[4] Ethnology, 221. Tribes and Castes, I., 4. [↑]

[5] These are perhaps analogous to the Barar sub-division of the Urâons, which have the same totemistic respect for the bar tree. Dalton, Ethnology, 254. [↑]

[6] Dalton, loc. cit. [↑]

[7] For the position of the maternal uncle among the allied Gond tribes see Mânjhi, para. 14. [↑]

[8] Risley, Tribes and Castes, I., 4. [↑]

[9] “In Efate two kinds of people were allowed to pass unharmed into Hades: those belonging to a certain tribe call Namtaku (a sort of yam) and those who had printed or graven or branded on their bodies certain marks or figures tattooed.”

Somerville.—Notes on the Islands of the New Hebrides, Journal Anthropological Institute, XXIII., 10. [↑]

[10] Risley, Tribes and Castes, I., 4. [↑]

[11] Jungle life, 668.—For a more detailed account see Watt’s Dictionary of Economic Products, IV., 502., sqq. [↑]

[12] Panjab Ethnography, 330. [↑]