Cairnes, J. E., on slave labour, [198];
on slaves and peasant proprietors [299]–301;
on abundance of land as a requisite for the existence of slavery, [303], [304];
on the cultivation of cotton and similar crops, [395].

Cannibalism, [8], [428].

Capital, among the Eskimos, [254];
among pastoral tribes, [268] sqq.;
among agricultural tribes, [297];
subsistence dependent on c., [255] sqq., [268] sqq., [297], [383] sqq., [418];
c. wanting in a system of natural economy, according to Hildebrand, [352], [354].

Captives, treatment of, [413], [424], [428], [436];
adopted see Adoption;
repelled by their former countrymen, [215], [435].

Carey, H. C., on the relation of parent and child, [26].

Carolingian period, [374].

Cattle-breeding agriculturists, [265], [271], [297].

Chamberlain, A. F., on child-life among savages, [26] note [2].

Characteristics of slavery, [5].

Chiefs, as slave-owners, [30]–32, [434], [440];
their wants provided for by [[468]]their subjects, [193];
appropriation of land by c., [329].