Index.

Ababua, the, 65

Abbas, the Great, 157

Abchases, their memorial feasts, 98, 103

Abdication, annual, of kings, 148;

of father when his son is grown up, 181;

of the king on the birth of a son, 190

Abeokuta, the Alake of, 203

Abipones, the, 63

Abraham, his attempted sacrifice of Isaac, 177

Abruzzi, the, 66, 67; burning an effigy of the Carnival in the, 224;

Lenten custom in the, 244sq.

Abstract notions, the personification of, not primitive, 253

Academy at Athens, funeral games held in the, 96

Acaill, Book of, 39

Accession of a Shilluk king, ceremonies at the, 23sq.

Acropolis at Athens, the sacred serpent on the, 86sq.

Adonis or Tammuz, 7

Aesculapius restores Hippolytus or Virbius to life, 214

Africa, succession to the soul in, 200sq.

—— North, festivals of swinging in, 284

Agathocles, his siege of Carthage, 167

Agrigentum, Phalaris of, 75

Agrionia, a festival, 163

Agylla, funeral games at, 95

Ahaz, King, his sacrifice of his children, 169sq.

Akurwa, 19, 23, 24

Alake, the, of Abeokuta, custom of cutting off the head of his corpse, 203

Alban kings, 76

Albania, expulsion of Kore on Easter Eve in, 265

Alcibiades of Apamea, his vision of the Holy Ghost, 5n.3

Alexander the Great, funeral games in his honour, 95

Algonkin women, their attempts to be impregnated by the souls of the dying, 199

Altdorf and Weingarten, Ash Wednesday at, 232

Alus, sanctuary of Laphystian Zeus at, 161, 164

Amasis, king of Egypt, 217

Amelioration in the character of the gods, 136

American Indians, their Great Spirit, 3

Andaman Islanders, their ideas as to shooting stars, 60

Angamis, the, 13

Angel of Death, 177sq.

Angola, the Matiamvo of, 35

Angoni, the, of British Central Africa, 156n.2

Angoy, king of, 39

Anhouri, Egyptian god, 5

Animals sacred to kings, 82, 84sqq.;

transformations into, 82sqq.

Annam, natives of, their indifference to death, 136sq.

Annual abdication of kings, 148

—— renewal of king's power at Babylon, 113

—— tenure of the kingship, 113sqq.

Antichrist, expected reign of, 44sq.

Aphrodite, the grave of, 4

Apollo, buried at Delphi, 4;

servitude of, 70n.1, 78;

and the laurel, 78sqq.;

as slayer of the dragon at Delphi, 78, 79, 80sq.;

at Thebes, 79;

purged of the dragon's blood in the Vale of Tempe, 81

Ardennes, effigies of Carnival burned in the, 226sq.

Ares, the grave of, 4

Ariadne and Theseus, 75

Ariadne's Dance, 77

Arician grove, ritual of the, 213

Arizona, mock human sacrifices in, 215

Arnold, Matthew, on the English middle class, 146

Artemis, Munychian, sacrifice to, 166n.1; mock human sacrifice in the ritual of, 215sq.

Artemisia, wife of Mausolus, 95

[pg 290]

Ascanius, 76

Ascension Day, 222n.1; the “Carrying out of Death” on, at Braller, 247sqq.

Ash Wednesday, Burial of the Carnival on, 221;

death of Caramantran on, 226;

effigies of Carnival or of Shrove Tuesday burnt or buried on, 226, 228sqq.

Asherim, sacred poles, 169

Ass, son of a god in the form of an, 124sq.;

the crest or totem of a royal family, 132, 133

“Assegai, child of the,” 183

Asses and men, redemption of firstling, 173

Assyrian eponymate, 116sq.

Astarte, the moon-goddess, 92

Astronomical considerations determining the early Greek calendar, 68sq.

Athamas and his children, legend of, 161sqq.

Athena, human sacrifices to, 166n.1

Athenaeus, 143

Athenian festival of swinging, 281

Athens, funeral games at, 96;

hand of suicide cut off at, 220n.

Attacks on kings permitted, 22, 48sqq.

Aun or On, king of Sweden, 57; sacrifices his sons, 160sq., 188

Aurora Australis, fear entertained by the Kurnai of the, 267n.1

Australia, custom of destroying firstborn children among the aborigines of, 179sq.;

magical rites for the revival of nature in Central, 270

Australian aborigines, their ideas as to shooting stars, 60sq.

—— funeral custom, 92

Avebury, Lord, 146n.1, 273

Baal, Semitic, 75;

human sacrifices to, 167sqq., 195

Babylon, festival of Zagmuk at, 110, 113

Babylonian gods, mortality of the, 5sq.

—— legend of creation, 110

—— myth of Marduk and Tiamat, 105sq., 107sq.

Bacchic frenzy, 164

Baganda, the, 11

Ball, V., 279

Ballymote, the Book of, 100

Balwe in Westphalia, Burying the Carnival at, 232

Banishment of homicide, 69sq.

Banna, a tribe accustomed to strangle their firstborn children, 181sq.

Barber, Rev. Dr. W. T. A., 145n., 275

Barcelona, ceremony of “Sawing the Old Woman” at, 242

Barongo, the, 10, 61

Bashada, a tribe accustomed to strangle their firstborn children, 181sq.

Bashkirs, their horse-races at funerals, 97

Bath of ox blood, 201

Battle of Summer and Winter, 254sqq.

Bautz, Dr. Joseph, on hell fire, 136n.1

Bavaria, Whitsuntide mummers in, 207sq.;

Carrying out Death in, 233sqq.;

dramatic contests between Summer and Winter in, 255sq.

Bear, the soul of Typhon in the Great, 5

Beast, the number of the, 44

Beating cattle to make them fat or fruitful, 236

Beauty and the Beast type of tale, 125sqq.

Bedouins, annual festival of the Sinaitic, 97

Behar, custom of swinging in, 279

Beheading the King, a Whitsuntide pageant in Bohemia, 209sq.

Bengal, kings of, their rule of succession, 51

Bengkali, East Indian island, 277

Benin, king of, represented with panther's whiskers, 85sq.;

human sacrifices at the burial of a king of, 139sq.

Berosus, Babylonian historian, 113

Berry, ceremony of “Sawing the Old Woman” in, 241sq.

Bhagats, mock human sacrifices among the, 217sq.

Bhuiyas, the, of north-eastern India, 56

Bilaspur, temporary rajah in, 154

Birds of omen, stories of their origin, 126, 127sq.

Black, Dr. J. Sutherland, 260sq.

Black bull sacrificed to the dead, 95

—— ox, bath of blood of, 201

—— ram sacrificed to Pelops, 92, 104

Bland, J. O. P., 274sq.

Blemishes, bodily, a ground for putting kings to death, 36sqq.

Blood of victims in rain-making ceremonies, 20;

bath of ox, 35;

human, offered to the dead, 92sq., 104;

of sacrifice splashed on door-posts, house-posts, etc., 175, 176n.1;

of human victims smeared on faces of idols, 185

Boemus, J., 234

Bohemia, Whitsuntide mummers in, 209sqq.;

“Carrying out Death” in, 237sq.

Bones of sacrificial victim not broken, 20

Bonfire, jumping over, 262

Boni, in Celebes, 40

Book of Acaill, 39

Borans, their custom of sacrificing their children, 181

Bororos, the, of Brazil, 62

Bourges, ceremony of “Sawing the Old Woman” at, 242

Bourke, Captain J. G., 215

[pg 291]

Boxers at funerals, 97

Brahmans, the ceremonial swinging of, 150, 156sq.

Braller in Transylvania, 230; “Carrying out Death” at, 247sqq.

Brasidas, funeral games in his honour, 94

Brazilian Indians, their indifference to death, 138

Breezes, magical means of securing, 287

Bridegroom of the May, 266

Bringing in Summer, 233, 237, 238, 246sqq.

Britomartis and Minos, 73

Brittany, Burial of Shrove Tuesday or of the Carnival in, 229sq.

Brockelmann, C., 116

Bronze ploughs used by Etruscans at founding cities, 157

Brother and sister marriages in royal families, 193sq.

Buddhist monks, suicide of, 42sq.

Budge, E. A. Wallis, 5n.3

Buginese of Celebes, their custom of swinging, 277

Bull, Pasiphae and the, 71; as symbol of the sun, 71sq.;

the brazen, of Phalaris, 75;

said to have guided the Samnites, 186n.4

—— and cow, represented by masked actors, 71

Bull-headed image of the sun, 75, 76, 78

Burgebrach in Bavaria, straw-man burnt on Ash Wednesday at, 232

Burial alive of the aged, 11sq.;

in jars, 12sq.;

of infants to secure rebirth, 199sq.;

of Shrove Tuesday, 228

Burning an effigy of the Carnival, 223, 224, 228sq., 229sq., 232sq.

