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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68185 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68185)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The passing of the great race,, by
-Madison Grant
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The passing of the great race,
- or, The racial basis of European history
-
-Author: Madison Grant
-
-Commentator: Henry Fairfield Osborn
-
-Release Date: May 27, 2022 [eBook #68185]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PASSING OF THE GREAT
-RACE, ***
-
-
-
-
-
- THE PASSING OF THE GREAT RACE
- OR
- THE RACIAL BASIS OF EUROPEAN HISTORY
-
-
- BY
-
- MADISON GRANT
-
- CHAIRMAN, NEW YORK ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY; TRUSTEE, AMERICAN MUSEUM OF
- NATURAL HISTORY; COUNCILOR, AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY
-
- _FOURTH REVISED EDITION
- WITH A DOCUMENTARY SUPPLEMENT_
-
- WITH PREFACES
- BY
- HENRY FAIRFIELD OSBORN
-
- RESEARCH PROFESSOR OF ZOOLOGY, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
-
-
- NEW YORK
- CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
- 1923
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1916, 1918, 1921, BY
- CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
-
- Printed in the United States of America
-
- Published October, 1916
- Reprinted December, 1916
-
- NEW AND REVISED EDITION
- Published March, 1918
- Reprinted March, 1919
-
- THIRD EDITION, REVISED
- Published May, 1920
-
- FOURTH EDITION, REVISED
- Published August, 1921
- Reprinted February, July, 1922
- February, September, 1923
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- To
- MY FATHER
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-
-European history has been written in terms of nationality and of
-language, but never before in terms of race; yet race has played a far
-larger part than either language or nationality in moulding the
-destinies of men; race implies heredity and heredity implies all the
-moral, social and intellectual characteristics and traits which are the
-springs of politics and government.
-
-Quite independently and unconsciously the author, never before a
-historian, has turned this historical sketch into the current of a great
-biological movement, which may be traced back to the teachings of Galton
-and Weismann, beginning in the last third of the nineteenth century.
-This movement has compelled us to recognize the superior force and
-stability of heredity, as being more enduring and potent than
-environment. This movement is also a reaction from the teachings of
-Hippolyte Taine among historians and of Herbert Spencer among
-biologists, because it proves that environment and in the case of man,
-education, have an immediate, apparent and temporary influence, while
-heredity has a deep, subtle and permanent influence on the actions of
-men.
-
-Thus the racial history of Europe, which forms the author’s main outline
-and subject and which is wholly original in treatment, might be
-paraphrased as the heredity history of Europe. It is history as
-influenced by the hereditary impulses, predispositions and tendencies
-which, as highly distinctive racial traits, date back many thousands of
-years and were originally formed when man was still in the tribal state,
-long before the advent of civilization.
-
-In the author’s opening chapters these traits and tendencies are
-commented upon as they are observed to-day under the varying influences
-of migration and changes of social and physical environment. In the
-chapters relating to the racial history of Europe we enter a new and
-fascinating field of study, which I trust the author himself may some
-day expand into a longer story. There is no gainsaying that this is the
-correct scientific method of approaching the problem of the past.
-
-The moral tendency of the heredity interpretation of history is for our
-day and generation and is in strong accord with the true spirit of the
-modern eugenics movement in relation to patriotism, namely, the
-conservation and multiplication for our country of the best spiritual,
-moral, intellectual and physical forces of heredity; thus only will the
-integrity of our institutions be maintained in the future. These divine
-forces are more or less sporadically distributed in all races, some of
-them are found in what we call the lowest races, some are scattered
-widely throughout humanity, but they are certainly more widely and
-uniformly distributed in some races than in others.
-
-Thus conservation of that race which has given us the true spirit of
-Americanism is not a matter either of racial pride or of racial
-prejudice; it is a matter of love of country, of a true sentiment which
-is based upon knowledge and the lessons of history rather than upon the
-sentimentalism which is fostered by ignorance. If I were asked: What is
-the greatest danger which threatens the American republic to-day? I
-would certainly reply: The gradual dying out among our people of those
-hereditary traits through which the principles of our religious,
-political and social foundations were laid down and their insidious
-replacement by traits of less noble character.
-
- HENRY FAIRFIELD OSBORN.
-
- July 13, 1916.
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION
-
-
-History is repeating itself in America at the present time and
-incidentally is giving a convincing demonstration of the central thought
-in this volume, namely, that heredity and racial predisposition are
-stronger and more stable than environment and education.
-
-Whatever may be its intellectual, its literary, its artistic or its
-musical aptitudes, as compared with other races, the Anglo-Saxon branch
-of the Nordic race is again showing itself to be that upon which the
-nation must chiefly depend for leadership, for courage, for loyalty, for
-unity and harmony of action, for self-sacrifice and devotion to an
-ideal. Not that members of other races are not doing their part, many of
-them are, but in no other human stock which has come to this country is
-there displayed the unanimity of heart, mind and action which is now
-being displayed by the descendants of the blue eyed, fair-haired peoples
-of the north of Europe. In a recent journey in northern California and
-Oregon I noted that, in the faces of the regiments which were first to
-leave for the city of New York and later that, in the wonderful array of
-young men at Plattsburg, the Anglo-Saxon type was clearly dominant over
-every other and the purest members of this type largely outnumbered the
-others. In northern California I saw a great regiment detrain and with
-one or two exceptions they were all native Americans, descendants of the
-English, Scotch and north of Ireland men who founded the State of Oregon
-in the first half of the nineteenth century. At Plattsburg fair hair and
-blue eyes were very noticeable, much more so than in any ordinary crowds
-of American collegians as seen assembled in our universities.
-
-It should be remembered also that many of the dark-haired, dark-eyed
-youths of Plattsburg and other volunteer training camps are often
-three-fourths or seven-eighths Nordic, because it only requires a single
-dark-eyed ancestor to lend the dark hair and eye color to an otherwise
-pure Nordic strain. There is a clear differentiation between the
-original Nordic, the Alpine and the Mediterranean strains; but where
-physical characters and characteristics are partly combined in a mosaic,
-and to a less degree are blended, it requires long experience to judge
-which strain dominates.
-
-With a race having these predispositions, extending back to the very
-beginnings of European history, there is no hesitation or even waiting
-for conscription and the sad thought was continually in my mind in
-California, in Oregon and in Plattsburg that again this race was
-passing, that this war will take a very heavy toll of this strain of
-Anglo-Saxon life which has played so large a part in American history.
-
-War is in the highest sense dysgenic rather than eugenic. It is
-destructive of the best strains, spiritually, morally and physically.
-For the world’s future the destruction of wealth is a small matter
-compared with the destruction of the best human strains, for wealth can
-be renewed while these strains of the real human aristocracy once lost
-are lost forever. In the new world that we are working and fighting for,
-the world of liberty, of justice and of humanity, we shall save
-democracy only when democracy discovers its own aristocracy as in the
-days when our Republic was founded.
-
- HENRY FAIRFIELD OSBORN.
-
- December, 1917.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- _PART I_
- RACE, LANGUAGE AND NATIONALITY
- PAGE
- I. RACE AND DEMOCRACY 3
- II. THE PHYSICAL BASIS OF RACE 13
- III. RACE AND HABITAT 37
- IV. THE COMPETITION OF RACES 46
- V. RACE, LANGUAGE AND NATIONALITY 56
- VI. RACE AND LANGUAGE 69
- VII. THE EUROPEAN RACES IN COLONIES 76
-
- _PART II_
- EUROPEAN RACES IN HISTORY
- I. EOLITHIC MAN 97
- II. PALEOLITHIC MAN 104
- III. THE NEOLITHIC AND BRONZE AGES 119
- IV. THE ALPINE RACE 134
- V. THE MEDITERRANEAN RACE 148
- VI. THE NORDIC RACE 167
- VII. TEUTONIC EUROPE 179
- VIII. THE EXPANSION OF THE NORDICS 188
- IX. THE NORDIC FATHERLAND 213
- X. THE NORDIC RACE OUTSIDE OF EUROPE 223
- XI. RACIAL APTITUDES 226
- XII. ARYA 233
- XIII. ORIGIN OF THE ARYAN LANGUAGES 242
- XIV. THE ARYAN LANGUAGE IN ASIA 253
-
- APPENDIX WITH COLORED MAPS 265
- DOCUMENTARY SUPPLEMENT 275
- BIBLIOGRAPHY 415
- INDEX 445
-
-
-
-
- CHARTS AND MAPS
-
-
- CHARTS
- CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE _Pages_ 132–133
-
- CLASSIFICATION OF THE RACES OF EUROPE _Facing page_ 123
-
- PROVISIONAL OUTLINE OF NORDIC INVASIONS AND METAL
- CULTURES _Facing page_ 191
-
-
- MAPS
- MAXIMUM EXPANSION OF ALPINES WITH BRONZE CULTURE,
- 3000–1800 B. C. _Facing page_ 266
-
- EXPANSION OF THE PRE-TEUTONIC NORDICS, 1800–100 B. C. _Facing page_ 268
-
- EXPANSION OF THE TEUTONIC NORDICS AND SLAVIC ALPINES,
- 100 B. C.–1100 A. D. _Facing page_ 270
-
- PRESENT DISTRIBUTION OF EUROPEAN RACES _Facing page_ 272
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-
-The following pages are devoted to an attempt to elucidate the meaning
-of history in terms of race; that is, by the physical and psychical
-characters of the inhabitants of Europe instead of by their political
-grouping or by their spoken language. Practically all historians, while
-using the word race, have relied on tribal or national names as its sole
-definition. The ancients, like the moderns, in determining ethnical
-origin did not look beyond a man’s name, language or country and the
-actual information furnished by classic literature on the subject of
-physical characters is limited to a few scattered and often obscure
-remarks.
-
-Modern anthropology has demonstrated that racial lines are not only
-absolutely independent of both national and linguistic groupings, but
-that in many cases these racial lines cut through them at sharp angles
-and correspond closely with the divisions of social cleavage. The great
-lesson of the science of race is the immutability of somatological or
-bodily characters, with which is closely associated the immutability of
-psychical predispositions and impulses. This continuity of inheritance
-has a most important bearing on the theory of democracy and still more
-upon that of socialism, for it naturally tends to reduce the relative
-importance of environment. Those engaged in social uplift and in
-revolutionary movements are therefore usually very intolerant of the
-limitations imposed by heredity. Discussion of these limitations is also
-most offensive to the advocates of the obliteration, under the guise of
-internationalism, of all existing distinctions based on nationality,
-language, race, religion and class. Those individuals who have neither
-country, nor flag, nor language, nor class, nor even surnames of their
-own and who can only acquire them by gift or assumption, very naturally
-decry and sneer at the value of these attributes of the higher types.
-
-Democratic theories of government in their modern form are based on
-dogmas of equality formulated some hundred and fifty years ago and rest
-upon the assumption that environment and not heredity is the controlling
-factor in human development. Philanthropy and noble purpose dictated the
-doctrine expressed in the Declaration of Independence, the document
-which to-day constitutes the actual basis of American institutions. The
-men who wrote the words, “we hold these truths to be self-evident, that
-all men are created equal,” were themselves the owners of slaves and
-despised Indians as something less than human. Equality in their minds
-meant merely that they were just as good Englishmen as their brothers
-across the sea. The words “that all men are created equal” have since
-been subtly falsified by adding the word “free,” although no such
-expression is found in the original document and the teachings based on
-these altered words in the American public schools of to-day would
-startle and amaze the men who formulated the Declaration.
-
-It will be necessary for the reader to divest his mind of all
-preconceptions as to race, since modern anthropology, when applied to
-history, involves an entire change of definition. We must, first of all,
-realize that race pure and simple, the physical and psychical structure
-of man, is something entirely distinct from either nationality or
-language. Furthermore, race lies at the base of all the manifestation of
-modern society, just as it has done throughout the unrecorded eons of
-the past and the laws of nature operate with the same relentless and
-unchanging force in human affairs as in the phenomena of inanimate
-nature.
-
-The antiquity of existing European populations, viewed in the light
-thrown upon their origins by the discoveries of the last few decades,
-enables us to carry back history and prehistory into periods so remote
-that the classic world is but of yesterday. The living peoples of Europe
-consist of layer upon layer of diverse racial elements in varying
-proportions and historians and anthropologists, while studying these
-populations, have been concerned chiefly with the recent strata and have
-neglected the more ancient and submerged types.
-
-Aboriginal populations from time immemorial have been again and again
-swamped under floods of newcomers and have disappeared for a time from
-historic view. In the course of centuries, however, these primitive
-elements have slowly reasserted their physical type and have gradually
-bred out their conquerors, so that the racial history of Europe has been
-in the past, and is to-day, a story of the repression and resurgence of
-ancient races.
-
-Invasions of new races have ordinarily arrived in successive waves, the
-earlier ones being quickly absorbed by the conquered, while the later
-arrivals usually maintain longer the purity of their type. Consequently
-the more recent elements are found in a less mixed state than the older
-and the more primitive strata of the population always contain physical
-traits derived from still more ancient predecessors.
-
-Man has inhabited Europe in some form or other for hundreds of thousands
-of years and during all this lapse of time the population has been as
-dense as the food supply permitted. Tribes in the hunting stage are
-necessarily of small size, no matter how abundant the game and in the
-Paleolithic period man probably existed only in specially favorable
-localities and in relatively small communities.
-
-In the Neolithic and Bronze periods domesticated animals and the
-knowledge of agriculture, although of primitive character, afforded an
-enlarged food supply and the population in consequence greatly
-increased. The lake dwellers of the Neolithic were, for example,
-relatively numerous. With the clearing of the forests and the draining
-of the swamps during the Middle Ages and, above all, with the industrial
-expansion of the last century the population multiplied with great
-rapidity. We can, of course, form little or no estimate of the numbers
-of the Paleolithic population of Europe and not much more of those of
-Neolithic times, but even the latter must have been very small in
-comparison with the census of to-day.
-
-Some conception of the growth of population in recent times may be based
-on the increase in England. It has been computed that Saxon England at
-the time of the Conquest contained about 1,500,000 inhabitants, at the
-time of Queen Elizabeth the population was about 4,000,000, while in
-1911 the census gave for the same area some 35,000,000.
-
-The immense range of the subject of race in connection with history from
-its nebulous dawn and the limitations of space, require that
-generalizations must often be stated without mention of exceptions.
-These sweeping statements may even appear to be too bold, but they rest,
-to the best of the writer’s belief, upon solid foundations of facts or
-else are legitimate conclusions from evidence now in hand. In a science
-as recent as modern anthropology, new facts are constantly revealed and
-require the modification of existing hypotheses. The more the subject is
-studied, the more provisional even the best-sustained theory appears,
-but modern research opens a vista of vast interest and significance to
-man, now that we have discarded the shackles of former false viewpoints
-and are able to discern, even though dimly, the solution of many of the
-problems of race. In the future new data will inevitably expand and
-perhaps change our ideas, but such facts as are now in hand and the
-conclusions based thereupon are provisionally set forth in the following
-chapters and necessarily often in a dogmatic form.
-
-The statements relating to time have presented the greatest difficulty,
-as the authorities differ widely, but the dates have been fixed with
-extreme conservatism and the writer believes that whatever changes in
-them are hereafter required by further investigation and study, will
-result in pushing them back and not forward in prehistory. The dates
-given in the chapter on “Paleolithic Man” are frankly taken from the
-most recent authority on this subject, “The Men of the Old Stone Age,”
-by Prof. Henry Fairfield Osborn and the writer desires to take this
-opportunity to acknowledge his great indebtedness to this source of
-information, as well as to Mr. M. Taylor Pyne and to Mr. Charles Stewart
-Davison for their assistance and many helpful suggestions.
-
-The author also wishes to acknowledge his obligation to Prof. William Z.
-Ripley’s “The Races of Europe,” which contains a large array of
-anthropological measurements, maps and type portraits, providing
-valuable data for the present distribution of the three primary races of
-Europe.
-
-The American Geographical Society and its staff, particularly Mr. Leon
-Dominian, have also been of great help in the preparation of the maps
-herein contained and this occasion is taken by the writer to express his
-appreciation for their assistance.
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION TO THE FOURTH REVISED EDITION
-
-
-The addition of a Documentary Supplement to the latest revision of this
-book has been made in response to a persistent demand for “authorities.”
-
-The author has endeavored to make the references and quotations in this
-Supplement very full and, so far as possible, interesting in themselves
-as well as entirely distinct from the text, which stands substantially
-unchanged, and the authorities quoted are not necessarily the sources of
-the views herein expressed but more often are given in support of them.
-The contents of the book, since its first appearance, have had the
-advantage of the criticism of virtually every anthropologist in America
-and in England, France and Italy—many of whom have furnished the author
-with valuable corroborative material. Some of this material appears in
-the notes, but accessible authorities and the classical writers have
-been given the more prominent place. The supplement covered, as first
-prepared, substantially every statement in the book, but much was
-afterward omitted because it would seem that some things could be taken
-without proof.
-
-“The Passing of the Great Race,” in its original form, was designed by
-the author to rouse his fellow-Americans to the overwhelming importance
-of race and to the folly of the “Melting Pot” theory, even at the
-expense of bitter controversy. This purpose has been accomplished
-thoroughly, and one of the most far-reaching effects of the doctrines
-enunciated in this volume and in the discussions that followed its
-publication was the decision of the Congress of the United States to
-adopt discriminatory and restrictive measures against the immigration of
-undesirable races and peoples.
-
-Another of the results has been the publication in America and Europe of
-a series of books and articles more or less anthropological in character
-which have sustained or controverted its main theme. The new definition
-of race and the controlling rôle played by race in all the
-manifestations of what we call civilization are now generally accepted
-even by those whose political position depends upon popular favor.
-
-It was to be expected that there would be bitter opposition to those
-definitions of race which are based on physical and psychical characters
-that are immutable, rather than upon those derived from language or
-political allegiance, that are easily altered.
-
-To admit the unchangeable differentiation of race in its modern
-scientific meaning is to admit inevitably the existence of superiority
-in one race and of inferiority in another. Such an admission we can
-hardly expect from those of inferior races. These inferior races and
-classes are prompt to recognize in such an admission the very real
-danger to themselves of being relegated again to their former obscurity
-and subordinate position in society. The favorite defense of these
-inferior classes is an unqualified denial of the existence of fixed
-inherited qualities, either physical or spiritual, which cannot be
-obliterated or greatly modified by a change of environment. Failing in
-this, as they must necessarily fail, they point out the presence of
-mixed or intermediate types, and claim that in these mixtures, or blends
-as they choose to call them, the higher type tends to predominate. In
-fact, of course, the exact opposite is the case and it is scarcely
-necessary to cite the universal distrust, often contempt, that the
-half-breed between two sharply contrasted races inspires the world over.
-Belonging physically and spiritually to the lower race, but aspiring to
-recognition as one of the higher race, the unfortunate mongrel, in
-addition to a disharmonic physique, often inherits from one parent an
-unstable brain which is stimulated and at times overexcited by flashes
-of brilliancy from the other. The result is a total lack of continuity
-of purpose, an intermittent intellect goaded into spasmodic outbursts of
-energy. Physical and psychical disharmonies are common among crosses
-between Indians, negroes and whites, but where the parents are more
-closely related racially we often obtain individuals occupying the
-border-land between genius and insanity.
-
-The essential character of all these racial mixtures is a lack of
-harmony—both physical and mental—in the first few generations. Then, if
-the strain survives, it is by the slow reversion to one of the parent
-types—almost inevitably the lower.
-
-The temporary advantage of mere numbers enjoyed by the inferior classes
-in modern democracies can only be made permanent by the destruction of
-superior types—by massacre, as in Russia, or by taxation, as in England.
-In the latter country the financial burdens of the war and the selfish
-interests of labor have imposed such a load of taxation upon the upper
-and middle classes that marriage and children are becoming increasingly
-burdensome.
-
-The best example of complete elimination of a dominant class is in Santo
-Domingo. The horrors of the black revolt were followed by the slow death
-of the culture of the white man. This history should be studied
-carefully because it gives in prophetic form the sequence of events that
-we may expect to find in Mexico and in parts of South America where the
-replacement of the higher type by the resurgent native is taking place.
-
-In the countries inhabited by a population more or less racially uniform
-the phenomenon of the multiplication of the inferior classes fostered
-and aided by the noble but fatuous philanthropy of the well-to-do
-everywhere appears. Nature’s laws when unchecked maintain a relatively
-fixed ratio between the classes, which is greatly impaired in modern
-society by humanitarian and charitable activities. The resurgence of
-inferior races and classes throughout not merely Europe but the world,
-is evident in every despatch from Egypt, Ireland, Poland, Rumania, India
-and Mexico. It is called nationalism, patriotism, freedom and other
-high-sounding names, but it is everywhere the phenomenon of the
-long-suppressed, conquered servile classes rising against the master
-race. The late Peloponnesian War in the world at large, like the Civil
-War in America, has shattered the prestige of the white race and it will
-take several generations and perhaps wars to recover its former control,
-if it ever does regain it. The danger is from within and not from
-without. Neither the black, nor the brown, nor the yellow, nor the red
-will conquer the white in battle. But if the valuable elements in the
-Nordic race mix with inferior strains or die out through race suicide,
-then the citadel of civilization will fall for mere lack of defenders.
-
-One of the curious effects of democracy is the unquestionable fact that
-there is less freedom of the press than under autocratic forms of
-government. It is well-nigh impossible to publish in the American
-newspapers any reflection upon certain religions or races which are
-hysterically sensitive even when mentioned by name. The underlying idea
-seems to be that if publication can be suppressed the facts themselves
-will ultimately disappear. Abroad, conditions are fully as bad, and we
-have the authority of one of the most eminent anthropologists in France
-that the collection of anthropological measurements and data among
-French recruits at the outbreak of the Great War was prevented by Jewish
-influence, which aimed to suppress any suggestion of racial
-differentiation in France. In the United States also, during the war, we
-were unable to obtain complete measurements and data, in spite of the
-self-devotion of certain scientists, like Drs. Davenport, Sullivan and
-others. This failure was due to lack of time and equipment and not to
-racial influences, but in the near future we may confidently expect in
-this country strenuous opposition to any public discussion of race as
-such.
-
-The rapidly growing appreciation of the importance of race during the
-last few years, the study of the influence of race on nationality as
-shown by the after-war disputes over boundaries, the increasing
-complexity of our own problems between the whites and blacks, between
-the Americans and Japs, and between the native Americans and the
-hyphenated aliens in our midst upon whom we have carelessly urged
-citizenship, and, above all, the recognition that the leaders of labor
-and their more zealous followers are almost all foreigners, have served
-to arouse Americans to a realization of the menace of the impending
-Migration of Peoples through unrestrained freedom of entry here. The
-days of the Civil War and the provincial sentimentalism which governed
-or misgoverned our public opinion are past, and this generation must
-completely repudiate the proud boast of our fathers that they
-acknowledged no distinction in “race, creed, or color,” or else the
-native American must turn the page of history and write:
-
- “FINIS AMERICÆ”
-
-
-
-
- THE PASSING OF THE GREAT RACE
-
-
-
-
- _PART I_
- RACE, LANGUAGE AND NATIONALITY
-
-
-
-
- I
- RACE AND DEMOCRACY
-
-
-Failure to recognize the clear distinction between race and nationality
-and the still greater distinction between race and language and the easy
-assumption that the one is indicative of the other have been in the past
-serious impediments to an understanding of racial values. Historians and
-philologists have approached the subject from the viewpoint of
-linguistics and as a result we are to-day burdened with a group of
-mythical races, such as the Latin, the Aryan, the Indo-Germanic, the
-Caucasian and, perhaps, most inconsistent of all, the Celtic race.
-
-Man is an animal differing from his fellow inhabitants of the globe not
-in kind but only in degree of development and an intelligent study of
-the human species must be preceded by an extended knowledge of other
-mammals, especially the primates. Instead of such essential training,
-anthropologists often seek to qualify by research in linguistics,
-religion or marriage customs or in designs of pottery or blanket
-weaving, all of which relate to ethnology alone. As a result the
-influence of environment is often overestimated and overstated at the
-expense of heredity.
-
-The question of race has been further complicated by the effort of
-old-fashioned theologians to cramp all mankind into the scant six
-thousand years of Hebrew chronology as expounded by Archbishop Ussher.
-Religious teachers have also maintained the proposition not only that
-man is something fundamentally distinct from other living creatures, but
-that there are no inherited differences in humanity that cannot be
-obliterated by education and environment.
-
-It is, therefore, necessary at the outset for the reader to appreciate
-thoroughly that race, language and nationality are three separate and
-distinct things and that in Europe these three elements are found only
-occasionally persisting in combination, as in the Scandinavian nations.
-
-To realize the transitory nature of political boundaries one has but to
-consider the changes which have occurred during the past century and as
-to language, here in America we hear daily the English language spoken
-by many men who possess not one drop of English blood and who, a few
-years since, knew not one word of Saxon speech.
-
-As a result of certain religious and social doctrines, now happily
-becoming obsolete, race consciousness has been greatly impaired among
-civilized nations but in the beginning all differences of class, of
-caste and of color marked actual lines of race cleavage.
-
-In many countries the existing classes represent races that were once
-distinct. In the city of New York and elsewhere in the United States
-there is a native American aristocracy resting upon layer after layer of
-immigrants of lower races and these native Americans, while, of course,
-disclaiming the distinction of a patrician class and lacking in class
-consciousness and class dignity, have, nevertheless, up to this time
-supplied the leaders in thought and in the control of capital as well as
-of education and of the religious ideals and altruistic bias of the
-community.
-
-In the democratic forms of government the operation of universal
-suffrage tends toward the selection of the average man for public office
-rather than the man qualified by birth, education and integrity. How
-this scheme of administration will ultimately work out remains to be
-seen but from a racial point of view it will inevitably increase the
-preponderance of the lower types and cause a corresponding loss of
-efficiency in the community as a whole.
-
-The tendency in a democracy is toward a standardization of type and a
-diminution of the influence of genius. A majority must of necessity be
-inferior to a picked minority and it always resents specializations in
-which it cannot share. In the French Revolution the majority, calling
-itself “the people,” deliberately endeavored to destroy the higher type
-and something of the same sort was in a measure done after the American
-Revolution by the expulsion of the Loyalists and the confiscation of
-their lands, with a resultant loss to the growing nation of good race
-strains, which were in the next century replaced by immigrants of far
-lower type.
-
-In America we have nearly succeeded in destroying the privilege of
-birth; that is, the intellectual and moral advantage a man of good stock
-brings into the world with him. We are now engaged in destroying the
-privilege of wealth; that is, the reward of successful intelligence and
-industry and in some quarters there is developing a tendency to attack
-the privilege of intellect and to deprive a man of the advantage gained
-from an early and thorough classical education. Simplified spelling is a
-step in this direction. Ignorance of English grammar or classic learning
-must not, forsooth, be held up as a reproach to the political or social
-aspirant.
-
-Mankind emerged from savagery and barbarism under the leadership of
-selected individuals whose personal prowess, capacity or wisdom gave
-them the right to lead and the power to compel obedience. Such leaders
-have always been a minute fraction of the whole, but as long as the
-tradition of their predominance persisted they were able to use the
-brute strength of the unthinking herd as part of their own force and
-were able to direct at will the blind dynamic impulse of the slaves,
-peasants or lower classes. Such a despot had an enormous power at his
-disposal which, if he were benevolent or even intelligent, could be used
-and most frequently was used for the general uplift of the race. Even
-those rulers who most abused this power put down with merciless rigor
-the antisocial elements, such as pirates, brigands or anarchists, which
-impair the progress of a community, as disease or wounds cripple an
-individual.
-
-True aristocracy or a true republic is government by the wisest and
-best, always a small minority in any population. Human society is like a
-serpent dragging its long body on the ground, but with the head always
-thrust a little in advance and a little elevated above the earth. The
-serpent’s tail, in human society represented by the antisocial forces,
-was in the past dragged by sheer strength along the path of progress.
-Such has been the organization of mankind from the beginning, and such
-it still is in older communities than ours. What progress humanity can
-make under the control of universal suffrage, or the rule of the
-average, may find a further analogy in the habits of certain snakes
-which wiggle sideways and disregard the head with its brains and eyes.
-Such serpents, however, are not noted for their ability to make rapid
-progress.
-
-A true republic, the function of which is administration in the
-interests of the whole community—in contrast to a pure democracy, which
-in last analysis is the rule of the demos or a majority in its own
-interests—should be, and often is, the medium of selection for the
-technical task of government of those best qualified by antecedents,
-character and education, in short, of experts.
-
-To use another simile, in an aristocratic as distinguished from a
-plutocratic or democratic organization the intellectual and talented
-classes form the point of the lance while the massive shaft represents
-the body of the population and adds by its bulk and weight to the
-penetrative impact of the tip. In a democratic system this concentrated
-force is dispersed throughout the mass. It supplies, to be sure, a
-certain amount of leaven but in the long run the force and genius of the
-small minority is dissipated, and its efficiency lost. _Vox populi_, so
-far from being _Vox Dei_, thus becomes an unending wail for rights and
-never a chant of duty.
-
-Where a conquering race is imposed on another race the institution of
-slavery often arises to compel the servient race to work and to
-introduce it forcibly to a higher form of civilization. As soon as men
-can be induced to labor to supply their own needs slavery becomes
-wasteful and tends to vanish. From a material point of view slaves are
-often more fortunate than freemen when treated with reasonable humanity
-and when their elemental wants of food, clothing and shelter are
-supplied.
-
-The Indians around the fur posts in northern Canada were formerly the
-virtual bond slaves of the Hudson Bay Company, each Indian and his squaw
-and pappoose being adequately supplied with simple food and equipment.
-He was protected as well against the white man’s rum as the red man’s
-scalping parties and in return gave the Company all his peltries—the
-whole product of his year’s work. From an Indian’s point of view this
-was nearly an ideal condition but was to all intents serfdom or slavery.
-When through the opening up of the country the continuance of such an
-archaic system became an impossibility, the Indian sold his furs to the
-highest bidder, received a large price in cash and then wasted the
-proceeds in trinkets instead of blankets and in rum instead of flour,
-with the result that he is now gloriously free but is on the highroad to
-becoming a diseased outcast. In this case of the Hudson Bay Indian the
-advantages of the upward step from serfdom to freedom are not altogether
-clear. A very similar condition of vassalage existed until recently
-among the peons of Mexico, but without the compensation of the control
-of an intelligent and provident ruling class.
-
-In the same way serfdom in mediæval Europe apparently was a device
-through which the landowners repressed the nomadic instinct in their
-tenantry which became marked when the fertility of the land declined
-after the dissolution of the Roman Empire. Years are required to bring
-land to its highest productivity and agriculture cannot be successfully
-practised even in well-watered and fertile districts by farmers who
-continually drift from one locality to another. The serf or villein was,
-therefore, tied by law to the land and could not leave except with his
-master’s consent. As soon as the nomadic instinct was eliminated serfdom
-vanished. One has but to read the severe laws against vagrancy in
-England just before the Reformation to realize how widespread and
-serious was this nomadic instinct. Here in America we have not yet
-forgotten the wandering instincts of our Western pioneers, which in that
-case proved beneficial to every one except the migrants.
-
-While democracy is fatal to progress when two races of unequal value
-live side by side, an aristocracy may be equally injurious whenever, in
-order to purchase a few generations of ease and luxury, slaves or
-immigrants are imported to do the heavy work. It was a form of
-aristocracy that brought slaves to the American colonies and the West
-Indies and if there had been an aristocratic form of governmental
-control in California, Chinese coolies and Japanese laborers would now
-form the controlling element, so far as numbers are concerned, on the
-Pacific coast.
-
-It was the upper classes who encouraged the introduction of immigrant
-labor to work American factories and mines and it is the native American
-gentleman who builds a palace on the country side and who introduces as
-servants all manner of foreigners into purely American districts. The
-farming and artisan classes of America did not take alarm until it was
-too late and they are now seriously threatened with extermination in
-many parts of the country. In Rome, also, it was the plebeian, who first
-went under in the competition with slaves but the patrician followed in
-his turn a few generations later.
-
-The West Indian sugar planters flourished in the eighteenth century and
-produced some strong men; to-day from the same causes they have vanished
-from the scene.
-
-During the last century the New England manufacturer imported the Irish
-and French Canadians and the resultant fall in the New England birth
-rate at once became ominous. The refusal of the native American to work
-with his hands when he can hire or import serfs to do manual labor for
-him is the prelude to his extinction and the immigrant laborers are now
-breeding out their masters and killing by filth and by crowding as
-effectively as by the sword.
-
-Thus the American sold his birthright in a continent to solve a labor
-problem. Instead of retaining political control and making citizenship
-an honorable and valued privilege, he intrusted the government of his
-country and the maintenance of his ideals to races who have never yet
-succeeded in governing themselves, much less any one else.
-
-Associated with this advance of democracy and the transfer of power from
-the higher to the lower races, from the intellectual to the plebeian
-class, we find the spread of socialism and the recrudescence of obsolete
-religious forms. Although these phenomena appear to be contradictory,
-they are in reality closely related since both represent reactions from
-the intense individualism which a century ago was eminently
-characteristic of Americans.
-
-
-
-
- II
- THE PHYSICAL BASIS OF RACE
-
-
-In the modern and scientific study of race we have long since discarded
-the Adamic theory that man is descended from a single pair, created a
-few thousand years ago in a mythical Garden of Eden somewhere in Asia,
-to spread later over the earth in successive waves.
-
-It is a fact, however, that Asia was the chief area of evolution and
-differentiation of man and that the various groups had their main
-development there and not on the peninsula we call Europe.
-
-Many of the races of Europe, both living and extinct, did come from the
-East through Asia Minor or by way of the African littoral, but most of
-the direct ancestors of existing populations have inhabited Europe for
-many thousands of years. During that time numerous races of men have
-passed over the scene. Some undoubtedly have utterly vanished and some
-have left their blood behind them in the Europeans of to-day.
-
-We now know, since the elaboration of the Mendelian Laws of Inheritance,
-that certain bodily characters, such as skull shape, stature, eye color,
-hair color and nose form, some of which are so-called unit characters,
-are transmitted in accordance with fixed laws, and, further, that
-various characters which are normally correlated or linked together in
-pure races may, after a prolonged admixture of races, pass down
-separately and form what is known as disharmonic combinations. Such
-disharmonic combinations are, for example, a tall brunet or a short
-blond; blue eyes associated with brunet hair or brown eyes with blond
-hair.
-
-The process of intermixture of characters has gone far in existing
-populations and through the ease of modern methods of transportation
-this process is going much further in Europe and in America. The results
-of such mixture are not blends or intermediate types, but rather mosaics
-of contrasted characters. Such blends, if any, as ultimately occur are
-too remote to concern us here.
-
-The crossing of an individual of pure brunet race with an individual of
-pure blond race produces in the first generation offspring which are
-distinctly dark. In subsequent generations, brunets and blonds appear in
-various proportions but the former tend to be much the more numerous.
-The blond is consequently said to be recessive to the brunet because it
-recedes from view in the first generation. This or any similar recessive
-or suppressed trait is not lost to the germ plasm, but reappears in
-later generations of the hybridized stock. A similar rule prevails with
-other physical characters.
-
-In defining race in Europe it is necessary not only to consider pure
-groups or pure types but also the distribution of characters belonging
-to each particular subspecies of man found there. The interbreeding of
-these populations has progressed to such an extent that in many cases
-such an analysis of physical characters is necessary to reconstruct the
-elements which have entered into their ethnic composition. To rely on
-averages alone leads to misunderstanding and to disregard of the
-relative proportion of pure, as contrasted with mixed types.
-
-Sometimes we find a character appearing here and there as the sole
-remnant of a once numerous race, for example, the rare appearance in
-European populations of a skull of the Neanderthal type, a race widely
-spread over Europe 40,000 years ago, or of the Cro-Magnon type, the
-predominant race 16,000 years ago. Before the fossil remains of the
-Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon races were studied and understood such
-reversional specimens were considered pathological, instead of being
-recognized as the reappearance of an ancient and submerged type.
-
-These physical characters are to all intents and purposes immutable and
-they do not change during the lifetime of a language or an empire. The
-skull shape of the Egyptian fellaheen, in the unchanging environment of
-the Nile Valley, is absolutely identical in measurements, proportions
-and capacity with skulls found in the pre-dynastic tombs dating back
-more than six thousand years.
-
-There exists to-day a widespread and fatuous belief in the power of
-environment, as well as of education and opportunity to alter heredity,
-which arises from the dogma of the brotherhood of man, derived in its
-turn from the loose thinkers of the French Revolution and their American
-mimics. Such beliefs have done much damage in the past and if allowed to
-go uncontradicted, may do even more serious damage in the future. Thus
-the view that the Negro slave was an unfortunate cousin of the white
-man, deeply tanned by the tropic sun and denied the blessings of
-Christianity and civilization, played no small part with the
-sentimentalists of the Civil War period and it has taken us fifty years
-to learn that speaking English, wearing good clothes and going to school
-and to church do not transform a Negro into a white man. Nor was a
-Syrian or Egyptian freedman transformed into a Roman by wearing a toga
-and applauding his favorite gladiator in the amphitheatre. Americans
-will have a similar experience with the Polish Jew, whose dwarf stature,
-peculiar mentality and ruthless concentration on self-interest are being
-engrafted upon the stock of the nation.
-
-Recent attempts have been made in the interest of inferior races among
-our immigrants to show that the shape of the skull does change, not
-merely in a century, but in a single generation. In 1910, the report of
-the anthropological expert of the Congressional Immigration Commission
-gravely declared that a round skull Jew on his way across the Atlantic
-might and did have a round skull child; but a few years later, in
-response to the subtle elixir of American institutions as exemplified in
-an East Side tenement, might and did have a child whose skull was
-appreciably longer; and that a long skull south Italian, breeding
-freely, would have precisely the same experience in the reverse
-direction. In other words the Melting Pot was acting instantly under the
-influence of a changed environment.
-
-What the Melting Pot actually does in practice can be seen in Mexico,
-where the absorption of the blood of the original Spanish conquerors by
-the native Indian population has produced the racial mixture which we
-call Mexican and which is now engaged in demonstrating its incapacity
-for self-government. The world has seen many such mixtures and the
-character of a mongrel race is only just beginning to be understood at
-its true value.
-
-It must be borne in mind that the specializations which characterize the
-higher races are of relatively recent development, are highly unstable
-and when mixed with generalized or primitive characters tend to
-disappear. Whether we like to admit it or not, the result of the mixture
-of two races, in the long run, gives us a race reverting to the more
-ancient, generalized and lower type. The cross between a white man and
-an Indian is an Indian; the cross between a white man and a Negro is a
-Negro; the cross between a white man and a Hindu is a Hindu; and the
-cross between any of the three European races and a Jew is a Jew.
-
-In the crossing of the blond and brunet elements of a population, the
-more deeply rooted and ancient dark traits are prepotent or dominant.
-This is matter of everyday observation and the working of this law of
-nature is not influenced or affected by democratic institutions or by
-religious beliefs. Nature cares not for the individual nor how he may be
-modified by environment. She is concerned only with the perpetuation of
-the species or type and heredity alone is the medium through which she
-acts.
-
-As measured in terms of centuries these characters are fixed and rigid
-and the only benefit to be derived from a changed environment and better
-food conditions is the opportunity afforded a race which has lived under
-adverse conditions to achieve its maximum development but the limits of
-that development are fixed for it by heredity and not by environment.
-
-In dealing with European populations the best method of determining race
-has been found to lie in a comparison of proportions of the skull, the
-so-called cephalic index. This is the ratio of maximum _width_, taken at
-the widest part of the skull above the ears, to maximum _length_. Skulls
-with an index of 75 or less, that is, those with a width that is
-three-fourths of the length or less, are considered dolichocephalic or
-long skulls. Skulls of an index of 80 or over are round or
-brachycephalic skulls. Intermediate indices, between 75 and 80, are
-considered mesaticephalic. These are cranial indices. To allow for the
-flesh on living specimens about two per cent is to be added to this
-index and the result is the cephalic index. In the following pages only
-long and round skulls are considered and the intermediate forms are
-assigned to the dolichocephalic group.
-
-This cephalic index, though an extremely important if not the
-controlling character, is, nevertheless, but a single character and must
-be checked up with other somatological traits. Normally, a long skull is
-associated with a long face and a round skull with a round face.
-
-The use of this test, the cephalic index, enables us to divide the great
-bulk of the European populations into three distinct subspecies of man,
-one northern and one southern, both dolichocephalic or characterized by
-a long skull and a central subspecies which is brachycephalic or
-characterized by a round skull.
-
-The first is the Nordic or Baltic subspecies. This race is long skulled,
-very tall, fair skinned with blond or brown hair and light colored eyes.
-The Nordics inhabit the countries around the North and Baltic Seas and
-include not only the great Scandinavian and Teutonic groups, but also
-other early peoples who first appear in southern Europe and in Asia as
-representatives of Aryan language and culture.
-
-The second is the dark Mediterranean or Iberian subspecies, occupying
-the shores of the inland sea and extending along the Atlantic coast
-until it reaches the Nordic species. It also spreads far east into
-southern Asia. It is long skulled like the Nordic race but the absolute
-size of the skull is less. The eyes and hair are very dark or black and
-the skin more or less swarthy. The stature is distinctly less than that
-of the Nordic race and the musculature and bony framework weak.
-
-The third is the Alpine subspecies occupying all central and eastern
-Europe and extending through Asia Minor to the Hindu Kush and the
-Pamirs. The Armenoids constitute an Alpine subdivision and may possibly
-represent the ancestral type of this race which remained in the
-mountains and high plateaux of Anatolia and western Asia.
-
-The Alpines are round skulled, of medium height and sturdy build both as
-to skeleton and muscles. The coloration of both hair and eyes was
-originally very dark and still tends strongly in that direction but many
-light colored eyes, especially gray, are now common among the Alpine
-populations of western Europe.
-
-While the inhabitants of Europe betray as a whole their mixed origin,
-nevertheless, individuals of each of the three main subspecies are found
-in large numbers and in great purity, as well as sparse remnants of
-still more ancient races represented by small groups or by individuals
-and even by single characters.
-
-These three main groups have bodily characters which constitute them
-distinct subspecies. Each group is a large one and includes several
-well-marked varieties, which differ even more widely in cultural
-development than in physical divergence so that when the Mediterranean
-of England is compared with the Hindu, or the Alpine Savoyard with the
-Rumanian or Turcoman, a wide gulf is found.
-
-In zoology, related species when grouped together constitute subgenera
-and genera and the term species implies the existence of a certain
-definite amount of divergence from the most closely related type but
-race does not require a similar amount of difference. In man, where all
-groups are more or less fertile when crossed, so many intermediate or
-mixed types occur that the word species has at the present day too
-extended a meaning.
-
-For the sake of clearness the word race and not the word species or
-subspecies will be used in the following chapters as far as possible.
-
-The old idea that fertility or infertility of races of animals was the
-measure of species is now abandoned. One of the greatest difficulties in
-classifying man is his perverse predisposition to mismate. This is a
-matter of daily observation, especially among the women of the better
-classes, probably because of their wider range of choice.
-
-There must have existed many subspecies and species, if not genera, of
-men since the Pliocene and new discoveries of their remains may be
-expected at any time and in any part of the eastern hemisphere.
-
-The cephalic index is of less value in the classification of Asiatic
-populations but the distribution of round and long skulls is similar to
-that in Europe. The vast central plateau of that continent is inhabited
-by round skulls. In fact, Thibet and the western Himalayas were probably
-the centre of radiation of all the round skulls of the world. In India
-and Persia south of this central area occurs a long skull race related
-to Mediterranean man in Europe.
-
-Both skull types occur much intermixed among the American Indians and
-the cephalic index is of little value in classifying the Amerinds. No
-satisfactory explanation of the variability of the skull shape in the
-western hemisphere has as yet been found, but the total range of
-variation of physical characters among them, from northern Canada to
-southern Patagonia, is less than the range of such variation from
-Normandy to Provence in France.
-
-In Africa the cephalic index is also of small classification value
-because all of the populations are characterized by a long skull.
-
-The distinction between a long skull and a round skull in mankind
-probably goes back at least to early Paleolithic times, if not to a
-period still more remote. It is of such great antiquity that when new
-species or races appear in Europe at the close of the Paleolithic,
-between 10,000 and 7,000 years B. C., the skull characters among them
-are as clearly defined as they are to-day.
-
-The fact that two distinct species of mankind have long skulls, as have
-the north European and the African Negro, is no necessary indication of
-relationship and in that instance is merely a case of parallel
-specialization, but the fact, however, that the Swede has a long skull
-and the Savoyard a round skull does prove them to be racially distinct.
-
-The claim that the Nordic race is a mere variation of the Mediterranean
-race and that the latter is in turn derived from the Ethiopian Negro
-rests upon a mistaken idea that a dolichocephaly in common must mean
-identity of origin, as well as upon a failure to take into consideration
-many somatological characters of almost equal value with the cephalic
-index. Indeed, the cephalic index, being merely a ratio, may be
-identical for skulls differing in every other proportion and detail, as
-well as in absolute size and capacity.
-
-Eye color is of very great importance in race determination because all
-blue, gray or green eyes in the world to-day came originally from the
-same source, namely, the Nordic race of northern Europe. This light
-colored eye has appeared nowhere else on earth, is a specialization of
-this subspecies of man only and consequently is of extreme value in the
-classification of European races. Dark colored eyes are all but
-universal among wild mammals and entirely so among the primates, man’s
-nearest relatives. It may be taken as an absolute certainty that all the
-original races of man had dark eyes.
-
-One subspecies of man and one alone specialized in light colored eyes.
-This same subspecies also evolved light brown or blond hair, a character
-far less deeply rooted than eye color, as blond children tend to grow
-darker with advancing years and populations partly of Nordic extraction,
-such as those of Lombardy, upon admixture with darker races lose their
-blond hair more readily than their light colored eyes. In short, light
-colored eyes are far more common than light colored hair. In crosses
-between Alpines and Nordics, the Alpine stature and the Nordic eye
-appear to prevail. Light color in eyes is largely due to a greater or
-less absence of pigment but it is not associated with weak eyesight, as
-in the case of Albinos. In fact, among marksmen, it has been noted that
-nearly all the great rifle-shots in England or America have had light
-colored eyes.
-
-Blond hair also comes everywhere from the Nordic subspecies and from
-nowhere else. Whenever we find blondness among the darker races of the
-earth we may be sure some Nordic wanderer has passed that way. When
-individuals of perfect blond type occur, as sometimes in Greek islands,
-we may suspect a recent visit of sailors from a passing ship but when
-only single characters remain spread thinly, but widely, over
-considerable areas, like the blondness of the Atlas Berbers or of the
-Albanian mountaineers, we must search in the dim past for the origin of
-these blurred traits of early invaders.
-
-The range of blond hair color in pure Nordic peoples runs from flaxen
-and red to shades of chestnut and brown. The darker shades may indicate
-crossing in some cases, but absolutely black hair certainly does mean an
-ancestral cross with a dark race—in England with the Mediterranean race.
-
-It must be clearly understood that blondness of hair and of eye is not a
-final test of Nordic race. The Nordics include all the blonds, and also
-those of darker hair or eye when possessed of a preponderance of other
-Nordic characters. In this sense the word “blond” means those lighter
-shades of hair or eye color in contrast to the very dark or black shades
-which are termed brunet. The meaning of “blond” as now used is therefore
-not limited to the lighter or flaxen shades as in colloquial speech.
-
-In England among Nordic populations there are large numbers of
-individuals with hazel brown eyes joined with the light brown or
-chestnut hair which is the typical hair shade of the English and
-Americans. This combination is also common in Holland and Westphalia and
-is frequently associated with a very fair skin. These men are all of
-“blond” aspect and constitution and consequently are to be classed as
-members of the Nordic race.
-
-In Nordic populations the women are, in general, lighter haired than the
-men, a fact which points to a blond past and a darker future for those
-populations. Women in all human races, as the females among all mammals,
-tend to exhibit the older, more generalized and primitive traits of the
-past of the race. The male in his individual development indicates the
-direction in which the race is tending under the influence of variation
-and selection.
-
-It is interesting to note in connection with the more primitive physique
-of the female, that in the spiritual sphere also women retain the
-ancient and intuitive knowledge that the great mass of mankind is not
-free and equal but bond and unequal.
-
-The color of the skin is a character of importance but one that is
-exceedingly hard to measure as the range of variation in Europe between
-skins of extreme fairness and those that are exceedingly swarthy is
-almost complete. The Nordic race in its purity has an absolutely fair
-skin and is consequently the white man par excellence.
-
-Many members of the Nordic race otherwise apparently pure have skins, as
-well as hair, more or less dark, so that the determinative value of this
-character is uncertain. There can be no doubt that the quality of the
-skin and the extreme range of its variation in color from black, brown,
-red, yellow to ivory-white are excellent measures of the specific or
-subgeneric distinctions between the larger groups of mankind but in
-dealing with European populations it is sometimes difficult to correlate
-the shades of fairness with other physical characters.
-
-In general, hair color and skin color are linked together, but it often
-happens that an individual with all other Nordic characters in great
-purity has a skin of an olive or dark tint. Even more frequently we find
-individuals with absolutely pure brunet traits in possession of a skin
-of almost ivory whiteness and of great clarity. This last combination is
-very frequent among the brunets of the British Isles. That these are, to
-some extent, disharmonic combinations we may be certain but beyond that
-our knowledge does not lead. Women, however, of fair skin have always
-been the objects of keen envy by those of the sex whose skins are black,
-yellow or red.
-
-Stature is another character of greater value than skin color and,
-perhaps, than hair color and is one of much importance in European
-classification for on that continent we have the most extreme variations
-of human height.
-
-Exceedingly adverse economic conditions may inhibit a race from
-attaining the full measure of its growth and to this extent environment
-plays its part in determining stature but fundamentally it is race,
-always race, that sets the limit. The tall Scot and the dwarfed
-Sardinian owe their respective sizes to race and not to oatmeal or olive
-oil. It is probable, however, that the fact that the stature of the
-Irish is, on the average, shorter than that of the Scotch is due partly
-to economic conditions and partly to the depressive effect of a
-considerable population of primitive short stock.
-
-The Mediterranean race is everywhere marked by a relatively short
-stature, sometimes greatly depressed, as in south Italy and in Sardinia,
-and also by a comparatively light bony framework and feeble muscular
-development.
-
-The Alpine race is taller than the Mediterranean, although shorter than
-the Nordic, and is characterized by a stocky and sturdy build. The
-Alpines rarely, if ever, show the long necks and graceful figures so
-often found in the other two races.
-
-The Nordic race is nearly everywhere distinguished by great stature.
-Almost the tallest stature in the world is found among the pure Nordic
-populations of the Scottish and English borders while the native British
-of Pre-Nordic brunet blood are for the most part relatively short. No
-one can question the race value of stature who observes on the streets
-of London the contrast between the Piccadilly gentleman of Nordic race
-and the cockney costermonger of the old Neolithic type.
-
-In some cases where these three European races have become mixed stature
-seems to be one of the first Nordic characters to vanish, but wherever
-in Europe we find great stature in a population otherwise lacking in
-Nordic characters we may suspect a Nordic crossing, as in the case of a
-large proportion of the inhabitants of Burgundy, of the Tyrol and of the
-Dalmatian Alps south to Albania.
-
-These four characters, skull shape, eye color, hair color and stature,
-are sufficient to enable us to differentiate clearly between the three
-main subspecies of Europe, but if we wish to discuss the minor
-variations in each race and mixtures between them, we must go much
-further and take up other proportions of the skull than the cephalic
-index, as well as the shape and position of the eyes, the proportions
-and shape of the jaws, the chin and other features.
-
-The nose is an exceedingly important character. The original human nose
-was, of course, broad and bridgeless. This trait is shown clearly in
-new-born infants who recapitulate in their development the various
-stages of the evolution of the human genus. A bridgeless nose with wide,
-flaring nostrils is a very primitive character and is still retained by
-some of the larger divisions of mankind throughout the world. It appears
-occasionally in white populations of European origin but is everywhere a
-very ancient, generalized and low character.
-
-The high bridge and long, narrow nose, the so-called Roman, Norman or
-aquiline nose, is characteristic of the most highly specialized races of
-mankind. While an apparently unimportant character, this feature is one
-of the very best clews to racial origin and in the details of its form,
-and especially in the lateral shape of the nostrils, is a race
-determinant of the greatest value.
-
-The lips, whether thin or fleshy or whether clean-cut or everted, are
-race characters. Thick, protruding, everted lips are very ancient traits
-and are characteristic of many primitive races. A high instep also has
-long been esteemed an indication of patrician type while the flat foot
-is often the test of lowly origin.
-
-The absence or abundance of hair and beard and the relative absence or
-abundance of body hair are characters of no little value in
-classification. Abundant body hair is, to a large extent, peculiar to
-populations of the very highest as well as the very lowest species,
-being characteristic of the north European as well as of the Australian
-savages. It merely means the retention in both these groups of a very
-early and primitive trait which has been lost by the Negroes, Mongols
-and Amerinds.
-
-The Nordic and Alpine races are far better equipped with head and body
-hair than the Mediterranean, which is throughout its range a glabrous or
-relatively naked race but among the Nordics the extreme blond types are
-less equipped with body hair or down than are darker members of the
-race. A contrast in color between head hair and beard, the latter always
-being lighter than the former, may be one of the results of an ancient
-crossing of races.
-
-The so-called red-haired branch of the Nordic race has special
-characters in addition to red hair, such as a greenish cast of eye, a
-skin of delicate texture tending either to great clarity or to freckles
-and certain peculiar temperamental traits. This was probably a variety
-closely related to the blonds and it first appears in history in
-association with them.
-
-While the three main European races are the subject of this book and
-while it is not the intention of the author to deal with the other human
-types, it is desirable in connection with the discussion of this
-character, hair, to state that the three European subspecies are
-subdivisions of one of the primary groups or species of the genus _Homo_
-which, taken together, we may call the Caucasian for lack of a better
-name.
-
-The existing classification of man must be radically revised, as the
-differences between the most divergent human types are far greater than
-are usually deemed sufficient to constitute separate species and even
-subgenera in the animal kingdom at large. Outside of the three European
-subspecies the greater portion of the genus _Homo_ can be roughly
-divided into the Negroes and Negroids, and the Mongols and Mongoloids.
-
-The former apparently originated in south Asia and entered Africa by way
-of the northeastern corner of that continent. Africa south of the Sahara
-is now the chief home of this race, though remnants of Negroid
-aborigines are found throughout south Asia from India to the
-Philippines, while the very distinct black Melanesians and the
-Australoids lie farther to the east and south.
-
-The Mongoloids include the round skulled Mongols and their derivatives,
-the Amerinds or American Indians. This group is essentially Asiatic and
-occupies the centre and the eastern half of that continent.
-
-A description of these Negroids and Mongoloids and their derivatives, as
-well as of certain aberrant species of man, lies outside the scope of
-this work.
-
-In the structure of the head hair of all races of mankind we find a
-regular progression from extreme kinkiness to lanky straightness and
-this straightness or curliness depends on the shape of the cross section
-of the hair itself. This cross section has three distinct forms,
-corresponding with the most extreme divergences among human species.
-
-The cross section of the hair of the Negroes is a flat ellipse with the
-result that they all have kinky hair. This kinkiness of the Negroes’
-hair is also due somewhat to the acute angle at which the hair is set
-into the skin and the peppercorn form of hair probably represents an
-extreme specialization.
-
-The cross section of the hair of the Mongols and their derivatives, the
-Amerinds, is a complete circle and their hair is perfectly straight and
-lank.
-
-The cross section of the hair of the so-called Caucasians, including the
-Mediterranean, Alpine and Nordic subspecies, is an oval ellipse and
-consequently is intermediate between the cross-sections of the Negroes
-and Mongoloids. Hair of this structure is wavy or curly, never either
-kinky or absolutely straight and is characteristic of all the European
-populations almost without exception.
-
-Of these three hair types the straighter forms most closely represent
-the earliest human form of hair.
-
-We have confined the discussion to the most important characters but
-there are many other valuable aids to classification to be found in the
-proportions of the body and the relative length of the limbs. In this
-latter respect, it is a matter of common knowledge that there occur two
-distinct types, the one long legged and short bodied, the other long
-bodied and short legged.
-
-Without going into further physical details, it is probable that all
-relative proportions in the body, the features, the skeleton and the
-skull which are fixed and constant and lie outside of the range of
-individual variation represent dim inheritances from the past. Every
-generation of human beings carries the blood of thousands of ancestors,
-stretching back through thousands of years, superimposed upon a prehuman
-inheritance of still greater antiquity and the face and body of every
-living man offer an intricate mass of hieroglyphs that science will some
-day learn to read and interpret.
-
-Only the foregoing main characters will be used as the basis for
-determining race and attention will be called later to such
-temperamental and spiritual traits as seem to be associated with
-distinct physical types.
-
-We shall discuss only European populations and, as said, shall not deal
-with exotic and alien races scattered among them nor with those quarters
-of the globe where the races of man are such that other physical
-characters must be called upon to provide clear definitions.
-
-A fascinating subject would open up if we were to dwell upon the effect
-of racial combinations and disharmonies, as, for instance, where the
-mixed Nordic and Alpine populations of Lombardy usually retain the skull
-shape, hair color and stature of the Alpine race, with the light eye
-color of the Nordic race, or where the mountain populations along the
-east coast of the Adriatic from the Tyrol to Albania have the stature of
-the Nordic race and an Alpine skull and coloration.
-
-
-
-
- III
- RACE AND HABITAT
-
-
-The laws which govern the distribution of the various races of man and
-their evolution through selection are substantially the same as those
-controlling the evolution and distribution of the larger mammals.
-
-Man, however, with his superior mentality has freed himself from many of
-the conditions which impose restraint upon the expansion of animals. In
-his case selection through disease and social and economic competition
-has largely replaced selection through adjustment to the limitations of
-food supply.
-
-Man is the most cosmopolitan of animals and in one form or another
-thrives in the tropics and in the arctics, at sea level and on high
-plateaux, in the desert and in the reeking forests of the equator.
-Nevertheless, the various races of Europe have each a certain natural
-habitat in which it achieves its highest development.
-
-
- THE NORDIC HABITAT
-
-The Nordics appear in their present centre of distribution, the basin of
-the Baltic, at the close of the Paleolithic, as soon as the retreating
-glaciers left habitable land. This race was probably at that time in
-possession of its fundamental characters, and its extension from the
-plains of Russia to Scandinavia was not in the nature of a radical
-change of environment. The race in consequence is now, always has been
-and probably always will be, adjusted to certain environmental
-conditions, chief of which is protection from a tropical sun. The
-actinic rays of the sun at the same latitude are uniform in strength the
-world over and continuous sunlight affects adversely the delicate
-nervous organization of the Nordics. The fogs and long winter nights of
-the North serve as a protection from too much sun and from its too
-direct rays.
-
-Scarcely less important is the presence of a large amount of moisture
-but above all a constant variety of temperature is needed. Sharp
-contrast between night and day temperature and between summer and winter
-are necessary to maintain the vigor of the Nordic race at a high pitch.
-Uniform weather, if long continued, lessens its energy. Too great
-extremes as in midwinter or midsummer in parts of New England are
-injurious. Limited but constant alternations of heat and cold, of
-moisture and dryness, of sun and clouds, of calm and cyclonic storms
-offer the ideal surroundings.
-
-Where the environment is too soft and luxurious and no strife is
-required for survival, not only are weak strains and individuals allowed
-to survive and encouraged to breed but the strong types also grow fat
-mentally and physically, like overfed Indians on reservations or
-wingless birds on oceanic islands, which have lost the power of flight
-as a result of prolonged protective conditions.
-
-Men of the Nordic race may not enjoy the fogs and snows of the North,
-the endless changes of weather and the violent fluctuations of the
-thermometer and they may seek the sunny southern isles, but under the
-former conditions they flourish, do their work and raise their families.
-In the south they grow listless and cease to breed.
-
-In the lower classes in the Southern States of America the increasing
-proportion of “poor whites” and “crackers” are symptoms of lack of
-climatic adjustment. The whites in Georgia, in the Bahamas and, above
-all, in Barbadoes are excellent examples of the deleterious effects of
-residence outside the natural habitat of the Nordic race.
-
-The poor whites of the Cumberland Mountains in Kentucky and Tennessee
-present a more difficult problem, because here the altitude, even though
-moderate, should modify the effects of latitude and the climate of these
-mountains cannot be particularly unfavorable to men of Nordic breed.
-There are probably other hereditary forces at work there as yet little
-understood.
-
-No doubt bad food and economic conditions, prolonged inbreeding and the
-loss through emigration of the best elements have played a large part in
-the degeneration of these mountaineers. They represent to a large extent
-the offspring of indentured servants brought over by the rich planters
-in early Colonial times and their names indicate that many of them are
-the descendants of the old borderers along the Scotch and English
-frontier. The persistence with which family feuds are maintained
-certainly points to such an origin. The physical type is typically
-Nordic, for the most part pure Saxon or Anglian, and the whole mountain
-population show somewhat aberrant but very pronounced physical, moral
-and mental characteristics which would repay scientific investigation.
-The problem is too complex to be disposed of by reference to the
-hookworm, illiteracy or competition with Negroes.
-
-This type played a large part in the settlement of the Middle West, by
-way of Kentucky, Tennessee and Missouri. Thence they passed both up the
-Missouri River and down the Santa Fé trail and contributed rather more
-than their share of the train robbers, horse thieves and bad men of the
-West.
-
-Scotland and the Bahamas are inhabited by men of precisely the same
-race, but the vigor of the English in the Bahamas is gone and the beauty
-of their women has faded. The fact that they were not in competition
-with an autochthonous race better adjusted to climatic conditions has
-enabled them to survive, but the type could not have persisted, even
-during the last two hundred years, if they had been compelled to compete
-on terms of equality with a native and acclimated population.
-
-Another element entering into racial degeneration on many other islands
-and for that matter in many New England villages, is the loss through
-emigration of the more vigorous and energetic individuals, leaving
-behind the less efficient to continue the race at home.
-
-In subtropical countries where the energy of the Nordics is at a low ebb
-it would appear that the racial inheritance of physical strength and
-mental vigor was suppressed and recessive rather than destroyed. Many
-individuals born in unfavorable climatic surroundings, who move back to
-the original habitat of their race in the north, recover their full
-quota of energy and vigor. New York and other Northern cities have many
-Southerners who are fully as efficient as pure Northerners.
-
-This Nordic race can exist outside of its native environment as land
-owning aristocrats who are not required to do manual labor in the fields
-under a blazing sun. As such an aristocracy it continues to exist under
-Italian skies, but as a field laborer the man of Nordic blood cannot
-compete with his Alpine or Mediterranean rival. It is not to be supposed
-that the various Nordic tribes and armies, which for a thousand years
-after the fall of Rome poured down from the Alps like the glaciers to
-melt in the southern sun, were composed solely of knights and gentlemen
-who became the landed nobility of Italy. The man in the ranks also took
-up his land and work in Italy, but he had to compete directly with the
-native under climatic conditions which were unfavorable to his race. In
-this competition the blue eyed Nordic giant died and the native
-survived. His officer, however, lived in the castle and directed the
-labor of his bondsmen without other preoccupation than the chase and war
-and he long maintained his vigor.
-
-The same thing happened in our South before the Civil War. There the
-white men did not work in the fields or in the factory. The heavy work
-under the blazing sun was carried on by Negro slaves and the planter was
-spared exposure to an unfavorable environment. Under these conditions he
-was able to retain much of his vigor. When slavery was abolished and the
-white man had to plough his own fields or work in the factory
-deterioration began.
-
-The change in type of the men who are now sent by the Southern States to
-represent them in the Federal Government from their predecessors in
-ante-bellum times is partly due to these causes, but in greater degree
-it is to be attributed to the fact that a large portion of the best
-racial strains in the South were killed off during the Civil War. In
-addition the war shattered the aristocratic traditions which formerly
-secured the selection of the best men as rulers. The new democratic
-ideals, with universal suffrage in free operation among the whites,
-result in the choice of representatives who lack the distinction and
-ability of the leaders of the Old South.
-
-A race may be thoroughly adjusted to a certain country at one stage of
-its development and be at a disadvantage when an economic change occurs,
-such as was experienced in England a century ago when the nation changed
-from an agricultural to a manufacturing community. The type of man that
-flourishes in the fields is not the type of man that thrives in the
-factory, just as the type of man required for the crew of a sailing ship
-is not the type useful as stokers on a modern steamer.
-
-
- THE HABITAT OF THE ALPINES AND MEDITERRANEANS
-
-The environment of the Alpine race seems to have always been the
-mountainous country of central and eastern Europe, as well as western
-Asia, but they are now spreading into the plains, notably in Poland and
-Russia. This type has never flourished in the deserts of Arabia or the
-Sahara, nor has it succeeded well in maintaining its early colonies in
-the northwest of Europe within the domain of the Nordic long heads. It
-is, however, a sturdy and persistent stock and, while much of it may not
-be overrefined or cultured, undoubtedly possesses great potentialities
-for future development.
-
-The Alpines in the west of Europe, especially in Switzerland and the
-districts immediately surrounding, have been so thoroughly Nordicized
-and so saturated with the culture of the adjoining nations that they
-stand in sharp contrast to backward Alpines of Slavic speech in the
-Balkans and east of Europe.
-
-The Mediterranean race, on the other hand, is clearly a southern type
-with eastern affinities. It is a type that did not endure in the north
-of Europe under former agricultural conditions nor is it suitable to the
-farming districts and frontiers of America and Canada. It is adjusted to
-subtropical and tropical countries better than any other European type
-and will flourish in our Southern States and around the coasts of the
-Spanish Main. In France it is well known that members of the
-Mediterranean race are better adapted for colonization in Algeria than
-are French Alpines or Nordics. This subspecies of man is notoriously
-intolerant of extreme cold, owing to its susceptibility to diseases of
-the lungs and it shrinks from the blasts of the northern winter in which
-the Nordics revel.
-
-The brunet Mediterranean element in the native American seems to be
-increasing at the expense of the blond Nordic element generally
-throughout the Southern States and probably also in the large cities.
-This type of man, however, is scarce on our frontiers. In the Northwest
-and in Alaska in the days of the gold rush it was in the mining camps a
-matter of comment if a man turned up with dark eyes, so universal were
-blue and gray eyes among the American pioneers.
-
-
-
-
- IV
- THE COMPETITION OF RACES
-
-
-Where two races occupy a country side by side, it is not correct to
-speak of one type as changing into the other. Even if present in equal
-numbers one of the two contrasted types will have some small advantage
-or capacity which the other lacks toward a perfect adjustment to
-surroundings. Those possessing these favorable variations will flourish
-at the expense of their rivals and their offspring will not only be more
-numerous, but will also tend to inherit such variations. In this way one
-type gradually breeds the other out. In this sense, and in this sense
-only, do races change.
-
-Man continuously undergoes selection through the operation of the forces
-of social environment. Among native Americans of the Colonial period a
-large family was an asset and social pressure and economic advantage
-counselled both early marriage and numerous children. Two hundred years
-of continuous political expansion and material prosperity changed these
-conditions and children, instead of being an asset to till the fields
-and guard the cattle, became an expensive liability. They now require
-support, education and endowment from their parents and a large family
-is regarded by some as a serious handicap in the social struggle.
-
-These conditions do not obtain at first among immigrants, and large
-families among the newly arrived population are still the rule,
-precisely as they were in Colonial America and are to-day in French
-Canada where backwoods conditions still prevail.
-
-The result is that one class or type in a population expands more
-rapidly than another and ultimately replaces it. This process of
-replacement of one type by another does not mean that the race changes
-or is transformed into another. It is a replacement pure and simple and
-not a transformation.
-
-The lowering of the birth rate among the most valuable classes, while
-the birth rate of the lower classes remains unaffected, is a frequent
-phenomenon of prosperity. Such a change becomes extremely injurious to
-the race if unchecked, unless nature is allowed to maintain by her own
-cruel devices the relative numbers of the different classes in their due
-proportions. To attack race suicide by encouraging indiscriminate
-reproduction is not only futile but is dangerous if it leads to an
-increase in the undesirable elements. What is needed in the community
-most of all is an increase in the desirable classes, which are of
-superior type physically, intellectually and morally and not merely an
-increase in the absolute numbers of the population.
-
-The value and efficiency of a population are not numbered by what the
-newspapers call souls, but by the proportion of men of physical and
-intellectual vigor. The small Colonial population of America was, on an
-average and man for man, far superior to the present inhabitants,
-although the latter are twenty-five times more numerous. The ideal in
-eugenics toward which statesmanship should be directed is, of course,
-improvement in quality rather than quantity. This, however, is at
-present a counsel of perfection and we must face conditions as they are.
-
-The small birth rate in the upper classes is to some extent offset by
-the care received by such children as are born and the better chance
-they have to become adult and breed in their turn. The large birth rate
-of the lower classes is under normal conditions offset by a heavy infant
-mortality, which eliminates the weaker children.
-
-Where altruism, philanthropy or sentimentalism intervene with the
-noblest purpose and forbid nature to penalize the unfortunate victims of
-reckless breeding, the multiplication of inferior types is encouraged
-and fostered. Indiscriminate efforts to preserve babies among the lower
-classes often result in serious injury to the race. At the existing
-stage of civilization, the legalizing of birth control would probably be
-of benefit by reducing the number of offspring in the undesirable
-classes. Regulation of the number of children is, for good or evil, in
-full operation among the better classes and its recognition by the state
-would result in no further harm among them.
-
-Mistaken regard for what are believed to be divine laws and a
-sentimental belief in the sanctity of human life tend to prevent both
-the elimination of defective infants and the sterilization of such
-adults as are themselves of no value to the community. The laws of
-nature require the obliteration of the unfit and human life is valuable
-only when it is of use to the community or race.
-
-It is highly unjust that a minute minority should be called upon to
-supply brains for the unthinking mass of the community, but it is even
-worse to burden the responsible and larger but still overworked elements
-in the community with an ever increasing number of moral perverts,
-mental defectives and hereditary cripples. As the percentage of
-incompetents increases, the burden of their support will become ever
-more onerous until, at no distant date, society will in self-defense put
-a stop to the supply of feebleminded and criminal children of weaklings.
-
-The church assumes a serious responsibility toward the future of the
-race whenever it steps in and preserves a defective strain. The marriage
-of deaf mutes was hailed a generation ago as a triumph of humanity. Now
-it is recognized as an absolute crime against the race. A great injury
-is done to the community by the perpetuation of worthless types. These
-strains are apt to be meek and lowly and as such make a strong appeal to
-the sympathies of the successful. Before eugenics were understood much
-could be said from a Christian and humane viewpoint in favor of
-indiscriminate charity for the benefit of the individual. The societies
-for charity, altruism or extension of rights, should have in these days,
-however, in their management some small modicum of brains, otherwise
-they may continue to do, as they have sometimes done in the past, more
-injury to the race than black death or smallpox.
-
-As long as such charitable organizations confine themselves to the
-relief of suffering individuals, no matter how criminal or diseased they
-may be, no harm is done except to our own generation and if modern
-society recognizes a duty to the humblest malefactors or imbeciles that
-duty can be harmlessly performed in full, provided they be deprived of
-the capacity to procreate their defective strain.
-
-Those who read these pages will feel that there is little hope for
-humanity, but the remedy has been found, and can be quickly and
-mercifully applied. A rigid system of selection through the elimination
-of those who are weak or unfit—in other words, social failures—would
-solve the whole question in a century, as well as enable us to get rid
-of the undesirables who crowd our jails, hospitals and insane asylums.
-The individual himself can be nourished, educated and protected by the
-community during his lifetime, but the state through sterilization must
-see to it that his line stops with him or else future generations will
-be cursed with an ever increasing load of victims of misguided
-sentimentalism. This is a practical, merciful and inevitable solution of
-the whole problem and can be applied to an ever widening circle of
-social discards, beginning always with the criminal, the diseased and
-the insane and extending gradually to types which may be called
-weaklings rather than defectives and perhaps ultimately to worthless
-race types.
-
-Efforts to increase the birth rate of the genius producing classes of
-the community, while most desirable, encounter great difficulties. In
-such efforts we encounter social conditions over which we have as yet no
-control. It was tried two thousand years ago by Augustus and his efforts
-to avert race suicide and the extinction of the old Roman stock were
-singularly prophetic of what some far seeing men are attempting in order
-to preserve the race of native Americans of Colonial descent.
-
-Man has the choice of two methods of race improvement. He can breed from
-the best or he can eliminate the worst by segregation or sterilization.
-The first method was adopted by the Spartans, who had for their national
-ideals military efficiency and the virtues of self-control, and along
-these lines the results were completely successful. Under modern social
-conditions it would be extremely difficult in the first instance to
-determine which were the most desirable types, except in the most
-general way and even if a satisfactory selection were finally made, it
-would be in a democracy a virtual impossibility to limit by law the
-right to breed to a privileged and chosen few.
-
-Interesting efforts to improve the quality as well as the quantity of
-the population, however, will probably be made in more than one country
-after the war has ended.
-
-Experiments in limiting reproduction to the undesirable classes were
-unconsciously made in mediæval Europe under the guidance of the church.
-After the fall of Rome social conditions were such that all those who
-loved a studious and quiet life were compelled to seek refuge from the
-violence of the times in monastic institutions and upon such the church
-imposed the obligation of celibacy and thus deprived the world of
-offspring from these desirable classes.
-
-In the Middle Ages, through persecution resulting in actual death, life
-imprisonment and banishment, the free thinking, progressive and
-intellectual elements were persistently eliminated over large areas,
-leaving the perpetuation of the race to be carried on by the brutal, the
-servile and the stupid. It is now impossible to say to what extent the
-Roman Church by these methods has impaired the brain capacity of Europe,
-but in Spain alone, for a period of over three centuries from the years
-1471 to 1781, the Inquisition condemned to the stake or imprisonment an
-average of 1,000 persons annually. During these three centuries no less
-than 32,000 were burned alive and 291,000 were condemned to various
-terms of imprisonment and other penalties and 17,000 persons were burned
-in effigy, representing men who had died in prison or had fled the
-country.
-
-No better method of eliminating the genius producing strains of a nation
-could be devised and if such were its purpose the result was eminently
-satisfactory, as is demonstrated by the superstitious and unintelligent
-Spaniard of to-day. A similar elimination of brains and ability took
-place in northern Italy, in France and in the Low Countries, where
-hundreds of thousands of Huguenots were murdered or driven into exile.
-
-Under existing conditions the most practical and hopeful method of race
-improvement is through the elimination of the least desirable elements
-in the nation by depriving them of the power to contribute to future
-generations. It is well known to stock breeders that the color of a herd
-of cattle can be modified by continuous destruction of worthless shades
-and of course this is true of other characters. Black sheep, for
-instance, have been practically obliterated by cutting out generation
-after generation all animals that show this color phase, until in
-carefully maintained flocks a black individual only appears as a rare
-sport.
-
-In mankind it would not be a matter of great difficulty to secure a
-general consensus of public opinion as to the least desirable, let us
-say, ten per cent of the community. When this unemployed and
-unemployable human residuum has been eliminated together with the great
-mass of crime, poverty, alcoholism and feeblemindedness associated
-therewith it would be easy to consider the advisability of further
-restricting the perpetuation of the then remaining least valuable types.
-By this method mankind might ultimately become sufficiently intelligent
-to choose deliberately the most vital and intellectual strains to carry
-on the race.
-
-In addition to selection by climatic environment man is now, and has
-been for ages, undergoing selection through disease. He has been
-decimated throughout the centuries by pestilences such as the black
-death and bubonic plague. In our fathers’ days yellow fever and smallpox
-cursed humanity. These plagues are now under control, but similar
-diseases now regarded as mere nuisances to childhood, such as measles,
-mumps and scarlatina, are terrible scourges to native populations
-without previous experience with them. Add to these smallpox and other
-white men’s diseases and one has the great empire builders of yesterday.
-It was not the swords in the hands of Columbus and his followers that
-decimated the American Indians, it was the germs that his men and their
-successors brought over, implanting the white man’s maladies in the red
-man’s world. Long before the arrival of the Puritans in New England,
-smallpox had flickered up and down the coast until the natives were but
-a broken remnant of their former numbers.
-
-At the present time the Nordic race is undergoing selection through
-alcoholism, a peculiarly Nordic vice, and through consumption. Both
-these dread scourges unfortunately attack those members of the race that
-are otherwise most desirable, differing in this respect from filth
-diseases like typhus, typhoid or smallpox. One has only to look among
-the more desirable classes for the victims of rum and tubercule to
-realize that death or mental and physical impairment through these two
-causes have cost the race many of its most brilliant and attractive
-members.
-
-
-
-
- V
- RACE, LANGUAGE AND NATIONALITY
-
-
-Nationality is an artificial political grouping of population usually
-centring around a single language as an expression of traditions and
-aspirations. Nationality can, however, exist independently of language
-but states thus formed, such as Belgium or Austria, are far less stable
-than those where a uniform language is prevalent, as, for example,
-France or England.
-
-States without a single national language are constantly exposed to
-disintegration, especially where a substantial minority of the
-inhabitants speak a tongue which is predominant in an adjoining state
-and, as a consequence, tend to gravitate toward such state.
-
-The history of the last century in Europe has been the record of a long
-series of struggles to unite in one political unit all those speaking
-the same or closely allied dialects. With the exception of internal and
-social revolutions, every European war since the Napoleonic period has
-been caused by the effort to bring about the unification either of Italy
-or of Germany or by the desperate attempts of the Balkan States to
-struggle out of Turkish chaos into modern European nations on a basis of
-community of language. The unification of both Italy and Germany is as
-yet incomplete according to the views held by their more advanced
-patriots and the solution of the Balkan question is still in the future.
-
-Men are keenly aware of their nationality and are very sensitive about
-their language, but only in a few cases, notably in Sweden and Germany,
-does any large section of the population possess anything analogous to
-true race consciousness, although the term “race” is everywhere misused
-to designate linguistic or political groups.
-
-The unifying power of a common language works subtly and unceasingly. In
-the long run it forms a bond which draws peoples together—as the
-English-speaking peoples of the British Empire with those of America. In
-the same manner this linguistic sympathy will bring the German-speaking
-Austrians into a closer political community with the rest of Germany and
-will hold together all the German-speaking provinces.
-
-It sometimes happens that a section of the population of a large nation
-gathers around language, reinforced by religion, as an expression of
-individuality. The struggle between the French-speaking Alpine Walloons
-and the Nordic Flemings of Low Dutch tongue in Belgium is an example of
-two competing languages in an artificial nation which was formed
-originally around religion. On the other hand, the Irish National
-movement centres chiefly around religion reinforced by myths of ancient
-grandeur. The French Canadians and the Poles use both religion and
-language to hold together what they consider a political unit. None of
-these so-called nationalities are founded on race.
-
-During the past century side by side with the tendency to form imperial
-or large national groups, such as the Pan-Germanic, Pan-Slavic,
-Pan-Rumanian or Italia Irredenta movements, there has appeared a counter
-movement on the part of small disintegrating “nationalities” to reassert
-themselves, such as the Bohemian, Bulgarian, Serbian, Irish, and
-Egyptian national revivals. The upheaval is usually caused, as in the
-cases of the Irish and the Serbians, by delusions of former greatness
-now become national obsessions, but sometimes it means the resistance of
-a small group of higher culture to absorption by a lower civilization.
-The reassertion of these small nationalities is associated with the
-resurgence of the lower races at the expense of the Nordics.
-
-Examples of a high type threatened by a lower culture are afforded by
-the Finlanders, who are trying to escape the dire fate of their
-neighbors across the Gulf of Finland—the Russification of the Germans
-and Swedes of the Baltic Provinces—and by the struggle of the Danes of
-Schleswig to escape Germanization. The Armenians, too, have resisted
-stoutly the pressure of Islam to force them away from their ancient
-Christian faith. This people really represents the last outpost of
-Europe toward the Mohammedan East and constitutes the best remaining
-medium through which Western ideals and culture can be introduced into
-Asia.
-
-In these as in other cases, the process of absorption from the viewpoint
-of the world at large is good or evil exactly in proportion to the
-relative value of the culture and race of the two groups. The world
-would be no richer in civilization with an independent Bohemia or an
-enlarged Rumania; but, on the contrary, an independent Hungarian nation
-strong enough to stand alone, a Finland self-governing or reunited to
-Sweden, or an enlarged Greece would add greatly to the forces that make
-for good government and progress. An independent Ireland worked out on a
-Tammany model is not a pleasing prospect. A free Poland, apart from its
-value as a buffer state, might be actually a step backward. Poland was
-once great, but the elements that made it so are scattered and gone and
-the Poland of to-day is a geographical expression and nothing more.
-
-The prevailing lack of true race consciousness is probably due to the
-fact that every important nation in Europe as at present organized, with
-the sole exception of the Iberian and Scandinavian states, possesses in
-large proportions representatives of at least two of the fundamental
-European subspecies of man and of all manner of crosses between them. In
-France to-day, as in Cæsar’s Gaul, the three races divide the nation in
-unequal proportions.
-
-In the future, however, with an increased knowledge of the correct
-definition of true human races and types and with a recognition of the
-immutability of fundamental racial characters and of the results of
-mixed breeding, far more value will be attached to racial in contrast to
-national or linguistic affinities. In marital relations the
-consciousness of race will also play a much larger part than at present,
-although in the social sphere we shall have to contend with a certain
-strange attraction for contrasted types. When it becomes thoroughly
-understood that the children of mixed marriages between contrasted races
-belong to the lower type, the importance of transmitting in unimpaired
-purity the blood inheritance of ages will be appreciated at its full
-value and to bring half-breeds into the world will be regarded as a
-social and racial crime of the first magnitude. The laws against
-miscegenation must be greatly extended if the higher races are to be
-maintained.
-
-The language that a man speaks may be nothing more than evidence that at
-some time in the past his race has been in contact, either as conqueror
-or as conquered, with its original possessors. Postulating the Nordic
-origin and dissemination of the Proto-Aryan language, then in Asia and
-elsewhere existing Aryan speech on the lips of populations showing no
-sign of Nordic characters is to be considered evidence of a former
-dominance of Nordics now long vanished.
-
-One has only to consider the spread of the language of Rome over the
-vast extent of her Empire to realize how few of those who speak to-day
-Romance tongues derive any portion of their blood from the pure Latin
-stock and the error of talking about a “Latin race” becomes evident.
-
-There is, however, such a thing as a large group of nations which have a
-mutual understanding and sympathy based on the possession of a common or
-closely related group of languages and on the culture of which it is the
-medium. This assemblage maybe called the “Latin nations,” but never the
-“Latin race.”
-
-“Latin America” is a still greater misnomer as the great mass of the
-populations of South and Central America is not even European and still
-less “Latin,” being overwhelmingly of Amerindian blood.
-
-In the Teutonic group a large majority of those who speak Teutonic
-languages, as the English, Flemings, Dutch, North Germans and
-Scandinavians, are descendants of the Nordic race while the dominant
-class in Europe is everywhere of that blood.
-
-As to the so-called “Celtic race,” the fantastic inapplicability of the
-term is at once apparent when we consider that those populations on the
-borders of the Atlantic Ocean, who to-day speak Celtic dialects, are
-divided into three groups, each one showing in great purity the
-characters of one of the three entirely distinct human subspecies found
-in Europe. To class together the Breton peasant with his round Alpine
-skull; the little, long skulled, brunet Welshman of Mediterranean race,
-and the tall, blond, light-eyed Scottish Highlander of pure Nordic
-blood, in a single group labelled Celtic is obviously impossible. These
-peoples have neither physical, mental nor cultural characteristics in
-common. If one be of “Celtic” blood then the other two are clearly of
-different origin.
-
-There was once a people who used the original Celtic language and they
-formed the western vanguard of the Nordic race. This people was spread
-all over central and western Europe prior to the irruption of the
-Teutonic tribes and were, no doubt, much mixed with Alpines among the
-lower classes. The descendants of these Celts must be sought to-day
-among those having the characters of the Nordic race and not elsewhere.
-
-In England the short, dark Mediterranean Welshman talks about being
-“Celtic,” quite unconscious that he is the residuum of Pre-Nordic races
-of immense antiquity. If the Celts are Mediterranean in race then they
-are absent from central Europe and we must regard as Celts all the
-Berbers and Egyptians, as well as many Persians and Hindus.
-
-In France many anthropologists regard the Breton of Alpine blood in the
-same light and ignore his remote Asiatic origin. If these Alpine Bretons
-are Celts then there is no substantial trace of their blood, in the
-British Isles, as round skulls are practically absent there and all the
-blond elements in England, Scotland and Ireland must be attributed to
-the historic Teutonic invasions. Furthermore, we must call all the
-continental Alpines “Celts,” and must also include all Slavs, Armenians
-and other brachycephs of western Asia within that designation, which
-would be obviously grotesque. The fact that the original Celts left
-their speech on the tongues of Mediterraneans in Wales and of Alpines in
-Brittany must not mislead us, as it indicates nothing more than that
-Celtic speech antedates the Anglo-Saxons in England and the Romans in
-France. We must once and for all time discard the name “Celt” for any
-existing race whatever and speak only of “Celtic” language and culture.
-
-In Ireland the big, blond Nordic Danes claim the honor of the name of
-“Celt,” if honor it be, but they are fully as Nordic as the English and
-the great mass of the Irish are of Danish, Norse and Anglo-Norman blood
-in addition to earlier and Pre-Nordic elements. We are all familiar with
-the blond and the brunet type of Irishman. These represent precisely the
-same racial elements as those which enter into the composition of the
-English, namely, the tall Nordic blond and the little Mediterranean
-brunet pure or combined with Paleolithic remnants. The Irish are
-consequently not entitled to independent national existence on the
-ground of race, but if there be any ground for political separation from
-England it must rest like that of Belgium on religion, a basis for
-political combinations now happily obsolete in communities well advanced
-in culture.
-
-In the case of the so-called “Slavic race,” there is much more unity
-between racial type and language. It is true that in most
-Slavic-speaking countries the predominant race is clearly Alpine, except
-perhaps in Russia where there is a very large substratum of Nordic
-type—which may be considered as Proto-Nordic. The objection which is
-made to the identification of the Slavic race with the Alpine type rests
-chiefly on the fact that a very large portion of the Alpine race is
-German-speaking in Germany, Italian-speaking in Italy and
-French-speaking in central France. Moreover, large portions of Rumania
-are of exactly the same racial complexion.
-
-Many of the modern Greeks are also Alpines; in fact, are little more
-than Byzantinized Slavs. It was through the Byzantine Empire that the
-Slavs first came in contact with the Mediterranean world and through
-this Greek medium the Russians, the Serbians, the Rumanians and the
-Bulgarians received their Christianity.
-
-Situated on the eastern marches of Europe, the Slavs were submerged
-during long periods in the Middle Ages by Mongolian hordes and were
-checked in development and warped in culture. Definite traces remain of
-the blood of the Mongols both in isolated and compact groups in south
-Russia and also scattered throughout the whole country as far west as
-the German boundary. The high tide of the Mongol invasion was during the
-thirteenth century. Three hundred years later the great Muscovite
-expansion began, first over the steppes to the Urals and then across
-Siberian tundras and forests to the waters of the Pacific, taking up in
-its course much Mongolian blood, especially during the early stages of
-its advance.
-
-The term “Caucasian race” has ceased to have any meaning except where it
-is used, in the United States, to contrast white populations with
-Negroes or Indians or in the Old World with Mongols. It is, however, a
-convenient term to include the three European subspecies when considered
-as divisions of one of the primary branches or species of mankind but it
-is, at best, a cumbersome and archaic designation. The name “Caucasian”
-arose a century ago from a false assumption that the cradle of the blond
-Europeans was in the Caucasus where no traces are now found of any such
-race, except a small and decreasing minority of blond traits among the
-Ossetes, a tribe whose Aryan speech is related to that of the Armenians,
-and who while mainly brachycephalic still retain some blond and
-dolichocephalic elements which apparently are fading fast. The Ossetes
-now have about thirty per cent fair eyes and ten per cent fair hair.
-They are supposed to be to some extent a remnant of the Alans, the
-easternmost Teutonic tribe and closely related to the Goths. Both Alans
-and Goths very early in the Christian era occupied southern Russia, and
-were the latest known Nordics in the vicinity of the Caucasus Mountains.
-If these Ossetes are not partly of Alan origin they may possibly
-represent the last lingering trace of ancient Scythian dolichocephalic
-blondness.
-
-The phrase “Indo-European or Indo-Germanic race” is also of little use.
-If it has any meaning at all it must include all the three European
-races as well as members of the Mediterranean race in Persia and India.
-The use of this name also involves a false assumption of blood
-relationship between the north European populations and the Hindus,
-because of their possession in common of Aryan speech.
-
-The name “Aryan race” must also be frankly discarded as a term of racial
-significance. It is to-day purely linguistic, although there was at one
-time, of course, an identity between the original Proto-Aryan mother
-tongue and the race that first spoke and developed it. In short, there
-is not nor has there ever been either a Caucasian or an Indo-European
-race, but there was once, thousands of years ago, an original Aryan race
-long since vanished into dim memories of the past. If used in a racial
-sense other than as above, it should be limited to the Nordic invaders
-of Hindustan now long extinct. The great lapse of time since the
-disappearance of the ancient Aryan race as such is measured by the
-extreme disintegration of the various groups of Aryan languages. These
-linguistic divergences are chiefly due to the imposition by conquest of
-Aryan speech upon several distinct subspecies of man throughout western
-Asia and Europe.
-
-It may be pertinent before leaving this subject to point out that, as a
-whole, “Germans,” “French,” and “English,” as certain populations are
-now called, are but little more entitled to be considered the direct
-descendants, or even the exclusive modern representatives, of the
-ancient Germans, Franks or Anglo-Saxons, than are the living Italians or
-Greeks to be regarded as the offspring of the Romans of the days of the
-Republic or the Hellenes of the classic period. There are, of course,
-many individuals and groups, perhaps even classes, in each of these
-nations, who do accurately represent the race from which the national
-name was derived. The Scandinavians, on the other hand, are racially
-what they were two thousand years ago, though diminished somewhat in
-race vigor by the loss through the emigration of some of their more
-enterprising members. Meanwhile, at the other end of Europe, the modern
-Spaniard probably more closely represents the Iberians before the
-arrival of the Gauls than did the Spaniard of five hundred years ago.
-
-
-
-
- VI
- RACE AND LANGUAGE
-
-
-When a country is invaded and conquered by a race speaking a foreign
-language, one of several things may happen: replacement of both
-population and language, as in the case of eastern England when
-conquered by the Saxons or adoption of the language of the victors by
-the natives, as happened in Roman Gaul, where the invaders imposed their
-Latin tongue throughout the land without substantially altering the
-race.
-
-The Romans probably modified the race in Gaul by killing a much larger
-proportion of the Nordic fighting classes than of the more submissive
-Alpines and Mediterraneans. This is confirmed by the fact that when the
-prolonged and brilliant resistance to Cæsar’s legions was finally
-broken, no serious attempt was ever again made to throw off the Roman
-yoke and a few centuries later the Teutonic invaders encountered no
-determined opposition from the inhabitants when they entered and
-occupied the land.
-
-In England and Scotland later conquerors, Norsemen, Danes and Normans,
-failed to change radically the Saxon speech of the country and in Gaul
-the Teutonic tongues of the Franks, Burgundians and Northmen could not
-displace the language of Rome.
-
-Autochthonous inhabitants frequently impose upon their invaders their
-own language and customs. In Normandy the conquering Norse pirates
-accepted the language, religion and customs of the natives and in a
-century they vanish from history as Scandinavian heathen and appear as
-the foremost representatives of the speech and religion of Rome.
-
-In Hindustan the blond Nordic invaders forced their Aryan language on
-the aborigines, but their blood was quickly and utterly absorbed in the
-darker strains of the original owners of the land. A record of the
-desperate efforts of the conqueror classes in India to preserve the
-purity of their blood persists until this very day in their carefully
-regulated system of castes. In our Southern States Jim Crow cars and
-social discriminations have exactly the same purpose and justification.
-
-The Hindu to-day speaks a very ancient form of Aryan language, but there
-remains not one recognizable trace of the blood of the white conquerors
-who poured in through the passes of the Northwest. The boast of the
-modern Indian that he is of the same race as his English ruler is
-entirely without basis in fact and the little swarthy native lives amid
-the monuments of a departed grandeur, professing the religion and
-speaking the tongue of his long-forgotten Nordic conquerors, without the
-slightest claim to blood kinship. The dim and uncertain traces of Nordic
-blood in northern India only serve to emphasize the utter swamping of
-the white man in the burning South.
-
-The power of racial resistance of a dense and thoroughly acclimated
-population to an incoming army is very great. No ethnic conquest can be
-complete unless the natives are exterminated and the invaders bring
-their own women with them. If the conquerors are obliged to depend upon
-the women of the vanquished to carry on the race, the intrusive blood
-strain of the invaders in a short time becomes diluted beyond
-recognition.
-
-It sometimes happens that an infiltration of population takes place
-either in the guise of unwilling slaves or of willing immigrants, who
-fill up waste places and take to the lowly tasks which the lords of the
-land despise, thus gradually occupying the country and literally
-breeding out their masters.
-
-The former catastrophe happened in the declining days of the Roman
-Republic and the south Italians of to-day are very largely descendants
-of the nondescript slaves of all races, chiefly from the southern and
-eastern coasts of the Mediterranean, who were imported by the Romans
-under the Empire to work their vast estates. The latter is occurring
-to-day in many parts of America, especially in New England.
-
-The eastern half of Germany has a Slavic Alpine substratum which
-represents the descendants of the Wends, who first appear about the
-commencement of the Christian era and who by the sixth century had
-penetrated as far west as the Elbe, occupying the lands left vacant by
-the Teutonic tribes which had migrated southward. These Wends in turn
-were Teutonized by a return wave of military conquest from the tenth
-century onward, and to-day their descendants are considered Germans in
-good standing. Having adopted the German as their sole tongue they are
-now in religious, political and cultural sympathy with the pure Teutons;
-in fact, they are quite unconscious of any racial distinction.
-
-This historic fact underlies the ferocious controversy which has been
-raised over the ethnic origin of the Prussians, the issue being whether
-the populations in Brandenburg, Silesia, Posen, West Prussia, and other
-districts in eastern Germany, are Alpine Wends or true Nordics. The
-truth is that the dominant half of the population is purely Teutonic and
-the remainder of the population are merely Teutonized Wends and Poles of
-Alpine affinities. Of course, these territories must also retain some of
-their early Teutonic population and the blood of the Goth, Burgund,
-Vandal and Lombard, who at the commencement of the Christian era were
-located there, as well as of the later Saxon element, must enter largely
-into the composition of the Prussian of to-day.
-
-Some anthropologists regard the Teutonized round heads of south Germany
-as a distinct subdivision of the Alpines because of the large percentage
-of blond hair and still larger percentage of light colored eyes.
-
-The most important communities in continental Europe of pure German type
-are to be found in old Saxony, the country around Hanover, and this
-element prevails generally in the northwestern part of the German Empire
-among the Low German-speaking population, while the High German-speaking
-population is largely composed of Teutonized Alpines.
-
-The coasts of the North Sea extending from Schleswig and Holstein into
-Holland are inhabited by a very pure Nordic type known as the Frisians.
-They are the handsomest and in many respects the finest of the
-continental Nordics and are closely related to the English, as many of
-the Post-Roman invaders of England either came from Frisia or from
-adjoining districts.
-
-All the states involved in the present world war have sent to the front
-their fighting Nordic element and the loss of life now going on in
-Europe will fall much more heavily on the blond giant than on the little
-brunet.
-
-As in all wars since Roman times from a breeding point of view the
-little dark man is the final winner. No one who saw one of our regiments
-march on its way to the Spanish War could fail to be impressed with the
-size and blondness of the men in the ranks as contrasted with the
-complacent citizen, who from his safe stand on the gutter curb gave his
-applause to the fighting man and then stayed behind to perpetuate his
-own brunet type. In the present war one has merely to study the type of
-officer and of the man in the ranks to realize that, in spite of the
-draft net, the Nordic race is contributing an enormous majority of the
-fighting men, out of all proportion to their relative numbers in the
-nation at large.
-
-This same Nordic element, everywhere the type of the sailor, the
-soldier, the adventurer and the pioneer, was ever the type to migrate to
-new countries, until the ease of transportation and the desire to escape
-military service in the last forty years reversed the immigrant tide. In
-consequence of this change our immigrants now largely represent lowly
-refugees from “persecution,” and other social discards.
-
-In most cases the blood of pioneers has been lost to their race. They
-did not take their women with them. They either died childless or left
-half-breeds behind them. The virile blood of the Spanish conquistadores,
-who are now little more than a memory in Central and South America, died
-out from these causes.
-
-This was also true in the early days of our Western frontiersmen, who
-individually were a far finer type than the settlers who followed them.
-In fact, it is said that practically every one of the Forty-Niners in
-California was of Nordic type.
-
-
-
-
- VII
- THE EUROPEAN RACES IN COLONIES
-
-
-For reasons already set forth there are few communities outside of
-Europe of pure European blood. The racial destiny of Mexico and of the
-islands and coasts of the Spanish Main is clear. The white man is being
-rapidly bred out by Negroes on the islands and by Indians on the
-mainland. It is quite evident that the West Indies, the coast region of
-our Gulf States, perhaps, also the black belt of the lower Mississippi
-Valley must be abandoned to Negroes. This transformation is already
-complete in Haiti and is going rapidly forward in Cuba and Jamaica.
-Mexico and the northern part of South America must also be given over to
-native Indians with an ever thinning veneer of white culture of the
-“Latin” type.
-
-In Venezuela the pure whites number about one per cent of the whole
-population, the balance being Indians and various crosses between
-Indians, Negroes and whites. In Jamaica the whites number not more than
-two per cent, while the remainder are Negroes or mulattoes. In Mexico
-the proportion is larger, but the unmixed whites number less than twenty
-per cent of the whole, the others being Indians pure or mixed. These
-latter are the “greasers” of the American frontiersman.
-
-Whenever the incentive to imitate the dominant race is removed the Negro
-or, for that matter, the Indian, reverts shortly to his ancestral grade
-of culture. In other words, it is the individual and not the race that
-is affected by religion, education and example. Negroes have
-demonstrated throughout recorded time that they are a stationary species
-and that they do not possess the potentiality of progress or initiative
-from within. Progress from self-impulse must not be confounded with
-mimicry or with progress imposed from without by social pressure or by
-the slaver’s lash.
-
-When the impulse of an inferior race to imitate or mimic the dress,
-manners or morals of the dominant race is destroyed by the acquisition
-of political or social independence, the servient race tends to revert
-to its original status as in Haiti.
-
-Where two distinct species are located side by side history and biology
-teach that but one of two things can happen; either one race drives the
-other out, as the Americans exterminated the Indians and as the Negroes
-are now replacing the whites in various parts of the South; or else they
-amalgamate and form a population of race bastards in which the lower
-type ultimately preponderates. This is a disagreeable alternative with
-which to confront sentimentalists but nature is only concerned with
-results and neither makes nor takes excuses. The chief failing of the
-day with some of our well meaning philanthropists is their absolute
-refusal to face inevitable facts, if such facts appear cruel.
