——, Mount, i. 207
Cadys, a Lydian, i. 183
Caeculus, son of the fire-god Vulcan, ii. [235]
Caesar introduces the Julian calendar, ii. [37];
as to German observation of the moon, [141]
Caffre purificatory ceremonies after a battle, ii. [251] sq.
Cairo, ceremony of cutting the dams at, ii. [38], [39] sq.
Calabar district, heads of chiefs buried secretly in the, ii. [104]
Calabria, Easter custom in, i. 254
Calauria, Poseidon worshipped in, i. 203 n. 2