—— effigies of Shrove Tuesday, 227sqq.;

of Winter at Zurich, 260sq.

“Burying the Carnival,” 209, 220sqq.

Busoga, mock human sacrifice in, 215

Cabunian, Mount, 3

Cadiz, custom of swinging at, 284

Cadmea, the, 79

Cadmus, servitude of, for the slaughter of the dragon, 70n.1, 78;

the slayer of the dragon at Thebes, 78sq.

—— and Harmonia, their transformation into serpents, 84;

marriage of, 88, 89

Caffres, the, 65

Caiem, the caliph, 8

Calabria, ceremony of “Sawing the Old Woman” in, 241;

custom of swinging in, 284

Calendar, the early Greek, determined by astronomical considerations, 68sq.;

closely bound up with religion, 69;

the Syro-Macedonian, 116

Calica Puran, an Indian law-book, 217

Calicut, rule of succession observed by the kings of, 47sqq., 206

California, Indians of, 62

Cambodia, Kings of Fire and Water in, 14;

annual abdication of the king of, 148

Canaanites, their custom of burning their children in honour of Baal, 168

Canada, Indians of, their ceremony for mitigating the cold of winter, 259sq.

Caramantran, death of, on Ash Wednesday in Provence, 226

Carinthia, ceremony at the installation of a prince of, 154sq.

Carman, the fair of, 100, 101

Carnival, Burying the, 209, 220sqq.;

swings taken down at, 287

“Carnival (Shrovetide) Fool,” 231

Carolina, king's son wounded among the Indians of, 184sq.

Carrier Indians, succession to the soul among the, 199

“Carrying out Death,” 221, 233sqq., 246sqq.

Carthaginian sacrifice of children to Moloch, 75;

to Baal, 167sq.

Cassange, in Angola, king of, 203;

human sacrifice at installation of king of, 56sq.

Cassotis, oracular spring, 79

Castaly, the oracular spring of, 79

Catalonia, funeral of Carnival in, 225

Cattle sacrificed instead of human beings, 166n. 1

Caucasus, funeral games among the people of the, 97sq.

Cauxanas, Indian tribe of the Amazon, kill all their firstborn children, 185sq.

Cecrops, half-serpent, half-man, 86sq.

Celebes, sanctity of regalia in, 202; the Toboongkoos of, 219

Celts of Gaul, their indifference to death, 142sq.

Cemeteries, fairs held at, 101, 102

Chaka, a Zulu tyrant, 36sq.

Chama, town on the Gold Coast, 129

Chariot-race at Olympia, 91, 104sq., 287

—— races in honour of the dead, 93

Chewsurs, their funeral games, 98

Cheyne, Professor T. K., 86n.4

Chilcotin Indians, their practice at an eclipse of the sun, 77

“Child of the assegai,” 183

Children sacrificed to Moloch, 75;

sacrificed by the Semites, 166sqq.;

dislike of parents to have children like themselves, 287

Chinese indifference to death, 144sqq., 273sqq.;

reports of custom of devouring firstborn children, 180

Chiriguanos, the, of South America, 12

[pg 292]

Chirol, Valentine, 274

Chitomé, a pontiff in Congo, the manner of his death, 14sq.

Christmas, custom of swinging at, 284

Chrudim in Bohemia, effigy of Death burnt at, 239

Chukchees, voluntary deaths among the, 13

Circassia, games in honour of the dead in, 98

Circumcision of father as a mode of redeeming his offspring, 181;

mimic rite of, 219sq.

Cities, Etruscan ceremony at the founding of, 157

Cloud-dragon, myth of the, 107

Cluis-Dessus and Cluis-Dessous, custom of “Sawing the Old Woman” at, 241sq.

Cnossus, Minos at, 70sqq.;

the labyrinth at, 75sqq.

Cobra, the crest of the Maharajah of Nagpur, 132sq.

Cock, king represented with the feathers of a, 85

Colchis, Phrixus in, 162

Congo, the pontiff Chitomé in, 14

Conjunction of sun and moon, a time for marriage, 73

Consecration of firstlings, 172

Contempt of death, 142sqq.

Contests, dramatic, between actors representing Summer and Winter, 254sqq.

Conti, Nicolo, 54

Conybeare, F. C., 5n.3

Cook, A. B., 71n.2, 78n.2, 79n.1, 80, 81n.1, 82ns.1 and 3, 89n.5, 90

Corannas of South Africa, custom as to succession among the, 191sq.

Corea, custom of swinging in, 284sq.

Cornaby, Rev. W. A., 273

Cornford, F. M., 91n.7

Corn-harvest, the first-fruits of the, offered at Lammas, 101sq.

—— -spirit called the Old Man or the Old Woman, 253sq.

Cornwall, temporary king in, 153sq.

Corporeal relics of dead kings confer right to throne, 202sq.

Courtiers required to imitate their sovereign, 39sq.

Cow as symbol of the moon, 71sq.

Crane, dance called the, 75

Crassus, Publicius Licinius, 96

Creation, myths of, 106sqq.;

Babylonian legend of, 110

Creator, the grave of the, 3

Crete, grave of Zeus in, 3

Criminals sacrificed, 195

Crocodile clan, 31

Cromm Cruach, a legendary Irish idol, 183

Cronus buried in Sicily, 4;

his sacrifice of his son, 166, 179;

his treatment of his father and his children, 192;

his marriage with his sister Rhea, 194

Crooke, W., 53n.1, 157n.5, 159n.1

Crown of laurel, 78, 80sqq.;

of oak leaves, 80sqq.;

of olive at Olympia, 91

Crowning, festival of the, at Delphi, 78sqq.

Cruachan, the fair of, 101

Crystals, superstitions as to, 64n.6

Cupid and Psyche, story of, 131

Cutting or lacerating the body in honour of the dead, 92sq., 97

Cuttle-fish, expiation for killing a, 217

Cychreus, king of Salamis, 87

Cycle, the octennial, based on an attempt to reconcile solar and lunar time, 68sq.

Cyclopes, slaughter of the, 78n.4

Cytisorus, 162

Czechs of Bohemia, 221

Daedalus, 75

Dahomey, royal family of, related to leopards, 85;

religious massacres in, 138

Daira or Mahadev Mohammedans in Mysore, 220

Dalton, Colonel E. T., 217

Danakils or Afar of East Africa, 200

Dance of youths and maidens at Cnossus, 75sqq.;

Ariadne's, 77

Dardistan, custom of swinging in, 279

Darfur, Sultans of, 39

Dassera festival of Nepaul, 277

Daura, a Hausa kingdom, 35;

custom of succession to the throne in, 201

David, King, and the brazen serpent, 86

Dead, souls of the, associated with falling stars, 64sqq.;

rebirth of the, 70;

sacrifices to the, 92, 93, 94, 95, 97;

human blood offered to the, 92sq., 104

Dead kings, worship of, 24sq.;

their spirits thought to possess sick people, 25sq.;

of Uganda consulted as oracles, 200sq.

—— man's hand used in magical ceremony, 267n.1

—— One, the, name applied to the last sheaf, 254

—— Sunday, 239;

the fourth Sunday in Lent, 221;

also called Mid-Lent, 222n.1

Death of the Great Pan, 6sq.

—— preference for a violent, 9sqq.;

natural, regarded as a calamity, 11sq.;

European fear of, 135sq., 146;

indifference to, displayed by many races, 136sqq.;

the Carrying out of, [pg 293] 221, 233sqq., 246sqq.;

conception of, in relation to vegetation, 253sq.;

in the corn, 254;

and resurrection of Kostrubonko at Eastertide, 261;

and revival of vegetation, 263sq.

Death, effigy of, feared and abhorred, 239sq.;

potency of life attributed to, 247sqq.

—— the Angel of, 177sq.

De Barros, Portuguese historian, 51

Deer, descent of Kalamants from a, 126sq.;

sacrificed instead of human beings, 166n..1

Delos, Theseus at, 75

Delphi, tombs of Dionysus and Apollo at, 3sq.;

festival of Crowning at, 78sqq.

Dengdit, the Supreme Being of the Dinka, 30, 32

Deputy, the expedient of dying by, 56, 160

Dictynna and Minos, 73

Dinka, the, of the White Nile, 28sqq.;

totemism of the, 30sq.

Diomede, human sacrifices to, 166n.1

Dionysus, the tomb of, at Delphi, 3;

human sacrifice consummated by a priest of, 163;

boys sacrificed to, 166n.1

Dislike of people to have children like themselves, 287

Diurnal tenure of the kingship, 118sq.

Divine king, the killing of the, 9sqq.

—— kings of the Shilluk, 17sqq.

—— spirit incarnate in Shilluk kings, 21, 26sq.

Dodge, Colonel R. I., 3

Dog killed instead of king, 17

Doreh Bay in New Guinea, 287

Dorians, their superstition as to meteors, 59

Dragon, drama of the slaughter of the, 78sqq., 89;

myth of the, 105sqq.