-
-In the Argentine white blood of the various European races is pouring in
-so rapidly that a community preponderantly white, but of the
-Mediterranean race, may develop, but the type is suspiciously swarthy.
-
-In Brazil, Negro blood together with that of the native inhabitants is
-rapidly overwhelming the white Europeans, although in the southern
-provinces German immigration has played an important rôle and the influx
-of Italians has also been considerable.
-
-In Asia, with the sole exception of the Russian settlements in Siberia,
-there can be and will be no ethnic conquest and all the white men in
-India, the East Indies, the Philippines and China will leave not the
-slightest trace behind them in the blood of the native population. After
-several centuries of contact and settlement the pure Spanish in the
-Philippines are about half of one per cent. The Dutch in their East
-Indian islands are even less, while the resident whites in Hindustan
-amount to about one-tenth of one per cent. Such numbers are
-infinitesimal and of no force in a democracy, but in a monarchy, if kept
-free from contamination, they suffice for a ruling caste or a military
-aristocracy. Throughout history it is only the race of the leaders that
-has counted and the most vigorous have been in control and will remain
-in mastery in one form or another until such time as democracy and its
-illegitimate offspring, socialism, definitely establish cacocracy and
-the rule of the worst and put an end to progress. The salvation of
-humanity will then lie in the chance survival of some sane barbarians
-who may retain the basic truth that inequality and not equality is the
-law of nature.
-
-Australia and New Zealand, where the natives have been virtually
-exterminated by the whites, are developing into communities of pure
-Nordic blood and will for that reason play a large part in the future
-history of the Pacific. The bitter opposition of the Australians and
-Californians to the admission of Chinese coolies and Japanese farmers is
-due primarily to a blind but absolutely justified determination to keep
-those lands as white man’s countries.
-
-In Africa, south of the Sahara, the density of the native population
-will prevent the establishment of any purely white communities, except
-at the southern extremity of the continent and possibly on portions of
-the plateaux of eastern Africa. The stoppage of famines and wars and the
-abolition of the slave trade, while dictated by the noblest impulses of
-humanity, are suicidal to the white man. Upon the removal of these
-natural checks Negroes multiply so rapidly that there will not be
-standing room on the continent for white men, unless, perchance, the
-lethal sleeping sickness, which attacks the natives far more frequently
-than the whites, should run its course unchecked.
-
-In South Africa a community of mixed Dutch and English extraction is
-developing. Here the only difference is one of language. English, being
-a world tongue, will inevitably prevail over the Dutch patois called
-“Taal.” This Frisian dialect, as a matter of fact, is closer to old
-Saxon or rather Kentish than any living continental tongue and the blood
-of the North Hollander is extremely close to that of the Anglo-Saxon of
-England. The English and the Dutch will merge in a common type just as
-they have in the past two hundred years in the Colony and State of New
-York. They must stand together if they are to maintain any part of
-Africa as a white man’s country, because they are confronted with the
-menace of an enormous black Bantu population which will drive out the
-whites unless the problem is bravely faced.
-
-The only possible solution is to establish large colonies for the
-Negroes and to allow them outside of them only as laborers and not as
-settlers. There must be ultimately a black South Africa and a white
-South Africa side by side or else a pure black Africa from the Cape to
-the cataracts of the Nile.
-
-In upper Canada, as in the United States up to the time of our Civil
-War, the white population was purely Nordic. The Dominion is, as a
-whole, handicapped by the presence of an indigestible mass of French
-Canadians, largely from Brittany and of Alpine origin, although the
-habitant patois is an archaic Norman of the time of Louis XIV. These
-Frenchmen were granted freedom of language and religion by their
-conquerors and are now using those privileges to form separatist groups
-in antagonism to the English population. The Quebec Frenchmen will
-succeed in seriously impeding the progress of Canada and will succeed
-even better in keeping themselves a poor and ignorant community of
-little more importance to the world at large than are the Negroes in the
-South. The selfishness of the Quebec Frenchmen is measured by the fact
-that in the present war they will not fight for the British Empire or
-for France or even for clerical Belgium and they are now endeavoring to
-make use of the military crisis to secure a further extension of their
-“nationalistic ideals.”
-
-Personally the writer believes that the finest and purest type of a
-Nordic community outside of Europe will develop in northwest Canada and
-on the Pacific coast of the United States. Most of the other countries
-in which the Nordic race is now settling lie outside the special
-environment in which alone it can flourish.
-
-The Negroes of the United States while stationary, were not a serious
-drag on civilization until in the last century they were given the
-rights of citizenship and were incorporated in the body politic. These
-Negroes brought with them no language or religion or customs of their
-own which persisted but adopted all these elements of environment from
-the dominant race, taking the names of their masters just as to-day the
-German and Polish Jews are assuming American names. They came for the
-most part from the coasts of the Bight of Benin, but some of the later
-ones came from the southeast coast of Africa by way of Zanzibar. They
-were of various black tribes but have been from the beginning saturated
-with white blood.
-
-Looking at any group of Negroes in America, especially in the North, it
-is easy to see that while they are all essentially Negroes, whether
-coal-black, brown or yellow, a great many of them have varying amounts
-of Nordic blood in them, which has in some respects modified their
-physical structure without transforming them in any way into white men.
-This miscegenation was, of course, a frightful disgrace to the dominant
-race but its effect on the Nordics has been negligible, for the simple
-reason that it was confined to white men crossing with Negro women and
-did not involve the reverse process, which would, of course, have
-resulted in the infusion of Negro blood into the American stock.
-
-The United States of America must be regarded racially as a European
-colony and owing to current ignorance of the physical bases of race, one
-often hears the statement made that native Americans of Colonial
-ancestry are of mixed ethnic origin.
-
-This is not true.
-
-At the time of the Revolutionary War the settlers in the thirteen
-Colonies were overwhelmingly Nordic, a very large majority being
-Anglo-Saxon in the most limited meaning of that term. The New England
-settlers in particular came from those counties of England where the
-blood was almost purely Saxon, Anglian, Norse and Dane. The date of
-their migration was earlier than the resurgence of the Mediterranean
-type that has so greatly expanded in England during the last century
-with the growth of manufacturing towns.
-
-New England during Colonial times and long afterward was far more Nordic
-than old England; that is, it contained a smaller percentage of small,
-Pre-Nordic brunets. Any one familiar with the native New Englander knows
-the clean cut face, the high stature and the prevalence of gray and blue
-eyes and light brown hair and recognizes that the brunet element is less
-noticeable there than in the South.
-
-The Southern States were populated also by Englishmen of the purest
-Nordic type but there is to-day, except among the mountains, an
-appreciably larger amount of brunet types than in the North. Virginia is
-in the same latitude as North Africa and south of this line no blonds
-have ever been able to survive in full vigor, chiefly because the
-actinic rays of the sun are the same regardless of other climatic
-conditions. These rays beat heavily on the Nordic race and disturb their
-nervous system, wherever the white man ventures too far from the cold
-and foggy North.
-
-The remaining Colonial elements, the Holland Dutch and the Palatine
-Germans, who came over in small numbers to New York and Pennsylvania,
-were also largely Nordic, while many of the French Huguenots who escaped
-to America were drawn from the same racial element in France. The
-Scotch-Irish, who were numerous on the frontier of the middle Colonies
-were, of course, of pure Scotch and English blood, although they had
-resided in Ireland for two or three generations. They were quite free
-from admixture with the earlier Irish, from whom they were cut off
-socially by bitter religious antagonism and they are not to be
-considered as “Irish” in any sense.
-
-There was no important immigration of other elements until the middle of
-the nineteenth century when Irish Catholic and German immigrants appear
-for the first time upon the scene.
-
-The Nordic blood was kept pure in the Colonies because at that time
-among Protestant peoples there was a strong race feeling, as a result of
-which half-breeds between the white man and any native type were
-regarded as natives and not as white men.
-
-There was plenty of mixture with the Negroes as the light color of many
-Negroes abundantly testifies, but these mulattoes, quadroons or
-octoroons were then and are now universally regarded as Negroes.
-
-There was also abundant cross breeding along the frontiers between the
-white frontiersman and the Indian squaw but the half-breed was
-everywhere regarded as a member of the inferior race.
-
-In the Catholic colonies, however, of New France and New Spain, if the
-half-breed were a good Catholic he was regarded as a Frenchman or a
-Spaniard, as the case might be. This fact alone gives the clew to many
-of our Colonial wars where the Indians, other than the Iroquois, were
-persuaded to join the French against the Americans by half-breeds who
-considered themselves Frenchmen. The Church of Rome has everywhere used
-its influence to break down racial distinctions. It disregards origins
-and only requires obedience to the mandates of the universal church. In
-that lies the secret of the opposition of Rome to all national
-movements. It maintains the imperial as contrasted with the
-nationalistic ideal and in that respect its inheritance is direct from
-the Empire.
-
-Race consciousness in the Colonies and in the United States, down to and
-including the Mexican War, seems to have been very strongly developed
-among native Americans and it still remains in full vigor to-day in the
-South, where the presence of a large Negro population forces this
-question upon the daily attention of the whites.
-
-In New England, however, whether through the decline of Calvinism or the
-growth of altruism, there appeared early in the last century a wave of
-sentimentalism, which at that time took up the cause of the Negro and in
-so doing apparently destroyed, to a large extent, pride and
-consciousness of race in the North. The agitation over slavery was
-inimical to the Nordic race, because it thrust aside all national
-opposition to the intrusion of hordes of immigrants of inferior racial
-value and prevented the fixing of a definite American type.
-
-The Civil War was fought almost entirely by unalloyed native Americans.
-The Irish immigrants were, at the middle of the last century, confined
-to a few States and, being chiefly domestic servants or day laborers,
-were of no social importance. They gathered in the large cities and by
-voting as a solid block for their own collective benefit quickly
-demoralized the governments of the municipalities in which they secured
-ascendancy. The German immigrants who came to America about the same
-time were chiefly enthusiasts who had taken part in the German
-Revolution of ’48. In spite of the handicap of a strange language they
-formed a more docile and educated element than the Irish and were more
-prone to scatter into the rural districts. Neither the Irish nor the
-Germans played an important part in the development or policies of the
-nation as a whole, although in the Civil War they each contributed a
-relatively large number of soldiers to the Northern army. These Irish
-and German elements were for the most part of the Nordic race and while
-they did not in the least strengthen the nation either morally or
-intellectually they did not impair its physique.
-
-There has been little or no Indian blood taken into the veins of the
-native American, except in States like Oklahoma and in some isolated
-families scattered here and there in the Northwest. This particular
-mixture will play no very important role in future combinations of race
-on this continent, except in the north of Canada.
-
-The native American has always found and finds now in the black men
-willing followers who ask only to obey and to further the ideals and
-wishes of the master race, without trying to inject into the body
-politic their own views, whether racial, religious or social. Negroes
-are never socialists or labor unionists and as long as the dominant
-imposes its will on the servient race and as long as they remain in the
-same relation to the whites as in the past, the Negroes will be a
-valuable element in the community but once raised to social equality
-their influence will be destructive to themselves and to the whites. If
-the purity of the two races is to be maintained they cannot continue to
-live side by side and this is a problem from which there can be no
-escape.
-
-The native American by the middle of the nineteenth century was rapidly
-acquiring distinct characteristics. Derived from the Saxon and Danish
-parts of the British Isles and being almost purely Nordic he was by
-reason of a differential selection due to a new environment beginning to
-show physical peculiarities of his own slightly variant from those of
-his English forefathers and corresponding rather with the idealistic
-Elizabethan than with the materialistic Hanoverian Englishman. The Civil
-War, however, put a severe, perhaps fatal, check to the development and
-expansion of this splendid type by destroying great numbers of the best
-breeding stock on both sides and by breaking up the home ties of many
-more. If the war had not occurred these same men with their descendants
-would have populated the Western States instead of the racial
-nondescripts who are now flocking there.
-
-There is every reason to believe that the native stock would have
-continued to maintain a high rate of increase if there had been no
-immigration of foreign laborers in the middle of the nineteenth century
-and that the actual population of the United States would be fully as
-large as it is now but would have been almost exclusively native
-American and Nordic.
-
-The prosperity that followed the war attracted hordes of newcomers who
-were welcomed by the native Americans to operate factories, build
-railroads and fill up the waste spaces—“developing the country” it was
-called.
-
-These new immigrants were no longer exclusively members of the Nordic
-race as were the earlier ones who came of their own impulse to improve
-their social conditions. The transportation lines advertised America as
-a land flowing with milk and honey and the European governments took the
-opportunity to unload upon careless, wealthy and hospitable America the
-sweepings of their jails and asylums. The result was that the new
-immigration, while it still included many strong elements from the north
-of Europe, contained a large and increasing number of the weak, the
-broken and the mentally crippled of all races drawn from the lowest
-stratum of the Mediterranean basin and the Balkans, together with hordes
-of the wretched, submerged populations of the Polish Ghettos. Our jails,
-insane asylums and almshouses are filled with this human flotsam and the
-whole tone of American life, social, moral and political has been
-lowered and vulgarized by them.
-
-With a pathetic and fatuous belief in the efficacy of American
-institutions and environment to reverse or obliterate immemorial
-hereditary tendencies, these newcomers were welcomed and given a share
-in our land and prosperity. The American taxed himself to sanitate and
-educate these poor helots and as soon as they could speak English,
-encouraged them to enter into the political life, first of
-municipalities and then of the nation.
-
-The native Americans are splendid raw material, but have as yet only an
-imperfectly developed national consciousness. They lack the instinct of
-self-preservation in a racial sense. Unless such an instinct develops
-their race will perish, as do all organisms which disregard this primary
-law of nature. Nature had granted to the Americans of a century ago the
-greatest opportunity in recorded history to produce in the isolation of
-a continent a powerful and racially homogeneous people and had provided
-for the experiment a pure race of one of the most gifted and vigorous
-stocks on earth, a stock free from the diseases, physical and moral,
-which have again and again sapped the vigor of the older lands. Our
-grandfathers threw away this opportunity in the blissful ignorance of
-national childhood and inexperience.
-
-The result of unlimited immigration is showing plainly in the rapid
-decline in the birth rate of native Americans because the poorer classes
-of Colonial stock, where they still exist, will not bring children into
-the world to compete in the labor market with the Slovak, the Italian,
-the Syrian and the Jew. The native American is too proud to mix socially
-with them and is gradually withdrawing from the scene, abandoning to
-these aliens the land which he conquered and developed. The man of the
-old stock is being crowded out of many country districts by these
-foreigners just as he is to-day being literally driven off the streets
-of New York City by the swarms of Polish Jews. These immigrants adopt
-the language of the native American, they wear his clothes, they steal
-his name and they are beginning to take his women, but they seldom adopt
-his religion or understand his ideals and while he is being elbowed out
-of his own home the American looks calmly abroad and urges on others the
-suicidal ethics which are exterminating his own race.
-
-When the test of actual battle comes, it will, of course, be the native
-American who will do the fighting and suffer the losses. With him will
-stand the immigrants of Nordic blood, but there will be numbers of these
-foreigners in the large cities who will prove to be physically unfit for
-military duty.
-
-As to what the future mixture will be it is evident that in large
-sections of the country the native American will entirely disappear. He
-will not intermarry with inferior races and he cannot compete in the
-sweat shop and in the street trench with the newcomers. Large cities
-from the days of Rome, Alexandria, and Byzantium have always been
-gathering points of diverse races, but New York is becoming a _cloaca
-gentium_ which will produce many amazing racial hybrids and some ethnic
-horrors that will be beyond the powers of future anthropologists to
-unravel.
-
-One thing is certain: in any such mixture, the surviving traits will be
-determined by competition between the lowest and most primitive elements
-and the specialized traits of Nordic man; his stature, his light colored
-eyes, his fair skin and light colored hair, his straight nose and his
-splendid fighting and moral qualities, will have little part in the
-resultant mixture.
-
-The “survival of the fittest” means the survival of the type best
-adapted to existing conditions of environment, which to-day are the
-tenement and factory, as in Colonial times they were the clearing of
-forests, fighting Indians, farming the fields and sailing the Seven
-Seas. From the point of view of race it were better described as the
-“survival of the unfit.”
-
-This review of the colonies of Europe would be discouraging were it not
-for the fact that thus far little attention has been paid to the
-suitability of a new country for the particular colonists who migrate
-there. The process of sending out colonists is as old as mankind itself
-and probably in the last analysis most of the chief races of the world,
-certainly most of the inhabitants of Europe, represent the descendants
-of successful colonists.
-
-Success in colonization depends on the selection of new lands and
-climatic conditions in harmony with the immemorial requirements of the
-incoming race. The adjustment of each race to its own peculiar habitat
-is based on thousands of years of rigid selection which cannot be safely
-ignored. A certain isolation and freedom from competition with other
-races, for some centuries at least, is also important, so that the
-colonists may become habituated to their new surroundings.
-
-The Americans have not been on the continent long enough to acquire this
-adjustment and consequently do not present as effective a resistance to
-competition with immigrants as did, let us say, the Italians when
-overrun by northern barbarians. As soon as a group of men migrate to new
-surroundings, climatic, social or industrial, a new form of selection
-arises and those not fitted to the new conditions die off at a greater
-rate than in their original home. This form of differential selection
-plays a large part in modern industrial centres and in large cities,
-where unsanitary conditions bear more heavily on the children of Nordics
-than on those of Alpines or Mediterraneans.
-
-
-
-
- _PART II_
- EUROPEAN RACES IN HISTORY
-
-
-
-
- I
- EOLITHIC MAN
-
-
-Before considering the living populations of Europe we must give
-consideration to the extinct peoples that preceded them.
-
-The science of anthropology is very recent—in its present form less than
-fifty years old—but it has already revolutionized our knowledge of the
-past and extended prehistory so that it is now measured not by thousands
-but by tens of thousands of years.
-
-The history of man prior to the period of metals has been divided into
-ten or more subdivisions, many of them longer than the time covered by
-written records. Man has struggled up through the ages, to revert again
-and again into savagery and barbarism but apparently retaining each time
-something gained by the travail of his ancestors.
-
-So long as there is in the world a freely breeding stock or race that
-has in it an inherent capacity for development and growth, mankind will
-continue to ascend until, possibly through the selection and regulation
-of breeding as intelligently applied as in the case of domestic animals,
-it will control its own destiny and attain moral heights as yet
-unimagined.
-
-The impulse upward, however, is supplied by a very small number of
-nations and by a very small proportion of the population in such
-nations. The section of any community that produces leaders or genius of
-any sort is only a minute percentage. To utilize and adapt to human
-needs the forces and the raw materials of nature, to invent new
-processes, to establish new principles, and to elucidate and unravel the
-laws that control the universe call for genius. To imitate or to adopt
-what others have invented is not genius but mimicry.
-
-This something which we call “genius” is not a matter of family, but of
-stock or strain, and is inherited in precisely the same manner as are
-the purely physical characters. It may be latent through several
-generations of obscurity and then flare up when the opportunity comes.
-Of this we have many examples in America. This is what education or
-opportunity does for a community; it permits in these rare cases fair
-play for development, but it is race, always race, that produces genius.
-An individual of inferior type or race may profit greatly by good
-environment. On the other hand, a member of a superior race in bad
-surroundings may, and very often does, sink to an extremely low level.
-While emphasizing the importance of race, it must not be forgotten that
-environment, while it does not alter the potential capacity of the
-stock, can perform miracles in the development of the individual.
-
-This genius producing type is slow breeding and there is real danger of
-its loss to mankind. Some idea of the value of these small strains can
-be gained from the recent statistics which demonstrate that
-Massachusetts produces more than fifty times as much genius per hundred
-thousand whites as does Georgia, Alabama or Mississippi, although
-apparently the race, religion and environment, other than climatic
-conditions, are much the same, except for the numbing presence in the
-South of a large stationary Negro population.
-
-The more thorough the study of European prehistory becomes, the more we
-realize how many advances of culture have been made and then lost. Our
-parents were accustomed to regard the overthrow of ancient civilization
-in the Dark Ages as the greatest catastrophe of mankind, but we now know
-that the classic period of Greece was preceded by similar dark ages
-caused by the Dorian invasions, that had overthrown the Homeric-Mycenæan
-culture, which in its turn had flourished after the destruction of its
-parent, the brilliant Minoan culture of Crete. Still earlier, some
-twelve thousand years ago, the Azilian Period of poverty and
-retrogression succeeded the wonderful achievements of the hunter-artists
-of the Upper Paleolithic.
-
-The progress of civilization becomes evident only when immense periods
-are studied and compared, but the lesson is always the same, namely,
-that race is everything. Without race there can be nothing except the
-slave wearing his master’s clothes, stealing his master’s proud name,
-adopting his master’s tongue and living in the crumbling ruins of his
-master’s palace. Everywhere on the sites of ancient civilizations the
-Turk, the Kurd and the Bedouin camp; and Americans may well pause and
-consider the fate of this country which they, and they alone, founded
-and nourished with their blood. The immigrant ditch diggers and the
-railroad navvies were to our fathers what their slaves were to the
-Romans and the same transfer of political power from master to servant
-is taking place to-day.
-
-Man’s place of origin was undoubtedly Asia. Europe is only a peninsula
-of the Eurasiatic continent and although the extent of its land area
-during the Pleistocene was much greater than at present, it is certain
-from the distribution of the various species of man, that the main races
-evolved in Asia, probably north of the great Himalayan range long before
-the centre of that continent was reduced to a series of deserts by
-progressive desiccation.
-
-The evidence based on man’s relatively large bulk, on the lack of the
-development of his fore limbs and particularly on his highly specialized
-foot structure all indicate that he has not been arboreal for a vast
-period of time, probably not since the end of the Miocene. The change of
-habitat from the trees to the ground may have been caused by a profound
-modification of climate, from moist to dry or from warm to cold, which
-in turn may have affected the food supply and compelled a more
-carnivorous diet.
-
-Evidence of the location of the early evolution of man in Asia and in
-the geologically recent submerged area toward the southeast is afforded
-by the fossil deposits in the Siwalik hills of northern India; where the
-remains of primates have been found which were either ancestral or
-closely related to the four genera of living anthropoids and where we
-may confidently look for remains of the earliest human forms; and by the
-discovery in Java, which in Pliocene times was connected with the
-mainland over what is now the South China Sea, of the earliest known
-form of erect primate, the _Pithecanthropus_. This ape-like man is
-practically the “missing link,” being intermediate between man and the
-anthropoids and is generally believed to have been contemporary with the
-Günz glaciation of some 500,000 years ago, the first of the four great
-glacial advances in Europe.
-
-One or two species of anthropoid apes have been discovered in the
-Miocene of Europe which may possibly have been remotely related to the
-ancestors of man but when the archæological exploration of Asia shall be
-as complete and intensive as that of Europe it is probable that more
-forms of fossil anthropoids and new species of man will be found there.
-
-Man existed in Europe during the second and third interglacial periods,
-if not earlier. We have his artifacts in the form of eoliths, at least
-as early as the second interglacial stage, the Mindel-Riss, of some
-300,000 years ago. A single jaw found near Heidelberg is referred to
-this period and is the earliest skeletal evidence of man in Europe. From
-certain remarkable characters in this jaw, it has been assigned to a new
-species, _Homo heidelbergensis_.
-
-Then follows a long period showing only scanty industrial relics and no
-known skeletal remains. Man was slowly and painfully struggling up from
-a culture phase where chance flints served his temporary purpose. This
-period, known as the Eolithic, was succeeded by a stage of human
-development where slight chipping and retouching of flints for his
-increasing needs led, after vast intervals of time, to the deliberate
-manufacture of tools. This Eolithic Period is necessarily extremely hazy
-and uncertain. Whether or not certain chipped or broken flints, called
-eoliths or dawn stones, were actually human artifacts or were the
-products of natural forces is, however, immaterial for man must have
-passed through such an eolithic stage.
-
-The further back we go toward the commencement of this Eolithic culture,
-the more unrecognizable the flints necessarily become until they finally
-cannot be distinguished from natural stone fragments. At the beginning,
-the earliest man merely picked up a convenient stone, used it once and
-flung it away, precisely as an anthropoid ape would act to-day if he
-wanted to break the shell of a tortoise or crack an ostrich egg.
-
-Man must have experienced the following phases of development in the
-transition from the prehuman to the human stage: first, the utilization
-of chance stones and sticks; second, the casual adaptation of flints by
-a minimum amount of chipping; third, the deliberate manufacture of the
-simplest implements from flint nodules; and fourth, the invention of new
-forms of weapons and tools in ever increasing variety.
-
-Of the last two stages we have an extensive and clear record. Of the
-second stage we have in the eoliths intermediate forms ranging from
-flints that are evidently results of natural causes to flints that are
-clearly artifacts. The first and earliest stage, of course, could leave
-behind it no definite record and must in the present state of our
-knowledge rest on hypothesis.
-
-
-
-
- II
- PALEOLITHIC MAN
-
-
-With the deliberate manufacture of implements from flint nodules, we
-enter the beginning of Paleolithic time and from here on our way is
-relatively clear. The successive stages of the Paleolithic were of great
-length but are each characterized by some improvement in the manufacture
-of tools. During long ages man was merely a tool making and tool using
-animal and, after all is said, that is about as good a definition as we
-can find to-day for the primate we call human.
-
-The Paleolithic Period or Old Stone Age lasted from the somewhat
-indefinite termination of the Eolithic, some 150,000 years ago, to the
-Neolithic or New Stone Age, which began about 7000 B. C.
-
-The Paleolithic falls naturally into three great subdivisions. The Lower
-Paleolithic includes the whole of the last interglacial stage with the
-subdivisions of the Pre-Chellean, Chellean and Acheulean; the Middle
-Paleolithic covers the whole of the last glaciation and is co-extensive
-with the Mousterian Period and the dominance of the Neanderthal species
-of man.[1] The Upper Paleolithic embraces all the postglacial stages
-down to the Neolithic and includes the subdivisions of the Aurignacian,
-Solutrean, Magdalenian and Azilian. During the entire Upper Paleolithic,
-except the short closing phase, the Cro-Magnon race flourished.
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- The Middle Paleolithic Period is suggested here for the first
- time.—EDITOR’S NOTE.
-
-It is not until after the third severe period of great cold, known as
-the Riss glaciation, nor until we enter, some 150,000 years ago, the
-third and last interglacial stage of temperate climate, known as the
-Riss-Würm, that we find a definite and ascending series of culture. The
-Pre-Chellean, Chellean and Acheulean divisions of the Lower Paleolithic
-occupied the whole of this warm or rather temperate interglacial phase,
-which lasted nearly 100,000 years.
-
-A shattered skull, a jaw and some teeth have been discovered recently in
-Sussex, England. These remains were attributed to the same individual,
-who was named the Piltdown Man. Owing to the extraordinary thickness of
-the skull and the simian character of the jaw, a new genus,
-_Eoanthropus_, the “dawn man,” was created and assigned to Pre-Chellean
-times. Some of the tentative restorations of the fragmentary bones make
-this skull altogether too modern and too capacious for a Pre-Chellean or
-even a Chellean.
-
-Further study and comparison with the jaws of other primates also
-indicate that the jaw belonged to a chimpanzee so that the genus
-_Eoanthropus_ must now be abandoned and the Piltdown Man must be
-included in the genus _Homo_ as at present constituted.
-
-In any event the Piltdown Man is highly aberrant and, so far as our
-present knowledge goes, does not appear to be related to any other
-species of man found during the Lower Paleolithic. Future discoveries of
-the Piltdown type and for that matter of Heidelberg Man may, however,
-raise either or both of them to generic rank.
-
-In later Acheulean times a new human species, very likely descended from
-the early Heidelberg Man of Eolithic times, appears on the scene and is
-known as the Neanderthal race. Many fossil remains of this type have
-been found.
-
-The Neanderthaloids occupied the European stage exclusively, with the
-possible exception of the Piltdown Man, from the first appearance of man
-in Europe to the end of the Middle Paleolithic. The Neanderthals
-flourished throughout the entire duration of the last glacial advance
-known as the Würm glaciation. This period, known as the Mousterian,
-began about 50,000 years ago and lasted some 25,000 years.
-
-The Neanderthal species disappears suddenly and completely with the
-advent of postglacial times, when, about 25,000 years ago, it was
-apparently supplanted or exterminated by a new and far higher race, the
-famous Cro-Magnons.
-
-There may well have been during Mousterian times races of man in Europe
-other than the Neanderthaloids, but of them we have no record. Among the
-numerous remains of Neanderthals, however, we do find traces of distinct
-types showing that this race in Europe was undergoing evolution and was
-developing marked variations in characters.
-
-Neanderthal Man was an almost purely meat eating hunter, living in caves
-or rather in their entrances. He was dolichocephalic and not unlike
-existing Australoids, although not necessarily of black skin and was, of
-course, in no sense a Negro.
-
-The skull was characterized by heavy superorbital ridges, a low and
-receding forehead, protruding and chinless under jaw and the posture was
-imperfectly erect. This race was widely spread and rather numerous. Some
-of its blood may have trickled down to the present time and occasionally
-one sees a skull apparently of the Neanderthal type. The best skull of
-this type ever seen by the writer belonged to a very intellectual
-professor in London, who was quite unconscious of his value as a museum
-specimen. In the old black breed of Scotland the overhanging brows and
-deep-set eyes are suggestive of this race.
-
-Along with other ancient and primitive racial remnants, ferocious
-gorilla-like living specimens of Paleolithic man are found not
-infrequently on the west coast of Ireland and are easily recognized by
-the great upper lip, bridgeless nose, beetling brow with low growing
-hair and wild and savage aspect. The proportions of the skull which give
-rise to this large upper lip, the low forehead and the superorbital
-ridges are certainly Neanderthal characters. The other traits of this
-Irish type are common to many primitive races. This is the Irishman of
-caricature and the type was very frequent in America when the first
-Irish immigrants came in 1846 and the following years. It seems,
-however, to have almost disappeared in this country. If, as it is
-claimed, the Neanderthals have left no trace of their blood in living
-populations, these Firbolgs are derived from some very ancient and
-primitive race as yet undescribed.
-
-In the Upper Paleolithic, which began after the close of the fourth and
-last glaciation, about 25,000 years ago, the Neanderthal race was
-succeeded by men of very modern aspect, known as Cro-Magnons. The date
-of the beginning of the Upper Paleolithic is the first we can fix with
-accuracy and its correctness can be relied on within narrow limits. The
-Cro-Magnon race first appears in the Aurignacian subdivision of the
-Upper Paleolithic. Like the Neanderthals, they were dolichocephalic but
-with a cranial capacity superior to the average in existing European
-populations and a stature of very remarkable size.
-
-It is quite astonishing to find that the predominant race in Europe
-25,000 years ago, or more, was not only much taller, but had an absolute
-cranial capacity in excess of the average of the present population. The
-low cranial average of existing populations in Europe can be best
-explained by the presence of large numbers of individuals of inferior
-mentality. These defectives have been carefully preserved by modern
-charity, whereas in the savage state of society the backward members
-were allowed to perish and the race was carried on by the vigorous and
-not by the weaklings.
-
-The high brain capacity of the Cro-Magnons is paralleled by that of the
-ancient Greeks, who in a single century gave to the world out of their
-small population much more genius than all the other races of mankind
-have since succeeded in producing in a similar length of time. Attica
-between 530 and 430 B. C. had an average population of about 90,000
-freemen, and yet from this number were born no less than fourteen
-geniuses of the very highest rank. This would indicate a general
-intellectual status as much above that of the Anglo-Saxons as the latter
-are above the Negroes. The existence at these early dates of a very high
-cranial capacity and its later decline shows that there is no upward
-tendency inherent in mankind of sufficient strength to overcome
-obstacles placed in its way by stupid social customs.
-
-All historians are familiar with the phenomenon of a rise and decline in
-civilization such as has occurred time and again in the history of the
-world but we have here in the disappearance of the Cro-Magnon race the
-earliest example of the replacement of a very superior race by an
-inferior one. There is great danger of a similar replacement of a higher
-by a lower type here in America unless the native American uses his
-superior intelligence to protect himself and his children from
-competition with intrusive peoples drained from the lowest races of
-eastern Europe and western Asia.
-
-While the skull of the Cro-Magnon was long, the cheek bones were very
-broad and this combination of broad face with long skull constitutes a
-peculiar disharmonic type which occurs to-day only among the very highly
-specialized Esquimaux and one or two other unimportant groups.
-
-Skulls of this particular type, however, are found in small numbers
-among existing populations in central France, precisely in the district
-where the fossil remains of this race were first discovered. These
-isolated Frenchmen probably represent the last lingering remnant of this
-splendid race of hunting savages.
-
-The Cro-Magnon culture is found around the basin of the Mediterranean,
-and this fact, together with the conspicuous absence in eastern Europe
-of its earliest phases, the lower Aurignacian, indicates that it entered
-Europe by way of north Africa, as its successors, the Mediterranean
-race, probably did in Neolithic times. There is little doubt that the
-Cro-Magnons originally developed in Asia and were in their highest stage
-of physical development at the time of their first appearance in Europe.
-Whatever change took place in their stature during their residence there
-seems to have been in the nature of a decline rather than of a further
-development.
-
-There is nothing whatever of the Negroid in the Cro-Magnons and they are
-not in any way related to the Neanderthals, who represent a distinct
-and, save for the suggestions made above, an extinct species of man.
-
-The Cro-Magnon race persisted through the entire Upper Paleolithic,
-during the periods known as the Aurignacian, Solutrean and Magdalenian,
-from 25,000 to 10,000 B. C. While it is possible that the blood of this
-race enters somewhat into the composition of the peoples of western
-Europe, its influence cannot be great and the Cro-Magnons—the Nordics of
-their day—disappear from view with the advent of the warmer climate of
-recent times.
-
-It has been suggested that, following the fading ice edge north and
-eastward through Asia into North America, they became the ancestors of
-the Esquimaux but certain anatomical objections are fatal to this
-interesting theory. No one, however, who is familiar with the culture of
-the Esquimaux and especially with their wonderful skill in bone and
-ivory carving, can fail to be struck with the similarity of their
-technique to that of the Cro-Magnons.
-
-To the Cro-Magnon race the world owes the birth of art. Caverns and
-shelters are constantly unearthed in France and Spain, where the walls
-and ceilings are covered with polychrome paintings or with incised
-bas-reliefs of animals of the chase. A few clay models, sometimes of the
-human form, are also found, together with abundant remains of their
-chipped but unpolished stone weapons and tools. Certain facts stand out
-clearly, namely, that they were purely hunters and clothed themselves in
-furs and skins. They knew nothing of agriculture or of domestic animals,
-even the dog being probably as yet untamed and the horse regarded merely
-as an object of chase.
-
-The question of their knowledge of the principle of the bow and arrow
-during the Aurignacian and Solutrean is an open one but there are
-definite indications of the use of the arrow, or at least the barbed
-dart, in early Magdalenian times and this weapon was well known in the
-succeeding Azilian Period.
-
-The presence toward the end of this last period of quantities of very
-small flints called microliths has given rise to much controversy. It is
-possible that some of these microliths represent the tips of small
-poisoned arrows such as are now in very general use among primitive
-hunting tribes the world over. Certain grooves in some of the flint
-weapons of the Upper Paleolithic may also have been used for the
-reception of poison. It is highly probable that the immediate
-predecessors of the Azilians, the Cro-Magnons, perhaps the greatest
-hunters that ever lived, not only used poisoned darts but were adepts in
-trapping game by means of pitfalls and snares, precisely as do some of
-the hunting tribes of Africa to-day. Barbed arrowheads of flint or bone,
-such as were commonly used by the North American Indians, have not been
-found in Paleolithic deposits.
-
-In the Solutrean Period the Cro-Magnons shared Europe with a new race
-known as the Brünn-Předmost, found in central Europe. This race is
-characterized by a long face as well as a long skull, and was,
-therefore, harmonic. This Brünn-Předmost race appears to have been well
-settled in the Danubian and Hungarian plains and this location indicates
-an eastern rather than a southern origin.
-
-Good anatomists have seen in this race the last lingering traces of the
-Neanderthaloids but it is more probable that we have here the first
-advance wave of the primitive forerunners of one of the modern European
-dolichocephalic races.
-
-This new race was not artistic, but had great skill in fashioning
-weapons and possibly is associated with the peculiarities of Solutrean
-culture and the decline of art which characterizes that period. The
-artistic impulse of the Cro-Magnons which flourished so vigorously
-during the Aurignacian seems to be quite suspended during this Solutrean
-Period, but reappears in the succeeding Magdalenian times. This
-Magdalenian art is clearly the direct descendant of Aurignacian models
-and in this closing age of the Cro-Magnons all forms of Paleolithic art,
-carving, engraving, painting and the manufacture of weapons, reach their
-highest and final culmination.
-
-Nine or ten thousand years may be assigned to the Aurignacian and
-Solutrean Periods and we may with considerable certainty give the
-minimum date of 16,000 B. C. as the beginning of Magdalenian time. Its
-entire duration can be safely set down at 6,000 years, thus bringing the
-final termination of the Magdalenian to 10,000 B. C. All these dates are
-extremely conservative and the error, if any, is in assigning too late
-and not too early a period to the end of Magdalenian times.
-
-At the close of the Magdalenian we enter upon the last period of
-Paleolithic times, the Azilian, which lasted from about 10,000 to 7,000
-B. C., when the Upper Paleolithic, the age of chipped flints, definitely
-and finally ends in Europe. This period takes its name from the Mas
-d’Azil, or “House of Refuge,” a huge cavern in the eastern Pyrenees
-where the local Protestants took shelter during the persecutions. The
-extensive deposits in this cave are typical of the Azilian epoch and
-here certain marked pebbles may be the earliest known traces of symbolic
-writing, but true writing was probably not developed until the late
-Neolithic.
-
-With the advent of this Azilian Period art entirely disappears and the
-splendid physical type of the Cro-Magnons is succeeded by what appear to
-have been degraded savages, who had lost the force and vigor necessary
-for the strenuous chase of large game and had turned to the easier life
-of fishermen.
-
-In the Azilian the bow and arrow are in common use in Spain and it is
-well within the possibilities that the introduction and development of
-this new weapon from the South may have played its part in the
-destruction of the Cro-Magnons; otherwise it is hard to account for the
-disappearance of this race of large stature and great brain power.
-
-The Azilian, also called the Tardenoisian in the north of France, was
-evidently a period of racial disturbance and at its close the beginnings
-of the existing races are found.
-
-From the first appearance of man in Europe and for many tens of
-thousands of years down to some ten or twelve thousand years ago all
-known human remains are of dolichocephalic type.
-
-In the Azilian Period appears the first round skull race. It comes
-clearly from the East. Later we shall find that this invasion of the
-forerunners of the existing Alpine race came from southwestern Asia by
-way of the Iranian plateau, Asia Minor, the Balkans and the valley of
-the Danube, and spread over nearly all of Europe. The earlier round
-skull invasions may as well have been infiltrations as armed conquests
-since apparently from that day to this the round skulls have occupied
-the poorer mountain districts and have seldom ventured down to the rich
-and fertile plains.
-
-This new brachycephalic race is known as the Furfooz or Grenelle race,
-so called from the localities in Belgium and France where it was first
-discovered. Members of this round skull race have also been found at
-Ofnet in Bavaria where they occur in association with a dolichocephalic
-race, our first historic evidence of the mixture of contrasted races.
-The descendants of this Furfooz-Grenelle race and of the succeeding
-waves of invaders of the same brachycephalic type now occupy central
-Europe as Alpines and form the predominant peasant type in central and
-eastern Europe.
-
-In this same Azilian Period there appear, coming this time from the
-South, the first forerunners of the Mediterranean race. The descendants
-of this earliest wave of Mediterraneans and their later reinforcements
-occupy all the coast and islands of the Mediterranean and are spread
-widely over western Europe. They can everywhere be identified by their
-short stature, slight build, long skull and brunet hair and eyes.
-
-While during this Azilian-Tardenoisian Period these ancestors of two of
-the existing European races are appearing in central and southern
-Europe, a new culture phase, also distinctly Pre-Neolithic, was
-developing along the shores of the Baltic. It is known as Maglemose from
-its type locality in Denmark. It is believed to be the work of the first
-wave of the Nordic race which had followed the retreating glaciers
-northward over the old land connections between Denmark and Sweden to
-occupy the Scandinavian Peninsula. In the remains of this culture we
-find definite evidence of the domesticated dog.
-
-With the appearance of the Mediterranean race the Azilian-Tardenoisian
-draws to its close and with it the entire Paleolithic Period. It is safe
-to assign for the end of the Paleolithic and the beginning of the
-Neolithic or Polished Stone Age, the date of 7,000 or 8,000 B. C.
-
-The races of the Paleolithic Period, so far as we can judge from their
-remains, appear successively on the scene with all their characters
-fully developed. The evolution of all these subspecies and races took
-place somewhere in Asia or eastern Europe. None of these races appear to
-be ancestral one to another, although the scanty remains of the
-Heidelberg Man would indicate that he may have given rise to the later
-Neanderthals. Other than this possible affinity, the various races of
-Paleolithic times are not related one to another.
-
-
-
-
- III
- THE NEOLITHIC AND BRONZE AGES
-
-
-About 7,000 B.C. we enter an entirely new period in the history of man,
-the Neolithic or New Stone Age, when the flint implements were polished
-and not merely chipped. Early as is this date in European culture, we
-are not far from the beginnings of an elaborate civilization in parts of
-Asia and Egypt. The earliest organized governments, so far as our
-present knowledge goes, were Egypt and Sumer. Chinese civilization at
-the other end of Asia is later, but mystery still shrouds its origin and
-its connection, if any, with the Mesopotamian city-states. The solution
-probably lies in the central region of the Syr Darya and future
-excavations in those regions may uncover very early cultures. Balkh, the
-ancient Bactra, the mother of cities, is located where the trade routes
-between China, India and Mesopotamia converged and it is in this
-neighborhood that careful and thorough excavations will probably find
-their greatest reward.
-
-However, we are not dealing with Asia but with Europe only and our
-knowledge is confined to the fact that the various cultural advances at
-the end of the Paleolithic and the beginning of the Neolithic correspond
-with the arrival of new races.
-
-The transition from the Paleolithic to the Neolithic was formerly
-considered as revolutionary, an abrupt change of both race and culture,
-but a period more or less transitory, known as the Campignian, now
-appears to bridge over this gap. This is only what should be expected,
-since in human archæology as in geology the more detailed our knowledge
-becomes the more gradually we find one period or horizon merges into its
-successor.
-
-For a long time after the opening of the Neolithic the old-fashioned
-chipped weapons and implements remain the predominant type and the
-polished flints so characteristic of the Neolithic appear at first only
-sporadically, then increase in number until finally they entirely
-replace the rougher designs of the preceding Old Stone Age.
-
-So in their turn these Neolithic polished stone implements, which
-ultimately became both varied and effective as weapons and tools,
-continued in use long after metallurgy developed. In the Bronze Period
-metal armor and weapons were for ages of the greatest value. So they
-were necessarily in the possession of the military and ruling classes
-only, while the unfortunate serf or common soldier who followed his
-master to war did the best he could with leather shield and stone
-weapons. In the ring that clustered around Harold for the last stand on
-Senlac Hill many of the English thanes died with their Saxon king, armed
-solely with the stone battle-axes of their ancestors.
-
-In Italy also there was a long period known to the Italian archæologists
-as the Eneolithic Period when good flint tools existed side by side with
-very poor copper and bronze implements; so that, while the Neolithic
-lasted in western Europe four or five thousand years, it is, at its
-commencement, without clear definition from the preceding Paleolithic
-and at its end it merges gradually into the succeeding ages of metals.
-
-After the opening Campignian phase there followed a long period typical
-of the Neolithic, known as the Robenhausian or Age of the Swiss Lake
-Dwellers, which reached its height after 5000 B. C. The lake dwellings
-seem to have been the work chiefly of the round skull Alpine races and
-are found in numbers throughout the region of the Alps and their
-foothills and along the valley of the Danube.
-
-These Robenhausian pile built villages were the earliest known form of
-fixed habitation in Europe and the culture found in association with
-them was a great advance over that of the preceding Paleolithic. This
-type of permanent habitation flourished through the entire Upper
-Neolithic and the succeeding Bronze Age. Pile villages end in
-Switzerland with the first appearance of iron but elsewhere, as on the
-upper Danube, they still existed in the days of Herodotus.
-
-Pottery is found together with domesticated animals and agriculture,
-which appear during the Robenhausian for the first time. The chase,
-supplemented by trapping and fishing, was still common but it probably
-was more for clothing than for food. A permanent site is not alone the
-basis of an agricultural community, but it also involves at least a
-partial abandonment of the chase, because only nomads can follow the
-game in its seasonal migrations and hunted animals soon leave the
-neighborhood of settlements.
-
-The Terramara Period of northern Italy was a later phase of culture
-contemporaneous with the Upper Robenhausian and was typical of the
-Bronze Age. During the Terramara Period fortified and moated stations in
-swamps or close to the banks of rivers became the favorite resorts
-instead of pile villages built in lakes. The first traces of copper are
-found during this period. The earliest human remains in the Terramara
-deposits are long skulled, but round skulls soon appear in association
-with bronze implements. This indicates an original population of
-Mediterranean affinities overwhelmed later by Alpines.
-
- CLASSIFICATION OF THE RACES OF EUROPE
-
- THEIR CHARACTERS AND DISTRIBUTION
-
- ┌────────────────────────┬───────────────────┬──────────────────┐
- │ EUROPEAN RACES │ MODERN PEOPLES │ ANCIENT PEOPLES │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- ├────────────────────────┼───────────────────┼──────────────────┤
- │_Nordic._ │ │ │
- │Homo sapiens nordicus, │All Norse, Swedes, │Sacæ, Massagetæ, │
- │ Homo sapiens europeus,│ Danes, Letts, │ Scythians, │
- │ Baltic, Indo-Germanic,│ many Finlanders, │ Cimmerians, │
- │ Indo-European, │ many Russians and│ Persians, │
- │ Scandinavian, │ Poles, North │ Phrygians, │
- │ Teutonic, Germanic, │ Germans, many │ Achæans, │
- │ Dolicho-lepto, │ French, Dutch, │ Dorians, │
- │ Reihengraber, Finnic. │ Flemings, │ Thracians, │
- │ │ English, Scotch, │ Umbrians, │
- │ │ most Irish, │ Oscans, Gauls, │
- │ │ Native Americans,│ Galatians, │
- │ │ Canadians, │ Cymry, Belgæ, │
- │ │ Australians, │ many Romans, │
- │ │ Africanders. │ Goths, Lombards,│
- │ │ │ Vandals, │
- │ │ │ Burgunds, │
- │ │ │ Franks, Danes, │
- │ │ │ Saxons, Angles, │
- │ │ │ Norse, Normans, │
- │ │ │ Varangians. │
- │ │ │ Reihengräber. │
- │ │ │ Kurgans. │
- │ │ │ Maglemose │
- │ │ │ culture. │
- │ │ │ │
- │_Alpine._ │ │ │
- │Homo sapiens alpinus │Bretons, Walloons, │Sumerians, │
- │ (Eurasiatic), │ Central French, │ Hittites, Medes,│
- │ Celto-Slav or Kelts of│ some Basques, │ Khosars, │
- │ the French, Sarmatian,│ Savoyards, Swiss,│ Sarmatians, │
- │ Arvernian, Auvergnat, │ Tyrolese, most │ Wends, Sorbs. │
- │ Slavic, Savoyard, │ South Germans, │ Furfooz-Grenelle│
- │ Lappanoid, Armenoid. │ North Italians, │ race, Swiss Lake│
- │ │ German-Austrians,│ Dwellers, Gizeh │
- │ │ Bohemians, │ skulls. │
- │ │ Slovaks, Magyars,│ Robenhausen. │
- │ │ many Poles, most │ Round Barrows. │
- │ │ Russians, Serbs, │ Bronze culture. │
- │ │ Bulgars, most │ │
- │ │ Rumanians, most │ │
- │ │ Greeks, Turks, │ │
- │ │ Armenians, most │ │
- │ │ Persians and │ │
- │ │ Afghans. │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │_Mediterranean._ │ │ │
- │Homo sapiens │Many English, │Egyptians, many │
- │ mediterraneus │ Portuguese, │ Babylonians, │
- │ (Eurafrican), Iberian,│ Spaniards, some │ Pelasgians, │
- │ Ligurian, │ Basques, │ Etruscans, │
- │ Atlanto-Mediterranean.│ Provençals, South│ Ligurians, │
- │ │ Italians, │ Phœnicians, most│
- │ │ Sicilians, many │ Greeks, many │
- │ │ Greeks and │ Romans, Cretans,│
- │ │ Rumanians, Moors,│ Iberians. Long │
- │ │ Berbers, │ Barrows. │
- │ │ Egyptians, many │ Neolithic │
- │ │ Persians and │ culture. │
- │ │ Afghans, Hindus. │ Megalithic │
- │ │ │ monuments. │
- │ │ │ │
- │_Upper Paleolithic._ │ │ │
- │_Extinct races._ │ │ │
- │Furfooz-Grenelle. │ │Proto-Alpines. │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │Brünn Předmost. │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │Homo sapiens │A few Dordognois. │Cro-Magnons. │
- │ cromagnonensis. │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │_Middle Paleolithic._ │ │ │
- │Homo neanderthalensis, │Doubtful traces │Neanderthals. │
- │ Homo primigenius. │ among west Irish │ Neanderthaloids.│
- │ │ and among the old│ │
- │ │ black breed of │ │
- │ │ Scotland and │ │
- │ │ Wales. │ │
- └────────────────────────┴───────────────────┴──────────────────┘
- ┌────────────────────────┬─────────────┬─────────┬───────────┐
- │ EUROPEAN RACES │ SKULL │ FACE │ NOSE │
- │ │ CEPHALIC │ │ │
- │ │ INDEX │ │ │
- ├────────────────────────┼─────────────┼─────────┼───────────┤
- │_Nordic._ │ │ │ │
- │Homo sapiens nordicus, │Long. 79 and │High. │Narrow. │
- │ Homo sapiens europeus,│ less. │ Narrow.│ Straight.│
- │ Baltic, Indo-Germanic,│ │ Long. │ Aquiline.│
- │ Indo-European, │ │ │ │
- │ Scandinavian, │ │ │ │
- │ Teutonic, Germanic, │ │ │ │
- │ Dolicho-lepto, │ │ │ │
- │ Reihengraber, Finnic. │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │_Alpine._ │ │ │ │
- │Homo sapiens alpinus │Round. │Broad. │Variable. │
- │ (Eurasiatic), │ 80 and │ │ Rather │
- │ Celto-Slav or Kelts of│ over. │ │ broad. │
- │ the French, Sarmatian,│ │ │ Coarse. │
- │ Arvernian, Auvergnat, │ │ │ │
- │ Slavic, Savoyard, │ │ │ │
- │ Lappanoid, Armenoid. │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │_Mediterranean._ │ │ │ │
- │Homo sapiens │Long. 79 and │High. │Rather │
- │ mediterraneus │ less. │ Narrow.│ broad. │
- │ (Eurafrican), Iberian,│ │ Long. │ │
- │ Ligurian, │ │ │ │
- │ Atlanto-Mediterranean.│ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │_Upper Paleolithic._ │ │ │ │
- │_Extinct races._ │ │ │ │
- │Furfooz-Grenelle. │Round, 79–85.│Medium. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │Brünn Předmost. │Long, 66–68. │Low and │ │
- │ │ │ medium.│ │
- │Homo sapiens │Long, with │Low and │Narrow and │
- │ cromagnonensis. │ disharmonic│ broad. │ aquiline.│
- │ │ broad face,│ │ │
- │ │ 63–76. │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │_Middle Paleolithic._ │ │ │ │
- │Homo neanderthalensis, │Long. │Long. │Broad. │
- │ Homo primigenius. │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- └────────────────────────┴─────────────┴─────────┴───────────┘
- ┌────────────────────────┬───────────┬───────────┬─────────┬─────────────┐
- │ EUROPEAN RACES │ STATURE │HAIR COLOR │EYE COLOR│ LANGUAGE │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├────────────────────────┼───────────┼───────────┼─────────┼─────────────┤
- │_Nordic._ │ │ │ │ │
- │Homo sapiens nordicus, │Tall. │Flaxen. │Blue. │All Aryan │
- │ Homo sapiens europeus,│ │ Fair. │ Gray. │ except │
- │ Baltic, Indo-Germanic,│ │ Red. │ Green. │ Tchouds, │
- │ Indo-European, │ │ Light │ Light │ Esths, many│
- │ Scandinavian, │ │ brown to │ brown │ Finlanders,│
- │ Teutonic, Germanic, │ │ chestnut.│ or │ and a few │
- │ Dolicho-lepto, │ │ Never │ hazel. │ tribes in │
- │ Reihengraber, Finnic. │ │ black. │ │ Siberia. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │_Alpine._ │ │ │ │ │
- │Homo sapiens alpinus │Medium. │Dark brown.│Black or │In Europe all│
- │ (Eurasiatic), │ Stocky. │ Black. │ dark │ Aryan │
- │ Celto-Slav or Kelts of│ Heavy. │ │ brown. │ except │
- │ the French, Sarmatian,│ │ │ Often │ Magyars, │
- │ Arvernian, Auvergnat, │ │ │ hazel │ some │
- │ Slavic, Savoyard, │ │ │ or │ Basques, │
- │ Lappanoid, Armenoid. │ │ │ gray, │ and some │
- │ │ │ │ in │ Finlanders.│
- │ │ │ │ western│ In Asia │
- │ │ │ │ Europe.│ mostly │
- │ │ │ │ │ Aryan, │
- │ │ │ │ │ except │
- │ │ │ │ │ Turcomans, │
- │ │ │ │ │ Kirghizes, │
- │ │ │ │ │ and other │
- │ │ │ │ │ nomad │
- │ │ │ │ │ tribes. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │_Mediterranean._ │ │ │ │ │
- │Homo sapiens │Short. │Dark brown.│Black. │In Europe all│
- │ mediterraneus │ Slender. │ Black. │ Dark │ Aryan, │
- │ (Eurafrican), Iberian,│ │ │ brown. │ except some│
- │ Ligurian, │ │ │ │ Basques. In│
- │ Atlanto-Mediterranean.│ │ │ │ Africa all │
- │ │ │ │ │ Non-Aryan. │
- │ │ │ │ │ In Asia │
- │ │ │ │ │ nearly all │
- │ │ │ │ │ Aryan. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │_Upper Paleolithic._ │ │ │ │ │
- │_Extinct races._ │ │ │ │ │
- │Furfooz-Grenelle. │ │Probably │Probably │Probably │
- │ │ │ very │ very │ non-Aryan. │
- │ │ │ dark. │ dark. │ │
- │Brünn Předmost. │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │Homo sapiens │Very tall │Probably │Probably │Probably │
- │ cromagnonensis. │ and │ very │ very │ non-Aryan. │
- │ │ medium. │ dark. │ dark. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │_Middle Paleolithic._ │ │ │ │ │
- │Homo neanderthalensis, │Short and │Probably │Probably │Probably │
- │ Homo primigenius. │ powerful.│ very │ very │ non-Aryan. │
- │ │ │ dark. │ dark. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- └────────────────────────┴───────────┴───────────┴─────────┴─────────────┘
-
-Neolithic culture also flourished in the north of Europe and
-particularly in Scandinavia now free from ice. The coasts of the Baltic
-were apparently occupied for the first time at the very beginning of
-this period, as no trace of Paleolithic industry has been found there,
-other than the Maglemose, which represents only the very latest phase of
-the Old Stone Age. The kitchen middens, or refuse heaps, of Sweden and
-more particularly of Denmark date from the early Neolithic and thus are
-somewhat earlier than the lake dwellers. Rough pottery occurs in them
-for the first time, but no traces of agriculture have been found and, as
-said, the dog seems to have been the only domesticated animal.
-
-From these two centres, the Alps and the North, an elaborate and
-variegated Neolithic culture spread through western Europe and an
-autochthonous development took place, comparatively little influenced by
-trade intercourse with Asia after the first immigrations of the new
-races.
-
-We may assume that the distribution of races in Europe during the
-Neolithic was roughly as follows.
-
-The Mediterranean basin and western Europe, including Spain, Italy,
-Gaul, Britain and parts of western Germany, were populated by
-Mediterranean long heads. In Britain the Paleolithic population must
-have been very small and the Neolithic Mediterraneans were the first
-effectively to open up the country. Even they kept to the open moorlands
-and avoided the heavily wooded and swampy valleys which to-day are the
-main centres of population. Before metal and especially iron tools were
-in use forests were an almost complete barrier to the expansion of an
-agricultural population.
-
-The Alps and the territories immediately adjacent, with Central Gaul and
-much of the Balkans, were inhabited by Alpine types. These Alpines
-extended northward until they came in touch in eastern Germany and
-Poland with the southernmost Nordics, but as the Carpathians at a much
-later date, namely, from the fourth to the eighth century A. D., were
-the centre of radiation of the Alpine Slavs, it is very possible that
-during the Neolithic the early Nordics lay farther north and east.
-
-North of the Alpines and occupying the shores of the Baltic and
-Scandinavia, together with eastern Germany, Poland and Russia, were
-located the Nordics. At the very base of the Neolithic and perhaps still
-earlier, this race occupied Scandinavia, and Sweden became the nursery
-of what has been generally called the Teutonic subdivision of the Nordic
-race. It was in that country that the peculiar characters of stature and
-blondness became most accentuated and it is there that we find them
-to-day in their greatest purity.
-
-During the Neolithic the remnants of early Paleolithic man must have
-been numerous, but later they were either exterminated or absorbed by
-the existing European races.
-
-During all this Neolithic Period Mesopotamia and Egypt were thousands of
-years in advance of Europe, but only a small amount of culture from
-these sources seems to have trickled westward up the valley of the
-Danube, then and long afterward the main route of intercourse between
-western Asia and the heart of Europe. Some trade also passed from the
-Black Sea up the Russian rivers to the Baltic coasts. Along these latter
-routes there came from the north to the Mediterranean world the amber of
-the Baltic, a fossil resin greatly prized by early man for its magic
-electrical qualities.
-
-Gold was probably the first metal to attract the attention of primitive
-man, but could only be used for purposes of ornamentation. Copper, which
-is often found in a pure state, was also one of the earliest metals
-known and probably came first either from the mines of Cyprus or of the
-Sinai Peninsula. These latter mines are known to have been worked before
-3400 B. C. by systematic mining operations and much earlier “the metal
-must have been obtained by primitive methods from surface ore.” It is,
-therefore, probable that copper was known and used, at first for
-ornament and later for implements, in Egypt before 4000 B. C. and
-possibly even earlier in the Mesopotamian regions.
-
-We now reach the confines of recorded history and the first absolutely
-fixed date, 4241 B. C., is established for lower Egypt by the oldest
-known calendar. The earliest date as yet for Mesopotamia is somewhat
-later, but these two countries supply the basis of the chronology of the
-ancient world until a few centuries before Christ.
-
-With the use of copper the Neolithic fades to its end and the Bronze Age
-commences soon thereafter. This next step in advance was made apparently
-before 3000 B. C. when some unknown genius discovered that an amalgam of
-nine parts of copper to one part of tin would produce the metal we now
-call bronze, which has a texture and hardness suitable for weapons and
-tools. The discovery revolutionized the world. The new knowledge was a
-long time spreading and weapons of this material were of fabulous value,
-especially in countries where there were no native mines and where
-spears and swords could only be obtained through trade or conquest. The
-esteem in which these bronze weapons, and still more the later weapons
-of iron, were held, is indicated by the innumerable legends and myths
-concerning magic swords and armor, the possession of which made the
-owner well-nigh invulnerable and invincible.
-
-The necessity of obtaining tin for this amalgam led to the early voyages
-of the Phœnicians, who from the cities of Tyre and Sidon and their
-daughter Carthage traversed the entire length of the Mediterranean,
-founded colonies in Spain to work the Spanish tin mines, passed the
-Pillars of Hercules and finally voyaged through the stormy Atlantic to
-the Cassiterides, the Tin Isles of Ultima Thule. There, on the coasts of
-Cornwall, they traded with the native British of kindred Mediterranean
-race for the precious tin. These dangerous and costly voyages become
-explicable only if the value of this metal for the composition of bronze
-be taken into consideration.
-
-After these bronze weapons were elaborated in Egypt the knowledge of
-their manufacture and use was extended through conquest into Palestine,
-and northward into Asia Minor.
-
-The effect of the possession of these new weapons on the Alpine
-populations of western Asia was magical and resulted in an intensive and
-final expansion of round skulls into Europe. This invasion came through
-Asia Minor, the Balkans and the valley of the Danube, poured into Italy
-from the north, introduced bronze among the earlier Alpine lake dwellers
-of Switzerland and among the Mediterraneans of the Terramara stations of
-the valley of the Po and at a later date reached as far west as Britain
-and as far north as Holland and Norway, where its traces are still to be
-found among the living population.
-
-The simultaneous appearance of bronze about 3000 or 2800 B. C. in the
-south as well as in the north of Italy may possibly be attributed to a
-lateral wave of this same invasion which, passing through Egypt, where
-it left behind the so-called Gizeh round skulls, reached Tunis and
-Sicily. In southern Italy bronze may have been introduced from Crete.
-With the first knowledge of metals begins the Eneolithic Period of the
-Italians.
-
-The close resemblance in design and technique among the implements of
-the Bronze Age in widely separated localities is so great that we can
-infer a relatively simultaneous introduction.
-
-With the introduction of bronze the custom of incineration of the dead
-also appears and replaces the typical Neolithic custom of inhumation.
-
-The introduction of bronze into England and into Scandinavia may be
-safely dated about one thousand years later, after 1800 B. C. The fact
-that the Alpines only barely reached Ireland indicates that at this time
-that island was severed from England and that the land connection
-between England and France had been broken. The computation of the
-foregoing dates, of course, is somewhat hypothetical, but the fixed fact
-remains that this last expansion of the Alpines brought the knowledge of
-bronze to western and northern Europe and to the Mediterranean and
-Nordic peoples living there.
-
-The effect of the introduction of bronze in the areas occupied chiefly
-by the Mediterranean race along the Atlantic coast and in Britain, as
-well as in north Africa from Tunis to Morocco, is seen in the
-construction and in the wide distribution of the megalithic funeral
-monuments, which appear to have been erected, not by Alpines but by the
-dolichocephs. The occurrence of bronze tools and weapons in the
-interments shows clearly that the megaliths of the south of France date
-from the beginning of the Bronze Age. The absence of bronze from the
-dolmens of Brittany may indicate an earlier age. It is, however, more
-likely that the opening Bronze Age in the South was contemporary with
-the late Neolithic in the North. The construction and use of these
-monuments continued at least until the very earliest trace of iron
-appears and in fact mound burials among the Vikings were common until
-the introduction of Christianity.
-
-Although there is evidence of very early use of iron in Egypt the
-knowledge of this metal as well as of bronze in Europe centres around
-the area occupied by the Alpines in the eastern Alps and its earliest
-phase is known as the Hallstatt culture, from a little town in the Tyrol
-where it was first discovered. This Hallstatt iron culture appeared
-about 1500 B. C. The Alpine Hittites in northeast Asia Minor were
-probably the first to mine and smelt iron and they introduced it to the
-Alpines of eastern Europe, but it was the Nordics who benefited by its
-use. Bronze weapons and the later iron ones proved in the hands of these
-Northern barbarians to be of terrible effectiveness. With these metal
-swords in their grasp, the Nordics conquered the Alpines of central
-Europe and then suddenly entered the ancient world as raiders and
-destroyers of cities. The classic civilizations of the northern coasts
-of the Mediterranean Sea fell, one after another, before the “Furor
-Normanorum,” just as two thousand years later the provinces of Rome were
-devastated by the last great flood of the Nordics from beyond the Alps.
-
-The first Nordics to appear in European history are tribes speaking
-Aryan tongues in the form of the various Celtic and related dialects in
-the West, of Umbrian in Italy and of Thracian in the Balkans. These
-barbarians, pouring down from the North, swept with them large numbers
-of Alpines whom they had already thoroughly Nordicized. The process of
-conquering and assimilating the Alpines must have gone on for long
-centuries before our first historic records and the work was so
-thoroughly done that the very existence of this Alpine race as a
-separate subspecies of man was actually forgotten for many centuries by
-themselves and by the world at large until it was revealed in our own
-day by the science of skull measurements.
-
-The Hallstatt iron culture did not extend into western Europe and the
-smelting and extensive use of this metal in southern Britain and
-northwestern Europe are of much later date and occur in what is called
-the La Tène Period, usually assigned to the fifth and fourth century B.
-C.
-
-Iron weapons were, however, known sporadically in England much earlier,
-perhaps as far back as 800 B. C., but were very rare and were probably
-importations from the Continent.
-
-“Hallstatt relics have only been found in the northeast or centre of
-France and it appears that the Bronze Age continued in the remainder of
-that country until about 700 B. C.”
-
-The spread of this La Tène culture is associated with the Nordic Cymry,
-who constituted the last wave of Celtic-speaking invaders into western
-Europe, while the earlier Nordic Gauls and Goidels had arrived in Gaul
-and Britain equipped with bronze only.
-
-In Roman times, following the La Tène Period, the main races of Europe
-occupied the relative positions which they had held during the whole
-Neolithic Period and which they hold to-day, with the exception that the
-Nordic subspecies was less extensively represented in western Europe
-than when, a few hundred years later, the so-called Teutonic tribes
-overran these countries; but on the other hand, the Nordics occupied
-large areas in eastern Germany, Hungary, Poland and Russia now mainly
-occupied by the Slavs of Alpine race.
-
-Many countries in central Europe were in Roman times inhabited by
-fair-haired, blue eyed barbarians, where now the population is
-preponderantly brunet and becoming yearly more so.
-
- CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE[2]
-
- ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │ METALS │
- │LATER IRON │
- │ La Tène Culture Europe 500 B. C.—Roman times│
- │ │
- │EARLY IRON │
- │ Hallstatt Culture Europe 1500–500 B. C. │
- │ Orient 1800–1000 B. C. │
- │ │
- │BRONZE Western and northern Europe 1800–500 B. C. │
- │ Orient 3000–2000 B. C. │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ NEOLITHIC │
- │LATE NEOLITHIC │
- │ COPPER, 3000–2000 B. C. │
- │ ENEOLITHIC │
- │ │
- │TYPICAL NEOLITHIC Swiss lake dwellings, 5000 B. C. │
- │ Robenhausian culture │
- │ │
- │EARLY NEOLITHIC Campignian culture 7000 B. C. │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ UPPER PALEOLITHIC │
- │POSTGLACIAL Caves and shelters: │
- │ Azilian-Tardenoisian │
- │ Nordic-Maglemose 10,000–7000 B. C. │
- │ Furfooz-Grenelle race │
- │ Proto-Mediterranean race │
- │ Magdalenian Cro-Magnon race 16,000–10,000 B. C. │
- │ Solutrean Brünn-Předmost 25,000–16,000 B. C. │
- │ race Cro-Magnon race │
- │ Aurignacian Cro-Magnon race │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ MIDDLE PALEOLITHIC │
- │IV. GLACIATION │
- │ Würm Mousterian Neanderthal race 50,000–25,000 B. C. │
- │ Caves and shelters │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ LOWER PALEOLITHIC │
- │III. INTERGLACIAL │
- │ Riss-Würm Acheulean, river terraces 75,000 B. C. │
- │ Chellean, river terraces 100,000 B. C. │
- │ Pre-Chellean and Mesvinian, 125,000 B. C. │
- │ river terraces 150,000 B. C. │
- │ │
- │ │
- │ EOLITHIC │
- │III. GLACIATION │
- │ Riss 200,000–150,000 B. C.│
- │ │
- │II. INTERGLACIAL │
- │ Mindel-Riss Heidelberg Man 350,000–200,000 B. C.│
- │ │
- │II. GLACIATION │
- │ Mindel 400,000–350,000 B. C.│
- │ │
- │I. INTERGLACIAL │
- │ Günz-Mindel 475,000–400,000 B. C.│
- │ │
- │GLACIATION │
- │ Günz _Pithecanthropus_ 500,000–475,000 B. C.│
- └─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- After Henry Fairfield Osborn, 1915.
-
-
-
-
- IV
- THE ALPINE RACE
-
-
-The Alpine race is clearly of Eastern and Asiatic origin. It forms the
-westernmost extension of a widespread subspecies which, outside of
-Europe, occupies Asia Minor, Iran, the Pamirs and the Hindu Kush. In
-fact the western Himalayas were probably its original centre of
-evolution and radiation and among its Asiatic members is a distinct
-subdivision, the Armenoids.
-
-The Alpine race is distinguished by a round face and correspondingly
-round skull which in the true Armenians has a peculiar sugarloaf shape,
-a character which can be easily recognized. The Alpines must not be
-confounded with the slit-eyed Mongols who centre around Thibet and the
-steppes of north Asia. The fact that both these races are round skulled
-does not involve identity of origin any more than the long skulls of the
-Nordics and of the Mediterraneans require that they be both considered
-of the same subspecies, although good anthropologists have been misled
-by this parallelism. The Alpines are of stocky build and moderately
-short stature, except sometimes where they have been crossed with Nordic
-elements. This race is also characterized by dark hair, except where
-there has been a strong Nordic admixture as in south Germany and
-Switzerland. In Europe at the present time the eye, also, is usually
-dark but sometimes grayish. The ancestral Proto-Alpines from the
-highlands of western Asia must, of course, have had brunet eyes and very
-dark, probably black, hair. Whether we are justified in considering gray
-eyes as peculiar to populations of mixed Alpine and Nordic blood is
-difficult to determine, but one thing is certain, the combination of
-blue eyes and flaxen hair is never Alpine.
-
-The European Alpines retain very little evidence of their Asiatic origin
-except the skull shape and have been in contact with the Nordic race so
-long that in central and western Europe they are everywhere saturated
-with the blood of that race. Many populations now considered good
-Germans, such as the majority of the Würtembergers, Bavarians,
-Austrians, Swiss and Tyrolese are merely Nordicized Alpines.
-
-While the Swiss are to-day neither tall nor long-headed, their country
-was thoroughly conquered early in the Christian era by the Nordic
-Alemanni who entered from the Rhine Valley. The exodus of soldiers from
-the forest cantons throughout the Middle Ages to fight as mercenaries in
-France and Italy gradually drained off this Nordic element until the
-chief evidence of its former existence lies to-day in the large amount
-of blondness among the Swiss. With the loss of this type the nation has
-ceased to be a military community.
-
-The first appearance in Europe of the Alpines dates from the Azilian
-Period when it is represented by the Furfooz-Grenelle race. There were
-later several invasions of this race which entered Europe from the Asia
-Minor plateaux, by way of the Balkans and the valley of the Danube,
-during Neolithic times and, also, at the beginning of the Bronze Age. It
-appears also to have passed north of the Black Sea, as some slight
-traces have been discovered there of round skulls which long antedate
-the existing population but the Russian brachycephaly of to-day is of
-much later origin and is due mainly to the eastward spread of Alpines
-from the regions of the Carpathians since the first centuries of our
-era.
-
-This race in its final expansion far to the northwest ultimately reached
-Norway, Denmark and Holland and planted among the dolichocephalic
-natives small colonies of round skulls, which still exist. These
-colonies are found along the coast and while of small extent are clearly
-marked. On the southwestern seaboard of Norway these round heads are
-dark and relatively short.
-
-When this invasion reached the extreme northwest of Europe its energy
-was spent and the invaders were soon forced back into central Europe by
-the Nordics. The Alpines at this time of maximum extension about 1800 B.
-C. crossed into Britain and a few reached Ireland and introduced bronze
-into both these islands. As the metal appears about the same time in
-Sweden it is safe to assume that it was introduced by this invasion.
-
-The men of the Round Barrows in England were Alpines, but their numbers
-were so scanty that they have left behind them in the skulls of the
-living population but little demonstrable evidence of their former
-presence. If we are ever able accurately to analyze the various strains
-that enter in more or less minute quantities into the blood of the
-British nation, we shall find many traces of these Round Barrow men as
-well as other interesting and ancient remnants especially in the western
-isles and peninsulas.
-
-In the study of European populations the great and fundamental fact
-about the British Isles is the almost total absence there to-day of true
-Alpine round skulls. It is the only important state in Europe in which
-the round skulls play no part and the only nation of any rank composed
-solely of Nordic and Mediterranean races in approximately equal numbers.
-To this fact are undoubtedly due many of the individualities and much of
-the greatness of the English people.
-
-The cephalic index in England is rather low, about 78, but there is a
-type of tall men, with a tendency to roundheadedness allied to a very
-marked intellectual capacity, known as the “Beaker Maker” type. They are
-probably descended from the men of the Round Barrows, who while
-brachycephalic were tall and presumably dark and entered England on the
-east and northeast. The Beaker Makers appear at the very end of the
-Neolithic and, at least in the case of the last of them to arrive, are
-identified with the Bronze Age.
-
-Before this tall, round-headed type reached Britain, they had absorbed
-many Nordic elements and they have nothing except the skull shape in
-common with the Alpines living closest, those of Belgium and France.
-However, they do suggest strongly the Dinaric race of the Tyrol and
-Dalmatian coast of the Adriatic. In addition to the Beaker Makers
-remains of short, thick-set brachycephs have also been found in small
-numbers. These last appear to have been true Alpines.
-
-The invasion of central Europe by Alpines, which occurred in the
-Neolithic, following in the wake of the Azilian forerunners of the same
-type—the Furfooz-Grenelle race—represented a very great advance in
-culture. They brought with them from Asia the art of domesticating
-animals and the first knowledge of the cereals and of pottery and were
-an agricultural race in sharp contrast to the flesh eating hunters who
-preceded them.
-
-The Neolithic populations of the lake dwellings in Switzerland and the
-extreme north of Italy, which flourished about 5000 B. C., all belonged
-to this Alpine race. A comparison of the scanty physical remains of
-these lake dwellers with the inhabitants of the existing villages on the
-lake shores demonstrates that the skull shape has changed little or not
-at all during the last seven thousand years and affords us another proof
-of the persistency of physical characters.
-
-This Alpine race in Europe is now so thoroughly acclimated that it is no
-longer Asiatic in any respect and has nothing in common with the Mongols
-except its round skulls. Such Mongolian elements as exist to-day in
-scattered groups throughout eastern Europe are remnants of the later
-invasions of Tatar hordes which, beginning with Attila in the fifth
-century, ravaged eastern Europe for hundreds of years.
-
-In western and central Europe the present distribution of the Alpine
-race is a substantial recession from its earlier extent and it has been
-everywhere conquered and subordinated by Celtic- and Teutonic-speaking
-Nordics. Beginning with the first appearance of the Celtic-speaking
-Nordics in western Europe, the Alpine race has been obliged to give
-ground but has mingled its blood everywhere with the conquerors and now
-after centuries of obscurity it appears to be increasing again at the
-expense of the master race.
-
-The Alpines reached Spain, as they reached Britain, in small numbers and
-with spent force but they still persist along the Cantabrian Alps as
-well as among the French Basques on the northern side of the Pyrenees.
-
-The Anaryan Basque or Euskarian language may be a derivative of the
-original speech of these Alpines, as its affinities point eastward and
-toward Asia rather than southward and toward the littoral of Africa and
-the Hamitic speech of the Mediterranean Berbers. Basque was probably
-related to the extinct Aquitanian. The Ligurian language, also seemingly
-Anaryan, if ever closely deciphered may throw some light on the subject.
-There are dim traces all along the north African coast of a round skull
-invasion about 3000 B. C. through Syria, Egypt, Tripoli and Tunis and
-from there through Sicily to southern Italy.
-
-The Alpine race forms to-day, as in Cæsar’s time, the great bulk of the
-population of central France with a Nordic aristocracy resting upon it.
-They occupy as the lower classes the uplands of Belgium, where, known as
-Walloons, they speak an archaic French dialect closely related to the
-ancient _langue d’oïl_. They form a majority of the upland population of
-Alsace, Lorraine, Baden, Würtemberg, Bavaria, Tyrol, Switzerland and
-northern Italy; in short, of the entire central _massif_ of Europe. In
-Bavaria and the Tyrol the Alpines are so thoroughly Nordicized that
-their true racial affinities are betrayed by their round skulls alone.
-
-When we reach Austria we come in contact with the Slavic-speaking
-nations which form a subdivision of the Alpine race appearing relatively
-late in history and radiating from the Carpathian Mountains. In western
-and central Europe in relation to the Nordic race the Alpine is
-everywhere the ancient, underlying and submerged type. The fertile
-lands, river valleys and cities are here in the hands of the Nordics but
-in eastern Germany and Poland we find conditions reversed. That is an
-old Nordic broodland with a Nordic substratum underlying the bulk of the
-peasantry, which now consists of round skulled Alpine Slavs. On top of
-these again we have an aristocratic upper class of comparatively recent
-introduction and of Saxon origin in eastern Germany. In Austria this
-upper class is Swabian and Bavarian.
-
-The introduction of Slavs into eastern Germany is believed to have been
-by infiltration and not by conquest. In the fourth century these Wends
-were called Venethi, Antes and Sclaveni, and were described as strong in
-numbers but despised in war. Through the neglect of the Teutons they had
-been allowed to range far and wide from their homes near the
-northeastern Carpathians and to occupy the lands formerly belonging to
-the Nordic nations, who had abandoned their country and flocked into the
-Roman Empire. Goth, Burgund, Lombard and Vandal were replaced by the
-lowly Wend and Sorb, whose descendants to-day form the privates in the
-east German regiments, while the officers are everywhere recruited from
-the Nordic upper class. The mediæval relation of these Slavic tribes to
-the dominant Teuton is well expressed in the meaning—slave—which has
-been attached to their name in western languages.
-
-The occupation of eastern Germany and Poland by the Slavs probably
-occurred from 400 A. D. to 700 A. D. but these Alpine elements were
-reinforced from the east and south from time to time during the
-succeeding centuries. Beginning early in the tenth century, the Saxons
-under their Emperors, especially Henry the Fowler, turned their
-attention eastward and during the next two centuries they reconquered
-and thoroughly Germanized all this section of Europe.
-
-A similar series of changes in racial predominance took place in Russia
-where in addition to a nobility largely Nordic a section of the
-population is of ancient Nordic type, although the bulk of the peasantry
-consists of Alpine Slavs.
-
-The Alpines in eastern Europe are represented by various branches of the
-“Slavic” nations. Their area of distribution was split into two sections
-by the occupation of the great Dacian plain first by the Avars about 600
-A. D. and later by the Hungarians about 900 A. D. These Avars and
-Magyars came from somewhere in eastern Russia beyond the sphere of Aryan
-speech and their invasions separated the northern Slavs, known as Wends,
-Czechs, Slovaks, and Poles, from the southern Slavs, known as Serbs and
-Croats. These southern Slavs entered the Balkan Peninsula in the sixth
-century from the northeast and to-day form the great mass of the
-population there.
-
-The centre of radiation of all these Slavic-speaking Alpines was located
-in the Carpathians, especially the Ruthenian districts of Galicia and
-eastward to the neighborhood of the Pripet swamps and the head-waters of
-the Dnieper in Polesia, where the Slavic dialects are believed to have
-developed and whence they spread throughout Russia about the eighth
-century. These early Slavs were probably the Sarmatians of the Greek and
-Roman writers. Their name “Venethi” seems to have been a later
-designation. The original Proto-Slavic language being Aryan must have
-been at some distant date imposed by Nordics upon the Alpines, but its
-development into the present Slavic tongues was chiefly the work of
-Alpines.
-
-In other words, the expansion of the Alpines of the Slavic-speaking
-group seems to have occurred after the Fourth Century and they have
-spread in the East over areas which were originally Nordic, very much as
-the Teutons had previously overrun and submerged the earlier Alpines in
-the West. The Mongol, Tatar and Turk who invaded Europe much later
-reinforced the brachycephalic element in these countries. To some extent
-the round skulled Alpines in Russia have been reinforced by way of the
-Caucasus and the route north of the Black Sea by their kindred in
-western Asia. The greater part of the purely Asiatic types has been
-thoroughly absorbed and Europeanized except in certain localities in
-Russia more especially in the east and south, where Mongoloid tribes
-such as the Mordvins, Bashkirs and Kalmucks have maintained their type
-either in isolated and relatively large groups or side by side with
-their Slavic neighbors. In both cases the isolation is maintained
-through religious and social differences.
-
-The Avars preceded the Magyars in Hungary, but they have merged with the
-latter without leaving traces that can be identified. Certain Mongoloid
-characters found in Bulgaria are believed, however, to be of Avar
-origin.
-
-The original physical type of the Magyars and the European Turks has now
-practically vanished as a result of prolonged intermarriage with the
-original inhabitants of Hungary and the Balkans. These tribes have left
-little behind but their language and, in the case of the Turks, their
-religion. The brachycephalic Hungarians to-day resemble the Austrian
-Germans much more than they do the Slavic-speaking populations adjoining
-them on the north and south or the Rumanians on the east.
-
-Driven onward by the Avars, the Bulgars appeared south of the Danube
-about the end of the seventh century, coming originally from eastern
-Russia where the remnants of their kindred still persist along the
-Volga. To-day they conform physically in the western half of the country
-to the Alpine Serbs and in the eastern half to the Mediterranean race,
-as do also the Rumanians of the Black Sea coast.
-
-Little or nothing remains of the ancestral Bulgars except their name.
-Language, religion and nearly, but not quite all, of the physical type
-have disappeared.
-
-The early members of the Nordic race in order to reach the Mediterranean
-world had to pass through the Alpine populations and must have absorbed
-a certain amount of Alpine blood. Therefore the Umbrians in Italy and
-the Gauls of western Europe, while predominantly Nordic, were more mixed
-especially in the lower classes with Alpine blood than were the Belgæ or
-Cymry or their successors, the Goths, Vandals, Burgundians, Alemanni,
-Saxons, Franks, Lombards, Danes and Northmen, all of whom appear in
-history as Nordics of the so-called Teutonic group.
-
-In some portions of their range notably Savoy and central France the
-Alpine race is much less affected by Nordic influence than elsewhere but
-on the contrary it shows signs of a very ancient admixture with
-Mediterranean and even earlier elements. Brachycephalic Alpine
-populations in comparative purity still exist in the interior of
-Brittany as in Auvergne, although nearly surrounded by Nordic
-populations.
-
-While the Alpines were everywhere overwhelmed and driven to the
-fastnesses of the mountains, the warlike and restless nature of the
-Nordics has enabled the more stable Alpine population to reassert itself
-slowly, and Europe is probably much less Nordic to-day than it was
-fifteen hundred years ago.
-
-The early Alpines made very large contributions to the civilization of
-the world and were the medium through which many advances in culture
-were introduced from Asia into Europe. This race at the time of its
-first appearance in the west brought to the nomad hunters a knowledge of
-agriculture and of primitive pottery and of domestication of animals and
-thus made possible a great increase in population and the establishment
-of permanent settlements. Still later its final expansion was the means
-through which the knowledge of metals reached the Mediterranean and
-Nordic populations of the west and north. Upon the appearance on the
-scene of the Nordics the Alpine race temporarily lost its identity and
-sank to the subordinate and obscure position which it still largely
-occupies.
-
-In western Asia members of this race seemingly are entitled to the honor
-of the earliest Mesopotamian civilization of which we have knowledge,
-namely, that of Sumer and its northerly neighbor Accad in Mesopotamia.
-It is also the race of early Elam and Media. In fact, the basis of
-Mesopotamian civilization belongs to this race. Later Babylonia and
-Assyria were Arabic and Semitic while Persia was Nordic and Aryan.
-
-In classic, mediæval and modern times the Alpines have played an
-unimportant part in European culture and in western Europe they have
-been so thoroughly Nordicized that they exist rather as an element in
-Nordic race development than as an independent type. There are, however,
-many indications in current history which point to an impending
-development of civilization in the Slavic branches of this race and the
-world must be prepared to face changes in the Russias which will, for
-good or for evil, bring them more closely into touch with western
-Europe.
-
-
-
-
- V
- THE MEDITERRANEAN RACE
-
-
-The Mediterranean subspecies formerly called the Iberian is a relatively
-small, light boned, long skulled race, of brunet coloring, becoming even
-swarthy in certain portions of its range. Throughout Neolithic times and
-possibly still earlier it seems to have occupied, as it does to-day, all
-the shores of the Mediterranean including the coast of Africa from
-Morocco on the west to Egypt on the east. The Mediterraneans are the
-western members of a subspecies of man which forms a substantial part of
-the population of Persia, Afghanistan, Baluchistan and Hindustan with
-perhaps a southward extension into Ceylon.
-
-The Aryanized Afghan and Hindu of northern India speak languages derived
-from Old Sanskrit and are distantly related to the Mediterranean race.
-Aside from a common dolichocephaly these peoples are entirely distinct
-from the Dravidians of south India whose speech is agglutinative and who
-show strong evidence of profound mixture with the ancient Negrito
-substratum of southern Asia.
-
-Everywhere throughout the Asiatic portion of its range the Mediterranean
-race overlies an even more ancient Negroid race. These Negroids still
-have representatives among the Pre-Dravidians of India, the Veddahs of
-Ceylon, the Sakai of the Malay Peninsula and the natives of the Andaman
-Islands.
-
-This Mediterranean subspecies at the close of the Paleolithic spread
-from the basin of the Inland Sea northward by way of Spain throughout
-westernmost Europe including the British Isles and, before the final
-expansion of the Alpines, was widely distributed up to and, possibly,
-touching the domain of the Nordic dolichocephs. The Mediterraneans did
-not cross the Alps from the south but spread around the mountains. In
-attaining to Britain from Spain by way of Central France it is probable
-that they swept with them Paleolithic remnants from the ancient centre
-of population in the Auvergne district.
-
-In all this vast range from the British Isles to Hindustan, it is not to
-be supposed that there is absolute identity of race. Certain portions,
-however, of the populations of the countries throughout this long
-stretch do show in their physique clear indications of descent from a
-Neolithic race of a common original type, which we may call
-Proto-Mediterranean.
-
-Quite apart from inevitable admixture with late Nordic and early
-Paleolithic elements, the brunet type of Englishman has had perhaps ten
-thousand years of independent evolution during which he has undergone
-selection due to the climatic and physical conditions of his northern
-habitat. The result is that he has specialized far away from the
-Proto-Mediterranean race which contributed his blood originally to
-Britain while it was, probably, still part of continental Europe.
-
-At the other end of their range in India this race, the Mediterraneans,
-have been crossed with Dravidians and with Pre-Dravidian Negroids. They
-have also had imposed upon them other ethnic elements which came over
-through the Afghan passes from the northwest. The resultant racial
-mixture in India has had its own line of specialization. Residence in
-the fertile but unhealthy river bottoms, the direct rays of a tropic sun
-and competition with the immemorial autochthones have unsparingly weeded
-generation after generation until the existing Hindu has little in
-common with the ancestral Proto-Mediterranean.
-
-It is to the Mediterranean race in the British Isles that the English,
-Scotch and Americans owe whatever brunet characters they possess. In
-western Europe, wherever it exists, it appears to underlie the Alpine
-race and, in fact, wherever this race is in contact with either the
-Alpines or the Nordics it would seem to represent the more ancient
-stratum of the population.
-
-So far as we know this Mediterranean type never existed in Scandinavia
-and all brunet elements found there can be attributed to introductions
-in the Bronze Age or in historic times. Nor did the Mediterranean race
-ever enter or cross the high Alps as did the Nordics at a much later
-date on their way to the Mediterranean basin from the Baltic coasts.
-
-The Mediterranean race with its Asiatic extensions is bordered
-everywhere on the north of its enormous range from Spain to India by
-round skulls but there does not seem to be as much evidence of mixture
-between these two subspecies of man as there is between the Alpines and
-the Nordics.
-
-Along its southern boundary the Mediterraneans are in contact with
-either the long skulled Negroes of Africa or the ancient Negrito
-population of southern Asia. In Africa this race has drifted southward
-over the Sahara and up the Nile Valley and has modified the blood of the
-Negroes in both the Senegambian and equatorial regions.
-
-Beyond these mixtures of blood, there is absolutely no relationship
-between the Mediterranean race and the Negroes. The fact that the
-Mediterranean race is long skulled as well as the Negro does not
-indicate relationship as has been suggested. An overemphasis of the
-importance of the skull shape as a somatological character can easily
-mislead and characters other than skull proportions must be carefully
-considered in determining race.
-
-From a zoological point of view Africa north of the Sahara is now and
-has been since early Tertiary times a part of Europe. This is true both
-of animals and of the races of man. The Berbers of north Africa to-day
-are racially identical with the Spaniards and south Italians while the
-ancient Egyptians and their modern descendants, the fellaheen, are
-merely well-marked varieties of this Mediterranean race.
-
-The Egyptians fade off toward the west into the so-called Hamitic
-peoples (to use an obsolete name) of Libya, and toward the south the
-infusion of Negro blood becomes increasingly great until we finally
-reach the pure Negro. On the east in Arabia we find an ancient and
-highly specialized subdivision of the Mediterranean race, which has from
-time out of mind crossed the Red Sea and infused its blood into the
-Negroes of east Africa.
-
-To-day the Mediterranean race forms in Europe a substantial part of the
-population of the British Isles, the great bulk of the population of the
-Iberian Peninsula, nearly one-third of the population of France,
-Liguria, Italy south of the Apennines and all the Mediterranean coasts
-and islands, in some of which like Sardinia it exists in great purity.
-It forms the substratum of the population of Greece and of the eastern
-coast of the Balkan Peninsula. Everywhere in the interior of the Balkan
-Peninsula, except in eastern Bulgaria and parts of Rumania, it has been
-replaced by the South Slavs and by the Albanians, the latter a mixture
-of the ancient Illyrians and the Slavs.
-
-In the British Isles the Mediterranean race represents the Pre-Nordic
-population and exists in considerable numbers in Wales and in certain
-portions of England, notably in the Fen districts to the northeast of
-London. In Scotland it is far less marked, but has left its brunetness
-as an indication of its former prevalence and this dark hair and eye
-color is very often associated with tall stature.
-
-This is the race that gave the world the great civilizations of Egypt,
-of Crete, of Phœnicia including Carthage, of Etruria, of Mycenæan
-Greece, of Assyria and much of Babylonia. It gave us, when mixed and
-invigorated with Nordic elements, which probably predominated in the
-upper and ruling classes and imposed their guidance upon the masses, the
-most splendid of all civilizations, that of ancient Hellas, and the most
-enduring of political organizations, the Roman state.
-
-To what extent the Mediterranean race entered into the blood and
-civilization of Rome, it is now difficult to say, but the traditions of
-the Eternal City, its love of organization, of law and military
-efficiency, as well as the Roman ideals of family life, of loyalty and
-truth, point clearly to a northern rather than to a Mediterranean
-origin, although there must have been some Alpine strains mixed in with
-the Nordic element.
-
-The struggles in early Rome between Latin and Etruscan and the endless
-quarrels between patrician and plebeian may have arisen from this
-existence in Rome, side by side, of two distinct and clashing races,
-probably Nordic and Mediterranean respectively. The Roman busts that
-have come down to us often show features of a very Anglo-Saxon cast but
-with a somewhat round head. The Romans were short in stature in
-comparison with the nations north of the Alps and in the recently
-discovered battlefield of the Teutoburgian Forest where Varus and his
-legions perished in the reign of Augustus the skeletons of the Romans,
-identified by their armor, were notably smaller and slighter than were
-those of the German victors. The indications on the whole point to a
-Nordic aristocracy in Rome with some Alpine elements. The Plebs, on the
-other hand, was largely Mediterranean and Oriental and finally in the
-last days of the Republic ceased to contain any purely Roman blood.
-
-The northern qualities of Rome are in sharp contrast to the less
-European traits of the classic Greeks, whose volatile and analytical
-spirit, lack of cohesion, political incapacity and ready resort to
-treason all point clearly to southern and eastern affinities.
-
-While very ancient, located for probably ten thousand years in western
-and southern Europe, and even longer on the south shore of the
-Mediterranean, nevertheless this subspecies cannot be called purely
-European. Its occupation of the north coast of Africa and the west coast
-of Europe can be traced everywhere by its beautifully polished stone
-weapons and tools. The megalithic monuments also, which are found in
-association with this race, may mark its line of advance in western
-Europe, although they extend beyond the range of the Mediterraneans into
-the domain of the Scandinavian Nordics. These huge stone structures were
-chiefly sepulchral memorials and are very suggestive of the Egyptian
-funeral monuments. They date back to the first knowledge of the
-manufacture and use of bronze tools by the Mediterranean race. They
-occur in great numbers, size and variety along the north coast of Africa
-and up the Atlantic seaboard through Spain, Brittany and England to
-Scandinavia.
-
-It is admitted that the various groups of the Mediterranean race did not
-speak in the first instance any form of Aryan tongue and we know that
-these languages were introduced into the Mediterranean world by invaders
-from the north.
-
-In Spain the language of the Nordic invaders was Celtic and is believed
-to have nearly died out by Roman times. Its remnants and the ancient
-speech of the natives were in turn superseded, along with the Phœnician
-spoken in some of the southern coast towns, by the Latin of the
-conquering Roman. Latin mixed with some small elements of Gothic
-construction and Arabic vocabulary forms to-day the basis of modern
-Portuguese, Castilian and Catalan.
-
-The native Mediterranean race of the Iberian Peninsula quickly absorbed
-the blood of these Celtic-speaking Nordic Gauls, just as it later
-diluted beyond recognition the vigorous physical characters of the
-Nordic Vandals, Suevi and Visigoths. A certain amount of Nordic blood
-still persists to-day in northern Spain, especially in Galicia and along
-the Pyrenees, as well as generally among the upper classes. According to
-classic writers there were light and dark types in Spain in Roman times.
-The Romans left no evidence of their domination except in their language
-and religion; while the earlier Phœnicians on the coasts and the later
-swarms of Moors and Arabs all over the peninsula, but chiefly in the
-south, were closely related by race to the native Iberians.
-
-That portion of the Mediterranean race which inhabits southern France
-occupies most of the territory of ancient Languedoc and Provence and it
-was these Provençals who developed and preserved during the Middle Ages
-the romantic civilization of the Albigensians, a survival of classic
-culture which was drowned in blood by a crusade from the north in the
-thirteenth century.
-
-In northern Italy only the coast of Liguria is occupied by the
-Mediterranean race. In the valley of the Po the Mediterraneans
-predominated during the early Neolithic but with the introduction of
-bronze the Alpines appear and round skulls to this day prevail north of
-the Apennines. About 1100 B. C. the Nordic Umbrians and Oscans swept
-over the Alps from the northeast, conquered northern Italy and
-introduced their Aryan speech, which gradually spread southward. The
-Umbrian state was afterward overwhelmed by the Tyrrhenians or Etruscans,
-who were of Mediterranean race and who, by 800 B. C. had extended their
-empire northward to the Alps and temporarily checked the advance of the
-Nordics. In the sixth century B. C. new swarms of Nordics, coming this
-time from Gaul and speaking Celtic dialects, seized the valley of the Po
-and in 382 B. C. these Gauls, heavily reinforced from the north and
-under the leadership of Brennus, stormed Rome and completely destroyed
-the Etruscan power. From that time onward the valley of the Po became
-known as Cisalpine Gaul. Mixed with other Nordic elements, chiefly
-Gothic and Lombard, this population persists to this day, and is the
-backbone of modern Italy.
-
-A continuation of this movement of these Gauls, or Galatians as the
-Greek world called them, starting from northern Italy occurred a century
-later when these Nordics suddenly appeared before Delphi in Greece in
-279 B. C. and then crossed into Asia Minor and founded the state called
-Galatia, which endured until Christian times.
-
-South Italy until its conquest by Rome was Magna Græcia and the
-population to-day retains many Pelasgian Greek elements. It is among
-these classic remnants that artists search for the handsomest specimens
-of the Mediterranean race. In Sicily also the race is purely
-Mediterranean in spite of the admixture of types coming from the
-neighboring coasts of Tunis. These intrusive elements, however, were all
-of kindred race. Traces of Alpines in these regions and on the adjoining
-African coast are very scarce and wherever found may be referred to the
-final wave of round skull invasion which introduced bronze into Europe.
-
-In Greece the Mediterranean Pelasgians speaking a Non-Aryan tongue were
-conquered by the Nordic Achæans, who entered from the northeast
-according to tradition prior to 1250 B. C. probably between 1400 and
-1300 B. C. Doubtless there were still earlier waves of these same Nordic
-invaders as far back as 1700 B. C., which was a period of general unrest
-and migration throughout the ancient world.
-
-The Nordic Achæans and Mediterranean Pelasgians as yet unmixed stand out
-in clear contrast in the Homeric account of the ten year siege of Troy,
-which is generally assigned to the date of 1194 to 1184 B. C.
-
-The same invasion that brought the Achæans into Greece brought a related
-Nordic people to the coast of Asia Minor, known as Phrygians. Of this
-race were the Trojan leaders.
-
-Both the Trojans and the Greeks were commanded by huge blond princes,
-the heroes of Homer—in fact, even the Gods were fair-haired—while the
-bulk of the armies on both sides was composed of little brunet
-Pelasgians, imperfectly armed and remorselessly butchered by the leaders
-on either side. The only common soldiers mentioned by Homer as of the
-same race as the heroes were the Myrmidons of Achilles.
-
-About the time that the Achæans and the Pelasgians began to amalgamate,
-new hordes of Nordic barbarians collectively called Hellenes entered
-from the northern mountains and destroyed this old Homeric-Mycenæan
-civilization. This Dorian invasion took place a little before 1100 B. C.
-and brought in the three main Nordic strains of Greece, the Dorian, the
-Æolian and the Ionian groups, which remain more or less distinct and
-separate throughout Greek history. Among these Nordics the Dorians may
-have included some Alpine elements. It is more than probable that this
-invasion or swarming of Nordics into Greece was part of the same general
-racial upheaval that brought the Umbrians and Oscans into Italy.
-
-Long years of intense and bitter conflict follow between the old
-population and the newcomers and when the turmoil of this revolution
-settled down classic Greece appears. What was left of the Achæans
-retired to the northern Peloponnesus and the survivors of the early
-Pelasgian population remained in Messenia serving as helots their
-Spartan masters. The Greek colonies in Asia Minor were founded largely
-by refugees fleeing from these Dorian invaders.
-
-The Pelasgian strain seems to have persisted best in Attica and the
-Ionian states. The Dorian Spartans appear to have retained more of the
-character of the northern barbarians than the Ionian Greeks but the
-splendid civilization of Hellas was due to a fusion of the two elements,
-the Achæan and Hellene of Nordic and the Pelasgian of Mediterranean
-race.
-
-The contrast between Dorian Sparta and Ionian Athens, between the
-military efficiency, thorough organization and sacrifice of the citizen
-for the welfare of the state, which constituted the basis of
-Lacedæmonian power, and the Attic brilliancy, instability and extreme
-development of individualism, is strikingly like the contrast between
-Prussia with its Spartan-like culture and France with its Athenian
-versatility.
