Page:Folk-lore - A Quarterly Review. Volume 18, 1907.djvu/520

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Index.

Alva : St. Servan's well, 34 Amangons, King, see King Amangons Amaravati, carvings at, 13 Amargin the hero, 138 Amathaon, son of Don, 145 Amazulu : Callaway's Religious Sys- tem of the Amazulu, 212 ; words

umusi, etc., 238 Amen, deity, Egypt, 117-8 America, see Central America ; North

America ; South America ; and

West Indies Amrum island : baby-wells, 268 Amulets and talismans, 70, 189, 249-

50, 329-30, 362, 426 Anahita, moon-goddess, Iran, 269-70. Ancestors : ancestral spirits, Australia,

467-S, Kafirs, 345-6, Herero, 239 ;

worshipped, Khasis, 241 Ancient Barbarous Sports, 336-8 Ancient Customs at the Riding of

Langholm Marches, 335-6 Ancient Law, by Sir H. S. Maine

and Sir F. Pollock, reviewed, 351,

353-4 Andaman islands : All Father belief, 468 ; mourning custom, 401 ; taboos at puberty, 408 ; tribes resembling Andamanese, Malay Peninsula,

453-4 Angakut, see Wizards Anglo-Saxons: Shore's Origin of the

Am^lo-Saxon ^are; reviewed, 35 1 -3 Angmagssalik : Eskimo settlements,

97

Angola : Kalunga, Death, 239 ; Nzambi, deity, 239

Angus the druid, 28

Animals in folklore : {see also Ante- lope ; Badger ; Bear ; Birds in folklore ; Buffalo ; Camel ; Cat ; Cattle ; Crustacea in folklore ; Deer ; Dog ; Donkey ; Dragon ; Duiker ; Elephant ; Ermine ; Fish in folk- lore; Gazelle; Goat; Hare; Horse; Ibex ; Indian ass ; Insects in folklore ; Jackal ; Leopard ; Levia- than ; Lion ; Monkey ; Mouse ; Mouse deer ; Mule ; Otter ; Pig ; Rat ; Reptiles in folklore ; Rhin- oceros ; Sable ; Sheep ; Sponge ; Stag; Tiger; Unicorn; Wer-beasts; Wolf; a;/a^ Worm) ; all have worms in heads, Aristotle, 215 ; animal clans, jatakas, 22 ; animal stories, 12, 16-7 ; cycle of 12 animals, China, 119; female, not sacrificed.

India, 394 ; skins worn by Armenian clergy, 432-3

Annee Sociologique, /,', vols. IX and X, by E. Durkheim, reviewed, 95-102, 460-6

Annual meeting, 4-5 ; Report of Council, 6- 1 1

Annwn, or Celtic Other-World, 142, 145, 149-51, 152

Antelope : origin of Unicorn, 213-4

Anthropological Essays presented to Edward Burnett Tylor, edit, by N. W. Thomas, reviewed, 457-60

Antigone, the story of, 19

Antilles : fasting as mourning, 398 \ religious purification by vomiting, 393 ; taboos at puberty, 408

Antrim : visited by cows of Eochaid Echbel, 148

Anubis : cult in S. Gaul, 126

Anvil : reversed in cursing. Con- naught, 348

Anyanja, see Nyanja

Apache Indians: string game, 115; taboos at puberty, 408

Apollo : Melkart identified with, 127

Apparitions foretell future, Palestine, 68

Apple : bobbing for apples, Hallow- e'en, Denbighshire and Ros- common, 437-8 ; in folktale, India, 428-9 ; gold, in folktale, Sweden, 199 ; mandrake fruit the " apple of the insane," Arabs, 68; in tales of Celtic Other- World, 155

Apple-tree : connected with Avallach, king of Other- World, 32 ; in folk- tales, 192, 195 ; in tale of Gilla Dacker, 49 ; of St. Serf, Culross,

33 April : cuckoo feast, 341 Aquila, see Scanno Aquitaine : no trace of God-mallet,

137 Arabia, see Aeneze ; Hira, cave of;

Koreish ; and Mecca Arakh tribe : worship of dead, 401 Aralach as king of Hades, 140 Arawn : as king of Hades, 140, or

Annwn, 145, 149-50 Arbois de Jubainville, H. d' : Le

Sejour des Morts suivant la Mylh-

ologie Celtique, 339-40 ; comment

by A. Nutt, 445-8. Arcadia, see Elatus river Argyllshire, see Lochleven Aricia, see Nemi, wood of