their traditions of human victims sacrificed by drowning, ii. 159;
continence at the making of a dam among the, iii. 202;
open cattle-stalls and unyoke ploughs to aid women in childbed, iii. 297;
use an artificial jargon in searching for eagle-wood, iii. 404;
their story of the type of Beauty and the Beast, iv. 130 n. 1;
their ceremonies at ploughing, sowing, reaping and eating the new rice, viii. 56 sqq.;
their sacrifices to the “god rat,” viii. 283;
their belief in transmigration, viii. 291 sq.
Chang, the house of, ancient Chinese family, i. 413
Change in date of Egyptian festivals with the adoption of the fixed Alexandrian year, vi. 92 sqq.