-
-To this mixture of races in classic Greece the Mediterranean Pelasgians
-contributed their Mycenæan culture and the Nordic Achæans and Hellenes
-contributed their Aryan language, fighting efficiency and the European
-aspect of Greek life.
-
-The first result of a crossing of two such contrasted subspecies as the
-Nordic and Mediterranean races has repeatedly been a new outburst of
-civilization. This occurs as soon as the older race has imparted to the
-conquerors its culture and before the victors have allowed their blood
-to be attenuated by mixture. This process seems to have happened several
-times in Greece.
-
-Later, in 338 B. C., when the original Nordic blood had been hopelessly
-diluted by mixture with the ancient Mediterranean elements, Hellas fell
-an easy prey to Macedon. The troops of Philip and Alexander were Nordic
-and represented the uncultured but unmixed ancestral type of the Achæans
-and Hellenes. Their unimpaired fighting strength was irresistible as
-soon as it was organized into the Macedonian phalanx, whether directed
-against their degenerate brother Greeks or against the Persians, whose
-original Nordic elements had also by this time practically disappeared.
-When in its turn the pure Macedonian blood was impaired by intermixture
-with Asiatics, they, too, vanished and even the royal Macedonian
-dynasties in Asia and Egypt soon ceased to be Nordic or Greek except in
-language and customs.
-
-It is interesting to note that the Greek states in which the Nordic
-element most predominated outlived the other states. Athens fell before
-Sparta and Thebes outlived them both. Macedon in classic times was
-considered quite the most barbarous state in Hellas and was scarcely
-recognized as forming part of Greece, but it was through the military
-power of its armies and the genius of Alexander that the Levant and
-western Asia became Hellenized. Alexander with his Nordic features,
-aquiline nose, fair skin, gently curling light hair and mixed eyes, the
-left blue and the right very black, typifies this Nordic conquest of the
-Near East.
-
-It is scarcely possible to-day to find in purity the physical traits of
-the ancient race in the Greek-speaking lands and islands and it is
-chiefly among the pure Nordics of Anglo-Norman type that there occur
-those smooth and regular classic features, especially the brow and nose
-lines, that were the delight of the sculptors of Hellas.
-
-To what extent any of the blood of the ancient Hellenes flows in the
-veins of the Greeks of to-day is difficult to determine but it should be
-found, if anywhere, in Crete and in the Ægean Islands. The modern Greek
-is trying to purify his language back to classic Ionian and to
-appropriate the traditions of the mighty Past, but to do this something
-more is needed than the naming of children after Agamemnon and Hecuba.
-Even in Roman times, the ancient Greek of the classic period was little
-more than a tradition and the term Græculus given to the contemporary
-Hellenes was one of contempt.
-
-Concerning the physical type of classic in contrast to Homeric Greece,
-we know that the Greeks were predominantly long-headed and of relatively
-short stature in comparison with the northern barbarians. The modern
-Greeks are also relatively short in stature, but are moderately
-round-headed. As to color these modern Greeks are substantially all dark
-as to eye and hair, with a somewhat swarthy skin.
-
-Among Albanians and such Greeks as show blond traits light eyes are more
-than ten times as numerous as light hair. The Albanians are members of
-the tall, round-headed Dinaric race and have distant relationship with
-the Nordics. They may possibly represent an ancient cross between
-Nordics and Alpines and they constitute to-day a marked subdivision of
-the latter. They resemble the Round Barrow brachycephs who entered
-Britain just before or at the opening of the Bronze Age and who are
-still scantily represented among the living English and Welsh. This type
-called the Beaker Maker or Borreby type is characterized by a moderately
-round head and great stature, strength and considerable intellectual
-force. The Albanian or Dinaric type was not, so far as we know,
-represented in ancient Greece although some modern archæologists have
-suggested that the Spartans were of this type. We have as yet no
-evidence of the color, size and skull shape of the Spartans, but we do
-know that their Dorian ancestors claimed to have come from or through
-the mountains of northern Epirus (Albania). The Dorian dialects are also
-said to be more closely related to modern Albanian—which is derived from
-the ancient Illyrian—than are the Ionian dialects. The Spartan
-character, if that be any test of race, was heavy, slow and steady, and
-would indicate northern rather than Mediterranean antecedents.
-
-Concerning modern Europe north of the Alps, culture came from the south
-and not from the east and to the Mediterranean subspecies is due the
-foundation of our civilization. The ancient Mediterranean world was for
-the most part of this race; the long-sustained civilization of Egypt,
-which endured for thousands of years in almost uninterrupted sequence;
-the brilliant Minoan Empire of Crete, which flourished between 3000 and
-1200 B. C. and was the ancestor of the Mycenæan cultures of Greece,
-Cyprus, Italy and Sardinia; the mysterious Empire of Etruria, the
-predecessor and teacher of Rome; the Hellenic states and colonies
-throughout the Mediterranean and Black Seas; the maritime and mercantile
-power of Phœnicia and its mighty colony, imperial Carthage; all were the
-creation of this race. The sea empire of Crete, when its royal palace at
-Cnossos was burned by the ‘sea peoples’ of the north, passed to Tyre,
-Sidon and Carthage and from them to the Greeks. The early development of
-the art of navigation is to be attributed to this race and from them the
-North centuries later learned its maritime architecture.
-
-Even though the Mediterranean race has no claim to the invention of the
-synthetic languages and though it played a relatively small part in the
-development of the civilization of the Middle Ages or of modern times,
-nevertheless to it belongs the chief credit of the classic civilization
-of Europe in the sciences, art, poetry, literature and philosophy, as
-well as the major part of the civilization of Greece and a very large
-share in the Empire of Rome.
-
-In the Eastern Empire the Mediterraneans were the predominant factor
-under the guise of Byzantine Greeks. Owing to the fact that our
-histories have been written under the influence of Roman orthodoxy and
-because in the eyes of the Frankish Crusaders the Byzantine Greeks were
-heretics, they have been regarded by us as degenerate cowards.
-
-But throughout the Middle Ages Byzantium represented in unbroken
-sequence the Empire of Rome in the East and as the capital of that
-Empire it held Mohammedan Asia in check for nearly a thousand years.
-When at last in 1453 the imperial city deserted by western Christendom
-was stormed by the Ottoman Turks and Constantine, last of Roman
-Emperors, fell sword in hand there was enacted one of the greatest
-tragedies of all time.
-
-With the fall of Constantinople the Empire of Rome passes finally from
-the scene of history and the development of civilization is transferred
-from Mediterranean lands and from the Mediterranean race to the North
-Sea and to the Nordic race.
-
-
-
-
- VI
- THE NORDIC RACE
-
-
-We have shown that the Mediterranean race entered Europe from the south
-and forms part of a great group of peoples extending into southern Asia,
-that the Alpine race came from the east through Asia Minor and the
-valley of the Danube and that its present European distribution is
-merely the westernmost point of an ethnic pyramid, the base of which
-rests solidly on the round skulled peoples of the great plateaux of
-central Asia. Both of these races are, therefore, western extensions of
-Asiatic subspecies and neither of them can be considered as exclusively
-European.
-
-With the remaining race, the Nordic, however, the case is different.
-This is a purely European type, in the sense that it has developed its
-physical characters and its civilization within the confines of that
-continent. It is, therefore, the _Homo europæus_, the white man par
-excellence. It is everywhere characterized by certain unique
-specializations, namely, wavy brown or blond hair and blue, gray or
-light brown eyes, fair skin, high, narrow and straight nose, which are
-associated with great stature and a long skull, as well as with abundant
-head and body hair.
-
-A composite picture of this Nordic race and remarkable examples of its
-best contemporary types can be found in the English illustrated
-weeklies, which are publishing during this great war the lists and
-portraits of their officers who have fallen in battle. No nation, not
-even England although richly endowed with a Nordic gentry, can stand the
-loss of so much good blood. Here is the evidence, if such be needed, of
-the actual Passing of the Great Race.
-
-Abundance of hair is an ancient and generalized character which the
-Nordics share with the Alpines of both Europe and Asia, but the light
-colored eyes and light colored hair are characters of relatively recent
-specialization and consequently highly unstable.
-
-The pure Nordic race is at present clustered around the shores of the
-Baltic and North Seas from which it has spread west and south and east
-fading off gradually into the two preceding races.
-
-The centre of its greatest purity is now in Sweden and there is no doubt
-that at first the Scandinavian Peninsula and later, also, the
-immediately adjoining shores of the Baltic were the centres of radiation
-of the Teutonic or Scandinavian branch of this race.
-
-The population of Scandinavia has been composed of this Nordic
-subspecies from the commencement of Neolithic times and Sweden to-day
-represents one of the few countries which has never been overwhelmed by
-foreign conquest and in which there has been but a single racial type
-from the beginning. This nation is unique in its unity of race,
-language, religion and social ideals.
-
-Southern Scandinavia only became fit for human habitation on the retreat
-of the glaciers about twelve thousand years ago and apparently was
-immediately occupied by the Nordic race. This is one of the few
-geological dates which is absolute and not relative. It rests on a most
-interesting series of computations made by Baron DeGeer, based on an
-actual count of the laminated deposits of clay laid down annually by the
-retreating glaciers, each layer representing the summer deposit of the
-subglacial stream.
-
-The Nordics first appear at the close of the Paleolithic along the
-coasts of the Baltic. The earliest industry discovered in this region,
-named the Maglemose and found in Denmark and elsewhere around the
-Baltic, is probably the culture of the Proto-Teutonic branch of the
-Nordic race. No human remains in connection therewith have been found.
-
-The vigor and power of the Nordic race as a whole is such that it could
-not have been evolved in so restricted an area as southern Sweden
-although its Teutonic or Scandinavian section did develop there in
-comparative isolation. The Nordics must have had a larger field for
-their specialization and a longer period for their evolution than is
-afforded by the limited time which has elapsed since Sweden became
-habitable. For the development of so marked a type there is required a
-continental area isolated and protected for long ages from the intrusion
-of other races. The climatic conditions must have been such as to impose
-a rigid elimination of defectives through the agency of hard winters and
-the necessity of industry and foresight in providing the year’s food,
-clothing and shelter during the short summer. Such demands on energy if
-long continued would produce a strong, virile and self-contained race
-which would inevitably overwhelm in battle nations whose weaker elements
-had not been purged by the conditions of an equally severe environment.
-
-An area conforming to these requirements is offered by the forests and
-plains of eastern Germany, Poland and Russia. It was here that the
-Proto-Nordic type evolved and here their remnants are found. They were
-protected from Asia on the east by the then almost continuous water
-connections across eastern Russia between the White Sea and the old
-Caspian-Aral Sea.
-
-During the last glacial advance (known as the Würm) which, like the
-preceding glaciations, is believed to have been a period of land
-depression, the White Sea extended far to the south of its present
-limits, while the enlarged Caspian Sea, then and long afterward
-connected with the Sea of Aral, extended northward to the great bend of
-the Volga. The intermediate area was studded with large lakes and
-morasses. Thus an almost complete water barrier of shallow sea located
-just west of the low Ural Mountains, separated Europe from Asia during
-the Würm glaciation and the following period of glacial retreat. The
-broken connection was restored just before the dawn of history by a
-slight elevation of the land and the shrinking of the Caspian-Aral Sea
-through the increasing desiccation which has left its present surface
-below sea level.
-
-An important element in the maintenance of the isolation of this Nordic
-cradle on the south is the fact that from earliest times down to this
-day the pressure of population has been unchangeably from the bleak and
-sterile north, southward and eastward, into the sunny but enervating
-lands of France, Italy, Greece, Persia and India.
-
-In these forests and steppes of the north, the Nordic race gradually
-evolved in isolation and at an early date spread north over the
-Scandinavian Peninsula together with much of the land now submerged
-under the Baltic and North Seas.
-
-Nordic strains form everywhere a substratum of population throughout
-Russia and underlie the round skulled Slavs who first appear a little
-over a thousand years ago as coming not from the direction of Asia but
-from south Poland. Burial mounds called kurgans are widely scattered
-throughout Russia from the Carpathians to the Urals and contain numerous
-remains of a dolichocephalic race,—in fact, more than three-fourths of
-the skulls are of this type. Round skulls first become numerous in
-ancient Russian graveyards about 900 A. D. and soon increase to such an
-extent that in the Slavic period from the ninth to the thirteenth
-centuries one-half of the skulls were brachycephalic, while in modern
-cemeteries the proportion of round skulls is still greater. The ancient
-Nordic element, however, still forms a very considerable portion of the
-population of northern Russia and contributes the blondness and the
-red-headedness so characteristic of the Russian of to-day. As we leave
-the Baltic coasts the Nordic characters fade out both toward the south
-and east. The blond element in the nobility of Russia is of later
-Scandinavian and Teutonic origin.
-
-When the seas which separated Russia from Asia dried, when the isolation
-and exacting climate of the north had done their work and produced the
-vigorous Nordic type, and when in the fulness of time bronze for their
-weapons reached them these men burst upon the southern races, conquering
-east, south and west. They brought with them from the north the
-hardihood and vigor acquired under the rigorous selection of a long
-winter season and vanquished in battle the inhabitants of older and
-feebler civilizations, but only to succumb in their turn to the
-softening influences of a life of ease and plenty in their new homes.
-
-The earliest recorded appearance of Aryan-speaking Nordics is our first
-dim vision of the Sacæ introducing Sanskrit into India, the Cimmerians
-pouring through the passes of the Caucasus from the grasslands of South
-Russia to invade the Empire of the Medes and the Achæans and Phrygians
-conquering Greece and the Ægean coast of Asia Minor. About 1100 B. C.
-Nordics enter Italy as Umbrians and Oscans and soon after other Nordics
-cross the Rhine into Gaul. The latter were the western vanguard of the
-Celtic-speaking tribes which had long occupied those districts in
-Germany which lay south and west of the Teutonic Nordics. These Teutons
-at this early date were confined probably to Scandinavia and the
-immediate shores of the Baltic and were just beginning to press
-southward.
-
-This first Celtic wave of Nordics seems to have swept westward along the
-sandy plains of northern Europe, and entered France through the Low
-Countries. From this point as Goidels they spread north into Britain,
-reaching there about 800 B. C. As Gauls they conquered all France and
-pushed on southward and westward into Spain and over the Maritime Alps
-into northern Italy, where they encountered the kindred Nordic Umbrians,
-who at an earlier date had crossed the Alps from the northeast. Other
-Celtic-speaking Nordics apparently migrated up the Rhine and down the
-Danube and by the time the Romans came on the scene the Alpines of
-central Europe had been thoroughly Celticized. These tribes pushed
-eastward into southern Russia and reached the Crimea as early as the
-fourth century B. C. Mixed with the natives, they were called by the
-Greeks the Celto-Scyths. This swarming out of what is now called Germany
-of the first Nordics was during the closing phases of the Bronze Period
-and was contemporary with and probably caused by the first great
-expansion of the Teutons from Scandinavia by way both of Denmark and the
-Baltic coasts.
-
-These invaders were succeeded by a second wave of Celtic-speaking
-peoples, the Cymry or Brythons, who drove their Goidelic predecessors
-still farther westward and exterminated and absorbed them over large
-areas. These Cymric invasions occurred about 300–100 B. C. and were
-probably the result of the growing development of the Teutons and their
-final expulsion of the Celtic-speaking tribes from Germany. These Cymry
-occupied northern France under the name of Belgæ and invaded England as
-Brythons in several waves, the last being the true Belgæ. The conquests
-of these Cymric tribes in both Gaul and Britain were only checked by the
-legions of Rome.
-
-These migrations are exceedingly hard to trace because of the confusion
-caused by the fact that Celtic speech is now found on the lips of
-populations in nowise related to the Nordics who first introduced it.
-But one fact stands out clearly, all the original Celtic-speaking tribes
-were Nordic.
-
-What were the special physical characters of these tribes in which they
-differed from their Teutonic successors is now impossible to say, beyond
-the possible suggestion that in the British Isles the Scottish and Irish
-populations in which red hair and gray or green eyes are abundant have
-rather more of this Celtic strain in them than have the flaxen haired
-Teutons, whose china-blue eyes are clearly not Celtic.
-
-When the peoples called Gauls or Celts by the Romans and Galatians by
-the Greeks first appear in history they are described in exactly the
-same terms as were later the Teutons. They were all gigantic barbarians
-with fair and very often red hair, then more frequent than to-day, with
-gray or fiercely blue eyes and were thus clearly members of the Nordic
-subspecies.
-
-The first Celtic-speaking nations with whom the Romans came in contact
-were Gaulish and had probably incorporated much Alpine blood by the time
-they crossed the mountains into the domain of classic history. The
-Nordic element had become still weaker by absorption from the conquered
-populations when at a later date the Romans broke through the ring of
-Celtic nations and came into contact with the Nordic Cymry and Teutons.
-
-After these early expansions of Gauls and Cymry the Teutons appear upon
-the scene. Of the pure Teutons within the ken of history, it is not
-necessary to mention more than the most important of the long series of
-conquering tribes.
-
-The greatest of them all were perhaps the Goths, who came originally
-from the south of Sweden and were long located on the opposite German
-coast at the mouth of the Vistula. From here they crossed Poland to the
-Crimea where they were known in the first century. Three hundred years
-later they were driven westward by the Huns and forced into the Dacian
-plain and over the Danube into the Roman Empire. There they split up;
-the Ostrogoths after a period of subjection to the Huns on the Danube,
-ravaged the European provinces of the Eastern Empire, conquered Italy
-and founded there a great but shortlived nation. The Visigoths occupied
-much of Gaul and then entered Spain driving the Nordic Vandals before
-them into Africa. The Teutons and Cimbri, destroyed by Marius in
-southern Gaul about 100 B. C., the Gepidæ, the Alans, the Suevi, the
-Vandals, the Alemanni of the upper Rhine, the Marcomanni, the Saxons,
-the Batavians, the Frisians, the Angles, the Jutes, the Lombards and the
-Heruli of Italy, the Burgundians of the east of France, the Franks of
-the lower Rhine, the Danes, and, latest of all, the Norse Vikings emerge
-from the northern forests and seas one after another and sweep through
-history. Less well known but of great importance are the Varangians, who
-coming from Sweden in the ninth and tenth centuries, conquered the coast
-of the Gulf of Finland and much of White Russia and left there a dynasty
-and aristocracy of Nordic blood. In the tenth and eleventh centuries
-they were the rulers of Russia.
-
-The traditions of Goths, Vandals, Lombards and Burgundians all point to
-Sweden as their earliest homeland and probably all the pure Teutonic
-tribes came originally from Scandinavia and were closely related.
-
-When these Teutonic tribes poured down from the Baltic coasts, their
-Celtic-speaking Nordic predecessors were already much mixed with the
-underlying populations, Mediterranean in the west and Alpine in the
-south. These “Celts” were not recognized by the Teutons as kin in any
-sense and were all called, Welsh, or foreigners. From this word are
-derived the names “Wales,” “Cornwales” or “Cornwall,” “Valais,”
-“Walloons,” and “Vlach” or “Wallachian.”
-
-
-
-
- VII
- TEUTONIC EUROPE
-
-
-No proper understanding is possible of the meaning of the history of
-Christendom or full appreciation of the place in it of the Teutonic
-Nordics without a brief review of the events in Europe of the last two
-thousand years.
-
-When Rome fell and changed trade conditions necessitated the transfer of
-power from its historic capital in Italy to a strategic situation on the
-Bosporus, western Europe was definitely and finally abandoned to its
-Teutonic invaders. These same barbarians swept up again and again to the
-Propontis, only to recoil before the organized strength of the Byzantine
-Empire and the walls of Mikklegard. The final line of cleavage between
-the western and eastern Empires corresponded closely to the boundaries
-of Latin and Greek speech and differences of language no doubt were the
-chief cause of the political and later of the religious divergence
-between them.
-
-Until the coming of the Alpine Slavs the Eastern Empire still held in
-Europe the Balkan Peninsula and much of the eastern Mediterranean. The
-Western Empire, however, collapsed utterly under the impact of hordes of
-Nordic Teutons at a much earlier date. In the fourth and fifth centuries
-of our era north Africa, once the empire of Carthage, had become the
-seat of the kingdom of Nordic Vandals. Spain fell under the control of
-the Visigoths and Lusitania, now Portugal, under that of the Suevi. Gaul
-was Visigothic in the south and Burgundian in the east, while the
-Frankish kingdom dominated the north until it finally absorbed and
-incorporated all the territories of ancient Gaul and made it the land of
-the Franks. Strictly speaking, the northern half of France and the
-adjoining districts, the country of Langued’oil, is the true land of the
-Franks while the southern Languedoc was never Frankish except by
-conquest, and was never as thoroughly Nordicized as the north. Whatever
-Nordic elements are still to be found there are Gothic and Burgundian
-but not Frankish.
-
-Italy fell under the control first of the Ostrogoths and then of the
-Lombards. The purely Nordic Saxons with kindred tribes conquered the
-British Isles and meanwhile the Norse and Danish Scandinavians
-contributed a large element to all the coast populations as far south as
-Spain and the Swedes organized in the eastern Baltic what is now Russia.
-
-Thus when Rome passed all Europe had become superficially Teutonic. At
-first these Teutons were isolated and independent tribes bearing some
-shadowy relation to the one organized state they knew, the Empire of
-Rome. Then came the Mohammedan invasion, which reached western Europe
-from Africa and destroyed the Visigothic kingdom. The Moslems swept on
-unchecked until their light horsemen dashed themselves to pieces against
-the heavy armed cavalry of Charles Martel and his Franks at Tours in 732
-A. D.
-
-The destruction of the Vandal kingdom by the armies of the Byzantine
-Empire, the conquest of Spain by the Moors and finally the overthrow of
-the Lombards by the Franks were all greatly facilitated by the fact that
-these barbarians, Vandals, Goths, Suevi and Lombards, with the sole
-exception of the Franks, were originally Christians of the Arian or
-Unitarian confession and as such were regarded as heretics by their
-orthodox Christian subjects. The Franks alone were converted from
-heathenism directly to the Trinitarian faith to which the old
-populations of the Roman Empire adhered. From this orthodoxy of the
-Franks arose the close relation between France, “the eldest daughter of
-the church,” and the papacy, a connection which lasted for more than a
-thousand years—in fact nearly to our own day.
-
-With the Goths eliminated western Christendom became Frankish. In the
-year 800 A. D. Charlemagne was crowned at Rome and re-established the
-Roman Empire in the west, which included all Christendom outside of the
-Byzantine Empire. In some form or shape this Roman Empire endured until
-the beginning of the nineteenth century and during all that time it
-formed the basis of the political concept of European man.
-
-This same concept lies to-day at the root of the imperial idea. Kaiser,
-Tsar and Emperor each takes his name and in some way undertakes to trace
-his title from Cæsar and the Empire. Charlemagne and his successors
-claimed and often exercised overlordship as to all the other continental
-Christian nations and when the Crusades began it was the German Emperor
-who led the Frankish hosts against the Saracens. Charlemagne was a
-German Emperor, his capital was at Aachen within the present limits of
-the German Empire and the language of his court was German. For several
-centuries after the conquest of Gaul by the Franks their Teutonic tongue
-held its own against the Latin speech of the Romanized Gauls.
-
-The history of all Christian Europe is in some degree interwoven with
-this Holy Roman Empire. Though the Empire was neither holy nor Roman but
-altogether secular and Teutonic, it was, nevertheless, the heart of
-Europe for ages. Holland and Flanders, Lorraine and Alsace, Burgundy and
-Luxemburg, Lombardy and the Veneto, Switzerland and Austria, Bohemia and
-Styria are states which were originally component parts of the Empire
-although many of them have since been torn away by rival nations or have
-become independent, while much of northern Italy remained under the sway
-of Austria within the memory of living men.
-
-The Empire wasted its strength in imperial ambitions and foreign
-conquests instead of consolidating, organizing and unifying its own
-territories and the fact that the imperial crown was elective for many
-generations before it became hereditary in the House of Hapsburg checked
-the unification of Germany during the Middle Ages.
-
-A strong hereditary monarchy, such as arose in England and in France,
-would have anticipated the Germany of to-day by a thousand years and
-made it the predominant state in Christendom, but disruptive elements in
-the persons of great territorial dukes were successful throughout its
-history in preventing an effective concentration of power in the hands
-of the Emperor.
-
-That the German Emperor was regarded, though vaguely, as the overlord of
-all Christian monarchs was clearly indicated when Henry VIII of England
-and Francis I of France appeared as candidates for the imperial crown
-against Charles of Spain, afterward the Emperor Charles V.
-
-Europe was the Holy Roman Empire and the Holy Roman Empire was Europe
-predominantly until the Thirty Years’ War. This war was perhaps the
-greatest catastrophe of all the ghastly crimes committed in the name of
-religion. It destroyed an entire generation, taking each year for thirty
-years the finest manhood of the nations.
-
-Two-thirds of the population of Germany was destroyed, in some states
-such as Bohemia three-fourths of the inhabitants were killed or exiled,
-while out of 500,000 inhabitants in Würtemberg there were only 48,000
-left at the end of the war. Terrible as this loss was, the destruction
-did not fall equally on the various races and classes in the community.
-It bore, of course, most heavily upon the big blond fighting man and at
-the end of the war the German states contained a greatly lessened
-proportion of Nordic blood. In fact, from that time on the purely
-Teutonic race in Germany has been largely replaced by the Alpine types
-in the south and by the Wendish and the Polish types in the east. This
-change of race in Germany has gone so far that it has been computed that
-out of the 70,000,000 inhabitants of the German Empire, only 9,000,000
-are purely Teutonic in coloration, stature and skull characters. The
-rarity of pure Teutonic and Nordic types among the German immigrants to
-America in contrast to its almost universal prevalence among those from
-Scandinavia is traceable to the same cause.
-
-In addition, the Thirty Years’ War virtually destroyed the land owning
-yeomanry and lesser gentry formerly found in mediæval Germany as
-numerously as in France or in England. The religious wars of France,
-while not as devasting to the nation as a whole as was the Thirty Years’
-War in Germany, nevertheless greatly weakened the French cavalier type,
-the “petite noblesse de province.” In Germany this class had flourished
-and throughout the Middle Ages contributed great numbers of knights,
-poets, thinkers, artists and artisans who gave charm and variety to the
-society of central Europe. But, as said, this section of the population
-was practically exterminated in the Thirty Years’ War and this class of
-gentlemen practically vanishes from German history from that time on.
-
-When the Thirty Years’ War was over there remained in Germany nothing
-except the brutalized peasantry, largely of Alpine derivation in the
-south and east, and the high nobility which turned from the toils of
-endless warfare to mimic on a small scale the court of Versailles. After
-this long struggle the boundaries in central Europe between the
-Protestant North and the Catholic South follow in a marked degree the
-frontier between the northern plain inhabited chiefly by Nordics and the
-more mountainous countries in the south populated almost entirely by
-Alpines.
-
-It has taken Germany two centuries to recover her vigor, her wealth and
-her aspirations to a place in the sun.
-
-During these years Germany was a political nonentity, a mere congeries
-of petty states bickering and fighting with each other, claiming and
-owning only the Empire of the Air as Napoleon happily phrased it.
-Meantime France and England founded their colonial empires beyond the
-seas.
-
-When in the last generation Germany became unified and organized, she
-found herself not only too late to share in these colonial enterprises,
-but also lacking in much of the racial element and still more lacking in
-the very classes which were her greatest strength and glory before the
-Thirty Years’ War. To-day the ghastly rarity in the German armies of
-chivalry and generosity toward women and of knightly protection and
-courtesy toward the prisoners or wounded can be largely attributed to
-this annihilation of the gentle classes. The Germans of to-day, whether
-they live on the farms or in the cities, are for the most part
-descendants of the peasants who survived, not of the brilliant knights
-and sturdy foot soldiers who fell in that mighty conflict. Knowledge of
-this great past when Europe was Teutonic and memories of the shadowy
-grandeur of the Hohenstaufen Emperors, who, generation after generation,
-led Teutonic armies over the Alps to assert their title to Italian
-provinces, have played no small part in modern German consciousness.
-
-These traditions and the knowledge that their own religious dissensions
-swept them from the leadership of the European world lie at the base of
-the German imperial ideal of to-day and it is for this ideal that the
-German armies are dying, just as did their ancestors for a thousand
-years under their Fredericks, Henrys, Conrads and Ottos.
-
-But the Empire of Rome and the Empire of Charlemagne are no more and the
-Teutonic type is divided almost equally between the contending forces in
-this world war. With the United States in the field the balance of pure
-Nordic blood will be heavily against the Central Powers, which pride
-themselves on being “the Teutonic powers.”
-
-Germany is too late and is limited to a destiny fixed and ordained for
-her on the fatal day in 1618 when the Hapsburg Ferdinand forced the
-Protestants of Bohemia into revolt.
-
-Although as a result of the Thirty Years’ War the German Empire is far
-less Nordic than in the Middle Ages, the north and northwest of Germany
-are still Teutonic throughout and in the east and south the Alpines have
-been thoroughly Germanized with an aristocracy and upper class very
-largely of pure Teutonic blood.
-
-
-
-
- VIII
- THE EXPANSION OF THE NORDICS
-
-
-The men of Nordic blood to-day form practically all the population of
-Scandinavian countries, as also a majority of the population of the
-British Isles and are almost pure in type in Scotland and eastern and
-northern England. The Nordic realm includes nearly all the northern
-third of France with extensions into the fertile southwest; all the rich
-lowlands of Flanders; all Holland; the northern half of Germany with
-extensions up the Rhine and down the Danube; and the north of Poland and
-of Russia. Recent calculations indicate that there are about 90,000,000
-of purely Nordic physical type in Europe out of a total population of
-420,000,000.
-
-Throughout southern Europe a Nordic nobility of Teutonic type everywhere
-forms the old aristocratic and military classes or what now remains of
-them. These aristocrats, by as much as their blood is pure, are taller
-and blonder than the native populations, whether these be Alpine in
-central Europe or Mediterranean in Spain or in the south of France and
-Italy.
-
-The countries speaking Low German dialects are almost purely Nordic but
-the populations of High German speech are very largely Teutonized
-Alpines and occupy lands once Celtic-speaking. The main distinction
-between the two dialects is the presence of a large number of Celtic
-elements in High German.
-
-In northern Italy there is a large amount of Nordic blood. In Lombardy,
-Venice and elsewhere throughout the country the aristocracy is blonder
-and taller than the peasantry, but the Nordic element in Italy has
-declined noticeably since the Middle Ages. From Roman times onward for a
-thousand years the Teutons swarmed into northern Italy, through the Alps
-and chiefly by way of the Brenner Pass. With the stoppage of these
-Nordic reinforcements this strain seems to have grown less all through
-Italy.[3]
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Procopius tells a significant story which illustrates the contrast in
- racial character between the natives and the barbarians. He relates
- that, at the surrender of Ravenna in 540 A. D. by the Goths to the
- army of the Byzantines, “when the Gothic women saw how swarthy, small
- men of mean aspect had conquered their tall, robust, fair-skinned
- barbarians, they were furious and spat in their husbands’ faces and
- cursed them for cowards.”
-
-In the Balkan Peninsula there is little to show for the floods of Nordic
-blood that have poured in for the last 3,500 years, beginning with the
-Achæans of Homer, who first appeared _en masse_ about 1400 B. C. and
-were followed successively by the Dorians, Cimmerians and Gauls, down to
-the Goths and the Varangians of Byzantine times.
-
-The tall stature of the population along the Illyrian Alps from the
-Tyrol to Albania on the south is undoubtedly of Nordic origin and dates
-from some of these early invasions, but these Illyrians have been so
-crossed with Slavs that all other blond elements have been lost and the
-existing population is essentially of brachycephalic Alpine type. They
-are known as the Dinaric race. What few remnants of blondness occur in
-this district, more particularly in Albania, as well as the so-called
-Frankish elements in Bosnia, may probably be attributed to later
-infiltrations.
-
-The Tyrolese seem to be largely Nordic except in respect to their round
-skull.
-
-In Russia and in Poland the Nordic stature, blondness and long skull
-grow less and less pronounced as one proceeds south and east from the
-Gulf of Finland.
-
-It would appear that in all those parts of Europe outside of its natural
-habitat, the Nordic blood is on the wane from England to Italy and that
-the ancient, acclimated and primitive populations of Alpine and
-Mediterranean race are subtly reasserting their long lost political
-power through a high breeding rate and democratic institutions.
-
-In western Europe the first wave of the Nordic tribes appeared about
-three thousand years ago and was followed by other invasions with the
-Nordic element becoming stronger until after the fall of Rome whole
-tribes moved into its provinces, Teutonizing them more or less for
-varying lengths of time.
-
- PROVISIONAL OUTLINE OF NORDIC INVASIONS AND METAL CULTURES
-
- ┌───┬───────────┬──────────────────┬──────────────┬───────────────┐
- │ │ B. C. │ GREAT BRITAIN │ SCANDINAVIA │ GERMANY AND │
- │ │ │ │ │ AUSTRIA │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Neolithic. │ │
- │ │ │ │ Rough │ │
- │ 1.│Before 3000│Neolithic │ pottery. │Neolithic. │
- │ │ │ │ Domesticated│ │
- │ │ │ │ dog. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │Copper. │
- │ │ │ │ │ Great │
- │ │ │ │ │ expansion of │
- │ │ │ │ │ Alpines, │
- │ 2.│3000–2500 │ │ │ introducing │
- │ │ │ │ │ bronze into │
- │ │ │ │ │ Austria and │
- │ │ │ │ │ later into │
- │ │ │ │ │ Germany. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ Neolithic. │ Neolithic. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 3.│2500–1800 │Copper. │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┴───────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ Transition from stone to │
- │ │ │ │ bronze. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Alpine │ │
- │ │ │ │ invasion │ │
- │ │ │Alpine invasion │ with bronze │ │
- │ │ │ with bronze │ culture │ │
- │ 4.│1800–1600 │ culture. │ reaches │ │
- │ │ │ Round Barrows. │ Denmark and │ │
- │ │ │ Megaliths. │ southwest │ │
- │ │ │ │ Norway. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │Hallstatt iron │
- │ │ │ │ │ culture in │
- │ │ │ │ │ Austrian │
- │ 5.│1600–1400 │ │ │ Tyrol has │
- │ │ │ │ │ first │
- │ │ │ │ │ beginning. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ │ Full Bronze Age. │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 6.│1400–1200 │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │Hallstatt iron │
- │ │ │ │ │ culture │
- │ │ │ │ │ flourishes. │
- │ │ │ │ │ Mixed │
- │ 7.│1200–1000 │ │Beginning of │ inhumation │
- │ │ │ │ cremation. │ and │
- │ │ │ │ │ incineration.│
- │ │ │ │ │ Goidels │
- │ │ │ │ │ occupy │
- │ │ │ │ │ Germany. │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ │ │Nordic Teutons│ │
- │ │ │ │ cross from │ │
- │ │ │ │Scandinavia to│ │
- │ │ │ │ south coasts │ │
- │ │ │ │of Baltic and │ │
- │ │ │ │ to Denmark. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │First invasion │
- │ │ │ │ │ of Nordic │
- │ │ │ │ │ Teutons from │
- │ │ │ │ │ Scandinavia. │
- │ │ │First │ │ Other Celtic │
- │ 8.│1000–800 │ Nordics—Goidels.│ │ Nordics on │
- │ │ │ │ │ Rhine and │
- │ │ │ │ │ Danube, who │
- │ │ │ │ │ Celticized │
- │ │ │ │ │ the Alpines. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ 800 │First iron swords,│ │ │
- │ │ │ 800. │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │The Goidels are│
- │ │ │ │ │ driven south │
- │ │ │ │ │ and west by │
- │ │ │ │ │ the Cymry. │
- │ │ │ │ │ Expansion of │
- │ │ │ │ │ the Cymry. │
- │ │ │First Aryan │ │ Pressure of │
- │ 9.│800–600 │ speech. │ │ Teutons in │
- │ │ │ │ │ north. │
- │ │ │ │ │ Last Goidels │
- │ │ │ │ │ expelled from│
- │ │ │ │ │ Germany. Iron│
- │ │ │ │ │ swords in │
- │ │ │ │ │ Central │
- │ │ │ │ │ Europe. │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │La Tène iron │
- │ │ │ │ │ culture. │
- │ │ │First Goidels in │ │ Cymric Belgæ │
- │10.│600–400 │ Ireland, 600. │ │ driven │
- │ │ │ │ │ westward by │
- │ │ │ │ │ Teutons. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ │ La Tène iron. │La Tène Iron. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │11.│400–300 │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ Great │ Expansion of │
- │ │ │ │ expansion of │ Teutons and │
- │ │ │ │Nordic Teutons│ expulsion of │
- │ │ │ │ out of │ Cymry as far │
- │ │ │ │ Scandinavia. │ west as the │
- │ │ │ │ │ Weser. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │_c._ 250. First│
- │ │ │Cymric │ │ Teutons in │
- │12.│300–200 │ Belgæ—invasion, │ │ Austria. │
- │ │ │ _c._ 300. Known │ │ Gold, silver,│
- │ │ │ as Brythons. │ │ and bronze │
- │ │ │ │ │ money. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │Teutons drive │
- │ │ │Few Cymry or │ │ Cymry out of │
- │13.│200–100 │ Brythons in │ │ Germany. │
- │ │ │ Ireland. │ │ Teutons cross│
- │ │ │ │ │ the Rhine. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │55. Julius Cæsar. │ │ │
- │ │100 to │ Copper and iron │ │ │
- │14.│ Christian│ money as │ │ │
- │ │ Era │ currency. │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │Defeat of Varus│
- │ │ │ │ │ and Roman │
- │15.│ │ │ │ legions in │
- │ │ │ │ │ old Saxony, 9│
- │ │ │ │ │ A. D. │
- └───┴───────────┴──────────────────┴──────────────┴───────────────┘
- ┌───┬───────────┬─────────────┬───────────────┬────────────────────────┐
- │ │ B. C. │ FRANCE AND │ ITALY │ RUSSIA, GREECE, AND │
- │ │ │ SPAIN │ │ BALKANS │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │3000 B. C. Commencement │
- │ │ │ │Terramara │ of early Minoan in │
- │ 1.│Before 3000│Neolithic. │ culture. │ Crete. │
- │ │ │ │ │ Copper. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │Copper. │ │
- │ │ │ │ Great │ │
- │ │ │ │ expansion of │ │
- │ │ │ │ Alpines, │ │
- │ │ │ │ introducing │ │
- │ 2.│3000–2500 │Copper. │ bronze into │ │
- │ │ │ │ north Italy. │ │
- │ │ │ │ Bronze │ │
- │ │ │ │ introduced in│ │
- │ │ │ │ South from │ │
- │ │ │ │ Crete. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ Eneolithic │ Great expansion of │
- │ │ │ │ culture. │ Alpines, introducing │
- │ │ │ │ │ bronze from │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │Asia Minor. │
- │ │ │ │ │ Middle Minoan in │
- │ 3.│2500–1800 │ │ │ Crete, 2000–1800. │
- │ │ │ │ │ Second city of │
- │ │ │ │ │ Hissarlik—2000. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │Alpine │ │ │
- │ │ │ invasion │ │ │
- │ │ │ with bronze│ │ │
- │ │ │ culture in │ │ │
- │ │ │ France. │ │Early Nordic invasions. │
- │ 4.│1800–1600 │ Later, same│ │ Cnossos. │
- │ │ │ wave of │ │ Mycenæan culture. │
- │ │ │ invasion │ │ │
- │ │ │ enters │ │ │
- │ │ │ Spain. │ │ │
- │ │ │ Megaliths. │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │Late Minoan in Crete, │
- │ 5.│1600–1400 │ │ │ 1600–1450. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ Last Minoan, │ │
- │ │ │ │ 1450–1200. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │Mycenæan culture. │
- │ │ │ │ │ Bronze. │
- │ │ │ │ │ Nordic Achæans from │
- │ │ │ │ │ south Russia introduce│
- │ 6.│1400–1200 │ │Villanova │ Aryan speech, │
- │ │ │ │ culture. │ 1400–1300. Have iron │
- │ │ │ │ │ swords. │
- │ │ │ │ │ 1200. Transition from │
- │ │ │ │ │ bronze to iron in │
- │ │ │ │ │ Crete. │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │_c._ 1100. │ │
- │ │ │ │ Umbrians and │Hallstatt iron. │
- │ │ │Cadiz founded│ Oscans │ Trojan war, 1194–1184.│
- │ │ │ in Spain, │ introduce │ Nordic │
- │ 7.│1200–1000 │ _c._ 1100, │ first Aryan │ Hellenes—Dorians—enter│
- │ │ │ by │ speech from │ Greece, 1100. │
- │ │ │ Phœnicians.│ northeast. │ Iron in full │
- │ │ │ │ Iron in │ development. │
- │ │ │ │ Etruria, │ │
- │ │ │ │ 1100. │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │1000. Nordic │ │ │
- │ │ │Goidels cross│ │ │
- │ │ │ Rhine and │ │ │
- │ │ │ introduce │ │ │
- │ │ │Aryan speech │ │ │
- │ │ │ (Gaulish). │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │Hallstatt │ │ │
- │ │ │ iron │ │ │
- │ │ │ culture. │First │ │
- │ │ │ Before 950 │ settlements │ │
- │ 8.│1000–800 │ Phœnicians │ on the site │Iron common in Greece. │
- │ │ │ masters of │ of Rome. │ │
- │ │ │ more than │ │ │
- │ │ │ half of │ │ │
- │ │ │ Spain. │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ 800 │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Expansion of │ │
- │ │ │ │ Mediterranean│ │
- │ │ │ │ Etruscans │ │
- │ │ │ │ over Umbrians│Iron Age in Russia. │
- │ │ │ │ to Alps. │ Megarian colonization,│
- │ │ │Gauls in │ Legendary │ 700. │
- │ 9.│800–600 │ France. │ founding of │ Greek colonies in │
- │ │ │ │ Rome, 753. │ Italy and Sicily. │
- │ │ │ │ First Greek │ Appearance of │
- │ │ │ │ colonies in │ Cimmerians. │
- │ │ │ │ south │ │
- │ │ │ │ Italy—Magna │ │
- │ │ │ │ Græcia. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │La Tène iron │ │ │
- │ │ │ culture in │ │ │
- │ │ │ France. │ │ │
- │ │ │ Nordic │ │ │
- │ │ │ Goidels │ │ │
- │ │ │ cross │ │ │
- │ │ │ Pyrenees │Nordic Gauls in│500. End of non-Aryan │
- │ │ │ and │ valley of │ speech in Crete. │
- │10.│600–400 │ introduce │ Po—Cisalpine │ Invasion of Scythia by│
- │ │ │ Aryan │ Gaul. │ Darius, 512 B. C. │
- │ │ │ speech in │ │ Persian wars, 500–449.│
- │ │ │ Spain. │ │ │
- │ │ │ First │ │ │
- │ │ │ Gallic │ │ │
- │ │ │ money of │ │ │
- │ │ │ Marseilles,│ │ │
- │ │ │ silver. │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │La Tène iron │ │ │
- │ │ │ in Spain. │Gauls under │ │
- │ │ │ Cymric │ Brennus sack │Macedon conquers Greece,│
- │ │ │ Belgæ │ Rome, 382, │ 338. │
- │ │ │ conquer │ and destroy │ Celto-Scyths in │
- │11.│400–300 │ northern │ Etruria. New │ Crimea, 4th century B.│
- │ │ │ France. │ invasion of │ C. │
- │ │ │ Bronze │ Nordics into │ Alexander the Great, │
- │ │ │ money in │ Cisalpine │ 356–323. │
- │ │ │ western │ Gaul. │ │
- │ │ │ France. │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │Gold coinage │ │ │
- │ │ │ in │ │Decline of Scythians in │
- │ │ │ northeast │ │ Russia, and appearance│
- │ │ │ France. │ │ in Russia of Alpine │
- │ │ │ Bronze │ │ Sarmatians. │
- │12.│300–200 │ coinage in │Expansion of │ Nordic Galatians enter│
- │ │ │ the │ Rome. │ Thrace and │
- │ │ │ southwest. │ │ Greece—Delphi, 279; │
- │ │ │ Gaul │ │ cross into Asia Minor │
- │ │ │ fertile and│ │ and found Galatia. │
- │ │ │ well │ │ │
- │ │ │ cultivated.│ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ Punic Wars, │ │
- │ │ │ │ 264–146. │ │
- │ │ │Teutons enter│ │ │
- │ │ │ France. │Slaves imported│ │
- │ │ │ Marius │ in Rome to │ │
- │13.│200–100 │ destroys │ work the │ │
- │ │ │ Teutones │ latifundia. │ │
- │ │ │ and Cimbri,│ │ │
- │ │ │ 100 B. C. │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │Augustus and │ │
- │ │ │Cæsar │ the │ │
- │ │100 to │ conquers │ organization │ │
- │14.│ Christian│ Gaul, │ of the Roman │ │
- │ │ Era │ 59–51. │ Empire. │ │
- │ │ │ │ Extinction of│ │
- │ │ │ │ old Romans. │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │Sarmatians appear in │
- │15.│ │ │ │ Danube valley, 50 A. │
- │ │ │ │ │ D. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- └───┴───────────┴─────────────┴───────────────┴────────────────────────┘
- ┌───┬───────────┬─────────────────────┬────────────────┐
- │ │ B. C. │ ASIA MINOR │NORTH AFRICA AND│
- │ │ │ │ EGYPT │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │Copper for │
- │ │ │ │ ornaments, │
- │ │ │ │ 4000. │
- │ │ │Alpines (Hissarlik). │ Copper │
- │ │ │ Founding of Troy. │ systematically│
- │ 1.│Before 3000│ Copper in Cyprus. │ mined, 3400. │
- │ │ │ Introduction of │ Pieces of iron│
- │ │ │ bronze from Egypt. │ from interior │
- │ │ │ │ of Great │
- │ │ │ │ Pyramid of │
- │ │ │ │ Gizeh, 3733. │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Gizeh skulls; │
- │ │ │ │ Alpine. │
- │ │ │ │ First │
- │ 2.│3000–2500 │Bronze smelting. │ illustration │
- │ │ │ │ of ship in │
- │ │ │ │ Egypt, 2800. │
- │ │ │ │ Pyramids, │
- │ │ │ │ Memphis. │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Period of │
- │ │ │ │ agricultural │
- │ │ │ │ depression │
- │ │ │Destruction of │ with invasions│
- │ 3.│2500–1800 │ Hissarlik II. │ from the │
- │ │ │ │ desert. │
- │ │ │ │ Feudal Age in │
- │ │ │ │ Egypt. │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │Beginnings of Hittite│Hyksos in Egypt,│
- │ 4.│1800–1600 │ Empire. │ 1700. │
- │ │ │ │ First horses. │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Egyptian Empire │
- │ │ │First Aryan names of │ at Thebes, │
- │ │ │ deities—Cappadocia.│ 1600–1150. │
- │ 5.│1600–1400 │ Hittite Empire with│ Egyptian │
- │ │ │ iron. │ campaigns in │
- │ │ │ │ Asia. Conquest│
- │ │ │ │ of Syria. │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Hittites invade │
- │ │ │ │ Syria. │
- │ │ │ │ Rameses II. │
- │ 6.│1400–1200 │Nordic Phrygians. │ 1230. Sea │
- │ │ │ (Trojan leaders.) │ peoples │
- │ │ │ │ (Achæans) │
- │ │ │ │ attack Egypt. │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ Hittites Alpines │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ 7.│1200–1000 │Armenians acquire │Phœnicia supreme│
- │ │ │ Aryan tongue. │ at sea. │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │Greek colonies in │Carthage │
- │ 8.│1000–800 │ Asia Minor. │ founded, 813. │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ 800 │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │Early Nordic raids. │ │
- │ 9.│800–600 │ Cimmerians, 650. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Persian │
- │ │ │Tyre under Babylonian│ conquest, 525.│
- │10.│600–400 │ yoke. │ The last of │
- │ │ │ │ the native │
- │ │ │ │ Pharaohs. │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Alexander │
- │11.│400–300 │ │ conquers │
- │ │ │ │ Egypt, 332. │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │12.│300–200 │Nordic Galatians, │ │
- │ │ │ 279. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │13.│200–100 │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │100 to │ │ │
- │14.│ Christian│ │ │
- │ │ Era │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │15.│ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- └───┴───────────┴─────────────────────┴────────────────┘
- ┌───┬───────────┬─────────────┬────────────┐
- │ │ B. C. │ MESOPOTAMIA │ INDIA AND │
- │ │ │ AND PERSIA │ CHINA │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │Copper for │ │
- │ │ │ ornaments. │ │
- │ │ │ Early │Mongolian │
- │ │ │ Babylonian │ bands come│
- │ │ │ graves. │ from west │
- │ 1.│Before 3000│ Cylinder │ into the │
- │ │ │ seals at │ Yellow │
- │ │ │ Fara about │ River │
- │ │ │ 3400. │ Valley. │
- │ │ │ Cuneiform │ │
- │ │ │ writing. │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │Ur in Sumer. │ │
- │ │ │ Nippur, │ │
- │ │ │ 3000–2500. │ │
- │ │ │ Beginning │Chinese │
- │ │ │ of │ claim │
- │ 2.│3000–2500 │ greatness │ first │
- │ │ │ of │ empire, │
- │ │ │ Babylonia. │ 2850–2730.│
- │ │ │ Sargon of │ │
- │ │ │ Accad │ │
- │ │ │ (Semitic), │ │
- │ │ │ 2750. │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │Sumer and │ │
- │ │ │ Accad │ │
- │ │ │ unite, │ │
- │ │ │ 2500. │Phonetic │
- │ │ │ Babylon │ writing in│
- │ │ │ under │ China, │
- │ 3.│2500–1800 │ Hammurapi │ probably │
- │ │ │ supreme, │ at 2000 B.│
- │ │ │ 2100. │ C. │
- │ │ │ First │ │
- │ │ │ horses from│ │
- │ │ │ Kassites in│ │
- │ │ │ Elam. │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │Kassite │ │
- │ │ │ dynasty of │ │
- │ 4.│1800–1600 │ Babylon │ │
- │ │ │ begins. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │ Kassitites │ │
- │ │ │and Mitanni, │ │
- │ │ │ 1700–1400. │ │
- │ │ │ │First │
- │ │ │ │ Nordics │
- │ │ │First Nordics│ enter │
- │ 5.│1600–1400 │ in Persia. │ India. │
- │ │ │ │ Nordic │
- │ │ │ │ states in │
- │ │ │ │ Punjab. │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │ Nordic │ │
- │ │ │ invasions. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │Semitic │ │
- │ 6.│1400–1200 │ Babylonians│ │
- │ │ │ overrun │ │
- │ │ │ Sumer. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Nordic Sacæ │
- │ │ │ │ introduce │
- │ 7.│1200–1000 │ │ Sanskrit │
- │ │ │ │ into │
- │ │ │ │ India. │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │Zoroaster. │ │
- │ │ │ Nordic │ │
- │ │ │ Persians │ │
- │ │ │ recorded at│ │
- │ │ │ Lake Urmia,│ │
- │ │ │ 900. │ │
- │ 8.│1000–800 │ Iron mines │ │
- │ │ │ at │ │
- │ │ │ Carchemish.│ │
- │ │ │ Assyrian │ │
- │ │ │ chronology │ │
- │ │ │ begins, 911│ │
- │ │ │ B. C. │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ 800 │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │Invasion of │ │
- │ │ │ Scythians. │ │
- │ │ │ Assyrian │ │
- │ │ │ Empire, │ │
- │ │ │ 750–606, │Nordic │
- │ │ │ with armies│ Hiung-nu │
- │ │ │ equipped │ in western│
- │ 9.│800–600 │ with iron │ China │
- │ │ │ borrowed │ become │
- │ │ │ from the │ restless. │
- │ │ │ Hittites. │ │
- │ │ │ Semitic │ │
- │ │ │ Chaldeans │ │
- │ │ │ rebuild │ │
- │ │ │ Babylon. │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │Nordic │ │
- │ │ │ Persians │Confucius, │
- │ │ │ overthrow │ 551–479. │
- │10.│600–400 │ Medes, 550.│ Buddha, │
- │ │ │ Reign of │ _c._ │
- │ │ │ Darius, │ 557–477. │
- │ │ │ 525–485. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Conquests of│
- │ │ │Conquests of │ Alexander │
- │11.│400–300 │ Alexander. │ in India, │
- │ │ │ │ 327. │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Nordic │
- │ │ │ │ Wu-Suns in│
- │ │ │ │ Chinese │
- │ │ │ │ Turkestan │
- │ │ │ │ and │
- │ │ │ │ Ting-Ling │
- │ │ │ │ in │
- │ │ │ │ Siberia. │
- │ │ │ │ Ts’in │
- │12.│300–200 │ │ dynasty │
- │ │ │ │ (255–209) │
- │ │ │ │ resist │
- │ │ │ │ Nomads and│
- │ │ │ │ secure │
- │ │ │ │ China │
- │ │ │ │ against │
- │ │ │ │ them by │
- │ │ │ │ building │
- │ │ │ │ the Great │
- │ │ │ │ Wall. │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │13.│200–100 │Nordic Alans in Sogdiana. │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Kian-Kuan in│
- │ │ │ │ Turkestan.│
- │ │ │ │ Hiung-nu, │
- │ │ │ │ turned │
- │ │ │ │ westward, │
- │ │ │ │ drove the │
- │ │ │ │ Wu-sun │
- │ │ │ │ into the │
- │ │ │ │ mountains │
- │ │ │ │ about Ili │
- │ │ │ │ and the │
- │ │ │ │ great │
- │ │ │ │ Yue-chih │
- │ │ │ │ into the │
- │ │ │ │ Tarim │
- │ │ │ │ basin. │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │100 to │ │ │
- │14.│ Christian│ │ │
- │ │ Era │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- ├───┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │15.│ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │
- └───┴───────────┴─────────────┴────────────┘
-
-These incoming Nordics intermarried with the native populations and were
-gradually bred out and the resurgence of the old native stock, chiefly
-Alpine, has proceeded steadily since the Frankish Charlemagne destroyed
-the Lombard kingdom and is proceeding with unabated vigor to-day. This
-process was greatly accelerated in western Europe by the Crusades, which
-were extremely destructive to the Nordic feudal lords, especially the
-Frankish and Norman nobility and was continued by the wars of the
-Reformation and by those of the Revolution. The world war now in full
-swing with its toll of millions will leave Europe much poorer in Nordic
-blood. One of its most certain results will be the partial destruction
-of the aristocratic classes everywhere in northern Europe. In England
-the nobility has already suffered in battle more than in any century
-since the Wars of the Roses. This will tend to realize the
-standardization of type so dear to democratic ideals. If equality cannot
-be obtained by lengthening and uplifting the stunted of body and of
-mind, it can be at least realized by the destruction of the exalted of
-stature and of soul. The bed of Procrustes operates with the same fatal
-exactness when it shortens the long as when it stretches the undersized.
-
-The first Nordics in Spain were the Gauls who crossed the western
-Pyrenees about the end of the sixth century before our era and
-introduced Aryan speech into the Iberian Peninsula. They quickly mixed
-with Mediterranean natives and the composite Spaniards were called
-Celtiberians by the Romans.
-
-In Portugal and Spain there are in the physical structure of the
-population few traces of these early Celtic-speaking Nordic invaders but
-the Suevi, who a thousand years later occupied parts of Portugal, and
-the Vandals and Visigoths, who conquered and held Spain for 300 years,
-have left some small evidence of their blood. In the provinces of
-northern Spain a considerable percentage of light colored eyes reveals
-these Nordic elements in the population.
-
-Deep seated Castilian traditions associate aristocracy with blondness
-and the _sangre azul_, or blue blood of Spain, probably refers to the
-blue eye of the Goth, whose traditional claim to lordship is also shown
-in the Spanish name for gentleman, “hidalgo,” said to mean “the son of
-the Goth.” The fact that the blood shows as “blue” through the fair
-Nordic skin is also to be taken into account.
-
-As long as this Gothic nobility controlled the Spanish states during the
-endless crusades against the Moors, Spain belonged to the Nordic
-kingdoms, but when their blood became impaired by losses in wars waged
-outside of Spain and in the conquest of the Americas, the sceptre fell
-from this noble race into the hands of the native Iberian, who had not
-the physical vigor or the intellectual strength to maintain the world
-empire built up by the stronger race. For 200 years the Spanish infantry
-had no equal in Europe but this distinction disappeared with the opening
-decades of the seventeenth century.
-
-The splendid conquistadores of the New World were of Nordic type, but
-their pure stock did not long survive their new surroundings and to-day
-they have vanished utterly, leaving behind them only their language and
-their religion. After considering well these facts we shall not have to
-search further for the causes of the collapse of Spain.
-
-Gaul at the time of Cæsar’s conquest was under the rule of the Nordic
-race, which furnished the bulk of the population of the north as well as
-the military classes elsewhere and, while the Romans killed off an undue
-proportion of this fighting element, the power and vigor of the French
-nation have been based on this blood and its later reinforcements. In
-fact, in the Europe of to-day the amount of Nordic blood in each nation
-is a very fair measure of its strength in war and standing in
-civilization. The proportion of men of pure type of each constituent
-race to the mixed type is also a powerful factor.
-
-When, about 1000 B. C., the first Nordics crossed the lower Rhine they
-found the Mediterranean race in France everywhere overwhelmed by an
-Alpine population except in the south. Long before the time of Cæsar the
-Celtic language of these invaders had been imposed upon the entire
-population and the country had been saturated with Nordic blood, except
-in Aquitaine which seems to have retained until at least that date its
-Anaryan Iberian speech. These earliest Nordics in the west were known to
-the ancient world as Gauls. These Gauls, or “Celts,” as they were called
-by Cæsar, occupied in his day the centre of France. The actual racial
-complexion of this part of France was overwhelmingly Alpine then and is
-so now, but this population had been Celticized thoroughly by the Gauls,
-just as it was Latinized as completely at a later date by the Romans.
-
-The northern third of France, that is above Paris, was inhabited in
-Cæsar’s time by the Belgæ, a Nordic people of the Cymric division of
-Celtic speech. They were largely of Teutonic blood and in fact should be
-regarded as the immediate forerunners of the Germans. They probably
-represent the early Teutons who had crossed from Sweden and adopted the
-Celtic speech of their Nordic kindred whom they found on the mainland.
-These Belgæ had followed the earlier Goidels across Germany into Britain
-and Gaul and were rapidly displacing their Nordic predecessors, who by
-this time were much weakened by mixture with the autochthones, when Rome
-appeared upon the scene and set a limit to their conquests by the Pax
-Romana.
-
-The Belgæ of the north of France and the Low Countries were the bravest
-of the peoples of Gaul, according to Cæsar’s oft-quoted remark, but the
-claim of the modern Belgians to descent from this race is without basis
-and rests solely on the fact that the present kingdom of Belgium, which
-only became independent and assumed its proud name in 1831, occupies a
-small and relatively unimportant corner of the land of the Belgæ. The
-Flemings of Belgium are Nordic Franks speaking a Low German tongue and
-the Walloons are Alpines whose language is an archaic French.
-
-The Belgæ and the Goidelic remnants of Nordic blood in the centre of
-Gaul taken together probably constituted only a small minority in blood
-of the population, but were everywhere the military and ruling classes.
-These Nordic elements were later reinforced by powerful Teutonic tribes,
-namely, Vandals, Visigoths, Alans, Saxons, Burgundians and, most
-important of all, the Franks of the lower Rhine, who founded modern
-France and made it for long centuries “_la grande nation_” of
-Christendom.
-
-The Frankish dynasties long after Charlemagne were of purely Teutonic
-blood and the aristocratic land owning and military classes down to the
-great Revolution were very largely of this type, which by the time of
-the creation of the Frankish kingdom had incorporated all the other
-Nordic elements of old Roman Gaul, both Gaulish and Belgic.
-
-The last invasion of Teutonic-speaking barbarians was that of the Danish
-Northmen, who were, of course, of unmixed Nordic blood and who conquered
-and settled Normandy in 911 A. D. No sooner had the barbarian invasions
-ceased than the ancient aboriginal blood strains, Mediterranean, Alpine
-and elements derived from Paleolithic times, began a slow and steady
-recovery. Step by step with the reappearance of these primitive and deep
-rooted stocks the Nordic element in France declined and with it the
-vigor of the nation. Even in Normandy the Alpines now tend to
-predominate and the French blonds are becoming more and more limited to
-the northeastern and eastern provinces.
-
-The chief historic events of the last thousand years have hastened this
-process and the fact that the Nordic element everywhere forms the
-fighting section of the community caused the loss in war to fall
-disproportionately as among the three races in France. The religious
-wars greatly weakened the Nordic provincial nobility, which was before
-the Massacre of St. Bartholomew largely Protestant and the extermination
-of the upper classes was hastened by the Revolutionary and Napoleonic
-wars. These last wars are said to have shortened the stature of the
-French by four inches; in other words, the tall Nordic strain was killed
-off in greater proportions than the little brunet.
-
-When by universal suffrage the transfer of power was completed from a
-Nordic aristocracy to lower classes predominantly of Alpine and
-Mediterranean extraction, the decline of France in international power
-set in. In the country as a whole, the long skulled Mediterraneans are
-also yielding rapidly to the round skulled Alpines and the average of
-the cephalic index in France has steadily risen since the Middle Ages
-and is still rising.
-
-The survivors of the aristocracy, being stripped of political power and
-to a large extent of wealth, quickly lost their caste pride and
-committed class suicide by mixing their blood with inferior breeds. One
-of the most conspicuous features of some of the French nobility of
-to-day is the strength of Oriental and Mediterranean strains in them.
-Being for political reasons ardently clerical the nobility welcomes
-recruits of any racial origin as long as they bring with them money and
-devotion to the Church.
-
-The loss in war of the best stock through death, wounds or absence from
-home has been clearly shown in France. The conscripts who were examined
-for military duty in 1890–2 were those descended in a large measure from
-the military rejects and other stay-at-homes during the Franco-Prussian
-War. In Dordogne this contingent showed seven per cent more deficient
-statures than the normal rate. In some cantons this unfortunate
-generation was in height an inch below the recruits of preceding years
-and in it the exemptions for defective physique rose from the normal six
-per cent to sixteen per cent.
-
-When each generation is decimated or destroyed in turn a race can be
-injured beyond recovery but it more frequently happens that the result
-is the annihilation of an entire class, as in the case of the German
-gentry in the Thirty Years’ War. Desolation of wide districts often
-resulted from the plagues and famines which followed the armies in old
-days but deaths from these causes fall most heavily on the weaker part
-of the population. The loss of valuable breeding stock is far more
-serious when wars are fought with volunteer armies of picked men than
-with conscript armies, because in the latter cases the loss is more
-evenly spread over the whole nation. Before England resorted in the
-present war to universal conscription the injury to her more desirable
-and patriotic classes was much more pronounced than in Germany where all
-types and ranks were called to arms.
-
-In the British Isles we find, before the appearance of the Nordic race,
-a Mediterranean population and no important element of Alpine blood, so
-that at the present day we have to deal with only two of the main races
-instead of all three as in France. In Britain there were, as elsewhere,
-representatives of earlier races but the preponderant strain of blood
-was Mediterranean before the first arrival of the Aryan-speaking
-Nordics.
-
-Ireland was connected with Britain and Britain with the continent until
-times very recent in a geological sense. The depression of the Channel
-coasts is progressing rapidly to-day and is known to have been
-substantial during historic times. The close parallel in blood and
-culture between England and the opposite coasts of France also indicates
-a very recent land connection, possibly in early Neolithic times. Men
-either walked from the continent to England and from England to Ireland,
-or they paddled across in primitive boats or coracles. The art of
-ship-building or even archaic navigation cannot go much further back
-than late Neolithic times.
-
-The Nordic tribes of Celtic speech came to the British Isles in two
-distinct waves. The earlier invasion of the Goidels, who were still in
-the Bronze culture, arrived in England about 800 B. C. and in Ireland
-two centuries later. It was part of the same movement which brought the
-Gauls into France. The later conquest was by the Cymric-speaking Belgæ
-who were equipped with iron weapons. It began in the third century B. C.
-and was still going on in Cæsar’s time. These Cymric Brythons found the
-early Goidels, with the exception of the aristocracy, much weakened by
-intermixture with the Mediterranean natives and would probably have
-destroyed all trace of Goidelic speech in Ireland and Scotland, as they
-actually did in England, if the Romans had not intervened. The Brythons
-reached Ireland in small numbers only in the second century B. C.
-
-These Nordic elements in Britain, both Goidelic and Brythonic, were in a
-minority during Roman times and the ethnic complexion of the island was
-not much affected by the Roman occupation, as the legions stationed
-there represented the varied racial stocks of the Empire.
-
-After the Romans abandoned Britain and about 400 A. D., floods of pure
-Nordics poured into the islands for nearly six centuries, arriving in
-the north as the Norse pirates, who made Scotland Scandinavian, and in
-the east as Saxons and Angles, who founded England.
-
-The Angles came from somewhere in central Jutland and the Saxons came
-from coast lands immediately at the base of the Danish Peninsula. All
-these districts were then and are now almost purely Teutonic; in fact,
-this is part of old Saxony and is to-day the core of Teutonic Germany.
-
-These Saxon districts sent out at that time swarms of invaders not only
-into England but into France and over the Alps into Italy, just as at a
-much later period the same land sent swarming colonies into Hungary and
-Russia.
-
-The same Saxon invaders passed down the Channel coasts and traces of
-their settlement on the mainland remain to this day in the Cotentin
-district around Cherbourg. Scandinavian sea peoples called Danes or
-Northmen swarmed over as late as 900 A. D. and conquered all eastern
-England. This Danish invasion of England was the same that brought the
-Northmen or Normans into France. In fact the occupation of Normandy was
-probably by Danes and the conquest of England was largely the work of
-Norsemen, as Norway at that time was under Danish kings.
-
-Both of these invasions, especially the later, swept around the greater
-island and inundated Ireland, driving both the Neolithic aborigines and
-their Celtic-speaking masters into the bogs and islands of the west.
-
-The blond Nordic element to-day is very marked in Ireland as in England.
-It is derived, to some extent, from the early invaders of Celtic speech,
-but the Goidelic element has been very largely absorbed in Ireland as in
-western England and in Scotland by the Iberian substratum of the
-population and is found to-day rather in the form of Nordic characters
-in brunets than in the entirely blond individuals who represent later
-and purer Nordic strains.
-
-The figures for recruits taken some decades ago in the two countries
-would indicate that the Irish as a whole are considerably lighter in eye
-and darker in hair color than are the English. The combination of black
-Iberian hair with blue or gray Nordic eyes is frequently found in
-Ireland and also in Spain and in both these countries is justly admired
-for its beauty, but it is by no means an exclusively Irish type.
-
-The tall, blond Irishmen are to-day chiefly Danish with the addition of
-English, Norman and Scotch elements, which have poured into the lesser
-island for a thousand years and have imposed the English speech upon it.
-The more primitive and ancient elements in Ireland have always shown
-great ability to absorb newcomers and during the Middle Ages it was
-notorious that the Norman and English colonists quickly sank to the
-cultural level of the natives.
-
-In spite of the fact that Paleoliths have not been found there some
-indications of Paleolithic man appear in Ireland both as single
-characters and as individuals. Being, like Brittany, situated on the
-extreme western outposts of Eurasia, it has more than its share of
-generalized and low types surviving in the living populations and these
-types, the Firbolgs, have imparted a distinct and very undesirable
-aspect to a large portion of the inhabitants of the west and south and
-have greatly lowered the intellectual status of the population as a
-whole. The cross between these elements and the Nordics appears to be a
-bad one and the mental and cultural traits of the aborigines have proved
-to be exceedingly persistent and appear especially in the unstable
-temperament and the lack of coordinating and reasoning power, so often
-found among the Irish. To the dominance of the Mediterraneans mixed with
-Pre-Neolithic survivals in the south and west are to be attributed the
-aloofness of the island from the general trend of European civilization
-and its long adherence to ancient forms of religion and even to
-Pre-Christian superstitions.
-
-In England, the same two ethnic elements are present, namely the Nordic
-and the Mediterranean. There is, especially in Wales and in the west
-central counties of England, a large substratum of ancient Mediterranean
-blood but the later Nordic elements are everywhere superimposed upon it.
-
-Scotland is by race Anglian in the Lowlands and Norse in the Highlands
-with underlying Goidelic and Brythonic elements, which are exceedingly
-hard to identify. The Mediterranean strain is marked in the Highlands
-and is frequently associated with tall stature.
-
-This brunetness in Scotland is, of course, derived from the same
-underlying Mediterranean stock which we have found elsewhere in the
-British Islands.
-
-The inhabitants of Scotland before the arrival of the Celtic-speaking
-Nordics seem to have been the Picts, whose language was almost surely
-Non-Aryan. Judging from the remnants of Anaryan syntax in the Goidelic
-and to a lesser degree in the Cymric languages, Pictish was related to
-the Anaryan Berber tongues still spoken in North Africa. No trace of
-this Pre-Aryan syntax is found in English.
-
-Where one race imposes a new language on another, the change is most
-marked in the vocabulary while the ancient usage in syntax or the
-construction of sentences is the more apt to survive and these ancient
-forms often give us a valuable clew to the aboriginal speech. This same
-Anaryan syntax is particularly marked in the Irish language, a condition
-which fits in with the other Pre-Aryan usages and types found there.
-
-This divergence between the new vocabulary and the ancient habits of
-syntax is probably one of the causes of the extreme splitting up of the
-various branches of the Aryan mother tongue.
-
-Wales, like western Ireland, is a museum of racial antiquities and being
-an unattractive and poor country has exported men rather than received
-immigration, while such invasions as did arrive came with spent force.
-
-The mass of the population of Wales especially in the upland or moorland
-districts is Mediterranean, with a considerable addition of Paleolithic
-remnants. With changing social and industrial conditions these Neolithic
-Mediterraneans are pushing into the valleys or towns with a resultant
-replacement of the Nordic types.
-
-Recent and intensive investigations reveal everywhere in Wales distinct
-physical types living side by side or in adjoining villages unchanged
-and unchangeable throughout the centuries. Extensive blending has not
-taken place though much crossing has occurred and the persistence of the
-skull shape has been particularly marked. Such individuals as are of
-pure Nordic type are generally members of the old county families and
-land owning class.
-
-As to language in Wales, the Cymric is everywhere spoken in various
-dialects, but there are indications of the ancient underlying Goidelic.
-In fact, Brythonic or Cymric may not have reached Wales much before the
-Roman conquest of Britain. The earlier Goidelic survived in parts of
-Wales as late as the seventh century but by the eleventh century all
-consciousness of race and linguistic distinctions had disappeared in the
-common name of Cymry. This name should perhaps be limited to the
-Brythons of England and not used for their kindred on the Continent.
-
-In Cornwall and along the Welsh border racial types are often grouped in
-separate villages and the intellectual and moral distinctions between
-them are well recognized.
-
-The Nordic species of man in its various branches made Gaul the land of
-the Franks and made Britain the land of the Angles and the Englishmen
-who built the British Empire and founded America were of the Nordic and
-not of the Mediterranean type.
-
-One of the most vigorous Nordic elements in France, England and America
-was contributed by the Normans and their influence on the development of
-these countries cannot be ignored. The descendants of the Danish and
-Norse Vikings who settled in Normandy as Teutonic-speaking heathen and
-who as Normans crossed over to Saxon England and conquered it in 1066
-are among the finest and noblest examples of the Nordic race. Their only
-rivals in these characters were the early Goths.
-
-This Norman strain, while purely Nordic, seems to have been radically
-different in its mental makeup, and to some extent in its physical
-detail from the Saxons of England and also from their kindred in
-Scandinavia.
-
-The Normans appear to have been “_fine race_” to use a French idiom and
-their descendants are often characterized by a tall, slender figure,
-much less bulky than the typical Teuton, of proud bearing and with
-clearly marked features of classic Greek regularity. The type is seldom
-extremely blond and is often dark. These Latinized Vikings were and are
-animated by a restless and nomadic energy and by a fierce
-aggressiveness. They played a brilliant role during the twelfth and
-following centuries but later, on the continent, this strain ran out,
-though leaving here and there traces of its former presence, notably in
-Sicily where the grayish blue Sicilian eye called “the Norman eye” is
-still found among the old noble families.
-
-The Norman type is still very common among the English of good family
-and especially among hunters, explorers, navigators, adventurers and
-officers in the British army. These latter-day Normans are natural
-rulers and administrators and it is to this type that England largely
-owes her extraordinary ability to govern justly and firmly the lower
-races. This Norman blood occurs often among the native Americans but
-with the changing social conditions and the filling up of the waste
-places of the earth it is doomed to a speedy extinction.
-
-The Normans were Nordics with a dash of brunet blood and their conquest
-of England strengthened the Nordic and not the Mediterranean elements in
-the British Isles, but the connection once established with France
-especially with Aquitaine later introduced from southern France certain
-brunet elements of Mediterranean affinities.
-
-The upper class Normans on their arrival in England were probably purely
-Scandinavian, but in the lower classes there were some dark strains.
-They brought with them large numbers of ecclesiastics who were, for the
-most part drawn from the more ancient types throughout France. Careful
-investigation of the graveyards and vaults in which these churchmen were
-buried revealed a large percentage of round skulls among them.
-
-In both Normandy and in the lowlands of Scotland there was much the same
-mixture of blood between Scandinavian and Saxon but with a smaller
-amount of Saxon blood in France. The result in both cases was the
-production of an extraordinarily forceful race.
-
-The Nordics in England are in these days apparently receding before the
-Neolithic Mediterranean type. The causes of this decline are the same as
-in France and the chief loss is through the wastage of blood by war and
-through emigration.
-
-The typical British soldier is blond or red bearded and the typical
-sailor is always a blond. The migrating type from England is also
-chiefly Nordic. These facts would indicate that nomadism as well as love
-of war and adventure are Nordic characteristics.
-
-An extremely potent influence, however, is the transformation of the
-nation from an agricultural to a manufacturing community. Heavy,
-healthful work in the fields of northern Europe enables the Nordic type
-to thrive, but the cramped factory and crowded city quickly weed him
-out, while the little brunet Mediterranean can work a spindle, set type,
-sell ribbons or push a clerk’s pen far better than the big, clumsy and
-somewhat heavy Nordic blond, who needs exercise, meat and air and cannot
-live under Ghetto conditions.
-
-The increase of urban communities at the expense of the countryside is
-also an important element in the fading of the Nordic type, because the
-energetic countryman of this blood is more apt to improve his fortunes
-by moving to the city than the less ambitious Mediterranean.
-
-The country villages and the farms are the nurseries of nations, while
-cities are consumers and seldom producers of men. The effort now being
-made in America to settle undesirable immigrants on farms may, from the
-viewpoint of race replacement, be more dangerous than allowing them to
-remain in crowded Ghettos or tenements.
-
-If England has deteriorated and there are those who think they see
-indications of such decline, it is due to the lowering proportion of the
-Nordic blood and the transfer of political power from the vigorous
-Nordic aristocracy and middle classes to the radical and labor elements,
-both largely recruited from the Mediterranean type.
-
-Only in Scandinavia and northwestern Germany does the Nordic race seem
-to maintain its full vigor in spite of the enormous wastage of three
-thousand years of the swarming forth of its best fighting men. Norway,
-however, after the Viking outburst has never exhibited military power
-and Sweden, in the centuries between the Varangian period and the rise
-of Gustavus Adolphus, did not enjoy a reputation for fighting
-efficiency. All the three Scandinavian countries after vigorously
-attacking Christendom a thousand years ago disappear from history as a
-nursery for soldiers until the Reformation when Sweden suddenly
-reappears just in time to save Protestantism on the Continent. To-day
-all three seem to be intellectually anæmic.
-
-Upper and Lower Austria, the Tyrol and Styria have a very considerable
-Nordic element which is in political control but the Alpine races are
-slowly replacing the Nordics both there and in Hungary.
-
-Holland and Flanders are purely Teutonic, the Flemings being the
-descendants of those Franks who did not adopt Latin speech as did their
-Teutonic kin across the border in Artois and Picardy; and Holland is the
-ancient Batavia with the Frisian coast lands eastward to old Saxony.
-
-Denmark, Norway and Sweden are purely Nordic and yearly contribute
-swarms of a splendid type of immigrants to America and are now, as they
-have been for thousands of years, the chief nursery and broodland of the
-master race.
-
-In southwestern Norway and in Denmark, there is a substantial number of
-short, dark round heads of Alpine affinities. These dark Norwegians are
-regarded as somewhat inferior socially by their Nordic countrymen.
-Perhaps as a result of this disability, a disproportionately large
-number of Norwegian immigrants to America are of this type. Apparently
-America is doomed to receive in these later days the least desirable
-classes and types from each European nation now exporting men.
-
-In mediæval times the Norse and Danish Vikings sailed not only the
-waters of the known Atlantic, but ventured westward through the fogs and
-frozen seas to Iceland, Greenland and America.
-
-Sweden, after sending forth her Goths and other early Teutonic tribes,
-turned her attention to the shores of the eastern Baltic, colonized the
-coast of Finland and the Baltic provinces and supplied also a strong
-Scandinavian element to the aristocracy of Russia.
-
-The coast of Finland is as a result Swedish and the natives of the
-interior have distinctly Nordic characters with the exception of the
-skull, which in its roundness shows an Alpine cross.
-
-The population of the so-called Baltic provinces of Russia is everywhere
-Nordic and their affinities are with Scandinavia and Germany rather than
-with Slavic Moscovy. The most primitive Aryan languages, namely,
-Lettish, Lithuanian and the recently extinct Old Prussian, are found in
-this neighborhood and here we are not far from the original Nordic
-homeland.
-
-
-
-
- IX
- THE NORDIC FATHERLAND
-
-
-The area in Europe where the Nordic race developed and in which the
-Aryan languages originated probably included the forest region of
-eastern Germany, Poland and Russia, together with the grasslands which
-stretched from the Ukraine eastward into the steppes south of the Ural.
-From causes already mentioned this area was long isolated from the rest
-of the world and especially from Asia. When the unity of the Aryan race
-and of the Aryan language was broken up at the end of the Neolithic and
-the beginning of the Bronze Age, wave after wave of the early Nordics
-pushed westward along the sandy plains of the north and pressed against
-and through the Alpine populations of central Europe. Usually these
-early Nordics, as indeed many of the later ones, constituted only a thin
-layer of ruling classes and there must have been many countries
-conquered by them in which we have no historic evidence of their
-existence, linguistic or otherwise. This must have certainly been the
-case in those numerous instances where only the leaders were Nordics and
-the great mass of their followers slaves or serfs of inferior races.
-
-The Nordics also swept down through Thrace into Greece and Asia Minor,
-while other large and important groups entered Asia partly through the
-Caucasus Mountains, but in greater strength they migrated around the
-northern and eastern sides of the Caspian-Aral Sea.
-
-That portion of the Nordic race which continued to inhabit south Russia
-and grazed their flocks of sheep and herds of horses on the grasslands
-were the Scythians of the Greeks and from these nomad shepherds came the
-Cimmerians, Persians, Sacæ, Massagetæ and perhaps the leaders of the
-Kassites, Mitanni and other early Aryan-speaking Nordic invaders of
-Asia. The descendants of these Nordics are scattered throughout Russia
-but are now submerged by the later Slavs.
-
-Well marked characters of the Nordic race, which were established in
-Neolithic times if not earlier, enable us to distinguish it definitely
-wherever it appears in history and we know that all the blondness in the
-world is derived from this source. As blondness is easily observed and
-recorded we are apt to lay too much emphasis on this single character.
-The brown shades of hair are equally Nordic.
-
-When the Nordics first enter the Mediterranean world their arrival is
-everywhere marked by a new and higher civilization. In most cases the
-contact of the vigorous barbarians with the ancient civilizations
-created a sudden impulse of life and an outburst of culture as soon as
-the first destruction wrought by the conquest was repaired.
-
-In addition to the long continued selection exercised by severe climatic
-conditions and the consequent elimination of ineffectives, both of which
-affects a race, there is another force at work which concerns the
-individual as well. The energy developed in the north is not lost
-immediately when transferred to the softer conditions of existence in
-the Mediterranean and Indian countries. This energy endures for several
-generations and only dies away slowly as the northern blood becomes
-diluted and the impulse to strive fades.
-
-The contact of Hellene and Pelasgian caused the blossoming of the
-ancient civilization of Hellas, just as two thousand years later when
-the Nordic invaders of Italy had absorbed the science, art and
-literature of Rome, they produced that splendid century we call the
-Renaissance.
-
-The chief men of the Cinque Cento and the preceding century were of
-Nordic blood, largely Gothic and Lombard, which is recognized easily by
-a close inspection of busts or portraits in northern Italy. Dante,
-Raphael, Titian, Michael Angelo, Leonardo da Vinci were all of Nordic
-type, just as in classic times many of the chief men and of the upper
-classes were Nordic.
-
-Similar expansions of civilization and organization of empire followed
-the incursion of the Nordic Persians into the land of the round skulled
-Medes and the introduction of Sanskrit into India by the Nordic Sacæ who
-conquered that peninsula. These outbursts of progress due to the first
-contact and mixture of two contrasted races are, however, only
-transitory and pass with the last lingering trace of Nordic blood.
-
-In India the blood of these Aryan-speaking invaders has been absorbed by
-the dark Hindu and in the final event only their synthetic speech
-survives.
-
-The marvellous organization of the Roman state made use of the services
-of Nordic mercenaries and kept the Western Empire alive for three
-centuries after the ancient Roman stock had virtually ceased to exist.
-
-The date when the population of the Empire had become predominantly of
-Mediterranean and Oriental blood, due to the introduction of slaves from
-the east and the wastage of Italian blood in war, coincides with the
-establishment of the Empire under Augustus and the last Republican
-patriots represent the final protest of the old patrician Nordic strain.
-For the most part they refused to abdicate their right to rule in favor
-of manumitted slaves and imperial favorites and they fell in battle and
-sword in hand. The Romans died out but the slaves survived and their
-descendants form the great majority of the south Italians of to-day.
-
-In the last days of the Republic, Cæsar was the leader of the mob, the
-Plebs, which by that time had ceased to be of Roman blood. Pompey’s
-party represented the remnants of the old native Roman aristocracy and
-was defeated at Pharsalia not by Cæsar’s plebeian clients but by his
-Nordic legionaries from Gaul. Cassius and Brutus were the last
-successors of Pompey and their overthrow at Philippi was the final death
-blow to the Republican party; with them the native Roman families
-disappear almost entirely.
-
-The decline of the Romans and for that matter of the native Italians
-began with the Punic Wars when in addition to the Romans who fell in
-battle a large portion of the country population of Italy was destroyed
-by Hannibal. Native Romans suffered greatly in the Social and Servile
-Wars as well as in the civil conflicts between the factions of Sylla,
-who led the Patricians, and Marius who represented the Plebs. Bloody
-proscriptions of the rival parties followed alternately the victory of
-one side and then of the other and under the tyranny of the Emperors of
-the first century also the old Roman stock was the greatest sufferer
-until it practically vanished from the scene.
-
-Voluntary childlessness was the most potent cause of the decline under
-the Empire and when we read of the abject servility of bearers of proud
-names in the days of Nero and Caligula, we must remember that they could
-not rally to their standard followers among the Plebs. They had only the
-choice of submission or suicide and many chose the latter alternative.
-The abjectness of the Roman spirit under the Empire is thus to be
-explained by a change in race.
-
-With the expanding dominion of Rome the native elements of vigor were
-drawn year after year into the legions and spent their active years in
-wars or in garrisons, while the slaves and those unfit for military duty
-stayed home and bred. In the present great war while the native
-Americans are at the front fighting the aliens and immigrants are
-allowed to increase without check and the parallel is a close one.
-
-Slaves began to be imported into Italy in numbers in the second century
-B. C. to work the large plantations—latifundia—of the wealthy Romans.
-This importation of slaves and the ultimate extension of the Roman
-citizenship to their manumitted descendants and to inferior races
-throughout the growing Empire and the losses in internal and foreign
-wars, ruined the state. In America we find another close parallel in the
-Civil War and the subsequent granting of citizenship to Negroes and to
-ever increasing numbers of immigrants of plebeian, servile or Oriental
-races, who throughout history have shown little capacity to create,
-organize or even to comprehend Republican institutions.
-
-In Rome, when this change in blood was substantially complete, the state
-could no longer be operated under Republican forms of government and the
-Empire arose to take its place. At the beginning the Empire was clothed
-in the garb of republicanism in deference to such Roman elements as
-still persisted in the Senate and among the Patricians but ultimately
-these external forms were discarded and the state became virtually a
-pure despotism.
-
-The new population understood little and cared less for the institutions
-of the ancient Republic but they were jealous of their own rights of
-“Bread and the Circus”—“panem et circenses”—and there began to appear in
-place of the old Roman religion the mystic rites of Eastern countries so
-welcome to the plebeian and uneducated soul. The Emperors to please the
-vulgar erected from time to time new shrines to strange gods utterly
-unknown to the Romans of the early Republic. In America, also, strange
-temples, which would have been abhorrent to our Colonial ancestors, are
-multiplying and our streets and parks are turned over to monuments to
-foreign “patriots,” designed not to please the artistic sense of the
-passer-by but to gratify the national preference of some alien element
-in the electorate.
-
-These comments on the change of race in Rome at the beginning of our era
-are not mere speculation. An examination of many thousands of Roman
-columbaria or funeral urns and the names inscribed thereon show quite
-clearly that as early as the first century of our era eighty to ninety
-per cent of the urban population of the Roman Empire was of servile
-extraction and that about seven-eighths of this slave population was
-drawn from districts within the boundaries of the Empire and very
-largely from the countries bordering on the eastern Mediterranean. Few
-names are found which indicate that their bearers came from Gaul or the
-countries beyond the Alps. These Nordic barbarians were of more use in
-the legions than as household servants.
-
-At the beginning of the Christian era the entire Levant and countries
-adjoining it in Asia Minor, Syria and Egypt had been so thoroughly
-hellenized that many of their inhabitants bore Greek names. It was from
-these countries and from northern Africa that the slave population of
-Rome was drawn. Their descendants were the most important element in the
-Roman melting pot and even to-day form the predominant element in the
-population of Italy south of the Apennines. When the Nordic barbarians a
-few centuries later poured in, these Romanized Orientals disappeared
-temporarily from view under the rule of the vigorous northerners but
-they have steadily absorbed the latter until the Nordic elements in
-Italy now are to be found chiefly in the Lombard plains and the region
-of the Alps.
-
-The Byzantine Empire from much the same causes as the Roman became in
-its turn gradually less and less European and more and more Oriental
-until it, too, withered and expired.
-
-Regarded in the light of the facts the fall of Rome ceases to be a
-mystery. The wonder is that the State lived on after the Romans were
-extinct and that the Eastern Empire survived so long with an ever fading
-Greek population. In Rome and in Greece only the language of the
-dominant race survived.
-
-So entirely had the blood of the Romans vanished in the last days of the
-Empire that sorry bands of barbarians wandered at will through the
-desolated provinces. Cæsar and his legions would have made short work of
-these unorganized banditti but Cæsar’s legions were a memory, though one
-great enough to inspire in the intruders somewhat of awe and desire to
-imitate. Against invaders, however, brains and brawn are more effective
-than tradition and culture, however noble these last may be.
-
-Early ascetic Christianity played a large part in this decline of the
-Roman Empire as it was at the outset the religion of the slave, the meek
-and the lowly while Stoicism was the religion of the strong men of the
-time. This bias in favor of the weaker elements greatly interfered with
-their elimination by natural processes and the fighting force of the
-Empire was gradually undermined. Christianity was in sharp contrast to
-the worship of tribal deities which preceded it and it tended then as
-now to break down class and race distinctions.
-
-The maintenance of such distinctions is absolutely essential to race
-purity in any community when two or more races live side by side.
-
-Race feeling may be called prejudice by those whose careers are cramped
-by it but it is a natural antipathy which serves to maintain the purity
-of type. The unfortunate fact that nearly all species of men interbreed
-freely leaves us no choice in the matter. Races must be kept apart by
-artificial devices of this sort or they ultimately amalgamate and in the
-offspring the more generalized or lower type prevails.
-
-
-
-
- X
- THE NORDIC RACE OUTSIDE OF EUROPE
-
-
-We find few traces of Nordic characters outside of Europe. When Egypt
-was invaded by the Libyans from the west in 1230 B. C. they were
-accompanied by “sea peoples,” probably the Achæan Greeks. There is some
-evidence of blondness among the people of the south shore of the
-Mediterranean down to Greek times and the Tamahu or fair Libyans are
-constantly mentioned in Egyptian records. The reddish blond or partly
-blond Berbers found to-day on the northern slopes of the Atlas Mountains
-may well be their descendants. That this blondness of the Berbers,
-though small in amount, is of Nordic origin we may with safety assume,
-but through what channels it came we have no means of knowing. There is
-no historic invasion of north Africa by Nordics except the Vandal
-conquests but there seems to be little probability that this small
-Teutonic tribe left behind any physical trace in the native population.
-
-There seem to have been traces of Nordic blood among the Philistines and
-still more among the Amorites. Certain references to the size of the
-sons of Anak and to the fairness of David, whose mother was an Amoritish
-woman, point vaguely in this direction.
-
-References in Chinese annals to the green eyes of the Wu-suns or to the
-Hiung-Nu in central Asia are almost the only evidence we have of the
-Nordic race in contact with the peoples of eastern Asia, though there
-are statements in ancient Chinese or Mongolian records as to the
-existence of blond and tall tribes and nations in those parts of
-northern Asia where Mongols are now found exclusively. We may expect to
-acquire much new light on this subject during the next few decades.
-
-The so-called blondness of the hairy Ainus of the northern islands of
-Japan seems to be due to a trace of what might be called Proto-Nordic
-blood. In hairiness these people are in sharp contrast with their
-Mongoloid neighbors but this is a generalized character common to the
-highest and the lowest races of man. The primitive Australoids and the
-highly specialized Scandinavians are among the most hairy populations in
-the world. So in the Ainus this somatological peculiarity is merely the
-retention of a primitive trait. The occasional brown or greenish eye and
-the sometimes fair complexion of the Ainus are, however, suggestive of
-Nordic affinities and of an extreme easterly extension of Proto-Nordics
-at a very early period.
-
-The skull shape of the Ainus is dolichocephalic or mesaticephalic, while
-the broad cheek bones indicate a Mongolian cross as among the Esquimaux.
-The Ainus, like many other small, mysterious peoples, are probably
-merely the remnants of one of the early races that are fast fading into
-extinction. The division of man into species and subspecies is very
-ancient and the chief races of the earth are the successful survivors of
-a long and fierce competition. Many species, subspecies and races have
-vanished utterly, except for reversional characters occasionally found
-in the larger races.
-
-The only Nordics in Asia Minor, so far as we know, were the Phrygians
-who crossed the Hellespont about 1400 B. C. as part of the same
-migration which brought the Achæans into Greece, the Cimmerians who
-entered by the same route and also through the Caucasus about 650 B. C.
-and still later, in 270 B. C., the Gauls who, coming from northern Italy
-through Thrace, founded Galatia. So far as our present information goes
-little or no trace of these invasions remains in the existing
-populations of Anatolia. The expansions of the Persians and the
-Aryanization of their empire and the conquests of the Nordics east and
-south of the Caspian-Aral Sea, will be discussed in connection with the
-spread of Aryan languages.
-
-
-
-
- XI
- RACIAL APTITUDES
-
-
-Such are the three races, the Alpine, the Mediterranean and the Nordic,
-which enter into the composition of European populations of to-day and
-in various combinations comprise the great bulk of white men all over
-the world. These races vary intellectually and morally just as they do
-physically. Moral, intellectual and spiritual attributes are as
-persistent as physical characters and are transmitted substantially
-unchanged from generation to generation. These moral and physical
-characters are not limited to one race but given traits do occur with
-more frequency in one race than in another. Each race differs in the
-relative proportion of what we may term good and bad strains, just as
-nations do, or, for that matter, sections and classes of the same
-nation.
-
-In considering skull characters we must remember that, while indicative
-of independent descent, the size and shape of the head are not closely
-related to brain power. Aristotle was a Mediterranean if we may trust
-the authenticity of his busts and had a small, long skull, while
-Humboldt’s large and characteristically Nordic skull was equally
-dolichocephalic. Socrates and Diogenes were apparently quite un-Greek
-and represent remnants of some early race, perhaps of Paleolithic man.
-The history of their lives indicates that each was recognized by his
-fellow countrymen as in some degree alien, just as the Jews apparently
-regarded Christ as, in some indefinite way, non-Jewish.
-
-Mental, spiritual and moral traits are closely associated with the
-physical distinctions among the different European races, although like
-somatological characters, these spiritual attributes have in many cases
-gone astray. Enough remain, however, to show that certain races have
-special aptitudes for certain pursuits.
-
-The Alpine race is always and everywhere a race of peasants, an
-agricultural and never a maritime race. In fact they only extend to salt
-water at the head of the Adriatic and, like all purely agricultural
-communities throughout Europe, tend toward democracy, although they are
-submissive to authority both political and religious being usually Roman
-Catholics in western Europe. This race is essentially of the soil and in
-towns the type is mediocre and bourgeois.
-
-The coastal and seafaring populations of northern Europe are everywhere
-Nordic as far as the shores of Spain and among Europeans this race is
-pre-eminently fitted for maritime pursuits. Enterprise at sea during the
-Middle Ages was in the hands of Mediterraneans just as it was originally
-developed by Cretans, Phœnicians and Carthaginians but after the
-Reformation the Nordics seized and occupied this field almost
-exclusively.
-
-The Nordics are, all over the world, a race of soldiers, sailors,
-adventurers and explorers, but above all, of rulers, organizers and
-aristocrats in sharp contrast to the essentially peasant and democratic
-character of the Alpines. The Nordic race is domineering,
-individualistic, self-reliant and jealous of their personal freedom both
-in political and religious systems and as a result they are usually
-Protestants. Chivalry and knighthood and their still surviving but
-greatly impaired counterparts are peculiarly Nordic traits, and
-feudalism, class distinctions and race pride among Europeans are
-traceable for the most part to the north.
-
-The social status of woman varies largely with race but here religion
-plays a part. In the Roman Republic and in ancient Germany women were
-held in high esteem. In the Nordic countries of to-day women’s rights
-have received much more recognition than among the southern nations with
-their traditions of Latin culture. To this general statement modern
-Germany is a marked exception. The contrast is great between the mental
-attitude toward woman of the ancient Teutons and that of the modern
-Germans.
-
-The pure Nordic peoples are characterized by a greater stability and
-steadiness than are mixed peoples such as the Irish, the ancient Gauls
-and the Athenians among all of whom the lack of these qualities was
-balanced by a correspondingly greater versatility.
-
-The mental characteristics of the Mediterranean race are well known and
-this race, while inferior in bodily stamina to both the Nordic and the
-Alpine, is probably the superior of both, certainly of the Alpines, in
-intellectual attainments. In the field of art its superiority to both
-the other European races is unquestioned, although in literature and in
-scientific research and discovery the Nordics far excel it.
-
-Before leaving this interesting subject of the correlation of spiritual
-and moral traits with physical characters we may note that these
-influences are so deeply rooted in everyday consciousness that the
-modern novelist or playwright does not fail to make his hero a tall,
-blond, honest and somewhat stupid youth and his villain a small, dark
-and exceptionally intelligent individual of warped moral character. So
-in Celtic legend as in the Græco-Roman and mediæval romances, prince and
-princess are always fair, a fact rather indicating that the mass of the
-people were brunet at the time when the legends were taking shape. In
-fact, “fair” is a synonym for beauty. Most ancient tapestries show a
-blond earl on horseback and a dark-haired churl holding the bridle.
-
-The gods of Olympus were almost all described as blond, and it would be
-difficult to imagine a Greek artist painting a brunet Venus. In church
-pictures all angels are blond, while the denizens of the lower regions
-revel in deep brunetness. “Non Angli sed angeli,” remarked Pope Gregory
-when he first saw Saxon children exposed for sale in the Roman
-slave-mart.
-
-In depicting the crucifixion no artist hesitates to make the two thieves
-brunet in contrast to the blond Saviour. This is something more than a
-convention, as such quasi-authentic traditions as we have of our Lord
-strongly suggest his Nordic, possibly Greek, physical and moral
-attributes.
-
-These and similar traditions clearly point to the relations of the one
-race to the other in classic, mediæval and modern times. How far they
-may be modified by democratic institutions and the rule of the majority
-remains to be seen.
-
-The wars of the past two thousand years in Europe have been almost
-exclusively wars between the various nations of this race or between
-rulers of Nordic blood.
-
-From a race point of view the present European conflict is essentially a
-civil war and nearly all the officers and a large proportion of the men
-on both sides are members of this race. It is the same old tragedy of
-mutual butchery and mutual destruction between Nordics, just as the
-Nordic nobility of Renaissance Italy seems to have been possessed with a
-blood mania to murder one another. It is the modern edition of the old
-Berserker blood rage and is class suicide on a gigantic scale.
-
-At the beginning of the war it was difficult to say on which side there
-was the preponderance of Nordic blood. Flanders and northern France are
-more Nordic than south Germany, while the backbone of the armies that
-England put into the field as well as of those of her colonies was
-almost purely Nordic and a large proportion of the Russian army was of
-the same race. As heretofore stated, with America in the war, the
-greater part of the Nordics of the world are fighting against Germany.
-
-Although the writer has limited carefully the use of the word “Teutonic”
-to that section of the Nordic race which originated in Scandinavia and
-which later spread over northern Europe, nevertheless this term is
-unfortunate because it is currently given a national and not a racial
-meaning and is used to denote the populations of the central empires.
-This popular use includes millions who are un-Teutonic and excludes
-millions of pure Teutonic blood who are outside of the political borders
-of Austria and Germany and who are bitterly hostile to the very name
-itself.
-
-The present inhabitants of the German Empire, to say nothing of Austria,
-are only to a limited extent descendants of the ancient Teutonic tribes,
-being very largely Alpines, especially in the east and south. To abandon
-to the Germans and Austrians the exclusive right to the name Teuton or
-Teutonic would be to acquiesce in one of their most grandiose
-pretensions.
-
-
-
-
- XII
- ARYA
-
-
-Having shown the existence in Europe of three distinct subspecies of man
-and a single predominant group of languages called the Aryan or
-synthetic group, it remains to inquire to which of the three races can
-be assigned the honor of inventing, elaborating and introducing this
-most highly developed form of human speech. Our investigations will show
-that the facts point indubitably to an original unity between the Nordic
-or rather the Proto-Nordic race and the Proto-Aryan language or the
-generalized, ancestral, Aryan mother tongue.
-
-Of the three claimants to the honor of being the original creator of the
-Aryan group of languages, we can at once dismiss the Mediterranean race.
-The members of this subspecies on the south shores of the Mediterranean,
-the Berbers and the Egyptians, and many peoples in western Asia speak
-now and have always spoken Anaryan tongues. We also know that the speech
-of the original Pelasgians was not Aryan, that in Crete remnants of
-Pre-Aryan speech persisted until about 500 B. C. and that the Hellenic
-language was introduced into Ægean countries from the north. In Italy
-the Etruscan in the north and the Messapian in the south were Anaryan
-languages and the ancestral form of Latin speech in the guise of Umbrian
-and Oscan came through the Alps from the countries beyond.
