[13]. Hallam, vol. i. p. 190.
[14]. [The rule of tribal exogamy, whatever may be its origin, is much more primitive than the author supposed (Sir J. G. Frazer, Totemism and Exogamy, i. 54 ff.).]
[15]. Zabti, ‘sequestration.’
[16]. Nazarana.
[17]. It might not be unworthy of research to trace many words common to the Hindu and the Celt; or to inquire whether the Kimbri, the Juts or Getae, the Sakasena, the Chatti of the Elbe and Cimbric Chersonese, and the ancient Britons, did not bring their terms with their bards and vates (the Bhats and Bardais) from the highland of Scythia east of the Caspian, which originated the nations common to both, improved beyond the Wolga and the Indus [?].
[18]. Hallam, vol. i. 155. [Welsh, Cornish gwas, ‘a servant.’]
[19]. Patta, a ‘patent’ or ‘grant’; Pattāwat, ‘holder of the fief or grant.’
[20]. Montesquieu, chaps. xxv., liv., xxxi.
[21]. Ten generations ago. [At present an estate is not liable to confiscation save for some gross political offence (Erskine ii. A. 71).]
[22]. The mountainous and woody region to the south-west, dividing Mewar from Gujarat.