[51] Simson, p. 210.
[52] Koch-Grünberg, Zeitschrift für Ethnologie, xxxviii. 188 (1906).
[53] Cd. 6266, pp. 9, 10, 12, 25, 26.
[54] Rice, p. 690.
[55] Wallace, p. 354.
[57] Hardenburg, Man, p. 134.
[58] This combination is of so exceptional a character that it is hardly to be recognised as a definite trait of organisation, and it follows that though such exceptional cases may point to a possible past unity of clans as a tribe, these clans are now practically small tribes, being incapable of combining for common action. The expressions language-group, tribe, and tribesman are therefore more correct than tribe, clan, and clansman would be.
[59] Cf. im Thurn, p. 185.
[60] This is exactly the reverse of the matrilocal customs related by Sir Everard im Thurn.