-
-In Spain a Celtic language was introduced from the north about 500 B. C.
-but with so little force behind it that it was unable to replace
-entirely the Anaryan Basque language of at least a portion of the
-aborigines.
-
-In Britain, Aryan speech was introduced about 800 B. C. and in France
-somewhat earlier. In central and northern Europe no certain trace of the
-Anaryan languages at one time spoken there persists, except among the
-Lapps and in the neighborhood of the Gulf of Finland, where Non-Aryan
-Finnic dialects are spoken to-day by the Finlanders and the Esthonians.
-
-We thus know the approximate dates of the introduction of Aryan speech
-into western and southern Europe and that it came in through the medium
-of the Nordic race.
-
-In Spain and in the adjoining parts of France nearly half a million
-people continue to speak an agglutinative language, called Basque or
-Euskarian. In skull shape these Basques correspond closely with the
-Aryan-speaking populations around them, being dolichocephalic in Spain
-and brachycephalic or pseudo-brachycephalic in France. In the case of
-both the long skulled and the round skulled Basques the lower part of
-the face is long and thin, with a peculiar and pointed chin and among
-the French Basques the skull is broadened in the temporal region. In
-other words, their faces show certain secondary racial characters which
-have been imposed by selection upon a people composed originally of two
-races of independent origin, but long isolated by the limitations of
-language.
-
-The Euskarian language is believed to have been related to the ancient
-Iberian but has affinities which point to Asia as its place of origin
-and make possible the hypothesis that it may have been derived from the
-ancient language of the Proto-Alpines in the west.
-
-The problem of the extinct Ligurian language must be considered in this
-connection. It seems to have been Anaryan, but we do not know whether it
-was the speech originally of Alpines or of Mediterraneans either of whom
-could be reasonably considered as a claimant.
-
-Other than the Basque language there are in western Europe but few
-remains of Pre-Aryan speech, and these are found chiefly in place names
-and in a few obscure words.
-
-Remnants of Anaryan speech exist here and there throughout European
-Russia, but many of them can be traced to historic invasions. Until we
-reach the main body of Ural-Altaic speech in the east of Russia, the
-Esthonians, with kindred tribes of Livonians and Tchouds, and the Finns
-are the only peoples who speak Non-Aryan tongues, but the physical type
-with the exception of the skull shape of all these tribes is distinctly
-Nordic. In this connection the Lapps and related groups in the far north
-can be disregarded.
-
-The problem of the Finns is a difficult one. The coast of Finland, of
-course, is purely Swedish, but the great bulk of the population in the
-interior is brachycephalic, though otherwise thoroughly Nordic in type.
-
-The Anaryan Finnish, Esthonian and Livonian languages were probably
-introduced at the same time as were round skulls into Finland. The
-shores of the Gulf of Finland were originally inhabited by Nordics and
-the intrusion of round skulled Finns probably came soon after the
-Christian era. This immigration and that of the Livonians and Esthonians
-may possibly have been part of the same movement which brought the
-Alpine Wends into eastern Germany. The earliest references to the Finns
-that we have locate them in central Russia.
-
-The most important Anaryan language in Europe is the Magyar of Hungary,
-but this we know was introduced from the eastward at the end of the
-ninth century, as was the earlier but now extinct Avar.
-
-In the Balkans the language of the Turks has never been a vernacular as
-it is in Asia Minor. In Europe it was spoken only by the soldiers and
-the civil administrators and by very sparse colonies of Turkish
-settlers. The mania of the Turks for white women, which is said to have
-been one of the motives that led to the conquest of the Byzantine
-Empire, has unconsciously resulted in the obliteration of the Mongoloid
-type of the original Asiatic invaders. Persistent crossing with
-Circassian and Georgian women, as well as with slaves of every race in
-Asia Minor and in Europe with whom they came in contact, has made the
-European Turk of to-day indistinguishable in physical characters from
-his Christian neighbors. At the same time, polygamy has greatly
-strengthened the hold of the dominant Turk. In fact, among the upper
-classes of the higher races monogamy and the resultant limitation in
-number of offspring has been a source of weakness from the viewpoint of
-race expansion. The Turks of Seljukian and Osmanli origin were never
-numerous and the Sultan’s armies were largely composed of Islamized
-Anatolians and Europeans.
-
-In Persia and India, also, the Aryan languages were introduced from the
-north at known periods, so in view of all these facts the Mediterranean
-race cannot claim the honor of either the invention or dissemination of
-the synthetic languages.
-
-The chief claim of the Alpine race of central Europe and western Asia to
-the invention and introduction into Europe of the Proto-Aryan form of
-speech rests on the fact that nearly all the members of this race in
-Europe speak well developed Aryan languages, chiefly in some form of
-Slavic. This fact taken by itself may have no more significance than the
-fact that the Mediterranean race in Spain, Italy and France speaks
-Romance languages, but it is, nevertheless, an argument of some weight.
-
-Outside of Europe the Armenians and other Armenoid brachycephalic
-peoples of Asia Minor and the Iranian Highlands, all of Alpine race,
-together with a few isolated tribes of the Caucasus, speak Aryan
-languages and these peoples lie on the highroad along which knowledge of
-the metals and other cultural developments entered Europe.
-
-If the Aryan language were invented and developed by these Armenoid
-Alpines we should be obliged to assume that they introduced it along
-with bronze culture into Europe about 3000 B. C. and taught the Nordics
-both their language and their metal culture. There are, however, in
-western Asia many Alpine peoples who do not speak Aryan languages and
-yet are Alpine in type, such as the Turcomans and in Asia Minor the
-so-called Turks are also largely Islamized Alpines of the Armenoid
-subspecies who speak Turki. There is no trace of Aryan speech south of
-the Caucasus until after 1700 B. C. and the Hittite language spoken
-before that date in central and eastern Asia Minor, although not yet
-clearly deciphered, was Anaryan to the best of our present knowledge.
-The Hittites themselves were probably ancestral to the living Armenians.
-
-We are sufficiently acquainted with the languages of the ancient
-Mesopotamian countries to know that the speech of Accad and Sumer, of
-Susa and Media was agglutinative and that the languages of Assyria and
-of Palestine were Semitic. The speech of the Kassites was Anaryan, but
-they seem to have been in contact with the horse-using Nordics and some
-of their leaders bore Aryan names. The language of the shortlived empire
-of the Mitanni in the foothills south of Armenia is the only one about
-the character of which there can be serious doubt. There is, therefore,
-much negative evidence against the existence of Aryan speech in that
-part of the world earlier than its known introduction by Nordics.
-
-If, then, the last great expansion into Europe of the Alpine race
-brought from Asia the Aryan mother tongue, as well as the knowledge of
-metals, we must assume that all the members of the Nordic race thereupon
-adopted synthetic speech from the Alpines.
-
-We know that these Alpines reached Britain about 1800 B. C. and probably
-they had previously occupied much of Gaul, so that if they are to be
-credited with the introduction of the synthetic languages into western
-Europe, it is difficult to understand why we have no known trace of any
-form of Aryan speech in central Europe or west of the Rhine prior to
-1000 B. C. while we have some, though scanty, evidence of Non-Aryan
-languages.
-
-It may be said in favor of this claim of the Alpine race to be the
-original inventor of synthetic speech, that language is ever a measure
-of culture and the higher forms of civilization are greatly hampered by
-the limitations of speech imposed by the less highly evolved languages,
-namely, the monosyllabic and the agglutinative, which include nearly all
-the Non-Aryan languages of the world. It does not seem probable that
-barbarians, however fine in physical type and however well endowed with
-the potentiality of intellectual and moral development, dwelling as
-hunters in the bleak and barren north along the edge of the retreating
-glaciers and as nomad shepherds in the Russian grasslands, could have
-evolved a more complicated and higher form of articulate speech than the
-inhabitants of southwestern Asia, who many thousand years earlier were
-highly civilized and are known to have invented the arts of agriculture,
-metal working and domestication of animals, as well as of writing and
-pottery. Nevertheless, such seems to be the fact.
-
-To summarize, it appears that a study of the Mediterranean race shows
-that so far from being purely European, it is equally African and
-Asiatic and that in the narrow coastal fringe of southern Persia, in
-India and even farther east the last strains of this race gradually fade
-into the Negroids through prolonged cross breeding. A similar inquiry
-into the origin and distribution of the Alpine subspecies shows clearly
-the fundamentally Asiatic origin of the type and that on its easternmost
-borders in central Asia it marches with the round skulled Mongols, and
-that neither the one nor the other was the inventor of Aryan speech.
-
-
-
-
- XIII
- ORIGIN OF THE ARYAN LANGUAGES
-
-
-By the process of elimination set forth in the preceding chapter we are
-competed to acknowledge that the strongest claimant for the honor of
-being the race of the original Aryans, is the tall, blond Nordic. An
-analysis of the various languages of the Aryan group reveals an extreme
-diversity which can be best explained by the hypothesis that the
-existing languages are now spoken by people upon whom Aryan speech has
-been forced from without. This theory corresponds exactly with the known
-historic fact that the Aryan languages, during the last three or four
-thousand years at least have, again and again, been imposed by Nordics
-upon populations of Alpine and Mediterranean blood.
-
-Within the present distributional area of the Nordic race on the Gulf of
-Riga and in the very middle of a typical area of isolation, are the most
-generalized members of the Aryan group, namely Lettish and Lithuanian,
-both almost Proto-Aryan in character. Close at hand existed the closely
-related Old Prussian or Borussian, very recently extinct. These archaic
-languages are relatively close to Sanskrit and exist in actual contact
-with the Anaryan speech of the Esthonians and Finns.
-
-The Anaryan languages in eastern Russia are Ugrian, a form of speech
-which extends far into Asia and which appears to contain elements which
-unite it with synthetic speech and may be dimly transitory in character.
-In the opinion of many philologists, a primitive form of Ugrian might
-have given birth to the Proto-Aryan ancestor of existing synthetic
-languages.
-
-This hypothesis, if sustained by further study, will provide additional
-evidence that the site of the development of the Aryan languages and of
-the Nordic subspecies was in eastern Europe, in a region which is close
-to the meeting place between the most archaic synthetic languages and
-the most nearly related Anaryan tongue, the agglutinative Ugrian.
-
-The Aryan tongue was introduced into Greece by the Achæans about 1400 B.
-C. and later, about 1100 B. C. by the true Hellenes, who brought in the
-classic dialects of Dorian, Ionian and Æolian.
-
-These Aryan languages superseded their Anaryan predecessor, the
-Pelasgian. From the language of these early invaders came the Illyrian,
-Thracian, Albanian, classic Greek and the debased modern Romaic, a
-descendant of the Ionian dialect.
-
-Aryan speech was introduced among the Anaryan-speaking Etruscans of the
-Italian Peninsula by the Umbrians and Oscans about 1100 B. C. and from
-the language of these conquerors was derived Latin which later spread to
-the uttermost confines of the Roman Empire. Its descendants to-day are
-the Romance tongues spoken within the ancient imperial boundaries,
-Portuguese on the west, Castilian, Catalan, Provençal, French, the
-Langue d’oïl of the Walloons, Romansch, Ladin, Friulian, Tuscan,
-Calabrian and Rumanian.
-
-The problem of the existence of a language clearly descended from Latin,
-the Rumanian, in the eastern Carpathians cut off by Slavic and Magyar
-tongues from the nearest Romance tongues presents difficulties. The
-Rumanians themselves make two claims; the first, which can be safely
-disregarded, is an unbroken linguistic descent from a group of Aryan
-languages which occupied this whole section of Europe, from which Latin
-was derived and of which Albanian is also a remnant.
-
-The more serious claim, however, made by the Rumanians is to linguistic
-and racial descent from the military colonists planted by the Emperor
-Trajan in the great Dacian plain north of the Danube. This may be
-possible, so far as the language is concerned, but there are some
-weighty objections to it.
-
-We have little evidence for, and much against, the existence of Rumanian
-speech north of the Danube for nearly a thousand years after Rome
-abandoned this outlying region. Dacia was one of the last provinces to
-be occupied by Rome and was the first from which the legions were
-withdrawn upon the decline of the Empire. The northern Carpathians,
-furthermore, where the Rumanians claim to have taken refuge during the
-barbarian invasions formed part of the Slavic homeland and it was in
-these same mountains and in the Ruthenian districts of eastern Galicia
-that the Slavic languages were developed, probably by the Sarmatians and
-Venethi, from whence they spread in all directions in the centuries that
-immediately followed the fall of Rome. So it is almost impossible to
-credit the survival of a frontier community of Romanized natives
-situated not only in the path of the great invasions of Europe from the
-east, but also in the very spot where Slavic tongues were at the time
-evolving.
-
-Rumanian speech occupies large areas outside of the present kingdom of
-Rumania, in Russian Bessarabia, Austrian Bukowina and above all in
-Hungarian Transylvania.
-
-The linguistic problem is further complicated by the existence in the
-Pindus Mountains of Thessaly of another large community of Vlachs of
-Rumanian speech. How this later community could have survived from Roman
-times until to-day, untouched either by the Greek language of the
-Byzantine Empire or by the Turkish conquest is another difficult
-problem.
-
-The evidence, on the whole, points to the descent of the Vlachs from the
-early inhabitants of Thrace, who adopted Latin speech in the first
-centuries of the Christian era and clung to it during the domination of
-the Bulgarians from the seventh century onward in the lands south of the
-Danube. In the thirteenth century the mass of these Vlachs, leaving
-scattered remnants behind them, crossed the Danube and founded Little
-and Great Wallachia. From there they spread into Transylvania and a
-century later into Moldavia.
-
-The solution of this problem receives no assistance from anthropology,
-as these Rumanian-speaking populations both on the Danube and in the
-Pindus Mountains in no way differ physically from their neighbors on all
-sides. But through whatever channel they acquired their Latin speech the
-Rumanians of to-day can lay no valid claim to blood descent even in a
-remote degree from the true Romans.
-
-The first Aryan languages known in western Europe were the Celtic group
-which first appears west of the Rhine about 1000 B. C.
-
-Only a few dim traces of Pre-Aryan speech have been found in the British
-Isles, and these largely in place names. The Pre-Aryan language of the
-Pre-Nordic population of Britain may have survived down to historic
-times as Pictish.
-
-In Britain, Celtic speech was introduced in two successive waves, first
-by the Goidels or “Q” Celts, who apparently appeared about 800 B. C. and
-this form exists to this day as Erse in western Ireland, as Manx of the
-Isle of Man and as Gaelic in the Scottish Highlands.
-
-The Goidels were still in a state of bronze culture. When they reached
-Britain they must have found there a population preponderantly of
-Mediterranean type with numerous remains of still earlier races of
-Paleolithic times and also some round skulled Alpines of the Round
-Barrows, who have since largely faded from the living population. When
-the next invasion, the Cymric or Brythonic, occurred the Goidels had
-been absorbed very largely by the underlying Mediterranean aborigines
-who had meanwhile accepted the Goidelic form of Celtic speech, just as
-on the continent the Gauls had mixed with Alpine and Mediterranean
-natives and had imposed upon the conquered their own tongue. In fact, in
-Britain, Gaul and Spain the Goidels and Gauls were chiefly a ruling,
-military class, while the great bulk of the population remained
-unchanged although Aryanized in speech.
-
-These Brythonic or Cymric tribes or “P” Celts followed the “Q” Celts
-four or five hundred years later, and drove the Goidels westward through
-Germany, Gaul and Britain and this movement of population was still
-going on when Cæsar crossed the Channel. The Brythonic group gave rise
-to the modern Cornish, extinct within a century, the Cymric of Wales and
-the Armorican of Brittany.
-
-In central Europe we find traces of these same two forms of Celtic
-speech with the Goidelic everywhere the older and the Cymric the more
-recent arrival. The cleavage between the dialects of the “Q” Celts and
-the “P” Celts was probably less marked two thousand years ago than at
-present, since in their modern form they are both Neo-Celtic languages.
-What vestiges of Celtic languages remain in France belong to Brythonic.
-Celtic was not generally spoken in Aquitaine in Cæsar’s time.
-
-When the two Celtic-speaking races came into conflict in Britain their
-original relationship had been greatly obscured by the crossing of the
-Goidels with the underlying dark Mediterranean race of Neolithic culture
-and by the mixture of the Belgæ with Teutonic tribes. The result was
-that the Brythons did not distinguish between the blond Goidels and the
-brunet but Celticized Mediterraneans as they all spoke Goidelic
-dialects.
-
-In the same way when the Saxons and the Angles entered Britain they
-found there a population speaking Celtic of some form, either Goidelic
-or Cymric and promptly called them all Welsh (foreigners). These Welsh
-were preponderantly of Mediterranean type with some mixture of a blond
-Goidel strain and a much stronger blond strain of Cymric origin and
-these same elements exist to-day in England. The Mediterranean race is
-easily distinguished, but the physical types derived from Goidel and
-Brython alike are merged and lost in the later floods of pure Nordic
-blood, Angle, Saxon, Dane, Norse and Norman. In this primitive, dark
-population with successive layers of blond Nordics imposed upon it, each
-one more purely Nordic and in the relative absence of round heads lie
-the secret and the solution of the anthropology of the British Isles.
-This Iberian substratum was able to absorb to a large extent the earlier
-Celtic-speaking invaders, both Goidels and Brythons, but it is only just
-beginning to seriously threaten the later Nordics and to reassert its
-ancient brunet characters after three thousand years of submergence.
-
-In northwest Scotland there is a Gaelic-speaking area where the place
-names are all Scandinavian and the physical types purely Nordic. This is
-the only spot in the British Isles where Celtic speech has reconquered a
-district from the Teutonic languages and it was the site of one of the
-conquests of the Norse Vikings, probably in the early centuries of the
-Christian era. In Caithness in north Scotland, as well as in some
-isolated spots on the Irish coasts, the language of these same Norse
-pirates persisted within a century. In the fifth century of our era and
-after the break-up of Roman domination in Britain there was much racial
-unrest and a back wave of Goidels crossed from Ireland and either
-reintroduced or reinforced the Gaelic speech in the highlands. Later,
-Goidelic speech was gradually driven northward and westward by the
-intrusive English of the lowlands and was ultimately forced over this
-originally Norse-speaking area. We have elsewhere in Europe evidence of
-similar shiftings of speech without any corresponding change in the
-blood of the population.
-
-Except in the British Isles and in Brittany Celtic languages have left
-no modern descendants, but have everywhere been replaced by languages of
-Neo-Latin or of Teutonic origin. Outside of Brittany one of the last, if
-not quite the last, reference to Celtic speech in Gaul is the historic
-statement that “Celtic” tribes, as well as “Armoricans,” took part at
-Châlons in the great victory in 451 A. D. over Attila the Hun and his
-confederacy of subject nations.
-
-On the continent the only existing populations of Celtic speech are the
-primitive inhabitants of central Brittany, a population noted for their
-religious fanaticism and for other characteristics of a backward people.
-This Celtic speech is claimed to have been introduced about 450–500 A.
-D. by Britons fleeing from the Saxons. These refugees, if there were any
-substantial number of them, must have been dolichocephs of either
-Mediterranean or Nordic race or both. We are asked by this tradition to
-believe that their long skull was lost, but that their language was
-adopted by the round skulled Alpine population of Armorica. It is much
-more probable that the Cymric-speaking Alpines of Brittany have merely
-retained in this isolated corner of France a form of Celtic speech which
-was prevalent throughout northern Gaul and Britain before these
-provinces were conquered by Rome and Latinized and which, perhaps, was
-reinforced later by British Cymry. Cæsar remarked that there was little
-difference between the speech of the Belgæ in northern Gaul and in
-Britain. In both cases the speech was Cymric.
-
-Long after the conquest of Gaul by the Goths and Franks Teutonic speech
-remained predominant among the ruling classes and, by the time it
-succumbed to the Latin tongue of the Romanized natives, the old Celtic
-languages had been entirely forgotten outside of Brittany.
-
-An example of similar changes of language is to be found in Normandy
-where the country was inhabited by the Nordic Belgæ speaking a Cymric
-language before that tongue was replaced by Latin. This coast was
-ravaged about 300 or 400 A. D. by Saxons who formed settlements along
-both sides of the Channel and the coasts of Brittany which were later
-known as the Litus Saxonicum. Their progress can best be traced by place
-names as our historic record of these raids is scanty.
-
-The Normans landed in Normandy in the year 911 A. D. They were heathen,
-Danish barbarians, speaking a Teutonic tongue. The religion, culture and
-language of the old Romanized populations worked a miracle in the
-transformation of everything except blood in one short century. So quick
-was the change that 155 years later the descendants of the same Normans
-landed in England as Christian Frenchmen armed with all the culture of
-their period. The change was startling, but the Norman blood remained
-unchanged and entered England as a substantially Nordic type.
-
-
-
-
- XIV
- THE ARYAN LANGUAGE IN ASIA
-
-
-In the Ægean region and south of the Caucasus Nordics appear after 1700
-B. C. but there were unquestionably invasions and raids from the north
-for many centuries previous to our first records. These early migrations
-were probably not in sufficient force to modify the blood of the
-autochthonous races or to substitute Aryan languages for the ancient
-Mediterranean and Asiatic tongues.
-
-These men of the North came from the grasslands of Russia in successive
-waves and among the first of whom we have fairly clear knowledge were
-the Achæans and Phrygians. Aryan names are mentioned in the dim
-chronicles of the Mesopotamian empires about 1700 B. C. among the
-Kassites and later, Mitanni. Aryan names of prisoners captured beyond
-the mountains in the north and of Aryan deities before whom oaths were
-taken are recorded about 1400 B. C. but one of the first definite
-accounts of Nordics south of the Caucasus describes the presence of
-Nordic Persians at Lake Urmia about 900 B. C. There were many incursions
-from that time on, the Cimmerians raiding across the Caucasus as early
-as 650 B. C. and shortly afterward overrunning all Asia Minor.
-
-The easterly extension of the Russian steppes or Kiptchak north of the
-Caspian-Aral Sea in Turkestan as far as the foothills of the Pamirs was
-occupied by the Sacæ or Massagetæ, who were also Nordics and akin to the
-Cimmerians and Persians, as were, perhaps, the Ephtalites or White Huns
-in Sogdiana north of Persia, destroyed by the Turks in the sixth
-century.
-
-For several centuries groups of Nordics drifted as nomad shepherds
-across the Caucasus into the empire of the Medes, introducing little by
-little the Aryan tongue which later developed into Old Persian. By 550
-B. C. these Persians had become sufficiently numerous to overthrow their
-rulers and under the leadership of the great Cyrus they organized the
-Persian Empire, one of the most enduring of Oriental states. The base of
-the population of the Persian Empire rested on the round skulled Medes
-who belonged to the Armenoid subdivision of the Alpines. Under the
-leadership of their priestly caste of Magi these Medes rebelled again
-and again against their Nordic masters before the two peoples became
-fused.
-
-From 525 to 485 B. C. during the reign of Darius, whose sculptured
-portraits show a man of pure Nordic type, the tall, blond Persians had
-become almost exclusively a class of great ruling nobles and had
-forgotten the simplicity of their shepherd ancestors. Their language
-belonged to the Eastern or Iranian division of Aryan speech and was
-known as Old Persian, which continued to be spoken until the fourth
-century before the Christian era. From it were derived Pehlevi, or
-Parthian as well as modern Persian. The great book of the old Persians,
-the Avesta, which was written in Zendic, also an Iranian language, does
-not go back to the reign of Darius and was remodelled after the
-Christian era, but the Old Persian of Darius was closely related to the
-Zendic of Bactria and to the Sanskrit of Hindustan. From Zendic, also
-called Medic, are derived Ghalcha, Balochi, Kurdish and other dialects.
-
-The rise to imperial power of the dolichocephalic Aryan-speaking
-Persians was largely due to the genius of their leaders but the
-Aryanization of western Asia by them is one of the most amazing events
-in history. The whole region became completely transformed so far as the
-acceptance by the conquered of the language and religion of the Persians
-was concerned, but the blood of the Nordic race quickly became diluted
-and a few centuries later disappears from history.
-
-During the great wars with Greece the pure Persian blood was still
-unimpaired and in control. In the literature of the time there is little
-evidence of race antagonism between the Greek and the Persian leaders
-although their rival cultures were sharply contrasted. In the time of
-Alexander the Great the pure Persian blood was obviously confined to the
-nobles and it was the policy of Alexander to Hellenize the Persians and
-to amalgamate his Greeks with them. The amount of pure Macedonian blood
-was not sufficient to reinforce the Nordic strain of the Persians and
-the net result was the entire loss of the Greek stock.
-
-It is a question whether the Armenians of Asia Minor derived their Aryan
-speech from this invasion of the Nordic Persians, or whether they
-received it at an earlier date from the Phrygians and from the west.
-These Phrygians entered Asia Minor by way of the Dardanelles and broke
-up the Hittite Empire. Their language was Aryan and probably was related
-to Thracian. In favor of the theory of the introduction of the Armenian
-language by the Phrygians from the west, rather than by the Persians
-from the east, is the highly significant fact that the basic structure
-of that tongue shows its relationship to be with the western or Centum
-rather than with the eastern or Satem group of Aryan languages and this,
-too, in spite of a very large Persian vocabulary.
-
-The Armenians themselves, like all the other natives of the plateaux and
-highlands as far east as the Hindu Kush Mountains, while of Aryan
-speech, are of the Armenoid subdivision, in sharp contrast to the
-predominant types south of the mountains in Persia, Afghanistan and
-Hindustan, all of which are dolichocephalic and of Mediterranean
-affinity but generally betraying traces of admixture with still more
-ancient races of Negroid origin, especially in India.
-
-We now come to the last and easternmost extension of Aryan languages in
-Asia. As mentioned above, the grasslands and steppes of Russia extend
-north of the Caucasus Mountains and the Caspian Sea to ancient Bactria,
-now Turkestan. This whole country was occupied by the Nordic Sacæ and
-the closely related Massagetæ. These Sacæ may be identical with the
-later Scythians.
-
-Soon after the opening of the second millennium B. C. and perhaps even
-earlier, the first Nordics crossed over the Afghan passes, entered the
-plains of India and organized a state in the Punjab, “the land of the
-five rivers,” bringing with them Aryan speech to a population probably
-of Mediterranean type and represented to-day by the Dravidians. The
-Nordic Sacæ arrived later in India and introduced the Vedas, religious
-poems, which were at first transmitted orally but which were reduced to
-written form in Old Sanskrit by the Brahmans at the comparatively late
-date of 300 A. D. From this classic Sanskrit are derived all the modern
-Aryan languages of Hindustan, as well as the Singalese of Ceylon and the
-chief dialects of Assam.
-
-There is great diversity among scholars as to the date of the first
-entry of these Aryan-speaking tribes into the Punjab but the consensus
-of opinion seems to indicate a period between 1600 and 1700 B. C. or
-even somewhat earlier. However, the very close affinity of Sanskrit to
-the Old Persian of Darius and to the Zendavesta would strongly indicate
-that the final introduction of Aryan languages in the form of Sanskrit
-occurred at a much later time. The most recent tendency is to bring
-these dates somewhat forward.
-
-If close relationship between languages indicates correlation in time
-then the entry of the Sacæ into India would appear to have been nearly
-simultaneous with the crossing of the Caucasus by the Nordic Cimmerians
-and their Persian successors.
-
-The relationship between the Zendavesta and the Sanskrit Vedas is as
-near as that between High and Low German and consequently such close
-affinity prevents our thrusting back the date of the separation of the
-Persians and the Sacæ more than a few centuries.
-
-A simultaneous migration of nomad shepherds on both sides of the
-Caspian-Aral Sea would naturally occur in a general movement southward
-and such migrations may have taken place several times. In all
-probability these Nordic invasions occurred one after another for a
-thousand years or more, the later ones obscuring and blurring the memory
-of their predecessors.
-
-When shepherd tribes leave their grasslands and attack their
-agricultural neighbors, the reason is nearly always a famine due to
-prolonged drought and causes such as these have again and again in
-history put the nomad tribes in motion over large areas. During many
-centuries fresh tribes composed of Nordics or under the leadership of
-Nordics but all Aryan-speaking, poured over the Afghan passes from the
-northwest and pushed before them the earlier arrivals. Clear traces of
-these successive floods of conquerors are to be found in the Vedas
-themselves.
-
-The Zendic form of the Iranian group of Aryan languages was spoken by
-those Sacæ who remained in old Bactria and from it is derived a whole
-group of closely related dialects still used in the Pamirs of which
-Ghalcha is the best known.
-
-The Sacæ and Massagetæ were, like the Persians, tall, blond dolichocephs
-and they have left behind them dim traces of their blood among the
-living Mongolized nomads of Turkestan, the Kirghizes. Ancient Bactria
-maintained its Nordic and Aryan aspect long after Alexander’s time and
-did not become Mongolized and receive the sinister name of Turkestan
-until the seventh century, when it was the first victim of the series of
-ferocious invasions from the north and east, which under various Mongol
-leaders destroyed civilization in Asia and threatened its existence in
-Europe. These conquests culminated in 1241 A. D. at Wahlstatt in Silesia
-where the Germans, though themselves badly defeated, put a final limit
-to this westward rush of Asiatics.
-
-The Sacæ were the most easterly members of the Nordic race of whom we
-have definite record. The Chinese knew well these “green eyed devils,”
-whom they called by their Tatar name, the “Wu-suns,”—the tall ones—and
-with whom they came into contact about 200 B. C. in what is now Chinese
-Turkestan. Other Nordic tribes are recorded in this region. Evidence is
-accumulating that central Asia had a large Nordic population in the
-centuries preceding the Christian era. The discovery of the Aryan
-Tokharian language in Chinese Turkestan considered in connection with
-other facts indicates intensive occupation by Nordics of territories in
-central Asia now wholly Mongol, just as in Europe dark-haired Alpines
-occupy large territories where in Roman times fair-haired Nordics were
-preponderant. In short we find both in Europe and in western and central
-Asia the same record of Nordic decline during the last two thousand
-years and their replacement by races of inferior value and civilization.
-
-This Tokharian is undoubtedly a pure Aryan language related, curiously
-enough, to the western group rather than to the Indo-Iranian. It has
-been deciphered from inscriptions recently found in northeast Turkestan
-and was a living language prior to the ninth century A. D.
-
-Of all the wonderful conquests of the Sacæ there remain as evidence of
-their invasions only these Indian and Afghan languages. Dim traces of
-their blood have been found in the Pamirs and in Afghanistan, but in the
-south their blond traits have vanished, even from the Punjab. It may be
-that the stature of some of the Afghan hill tribes and of the Sikhs and
-some of the facial characters of the latter are derived from this
-source, but all blondness of skin, hair or eye of the original Sacæ has
-utterly vanished.
-
-The long skulls all through India are to be attributed to the
-Mediterranean race rather than to this Nordic invasion, while the
-Pre-Dravidians and Negroids of south India, with which the former are
-largely mixed, are also dolichocephs.
-
-In short, the introduction in Iran and India of Aryan languages,
-Iranian, Ghalchic and Sanskrit, represents a linguistic and not an
-ethnic conquest.
-
-
-In concluding this revision of the racial foundations upon which the
-history of Europe has been based it is scarcely necessary to point out
-that the actual results of the spectacular conquests and invasions of
-history have been far less permanent than those of the more insidious
-victories arising from the crossing of two diverse races and that in
-such mixtures the relative prepotency of the various human subspecies in
-Europe appears to be in inverse ratio to their social value.
-
-The continuity of physical traits and the limitation of the effects of
-environment to the individual only are now so thoroughly recognized by
-scientists that it is at most a question of time when the social
-consequences which result from such crossings will be generally
-understood by the public at large. As soon as the true bearing and
-import of the facts are appreciated by lawmakers a complete change in
-our political structure will inevitably occur and our present reliance
-on the influence of education will be superseded by a readjustment based
-on racial values.
-
-Bearing in mind the extreme antiquity of physical and spiritual
-characters and the persistency with which they outlive those elements of
-environment termed language, nationality and forms of government, we
-must consider the relation of these facts to the development of the race
-in America. We may be certain that the progress of evolution is in full
-operation to-day under those laws of nature which control it and that
-the only sure guide to the future lies in the study of the operation of
-these laws in the past.
-
-We Americans must realize that the altruistic ideals which have
-controlled our social development during the past century and the
-maudlin sentimentalism that has made America “an asylum for the
-oppressed,” are sweeping the nation toward a racial abyss. If the
-Melting Pot is allowed to boil without control and we continue to follow
-our national motto and deliberately blind ourselves to all “distinctions
-of race, creed or color,” the type of native American of Colonial
-descent will become as extinct as the Athenian of the age of Pericles,
-and the Viking of the days of Rollo.
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX
-
-
-The maps shown facing pages 266, 268, 270, and 272 of this book attempt
-in broad and somewhat hypothetical lines to represent by means of color
-diagrams the original distribution and the subsequent expansion and
-migration of the three main European races, the Mediterranean, the
-Alpine and the Nordic, as outlined in this book.
-
-
- THE MAXIMUM EXPANSION OF THE ALPINES WITH BRONZE CULTURE, 3000–1800 B.
- C.
-
-The first map (Pl. I) shows the distribution of these races at the close
-of the Neolithic, as well as their later expansion. It also indicates
-the sites of earlier cultures. The distribution of megaliths in Asia
-Minor on the north coast of Africa and up the Atlantic seaboard through
-Spain, France and Britain to Scandinavia is set forth. These great stone
-monuments were seemingly the work of the Mediterranean race using,
-however, a culture of bronze acquired from the Alpines. The map also
-shows the sites throughout Russia of the kurgans, or ancient artificial
-mounds, distribution of which seems to correspond closely with the
-original habitat of the Nordics.
-
-In southwestern France there is indicated the area where the Cro-Magnon
-race persisted longest and where traces of it are still to be found. The
-site is shown of the type station of the latest phase of the Paleolithic
-known as the Mas d’Azil—a great cavern in the eastern Pyrenees from
-which that period took its name of Azilian.
-
-At the entrance of the Baltic Sea is also shown the type station of the
-Maglemose culture which flourished at the close of the Paleolithic and
-was probably the work of early Nordics.
-
-In the centre of the district occupied by the Alpines is located
-Robenhausen, the most characteristic of the Neolithic lake dwelling
-stations and also the Terramara stations in which a culture transitional
-between the Neolithic and the bronze existed. In the Tyrol the site is
-indicated of the village of Hallstatt, which gave its name to the first
-iron culture.
-
-The site of La Tène at the north end of Lake Neuchâtel in Switzerland is
-also shown. From this village the La Tène Iron Age takes its name.
-
-The difficulty of depicting the shifting of races during twelve
-centuries is not easily overcome, but the map attempts to show that at
-the close of the Neolithic all the coast lands of the Mediterranean and
-of the Atlantic seaboard up to Germany and including the British Isles
-were populated by the Mediterranean race, in addition, of course, to
-remnants of earlier Neanderthals and Cro-Magnons, who probably, at that
-date, still formed an appreciable portion of the population.
-
-The yellow arrows indicate the route of the migrations of Mediterranean
-man, who appears to have entered Europe from the east along the African
-littoral. But the main invasions passed up through Spain and Gaul into
-the British Isles, where from that time to this they have formed the
-substratum of the population. In the central portion of their range
-these Mediterraneans were swamped by the Alpines, as shown by the
-spreading green, while in northern Gaul and Britain the Mediterraneans
-were submerged afterward by Nordics, as appears on the later maps.
-
-The arrows and routes of migration shown on the yellow area of this map
-indicate changes which occurred during the Neolithic and perhaps
-earlier, but the pink and red arrows in the northern and southeastern
-portions represent migrations which were in full swing and in fact were
-steadily increasing during the entire period involved. The next map
-shows these Nordics bursting out of their original homeland in every
-direction and in their turn conquering Europe.
-
-[Illustration: MAXIMUM EXPANSION of ALPINES with BRONZE
-CULTURE—3000–1800 B.C. (generalized scheme) by Madison Grant]
-
-Between these two races, the Mediterranean and the Nordic, there entered
-a great intrusion of Alpines, flowing from the highlands of western Asia
-through Asia Minor and up the valley of the Danube throughout central
-Europe and thence expanding in every direction. Forerunners of these
-same Alpines were found in western Europe as far back as the closing
-Azilian phase of the Paleolithic, where they are known as the
-Furfooz-Grenelle race and are thus contemporary in western Europe with
-the earliest Mediterraneans.
-
-During all the Neolithic the Alpines occupied the mountainous core of
-Europe, but their great and final expansion occurred at the close of the
-Neolithic and the beginning of the Bronze Period, when a new and
-extensive Alpine invasion from the region of the Armenian highlands
-brought in the Bronze culture. This last migration apparently followed
-the routes of the earlier invasions and, in the extreme southwest, it
-even reached Spain in small numbers, where its remnants can still be
-found in the Cantabrian Alps. The Alpines occupied all Savoy and central
-France, where from that day to this they constitute the bulk of the
-peasant population. They reached Brittany and to-day that peninsula is
-their westernmost outpost. They crossed over in small numbers to Britain
-and some even reached Ireland. In England they were the men of the Round
-Barrows, but nearly all trace of this invasion has vanished from the
-living population.
-
-The Alpines also reached Holland, Denmark and southwestern Norway and
-traces of their colonization in these countries are still found.
-
-The author has attempted to indicate the lines of this Alpine expansion
-by means of the solid green spreading over central Europe and Asia
-Minor, with outlying dots showing the outer limits of the invasion.
-Black arrows proceeding from the east denote its main lines and routes.
-Those Alpines who crossed the Caucasus passed through southern Russia
-and a side wave of the same migration passed down the Syrian coast to
-Egypt and along the north coast of Africa, entering Italy by way of
-Sicily. The last African invasion left behind it the Giza round skulls
-of Egypt. This final Alpine expansion taught the other races of Europe,
-both Mediterranean and Nordic, the art of metallurgy.
-
-The Nordics apparently originated in southern Russia, but long before
-the Bronze Period they had spread northward across the Baltic into
-Scandinavia, where they specialized into the race now known as the
-Scandinavian or Teutonic. On the map the continental Nordics are
-indicated by pink and the Nordics of Scandinavia are shown in red. At
-the very end of the period covered by this map, these Scandinavian
-Nordics were beginning to return to the continent. The routes of these
-migrations and their extent are indicated by red arrows and circles
-respectively.
-
-To sum up, this map shows the expansion from central Asia of the round
-skull Alpines across central Europe, submerging, in the south and west,
-the little, dark, long skulled Mediterraneans of Neolithic culture,
-while at the same time they pressed heavily upon the Nordics in the
-north and introduced Bronze culture among them.
-
-This development of the Alpines at the expense of the Mediterraneans had
-a permanent influence in western Europe, but in the north their impress
-was of a more temporary character. It is probable that in the first
-instance they were able to conquer the Nordics by reason of the
-superiority of bronze weapons to stone hatchets. But no sooner had they
-imparted the knowledge of the manufacture and use of metal weapons and
-tools to the Nordics than the latter turned on their conquerors and
-completely mastered them, as appears on the next map.
-
-
- THE EXPANSION OF THE PRE-TEUTONIC NORDICS, 1800–100 B. C.
-
-The second map (Pl. II) of the series shows the shattering and
-submergence of the green Alpine area by the pink Nordic area. It will be
-noted that in Italy, Spain, France and Britain the solid green and the
-green dots have steadily declined and in central Europe the green has
-been torn apart and riddled in every direction by pink arrows and pink
-dots, leaving solid green only in mountainous and infertile districts.
-This submergence of the Alpines by the Nordics was so complete that
-their very existence was forgotten until in our own day it was
-discovered that the central core of Europe was inhabited by a short,
-stocky, round skulled race originally from Asia. To-day these Alpines
-are gradually recovering their influence in the world by sheer weight of
-numbers. On this map the green Alpine area is shown to be everywhere
-shrinking except in the countries around the Carpathians and the Dnieper
-River, where the Sarmatians and Wends are located. It was in this
-district that the Slavic-speaking Alpines were developing.
-Simultaneously with this expansion toward the west, south and east of
-the continental Nordics, the Scandinavian or Teutonic tribes appear on
-the scene in increasing numbers, as shown by the red area and red
-arrows, pressing upon and forcing ahead of them their kinsmen on the
-mainland.
-
-[Illustration: EXPANSION OF THE PRE-TEUTONIC NORDICS 1800–100 B.C.
-(generalized scheme) by Madison Grant]
-
-The pink arrows in Spain show the invasion of Celtic-speaking Nordics,
-closely related to the Nordic Gauls who a little earlier had conquered
-France. This same wave of Nordic invasion crossed the Channel and
-appears in the pink dots of Britain and Ireland, where the intruders are
-known as Goidels. These early Nordics were followed some centuries later
-by another wave of kindred peoples who were known as Brythons or Cymry
-in Britain and as Belgæ on the continent. These Cymric Belgæ or Brythons
-probably represented the mixed descendants of the earliest Teutons who
-crossed from Scandinavia and had adopted and modified the Celtic
-languages spoken by the continental Nordics. These Cymric-speaking
-Nordics drove before them the earlier Gauls in France and the Goidels in
-Britain, but their impulse westward was very likely caused by the
-oncoming rush of pure Teutons from Scandinavia and the Baltic coasts.
-
-In Italy the pink arrows entering from the west show the route of the
-invading Gauls, who occupied the country north of the Apennines and made
-it Cisalpine Gaul, while the arrows entering Italy from the northeast
-show the earlier invasions of the Nordic Umbrians and Oscans, who
-introduced Aryan speech into Italy. Farther east in Greece and the
-Balkans, the pink arrows show the routes of invasion of the Achæans and
-the kindred Phrygians of Homer as well as the later Dorians and
-Cimmerians. In the region of the Caucasus, the routes of the invading
-Persians are shown and, north of the Caspian Sea, the line of migration
-of the Sacæ from the grasslands of southern Russia toward the east. In
-the inset map in the upper right corner is shown the expansion of these
-Nordics into Asia, where the Sacæ and closely related Massagetæ occupied
-what is now Turkestan and from this centre swarmed over the mountains of
-Afghanistan into India and introduced Aryan speech among the swarming
-millions of that peninsula.
-
-In the northern part of the main map the expansion of the Teutonic
-Nordics is shown, with the Goths in the east and Saxons in the west of
-the red area, but the salient feature is the expansion of the pink at
-the expense of the green and the ominous growth of the red area centring
-around Scandinavia in the north.
-
-
- THE EXPANSION OF THE TEUTONIC NORDICS AND SLAVIC ALPINES, 100 B. C. TO
- 1100 A. D.
-
-This map (Pl. III) shows the yellow area greatly diminished in central
-and northern Europe, while it retains its supremacy in Spain and Italy
-as well as on the north coast of Africa. In the latter areas the green
-dots have nearly vanished and have been replaced by pink and red dots.
-In central Europe the green area is still more broken up and reduced to
-a minimum. In the Balkans and eastern Europe, however, two large centres
-of green, north and south of the Danube respectively, represent the
-expanding power of the Slavic-speaking Alpines. The pink area of the
-continental Nordics is everywhere fading and is on the point of
-vanishing as a distinctive type and of merging in the red. The expansion
-of the Teutonic Nordics from Scandinavia and from the north of Germany
-is now at its maximum and they are everywhere pressing through the
-Empire of Rome and laying the foundations of the modern nations of
-Europe. The Vandals have migrated from the coasts of the Baltic to what
-is now Hungary, then westward into France and finally, after occupying
-for a while southern Spain, under pressure of the kindred Visigoths to
-northern Africa, where they established a kingdom which is the sole
-example we have of a Teutonic state on that continent. The Visigoths and
-Suevi laid the foundations of Spain and Portugal, while the Franks,
-Burgundians and Normans transformed Gaul into France.
-
-[Illustration: EXPANSION OF THE TEUTONIC NORDICS AND SLAVIC ALPINES 100
-BC–1100 AD (generalized scheme) by Madison Grant]
-
-Into Italy for a thousand years floods of Nordic Teutons crossed the
-Alps and settled along the Po Valley. While many tribes participated in
-these invasions, the most important migration was that of the Lombards,
-who, coming from the basin of the Baltic by way of the Danubian plains,
-occupied the Po Valley in force and scattered a Teutonic nobility
-throughout the peninsula. The Lombard and kindred strains in the north
-give to that portion of the peninsula its present predominance over the
-provinces south of the Apennines.
-
-The conquest of the British Isles by the Teutonic and Scandinavian
-Nordics was far more complete than was their conquest of Spain, Italy or
-even northern France. When these Teutons arrived upon the scene, the
-ancient, dark Neolithics had very largely absorbed the early Nordic
-invaders, Goidels and Cymry alike. Floods of Saxons, of Angles and later
-of Danes, crossed the Channel and the North Sea and displaced the old
-population in Scotland and the eastern half of England, while Norse
-Vikings following in their wake occupied nearly all of the outlying
-islands and much of the coast. Both these later invasions, Danish and
-Norse, passed around the greater island and inundated Ireland, so that
-the big, blond or red-haired Irishman of to-day is to a large extent a
-Dane in a state of culture analogous to that of Scotland before the
-Reformation.
-
-This map shows that the vitality of Scandinavia was far from exhausted
-after sending for upward of two thousand years tribe after tribe across
-to the continent and that it was now producing an extraordinarily
-vigorous type, the Vikings in the west and the equally warlike and
-energetic Varangians in the east, who migrated back to the motherland of
-the Nordics and laid the foundations of modern Russia.
-
-While all these splendid conquests were in full swing a little known
-group of tribes was growing and spreading in eastern and southern
-Germany and in Austria-Hungary and occupying the lands left vacant by
-the Teutonic nations, which had invaded the Roman Empire. From this
-centre in the neighborhood of the Carpathians and in Galicia eastward to
-the head of the Dnieper River, the Wends and Sarmatians expanded in all
-directions. They were the ancestors of those Alpines who are to-day
-Slavic-speaking. From this obscure beginning came the bulk of the
-Russians and the South Slavs. The expansion of the Slavs is one of the
-most significant features of the Dark Ages and the author has attempted
-to indicate the centre of expansion of these tribes by green dots and
-green arrows, radiating in all directions from the solid green area in
-Europe. To sum up this map, the yellow area has steadily declined
-everywhere, while in western Europe the green area is now limited to the
-infertile and backward mountain regions. In eastern Europe, however,
-this same green Alpine area is showing a marvellous capacity for
-recovery, as will appear from the map of the races of to-day.
-
-The red area is widely spread and occupies the river valleys and the
-fertile lands and represents everywhere the ruling, military aristocracy
-more or less thinly scattered over a conquered peasantry of
-Mediterranean and Alpine blood. One phenomenon of dire import is shown
-on the map, where, coming from the districts north and east of the
-Caspian Sea, certain black arrows are seen shooting westward into
-Europe, reaching in one extreme instance as far as Châlons in France,
-where Attila nearly succeeded in destroying what remained of western
-civilization. These arrows mark respectively Huns, Cumans, Avars,
-Magyars, Bulgars and other Asiatic hordes, probably for the most part of
-Mongoloid origin and coming originally from central Asia far beyond the
-range of Aryan speech. These hordes of Mongoloids destroyed the budding
-culture of Russia, while at a later date kindred tribes under the name
-of Turks or Tatars flooded the Balkans and the valley of the Danube but
-these later invasions entered Europe from Asia Minor.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PRESENT DISTRIBUTION
- OF
- EUROPEAN RACES
- (generalized scheme)
- by
- Madison Grant
-]
-
-
- THE PRESENT DISTRIBUTION OF EUROPEAN RACES
-
-The preparation of the last map (Pl. IV), showing the present
-distribution of European races, was in some respects a more intricate
-task than that of the earlier maps. The main difficulty is that, as a
-result of successive migrations and expansions, the different races of
-Europe are now often represented by distinct classes. Numerically one
-type may be in a majority, as are the Rumanians in eastern Hungary,
-where they constitute nearly two-thirds of the population. At the same
-time this majority is of no intellectual or social importance, since all
-the professional and military classes in Transylvania are either Magyar
-or Saxon. Under the existing scheme of showing majorities by color these
-ruling minorities do not appear at all. In this last map the yellow is
-beginning to expand, especially in the British Isles. The green also is
-recovering somewhat in central and western Europe, but in the Balkans,
-eastern Germany, Austria and above all in Poland and Russia, it has
-largely replaced the former Nordic color. The pink, _i. e._, the
-continental Nordics as a distinct type, has entirely vanished and has
-been everywhere replaced by the Teutonic red. This does not mean that
-there are no existing remnants of the continental Nordics, but it does
-mean that these remnants cannot now be distinguished from the
-all-pervading and masterful type of the Teutonic Nordics.
-
-In general, this last map, as compared with the earlier ones, although
-showing a steady shrinkage of the Nordic area, brings out clearly the
-manner in which it centres around the basins of the Baltic and the North
-Sea, radiating thence in every direction and in decreasing numbers. The
-menace of the continued expansion of the green area westward and
-northward into the red area of the Nordics is undoubtedly one of the
-causes of the present world war. This expansion began as far back as the
-fall of Rome, but only in our day and generation has this backward race
-even claimed a parity of strength and culture with the Master Race.
-
-
-
-
- DOCUMENTARY SUPPLEMENT
-
-
-The purpose of these notes is to meet an insistent demand for
-authorities for the statements made in the body of the book. As was
-mentioned in the Introduction, in a work of this compass and aim, mere
-lack of space forbade all but the barest outlines, so that often an
-appearance of dogmatism was the result.
-
-There is a vast literature on the subjects discussed and to give all the
-references would be almost a physical impossibility. It is particularly
-difficult to name all that has appeared in periodicals, since they have
-become so numerous, especially during the last few years.
-
-The author has in mind to refer only to those works which bear directly
-on the most essential statements made and, necessarily, to but a part of
-these. In many cases only books which are most easily available have
-been used. The author has intentionally quoted chiefly works in English,
-where these exist, and when using foreign authorities has translated the
-statements.
-
-It must be clearly understood that the references are given for the
-facts rather than the theories they contain. In no case, unless
-specifically stated, is the author committed to the conclusions drawn in
-the works cited. In order to present all sides, authorities who differ
-in viewpoint are sometimes listed, the reader being left to make his own
-decision of the case.
-
-It is hoped that the references will be of assistance to students of
-anthropology and to those who care to inquire further into the subjects
-under discussion.
-
-Where an author is quoted frequently or for more than one book, he is
-referred to merely by name; the book is given by number immediately
-following. Its full title may be ascertained in the bibliography.
-
-
-
-
- DOCUMENTARY SUPPLEMENT
-
-
- _PART I_
- INTRODUCTION
-
-Page xix : line 22. Immutability of somatological or bodily characters.
-Charles B. Davenport, pp. 225 _seq._ and 252 _seq._: William E. Castle,
-1, pp. 125 _seq._; Frederick Adams Woods, 3, p. 107; and Edwin G.
-Conklin, 1, pp. 191 _seq._ See the note to p. 226, 7 for a quotation
-from Conklin bearing on this point.
-
-xix : 23. Immutability of psychical predispositions and impulses. See
-note above. Professor Irving Fisher said, on p. 627 of _National
-Vitality_, speaking of laws relating to eugenics: “What such laws might
-accomplish may be judged from the history of two criminal families, the
-‘Jukes’ and the ‘Tribe of Ishmael.’ Out of 1,200 descendants from the
-founder of the ‘Jukes’ through 75 years, 310 were professional
-paupers ... 50 were prostitutes, 7 murderers, 60 habitual thieves, and
-130 common criminals.” Certainly these facts were not all due entirely
-to identity or similarity of environment. On p. 675 we read: “Similarly,
-the ‘Tribe of Ishmael,’ numbering 1,692 individuals in six generations,
-has produced 121 known prostitutes and has bred hundreds of petty
-thieves, vagrants and murderers. The history of the tribe is a swiftly
-moving picture of social degeneration and gross parasitism extending
-from its seventeenth century convict ancestry to the present day horde
-of wandering and criminal descendants.” See R. L. Dugdale and Oscar C.
-McCulloch, pp. 154–159. For transmission of opposite tendencies see pp.
-675–676, Fisher. The Jukes were a family of Dutch descent, living in an
-isolated valley in the mountains of northern New York. The Ishmaels were
-a family of central Indiana which came from Maryland through Kentucky.
-The Kalikak family is another striking instance. See also Davenport, 1,
-and the note to p. 226: 7.
-
-xxi : 5. Professor Charles B. Davenport says in correspondence: “By the
-way, it was Judge John Lowell who added ‘free and’ to the words of the
-Declaration in writing the Constitution of Massachusetts in the latter
-part of the eighteenth century.”
-
-xxiii : 20–25. _A Statistical Account of the British Empire._ J. R.
-McCulloch, vol. I, pp. 400 seq.
-
-
- CHAPTER I. RACE AND DEMOCRACY
-
-4 : 6. Archbishop Ussher, 1581–1656. See the _New Schaff-Herzog
-Religious Encyclopedia_; also other religious encyclopedias. Taylor,
-_Origin of the Aryans_, p. 8.
-
-5 : 15. See Émile Faguet, _Le Culte de l’Incompétence_.
-
-6 : 3. _Cf._ _The Loyalists of Massachusetts_, by James H. Stark.
-
-9 : 7. A good description of conditions is to be found in Bryce’s _The
-Remarkable History of the Hudson’s Bay Company_, p. 73, all of chapter
-XLII and elsewhere.
-
-10 : 3 _seq._ Charles B. Davenport, _passim_, has discussed migratory
-instincts, see especially 1.
-
-10 : 16–17. These conditions are quaintly described in what is known as
-the _Italian Relation_, translated by Charlotte Augusta Sneyd. See
-especially pp. 34 and 36. The resulting laws may be found in Sir James
-Fitzjames Stephen’s _History of the Criminal Law of England_, vol. III,
-pp. 267 seq.; Pollard’s Political History of England, vol. VI, pp.
-29–30; Green’s _History of the English People_, vol. II, pp. 20; and
-elsewhere.
-
-11 : 3. See the note to p. 79: 15.
-
-11 : 17. See Notes to p. 218: 16.
-
-11 : 20. For a very interesting series of letters written from Santo
-Domingo in 1808 concerning conditions among the whites as the negro
-slaves were gaining the ascendancy, consult the anonymous _Secret
-History, or The Horrors of Santo Domingo_, in a series of letters
-written by a lady at Cape François to Colonel Burr (late Vice-President
-of the United States), principally during the command of General
-Rochambeau. Lothrop Stoddard, in his _French Revolution in San Domingo_,
-pp. 25 _seq._, gives a vivid picture of these times and conditions.
-
-11 : 24. _Immigration Restriction and World Eugenics_, Prescott Hall,
-pp. 125–127.
-
-
- CHAPTER II. THE PHYSICAL BASIS OF RACE
-
-13 : 7. See W. D. Matthew, _Climate and Evolution_; John C. Merriam,
-_The Beginnings of Human History, Read from the Geological Record: The
-Emergence of Man_, especially pp. 208–209 of the first part; and Madison
-Grant, _The Origin and Relationships of North American Mammals_, pp.
-5–7.
-
-13 : 20. Mendelism. See Edwin G. Conklin, 1, chap. III, C, pp. 224
-_seq._, or 2, vol. X, no. 2, pp. 170 _seq._ Also Punnett’s _Mendelism_,
-or the appendix to Castle’s _Genetics and Eugenics_, which is a
-translation of Mendel’s paper. Practically all late writers on heredity
-give Mendel’s principles.
-
-13 : 22–14 : 10 For these and other statements on heredity see the
-writings of Charles B. Davenport, Frederic Adams Woods, G. Archdall
-Reid, Edwin G. Conklin, Thomas Hunt Morgan, E. B. Wilson, J. Arthur
-Thomson, William E. Castle, and Henry Fairfield Osborn, 2.
-
-14 : 10 _seq._ Blends. E. G. Conklin remarks in correspondence: “In so
-far as races interbreed, their characters mingle but do not blend or
-fuse, and come out again in all their purity in descendants.” See also
-the same authority, 1, pp. 208, 280, 282–287.
-
-Every now and then an observation is met with which corroborates this
-statement. The inheritance from one parent or the other of the shape of
-the skull, in a fairly pure form, has been noted a number of times.
-
-Fleure and James in their study of the _Anthropological Types in Wales_,
-p. 39, make the following observation: “It may be said that certain
-component features of head form, in many cases, seem to segregate more
-or less in Mendelian fashion, but this is a matter for further
-investigation; we are on safer ground in saying that the children of
-parents of different head form very frequently show a fairly complete
-resemblance to one or other parent, _i. e._, that head form is
-frequently inherited in a fairly pure fashion.”
-
-Von Luschan found still more striking evidence of this in his study of
-modern Greeks, which he describes in his _Early Inhabitants of Western
-Asia_. He has found that the children of parents of different head form
-inherit in quite strict fashion the shape of skull of one or the other
-parent, and that the population, instead of being mesaticephalic, is
-to-day as distinctly divided into two groups, dolichol- and
-brachycephalic, as in prehistoric times, in spite of the constant
-intermixture that has occurred.
-
-14 : 18. See notes to p. 13. This is a statement made by Dr. Davenport,
-in correspondence.
-
-15 : 17. On the Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon types consult Professor
-Arthur Keith, 1, pp. 101–120, and 2; also Henry Fairfield Osborn, 1, the
-table on p. 23, pp. 214 _seq._, 289 _seq._, 291–305 and elsewhere, and
-the authorities given.
-
-On the resurgence of types, see Beddoe, 4; Fleure and James;
-Giuffrida-Ruggeri; Parsons; and numerous other recent anthropologists.
-
-15 : 25. See the notes to p. xix of the Introduction to this book, and
-Keith, 2.
-
-15 : 29 _seq._ Professor G. Elliot Smith, _The Ancient Egyptians_, chap.
-IV, and pp. 41 _seq._ On p. 43 we read: “If we want to add to such
-sources of information and complete the picture of the early
-Egyptian ... he can be found reincarnated in his modern descendants with
-surprisingly little change, either in physical characteristics or mode
-of life, to show for the passage of six thousand years.” On p. 44:
-“Although alien elements from north and south have been coming into
-Upper Egypt for fifty centuries, it has been a process of percolation,
-and not an overwhelming rush; the population has been able to assimilate
-the alien minority and retain its own distinctive features and customs
-with only slight change; and however large a proportion of the
-population has taken on hybrid traits resulting from Negro, Arab, or
-Armenoid admixture, there still remain in the Thebaid large numbers of
-its people who present features and bodily conformation precisely
-similar to those of their remote ancestors, the Proto-Egyptians.” See
-also G. Sergi, 1, p. 65, and 4, p. 200.
-
-17 : 5. See Franz Boas, _Changes in the Bodily Form of the Descendants
-of Immigrants_, pp. 9, 27, etc.
-
-17 : 28–18 : 7. See the notes to p. 13.
-
-18 : 13. See notes to p. 14. Also Ripley, pp. 465–466 for a statement as
-to brunetness.
-
-18 : 24–19 : 2. E. G. Conklin, 1, pp. 454–455, and 2, especially vol. X,
-no. 1, pp. 55–58.
-
-19 : 3. Anders Retzius was the first to make use of the head form in
-anthropological study, and to give the impetus to the index measurement
-system in _The Form of the Skulls of the Northern Peoples of Europe_.
-See also A. C. Haddon, 1, chap. I, in which he discusses these traits in
-full, and Ripley, chap. III, especially pp. 55 _seq._ Modern physical
-anthropologists still agree that the skull form is a most stable and
-reliable character.
-
-19 : 25. Ripley, p. 39.
-
-19 : 27–pp. 20 and 21. Beddoe, Broca, Collignon, Livi, Topinard and a
-host of other anthropologists all affirm the existence of three European
-racial types, which Ripley has discussed exhaustively. Deniker alone
-differs from them in classifying the populations of Europe, from the
-same data, into six principal races and four or more sub-races. See
-Appendix D, in Ripley’s _Races of Europe_.
-
-The three terms, Nordic, Alpine and Mediterranean, have now become quite
-generally accepted designations for the three European races. The term
-Nord, rather than Nordic, has been chosen, perhaps more wisely, by some
-authors. In the present book these names are applied with quite
-different connotations from those usually understood.
-
-It cannot be too clearly stated that in speaking of Nordics, the
-proto-type was probably quite generalized, with hair shades including
-the browns and reds. In the author’s opinion the blond Scandinavian
-represents an extreme specialization of Nordic characters. (See p. 167
-of this book.)
-
-20 : 5–24. The term Nordic was first used by Deniker. The authorities
-for the descriptions of these races may all be found in Ripley. The
-Mediterranean race was first defined by Sergi, who also calls it
-Eurafrican. The term Alpine, proposed by Linnæus, was revived by
-DeLapouge, and later adopted by Ripley, since when it has come into
-general use. Sergi and Zaborowski prefer that of Eurasian. While this
-latter name does cover the requirements, since it correctly signifies
-not only the European and Asiatic range of the people under discussion,
-but also their actual relationship to Asiatics, it is objectionable
-because it implies the adoption of the similarly constructed term
-Eurafrican, which, as defined by Sergi, is misleading. Correct as
-Eurafrican may be for signifying the European and African range of the
-Mediterranean race, it involves an acceptance of the theory put forward
-by its sponsor, that the Mediterranean race originated in Africa and is
-closely related to the negro, both being long skulled peoples, descended
-from a common stock, the Eurafrican.
-
-The chief objection to the term Mediterranean is that the race extends
-in habitat beyond the Mediterranean region, but the name is now so
-generally accepted and this fact so well known that misunderstandings
-are unlikely. The term Alpine, also, is not as inappropriate as it might
-seem, since the word Alps is frequently not confined to the Swiss ranges
-but extended to many other mountain chains, and Alpine, like the term
-Mediterranean, is not, at this late date, apt to be misunderstood.
-
-20 : 24–21: 9. Von Luschan, _The Early Inhabitants of Western Asia_, pp.
-221–244, and G. Elliot Smith, _The Ancient Egyptians_.
-
-22 : 10. Thomson, _Heredity_, p. 387; Darwin, _Descent of Man_; Boas,
-_Modern Populations of America_, p. 571.
-
-22: 25. Haddon, 1, pp. 15 _seq._
-
-22 : 29. The same, pp. 12–14.
-
-23 : 8. Clark Wissler, in _The American Indian_, makes clear the general
-uniformity of American Indian types in chap. XVIII. See also Haddon, 1,
-p. 8, and Hrdlička, _The Genesis of the American Indian_, pp. 559 _seq._
-
-23 : 13. Haddon, 1, pp. 10 and 11. There are numerous other references
-to this fact, especially in articles in various anthropological
-journals, and general works on anthropology, such as those of Deniker,
-Collignon, Martin and Ratzel.
-
-23 : 16. For the differentiation of skull types in Europe during the
-Paleolithic period, see Keith, 2, the chapters on Pre-Neolithic,
-Mousterian and Neanderthal man; and 1, pp. 74 _seq._; as well as Osborn,
-1, who also gives the dates of the Paleolithic in the table on p. 18.
-
-24 : 3–5. This claim was put forth by Sergi, in his _Mediterranean
-Race_, pp. 252, 258–259, and was followed by Ripley in his _Races of
-Europe_.
-
-24 : 14. Deniker, _Races of Man_, pp. 48–49; Ripley, p. 465.
-
-25 : 5. Topinard, 1, 4; Collignon, 1; and Virchow, 1, p. 325; Ripley, p.
-64. Ripley says: “If the hair be light, one can generally be sure that
-the eyes will be of a corresponding shade. Bassanovitch, ... p. 29,
-strikingly confirms this rule even for so dark a population as the
-Bulgarian.”
-
-25 : 6. See p. 163 of this book on the Albanians.
-
-25 : 8. Ripley, pp. 75–76 and the footnote on p. 76.
-
-25 : 11. Deniker, 2, p. 51. Also Davenport, _passim_.
-
-25 : 13. Sir Edmund Loder, in correspondence, February, 1917, asks: “Has
-it been noticed at Creedmore and elsewhere in America that nearly all
-noted shots have blue eyes? It has been very noticeable at Wimbledon and
-Bisby, where it was quite exceptional to find a man in the front rank of
-marksmen with dark colored eyes. There was, however, one man who shot in
-my team who had very dark eyes and was one of the best shots of the
-day.”
-
-25 : 16. There are said to be blue eyes occasionally in other races,
-where traces of Nordic blood cannot be discovered. Green and blue eyes
-have been found among the Rendeli (Desert Masai), although they are
-otherwise normal negroes.
-
-25 : 19. The following quotation is from Von Luschan, 1, p. 224: “In
-Marmaritza near Halikarnassos, where a British squadron had a winter
-station for many years, a very great proportion of the children is said
-to be ‘flaxen-haired.’” According to a statement made to the author by
-Professor G. Elliot Smith on May 4, 1920, a similar nest of blondness is
-found in the Egyptian delta near Aboukir and is due to the fact that
-after the battle of the Nile the Seaforth Highlanders were long
-stationed there. At one time this blondness was supposed to bear some
-relation to the ancient Lybian blondness depicted on the monuments.
-
-25 : 25 _seq._ On the Berbers see Sergi, 4, pp. 59 _seq._, and Topinard,
-3. In regard to the Albanians, Ripley refers to their blondness, on p.
-414, as follows: “The Albanian colonists, studied by Livi and Zampa in
-Calabria, still, after four centuries of Italian residence and
-intermixture, cling to many of their primitive characteristics, notably
-their brachycephaly and their relative blondness.” See also Zampa, 1,
-and Deniker, 1, for scientific discussions of their physical characters.
-Giuffrida-Ruggeri gives a summary of the most recent literature on
-Albania.
-
-25 : 29–26: 6. See Beddoe, _The Races of Britain_, pp. 14, 15 and
-_passim_.
-
-26 : 18. Beddoe, 4, p. 147.
-
-27 : 1 _seq._ See Ripley, pp. 399–400 for a summary of observations on
-this point. See also Darwin, _Descent of Man_, pp. 340–341 and 344
-_seq._; and Fleure and James, p. 49.
-
-27 : 14–28: 19. Haddon, 1, p. 2; also 2; Deniker, 2, chap. II and
-_passim_.
-
-28 : 19. Davenport, _passim_; Ripley, _passim_; and any general book on
-anthropology.
-
-28 : 24–29: 17. Ripley, pp. 80, 81, 84, 108–109, 131, 132, 252, 271,
-307. Also see Davenport and Conklin, _passim_, and the notes to p. 18 of
-this book.
-
-30 : 18–31: 8. For a very interesting discussion of this question see
-Conklin, 2, vol. IX, no. 6, pp. 492–6; Deniker, 2, p. 18; Haddon, 2,
-chap. IV; and Louis R. Sullivan, _The Growth of the Nasal Bridge in
-Children_, are other authorities. Some special studies of the nose have
-been made by Majer and Koperniki, Weisbach, and Olechnowicz, for which
-see Ripley, pp. 39 4–395. Jacobs, pp. 23–62, is particularly good on
-nostrility.
-
-31 : 9. Deniker, 2, p. 83.
-
-31 : 13. On the shape of the foot as a racial character see Rudolf
-Martin, _Lehrbuch der Anthropologie_, pp. 317 _seq._; and Beddoe, 4, pp.
-245 _seq._; W. K. Gregory, 2, p. 14, and John C. Merriam, vol. IX, pp.
-202 _seq._, have both discussed the evolution of the foot and the hand,
-and the anatomical differences which distinguish those of man from those
-of the apes.
-
-31 : 16. P. Topinard, 2, chap. X, and Rudolf Martin, pp. 367 _seq._
-
-32 : 4. Beard lighter than head hair. Darwin, _Descent of Man_, p. 850.
-
-32 : 8. The red-haired branch of the Nordics. On red hair see Beddoe, 4,
-pp. 3, 151–156; Fleure and James, _Anthropological Types in Wales_, pp.
-118 _seq._; Ripley, pp. 205–207, based on Arbo; T. Rice Holmes, _Cæsar’s
-Conquest of Gaul_, p. 337; and F. G. Parsons, _Anthropological
-Observations on German Prisoners of War_, pp. 32 _seq._
-
-32 : 21. See notes to p. 66.
-
-33 : 7. Haddon, 1, p. 9 _seq._; Deniker, _Races of Man_; Ratzel,
-_History of Mankind_; etc.
-
-33 : 13. Haddon, 1, p. 16 _seq._; Deniker; Ratzel; etc.
-
-33 : 23–34: 21. Haddon, 1, pp. 2 and 3, and Deniker, 2, pp. 42 _seq._
-While this classification is substantially sound, and sufficient for our
-purpose, recent investigations have shown that other factors also
-contribute to straightness or kinkiness, such as coarseness of texture,
-as opposed to fineness. Probably these will be determined by Mr. Louis
-R. Sullivan, of the American Museum of Natural History, who is working
-on the subject. It has been found that the Japanese and Eskimo are
-exceptions to the rule of “straight hair, round cross section,” for they
-show an ellipse. There is also a wide range of variation in the
-cross-sections of hair for individuals of any race, who are classified
-according to the preponderance of cross-sections of a single type. For a
-fine series of plates which are photographs of the magnified hair of
-individuals of various races, see _Das Haupthaar und seiner
-Bildungsstatte bei den Rassen des Menschen_, Gustave Fritsch. Another
-recent paper is the study by Leon Augustus Hausmann of Cornell, “The
-Microscopic Structure of the Hair as an Aid in Race Determination.”
-
-35 : 27. Livi, _Antropometria Militare_, and Ripley, pp. 115, 255 and
-258.
-
-36. Deniker, 1; Zampa, 1,2; Weisbach, 1, 2, 3; and others given by
-Ripley, pp. 411–415.
-
-
- CHAPTER III. RACE AND HABITAT
-
-37 : 6. Sir G. Archdall Reid, _The Principles of Heredity_, chaps. VII,
-VIII, IX.
-
-37 : 17. Ripley discusses them in full in chap. VI.
-
-37 : 20–38 : 2. W. Boyd Dawkins, _Early Man in Britain_, p. 233; Keane,
-_Ethnology_, pp. 110 _seq._; Osborn, _Men of the Old Stone Age_, pp.
-220, 479–486 _seq._; Keith, _Antiquity of Man_, p. 16.
-
-38 : 10. Ellsworth Huntington, 1, p. 83; Charles E. Woodruff, 1, pp.
-85–86; also the Report of the Smithsonian Institution for 1891, which
-contains an article on “Isothermal Zones.”
-
-38 : 17 _seq._ Ellsworth Huntington, 1, pp. 86 _seq._
-
-40 : 27. Ellsworth Huntington, 1, pp. 14, 27.
-
-41 : 25–42. G. Retzius, _On the So-called North European Race of
-Mankind_, p. 300; and many other authorities.
-
-43 : 23. Ripley, pp. 352 _seq._ and 470.
-
-44 : 17. G. Elliot Smith, 1, p. 61; G. Sergi, 4.
-
-44 : 26. Ripley, pp. 443 and 582–583.
-
-45 : 2. Beddoe, 4, p. 270.
-
-
- CHAPTER IV. THE COMPETITION OF RACES
-
-47 : 17. Prescott F. Hall, _Immigration Restriction and World Eugenics_.
-
-49 : 15–51. See the _Eugenics Record Office Bulletins_, 10A and 10B, by
-Harry H. Laughlin, Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island. Part I is “The Scope
-of the Committee’s Work”; Part II, “The Legal, Legislative and
-Administrative Aspects of Sterilization.” See also H. H. Hart,
-_Sterilization as a Practical Measure_; and Raymond Pearl, _The
-Sterilization of Degenerates_; as well as _The Eugenical News_ for
-April, May and August, 1918.
-
-52 : 17. Sir Francis Galton, _Hereditary Genius_, pp. 351–359; Darwin,
-_The Descent of Man_, p. 218.
-
-53 : 6. Galton, _Hereditary Genius_, pp. 345–346.
-
-55 : 3 _seq._ Sir G. Archdall Reid, 2, p. 182; _The Handbook of the
-American Indian_, under _Health and Disease_; Payne, _A History of the
-New World Called America_; and elsewhere in early accounts. Also, Paul
-Popenoe, _One Phase of Man’s Modern Evolution_, p. 618.
-
-
- CHAPTER V. RACE, LANGUAGE AND NATIONALITY
-
-60 : 18. See the note to p. 18.
-
-62 : 2. Ripley, _passim_; and the notes to pp. 142 : 23, 172 : 22, 187 :
-23, 188 : 15, 195 : 18, 213 and 247 of this book.
-
-63 : 13. This absence of round skulls was universally accepted, but
-recent studies show an appreciable Alpine element which is increasing.
-
-64 : 2 _seq._ See pp. 201 and 203.
-
-64 : 18. Ripley discusses the Slavs in full in chap. XIII, and gives the
-original sources for all of his information.
-
-65 : 1. Ripley, pp. 422–428.
-
-65 : 3. Von Luschan, 1; Ripley, pp. 406–411.
-
-65 : 14. Ripley, pp. 361 _seq._
-
-66 : 4. Blumenbach was the first to divide the races into Caucasian,
-Mongolian, Ethiopian, American and Malayan, in his _De Generis Humani
-Varietate Nativa_, in 1775.
-
-66 : 8–23. Ossetes. For a full description of these people see
-Zaborowski, _Les peuples aryens d’Asie et d’Europe_, pp. 246–272.
-Deniker likewise treats of them in _Races of Man_, p. 356. Minns,
-_Scythians and Greeks_, p. 37, says: “Klaproth first proved in 1822 that
-the Ossetes are the same as the Caucasian Alans, and this is supported
-by the testimony of the chroniclers, Russian, Georgian, Greek and Arab.
-From Ammianus Marcellinus (XXXI, II, 16–25) we know that at the time of
-the Huns’ invasion these Alans pastured their herds over the plains to
-the north of the Caucasus, and made raids upon the coast of the Mæotis
-and the peninsula of Taman. The Huns passed through their land,
-plundering Ermanrich, the king of the Goths.... Ammianus means by Alans
-all the nomadic tribes about the Tanais (Don) and gives a description of
-their habits, borrowed from the account of the Scythians in Herodotus.
-For the first three centuries of our era we find these Alans mentioned
-(Pliny, _N. H._, IV, 80; Dionysius Perigetes, 305, 306; Fl. Josephus,
-Bell. Jud., VII, VII, 4; Ptolemy, etc.), as neighbors of the Sarmatians
-on this side or the other of the Don, living the same life and counting
-as one of their tribes. That is, that the Ossetes, Jasy, Alans,
-Sarmatians[4] are all of one stock, once nomad, now confined to the
-valleys of the central chain of the Caucasus. The Ossetes are tall,
-well-made, and inclined to be fair, corresponding to the description of
-the Alans in Ammianus (XXXI, II, 21) and their Iranian language answers
-to the accounts of the Sarmatians, of whom Pliny says ‘Medorum ut ferunt
-soboles’ (_N. H._, VI, 19).”
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- The author agrees with Zaborowski and differs from Minns in his belief
- that the Ossetes are of Nordic stock while the Sarmatians were
- Alpines.
-
-Chantre found among the Ossetes 30 per cent of blonds. See Chantre, 2.
-
-66 : 16. Alans. See Jordanes, _History of the Goths_, Mierow
-translation. Procopius, writing about 550 A. D., says: “At this time the
-Alani and the Absagi were Christians and friends of the Romans of old
-and lived in the neighborhood of the Caucasus.” In his vol. III, chap.
-II, 2–8, we read of the period from 395–425 A. D. “There were many
-Gothic nations in earlier times just as also at the present, but the
-greatest and most important of all are the Goths, Vandals, Visigoths and
-Gepædes. In ancient times, however, they were named Sauromatæ and
-Melanchlæni, and there were some too who called these nations Getic. All
-these, while they are distinguished from one another by their names, as
-has been said, do not differ in anything else at all. For they all have
-white bodies and fair hair and are tall and handsome to look upon, and
-they use the same laws, and practise a common religion. For they are all
-of the Arian faith and have one language called ‘Gothic.’” (Procopius
-thinks they all came originally from one tribe, and were distinguished
-later by the names of those who led each group of old. They dwelt north
-of the Danube and later the Gepædes took possession of the portion south
-of the river. In regard to the derivation of the Goths and other tribes
-from the Sauromatæ, compare the note on Sarmatians, for p. 143 : 21.) As
-to the Goths in the Crimea see Zeuss, _Die Deutschen_, pp. 432 seq.; F.
-Kluge, _Geschichte der götischen Sprache_, pp. 515 _seq._ Crim-götisch
-existed as a language in southern Russia up to the 16th century.
-
-66 : 23. Scythians. See the note to p. 214 : 10.
-
-66: 24. Indo-European. The earliest known occurrence of this term is in
-an article in _The Quarterly Review_ for 1813, written by Doctor Thomas
-Young (no. XIX, p. 225).
-
-Indo-Germanic. This term, although said not to have been invented by
-Klaproth, was used by him as early as 1823. See Leo Meyer, in _Über den
-Ursprung der Namen Indo-Germanen, Semiten und Ugro-finner,
-Göttingergelehrte Nachrichten, philologisch-historische Klasse_, 1901,
-pp. 454 _seq._
-
-67 : 4. The idea of an Aryan race was first promulgated by Oscar
-Schrader in his _Sprachvergleichung und Urgeschichte_. That there was an
-original Aryan tongue but no Aryan race was the idea of Broca. Pösche
-identified the Aryans with the Reihengraber type. Consult also Penka,
-_Herkunft der Arier_ and _Origines Ariacæ_.
-
-67 : 12. See Zaborowski, 1, pp. 1–10.
-
-67 : 15. See the notes to p. 70: 22 _seq._
-
-67 : 19. See the notes to p. 242: 5.
-
-68 : 11. See pp. 192–193 and elsewhere, in this book.
-
-
- CHAPTER VI. RACE AND LANGUAGE
-
-69 : 10. See T. Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 185–199. The same thing may have
-happened in Britain at Cæsar’s conquest, and still more in the Saxon
-conquest.
-
-70 : 4 _seq._ See p. 206 : 13 and note.
-
-70 : 12–71: 6. These paragraphs elicited a very interesting letter from
-a British officer in Howrah, Bengal, India, in October, 1919. He says:
-“May I offer one or two remarks on points of detail? On p. 70 it is
-stated ‘The Hindu to-day speaks a very ancient form of Aryan language
-but there remains not one recognizable trace of the blood of the white
-conquerors who poured in through the passes of the Northwest,’ and again
-at p. 261, ‘Of all the wonderful conquests of the Sacæ there remain as
-evidence of their invasions only these Indian and Afghan languages. Dim
-traces of their blood, as stated before, have been found in the Pamirs
-and in Afghanistan, but in the South their blond traits have vanished,
-even from the Punjab. It may be that the stature of some of the Afghan
-hill tribes and of the Sikhs, and some of the facial characters of the
-latter, are derived from this source, but all blondness of skin, hair
-and eye of the original Sacæ have utterly vanished.’
-
-“This hardly agrees with my own observations during two years’ service
-in the Punjab and Northwest Frontier Province. I should say that among
-the Pathans living in British territory about Peshawar, blond
-traits,—fair skin, the color of old ivory, red or brown hair, grey,
-green, or blue eyes,—are as common as really black hair is in Scotland;
-while among Panjabi Mussulmans living about Jhelum these traits are, if
-not common, at least not extremely rare. Judging from the experience of
-one squadron of cavalry, I should put the proportion of men with blond
-traits at not less than one per cent. The women, whom one does not see,
-must be fairer than the men, as elsewhere. I have seen a small Panjabi
-Mahommedan girl, from about Dera Ismail Khan with _yellow_ hair. I have
-also seen a _Sikh_ with _red_ hair, but that was certainly exceptional.
-
-“These remarks are based on what I have seen myself, though no
-statistics are kept and it is possible that I am generalizing from
-insufficient data. It would not, however, I think, be too much to say
-that ‘Blond traits are not uncommon in Afghanistan, and are even to be
-found among Mussulmans in the Northwestern Panjab.’ (Afghans and Indian
-Mussulmans of course sometimes dye their beards red, but this artificial
-blondness has not been confused with the real thing.)”
-
-The following quotation is from _The Outlook_ for March 10, 1920, which
-contains an article entitled “The Present Situation in India,” by
-Major-General Thomas D. Pilcher, of the British Army.
-
-“Beside these castes there are tribes, and the Brahmin from the Punjab
-has very little indeed in common with the Brahmin from Bengal or Madras.
-Many Pathans and Punjabi Mohammedans have blue eyes and are no darker
-than a southern European, whereas some of the depressed tribes are as
-black as Negroes. Many of the northern peoples are at least as tall as
-men of our own race, whereas other tribes do not average five feet.”
-
-70 : 16. Castes. Deniker, 2, p. 403: “About 2,000 castes may be
-enumerated at the present day, but year by year new ones are being
-called into existence as a certain number disappear.” In his footnote
-Deniker says: “The so-called primitive division into four castes:
-Brahmans (priests), Kshatriya (soldiers), Vaisyas (husbandmen and
-merchants), and Sudra (common people, outcasts, subject peoples?),
-mentioned in the later texts of the Vedas, is rather an indication of
-the division into three principal classes of the ruling race as opposed,
-in a homogeneous whole, to the conquered aboriginal race (fourth
-caste).” He continues: “The essential characteristics of all castes,
-persisting amid every change of form, are endogamy within themselves and
-the regulation forbidding them to come into contact one with another and
-partake of food together.”
-
-See also Zaborowski, _Les peuples aryens_, p. 65. There is, of course,
-an enormous number of books which deal with the caste system of India.
-
-71 : 7. Sir G. Archdall Reid, 2, p. 186: “If history teaches any lesson
-with clearness, it is this, that conquest, to be permanent, must be
-accompanied with extermination; otherwise, in the fulness of time, the
-natives expel or absorb the conquerors. The Saxon conquest of England
-was permanent; of the Norman conquest there remains scarcely a trace.”
-
-71 : 24. See pp. 217–222 and notes.
-
-72 : 4. See the notes to p. 141 : 4 _seq._
-
-72 : 19. Ripley, pp. 219–220, says: “The race question in Germany came
-to the front some years ago under rather peculiar circumstances. Shortly
-after the Franco-Prussian War, De Quatrefages promulgated the theory ...
-that the dominant people in Germany were not Teutons at all, but were
-directly descended from the Finns. Being nothing but Finns, they were to
-be classed with the Lapps and other peoples of western Russia.... Coming
-at a time of profound national humiliation in France ... the book
-created a profound sensation.... A champion of the Germans was not hard
-to find. Professor Virchow of Berlin set himself to work to disprove the
-theory which thus damned the dominant people of the empire. The
-controversy, half political and half scientific, waxed hot at times....
-One great benefit flowed indirectly from it all, however. The German
-government was induced to authorize the official census of the color of
-hair and eyes of the six million school children of the empire.... It
-established beyond question the differences in pigmentation between the
-North and the South of Germany. At the same time it showed the
-similarity in blondness between all the peoples along the Baltic. The
-Hohenzollern territory was as Teutonic in this respect as the
-Hanoverian.”
-
-73 : 6. Deniker is one of these. See his _Races of Man_, p. 334.
-Collignon is another. See the _Bulletin de la Société d’anthropologie_,
-Paris, 1883, p. 463; and _L’Anthropologie_, no. 2, for 1890.
-
-73 : 11. See Keith, 3, p. 19; Beddoe, 4, p. 39; and Ripley, section on
-Germany.
-
-73 : 19. Beddoe, 4, pp. 39–40; Deniker, 2, p. 339; Ripley, p. 294.
-
-74 : 12. See the note to p. 198 : 22.
-
-
- CHAPTER VII. THE EUROPEAN RACES IN COLONIES
-
-76 : 16. An old edition of the _Encyclopædia Britannica_ states: “The
-pure white population [of Venezuela] is estimated at only one per cent
-of the whole, the remainder of the inhabitants being Negroes (originally
-slaves, now all free), Indians and mixed races (Mulattoes and Zambos).”
-
-The 11th edition of the _Encyclopædia Britannica_ estimates the
-percentage of whites, the creole element (whites of European descent),
-at 10 per cent, as in Colombia, and the mixed races at 70 per cent, the
-remainder consisting of Africans, Indians and resident foreigners.
-
-76 : 19. Jamaica. _The New International Encyclopedia_, 1915 edition,
-gives as follows figures which agree with the 1915 _Statesman’s
-Yearbook_:
-
- ┌─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┐
- │ YEAR │ WHITE │ COLORED │ BLACK │ OTHERS │ TOTAL │
- ├─────────┼─────────┼─────────┼─────────┼─────────┼─────────┤
- │ 1861│ 13,816│ 81,065│ 346,374│ │ 441,255│
- │ 1871│ 13,101│ 100,346│ 392,707│ │ 506,154│
- │ 1881│ 14,432│ 109,946│ 444,186│ 12,240│ 580,804│
- │ 1891│ 14,692│ 121,955│ 488,624│ 14,220│ 639,491│
- │ 1911│ 15,605│ 163,201│ 630,181│[5]22,396│ 831,383│
- └─────────┴─────────┴─────────┴─────────┴─────────┴─────────┘
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- East Indians, 17,380; Chinese, 2,111; not stated, 2,905.
-
-76 : 21. The 11th edition of the _Encyclopædia Britannica_ gives the
-entire population of Mexico as 13,607,259, of which less than one-fifth
-(19 per cent) were classed as whites, 38 per cent as Indians, and 43 per
-cent as mixed bloods. There were 57,507 foreign residents, including a
-few Chinese and Filipinos.
-
-78 : 5. The Argentine Republic. In 1810 the population was approximately
-250,000; in 1895, 3,955,110; in 1914, 7,885,237. For a total of
-fifty-nine years in which the statistics have been kept, the number of
-immigrants from Montevideo is 4,711,013. They were divided by
-nationality as follows:
-
- Italians 2,259,933
- Spaniards 1,492,848
- French 225,049
- English 56,448
- Austrians 81,186
- Swiss 33,326
- Germans 62,329
- Belgians 23,091
- Russians 135,962
- Ottomans 121,177
- Other nationalities 189,664
-
-For added information on the Argentine, see the _Statistical Book of the
-Argentine Republic_, 1915; _Argentine Geography_, published by Urien &
-Colombo; and Juan Alsina’s _European Immigration to the Argentine_.
-
-78 : 22. Philippines. The following figures were taken from the _New
-International Encyclopedia_ and the _Statesman’s Yearbook_ for 1915. The
-size of the population was established in June, 1914.
-
- Total population 8,650,937
- Native-born 6,931,548 or 99.2%
- Chinese 41,035 or 0.6%
- Americans and Europeans 20,000 or 0.3%
-
-The natives are mostly of the Malayan race with the exception of 25,000
-Negrito tribesmen.
-
-78 : 24. Dutch East Indies. The figures are taken from the census of
-1905.
-
- Total population is approximately 38,000,000
- Europeans 80,910
- Chinese 563,000
- Arabs 29,000
- Other Orientals 23,000
-
-78 : 25. British India. The figures are from the census of 1911:
-
- Total population 315,156,396
- (Of these 650,502 were not
- born in India.)
-
-The remainder are divided according to the languages spoken:
-
- East Asiatics 4,410,000
- Tibeto-Chinese 12,970,000
- Dravidian 62,720,000
- Aryan 232,820,000
- European 320,000
-
-81 : 5. See Francis Parkman, _The Old Régime in Canada_, vol. II, pp. 12
-and 13.
-
-82 : 10. See Sir Harry Johnston, _The Negro in the New World_, p. 343.
-
-83 : 8. See the _Genealogical Records of the Society of the Colonial
-Wars_.
-
-84 : 6. See the notes to p. 38.
-
-84 : 11 _seq._ A letter from Abraham C. Strite, a lawyer of Hagerstown,
-Maryland, contains additional information on the so-called Pennsylvania
-Dutch. Mr. Strite says: “They are not Palatine Germans, but largely
-Swiss who speak a dialect of German. The writer happens to be of this
-stock. Its characteristics are round head, black hair, dark brown eyes,
-stocky stature, brunet type, all clearly indicating, according to your
-analysis, an Alpine origin. This description fairly well averages up the
-prevailing Pennsylvania Dutch type of this section although there are
-some red heads and some blonds which would indicate a Nordic admixture,
-again meeting your argument. There are many other varieties of Teutons
-in this section, but I am confining my remarks to the class known as the
-Pennsylvania Dutch. I have never made any head measurements among them
-but I am of the opinion that the round-headed type vastly predominates.
-The ancestors of these people emigrated from southern Europe, mostly
-Switzerland, in quite some numbers between the years 1700 and 1775, and
-settled in Lancaster County, Pa.; from thence they have spread out over
-the adjoining sections of Pennsylvania, down through the Cumberland
-valley and into the valley of Virginia, and to-day they form an
-important element of the population. They are the organizers in America
-of the religious sect known as the Mennonites.
-
-“The early settlers of Germantown who were Mennonites, were of Palatine
-stock. Of this there can be no doubt. Later immigration to Lancaster
-County, Pennsylvania, which constituted the bulk of the Pennsylvania
-Dutch stock will be found, I think, largely to have come from
-Switzerland, although not exclusively. Rupp’s _30,000 Names of
-Immigrants to America_ gives the names, dates and sailings of this
-Mennonite stock. Your conclusions are correct enough for all practical
-purposes but it seemed to me that the immigrants from Switzerland and
-from the Palatinate might be distinguished.”
-
-Doctor C. P. Noble, of Radnor, Pa., writes concerning the Pennsylvania
-Dutch: “I have seen much of them as patients and as I have observed them
-they have the medium stature and stocky build of the Alpines, also they
-have, usually, broad, round faces which are associated with
-brachycephaly and certainly they have always exhibited peasant traits.
-Moreover, it is unusual to find a blond among them.”
-
-Doctor Jordan, of the Pennsylvania Historical Society, furnished Doctor
-Noble with some data concerning them. That there were some Alpine
-elements among them will appear from what follows. Doctor Jordan agreed
-that the present day Pennsylvania Germans are almost exclusively brunet,
-with stocky bodies of moderate height. Existing portraits of various
-leaders among them when they arrived in Pennsylvania showed the same
-types. Furthermore, Doctor Jordan’s extensive reading of early documents
-relating to them tends to confirm the belief that the present day
-descendants represent the original types. Tall blonds are very rare
-among them.
-
-Doctor Noble knows some individuals with Nordic traits, but these were
-acquired by intermarriage with Anglo-Saxons. Most of these groups came
-from southern Germany, from Silesia on the east to the Palatinate on the
-west.
-
-The following are Doctor Jordan’s notes:
-
-Moravians. They were located in Pennsylvania, at first in Bethlehem and
-later in Nazareth. The land in Nazareth was purchased of Whitfield, the
-predestinarian Methodist.
-
-The Moravian immigration was carefully supervised. The church either
-owned or chartered the vessels which brought over the immigrants.
-Frequently it was definitely arranged as to how many artisans of each
-trade should come over so that they would prosper on arrival.
-
-The Moravian immigration was small—about 500 up to 1750. Until about
-1840 the Moravian settlements were closed towns—no non-Moravians could
-buy property.
-
-Not one quarter of the present Moravians are descendants of the early
-settlers. The rest are converts or descendants of converts. A connection
-exists between the Moravians, Huss and his Protestant followers, and the
-Waldenses. A short résumé of this will be found in the _Encyclopædia
-Britannica_—under Huss and Moravians—from the world standpoint.
-
-Moravians migrated from Bohemia to Saxony and were protected by Count
-Zinzendorf—a liberal Lutheran—and lived on his estates. He assisted in
-their migration to Pennsylvania. Some went to Georgia and later to
-Pennsylvania.
-
-Schwenkfelders. These were the followers of Kaspar Schwenkenfeld
-(1490–1561). See the _Encyclopædia Britannica_ for a short account. They
-formed a sect in Silesia which has persisted. In 1720 a commission of
-Jesuits was sent to convert them by force. Most of them fled into Saxony
-and were protected by Count Zinzendorf. From thence they migrated to
-Holland, England and Pennsylvania. Frederick the Great, when he seized
-Silesia, protected those remaining there.
-
-Ursinus College, Collegeville, is Schwenkfelder. The sect is not large
-and was located in or around Montgomery County. Their migration to
-Saxony and also to Pennsylvania antedated that of the Moravians.
-Generally speaking, they have been much more aggressive and vigorous
-than the Moravians.
-
-The Dunkards, Mennonites, Amish, and Seventh Day Baptists (Wissahickon
-and Ephrata, Pennsylvania), came from south Germany and the Palatinate.
-
-The Harmony Society, small in numbers, the Lutherans and German
-Reformed, came largely from south Germany and the Palatinate, but also
-from other parts of Germany. The Lutherans and the Reformed were the
-large sects in Pennsylvania.
-
-Germans from the Hudson valley migrated to Berks County around Reading.
-The Swedes in New Jersey were almost exclusively below Philadelphia—from
-Gloucester down the Delaware River. Before the Revolution there were
-about 30,000 Germans in Pennsylvania, out of a total estimated
-population of 100,000 to 120,000.
-
-84 : 16. Scotch-Irish. See _The Scotch-Irish in America_, by Henry Jones
-Ford; and also Sir George Trevelyan on the Irish Protestants in chap.
-XI, vol. II, of _George III and Charles Fox_.
-
-87 : 24. In this connection it is interesting to note that an early
-Egyptian king said almost the same concerning the negroes of his time.
-The quotation is taken from Hall’s _Ancient History of the Near East_,
-pp. 161–162, and is a translation of a portion of the manifesto of
-Senusert III, of the XIIth dynasty, which he caused to be set up at the
-time of the Nubian wars: “Vigor is valiant, but cowardice is vile. He is
-a coward who is vanquished on his own frontier, since the negro will
-fall prostrate at a word; answer him, and he retreats; if one is
-vigorous, he turns his back, retiring even when on the way to attack.
-Behold, these people have nothing terrible about them; they are feeble
-and insignificant; they have buttocks for hearts. I have seen it, even
-I, the majesty; it is no lie....”
-
-88 : 9. Barrett Wendell, _A Literary History of America_, chap. III.
-
-88 : 28. The belief in the approximation of the Anglo-Saxon in America
-to the Amerindian is widespread, but is entirely without justification,
-scientific or otherwise.
-
-89 : 1. Hall, _Immigration Restriction and World Eugenics_, and
-especially his _Immigration_, pp. 107–112.
-
-91 : 1. Hall, 2.
-
-94 : 1. Beddoe, 5, p. 416. For similar conclusions see DeLapouge,
-_passim_; G. Retzius, 3; and Roese, _Beiträge zur Europäischen
-Rassenkunde_. Fleure and James, pp. 125 and 151–152 make similar
-observations.
-
-
- _PART II_
- EUROPEAN RACES IN HISTORY
-
-
- CHAPTER I. EOLITHIC MAN
-
-97 : 10. Osborn, 1, the tables on pp. 18 and 41.
-
-98 : 15. Galton, pp. 309–310; Woods, 1, chap. XVIII.
-
-99 : 5–10. _A Statistical Study of American Men of Science_, J. McKeen
-Cattell, especially _Science_, vol. XXXII, no. 828, pp. 553–555.
-
-99 : 22. The authorities quoted by J. B. Bury in his _History of Greece_
-are complete and concise. In chap. I he discusses the Dorian conquest
-from p. 57 forward, and the Homeric-Mycenæan period (1600–1100 B. C.)
-from p. 20. A very interesting instance of the truth of the picture of
-Mycenæan culture as drawn by Homer occurs on p. 50, where it is stated
-that much described by the poet, even to small articles, has been
-unearthed during archæological investigations. “Although the poets who
-composed the Iliad and Odyssey probably did not live before the ninth
-century, they derived their matter from older lays.”
-
-99 : 27. Crete. For systems of Cretan writing see Sir Arthur J. Evans,
-_Cretan Pictographs and Pre-Phœnician Script_, _Further Discoveries of
-Cretan and Ægean Script_, _Reports of Excavations at Cnossus_,
-_Prehistoric Tombs of Knossos_, and _Scripta Minoa_. That the aboriginal
-“Eteocretan” language existed until historic times is attested by the
-discoveries of later inscriptions belonging to the fifth and succeeding
-centuries B. C., which were written in Greek letters at this time but in
-the indigenous, undecipherable tongue. They are described by Comparetti,
-_Mon. Ant._, III, pp. 451 _seq._, and by R. S. Conway, 2, 3, especially
-pp. 125 _seq._, in vol. VIII. In 1908 another discovery was made by the
-Italian Mission at Phæstus, of a clay disk with printed hieroglyphics
-which did not belong to the Cretan system of writing. It is supposed to
-have come from Asia Minor.
-
-For other discoveries in Crete and other authorities see R. M. Burrowes,
-C. H. and H. B. Dawes. On Cretan pottery see Sir Duncan Mackenzie, 2,
-and Sir Arthur Evans, 2. Sir Duncan Mackenzie also has a book on the
-Cretan palaces. Bury, in his _History of Greece_, pp. 9 _seq._, gives a
-brief description of Crete as revealed by archæologists. According to
-them, the palaces of Cnossus and Phæstus were erected before 2100 B. C.,
-when Cretan civilization was well advanced. See also the note to p.
-119 : 1 of this book.
-
-99 : 28. Azilian period. See p. 115 of this book.
-
-100 : 20 _seq._ Osborn, 1, p. 49 _seq._, and the note VII of the
-appendix. See also the notes to p. 13 of this book.
-
-100 : 28. Progressive dessication. Ellsworth Huntington, 2.
-
-101 : 5. Arboreal Man. See the work of W. K. Gregory, especially 3, p.
-277; and John C. Merriam, pp. 203 and 206–207.
-
-101 : 12. Osborn, 1, note VII, p. 511, of the appendix; and Merriam, pp.
-205–208.
-
-101 : 15. J. Pilgrim, _The Correlation of the Siwaliks with Mammal
-Horizons of Europe_.
-
-101 : 21. Java and the Pithecanthropus erectus. Dubois, E. Fischer, and
-particularly G. Schwalbe. For the land connection of Java with the
-mainland see Alfred Russel Wallace’s _Island Life_, and _The Geography
-of Mammals_, by W. L. and P. L. Sclater.
-
-101 : 27. Gunz glaciation. See Osborn’s table of Geologic Time, in 1, p.
-41. The date given here is that made by Penck.
-
-102 : 1. W. D. Matthew, _Revision of the Lower Eocene Primates_, and W.
-K. Gregory, _The Evolution of the Primates_.
-
-102 : 13. Schoetensack, _Der Unterkiefer des Homo Heidelbergensis aus
-den Sanden von Mauer bei Heidelberg im Beitrag zur Paläontologie des
-Menschen_.
-
-102 : 21. At the beginning of this Eolithic period wood was used for
-clubs and probably as levers along with the chance flints. Perhaps it
-was employed even earlier, but of course no remains would come down to
-us.
-
-
- CHAPTER II. PALEOLITHIC MAN
-
-For the material in this chapter the authorities, such as Cartailhac,
-Boule, Breuil, Obermaier and Rutot are all given in Osborn, 1, together
-with useful discussions of the evidence. In special instances additional
-sources are inserted here.
-
-105 : 17. Piltdown Man. See Charles Dawson, the discoverer, 1, 2 and 3.
-There is a tremendous bibliography on the Piltdown Man.
