[111] Bühler, Laws of Manu, i.: "In Vedic mythology Manu is the heros eponymos of the human race and by his nature belongs both to gods and to men" (p. 57). Cf. Burnell and Hopkins, Ordinances of Manu, p. 25.
[112] Early Law and Custom, 5.
[113] Pausanias, iii. 2(4).
[114] Maine, Ancient Law, 4; Grote, Hist. of Greece, iii. 101.
[115] Ortolan, Hist. Roman Law, 50; Maine, Early Law and Custom, 6.
[116] Morris, Saga Library, i. p. xxx; Dasent, Burnt Njal, i. xlvi.
[117] Early Law and Custom, 162.
[118] Manx Society Publications, xviii. 21-22.
[119] Strabo, lib. xv. cap. 1, pp. 709, 717; J. D. Mayne, Hindu Law and Usage, 4, 13.
[120] Mackenzie, Roman Law, 11; cf. Pais, Anc. Legends of Roman Hist., 139.