Judah, his connexion with Tamar, a Solar legend, of Sun and Fruit, [180–2];
an ethnographical name, [175], [179–83]
Judges (Shôpheṭîm), Hebrew, legends of, suffered no theocratic transformation, [287–8];
were preserved mainly in the Northern kingdom, [289]
Judges, Phenician magistrates (Suffetes), [242–5]
Ḳâbil and Hâbil, Arabic for Cain and Abel, [347–9]
Kâfir, ‘Infidel,’ its original meaning, [193]
Kalypso and Kalyke, the ‘Covering Night,’ [192]
Kenite origin of name Jahveh asserted by Tiele, [293]
Khitem dynasty adopted Chinese civilisation, [236]