-
-106 : 1. _The Jaw of the Piltdown Man_, Gerrit S. Miller. From a later
-paper by Mr. Miller (2) we quote the following from pp. 43–44:
-
-“The combined characters of the jaw, molars and skull were made the
-basis of a genus Eoanthropus, placed in the family Hominidæ.... While
-the brain case is human in structure, the jaw and teeth have not yet
-been shown to present any character diagnostic of man; the recognized
-features in which they resemble human jaws and teeth are merely those
-which men and apes possess in common. On the other hand, the symphyseal
-region of the jaw, the canine tooth and the molars are unlike those
-known to occur in any race of men.... Until the combination of a human
-brain case and nasal bones with an ape-like mandible, ape-like lower
-molars and an ape-like upper canine has actually been seen in one
-animal, the ordinary procedure of both zoology and paleontology would
-refer each set of fragments to a member of the family which the
-characters indicate. The name Eoanthropus dawsoni has therefore been
-restricted to the human elements of the original composite (Family
-Hominidæ), and the name Pan vetus has been proposed for the animal
-represented by the jaw (Family Pongidæ).”
-
-See also _The Dawn Man of Piltdown, England_, by W. K. Gregory. Ray
-Lancaster has made some interesting observations and is the most recent
-authority on this subject.
-
-106 : 14. On the Neanderthal Man see Osborn and his authorities.
-
-107 : 21. A note on p. 385 of Rice Holmes’s _Ancient Britain_ is useful
-in this connection. “MM. de Quatrefages and Hamy affirm that the
-Neanderthal race has left a permanent imprint on the population, and
-refer to various skulls of the Neolithic and later periods which
-resemble more or less closely that of Neanderthal. Moreover, it is
-generally admitted that even at the present day a few individuals here
-and there belong to the same type. But it does not follow that these
-persons to whom Dr. Beddoe and M. Hamy refer were descended from men who
-lived in Britain in the Paleolithic age.”
-
-Taylor, _Origin of the Aryans_, mentions several famous men who had
-typical Neanderthal skulls, among them Robert Bruce.
-
-108 : 1 _seq._ Beddoe, 4, pp. 265–266; Ripley, pp. 326–334, but
-especially pp. 266, 330–331.
-
-108: 16. Alés Hrdlička, _The Most Ancient Skeletal Remains of Man_,
-considers the Neanderthal type extinct, as do Keith, _Antiquity of Man_,
-_passim_, and A. C. Haddon. Consult Barnard Davis, _Thesaurus
-Craniorum_, especially p. 70, and Beddoe, 2, as well as Osborn, 1, p.
-217.
-
-108 : 18. Firbolgs. See the note above to line 1; also Taylor, _Origin
-of the Aryans_, p. 78.
-
-109 : 8. Broca, according to Osborn, is responsible for this theory.
-
-109 : 17 _seq._ See pp. 329 _seq._ of Galton’s _Hereditary Genius_.
-
-110 : 8. In Dordogne, France, there are people who look as it is thought
-the Cro-Magnons did. These modern people may belong to that type in the
-same way that here and there people resembling the Neanderthals are
-still found. In Dordogne these Cro-Magnon features are quite common, and
-differ markedly from those of other Frenchmen. For studies of this type
-see Collignon, 1. For full discussions of the ancient Cro-Magnons see
-Keith, 1 and 2, and Osborn, 1.
-
-110 : 11. Dr. Charles B. Davenport, in correspondence, remarks: “There
-can be no doubt that the prolific shall inherit the earth or the
-proletariat shall inherit the earth, which is etymologically the same
-thing. We see this law in action in Russia to-day.... Can we build a
-wall high enough around this country, so as to keep out these cheaper
-races, or will it be only a feeble dam which will make the flood all the
-worse when it breaks? Or should we admit the four million picks and
-shovels which many of our capitalists are urging Congress to admit in
-order to secure what wealth we can for the moment, leaving it for our
-descendants to abandon the country to the blacks, browns and yellows,
-and seek an asylum in New Zealand? I am inclined to think that the thing
-to do is to make better selection of immigrants, admitting them in
-fairly large numbers so long as we can sift out the defective strains.”
-
-111 : 20 _seq._ É. Cartailhac says, in _La France préhistorique_: “The
-race of Cro-Magnon is well determined. There is no doubt about their
-high stature and Topinard is not the only one who believes that they
-were blonds.” See also G. Retzius, 3. But he derives the Nordics from
-them. On the other hand, the Dordogne people to-day are dark, and many
-anthropologists are inclined to the belief that the Cro-Magnons were
-brunets, a theory in which the writer heartily concurs.
-
-112 : 1. L’Abbé H. Breuil, _Les subdivisions du paléolithique supérieur
-et leur signification_, pp. 203–205. Other writers such as Nilsson and
-Dawkins have also held this theory.
-
-112 : 21. One of the few references to the bare possibility of a
-Magdalenian dog occurs in Obermaier’s _El Hombre Fósil_, the footnote on
-pp. 221 and 223. From this it appears that certain conclusions are drawn
-that if the Alpera paintings are of late Magdalenian age, if certain
-nondescript animals in those paintings are intended for dogs and if
-those dogs are meant to be in a state of domestication, then there can
-be no doubt whatever that the dog was domesticated in Magdalenian times.
-But Obermaier does not feel that this furnishes satisfactory proof.
-
-112 : 25–p. 113. Bow and Arrow. Obermaier, 1, chap. V, _The Upper
-Paleolithic_, p. 112, says: “The coarse stone implements of the lower
-Paleolithic no longer exist, being replaced by an industry of very fine
-flints and ... certain lances with points made of bone, horn or ivory,
-which were very generally used. The use of the bow is proved by certain
-representations in mural pictures (_i. e._, the Archers of Alpera, etc.,
-eastern Spain, Magdalenian; Archer of Laussel, France, Aurignacian).”
-See the corresponding plates in chap. VII.
-
-On p. 217 of chap. VII, _Quaternary Art_, there is a man depicted in the
-pose of an archer. On p. 239 Obermaier says: “Among ... [the paintings
-of Alpera] are sketches of more than 70 human figures, ... 13 are shown
-in the act of shooting an arrow at other men or animals.”[6] On p. 241
-he continues: “The paintings of eastern Spain of Quaternary age also
-show archers.” A recent letter from the Abbé Henri Breuil says that the
-bow and arrow did not exist in France in Paleolithic times, and he is,
-of course, aware of the Laussel figure found by Lalanne and referred to
-by Obermaier as proof. Alpera is agreed by Obermaier to be of
-Tardenoisian age, consequently of the transition period to the
-Neolithic. Beside Alpera, the only other instance of pictured bows and
-arrows noted occurs at Calpatá, said to be of Upper Paleolithic age and
-Capsian industry.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- If the Alpera paintings are of this (Magdalenian?) period, then the
- bow certainly existed at this time, but there is reason to believe
- that the paintings belong to a later epoch.
-
-See Fig. 174, p. 353, of Osborn, 1, giving a large bison drawing in the
-cavern of Niaux on the Ariège, showing the supposed spear or arrowheads,
-attached to large shafts, which are represented as having pierced its
-side. On p. 354 Osborn says: “It is possible, although not probable,
-that the bow was introduced at this time and that a less perfect flint
-point, fastened to a shaft like an arrowhead, and projected with great
-velocity and accuracy, proved to be far more effective than the
-spear.... From these drawings and symbols (Fig. 174), it would appear
-that barbed weapons of some kind were used in the chase, but no barbed
-flints occur at any time in the Paleolithic, nor has any trace been
-found of bone barbed arrowheads, or any direct evidence of the existence
-of the bow.” On p. 410: “Here [Cavern of Niaux] for the first time are
-revealed the early Magdalenian methods of hunting the bison, for upon
-their flanks are clearly traced one or more arrow or spear heads with
-the shafts still attached; the most positive proof of the use of the
-arrow is the apparent termination of the wooden shaft in the feathers
-which are rudely represented in three of the drawings.”
-
-113 : 3. Osborn, p. 456: “The flint industry [of the Azilian] continues
-the degeneration begun in the Magdalenian and exhibits a new life and
-impulse only in the fashioning of extremely small or microlithic tools
-and weapons known as ‘Tardenoisian.’” See also pp. 465–475 for a more
-complete discussion and their distribution as traced by de Mortillet.
-Also Breuil, 2, pp. 2–6, and 3, pp. 165–238, but especially pp. 232–233.
-
-Osborn continues, p. 450: “If it is true ... that Europe at the same
-time became more densely forested, the chase may have become more
-difficult and the Cro-Magnons may have begun to depend more and more
-upon the life of the streams and the art of fishing. It is generally
-agreed that the harpoons were chiefly used for fishing, and that many of
-the microlithic flints, which now begin to appear more abundantly, may
-have been attached to a shaft for the same purpose. We know that similar
-microliths were used as arrowpoints in pre-dynastic Egypt.”
-
-The microliths may have been used on darts for bird hunting.
-
-113 : 21. See Osborn, pp. 333 _seq._, and in this book the note to p.
-143 : 13 on the Tripolje culture.
-
-115 : 9. Compare what Rice Holmes has to say on pp. 99–100 of his
-_Ancient Britain_.
-
-117 : 18. Maglemose. This culture was first found and described by G. F.
-L. Sarauw, in a work entitled _En Stenolden Boplads: Maglemose ved
-Mullerup_. The same material is given in “Trouvaille fait dans le nord
-de l’Europe datant de la période de l’hiatus,” in the _Congrès
-préhistorique de France_. A site equivalent to the Maglemose in culture,
-but discovered later, is described in “Une trouvaille de l’ancien âge de
-la pierre” (Braband), by MM. Thomsen and Jessen. See also Obermaier, 2,
-pp. 467–469.
-
-117 : 23. The Abbé Breuil, _Les peintures rupestres d’Espagne_ (with
-Serrano Gomez and Cabre Aguilo), IV, “Les Abris del Bosque à Alpéra
-(Albacete)” says: “Other peoples known at present only from their
-industries, were advancing toward the close of the Upper Paleolithic
-along the northern and southern shores of the Baltic and persisted for
-an appreciable time before the arrival of the tribes introducing the
-early Neolithic-Campignian culture which accumulated in the Kitchen
-Middens along the same shores. Like the southern races of the
-Azilian-Tardenoisian times these northerly tribes were truly
-Pre-Neolithic, ignorant of both agriculture and pottery; they brought
-with them no domesticated animals excepting the dog, which is known at
-Mugem, at Tourasse and at Oban, in northwestern Scotland.”
-
-
- CHAPTER III. THE NEOLITHIC AND BRONZE AGES
-
-119: 1. See the Osborn tables. As evidence of far earlier dates of the
-Neolithic in the east we may quote Sir A. J. Evans, 2, p. 721. He
-calculates that the earliest settlement at Knossos in Crete, which was
-_Neolithic_, is about 12,000 years old, for he assumes that in the
-western court of the palace the average rate of deposit was fairly
-continuous. Professor Montelius, in _L’Anthropologie_, t. XVII, p. 137,
-argues from the stratigraphy of finds at Susa that the beginning of the
-Neolithic Age in the east may be dated about 18,000 B. C.
-
-119: 6. See the note to p. 147.
-
-119: 15. Balkh. Balkh, in Afghanistan, was the capital of Bactria, the
-ancient name of the country between the range of the Hindu Kush and the
-Oxus, and is now for the most part a mass of ruins, situated on the
-right bank of the Balkh River. The antiquity and greatness of the place
-are recognized by the native populations who speak of it as the “Mother
-of Cities,” and it is certain that at a very early date it was the rival
-of Ecbatana, Nineveh, and Babylon.
-
-Bactria was subjugated by Cyrus and from then on formed one of the
-satrapies of the Persian Empire. Zaborowski, 1, p. 43, says: “After the
-conquests of Alexander there was founded a Greco-Bactrian kingdom ...
-which embraced Sogdiana, Bactria and Afghanistan. The Greco-Bactrian
-kings struck a quantity of coins. They bore a double legend, the one
-Greek, the other still called Bactrian, which is not Zend, nor even the
-language really spoken in Bactria. It is a popular dialect derived from
-Sanskrit.” Again on p. 185: “Zend has been called, and is still called,
-Bactrian or Old Bactrian, it may be because Bactria has been conceived
-as the original country or an ancient place of sojourn of the Persians;
-it may be because Zoroaster, a Median Magus, had, according to a legend,
-fled to the Bactrians where he found protection under Prince Vishtaspa.
-Eulogy of this prince is often incorporated in the sayings of
-Zoroaster.”
-
-Later a new race appeared, tribes called Scythians by the Greeks,
-amongst which the Tochari, identical with the Yuë-Chih of the Chinese,
-were the most important. According to Chinese sources, they entered
-Sogdiana in 159 B. C.; in 139 they conquered Bactria, and during the
-next generation they had made an end to the Greek rule in eastern Iran.
-In the middle of the first century B. C. the whole of eastern Iran and
-western India belonged to the great “Indo-Scythian” Empire. In the third
-century the Kushan dynasty began to decline; about 320 A. D. the Gupta
-Empire was founded in India. In the fifth the Ephtalites, or “White
-Huns,” subjugated Bactria; then the Turks, about A. D. 560, overran the
-country north of the Oxus. In 1220 Jenghis Khan sacked Balkh and
-levelled all buildings capable of defence, while Timur repeated this
-treatment in the fourteenth century. Notwithstanding this, Marco Polo
-could still, in the following century, describe it as “a noble city and
-a great.”
-
-See also Raphael Pumpelly, _Explorations in Turkestan_, where 10,000
-years is said to be the age of the remains of early civilization. More
-modern authorities, however, do not accept these ancient dates.
-
-119: 21. Osborn, 1, p. 479.
-
-120: 1 _seq._ Osborn, 1, pp. 493–495; Ripley, pp. 486–487, and also S.
-Reinach, 3, and G. Sergi, 2, pp. 199–220.
-
-120: 28 _seq._ Oman, _England before the Norman Conquest_, pp. 642
-_seq._, says: “The position which he [Harold] chose is that where the
-road from London to Hastings emerges from the forest, on the ground
-named Senlac, where the village of Rattle now stands.... This hill
-formed the battleground.... On reaching the lower slopes of the English
-position the archers began to let fly their shafts, and not without
-effect, for as long as the shooting was at long range, there was little
-reply, since Harold had but few bowmen in his ranks, (the Fyrd, it is
-said, came to the fight with no defensive weapons but the shield, and
-were ill-equipped, with javelins and instruments of husbandry turned to
-warlike uses), and the abattis, whatever its length or height, would not
-give complete protection to the English. But when the advance reached
-closer quarters, it was met with a furious hail of missiles of all
-sorts—darts, lances, casting axes, and stone clubs such as William of
-Poictiers describes, and the Bayeux Tapestry portrays—rude weapons, more
-appropriate to the neolithic age.... Many a moral has been drawn from
-this great fight.... Neither desperate courage, nor numbers that must
-have been at least equal to those of the invader, could save from defeat
-an army which was composed in too great a proportion of untrained
-troops, and which was behind the times in its organization.... But the
-English stood by the customs of their ancestors, and, a few years
-before, Earl Ralph’s attempt to make the thegnhood learn cavalry tactics
-(see the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle), had been met by sullen resistance and
-had no effect.”
-
-121 : 4. See the note top. 128 : 2.
-
-121 : 15. F. Keller, _The Lake-Dwellings of Switzerland and Other Parts
-of Europe_; Schenck, _La Suisse préhistorique_, pp. 533–549; G. and A.
-de Mortillet, _Le Préhistorique_, part 3, and Munro, _The Lake Dwellings
-of Europe_. The lake-dwelling, known as Pont de la Thièle, between the
-lakes of Bienne and Neuchâtel, according to Grilliéron’s calculations,
-is dated 5000 B. C. See Keller, p. 462; Lyell, Antiquity of Man, p. 29;
-Avebury, _Prehistoric Times_, p. 401; and De Mortillet, _Le
-Préhistorique_, p. 621.
-
-121 : 17. Schenck, p. 190, says concerning Switzerland: “There were
-three [cultural] stages, stone, bronze, and iron.... On the other hand,
-from the anthropological point of view, this subdivision can also be
-made. In the first stage [Neolithic Lacustrian], we find only
-brachycephalic crania; in the second there are an almost equal number of
-brachycephalic and dolichocephalic; in the third there is a predominance
-of dolichocephalic” (that is, Schenck divides the Neolithic into three
-periods according to skulls, and the last runs into the age
-transitionary to bronze).
-
-See also G. Hervé, _Les populations lacustres_, p. 140; His and
-Rütimeyer, _Crania Helvetica_, pp. 12, 34, etc.; and the note on p. 275
-of Rice Holmes’s _Cæsar’s Conquest of Gaul_. Ripley gives useful and
-concise discussions on pp. 120, 471, 488 and 501.
-
-121 : 19. See both Keller and Schenck for the numbers of dwellings.
-
-121 : 22. _There were, of course, the caves and rock shelters used
-during a large part of the year, but probably no other regularly
-constructed dwellings served as permanent, all-the-year-round places of
-abode prior to the lake dwellings, and it is doubtful if these were
-inhabited in winter. It is generally believed that the custom of
-building pile villages arose from considerations of safety. This
-protection would be absent when the lakes were frozen over, and at the
-same time the huts would be exposed on all sides, including the floor,
-to the wintry blasts sweeping the lakes. They would in this way be
-rendered practically uninhabitable during the winter season._
-
-Keller declares that the same type of dwelling is found in the whole
-circle of countries which were formerly Celtic. (Introduction, p. 2.)
-The Crannoges of Scotland and Ireland continued in use until the age of
-iron in those countries. In Switzerland the lake dwellings disappeared
-about the first century (p. 7). The population was numerous (p. 432),
-large enough to have to depend upon cattle and agriculture (p. 479).
-
-This type of dwelling is found from Ireland to Japan, and even in South
-America. Many lake dwellings exist at the present day. The Welsh, Scotch
-and Irish Crannoges are related in structure to the European fascine
-types (Keller, p. 684 and Introduction). Others are built somewhat
-differently, and are, of course, of independent origin. An ancient site
-was unearthed at Finsbury, on the outskirts of London not long since,
-where there used to be a marsh. The inhabitants of this lake-dwelling
-were native outcasts during Romano-British times.
-
-121 : 26. See Schenck, and Keller, p. 6. On p. 140 of Keller we read:
-“The Pile Dwellings of eastern Switzerland ceased to exist before the
-bronze age or at its beginnings; those of western Switzerland came to
-their full development during this period.” On p. 37, describing the
-settlement of Mooseedorfsee Keller says: “A very striking circumstance
-ought to be mentioned, namely, that even heavy implements, such as stone
-chisels, grinding or sharpening stones, etc., were found quite high in
-the relic bed, while lighter objects, such as those made out of bone,
-were met with much deeper.” It is known that the Mooseedorfsee
-settlement is very old. No metal has been found here, but a bone
-arrowhead is described by Keller on p. 38. He remarks that the bones of
-very large animals were uncommonly numerous. It seems as if the earlier
-inhabitants were users of bone rather than of stone implements.
-
-122 : 1. Herodotus, V, 16 describes them. He also is the source of our
-information regarding the keeping of cattle, although archæological
-finds have proved the location of stables out on the platforms between
-the houses. His interesting account is given herewith: “Their manner of
-living is the following. Platforms supported upon tall piles stand in
-the middle of the lake, which are approached from land by a single
-narrow bridge. At the first the piles which bear up the platforms were
-fixed in their place by the whole body of the citizens, but since that
-time the custom which has prevailed about fixing them is this: they are
-brought from a hill called Orbêlus, and every man drives in three for
-each wife that he marries. Now the men all have many wives apiece; and
-this is the way in which they live. Each has his own hut, wherein he
-dwells, upon one of the platforms, and each has also a trap door giving
-access to the lake beneath; and their wont is to tie their baby children
-by the foot with a string, to save them from rolling into the water.
-They feed their horses and their other beasts upon fish, which abound in
-the lake to such a degree that a man has only to open his trap door and
-to let down a basket by a rope into the water and then to wait a very
-short time, when he draws it up quite full of them. The fish are of two
-kinds, which they call the paprax and the tilon.”
-
-122 : 3. In the Introduction, p. 2, and elsewhere Keller says regarding
-cattle: “Cattle were kept, not on land, as in the Terramara region, but
-on the platforms themselves, out in the lakes. Many charred remains of
-stables and stable refuse have been taken from the lakes, but only from
-certain parts of the sites, between those of the houses.” See also
-Schenck, p. 188.
-
-Rice Holmes, pp. 89–90 of _Ancient Britain_, says of that country that
-agriculture was limited in the Neolithic, but flourished in the Bronze
-Age.
-
-122 : 14. The Terramara Period. Keller, pp. 378 _seq._ As related to
-Switzerland, pp. 391, 393. For swamp and river bank sites, pp. 391, 397
-_seq._ For bronze in Terramara settlements, p. 386. For the Upper
-Robenhausian, see Schenck, p. 190, and Montelius, _La civilisation
-primitive en Italie_. Peet, _The Stone and Bronze Ages in Italy_, and
-Munro, _The Lake Dwellings of Europe_ and _Palæolithic Man and the
-Terramara Settlements_ must also be read in this connection. Schwerz,
-_Völkerschaften der Schweiz_, gives, for the average cranial indices of
-the Lake Dwellers, 79 during the Stone Age, 75.5 in the Copper Age, and
-77 in the Bronze Age. Of these last 14 per cent only were
-brachycephalic, 20 per cent were extremely long-headed. In the Iron Age
-46 per cent were brachycephalic. Consult also Deniker, 2, p. 316.
-
-122 : 21. Ripley, pp. 502–503; Sergi, 2; Robert Munro, 2; Peet, 2.
-
-122 : 27–123: 4. See the note to p. 117 : 18.
-
-123 : 5. On the Kitchen Middens, see especially Madsen, Sophus Müller
-and others in _Affaldsdynger fra Stenaldern i Danmark_.
-
-123 : 12. Salomon Reinach, 3 and 5; Deniker, 2, p. 314; and Peake, 2, p.
-156, where we find the following: “Over the greater part of Sweden,—all,
-in fact, except a strip of coastline on the western side of Scania,—and
-all along the shore of the Baltic from the Gulf of Bothnia southwards
-and westwards as far as a point midway between the Vistula and the Oder,
-there are found abundant remains of a primitive civilization which dates
-from the Neolithic Age, and indeed, from early in that age. This
-civilization, known as the East Scandinavian or Arctic culture,
-extended, perhaps later, over the whole of Norway.”
-
-Consult the notes to pp. 125: 4 _seq._ for western trade.
-
-123 : 20. Sergi, 4; Beddoe, 4, pp. 26, 29; Fleure and James, pp. 122
-_seq._
-
-123 : 23. Paleolithic Population. Fleure and James, _Anthropological
-Types in Wales_, p. 120. Rice Holmes, _Ancient Britain_, p. 380, says
-they were confined to the South. No Paleolithic implements were found
-north of Lincoln, or at least of the East Riding of Yorkshire.
-
-123 : 26. John Munro, _The Story of the British Race_, p. 45; Rice
-Holmes, _Ancient Britain_, p. 68; and Fleure and James, pp. 40, 69–74,
-122 _seq._
-
-124 : 4. For the Alpines see pp. 134 _seq._ of this book.
-
-124 : 9. Consult the note to p. 143 on this subject.
-
-124 : 15. On the Nordics see pp. 167 _seq._ and 213 _seq._ On the
-Scandinavian blonds see the note to p. 20 : 5.
-
-124 : 20. See the notes to pp. 168 _seq._
-
-125 : 1. G. Elliot Smith, _The Ancient Egyptians_, especially pp. 146
-and 149 _seq._; Breasted, 1, 2 and 3; Keane, _Ethnology_, pp. 72 _seq._;
-Sophus Müller, _L’Europe préhistorique_, p. 49; Hall, _Ancient History
-of the Near East_, p. 3.
-
-125 : 4. Deniker, 2, pp. 314–315: “The great trade route for amber, and
-perhaps tin, between Denmark and the Archipelago is well known at the
-present day; it passes through the valley of the Elbe, the Moldau and
-the Danube. The commercial relations between the north and the south
-explain the similarities which archæologists find between Scandinavian
-bronze objects and those of the Ægean district.”
-
-See also E. H. Minns, _Scythians and Greeks_, for trade in the East, via
-the Vistula, Dnieper and Danube, pp. 438–446, 458, 459, 465, 493, etc.;
-and Déchellette, _Manuel d’Archéologie_, t. I, p. 626, and II, p. 19.
-Herodotus IV, 33, gives the trade route from the Hyperboreans to Delos.
-Félix Sartiaux, _Troie, La Guerre de Troie_, pp. 162, 181, also
-discusses the trade routes for amber.
-
-125 : 7. Amber. Tacitus, _Germania_: “They [the tribes of the Æstii]
-ransack the sea also and are the only people who gather in the shallows
-and on the shore itself the amber which they call in their tongue
-‘glæsum.’ Nor have they, being barbarians, inquired or learned what
-substance or process produces it; nay, it lay there long among the rest
-of the flotsam and jetsam of the sea, until Roman luxury gave it a name.
-To the natives it is useless; it is gathered crude, it is forwarded to
-Rome unshaped; they are astonished to be paid for it. Yet you may infer
-that it is the exudation of trees: certain creeping and even winged
-creatures are continually found embedded; they have been entangled in
-its liquid form and as the material hardens, are imprisoned. I should
-suppose, therefore, that, just as in the secluded places of the East,
-where frankincense and balsam are exuded, so in the islands and lands of
-the West, there are groves and glades more than ordinarily luxuriant,”
-etc.
-
-Amber, if rubbed, has magnetic qualities and develops electricity. Our
-word “electricity” is derived from its Greek name, “electron.” Tacitus
-says: “If you try the qualities of amber by setting fire to it, it
-kindles like a torch and soon dissolves into something like pitch and
-resin.”
-
-125 : 13. Gowland, _Metals in Antiquity_, pp. 236, 252 _seq._
-
-125 : 15 _seq._ Copper. Reisner’s opinion that the pre-dynastic
-Egyptians invented the use of copper (_Naga-ed-Dêr_, I, p. 134) which is
-followed by Elliot Smith (_Ancient Egyptians_, p. 3), is not the view
-held by all scholars. Hall believes that the knowledge of the use of
-metal came to the prehistoric southern Egyptians (_Ancient History of
-the Near East_, p. 90), toward the end of the pre-dynastic age from the
-north. But he counts the Mount Sinai and Cyprus deposits as northern
-centres of origin from which a knowledge of the working of the metal
-radiated.
-
-The mines of the Sinaitic peninsula were worked for copper at the time
-of Seneferu, about 3733 B. C., and probably much earlier (Gowland, p.
-245, and elsewhere), “but long before the actual mining operations were
-carried on, how long it is impossible to say, the metal must have been
-obtained by primitive methods from the surface ore. It is hence not
-unreasonable to assume that at least as early as about 5000 B. C. the
-metal copper was known and in use in Egypt.” The same writer believes
-“that an earlier date than 5000 B. C. should be assigned to the first
-use of copper in the Chaldean region.” In this he bases himself on the
-discovery of copper figures associated with bricks and tablets bearing
-the name of King Ur-Nina (about 4500 B. C.), and the fact that the upper
-Tigris region is known to contain rich deposits of the mineral. Jastrow,
-Jr., assigns the date of 3000 B. C. to Ur-Nina, which may be more
-correct. Gowland dates copper in Cyprus at 2500 B. C., or even 3000,
-judging by the finds at Crete dated 2500 B. C. In the Troad he thinks it
-was used not later than in Cyprus. For China the date is unknown, but if
-we accept 2205, given in the Chinese annals as the time when the nine
-bronze caldrons were cast, which are often mentioned in the historical
-records, then copper may have been in use as early as 3000, or even
-earlier. De Morgan dates copper at 4400 B. C. in Egypt, where it was
-found in the supposed tomb of Menes.
-
-See also Lord Avebury, _Prehistoric Times_, pp. 71–72, who gives 3730
-for copper-working in Sinai, and its first appearance about 5000 B. C.
-Montelius, 1, p. 380, gives copper in Cyprus as about 2500 B. C., hardly
-3000; and for Egypt 5000; he regards it as having been known in Babylon
-at about the same time. Breasted, _Ancient Times_, assigns the date of
-the earliest copper as at least 4000 in Egypt.
-
-125 : 27. Eduard Meyer, 1, p. 41. But _cf._ Reisner, _Naga-ed-Dêr_, I,
-p. 126, note 3. Also Hall, _Ancient History of the Near East_, p. 28.
-
-126 : 1. Elliot Smith, 1, p. 8: “Most serious scholars who concern
-themselves with the problems of the ancient history of Egypt and
-Babylonia have now abandoned these inflated estimates of the lengths of
-the historical periods in the two empires; and it is now generally
-admitted that Meyer’s estimate of 3400±100 B. C. is a close
-approximation to the date of the union of Upper and Lower Egypt and that
-the blending of Semitic and Sumerian cultures in Babylonia took place
-shortly after the time of this event in the Nile valley.” See also Hall,
-_Ancient History of the Near East_, p. 3.
-
-126 : 7. Bronze. Rice Holmes, 1, p. 125: “The oldest piece of bronze
-that has yet been dated was found at Medûm, in Egypt, and is supposed to
-have been cast about 3700 B. C. But the metal may have been worked even
-earlier in other lands; for a bronze statuette and a bronze vase, which
-were made twenty-five centuries before our era have been obtained from
-Mesopotamia and the craft must have passed through many stages before
-such objects could have been produced. Yet it would be rash to infer
-that either the Babylonians or the Egyptians invented bronze for neither
-in Egypt nor in Babylonia is there any tin. The old theory that it was a
-result of Phœnician commerce with Britain has long been abandoned and
-British bronze implements are so different from those of Norway and
-Sweden, Denmark and Hungary, that it cannot have been derived from any
-of these countries. German influence was felt at a comparatively late
-period, but from first to last British bronze culture was closely
-connected with that of Gaul and through Gaul with that of Italy.”
-
-126 : 9. Gowland, p. 243: “It has been frequently stated that the alloy
-used by the men of the Bronze Age generally consists of copper and tin
-in the proportions of 9 to 1. I have hence compared the analyses which
-have been published with the following results:
-
- EARLY WEAPONS AND IMPLEMENTS. 57 ANALYSES
-
- In 25 the tin ranges from about 8 to 11 per cent.
- „ 6 „ „ „ „ „ 11 „ 13 „ „
- „ 26 „ „ „ „ „ 3 „ 8 „ „
-
-
- LATER PALSTAVES AND SOCKETED AXES. 15 ANALYSES
-
- In 13 the tin ranges from about 4.3 to 13.1 per cent.
- „ 2 „ „ was about 18.3 per cent.
-
-
- SPEAR AND LANCE HEADS
-
- In 5 the tin ranges from about 11.3 to 15.7 per cent.
-
-
- STILL LATER. SWORDS. 33 ANALYSES
-
- In 14 the tin ranges from about 8 to 11 per cent.
- „ 12 „ „ „ „ „ 12 „ 18 „ „
- „ 7 „ „ is less than 9 per cent.
-
-“It is obvious, therefore, that these statements do not accurately
-represent the facts. And if we consider the different uses to which the
-implements or weapons were put, it is evident that no single alloy could
-be equally suitable for all.... It is worthy of note that these
-proportions (_i. e._, different hardnesses for different implements)
-appear to have been frequently attained, and for this the men of the
-later Bronze Age are deserving of great credit as metallurgists and
-workers in metal.”
-
-On the percentages of tin with copper for bronze see also Montelius, 1,
-pp. 448 _seq._
-
-126 : 12. Schenck, p. 241, describes a copper axe exactly like those of
-polished stone, and another of bronze, of very primitive pattern,
-showing that these were copied from the earlier stone models.
-
-Some authorities think that iron, in Egypt at least, came in about the
-same time as bronze, or even earlier. Certain peoples missed altogether
-one or another of these stages, as the absence of remains indicates. For
-instance, the central Africans had, as far as is known, no bronze age,
-but passed directly from the use of stone to that of iron. (See Rice
-Holmes, _Ancient Britain_, p. 123.) See the notes to p. 129 on the value
-of iron. Occasional implements of any material better than that
-ordinarily in use, which had been introduced by trade or acquired by
-fighting, were very highly prized. Any books on primitive peoples
-contain references to the value of such “foreign tools.”
-
-126 : 24. Diodorus Siculus, V. Consult _Crania Britannica_, by Davis and
-Thurnam, the chapter on the “Historical Ethnology of Britain,” for
-evidence that the Phœnicians did have intercourse with Britain. For a
-full discussion of this disputed question see pp. 483–514 in Rice
-Holmes’s _Ancient Britain_. Herodotus and other early writers allude to
-the fleets of the Phœnicians, and of course the voyage of Pythias about
-the last half of the fourth century B. C. was undertaken to discover the
-source of the Phœnician tin. See Holmes’s _Britain_, pp. 217–226;
-D’Arbois de Jubainville, _Les premiers habitants de l’Europe_, vol. I,
-chap. V; Hall, _Ancient History of the Near East_, pp. 158, 402–403; and
-G. Elliot Smith, _Ancient Mariners_, on the Phœnicians.
-
-On pp. 251–252 of _Ancient Britain_, Rice Holmes makes the suggestion
-that the export of tin from Britain may have died down by Roman times.
-
-127 : 9 _seq._ G. Elliot Smith, 1, p. 178, and map 3. Deniker, 2, p.
-315, says: “It is generally admitted that the ancient Bronze Age
-corresponds with the ‘Ægean Civilization’ which flourished among the
-peoples inhabiting, between the thirtieth and twentieth centuries B. C.,
-Switzerland, the north of Italy, the basin of the Danube, the Balkan
-peninsula, a part of Anatolia, and lastly, Cyprus. It gave rise, between
-1700 and 1100 B. C., to the ‘Mycenæan Civilization,’ of which the
-favorite ornamental design is the spiral.”
-
-Myers, in _Ancient History_, pp. 134–135, states that in Crete the metal
-development began as early, at least, as 3000 B. C., and was at its
-height in the island about 1600 or 1500 B. C. Articles of Cretan
-handiwork found in Egypt point to intercourse with that country as early
-as the sixth dynasty, which he makes about 2500 B. C. See also G. Elliot
-Smith, 1, pp. 147, 179–180, and the authorities quoted on bronze.
-
-127 : 26–128 : 1 _seq._ G. Elliot Smith, 1, pp. 178–180. Rice Holmes, 1,
-p. 123, gives in a footnote the sixth dynasty as about 3200 B. C. (_cf._
-above), when Elliot Smith says the movement first began (_ibid._, pp.
-169, 171). They do not agree on the date of this dynasty. See also Rice
-Holmes (_ibid._, p. 125), and Breasted, 3, p. 108. Montelius assigns
-2100 B. C. for the small copper daggers of northern Italy.
-
-128 : 2. The Eneolithic period. G. Elliot Smith, 1, pp. 20 _seq._, 37
-and 163 _seq._ Professor Orsi is responsible for the introduction of
-this term. See T. E. Peet, _The Stone and Bronze Ages in Italy_, and G.
-Sergi, _Italia_, pp. 240 _seq._, on the Eneolithic period in Italy.
-
-128 : 13. Oscar Montelius, _The Civilization of Sweden in Heathen
-Times_, and _Kulturgeschichte Schwedens von den ältesten Zeiten_; Sophus
-Müller, _Nordische Alterthumskunde_. The latter gives 1200 B. C. See
-also Rice Holmes, 1, pp. 64, 127, 424–454; Beddoe, 4, p. 15; Haddon, 3,
-p. 41. According to Gjerset, in his _History of the Norwegian People_,
-the Bronze Age in Norway began about 1500 B. C., the Iron Age at 500 B.
-C. Lord Avebury, pp. 71–72; Read, _Guide to the Antiquities of the
-Bronze Age_; and Deniker, 2, p. 315, give 1800 B. C. for Britain, and
-for northern Europe Avebury assigns 2500 B. C. 1800 is the generally
-accepted date for the beginning of the Bronze Age in Britain.
-
-128 : 16. Alpines in Ireland. Beddoe, 4, p. 15; Fleure and James, pp.
-128–129, 135, 139; Rice Holmes, 1, p. 432; Ripley, pp. 302–303;
-Abercromby, pp. 111 _seq._; Crawford, pp. 184 _seq._ But Fleure and
-James say, p. 138, that other Alpines without brow ridges are to be
-found at the present time in considerable numbers on the east coast of
-Ireland. Ripley’s strong assertion that no Alpines have remained in the
-British Isles has been proved by more recent study to require
-modification.
-
-128 : 17. See in this connection Fleure and James, p. 127.
-
-128 : 26. _Cf._ Elliot Smith, 1, pp. 20–21, 163, 181; Peet, 2; Reisner,
-_Early Dynastic Cemeteries of Naga-ed-Dêr_; and Rice Holmes, 1, p. 65
-_seq._
-
-129 : 2–8. The megaliths were not erected by Alpines, for there are
-practically none in central Europe, according to Keane, _Ethnology_, pp.
-135–136, and Dr. Robert Munro, in a discussion published in the _Jour.
-Roy. Anth. Inst._, 1889–1890, p. 65. On the other hand, Peet, 1, pp. 39,
-64, says they are being discovered in the interior—a few in Germany. He
-does not mention bronze among the finds in the megaliths of France, but
-there was a little gold. Bronze was, however, found in Spain. Consult
-Fleure and James, pp. 128 _seq._; Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 8–9; and, for an
-exhaustive archæological study, Déchellette, _Manuel d’archéologie_,
-vol. I, chap. III, especially paragraph v, pp. 393 _seq._, for dolmens
-in Brittany. Concerning the contents of these we may quote the
-following:
-
-“Polished hatchets, often enough of rare stone, beads from necklaces,
-and pendants of Callais or of divers materials, implements of flint,
-knives, arrow points which are wing-shaped, scrapers, nodules, grinding
-stones, pottery, vases, grains of baked earth, some rare jewels of gold,
-collars and bracelets, such is, in general, the composition of the
-contents of the neolithic dolmens of Brittany, contents different, as we
-shall see, from those of the sepulchres of the Bronze Age in the same
-region. These vast Armorican crypts belong certainly to the end of the
-Neolithic period, in spite of the absence of copper, the habitual
-forerunner of bronze objects. The smallness of the crypt, the size of
-the tumulus, the mixture of construction in huge blocks and in walls
-seem to indicate, as M. Cartailhac has observed, a more recent age than
-that of ordinary dolmens. In the pure Bronze Age the monolithic supports
-are replaced by the walls of unmortared stones.
-
-“Moreover, we shall see that there have been found in certain covered
-alleys in Brittany, pottery of a very characteristic type called
-calciform vases, pottery belonging in the south of France and southern
-Europe with the first objects of copper and bronze. Jewels of gold
-confirm, on the other hand, these chronological determinations.” On p.
-397: “The dolmen sepulchres of the Bronze Age in Brittany, and notably
-in Finisterre, are distinguished more often by the type of their
-construction from those of the Stone Age.”
-
-“The dolmens of Normandy and Isle de France contain some stone objects,
-fragments of vases, and numerous debris of human skeletons.” The end of
-the pure Neolithic is the date of the megaliths in Armorica, as we read
-on p. 407. The first metals, imported from the south, penetrated into
-northern Gaul a little later than in the southern provinces. That is why
-certain typical objects of the end of the pure Neolithic in Armorica,
-such as Callais and the calciform vases, are associated with the first
-objects of copper or bronze in the funerary crypts of Provence and
-Portugal.
-
-G. Elliot Smith and W. H. R. Rivers claim that there is a close
-connection throughout the eastern hemisphere between the distribution of
-megalithic monuments and either ocean or fresh-water pearls, but this
-appears to the author to be far-fetched. Two very recent articles
-dealing with megaliths are “Anthropology and Our Older Histories,” by
-Fleure and Winstanley, and “The Menhirs of Madagascar,” by A. L. Lewis.
-
-129 : 8. Rice Holmes, _Cæsar’s Conquest of Gaul_, p. 9.
-
-129 : 12. Earliest iron in the north. See the notes to pp. 131 : 1 and
-131 : 9 on the La Tène period. Also Montelius, 2, and Sophus Müller, 2,
-pp. 145 and 165 _seq._
-
-129 : 13. Mound burials among the Vikings. Montelius, 2.
-
-129 : 15. Iron in Egypt. Some authorities think that iron in Egypt came
-in about the same time as bronze, or even earlier. A piece of worked
-iron was found in the Great Pyramid, to which a date of about 3500 B. C.
-has been assigned. But, according to the archæological investigations of
-Professor Flinders Petrie, iron came into general use only about 800 B.
-C.
-
-Myres, in _The Dawn of History_, is quoted from p. 60 for the following
-neat summary, although any of the authorities on Egypt, such as Petrie,
-Maspero, Hall, Breasted, Elliot Smith, Reisner, Meyer, etc., should be
-consulted as original investigators: “The presence of iron, rare though
-it is, as far back as the first dynasty, puts Egypt into a position
-which is unique among metal-using lands; for, apart from these rare, but
-quite indisputable finds, Egypt remains for thousands of years a
-bronze-using, and for long, a merely copper-using, country.... In Egypt
-iron was known as a rarity, worn as a charm and an ornament, and even
-used, when it could be gotten ready made, as an implement; and it does
-not seem to have been worked in the country, and probably its source was
-unknown to the Egyptians. In historic times they still called it the
-‘metal of heaven’ as if they obtained it from meteorites; and it looks
-at present as though their earliest knowledge of it was from the south;
-for central Africa seems to have had no bronze age but direct and
-ancient transition from stone to iron weapons. Yet when they conquered
-Syria in the sixteenth century, they found it in regular use and
-received it in tribute. At home, however, they had no real introduction
-to an ‘Age of Iron’ until they met an Assyrian army in 668 B. C. and
-began to be exploited by Greeks from over sea.” In this connection see
-also Ridgeway, _The Early Age of Greece_, pp. 613–614. The same author,
-pp. 154 _seq._, discusses the value of iron in these early times.
-
-Deniker, p. 315 of his _Races of Man_, says Italy had iron as early as
-1200 B. C.
-
-Montelius assigns 1100 for iron in Etruria.
-
-129 : 19. Hallstatt iron culture. See Baron von Sacken, _Das Grabfeld
-von Hallstatt_; Dr. Moritz Hoernes, _Die Hallstattperiode_; Bertrand and
-Salomon Reinach, _Les Celts dans les vallées du Pô et du Danube_; and
-Ridgeway, _The Early Age of Greece_, pp. 407–480 and 594 _seq._ There is
-a brief summary by Ridgeway which it will serve to quote: “Everywhere
-else the change from iron weapons to bronze is immediate but at
-Hallstatt iron is seen gradually superseding bronze, first for ornament,
-then for edging cutting implements, then replacing fully the old bronze
-types and finally taking new forms of its own. There can be no doubt
-that the use of iron first developed in the Hallstatt area and that
-thence it spread southwards into Italy, Greece, the Ægean, Egypt and
-Asia, and northwards and westwards in Europe. At Noreia, which gave its
-name to Noricum, less than forty miles from Hallstatt, were the most
-famous iron mines of antiquity, which produced the Noric swords so
-prized and dreaded by the Romans. (See Pliny, _Hist. Nat._, XXXIV, 145;
-Horace, _Epod._, 17 : 71.) This iron needed no tempering and the Celts
-had found it ready smelted by nature just as the Eskimos had learned of
-themselves to use telluric iron embedded in basalt.... The Hallstatt
-culture is that of the Homeric Achæans (see Ridgeway, _Early Age of
-Greece_, pp. 407 _seq._), but as the brooch (along with iron, cremation
-of the dead, the round shield and the geometric ornament), passed down
-into Greece from central Europe, and as brooches are found in the lower
-town at Mycenæ, 1350 B. C., they must have been invented long before
-that date in central Europe. But as they are found here in the late
-bronze and early iron age, the early iron culture of Hallstatt must have
-originated long before 1350 B. C., a conclusion in accordance with the
-absence of silver at Hallstatt itself.”
-
-Keller, p. 160, describes an iron sword modelled after the same pattern
-as those of bronze; Schenck, p. 341, mentions a copper axe exactly like
-those of stone, and another of bronze of very primitive pattern. These
-and numerous other examples show the gradual growth of each age.
-
-The generally accepted date for Hallstatt is about 900 or 1000 B. C.
-Even Rice Holmes approves of this. (See 2, p. 9.) But if we believe that
-iron spread from Hallstatt, and it was in Etruria at 1200–1100 B. C.,
-and in Greece, in the form of swords like those of Hallstatt, at 1400 B.
-C. (according to Ridgeway), together with pins and various other objects
-which originated in the Tyrol, it is certainly very conservative to
-place the appearance of iron in Austria at 1500 B. C. Iron weapons were
-found in the remains of Troy from the war of 1184 B. C. See Ridgeway,
-_op. cit._, and Lartiaux, p. 179.
-
-We may quote from Hoernes as follows regarding the dates: “The temporal
-limits of the Hallstatt period are uncertain, according to the districts
-which one includes and the phenomena which one considers. It is now
-known that the Hallstatt relics for the most part belong to the first
-half of the last millennium B. C. But while some assign these relics as
-from the time of perhaps 1200 to perhaps 500, others are satisfied with
-the period from 900 to 400, or bring them even farther forward. It is
-certain that one must differentiate in these questions between the west
-and the east of the Hallstatt culture areas; in the one the particular
-Hallstatt forms would come nearer to the close than in the other. One or
-perhaps more centuries lie between the first appearance of the La Tène
-forms in Western Germany and in the eastern Alps. Also the beginning
-varies according to the locality and the criteria which one takes for a
-guide, that is to say, according to whether the phenomena of the time
-about 1000 B. C. are considered as belonging still in the pure Bronze
-Age, to a transition period, or indeed to the first Iron Age.”
-
-129 : 26. Ridgeway, speaking of the Achæans, says: “They brought with
-them iron which they used for their long swords and cutting
-implements.... The culture of the Homeric Achæans” (these are dated
-about 1000 B. C., about the time of the Dorians, according to Bury, p.
-57) “corresponds to a large extent with that of the early Iron Age of
-the Upper Danube (Hallstatt) and to the early Iron Age of Upper Italy
-(Villanova).”
-
-Myres, _Dawn of History_, p. 175, says that there was a gradual
-introduction of iron, first for tools and then for weapons. It had been
-known as “precious metal” in the Ægean since the late Minoan third
-period, or even the late Minoan second period, which is usually dated
-with the XVIIIth Egyptian dynasty as about 1500–1350. Most other
-writers, however, including Bury, p. 57, Myers, _Anc. Hist._, p. 136,
-and Deniker, _Races of Man_, p. 315, ascribe the general use of iron to
-a much later invasion, namely that of the Dorians, about 1100 B. C.
-
-129 : 29. Iron swords of the Nordics. Ridgeway, 1, pp. 407 _seq._:
-“Their chief weapon was a long iron sword; with trenchant strokes
-delivered by these long swords the Celts had dealt destruction to their
-foes on many a field. They used not the thrust, as did the Greeks and
-Romans of the classical period. This is put beyond doubt by Polybius
-(II, 30) who in his account of the great defeat suffered by the combined
-tribes of Transalpine Gæsatæ, Insubres, Boii and Taurisci, when they
-invaded Italy in 225 B. C., tells us that the Romans had the advantage
-in arms ‘for the Gallic sword can only deliver a cut but cannot thrust.’
-Again in his account of the great victory gained over the Insubres by
-the Romans in 223 B. C., the same historian tells us that the defeat of
-the Celts was due to the fact that their long iron swords easily bent,
-and could only give one downward cut with any effect, but that after
-this the edges got so turned and the blades so bent, that unless they
-had time to straighten them out with the foot against the ground, they
-could not deliver a second blow.
-
-“‘When the Celts had rendered their swords useless by the first blows
-delivered on the spears the Romans closed with them and rendered them
-quite helpless by preventing them from raising their hands to strike
-with their swords, which is their peculiar and only stroke, because
-their blade has no point. The Romans, on the contrary, having excellent
-points to their swords, used them not to cut but to thrust; and by thus
-repeatedly smiting the breasts and faces of the enemy, they eventually
-killed the greater number of them.’ (II, 33 and III.)”
-
-Further evidence in support of our contention that iron was in use much
-earlier than is generally admitted, comes from an unexpected quarter. J.
-N. Svoronos, in a recent book on ancient Greek coinage, entitled
-_L’Hellénism primitif de la Macédoine, prouvé par la numismatique_, p.
-171, remarks: “In the first place, indeed, it is forgotten that some of
-this information, that which is derived from people of ‘mythical’ times,
-can be referred not only to the invention of the first money struck in
-precious metal (gold, electrum, or silver), but even to obelisks of
-iron, or to cast plinths in the form of copper axes, which, of a
-determined weight, and legally guaranteed by the state, constituted,
-already before the XVth century, as we positively know at the present
-time, the first legal money.”
-
-130 : 2. Keary, _The Vikings in Western Christendom_, chap. XIII;
-Steenstrup, _Normannerne_.
-
-130 : 4. “Furor Normanorum.” On account of the suffering inflicted by
-the Vikings and other northern raiders in Europe, a special prayer, _A
-furore Normanorum libera nos_ was inserted in some of the litanies of
-the West.
-
-130 : 5. Rome was sacked by Alaric in 410 A. D., and during the forty
-years following the German tribes seized the greater part of the Roman
-provinces and established in them what are known as the Barbarian
-Kingdoms. Consult Villari, _The Barbarian Invasions of Italy_.
-
-130 : 8 _seq._ See chap. XIII, pp. 242 _seq._, of this book.
-
-130 : 13 _seq._ Ripley, pp. 125–126. The discovery of the Alpine type
-was the work of Von Baer.
-
-130 : 24. The Iron Age in western Europe. Deniker, 2, p. 315, says: “So
-also, according to Montelius, the introduction of iron dates only from
-the fifth or third century B. C. in Sweden, while Italy was acquainted
-with this metal as far back as the twelfth century B. C. The
-civilization of the ‘iron age,’ distributed over two periods, according
-to the excavations made in the stations of Hallstatt (Austria) and La
-Tène (Switzerland), must have been imported from central Europe into
-Greece through Illyria. The importation corresponds perhaps with the
-Dorian invasion of the Peloponnesus.... The Hallstattian civilization
-flourished chiefly in Carinthia, southern Germany, Switzerland, Bohemia,
-Silesia, Bosnia, the southeast of France and southern Italy (the
-pre-Etruscan age of Montelius). The period which followed, called the
-second, or iron age or the La Tène period, was prolonged until the first
-century B. C. in France, Bohemia and England. In Scandinavian countries
-the _first iron age_ lasted until the sixth century, and the _second
-iron age_ until the tenth century A. D.” Referring to the La Tène period
-in a footnote, Deniker says: “This term, first used in Germany, is
-accepted by almost all men of science. The La Tène period corresponds
-pretty nearly with the ‘Âge Marmien’ of French archæologists and the
-‘Late Celtic’ of English archæologists. _Cf._ M. Hoernes, _Urgeschichte
-d. Mensch._, chapters VIII and IX.”
-
-Rice Holmes, 1, p. 231, remarks: “Iron in Britain is hardly older than
-500 B. C. (_i. e._ the earliest products of the British iron age were
-traded in. See p. 229). In Gaul the Hallstatt period is believed to have
-lasted from about 800 to about 400 B. C.” On p. 126: “It is certain that
-in the southeastern districts iron tools began to be used not later than
-the fourth century B. C.”
-
-See also Sir John Evans, _Ancient Bronze Implements_, pp. 470–472.
-Consult especially Déchellette, _Manuel d’archéologie_, t. II, pp. 152
-_seq._, on iron in western Gaul during the La Tène period.
-
-130 : 28. La Tène Period. M. Wavre and P. Vouga, _Extrait du Musée
-neuchatelois_, p. 7; V. Gross, _La Tène, un oppidum helvète_; E. Vouga,
-_Les Helvètes à La Tène_; and F. Keller, _The Lake Dwellings of
-Switzerland_.
-
-131 : 3. Montelius suggests this date. Lord Avebury, in _Prehistoric
-Times_, even goes so far as to suggest 1000 B. C.
-
-131 : 5. Rice Holmes, 2, the footnote to p. 9; Déchellette, _Manuel
-d’archéologie_, t. II, p. 552.
-
-131 : 9. La Tène culture and the Nordic Cymry. This is also in Britain
-termed the “Late Celtic period.” See Rice Holmes, 2, p. 318. For the
-expansion of the Celtic empire and La Tène see Jean Bruhnes, p. 779. G.
-Dottin, in his _Manuel celtique_, devotes a whole chapter to the Celtic
-empire.
-
-Cymry. See the note to p. 174 : 22 of this book. As to the Nordic
-characters of these people, see Rice Holmes, 1, P. 234.
-
-131 : 12. Nordic Gauls and Goidels as users of bronze. Rice Holmes, 1,
-pp. 126, 229, and elsewhere.
-
-131 : 15. Haddon, _Wanderings of People_, p. 49.
-
-131 : 19. S. Feist, _Europa im Lichte der Vorgeschichte_, p. 9, etc.
-
-131 : 23. Tacitus, _Germania_.
-
-131 : 26. Tacitus, _Germania_, 4: “Personally I associate myself with
-the opinion of those who hold that in the peoples of Germany there has
-been given to the world a race untainted by intermarriage with other
-races, a peculiar people and pure, like no one but themselves; whence it
-comes that their physique, in spite of their vast numbers, is
-identical;—fierce blue eyes, red hair, tall frames,” etc.
-
-See Beddoe, 4, pp. 81–82; Fleure and James, pp. 122, 126, 151–152; and
-Ripley, _passim_, for remarks on the increasing brunetness of Britain
-and other parts of Europe which were formerly more blond.
-
-The recent article by Parsons entitled “Anthropological Observations on
-German Prisoners of War,” contains an interesting reference, on p. 26,
-to the resurgence of Alpine types in central Europe.
-
-
- CHAPTER IV. THE ALPINE RACE
-
-134 : 1. There seem to have been at least three distinct types of
-Alpines, one with a broad head and developed occiput typical of western
-Europe, a second with a flat occiput and a high crown, represented by
-such peoples as the Armenoids of Asia Minor, and a third, of which
-little notice has been taken, except by such men as Zaborowski (2) and
-Fleure and James, pp. 137 _seq._ This third type is encountered here and
-there in nests which “stretch at least from southern Italy to Ireland,
-by way of the Straits of Gibraltar and across France by the dolmen
-line.” Fleure and James may be quoted for the following discussion.
-“Questions naturally arise as to the homologies of this type, and its
-distribution beyond the line here mentioned. If we had the type in
-Britain, by itself, we should be inclined to connect it with the general
-population of Central Europe, the dark, broad-headed Alpine type. We
-should, however, retain a little hesitation about this, as our type is
-sometimes of extraordinary strength of build and, while often fairly
-short, it is occasionally outstandingly tall; moreover, the hair is
-frequently quite black, and this is not on the whole an Alpine
-character. But, when we note the coastal distribution of this type, our
-hesitation is much increased, for the Alpine type has spread typically
-along the mountain flanks and its characteristic rarity in Britain is
-evidence of how little it has followed the sea.
-
-“We cannot but wonder also whether what Deniker calls the
-Atlanto-Mediterranean type is not a result of averaging these dark
-broad-heads with the true Mediterranean type.
-
-“Seeking further distributional evidence, we find that the dark
-broad-heads are highly characteristic of Dalmatia and may be an
-old-established stock, but it would appear that this region is famous
-for the height of the heads there, and our type is not specially
-high-headed. Broad-head brunets do, however, occur farther east in Asia
-Minor, the Ægean, and Crete, for example. Many are certainly
-hypsicephalic, but in others it seems that the brow and head are
-moderate and the forehead rather rectangular, as in our type....
-
-“It is interesting that there should be evidence of our dark broad-heads
-beyond the Irish end of the line now discussed, the line of intercourse
-which Déchellette thinks must be older than the Bronze Age. The chief
-evidences for the type beyond Ireland are:
-
-“1. Ripley (p. 309) shows that a dark, broad-headed element is present
-in Shetland, West Caithness, and East Sutherland. This is sometimes
-called the Old Black Breed.
-
-“2. Arbo finds the coast and external openings of the more southerly
-Norwegian fjords have a broad-headed population, whereas the inner ends
-of the fjords and the interior are more dolichocephalic. The broad-heads
-stretch from Trondhjemsfjord southward, and from their exclusively
-coastwise distribution he supposes them to have come across from the
-British Isles.
-
-“The population is darker than the rest of Norway and its area of
-distribution, as Dr. Stuart Mackintosh has kindly pointed out to us, is,
-like that of the same type in the British Isles, characterized by a
-pelagic climate.”
-
-Von Luschan has fully discussed the Armenoid type in his _Early
-Inhabitants of Western Asia_, and with E. Petersen, in _Reisen in
-Lykien, Milyas, und Kibyratis_. A special study was made by Chantre in
-his _Recherches anthropologiques dans l’Asie occidentale_.
-
-The first type, then, the western European, has a short, thick stature,
-round head, and rather light pigmentation; the second, Armenoid, a
-rather tall stature, square, high head, flat occiput, and dark
-pigmentation. The third, the Old Black Breed, is rather small and dark.
-
-In addition to these we have a fourth type, which has been called the
-Bronze Age race, or, better, the Beaker Maker type (Borreby). This has
-been discussed by Greenwell and Rolleston, Beddoe, and Keith, especially
-as to their possible survivors at the present day; by Abercromby, in
-_Bronze Age Pottery_; by Crawford, _The Distribution of Early Bronze Age
-Settlements in Britain_; and by Peake, in a discussion of the last work
-in the same number of the _Geographical Journal_. Fleure and James
-describe it also. See the note to p. 138 : 1 of this book.
-
-Further anthropological studies may simplify the problem somewhat, but
-the author is now inclined to believe that the above-mentioned third
-brachycephalic type, the “Old Black Breed,” represents the survivors of
-the earliest waves of the round-head invasion—in Britain antedating the
-arrival of the Neolithic Mediterraneans, while the first type mentioned
-above represents the descendants of the last great Alpine expansion.
-This type in southern Germany has been so thoroughly Nordicized in
-pigmentation that these blond South Germans are sometimes discussed as
-though they were a distinct Alpine subspecies. The type is scantily
-represented in England, and when found may be partly attributed to
-ecclesiastics and other retainers brought over by the Normans.
-
-The second of the above types, the Armenoids, are virtually absent from
-Europe, and seem to be characteristic of eastern Anatolia and the
-immediately adjacent regions.
-
-The author regards the fourth, Borreby or Beaker Maker type of tall,
-round heads as distinct from the three preceding types. The distribution
-of their remains would indicate they entered Britain from the northeast.
-We have no clew as to their origin. A similar type is found in the
-so-called Dinaric race of Deniker (which Fleure and James mention in
-connection with the third type but hesitate to class with it), which
-extends from the Tyrol along the mountainous east coast of the Adriatic
-into Albania. Further study of the Tripolje culture (see note to p.
-143 : 15) and the mixture of population north of the Carpathians, where
-the early Nordics and early Alpines came in contact, may throw light on
-this question, as well as upon the problem of the acquisition of Aryan
-languages by the Alpines.
-
-All these four round skulled types seem to have been of West Asiatic
-origin, but their relationship to each other and to the true Mongols of
-central Asia is as yet undetermined. One thing is certain, that the
-Alpine Slavs north and east of the Carpathians, and, to a less degree,
-the inhabitants of Hungary and Bulgaria, have in their midst a very
-considerable Mongoloid element, which has entered Europe since the
-beginning of our era.
-
-134 : 12 _seq._ For further characters of the Alpines see Ripley, pp.
-123–128, 416 _seq._, and p. 139 of this book.
-
-135 : 1. Haddon, _Races of Man_, pp. 15–16; Deniker, _Races of Man_, pp.
-325–326.
-
-135 : 14 _seq._ Zaborowski, _Les peuples aryens_, p. 110.
-
-135 : 17. See the authorities given in Ripley; for the Würtembergers,
-pp. 233–234; for Bavaria and Austria, p. 228; for Switzerland, pp.
-282–286; and for the Tyrolese, p. 102.
-
-135 : 22. Beddoe, 4, chap. VI, is particularly good on the physical
-anthropology of the Swiss, while His and Rütimeyer, _Crania Helvetica_,
-are classic authorities.
-
-135 : 23. _The Historical Geography of Europe_, by Freeman; and Beddoe,
-4, pp. 75 _seq._
-
-135 : 25 _seq._ Beddoe, 4, p. 81, says: “As Switzerland, especially its
-central region, was for ages the great recruiting ground of mercenary
-soldiers, it is probable that the tall, blond, long-headed element would
-emigrate at a more rapid rate than the brown, short-headed one. In this
-way may also be accounted for the apparent decline in the stature of the
-modern Swiss, who certainly do not, as a rule, now justify the
-descriptions given of their huge physical development in earlier days,
-the days of halberds, morgensterns and two-handed swords.” These
-mercenaries were Teutonic, but their Celtic predecessors were addicted
-to the same habit as G. Dottin has shown on p. 257 of his _Manuel
-Celtique_: “When the Celts could not battle on their own account or
-against their neighbors, they offered their services for the price of
-silver to foreign kings. There is hardly a country that was not overrun
-with Celtic mercenaries, nor struggles in which they had not taken part.
-As far back as 368 B. C. an army sent by Denys, the Ancient, to Corinth
-to aid the Spartiates, was in part formed of Celtic foot soldiers.”
-
-“Pas d’argent, pas de Suisses,” as the old saying has it.
-
-See also Gibbon, _Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire_, chap. LV, where
-are described the Teutonic Varangians in Constantinople, who became the
-body-guard of the Greek Emperor.
-
-136 : 5. Osborn, 1, pp. 458 and 479 _seq._ See p. 116 of this book.
-
-136 : 7. G. Elliot Smith, 1, p. 179; Haddon, 3; Peake, 2, pp. 160–163;
-Deniker, 2, p. 313; Zaborowski, 1, pp. 172 _seq._; Hervé, 1, IV, p. 393,
-and V, p. 18; and the authorities quoted in Osborn.
-
-136 : 14. Russian brachycephaly. See Ripley, pp. 358 _seq._, and the
-authorities quoted.
-
-136 : 16. See p. 143 : 13 of this book, and notes.
-
-136 : 19–26. Brachycephalic colonies in Scandinavia. See p. 211 : 6 and
-notes.
-
-136 : 29. Ripley, p. 472.
-
-137 : 2. See the notes to p. 128 : 13.
-
-137 : 8. See pp. 138 : 1, and 163 : 26 of this book.
-
-137 : 21. See the notes to p. 128 : 16.
-
-137 : 29 _seq._ Beddoe, 4, pp. 231–232.
-
-138 : 1 _seq._ Beddoe, 4, pp. 15, 17, 231–233; Davis and Thurnam; Keane,
-1, p. 150; Rice Holmes, 1, pp. 194, 441; Ripley, pp. 308–309. Holmes
-suggests that the Beaker Makers may have come from Denmark. Compare this
-theory with that expressed by Fleure and James, pp. 128 _seq._ and 135;
-and by Abercromby, Crawford and Peake as given there. The Beaker Makers
-are quite fully discussed on pp. 86–88, 117, 128 _seq._, and 135–137, in
-the article by Fleure and James. See also Greenwell, _British Barrows_,
-pp. 627–718, and J. P. Harrison, _On the Survival of Certain Racial
-Features in the Population of the British Isles_. Fleure and James
-describe the type as follows on p. 136: “With the beakers have long been
-associated the broad-headed, strong-browed type, long known to
-archæologists as the Bronze Age race, but better called the ‘Beaker
-Makers,’ or Borreby type, for we now think that these people reached
-Britain without a knowledge of bronze.... The general description of
-them is that they must have been taller than the Neolithic British,
-averaging 5 feet 7 inches, rather strongly built, with long forearms and
-inclined to roughness of feature. The head was broad (skull index over
-80, often 82 or more) and the supraciliary arches strong, but very
-distinctly separated in most cases by a median depression, and thus
-strongly contrasted with the continuous supraciliary ridges of _e. g._,
-Neanderthal man ... Keith ... thinks it [the type] was usually brown to
-fair in colouring at all periods, and this seems to be a very general
-opinion.”
-
-138 : 3. Beddoe, 4, p. 16: “On the whole, however, we cannot be far
-wrong in describing the British skulls of the bronze period as
-distinctly brachycephalic; and this seems to have been the case in
-Scotland as well as in England (see D. Wilson, _Archæological and
-Prehistoric Annals_, pp. 168–171). Whencesoever they came, the men of
-the British bronze race were richly endowed, physically. They were, as a
-rule, tall and stalwart, their brains were large and their features, if
-somewhat harsh and coarse, must have been manly and even commanding. The
-chieftain of Gristhorpe, whose remains are in the Museum of York, must
-have looked a true king of men with his athletic frame, his broad
-forehead, beetling brows, strong jaws and aquiline profile.”
-
-138 : 14. Rice Holmes, 1, p. 425.
-
-138 : 17. Dinaric Race. Deniker, 1, pp. 113–133; also 2, p. 333. For
-allusions to this and descriptions see Ripley, pp. 350, 412, 597,
-601–602.
-
-138 : 18. Remains of Alpines. Fleure and James, pp. 117, no. 3, and pp.
-137–142.
-
-138 : 22. See the notes to p. 122 : 3. Also Jean Bruhnes in _Le
-Correspondant_ for September, 1917, p. 774.
-
-139 : 3. See p. 121 : 16.
-
-139 : 6 _seq._ Sergi, _Africa_, p. 65; Studer and Bannwarth, Crania
-_Helvetica Antiqua_, pp. 13 _seq._; His and Rütimeyer, _Crania
-Helvetica_, p. 41.
-
-139 : 16. See p. 144 of this book.
-
-139 : 22 _seq._ See p. 130.
-
-140 : 1 _seq._ See DeLapouge, _passim_; Ripley, p. 352; Johannes Ranke,
-Der Mensch, vol. II, pp. 296 _seq._; part II of Topinard’s
-_L’anthropologie générale_, and the note to p. 131 : 26.
-
-140 : 4 _seq._ Alpines in the Cantabrian Alps. See Ripley, p. 272, and
-Oloriz, _Distribución geográfica del Indice cephalica_.
-
-140 : 9. Basques and the Basque language. See the notes to p. 234 : 24
-_seq._
-
-140 : 15. Aquitanian. See p. 248 : 14. Ligurian. See the notes to p.
-235 : 17.
-
-140 : 17. Round skulls on North African coast. See pp. 127–128.
-
-140 : 22 _seq._ See the authorities quoted in Ripley, chap. VII. For the
-Walloons see Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 323–325, 334; Deniker, 2, p. 335;
-D’Arbois de Jubainville, 2, pp. 87–95; G. Kurth, _La frontière
-linguistique en Belgique_; L. Funel, _Les parlers populaires du
-département des Alpes-Maritimes_, pp. 298–303.
-
-The dialects or patois spoken to-day in France all fall under one of
-these two languages. They can be classified as follows:
-
- LANGUE D’OC
-
-
- PATOIS SPOKEN IN THE DEPARTMENTS OF
-
- Languedocian Gard, Hérault, Pyrénées-Orientales, Aude,
- Ariège, Haute-Garonne, Lot-et-Garonne, Tarn,
- Aveyron, Lot, Tarn-et-Garonne.
-
- Provençal Drôme, Vaucluse, Bouches-du-Rhône, Hautes- and
- Basses-Alpes, Var.
-
- Dauphinois Isère.
-
- Lyonnais Rhône, Ain, Saône-et-Loire.
-
- Auvergnat Allier, Loire, Haute-Loire, Ardèche, Lozère,
- Puy-de-Dôme, Cantal.
-
- Limousin Corrèze, Haute-Vienne, Creuse, Indre, Cher,
- Vienne, Dordogne, Charente,
- Charente-Inférieure, Indre-et-Loire.
-
- Gascon Gironde, Landes, Hautes-Pyrénées,
- Basses-Pyrénées, Gers.
-
-
- LANGUE D’OÏL
-
-
- Norman Normandie, Bretagne, Perche, Maine, Anjou,
- Poitou, Saintonge.
-
- Picard (modern French) Picardie, Île-de-France, Artois, Flandre,
- Hainault, Basse Maine, Thiérache, Rethelois.
-
- Burgundian Nivernais, Berry, Orléanais, lower Bourbonnais,
- part of Ile-de-France, Champagne, Lorraine,
- Franche-Comté.
-
-140 : 28 _seq._ For the distribution of the Alpines see Ripley, p. 157.
-
-141 : 6. Austria and the Slavs. See Ripley’s authorities mentioned on
-pp. 352 _seq._
-
-141 : 9. See p. 143 of this book.
-
-141 : 13. See the notes to chap. IX.
-
-141 : 23–142: 4. Introduction of the Slavs into eastern Germany. See
-Jordanes, _History of the Goths_, V, 34, 35, and XXIII, 119; Freeman,
-_Historical Geography of Europe_, pp. 113 _seq._
-
-141 : 25. Wends, _Antes and Sclaveni_. See the notes to p. 143 : 13
-_seq._
-
-142 : 4. Haddon, 3, p. 43.
-
-142 : 9. Ripley, p. 355 and the authorities quoted. The word Slave
-originally signified _illustrious_ or _renowned_ in Slavic language, but
-in Europe was a word of disdain for the backward Slavs. See T. Peisker,
-_The Expansion of the Slavs_, Hist., vol. II, p. 421, n. 2.
-
-142 : 13. See pp. 143–144 of this book.
-
-142 : 23. Russian populations. Ripley, based on Anutschin, Taranetzki,
-Niederle, Zakrewski, Talko-Hyrncewicz, Olechnowicz, Matiezka, Kharuzin,
-Retzius, Bonsdorff, etc. Consult his chap. XIII, especially pp. 343–346
-and 352. Olechnowicz and Talko-Hyrncewicz both remark on the
-dolichocephaly and blondness of the upper classes of Poland.
-
-143 : 1. Keane, 2, pp. 345–346; Beddoe, 1, p. 35; Freeman, 1, pp. 107,
-113–116, 155–158.
-
-143 : 3. Avars. See the authorities just given; also Eginhard, _The Life
-of Charlemagne_; Gibbon, _Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire_, chaps.
-XLII, XLV and XLVI.
-
-143 : 4. Hungarians. That the Hungarians as such were known earlier than
-this date appears from a passage in Jordanes, written about 550 A. D.
-See the _History of the Goths_, V, 37, where he says: “Farther away and
-above the sea of Pontus are the abodes of the Bulgares, well known from
-the disaster our neglect has brought upon us. From this region, the
-Huns, like a fruitful root of bravest races, sprouted into two hordes of
-people. Some of these are called Altziagiri, others, Sabiri; and they
-have different dwelling places. The Altziagiri are near Cherson, where
-the avaricious traders bring in the goods of Asia. In summer they range
-the plains, their broad domains, wherever the pasturage for their cattle
-invites them, and betake themselves in winter beyond the sea of Pontus.
-Now the Hunuguri are known to us from the fact that they trade in marten
-skins. But they have been cowed by their bolder neighbors.” Also on the
-Hunuguri see Zeuss, p. 712.
-
-143 : 5 _seq._ The invasion of the Avars and the Magyars. See Freeman,
-1, pp. 107, 113, 115–116; Beddoe, 1, p. 35; and Ripley, p. 432.
-
-143 : 13 _seq._ Haddon, 3, chap. III, _Europe_, especially p. 40; and A.
-Lefèvre, _Germains et Slavs_, p. 156. Minns, in an article on the Slavs,
-says: “Pliny (N. H., IV, 97) is the first to give the Slavs a name which
-can leave us in no doubt. He speaks of the Venedi (_cf._ Tacitus,
-_Germania_, 46, Veneti); Ptolemy (_Geog._, III, 5, 7, 8) calls them
-Venedæ and puts them along the Vistula and by the Venedic Gulf, by which
-he seems to mean the Gulf of Danzig; he also speaks of the Venedic
-mountains to the south of the sources of the Vistula, that is, probably
-the northern Carpathians. The name Venedæ is clearly Wend, the name that
-the Germans have always applied to the Slavs. Its meaning is unknown. It
-has been the cause of much confusion because of the Armorican Veneti,
-the Paphlagonian Enetæ, and above all the Enetæ-Venetæ at the head of
-the Adriatic.... Other names in Ptolemy which almost certainly denote
-Slavic tribes are the Veltæ on the Baltic. The name Slav first occurs in
-Pseudo-Cæsarius (Dialogues, II, 110; Migne, P. G., XXXVIII, 985, early
-6th century), but the earliest definite account of them under that name
-is given by Jordanes (Getica [_History of the Goths_], V, 34, 35), about
-550 A. D.: ‘Within these rivers lies Dacia, encircled by the Alps as by
-a crown. Near their left ridge, which inclines toward the north, and
-beginning at the source of the Vistula, the populous race of the Venethi
-dwell, occupying a great expanse of land. Though their names are now
-dispersed amid various clans and places, yet they are chiefly called
-Sclaveni and Antes. The abode of the Sclaveni extends from the city of
-Noviodunum and the lake called Mursianus, to the Dnâster, and northward
-as far as the Vistula. They have swamps and forests for their cities.
-The Antes, who are the bravest of these peoples dwelling in the curve of
-the sea of Pontus, spread from the Dnâster to the Dnâper, rivers that
-are many days’ journey apart.’” See also Zaborowski, 1, pp. 272 _seq._
-
-The name _Wends_, as has been said, was used by the Germans to designate
-the Slavs. It is now used for the Germanized Polaks, and especially for
-the Lusatian Wends or Sorbs. It is first found in English used by
-Alfred. Canon I. Taylor, in _Words and Places_, p. 42, says: “The
-Sclavonians call themselves either _Slowjane_, ‘the intelligible men,’
-or else _Srb_ which means ‘kinsmen,’ while the Germans call them
-_Wends_.”
-
-Haddon, 3, p. 47, says: “The Slavs, who belong to the Alpine race, seem
-to have had their area of characterization in Poland and the country
-between the Carpathians and the Dnieper; they may be identified with the
-Venedi.”
-
-In the author’s opinion these people have, so far as is known, nothing
-whatever to do with the tribe of Veneti at the head of the Adriatic, nor
-with the Veneti in western Europe in what is now Brittany. Of the former
-Ripley, p. 258, says that they have been generally accepted as of
-Illyrian derivation and cites D’Arbois de Jubainville, Von Duhn,
-Pigorini, Sergi, Pullé, Moschen and Tedeschi as authorities.
-
-The Veneti in Italy are tall, broad-headed and some are blond, having
-mixed with the Teutons. They possessed some eastern habits, such as
-their marriage customs, as set forth in Herodotus. They were
-flourishing, wealthy and peaceful. Later they were driven to what is now
-Venice.
-
-The Veneti in Gaul were a powerful maritime people, who carried on a sea
-trade with Britain. Strangely, perhaps, the ancient name of northern
-Wales was Venedotia. The name Veneto, however, has nothing to do with
-that of Vandal. For some theories as to the relationships of some of
-these Veneti, see Zaborowski, 3.
-
-143 : 15. Gallicia and the Tripolje Culture. _Cf._ pp. 113–114. Gallicia
-is not far from the known location of the Brünn-Prêdmost race, which was
-_dolichocephalic with a long face_. This early appearance of a
-dolichocephalic race at the point where the dolichocephalic Nordics
-later came in contact with the Alpines is very significant.
-
-The locality is in the neighborhood of the Tripolje area in southern
-Russia, for which see Minns, _Scythians and Greeks_, pp. 130–142, and
-Peake, 2, p. 164.
-
-Minns says: “The first finds of Neolithic settlements in Russia were
-made near the village of Tripolje, on the Dnêpr, forty miles below Kiev,
-and this name has since been extended to the culture of a large area in
-southern Russia. The remains consist of so-called ‘areas’ with buildings
-which had wattled, clay-covered walls which were fired when dry to give
-them greater hardness. Pottery is present in great abundance and variety
-of forms. These bear painted decorations which are very artistic. There
-are a few figurines. The buildings were not dwellings but probably
-chapels. The homes were probably pit dwellings. Bodies of the dead were
-incinerated and deposited in urns.
-
-“The theory has been abandoned that this was an autochthonous
-development, typical of the Indo-Europeans [Nordics] before they
-differentiated (_cf._ Chvojka, the first discoverer). Although similar
-to Ægean art this was earlier (see Von Stern, _Prehistoric Greek Culture
-in the South of Russia_). It came suddenly to an end and had no
-successor in that region. The people were agriculturalists long before
-the Scythians, but the next people who lived there were thorough nomads.
-Niederle (_Slav. Ant._, I) dates them 2000 B. C. The Tripolje people
-either moved south or were overwhelmed by new comers.” As Peake says, 2,
-pp. 164–165, here was a very likely point of contact between the Nordic
-and Alpine stocks, a mixture which, in the opinion of the author, may
-ultimately throw some light on the origin of the Dinaric and Beaker
-Maker types. Through this region both Alpines and Nordics must have
-passed many times in their wanderings. Here perhaps the Alpines became
-partly Nordicized, especially as to their language.
-
-143 : 21. Sarmatians. There has been considerable confusion over these
-people, owing to the various ways in which the name has been spelled by
-early and later writers, and to the fact that they dwelt in the region
-where both Alpines and Nordics must have existed side by side. The name
-Sarmatians has been applied at one time to Nordics, at another to
-Alpines or even Mongolians, depending on the dates when they were
-discussed and the bias of various writers. We have no generic name for
-the Alpine peoples who must have been in this region in early times,
-except that of Sarmatians or Scythians. As the Scythians are apparently
-strongly Nordic in character, the name Sarmatians seemed more fitting to
-apply to the Alpine tribes who were certainly there. Not all authorities
-are agreed as to their affiliations, however, as has been said.
-
-Jordanes declares that the Sarmatians and the Sauromatæ were the same
-people. Stephanus Byzantius states that the Syrmatæ were identical with
-the Sauromatæ. They are first mentioned by Polybius as being in Europe
-in 179 B. C. (XXV, II; XXVI, VI, 12). But in Asia we hear of them as
-early as 325 B. C., according to Minns, p. 38, who says that they
-gradually shifted westward, until in 50 A. D. they were in the Danube
-valley. Jordanes later speaks of the Carpathian mountains as the
-Sarmatian range. Mierow, in the notes to his translation of Jordanes,
-makes the Sarmatians a great Slavic people dwelling from the Vistula to
-the Don, in what is now Poland and Russia. (See also Hodgkin, _Italy_,
-vol. I, part I, p. 71.) According to Jordanes, the Sarmatians were
-beyond Dacia (the ancient Gothic land) and to the north (XII, 74). It is
-with these statements in mind that the author has designated them as
-Alpines.
-
-Minns describes the Sarmatians as nomads of the Caspian steppes who wore
-armor like the Hiung-nu. About 325 B. C. there was a decline of the
-Scyths and they appear. During the second and third centuries A. D. was
-the time when they spread over the vast regions from Hungary to the
-Caspian. Minns, however, is firm in the belief that they were Iranians
-[Nordics], like the Alans, Ossetes, Jasy, etc. In the second half of the
-fourth century B. C. they were still east of the Don or just crossing;
-for the next century and a half we have very scanty knowledge of what
-was happening in the steppes. Procopius, III, II, also makes them Goths.
-(See the note to p. 66 : 16.) Feist, 5, p. 391, quotes Tacitus as to
-their being horse-loving nomads of south Russia. See also D’Arbois de
-Jubainville, 4, t. I, and Gibbon, chaps. XVIII, XXV, etc., for further
-discussions.
-
-144 : 11 _seq._ See the authorities quoted, in Ripley, pp. 361–362. The
-Bashkirs, however, are partly Finn, partly Tatar as well.
-
-144 : 26–145: 1. Ripley, pp. 416 _seq._ and 434.
-
-145 : 3. Ripley, p. 434.
-
-145 : 7. Freeman, 1, pp. 113–115; Haddon, 3, p. 45.
-
-145 : 10. Ripley, p. 421. These are the Volga Finns. Old Bulgaria,
-according to Pruner-Bey, 2, t. I, pp. 399–433, P. F. Kanitz and others,
-seems to have been between the Ural mountains and the Volga. The old
-Bulgarians were a Finnic tribe (just which is a matter of much dispute).
-They crossed the Danube toward the end of the seventh century. See
-Freeman, 1, pp. 17, 155.
-
-145 : 11 _seq._ Ripley, p. 426, based on Bassanovič, p. 30.
-
-145 : 16. Ripley, p. 421.
-
-145 : 19. Of the numerous tribes who, since the Christian Era, have
-entered Europe and Anatolia from western Asia some were undoubtedly pure
-Mongoloids, like the Huns of Attila, or the hordes of Genghis Khan.
-Others were probably under Mongoloid leaders, and included a large
-proportion of West Asiatic Alpines (_i. e._, Turcomans), while still
-others may have been substantially Alpines. The Mongols in their sweep
-into Europe would naturally gather up and carry with them many of the
-tribes of western Asia, or perhaps more often would drive the latter
-ahead of them.
-
-146 : 3 _seq._ Ripley, p. 139; Taylor, 1, p. 119; Peake, 2, p. 162.
-
-146 : 8. Ripley, p. 136. These primitive nests occur also in Norway.
-
-146 : 12. See the note to p. 131 : 26.
-
-146 : 19–147 : 6. See pp. 122 and 138 of this book.
-
-147 : 7 _seq._ Accad and Sumer. Prince, and Zaborowski (after de Sarzec)
-give the earliest date of Accad as about 3800 B. C., but Prince thinks
-this date too old by 700–1000 years. See also Zaborowski, 1, pp.
-118–125. H. R. Hall, in _The Ancient History of the Near East_, reviews
-the entire work in this field in his first chapter. According to him,
-dates in Babylonia can be traced as far back as those of Egypt, without
-coming to a time when there was no writing or metal, while Egyptian
-records begin in a Neolithic culture. The earliest dates so far
-established are in the fourth millennium B. C., but already a high
-degree of civilization had been reached there or elsewhere by people who
-brought it to Babylonia. Hall, p. 176, says: “The most ancient remains
-that we find in the city mounds are Sumerian. The site of the ancient
-Shurripak, at Fârah in Southern Babylonia, has lately been excavated.
-The culture revealed by this excavation is Sumerian, and metal-using,
-even at the lowest levels. The Sumerians apparently knew the use of
-copper at the beginning of their occupation of Babylonia, and no doubt
-brought this knowledge with them.” See chap. V of Hall’s book, and the
-two great works of King, the _Chronicles Concerning the Early Babylonian
-Kings_, and _The History of Sumer and Akkad_, as well as Rogers’s
-_History of Babylonia and Assyria_. In his preface to the first
-mentioned of his two works King states that the new researches are
-resulting in a tendency to reduce the dates of these ancient empires
-very considerably, especially for the dynasties. Thus for Su-abu, the
-founder of the first dynasty, a date not earlier than 2100 B. C. is now
-given, and for Hammurabi one not earlier than the twentieth century B.
-C. Accad is by many authors, including Breasted, considered to have been
-Semitic from the beginning, and to have been established about 2800 B.
-C. But Zaborowski claims that it was not originally Semitic, but
-Semitized at a very early date. He makes both city-kingdoms originally
-Turanian [by which he means Alpine and pre-Aryan] with an agglutinative
-language related to the Altaic. See also Zaborowski, 2. He dates the
-cuneiform inscriptions between 3700 and 4000 B. C., after de Sarzec and
-de Morgan. Hall draws attention to the remarkable resemblance of the
-Sumerians to the Dravidians, and is inclined to believe that they may
-have come from India. Both G. Elliot Smith and Breasted claim the
-Babylonians derived their culture from Egypt, but the weight of evidence
-is gradually accumulating against them. See Hall, chap. V. The relations
-of the two regions and Egyptian dates are treated in Reisner’s _Early
-Dynastic Cemeteries of Naga-ed-Dêr_; and Eduard Meyer, _Geschichte des
-Altertums_, should also be consulted. Against these Egyptologists are
-most of the later writers, such as Hall and King and many others. The
-location of Babylonia is a fact distinctly in favor of its earlier
-beginnings. There is no denying the very remote origin of Egyptian
-culture, which in its isolation for so many centuries had ample time to
-develop its own peculiar features and to become sufficiently strong to
-later extend a very wide influence. There is an interesting study of the
-fauna of Egypt by Lortet and Gaillard, which proves that much of it was
-originally African, not Asiatic, as those who wish to prove the opposite
-theory, that Egyptian culture was derived from the east in very remote
-times, have endeavored to establish. There is no doubt that the
-Egyptians were sufficiently plastic and adaptable in the earlier
-centuries of their development, wherever they may have come from, to
-make use of what the continent of Africa contributed in the way of
-resources. (See also Gaillard, _Les Tatonnements des Égyptiens_, etc.,
-and H. H. Johnston, _On North African Animals_.) To claim that the
-civilization of Sumer was derived directly from Elam, which in turn
-obtained its earliest culture from Egypt, is, in the opinion of the
-author, to reverse the truth. Some authorities believe that Elam was the
-origin from which came the civilization found by Pumpelly in Turkestan,
-and believed by him to have been not earlier than the end of the third
-millennium B. C. (For a further reference to this see the note to p.
-119 : 15 of this book, on Balkh.)
-
-See Hall as to the relationship of the Accadians and Sumerians with
-Elam. Zaborowski says they were all of the same Alpine stock, that is,
-the very early Sumerians and Accadians and Elamites. See 2, p. 411. For
-Susa, Elam and Media, see _Les peuples Aryens_, pp. 125–138, and Hall,
-chap. V. For the Persians, Zaborowski, 1, pp. 134 _seq._ Ripley, pp.
-417, 449–450, discusses some of the eastern tribes, among them the
-Tadjiks, whom general opinion makes round skulled. These, according to
-Zaborowski, are the living prototypes of the Susians, Elamites and
-Medes. Many writers consider the Medes to have been Nordics and related
-to the Persians. The author, however, follows Zaborowski in classing
-them as the early brachycephalic population of Elam or its highlands or
-plateau, which was conquered by the Persians. On the Medes and Media see
-the notes to p. 254 : 13.
-
-
- CHAPTER V. THE MEDITERRANEAN RACE
-
-148 : 1. The Mediterranean Race. Sergi, 4; Ripley; and Elliot Smith, 1.
-
-148 : 14. Deniker, 2, pp. 408 _seq._; Ripley, pp. 450–451.
-
-148 : 15. See the notes to pp. 257–261.
-
-148 : 18. Dravidians. Bishop R. Caldwell, _Comparative Grammar of the
-Dravidian or South Indian Family of Languages_; G. A. Grierson,
-_Linguistic Survey of India_, vol. IV, _Munda and Dravidian Languages_;
-Friedrich Müller, _Reise der österreichischen Fregatte Novara um die
-Erde in den Jahren_ 1857–1859, etc., pp. 73 _seq._; _Grundriss der
-Sprachwissenschaft_, vol. III, pp. 106 _seq._ See also Haddon, 3, p. 18.
-
-148 : 22 _seq._ Deniker, 2, p. 397; Haddon, 1, 3, but Haddon has pointed
-out that the Andamanese are not racially of the same stock as the Sakai,
-Veddahs, etc.
-
-149 : 6. Haddon, 3, and Sergi, 4, p. 158; Ripley; Fleure and James;
-Peake; etc.
-
-149 : 12. Peake, 2, p. 158.
-
-149 : 21. On this point, Ripley, pp. 465 _seq._, quotes Von Dueben,
-Retzius, Arbo, Montelius, Barth, Zograf, Lebon, Olechnowicz, etc.
-
-150 : 8. See the notes to p. 149.
-
-150 : 12. See the notes to p. 257.
-
-150 : 21. Beddoe, 4, and 3, pp. 384 _seq._, and Ripley, pp. 326, 328
-_seq._
-
-150 : 24 seq. See the notes to p. 149.
-
-150 : 29–151 : 3. A. Retzius, 1, 2; G. Retzius, 1, 2; Peake, 2, p. 158.
-Taylor, _Origin of the Aryans_, p. 101, says the Iberian type is not
-found in northern Europe east of Namur. In the British Isles, however,
-it extends to Caithness.
-
-151 : 3 _seq._ See the notes to p. 149; Ripley, pp. 461–465; Sergi, 4,
-p. 252; Osborn, 1, p. 458.
-
-151 : 18. Sir Harry Johnston, _passim_; G. Elliot Smith, 1, pp. 18, 30,
-31, and chap. V.
-
-151 : 22 _seq._ G. Elliot Smith, 1, p. 30. For a contrary opinion see
-Sergi, 4.
-
-152 : 3. W. L. and P. L. Sclater, _The Geography of Mammals_, pp. 177
-_seq._; Flower and Lydekker, _Mammals, Living and Extinct_, pp. 96–97.
-
-152 : 6. Elliot Smith, 1, chap. IV and elsewhere; Sergi, 4, chap. III.
-
-152 : 12. Negroes seem to have been unknown in Egypt and Nubia in
-pre-dynastic days and only appear in small numbers in the third and
-fourth dynasties, in the South. The great ruins on the Zambezi at
-Zimbabwe were probably the work of the Mediterranean race and are to be
-dated about 1000 B. C. In other words, all northeast Africa, including
-Nubia, the northern Sudan, the ancient Kingdom of Meroë at the junction
-of the Blue and White Niles, Abyssinia and the adjoining coast were
-originally part of the domain of the Mediterranean race.
-
-In the recent kingdom of the Mahdi, the predominant element was not
-Negro but Arab more or less mixed.
-
-152 : 16. Sir Harry Johnston, _passim_; Ripley, pp. 387, 390; Hall,
-_Ancient History of the Near East_.
-
-152 : 27. Sardinia. See Ripley and Von Luschan. A recent article by V.
-Giuffrida-Ruggeri, entitled “A Sketch of the Anthropology of Italy,” in
-the _Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and
-Ireland_, is well worth consideration. On pp. 91–92 the author gives a
-short sketch of the Sardinians and his authorities are to be found in a
-footnote on p. 91.
-
-153 : 4. Albanians. See the notes to p. 163 : 19.
-
-153 : 6 _seq._ Fleure and James, pp. 122 _seq._, 149; Beddoe, 4, pp.
-25–26; Davis and Thurnam, especially p. 212; Boyd Dawkins, _Early Man in
-Britain_.
-
-153 : 10. Scotland. See the notes to pp. 150 : 10 and 204 : 5.
-
-153 : 14 _seq._ See the notes to p. 229 : 5–12.
-
-153 : 24 _seq._ The Mediterranean Race in Rome. Montelius, _La
-Civilisation primitive en Italie_; Peet, _The Stone and Bronze Ages in
-Italy_; Munro, _Palæolithic Man and the Terramara Settlements_;
-Modestov, _Introduction à l’histoire romain_; Frank, _Roman
-Imperialism_. Giuffrida-Ruggeri, in _A Sketch of the Anthropology of
-Italy_, p. 101, says of the composition of the population of Rome: “The
-three fundamental European races, _H. mediterraneus_, _H. alpinus_, and
-_H. nordicus_, had their representatives among the ancient Romans,
-although the skeletal remains of the Mediterraneans and the Northerners
-are difficult to distinguish from each other. It is also possible that
-the Northerners belonged to the aristocrats who preferred to burn their
-dead. In the calm tenacity and quiet growth of the Roman people perhaps
-the descendants of _H. nordicus_ represented the turbulent restlessness
-of violent and bold individuals which, even in Roman history, one is
-able to discern from time to time.”
-
-In this connection it is interesting to note what Charles W. Gould has
-said on p. 117, in _America, a Family Matter_, concerning Sulla. He
-describes him as follows: “Even during the terror Sulla found time for
-enjoyment. Tawny hair, piercing blue eyes, fair complexion readily
-suffused with color as emotion and red blood surged within, Norseman
-that he was, he presided over constant and splendid entertainments,
-taking more pleasure in a witty actor than in the degenerate men and
-women of the old nobility who elbowed their way in.” Also see the notes
-to p. 215 : 21.
-
-154 : 5. Quarrels between the Patricians and the Plebs. See Tenney
-Frank, _Roman Imperialism_, pp. 5 _seq._, for a discussion of the
-mixture of races, “only we cannot agree that a social state can
-accomplish race amalgamation. The two races are still there.” Boni,
-_Notizie degli Scavi_, vol. III p. 401, believes that the Patricians
-were the descendants of the immigrant Aryans, while the Plebeians were
-the offspring of the aboriginal Non-Aryan stock. Compare this with the
-statements of early writers concerning the conditions in Gaul,
-especially as summed up by Dottin in his _Manuel Celtique_.
-
-Frank says, concerning the quarrels, in chap. II, _op. cit._: “Roman
-tradition preserved in the first book of Livy presents a very
-circumstantial account of the several battles by which Rome supposedly
-razed the Latin cities one after another.... Needless to say, if the
-Latin tribe had lived in such civil discord as the legend assumes, it
-would quickly have succumbed to the inroads of the mountain tribes.”
-Thus probably the quarrels between Latin and Etruscan have been
-overrated. See again, p. 14, for the oriental origin of some intruding
-people. He says, in a note at the end of the chapter: “Ridgeway, in _Who
-were the Romans_, 1908, has ably, though not convincingly developed the
-view that the Patricians were Sabine conquerors. Cuno, _Vorgeschichte
-Roms_, I, 14, held that they were Etruscans. Fustel de Coulanges, in his
-well-known work, _La cité antique_, proposed the view that a religious
-caste system alone could explain the division. Eduard Meyer, the article
-on the Plebs in _Handwörterbuch der Staatswissenschaften_, and Botsford,
-_Roman Assemblies_, p. 16, have presented various arguments in favor of
-the economic theory. See Binder, _Die Plebs_, 1909, for a summary of
-many other discussions.”
-
-Breasted, _Ancient Times_, pp. 495 _seq._, and Sir Harry Johnston,
-_Views and Reviews_, p. 97, are two who have touched upon these
-questions.
-
-On Etruria see the note to p. 157 : 14.
-
-154 : 11. An allusion to the short stature of the Roman legions of Cæsar
-in Gaul may be found in Rice Holmes, 2, p. 81. D’Arbois de Jubainville,
-_Les Celts en Espagne_, XIV, p. 369, says in describing a combat between
-P. Cornelius Scipio and a Gallic warrior: “Scipio was of very small
-stature, the Celtiberian warrior with the high stature which in all
-times in the tales of the Roman historians characterizes the Celtic
-race; and the beginning of the struggle gave him the advantage.” Taylor,
-_Origin of the Aryans_, p. 76, says: “The stature of the Celts struck
-the Romans with astonishment. Cæsar speaks of their _mirifica corpora_
-and contrasts the short stature of the Romans with the _magnitudo
-corporum_ of the Gauls. Strabo, also, speaking of the Coritavi, a
-British tribe in Lincolnshire, after mentioning their yellow hair, says:
-‘To show how tall they are, I saw myself some of their young men at Rome
-and they were taller by six inches than anyone else in the city.’” See
-also Elton, _Origins_, p. 240.
-
-154 : 18 _seq._ Nordic Aristocracy in Rome. Tenney Frank, _Race Mixture
-in the Roman Empire_. But he also makes Gauls and Germans on the same
-level as other conquered people, as legionaries, etc. See also
-Giuffrida-Ruggeri, p. 101.
-
-155 : 5 _seq._ G. Elliot Smith, 1; Peet, 2, pp. 164 _seq._ Fleure and
-James use the terms Neolithic and Mediterranean interchangeably. Recent
-study is giving a somewhat different interpretation to the significance
-of the megaliths. See the article by H. J. Fleure and L. Winstanley in
-the 1918 _Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great
-Britain and Ireland_. On the megaliths see also the note to p. 129 : 2
-_seq._
-
-155 : 22 _seq._ See the notes to p. 233 _seq._
-
-155 : 27–156 : 4. See the notes to p. 192.
-
-156 1 4. See the notes to p. 244 : 6.
-
-156 : 8. Sergi, 4, p. 70.
-
-156 : 10. Gauls. D’Arbois de Jubainville, 1, XIV, p. 364, says:
-“Hannibal left Spain for Italy in 218, but he left there a Carthaginian
-army in the ranks of which marched auxiliaries furnished by the Celtic
-peoples of Spain; Roman troops came to combat this army and four years
-after the departure of Hannibal, (_i. e._ in 214), they gave many
-battles to the Carthaginian generals where the Celts were vanquished. In
-the booty there were found abundant Gallic trappings, especially a great
-number of collars and bracelets of gold; among the dead of the
-Carthaginian army left upon the plain were two petty Gallic kings,
-Moencapitus and Vismarus. Livy, who tells us these things, says
-distinctly that the trappings were Gallic (Gallica) and that the kings
-were Gallic. See Livy, I, XXIV, c. 42.”
-
-156 : 13. See the note to p. 192.
-
-156 : 16. Feist, 5, p. 365, is one of the authors who notes the fact
-that classic writers spoke of light and dark types in Spain.
-
-156 : 18. This of course means racial evidence. See Mommsen, _History of
-the Roman Provinces_, I, chap. II, and Burke, _History of Spain_, p. 2.
-
-156 : 25–157 : 3. On the history of the Albigenses the most important
-authority is C. Schmidt, _Histoire de la secte des Cathares ou
-Albigeois_, Paris, 1849. The Albigenses were deeply indebted to the
-Arabic culture of Saracenic Spain, which was the medium through which
-much of the ancient Greek science and learning was preserved to modern
-times.
-
-157 : 4. Ripley, pp. 260 _seq._ For an exhaustive résumé of the subject
-see Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 277–287. Also consult the notes to p. 235 : 17
-of this book.
-
-157 : 6. See p. 122 for the predominance of the Mediterraneans.
-
-157 : 10. Umbrians and Oscans. It is fair to assume that some people
-brought the Aryan languages into Italy from the north, and this
-introduction is credited to the Umbrians and Oscans. (See Helbig, _Die
-Italiker in der Poebene_, pp. 29–41; Ridgeway, _Early Age of Greece_;
-Conway, _Early Italic Dialects_.) The Umbrians and Oscans were closely
-allied in regard to their language, whatever may have been their ethnic
-affinities. In a remoter degree they were connected with the Latins.
-From the time and starting-point of their migrations, as well as from
-their type of culture, it would appear that they were cognate with the
-early Nordic invaders of Greece. Whether they were wholly Nordic, or
-were thoroughly Nordicized Alpines, or merely Alpines with Nordic
-leaders is not of particular moment in this connection, but if they were
-the carriers of Aryan language and culture they were Nordicized in a
-degree comparable to the genuine Nordics who invaded Greece.
-Giuffrida-Ruggeri, in one of the latest papers on Italy, as well as many
-earlier authorities, regards the Umbrians as Alpines, but he says they
-were not all round skulled. “The Osci, the Sabines, the Samnites, and
-other Sabellic peoples were Aryans or Aryanized, although they inhumated
-their dead instead of burning them. It is possible that the founders of
-Rome consisted of both families, as we find both rites in ancient Rome”
-(p. 100).
