The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India, Volume 1. Robert Vane Russell
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СКАЧАТЬ for this the article on Kol, from which the above passage is abridged.

77

Bombay Gazetteer, vol. xii. p. 175.

78

Cochin Census Report, 1901, quoted in Sir H. Risley’s Peoples of India, 2nd ed. p. 115.

79

This was permissible in the time of Asoka, circa 250 B.C. Mr. V.A. Smith’s Asoka, pp. 56, 58.

80

Sir H. Risley’s Tribes and Castes of Bengal, art. Tānti.

81

See article Kanjar for a discussion of the connection of the gipsies and Thugs with the Kanjars.

82

See article Chamār, para. 1.

83

Loha, iron; tamba, copper; kānsa, brass or bell-metal; sona, gold.

84

Kānch, glass.

85

Phul, flower; haldi,turmeric; jira, cumin.

86

Crotalaria juncea. See article Lorha for a discussion of the objections to this plant.

87

Morinda citrifolia. The taboo against the plant is either because the red dye resembles blood, or because a number of insects are destroyed in boiling the roots to extract the dye.

88

See article on Brāhman.

89

Sonjhara is a separate caste as well as a subcaste of Dhīmar.

90

See article Kurmi, appendix, for some instances of territorial names.

91

Wilson’s Indian Caste, p. 439.

92

Vol. i. pp. 272, 276.

93

Studies in Ancient History, p. 123.

94

See lists of totems of Australian and Red Indian tribes. Sir J.G. Frazer notes that the majority are edible animals or plants.

95

Address to the British Association, 1902. I had not had the advantage of reading the address prior to the completion of this work.

96

M’Lennan, Studies in Ancient History, p. 123, quoting from Grant’s Origin and Descent of the Gael.

97

Totemism and Exogamy, i. pp. 112, 120, ii. p. 536, iii. pp. 100, 162; Native Tribes of Central Australia, pp. 209–10; Native Tribes of South-East Australia p. 145; Native Tribes of Northern Australia (Professor Baldwin Spencer), pp. 21, 197; J.H. Weeks, Among the Primitive Bakongo, p. 99.

98

See pp. II, 138, 190 (Edition 1891).

99

Totemism and Exogamy, ii. pp. 338, 339.

100

La Cité Antique, p. 254.

101

The Origin of Civilisation, 7th ed. p. 246.

102

W.W. Skeat, Malay Magic, pp. 52, 53.

103

I. p. 253.

104

2nd ed. vol. i. pp. 169, 174. See also Sir E.B. Tylor’s Primitive Culture, i. pp. 282, 286, 295; ii. pp. 170, 181, etc.

105

See also Primitive Culture, i. pp. 119, 121, 412, 413, 514.

106

Messrs. Spencer and Gillan, Native Tribes of Central Australia (London, Macmillan), p. 201.

107

Linguistic Survey of India, vol. iv., Munda and Dravidian Languages, pp. 40, 41, 45.

108

Linguistic Survey of India, vol. iv., Munda and Dravidian Languages, pp. 292, 294.

109

Dr. A.H. Keane, The World’s Peoples, London, Hutchinson, 1908, p. 50.

110

Nimār Settlement Report.

111

See also Primitive Culture, i. p. 408.

112

The Oraons, pp. 408, 409.

113

2nd ed. vol. ii. p. 457 et seq.

114

For instances of omens see article Thug and Index. Also Miss Harrison’s Themis, pp. 98, 99.

115

La Cité Antique, p. 225.

116

W.W. Skeat, Malay Magic, pp. 178, 571.

117

Early History of Mankind, 3rd ed. p. 143.

118

Ibidem, p. 125.

119

See article Joshi for examples of Hindu names.

120

La Cité Antique, p. 357.

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