Dragon-crest of kings, 105

Dramatic contests of actors representing Summer and Winter, 254sqq.

Dreams, revelations in, 25

Drenching leaf-clad mummer as a rain-charm, 211

Driver, Professor S. R., 170n.5, 173n.1

Ducks and ptarmigan, dramatic contest of the, 259

Dyak medicine-men, their practice of swinging, 280sq.

Dyaks of Sarawak, story of their descent from a fish, 126;

sacrifice cattle instead of human beings, 166n.1;

their sacrifices during an epidemic, 176n.1;

their custom of swinging, 277

Dying, custom of catching the souls of the, 198sqq.

Dying by deputy, 56, 160

Eames, W., 273

Ears of sacrificial victims cut off, 97

Easter, first Sunday after, 249;

swinging on the Tuesday after, 283;

custom of swinging on the four Sundays before, 284

Easter Eve in Albania, expulsion of Kore on, 265

Eastertide, death and resurrection of Kostrubonko at, 261

Eating the bodies of aged relations, custom of, 14

Echinadian Islands, 6

Eclipse of the sun and moon, belief of the Tahitians as to, 73n.2;

practice of the Chilcotin Indians at an, 77

Ecliptic perhaps mimicked in dances, 77

Effigies of Carnival, 222sqq.;

of Shrove Tuesday, 227sqq.;

of Death, 233sqq., 246sqq.;

seven-legged, of Lent in Spain and Italy, 244sq.;

of Winter burnt at Zurich, 260sq.;

of Kupalo, Kostroma, and Yarilo in Russia, 262sq.

Effigy, human sacrifices carried out in, 217sqq.

Egbas, the, 41

Egypt, temporary kings in Upper, 151sq.;

mock human sacrifices in ancient, 217

Egyptian gods, mortality of the ancient, 4sqq.;

influence on Christian doctrine of the Trinity, 5n.3;

kings called bulls, 72;

trinities of gods, 5n.3

Eimine Ban, an Irish abbot, 159n.1

Eldest sons sacrificed for their fathers, 161sqq.

Elliot, R. H., 136

Emain, fair at, 100

Embalming as a means of prolonging the life of the soul, 4

Encheleans, the, 84

Endymion at Olympia, 90; his tomb at Olympia, 287

English middle class, their clinging to life, 146

Ἐννέωρος βασίλευε, 70n.3

Eponymate, the Assyrian, 116sq.

Eponymous magistrates, 117n.1

Equinox, the spring, custom of swinging at, 284;

drama of Summer and Winter at the spring, 257

Erechtheum, the, 87

Erechtheus or Erichthonius in relation to the sacred serpent on the Acropolis, 86sq.;

voluntary death of the daughters of, 192n.3

Ergamenes, king of Meroe, 15

Erichthonius, 86. See Erechtheus

Erigone, her suicide by hanging, 281sq.

[pg 294]

Erzgebirge, Shrovetide custom in the, 208sq.

Esagil, temple of Marduk at Babylon, 113

Esarhaddon, king of Assyria, 116

Esquimaux, suicide among the, 43;

their magical ceremony in autumn, 259

Esthonian belief as to falling stars, 66sq.;

celebration of St. John's Day, 280;

custom on Shrove Tuesday, 233, 252sq.

Esthonians, their ideas of shooting stars, 63

Ethiopia, kings of, chosen for their beauty, 38sq.

Ethiopian kings of Meroe put to death, 15

Etruscan ceremony at founding cities, 157

Euphorion of Chalcis, Greek author, 143, 144

Europa, her wanderings, 89;

and Zeus, 73

European beliefs as to shooting stars, 66sqq.;

fear of death, 135sq., 146

Evans, Sebastian, 122n.1

Eve, Easter, in Albania, 265

Eve of St. John (Midsummer Eve), Russian ceremony on, 262

Ewe negroes, the, 61

Expiation for killing sacred animals, 216sq.

Eyeo, kings of, put to death, 40sq.

Ezekiel, on the sacrifice of the firstborn, 171sq.

E-zida, the temple of Nabu, 110

Fairs of ancient Ireland, 99sqq.

Fashoda, the capital of the Shilluk kings, 18, 19, 21, 24

Father god succeeded by his divine son, 5

Fazoql or Fazolglou, kings of, put to death, 16

Fear of death entertained by the European races, 135sq., 146

“Feeding the dead,” 102

Feriae Latinae, 283

Feronia, a Latin goddess, 186n.4

Fertilising power ascribed to the effigy of Death, 250sq.

Festival of the Crowning at Delphi, 78sq.;

of the Laurel-bearing at Thebes, 78sq., 88sq.

Festus, on “the Sacred Spring,” 186

Feuillet, Madame Octave, 228sq.

Fez, mock sultan in, 152

Fighting the king, right of, 22

Fiji, voluntary deaths in, 11sq.;

custom of grave-diggers in, 156n.2;

rule of succession in, 191

Finger-joints, custom of sacrificing, 219;

mock sacrifice of, ib.

Fire, voluntary death by, 42sqq.;

and Water, kings of, in Cambodia, 14

Firstborn, sacrifice of the, 171sqq.;

killed and eaten, 179sq.;

sacrificed among various races, 179sqq.

—— -fruits offered to the dead, 102;

of the corn offered at Lammas, 101sq.;

of the vintage offered to Icarius and Erigone, 283

Firstlings, Hebrew sacrifice of, 172sq.;

Irish sacrifice of, 183

Fish, descent of the Dyaks from a, 126

Fison, Rev. Lorimer, 156n.2

Five years, despotic power for period of, 53

Flight of the priestly king (Regifugium) at Rome, 213

Florence, ceremony of “Sawing the Old Woman” at, 240sq.

Florida, sacrifice of firstborn male children by the Indians of, 184

Fool, the Carnival, burial of, 231sq.

Foot, custom of standing on one, 149, 150, 155, 156

—— -race at Olympia, 287

Franche-Comté, effigies of Shrove Tuesday destroyed in, 227

Freycinet, L. de, 118n.1

Frosinone in Latium, burning an effigy of the Carnival at, 22sq.

Funeral of Kostroma, 261sqq.

—— -games, 92sqq.

—— -rites performed for a father in the fifth month of his wife's pregnancy, 189

Futuna in the South Pacific, 97

Galton, Sir Francis, 146n.2

Game of Troy, 76sq.

Games, funeral, 92sqq.

Gandharva-Sena, 124, 125

Ganges, firstborn children sacrificed to the, 180sq.

Gazelle Peninsula in New Britain, 65

Gelo, tyrant of Syracuse, 167

Genesis, account of the creation in, 106

Ghost, the Holy, regarded as female, 5n.3

Ghosts propitiated with blood, 92;

propitiated with games, 96;

anger of, 103

Giles, Professor H. A., 275

Girls' race at Olympia, 91

Gladiators at Roman funerals, 96;

at Roman banquets, 143

Goats sacrificed instead of human beings, 166n.1

Gobir, a Hausa kingdom, 35

God, the killing and resurrection of a god in the hunting, pastoral, and agricultural stages of society, 221

[pg 295]

God's Mouth, 41

Gods, mortality of the, 1sqq.;

created by man in his own likeness, 2sq.;

succeeded by their sons, 5;

progressive amelioration in the character of the, 136

Golden apples of the Hesperides, 80

—— fleece, ram with, 162

—— swords, 75

Goldmann, Dr. Emil, 155n.1

Goldziher, I., 97n.7

Gomes, E. H., 176n.1

Gonds, mock human sacrifices among the, 217

Good Friday, 284

Gore, Captain, 139n.1

Gospel to the Hebrews, the apocryphal, 5n.3

Graal, History of the Holy, 120, 134

Grape-cluster, Mother of the, 8

Gray, Archdeacon J. H., 145

Great Pan, death of the, 6sq.

—— Spirit, the, of the American Indians, 3

—— year, the, 70

Greece, human sacrifices in ancient, 161sqq.;

swinging as a festal rite in modern, 283sq.

Greek mode of reckoning intervals of time, 59n.1

Greenlanders, their belief in the mortality of the gods, 3

Grey hair a signal of death, 36sq.

—— hairs of kings, 100, 102, 103

Grimm, J., 155n.1, 221, 240, 244

Groot, Professor J. J. M. de, 180n.7, 275

Grove, the Arician, 213

Guatemala, catching the soul of the dying in, 199

Guayana Indians, 12

Gypsies, ceremony of “Sawing the Old Woman” among the, 243

Hair, grey, a signal of death, 36sq.

Halae in Attica, mock human sacrifice at, 215

Hale, Horatio, quoted, 11sq.