-
-157 : 14. Etruscans. The author is familiar with the persistent theory
-that the Etruscans came from Asia Minor by sea, but he nevertheless
-regards them as indigenous inhabitants of Italy, that is, the Pre-Aryan,
-Pre-Nordic Mediterraneans, who, as part of a large and extended group,
-were spread over a great part of the shores of the Mediterranean, and
-were at that time the Italian exponents of the prevailing Ægean culture.
-During the second millennium in which this culture flourished, they were
-much influenced by Crete, although they developed their civilization
-along special lines. The Etruscan language, excluding the borrowed
-elements from later Italic dialects, is apparently in no sense Aryan.
-_Cf._ Hall, _Ancient History of the Near East_, pp. 53–54.
-
-157 : 16. The date 800 is given by Feist, 5, p. 370.
-
-157 : 18. Livy, V, 33 _seq._, is the authority for the date of the sixth
-century. See also Polybius, 1, II, c. XVII, § 1. Myers, _Ancient
-History_, makes the settlement of the Gauls in Italy about the fifth
-century B. C. Most authorities follow Livy.
-
-157 : 21. To show how approximate the authorities are on this date, Rice
-Holmes, 2, p. 1, and Myers, _Ancient History_, make it 390, while
-Breasted gives 382.
-
-157 : 23. Livy, V, 35–49, treats of the taking of Rome by the Gauls. The
-name Brennus means raven; it is from the Celtic _bran_, raven, crow.
-
-157 : 26. There is a considerable Frankish element there also, among the
-aristocracy.
-
-158 : 1 _seq._ An interesting discussion of this event is given by
-Salomon Reinach, 2. The invasion was resisted first at Thermopylæ and
-later at Delphi. On p. 81 Reinach says: “In the detailed recital which
-Pausanius has left us of the invasion of the Galatic bands in Greece,
-dealing with the glorious part which the Athenians played in the defence
-of the Pass of Thermopylæ. But, when the defile had been forced, the
-Athenians departed and Pausanius makes no more mention of them in
-relating the defence of Delphi, where only the Phocians, four hundred
-Locrians and two hundred Ætolians figured. It is only after the defeat
-of the Gauls that the Athenians, according to Pausanius, came back,
-together with the Bœotians, to harass the barbarians in their
-retreat....” On p. 83 he says: “The barbarians are incontestably the
-Galatians.” See also by the same author, _The Gauls in Antique Art_. G.
-Dottin, pp. 461–462 gives us the following: “Hannibal, traversing
-southern Gaul, found on his passage only Gauls. On the other hand, Livy
-mentions the arrival of Gauls in Provence at the same time as their
-first descent into Italy, and Justinius places the wars of the Greeks of
-Marseilles against the Gauls and Ligurians before the taking of Rome by
-the Gauls. The invasion of the Belgæ is placed then in the third
-century. It is doubtless contemporaneous with the Celtic invasion of
-Greece which was perhaps caused by it.” See also the notes to p. 174 :
-21 of this book. According to Myers, _Ancient History_, where the
-account of these events is briefly given on pp. 269–270, the year was
-278 B. C. Breasted, 1, p. 449, gives 280 B. C.
-
-As late as the fourth century of our era, Celtic forms of speech
-prevailed among the Galatians of Asia Minor. According to Jerome
-(Fraser’s _Golden Bough_, II, p. 126, footnote), the language spoken
-then in Anatolia was very similar to the dialect of the Treveri, a
-Celtic tribe on the Moselle, of whose name Treves is the perpetuator.
-“It was to these people that St. Paul addressed one of his epistles.”
-
-It is interesting to note that at the present time the finest soldiers
-of the Turkish army are recruited in the district of Angora which
-includes the territory of ancient Galatia.
-
-158 : 13. Procopius, IV, 13, says that a number of Moors and their wives
-took refuge in Sicily and also in Sardinia where they established
-colonies. The recent article by Giuffrida-Ruggeri sums up the data for
-Sicily, Sardinia and Corsica. See also Gibbon, _passim_, and Ripley, pp.
-115–116.
-
-158 : 16. G. Elliot Smith, 1, pp. 94 _seq._, and the notes to pp. 127 :
-26 and 128.
-
-158 : 21. Pelasgians. Sergi, 4, followed by many anthropologists,
-describes as Pelasgian one branch of the Mediterranean or Eurafrican
-race of mankind and one group of skull types within that race. Ripley,
-pp. 407, 448, considers them Mediterraneans in all probability, as this
-is the oldest layer of population in these regions. So also do Myres,
-_Dawn of History_, p. 171, and most of the other authorities. In his
-_History of the Pelasgian Theory_, Myres sums up all that was written up
-to that time. Homer and other early writers make them the ancient
-inhabitants of Greece, who were subdued by the Hellenes. It is generally
-agreed that a people resembling in its prevailing skull forms the
-Mediterranean race of north Africa was settled in the Ægean area from a
-remote Neolithic antiquity. D’Arbois de Jubainville, 4, t. I, devotes a
-chapter or more to them, and declares on p. 110: “In fact the Pelasgians
-and the Hellenes are of different origin; the first are one of the races
-which preceded the Indo-Europeans in Europe, the others are
-Indo-European.”
-
-Another recent writer who deals with this puzzling problem is Sartiaux,
-in his _Troie_, pp. 140–143. Finally, Sir William Ridgeway says: “The
-Achæans found the land occupied by a people known by the ancients as
-Pelasgians who continued down to classical times the main element in the
-population, even in the states under Achæan, and later, under Dorian
-rule. In some cases the Pelasgians formed a serf class, _e. g._ in
-Penestæ, in Thessaly, the Helots in Laconia and the Gymnesii at Argos;
-whilst they practically composed the whole population of Arcadia and
-Attica which never came under either Achæan or Dorian rule. This people
-had dwelt in the Ægean from the Stone Age, and though still in the
-Bronze Age at the Achæan conquest, had made great advances in the useful
-and ornamental arts. They were of short stature, with dark hair and
-eyes, and generally dolichocephalic. Their chief centers were at
-Cnossus, Crete, in Argolis, Laconia and Attica, in each being ruled by
-ancient lines of kings. In Argolis, Prœtus built Tiryns but later under
-Perseus, Mycenæ took the lead until the Achæan conquest. All the ancient
-dynasties traced their descent from Poseidon, who at the time of the
-Achæan conquest was the chief male divinity of Greece and the islands.”
-
-As to the Pelasgian being a Non-Aryan tongue, the ancient script at
-Crete has not yet been deciphered. Since the ancient Cretans were
-presumably Pelasgians, it is safe to identify them with this Non-Aryan
-language, although Conway, 2, pp. 141–142, is inclined to believe that
-it is related to the Aryan family. See also Sweet, _The History of
-Language_, p. 103.
-
-158 : 22. Nordic Achæans. Ridgeway, 1, p. 683, says: “We found that a
-fair-haired race greater in stature than the melanochroous Ægean people
-had there [in Greece and the Ægean] been domiciled for long ages, and
-that fresh bodies of tall, fair-haired people from the shores of the
-northern ocean continually through the ages had kept pressing down into
-the southern peninsulas. From this it followed that the Achæans of Homer
-were one of these bodies of Celts [_i. e._, Nordics], who had made their
-way down into Greece and had become the masters of the indigenous race.
-
-“This conclusion we further tested by an examination of the distribution
-of the round shield, the practise of cremation, the use of the brooch
-and buckle, and finally the diffusion of iron in Europe, North Africa
-and western Asia. Our inductions showed that all four had made their way
-into Greece and the Ægean from Central Europe. Accordingly as they all
-appeared in Greece along with the Homeric Achæans, we inferred that the
-latter had brought them with them from central Europe.” Elsewhere, in
-the same book, Ridgeway identifies the Homeric age with the Achæan and
-Post-Mycenæan, the Mycenæan with the Pre-Achæan and Pelasgian.
-
-Bury, _The History of Greece_, p. 44, says: “The Achæans were a people
-of blond complexion, of Indo-European speech. Among the later Greeks,
-there were two marked types, distinguished by light and dark hair. The
-blond complexion was rarer and more prized. This is illustrated by the
-fact that women and fops used sometimes to dye their hair yellow or red,
-the κομης ξανθίσματα mentioned in the Danæ of Euripedes.”
-
-159 : 4–5. Date of the siege of Troy. Hall, _Ancient History of the Near
-East_, p. 69, and many other authorities accept the Parian Chronicle,
-which makes it 1194–1184 B. C. For the whole question of the Trojan War
-see Félix Sartiaux, _Troie, La Guerre de Troie_.
-
-159 : 6 _seq._ See the notes to p. 225 : 11.
-
-159 : 10 _seq._ Bury, _History of Greece_, p. 44; DeLapouge, _Les
-sélections sociales_. Beddoe noted in his _Anthropological History of
-Europe_ that almost all of Homer’s heroes were blond or chestnut-haired
-as well as large and tall. There are many passages in the Iliad which
-refer to the blondness and size of the more important personages.
-
-159 : 19 _seq._ Bury, _History of Greece_, pp. 57, 59, describes the
-Greek tribes which moved down before the Dorians, conquering the
-Achæans—the Thessalians, Bœotians, etc. But see Peake, 2, for
-Thessalians. Also D’Arbois de Jubainville, 4, t. II, p. 297, and Myers,
-_Anc. Hist._, pp. 127, 136 _seq._
-
-159 : 23. Dorians. See the authorities quoted above; also Ridgeway, Von
-Luschan, Deniker, 2, pp. 320–321, and Hawes.
-
-160 : 1. C. H. Hawes, p. 258 of the _Annal of the British School at
-Athens_, vol. XVI, “Some Dorian Descendants,” says the Dorians were
-Alpines, and this view is shared by many others, among them Von Luschan.
-See also Myres, _The Dawn of History_, pp. 173 _seq._ and 213. While
-this may be partially true even of the bulk of the population, all the
-tribes to the north of the Mediterranean fringe carried a large Nordic
-element, which practically always assumed the leadership.
-
-160 : 17. For the character of the Dorians, see Bury, p. 62.
-
-161 : 20. The philosopher Xenophanes, a contemporary of both Philip and
-his son, in discussing man’s notion of God, insists that each race
-represents the Great Supreme under its own shape: the Negro with a flat
-nose and black face, the Thracian with blue eyes and a ruddy complexion.
-
-161 : 27. Loss of Nordic blood among the Persians. See the note to p.
-254 : 11.
-
-162 : 8. Barbarous Macedonia. Bury, _The History of Greece_, pp.
-681–731.
-
-162 : 14. Alexander the Great. Descriptions of Alexander are found in
-Plutarch, who quotes the memoirs of Aristoxenus, a contemporary of
-Alexander, regarding the agreeable odor exhaled from his skin; Plutarch
-also says, without giving his authority, who was probably the same, that
-Alexander was “fair and of a light color, passing to ruddiness in his
-face and upon his breast.” An authority for the statement of blue and
-black eyes is Quintus Curtius Rufus, a Roman historian of the first
-century A. D., in _Historiarum Alexandri Magni, Libri Decem_. This was
-written three and one-half centuries after the death of Alexander. The
-quotation, from North’s translation of Plutarch, reads: “But when
-Appeles painted Alexander holding lightning in his hand he did not shew
-his fresh color, but made him somewhat blacke and swarter than his face
-in deede was; for naturally he had a very fayre white colour, mingled
-also with red which chiefly appeared in his face and in his brest.”
-
-In Gabon’s _Inquiries into the Human Faculty_, original English edition,
-frontispiece, is a composite photograph of Alexander the Great from six
-different medals selected by the curator in the British Museum. The
-curly hair and Greek profile are significant features. The sarcophagus
-of Alexander in the Constantinople Museum called the Sidonian, throws
-some light on this point, although there is some uncertainty among
-archæologists as to whether or not it is Alexander’s sarcophagus.
-
-162 : 19. See Von Luschan, _The Early Inhabitants of Western Asia_, the
-section on Greece.
-
-163 : 7. _Græculus_, -_a_, -_um_. According to the Latin dictionaries,
-the diminutive adjective, understood mostly in a depreciating,
-contemptuous sense—a paltry Greek.
-
-163 : 10. Physical types in early Greece. Ripley, pp. 407–408, quotes
-Nicolucci, Zaborowski, Virchow, DeLapouge and Sergi. _Cf._ Peake, 2, pp.
-158–159, also Ripley, p. 411.
-
-163 : 14. Physical types of modern Greeks. See the authorities given on
-p. 409 of Ripley’s book, and Von Luschan, pp. 221 _seq._ Von Luschan and
-most other observers say that the modern Greeks, at least in Asia Minor,
-are a very mixed people. See his curve for head form.
-
-163 : 16. Von Luschan, p. 239: “As in ancient Greece a great number of
-individuals seem to have been fair, with blue eyes, I took great care to
-state whether this were the case with the modern ‘Greeks’ in Asia. I
-have notes for 580 adults, males and females. In this number there were
-8 with blue and 29 with gray or greenish eyes; all the rest had brown
-eyes. There was not one case of really light colored hair, but in nearly
-all the cases of lighter eyes the hair also was less dark than with the
-other Greeks.” See Ripley for European Greeks.
-
-163 : 19. Albanians. Deniker, 2, pp. 333–334; Von Luschan, p. 224;
-Ripley, p. 410. Most Albanians are tall and dark. C. H. Hawes, _Some
-Dorian Descendants_, p. 258 _seq._, says that the percentage of light
-eyes over light hair is nearly ten times as great, _i. e._, there is 3
-per cent of light hair to 30–38 per cent light eyes among Albanians and
-selected Greeks and Cretans. Also Glück, _Zur Physischen Anthropologie
-der Albanesen_, pp. 375–376, and the note to p. 25 : 25 of this book.
-Hall gives some interesting data on p. 522 of his _Ancient History of
-the Near East_.
-
-163 : 26. See the note to p. 138 : 1 _seq._
-
-164 : 4 _seq._ Dinaric type identified with the Spartans. See C. H.
-Hawes, _op. cit._, pp. 250 _seq._, where he discusses the Spartans and
-the Dinaric type, and Hall, _Ancient History of the Near East_, pp. 74
-and 572.
-
-164 : 12. On p. 57 of his _History of Greece_ Bury inclines to the
-belief that the Dorians came through Epirus, and attributes the cause of
-their invasion to the pressure of the Illyrians, to whom the Dorians
-were probably related. It is known that the Illyrians were round-headed.
-Finally they left the regions of the Corinthian Gulf, and sailed around
-the Peloponnesus to southeast Greece, where they settled, leaving only a
-few Dorians behind, who gave their name to the country they occupied,
-but ever afterward were of no consequence in Greek history. Some bands
-went to Crete, others on other islands and some to Asia Minor.
-
-164 : 15. Character of the Spartans. See Bury, _History of Greece_, pp.
-62, 120, 130–135.
-
-164 : 22. See p. 153 of this book.
-
-165 : 6 _seq._ _Cf._ the note to p. 119 : 1 and that to p. 223 : 1.
-
-165 : 10. G. Elliot Smith, _Ancient Mariners_.
-
-165 : 14. See the note to p. 242 : 5 on languages.
-
-166 : 3. Gibbon, chap. XLVIII.
-
-
- CHAPTER VI. THE NORDIC RACE
-
-167 : 1 _seq._ _Cf._ Peake, 2, p. 162, and numerous other authorities.
-Peake’s summary is brief, clear and up to date.
-
-167 : 13 _seq._ R. G. Latham was the first to propound the theory of the
-European origin of the Indo-Europeans. He says that there is “a tacit
-assumption that as the east is the probable quarter in which either the
-human species or the greater part of our civilization originated,
-everything came from it. But surely in this there is a confusion between
-the primary diffusion of mankind over the world at large and those
-secondary movements by which, according to even the ordinary hypothesis,
-the Lithuanians, etc., came from Asia into Europe.”
-
-167 : 17. See _The So-Called North European Race of Mankind_, by G.
-Retzius. Linnæus and DeLapouge were the first to use this term, _homo
-Europæus_. See Ripley, pp. 103 and 121.
-
-168 : 13. See the notes to pp. 31 : 16 and 224 : 19.
-
-168 : 19 _seq._ Ripley, chap. IX, p. 205, based on Arbo, Hultkranz and
-others. G. Retzius, in the article mentioned above, pp. 303–306, and
-also _Crania Suecica_; L. Wilser; K. Penka; O. Schrader, 2 and 3; Feist,
-5; Mathæus Much; Hirt, 1; and Peake, 2, pp. 162–163, are other
-authorities. There are many more.
-
-169 : 1 _seq._ G. Retzius, 3, p. 303. See also 1, for the racial
-homogeneity of Sweden.
-
-169 : 9. Osborn, 1, pp. 457–458, and authorities given.
-
-169 : 14. Gerard de Geer, _A Geochronology of the Last 12,000 Years_.
-
-169 : 20 _seq._ See the note to p. 117 : 18.
-
-170 : 3 _seq._ Cuno, _Forschungen im Gebiete der alten Völkerkunde_;
-Pösche, _Der Arier_.
-
-170 : 10 _seq._ Peake, 2; Woodruff, 1, 2; and Myres, 1, p. 15. See also
-the notes to pp. 168 : 19 and Chap. IX of this book.
-
-170 : 21. See the notes to pp. 213 _seq._
-
-170 : 29–171 : 12. See Osborn’s map, 1, p. 189.
-
-171 : 12. _Cf._ Ellsworth Huntington, _The Pulse of Asia_.
-
-171 : 25. Peake, 2, and Montelius, _Sweden in Heathen Times_, and most
-of the authors already given on the subject of the Nordics.
-
-172 : 1–25. Ripley, pp. 346–348, and pp. 352 _seq._, together with the
-authorities quoted. Also Feist, 5, and Zaborowski, 1, pp. 274–278. Marco
-Polo, about 1298, in chap. XLVI, of his travels, says that the Russian
-men were extremely well favored, tall and with fair complexions. The
-women were also fair and of a good size, with light hair which they were
-accustomed to wear long.
-
-173 : 9. See Bury, _History of Greece_, pp. 111–112, and the notes to
-Chap. XIV of this hook.
-
-173 : 11. Saka or Sacæ. See the notes to p. 259 : 21.
-
-173 : 11. Cimmerians. For an interesting summary see Zaborowski, 1, pp.
-137–138. For a lengthy discussion of them and of their migrations, and
-of their possible affiliations with the Cimbri, see Ridgeway, 1, pp.
-387–397. According to the best Assyriologists the Cimmerians are the
-same people who, known as the Gimiri or Gimirrai, according to cuneiform
-inscriptions, were in Armenia in the eighth century B. C. See Hall,
-_Ancient History of the Near East_, p. 495. Bury, _History of Greece_,
-also touches on their raids in Asia Minor. Minns, p. 115, believes them
-to have been Scythians. G. Dottin, p. 23 and elsewhere, speaking of the
-Cimmerians and Cimbri, says: “The latter are without doubt Germans,
-therefore the Cimmerians who are the same people are not ancestors of
-the Celts.” The Cimmerians were first spoken of by Homer (Odyssey, XI,
-12–19) who describes them as living in perpetual darkness in the far
-North. Herodotus (IV, 11–13) in his account of Scythia, regards them as
-the early inhabitants of south Russia, after whom the Bosphorus
-Cimmerius and other places were named, and who were driven by the Scyths
-along the Caucasus into Asia Minor, where they maintained themselves for
-a century. The Cimmerii are often mentioned in connection with the
-Thracian Treres who made their raids across the Hellespont, and possibly
-some of them took this route, having been cut off by the Scyths as the
-Alani were by the Huns. Certain it is that in the middle of the seventh
-century B. C., Asia Minor was ravaged by northern nomads (Herodotus, IV,
-12), one body of whom is called in Assyrian sources Gimirrai and is
-represented as coming through the Caucasus. They were Aryan-speaking, to
-judge by the few proper names preserved. To the north of the Euxine
-their main body was merged finally with the Scyths. Later writers have
-often confused them with the Cimbri of Jutland. There is no relation
-between the Cimbri and the Cymbry or Cymry, a word derived from the
-Welsh Combrox and used by them to denote their own people. See note to
-p. 174 : 26
-
-173 : 14. Medes. See the notes to p. 254 : 13.
-
-173 : 14. Achæans and Phrygians. See Peake, 2, who dates them at 2000 B.
-C. Bury says, pp. 5 and 44 _seq._: “after the middle of the second
-millennium B. C., but there were previous and long-forgotten invasions.”
-Consult also Ridgeway, 1, and the notes to pp. 158–161 and 225 : 11 of
-this book.
-
-173 : 16. See the note to p. 157 : 10.
-
-173 : 18. The Nordics cross the Rhine into Gaul. Rice Holmes, 2, pp.
-11–12, gives the seventh century B. C. as the date when tall fair Celts
-first crossed the Rhine westward, “but it is unlikely that they were
-homogeneous.... Physically they resembled the tall fair Germans whom
-Cæsar and Tacitus describe, but they differed from them in character and
-customs as well as in speech.” See also p. 336, at the bottom, where he
-remarks: “Early in the Hallstatt period a tall dolichocephalic race
-appeared in the Jura and the Doubs, who may have been the advanced guard
-of the Celts.” 1000 B. C. for the appearance of the Celts on the Rhine
-is a very moderate estimate of the date at which these Nordics appear in
-western Europe, as that would be nearly four centuries after the
-appearance of the Achæans in Greece and fully two centuries after the
-appearance of Nordics who spoke Aryan in Italy. The Hallstatt culture
-(see p. 129) with which the invasion of these Nordics is generally
-associated had been in full development for four or five centuries
-before the date here given for the crossing of the Rhine. 700 B. C.,
-given by many authorities, seems to the author too late by several
-centuries.
-
-173 : 18 _seq._ G. Dottin, _Manuel Celtique_, pp. 453 _seq._, says: “If
-the Celts originated in Gaul, it is likely that their language would
-have left in our nomenclature more traces than we find, and above all,
-that the Celtic denominations would be applied as well to mountains and
-water courses as to inhabited places.... According to D’Arbois de
-Jubainville, these names were Ligurian. Thus the Celts would have named
-only fortresses, and the names properly geographic would be due to the
-populations which preceded them.... These constituted for the most part
-the plebs, reduced almost to the state of slavery, which the Celtic
-aristocracy of Druids and Equites dominated.... On the other hand, if
-one derives the Celts from central Europe, one explains better both the
-presence in central Europe of numerous place names, proving the
-establishment of dwellings of the Celts, and their invasions into
-southeastern Europe, more difficult to conceive if they had had to
-traverse the German forests. The migration of a people to a more fertile
-country is natural enough; the departure of the Celts from a fertile
-country like Gaul to a less fertile country like Germany would be very
-unlikely.” And it must be remembered that Tacitus wondered why anyone
-should want to live in Germany, with its disagreeable climate, trackless
-forests and endless swamps.
-
-Dottin adds the interesting bit of information, on p. 197, that the
-Gauls, mixed with the Illyrians (Alpines) were the farmers of old Gaul.
-The real Gauls were warriors and hunters.
-
-173 : 22. Teutons. Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 546 _seq._
-
-173 : 26 _seq._ Deniker, 2, p. 321; Oman, _England Before the Norman
-Conquest_, pp. 13 _seq._ For Celts and Teutons consult also G. de
-Mortillet, _La formation de la nation française_, pp. 114 _seq._
-
-174 : 1. Goidels. Rice Holmes, 1, pp. 229, 409–410, and 2, pp. 319–320,
-says not earlier than the sixth or seventh centuries B. C., but
-Montelius and others give 800. G. Dottin, pp. 457–460, and D’Arbois de
-Jubainville, 4, t. I, pp. 342–343, contend that there is no historical
-record of it. The date depends upon whether the word κασσίτερος, which
-designates “tin” in the Iliad, is a Celtic word. See also Oman, 2, pp.
-13–14, and Rhys and Jones, _The Welsh People_, pp. 1, 2.
-
-174 : 7. Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 308 _seq._ and 325 _seq._; Dottin, pp. 1
-and 2, and his Conclusion. Also numerous other writers, especially
-D’Arbois de Jubainville, in various volumes of the _Revue Celtique_.
-
-174 : 10. Nordicized Alpines. Dottin, p. 237: “Cæsar tells us that the
-Plebs of Gaul was in a state bordering on slavery. It did not dare by
-itself to do anything and was never consulted.” _Cf._ note to p. 173 :
-20.
-
-174 : 11 Gauls in the Crimea. Ridgeway, _Early Age of Greece_, p. 387,
-quotes Strabo (309 and 507) and the long Protogenes inscription from
-Olbia (_Corp. Inscr. Græc._, II, no. 2058).
-
-174 : 15. Migration of Nordics from Germany. It occurred about the
-eighth century B. C., according to many authors, among them G. Dottin,
-pp. 241, 457–458. “Cæsar, Livy, Justinius, summing up Pompeius Trogus,
-Appian and Plutarch, without doubt following a common source, even think
-that excess population is the cause of the Gallic migrations. It is one
-of the reasons to which Cæsar attributes the emigration of the Helvetii.
-Cisalpine Gaul nourished an immense population.”
-
-174 : 21. Cymry move westward. See Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 319–321; Oman, 2,
-pp. 13 _seq._ and especially p. 16; Deniker, 2, pp. 320–322; Dottin, pp.
-460 _seq._ Both Rhys and Jones, in the _Welsh People_, and G. Dottin,
-suggest that this movement was only part of one great migration which
-dispersed the Nordics from a central home. Their appearance in Greece as
-Galatians at about the same time may be ascribed to this migration. See
-the notes to p. 158 : 1 _seq._
-
-Oman and many other authorities think the movement occurred some time
-before 325 B. C.
-
-174 : 21 _seq._ Cymry and Belgæ. The Cymry or Belgæ were “P Celtic” in
-speech. They first appeared in history about 300 B. C., equipped with a
-culture of the second iron period called La Tène. The classic authors
-were apparently uncertain as to whether or not they were Germans (or
-Teutons), but they appear to have been largely composed of this element,
-and to have arrived previously from Scandinavia and to have adopted the
-Celtic tongue. These Belgæ drove out the earlier “Q Celts” or Goidels,
-and the pressure they exerted caused many of the later migrations of the
-Goidels or Gauls.
-
-The groups of tribes which in Cæsar’s time occupied the part of France
-to the north and east of the Seine were known as Belgæ, while the same
-people who had crossed to the north of the channel were called Brythons.
-To avoid designating these groups separately the author has called all
-these tribes Cymry, although the term can properly be applied only to
-the “_P_ Celts” of Wales, who adopted this designation for themselves
-about the sixth century A. D., according to Rhys and Jones, p. 26, where
-we read: “The singular is Cymro, the plural Cymry. The word Cymro, is
-derived from the earlier Cumbrox or Combrox, which is parallel to the
-Gaulish Allobrox (plural Allobroges) a name applied by the Gauls to
-certain Ligurians whose country they conquered.... As the word is to be
-traced to Cumbra-land (Cumberland), its use must have extended to the
-Brythons” (see Rice Holmes, 2, p. 15, where he says the Brythons spread
-the La Tène culture). “But as the name Cymry seems to have been unknown,
-not only in Brittany, but also in Cornwall, it may be conjectured that
-it cannot have acquired anything like national significance for any
-length of time before the battle of Deorham in the year 577, when the
-West Saxons permanently severed the Celts west of the Severn from their
-kinsmen (of Gloucester, Somerset, etc., as now known).
-
-“Thus it is probable that the national significance of the term Cymro
-may date from the sixth century and is to be regarded as the exponent of
-the amalgamation of the Goidelic and Brythonic populations under high
-pressure from without by the Saxons and Angles.” Therefore it is a
-purely Welsh term, properly speaking. Broca, in the _Mémoires
-d’anthropologie_, I, 871, p. 395, is responsible for the word as applied
-to the invaders of Gaul who spoke Celtic. He called them Kimris. See
-also his remarks in the _Bulletin de la société d’Anthropologie_, XI,
-1861, pp. 308–309, and the article by L. Wilser in _L’Anthropologie_,
-XIV, 1903, pp. 496–497.
-
-175 : 12 _seq._ See the notes to p. 32 : 8; also Rice Holmes, 2, p. 337;
-Fleure and James, pp. 118 _seq._ Taylor, 1, p. 109, says that there is a
-superficial resemblance between the Teutons and Celts, but a radical
-difference in skulls, the Teutonic being more dolichocephalic. Both are
-tall, large-limbed and fair. The Teuton is distinguished by a pink and
-white skin, the Celt is more florid and inclined to freckle. The Teuton
-eye is blue, that of the Celt gray, green, or grayish blue.
-
-175 : 21 _seq._ Rice Holmes, 2, p. 326 _seq._, gives a summary of the
-descriptions of various classic authors. Salomon Reinach, 2, pp. 80
-_seq._, discusses Pausanias’ detailed recital of the event. For the
-original see Pausanias, X, 22. _Cf._ also the note to p. 158 : 1.
-
-176 : 15–177 : 27. The series of notes which were collected by the
-author on the wanderings of these Germanic tribes proved so lengthy, and
-the relationships of the peoples under discussion so intricate, that
-they grew beyond all reasonable proportions as notes, and carried the
-subject far afield. Hence it has seemed best to omit them in this
-connection and to embody them in another work.
-
-Perhaps it will therefore be sufficient to say here that the results of
-the research have made it clear that all of these tribes were related by
-blood and by language, and came originally from Scandinavia and the
-neighborhood of the Baltic Sea. For some unknown reason, such as
-pressure of population, they began, one after another, a southward
-movement in the centuries immediately before the Christian Era, which
-brought them within the knowledge of the Mediterranean world. Their
-wanderings were very extensive and covered Europe from southern Russia
-and the Crimea to Spain, and even to Africa. Many of these tribes broke
-up into smaller groups under distinct names, or united with others to
-form large confederacies. Not only did some of them clash with each
-other almost to the point of extermination in their efforts to obtain
-lands, but in attempting to avoid the Huns came into contact with the
-Romans, and broke through the frontier of the Empire at various points.
-From the Romans they gained many of the ideas which were later
-incorporated by them in the various European nations which they founded.
-The result of their conquests was to establish a Nordic nobility and
-upper class in practically every country of Europe,—a condition which
-has remained to the present day.
-
-177 : 12. Varangians. See the note on the Varangians, to p. 189 : 24.
-
-177 : 18. See Jordanes, _History of the Goths_.
-
-177 : 27. D’Arbois de Jubainville, 2, pp. 92–93; Taylor, _Words and
-Places_, p. 45; and G. Dottin, _Manuel Celtique_, p. 28. This word came
-from _Volcæ_, the name of a Celtic tribe of the upper Rhine. Their name,
-to the neighboring Teutons, came to designate a foreigner. The Volcæ
-were separated into two branches, the Arecomici, established between the
-Rhone and the Garonne, and the Tectosages, in the region of the upper
-Garonne. The term Volcæ has become among the Germans _Walah_, then
-_Walch_, from which is derived _Welsch_, which designates the people of
-Romance language, such as the Italians and French. Among the
-Anglo-Saxons it has become _Wealh_, from which the derivation _Welsh_,
-which designates the Gauls, and nowadays their former compatriots who
-migrated to England and settled in Wales.
-
-
- CHAPTER VII. TEUTONIC EUROPE
-
-179 : 10. Mikklegard. “The Great City.” This was the name given to
-Byzantium by the Goths.
-
-180 : 2–11. Procopius, _Vandalic War_; Gibbon, chaps. XXXI-XXXVIII;
-Freeman, _Historical Geography of Europe_.
-
-181 : 14. Gibbon, chaps. XXXVII and XXXVIII.
-
-182 : 1. Eginhard, _The Life of Charlemagne_.
-
-183 : 24. _The Political History of England_, vol. V, by H. A. L.
-Fisher, p. 205: “While the sovereigns of Europe were collecting tithes
-from their clergy for the Holy War, and papal collectors were selling
-indulgences to the scandal of some scrupulous minds, the empire became
-vacant by the death of Maximilian on January 19, 1519. For a few months
-diplomacy was busy with the choice of a successor. The king of France
-(Francis I) poured money into Germany, and was supported in his
-candidature by the pope; the king of England (Henry VIII) sent Pace to
-counteract French designs with the electors; but the issue was never
-really in doubt. Germany would not tolerate a French ruler; and on June
-28, 1519, Charles of Spain was elected king of the Romans.”
-
-184 : 8. Depopulation. (Thirty Years’ War.) _Cambridge Modern History_,
-vol. IV, p. 418, says that Germany was particularly afflicted. The data
-are unreliable, but the population of the empire was probably reduced by
-two-thirds, or from 16,000,000 to less than 6,000,000. Bavaria,
-Franconia and Swabia suffered most. W. Menzel says: “Germany is reckoned
-by some to have lost one-half, by others, two-thirds, of her entire
-population during the Thirty Years’ War. In Saxony 900,000 men had
-fallen within ten years; in Bohemia the number of inhabitants at the
-demise of Frederick II, before the last deplorable inroads made by
-Barier and Torstenson, had sunk to one-fourth. Augsburg, instead of
-80,000 had 18,000 inhabitants. Every province, every town throughout the
-Empire had suffered at an equal ratio, with the exception of Tyrol....
-The working class had almost totally disappeared. In Franconia the
-misery and depopulation had reached such an extent that the Franconian
-estates, with the assent of the ecclesiastical princes, abolished in
-1650 the celibacy of the Catholic clergy and permitted each man to have
-two wives.... The nobility were compelled by necessity to enter the
-services of the princes, the citizens were impoverished and powerless,
-the peasantry had been utterly demoralized by military rule and reduced
-to servitude.” It has been said that the city of Berlin contained but
-300 citizens; the Palatinate of the Rhine but 200 farmers. In character,
-intelligence and in morality, the German people were set back two
-hundred years. There are, in addition to the authorities quoted here,
-numerous others who make the same observations, in fact, this
-depopulation is one of the outstanding results of the Thirty Years’ War.
-
-See also Anton Gindely, _History of the Thirty Years’ War_, p. 398.
-
-184 : 22 _seq._ The _British Medical Journal_ for April 8, 1916; and
-Parsons, _Anthropological Observations on German Prisoners of War_.
-
-185 : 6. See the note to p. 196 : 27.
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII. THE EXPANSION OF THE NORDICS
-
-188 : 5. Beddoe, 4; Ripley, chap. VI.
-
-188 : 11. _British Medical Journal_ for April 8, 1916.
-
-188 : 15. Ripley, pp. 221 and 469, and the authorities quoted.
-
-188 : 24–189 : 6. P. Kretschmer; and, on the history of High and Low
-German, see Herman Paul, _Grundriss der Germanischen Philologie_; _The
-Encyclopædia Britannica_, under German Language, gives a good summary.
-
-189 : 7. Ripley, p. 256.
-
-189 : 12. Villari, _The Barbarian Invasions of Italy_; Thos. Hodgkin,
-_Italy and Her Invaders_.
-
-189 : 15. Brenner Pass. See Rice Holmes, _Cæsar’s Conquest of Gaul_, p.
-37; Ripley, p. 290; and most histories of the incursions of the
-barbarians into Italy.
-
-189 : 24. Varangians. Most of the early historians of Russia and Germany
-and the monk Nestor, who was the earliest annalist of the Russians,
-agree in deriving the Varangians or Varegnes from Scandinavia. They
-probably were more of the same people whom we find as Varini on the
-continental shores of the North Sea. The names of the first founders of
-the Russian monarchy are Scandinavian or Northman. Their language,
-according to Constantine Porphyrogenitus, differed essentially from the
-Sclavonian. The author of the annals of St. Bertin, who first names the
-Russians (Rhos) in the year 939 of his annals, assigns them Sweden for
-their country. Luitprand calls them the same as the Normans. The Finns,
-Laplanders and Esthonians speak of the Swedes to the present day as
-Roots, Rootsi, Ruorzi, Rootslane or Rudersman, meaning rowers. See
-Schlözer, in his _Nestor_, p. 60; and _Malte Brun_, p. 378, as well as
-_Kluchevsky_, vol. I, pp. 56–76 and 92. The Varangians, according to
-Gibbon, formed the body-guard of the Greek Emperor at Byzantium. These
-were the Russian Varangians, who made their way to that city by the
-eastern routes. Canon Isaac Taylor, in _Words and Places_, p. 110,
-remarks that “for centuries the Varangian Guard upheld the tottering
-throne of the Byzantine emperors.” This Varangian Guard was very largely
-reinforced by Saxons fleeing from the Norman Conquest of England. The
-name Varangi is undoubtedly identical with _Frank_, and is the term used
-in the Levant to designate Christians of the western rite, from the days
-of the Crusades down to the present time. _Cf._ Ferangistan—_land of the
-Franks_, or, as it is now interpreted, “Europe,” especially western
-Europe. E. B. Soane, To _Mesopotamia and Kurdistan in Disguise_, uses
-the phrase _á la ferangi_ as describing anything imported from western
-Europe.
-
-190 : 1. Deniker, 2, pp. 333–334; Ripley.
-
-190 : 9. Deniker, the same.
-
-190 : 13. Ripley, pp. 281–283.
-
-190 : 15. Ripley, pp. 343 _seq._
-
-190 : 19. See the notes to pp. 131 : 26, 140 : 1 _seq._ and 196 : 18.
-
-190 : 26. See p. 140 of this book.
-
-192 : 1 _seq._ D’Arbois de Jubainville, 1, t. XIV, pp. 357–395; Feist,
-5, p. 365. Col. W. R. Livermore, in correspondence, says that
-practically all students on the Celtiberian question agree upon the
-point where the Celts entered Spain, namely, that designated by de
-Jubainville. They passed along the Atlantic coast, across the Pyrenees,
-where the railroad from Paris to Madrid now crosses, about 500 B. C.,
-between the time of Avienus, ± 525 and Herodotus, ± 443. In the time of
-Avienus the Ligurians had both ends of the Pyrenees from Ampurias to
-Bayonne, and controlled the sources of the Batis. In the time of
-Herodotus, the Gauls had the country up to the Curretes. See also
-Müllenhoff, _Deutsche Altertumskunde_, II, p. 238, and Deniker, 2, p.
-321. D’Arbois de Jubainville, _op. cit._, especially pp. 363–364, says:
-“The name Celtiberian was adopted at the time of Hannibal, who entered
-Spain, married a Celt, and thus won the assistance of the Celts in his
-march on Rome.... The name Celtiberian is the generic term for
-designating the Celts established in the center of Spain, but the word
-is sometimes taken in a less extended sense to designate only one part
-of this important group.”
-
-192 : 8. Sergi, 4, p. 70. See also p. 156 of this book.
-
-192 : 14. See the note to p. 156, or Ridgeway, _The Early Age of
-Greece_, p. 375.
-
-192 : 18. Ridgeway, _op. cit._, p. 375. This may refer to the veins
-showing blue through the fair Nordic skin.
-
-192 : 18. Ridgeway, _op. cit._, p. 375. Here he says: “The Visigoths
-became the master race, and from them the Spanish Grandees, among whom
-fair hair is a common feature, derive their _sangre azul_. After a
-glorious struggle against the Saracens, which served to keep alive their
-martial ardor and thus brace up the ancient vigor of the race, from the
-16th century onward the Visigothic wave seems to have exhausted its
-initial energy, and the aboriginal stratum has more and more come to the
-surface and has thus left Spain sapless and supine.”
-
-102 : 22. Taylor, 2, pp. 308–309, says: “From the name of the same
-nation,—the Goths of Spain,—are derived curiously enough, two names, one
-implying extreme honor, the other extreme contempt. The Spanish noble,
-who boasts that the _sangre azul_ of the Goths runs in his veins with no
-admixture, calls himself an _hidalgo_, that is, a son of the Goth, as
-his proudest title.” A footnote to this reads: “The old etymology _Hijo
-d’algo_, son of someone, has been universally given up in favor of _hi’
-d’al Go_, son of the Goth. (More correctly _hi’ del Go’_.) See a paper
-‘On Oc and Oyl’ translated by Bishop Thirlwall, for the _Philological
-Museum_, vol. II, p. 337.” Taylor goes on to say, however, that the
-version _hi’ d’ algo_, son of someone, is still given as the origin of
-this word in R. Barcia’s _Primer Diccionaria Géneral Étimologico de la
-Lengua Español_.
-
-Concerning some other derivations Taylor continues: “Of Gothic blood
-scarcely less pure than that of the Spanish Hidalgos, are the Cagots of
-Southern France, a race of outcast pariahs, who in every village live
-apart, executing every vile or disgraceful kind of toil, and with whom
-the poorest peasant refuses to associate. These Cagots are the
-descendants of those Spanish Goths, who, on the invasion of the Moors,
-fled to Aquitaine, where they were protected by Charles Martel. But the
-reproach of Arianism clung to them, and religious bigotry branded them
-with the name _câ gots_ or ‘Gothic Dogs.’ a name which still clings to
-them, and keeps them apart from their fellow-men.”
-
-Elsewhere we find the following: “The fierce and intolerant Arianism of
-the Visigothic conquerors of Spain has given us another word. The word
-Visigoth has become Bigot, and thus on the imperishable tablets of
-language the Catholics have handed down to perpetual infamy the name and
-nation of their persecutors.”
-
-193 : 14 _seq._ _Cf._ DeLapouge, _L’Aryen_, p. 343, where he says that
-the exodus of the Conquistadores was fatal to Spain.
-
-193 : 17. Rice Holmes, 2; and the note to p. 69 of this book.
-
-194 : 1. See the note to p. 173.
-
-194 : 8. Ridgeway, 1, p. 372, says: “We know from Strabo and other
-writers that the Aquitani were distinctly Iberian.” Consult also Rice
-Holmes, 2, p. 12, where he quotes Cæsar.
-
-194 : 14 _seq._ Ridgeway, _op. cit._, pp. 372 and 395; Ripley, chap.
-VII, pp. 137 _seq._
-
-194 : 19 _seq._ Rice Holmes, 2, under Belgæ, pp. 5, 12, 257, 259,
-304–305, 308–309, 311, 315, 318–325; and _Ancient Britain_, p. 445. The
-modern composition of the French population has been investigated by
-Edmond Bayle and Dr. Leon MacAuliffe, who find that there is decided
-race mixture, with chestnut pigmentation of hair and eyes predominating.
-Blond traits were found to be almost confined to the north and east,
-while brunet characters prevail in the south. Pure black hair is
-exceedingly rare.
-
-195 : 14. Vanderkindere, _Recherches sur l’Ethnologie de la Belgique_,
-pp. 569–574; Rice Holmes, 2, p. 323; Beddoe, 4, pp. 21 _seq._ and 72.
-
-195 : 18. Ridgeway, 1, p. 373; Ripley, p. 127; Rice Holmes, 2; and
-Feist, 5, p. 14.
-
-195 : 25 _seq._ Franks of the lower Rhine. Eginhard, in his _Life of
-Charlemagne_, p. 7, states the following: “There were two great
-divisions or tribes of the Franks, the Salians, deriving their name
-probably from the river Isala, the Yssel, who dwelt on the lower Rhine,
-and the Ripuarians, probably from _Ripa_, a bank, who dwelt about the
-banks of the middle Rhine. The latter were by far the most numerous, and
-spread over a greater extent of country; but to the Salians belongs the
-glory of founding the great Frankish kingdom under the royal line of the
-Merwings” (Merovingians).
-
-196 : 2 _seq._ Ripley, p. 157; DeLapouge, _passim_.
-
-196 : 7 _seq._ Oman, 2, pp. 499 _seq._; Beddoe, 4, p. 94 and chap. VII;
-Fleure and James, pp. 121, 129; Taylor, 2, p. 129; Ripley, pp. 151–153,
-316–317.
-
-196 : 18 _seq._ DeLapouge, _passim_; Ripley, pp. 150–155.
-
-197 : 3. See David Starr Jordan, _War and the Breed_, pp. 61 seq. This
-stature has somewhat recovered in recent years. It is now, in Corrèze,
-only 2 cm. below the average for the whole of France. See Grillière, pp.
-392 _seq._ W. R. Inge, _Outspoken Essays_, pp. 41–42: “The notion that
-frequent war is a healthy tonic for a nation is scarcely tenable. Its
-dysgenic effect, by eliminating the strongest and healthiest of the
-population while leaving the weaklings at home to be the fathers of the
-next generation, is no new discovery. It has been supported by a
-succession of men, such as Tenon, Dufau, Foissac, DeLapouge and Richet
-in France; Tiedemann and Seeck in Germany; Guerrini in Italy; Kellogg
-and Starr Jordan in America. The case is indeed overwhelming. The lives
-destroyed in war are nearly all males, thus disturbing the sex
-equilibrium of the population. They are in the prime of life, at the age
-of greatest fecundity; and they are picked from a list out of which from
-20 to 30 per cent have been rejected for physical unfitness. It seems to
-be proved that the children born in France during the Napoleonic wars
-were poor and undersized, 30 millimeters below the normal height.”
-
-197 : 11. DeLapouge, _passim_; Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 306 _seq._
-
-197 : 29–198: 10. R. Collignon, _Anthropologie de la France_, pp. 3
-_seq._; DeLapouge, _Les Sélections sociales_; Ripley, pp. 87–89; Inge,
-p. 41; Jordan, _passim_.
-
-198 : 22. Conscript Armies. Two interesting letters bearing on the
-racial differences composing conscript and volunteer armies in the
-recent World War may here be quoted.
-
-The first, from Mr. T. Rice Holmes, relates to the English army of
-Kitchener in 1915. “Perhaps it may interest you to know that in 1915
-when recruits belonging to Kitchener’s army were training near
-Rochampton, I noticed that almost every man was fair,—not, of course,
-with the pronounced fairness of the men of the north of Scotland, who
-are descended from Scandinavians, but with such fairness as is to be
-seen in England. These men, as you know, were volunteers.”
-
-The second, from DeLapouge, concerns our American army in France. “I
-have been able to verify for myself your observations on the American
-army. The first to arrive were all volunteers, all dolicho-blonds; but
-the draft afterwards brought in inferior elements. At St. Nazaire, at
-Tours, and at Poictiers, I have been able to examine American soldiers
-by the tens of thousands and I have been able to formulate for myself a
-very definite conception of the types.”
-
-199 : 9. H. Belloc, _The Old Road_; Peake, _Memorials of Old
-Leicestershire_, pp. 34–41; Fleure and James, p. 127.
-
-199 : 23. See the notes to pp. 174 : 21 and 247 : 3 of this book.
-
-199 : 29–200 : 11. See p. 131 of this book; also Rice Holmes, 1, pp.
-231–236, 434, 455–456; and 2, p. 15.
-
-200 : 10. _Cf._ Rice Holmes, 1, pp. 446, 449 and the note on 451; also
-Oman, 2, p. 16.
-
-200 : 12. Inferred from Rice Holmes, 1, p. 232; also Beddoe, 4, p. 31.
-
-200 : 18. Oman, 2, pp. 174–175 and chap. III _seq._, treats specially of
-these times. See also Beddoe, 4, pp. 36, 37 and chap. V.
-
-200 : 24. Oman, 2, pp. 215–219.
-
-201 : 1. Villari, vol I, or Hodgkin.
-
-201 : 6 _seq._ Oman, 2; Ripley, pp. 154, 156; Beddoe, 4, p. 94; Fleure
-and James, pp. 121, 129; Taylor, 2.
-
-201 : 11 _seq._ Beddoe, 4, chap. VII and the notes to p. 196 : 7 of this
-book.
-
-201 : 18 _seq._ See pp. 63, 64.
-
-201 : 23 _seq._ See the notes to p. 247. Decline of the Nordic type in
-England. Beddoe, H.; Fleure and James; Peake and Horton, _A Saxon
-Graveyard at East Shefford, Berks_, p. 103.
-
-202 : 4. Beddoe, 4, p. 148.
-
-202 : 13. Beddoe, 4, p. 92 and also chap. XII.
-
-202 : 17. Ripley, under Ireland.
-
-202 : 23 _seq._ See the notes to p. 108 : 1.
-
-203 : 5 _seq._ The intellectual inferiority of the Irish. If there is
-any indication of the intellectual rating of various foreign countries
-to be derived from the draft examinations of our foreign-born, grouped
-according to place of nativity, a paper by Major Bingham of Washington,
-in regard to “The Relation of Intelligence Ratings to Nativity” may be
-quoted. The total number of foreign-born examined, which formed the
-basis of this report, was 12,407, while the total number of native-born
-whites was 93,973. Only countries were considered which were represented
-by more than 100 men in the examinations. The tests were divided into
-those for literates and those for illiterates, so that even men not
-speaking English could be graded. In these examinations the Irish made a
-surprisingly poor showing, falling far below the English and Scotch, who
-stood very high, as well as below the Germans, Austrians, French
-Canadians, Danes, Dutch, Belgians, Swedes and Norwegians, being about on
-a par with the Russians, Poles and Italians. Therefore, if these tests
-are any criterion of intellectual ability, the Irish are noticeably
-inferior.
-
-203 : 18. See p. 123 of this book.
-
-203 : 24. Beddoe, 4, p. 139 and chap. XIV.
-
-204 : 1. See the note to p. 150 : 21.
-
-204 : 5. There is an amusing discussion in Rice Holmes, 1, on the
-Pictish question. See pp. 409–424. Rice Holmes contends that the Picts
-were not pure remnants of the Pre-Celtic inhabitants, but a mixture of
-these with Celts. The term Picts has been very widely accepted as a
-designation for those Pre-Celtic inhabitants, who were certainly there.
-No other name has been given for them and it is in this sense that it is
-used here, and that Rice Holmes himself is obliged to use it on p. 456.
-It will be useful to the reader to peruse pp. 13–16 of Rhys and Jones,
-_The Welsh People_. Appendix B, of that volume (pp. 617 _seq._), written
-by Sir J. Morris Jones, entitled “Pre-Aryan Syntax in Insular Celtic,”
-shows the Anaryan survivals in Welsh and Irish to be remarkably similar
-to ancient Egyptian, which, with the Berber of intermediate situation,
-belongs to the great Hamitic family of languages and was the tongue of
-the primitive Mediterraneans. For Beddoe’s opinion see 4, p. 36. On p.
-247 he says, speaking of the Highland people: “Every here and there a
-decidedly Iberian physiognomy appears, which makes one think Professor
-Rhys right in supposing that the Picts were in part, at least, of that
-stock.” See Hector McLean, 1, p. 170, where he suggests that the Picts
-were originally the Pictones from the south bank of the Loire in Gaul.
-
-The name Pixie, met with so frequently in Irish legends, and relating to
-little people similar to dwarfs, may have some connection with these shy
-little Mediterraneans whom the Nordics found on their arrival and who
-were forced back by them into inaccessible districts.
-
-204 : 19. See the article on “Pre-Aryan Syntax in Insular Celtic,” just
-mentioned, and Beddoe, 4, p. 46, quoting Elton, p. 167. For other
-Non-Aryan remnants, especially in names, see Hector McLean, 1, _passim_.
-
-205 : 3. See Fleure and James, pp. 62, 73, 119–128, and especially pp.
-125 and 151.
-
-205 : 10. The same, pp. 38–39, 75 and elsewhere.
-
-205 : 16. This is intimated by Rhys and Jones, in _The Welsh People_, p.
-33.
-
-205 : 20 _seq._ The same, chap. I, especially p. 35 and pp. 502 _seq._;
-Fleure and James, p. 143.
-
-206 : 3. Fleure and James, pp. 38, 75, 119, 152. These gentlemen say, on
-p. 38, that they believe that certain types, without any intervening
-social or linguistic barrier for centuries, have apparently persisted
-side by side in very marked fashion in certain parts of Wales.
-
-A letter from Mr. Baring Gould confirms this: “In Wales there are two
-types, the dark Siluric and the light Norman. Here in the west of
-England we have the same two types. In this neighborhood one village is
-fair, the next dark and sallow. It is the same in Cornwall; in certain
-villages the type is dark and sallow, in others fair. There is no
-comparison between the capabilities moral and physical between the two
-types. The dark is tricky, unreliable and goes under, and the fair type
-predominates in trade, in business, in farming and in every department.”
-
-Beddoe, Fleure and James, and also Hector McLean remark on the various
-moral and mental capabilities of the different physical types.
-
-206 : 13. Beddoe, 4, chap. VIII.
-
-206 : 16 _seq._ Taylor, 2, p. 129; Keary, pp. 486 _seq._ On the Normans
-see Beddoe, chaps. VIII, IX and X.
-
-207 : 2. Beddoe, the same.
-
-207 : 11. Gibbon, chap. LVI; Taylor, 2, p. 133.
-
-207 : 15. Beddoe, chap. VIII.
-
-208 : 8. Beddoe, 4, p. 95. The breadth of skull “of the Norman
-aristocracy may probably have been smaller, but the ecclesiastics of
-Norman or French nationality, who abounded in England for centuries
-after the conquest and who, in many cases, rose from the subjugated
-Celtic [Alpine] layer of population, have left us a good many broad and
-round skulls. Thus the crania of three bishops of Durham ... yield an
-index of 85.6, while those of eight Anglican canons dating from before
-the conquest yield one of 74.9. So far, however, as the actual conquest
-and armed occupation of England was concerned, the aristocracy and
-military caste, who were largely of Scandinavian type, came over in much
-larger proportion than the more Belgic or Celtic lower ranks, insomuch
-that it has been said that more of the Norman _noblesse_ came over to
-England than were left behind.”
-
-During the Middle Ages the church was a very democratic institution, and
-it was only through its offices that the lower ranks succeeded in
-working their way up. This was partly because the older peoples
-possessed the Roman learning, and because the northern invaders were
-more addicted to martial than to priestly pursuits. The conquered people
-had no chance to rise in political, aristocratic or military circles,
-and contented themselves with the church. At the present time, in many
-Catholic countries, notably Ireland, the priests are derived from the
-lowest stratum of the population, as may be clearly recognized in their
-portraits.
-
-208 : 14. Beddoe, _passim_.
-
-208 : 20. Beddoe, 4, p. 270; G. Retzius, 3; Ripley; Fleure and James, p.
-152; Alphonse de Candolle, _Histoire des sciences et des savants depuis
-deux siècles_, p. 576; Peake and Horton, p. 103; and the note to p.
-201 : 23 of this book.
-
-208 : 26. Beddoe, 4, p. 148.
-
-210 : 5. _Cf._ Beddoe, p. 94.
-
-210 : 20. Ripley, pp. 228, 283, 345.
-
-210 : 24. Holland and Flanders. Ripley, pp. 157 and 293 _seq._
-
-210 : 25. Flemings and Franks. See Sir Harry Johnston, _Views and
-Reviews_, p. 101.
-
-211 : 6. The authorities quoted in Ripley, p. 207. See also Fleure and
-James, p. 140; Zaborowski, 2; and C. O. Arbo, _Yner_, p. 25.
-
-211 : 26. Ripley, pp. 363–365; Feist, 5; and Dr. Westerlund as quoted in
-“The Finns,” by Van Cleef.
-
-212 : 1. Ripley, p. 341.
-
-212 : 4. See the note to p. 242 : 16.
-
-
- CHAPTER IX. THE NORDIC FATHERLAND
-
-213 : 1–23. _Cf._ O. Schrader, 2 and 3; Mathæus Much; Hirt, 1, 2;
-Zaborowski, 1, pp. 109–110; Peake, 2, pp. 163–167; Feist, 1, p. 14;
-Taylor, 1; Ripley, p. 127; Ridgeway, 1, p. 373 and the notes to pp.
-239 : 16 _seq._, and 253 : 19 of this book. D’Arbois de Jubainville, 4,
-t. I, pp. ix and 214, gives the date when the Indo-Europeans were united
-as 2500 B. C. Feist, 5, believes the Nordics were still in their
-homeland between 2500 and 2000 B. C. This was the transition period from
-Stone to Bronze in north-middle and eastern Europe. Breasted, _Ancient
-Times_, says: “It has recently been scientifically demonstrated on the
-basis, chiefly, of the Amarna tablets and other cuneiform evidence, that
-the Aryans had by 2000 or 1800 B. C. begun to leave a home on the east
-or southeast of the Caspian, where they divided into two branches, one
-going southeast into India, the other southwest into Babylon.” “The
-first occurrence of Indo-European names is in the Tell-el-Amarna
-(Egyptian) correspondence,” says Myres, _Dawn of History_, p. 153,
-“which gives so vivid a picture of Syrian affairs in the years
-immediately after 1400. They represent chieftains scattered up and down
-Syria and Palestine, and they include the name of Tushratta, king of the
-large district of Mitanni beyond Euphrates.... But this is a minor
-matter; nothing is commoner in the history of migratory peoples than to
-find a very small leaven of energetic intruders ruling and organizing
-large native populations without either learning their subjects’
-language or improving their own until considerably later, if at all. The
-Norman princes, for example, bear Teutonic names, Robert, William,
-Henry; but it is Norman French in which they govern Normandy and
-correspond with the king of France. All these Indo-European names
-(mentioned in the tablets), belong to the Iranian group of languages,
-which is later found widely spread over the whole plateau of Persia.”
-
-214 : 1 _seq._ See pp. 158–159 of this book.
-
-214 : 7 _seq._ Herodotus, IV, 17, 18, 33, 53, 65, 74, etc., for notes on
-the Scythians. Wheat was cultivated in the southern part of Scythia.
-Corn was an article of trade, and the loom was used. See also
-Zaborowski, 1; Ripley; Feist, 5.
-
-214 : 10. Scythians. According to Zaborowski, 1, the Scythians were the
-earliest known Nordic nomads of Scythia, or southern Russia, from whom
-no doubt came the Achæans, Cimmerians, etc., and later the Persian
-conquerors, the leaders of the Kassites and Mitanni, etc. The Sacæ were
-an eastern branch of the Scythians (and likewise the Massagetæ), who
-threw off branches into India. Possibly the Wu-Suns and the Epthalites,
-or White Huns, were eastern offshoots. Owing to the fact that Scythia
-has been swept time and again by various hordes moving east and west,
-and has served no doubt as a meeting-ground for Alpines, Nordics and
-Mongols, these may all, at some period or another, have been called
-Scythians because they inhabited this little-known territory. But the
-indications are strongly in favor of the original Scythians being
-Nordics. It is in this sense that the name is here applied. Minns,
-_Scythians and Greeks_, and D’Arbois de Jubainville, 4, t. I, are two
-other authorities who have discussed the Scythians at length.
-
-214 : 11. Cimmerians. See the note to p. 173. On the Persians, see the
-notes to p. 254. For the Sacæ, the note to p. 259 : 21; for the
-Massagetæ, the same; for the Kassites, that to p. 239 : 13. These last
-are Non-Aryan, according to some authors, including Prince, but Hall,
-_The Ancient History of the Near East_, says they are undeniably Aryans.
-For the Mitanni see the note to p. 239 : 16.
-
-214 : 26–215 : 3. See p. 161 of this book.
-
-215 : 15. See p. 160 of this book.
-
-215 : 25. Dante Alighieri. It is interesting to know that the name
-Aligheri is Gothic, a corruption of Aldiger. It belongs to such German
-names as those which include the word “_ger_,” spear, as in Gerhard,
-Gertrude, etc. This name came into the family through Dante’s
-grandmother on the father’s side, a Goth from Ferrara, whose name was
-Aldigero. With regard to the origin of his grandfather and mother, the
-attempt to connect him with Roman families is known to be a pure fiction
-on the part of the Italian biographers, who thought it more glorious to
-be a Roman than anything else; but his descent from pure Germanic
-parentage is practically proved, since the grandfather was a warrior,
-knighted by the emperor Conrad, and Dante himself declares that he
-belonged to the petty nobility. Even to the beginning of the fifteenth
-century many Italians are described in old documents as Alemanni,
-Langobardi, etc., _ex alamanorum genere_, _legibus vivens
-Langobardorum_, etc. Though the majority of them had adopted Roman law,
-whereby the documentary evidence of their descent usually disappeared,
-they were thoroughly Germanic in blood, especially those to whom Rome
-owes much. See Franz Xaver Kraus, Dante, pp. 21–25, and Savigny,
-_Geschichte des römischen Rechte im Mittelalter_, I, chap. III.
-
-216 : 1. See the notes to p. 254 : 13–15.
-
-216 : 4. Nordic Sacæ. See the notes to p. 259 : 21.
-
-216 : 9. See the notes to pp. 70 and 242 : 5.
-
-216 : 12. Gibbon, especially vols. III and IV, which contain numerous
-references, and the note to p. 135 : 25.
-
-216 : 17. Tenney Frank, _Race Mixture in the Roman Empire_, pp. 704
-_seq._
-
-217 : 3. Plutarch’s _Life of Pompey the Great_, and his _Life of Cæsar_;
-also Ferrero, _The Greatness and Decline of Rome_, vol. II, “Cæsar,”
-chap. VII.
-
-217 : 12. Decline of the Romans and the Punic Wars. Livy, I, XXI _seq._,
-and Appian, _De rebus hispaniensibus_, and _De bello Annibalico_. Also
-Pliny, I, and Polybius, I. D’Arbois de Jubainville, 1, section entitled
-“Les Celtibères pendant la seconde guerre punique,” pp. 44 _seq._, says
-that Hannibal’s success in Rome was due to the aid of the Celts and the
-Celtiberians. Hannibal gained much of his army from the Celts of Spain,
-Gaul, and Cis-Alpine Gaul, as he marched toward Rome.
-
-217 : 16. Social and Servile Wars. Plutarch’s _Lives_ of Fabius Maximus
-and of Sylla.
-
-217 : 26. See the note to p. 51 : 18.
-
-218 : 16. Tenney Frank, 1 and 2; Dill, 2, book II, chaps. II and III;
-and 1, book II, chap. I; Myers, _Ancient History_, pp. 498–499, 523–525.
-Bury, in _A History of the Later Roman Empire_, vol. I, chap. III, makes
-slavery, oppressive taxation, the importation of barbarians and
-Christianity the four chief causes of the weakness and failure of the
-Empire.
-
-Gibbon, vol I, at the end of chap. X, says, in speaking of the
-extinction of the old Roman families, that only the Calpurnian gens long
-survived the tyranny of the Cæsars. See the last three or four pages of
-the chapter. Also Frederick Adams Woods, _The Influence of Monarchs_, p.
-295.
-
-219 : 11–220 : 19. Frank, 1, p. 705.
-
-220 : 21. See p. 216 of this book.
-
-221 : 25. Gibbon; Lecky, _The History of European Morals_; and the note
-to p. 218 : 16.
-
-
- CHAPTER X. THE NORDIC RACE OUTSIDE OF EUROPE
-
-223 : 2. Hall, _Ancient History of the Near East_, pp. 380 _seq._;
-Myers, _Ancient History_, p. 33, footnote. Also consult Von Luschan,
-_The Early Inhabitants of Western Asia_, p. 230.
-
-223 : 5. DeLapouge, L’Aryen, pp. 200 _seq._
-
-223 : 5. Tamahu. Authorities above; Sergi, 4, pp. 59 _seq._; Beddoe, 4,
-p. 14, for the question of their race.
-
-223 : 12. Broca, 1; Collignon, 5 and 7; Sergi, 1; and Ripley, p. 279.
-There are numerous articles on the blond Berbers and references to their
-relation to the Vandals. Ripley, based on Broca, gives the essential
-information. Gibbon, chap. XXXIII, is an important reference.
-
-Blond Moors. Procopius says, IV, 13, describing the fighting with the
-Moors in Mauretania beyond Mt. Aurasium, which is thirteen days’ journey
-west of Carthage: “I have heard Ortaias say that beyond these nations of
-Moors, beyond Aurasium, which he ruled” [apparently south] “there was no
-habitation of men, but desert land to a great distance, and that beyond
-this desert there are men, not black-skinned like the Moors, but very
-white in body and fair-haired.”
-
-Mr. J. B. Thornhill relates that about fifteen years ago he was in
-Morocco (presumably near Tangier) and while there he saw several purely
-blond Berbers from the Riff mountains. A young girl, especially, was an
-almost pure Swedish blond. The coloring, however, was pale and whitish
-rather than pink; the eyes were blue and the hair wavy and very blond.
-
-223 : 21. For the Philistines, Anakim and Achæans see Ridgeway, 1, pp.
-618 _seq._ Sir William Ridgeway places the appearance of the Philistines
-as nearly synchronous with that of the Achæans, and states that their
-weapons and armor were similar to those of the Achæans, but different
-from those of the other nations of the early world. _Cf._ also Hall,
-_Ancient History of the Near East_, p. 72, especially footnote 1, where
-he says: “The Philistines were specially receptive of Hellenic culture
-and eager to claim relationship with the Greeks, and disassociate
-themselves from the Semites. Their coin types shew this, see p. 399, n.”
-He regards them as Cretans.
-
-223 : 22–23. Sons of Anak. Numbers, XIII, 33: “And there we saw the
-giants, the sons of Anak, which came of the giants; and we were in our
-own sight as grasshoppers and so we were in their sight.” Deuteronomy,
-I, 28: “Whither shall we go up? Our brethren have discouraged our heart,
-saying, ‘The people is greater and taller than we; the cities are great
-and walled up to heaven; and moreover we have seen the sons of the
-Anakim there.’”
-
-Fairness of David. I Samuel, XVI, 11, 12: “And Samuel said unto Jesse,
-Are here all thy children? And he said, There remaineth the youngest,
-and behold, he keepeth the sheep. And Samuel said unto Jesse, Send and
-fetch him; for we shall not sit down till he come hither. And he sent,
-and brought him in. Now he was ruddy, and withal of a beautiful
-countenance, and goodly to look to....” Chap. XVII, 41,42: “And the
-Philistine came on and drew near unto David, and when the Philistine
-looked about, and saw David, he disdained him; for he was but a youth,
-and ruddy and of a fair countenance.” In the Hebrew, the phrase _Of a
-Beautiful Countenance_ means fair of eyes.
-
-The presence of Nordics in Syria among the Amorites is indicated by the
-tall stature, long-headedness and fair skin with which they are depicted
-on the Egyptian monuments. In some instances their eyes are blue. See p.
-59 of Albert T. Clay’s _The Empire of the Amorites_, also Sayce, and
-Hall.
-
-224 : 3. Wu-Suns and Hiung-Nu. Minns, _Scythians and Greeks_, p. 121.
-DeLapouge, _L’Aryen_, mentions the existence of a number of central
-Asiatic tribes in addition to the Wu-Suns, who were Nordic. See also J.
-Klaproth, _Tableaux historiques de l’Asie_. Zaborowski, _Les peuples
-aryens_, p. 286, says: “The Hiung-Nu hurled themselves upon the Illi,
-and upon another blond people the Wu-Suns, whose importance was such
-that the Chinese, who have made them known to us, sought their alliance
-against the Huns. The Chinese knew then, in Turkestan, only the Wu-Suns,
-the Sse, or Sacæ, and the Ta-hia (our Tadjiks).”
-
-“The Yuë-Tchi, repulsed by the Wu-Suns in 130 B. C., hurled themselves
-upon Bactria” (see the notes to p. 119 : 13). “The Sacæ were then
-masters of it and their dispossession resulted in pressing them in part
-into India where they founded a kingdom and also in part into the
-Pro-Pamirian valleys, especially that of the Oxus. The Yuë-Tchi ruled
-over central Asia until 425 A. D. They were dispossessed in their turn
-by the Hoas, or Ephtalite Huns” (White Huns).
-
-The remainder of the chapter, pp. 287–291 is concerned with Turkestan,
-the Wu-Suns, Huns, Kirghizes, etc.
-
-224 : 13. Deniker, 2, pp. 59 and 371, says the Ainus are dolichocephalic
-and have in addition other Nordic traits. See also Haddon, 1, pp. 8,
-15–16, 49–50, Ratzel and others. The Ainus are, according to Darwin,
-_Descent of Man_, p. 852, the hairiest people in the world.
-
-224 : 19. See the notes to pp. 31: 16–32 : 4.
-
-224 : 28. Deniker, 2, pp. 59 and 371; Haddon, 1, pp. 8, 15.
-
-225 : 11. Phrygians. Bury, _History of Greece_, pp. 46–48, says: “But
-about this very time (1287 B. C.) the Hittite power was declining and
-northwestern Asia Minor as far as the valley of the Sangarius, was
-wrested from their rule by swarms of new invaders from Europe. These
-were the Phrygians to whose race the Dardanians belonged and who were so
-closely akin to the Thracians that we may speak of the Phrygo-Thracian
-division of the Indo-European family.” On p. 44 we read: “The dynasty
-from which the Homeric kings, Agamemnon and Menelaus sprang, was founded
-according to Greek tradition, early in the 13th century (B. C.) by
-Pelops, a Phrygian. Agamemnon and Menelaus represent the Achæan
-stock.... The meaning of this Phrygian relationship is not clear.” But
-if we follow the extent of the Achæan invasions and the relation of the
-art and language of archaic Phrygia to archaic Greece, the difficulty
-seems solved. See Hall, _Ancient History of the Near East_, p. 475. The
-_Encyclopædia Britannica_ (Phrygia) says: “According to unvarying Greek
-tradition the Phrygians were most closely akin to certain tribes of
-Macedonia and Thrace; and their near relationship to the Hellenic stock
-is proved by all that is known of their language and art, and is
-accepted by almost every modern authority.... The inference has been
-generally drawn that the Phrygians belonged to a stock widespread in the
-countries which lie around the Ægean Sea. There is, however, no
-conclusive evidence whether this stock came from the east, over Armenia,
-or was European in origin and crossed the Hellespont into Asia Minor;
-but modern opinion inclines decidedly to the latter view”; and we may
-add that the recently demonstrated linguistic affiliations strengthen
-this assumption. See also Ridgeway, 1, pp. 396 and elsewhere; Peake, 2,
-p. 172; Feist, 5, p. 407; Félix Sartiaux, _Troie, la guerre de Troie_;
-and O. Schrader, Jevons translation, p. 430.
-
-225 : 15. Cimmerians. See the note to p. 173 : 11.
-
-225 : 17. Gauls and Galatians. See the note to p. 158 : 1.
-
-225 : 19. Von Luschan, p. 243, says: “All western Asia was originally
-inhabited by a homogeneous, melanochroic race, with extreme
-hypsi-brachycephaly and with a ‘Hittite’ nose. About 4000 B. C. began a
-Semitic invasion from the southeast, probably from Arabia, by people
-looking like modern Bedawy. 2000 years later commenced a second
-invasion, this time from the northwest by xanthochrous and long-headed
-tribes like the modern Kurds, and perhaps connected with the historic
-Harri, Amorites, Tamahu and Galatians.
-
-“The modern ‘Turks,’ Greeks and Jews are all three equally composed of
-these three elements, the Hititte, the Semitic, and the xanthochrous
-Nordic. Not so the Armenians and Persians. They, and still more, the
-Druses, Maronites, and the smaller sectarian groups of Syria and Asia
-Minor, represent the old Hittite element, and are little, or not at all,
-influenced by the somatic characters of alien invaders.”
-
-Von Luschan means by Persians, the round-headed Medic element, which has
-always been in the majority and which has, at the present day,
-practically submerged the once powerful, dominant Nordic class, which he
-says is still seen not rarely in some old noble families.
-
-225 : 20. Until rather recently nothing much was known about the wild
-Kurdish tribes living in southeast Anatolia, and what reports there
-were, were frequently conflicting. There are two kinds of Kurds, dark
-and light. More data has gradually accumulated, however, and it seems
-that the true Kurds are tall, blond people, who resemble very much the
-inhabitants of northern Europe.
-
-Ratzel, _History of Mankind_, says, quoting Polak: “The Kurds are, in
-color of skin, hair and eyes, so little different to the northern,
-especially the Teutonic breed, that they might easily be taken for
-Germans. There is nothing to contradict this racial affinity in the
-reputation for honor and courage, which in spite of their rapacious
-tendencies, the Kurds enjoy wherever it has been found possible to
-compel them to labor or to the trade of arms. In Persia the Shah
-entrusts the security of his person to Kurdish officers rather than to
-any others. Their loyalty to their hereditary Wali, which neither Turks
-nor Persians have been able to shake, is also noted with praise. The
-Kurd prefers to wander with his herds and in the winter lives in caves
-like Xenophon’s Carduchi.... The Kurds are a highly mixed race of a type
-chiefly Iranian, which has been compared with the Afghan but is not
-homogeneous. The eastern Kurds must have received a larger infusion of
-Turkish blood than the western. ‘Husbandmen by necessity, fighters by
-inclination.’ says Moltke, ‘the Arab is more of a thief, the Kurd more
-of a warrior.’ They are a vigorous, violent race, running wild in tribal
-feuds and vendettas.... Their women hold a freer position than those of
-the Turks and Persians.” The quotation is from vol. III, p. 537.
-
-Von Luschan, _op. cit._, p. 229, describes them thus: “[They] have long
-heads and generally blue eyes and fair hair. They are probably descended
-from the Kardouchoi and Gordyæans of old historians. They live southeast
-of the Armenian mountains. The western Kurds are dolichocephalic and
-more than half of them are fair. The eastern Kurds are little known but
-are apparently darker and more round-headed.”
-
-Soane, in _To Mesopotamia and Kurdistan in Disguise_, gives a very full
-description of them, confirming the above. There are so many tribes
-differing from one another, that only the briefest summary may be given.
-It is found on pp. 398 _seq._ “Judged as specimens of the human form,
-there is probably no higher standard extant that that of the Kurds. The
-northerner is a tall, thin man (obesity is absolutely unknown among the
-Kurds). The nose is long, thin and often a little hooked, the mouth
-small, the face oval and long. The men usually grow a long moustache,
-and invariably shave the beard. The eyes are piercing and fierce. Among
-them are many of yellow hair and bright blue eyes; and the Kurdish
-infant of this type, were he placed among a crowd of English children,
-would be indistinguishable from them, for he has a white skin. In the
-south the face is a little broader sometimes, and the frame heavier. Of
-forty men of the southern tribes taken at random, there were nine under
-six feet, though among some tribes the average height is five feet nine.
-The stride is long and slow, and the endurance of hardship great. They
-hold themselves as only mountain men can do, proudly and erect.... Many
-and many a man have I seen among them who might have stood for the
-picture of a Norseman. Yellow, flowing hair, a long drooping moustache,
-blue eyes, and a fair skin—one of the most convincing proofs, if
-physiognomy be a criterion (were their language not a further proof),
-that the Anglo-Saxon and Kurd are one and the same stock.” For a list of
-Kurdish tribes and their numbers and affiliations see Mark Sykes, vol.
-XXXVIII of the _Jour. of the Roy. Anth. Soc. of Great Britain and
-Ireland_, and Von Luschan, _op. cit._
-
-From all this evidence by men who have travelled among them it would
-appear that the Kurds are descendants of some ancient Nordic invaders
-who have found refuge in the mountain regions north of Mesopotamia.
-_Cf._ the note to p. 239 : 16.
-
-
- CHAPTER XI. RACIAL APTITUDES
-
-226 : 7. Conklin, in _Heredity and Environment_, p. 207, says:
-“Psychological characters appear to be inherited in the same way that
-anatomical and physiological traits are; indeed, all that has been said
-regarding the correlation of morphological and physiological characters
-applies also to psychological ones. No one doubts that particular
-instincts, aptitudes and capacities are inherited among both animals and
-men, nor that different races and species differ hereditarily in
-psychological characteristics. The general tendency of recent work on
-heredity is unmistakable, whether it concerns man or lower animals. The
-entire organism, consisting of structures and functions, body and mind,
-develops out of the germ, and the organization of the germ determines
-all the possibilities of development of the mind no less than of the
-body, though the actual realization of any possibility is dependent also
-upon environmental stimuli.”
-
-_Cf._ Haeckel, _The Riddle of the Universe_, _passim_.
-
-226 : 17. Deniker, 2, pp. 76, 97–104.
-
-227 : 1. _Cf._ their busts with other Greek statues.
-
-227 : 15. This does not refer to the peculiar nests of round heads
-alluded to by Fleure and James, and Zaborowski, but to the Alpines
-proper.
-
-227 : 20. DeLapouge, _Les Sélections sociales_.
-
-228 : 18. See Tacitus, _Germania_.
-
-229 : 6. It may be interesting in this connection to quote Fleure and
-James, pp. 118–119, who, after giving illustrations of Mediterranean
-types, say of them: “Types 1(a) to 1(c) contribute considerable numbers
-to the ministries of the various churches, possibly in part from
-inherent and racial leanings, but partly also because these are the
-people of the Moorlands. The idealism of such people usually expresses
-itself in music, poetry, literature and religion, rather than in
-architecture, painting and plastic arts generally. They rarely have a
-sufficiency of material resources for the latter activities. These types
-also contribute a number of men to the medical profession, for somewhat
-similar reasons, no doubt.
-
-“The successful commercial men, who have given the Welsh their
-extraordinarily prominent place in British trade (shipping firms, for
-example), usually belong to types 2 or 4” [Nordic and Nordic-Alpine,
-Beaker Maker], “rather than to 1, as also do the great majority of Welsh
-members of Parliament, though there are exceptions of the first
-importance.
-
-“The Nordic type is marked by ingenuity and enterprise in striking out
-new lines. Type 2(c)” [Beaker Maker] “in Wales is remarkable for
-governmental ability of the administrative kind as well as for
-independence of thought and critical power.”
-
-The following remarks are taken from Beddoe, 4, p. 142: “In opposition
-to the current opinion it would seem that the Welsh rise most in
-commerce, the Scotch coming after them and the Irish nowhere. The people
-of Welsh descent and name hold their own fairly in science; the Scotch
-do more, the Irish less. But when one looks to the attainment of
-military or political distinction, the case is altered. Here the
-Scotchmen, and especially the Highlanders bear away the palm; the Irish
-retrieve their position and the Welsh are little heard of.”
-
-See also p. 10 of Beddoe’s _Races of Britain_, and Hector McLean in vol.
-IV, pp. 218 _seq._ of the _Anthropological Review_ and elsewhere. The
-following quotation from Hall’s _Ancient History of the Near East_ is
-interesting:
-
-“Knowing what we do of the psychological peculiarities of the different
-races of mankind, it is perhaps not an illegitimate speculation to
-wonder whence the Greeks inherited this sense of proportion in their
-whole mental outlook. The feeling of Hellenes for art in general was
-surely inherited from their forebears on the Ægean, not the
-Indo-European side.[7] The feeling for naturalistic art, for truth of
-representation, may have come from the Ægeans, but the equally
-characteristic love of the crude and bizarre was not inherited: the
-sense of proportion inhibited it. In fact, we may ascribe this sense to
-the Aryan element in the Hellenic brain, to which must also be
-attributed the Greek political sense, the idea of the rights of the folk
-and of the individual in it.[8] The Mediterranean possessed the artistic
-sense without the sense of proportion: the Aryan had little artistic
-sense but had the sense of proportion and justice, and with it the
-political sense. The result of the fusion of the two races we see in the
-true canon of taste and beauty in all things that had become the ideal
-of the Greeks,[9] and was through them to become the ideal of mankind.”
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- “We have only to look around and seek, vainly, for any self-developed
- artistic feeling among the pure Indo-Europeans. The Kassites had none
- and blighted that of Babylonia for centuries: the Persians had none
- and merely adopted that of Assyria: the Goths and Vandals had none:
- the Celts and Teutons have throughout the centuries derived theirs
- from the Mediterranean region.”
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- The predominance of the Aryan element in Greek political ideas is
- obvious. It is not probable that the old Ægean had any more definite
- political ideas than had his relative the Egyptian.
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- “In matters of political and ordinary justice between man and man they
- fell short of their ideal often enough, but they had the reasonable
- ideal: the barbarians had none. The Egyptians were an imaginative
- race, but their imagination was untrammelled by the sense of
- proportion: their only thinker with reasonable and logical ideas,
- Akhenaten, soon became as mad a fanatic as any unreasonable Nitrian
- monk or Arab Mahdi. Ordinarily speaking, Egyptian and Semitic ideals
- were purely religious, and so, to the Greek mind, beyond the domain of
- reason. The Babylonians, Assyrians, and Phœnicians cannot be said ever
- to have possessed any ideals of any kind.”
-
-229 : 22. Fleure and James, p. 146, say: “In the folk tales, it is true,
-the people are called fairies but colouring is mentioned only in one
-case—that is of a trader from the sea who is said to be fair; _i. e._,
-fair hair is treated as something worthy of special mention. The fairy
-children (changelings) are always described in such a way as to suggest
-that they were dark, and that they were the children of the Upland-folk
-of our hypothesis—_i. e._, mostly of Mediterranean race. In the romances
-the princes and princesses are said to be fair, as though that were
-exceptional. Our friend, Mr. J. H. Shaxby, draws our attention to the
-probability that the word fair in ‘fair’ or ‘fair-folk’ does not refer
-to physical traits, but is an adulatory term such as men so generally
-use in describing beings about whom their superstitions gather.”
-
-230 : 5. Pope Gregory, about 578 A. D.
-
-230 : 9. For evidence as to the blond characters of Christ and the
-indications of His descent, see Haeckel, _The Riddle of the Universe_,
-chap. XVII.
-
-Every now and then some reference to this question is noted in the daily
-papers. Not long ago, in one of the large New York dailies, there
-appeared a short paragraph concerning the letter of Lentulus. All
-mention of the extremely doubtful authenticity of this letter was
-omitted. The _Catholic Cyclopædia_, vol. IX, discusses the matter as
-follows:
-
-Publius Lentulus, A fictitious person said to have been the governor of
-Judea before Pontius Pilate and to have written the following letter to
-the Roman Senate: “Lentulus, the Governor of the Jerusalemites, to the
-Roman Senate and People, greetings. There has appeared in our times and
-there still lives, a man of great power (virtue), called Jesus Christ.
-The people call him prophet of truth; his disciples son of God. He
-raises the dead, and heals infirmities. He is a man of medium size
-(_statura procerus, mediocris et spectabilis_); he has a venerable
-aspect, and his beholders can both fear and love him. His hair is of the
-color of the ripe hazel nut, straight down to the ears, but below the
-ears wavy and curled, with a bluish and bright reflection flowing over
-his shoulders. It is parted in two on the top of the head, after the
-pattern of the Nazarenes. His brow is smooth and very cheerful, with a
-face without a wrinkle or spot, embellished by a slightly ruddy
-complexion. His nose and mouth are faultless. His beard is abundant, of
-the color of his hair, not long, but divided at the chin. His aspect is
-simple and mature, his eyes are changeable and bright. He is terrible in
-his reprimands, sweet and amiable in his admonitions, cheerful without
-loss of gravity. He was never known to laugh, but often to weep. His
-stature is straight, his hands and arms beautiful to behold. His
-conversation is grave, infrequent and modest. He is the most beautiful
-among the children of men.” The letter was first printed in _The Life of
-Christ_, by Ludolph the Carthusian, at Cologne, 1474. According to the
-manuscript of Jena, a certain Giacomo Colonna found the letter in an
-ancient Roman document sent to Rome from Constantinople. It must be of
-Greek origin and have been translated into Latin during the thirteenth
-or fourteenth century, though it received its present form at the hands
-of a humanist of the fifteenth or sixteenth century.
-
-The description agrees with the so-called Abgar picture of Our Lord. It
-also agrees with the portrait of Jesus Christ drawn by Nicephorus, St.
-John Damascene, and the Book of Painters (of Mt. Athos). Munter, (_Die
-Sinnbilder und Kunstvorstellungen der alten Christen_, Altona, 1825, p.
-9), believes he can trace the letter down to the time of Diocletian, but
-this is not generally admitted. The Letter of Lentulus is certainly
-apocryphal; there never was a governor of Jerusalem; no procurator of
-Judea is known to have been called Lentulus; a Roman governor would not
-have addressed the Senate, but the Emperor; a Roman writer would not
-have employed the expressions, “prophet of truth,” “sons of men,” “Jesus
-Christ.” The former two are Hebrew idioms, the third is taken from the
-New Testament. The letter, therefore, shows us a description of Our Lord
-such as Christian piety conceived him.
-
-There is considerable literature touching on this letter, for which see
-the _Catholic Cyclopædia_. Although we cannot credit the letter as
-genuine, it is interesting, as the article indicated, in showing the
-popular attitude to the traits in question, and in attributing these
-Nordic characters to Christ, as are the occasional efforts to bring the
-matter up again in the journals of to-day.
-
-
- CHAPTER XII. ARYA
-
-233 : 4. Synthetic. See the note on languages, p. 242 : 5.
-
-233 : 13. Tenney Frank, 2, pp. 1, 2, and the authorities quoted at the
-end of the chapter. Also Peake, 2, pp. 154–173; Freeman, _Historical
-Geography of Europe_, pp. 44–45.
-
-233 : 20. See the note to p. 99 : 27.
-
-233 : 24. Ridgeway, 1; Conway, 1; Peake, 2; and numerous other
-authorities.
-
-234 : 2. The Messapians, according to Ridgeway, 1, p. 347, were the
-remnants of the primitive Ligurians, who once occupied central Italy but
-who migrated, under the pressure of the Umbrians, toward the south.
-There some of them survived under the name Iapyges or Messapians, in the
-heel of the peninsula. “The name Iapyges seems identical with that of
-the Iapodes, that Illyrian tribe which dwelt on the other side of the
-Adriatic, largely contaminated with the Celts (Nordics) who had flowed
-down over them. That the Umbrians had a deadly hatred of a people of the
-same name, who had survived in their coast area, is proved by the
-Iguvine Tables, where the _Iapuzkum numen_ is heartily cursed along with
-the Etruscans and the men of Nar.”
-
-See also Giuffrida-Ruggeri.
-
-234 : 3 _seq._ See the notes to pp. 157 : 10 and 157 : 14.
-
-234 : 7. See the note to p. 192 : 1–4.
-
-234 : 12. See pp. 174, 199 and 247 of this book.
-
-234 : 13 _seq._ Non-Aryan traces in central Europe. Deniker, 2, pp. 317,
-334; D’Arbois de Jubainville, 3, pp. 153 _seq._, gives Ligurian place
-names. See also 4, t. II. It all depends on whether one considers the
-Ligurians as Non-Aryan. D’Arbois de Jubainville is inclined to class
-them as Aryans. Burke, _History of Spain_, says, in his footnote to p.
-2, that Basque place names are found all over Spain. For survivals in
-the British Isles see the notes to pp. 204 : 5 and 204 : 19, and for the
-general question, Taylor, _Words and Places_.
-
-234 : 18. Finnic dialects. Zaborowski, 3, pp. 174–175, says there are
-very ancient traces of Germanic elements in the Finnic languages of the
-Baltic. Prior to the fourth century they had a Gothic character.
-
-234 : 24 _seq._ Agglutinative language. See the note to p. 242 : 5. For
-the physical characters of the Basques, Collignon, 3, p. 13; and Ripley,
-pp. 190 _seq._, who bases himself upon Collignon. On the language see
-Pruner-Bey, 1; Feist, 5, pp. 362–363, and Ripley, pp. 20, 183–185. There
-are of course other writers on the Basque language. As a result of the
-epoch-making study of Keltic by Professor J. Morris Jones, of the
-University College, Bangor, Wales, which appears as Appendix B, in Rhys
-and Jones, _The Welsh People_, pp. 616–641, the assertion is made that
-Basque is apparently allied to Berber, and that other problems hitherto
-unsolved may be unravelled. It has not been possible to learn if any
-very recent progress has been the result of this new method.
-
-235 : 1 _seq._ Pseudo-brachycephaly of the Basques. A. C. Haddon,
-correspondence, says: “The Basque skull is long, but with a broadening
-in the temporal region, in the French Basques, which forms a spurious
-kind of brachycephaly.”
-
-235 : 11. See the notes above, to p. 234 : 24.
-
-235 : 17. Liguria and the Ligurian language. Sergi, 4; Ripley, chap. X.
-The modern Liguria comprises virtually the coast lands of Italy around
-the Gulf of Genoa as far south as Pisa. For ancient Liguria, which once
-extended into Gaul, see Déchellette, _Manuel d’archéologie_, t. II, pp.
-6–25. D’Arbois de Jubainville treats of the Ligurians at length in
-several of his works mentioned, but Déchellette shows his wrong
-reasoning, rather convincingly it seems to the author. The opinions of
-Jullian, as given in his _Histoire de la Gaule_, are also discussed by
-Déchellette. A full discussion in English, of all the authorities on
-ancient Liguria, the Ligurians and their language is given in Rice
-Holmes, _Cæsar’s Conquest of Gaul_, pp. 277–287. The language is treated
-on pp. 281–284, and 318, and by Peet, _The Stone and Bronze Ages in
-Italy_, pp. 164 _seq._; see also D’Arbois de Jubainville, 3, pp. 152
-_seq._ Feist, 5, p. 369, says that the Ligurians were Mediterraneans. A
-number of others agree with him. The evidence points rather to their
-having been an early Alpine people, somewhat less brachycephalic than
-those who came later, and this is the opinion held by Ratzel, vol. III,
-p. 561. The name Ligurian in this book designates a Pre-Nordic race of
-Alpine affinities, with a Pre-Aryan language.
-
-The peculiar and discontinuous distribution of Alpine peoples with names
-which are variations of the term Veneti, a condition rather analogous to
-the scattered groups of Pelasgians as noted by various authors of
-antiquity, may indicate the last traces of a once widely distributed
-race. It is possible that the Ligurians displaced these “Veneti” in
-southern Europe, and later became confined to a part of Gaul and
-northern Italy.
-
-235 : 23. Deniker, 2, p. 317, and the note to p. 234 : 13 of this book.
-
-235 : 27–236 : 6. See the note to p. 234 : 17.
-
-236 : 9. Feist, 1 and 5; G. Retzius, 2, 3; Ripley, p. 351; Nordenskiöld.
-
-236 : 14. Livs and Livonians. Ripley, pp. 358 _seq._; Abercromby, _The
-Pre- and Proto-Finns_; Peake, 2, p. 150.
-
-236 : 17 _seq._ Ripley, pp. 365–367. Feist, 5, p. 55, says the Finnish
-language was once agglutinative but is now inflectional. See also
-another reference to it on p. 231, and our note to languages, p. 242 : 5
-of this book.
-
-236 : 26. Magyar language. The most authoritative books on Finnish,
-Ugrian, and Hungarian speech are those of Szinnyei. See also Feist, pp.
-394 _seq._, and Deniker, 2, pp. 349–351.
-
-237 : 1. Ripley, p. 415, says: “Turkish is the westernmost
-representative of a great group of languages, best known, perhaps, as
-the Ural-Altaic family. This comprises all those of northern Asia, even
-to the Pacific Ocean, together with that of the Finns in Russian
-Europe.... According to Chantre the word Turk seems quite aptly to be
-derived from a native root meaning _Brigand_.” Also see pp. 404–405 and
-419 in Ripley.
-
-237 : 13. Ripley, p. 418, and Von Luschan, _op. cit._
-
-237 : 21. Gibbon, chap. LVII, on the “Seljukian Turks.” On the Osmanli
-Turks see Ripley, pp. 415 _seq._ On Turks in general see Von Luschan.
-
-237 : 25. See the notes to p. 173 : 11 and to pp. 253–261.
-
-238 : 12. G. Elliot Smith, _Ancient Egyptians_, pp. 134 _seq._;
-Zaborowski, 1, and the table of languages in the note to p. 242 : 5.
-Practically any book dealing with Aryans gives this information.
-
-238 : 24. Ripley, p. 415; Von Luschan.
-
-239 : 1. See the notes to pp. 158 and 253.
-
-239 : 2. Hittites and the Hittite Empire. See S. J. Garstang, _The Land
-of the Hittites_; L. Messerschmidt, _Die Hetiter_ (_Der Alte Orient_,
-IV, 1); Feist, 5, pp. 406 _seq._, and the Hittite Inscriptions, Cornell
-Expedition of 1911. The history of the Hittite Empire has been brought
-to light by the research and investigations of Professor Sayce. See his
-_Hittites_. There are a number of short general descriptions in
-practically all of the histories of ancient peoples, and in those of the
-Near East. See for instance, Bury, _History of Greece_, pp. 45, 64;
-Hall, _Ancient History of the Near East_, pp. 200, 334 seq.; Myres,
-_Dawn of History_, pp. 118 seq., 152 _seq._ and 199 seq.; Myers,
-_Ancient History_, pp. 91–93; Feist, _Kultur_, pp. 406 _seq._; Von
-Luschan, pp. 242–243; and Zaborowski, 1, pp. 121, 134, 138 and 160, deal
-more with the physical characters of the Hittites.
-
-According to some of the most recent authorities, the Hittites were an
-extraordinarily powerful nation and held Syria from about 3700 B. C. to
-700 B. C., when the Assyrians overcame them. They had some contact with
-Babylon and probably their development was influenced thereby. They seem
-to have been the Kheta or Khatti of the Ancient Egyptians. “About 1280
-B. C.,” according to Von Luschan, “when Khattusil made his peace with
-Rameses II, there existed a large empire, not much smaller than Germany,
-reaching from the Ægean Sea to Mesopotamia and from Kadesh on the
-Orontes to the Black Sea. We do not know at present if this Hittite
-Empire ever had a really homogeneous population, but we have a good many
-Hittite reliefs and all these, without one single exception, show us the
-high and short heads, or the characteristic noses of our modern
-brachycephalic groups, (Armenoids).”
-
-As to their language, J. D. Prince, correspondence, says that it was not
-Aryan, in spite of all conjectures to the contrary. “Friedrich Delitzsch
-analyzed some of the only syllabized material we have of this language,
-and I analyzed it still further in the _Journal of the American Oriental
-Society_, vol. XXII, ‘Hittite Material in the Cuneiform Inscriptions,’
-reaching the conclusion as to the Non-Aryan character of this idiom. The
-so-called ‘Hittite Inscriptions’ are in hieroglyphs and give us no clue
-as to the pronunciation and hence none to the character of the
-language.” Von Luschan, p. 242, says: “Orientalists are unanimous in
-assuming that the Hittite language was not Semitic.” A very recent
-communication from Fr. Cumont, in _L’Académie des inscriptions et belles
-lettres_ for April 20, 1917, says that the tongue is proved to have been
-Aryan.
-
-As to their physical characters, all are agreed that the Hittites had
-short, brachycephalic heads, and thick, prominent noses. Myres, p. 44,
-remarks that the earliest portraits, which he dates about 1285 B. C.,
-have been thought by some to be Mongoloid, but the evidence is still
-scanty and inconclusive. Surely if the older likenesses were Mongoloid,
-they bear no resemblance to the later types. On the monuments bearded
-figures are frequent and the type is Armenoid. See Hall, _The Ancient
-History of the Near East_, p. 334, for a criticism of the Mongol theory.
-
-239 : 10. Sumer. J. D. Prince, in his article on the Sumerians in the
-_Encyclopædia Britannica_, classes the Sumerian language as
-agglutinative. The language of Susiana is also known as Anzanite, Susian
-or Elamite. The Anzanite may have been a dialect of Susian. Schiel’s
-work with de Morgan’s mission shows that Elamite was agglutinative and
-that inflections found in derived words are due to the influence of
-another language. The locality of Anzan is not known exactly, but is
-believed to have been in the plain south or southeast of Susa. See also
-Zaborowski, 1, pp. 149–150, and Hall, _The Ancient History of the Near
-East_. Hall agrees with Prince that Sumerian is agglutinative (p. 171).
-He also states that Elamite was agglutinative, but not otherwise like
-Sumerian. See his chap. V for the relationships of Sumerians and
-Elamites.
-
-For Media see the notes to p. 254 : 13.
-
-239 : 12. Assyria and Palestine. Breasted, _Ancient Times_, p. 173 and
-Fig. 112; Hall, _History of the Near East_; Myres, _Dawn of History_,
-pp. 114–116, 140; and other histories of the Near East.
-
-239 : 13. Kassites. See Hall, pp. 198–200. Very little is known about
-the Kassites. Hall declares that there is very little doubt but that
-they were Indo-European; Prince, from the same information, says this
-could not possibly be the case. They are supposed to have been an
-Elamite tribe who were living in the northwestern mountains of Elam,
-immediately south of Holwan, when Sennacherib attacked them in 702 B. C.
-They attacked Babylonia in the ninth year of Samsu-iluma, the son of
-Khammurabi, overran it and founded a dynasty there in 1780 B. C., which
-lasted 576 years. They became absorbed into the Babylonian population;
-the kings adopted Semitic names and married into the royal family of
-Assyria. Like the other languages of the Non-Semitic tribes of Elam,
-according to Prince, that of the Kassites was agglutinative. That the
-Kassites had been in contact with the horse-using nomads of the northern
-steppes, is indicated by the fact that they first introduced the horse
-into Mesopotamian lands, whence its use for riding and drawing chariots
-spread into Egypt in 1700 B. C. See Breasted, _Ancient Times_, p. 138.
-
-239 : 16. Mitanni. Very little is known of the Mitanni. Von Luschan, p.
-230, dates them around the fourteenth century B. C. In 1380 they called
-themselves Harri, from Harri-ya, an old form of the word Aryan. Myres,
-_Dawn of History_, says: “The conquest of Syria in 1500 B. C. brought
-Egypt face to face with a homogeneous state called Mitanni, occupying
-the whole foothill country east of the Euphrates.... The Egyptian
-conquest came just in time to relieve the kingdom of Mitanni from severe
-pressure exerted simultaneously and probably in collusion, by its
-neighbors in the foothills,—Assyria on the east, and the Hittites west
-of the Euphrates. Egypt made friends with Mitanni and more than one
-marriage was arranged between the royal houses. Soon after the treaty
-between Egypt and Mitanni, Subiluliuma, king of the Hittites of
-Cappadocia, whom Egyptian scribes conveniently abbreviate as Saplel, was
-overlord apparently of a number of outpost baronies in north Syria.
-Assured of their help, and watching his opportunity, he flung his whole
-force, about 1400 upon Mitanni.... This closed the career of Mitanni.”
-
-The racial affinities of Mitanni are doubtful. Prince, correspondence,
-says the language of Mitanni was certainly not Aryan. It has been
-thoroughly analyzed by Ferdinand Bork, in his _Die Mitanni Sprache_, who
-compares it with the Georgian or Imeretian branch of the Caucasic
-linguistic groups. The Mitanni are not to be confused with the Ossetes,
-who speak a highly archaic, real Aryan language. Mitanni, in structure,
-is like the polysynthetic North American groups. Feist, 1, p. 14, says
-the Mitanni were Nordics and inhabited the western mountains of Iran, in
-Zagros. In 5, p. 406, he places them on the north of the Euphrates
-during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries B. C. See also Hall, p.
-200, the following note and that to p. 213 : 1–23 of this book. Hall
-also considers them Nordics.
-
-239 : 16 _seq._ Von Luschan, p. 230, asks: “Can it be mere accident that
-a few miles north of the actual frontier of modern Kurdish languages
-there is Boghaz-Köi, the old metropolis of the Hittite Empire, where
-Hugo Winckler in 1908 found tablets with two political treaties of King
-Subiluliuma with Mattiuaza, son of Tušrata, king of Mitanni, and in both
-of these treaties Aryan divinities, Mithra, Varuna, Indra and Nasatya
-are invoked, together with Hittite divinities, as witnesses and
-protectors? And in the same inscriptions, which date from about 1380 B.
-C., the king of Mitanni and his people are called Harri, just as nine
-centuries later in the Achæmenidian inscriptions Xerxes and Darius call
-themselves Har-ri-ya, ‘Aryans of Aryan stock.’ So the Kurds,” concludes
-Von Luschan, “are the descendants of Aryan invaders and have maintained
-their type and their language for more than 3300 years.”
