deified after death, viii. 125;
souls of, in lions, viii. 287 sq.
—— and kings tabooed, iii. 131 sqq.
—— in the Pelew Islands, custom of slaying, vi. 266 sqq.
——, sacred, viii. 28;
not allowed to leave their enclosures, iii. 124;
regarded as dangerous, iii. 138
Chiefs' daughters entrusted with the sacred fire among the Herero, ii. 215, 228
Chieftainship and kingship in Africa fully developed, i. 342
Chikumbu, a Yao chief, xi. 314