[2688] Smeaton, ‘The Loyal Karens of Burma,’ p. 81.
[2689] Kadams, Ka-káu (Colquhoun, ‘Amongst the Shans,’ pp. 72, 80), Mantras (Bourien, in ‘Trans. Ethn. Soc.,’ N. S. vol. iii. p. 80), Italones of the Philippines (Blumentritt, loc. cit. p. 33), Galela (Riedel, in ‘Zeitschr. f. Ethnol.,’ vol. xvii. p. 77). In Sumatra, a man married by ‘semando,’ i.e., a regular treaty between the parties on the footing of equality, cannot take a second wife without repudiating the first one (Marsden, loc. cit. pp. 263, 270).
[2690] Sea Dyaks (Low, loc. cit. p. 195), the Rejang tribe of the Milanowes in Borneo (ibid., p. 342), Kyans of Baram (St. John, loc. cit. vol. i. p. 113), Alfura of Letti (Bickmore, loc. cit. p. 125), Watubela Islanders (Riedel, loc. cit. p. 206).
[2691] Meyer, in ‘Verhandl. Berl. Ges. Anthr.,’ 1883, p. 385. Cf. Foreman, loc. cit. p. 216 (Tinguianes of the Philippines).
[2692] Low, p. 300.
[2693] Hickson, loc. cit. p. 277.
[2694] Waitz-Gerland, loc. cit. vol. vi. p. 128.
[2695] Finsch, ‘Neu-Guinea,’ p. 101. Earl, loc. cit. p. 81.
[2696] Curr, loc. cit. vol. i. p. 402.
[2697] Ibid., vol. ii. p. 371.