-
-See also the notes to p. 173 : 11.
-
-239 : 29. See pp. 128 and 137 of this book.
-
-240 : 4 _seq._ See the notes to p. 173.
-
-240 : 15 _seq._ See the notes to p. 242 : 5.
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII. ORIGIN OF THE ARYAN LANGUAGES
-
-242 : 5. The following notes on languages were taken mostly from the
-_History of Language_, by Henry Sweet, and were supplemented by the
-writings of W. D. Whitney, and an article on “Indo-European Languages,”
-by Peter Giles.
-
-All languages may be roughly divided into two great groups, _isolating_
-and _agglutinative_.
-
-The isolating languages are constructed on the principle of single,
-distinct words for each idea, and do not employ forms which add or drop
-syllables, or letters, in order to obtain variety of expression, tense,
-mode, person, number, etc. However, the element of intonation frequently
-plays a large part in multiplying the number of possible forms, and
-therefore of ideas, in isolating languages, by imparting to otherwise
-identical words different meanings through pitch, rising or falling
-inflection or accent.
-
-To the isolating languages belong most of those of southeastern
-Asia,—Chinese, Burmese, Siamese, Thibetan, Annamite, Cochin-Chinese,
-Malayan, etc. The term isolating does not necessarily imply words of one
-syllable, although there is a tendency in this direction since the roots
-are stripped of all incumbrances of a modifying nature so common in
-agglutinative or synthetic languages. The Chinese, Burmese, Siamese and
-Annamite are classed as monosyllabic, the Thibetan as half-monosyllabic,
-while the Malay is polysyllabic.
-
-Because languages are isolating in structure does not mean that they
-necessarily all belong to one family. They merely have this structural
-principle in common. To establish family relationships it is necessary
-to investigate the sets of phonetics used, the root forms, the types of
-ideas expressed, the composition of the sentence and various other
-important points included under the psychology of habit and growth forms
-of speech. No one of these alone is ordinarily sufficient to prove that
-two languages are of one common stock, since extensive borrowing of all
-kinds has occurred since time immemorial.
-
-Nevertheless, in point of fact, taking languages as they now exist, only
-those have been shown related which possess a common structure, or have
-together grown out of the more primitive radical stage, since structure
-proves itself a more constant and reliable evidence than vocabulary.
-But, on the other hand, since all structure is the result of growth, and
-any degree of difference of structure, as well as of difference of
-material, may be explained as the result of discordant growth from
-identical beginnings, it is equally inadmissible to claim that the
-diversities of languages prove them to have had different beginnings.
-
-In isolating languages, word order is very important, but here again the
-peculiar character of any tongue of this type depends upon the order
-selected, or the relative importance of ideas (general, specific, etc.).
-The employment of particles makes possible a freer word order.
-
-The _agglutinative_ languages are those which combine roots or parts of
-words or elements into new wholes to express other related ideas than
-those imparted by the single forms, or else entirely new concepts.
-Frequently these combinations are still separable on occasion into their
-original elements, or, if inseparable in their secondary meanings, their
-original parts with their derivations are still recognizable as such.
-Again, the component parts are no longer independent, but form a firmly
-knit whole.
-
-In some languages certain classes of elements have arisen which may be
-added in a perfectly formal manner to other fixed roots or elements,
-with or without slight phonetic modifications of either or both parts.
-Since this occurs in conformity with fairly fixed rules, the meanings of
-the resultant combinations are, according to the class of the attached
-elements used, fairly analogous. Thus in English many verb roots obtain
-the present participle by the addition of the formal element _ing_, in
-itself now meaningless, but once, no doubt, a separate root.
-
-The process of agglutination may be accomplished in many different ways,
-any of which may be characteristic of whole groups of unrelated
-languages. These may be roughly divided first into mono- or
-oligo-synthetic and polysynthetic. The former very nearly approach the
-isolating languages, since usually only one element may be added at a
-time, but the process of addition may be accomplished in any of the ways
-possible to agglutination.
-
-Agglutination includes prefixing, suffixing and infixing in all degrees
-of complexity and fixity. Thus languages may be spoken of as
-agglutinative only in a relative sense. Some are much more so than
-others, both in point of the number of elements which it is possible to
-add, and their dependence upon one another and the root, denoting a
-higher or lower degree of inextricability in blending.
-
-Many languages are only loosely agglutinative and the component parts of
-the compounds readily resolve. In others, as in the inflecting
-languages, the combination is inextricable.
-
-Thus under the head of agglutinative we have the merely agglutinative or
-synthetic, readily resolvable combinations, which are often hardly
-distinguishable from isolating languages, and the less easily divisible
-inflectional and incorporating types. Any or all of the three processes
-of infixing, prefixing and suffixing may be employed in simple
-agglutinative combinations.
-
-In inflectional languages the root is attended by prefixes or suffixes
-which form inseparable modifiers. At times phonetic changes occur which
-render the complex unlike the simple joining of its component parts.
-
-As Mr. Sweet says: “If we define inflection as ‘agglutination run mad’
-we may regard incorporation as inflection run madder still, for it is
-the result of attempting to develop a verb into a complete sentence.” In
-some languages, such as the incorporating, a verb is sufficiently
-distinct in its meaning not to require an independent pronoun. French
-and Spanish, though not belonging to this category, contain words with
-the incorporating idea, as in Spanish _hablo_, I speak, and French,
-_pluit_, it rains. Where polysynthesism is the prevailing character, the
-verb may be sufficiently comprehensive to include the objective pronoun
-as well as the subjective, so that it is possible to find in one word a
-transitive, as well as in others an intransitive, sentence. But this is
-only rudimentary incorporation, and borders on inflection. Some American
-Indian languages carry it to a very high degree, appending to or
-inserting into this simple complex not only nouns which may stand in
-apposition to the implied or actual pronouns, but particles and
-modifiers of every description. (See the _Handbook of American Indian
-Languages_, published by the Bureau of American Ethnology at
-Washington.) Frequently during this process various parts undergo
-phonetic changes in accordance with fixed laws, so that the final
-complex may not at all resemble a string of the original elements, but
-becomes a new, inseparable and fixed word containing a whole sentence of
-ideas. This sentence, in some languages, may carry throughout certain
-modifiers for all noun elements—for instance, as to whether the objects
-under discussion are visible or invisible. These modifiers bear definite
-relationships to the nouns, and the “sentence word” in each of its parts
-must then be conjugated as a verb in an even more complicated manner.
-This is agglutination par excellence, and is frequently so complex as to
-be utterly bewildering to the Indo-European mind, even though the
-Indo-European languages themselves employ agglutination to a limited
-degree and of certain varieties, particularly of the inflectional order.
-
-Compared to the most complicated Indian tongues, English is in the
-position of Chinese to Indo-European languages in its structural
-simplicity, though of course in Chinese we have an added complexity in
-the use of pitch, etc.
-
-There are certain types of speech which secure changes (plurals, etc.)
-by internal vowel modification. English itself makes use of this device,
-but it is the outstanding feature of Semitic tongues.
-
-Sweet says: “There are many other minor criteria of morphological
-classification. The most important of these is perhaps that of the
-agglutinative or inflectional elements before or after the word or stem
-[modified]. In Turkish and in other Altaic languages, as also in
-Finnish, these are always post-positions, so that every word begins with
-the root which always has chief stress. The Bantu languages of South
-Africa, on the other hand, favor prefixes.... The Semitic languages
-favor prefixes and post-positions about equally. The Aryan languages are
-mainly post-positional, with occasional use of prefixes, most of which,
-however, are of later origin.”
-
-It must not be supposed that languages fall into absolutely distinct
-categories because of their structure. No language to-day is purely of
-one type or another. There have been too many centuries of borrowing and
-change for that condition to now be possible for any language, nor are
-there any longer what might be called primitive tongues. They have all
-long since outgrown that state, whatever it may have been, even the
-Botocudo of Brazil, which is generally ranked as the most primitive.
-
-Languages may now be classified only according to their prevailing
-tendencies. Thus, modern English is in part isolating, in part
-inflectional and in part agglutinative, as that term is generally
-applied. Basque is an incorporating language, far removed geographically
-and linguistically from any other of that character. The Indo-European
-family may be considered as inflectional, because that process is a
-prominent feature, but it is by no means the only one present, nor is it
-exclusively typical of that family.
-
-There is no doubt that all languages pass through certain stages in
-their development, but it is not at all true that they all have
-eventually the same or even similar histories. There are endless
-possibilities of growth and decay, and this fact alone excludes any set
-evolutionary scheme. Nor are the isolating languages the most primitive.
-On the contrary, they are as complex in their way as the most
-agglutinative North American tongues, and as expressive, for some
-psychological categories.
-
-There is little doubt that all languages have begun on an isolating
-principle of simple roots for single ideas, from which they have
-diverged in endless variety. Probably all inflectional languages had an
-isolating and agglutinative stage, although this is by no means proved.
-The Chinese seems to have undergone an agglutinative past of some sort,
-but to have resolved again into simple roots, with only traces of fuller
-forms, but with the added complexity of tone, accent, and order, to
-give, as Sweet puts it, “that extreme of elliptical conciseness and
-concentrated force of expression, which excites our admiration.”
-
-English has become analytical, for many older inflected words have now
-been worked over into combinations of independent words, but this is far
-from a complete or consistent process. Probably it will never become
-like the Chinese, for to do away now with its inflectional system
-entirely would necessitate a complete upheaval of structure which is not
-likely to happen in the course of normal inner development, particularly
-with a vast literature to assist in stabilizing present forms.
-
-As regards polysynthesism, or amount of agglutination, the Aryan tongues
-are intermediate; they allow affixes, but only within certain limits.
-
-Languages undoubtedly differ from one another in their richness and
-power of expression, but may not be used as a test of the intellectual
-capacity of those who now speak them. In fact, men of any race can learn
-any language, unless abnormal. To account for the great and striking
-difference of structure among human languages is beyond the power of the
-linguistic student, and will doubtless always continue so. We are not
-likely to be able even to demonstrate a correlation of capacities,
-saying that a race which has done this and that in other departments
-might have been expected to form such and such a language. Every tongue
-represents the general outcome of the capacity of a race as exerted in
-this particular direction, under the influence of historical
-circumstances which we can have no hope of tracing, but there are
-striking anomalies to be noted.
-
-“The Chinese and the Egyptians have shown themselves to be among the
-most gifted races the earth has known; but the Chinese tongue is of
-unsurpassed jejuneness, and the Egyptian, in point of structure, little
-better, while among the wild tribes of Africa and America we find
-tongues of every grade up to a high one or the highest. This shows
-clearly enough that mental power is not measured by language structure.
-On the whole the value and rank of a language are determined by what its
-users have made it do—a poor tool in skilful hands can do vastly better
-work than the best tool in unskilful hands, even as the ancient
-Egyptians, without steel or steam, turned out products which, both for
-colossal grandeur and for exquisite finish, are the despair of modern
-engineers and artists.” In other words, we must not underestimate the
-important part played by habit or inertia. “The formation of habit is
-slow, and once formed it exercises a constraining as well as a guiding
-influence.”
-
-The Indo-European language is one of the most highly organized families
-of tongues that exist, and its greatest power lies (in modern English,
-etc.) in its mixed structural and material character. So to the
-Indo-European family belongs incontestably the first place, and for many
-reasons,—the historical position of the peoples speaking its dialects,
-who have now long been the leaders in world history, the abundance,
-variety and merit of its literatures ancient and modern and, most of
-all, the great variety and richness of its development. These have made
-it an illustration of the history of human speech, which is extremely
-valuable and the training ground of comparative philology.
-
-W. D. Whitney gives the following linguistic groups in order of their
-importance from a literary standpoint:
-
- 1. Indo-European (Indo-Germanic). 2. Semitic. 3. Hamitic. 4.
- Monosyllabic or Southeastern Asiatic. 5. Ural-Altaic (Scythian,
- Turanian). 6. Dravidian or South Indian. 7. Malay-Polynesian. 8.
- Oceanic— _a._ Australian and Tasmanian. _b._ Papuan and Negrito,
- etc. 9. Caucasian— _a._ Circassian. _b._ Mitsjeghian. _c._
- Lesghian, Georgian. 10. European Remnants— Basque. Etruscan?
- Lydian? 11. South African, Bantu. 12. Central African. 13.
- American.
-
-The first ten groups are families. So little is or was known about the
-last three groups that the author of the article classed together what
-are now known to be vast agglomerations of families. For instance, the
-American languages include several hundred distinct stocks, of which
-fifty are found in California alone. These are all, according to our
-present knowledge, utterly unrelated. It is known that the central
-African tongues belong to a different group than the southern, and it
-would be advisable to consult Sir Harry Johnston’s recent large work on
-the Bantu languages.
-
-The subdivision of the Indo-European family into cognate languages is
-given here to show the great diversity of tongues that may spring from
-one ancestor. Not all the dialects, nor even languages, have been
-included, but only those best known:
-
- I. Centum (European).
- 1. Greek.
-
- ANCIENT MODERN
- { Latin. Portuguese
- { Oscan. Spanish.
- 2. Italic. { Umbrian Catalan.
- { Minor dialects of Provençal.
- { ancient Italy.
- French. { Tuscan.
- Italian. { Calabrian.
- Friulian.
- Ladin.
- Romansch.
- Rumanian.
-
- { { Irish.
- { _Q._ Celtic { Manx.
- { { Scotch Gaelic.
- 3. Celtic {
- { { Ancient Gaulish.
- { _P._ Celtic { Welsh.
- { { Cornish.
- { { Breton or Armorican.
-
-
- { Gothic.
- { { Swedish.
- { { Danish.
- { Scandinavian { Norwegian.
- { { Icelandic.
- { { Old Norse.
- {
- Germanic or {
- Teutonic {
- {
- { { English.
- { { Frisian.
- { West { Low Frankish { Dutch.
- { Germanic { { Flemish.
- { { Low German.
- { { High German.
-
- 5. Armenian.
- [6. Tokharian?]
-
- II. Satem. (Eastern Europe and Asia.)
-
- { { Zend.
- { Sanskrit { Old Persian.
- 1. Aryan or { { Modern Persian.
- Indo-Iranian {
- { Hindu, and nearly all the modern languages
- { of India [and of the Pamirs].
-
- { { Lithuanian.
- { { Lettish.
- { _a_ { Old Prussian or Borussian, extinct
- { { since the 17th century.
- {
- { { { Old Bulgarian.
- { { { { Great Russian
- { { 1. S.E. { { and White Russian.
- 2. Balto-Slavonic { { Slavic { Russian. { Little Russian or
- { { { Ruthenian.
- { _b_ { { Servian.
- { { { Slovene.
- { {
- { { 2. West { Polish.
- { { Slavic. { Czech or Bohemian.
- { { { Sorb.
- 3. Albanian.
-
-242 : 16. _Cf._ S. Feist, 2, p. 250. On the archaic character of
-Lithuanian, see Taylor, 1, p. 15, and the authorities he quotes. Also
-Schrader, Jevons translation.
-
-242 : 20–243 : 4. Deniker, 2, p. 320, sums up Hirt’s position on this
-question in the footnote: “According to Hirt the home of dispersion of
-the primitive Aryan language would be found to the north of the
-Carpathians, in the Letto-Lithuanian region. From this point two
-linguistic streams would start flowing around the mountains to the west
-and east; the western stream, after spreading over Germany (Teutonic
-languages), left behind the Celtic languages in the upper valley of the
-Danube, and filtered through on the one side into Italy (Latin
-languages), on the other side into Illyria, Albania, and Greece
-(Helleno-Illyrian languages). The eastern stream formed the Slav
-languages in the plains traversed by the Dnieper, then spread by way of
-the Caucasus into Asia (Iranian languages and Sanscrit). In this way we
-can account, on the one hand, for the less and less marked relationship
-between the Aryan languages of the present day and the common primitive
-dialect, and on the other hand, for the diversity between the two groups
-of Aryan languages, western and eastern.”
-
-If this were so, Sanskrit should more closely resemble the Slavic than
-the western languages. As it is, the old Vedic speech, the earliest form
-of Sanskrit, is said to show more affiliations with Greek than with any
-other of the Aryan tongues (see Taylor, 1, p. 21, and authorities
-quoted), a fact which merely adds another proof to our hypothesis that
-sometime between 2000 and 1500 B. C. the Nordics filtered down the
-Balkan peninsula in their earliest wave and about the same time other
-branches found their way into northwestern India. The Sanskrit alphabet
-is more closely related to the Phœnician than to any other. At the time
-of the first Nordic expansion their language was not reduced to writing.
-The alphabet used for early Sanskrit, was, according to Professor
-Bühler, probably introduced into India by traders from Mesopotamia about
-800 B. C. Another authority on the relations of Greek and Sanskrit is
-Johannes Schmidt, _Die Verwandtschaftsverhältnisse der Indo-germanischen
-Sprachen_, Weimar, 1872.
-
-243 : 4. Prof. J. D. Prince, correspondence, in discussing the kinship
-of prehistoric Ugrian to Aryan says that, although it is a temptation to
-believe in it, there is insufficient data for proving it. As careful a
-scholar as Szinnyei, in his _Vergleichende Grammatik der Ugrischen
-Sprache_, is careful not to commit himself. But see Zaborowski, 3; also
-the notes to p. 236 : 26; and Deniker, 2, pp. 349–351.
-
-243 : 12. Deniker, 2, p. 320 and the authorities he quotes.
-
-243 : 20. See the notes to pp. 158 : 21 and 159.
-
-243 : 25. See p. 158 and also the notes on languages to p. 242 : 5.
-
-244 : 1. See p. 157 and the notes.
-
-244 : 6. Latin derivatives. Zaborowski, 1, p. 2. See table of languages,
-in the note to p. 242 : 5 of this book.
-
-244 : 12–28. Ripley, pp. 423–424; Freeman, 2, p. 217; Obédénare, p. 350;
-Ratzel, vol. III, p. 564; and the articles on the Balkans and Hungary in
-the _Geographical Review_, by Cvijič and Wallis. _Cf._ G. Poisson, _The
-Latin Origin of the Rumanians_.
-
-244 : 29–245 : 3. Freeman, 1, p. 439.
-
-245 : 3. Jordanes, _History of the Goths_; Procopius, _The History of
-the Wars_; Gibbon, _Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire_, chaps. I and
-XI; Freeman, _The Historical Geography of Europe_, pp. 70–71; also the
-notes to pp. 143 and 156 : 10.
-
-245 : 12. Sarmatians. See the note to p. 143 : 21. The same for the
-Venethi. Under the Roman dominion Latin speech appears to have spread
-from the Adriatic coast eastward over the Balkans replacing the native
-dialects except along the shores of the Ægean and in the large cities.
-
-246 : 9. Freeman, 1, pp. 440–441.
-
-246 : 15. Ripley, p. 425.
-
-246 : 24. See the note to p. 173 of this book.
-
-246 : 27. Rhys and Jones, _The Welsh People_, pp. 12, 13.
-
-247 : 3. See the note to p. 174; Oman, 2, pp. 13, 14; Rice Holmes, 1,
-pp. 409–410; 2, pp. 319–320; Rhys and Jones, pp. 1, 2.
-
-247 : 9. Goidels. Rice Holmes, 1, pp. 227, 291 and 455–456.
-
-247 : 16. Rice Holmes, 1, pp. 229, 456; Oman, 2, p. 16. See also p. 174
-of this book.
-
-247 : 23. Ripley, p. 127; Feist, 4, p. 14; Ridgeway, 1, p. 373; and pp.
-195 and 212 of this book.
-
-247 : 27. See the note to p. 247 : 3.
-
-248 : 3. Fleure and James, pp. 146, 148; D’Arbois de Jubainville, 2, p.
-88.
-
-248 : 6. Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 319–321; Taylor, 2, pp. 138, 167–168;
-Beddoe, 4, p. 20.
-
-248 : 12. Neo-Celtic. D’Arbois de Jubainville, 2, p. 88; Fleure and
-James, p. 143.
-
-248 : 14. Rice Holmes, 2, p. 12.
-
-248 : 29–249 : 4. See the notes to pp. 177–178 of this book.
-
-249 : 16. Beddoe, 4, p. 223.
-
-249 : 20. The same, pp. 241–242; Ripley’s maps, pp. 23 and 313; but
-consult Beddoe, 4, p. 66, for criticisms of evidence derived from place
-names; Taylor, 2, p. 119.
-
-249 : 27–250 : 1. Beddoe, 4, pp. 139, 241–242.
-
-250 : 1 _seq._ Taylor, 2, p. 173; Palgrave, vol. I of _The English
-Commonwealth_; Oman, 2, pp. 158 seq.
-
-250 : 6. Taylor, 2, pp. 170–171.
-
-250 : 14. Ripley, p. 22; Taylor, 2, pp. 137–138.
-
-250 : 20. Jordanes, XXXVI; Gibbon and others.
-
-250 : 24. Ripley, pp. 531–533.
-
-250 : 28 _seq._ _Cf._ Ripley, pp. 101, 151 _seq._
-
-251 : 7 _seq._ _Cf._ Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 309–314.
-
-251 : 18. See the note to p. 182 of this book.
-
-251 : 26. Since the Belgæ were the last wave of the Celts, and Cymric
-was the later Celtic, this deduction is inevitable, even if there were
-no facts, such as place names, history, etc., to prove it. See the note
-to p. 248 : 6.
-
-251 : 28–252 : 2. Beddoe, 4, p. 35; Ripley, pp. 101, 152; Taylor, 2, pp.
-95, 98.
-
-252 : 5. See the note to p. 196 : 7.
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV. THE ARYAN LANGUAGE IN ASIA
-
-253 : 1. See p. 158 and note. Also Peake, 2, p. 165; Breasted, 1, p.
-176; Von Luschan, pp. 241–243; Zaborowski, 1, p. 112; DeLapouge, 1, p.
-252, says: “Aryans were in India about 1500 B. C.”
-
-253 : 10. See Peake, 2; also pp. 170–171 and 213 of this book.
-
-253 : 13. See the note to p. 225 : 11.
-
-253 : 13–15. Eduard Meyer, _Zur ältesten Geschichte der Iranier_.
-
-253 : 16 _seq._ See the note to p. 239 : 16 seq.
-
-253 : 19. Zaborowski, 1, pp. 137 and 214.
-
-254 : 1. See pp. 173 and 225 of this book.
-
-254 : 3 _seq._ For Sacæ see the note to p. 259 : 21. Cahun, _Histoire de
-l’Asie_, says on p. 35: “The Sacæ and the Ephtalites and Massagetæ were
-from the Kiptchak.” See also Zaborowski, 1, pp. 94, 100–101, 215 _seq._
-
-254 : 6. Massagetæ. See the note to p. 259 : 21.
-
-254 : 8. Ephtalites, or White Huns. Cahun, _Histoire de l’Asie_, pp.
-43–55: “The Turks destroyed in the first half of the seventh century a
-powerful nation, the Ephtalites of Soghdiana, north of Persia. They were
-called Ephtalites, or White Huns or Tie-le-urn Turks.” See also the
-notes to pp. 119 : 15 and 224 : 3 of this book, and chap. XXVI in Gibbon
-on the Huns in general.
-
-Procopius, vol. I, says in speaking of the Ephtalite Huns and describing
-their war with the Persians about 450 A. D.: “The White Huns are of the
-stock of the Huns in fact as well as in name, living in the territory
-north of Persia, and are settlers on the land in contrast to the Nomadic
-Huns who live at a distance.... They are the only ones among the Huns
-who have white bodies and countenances that are not ugly and they are
-far more civilized than are the other Huns.” The general impression
-gained from Procopius is that they were not true Huns. “Massagetæ” is
-used as another name for Huns by Procopius. He describes them as mounted
-bowmen. It is clear that in using this name he refers to Huns only.
-
-254 : 13. Medes. The name Medes is variously applied by different
-authorities; by many the Medes are regarded as a branch of the Persians,
-one of two kindred tribes of Nordics. The author follows Zaborowski in
-applying the name to the round skulled population which was conquered by
-the Persians. See Zaborowski, 1, chaps. V and VI, especially part II and
-p. 125. Also Herodotus in the references given for Persia. Hall,
-_Ancient History of the Near East_, p. 459, gives an interesting bit of
-their story.
-
-254 : 15. Persians. The Persians were a branch of Nordics who invaded
-the territory of the round skulled Medes, and gradually imposed their
-language and much of their culture on the subjugated populations. See
-Herodotus, book I, especially 55, 71, 72, 74, 91, 95, 101, 107, 125,
-129, 135, 136; and book VI, 19, where he discusses both Medes and
-Persians. For modern commentary the author follows Zaborowski, 1, pp.
-138–139, 153 _seq._, chap. VI, and also pp. 212–214.
-
-Von Luschan, pp. 233–234, describes the present day Persians, showing
-that there has been a resurgence of types and that the Nordic elements
-have been largely absorbed by the original inhabitants. He adds,
-however, on p. 234, that while he never saw Persians with light hair and
-blue eyes, he was told that in some noble families fair types were not
-very rare.
-
-254 : 19. See the note on the Medes, and Zaborowski, p. 156, on the
-Magi.
-
-254 : 26. Darius. Zaborowski, 1, p. 12. Herodotus, I, 209, says: “Now
-Hystaspes the son of Arsames was of the race of the Achæmenidæ and his
-eldest son Darius was at that time twenty years old.” Another name for
-Hystaspes was Vashtaspa, whose father was Arsames (Arsháma). He traced
-his descent through four ancestors to Achæmenes (Hakhámamish).
-
-Von Luschan, p. 241, says: “Nothing is known of the Achæmenides who
-called themselves ‘Aryans of Aryan stock’ and who brought the Aryan
-language to Persia. About 1500 B. C. or earlier, there seems to have
-begun a migration of northern men to Asia Minor, Syria, Persia, Egypt
-and India. Indeed we can now connect even Further India with the Mitanni
-of central Asia Minor.”
-
-See Zaborowski in regard to the Behistun tablet, etc., although
-practically any writers on Persia and Mesopotamia discuss this great
-monument.
-
-255 : 2. Zaborowski, 1, pp. 116–117.
-
-255 : 6. See the note on the Medic language, 255 : 13. Also Zaborowski,
-1, pp. 34, 182–184.
-
-255 : 7 _seq._ Zaborowski, 1, pp. 180–184; Feist, 5, p. 423.
-
-255 : 13. Bactria and Zendic. See the notes to pp. 119 : 15 and 257 :
-12.
-
-255 : 13. Zendic or the Medic language. See Zaborowski, 1, chap. VI.
-According to the Census of India, vol. I, pp. 291 _seq._, both Persian
-and Medic tongues belong to the Aryan stock. They are divided in the
-following table:
-
- ARYAN
- |
- +-------+-----+---------------+--------------+
- | | | |
- Persic | | +---Medic
- | | | | (The language of
-Old Persian of the Achæmenides | the Avesta. No
- (Darius’ insc. at Behistun, c. | transition language
- 5th century B. C.) | between
- | | | Medic and its
- | | | modern derivatives
- Pehlevi or Parthian | is known.)
- 3d–7th century +-----+-----+-----+-----+
- A. D. | | | | | |
- | Galchah dialects of the Pamirs
- | | | | | |
- | Pashto | | | |
- Modern Persian. | | | |
- Omuri | | |
- | | |
- Balochi | |
- | |
- Kurdish |
- |
- Other minor
- dialects.
-
-Zaborowski, 1, p. 146, positively identifies Medic as agglutinative, in
-which he agrees with Oppert. See chaps. V and VI, especially part II and
-p. 125. For early data on the Medes see the Herodotus references given
-under Persia. Zaborowski says, p. 121, that Medic was spoken until 600
-B. C.
-
-255 : 15. Kurdish. Von Luschan, p. 229: “The Kurds speak an Aryan
-language.... The eastern Kurds are little known.... They speak a
-different dialect from the western tribes, but both divisions are
-Aryan.” On the Kurds as a people, see the notes to p. 225 : 20.
-
-255 : 20. Zaborowski, 1, p. 216–217.
-
-255 : 23. Von Luschan, p. 234, and the note to p. 225 : 19 of this book.
-
-255 : 26–256 : 10. See Plutarch’s _Life of Alexander_; _Historia
-Alexandri Magni de præliis_; Zaborowski, 1, p. 171.
-
-256 : 3. Alexander the Great and the Persians. Plutarch, _Life of
-Alexander_: “After this he accommodated himself more than ever to the
-manners of the Asiatics, and at the same time persuaded them to adopt
-some of the Macedonian fashions, for by a mixture of both he thought a
-union might be promoted much better than by force, and his authority
-maintained when he was at a distance. For the same reason he selected
-30,000 boys and gave them masters to instruct them in the Grecian
-literature as well as to train them to arms in the Macedonian manner. As
-for his marriage with Roxana, it was entirely the effect of love.... Nor
-was the match unsuitable to the situation of his affairs. The barbarians
-placed greater confidence in him on account of that alliance....
-Hephæstion and Craternus were his two favorites. The former praised the
-Persian fashions and dressed as he did; the latter adhered to the
-fashions of his own country. He therefore employed Hephæstion in his
-transactions with the barbarians and Craternus to signify his pleasure
-to the Greeks and Macedonians.”
-
-256 : 11 _seq._ Armenians. Ridgeway, 1, p. 396, speaking of language,
-says: “That the Armenians were an offshoot of the Phrygians as mentioned
-in Herodotus VII, 73, is proved by the most modern linguistic results,
-which show that Armenian comes closer to Greek than to the Iranian
-tongues.” _Cf._ also Hall, _Ancient History of the Near East_, p. 475.
-This need not imply racial affinity, however. The following notes on
-Armenian were contributed by Mr. Leon Dominian: “The proof of Aryan
-affinities in the Hittite language has not yet been established. The
-great difficulty in establishing the pre-Aryan relation of Armenian is
-due to the fact that the earliest text dates only from the fifth century
-A. D.
-
-“The Cimmerians and Scythians, coming from southern Europe by way of the
-Caucasus (Herodotus, IV, 11, 12), reached Armenia about 720 B. C. (see
-Garstang, _The Land of the Hittites_, p. 62). The old Vannic language
-antedating this invasion resembles the Georgian of the Caucasus,
-according to Sayce (_Jour. Roy. As. Soc._, XIV, p. 410), who has studied
-the local inscriptions. On p. 409 he infers that the Aryan occupation of
-Armenia was coeval with the victory of Aryanism in Persia at the end of
-the sixth century, B. C.
-
-“The fact that Armenia is linguistically related to the western groups
-of the Indo-European languages and that the Persian element consists of
-loan words is corroborated by geographical evidence. The Armenian
-highland culminating in the 17000 foot altitude of Mt. Ararat has acted
-as a barrier dividing the plateau of Anatolia from that of Iran.
-Herodotus called the Armenians the ‘beyond’ Phrygians.” See also O.
-Schrader, Jevons translation, p. 430.
-
-256 : 14 _seq._ Phrygians. See the note to p. 225.
-
-256 : 15. Félix Sartiaux, _Troie, la guerre de Troie_, pp. 5–9.
-
-256 : 16–17. See the note to p. 239 : 2 _seq._
-
-256 : 21 _seq._ See the table of languages to p. 242 : 5.
-
-256 : 27–257 : 7. See pp. 20, 134, 238–239, of this book.
-
-257 : 12. Bactria. See the note to p. 119 : 15.
-
-257 : 16 _seq._ See the notes to pp. 158 and 253. Also Von Luschan, p.
-243; Zaborowski, 1, p. 112; and the Indian Census, 1901, vol. I, p. 294.
-
-257 : 19. Punjab. _Panch_—five, _ab_—river, in Hindustani. _Cf._ the
-Greek _penta_—five.
-
-257 : 22. Dravidians. See pp. 148–149 of this book.
-
-257 : 23. See the note to. p. 259 : 21 and Zaborowski, 1, pp. 113 seq.
-
-257 : 28–258 : 2. See the note to p. 242 : 5. George Turnour’s edition
-in 1836, of the Mahavamsa, first made it possible to trace Sinhalese
-history and to prove that about the middle of the sixth century B. C. a
-band of Aryan-speaking people from India, under Vijaya conquered and
-settled Ceylon permanently. There are a number of later works on Ceylon,
-dealing with its archæology, flora, fauna, history, etc.
-
-According to the British Indian Census of 1901 nearly two-thirds of the
-inhabitants of Assam were Hindus, and the language of Hinduism has
-become that of the province. The vernacular Assamese is closely related
-to Bengali. E. A. Gait has written a _History of Assam_ (1906).
-
-258 : 3. See the notes to pp. 158 and 253 of this book.
-
-258 : 8. Zaborowski, 1, pp. 184–185. Compare de Morgan’s dates with
-those of Zaborowski, the Indian Census and Meillet.
-
-258 : 19. See Meillet, _Introduction á l’étude des langues européens_.
-On p. 37 he claims that the relation between the two is comparable to
-that prevailing between High and Low German. Zaborowski, 1, p. 184,
-says: “The language of the Avesta, the Zend, is a contemporary dialect
-of the Persian of Darius (_i. e._, of Old Persian), from whence has come
-the Pehlevi and its very close relative. It even presents the closest
-affinities with the Sanskrit of the Vedas, from which was derived, in
-the time of Alexander, classical Sanskrit. This Sanskrit of the Vedas is
-itself so close to Old Persian that it can be said that one and the
-other are only two pronunciations of the same tongue.” See also the
-Indian Census for 1901, vol. I, p. 294.
-
-258 : 25 _seq._ Zaborowski, 1, pp. 213–216; Peake, 2, pp. 165 _seq._ and
-especially pp. 169 and 172.
-
-259 : 4. Ellsworth Huntington, _The Pulse of Asia_; Peake, 2, p. 170;
-and Breasted, _passim_.
-
-259 : 9. See pp. 173, 237, 253–254 and 257 of this book.
-
-259 : 16. See the notes to pp. 119 : 13 and 255 : 7.
-
-259 : 21. Sacæ or Saka. The Sacæ or Saka were the blond peoples who
-carried the Aryan language to India. Strabo, 511, allies them with the
-Scythians as one of their tribes. Many tribes were called Sacæ,
-especially by the Hindus, who used the term indiscriminately to
-designate any northern invaders of India.
-
-One tribe gained the most fertile tract in Armenia which was called
-Sacasene, after them.
-
-Zaborowski, 1, p. 94, relates the Sacæ with the Scythians, and says:
-“The Tadjiks are a people composed of suppressed elements where blonds
-are found in an important minority. These blonds, saving an atavistic
-survival of more ancient or sporadic characters I can identify. They are
-the Sacæ.” He continues, in a note, that a great error has been
-committed on the subject of the Sacæ. “Repeating an assertion of Alfred
-Maury, whose very sound erudition enjoyed a merited reputation, I myself
-once repeated that the Sacæ who figures on the rock of Behistun was of
-the Kirghiz type. This assertion is completely erroneous. I have proved
-it and can say that the Sacæ and the Scythians were identical.”
-
-Zaborowski, p. 216, also identifies the Sacæ with the Persians. On this
-whole subject see Herodotus, VII, 64; also Feist, 5.
-
-259 : 21. Massagetæ. Zaborowski, 1, p. 285, says: “The first information
-of history concerning the peoples of Turkestan refers to the Massagetæ,
-whose life was exactly the same as that of the Scythians (Herodotus, I,
-205–216). They enjoyed a developed industrial civilization while they
-remained nomads. They were doubtless composed of ethnic elements
-different from the Scythians, but probably already spoke the Iranian
-tongue, like them. And since the time of Darius, at least, there were in
-Turkestan with them and beside them, Sacæ, whom the Greeks have always
-regarded as Scythians come from Europe.”
-
-Minns, _Scythians and Greeks_, p. 11, says: “The Scyths and the
-Massagetæ were contemporaneous and different. The Massagetæ are
-evidently a mixed collection of tribes without an ethnic unity; the
-variety of their customs and states of culture shows this and Herodotus
-does not seem to suggest that they are all one people. They are
-generally reckoned to be Iranian.... The picture drawn of the nomad
-Massagetæ seems very like that of the Scythians in a rather ruder stage
-of development.”
-
-Herodotus, I, 215, describes them as follows: “In their dress and mode
-of living the Massagetæ resemble the Scythians. They fight both on
-horseback and on foot, neither method is strange to them.... The
-following are some of their customs,—each man has but one wife, yet all
-wives are held in common; for this is a custom of the Massagetæ and not
-of the Scythians, as the Greeks wrongly say. Human life does not come to
-its natural close with this people; but when a man grows very old, all
-his kinsfolk collect together and offer him up in sacrifice; offering at
-the same time some cattle also. After the sacrifice they boil the flesh
-and feast on it; and those who thus end their days are reckoned the
-happiest. If a man dies of disease they do not eat him, but bury him in
-the ground, bewailing his ill fortune that he did not come to be
-sacrificed. They sow no grain, but live on their herds and on fish, of
-which there is great plenty in the Araxes. Milk is what they chiefly
-drink. [_Cf._ the eastern Siberian tribes of the present day.] The only
-god they worship is the sun, and to him they offer the horse in
-sacrifice, under the notion of giving to the swiftest of the gods, the
-swiftest of all mortal creatures.”
-
-D’Arbois de Jubainville, 4, t. I, p. 231 declares they were the same as
-the Scyths.
-
-Horse sacrifices are said to prevail among the modern Parses. On the
-whole, the Massagetæ appear to have been largely Nordic.
-
-259 : 24. Kirghizes. See Zaborowski, 1, pp. 216, 290–291.
-
-259 : 25 _seq._ See the note to p. 119 : 15.
-
-260 : 3. Gibbon, chap. LXIV. Also called the battle of Lignitz. Lignitz
-is the duchy, and Wahlstatt a small village on the battlefield.
-
-260 : 8. See the notes to pp. 224 : 3 and 259 : 21.
-
-260 : 17. Feist, 5, pp. 1, 427–431, says the Tokharian is related to the
-western rather than to the Iranian-Indian group of languages, and places
-the Tokhari in northeast Turkestan. (See the note to p. 119 : 13.) On p.
-471 he identifies the Yuë-Tchi and Khang with Aryans from Chinese
-Turkestan, basing himself on Chinese annals, the date being given as 800
-B. C. _Cf._ also the notes to p. 224 : 3 of this book.
-
-260 : 21. See DeLapouge, 1, p. 248; Feist, 5, p. 520.
-
-260 : 29–261 : 5. See Feist, above, in the note to 260 : 17.
-
-261 : 6. Traces. See the note to p. 70 : 12.
-
-261 : 17. Deniker, 2, pp. 407 _seq._; G. Elliot Smith, _Ancient
-Egyptians_, p. 61; Ripley, p. 450.
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
- Aachen, 182.
-
- Accad, 147;
- language of, 239.
-
- Achæans, 158–161, 173, 189, 223, 225, 243, 253;
- at Troy, 159;
- invade Greece, 158–159;
- language of, 161.
-
- Acheulean period, 104–106, 133.
-
- Achilles, 159.
-
- Actinic rays, 38, 84.
-
- Adamic theory, 13.
-
- Adriatic, 36, 138.
-
- Ægean, islands of, Hellenes in, 162;
- Ægean region, Nordics in, 253.
-
- Æolian language, 243.
-
- Æolians, 159.
-
- Afghan hill tribes, physical character of, 261;
- language, 261;
- passes, Nordics in, 257, 259.
-
- Afghanistan, 257, 261;
- Mediterranean race in, 148;
- physical types of, 257.
-
- Afghans, 148;
- language of, 148.
-
- Africa, 23, 33, 82;
- Alpines in, 140, 158;
- Bronze Age in, 128;
- cephalic index in, 23;
- hunting tribes of, 113;
- Mediterraneans in, 148, 151, 152, 155;
- megaliths in, 155;
- Negro population of, 33, 79, 80;
- no Nordic blood in, 180, 223;
- Nordic invasion of, 223;
- North Africa, as part of Europe, 152;
- Berbers of, 152;
- under Vandals, 180, 233;
- _South Africa_, density of native population barrier to white
- conquest, 79, 80.
-
- Agglutinative languages, 148, 234, 239, 240.
-
- Agriculture, 112, 122–124, 138, 146, 240.
-
- Ainus, physical characters of, 224–225;
- crossed with Mongols, 225.
-
- Alabama, 99.
-
- Alani, or Alans, 66, 177, 195.
-
- Alaska, 45.
-
- Albania, 30, 36, 164;
- stature in, 190.
-
- Albanian language, 164;
- origin of, 243–244;
- Albanian type, 164.
-
- Albanians, 25;
- blondness of, 163;
- in the Balkan peninsula, 153.
-
- Albigensians, 157.
-
- Albinos, 25.
-
- Alcoholism, 55.
-
- Alemanni, 135, 145, 177.
-
- Alexander the Great, 161–162, 256, 259.
-
- Alexandria, 92.
-
- Algeria, 44.
-
- Alphabet, earliest traces of, 115.
-
- Alpine race, 20, 21, 25, 29, 31, 34, 35, 63, 64, 69, 73, 134–147, 167,
- 226;
- an agricultural race, 138–139, 146;
- and Aryan language, 238–241;
- and Dorians, 160;
- and High German, 188;
- and iron, 129;
- and lake dwellings, 121, 139;
- and Proto-Slavic language, 143;
- and Round Barrows, 137;
- as aristocracy in Rome, 154;
- Asiatic, and earliest civilizations, 147;
- bringers of bronze, 127–128;
- of cereals, 138, 146;
- of culture, 138, 146;
- of domesticated animals, 138, 146;
- of metals, 122, 127, 129, 146–147;
- of pottery, 146;
- Celticized, 174;
- centre of radiation of, 124, 136, 141–143;
- conquered by Nordics, 129, 145–147;
- crossed with Mediterraneans, 151;
- crossed with Nordics, 134, 135, 151, 163;
- discovery of type of, 130;
- distribution of, 241;
- eastern spread of, 136;
- final invasion of Europe, 127–128;
- first appearance of, 116;
- in Europe, 136;
- habitat of, 43–44;
- hair of, 34;
- in Africa (North), 128, 140, 156;
- Alsace, 140;
- Armorica, 251;
- Asia, 144;
- Austria, 232;
- Auvergne, 146;
- Baden, 140;
- Bavaria, 141;
- Belgium, 138, 140;
- Britain, 137–138, 239–240, 247;
- (present absence of, 137);
- British Isles, 199, Brittany, 63, 146;
- Canada, 81;
- cities, 94;
- Denmark, 136;
- Egypt, 128, 140;
- Europe, 117 (central, 138–139, 141);
- (eastern, 44);
- (western, 44);
- (during the Neolithic, 124);
- France, 63, 64, 138, 140, 146, 194, 240, 251;
- Gaul, 240;
- Germany, 64, 72, 184, 232;
- Greece, 65;
- Holland, 136;
- Italy, 64, 128, 140, 154, 157 (north, 141);
- Ireland, 128, 137;
- Lake Dwellings, 121;
- Lorraine, 140;
- Neolithic period, 136;
- Norway, 136, 211;
- Po valley, 157;
- Rome, 154;
- Russia, 136, 142–144;
- Savoy, 146;
- Sicily, 140;
- Spain, 140;
- Switzerland, 121, 135, 141;
- Syria, 140;
- Terramara, 122;
- Tyrol, 141;
- Würtemberg, 140;
- maximum extension of, 136–137;
- migrations, route of, 116;
- mixed with Celts, 177;
- with Nordics, 25, 35–36, 62, 135–136;
- Nordicized, 130, 141, 147;
- north of the Black Sea, 136, 144;
- origin of, 134, 241;
- original language of, 140, 235;
- physical characters of, 35–36, 73;
- racial aptitudes of, 227;
- reinforced by others, 144;
- replacing Nordics in Europe, 260;
- resurgence of in Europe, 131, 146–147, 184, 190–191, 196, 210;
- retreat of from northwest Europe, 136–138;
- skull of, 62;
- speech of, 64;
- substratum in eastern Germany, 72;
- underlying population, 136;
- (in relation to Nordics in central Europe, 141);
- unimportant in modern culture, 147.
-
- Alps, 42, 123, 129, 174, 187;
- Alpines in, 124;
- lake dwellings in, 121;
- Mediterraneans in, 149, 151;
- Nordics in, 151.
-
- Alsace, 182;
- Alpines in, 140.
-
- Amber, 125.
-
- America, 6, 10, 14, 57;
- change of religion in, 219;
- genius in, 98;
- immigrants to, 218;
- in Colonial times, 46–48, 83–85;
- Mediterranean element in, 45;
- Nordic immigration to, 211;
- Nordics in, 83, 84, 87, 89, 206, 231;
- Norman type in, 207;
- race development in, 262–263;
- replacement of types in, 110;
- result of immigration to, 11, 12, 72, 86, 89–94, 100, 209, 211;
- Scandinavian element in, 211.
-
- American aristocracy, 5;
- characters, 26;
- colonies, 10;
- democracy, 6;
- factories, 11;
- farming and artisan classes, 11;
- Indians, 33
- (eliminated by smallpox, 55;
- arrowheads of, 113);
- mines, 11;
- Negro, provenience of, 82;
- Revolution, 6.
-
- Americans, 5, 11, 12, 77, 83, 88–90, 100;
- birth rate decline of, 46, 91;
- brunet type of, 45, 150;
- destruction of in Civil War, 88;
- future race mixture of, 92–93, 100;
- in competition with immigrants, 91;
- individualism of, 12;
- national consciousness of, 90;
- Nordic element of, 88;
- race consciousness among, 86;
- southerners, 42;
- typical hair shade of, 26.
-
- Amerindian blood, 61.
-
- Amerinds, 23, 31, 33, 34.
-
- Amorites, 223.
-
- Anak, sons of, 223.
-
- Anaryan languages, 140, 194, 204, 233–236;
- survivals of in Europe, 234–236, 240;
- in Russia, 243;
- in the British Isles, 246.
-
- Anatolia, 21;
- present population of, 225.
-
- Anatolians, 237.
-
- Andaman Islands, Negroids in, 149.
-
- Angles, 177;
- in Britain, 206, 248–249;
- in England, 200;
- in Scotland, 203;
- origin of, 200.
-
- Anglian blood of American settlers, 83.
-
- Anglian type, 40.
-
- Anglo-Norman type, 162.
-
- Anglo-Normans of Ireland, 64.
-
- Anglo-Saxons, 63, 67, 80, 154;
- and genius, 109;
- in Colonial America, 83.
-
- Animals, domesticated, 112, 117, 122, 123, 138, 146, 240.
-
- Antes, 141.
-
- Anthropoid Apes, 101–102.
-
- Anthropology, 3, 97;
- in the British Isles, 249.
-
- Apes, 101–102.
-
- Aquitaine, Iberian language of, 194;
- brunet elements from, 208;
- and Celtic language, 248.
-
- Aquitanian language, 140.
-
- Arabia, 44, 152.
-
- Arabic language, in Spain, 156.
-
- Arabic race, 147.
-
- Arabs, in Spain, 156.
-
- Aral Sea; _see also_ Caspian-Aral Sea, 171, 254.
-
- Argentine, 78.
-
- Arian faith of the barbarians, 181.
-
- Aristocracy, 5, 10, 140–142, 153–154, 187–189, 191–192, 196–197;
- Alpine, 154;
- Austrian, 141;
- Bavarian, 141;
- British, 247;
- French, 140;
- German, 141;
- Greek, 153;
- Italian, 189, 215;
- military, 78;
- Persian, 254;
- Roman, 154;
- Russian, 142;
- Spanish, 192, 247;
- Swabian, 141;
- a true, 7, 8.
-
- Aristocrats, 188, 191, 192, 197.
-
- Aristotle, 226.
-
- Armenians, 59, 63, 66, 238–239, 256;
- language of, 238, 256.
-
- Armenoid Alpines, 254.
-
- Armenoids, 20, 134, 238, 254, 257.
-
- Armies, conscript and volunteer, 198.
-
- Armor, 120;
- of the Romans, 154.
-
- Armorica; _see also_ Brittany;
- Alpines in, 251;
- Celts in, 250–251.
-
- Armorican language, 248, 251.
-
- Armoricans, 250.
-
- Arrow, in the Azilian Period, 115;
- in the Palæolithic Period, 112, 115.
-
- Art, Cro-Magnon, 112;
- Magdalenian, 114;
- in the Palæolithic Period, 112;
- decline of in the Solutrean Period, 114.
-
- Artois, 210.
-
- Arya, 233–241.
-
- Aryan deities, 253.
-
- Aryan language or speech, 20, 61, 67, 130, 155, 161, 233;
- and Alpines, 238;
- associated with the Nordics, 234, 241–242;
- diversity of, 242;
- first appearance of in Europe, 246;
- imposed upon the Alpines and Mediterraneans, 242;
- in Armenia, 239;
- in Asia, 253–263;
- in Asia Minor, 238–239;
- in the Caucasus, 238–239;
- in Iran, 238–239;
- introduced into Etruria, 244;
- into Europe, 155;
- into Greece, 203;
- into India, 258;
- into Media, 254;
- into Spain, 192;
- language of the Ossetes, 66;
- of Hindustan, 67, 70;
- origin of, 242–252;
- place of development of, 243;
- primitive 212;
- Pre-Aryan, 204, 233, 235, 247;
- Proto-Aryan, 61, 233, 238, 242–243.
-
- Aryan race, 3, 67, 213.
-
- Asia, 20, 21, 61;
- Alpines in, 144;
- area of man’s evolution, 13;
- Aryan languages in, 253–263;
- Aryanization of, 255;
- blondness in, 224;
- cradle of mankind, 100–101;
- cradle of the Negro, 33;
- early civilizations in, 119;
- ethnic conquest of, 78;
- (western) Hellenization of, 162;
- (western) Macedonian dynasties of, 162;
- Mediterranean languages in, 253;
- Mediterranean race in, 148–149;
- Mongols destroy civilization in, 260;
- Negrito substratum in, 148–149;
- Nordics in, 214, 224, 253–263.
-
- Asia Minor, 20;
- Alpines in, 127, 134, 136;
- Armenians in, 256;
- bronze weapons in, 127;
- Cimmerians in, 254;
- early iron in, 129;
- Gauls in, 158;
- Greek colonies in, 160;
- Hellenized, 220;
- invaded by Phrygians, 159;
- Nordics in, 214, 225;
- Turkish language in, 237.
-
- Asiatic types, Europeanized, 144.
-
- Asiatics, 22.
-
- Assam, dialects of, 258.
-
- Assyria, 147;
- ancient civilizations of, 153;
- languages of, 239.
-
- Athenians, instability and versatility of, 229.
-
- Athens, 160, 162.
-
- Atlas Berbers, 25.
-
- Atlas Mountains, 223.
-
- Attica, and genius, 109;
- Pelasgians in, 160.
-
- Attila, 139, 250.
-
- Augustus, Emperor, 51, 154, 216.
-
- Aurignacian Period, 105, 108, 111, 112, 114, 132.
-
- Australia, Nordic race in, 79.
-
- Australians, 31;
- opposing the Japanese and Chinese, 79.
-
- Australoids, 33, 107;
- hairiness of, 224.
-
- Austria, 56, 183;
- Alpines in, 210, 232;
- Nordics in, 210;
- present population of, 231–232;
- Slavs in, 141.
-
- Austrians, 57, 135.
-
- Auvergne, Alpines in, 146;
- ancient centre of population, 149.
-
- Avars, 143–145;
- language of, 236.
-
- Avesta, 255.
-
- Azilian Period (Azilian-Tardenoisian), 99, 105, 115–117, 132, 136;
- and brachycephalics, 116;
- and Mediterranean race, 117;
- bow and arrow in, 113, 115.
-
- Azilians, 113, 138.
-
-
- Babylonia, 147;
- ancient civilization of, 153.
-
- Bactra, 119.
-
- Bactria, language of, 255;
- Mongolization of, 259;
- Sacæ in, 259.
-
- Baden, Alpines in, 140.
-
- Bahamas, 39, 40;
- English in, 40.
-
- Balkan Peninsula, Albanians in, 153;
- Illyrians in, 153;
- Mediterranean substratum in, 152–153;
- Nordics in, 189;
- Slavs in, 143, 153.
-
- Balkan Question, 156–157.
-
- Balkans, 56, 57, 144;
- Alpines in, 116, 124, 127, 136;
- immigrants from, 89;
- language in, 237.
-
- Balkh, 119.
-
- Balochi dialect, 255.
-
- Baltic, coasts, Neolithic occupation of, 122–123;
- Pre-Neolithic culture of, 117;
- Provinces, 211, 212;
- Race, _see_ Nordic race;
- Russification of, 58;
- Sea, 20, 37, 117, 122, 124, 151, 168, 169, 171, 173, 174, 180;
- subspecies, 20;
- _see also_ Nordic race.
-
- Baluchistan, 148.
-
- Bantus, 80.
-
- Barbadoes, 39.
-
- Bashkirs, 144.
-
- Basques, 140;
- language of and its affinities, 140, 234;
- physical characters of, 234–235.
-
- Bas-reliefs, 112.
-
- Batavia, 210.
-
- Batavians, 177.
-
- Bavaria, Alpines in, 116, 141;
- dolichocephalics in, 116.
-
- Bavarians, 135, 141.
-
- Beaker Maker type, 138, 164.
-
- Bedouins, 100.
-
- Belgæ, 145, 194–195, 200, 269;
- in Britain, 251;
- in England, 175;
- in France, 175;
- Gaul, 251;
- Normandy, 251;
- mixed with Teutons, 248;
- language of, 251.
-
- Belgians (modern), 195.
-
- Belgium, 56, 64, 195;
- divided into Walloons and Flemings, 57;
- Alpines in, 116, 138, 140;
- Walloons in, 146.
-
- Benin, Bight of, 82.
-
- Berbers, 25, 63, 152, 223;
- language of, 204, 233;
- related to the Spaniards and South Italians, 152.
-
- Berserker, 231.
-
- Bessarabia, Rumanian language in, 245.
-
- Birth control, 48–49;
- increase, 51;
- privilege of, 6;
- rate in upper and lower classes, 47–52, 91;
- unconscious part played by church in, 52.
-
- Black Belt of Mississippi, 76.
-
- Black Breed of Scotland, 107.
-
- Black Sea, 125, 136, 144, 165;
- Alpines north of, 136.
-
- Blends, 14.
-
- Blond Hair, 24, 25.
-
- Blond type, 24–26, 229, 230;
- crossed with brunet, 14, 18, 26, 28, 202;
- origin of, 214.
-
- Blondness, 25, 26;
- associated with glabrous skin, 32;
- with red hair, 32;
- of Ainus, 224;
- of Albanians and Greeks, 163;
- of Berbers, 223;
- of Libyans, 223;
- of Swiss, 136;
- of Tamahu, 223;
- in Asia, 224;
- in Bosnia, 190;
- in central Europe in Roman times, 131;
- in Ireland, 201;
- in literature as special trait, 229;
- in Poland, 190;
- in Russia, 190;
- in Spain, 192;
- of Christ, 230.
-
- Blonds, mixed with brunets, 202.
-
- Bohemia, 59, 183;
- revolt of, 187;
- loss of population in during Thirty Years’ War, 184.
-
- Bohemian national revival, 58.
-
- Bone-carving, 112.
-
- Borreby type (_see_ Beaker Makers), 164.
-
- Borussian language, 242.
-
- Bosnia, 190.
-
- Boundaries, of Catholics and Protestants, 185;
- of Nordics and Alpines, 185–186;
- of Eastern and Western Empires, 179.
-
- Bow and arrow in the Paleolithic Period, 112, 113, 115.
-
- Brachycephalic, as a term, 19;
- races, first appearance of, 116.
-
- Brachycephaly, 19, 116, 122, 127–128, 136–138, 144, 146, 151, 157, 172;
- increase of in France, 197;
- Russian, 136.
-
- Brahmans, 257.
-
- Brandenburg, population of, 72.
-
- Brazil, Negro blood in, 78.
-
- Brenner Pass, 189.
-
- Brennus, 157.
-
- Bretons, 62;
- Asiatic origin of, 63.
-
- Britain, 128, 131, 194;
- Alpine invasion of, 239;
- Angles in, 206, 248–249;
- Aryan language in, 234;
- Beaker Makers in, 138;
- Belgæ in, 248, 251;
- bronze in, 127;
- Bronze Age in, 163;
- Celtic language in, 247;
- Celts in, 248;
- Danes in, 249;
- Goidels in, 174, 248;
- iron in, 130–131;
- land connection of, with France, 199;
- with Ireland, 199;
- loss of Roman power in, 250;
- Mediterraneans in, 123, 127, 248;
- (_see also_ British Isles and England)
- Neolithic population of, 123;
- Normans in, 249;
- Norse in, 249;
- Paleolithic population of, 123;
- Proto-Mediterraneans in, 150;
- race mixture in, 248;
- racial composition of, 199;
- Round Barrow Men in, 163;
- Saxons in, 248–249;
- Welsh in, 248–249.
-
- British, 29;
- native British stature, 29.
-
- British Empire, 57.
-
- British Isles (_see also_ Britain and England);
- Alpines absent in, 63;
- absence of round skulls in, 63, 137, 138, 247, 249;
- anthropology of, 249;
- brunets of, 28, 29, 149, 150;
- conquered by Saxons, 180;
- Celtic languages in, 249–250;
- Iberian substratum in, 249;
- invaded by Belgæ or Cymry, 199;
- by Brythons, 199;
- by Goidels, 199;
- Mediterraneans in, 149, 198, 266;
- Nordics in, 188, 199–206, 269, 271;
- Saxon and Danish parts of, 88;
- Saxons in, 180;
- Teutonic languages in, 249;
- Vikings in, 249.
-
- Brittany, 81, 129, 146, 202, 248;
- (_see_ Armorica);
- Alpines in, 146, 267;
- Armorican language in, 248;
- Celtic language in, 250–252;
- Celts in, 250–251;
- dolmens in, 129;
- megaliths in, 155;
- ravaged by the Saxons, 251–252.
-
- Bronze, 132, 155;
- associated with Alpines, 128, 136;
- composition and invention of, 126;
- effect of, 127, 128, 129;
- fabulous value of, 126;
- implements, wide diffusion of common types, 128;
- in Crete, 128;
- in England, 128, 137;
- in Ireland, 137;
- in Italy, 127–128;
- in megalithic monuments, 129;
- in north Africa, 128;
- in Scandinavia, 128;
- in Sweden, 137;
- introduction of, 157, 158;
- on Atlantic coasts, 128;
- absence of in dolmens, 127.
-
- Bronze Period (Age), 120–122, 126–133, 137, 163, 174, 199, 213, 238,
- 267;
- and Beaker Makers, 138;
- in the South contemporary with the northern neolithic, 129.
-
- Brunet, crossed with blond, 14, 18, 26, 28, 202.
-
- Brunetness, among Greeks, 163;
- in central Europe, 131;
- in literature, as a special character, 229;
- in England and America, 150, 153;
- in Scotland, 150, 153, 204.
-
- Brünn-Předmost race, 113, 114, 132.
-
- Brutus, 217.
-
- Brythonic elements, in Scotland, 203;
- (Cymric) invasion, 247;
- language, 248;
- in France, 248;
- in Wales, 205.
-
- Brythons, 203, 247–249, 269;
- on the continent, 174;
- in England, 175, 200, 206;
- in Ireland, 200, 206.
-
- Bukowina, Rumanian language in, 245.
-
- Bulgaria, Mongoloid characters in, 144;
- Mediterraneans in, 153.
-
- Bulgarian national revival, 58.
-
- Bulgarians and Christianity, 65;
- domination of in Thrace, 246.
-
- Bulgars, 145.
-
- Burgund, 142.
-
- Burgundians, 70, 72, 145, 177, 194;
- in Gaul, 180.
-
- Burgundy, 30, 182–183.
-
- Byzantine Army, 189;
- Empire, 65, 165–166, 179, 181, 189, 221, 237, 246;
- decline of, 221;
- Greeks in, 165.
-
- Byzantium, 92, 166.
-
-
- Cacocracy, 79.
-
- Cæsar, 69, 140, 182, 193–195, 200, 217, 221, 248, 251.
-
- Caithness, 249.
-
- Calabrian, language, 244.
-
- California, 11, 75.
-
- Californians, 79.
-
- Caligula, 217.
-
- Campignian Period, 120, 121;
- culture of, 132.
-
- Canada, 23;
- Nordics in, 81;
- French Canada, 47.
-
- Canadians (French), 11, 47, 58, 81;
- origin of, 81;
- Alpine character of, 81;
- language of, 81;
- (Irish), 11;
- Indian, 9, 87.
-
- Cantabrian Alps, 140, 267.
-
- Carpathian Mountains, 124, 136, 141, 142, 143, 244–245.
-
- Carthage, 126, 165, 180;
- ancient civilization of, 153.
-
- Carthaginians, 228.
-
- Caspian Sea (_see also_ Caspian-Aral Sea), 171, 257.
-
- Caspian-Aral Sea, 170, 214, 225, 254, 258.
-
- Cassiterides, 127.
-
- Cassius, 217.
-
- Castes, 70.
-
- Castilian language, 156, 244.
-
- Catalan language, 156, 244.
-
- Catholic boundaries in Europe, 185.
-
- Catholic colonies, the half-breed in, 85.
-
- Caucasian race, 3, 32, 34, 65, 66, 67;
- hair of, 34;
- in the United States, 65;
- origin of the name, 66.
-
- Caucasus, 66, 144, 225, 238–239, 253;
- Cimmerian raids in, 254;
- Nordics in, 214, 258.
-
- Caucasus Mountains, 66, 214, 257.
-
- Cavalier type, 185.
-
- Caverns of France and Spain, 112, 132.
-
- Celtiberians, 192;
- language of, 234.
-
- Celtic dialects, 62, 130.
-
- Celtic languages, 62;
- antedating Anglo-Saxons in England, and Romans in France, 63;
- in Spain, 155, 234;
- Celtic and High German, 189;
- Celtic in France, 194, 248;
- Celtic language of the Nordics, 194;
- first crosses the Rhine westward, 246;
- introduced into Britain, 247–250;
- in Brittany, 250–251;
- in Gaul, 250;
- descendants of, 250;
- remnants of, 155–156.
-
- Celtic Nordics, 139.
-
- Celtic race, 3, 62–64.
-
- Celtic-speaking nations, 130, 131, 139, 173–177, 189, 192, 199;
- physical characters of, 175.
-
- Celtic tribes, 250;
- in Armorica, 251.
-
- Celto-Scyths, 174.
-
- Celts, 62, 63, 194;
- in the Rhine valley, 174;
- in the Danube valley, 174;
- expulsion of from Germany, 174;
- physical characters of, 175;
- mixed with Mediterraneans and Alpines, 177;
- “Q” and “P,” 247–248.
-
- Central America, 61, 75.
-
- Centum group of Aryan languages, 256.
-
- Cephalic index, 19–24;
- in England, 137;
- increase of in France, 197.
-
- Cereals, 138.
-
- Ceylon, 258;
- Mediterranean race in, 148;
- Negroids in, 149;
- Veddahs in, 149.
-
- Châlons, battle of, 250, 272.
-
- Channel coasts, 201;
- depression of, 199.
-
- Characters, unit, 13 _et seq._
-
- Charlemagne, 182, 187, 191, 195;
- capital of, 182;
- coronation of, 182;
- empire of, 182;
- language of the court of, 182.
-
- Charles V, 183.
-
- Charles Martel, 181.
-
- Chase, the, 122.
-
- Chellean Period, 104–105, 132;
- Pre-Chellean, 104–105.
-
- Cherbourg, 201.
-
- China, whites in, 78.
-
- Chinese, 11, 79, 119, 260;
- in California and Australia, 79;
- Nordic elements among, 224.
-
- Chinese civilization, 119.
-
- Chinese coolie, 11.
-
- Chinese Turkestan, Wu-Suns in, 260;
- Tokharian language in, 260.
-
- Chivalry, 228.
-
- Christ, 227;
- blondness of, 230.
-
- Christianity, 181–183, 221–222.
-
- Chronological table, 132–133.
-
- Chronology, Hebrew, 4.
-
- Church, and birth control, 52;
- harboring defective strains, 49–50.
-
- Church of Rome and democracy, 85.
-
- Cimbri, 177.
-
- Cimmerians, 173, 189, 214, 225, 253, 258, 269.
-
- Cinque cento, 215.
-
- Circassians, 237.
-
- Cisalpine Gaul, 157.
-
- Cities, consumers of men, 209;
- Alpines in, 94;
- Mediterraneans in, 94, 209;
- Nordics in, 94, 209.
-
- Civil War, 16, 42–43, 81, 86, 88, 218.
-
- Civilization, foundation of European, 164, 165;
- and race mixture, 161;
- of Nordics and Mediterraneans, 214–216.
-
- Climate and arboreal man, 101.
-
- Climatic conditions, 38–42, 215.
-
- Cnossos, 165.
-
- Colonial American families, 46–48, 51, 83–85.
-
- Colonial population, of America, 48, 83, 84.
-
- Colonial Wars, causes of, 85.
-
- Colonies, American, Nordic blood in, 84;
- Catholic, in New France and New Spain, 85.
-
- Colonization, 93.
-
- Columbaria, 220.
-
- Competition of races, 46–55.
-
- Conquistadores, 73, 193.
-
- Conscript Armies, 197–198.
-
- Constantine, 166.
-
- Constantinople, 166 (_see_ Byzantium).
-
- Consumption, 55.
-
- Continuity of physical characters, 262.
-
- Copper, 125, 132;
- in Egypt, 125;
- first appearance of in Europe, 122;
- implements, 121;
- mines, 125.
-
- Cornish language, 248.
-
- Cornwales, 178.
-
- Cornwall, 178;
- racial types in, 206;
- Phœnicians in, 127.
-
- Cotentin, 201.
-
- “Crackers,” 39.
-
- Cretans, 228.
-
- Crete, 99, 165;
- ancient civilization of, 153;
- bronze in, 128;
- Hellenes in, 162;
- Minoan culture of, 99, 164;
- Pre-Aryan language, remnants in, 233.
-
- Crimea, 176;
- Gauls in, 174.
-
- Croats, 143.
-
- Cro-Magnon, race, 105–107, 108–115, 132;
- and art, 112, 114;
- and Esquimaux, 112;
- cranial capacity of, 109;
- culture of, 111–113;
- direction of entrance of, into Europe, 111;
- disappearance of, 110–111, 115;
- disharmonic features of, 110;
- distribution of, 111;
- first appearance of, 108, 111;
- genius of, 109;
- in France, 265;
- origin of, 111;
- race characters of, 108–109;
- remnants of, 15, 110;
- skull of, 15, 110;
- weapons of, 112, 113.
-
- Crossing, brunets and blonds, 14, 18, 26, 28, 202.
-
- Crucifixion, in art, 230.
-
- Crusades, 182, 191.
-
- Cuba, 76.
-
- Culture, European, derivation of, 164.
-
- Cumberland Mountains, 39.
-
- Cymric invasions, 174;
- (Brythonic), 247.
-
- Cymric language, 248;
- Anaryan syntax of, 204;
- in Britain, 248;
- in central Europe, 248;
- in Normandy, 251;
- in Wales, 205.
-
- Cymry, 145, 174, 205–206, 247, 269, 271;
- and La Tène, 131;
- in Britain, 175, 200;
- in France, 175, 251.
-
- Cyprus, mines of, 125;
- Mycenæan culture of, 164.
-
- Cyrus, 254.
-
- Czechs, 143.
-
-
- Da Vinci, Leonardo, 215.
-
- Dacia, 245.
-
- Dacian Plain, 176, 244–245;
- occupation of, 143.
-
- Dalmatian Alps, 30;
- coast, 138.
-
- Danes, 69, 145, 177, 196, 206, 211;
- along the Atlantic coasts, 180;
- in Britain, 249;
- invasion of, 201;
- Nordic, 64;
- of Ireland, 63–64, 201;
- of Schleswig, Germanization of, 58–59.
-
- Danish barbarians, identified with Normans, 252;
- Danish blood of American settlers, 83;
- Danish Peninsula, 200.
-
- Dante, 215.
-
- Danube, 244–245;
- Alpines, in valley of, 116, 127, 136, 167;
- lake dwellings of, 121, 122;
- Nordics in, 174;
- routes of, 125.
-
- Dardanelles, 256.
-
- Darius, 254–255;
- Nordic type, 258.
-
- Dark Ages, 99.
-
- Dart, barbed, 112;
- poisoned, 113.
-
- David, fairness of, 223;
- mother of, 223–224.
-
- Dawn Man, 105.
-
- Dawn stones, 102–103.
-
- DeGeer, Baron, 169.
-
- Delphi, Galatians at, 158.
-
- Democracy, 5, 8, 10, 12, 78, 79;
- and socialism, 79.
-
- Democratic forms of government, 5.
-
- Denmark, Alpines in, 136, 211;
- kitchen middens of, 123;
- Maglemose culture in, 117, 123, 169;
- Teutons from, 174.
-
- Dinaric race, or type, 138, 163–164, 190.
-
- Diogenes, 227.
-
- Diseases, 54, 55.
-
- Disharmonic combinations of physical characters, 14, 28, 35, 110.
-
- Dnieper river, 143.
-
- Dog, the, domesticated, 117, 123;
- Paleolithic, 112.
-
- Dolichocephalic, as a term, 19;
- Dolichocephalics, earliest races in Europe, 116.
-
- Dolichocephaly, 24, 107, 108, 114, 116, 122, 136, 148–149, 151, 172.
-
- Dolichocephs and megaliths, 129.
-
- Dolmens, of Brittany, absence of bronze in, 129.
-
- Domesticated animals, 117, 122–123, 138.
-
- Dominion of Canada, 81.
-
- Dordogne, stature in, 198.
-
- Dorian dialects, 164, 243;
- invasion of Greece, 99, 159–160.
-
- Dorians, 159–160, 164, 189, 269.
-
- Dravidians, 148, 257;
- mixed with Mediterraneans, 150.
-
- Dutch, 61;
- in the East Indies, 78;
- in New York, 80, 84;
- in South Africa, 80.
-
-
- East Indies, whites in, 78;
- Dutch in, 78.
-
- Eastern Empire of Rome, 165–166, 176, 179, 221.
-
- Ecclesiastics among Normans, brachycephalic, 208.
-
- Egypt, Alpines in, 128, 140;
- ancient civilization of, 119, 153, 164;
- bronze weapons in, 127;
- copper in, 125;
- culture synchronous with the northern Neolithic, 125;
- (lower) earliest fixed date of, 125;
- fellaheen of, 15;
- freedmen of, 16;
- Hellenized, 220;
- invaded by Libyans, 223;
- iron in, 129;
- Macedonian dynasties of, 162;
- Mediterranean race in, 148;
- monuments in, 155;
- national revival of, 58;
- Nordics in, 223.
-
- Egyptians, 15, 63;
- ancient, 152;
- language of, 233.
-
- Elam, 147.
-
- Elimination of the weak and unfit, 49–54.
-
- Eneolithic Period, 121, 128, 132.
-
- Energy of the Nordics, 215.
-
- England, 10, 21, 26, 56, 62, 185–186;
- Alpines in, 137;
- Angles in, 200;
- blond elements in, 63;
- bronze introduced into, 128;
- Brythons in, 175;
- cephalic index in, 137, 138;
- conquered by the Danes, 69, 201;
- by the Normans, 69, 206–207;
- by the Norsemen, 69;
- by the Saxons, 69;
- blonds mixed with brunets in, 202;
- deterioration of, 209;
- economic change in, 43, 209;
- ethnic elements in, 201–210;
- Goidelic elements in, 201;
- Goidelic speech in, 200;
- Iberian substratum in, 201;
- iron in, 129–131;
- land connection of with Ireland and France, 128, 199;
- loss of Nordics in, 168, 191;
- Mediterranean race in, 26, 83, 150, 153, 155, 203, 208–210;
- megaliths in, 155;
- nobility in, 191;
- Nordic race in, 26, 188, 199–210;
- decline of Nordic element in, 190, 191, 208–210;
- Norman type in, 206–208, 252;
- physical types in, 249;
- Post-Roman invaders of, 73;
- race elements in, 64, 249;
- Round Barrow men of, 137–138;
- Saxon invasion of, 200–201;
- Saxon speech of, 69;
- severed from France and Ireland, 128;
- stone weapons in, 120–121;
- in world war, 191, 198.
-
- English, the, 61, 67;
- brunet, 149–150;
- borderers, 40;
- characters, 26, 29, 64;
- in the Bahamas, 40;
- in New York, 80;
- in South Africa, 80;
- modern, 67;
- Norman type among, 207;
- Round Barrow survivals among, 164;
- typical hair shade of, 26.
-
- English Channel, 199.
-
- English language, 61;
- a world language, 80, 204.
-
- English race related to the Frisians, 73.
-
- Environment, 4, 16, 19, 28, 38–39, 98–99;
- effects of, 262.
-
- _Eoanthropus_, 105–106.
-
- Eolithic culture, 103;
- man, 97–103;
- Period, 102–103, 105, 132.
-
- Eoliths, 102–103.
-
- Ephtalites, 254.
-
- Epirus, 164.
-
- Erse language, 247.
-
- Esquimaux, and Cro-Magnons, 110, 112, 225.
-
- Esthonians, 234;
- language of, 234, 236, 243;
- immigration of, 236.
-
- Esths, 236, 243.
-
- Eternal City, 153.
-
- Ethiopia, 151.
-
- Ethiopian Negro, 24, 151.
-
- Etruria, 153, 165;
- ancient civilization of, 153;
- struggles of with the Latins, 154;
- empire of, 165.
-
- Etruscans, 154, 157, 244;
- language of, 234, 244;
- empire of, 157;
- power of destroyed, 157;
- learn Aryan, 244.
-
- Eugenics, ideal in, 48.
-
- Eurasia, 100, 202.
-
- Europe, 20, 21, 24, 27, 30, 44, 56, 60, 62, 63, 68;
- abandoned to invaders, 179;
- Alpines in, 117;
- Anaryan survivals in, 234–235;
- brain capacity of, 53;
- Cro-Magnons in, 108, 115;
- dolichocephalic, 116;
- early man in, 102;
- glaciation in, 101–102;
- not the home of the Alpines, 43;
- nor of the Slavs, 65;
- German types in, 73;
- iron in, 129–131;
- (mediæval), 10, 52, 59;
- megaliths in, 155;
- Mongols in, 65;
- Nordic aristocracy in, 188;
- _see also_ Aristocracy;
- Nordics in, 188;
- peninsula of Asia or Eurasia, 100;
- Pre-Aryan speech in, 235;
- Teutonic, 179–187;
- Turkish language in, 237;
- (western) introduction of Aryan speech into, 234.
-
- Europe (Paleolithic), 23.
-
- European culture, derivation of, 164.
-
- European man, 25,000 years ago, 109.
-
- European races, 18–21, 24, 28–30, 32, 33, 35, 60, 66, 131;
- natural habitat of, 37;
- physical characters of, 21, 31, 34;
- present distribution of, 272–273.
-
- European wars and Nordics, 73, 74;
- causes of, 56.
-
- Europeans, in Brazil, 78;
- modern, cranial capacity of, 109.
-
- Euskarian language; _see also_ Basque, 140, 235.
-
- Euskarians (Basques), 234.
-
- Eye color, 13, 24, 25, 35, 135, 168, 175.
-
-
- Farms, immigrants on, 209;
- nurseries of nations, 209.
-
- Fellaheen, 152.
-
- Fen districts, Mediterraneans in, 153.
-
- Ferdinand of Hapsburg, 187.
-
- Fertility and infertility of races, 22.
-
- Feudalism, 228.
-
- Finland, 59, 236;
- Alpines in, 211;
- colonized by Sweden, 211;
- conquered by the Varangians, 177.
-
- Finlanders, language of, 234, 236, 243.
-
- Finnic dialects, 234.
-
- Finns, 58, 243;
- round skulled, invasion of, 236.
-
- Firbolgs, 108, 203.
-
- Flanders, 182;
- Nordics in, 188, 210, 231.
-
- Flemings, 57, 61, 195, 210;
- language of, 195;
- descended from the Franks, 210.
-
- Flints, chipped, 102–104, 113, 119–121;
- polished, 119–120.
-
- Foot, as a race character, 31.
-
- Forests, 124.
-
- Forty-Niners, 75.
-
- France, 23, 56, 60, 63;
- and the church, 181;
- and the Huguenots, 53;
- Alpines in, 138, 140, 142, 194;
- Aryan language in, 234;
- Athenian versatility of, 161;
- Basques in, 140;
- Bronze Age in, 129, 131;
- Brythonic language in, 248;
- caverns in, 112;
- Celtic language in, 194, 248–251;
- connection of by land with Britain, 199;
- cephalic index in, 197;
- conquered by Gauls, 173;
- Cro-Magnon race in, 110;
- Cymry or Belgæ in, 175, 251;
- decline of international power in, 197;
- first Alpines in, 116;
- Hallstatt relics in, 131;
- in Cæsar’s time, 194–195;
- invasion of by Gauls, 199;
- loss through war, 197;
- Mediterraneans in, 149, 156, 194;
- megaliths in, 129;
- mercenaries in, 135;
- Nordic aristocracy in, 140;
- Nordics in, 188, 231;
- Normans in, 201;
- Paleolithic,
- remnants in, 110;
- racial composition of, 194;
- religious wars of, 185, 196;
- Saxons in, 201;
- severed from England, 128;
- stature in, 198;
- Tardenoisian Period of, 115;
- variation of physical characters in, 23.
-
- Francis I, 183.
-
- Franco-Prussian War, 198.
-
- Frankish aristocracy, 196;
- dynasties, 195;
- kingdom, 196.
-
- Franks, 67, 70, 145, 177, 181, 251;
- founders of France, 195;
- in Belgium, 195;
- in Gaul, 206;
- conquer the Lombards, 181;
- conversion of, 181;
- control western Christendom, 181;
- defeat the Moslems, 181;
- kingdom of, 180–196.
-
- French, 67;
- stature of, 197–198;
- conscripts, 198;
- language, 244;
- Revolution, 6.
-
- French Canadians, 11, 58.
-
- Frisia, 73.
-
- Frisian coast, 210;
- dialect (Taal), South Africa, 80.
-
- Frisians, 177;
- Nordic character of, 73.
-
- Friulian language, 244.
-
- Frontiersmen of America, 45, 74–75, 85.
-
- Furfooz-Grenelle race, 116, 132, 136, 138.
-
- “Furor Normanorum,” 130.
-
-
- Gaelic, 247, 249.
-
- Galatia, 158, 225.
-
- Galatians, 158;
- physical character of, 175.
-
- Galicia, 245;
- Nordics in, 156.
-
- Gallicia, Slavs in, 143.
-
- Gaul, 60, 131;
- Cisalpine Gaul, 157;
- Roman Gaul, 69;
- Alpines in, 124, 240;
- Belgæ in, 251;
- Burgundians in, 180;
- Celtic speech in, 250;
- conquered by the Goths and Franks, 251;
- Franks in, 206;
- Goidels in, 248;
- languages in, 69–70;
- Latinized, 194;
- Latin speech in, 251;
- Mediterraneans in, 123;
- Nordics in, 193–194;
- Nordics or Celts cross into, 173, 194;
- Teutonic speech in, 251;
- Visigoths in, 180.
-
- Gauls, 68, 131, 145, 156, 189, 194;
- ancient, 229;
- conquer France, 174;
- enter Spain, 174, 192;
- in Asia Minor, 158;
- in the Crimea, 174;
- in France, 199;
- in Galatia, 225;
- in Greece, 158;
- in Italy, 157, 174, 225;
- in south Russia, 174;
- in Thrace, 225;
- mixed with Alpines, 247;
- mixed with Mediterraneans, 192, 247;
- physical characters of, 175;
- as a ruling class, 247.
-
- Genius and leaders, 98;
- and education or environment versus race, 98;
- in Greece, 109;
- in various states, 99;
- genius producing type and rate of increase, 51, 99.
-
- Georgia, 39, 99.
-
- Georgians, 237.
-
- Gepidæ, 177.
-
- German, Emperor, 182–183;
- Empire, 184;
- immigrants to America, 84, 86, 87, 184;
- in the Civil War, 87;
- in Brazil, 78;
- language, 61, 182, 188–189;
- Revolution, of 1848, 87;
- type, 73.
-
- Germans, 61, 67;
- Austrian Germans, 145;
- defeat Mongols, 260;
- descendants of Wends, 72;
- immediate forerunners of, 194;
- in America, 84;
- in Brazil, 78;
- in Civil War, 87;
- of the Palatinate, 84;
- Russification of, 58;
- stature of, 154.
-
- Germany, 65, 72, 200;
- Alpines in, 64, 72, 73, 124, 135, 141–142, 184–187, 189, 232;
- Celts in, 173–174, 248;
- change of race in, 141–142, 184–185;
- Christian overlordship of, 183;
- early Nordics in, 124, 131;
- gentry of, 185, 198;
- Goidels in, 247–248;
- imperial idea in, 187;
- loss of population of during Thirty Years’ War, 183;
- Mediterraneans in, 123;
- in Middle Ages, 183;
- modern population of, 186, 231–232;
- nobility of, 185;
- Nordics in, 73, 124, 131, 141–142, 170, 174, 184, 187–188, 210, 213,
- 231;
- peasantry (Alpine) in, 185;
- race consciousness of, 57;
- race mixture in, 135;
- racial composition of, 72, 73, 184;
- Slavic substratum in, 72, 131, 141–142;
- Teutons in, 72, 73, 184–189;
- Thirty Years’ War, effect of, 183–187, 198;
- unified, 56–57, 186;
- Wends in, 236;
- women of, 228;
- in world war, 186–187, 231.
-
- Ghalcha, 255, 259.
-
- Ghalchic, 261.
-
- Ghettos, 209.
-
- Gizeh round skulls, 127.
-
- Glacial stages, 101, 105–106, 133.
-
- Glaciation, 100–106, 132.
-
- Goidelic dialects, 200–201, 248;
- elements in Scotland, 203;
- language, Anaryan syntax in, 204;
- in Wales, 205;
- older in central Europe, 248.
-
- Goidels, 131, 173–174, 194–195, 200, 247, 269, 271;
- crossed with Mediterraneans, 248–249;
- invade Britain, 199;
- late wave of from Ireland to Scotland, 250;
- a ruling class, 247.
-
- Gold, 125.
-
- Gothic language in Spain, 156.
-
- Goths, 66, 73, 142, 145, 176–177, 180–181, 189, 192, 206, 211, 251,
- 270;
- early home of, 176;
- in Italy, 157.
-
- Græculus, 163.
-
- Greece, 59;
- ancient, absence of Dinaric type in, 164;
- ancient civilization of, 153;
- classic period of, 99, 160–161;
- conquered by Achæans, 158;
- culture of, contrasted with that of the Persians, 255;
- dark period of, 99;
- Dorian invasion of 99, 159;
- Homeric, 163–164;
- Homeric-Mycenæan culture of, 99;
- Mediterranean substratum in, 152;
- modern, 161–164;
- Hellenes in, 162;
- Mycenæan culture of, 164;
- Nordics in, 159–160, 173, 214;
- Pelasgians in, 158;
- race mixture in, 161;
- war of with Persia, 255.
-
- Greek language, 179;
- origin of, 243.
-
- Greek states, 162.
-
- Greeks, in Asia Minor, 160.
- ancient, cranial capacity of, 109;
- brunets among, 159, 163;
- blonds among, 159, 163;
- genius of, 109;
- language of, 158;
- Mediterraneans, 153, 158
- classic, 161, 256;
- blondness of, 159, 163;
- brunets among, 160–161;
- character of, 154, 160;
- language of, 161;
- Nordic type of, 162;
- physical character of, 163;
- race mixture among, 160–161
- modern, 68;
- Alpines among, 65;
- language of, 163;
- physical character of, 162–163.
-
- Greenland, 211.
-
- Gregory, Pope, 230.
-
- Grenelle race, 116, 132, 136, 138, 267.
-
- Gulf States, Negroes in, 76.
-
- Günz glaciation, 101, 132.
-
- Günz-Mindel glaciation, 132.
-
- Gustavus Adolphus, 210.
-
-
- Hair, of the head, 33;
- character of, 33–34.
-
- Hair color, 13, 24, 25, 28, 32, 35, 135, 168, 175.
-
- Hairiness, 31, 168;
- of the Ainus, 224;
- of the Australoids, 224;
- of the Scandinavians, 224.
-
- Haiti, 76, 77.
-
- Hallstatt iron culture, 129, 130–132.
-
- Hamitic peoples, 152;
- speech, 140.
-
- Hannibal, 217.
-
- Hanover, 73.
-
- Hapsburg, House of, 183;
- Ferdinand of, 187.
-
- Harold, King of England, 120.
-
- Hebrew chronology, 4.
-
- Heidelberg jaw, 102;
- man, 106, 118, 133.
-
- Hellas, ancient civilization of, 153, 160, 215;
- conquered by Macedon, 161–162.
-
- Hellenes, 68, 158–163, 215, 243;
- language of, 233–234.
-
- Hellenic colonies, 165;
- language, 233–234;
- states, 165.
-
- Henry VIII, 183.
-
- Henry the Fowler, 142.
-
- Heredity, 4, 13 _et seq._;
- in relation to environment, 16;
- unalterable, 16–19.
-
- Heroes, blondness of, 159, 229.
-
- Heruli, 177.
-
- Hidalgo, meaning of the term, 192.
-
- High German, and Teutonized Alpines, 189;
- and Celtic elements, 189;
- High German people, 73;
- High and Low German, 258.
-
- Highlanders, Scottish, 62.
-
- Highlands, Goidelic speech in, 250;
- language of, 247.
-
- Himalayas, western, 22;
- Alpines in, 134.
-
- Hindu Kush, 20, 256;
- Alpines in, 134.
-
- Hindus, 18, 21, 70, 159, 216;
- Aryan speech of, 67;
- languages of, 148, 216, 257.
-
- Hindustan, 67, 70, 148–149, 255;
- Mediterraneans in, 149;
- Nordic invaders of, 67, 70;
- physical types of, 257;
- whites in, 78.
-
- Hittite empire, 256;
- language, 239.
-
- Hittites, ancestors of the Armenians, 239;
- and iron, 129.
-
- Hiung-Nu, 224.
-
- Hohenstaufen emperors, 186.
-
- Holland, 26, 73, 182, 210;
- Alpines in, 136;
- bronze in, 127;
- Nordics in, 188, 210.
-
- Hollanders, related to Anglo-Saxons of England, 80.
-
- Holstein, 73.
-
- Holy Roman Empire, 182, 184.
-
- Homer, 159, 189.
-
- Homeric-Mycenæan civilization, 159.
-
- _Homo_, 32, 33, 167;
- _eoanthropus_, 105–106;
- _europæus_, 167;
- _heidelbergensis_, 102, 106, 118;
- _pithecanthropus_, 101.
-
- Horse, 112.
-
- “House of Refuge,” 115.
-
- Hudson Bay Company, 9.
-
- Huguenots, exterminated in France, 53;
- in exile, 53;
- in America, 84.
-
- Humboldt, skull of, 226.
-
- Hungarian nation, 59.
-
- Hungarians, 143;
- modern, 145.
-
- Hungary, 144;
- Alpines and Nordics in, 210;
- early Nordics in, 131;
- independent, 59;
- languages in, 236;
- Saxons in, 201;
- Slavs in, 131.
-
- Huns, 176.
-
- Hunting, 113, 122.
-
- Hybridism, 14, 17, 18, 60, 188.
-
-
- Iberian language, 194, 235.
-
- Iberian Peninsula, Aryan language in, 192;
- Mediterraneans in, 152, 156;
- states, 60.
-
- Iberian subspecies, 20, 148 (_see_ Mediterranean race);
- as substratum in British Isles, 249;
- in England, 201;
- in Ireland, 201.
-
- Iberian type or race, 148, 202 (_see_ Mediterranean race);
- resurgence of, in Scotland, 249.
-
- Iberians, 68, 156, 193, 201, 249.
-
- Iceland, 211.
-
- Illyria, stature in, 190.
-
- Illyrian language, 164;
- origin of, 243.
-
- Illyrians, mixed with Slavs, 153, 190.
-
- Immigrants, 71, 74, 84, 100, 218;
- Americanization of, 90–91;
- and American institutions and environment, 90;
- in America, 11, 12, 84, 86–92, 209, 211, 218;
- German and Irish, 84, 86, 87;
- large families among, 47;
- Norwegian, 211;
- Scandinavian, 211;
- skulls of, 17;
- Teutonic and Nordic types of, 184.
-
- Immigration, and decline of American birth rate, 91;
- German, in Brazil, 78;
- Italian, in Brazil, 78;
- Japanese and Chinese, 79;
- result of, in the United States, 11, 12, 89–94.
-
- Immigration Commission, Congressional, report of, 17.
-
- Immutability of characters, 15, 18.
-
- Imperial idea, 182;
- of Germany, 187.
-
- Implements, bronze, 121, 122;
- copper, 125;
- flint, 103–104;
- wide diffusion of, 128.
-
- Incineration, 128.
-
- Increase of native Americans, 88, 89;
- and immigration, 89.
-
- India, 22, 33, 66, 78, 119, 171, 241, 261;
- Aryan languages in, 173, 216, 237, 257–261;
- conquering classes in, 70, 71;
- Dravidians in, 148;
- fossil deposits in, 101;
- Mediterraneans in, 150–151, 261;
- Negroids in, 149;
- Nordics in, 257;
- physical types of, 257;
- Pre-Dravidians in, 149;
- prehistoric remains in, 101;
- race mixture in, 150;
- Sacæ in, 257–258;
- Sanskrit introduced into, 216;
- selection in, 150;
- whites in, 78.
-
- Indian languages, 173, 216, 237, 257–261.
-
- Indians, 9, 18, 23, 33, 55, 65, 76, 77, 85, 87.
-
- Individualism, 12.
-
- Indo-European race, 3, 66;
- Indo-Germanic race, 3, 66;
- Indo-Iranian group of Aryan languages, 261.
-
- Inequality, law of nature, 79.
-
- Inheritance of genius, 15, 18, 98.
-
- Inhumation, 128.
-
- Inquisition, in selection, 53.
-
- Instep, as race character, 31.
-
- Intellect, privilege of, 6.
-
- Interglacial periods, 102, 104, 105, 133.
-
- Invaded countries, effect on language and population in, 70–73.
-
- Ionia, Pelasgians in, 160.
-
- Ionian language, 163–164, 243.
-
- Ionians, 159.
-
- Iran, Alpines in, 134, 261.
-
- Iranian, division of Aryan languages, 255, 259, 261;
- plateaux, 116, 238.
-
- Ireland, 59;
- Alpines in, 128;
- blond elements in, 63, 201;
- Celtic language in, 247;
- connection of, by land, with Britain, 199;
- Danes in, 201;
- Erse language in, 247;
- Goidelic element in, 201;
- Goidelic invasion of, 199, 200;
- Goidelic speech in, 200;
- Goidels leave Ireland for Scotland, 250;
- Iberian substratum in, 201;
- Mediterraneans in, 203;
- Nordics in, 201;
- Paleolithic man in, 202–203;
- Paleolithic remnants in, 108;
- religion in, 203;
- severed from England, 128.
-
- Irish, 29, 58;
- immigrants, 11, 86, 87;
- instability and versatility of, 229;
- intellectual inferiority of, 203;
- Neanderthal type of, 108;
- race elements in, 63, 64, 175, 201–203, 229;
- red hair of, 175;
- stature of, 29.
-
- Irish Canadians, 11;
- Irish Catholic immigrants to America, 84, 86, 87;
- Irish coasts, Norse language on, 249–250;
- Irish immigrants in the Civil War, 87;
- Irish language, Pre-Aryan syntax of, 204, 249;
- Irish national movement, 58, 64;
- Irish recruits, pigmentation of, 202;
- Irish type, 202.
-
- Iron, 123, 124, 129, 132;
- discovery and effect of, 129;
- fabulous value of, 126;
- first appearance of, 121;
- in Asia Minor, 129;
- in eastern Europe, 129;
- in Egypt, 129;
- in western Europe, 130;
- weapons, 126, 159, 200.
-
- Iroquois, 85.
-
- Islam, 59.
-
- Isle of Man, language of, 247.
-
- Italia Irredenta Movement, 58.
-
- Italians, 68, 91;
- decline of, 217;
- descended from slaves, 216;
- loss in war, 216;
- (south) immigrants in Brazil, 78;
- (south) mixture of, 71;
- related to the Berbers, 152.
-
- Italy, 29, 120;
- Alpines in, 64, 127, 139–140, 157;
- and the Huguenots, 53;
- bronze in, 127;
- introduction of, from Crete, 128;
- Eneolithic Period in, 121, 128;
- Gauls in, 174, 225;
- Goths in, 157;
- Lake dwellings in, 139;
- languages in, 234, 244;
- Lombards in, 157, 180;
- Mediterraneans in, 29, 123, 152, 157–158;
- mercenaries in, 135;
- Mycenæan culture in, 164;
- Nordics in, 42, 145, 157, 173, 174, 180, 189, 215, 220–221, 269–271;
- Ostrogoths in, 180;
- races in the north, 157, 189;
- races in the south, 158;
- Terramara Period in, 122;
- Teutons in, 176, 180;
- slaves in, 218;
- Saxons in, 201;
- Umbrians and Oscans in, 173;
- under Austria, 183;
- unification of, 56, 57.
-
- Ivory carving, 112.
-
-
- Jamaica, population of, 76.
-
- Japan, Ainus of, 224.
-
- Japanese, 11;
- in California and Australia, 79.
-
- Java, connection of with mainland, 101;
- prehistoric remains in, 101.
-
- Jews, 16–18, 82, 91, 227.
-
- Jutes, 177.
-
- Jutland, 200.
-
-
- Kalmucks, 144.
-
- Kassites, 214, 239;
- language of, 239;
- Aryan names among, 253.
-
- Kentish dialect, related to Frisian and Taal, 80.
-
- Kentucky, 39, 40.
-
- Kiptchak, 254.
-
- Kirghizes, 259.
-
- Kitchen Middens, 123.
-
- Kurd, 100.
-
- Kurdish dialect, 255.
-
- Kurgans, Russian, 265.
-
-
- Lacedæmonian power, 160.
-
- Ladin language, 244.
-
- Lake Dwellers, 121, 123, 139;
- physical characters of, 139.
-
- Lake Dwellings, 132;
- bronze in, 127.
-
- Languages, 3, 4, 233–263;
- and nationality, 56–57;
- changes in, 249–252;
- through superposition, 204;
- in invaded countries, 70;
- a measure of culture, 240;
- nationalities founded on, 56, 57;
- no indication of race, 60–68.
- _See also under_ various languages.
-
- Languedoc, Mediterraneans in, 156;
- Nordics in, 180.
-
- Langue d’oïl, 140, 180, 244.
-
- Lapps, language of, 234, 236.
-
- La Tène culture, 131;
- Period, 130–132, 266.
-
- Latifundia, 218.
-
- “Latin America,” 61.
-
- Latin language, 69;
- ancestral forms of, 234;
- derivation of, 244;
- descendants of, 244;
- in Gaul, 182, 251;
- in Normandy, 251;
- in Spain, 156;
- limiting Western Roman Empire on the east, 179;
- Teutons adopt it in Artois and Picardy, 210;
- Vlachs in Thrace adopt it, 246;
- Latin nations, 61;
- race, 3, 61, 76, 154;
- stock, 61;
- type, 76.
-
- Latins, struggle of with Etruria, 154.
-
- Leaders and genius, 98.
-
- Legendary characters and physical types, 229–230.
-
- Leonardo da Vinci, 215.
-
- Lettish language, 212, 242.
-
- Levant, Hellenization of, 162, 220.
-
- Libya, 152.
-
- Libyans, blondness of, 223;
- invade Egypt, 223.
-
- Liguria, Mediterraneans in, 152, 157.
-
- Ligurian language, 140, 234.
-
- Lips, as race character, 31.
-
- Literary characters and physical types, 229–230.
-
- Lithuanian language, 212, 242.
-
- “Litus Saxonicum,” 252.
-
- Livonian language, 236.
-
- Livonians, or Livs, 236.
-
- Lombards, 73, 142, 145, 177, 271;
- in Italy, 157, 180;
- overthrow of, by Franks, 181, 191.
-
- Lombardy, 25, 35, 183;
- Nordics in, 189, 221.
-
- London, 29, 153.
-
- Long skulls in India, 261.
-
- Lorraine, 182;
- Alpines in, 140.
-
- Low Countries and the Huguenots, 53.
-
- Low German language, 258;
- and the Nordics, 188–189.
-
- Low German people, 73.
-
- Lower Paleolithic, 104–106, 132.
-
- Loyalists, 6.
-
- Lusitania (Portugal), occupied by the Suevi, 180.
-
- Luxemburg, 183.
-
-
- Macedon, 161–162.
-
- Macedonian dynasties, 162.
-
- Macedonians, mixed with Asiatics, 161–162.
-
- Magdalenian bow, 112–113;
- Period, 105, 111, 112, 114, 115, 132;
- art, 114.
-
- Magi, 254.
-
- Maglemose culture, 117, 123, 132, 169, 265.
-
- Magna Græcia, 158.
-
- Magyar language, 236, 244.
-
- Magyars, 143, 144.
-
- Malay Peninsula, Negroids in, 149.
-
- Male, as indicating the trend of the race, 27.
-
- Man, ancestry of, 104–118;
- arboreal, 101;
- ascent of, 97–98;
- classification of, 32;
- definition of, 104;
- earliest skeletal evidence of, in Europe, 101, 102;
- evolution of, 101;
- phases of development of, 101–103;
- place of origin, 100;
- predisposition to mismate, 22;
- race, language, and nationality of, 3, 4;
- three distinct subspecies of, in Europe, 19–22.
-
- Manx language, 247.
-
- Marcomanni, 177.
-
- Maritime architecture, 165, 199.
-
- Marius, 177, 217.
-
- Marriages between contrasted races, 60.
-
- Mas d’Azil, 115, 265.
-
- Massachusetts, genius produced in, 99.
-
- Massagetæ (_see_ Sacæ), 214, 254, 257, 270;
- physical characters of, 259.
-
- _Massif_ Central, 141.
-
- Medes, 173, 216, 254;
- Nordics in the Empire of, 254.
-
- Media, 147;
- language of, 239;
- introduction of Aryan language into, 254;
- Nordics in, 173.
-
- Mediæval Europe, 10, 52, 179–188.
- _See also_ Middle Ages.
-
- Medic language (_see_ Media, also Zendic language), 255.
-
- Mediterranean basin, 89, 111, 123;
- immigrants from to America, 89.
