Page:Folk-lore - A Quarterly Review. Volume 8, 1897.djvu/453

 Index.

417

Jacobs, (Joseph) review by, The Jdtaka, 257

Jagganath, image prepared for Chand Jatra festival, 333, how made, 334 procession of, 337, annual, 355

Jageswar, covered image at, 346

Jainism in India, 369

James, M. E., The Hare, 375

Jandy Well cure of jaundice, 390

Janus, 342

Japan, folklore of, {sec Nihongi) fetish-punishing in, 339, god-bind- ing in, at Kioto, 342, pagan and monkish resemblances in its chro- nicles, 266

Jars, Indian for grain, in relation to Ares' imprisonment, 350, burial in, 350, for god-holding, 351, repre- senting a goddess, 352, or a god, 353, Agastya, and Vasishtha the jar-born, 352 ; fish - progenitor of Vishnu kept in, 352, prison of a cholera demon, 352, Canobus, Jar- form of, in Egypt, 353, other jars in ritual, 352, 353, double sym- bolical jar of Durga-puja, in India,

353

Jason in relation to Orendel 299, and other tales, 300, 301, 305

Jdtaka, The^ or Stories of the BuddhcHs Former Births, vol. ii. translated from the Pali by W. H. D. Rouse, vol. iii. translated by H. T. Francis and R. A. Neil, edited by Prof E. B. Cowell, reviewed by Joseph Jacobs, 257

Jatte and his wife, a, parallel to Giant Wade, 280

Jaufre Rudel, and the Lady of Tripoli, tale, 306

Jaundice cures, 387, 390

Jesus Christ, folktale concerning, 379

Jevons, (Dr. Frank Byron), quoted on god-constraining, 338

Jews, folklore of, {see also Israelites, and Semitic folklore), alleged sac- rifices of Christian children, 276, the Dagon story, 341, devil- binding, 348. falling stars, 203

Jinn, of the sealed bottle, 347, 354, their status, 331

Joseph, a parallel story, 102

Ju-ju, {see Fetish), derivation sug- gested for, 139

Jimcus glaucus, as cure for jaundice, 387

Kabligers of Bijapur, death masks of,

347 . Kalamis, sculptor, 342 Kalasa or sacred jar of the Hindus,

351

Kali, imprisoned, 346

Kandaswami, the procession of the spear, 337

Kannua, god of New Ireland, 341

Katha Sarit Sagara, the, 257

Kennedy, (Louise), Water in Mar- riage Customs, 176

Ker, (Prof. W. P.) Notes on Orendel and other Stories, 289

Keramos, the, prison in Cyprus,

350

Kesava Deva, legend of the idol of, 336

Kidlington (Oxfordshire) Lamb Ale festival at, 315, its sacrificial features, 316, women morris- dancers of, 317

Kidneys as food, Irish idea concern- ing. 15

King's Son of Ireland, tale in re- lation to Orendel, 297, 298, 300,

307 King of the Red Cap, 297, 300 King's County, Medicinal folklore of,

387, 3S8, 389, 390 King's Evil, touching for, in Ireland,

IS

King's Teignton, festival similar to Oxfordshire seasonal feasts, 316

Kingsley, (Mary H.), The Fetish View of the Human Soul, 138 ; Travels in West Africa: Congo Francais, Corisco and Ca»ieroo7is, reviewed, 162

Kioto (Japan) sacred boulder at, 342

Kirtlington, Oxfordshire, Lamb Ale festival at, 313, Indian and other parallels 316, morris-dances of, 317

Kissing in May-Day Festivals, Ox- fordshire, 308

Klebermere (or Lebermere) the sticky sea, 291, 294, 297

Kleisthenes of Sikyon, and the lent image of Melanippus, 337

Knotted cords in witchcraft, S, 7, 8

Kolbing, E. on Hjalmter's Saga, 303, 3'34, 306

Konig Rother, tale classified, 299

Kora, her veiled image at Mantineia, 344

Koramas, the, of Madras, their pot- bound god, 352

VOL. VIII.

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