[323.2] Crooke, Pop. Rel., ii. 142.
[323.3] Crooke, Tribes and Castes, ii. 380. Cf. the Legend of Dhatu Sena, King of Ceylon (Tennent, Ceylon, i. 389).
[324.1] A. Landes, Contes Tjames, 104.
[324.2] Journal of the Indian Archipelago, iii. 571.
[324.3] Havelok, ll. 602 sqq., 2139 sqq.
[326.1] Owen, Narrative, ii. 418, translating a MS., of Sr. Ferão, a Portuguese governor of the coast. This translation is reprinted by Theal, Records of South-Eastern Africa, vii. 371 sqq.
[327.1] Theal, Records, vii. 191 sqq.
[327.2] 2 Sam., ch. 16; 1 Kings, ch. 2. There is some reason to think that the same custom obtained among the ancient Teutonic peoples, and even in England. Both this and succession by marrying a daughter are frequent incidents in historical traditions as well as in märchen (see Frazer, Magic Art, ii., ch. xviii., and Scapegoat, 368).
[328.1] Junod, S. A. Tribe, i. 199, 206.