Hamilton, Alexander, quoted, 48

Hamilton's Account of the East Indies, 278

Hammurabi, king of Babylon, 110

Hand of dead man in magical ceremony, 267n.1;

of suicide cut off, 220n.

Hanging of an effigy of the Carnival, 230sq.

Harmonia and Cadmus, 84;

marriage of, 88, 89

Harvest ceremonies, 20, 25

Harz Mountains, ceremony at Carnival in the, 233

Hausa kings put to death, 35

Hawaii, annual festival in, 117sq.

Hawk in Egypt, symbol of the sun and of the king, 112

Heads of dead kings removed and kept, 202sq.

Hebrew sacrifice of the firstborn, 171sqq.

Hebrews, apocryphal Gospel to the, 5n.3

Heitsi-eibib, a Hottentot god, 3

Heliogabalus, the emperor, 92

Heliopolis, 5;

the sacred bull of, 72

Hell fire in Catholic and Protestant theology, 136

Helle and Phrixus, the children of King Athamas, 161sqq.

Hephaestion, 95

Hera, race of girls in honour of, at Olympia, 91;

the sister of her husband Zeus, 194

Heraclitus, on the souls of the dead, 12

Hercules in the garden of the Hesperides, 80

Hermapolis, 4

Hermes, the grave of, 4

Heruli, the, 14

Hesperides, garden of the, 80

Hieraconpolis, 112

High History of the Holy Graal, 120, 134

Hippodamia at Olympia, 91;

grave of the suitors of, 104

Hippolytus or Virbius killed by horses, 214

Hindoo belief as to shooting stars, 67;

of the rebirth of a father in his son, 188

Hinnom, the Valley of, 169, 170

Hirpini, guided by a wolf (hirpus), 186n.4

Hodson, T. C., 117n.1

Hoeck, K., 73n.1

Hofmayr, P. W., 18n.1, 19n.2

Holm-oak, 81sq.

Holy Ghost, regarded as female, 5n.3

—— Saturday, 244

Homeric age, funeral games in the, 93

Homicide, banishment of, 69sq.

Homoeopathic or imitative magic, 283, 285

Hooks, Indian custom of swinging on, 278sq.

Horse-mackerel, descent of a totemic clan from a, 129

—— -races in honour of the dead, 97, 98, 99, 101;

at fairs, 99sqq.

Horses, Hippolytus killed by, 214

Horus, the soul of, in Orion, 5

Hottentots, the mortal god of the, 3

Howitt, A. W., 64

Human flesh, transformation into animal shape through eating, 83sq.

[pg 296]

Human sacrifices at Upsala, 58;

in ancient Greece, 161sqq.;

mock, 214sqq.;

offered by ancestors of the European races, 214;

to renew the sun's fire, 74sq.

Huntsman, the Spectral, 178

Huron Indians, their burial of infants, 199

Ibadan in West Africa, 203

Ibn Batuta, 53

Icarus or Icarius and his daughter Erigone, 281sq., 283

Ida, oracular cave of Zeus on Mount, 70

Ihering, R. von, 187n.4

Ijebu tribe, 112

Ilex or holm-oak, 81sq.

Immortality, belief of savages in their natural, 1;

firm belief of the North American Indians in, 137

Impregnation by the souls of the dying, 199

Incarnation of divine spirit in Shilluk kings, 21, 26sq.

India, sacrifice of firstborn children in, 180sq.;

images of Siva and Pârvati married in, 265sq.

Indians of Arizona, mock human sacrifice among the, 215;

of Canada, their ceremony for mitigating the cold of winter, 259sq.

Indifference to death displayed by many races, 136sqq.

Indra and the dragon Vrtra, 106sq.

Infanticide among the Australian aborigines, 187n.6;

sometimes suggested by a doctrine of transmigration or reincarnation of human souls, 188sq.;

prevalent in Polynesia, 191, 196;

among savages, 196sq.

Infants, burial of, 199

Ino and Melicertes, 162

Intervals of time, Greek and Latin modes of reckoning, 59n.1

Invocavit Sunday, 243

Ireland, the great fairs of ancient, 99sqq.

Irish sacrifice of firstlings, 183

Iron-Beard, Dr., a Whitsuntide mummer, 208, 212, 233

Isaac about to be sacrificed by his father Abraham, 177

Isaacs, Nathaniel, 36sq.

Isis, the soul of, in Sirius, 5

Isle of Man, May Day in the, 258

Isocrates, 95

Israelites, their custom of burning their children in honour of Baal, 168sqq.

Isthmian games instituted in honour of Melicertes, 93, 103

Italy, seven-legged effigies of Lent in, 244sq.

Jack o' Lent, 230

Jagas, a tribe of Angola, their custom of infanticide, 196sq.

Jaintias of Assam, 55

Jambi in Sumatra, temporary kings in, 154

Japan, mock human sacrifices in, 218

Jars, burial in, 12sq.

Java, Sultans of, 53

Jawbone of king preserved, 200sq.

Jeoud, the only-begotten son of Cronus, sacrificed by his father, 166

Jerome, on Tophet, 170

“Jerusalem, the Road of,” 76

Jerusalem, sacrifice of children at, 169

Jinn, death of the King of the, 8

Jordanus, Friar, 54

Joyce, P. W., 100n.1, 101

Judah, kings of, their custom of burning their children, 169

Jukos, kings of the, put to death, 34

Jumping over a bonfire, 262

June, the twenty-ninth of, St. Peter's Day, 262

Jŭok, the great god of the Shilluk, 18

Jupiter, period of revolution of the planet, 49

Justin, 187n.5

Kaitish, the, 60

Kalamantans, their descent from a deer, 126sq.

Kali, Indian goddess, 123

Kamants, a Jewish tribe, 12

Kanagra district of India, 265

Karpathos, custom of swinging in the island of, 284

Katsina, a Hausa kingdom, 35

Kayans of Borneo, mock human sacrifices among the, 218

Keonjhur, ceremony at installation of Rajah of, 56

Kerre, a tribe accustomed to strangle their firstborn children, 181sq.

Khlysti, the, a Russian sect, 196n.3

Khonds of India, their human sacrifices, 139

Kibanga, kings of, put to death, 34

Killer of the Elephant, 35

Killing the divine king, 9sqq.

—— of the tree-spirit, 205sqq.;

a means to promote the growth of vegetation, 211sq.

—— a god, in the hunting, pastoral, and agricultural stages of society, 221

King, the killing of the divine, 8sqq.;

slaying of the, in legend, 120sqq.;

responsible for the weather and crops, 165;

abdicates on the birth of a son, 190;

at Whitsuntide, pretence of beheading the, 209sq.

[pg 297]

King of the Jinn, death of the, 8

—— of the Wood at Nemi, 28, 205sq., 212sqq.

—— and Queen of May, marriage of, 266

King Hop, 149, 151

King's daughter offered as prize in a race, 104

—— jawbone preserved, 200sq.

—— life sympathetically bound up with the prosperity of the country, 21, 27

—— skull used as a drinking-vessel, 200

—— son, sacrifice of the, 160sqq.

—— widow, succession to the throne through marriage with, 193

Kingdom, the prize of a race, 103sqq. See also Succession

Kings, divine, of the Shilluk, 17sqq.;

regarded as incarnations of a divine spirit, 21, 26sq.;

attacks on, permitted, 22, 48sqq.;

worship of dead, 24sq.;

killed at the end of a fixed term, 46sqq.;

related to sacred animals, 82, 84sqq.;

personating dragons or serpents, 82;

addressed by names of animals, 86;

with a dragon or serpent crest, 105;

the supply of, 134sqq.;

temporary, 148sqq.;

abdicate annually, 148

—— killed when their strength fails, 14sqq.

—— of Dahomey and Benin represented partly in animal shapes, 85sq.

—— of Fire and Water, 14

—— of Uganda, dead, consulted as oracles, 200sq.

Kingship, octennial tenure of the, 58sqq.;

triennial tenure of the, 112sq.;

annual tenure of the, 113sqq.;

diurnal tenure of the, 118sq.;

burdens and restrictions attaching to the early, 135;

modern type of, different from the ancient, 135

Kingsley, Mary H., 119n.1

Kingsmill Islanders, 64

Kirghiz, games in honour of the dead among the, 97

Kirwaido, ruler of the old Prussians, 41

Königgrätz district of Bohemia, Whitsuntide custom in the, 209sq.

Kore expelled on Easter Eve in Albania, 265

Koryaks, voluntary deaths among the, 13

Kostroma, funeral of, 261sqq.

Kostrubonko, funeral of, 261

Krapf, Dr. J. L., 183n.1

Krishna, Hindoo festival of swinging in honour of, 279

Kupalo, funeral of, 261, 262

Kurnai, their fear of the Aurora Australis, 267n.1

Kutonaqa Indians of British Columbia, their sacrifice of their firstborn children to the sun, 183sq.

