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 412 Index. Gudea, bronzes inscribed with his name, ii. 1 16, iSo, iSS. Guillaume, E., quoted, ii. 128. Guyard, Stanislas, his agreements with M. Halévy on the origin of the Chaldaeans, i. 19. Gyges, king of Lydia, his homage to Assurbanipal, i. 44. II Hades, the Assyrian, i. 345. Halévy, J., his disbelief in Turanian element in primitive Chaldaea, i. 19; quoted, 21; his dissent from the reading Gudea or Goudea, 328 ; translation of a text relating to a posthumous life, 344. Haldia, i. 394. Ham, i. 15. Hama, i. 349. Haman, i. 131 ; ii. 71. Hammourabi, i. 35 ; contracts from the time of, ii. 277. Hands, treatment of, in Chaldsean statues, ii. 183. Hanging gardens, the, at Babylon, i. 223 ; ii. 30 ; their position, 35. Harem, at Khorsabad, ii. 20. Harness, how ornamented, ii. 357. Hathor, i. 78. Havet, M. Ernest, i. 15. Hea-bani, ii. 86, 263, 269. Hedjra, ii. 176. Helbig, ii. 302. Heliopolis, i. 56. Hematite, ii. 252. Hera, i. 374. Herat, ii. 374. Herodotus, considers Babylonia a mere district of Assyria, i. 5 ; quoted, 8, 9, 12 ; his 'Acro-vpLOL Àoyoi, 50, 120 ; the the vagueness of his statement as to the height of the temple of Bel, 129, 155 ; the ramparts of Ecbatana, 273 ; his scanty allusions to burial in Mesopotamia, 340 ; his reference to Nineveh, ii. 59 ; his statement as to the height of the walls of Babylon, 63 ; and as to their width, 64 ; quoted, 94 ; his description of the temple of Bel or Belus, 201 ; quoted, 257. Hesiod, ii. 397. Heuzey quoted, i. 63 ; ii. 177, 184. Hierapolis, i. 56. Hillah, i. 27, 38 ; mentioned by George Smith, 153 ;ii. 195. Hinges, bronze, i. 243. Hipparchus, ii. 398. Hisr-Sargon (or Dour-Saryoukiiî), see Khorsabad. Hit, i. 4. Hoefer, Ferd., quoted, ii. 5. Hoffmann quoted, i. 337. Horse, the, in Assyrian sculpture, ii. 149. Horus, i. 78. Household, arrangement of the royal H. in Assyria, i. 96. Humboldt quoted by Rawlinson, i. 3. Hyksos, ii. 378. Hypogea, at Bavian, ii. 227. Ibex, occurs on the summits of shafts, i. 209; in Assyrian sculpture, ii. 150 Iconography, was there an Assyrian ? ii. 138. Ilou, i. 78. India, metals brought from, i. 125. Inscriptions, funerary, their absence i. 55- Iran, ii. 236. Isaiah, ii. 372. Isidore, i. 172. Isis, i. 78. Ismi-Dagan, i. 39. Ispahan, i. 289. Istar (Venus), i. 73, 78 ; how figured, 80 ; her relationship to male deities, 83 ; her descent into hades, 344 ; her arrival at the gate of Hades, 345 ; ii- 8 9, 9 2, 193, 28 9 ; Ivories, ii. 118-125 ; Egyptian character of many ivories, 320 ; how they have acquired their present colour, 322. Ivory, its use in decoration, i. 300; panels in the British Museum, 301 ; used for the decoration of furniture, ii. 319 ; means by which the demand for ivory was supplied, 320. Izdubar, the Assyrian Hercules, i. 346 ; ii. 86, 263, 269. j Jambs, the bronze jambs of the gates of Babylon, i. 241. Janus, ii. 91.