[172.3] v. Radloff, 2. Among the Southern Slavs the bride is unveiled beneath an apple-tree and the veil is sometimes hung on the tree. Krauss, Sitte und Brauch, 450.

[173.1] Ploss, i. Weib, 437, 439. For other amulets, see ibid., 441; Klunzinger, 399.

[173.2] Codrington, 184.

[173.3] Ploss, i. Weib, 439.

[174.1] A. H. Kiehl, in vi. Journ. Anthr. Inst., 359.

[174.2] Augustine, Civ. Dei, vi. 9; Ploss, i. Weib, 435, quoting Thomas Bartholinus.

[174.3] Ploss, i. Weib, 436.

[174.4] Bérenger-Féraud, 201, quoting Yéménier.

[175.1] County F.L., Suffolk, 124, quoting Corolla Varia by Rev. W. Hawkins (1634), and deeds of the monastery relating to the property and the bull. The rite had evidently been mutilated.

[176.1] Ploss, i. Weib, 444; Bérenger-Féraud, 200. Other Breton cases are referred to by Sébillot, i. Trad. et Sup., 51.