La Rochelle, burning of Shrove Tuesday at, 230

Labyrinth, the Cretan, 71, 74, 75, 76, 77

Labyrinths in churches, 76;

in the north of Europe, 76sq.

Lada, the funeral of, 261, 262

Laevinus, M. Valerius, 96

Laius and Oedipus, 193

“Lame reign,” 38

Lammas, the first of August, 99, 100, 101, 105

Lampson, M. W., 146n.1, 273

Lancelot constrained to be king, 120sq., 135

Lang, Andrew, 130n.1

Laodicea in Syria, human sacrifices at, 166n.1

Laos, a province of Siam, 97

Laphystian Zeus, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165

Last sheaf called “the Dead One,” 254

Latin festival, the great (Feriae Latinae), 283

—— mode of reckoning intervals of time, 59n.1

Latins, sanctity of the woodpecker among the, 186n.4

Latinus, King, his disappearance, 283

Laughlan Islanders, 63

Laurel, sacred, guarded by a dragon, 79sq.;

chewed by priestess of Apollo, 80

Laurel-Bearer at Thebes, 88sq.

—— -Bearing Apollo, 79n.3

—— -bearing, festival of the, at Thebes, 78sq., 88sq.

—— wreath at Delphi and Thebes, 78sqq.

Laws of Manu, 188

Learchus, son of King Athamas, 161, 162

Lechrain, Burial of the Carnival in, 231

Leipsic, “Carrying out Death” at, 236

Lengua Indians, 11;

of the Gran Chaco, 63;

their practice of killing firstborn girls, 186;

their custom of infanticide, 197

Lent, the fourth Sunday in, called Dead Sunday or Mid-Lent, 221, 222n.1, 233sqq., 250, 255;

personified by an actor or effigy, 226, 230;

fifth Sunday in, 234, 239;

third Sunday in, 238;

Queen of, 244;

symbolised by a seven-legged effigy, 244sq.

Leonidas, funeral games in his honour, 94

[pg 298]

Leopard Societies of Western Africa, 83

Leopards related to royal family of Dahomey, 85

Lepidus, Marcus Aemilius, 96

Lepsius, R., 17n.2

Lerida in Catalonia, funeral of the Carnival at, 225sq.

Lerpiu, a spirit, 32

Letts, celebration of the summer solstice among the, 280

Leviathan, 106n.2

Liebrecht, F., 7n.2

Life, human, valued more highly by Europeans than by many other races, 135sq.

Limu, the Assyrian eponymate, 117

Lion, king represented with the body of a, 85

Lisiansky, U., 117sq.

“Little Easter Sunday,” 153, 154n.1

Logan, W., 49

Lolos, the, 65

Lombardy, the Day of the Old Wives in, 241

“Lord of the Heavenly Hosts,” 149, 150, 155, 156

Lostwithiel in Cornwall, temporary king at, 153sq.

Lous, a Babylonian month, 113, 116

Lucian, 42

Lug, legendary Irish hero, 99, 101

Lugnasad, the first of August, 101

Lunar and solar time, attempts to harmonise, 68sq.

Luschan, F. von, 85n.5, 86n.1

Lussac, Ash Wednesday at, 226

Lycaeus, Mount, Zeus on, 70;

human sacrifices on, 163

Macahity, an annual festival in Hawaii, 117

Macassars of Celebes, their custom of swinging, 277

Macdonald, Rev. J., 183n.2

Maceboard, the, in the Isle of Man, 258

Macgregor, Sir William, 203n.2

Macha, Queen, 100

McLennan, J. F., 194n.1

Magic, the Age of, 2;

homoeopathic or imitative, 283, 285

Magical ceremonies for the revival of nature in spring, 266sqq.;

for the revival of nature in Central Australia, 270

Maha Makham, the Great Sacrifice, 49

Mairs, their custom of sacrificing their firstborn sons, 181

Malabar, custom of Thalavettiparothiam in, 53;

religious suicide in, 54sq.

Malayans, devil-dancers, practise a mock human sacrifice, 216

Malays, their belief in the Spectral Huntsman, 178

Malta, death of the Carnival in, 224sq.

Manasseh, King, his sacrifice of his children, 170

Mandans, their notions as to the stars, 67sq.

Man-god, reason for killing the, 9sq.

Mangaians, their preference for a violent death, 10

Manipur, the Naga tribes of, 11;

mode of counting the years in, 117n.1;

rajahs of, descended from a snake, 133

Mannhardt, W., 249n.4, 253, 270

Manu, Laws of, 188

Maoris, the, 64

Mara tribe of northern Australia, 60

Mardi Gras, Shrove Tuesday, 227

Marduk, New Year festival of, 110;

his image at Babylon, 113

—— and Tiamat, 105sq., 107sq.

Mareielis at Zurich, 260

Marena, Winter or Death, 262

Marketa, the holy, 238

Marriage, mythical and dramatic, of the Sun and Moon, 71, 73sq., 78, 87sq., 92, 105;

of brothers and sisters in royal families, 193sq.

—— Sacred, of king and queen, 71;

of gods and goddesses, 73;

of actors disguised as animals, 83;

of Zeus and Hera, 91

“Marriage Hollow” at Teltown, 99

Martin, Father, quoted, 141sq.

Marzana, goddess of Death, 237

Masai, the, 61, 65;

their custom as to the skulls of dead chiefs, 202sq.

Masks hung on trees, 283

Masquerades of kings and queens, 71sq., 88, 89

Masson, Bishop, 137

Mata, the small-pox goddess, sacrifice of children to, 181

Matiamvo, a potentate in Angola, the manner of his death, 35sq.

Mausoleum at Halicarnassus, 94sq.

Mausolus, contests of eloquence in his honour, 95

May, the Queen of, in the Isle of Man, 258;

King and Queen of, 266

—— Bride, 266

—— Day in Sweden, 254;

in the Isle of Man, 258

—— -tree, 246;

horse-race to, 208

—— -trees, 251sq.

Mbaya Indians of South America, 140;

their custom of infanticide, 197

Medicine-men swinging as a mode of cure, 280sq.

Melicertes at the Isthmus of Corinth, 93, 103;

in Tenedos, human sacrifices to, 162

[pg 299]

Memphis, statues of Summer and Winter at, 259n.1

Men and asses, redemption of firstling, 173

Mendes, mummy of Osiris at, 4;

the ram-god of, 7n.2

Menoeceus, his voluntary death, 192n.3

Meriahs, human victims among the Khonds, 139

Meroe, Ethiopian kings of, put to death, 15

Merolla, G., quoted, 14sq.

Messiah, a pretended, 46

Meteors, superstitions as to, 58sqq.

Metis, swallowed by her husband Zeus, 192

Metsik, “wood-spirit,” 233, 252sq.

Meyer, Professor Kuno, 159n.1

Micah, the prophet, on sacrifice, 171, 174

Mid-Lent, the fourth Sunday in Lent, 222n.1;

also called Dead Sunday, 221;

celebration of, 234, 236sq.;

ceremony of “Sawing the Old Woman” at, 240sqq.

Midsummer Eve, Russian ceremony on, 262

Mikados, human sacrifices formerly offered at the graves of the, 218

Miltiades, funeral games in his honour, 93

Minahassa, mock human sacrifices in, 214sq.

Minorca, seven-legged images of Lent in, 244n.1

Minos, king of Cnossus, his reign of eight years, 70sqq.;

tribute of youths and maidens sent to, 74sqq.

—— and Britomartis, 73

Minotaur, legend of the, 71, 74, 75

Minyas, king of Orchomenus, 164

Mnevis, the sacred bull of Heliopolis, 72

Moab, king of, sacrifices his son on the wall, 166, 179

Mock human sacrifices, 214sqq.;

sacrifices of finger-joints, 219

—— sultan in Morocco, 152sq.

Mohammedan belief as to falling stars, 63sq.

Moloch, sacrifice of children to, 75, 168sqq.

Moon represented by a cow, 71sq.;

myth of the setting and rising, 73;

married to Endymion, 90

—— and sun, mythical and dramatic marriage of the, 71, 73sq., 78, 87sq., 92, 105

Morasas, the, 219

Moravia, “Carrying out Death” in, 238sq., 249

Morocco, annual temporary king in, 152sq.

Mortality of the gods, 1sqq.

Moschus, 73n.1

Moss, W., 284n.4

Mother of the Grape-cluster, 8

Moulton, Professor J. H., 124n.1

Mounds, sepulchral, 93, 96, 100, 104

Mulai Rasheed II., 153

Müller, K. O., 59, 69n.1, 90, 165n.1, 166n.1

Mumbo Jumbos, 178

Mummers, the Whitsuntide, 205sqq.

Murderers, their bodies destroyed, 11

Mutch, Captain J. S., 259n.1

Mysore, mimic rite of circumcision in, 220

Myths of creation, 106sqq.

