[371] See in [Appendices I.] to [III.] the figures relative to the different populations of Europe, taken from the works referred to by me in the previous note.

[372] Sergi, Origine ... Stirpe Mediterranea, Rome, 1895.

[373] Houzé, “Caract. phys. des races européennes,” Bull. Soc. Anthro., Brussels, vol. ii., 1883, 1st part.

[374] R. Collignon, Bull. Soc. Anthro., Paris, 1883, p. 463, and L’Anthropologie, 1890, No. 2.

[375] Ch. de Tourtoulon and Bringuier, “Limite ... de la langue d’oc, etc.,” Arch. Miss. Sc. Paris, 1876. Cf. Rev. École Anthr. Paris, 1891, p. 218.

[376] Province of Namur, nearly the whole of the provinces of Hainault, Liège, and Luxemburg, as well as the southern part of Brabant. Cf. Bremer, Nationalit. und Sprache in Belgien (with map), Stuttgart, 1887.

[377] H. Gaidoz, “Die französisch. Thäler Piemonts,” Globus, p. 59, 1891, with map; Sachier, Le Français et le Provençal (Fr. trans. by Monet, Paris, 1891).

[378] F. Pullé, “Profilo antr. dell’ Italia,” Archivo. p. Antr., 1898 (with maps).

[379] Dr. N. Manolescu, Igiena Teranului (Hygiene of the Rumanian peasant, an ethnographical inquiry), Bucharest, 1895; S. Weigand, Die Aromunen, vol. i., Leipzig, 1895 (with plates and maps).

[380] A. J. Ellis, English Dialects, London, 1890, two maps; and other publications of the English Dialect Society (1873–98).