[190.1] i. Bull. F.L., 228, citing the Ἐφημερὶς ἀρχαιολογική.

[190.2] Aristophanes, Plut., 840, 937. Initiates at the Mysteries, explains the scholiast on the former passage, consecrated at some shrine the garments they had worn during the ceremony. And see Anrich, 211.

[190.3] Lucan, Phars., i. 135; Vergil, Æn., xii. 766. Bötticher, 62, et seqq., mentions other instances, and in his illustrations gives several figures showing the custom.

[191.1] Georgeakis, 348, 349.

[191.2] Andree, i. Ethnog. Par., 29.

[191.3] vii. Rev. Trad. Pop., 56, citing Boijdowsky, Kievskaïa Starina.

[192.1] Von Wlislocki, Volksgl. Mag., 22, 70.

[192.2] H. H. Wilson, ii. Works, 169.

[193.1] Andree, i. Ethnog. Par., 50, 61; Burton, Sindh, 177; i. N. Ind. N. and Q., 39, 88, 174; Dalpatrám Dayá, 19, 20; i. Hanway, 260; Yule, i. Marco Polo, 128; i. Ouseley, 313, 369, et seqq., ii. 83; iii. 532. The Turks tear off strips of their robes and tie them to the railing surrounding a saint’s tomb. Featherman, Turanians, 398.

[193.2] Robertson Smith, Rel. Sem., 170; Andree, i. Ethnog. Par., 60, 34.