Nabu, a Babylonian god, 110

Naga tribes of Manipur, 11

Nagpur, the cobra the crest of the Maharajah of, 132sq.

Namaquas, the, 61

Natural death regarded as a calamity, 11sq.

Nauroz and Eed festivals, 279

Nemean games celebrated in honour of Opheltes, 93

Nemi, priest of, 28, 212sq., 220;

King of the Wood at, 205sq., 212sqq.

Nephele, wife of King Athamas, 161

New Britain, 65

—— Guinea, the Papuans of, 287

—— Hebrides, burial alive in the, 12

—— South Wales, sacrifice of firstborn children among the aborigines of, 179sq.

Ngarigo, the, of New South Wales, 60

Ngoio, a province of Congo, 118sq.

Nias, custom of succession to the chieftainship in, 198sq.;

mock human sacrifices at funerals in, 216

Nicobarese, their sham-fights to gratify the dead, 96

Niederpöring in Bavaria, Whitsuntide custom at, 206sq.

Niué or Savage Island, 219

Nöldeke, Professor Th., 179n.4

Normandy, Burial of Shrove Tuesday in, 228

Norsemen, their custom of wounding the dying, 13sq.

North Africa, festivals of swinging in, 284

—— American Indians, their funeral celebrations, 97;

their firm belief in immortality, 137

Nyakang, founder of the dynasty of Shilluk kings, 18sqq.

Nyikpla or Nyigbla, a negro divinity, 61

Oak, sacred, at Delphi, 80sq.;

effigy of Death buried under an, 236

[pg 300]

Oak branches, Whitsuntide mummer swathed in, 207

—— -leaves, crown of, 80sqq.

Oath by the Styx, 70n.1

Octennial cycle based on an attempt to harmonise lunar and solar time, 68sq.

—— tenure of the kingship, 58sqq.

Odin, 13;

legend of the deposition of, 56; sacrifice of king's sons to, 57;

human sacrifices to, 160sq., 188

Oedipus, legend of, 193

Oenomaus at Olympia, 91

Oesel, island of, 66

Old Man, name of the corn-spirit, 253sq.

—— people killed, 11sqq.

—— Wives, the Day of the, 241

—— Woman, Sawing the, a ceremony in Lent, 240sqq.;

name applied to the corn-spirit, 253sq.

Oldenberg, Professor H., 122n.2

Oleae, the, at Orchomenus, 163, 164

Olive crown at Olympia, 91

Olympia, tombs of Pelops and Endymion at, 287

Olympiads based on the octennial cycle, 90

Olympic festival based on the octennial cycle, 89sq.;

based on astronomical, not agricultural considerations, 105

—— games said to have been founded in honour of Pelops, 92

—— stadium, the, 287

—— victors regarded as embodiments of Zeus, 90sq., or of the Sun and Moon, 91, 105

Omen-birds, stories of their origin, 126, 127sq.

On or Aun, king of Sweden, 57, 160sq., 188

Opheltes at Nemea, 93

Ophites, the, 5n.3

Oracular springs, 79sq.

Orchomenus in Boeotia, human sacrifice at, 163sq.

Ordeal by poison, fatal effects of, 197

Orestes, flight of, 213

Origen, on the Holy Spirit, 5n.3

Orion the soul of Horus, 5

Ororo, 24

Osiris, the mummy of, 4

Otho, suicide of the Emperor, 140

Ox-blood, bath of, 201

Oxen sacrificed instead of human beings, 166n.1

Palermo, ceremony of “Sawing the Old Woman” at, 240

Palm Sunday, “Sawing the Old Woman” on, 243

Palodes, 6

Pan, death of the Great, 6sq.

Panebian Libyans, their custom of cutting off the heads of their dead kings, 202

Papuans, the, of Doreh Bay in New Guinea, 287

Parker, Professor E. H., 146n.1

Parkinson, John, 112sq.

Parrots' eggs, a signal of death, 40sq.

Parsons, Harold G., 203n.5

Parthenon, eastern frieze of the, 89n.5

Pârvatî and Siva, marriage of the images of, 265sq.

Pasiphae identified with the moon, 72

—— and the bull, 71

“Pass through the fire,” meaning of the phrase as applied to the sacrifice of children, 165n.3, 172

Passier, kings of, put to death, 51sq.

Passover, tradition of the origin of the, 174sqq.

Pau Pi, an effigy of the Carnival, 225

Pausanias, King, funeral games in his honour, 94

Payagua Indians, 12

Payne, E. J., 69n.2

Paxos, 6

Peking Gazette, 274, 275

Pelops worshipped at Olympia, 92, 104;

sacred precinct of, 104, 287

—— and Hippodamia at Olympia, 91

Penance for the slaughter of the dragon, 78

Peregrinus, his death by fire, 42

Persia, temporary kings in, 157sqq.

Personification of abstract ideas not primitive, 253

Peru, sacrifice of children among the Indians of, 185

Perun, sacrifice of firstborn children to, 183

Peruvian Indians, 63n.1

Pfingstl, a Whitsuntide mummer, 206sq., 211

Phalaris, the brazen bull of, 75

Phaya Phollathep, “Lord of the Heavenly Hosts,” 149

Pherecydes, 163n.1

Philippine Islands, 3

Philo Judaeus, his doctrine of the Trinity, 6n.

—— of Byblus, 166, 179

Phocaeans, dead, propitiated with games, 95

Phoenicians, their custom of human sacrifice, 166sq., 178, 179

Phrixus and Helle, the children of King Athamas, 161sqq.

Piceni, guided by a woodpecker (picus), 186n.4

Pilsen district of Bohemia, Whitsuntide custom in the, 210sq.

Pindar on the rebirth of the dead, 70

[pg 301]

Pitrè, G., 224n.1

Plataea, sacrifices and funeral games in honour of the slain at, 95sq.

Plato on human sacrifices, 163

Ploughing, annual ceremony of, performed by temporary king, 149, 155sq., 157

Ploughs, bronze, used by Etruscans at founding of cities, 157

Plutarch, 163;

on the death of the Great Pan, 6;

on human sacrifices among the Carthaginians, 167

Poison ordeal, fatal effects of the use of the, 197

Polynesia, remarkable rule of succession in, 190;

prevalence of infanticide in, 191, 196

Poplars burnt on Shrove Tuesday, 224n.1

Poseidon, identified with Erechtheus, 87

Posidonius, ancient Greek traveller, 142

Possession by spirits of dead kings, 25sq.

Preference for a violent death, 9sqq.

Pregnancy, funeral rites performed for a father in the fifth month of his wife's, 189

Prince of Wales Islands, 64

Procopius, 14

Prussians, supreme ruler of the old, 41sq.;

custom of the old, 156

Pruyssenaere, E. de, 30n.1

Psoloeis, the, at Orchomenus, 163, 164

Ptarmigans and ducks, dramatic contest of the, 259

Puruha, a province of Quito, 185

Pururavas and Urvasi, Indian story of, 131

Pylos, burning the Carnival at, 232sq.

Pythagoras at Delphi, 4

Pythian games, 80sq.;

celebrated in honour of the Python, 93

Queen of May in the Isle of Man, 259;

married to the King of May, 266

—— of Winter in the Isle of Man, 258

Queensland, natives of, their superstitions as to falling stars, 60

Quilicare, suicide of kings of, 46sq.

Quiteve, title of kings of Sofala, 37sq.

Race for the kingdom at Olympia, 90

Races to determine the successor to the kingship, 103sqq.

Radica, a festival at the end of the Carnival at Frosinone, 222

Rahab or Leviathan, 106n.2

Rain-charms, 211

—— clan, 31

—— -god, 61

—— -makers among the Dinka, 32sqq.

—— -making ceremonies, 20

Rajah, temporary, 154

Ralî, the fair of, 265

Ram with golden fleece, 162

—— -god of Mendes, 7n.3

—— sacrificed to Pelops, 92, 104

Raratonga, custom of succession in, 191

Rauchfiess, a Whitsuntide mummer, 207n.1

Rebirth of the dead, 70;

of a father in his son, 188sqq.;

of the parent in the child, 287

Reckoning intervals of time, Greek and Latin modes of reckoning, 59n.1

Redemption of firstling men and asses, 173

Regalia in Celebes, sanctity of, 202

Regicide among the Slavs, 52;

modified custom of, 148

Regifugium at Rome, 213

Reinach, Salomon, 7n.2

Reincarnation of human souls, belief in, a motive for infanticide, 188sq.

Religion, the Age of, 2

Renewal, annual, of king's power at Babylon, 113

Resurrection of the god, 212;

of the tree-spirit, 212;

of a god in the hunting, pastoral, and agricultural stages of society, 221;

enacted in Shrovetide or Lenten ceremonies, 233;

of the effigy of Death, 247sqq.;

of the Carnival, 252;

of the Wild Man, 252;

of Kostrubonko at Eastertide, 261

Retaliation in Southern India, law of, 141sq.

