[327] The fable is that a Mauryan woman was married to a Tibetan dog and that their progeny were the Man-tzŭ.
[328] See above, p. 275 (footnote 2).
[329] Introduction to Colquhoun's Amongst the Shans.
[331] Buddhist India, p. 260.
[333] Introduction to Jātaka, No. 149. (Cowell's ed., vol. i. p. 316.)
[334] Ibid., No. 301 (vol. iii. p. 1).
[336] "The struggle between Kosala and Magadha for the paramount power in all India was, in fact, probably decided when the powerful confederation of the Licchavis became arrayed on the side of Magadha." (Rhys Davids' Buddhist India, p. 25.)