ever desirous of
+displaying its independence, and is consequently averse to appearing
+to solicit help or sympathy from the outside. A gifted Frenchman, a
+true friend of Japan, the late Félix Régamey, several of whose spirited
+pictures of Japan are reproduced in this History, and who did much
+to gain sympathy for that country amongst his compatriots at a time
+when they were little inclined to extend it, said to the writer: “It
+would, indeed, be a pleasure to help the Japanese, but they will not
+let one help them.” It is noticeable that this coolness towards foreign
+sympathy is usually coincident with a period of national elation,
+consequent on the victory of Japanese arms or the obtaining of some
+solid advantage by Japanese diplomacy.</p>
+
+<p>Reviewing impartially the good and the bad points of the Japanese
+national character, one must come to the comforting conclusion that
+its faults are likely to disappear, or, at least, to be considerably
+attenuated in the future, as Japan enters more and more into the active
+life of the family of nations. The pressure of the public opinion of
+the vast majority of civilised mankind must exercise a beneficial
+influence in bringing the Japanese gradually into line with ourselves
+where the points of view are still too widely divergent to admit of
+cordial co-operation between them and Occidentals. The virtues now
+pre-eminently Japanese may, indeed probably will, suffer to a certain
+extent in the process; it is the writer’s firm conviction that enough
+of them will remain to enable the Japanese to accomplish the glorious
+destiny towards which they are marching. Their patriotism, their
+valour, their thoroughness, their wisdom in matters of national moment,
+are of the virtues that make nations great.</p>
+
+<p class="right mright2">A<span class="smaller">RTHUR</span>
+D<span class="smaller">IOSY</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter illowe50" id="i_448b">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_448b.jpg" alt="Tailpiece" />
+</div>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 67214 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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