Rhea and Cronus, 194

Rhegium in Italy, 187n.5

Rhodes, human sacrifices to Baal in, 195

Rhys, Sir John, 101

Rigveda, the, 279

“Road of Jerusalem,” 76

Robinson, Captain W. C., 139n.1

Rockhill, W. W., 284sq.

Roman custom of catching the souls of the dying, 200;

of vowing a “Sacred Spring,” 186sq.

—— funeral customs, 92, 96

—— game of Troy, 76sq.

—— indifference to death, 143sq.

Rome, funeral games at, 96;

the Regifugium at, 213

Rook, custom of killing all firstborn children in the island of, 180

Roscher, W. H., 7n.2, 73n.2

Roscoe, Rev. J., 139, 182n.2, 201n.1

Rose, H. A., 181

Rose, the Sunday of the, 222n.1

Rottweil, the Carnival Fool at, 231

Russia, funeral ceremonies of Kostrubonko, etc., in, 261sqq.

Russians, religious suicides among the, 44sq.;

the heathen, their sacrifice of the firstborn children, 183

[pg 302]

Sacaea, a Babylonian festival, 113sqq.

Sacred Marriage of king and queen, 71;

of actors disguised as animals, 71, 83;

of gods and goddesses, 73;

of Zeus and Hera, 91

—— spears, 19, 20

“Sacred spring, the,” among the ancient Italian peoples, 186sq.

Sacrifice of the king's son, 160sqq.;

of the firstborn, 171sqq., 179sqq.;

of finger-joints, 219

Sacrifices for rain, 20;

for the sick, 20, 25;

to totems, 31;

to the dead, 92, 93, 94, 95, 97;

of children among the Semites, 166sqq.

—— human, in ancient Greece, 161sqq.;

mock human, 214sqq.

—— vicarious, 117;

in ancient Greece, 166n.1

St. George and the Dragon, 107;

swinging on the festival of, 283

St. John's Day (the summer solstice), swinging at, 280

—— Eve, Russian ceremony on, 262

Saint-Lô, the burning of Shrove Tuesday at, 228sq.

St. Peter's Day, the twenty-ninth of June, 262

Saintonge and Aunis, burning the Carnival in, 230

Sakalavas, sanctity of relics of dead kings among the, 202

Salamis in Cyprus, human sacrifices at, 166n.1

Salih, a prophet, 97

Salish Indians, their sacrifice of their firstborn children to the sun, 184

Salmoneus, his imitation of thunder and lightning, 165

Samaracand, New Year ceremony at, 151

Samnites, guided by a bull, 186n.4

Samoa, expiation for disrespect to a sacred animal in, 216sq.

Samorin, title of the kings of Calicut, 47sq.

Samothracian mysteries, 89

Santal custom of swinging on hooks, 279

Santos, J. dos, 37sq.

Sarawak, Dyaks of, 277

Saturday, Holy, 244

Savage Island, mimic rite of circumcision in, 219sq.

Savages believe themselves naturally immortal, 1

Savou, island of, 287

“Sawing the Old Woman,” a Lenten ceremony, 240sqq.

Saws at Mid-Lent, 241, 242

Saxon kings, their marriage with their stepmothers, 193

Saxons of Transylvania, the hanging of an effigy of Carnival among the, 230sq.

Saxony, Whitsuntide mummers in, 208

Scarli, 224n.1

Schmidt, A., 59n.1

Schmiedel, Professor P., 261n.1

Schoolcraft, H. R., 137sq.

Schörzingen, the Carnival Fool at, 231

Schwegler, F. C. A., 187n.4

Sdach Méac, title of annual temporary king of Cambodia, 148

Sea Dyaks, their stories of the origin of omen birds, 126, 127sq.

Seligmann, C. G., 17, 21, 22, 23, 26, 30, 33

Semang, the, 85

Semic in Bohemia, beheading the king on Whit-Monday at, 209

Seminoles of Florida, souls of the dying caught among the, 199

Semites, sacrifices of children among the, 166sqq.

Semitic Baal, 75

Senjero, sacrifice of firstborn sons in, 182sq.

Sepharvites, their sacrifices of children, 171

Seriphos, custom of swinging in the island of, 283sq.

Serpent, the Brazen, 86;

sacred, on the Acropolis at Athens, 86;

or dragons personated by kings, 82;

transmigration of the souls of the dead into, 84

Servitude for the slaughter of dragons, 70, 78

Servius, on the legend of Erigone, 282

Seven youths and maidens, tribute of, 74sqq.

—— -legged effigy of Lent, 244sq.

Shadow Day, a gypsy name for Palm Sunday, 243

—— Queen, the, 243

Shalmaneser, king of Assyria, 169, 170

Sham fight, 24

Shark, king of Dahomey represented with body of a, 85

Shilluk, a tribe of the White Nile, 17sqq.;

custom of putting to death the divine kings, 17sqq., 204, 206;

ceremony on the accession of a new king of the, 204

Shirt worn by the effigy of Death, its use, 247, 249

Shooting stars, superstitions as to, 53sqq.

Shrines of dead kings, 24sq.

Shrove Tuesday, Burial of the Carnival on, 221sqq.;

mock death of, 227sqq.;

drama of Summer and Winter on, 257

Shrovetide custom in the Erzgebirge, 208sq.;

in Bohemia, 209

—— Bear, the, 230

[pg 303]

Shurii-Kia-Miau, aboriginal tribe in China, 145

Siam, annual temporary kings in, 149sq.

Siamese, mock human sacrifices among the, 218

Sick, sacrifices for the, 20, 25;

thought to be possessed by the spirits of kings, 25sq.

Silesia, “Carrying out Death” in, 236sq., 250sq.

Singalang Burong, the Ruler of the Spirit World, 127, 128

Sioo or Siauw, mock human sacrifices in the island of, 218

Sirius, the soul of Isis in, 5

Sister, marriage with, in royal families, 193sq.

Siu, a Sea Dyak, and his bird wife, 127sq.

Siva and Pârvatî, marriage of the images of, 265sq.

Six hundred and sixty-six, the number of the Beast, 44

Skoptsi, a Russian sect, 196n.3

Skull of dead king used as a drinking-vessel, 200

Skulls of dead kings removed and kept, 202sq.

Sky-spirit, sacrifice of children to, 181

Slaughter of the Dragon, drama of the, at Delphi and Thebes, 78sqq., 89;

myth of the, 105sqq.

Slavs, custom of regicide among the, 52;

festival of the New Year among the old, 221;

"Sawing the Old Woman" among the, 242

Slaying of the king in legend, 120sqq.

Smith, W. Robertson, 8n.1

Snake, rajahs of Manipur descended from a, 133

Sofala, kings of, put to death, 37sq.;

dead kings of, consulted as oracles, 201

Solar and lunar time, early attempts to harmonise, 68sq.

Son of the king sacrificed for his father, 160sqq.

Sons of gods, 5

“Soranian Wolves,” 186n.4

Soul, succession to the, 196sqq.

Souls of the dead supposed to resemble their bodies, as these were at the moment of death, 10sq.;

associated with falling stars, 64sqq.;

transmitted to successors, 198

South American Indians, their insensibility to pain, 138

Spain, seven-legged effigies of Lent in, 244

Spartan kings liable to be deposed every eighth year, 58sq.

Spears, sacred, 19

Spectral Huntsman, 178

Spencer and Gillen, quoted, 180n.1, 187n.6

Spirit, the Great, of the American Indians, 3

Spitting to avert demons, 63

Spring equinox, custom of swinging at, 284;

drama of Summer and Winter at the, 257

Spring, magical ceremonies for the revival of nature in, 266sqq.

“Spring, the Sacred,” among the ancient Italian peoples, 186sq.

Springs, oracular, 78sq.

Stadium, the Olympic, 287

Standing on one foot, custom of, 149, 150, 155, 156

Stars, the souls of Egyptian gods in, 5;

shooting, superstitions as to, 58sqq.;

their supposed influence on human destiny, 65sq., 67sq.

Stepmother, marriage with a, 193

Stevens, Captain John, his History of Persia quoted, 158sq.

Stigand, Captain C. H., 182

Stool at installation of Shilluk kings, 24

Students of Fez, their mock sultan, 152sq.

Styx, oath by the, 70n.1

Substitutes, voluntary, for capital punishment in China, 145sq., 273sqq.

Succession in Polynesia, customs of, 190sq.

—— to the kingdom through marriage with a sister or with the king's widow, 193sq.;

conferred by personal relics of dead kings, 202sq.

—— to the soul, 196sqq.

Sufi II., Shah of Persia, 158

Suicide of Buddhist monks, 42sq.;

epidemic of, in Russia, 44sq.;

by hanging, 282

——, religious, 42sqq., 54sqq.;

in India, 54sq.

