[103.3] Rev. J. Roscoe, The Baganda, p. 262.
[103.4] Rev. J. Roscoe, op. cit. pp. 72, 102.
[104.1] Cullen Gouldsbury and Hubert Sheane, The Great Plateau of Northern Rhodesia (London, 1911), pp. 57, 178.
[104.2] Henri A. Junod, “Les Conceptions Physiologiques des Bantou Sud-Africains et leurs Tabous,” Revue d’Ethnographie et de Sociologie, i. (1910) p. 150; id., The Life of a South African Tribe (Neuchatel, 1912-1913), i. 38 sq.
[105.1] Henri A. Junod, “Les Conceptions Physiologiques des Bantous Sud-Africains et leurs Tabous,” Revue d’Ethnographie et de Sociologie, i. (1910) p. 150; id., The Life of a South African Tribe, i. 194 sq.
[105.2] C. W. Hobley, “Kikuyu Customs and Beliefs,” Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, xl. (1910) p. 433. A similar state of ceremonial pollution (thahu) is supposed by the Akikuyu to arise on many other occasions, which are enumerated by Mr. Hobley (op. cit. pp. 428-440). See further below, p. [115], note 5.
[105.3] H. S. Stannus, “Notes on some Tribes of British Central Africa,” Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, xl. (1910) p. 305. Compare R. C. F. Maugham, Zambezia (London, 1910), p. 326.
[105.4] Max Weiss, Die Völkerstämme im Norden Deutsch-Ostafrikas (Berlin, 1910), p. 385.
[105.5] C. W. Hobley, Ethnology of A-Kamba and other East African Tribes (Cambridge, 1910), p. 61.
[106.1] C. W. Hobley, op. cit. p. 103.