No representative collection of Philippine myths has yet been made, and the present paper can only be considered a beginning. I hope to be able to continue the work.
[1] Read before The Philippine Academy, October 2, 1912. The paper is intended as an introduction to a series of more complete studies in Philippine mythology and religion. [↑]
[2] A complete bibliography cannot be given within the limits of this paper, but a number of the most important printed titles and manuscripts have been cited. [↑]
[3] Blair and Robertson, The Philippine Islands. Cleveland (1906), 37; (1907), 48. [↑]
[4] This Journal (1906), 1, 812–818. Many plates illustrating Ilongot types and culture are given. [↑]
[5] The Philippine Islands and Their People. New York (1898), 362–434. [↑]
[6] A typewritten manuscript of 60 pages, entitled “The Hampán͠gan Man͠gyans of Mindoro” by Dr. Fletcher Gardner. U. S. A. (1905). In the records of the division of ethnology, Bureau of Science, Manila. [↑]