——, hand of, cut off, 220n.

Sulka, the, of New Britain, 65

“Sultan of the Scribes,” 152sq.

Summer, bringing in, 233, 237, 238, 246sqq.

—— and Winter, dramatic battle of, 254sq.

—— solstice in connexion with the Olympic festival, 90;

swinging at the, 280

—— trees, 246, 251sq.

Sun represented by a bull, 71sq.;

represented as a man with a bull's head, 75;

eclipses of the, beliefs and practices as to, 73n.2, 77;

sacrifice of firstborn children to the, 183sq.;

called “the golden swing in the sky,” 279

[pg 304]

Sun and Moon, mythical and dramatic marriage of, 71, 73sq., 78, 87sq., 92, 105

Sunday of the Rose, 222n.1

Supply of kings, 134sqq.

Supreme Beings, otiose, in Africa, 19n.

Swabia, Whitsuntide mummers in, 207;

Shrovetide or Lenten ceremonies in, 230, 233

Sweden, May Day in, 254

Swedish kings, traces of nine years' reign of, 57sq.

Swing in the Sky, the Golden, description of the sun, 279

Swinging as a ceremony or magical rite, 150, 156sq., 277sqq.;

on hooks run through the body, Indian custom, 278sq.;

as a mode of inspiration, 280;

as a festal rite in modern Greece, Spain, and Italy, 283sq.

Swords, golden, 75

Syene, 144n.2

Syntengs of Assam, 55

Syro-Macedonian calendar, 116n.1

Tahiti, remarkable rule of succession in, 190

Tahitians, their notions as to eclipses of the sun and moon, 73n.2

Tailltiu or Tailltin, the fair of, 99, 101

Takilis or Carrier Indians, succession to the soul among the, 199

Talos, a bronze man, perhaps identical with the Minotaur, 74sq.

Tammuz or Adonis, 7

Tara, pagan cemetery at, 101

Tarahumares, the, of Mexico, 62

Taui Islanders, 61

Tchiglit Esquimaux, the, 65

Tel-El-Amarna tablets, 170n.5

Teltown, the fair at, 99

Tempe, the Vale of, 81

Temporary kings, 148sqq.

Tenedos, sacrifice of infants to Melicertes in, 162

Tengaroeng in Borneo, swinging at, 280, 281

Thalavettiparothiam, a custom observed in Malabar, 52sq.

Thamus, an Egyptian pilot, 6

Thebes, festival of the Laurel-Bearing at, 78sq., 88sq.

Theopompus, 95

Theseus and Ariadne, 75

Thiodolf, the poet, 161

Thracians, funeral games held by the, 96;

their contempt of death, 142

Throne, reverence for the, 51

Thüringen, Whitsuntide mummers in, 208;

Carrying out Death in, 235sq.

Tiamat and Marduk, 105sq., 107sq.

Tiberius, his enquiries as to the death of Pan, 7;

his attempt to put down Carthaginian sacrifices of children, 168

Tilton, E. L., 232

Time, Greek and Latin modes of reckoning intervals of, 59

Timoleon, funeral games in his honour, 94

Tinneh Indians, the, 65, 278

Tirunavayi temple, 49

Tlachtga, pagan cemetery at, 101

Toboongkoos, mock human sacrifices among the, 219

Todtenstein, 264

Tonquinese custom of catching the soul of the dying, 200

Tooth of dead king kept, 203

Tophet, 169, 170, 171

Torres Straits, funeral custom in, 92sq.

Totemism of the Dinka, 30sq.;

possible trace of Latin, 186n.4;

the source of a particular type of folk-tales, 129sqq.

Totems, sacrifices to, 31;

stories told to account for the origin of, 129

Toumou, Egyptian god, 5

Transformations into animals, 82sqq.

Transmigration of souls of the dead into serpents and other animals, 84sq.;

belief in, a motive for infanticide, 188sq.

Transmission of soul to successor, 198sqq.

Trasimene Lake, battle of, 186

Tree-spirit, killing of the, 205sqq.;

resurrection of the, 212;

in relation to vegetation-spirit, 253

Trees, masks hung on, 283

Trevelyan, G. M., 154n.1

Tribute of youths and maidens, 74sqq.

Triennial tenure of the kingship, 112sq.

Trinity, Christian doctrine of the, 5n.3

Trocadero Museum, statues of kings of Dahomey in the, 85

Trojeburg, 77

Trophonius at Lebadea, 166n.1

Troy, the game of, 76sq.

Tshi-speaking negroes of the Gold Coast, their stories to explain their totemism, 128sq.

Turrbal tribe of Queensland, 60

Typhon, the soul of, in the Great Bear, 5

Uganda, king of, 39sq.;

human sacrifices in, 139;

firstborn sons strangled in, 182;

dead kings of, give oracles through inspired mediums, 200sq.

Ujjain in Western India, 122sqq., 132, 133

Ulster, tombs of the kings of, 101

Unyoro, kings of, put to death, 34

Upsala, 161;

sepulchral mound at, 57;

great festival at, 58

[pg 305]

Uranus mutilated by his son Cronus, 192

Urvasi and King Pururavas, Indian story of, 131

Ushnagh, pagan cemetery at, 101

Valhala, 13

Varro on a Roman funeral custom, 92;

on suicides by hanging, 282

Vegetation, death and revival of, 263sqq.

—— -spirit perhaps generalised from a tree-spirit, 253

Vicarious sacrifices, 117;

in ancient Greece, 166n.1

Vikramaditya, legendary king of Ujjain, 122sqq., 132

Vintage, first-fruits of the, offered to Icarius and Erigone, 283

Virbius or Hippolytus killed by horses, 214

Virgil, on the game of Troy, 76;

on the creation of the world, 108sq.

Vishnu, mock human sacrifice in the worship of, 216

Volcano, sacrifice of child to, 218

Vosges Mountains, superstition as to shooting stars in the, 67

Vṛtra, the dragon, 106sq.

Wachtl in Moravia, drama of Summer and Winter at, 257

Wadai, Sultan of, 39

Wade, Sir Thomas, 273sq.

Waizganthos, an old Prussian god, 156

Wak, a sky-spirit, 181

Wambugwe, the, 65

Water, effigies of Death thrown into the, 234sqq., 246sq.

—— -bird, a Whitsuntide mummer, 207n.1

—— -dragon, drama of the slaying of, 78

Weinhold, K., 57n.2

Wends, their custom of killing and eating the old, 14

Westermarck, Dr. E., 16n.1, 153n.1, 189n.2, 204n.1

Wheat at Lammas, offerings of, 101

Wheel, effigy of Death attached to a, 247

Whiteway, R. S., 51n.2

Whitsuntide, drama of Summer and Winter at, 257

—— King, 209sqq.

—— Mummers, 205sqq.

—— Queen, 210

Widow of king, succession to the throne through marriage with the, 193

Wieland's House, 77

Wild Man, a Whitsuntide mummer, 208sq., 212

Winter, Queen of, in the Isle of Man, 258;

effigy of, burned at Zurich, 260sq.

—— and Summer, dramatic battle of, 254sqq.

Wolf, transformation into, 83;

said to have guided the Samnites, 186n.4

—— -god, Zeus as the, 83

Wolves, Soranian, 186n.4

Woman, Sawing the Old, a Lenten ceremony, 240sqq.

Wood, King of the, at Nemi, 28

Woodpecker (picus) said to have guided the Piceni, 186n.4;

sacred among the Latins, ib.

Worship of dead kings, 24sq.

Wotjobaluk, the, 64

Wounding the dead or dying, custom of, 13sq.

Wrestling-matches in honour of the dead, 97

Wurmlingen in Swabia, Whitsuntide custom at, 207sq.;

the Carnival Fool at, 231sq.

Wyse, W., 144

Xeres, Fr., early Spanish historian, 185

Xerxes in Thessaly, 161, 163

Ximanas, an Indian tribe of the Amazon, kill all their firstborn children, 185sq.

Yarilo, the funeral of, 261, 262sq.

Year, the Great, 70

Years, mode of counting the, in Manipur, 117n.1

Yerrunthally tribe of Queensland, 64

Yorubas, the, 41, 112

Youths and maidens, tribute of, sent to Minos, 74sqq.

Zagmuk, a Babylonian festival, 110sq., 113, 115sqq.

Zeus, the grave of, 3;

oracular cave of, 70;

on Mount Lycaeus, 70n.1;

his transformations into animals, 82sq.;

the Wolf-god, 83;

the Olympic victors regarded as embodiments of, 90sq.;

swallows his wife Metis, 192;

his marriage with his sister Hera, 194;

and Europa, 73

—— and Hera, sacred marriage of, 91

—— Laphystian, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165

Zimmern, H., 111n.1

Zoganes at Babylon, 114

Zulu kings put to death, 36sq.

Zurich, effigies of Winter burnt at, 260sq.

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