[743] For these cases see Westermarck, op. cit., 520-23; Post, Familienrecht, 253, 254; idem, Afrikanische Jurisprudenz, I, 433-36; idem, Grundlagen, 268, 269; Friedrichs, "Familienstufen und Eheformen," ZVR., X, 251, 252; Kohler, "Studien," ibid., V, 340, 341 (Mongols and Tunguse); idem, "Ueber das Recht der Koreaner," ibid., VI, 403; and Letourneau, L'évolution du mariage, 286 ff., 289 ff.

[744] McLennan, Studies, I, 141, 142, note; Post, Familienrecht, 253. But this is not the general rule, as below shown.

[745] Post, Afrikanische Jurisprudenz, I, 433 ff.; Waitz, Anthropologie, II, 109, 115 (only the woman legally capable of adultery), 120; Munzinger, Ostaf. Studien, 320 (Beni Amer).

[746] Post, Familienrecht, 253.

[747] Westermarck, op. cit., 520, 521.

[748] Powers, Tribes of Cal., 56.

[749] Ibid., 178.

[750] After the wife is "thrown away" the husband becomes a "young man" again, and seeks new partners: Beckwith, "Customs of the Dakotahs," Rep. Smith. Inst., 1886, Part I, 256. Cf. also on the man's absolute right of divorce, Dorsey, "Siouan Sociology," XV. Rep. of Bureau of Eth., 225.

[751] Dobrizhoffer, Account, II, 210-12, 96, 138; cf. Guimarães, "Memoria," Revist. Trim. Hist., VI, 307.

[752] Bonwick, Daily Life and Origin of the Tasmanians, 73, 74. The Tasmanian woman, he adds, even when divorced "was by no means free, as the tribe exercised jurisdiction" in her "affairs and the disposal of her person. She soon came under bondage again to another man, though perhaps to a younger than her first affianced one; as the young fellows were in most instances supplied with their first partners from the overflowing establishments of their seniors, or by the grant of a cast-off bit of property."