[144.1] Sacred Books, vol. iv. p. 169 (pt. i.).

[145.1] Vide Cults of the Greek States, vol. i. pp. 66-69: Steinmetz, op. cit., vol. ii. p. 345, discusses a record concerning the Ossetes, who live habitually in the system of the blood-feud, to the effect that a person guilty of parricide was surrounded and burnt in his house by the whole people, and he suggests that this may be the first example among them of a State cognisance of murder.

[147.1] Antiphon, Or. 6, p. 764: cf. Eurip., Hecuba, pp. 291-292.

[148.1] Demosthenes, c. Aristocrat., pp. 643-644.

[148.2] Antiphon, p. 686.

[149.1] Plato, Laws, 873 A-B: Demosth., c. Euerg., p. 1160.

[149.2] P. 749; cf. 764.

[149.3] Laws, pp. 854, 865.

[149.4] Demosthenes, c. Aristocrat., p. 643.

[149.5] Antiphon, p. 709.