-
- Mediterranean race, or subspecies, 20, 21, 23, 24, 26, 29, 31, 34, 66,
- 68, 69, 111, 134, 145, 148–167, 226;
- and Alpine race, 146, 181;
- and ancient civilization, 153, 214–215;
- and Aryan speech, 155, 233, 235, 237–238, 257;
- and Celtic language, 247–251;
- and Gauls, 156;
- and Negroes, 151;
- and Negritos, 151;
- and synthetic languages, 237;
- as sailors, 227–228;
- classic civilization due to, 153, 165–166;
- Celticized, 248;
- crossed with Goidels, 248;
- description of, 20, 148;
- distribution of, 148–149, 241;
- distribution in the Neolithic, 123, 148–149;
- in the Paleolithic, 147;
- to-day, 20, 148 _seq._, 152, 167, 273;
- habitat of, 44, 45;
- hair of, 20, 26, 31, 34;
- expansion of, 266;
- eye color of, 20;
- forerunners of, 117;
- handsomest types of, 158;
- _in_ Afghanistan, 148;
- Africa, 148, 151–152, 155;
- Algeria, 44;
- America, 44, 45;
- Arabia, 153;
- Argentine, 78;
- Asia, 148–150, 257;
- Azilian Period, 117;
- Baluchistan, 148;
- Britain (_see also_ British Isles and England), 123, 149, 247–249;
- British Isles, 137, 149–153, 177 (Pre-Nordic), 153, 198–199, 247;
- Bronze Age, 128, 155;
- Eastern Bulgaria, 145;
- Canada, 44;
- Ceylon, 148;
- cities, 94, 209;
- north and western Europe, 149, 155;
- Egypt, 148;
- England, or the British Isles, 64, 83, 123, 127, 137, 149, 150, 153,
- 208–210, 249;
- France, 44, 149, 156, 194, 197;
- Greece, 158–161;
- Iberian Peninsula, 152, 156;
- India, 66, 148, 150, 257, 261;
- Italy, 122, 127, 157, 158;
- Languedoc, 156;
- Liguria, 152, 157;
- Morocco, 148;
- Nile Valley, 151;
- Paleolithic Period, 149;
- Persia, 66, 148;
- Po Valley, 157;
- Provence, 156;
- Rome, 153–154;
- Sahara, 151;
- Scotland, 150, 153, 203–204;
- Senegambian regions, 151;
- in Sicily, 158;
- in South America, 78;
- in Spain, 149, 151, 155–156, 192;
- in the Terramara Period, 122;
- in Wales, 62, 63, 153, 177, 203, 205;
- increasing in America, 45;
- language of, 155–158, 233;
- (in Spain, Italy, and France, 238);
- knowledge of metallurgy, 146;
- mental characteristics of, 229;
- mixed with Celts, 177;
- with Dravidians, 150;
- with Gauls, 192;
- with Negroids, 150, 241;
- with Nordics, 161;
- with other ethnic elements, 149–166;
- never in Scandinavia, 150–151;
- not in the Alps, 149, 151;
- not purely European, 155, 241;
- origin of, 241;
- original language of, 235;
- physical characters of, 34, 117, 134, 148;
- racial aptitudes of, 228–229;
- rise of, in Europe, 190;
- route of migration of, 155;
- resurgence of, 190, 196;
- in England, 83, 208;
- skulls of, 20, 24, 117, 134;
- stature of, 20, 29;
- underlying the Alpines and Nordics in western Europe, 150;
- victims of tuberculosis, 45;
- yielding to the Alpines at the present time, 177;
- Proto-Mediterraneans, 132, 149, 150.
-
- Mediterranean Sea, 71, 89, 111, 117, 123, 148, 155, 165, 179.
-
- Megalithic monuments, 128–129;
- distribution of, 155, 265.
-
- Melanesians, 33.
-
- Melting Pot, 16, 263.
-
- Mendelian characters, 13.
-
- Mercenaries, 135, 216.
-
- Mesaticephaly, 19.
-
- Mesopotamia, 147, 239;
- chronicles of, 253;
- city-states of, 119;
- copper in, 125;
- culture synchronous with the northern Neolithic, 125;
- earliest fixed date of, 126.
-
- Messapian language, 234.
-
- Messina, Pelasgians in, 160.
-
- Mesvinian river terraces, 133.
-
- Metallurgy, 120, 122, 123, 125–132, 146, 238–240, 267.
-
- Metals, 120–132.
-
- Mexican War, 86.
-
- Mexico, 17, 76;
- peons of, 9.
-
- Michael Angelo, 215.
-
- Microliths, 113.
-
- Middle Ages, 65, 135, 156, 183, 185, 189, 197, 202, 227;
- civilization of, 165;
- elimination of good strains of, 52–53.
-
- Middle Paleolithic Period, 104, 106, 132.
-
- Middle West, settlement of by poor whites, 40.
-
- Migrating types, 10, 208.
-
- Mikklegard, 179.
-
- Mindel glaciation, 133.
-
- Mindel-Riss Interglacial stage, 102, 133.
-
- Minoan culture of Crete, 99, 164;
- Minoan Empire, 164.
-
- Miocene Period, 101–102.
-
- Miscegenation, 60.
-
- Mississippi, 99;
- black belt of, 76.
-
- Missouri, 40;
- river, 40.
-
- Mitanni, 214;
- Aryan names among, 253;
- Empire of, 239.
-
- Mixture of races, 18, 34, 60;
- _see also_ race mixture.
-
- Mohammedan invasion of Europe, 181.
-
- Moldavia, Vlachs in, 246.
-
- Mongolian elements in Europe, 139.
-
- Mongolians, _see_ Mongols.
-
- Mongoloid race, 33, 144, 237;
- hair of, 34;
- invasions of Europe by, 65, 259–260, 272.
-
- Mongols, 31, 33, 34, 65, 134, 139, 144, 224, 241, 260;
- crossed with Ainus, 225;
- crossed with Esquimaux, 225;
- in Russia, 65.
-
- Monosyllabic languages, 240.
-
- Moors, in Spain, 156, 181, 192.
-
- Moral, intellectual and physical characters, race differences in, 226
- _et seq._
-
- Mordvins, 144.
-
- Morocco, bronze in, 128;
- Mediterranean race in, 148.
-
- Mosaics, 13.
-
- Moscovy, 212.
-
- Moslems in Europe, 181.
-
- Mound burials, 129.
-
- Mousterian Period, 104, 106–107, 132.
-
- Muscovite expansion in Europe, 65.
-
- Mycenæ, ancient civilization of, 153.
-
- Mycenæan civilization, 159, 161, 164;
- culture, of Crete, 164;
- of Greece, 99;
- of Sardinia, 164.
-
- Myrmidons, 159.
-
-
- Napoleon, 186.
-
- Napoleonic Wars, 197.
-
- National consciousness of Americans, 90.
-
- National movements, 57, 58;
- types, absorption of higher by lower, 58, 59.
-
- Nationalities, formed around language and religion, 57, 58.
-
- Nationality, 3, 4;
- artificial grouping, 56;
- and language, 56–68.
-
- Navigation, development of, 165, 199.
-
- Neanderthal man, 15, 104–107, 111, 114, 118, 132;
- habits of, 107;
- race characters of, 107;
- remnants or survivals of, 15, 107–108;
- skull of, 15, 107–108.
-
- Neanderthaloids, 106–107;
- remnants of, 114.
-
- Negritos, and Mediterraneans, 151;
- as substratum in southern Asia, 148–149.
-
- Negroes, 16, 18, 23, 24, 31, 33, 34, 40, 65, 76, 80, 88, 152;
- African, 80;
- American, provenience of, 82;
- and genius, 109;
- and the Mediterranean race, 151–152;
- and socialism, 87;
- citizenship of, 218;
- hair of, 34;
- _in_ Africa, 23, 24, 33, 79, 80;
- America, 82;
- Brazil, 78;
- Haiti, 76, 77;
- Mexico, 76;
- New England, 86;
- South America, 76, 78;
- Southern States, 42;
- United States, 16, 40, 65, 76, 82, 85–87, 99;
- West Indies, 76;
- Nordic blood in, 82;
- rapid multiplication of, 79;
- replacing whites in the South, 76–78;
- a servient race, 87, 88;
- stationary character of their development, 77.
-
- Negroids, 33, 111, 149;
- crossed with Mediterraneans, 150, 241, 257;
- hair of, 34;
- (in India) physical character of, 261.
-
- Neo-Celtic languages, 248.
-
- Neo-Latin, 250.
-
- Neolithic (New Stone Age), 29, 105, 136, 139, 148, 157, 169, 199, 205,
- 213–214, 248;
- Beaker Makers in, 138;
- beginning of, 118–122;
- duration of, 121;
- distribution of races during, 123–124;
- in western Europe, 121;
- northern Neolithic contemporary with southern Bronze, 129;
- Pre-Neolithic, 117, 207;
- Upper or Late Neolithic, 121, 132;
- and writing, 115.
-
- Neolithic ancestors of the Proto-Mediterraneans, 149;
- invasion of the Alpines, 138.
-
- Nero, 217.
-
- New England, 11, 38, 41, 55;
- immigrants in, 11, 72;
- lack of race consciousness in, 86;
- Negro in, 86;
- Nordic in Colonial times, 83;
- race mixture in, 72;
- settlers of, 83.
-
- New England type, 83.
-
- New France, Catholic colonies in, 85.
-
- New Spain, Catholic colonies in, 85.
-
- New Stone Age, 119;
- _see_ Neolithic.
-
- New York, 5, 41, 80;
- immigrants in, 91, 92.
-
- New Zealand, whites in, 79.
-
- Nile river, 80;
- Nile valley, Mediterraneans in, 151.
-
- Nobility (French), Oriental and Mediterranean strains in, 197.
-
- Nomads, 10, 209, 258, 259;
- _see also_ migratory types.
-
- Non-Aryan, 204.
- _See_ Anaryan.
-
- Nordic aristocracy, 213;
- _see also_ aristocracy;
- _in_ Austria, 141;
- Britain, 247;
- eastern Germany, 141;
- France, 140, 196–197;
- Gaul, 247;
- Germany, 187;
- Greece, 153;
- Italy, 215;
- Lombardy, 189;
- Persia, 254;
- Rome, 154;
- Russia, 142;
- Spain, 192, 247;
- southern Europe, 188;
- Venice, 189;
- loss of through war, 191.
-
- Nordic broodland, 141, 213 _et seq._;
- Nordic conquerors of India, 71, 216;
- fatherland, 213–222;
- immigrants to America, 211;
- invaders of Italy, 215;
- invasions of Asia, 257–259;
- nations, 142.
-
- Nordic race, or subspecies, 20, 24, 31, 61, 131, 133, 149, 151,
- 167–178;
- adventurers, pioneers and sailors, 74;
- affected by the actinic rays, 84;
- allied to the Mediterraneans, 24;
- depleted by war, 73–74;
- a European type, 167;
- in the Great War, 168;
- habitat of, 37–38;
- hair of, 34;
- in Italy, 42;
- in the subtropics and elsewhere outside of its native habitat, 41–42;
- location of, in Roman times, 131;
- mixed with Alpines, 25, 35–36, 135–136;
- mixed with other types in the United States, 82–94;
- passing of, 168;
- physical character of, 20, 26, 27, 29, 31, 32, 167–168;
- at the present time, 168;
- racial aptitudes of, 226–228;
- red-haired branch of, 32.
-
- Nordic stature, 29.
-
- Nordic substratum in eastern Germany and Poland, 141;
- in Russia, 172.
-
- Nordic troops of Philip and Alexander, 161.
-
- Nordic type, 40;
- among native Americans, 88;
- in California, 75;
- in Scotland, 249.
-
- Nordic vice, 55.
-
- Nordics, 58, 61, 72, 129;
- absorption of by conquered nations, 176;
- and alcoholism, 55;
- and consumption, 55;
- and Low German, 188–189;
- and Aryan languages, 240–242;
- and Proto-Slavic languages, 143;
- and specialized features, 92;
- around the Caspian-Aral Sea, 214;
- among the Amorites, 223;
- among the Philistines, 223;
- as mercenaries, 155, 216;
- as officers, 142;
- as raiders, 130;
- Celtic dialects of, 157, 194;
- Celtic and Teutonic Nordics, 139;
- centre of evolution of, 169–171;
- checked by the Etruscans in their advance southward, 157;
- carriers of Aryan speech, 234;
- conquer Alpines, 145, 147;
- continental, 73;
- cross the Rhine westward, 173, 194, 240;
- decline of, 190, 196;
- (in England) 208–210, (in India) 216, (in Europe and Asia) 260, (in
- Spain) 192;
- destroyed by war, 230–231;
- distribution of, 242;
- early movements of, 253;
- energy of, 215;
- expansion of, 174, 188–212;
- first, 130–132;
- first appearance of along the Baltic, 169;
- first appearance of in Scandinavia, 117;
- founders of France, England and America, 206;
- _in_ agriculture, 209;
- Africa, 223;
- Afghan passes, 257;
- the Ægean region, 253;
- the Alps, 151:
- Austria, 210;
- Asia, 214, 224;
- Asia Minor, 214, 225;
- the Balkan Peninsula, 189;
- the British Isles, 188;
- the Caucasus, 214, 225;
- south of the Caucasus, 253–254;
- cities, 94, 209;
- colonies, 84;
- England (Britain), 64, 137, 188, 249;
- France, 188, 231;
- Flanders, 188, 210, 231;
- Gaul, 69, 193–194;
- Germany, 170, 174, 188, 210, 231;
- Europe, 188;
- Hindustan, 67;
- Holland, 188;
- Galicia, 156;
- Greece, 158–160, 214;
- India, 257;
- Ireland, 201;
- Italy, 189, 220–221;
- Lombardy, 221;
- Persia, 254;
- Poland, 188;
- Portugal, 192;
- the Punjab, 257–258;
- Rome, 154;
- Russia, 188, 214, 231;
- Scandinavia, 188, 210;
- Scotland, 188;
- Spain, 156;
- Styria, 210;
- Thrace, 214;
- the Tyrol, 210;
- invade Greece, 158–160;
- landed gentry in Wales, 205;
- later in central Europe, 141;
- long skulls of, 134;
- loss of through war, 184, 191–193, 196–197;
- mixed with Alpines, 134–135, 151, 163;
- with Mediterraneans, 161, 192;
- Neolithic location of, 124;
- outside of Europe, 223–224;
- owners of fertile lands and valleys, 141;
- physical characters of, 214;
- Protestants, 228;
- reach the Mediterranean Sea through the Alpines, 145, 147;
- seize the Po valley, 157.
-
- Norman language, spoken by French Canadians, 81.
-
- Norman type, in England and America, 207.
-
- Normandy, 23, 206;
- conquest of, 196;
- Belgæ in, 251;
- change of language in, 251;
- Cymric language in, 251;
- Latin speech in, 251;
- Normans in, 252;
- Norse pirates in, 70;
- ravaged by Saxons, 251–252.
-
- Normans, 201, 206–207;
- characters of in Sicily, 207;
- ecclesiastics among, 208;
- in Britain, 249;
- in England, 252;
- language of, 252;
- racial aptitudes of, 207–208;
- racial mixture among, 208;
- settle Normandy, 252;
- transformation of, 252.
-
- Norse, along the Atlantic coasts, 180;
- Norse blood of American settlers, 83;
- Norse in Britain, 200, 249;
- in Ireland, 64;
- in Scotland, 203;
- Norsemen, 201;
- Norse pirates, 70;
- language of, 250;
- Norse Vikings, _see_ Vikings.
-
- North Europeans, 67.
-
- North Germans, 61.
-
- North Sea, 20, 73, 166, 168, 171.
-
- Northmen, 145, 196;
- invasion of, 201;
- language of, 70.
-
- Norway, 201;
- Alpines in, 136, 211;
- bronze in, 127;
- intellectual anæmia of, 210.
-
- Norwegian immigrants, 211.
-
- Nose form, 13, 30, 31.
-
-
- Ofnet race, 116.
-
- Oklahoma, 87.
-
- Old Persian, 254–255, 258.
-
- Old Prussian, 212, 242.
-
- Old Sanskrit, 257.
-
- Old Saxon (related to Frisian and Taal), 80.
-
- Old South, 42–43.
-
- Old Stone Age (_see also_ Paleolithic), 120, 123.
-
- Oscan language, 234.
-
- Oscans, 157, 160, 173, 244, 269.
-
- Osmanli Turks, 237.
-
- Ossetes, 66;
- language of, 66.
-
- Ostrogoths, 176;
- in Italy, 180.
-
- Ottoman Turks, 166.
-
-
- Paintings, polychrome, 112.
-
- Palatine Germans, 84.
-
- Paleolithic Period, 23, 38;
- art of, 112, 114;
- close of, 117, 149;
- dates of, 104;
- man, 104–118, 107–108, 124, 149, 227, 247;
- in Ireland, 202;
- remnants of in England, 64;
- in Wales, 205;
- races of the Paleolithic Period, 118;
- Lower Paleolithic Period, 104–106, 133;
- Middle Paleolithic Period, 104, 106, 133;
- Upper Paleolithic Period, 100, 105, 108, 111, 113, 132;
- close of, 115.
-
- Palestine, 223;
- bronze weapons in, 127;
- language of, 239.
-
- Pamirs, the, 20, 254, 261;
- Alpines in, 134;
- language of, 259.
-
- Pan-Germanic movement, 58.
-
- Pan-Rumanian movement, 58.
-
- Pan-Slavic movement, 58.
-
- Parthian language, 255.
-
- Patagonia, 23.
-
- Patricians in Rome, 11, 217.
-
- Pax Romana, 195.
-
- Peasant, European, 117;
- _see also under_ Alpines _and_ Racial aptitudes.
-
- Pehlevi language, 255.
-
- Pelasgians, 158–161, 215;
- at Troy, 159;
- language of, 158, 233, 243.
-
- Peloponnesus, 160.
-
- Pennsylvania Dutch, 84.
-
- Peons, Mexican, 9.
-
- Pericles, 263.
-
- Persia, 22, 66, 147, 171, 241, 254;
- Aryan language in, 237;
- Aryanization of, 225;
- language of (_see_ Old Persian), 255;
- Mediterraneans in, 148;
- physical types in, 257;
- wars of with Greece, 255.
-
- Persian Empire, organization of, 254.
-
- Persians, 63, 73, 161, 214, 216, 253–256, 269;
- culture of, 255;
- date of separation of, from the Sacæ, 258;
- expansion of, 225;
- Hellenization of, 256;
- as Nordics, 255;
- physical character of, 259.
-
- Pharsalia, 217.
-
- Philip of Macedon, 161.
-
- Philippi, 217.
-
- Philippines, 33;
- Spanish in, 78;
- whites in, 78.
-
- Philistines, Nordics among, 223.
-
- Phœnicia, 165;
- ancient civilization of, 153.
-
- Phœnician language in Spain, 156.
-
- Phœnicians, 228;
- colonies of, 126;
- in Spain, 156;
- voyages of, 126–127.
-
- Phrygians, 173, 225, 253, 256;
- invade Asia Minor, 159;
- language of, 256.
-
- Physical types and literary or legendary characters, 229–230;
- physical types of Normans, 207–208;
- of British soldiers and sailors, 208;
- _see also under_ various races.
-
- Picardy, 210.
-
- Pictish language, 204, 247.
-
- Picts, 204.
-
- Pile dwellings, 121, 127, 132.
-
- Piltdown man, 105–106.
-
- Pindus mountains, Vlachs in, 45–246.
-
- Pioneers, 45, 74–75.
-
- _Pithecanthropus erectus_, 101, 133.
-
- Plebeians or Plebs of Rome, 11, 154, 217–218.
-
- Pleistocene Period, 100.
-
- Pliocene Period, 22, 101.
-
- Po valley, Alpines in, 157;
- as Cisalpine Gaul, 157;
- Mediterraneans in, 157;
- seized by Nordics, 157;
- Terramara settlements in, 127.
-
- Poetry, 241.
-
- Poland, 59;
- Alpines in, 44, 124, 141–142;
- blondness in, 190;
- dolichocephaly in, 190;
- Nordics in, 124, 131, 170, 188–213;
- Nordic substratum in, 141;
- Slavs in, 131, 142;
- stature in, 190.
-
- Poles, 58, 72, 143;
- increase in East Germany, 184.
-
- Polesia, 143.
-
- Polish Ghettos, immigrants from, 89.
-
- Polish Jews, 16;
- in New York, 91.
-
- Polished Stone Age, _see_ Neolithic;
- beginning of, 118–119.
-
- Polygamy, among the Turks, 237.
-
- Pompey, 217.
-
- “Poor Whites,” 39–40;
- physical types of, 40.
-
- Population, direction of pressure of, 171;
- effect of foreign invasion on, 69–71;
- infiltration into, of slaves or immigrants, 71;
- value and efficiency of a, 48.
-
- Portugal, Nordics in, 192;
- occupied by the Suevi, 180, 192.
-
- Portuguese language, 156, 244.
-
- Posen, 72.
-
- Post-Glacial Periods, 105–106, 132–133.
-
- Post-Roman invaders of Britain, 73.
-
- Pottery, 138, 146, 241;
- first appearance of, 122–123.
-
- Pre-Aryan language, 204, 233, 235, 247;
- in the British Isles, 246.
-
- Pre-Dravidians, 149;
- physical character of, 261.
-
- Pre-Neolithic culture on the Baltic, 117.
-
- Pre-Nordic brunets in New England, 83.
-
- Pre-Nordics, 29, 63;
- of Ireland, 64.
-
- Primates, 3, 24, 106;
- erect, 101.
-
- Pripet swamps, 143.
-
- Procopius, 189.
-
- Propontis, 179.
-
- Proto-Alpines, 135;
- language of, 235;
- physical characters of, 135.
-
- Proto-Aryan language, 67, 233, 242;
- and Alpines, 237;
- Nordic origin of, 61.
-
- Proto-Mediterranean Race, 132;
- descended from the Neolithic, 149–150.
-
- Proto-Nordics, 224, 233;
- in Russia, 64, 170.
-
- Proto-Slavic language, Aryan character of, 143.
-
- Proto-Teutonic race, 169.
-
- Provençal, 244;
- Provençal language, 244.
-
- Provençals, 156.
-
- Provence, 23;
- Mediterraneans in, 156.
-
- Prussia, Spartan culture of, 161.
-
- Prussian, Old (Borussian), language, 212, 242.
-
- Prussians, ethnic origin of, 72.
-
- Punic Wars, 217.
-
- Punjab, the, 257;
- entrance of Aryans into, 258;
- decline of Nordics in, 261.
-
- Puritans, 55.
-
- Pyrenees, caverns of, 115.
-
-
- Quebec Frenchmen, 81.
-
-
- Race, 3, 4;
- Aryan, 3;
- Caucasian, 3;
- Celtic, 3;
- Indo-Germanic, 3;
- Latin, 3;
- adjustment to habitat of, 93;
- characters, 13 _et seq._;
- consciousness, 4, 57, 60, 90;
- in Germany, 57;
- in Sweden, 57;
- in the United States, 86;
- degeneration, 39–43, 109;
- determination, 15, 19, 24, 28;
- disharmonic combinations of, 14, 28, 35, 110;
- distinguished from language and nationality, 34;
- effect of democracy on, 5;
- feeling, 222;
- importance of, 98–100;
- physical basis of, 13–16;
- positions of the three main races in Roman times, 131;
- resistance to foreign invasion, 71;
- selection, 46, 50, 54, 55, 215;
- versus species and subspecies, 22.
-
- Race mixture, 18, 34, 60, 77, 85, 116, 262;
- among the Gauls, 145;
- among the Normans, 208;
- among the Turks, 237;
- among the Umbrians, 145;
- and civilization, 214–216;
- in North Africa, 151;
- in South Africa, 80;
- in the Argentine, 78;
- in Brazil, 78;
- in Britain, 248;
- in Canada, 81;
- in Europe, 261–262;
- in Germany, 135;
- in Greece, 161;
- in Jamaica, 76;
- in large cities, 92;
- in Macedon, 161;
- in Mexico, 76;
- in the Roman Empire, 71;
- in Rome, 154, 220;
- in Russia, 174;
- in Spain, 192;
- in Switzerland, 135;
- in the United States, 77, 82–94;
- in Venezuela, 76;
- in Tunis, 158;
- of Alpines and Celts, 177;
- of Alpines and Nordics, 151;
- of Alpines and Mediterraneans, 151;
- of Ainus and Mongols, 225;
- of Belgæ and Teutonic tribes, 248;
- of Celts and Mediterraneans, 177;
- of Goidels and Mediterraneans, 248;
- of Mediterraneans and Dravidians and Negroids, 150;
- of Nordics and Negroes, 82;
- of late Nordics and Paleoliths, 149;
- of Slavs and Illyrians, 153, 190.
-
- Race supplanting, 77, 46–48, 110.
-
- Races, European distribution of during the Neolithic, 123;
- in Europe, 131;
- laws of distribution of, 37;
- evolution of through selection, 37 _et seq._
-
- Racial, aptitudes, 226–232;
- of Alpines, 138–139, 146;
- of Negroes, 77, 109;
- of Normans, 207–208;
- elements of the Great War, 187;
- resistance of acclimated populations, 71;
- types, intellectual and moral differences of, 206.
-
- Raphael, 215.
-
- Ravenna, surrender of, 189.
-
- Recapitulation of development in infants, 30.
-
- Reformation, the, 191, 210, 228;
- in England, 10.
-
- Regiments, German, composition of, 142.
-
- Religion, 64;
- nationalities founded on, 57, 58.
-
- Renaissance, 215, 231.
-
- Republic, a true, 7, 8.
-
- Resurgence of types, 15;
- of Alpines in Europe, 146–147, 184, 190–191, 196, 210;
- of Iberians in Scotland, 249;
- of Mediterraneans, 190, 196;
- in England, 83, 208.
-
- Revolution, 6;
- French, 6, 16, 191, 196, 197;
- German, 87.
-
- Revolutionary Wars, 197.
-
- Riss glaciation, 105, 133.
-
- Riss-Würm, 105;
- interglacial, 133.
-
- Robenhausian culture, 132;
- Period, 121;
- Upper, 122, 265.
-
- Rollo, 263.
-
- Romaic language, origin of, 243.
-
- Roman, abandonment of Britain, 200;
- aristocracy, 217;
- busts, 154;
- church, 53, 85;
- Empire, 10, 71–72, 142, 176, 179–182, 187, 217–222;
- component states of, 183;
- fall of, 221;
- Eastern Empire, 165–166;
- population of, 216, 220;
- slaves in, 216;
- Western Empire, re-established, 182;
- ideals, 153;
- occupation of Britain, effect of, ethnically, 200;
- provinces, Teutonized, 191;
- Republic, 71, 154, 217, 219;
- State, ancient civilization of, 153, 216;
- stature, 154;
- stock, extinction of, 51.
-
- Romance tongues, 61, 238, 244.
-
- Romans, 68, 156, 174–176, 193, 194, 216–221, 246;
- decline of, 217–222;
- features of, 154;
- in Britain, 200, 250;
- in France, 63;
- in Spain, 156;
- a modified race in Gaul, 69;
- stature of, 154.
-
- Romansch language, 244.
-
- Rome, 11, 52, 61, 70, 92, 130, 154, 157, 158, 165, 179, 180, 191, 195,
- 215–221, 245, 251;
- Alpines, Nordics and Mediterraneans in, 130, 153, 154;
- change of race in, 218–220;
- change of religion in, 219;
- early struggles in, 154;
- in Dacia, 245;
- language of, 61, 70;
- Northern qualities of, 153–154;
- race mixture in, 154, 220;
- slaves in, 71, 100, 216, 218–220;
- stormed by Brennus, 157.
-
- Rough Stone Age, _see_ Paleolithic.
-
- Round Barrows, 137–138, 163, 247, 267;
- brachycephalic survivals of, 163–164.
-
- Round skulls, absence of in Britain, 249.
- _See also_ physical characters of the Alpines, Armenoids, etc.
-
- Rumania, 59, 245;
- Alpines in, 65;
- Mediterraneans in, 153.
-
- Rumanian language, 244–246;
- origin of, 244–245;
- distribution of, 245.
-
- Rumanians, 21, 145;
- and Christianity, 65;
- descent of, 244–246;
- Latin language of, 244–246.
-
- Russia, 38, 143, 253;
- Alans and Goths in, 66;
- Alpines in, 44, 131, 136, 142–144, 147;
- Anaryan survivals in, 235, 243;
- Asiatic types in, 144;
- Baltic provinces of, Nordic, 212;
- blondness in, 190;
- Bulgars from, 145;
- burial mounds or kurgans in, 172;
- changes in racial predominance in, 142–144, 147;
- dolichocephaly in, 190;
- early Nordics in, 124, 131, 142;
- Esthonians in, 236;
- Finns in, 236;
- Gauls in, 174;
- grasslands and steppes of, 240, 253–254, 257;
- language in, 235–236, 243;
- Livs in, 236;
- Mongols in, 65, 142;
- Muscovite expansion in, 65;
- Nordic substratum in, 64, 142;
- Nordics in, 170, 188, 213–214, 231;
- organized by Sweden, 180;
- race mixture in, 174;
- races in, 142;
- Saxons in, 201;
- Slavs or Alpines in, 64, 131, 142;
- Slavic dialects in, 143;
- Slavic future of, 147;
- stature in, 190;
- Swedes in, 211;
- Varangians in, 177;
- water connections across, 170.
-
- Russian brachycephaly, 136–137;
- settlements of Siberia, 78.
-
- Russians and Christianity, 65.
-
- Ruthenia, 245;
- Slavs in, 143.
-
-
- Sacæ, 173, 214, 216, 254 (_see_ Massagetæ);
- date of separation from Persia, 258;
- evidence of conquests of, 261;
- identified with the Wu-Suns, 260;
- in India, 257–258;
- language of, 259;
- physical characters of, 259, 261.
-
- Sahara, the, 33, 44;
- Mediterraneans in, 151–152.
-
- St. Bartholomew, Massacre of, 196.
-
- Sakai, 149.
-
- _Sangre Azul_, derivation of the term, 192.
-
- Sanskrit, 148, 243, 255, 257–258, 261;
- introduction of into India, 173, 216.
- _See_ Old Sanskrit.
-
- Santa Fé Trail, 40.
-
- Sardinia, 29;
- Mediterraneans in, 152;
- Mycenæan culture of, 164.
-
- Sardinian, the, 28;
- stature of, 28.
-
- Sarmatians, 143, 245, 269, 272.
-
- Satem group of Aryan languages, 256.
-
- Saviour, the, blondness of, 230.
-
- Savoy, Alpines in, 146.
-
- Savoyard, 21, 23.
-
- Saxon blood of American settlers, 83;
- in Normandy and Scotland, 208;
- Saxon type, 40.
-
- Saxons, 69, 73, 141–142, 145, 177, 180, 195, 206;
- in Britain, 248–249;
- in Brittany, 251–252;
- in England, 200–201;
- in France, 201;
- in Hungary, 201;
- in Italy, 201;
- in Russia, 201;
- invaders, 201;
- invasions of, 200–201, 252, 270;
- origin of, 200;
- ravage Normandy, 251–252.
-
- Saxony, 73, 200–201.
-
- Scandinavia, brunets in, 151;
- centre of radiation of the Teutons, 168;
- character of the population of, 169;
- first Nordics in, 117, 124, 169;
- first occupation of by human beings, 169;
- introduction of bronze into, 128;
- megaliths in, 155;
- Mediterraneans never in, 150–151;
- Neolithic culture in, 117, 122;
- Nordics in, 117, 124, 188, 210.
-
- Scandinavian blood in Normandy and Scotland, 208;
- place names in Scotland, 249;
- states, 4, 20, 60.
-
- Scandinavians, 61, 68;
- hairiness of, 224.
-
- Schleswig, 58, 73.
-
- Sclaveni, 141.
-
- Scotch, 29;
- brunet type of, 150;
- red hair of, 175;
- stature of, 28, 29.
-
- Scotch borders, 40;
- Highlanders, 62.
-
- Scotch-Irish in America, 84.
-
- Scotland, 40, 69;
- Angles in, 203;
- blond elements in, 63;
- blonds mixed with brunets in, 202;
- brunetness in, 153, 204;
- Brythonic elements in, 203;
- Gaelic area in, 249;
- Goidelic element in, 201, 203;
- Goidelic speech in, 200;
- Goidels invade from Ireland, 250;
- Iberian substratum in, 201;
- language in, 204, 249–250;
- Mediterraneans in, 153, 203;
- Neanderthal type in, 107;
- Nordic type in, 249;
- Nordics in, 188;
- Norse pirates in, 200, 203;
- racial elements in, 203–204, 208;
- resurgence of types in, especially the Iberian, 249;
- Scandinavian place names in, 249.
-
- Scots, 28.
-
- Scottish Highlands, language of, 247.
-
- Scythians, 66, 214, 257.
-
- Selection, 37, 46–55, 215, 225;
- by elimination of the unfit, 50–54;
- in Colonial times, 92;
- in colonies, 93;
- in tenements and factories, 92;
- practical measures in, 46–55;
- through alcoholism, 55;
- through disease, 54–55;
- through social environment, 46.
-
- Seljukian Turks, 237.
-
- Semitic language, 239;
- race, 147.
-
- Senegambian regions, Mediterraneans in, 151.
-
- Senlac Hill, 120.
-
- Serbian national revival, 58.
-
- Serbs, 53, 143;
- and Christianity, 65;
- in Bulgaria, 145.
-
- Serfs and serfdom, 10.
-
- Servile wars in Rome, 217.
-
- Ship-building, 165, 199.
-
- Siberia, Russian settlements of, 78.
-
- Siberian tundras, 65.
-
- Sicily, Alpines in, 128, 140;
- Mediterraneans in, 158;
- Normans in, 207.
-
- Sidon, 126, 165.
-
- Sikhs, 261.
-
- Silesia, 72, 260.
-
- Sinai Peninsula, mines of, 125.
-
- Singalese, 258.
-
- Siwalik Hills, fossil deposits of, 101.
-
- Skin color and quality, 27–28.
-
- Skull shape, 13, 15, 17, 19, 139, 226;
- among immigrants, 17;
- antiquity of distinction between long and round, 23, 24;
- as a race character, 151;
- of the Ainus, 224;
- African, 23;
- American Indian, 23;
- Asiatic, 22;
- Cro-Magnon, 110;
- European, 19–21;
- Neanderthal, 107;
- best method of determining race, 19–24;
- _see also_ Brachycephaly, Dolichocephaly, Mesaticephaly, and the
- physical characters of the various races.
-
- Slave trade, 79.
-
- Slavery, 8–11, 42, 86.
-
- Slaves, 9–11, 16;
- in Italy, 218;
- in Rome, 71, 100, 216, 218, 220;
- source of, 82, 200.
-
- Slavic Alpines in Germany, 72;
- homeland, 245;
- languages, 141–145, 238–237, 244–245;
- Proto-Slavic, 143;
- race, 64, 72;
- as an Alpine race, 64, 131.
-
- Slavs, 63, 64, 124, 172, 190;
- of Alpine race, 64, 131;
- area of distribution of, 143;
- expansion of, 272;
- in Austria, 141;
- in the Balkans, 153;
- eastern Europe, 65;
- eastern Germany, 141–142;
- Greece, 65;
- Middle Ages, 65;
- Poland, 142;
- Russia, 214;
- mixed with Illyrians, 153, 190;
- northern and southern, 143.
-
- Slovaks, 91, 143.
-
- Social environment, 46.
-
- Social wars in Rome, 217.
-
- Socialism, 12, 79.
-
- Socrates, 227.
-
- Sogdiana, 254.
-
- Solutrean Period, 105, 111–113;
- culture of and the Brünn-Předmost race, 114, 132;
- and the Cro-Magnon race, 132.
-
- Sorb, 142.
-
- South Africa, 79, 80;
- Dutch and English in, 80.
-
- South America, 61, 73, 75, 76, 78.
-
- Southern States of America, 71, 99;
- brunets in, 84;
- Mediterranean element in, 44, 45;
- Nordic type in, 83, 84;
- “poor whites” of, 39, 40;
- race consciousness in, 86.
-
- Southerners, effect of climate on, 39–43.
-
- Spain, 115, 149, 176, 202;
- Alpines in, 140;
- Arabic spoken in, 156;
- Arabs in, 156;
- aristocracy of, 192;
- Basques in, 140;
- blondness in, 192;
- bow and arrow of the Azilians in, 115;
- cause of the collapse of, 193;
- caverns in, 112;
- Celtic language in, 155, 234;
- decline of the Nordic element in, 193;
- elimination of genius producing classes in, 53;
- Gauls in, 174, 192;
- Gothic language in, 156;
- Goths in, 192;
- Latin language in, 156;
- Mediterraneans in, 123, 149, 152, 155–156;
- megaliths in, 155;
- Moorish conquest of, 181;
- Moors in, 156;
- Nordics in, 155–156, 174, 192–193, 269;
- Phœnician language in, 156;
- Phœnicians in, 126, 156;
- racial change in, 192;
- Romans in, 156;
- Teutons in, 180;
- tin mines in, 126;
- types in, 156;
- Vandals in, 192;
- Visigoths in, 180, 192.
-
- Spaniards or Spanish (modern), 53, 68;
- (ancient), 68;
- in Mexico, 17;
- and Nordics, 73;
- in the Philippines, 78;
- related to the Berbers, 152.
-
- Spanish conquistadores, 76, 193;
- infantry, 193;
- Inquisition in selection, 53;
- Spanish Main, 44;
- islands and coasts of, 76;
- Spanish-American War, 74.
-
- Sparta, 160, 162.
-
- Spartans, 160, 164;
- and Dinaric race, 164;
- physical character of, 164.
-
- Specializations, racial, recent, 27, 18, 24.
-
- Species, significance of the term, 21, 22.
-
- Stature, 13, 28–30, 35;
- affected by war, 197–198;
- of the Romans, 154;
- in Albania, 190;
- in France, 198;
- in Illyria and the Tyrol, 190;
- in the Scottish Highlands, 28–29, 203;
- in Sardinia, 28–29.
-
- Sterilization of the unfit, 51, 52.
-
- Stoicism, 221.
-
- Stone weapons in England, 120–121.
- For _Stone Ages_ _see_ Neolithic and Paleolithic.
-
- Styria, 183;
- Alpines in, 210;
- Nordics in, 210.
-
- Suevi, 156, 177, 181, 270;
- in Portugal, 180, 192.
-
- Sumer, 119, 147;
- language of, 239.
-
- Susa, 147;
- language of, 239.
-
- Swabians, 141.
-
- Sweden, 52, 59, 176, 194, 211;
- centre of Nordic purity, 168, 170;
- colonizes Finland, 211;
- colonizes Russia, 211;
- cradle of Teutonic branch of the Nordics, 124, 177;
- bronze introduced into, 137;
- first Nordics in, 117;
- intellectual anæmia of, 210;
- Kitchen Middens in, 123;
- Nordic race in, 117, 124, 135–136, 168–170, 210–211;
- race consciousness in, 57;
- saves Protestantism, 210;
- unity of race in, 169.
-
- Swedes, 23;
- organization of Russia by, 180;
- Russification of, 58.
-
- Swiss, 135;
- blondness of, 136;
- Swiss Lake Dwellers, 121, 127.
-
- Switzerland, 121, 127, 183;
- Alpines in, 44, 135, 141;
- Lake Dwellings in, 139;
- mercenaries in, 135;
- Nordics in, 135;
- race mixture in, 135.
-
- Sylla, 217.
-
- Synthetic languages, 165, 216, 233, 237, 239–240, 243.
-
- Syr Darya, 119.
-
- Syria, hellenized, 220;
- round skull invasion of, 140.
-
- Syrians, 16, 91.
-
-
- Taal dialect, 80.
-
- Tamahu, blondness of, 223.
-
- Tardenoisian Period, 115, 117, 132.
-
- Tatars, 139, 144.
-
- Tchouds, language of, 236.
-
- Tennessee, 39, 40.
-
- Terramara Period, 122, 127, 266.
-
- Terramara settlements, bronze in, 127;
- copper in, 122;
- human remains in, 122.
-
- Teutoburgiana forest, 154.
-
- Teutonic, as a term, 231–232;
- branch of the Nordic race, 20, 61, 62, 72, 124, 131, 139, 146,
- 168–170, 210, 211, 231, 232, 248;
- expansion of, 270, 271;
- invaders of Gaul, 69;
- invasions, 63, 69, 179–184, 189, 194–196;
- languages of, 61, 139, 249–251;
- duration of Teutonic language in Gaul, 182;
- Teutonic tribes mixed with the Belgæ, 248;
- speech in the British Isles, 249–250;
- Proto-Teutonics, 169.
-
- Teutons, 72, 141–142, 144, 173–174, 176–177, 189, 194–196;
- division of in the Great War, 184;
- physical characters of, 175;
- route of expansion of, 174.
-
- Thebes, 162.
-
- Thessaly, 245.
-
- Thibet, 22, 134.
-
- Thirty Years’ War, 184–187, 198.
-
- Thrace, Nordics in, 214;
- early inhabitants of, 246;
- Gauls in, 225.
-
- Thracian language, 130, 256;
- origin of, 243.
-
- Tin, 126–127.
-
- Tin Isles of Ultima Thule, 127.
-
- Titian, 215.
-
- Tokharian language, 260–261.
-
- Tools, 102–104, 112, 120–121, 123, 126, 129, 155.
-
- Tours, battle of, 181.
-
- Trade routes, 119, 123–125.
-
- Trajan, 244.
-
- Transylvania, Rumanian language in, 245;
- Vlachs in, 246.
-
- Trapping, 122.
-
- Trinitarian faith of the Franks, 181.
-
- Tripoli, round skull invasion of, 140.
-
- Trojans, 159.
-
- Troy, siege of, 159.
-
- Tunis, Alpines in, 128, 140, 158;
- bronze in, 128;
- race mixture in, 158.
-
- Turcomans, 238;
- or Turkomans, 21.
-
- Turkestan, 254, 257;
- Nomads of, 259;
- Tokharian language in, 261.
-
- Turki or Turks, 100, 144–145, 166, 237, 238, 254;
- language of, 237–238;
- race mixture among, 237.
-
- Tuscan language, 244.
-
- Tyre, 126, 165.
-
- Tyrol, the, 30, 36, 129;
- Alpines in, 141, 210;
- Dinaric race in, 138;
- Nordics in, 200;
- stature in, 190.
-
- Tyrolese, 135;
- physical character of, 190.
-
- Tyrrhenians, 157.
-
-
- Ugrian language, 243.
-
- Ukraine, 213.
-
- Ultima Thule, 126.
-
- Umbrian language, 130, 234, 244.
-
- Umbrians, 145, 157, 160, 173, 244, 269.
-
- Unit characters, 13, 14, 30, 31;
- intermixture of, 14;
- unchanging, 15–18, 139.
-
- Unitarian faith of the barbarians, 181.
-
- United States of America, affected by immigration, 89 _et seq._;
- as a European colony, racially, 83, 84;
- German and Irish immigrants in, 84, 86;
- Indian element in, 87;
- Negroes of, 16, 40, 65, 76, 82, 85, 87, 99;
- Nordic blood in the colonies, 83–85;
- race consciousness in, 86;
- Nordics in, 81;
- in the world war, 187;
- _see also_ America.
-
- Upper Neolithic, 121.
-
- Upper Paleolithic, 100, 105, 108, 113, 132;
- close of, 115.
-
- Upper Robenhausian, 122.
-
- Ural mountains, 65, 213.
-
- Ural-Altaic speech, 236.
-
- Urmia, Lake, 253.
-
- Ussher, Archbishop, 4.
-
-
- Vagrancy, 10.
-
- Valais, 178.
-
- Vandal kingdom, destruction of, 181;
- conquests, 223.
-
- Vandals, 73, 142, 145, 156, 176–177, 181, 195, 223, 270;
- in Africa, 180;
- in Spain, 176–177, 192.
-
- Varangians, 177, 189.
-
- Varus, 154.
-
- Vassalage, 9.
-
- Vedas, 257–259.
-
- Veddahs, 149.
-
- Venethi, 141, 143, 245.
-
- Veneto, 183.
-
- Venezuela, population of, 76.
-
- Venice, Nordic aristocracy of, 189.
-
- Vikings, 129, 177, 206–207, 210, 211, 249, 271;
- in America, 211, 249;
- _see also_ Norse pirates.
-
- Villein, 10.
-
- Virginia, 84.
-
- Visigoths, 156, 176, 195, 270;
- in Gaul, 180;
- in Spain, 180, 192;
- kingdom of destroyed, 181.
-
- Vlachs, 178, 245–246.
-
- Volga river, 145.
-
- Voluntary childlessness, 217.
-
- Volunteer armies, 198.
-
-
- Wahlstatt, battle of, 260.
-
- Wales, Celtic language in, 63;
- Cymric language in, 205, 248;
- derivation of the name, 178;
- Goidelic language in, 205;
- Mediterraneans in, 63, 153, 203;
- Nordics in, 203;
- racial elements and survivals in, 204–205.
-
- Wallachia, Little and Great, 246.
-
- Wallachian, 178.
-
- Walloons, 57, 140, 178, 195;
- language of, 244.
-
- War and racial elements, 91;
- effect of on populations, 183–187, 191–193, 196–198, 216, 231;
- Great World War, 73, 74, 168, 186, 187, 191, 230–232.
-
- Wars, European, 56, 191, 198, 230–232;
- losses from, 185, 196–198;
- Nordic element in, 73, 74, 231;
- of the Roses, 191;
- Punic, 217;
- Servile, 217;
- Social, 217.
-
- Wealth, privilege of, 6.
-
- Weapons, 103, 113–115, 120–121, 126–130, 155, 159, 200.
-
- Welsh, 62, 63, 177–178;
- in Britain, 248;
- Round Barrow survivals among, 164.
-
- Wends, 72, 141–143, 236, 269, 272;
- increase of in east Germany, 184.
-
- West Indian sugar planters, 11.
-
- West Indies, Negroes in, 76.
-
- West Prussia, 72.
-
- Western Empire, 179, 180, 216.
-
- Westphalia, 26.
-
- White Huns, 254.
-
- White race, 79.
-
- White Sea, 171.
-
- Whites, 76–77;
- in the Argentine, 78;
- in Australia, 79;
- in Brazil, 78;
- in China, 78;
- in the East Indies, 78;
- in India, 78;
- in Jamaica, 76;
- in Mexico, 76;
- in the Philippines, 78;
- in New Zealand, 79;
- _see also_ Nordics, the Nordic race, and Teutons.
-
- Women, lighter in pigmentation than men, 26, 27;
- more primitive, 27;
- social status of among the races, 228.
-
- Writing, 115, 241.
-
- Wu-Suns, 224, 260.
-
- Würm glaciation, 106, 133, 170, 171.
-
- Würtemberg, Alpines in, 140–141;
- loss of population in during the Thirty Years’ War, 184.
-
- Würtembergers, 135.
-
-
- Zanzibar, 82.
-
- Zendavesta, 258.
-
- Zendic language, 255, 259.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The passing of the great race,, by Madison Grant</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The passing of the great race,</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>or, The racial basis of European history</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Madison Grant</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Commentator: Henry Fairfield Osborn</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: May 27, 2022 [eBook #68185]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PASSING OF THE GREAT RACE, ***</div>
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='titlepage'>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'>THE PASSING OF THE GREAT RACE<br /> <span class='large'>OR<br /> THE RACIAL BASIS OF EUROPEAN HISTORY</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>BY</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='xlarge'>MADISON GRANT</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>CHAIRMAN, NEW YORK ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY; TRUSTEE, AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY; COUNCILOR, AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><em>FOURTH REVISED EDITION</em></div>
- <div><em>WITH A DOCUMENTARY SUPPLEMENT</em></div>
- <div class='c003'>WITH PREFACES</div>
- <div>BY</div>
- <div><span class='large'>HENRY FAIRFIELD OSBORN</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>RESEARCH PROFESSOR OF ZOOLOGY, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='large'>NEW YORK</span></div>
- <div><span class='large'>CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS</span></div>
- <div>1923</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='small'><span class='sc'>Copyright, 1916, 1918, 1921, by</span></span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>Printed in the United States of America</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>Published October, 1916</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>Reprinted December, 1916</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>NEW AND REVISED EDITION</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>Published March, 1918</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>Reprinted March, 1919</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>THIRD EDITION, REVISED</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>Published May, 1920</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>FOURTH EDITION, REVISED</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>Published August, 1921</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>Reprinted February, July, 1922</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>February, September, 1923</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_copyright.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='large'>To</span></div>
- <div><span class='large'>MY FATHER</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>European history has been written in terms of
-nationality and of language, but never before in
-terms of race; yet race has played a far larger part
-than either language or nationality in moulding the
-destinies of men; race implies heredity and heredity
-implies all the moral, social and intellectual
-characteristics and traits which are the springs of
-politics and government.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Quite independently and unconsciously the author,
-never before a historian, has turned this
-historical sketch into the current of a great biological
-movement, which may be traced back to
-the teachings of Galton and Weismann, beginning
-in the last third of the nineteenth century. This
-movement has compelled us to recognize the
-superior force and stability of heredity, as being
-more enduring and potent than environment.
-This movement is also a reaction from the teachings
-of Hippolyte Taine among historians and of Herbert
-Spencer among biologists, because it proves
-that environment and in the case of man, education,
-have an immediate, apparent and temporary
-influence, while heredity has a deep, subtle and
-permanent influence on the actions of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span>Thus the racial history of Europe, which forms
-the author’s main outline and subject and which
-is wholly original in treatment, might be paraphrased
-as the heredity history of Europe. It is
-history as influenced by the hereditary impulses,
-predispositions and tendencies which, as highly
-distinctive racial traits, date back many thousands
-of years and were originally formed when man was
-still in the tribal state, long before the advent of
-civilization.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the author’s opening chapters these traits
-and tendencies are commented upon as they are
-observed to-day under the varying influences of
-migration and changes of social and physical environment.
-In the chapters relating to the racial
-history of Europe we enter a new and fascinating
-field of study, which I trust the author himself
-may some day expand into a longer story. There
-is no gainsaying that this is the correct scientific
-method of approaching the problem of the past.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The moral tendency of the heredity interpretation
-of history is for our day and generation and
-is in strong accord with the true spirit of the
-modern eugenics movement in relation to patriotism,
-namely, the conservation and multiplication
-for our country of the best spiritual, moral, intellectual
-and physical forces of heredity; thus only
-will the integrity of our institutions be maintained
-in the future. These divine forces are more or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_ix'>ix</span>less sporadically distributed in all races, some of
-them are found in what we call the lowest races,
-some are scattered widely throughout humanity,
-but they are certainly more widely and uniformly
-distributed in some races than in others.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus conservation of that race which has given
-us the true spirit of Americanism is not a matter
-either of racial pride or of racial prejudice; it is a
-matter of love of country, of a true sentiment
-which is based upon knowledge and the lessons of
-history rather than upon the sentimentalism which
-is fostered by ignorance. If I were asked: What
-is the greatest danger which threatens the American
-republic to-day? I would certainly reply: The gradual
-dying out among our people of those hereditary
-traits through which the principles of our religious,
-political and social foundations were laid down and
-their insidious replacement by traits of less noble
-character.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Henry Fairfield Osborn.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>July 13, 1916.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xi'>xi</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>History is repeating itself in America at the
-present time and incidentally is giving a convincing
-demonstration of the central thought in this
-volume, namely, that heredity and racial predisposition
-are stronger and more stable than environment
-and education.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whatever may be its intellectual, its literary,
-its artistic or its musical aptitudes, as compared
-with other races, the Anglo-Saxon branch of the
-Nordic race is again showing itself to be that upon
-which the nation must chiefly depend for leadership,
-for courage, for loyalty, for unity and harmony
-of action, for self-sacrifice and devotion to
-an ideal. Not that members of other races are
-not doing their part, many of them are, but in no
-other human stock which has come to this country
-is there displayed the unanimity of heart, mind
-and action which is now being displayed by the
-descendants of the blue eyed, fair-haired peoples
-of the north of Europe. In a recent journey in
-northern California and Oregon I noted that, in
-the faces of the regiments which were first to leave
-for the city of New York and later that, in the
-wonderful array of young men at Plattsburg, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xii'>xii</span>Anglo-Saxon type was clearly dominant over every
-other and the purest members of this type largely
-outnumbered the others. In northern California I
-saw a great regiment detrain and with one or two
-exceptions they were all native Americans, descendants
-of the English, Scotch and north of
-Ireland men who founded the State of Oregon
-in the first half of the nineteenth century. At
-Plattsburg fair hair and blue eyes were very noticeable,
-much more so than in any ordinary crowds
-of American collegians as seen assembled in our
-universities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It should be remembered also that many of the
-dark-haired, dark-eyed youths of Plattsburg and
-other volunteer training camps are often three-fourths
-or seven-eighths Nordic, because it only requires
-a single dark-eyed ancestor to lend the dark
-hair and eye color to an otherwise pure Nordic
-strain. There is a clear differentiation between the
-original Nordic, the Alpine and the Mediterranean
-strains; but where physical characters and characteristics
-are partly combined in a mosaic, and to
-a less degree are blended, it requires long experience
-to judge which strain dominates.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With a race having these predispositions, extending
-back to the very beginnings of European
-history, there is no hesitation or even waiting for
-conscription and the sad thought was continually
-in my mind in California, in Oregon and in Plattsburg
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xiii'>xiii</span>that again this race was passing, that this
-war will take a very heavy toll of this strain of
-Anglo-Saxon life which has played so large a part
-in American history.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>War is in the highest sense dysgenic rather than
-eugenic. It is destructive of the best strains, spiritually,
-morally and physically. For the world’s
-future the destruction of wealth is a small matter
-compared with the destruction of the best human
-strains, for wealth can be renewed while these strains
-of the real human aristocracy once lost are lost
-forever. In the new world that we are working
-and fighting for, the world of liberty, of justice and
-of humanity, we shall save democracy only when
-democracy discovers its own aristocracy as in the
-days when our Republic was founded.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Henry Fairfield Osborn.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>December, 1917.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xv'>xv</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0'>
- <tr>
- <th class='c009'></th>
- <th class='c010'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='c011'><em>PART I</em></th>
- </tr>
- <tr><th class='c012' colspan='3'>RACE, LANGUAGE AND NATIONALITY</th></tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='c009'></th>
- <th class='c010'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='c011'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>I.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Race and Democracy</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_3'>3</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>II.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Physical Basis of Race</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_13'>13</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>III.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Race and Habitat</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_37'>37</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Competition of Races</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_46'>46</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>V.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Race, Language and Nationality</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_56'>56</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Race and Language</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_69'>69</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The European Races in Colonies</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_76'>76</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><th class='c012' colspan='3'><em>PART II</em></th></tr>
- <tr><th class='c012' colspan='3'>EUROPEAN RACES IN HISTORY</th></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>I.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Eolithic Man</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_97'>97</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>II.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Paleolithic Man</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_104'>104</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>III.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Neolithic and Bronze Ages</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_119'>119</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Alpine Race</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_134'>134</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>V.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Mediterranean Race</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_148'>148</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Nordic Race</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_167'>167</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_xvi'>xvi</span>VII.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Teutonic Europe</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_179'>179</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>VIII.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Expansion of the Nordics</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_188'>188</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>IX.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Nordic Fatherland</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_213'>213</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>X.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Nordic Race Outside of Europe</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_223'>223</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>XI.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Racial Aptitudes</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_226'>226</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>XII.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Arya</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_233'>233</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>XIII.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Origin of the Aryan Languages</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_242'>242</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>XIV.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Aryan Language in Asia</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_253'>253</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Appendix with Colored Maps</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_265'>265</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Documentary Supplement</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_275'>275</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Bibliography</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_415'>415</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Index</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_445'>445</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xvii'>xvii</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHARTS AND MAPS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0'>
- <tr><td class='c012' colspan='2'>CHARTS</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Chronological Table</span></td>
- <td class='c013'><em>Pages</em> <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>–133</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Classification of the Races of Europe</span></td>
- <td class='c013'><em>Facing page</em> <a href='#t123'>123</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Provisional Outline of Nordic Invasions and Metal Cultures</span></td>
- <td class='c013'><em>Facing page</em> <a href='#t191'>191</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td class='c012' colspan='2'>MAPS</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Maximum Expansion of Alpines with Bronze Culture, 3000–1800 B. C.</span></td>
- <td class='c013'><em>Facing page</em> <a href='#i_266o'>266</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Expansion of the Pre-Teutonic Nordics, 1800–100 B. C.</span></td>
- <td class='c013'><em>Facing page</em> <a href='#i_268o'>268</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Expansion of the Teutonic Nordics and Slavic Alpines, 100 B. C.–1100 A. D.</span></td>
- <td class='c013'><em>Facing page</em> <a href='#i_270o'>270</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Present Distribution of European Races</span></td>
- <td class='c013'><em>Facing page</em> <a href='#i_272o'>272</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xix'>xix</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The following pages are devoted to an attempt
-to elucidate the meaning of history in terms of
-race; that is, by the physical and psychical characters
-of the inhabitants of Europe instead of by
-their political grouping or by their spoken language.
-Practically all historians, while using the
-word race, have relied on tribal or national names
-as its sole definition. The ancients, like the moderns,
-in determining ethnical origin did not look
-beyond a man’s name, language or country and
-the actual information furnished by classic literature
-on the subject of physical characters is
-limited to a few scattered and often obscure
-remarks.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Modern anthropology has demonstrated that
-racial lines are not only absolutely independent of
-both national and linguistic groupings, but that in
-many cases these racial lines cut through them at
-sharp angles and correspond closely with the divisions
-of social cleavage. The great lesson of the
-science of race is the immutability of somatological
-or bodily characters, with which is closely associated
-the immutability of psychical predispositions
-and impulses. This continuity of inheritance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xx'>xx</span>has a most important bearing on the theory
-of democracy and still more upon that of socialism,
-for it naturally tends to reduce the relative importance
-of environment. Those engaged in social
-uplift and in revolutionary movements are therefore
-usually very intolerant of the limitations
-imposed by heredity. Discussion of these limitations
-is also most offensive to the advocates of
-the obliteration, under the guise of internationalism,
-of all existing distinctions based on nationality,
-language, race, religion and class. Those individuals
-who have neither country, nor flag, nor
-language, nor class, nor even surnames of their
-own and who can only acquire them by gift or
-assumption, very naturally decry and sneer at the
-value of these attributes of the higher types.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Democratic theories of government in their modern
-form are based on dogmas of equality formulated
-some hundred and fifty years ago and rest
-upon the assumption that environment and not
-heredity is the controlling factor in human development.
-Philanthropy and noble purpose dictated
-the doctrine expressed in the Declaration of Independence,
-the document which to-day constitutes
-the actual basis of American institutions. The men
-who wrote the words, “we hold these truths to be
-self-evident, that all men are created equal,” were
-themselves the owners of slaves and despised
-Indians as something less than human. Equality
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxi'>xxi</span>in their minds meant merely that they were just
-as good Englishmen as their brothers across the
-sea. The words “that all men are created equal”
-have since been subtly falsified by adding the
-word “free,” although no such expression is found
-in the original document and the teachings based
-on these altered words in the American public
-schools of to-day would startle and amaze the men
-who formulated the Declaration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It will be necessary for the reader to divest his
-mind of all preconceptions as to race, since modern
-anthropology, when applied to history, involves
-an entire change of definition. We must, first of
-all, realize that race pure and simple, the physical
-and psychical structure of man, is something entirely
-distinct from either nationality or language.
-Furthermore, race lies at the base of all the manifestation
-of modern society, just as it has done
-throughout the unrecorded eons of the past and
-the laws of nature operate with the same relentless
-and unchanging force in human affairs as in the
-phenomena of inanimate nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The antiquity of existing European populations,
-viewed in the light thrown upon their origins by
-the discoveries of the last few decades, enables us
-to carry back history and prehistory into periods
-so remote that the classic world is but of yesterday.
-The living peoples of Europe consist of layer
-upon layer of diverse racial elements in varying
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxii'>xxii</span>proportions and historians and anthropologists,
-while studying these populations, have been concerned
-chiefly with the recent strata and have
-neglected the more ancient and submerged types.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Aboriginal populations from time immemorial
-have been again and again swamped under floods
-of newcomers and have disappeared for a time
-from historic view. In the course of centuries,
-however, these primitive elements have slowly reasserted
-their physical type and have gradually bred
-out their conquerors, so that the racial history of
-Europe has been in the past, and is to-day, a story
-of the repression and resurgence of ancient races.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Invasions of new races have ordinarily arrived in
-successive waves, the earlier ones being quickly
-absorbed by the conquered, while the later arrivals
-usually maintain longer the purity of their type.
-Consequently the more recent elements are found
-in a less mixed state than the older and the more
-primitive strata of the population always contain
-physical traits derived from still more ancient predecessors.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Man has inhabited Europe in some form or
-other for hundreds of thousands of years and
-during all this lapse of time the population has
-been as dense as the food supply permitted. Tribes
-in the hunting stage are necessarily of small size,
-no matter how abundant the game and in the
-Paleolithic period man probably existed only in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxiii'>xxiii</span>specially favorable localities and in relatively
-small communities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the Neolithic and Bronze periods domesticated
-animals and the knowledge of agriculture,
-although of primitive character, afforded an enlarged
-food supply and the population in consequence
-greatly increased. The lake dwellers of
-the Neolithic were, for example, relatively numerous.
-With the clearing of the forests and the
-draining of the swamps during the Middle Ages
-and, above all, with the industrial expansion of
-the last century the population multiplied with
-great rapidity. We can, of course, form little or
-no estimate of the numbers of the Paleolithic
-population of Europe and not much more of those
-of Neolithic times, but even the latter must have
-been very small in comparison with the census of
-to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Some conception of the growth of population in
-recent times may be based on the increase in England.
-It has been computed that Saxon England
-at the time of the Conquest contained about
-1,500,000 inhabitants, at the time of Queen Elizabeth
-the population was about 4,000,000, while
-in 1911 the census gave for the same area some
-35,000,000.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The immense range of the subject of race in connection
-with history from its nebulous dawn and
-the limitations of space, require that generalizations
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxiv'>xxiv</span>must often be stated without mention of
-exceptions. These sweeping statements may even
-appear to be too bold, but they rest, to the best of
-the writer’s belief, upon solid foundations of facts
-or else are legitimate conclusions from evidence
-now in hand. In a science as recent as modern
-anthropology, new facts are constantly revealed
-and require the modification of existing hypotheses.
-The more the subject is studied, the more provisional
-even the best-sustained theory appears,
-but modern research opens a vista of vast interest
-and significance to man, now that we have discarded
-the shackles of former false viewpoints and
-are able to discern, even though dimly, the solution
-of many of the problems of race. In the future
-new data will inevitably expand and perhaps
-change our ideas, but such facts as are now in
-hand and the conclusions based thereupon are
-provisionally set forth in the following chapters
-and necessarily often in a dogmatic form.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The statements relating to time have presented
-the greatest difficulty, as the authorities differ
-widely, but the dates have been fixed with extreme
-conservatism and the writer believes that
-whatever changes in them are hereafter required
-by further investigation and study, will result in
-pushing them back and not forward in prehistory.
-The dates given in the chapter on “Paleolithic
-Man” are frankly taken from the most recent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxv'>xxv</span>authority on this subject, “The Men of the Old
-Stone Age,” by Prof. Henry Fairfield Osborn and
-the writer desires to take this opportunity to
-acknowledge his great indebtedness to this source
-of information, as well as to Mr. M. Taylor Pyne
-and to Mr. Charles Stewart Davison for their assistance
-and many helpful suggestions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The author also wishes to acknowledge his
-obligation to Prof. William Z. Ripley’s “The
-Races of Europe,” which contains a large array of
-anthropological measurements, maps and type
-portraits, providing valuable data for the present
-distribution of the three primary races of Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The American Geographical Society and its
-staff, particularly Mr. Leon Dominian, have also
-been of great help in the preparation of the maps
-herein contained and this occasion is taken by the
-writer to express his appreciation for their assistance.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xxvii'>xxvii</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>INTRODUCTION TO THE FOURTH REVISED EDITION</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The addition of a Documentary Supplement to
-the latest revision of this book has been made in response
-to a persistent demand for “authorities.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The author has endeavored to make the references
-and quotations in this Supplement very full and,
-so far as possible, interesting in themselves as well
-as entirely distinct from the text, which stands
-substantially unchanged, and the authorities quoted
-are not necessarily the sources of the views herein
-expressed but more often are given in support of
-them. The contents of the book, since its first
-appearance, have had the advantage of the criticism
-of virtually every anthropologist in America and in
-England, France and Italy—many of whom have
-furnished the author with valuable corroborative
-material. Some of this material appears in the
-notes, but accessible authorities and the classical
-writers have been given the more prominent place.
-The supplement covered, as first prepared, substantially
-every statement in the book, but much was
-afterward omitted because it would seem that some
-things could be taken without proof.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_xxviii'>xxviii</span>“The Passing of the Great Race,” in its original
-form, was designed by the author to rouse his fellow-Americans
-to the overwhelming importance of race
-and to the folly of the “Melting Pot” theory, even
-at the expense of bitter controversy. This purpose
-has been accomplished thoroughly, and one of the
-most far-reaching effects of the doctrines enunciated
-in this volume and in the discussions that followed
-its publication was the decision of the Congress of
-the United States to adopt discriminatory and restrictive
-measures against the immigration of undesirable
-races and peoples.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Another of the results has been the publication in
-America and Europe of a series of books and articles
-more or less anthropological in character
-which have sustained or controverted its main
-theme. The new definition of race and the controlling
-rôle played by race in all the manifestations of
-what we call civilization are now generally accepted
-even by those whose political position depends upon
-popular favor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was to be expected that there would be bitter
-opposition to those definitions of race which are
-based on physical and psychical characters that are
-immutable, rather than upon those derived from
-language or political allegiance, that are easily
-altered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To admit the unchangeable differentiation of race
-in its modern scientific meaning is to admit inevitably
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxix'>xxix</span>the existence of superiority in one race and of
-inferiority in another. Such an admission we can
-hardly expect from those of inferior races. These
-inferior races and classes are prompt to recognize
-in such an admission the very real danger to
-themselves of being relegated again to their former
-obscurity and subordinate position in society. The
-favorite defense of these inferior classes is an unqualified
-denial of the existence of fixed inherited
-qualities, either physical or spiritual, which cannot
-be obliterated or greatly modified by a change
-of environment. Failing in this, as they must
-necessarily fail, they point out the presence of
-mixed or intermediate types, and claim that in
-these mixtures, or blends as they choose to call them,
-the higher type tends to predominate. In fact, of
-course, the exact opposite is the case and it is
-scarcely necessary to cite the universal distrust,
-often contempt, that the half-breed between two
-sharply contrasted races inspires the world over.
-Belonging physically and spiritually to the lower
-race, but aspiring to recognition as one of the higher
-race, the unfortunate mongrel, in addition to a disharmonic
-physique, often inherits from one parent
-an unstable brain which is stimulated and at times
-overexcited by flashes of brilliancy from the other.
-The result is a total lack of continuity of purpose,
-an intermittent intellect goaded into spasmodic outbursts
-of energy. Physical and psychical disharmonies
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxx'>xxx</span>are common among crosses between Indians,
-negroes and whites, but where the parents are more
-closely related racially we often obtain individuals occupying
-the border-land between genius and insanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The essential character of all these racial mixtures
-is a lack of harmony—both physical and mental—in
-the first few generations. Then, if the strain survives,
-it is by the slow reversion to one of the parent
-types—almost inevitably the lower.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The temporary advantage of mere numbers enjoyed
-by the inferior classes in modern democracies
-can only be made permanent by the destruction of
-superior types—by massacre, as in Russia, or by taxation,
-as in England. In the latter country the financial
-burdens of the war and the selfish interests of
-labor have imposed such a load of taxation upon
-the upper and middle classes that marriage and children
-are becoming increasingly burdensome.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The best example of complete elimination of a
-dominant class is in Santo Domingo. The horrors
-of the black revolt were followed by the slow death
-of the culture of the white man. This history should
-be studied carefully because it gives in prophetic
-form the sequence of events that we may expect to
-find in Mexico and in parts of South America where
-the replacement of the higher type by the resurgent
-native is taking place.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the countries inhabited by a population more
-or less racially uniform the phenomenon of the multiplication
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxxi'>xxxi</span>of the inferior classes fostered and aided
-by the noble but fatuous philanthropy of the well-to-do
-everywhere appears. Nature’s laws when
-unchecked maintain a relatively fixed ratio between
-the classes, which is greatly impaired in modern
-society by humanitarian and charitable activities.
-The resurgence of inferior races and classes throughout
-not merely Europe but the world, is evident in
-every despatch from Egypt, Ireland, Poland, Rumania,
-India and Mexico. It is called nationalism,
-patriotism, freedom and other high-sounding names,
-but it is everywhere the phenomenon of the long-suppressed,
-conquered servile classes rising against
-the master race. The late Peloponnesian War in the
-world at large, like the Civil War in America, has
-shattered the prestige of the white race and it will
-take several generations and perhaps wars to recover
-its former control, if it ever does regain it.
-The danger is from within and not from without.
-Neither the black, nor the brown, nor the yellow, nor
-the red will conquer the white in battle. But if the
-valuable elements in the Nordic race mix with inferior
-strains or die out through race suicide, then
-the citadel of civilization will fall for mere lack of
-defenders.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of the curious effects of democracy is the
-unquestionable fact that there is less freedom of the
-press than under autocratic forms of government.
-It is well-nigh impossible to publish in the American
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxxii'>xxxii</span>newspapers any reflection upon certain religions
-or races which are hysterically sensitive even when
-mentioned by name. The underlying idea seems
-to be that if publication can be suppressed the facts
-themselves will ultimately disappear. Abroad, conditions
-are fully as bad, and we have the authority
-of one of the most eminent anthropologists in France
-that the collection of anthropological measurements
-and data among French recruits at the outbreak of
-the Great War was prevented by Jewish influence,
-which aimed to suppress any suggestion of racial
-differentiation in France. In the United States also,
-during the war, we were unable to obtain complete
-measurements and data, in spite of the self-devotion
-of certain scientists, like Drs. Davenport, Sullivan
-and others. This failure was due to lack of time
-and equipment and not to racial influences, but in
-the near future we may confidently expect in this
-country strenuous opposition to any public discussion
-of race as such.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The rapidly growing appreciation of the importance
-of race during the last few years, the study of
-the influence of race on nationality as shown by the
-after-war disputes over boundaries, the increasing
-complexity of our own problems between the whites
-and blacks, between the Americans and Japs, and
-between the native Americans and the hyphenated
-aliens in our midst upon whom we have carelessly
-urged citizenship, and, above all, the recognition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxxiii'>xxxiii</span>that the leaders of labor and their more zealous followers
-are almost all foreigners, have served to arouse
-Americans to a realization of the menace of the impending
-Migration of Peoples through unrestrained
-freedom of entry here. The days of the Civil War
-and the provincial sentimentalism which governed or
-misgoverned our public opinion are past, and this
-generation must completely repudiate the proud
-boast of our fathers that they acknowledged no
-distinction in “race, creed, or color,” or else the native
-American must turn the page of history and
-write:</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>“<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">FINIS AMERICÆ</span>”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>THE PASSING OF THE GREAT RACE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>PART I</em><br /> <span class='large'>RACE, LANGUAGE AND NATIONALITY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>I<br /> <span class='large'>RACE AND DEMOCRACY</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Failure to recognize the clear distinction between
-race and nationality and the still greater
-distinction between race and language and the easy
-assumption that the one is indicative of the other
-have been in the past serious impediments to an
-understanding of racial values. Historians and
-philologists have approached the subject from the
-viewpoint of linguistics and as a result we are
-to-day burdened with a group of mythical races,
-such as the Latin, the Aryan, the Indo-Germanic,
-the Caucasian and, perhaps, most inconsistent of
-all, the Celtic race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Man is an animal differing from his fellow inhabitants
-of the globe not in kind but only in
-degree of development and an intelligent study of
-the human species must be preceded by an extended
-knowledge of other mammals, especially the primates.
-Instead of such essential training, anthropologists
-often seek to qualify by research
-in linguistics, religion or marriage customs or in
-designs of pottery or blanket weaving, all of which
-relate to ethnology alone. As a result the influence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>of environment is often overestimated and overstated
-at the expense of heredity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The question of race has been further complicated
-by the effort of old-fashioned theologians
-to cramp all mankind into the scant six thousand
-years of Hebrew chronology as expounded by Archbishop
-Ussher. Religious teachers have also maintained
-the proposition not only that man is something
-fundamentally distinct from other living
-creatures, but that there are no inherited differences
-in humanity that cannot be obliterated
-by education and environment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is, therefore, necessary at the outset for the
-reader to appreciate thoroughly that race, language
-and nationality are three separate and
-distinct things and that in Europe these three
-elements are found only occasionally persisting
-in combination, as in the Scandinavian nations.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To realize the transitory nature of political
-boundaries one has but to consider the changes
-which have occurred during the past century
-and as to language, here in America we hear daily
-the English language spoken by many men who
-possess not one drop of English blood and who, a
-few years since, knew not one word of Saxon speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As a result of certain religious and social
-doctrines, now happily becoming obsolete, race
-consciousness has been greatly impaired among
-civilized nations but in the beginning all differences
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>of class, of caste and of color marked actual
-lines of race cleavage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In many countries the existing classes represent
-races that were once distinct. In the city
-of New York and elsewhere in the United States
-there is a native American aristocracy resting upon
-layer after layer of immigrants of lower races
-and these native Americans, while, of course, disclaiming
-the distinction of a patrician class and
-lacking in class consciousness and class dignity,
-have, nevertheless, up to this time supplied the
-leaders in thought and in the control of capital as
-well as of education and of the religious ideals and
-altruistic bias of the community.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the democratic forms of government the
-operation of universal suffrage tends toward the
-selection of the average man for public office rather
-than the man qualified by birth, education and
-integrity. How this scheme of administration
-will ultimately work out remains to be seen but
-from a racial point of view it will inevitably increase
-the preponderance of the lower types and
-cause a corresponding loss of efficiency in the
-community as a whole.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The tendency in a democracy is toward a standardization
-of type and a diminution of the influence
-of genius. A majority must of necessity
-be inferior to a picked minority and it always
-resents specializations in which it cannot share.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>In the French Revolution the majority, calling
-itself “the people,” deliberately endeavored to
-destroy the higher type and something of the
-same sort was in a measure done after the American
-Revolution by the expulsion of the Loyalists
-and the confiscation of their lands, with a resultant
-loss to the growing nation of good race strains,
-which were in the next century replaced by immigrants
-of far lower type.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In America we have nearly succeeded in destroying
-the privilege of birth; that is, the intellectual
-and moral advantage a man of good stock
-brings into the world with him. We are now engaged
-in destroying the privilege of wealth; that
-is, the reward of successful intelligence and industry
-and in some quarters there is developing
-a tendency to attack the privilege of intellect
-and to deprive a man of the advantage gained from
-an early and thorough classical education. Simplified
-spelling is a step in this direction. Ignorance
-of English grammar or classic learning must not,
-forsooth, be held up as a reproach to the political
-or social aspirant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mankind emerged from savagery and barbarism
-under the leadership of selected individuals
-whose personal prowess, capacity or wisdom gave
-them the right to lead and the power to compel
-obedience. Such leaders have always been a minute
-fraction of the whole, but as long as the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>tradition of their predominance persisted they were
-able to use the brute strength of the unthinking
-herd as part of their own force and were able to
-direct at will the blind dynamic impulse of the
-slaves, peasants or lower classes. Such a despot
-had an enormous power at his disposal which, if
-he were benevolent or even intelligent, could be
-used and most frequently was used for the general
-uplift of the race. Even those rulers who most
-abused this power put down with merciless rigor
-the antisocial elements, such as pirates, brigands
-or anarchists, which impair the progress of a community,
-as disease or wounds cripple an individual.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>True aristocracy or a true republic is government
-by the wisest and best, always a small minority
-in any population. Human society is like
-a serpent dragging its long body on the ground,
-but with the head always thrust a little in advance
-and a little elevated above the earth. The serpent’s
-tail, in human society represented by the
-antisocial forces, was in the past dragged by
-sheer strength along the path of progress. Such has
-been the organization of mankind from the beginning,
-and such it still is in older communities than
-ours. What progress humanity can make under
-the control of universal suffrage, or the rule of the
-average, may find a further analogy in the habits of
-certain snakes which wiggle sideways and disregard
-the head with its brains and eyes. Such
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>serpents, however, are not noted for their ability
-to make rapid progress.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A true republic, the function of which is administration
-in the interests of the whole community—in
-contrast to a pure democracy, which in
-last analysis is the rule of the demos or a majority
-in its own interests—should be, and often is, the
-medium of selection for the technical task of
-government of those best qualified by antecedents,
-character and education, in short, of experts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To use another simile, in an aristocratic as
-distinguished from a plutocratic or democratic
-organization the intellectual and talented classes
-form the point of the lance while the massive
-shaft represents the body of the population and
-adds by its bulk and weight to the penetrative
-impact of the tip. In a democratic system this
-concentrated force is dispersed throughout the
-mass. It supplies, to be sure, a certain amount
-of leaven but in the long run the force and genius
-of the small minority is dissipated, and its efficiency
-lost. <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Vox populi</span></i>, so far from being <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Vox
-Dei</span></i>, thus becomes an unending wail for rights and
-never a chant of duty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Where a conquering race is imposed on another
-race the institution of slavery often arises to compel
-the servient race to work and to introduce
-it forcibly to a higher form of civilization. As
-soon as men can be induced to labor to supply
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>their own needs slavery becomes wasteful and
-tends to vanish. From a material point of view
-slaves are often more fortunate than freemen when
-treated with reasonable humanity and when their
-elemental wants of food, clothing and shelter are
-supplied.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Indians around the fur posts in northern
-Canada were formerly the virtual bond slaves of
-the Hudson Bay Company, each Indian and his
-squaw and pappoose being adequately supplied
-with simple food and equipment. He was protected
-as well against the white man’s rum as the
-red man’s scalping parties and in return gave the
-Company all his peltries—the whole product of his
-year’s work. From an Indian’s point of view this
-was nearly an ideal condition but was to all intents
-serfdom or slavery. When through the opening
-up of the country the continuance of such an
-archaic system became an impossibility, the Indian
-sold his furs to the highest bidder, received a large
-price in cash and then wasted the proceeds in
-trinkets instead of blankets and in rum instead of
-flour, with the result that he is now gloriously free
-but is on the highroad to becoming a diseased outcast.
-In this case of the Hudson Bay Indian the
-advantages of the upward step from serfdom to
-freedom are not altogether clear. A very similar
-condition of vassalage existed until recently among
-the peons of Mexico, but without the compensation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>of the control of an intelligent and provident
-ruling class.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the same way serfdom in mediæval Europe
-apparently was a device through which the landowners
-repressed the nomadic instinct in their
-tenantry which became marked when the fertility
-of the land declined after the dissolution of the
-Roman Empire. Years are required to bring land
-to its highest productivity and agriculture cannot
-be successfully practised even in well-watered and
-fertile districts by farmers who continually drift
-from one locality to another. The serf or villein
-was, therefore, tied by law to the land and could
-not leave except with his master’s consent. As
-soon as the nomadic instinct was eliminated
-serfdom vanished. One has but to read the
-severe laws against vagrancy in England just
-before the Reformation to realize how widespread
-and serious was this nomadic instinct.
-Here in America we have not yet forgotten the
-wandering instincts of our Western pioneers, which
-in that case proved beneficial to every one except
-the migrants.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While democracy is fatal to progress when two
-races of unequal value live side by side, an aristocracy
-may be equally injurious whenever, in
-order to purchase a few generations of ease and
-luxury, slaves or immigrants are imported to do the
-heavy work. It was a form of aristocracy that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>brought slaves to the American colonies and the
-West Indies and if there had been an aristocratic
-form of governmental control in California, Chinese
-coolies and Japanese laborers would now form the
-controlling element, so far as numbers are concerned,
-on the Pacific coast.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was the upper classes who encouraged the
-introduction of immigrant labor to work American
-factories and mines and it is the native American
-gentleman who builds a palace on the country side
-and who introduces as servants all manner of
-foreigners into purely American districts. The
-farming and artisan classes of America did not
-take alarm until it was too late and they are now
-seriously threatened with extermination in many
-parts of the country. In Rome, also, it was the plebeian,
-who first went under in the competition with
-slaves but the patrician followed in his turn a few
-generations later.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The West Indian sugar planters flourished in the
-eighteenth century and produced some strong
-men; to-day from the same causes they have vanished
-from the scene.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>During the last century the New England manufacturer
-imported the Irish and French Canadians
-and the resultant fall in the New England birth rate
-at once became ominous. The refusal of the
-native American to work with his hands when he
-can hire or import serfs to do manual labor for him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>is the prelude to his extinction and the immigrant
-laborers are now breeding out their masters and
-killing by filth and by crowding as effectively as by
-the sword.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus the American sold his birthright in a continent
-to solve a labor problem. Instead of retaining
-political control and making citizenship an
-honorable and valued privilege, he intrusted the
-government of his country and the maintenance of
-his ideals to races who have never yet succeeded in
-governing themselves, much less any one else.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Associated with this advance of democracy and
-the transfer of power from the higher to the lower
-races, from the intellectual to the plebeian class, we
-find the spread of socialism and the recrudescence
-of obsolete religious forms. Although these phenomena
-appear to be contradictory, they are in reality
-closely related since both represent reactions
-from the intense individualism which a century
-ago was eminently characteristic of Americans.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>II<br /> <span class='large'>THE PHYSICAL BASIS OF RACE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>In the modern and scientific study of race we
-have long since discarded the Adamic theory that
-man is descended from a single pair, created a few
-thousand years ago in a mythical Garden of Eden
-somewhere in Asia, to spread later over the earth
-in successive waves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is a fact, however, that Asia was the chief
-area of evolution and differentiation of man and
-that the various groups had their main development
-there and not on the peninsula we call Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Many of the races of Europe, both living and
-extinct, did come from the East through Asia
-Minor or by way of the African littoral, but most
-of the direct ancestors of existing populations
-have inhabited Europe for many thousands of
-years. During that time numerous races of men
-have passed over the scene. Some undoubtedly
-have utterly vanished and some have left their
-blood behind them in the Europeans of to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We now know, since the elaboration of the
-Mendelian Laws of Inheritance, that certain bodily
-characters, such as skull shape, stature, eye color,
-hair color and nose form, some of which are so-called
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>unit characters, are transmitted in accordance
-with fixed laws, and, further, that various characters
-which are normally correlated or linked
-together in pure races may, after a prolonged
-admixture of races, pass down separately and
-form what is known as disharmonic combinations.
-Such disharmonic combinations are, for example, a
-tall brunet or a short blond; blue eyes associated
-with brunet hair or brown eyes with blond hair.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The process of intermixture of characters has
-gone far in existing populations and through the
-ease of modern methods of transportation this
-process is going much further in Europe and in
-America. The results of such mixture are not
-blends or intermediate types, but rather mosaics
-of contrasted characters. Such blends, if any, as
-ultimately occur are too remote to concern us here.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The crossing of an individual of pure brunet race
-with an individual of pure blond race produces in
-the first generation offspring which are distinctly
-dark. In subsequent generations, brunets and
-blonds appear in various proportions but the former
-tend to be much the more numerous. The blond is
-consequently said to be recessive to the brunet because
-it recedes from view in the first generation.
-This or any similar recessive or suppressed trait is
-not lost to the germ plasm, but reappears in later
-generations of the hybridized stock. A similar rule
-prevails with other physical characters.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>In defining race in Europe it is necessary not
-only to consider pure groups or pure types but
-also the distribution of characters belonging to
-each particular subspecies of man found there.
-The interbreeding of these populations has progressed
-to such an extent that in many cases such
-an analysis of physical characters is necessary to
-reconstruct the elements which have entered into
-their ethnic composition. To rely on averages
-alone leads to misunderstanding and to disregard
-of the relative proportion of pure, as contrasted
-with mixed types.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sometimes we find a character appearing here
-and there as the sole remnant of a once numerous
-race, for example, the rare appearance in
-European populations of a skull of the Neanderthal
-type, a race widely spread over Europe 40,000
-years ago, or of the Cro-Magnon type, the predominant
-race 16,000 years ago. Before the fossil
-remains of the Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon races
-were studied and understood such reversional
-specimens were considered pathological, instead
-of being recognized as the reappearance of an
-ancient and submerged type.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These physical characters are to all intents and
-purposes immutable and they do not change during
-the lifetime of a language or an empire. The
-skull shape of the Egyptian fellaheen, in the unchanging
-environment of the Nile Valley, is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>absolutely identical in measurements, proportions
-and capacity with skulls found in the pre-dynastic
-tombs dating back more than six thousand
-years.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There exists to-day a widespread and fatuous
-belief in the power of environment, as well as of
-education and opportunity to alter heredity, which
-arises from the dogma of the brotherhood of man,
-derived in its turn from the loose thinkers of the
-French Revolution and their American mimics.
-Such beliefs have done much damage in the past
-and if allowed to go uncontradicted, may do even
-more serious damage in the future. Thus the view
-that the Negro slave was an unfortunate cousin
-of the white man, deeply tanned by the tropic
-sun and denied the blessings of Christianity and
-civilization, played no small part with the sentimentalists
-of the Civil War period and it has
-taken us fifty years to learn that speaking English,
-wearing good clothes and going to school and to
-church do not transform a Negro into a white
-man. Nor was a Syrian or Egyptian freedman
-transformed into a Roman by wearing a toga and
-applauding his favorite gladiator in the amphitheatre.
-Americans will have a similar experience
-with the Polish Jew, whose dwarf stature, peculiar
-mentality and ruthless concentration on self-interest
-are being engrafted upon the stock of the
-nation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>Recent attempts have been made in the interest
-of inferior races among our immigrants to
-show that the shape of the skull does change, not
-merely in a century, but in a single generation.
-In 1910, the report of the anthropological expert
-of the Congressional Immigration Commission
-gravely declared that a round skull Jew on his way
-across the Atlantic might and did have a round
-skull child; but a few years later, in response to
-the subtle elixir of American institutions as exemplified
-in an East Side tenement, might and
-did have a child whose skull was appreciably
-longer; and that a long skull south Italian, breeding
-freely, would have precisely the same experience
-in the reverse direction. In other words the
-Melting Pot was acting instantly under the influence
-of a changed environment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>What the Melting Pot actually does in practice
-can be seen in Mexico, where the absorption
-of the blood of the original Spanish conquerors
-by the native Indian population has produced
-the racial mixture which we call Mexican and
-which is now engaged in demonstrating its incapacity
-for self-government. The world has seen
-many such mixtures and the character of a mongrel
-race is only just beginning to be understood
-at its true value.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It must be borne in mind that the specializations
-which characterize the higher races are of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>relatively recent development, are highly unstable
-and when mixed with generalized or primitive
-characters tend to disappear. Whether we like
-to admit it or not, the result of the mixture of
-two races, in the long run, gives us a race reverting
-to the more ancient, generalized and lower
-type. The cross between a white man and an Indian
-is an Indian; the cross between a white man
-and a Negro is a Negro; the cross between a white
-man and a Hindu is a Hindu; and the cross between
-any of the three European races and a Jew
-is a Jew.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the crossing of the blond and brunet elements
-of a population, the more deeply rooted
-and ancient dark traits are prepotent or dominant.
-This is matter of everyday observation and the
-working of this law of nature is not influenced or
-affected by democratic institutions or by religious
-beliefs. Nature cares not for the individual nor
-how he may be modified by environment. She
-is concerned only with the perpetuation of the species
-or type and heredity alone is the medium
-through which she acts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As measured in terms of centuries these characters
-are fixed and rigid and the only benefit to be
-derived from a changed environment and better
-food conditions is the opportunity afforded a
-race which has lived under adverse conditions
-to achieve its maximum development but the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>limits of that development are fixed for it by
-heredity and not by environment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In dealing with European populations the best
-method of determining race has been found to lie
-in a comparison of proportions of the skull, the so-called
-cephalic index. This is the ratio of maximum
-<em>width</em>, taken at the widest part of the skull above
-the ears, to maximum <em>length</em>. Skulls with an index
-of 75 or less, that is, those with a width that is three-fourths
-of the length or less, are considered dolichocephalic
-or long skulls. Skulls of an index of
-80 or over are round or brachycephalic skulls.
-Intermediate indices, between 75 and 80, are considered
-mesaticephalic. These are cranial indices.
-To allow for the flesh on living specimens about
-two per cent is to be added to this index and the
-result is the cephalic index. In the following
-pages only long and round skulls are considered
-and the intermediate forms are assigned to the
-dolichocephalic group.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This cephalic index, though an extremely important
-if not the controlling character, is, nevertheless,
-but a single character and must be checked
-up with other somatological traits. Normally, a
-long skull is associated with a long face and a
-round skull with a round face.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The use of this test, the cephalic index, enables
-us to divide the great bulk of the European populations
-into three distinct subspecies of man,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>one northern and one southern, both dolichocephalic
-or characterized by a long skull and a
-central subspecies which is brachycephalic or characterized
-by a round skull.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first is the Nordic or Baltic subspecies. This
-race is long skulled, very tall, fair skinned with
-blond or brown hair and light colored eyes. The
-Nordics inhabit the countries around the North
-and Baltic Seas and include not only the great
-Scandinavian and Teutonic groups, but also other
-early peoples who first appear in southern Europe
-and in Asia as representatives of Aryan language
-and culture.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The second is the dark Mediterranean or Iberian
-subspecies, occupying the shores of the inland sea
-and extending along the Atlantic coast until it
-reaches the Nordic species. It also spreads far
-east into southern Asia. It is long skulled like
-the Nordic race but the absolute size of the skull
-is less. The eyes and hair are very dark or black
-and the skin more or less swarthy. The stature is
-distinctly less than that of the Nordic race and the
-musculature and bony framework weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The third is the Alpine subspecies occupying
-all central and eastern Europe and extending
-through Asia Minor to the Hindu Kush and the
-Pamirs. The Armenoids constitute an Alpine subdivision
-and may possibly represent the ancestral
-type of this race which remained in the mountains
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>and high plateaux of Anatolia and western
-Asia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Alpines are round skulled, of medium
-height and sturdy build both as to skeleton and
-muscles. The coloration of both hair and eyes was
-originally very dark and still tends strongly in that
-direction but many light colored eyes, especially
-gray, are now common among the Alpine populations
-of western Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While the inhabitants of Europe betray as a
-whole their mixed origin, nevertheless, individuals
-of each of the three main subspecies are found in
-large numbers and in great purity, as well as sparse
-remnants of still more ancient races represented
-by small groups or by individuals and even by
-single characters.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These three main groups have bodily characters
-which constitute them distinct subspecies. Each
-group is a large one and includes several well-marked
-varieties, which differ even more widely
-in cultural development than in physical divergence
-so that when the Mediterranean of England
-is compared with the Hindu, or the Alpine Savoyard
-with the Rumanian or Turcoman, a wide gulf
-is found.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In zoology, related species when grouped together
-constitute subgenera and genera and the
-term species implies the existence of a certain
-definite amount of divergence from the most closely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>related type but race does not require a similar
-amount of difference. In man, where all groups
-are more or less fertile when crossed, so many
-intermediate or mixed types occur that the word
-species has at the present day too extended a
-meaning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For the sake of clearness the word race and
-not the word species or subspecies will be used in
-the following chapters as far as possible.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The old idea that fertility or infertility of races
-of animals was the measure of species is now
-abandoned. One of the greatest difficulties in
-classifying man is his perverse predisposition to
-mismate. This is a matter of daily observation,
-especially among the women of the better classes,
-probably because of their wider range of choice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There must have existed many subspecies and
-species, if not genera, of men since the Pliocene and
-new discoveries of their remains may be expected
-at any time and in any part of the eastern hemisphere.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The cephalic index is of less value in the classification
-of Asiatic populations but the distribution
-of round and long skulls is similar to that in
-Europe. The vast central plateau of that continent
-is inhabited by round skulls. In fact, Thibet
-and the western Himalayas were probably the
-centre of radiation of all the round skulls of the
-world. In India and Persia south of this central
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>area occurs a long skull race related to Mediterranean
-man in Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Both skull types occur much intermixed among
-the American Indians and the cephalic index is
-of little value in classifying the Amerinds. No
-satisfactory explanation of the variability of the
-skull shape in the western hemisphere has as yet
-been found, but the total range of variation of
-physical characters among them, from northern
-Canada to southern Patagonia, is less than the
-range of such variation from Normandy to Provence
-in France.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Africa the cephalic index is also of small
-classification value because all of the populations
-are characterized by a long skull.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The distinction between a long skull and a
-round skull in mankind probably goes back at
-least to early Paleolithic times, if not to a period
-still more remote. It is of such great antiquity
-that when new species or races appear in Europe
-at the close of the Paleolithic, between 10,000 and
-7,000 years B. C., the skull characters among
-them are as clearly defined as they are to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The fact that two distinct species of mankind
-have long skulls, as have the north European and
-the African Negro, is no necessary indication of
-relationship and in that instance is merely a case
-of parallel specialization, but the fact, however, that
-the Swede has a long skull and the Savoyard a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>round skull does prove them to be racially distinct.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The claim that the Nordic race is a mere variation
-of the Mediterranean race and that the latter
-is in turn derived from the Ethiopian Negro
-rests upon a mistaken idea that a dolichocephaly in
-common must mean identity of origin, as well as
-upon a failure to take into consideration many somatological
-characters of almost equal value with
-the cephalic index. Indeed, the cephalic index,
-being merely a ratio, may be identical for skulls
-differing in every other proportion and detail, as
-well as in absolute size and capacity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Eye color is of very great importance in race
-determination because all blue, gray or green
-eyes in the world to-day came originally from the
-same source, namely, the Nordic race of northern
-Europe. This light colored eye has appeared nowhere
-else on earth, is a specialization of this
-subspecies of man only and consequently is
-of extreme value in the classification of European
-races. Dark colored eyes are all but universal
-among wild mammals and entirely so among the
-primates, man’s nearest relatives. It may be
-taken as an absolute certainty that all the original
-races of man had dark eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One subspecies of man and one alone specialized
-in light colored eyes. This same subspecies also
-evolved light brown or blond hair, a character far
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>less deeply rooted than eye color, as blond children
-tend to grow darker with advancing years and
-populations partly of Nordic extraction, such as
-those of Lombardy, upon admixture with darker
-races lose their blond hair more readily than their
-light colored eyes. In short, light colored eyes
-are far more common than light colored hair. In
-crosses between Alpines and Nordics, the Alpine
-stature and the Nordic eye appear to prevail.
-Light color in eyes is largely due to a greater or
-less absence of pigment but it is not associated
-with weak eyesight, as in the case of Albinos. In
-fact, among marksmen, it has been noted that
-nearly all the great rifle-shots in England or America
-have had light colored eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Blond hair also comes everywhere from the
-Nordic subspecies and from nowhere else. Whenever
-we find blondness among the darker races of
-the earth we may be sure some Nordic wanderer has
-passed that way. When individuals of perfect
-blond type occur, as sometimes in Greek islands,
-we may suspect a recent visit of sailors from a
-passing ship but when only single characters remain
-spread thinly, but widely, over considerable
-areas, like the blondness of the Atlas Berbers or
-of the Albanian mountaineers, we must search in
-the dim past for the origin of these blurred traits
-of early invaders.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The range of blond hair color in pure Nordic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>peoples runs from flaxen and red to shades of chestnut
-and brown. The darker shades may indicate
-crossing in some cases, but absolutely black hair
-certainly does mean an ancestral cross with a
-dark race—in England with the Mediterranean
-race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It must be clearly understood that blondness of
-hair and of eye is not a final test of Nordic race.
-The Nordics include all the blonds, and also those
-of darker hair or eye when possessed of a preponderance
-of other Nordic characters. In this sense the
-word “blond” means those lighter shades of hair
-or eye color in contrast to the very dark or black
-shades which are termed brunet. The meaning
-of “blond” as now used is therefore not limited
-to the lighter or flaxen shades as in colloquial
-speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In England among Nordic populations there are
-large numbers of individuals with hazel brown
-eyes joined with the light brown or chestnut hair
-which is the typical hair shade of the English and
-Americans. This combination is also common in
-Holland and Westphalia and is frequently associated
-with a very fair skin. These men are all of “blond”
-aspect and constitution and consequently are to
-be classed as members of the Nordic race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Nordic populations the women are, in general,
-lighter haired than the men, a fact which
-points to a blond past and a darker future for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>those populations. Women in all human races,
-as the females among all mammals, tend to exhibit
-the older, more generalized and primitive traits of
-the past of the race. The male in his individual
-development indicates the direction in which the
-race is tending under the influence of variation and
-selection.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is interesting to note in connection with the
-more primitive physique of the female, that in
-the spiritual sphere also women retain the ancient
-and intuitive knowledge that the great mass
-of mankind is not free and equal but bond and
-unequal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The color of the skin is a character of importance
-but one that is exceedingly hard to measure
-as the range of variation in Europe between
-skins of extreme fairness and those that are
-exceedingly swarthy is almost complete. The
-Nordic race in its purity has an absolutely fair
-skin and is consequently the white man par
-excellence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Many members of the Nordic race otherwise
-apparently pure have skins, as well as hair, more
-or less dark, so that the determinative value of
-this character is uncertain. There can be no
-doubt that the quality of the skin and the extreme
-range of its variation in color from black,
-brown, red, yellow to ivory-white are excellent
-measures of the specific or subgeneric distinctions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>between the larger groups of mankind but in dealing
-with European populations it is sometimes
-difficult to correlate the shades of fairness with other
-physical characters.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In general, hair color and skin color are linked
-together, but it often happens that an individual
-with all other Nordic characters in great purity
-has a skin of an olive or dark tint. Even more
-frequently we find individuals with absolutely pure
-brunet traits in possession of a skin of almost ivory
-whiteness and of great clarity. This last combination
-is very frequent among the brunets of the
-British Isles. That these are, to some extent, disharmonic
-combinations we may be certain but beyond
-that our knowledge does not lead. Women,
-however, of fair skin have always been the objects
-of keen envy by those of the sex whose skins are
-black, yellow or red.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Stature is another character of greater value
-than skin color and, perhaps, than hair color and
-is one of much importance in European classification
-for on that continent we have the most
-extreme variations of human height.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Exceedingly adverse economic conditions may
-inhibit a race from attaining the full measure of
-its growth and to this extent environment plays its
-part in determining stature but fundamentally it
-is race, always race, that sets the limit. The tall
-Scot and the dwarfed Sardinian owe their respective
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>sizes to race and not to oatmeal or olive oil.
-It is probable, however, that the fact that the stature
-of the Irish is, on the average, shorter than
-that of the Scotch is due partly to economic conditions
-and partly to the depressive effect of a
-considerable population of primitive short stock.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Mediterranean race is everywhere marked
-by a relatively short stature, sometimes greatly
-depressed, as in south Italy and in Sardinia, and
-also by a comparatively light bony framework and
-feeble muscular development.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Alpine race is taller than the Mediterranean,
-although shorter than the Nordic, and is characterized
-by a stocky and sturdy build. The Alpines
-rarely, if ever, show the long necks and graceful
-figures so often found in the other two races.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Nordic race is nearly everywhere distinguished
-by great stature. Almost the tallest stature
-in the world is found among the pure Nordic populations
-of the Scottish and English borders while
-the native British of Pre-Nordic brunet blood
-are for the most part relatively short. No one
-can question the race value of stature who observes
-on the streets of London the contrast
-between the Piccadilly gentleman of Nordic race
-and the cockney costermonger of the old Neolithic
-type.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In some cases where these three European races
-have become mixed stature seems to be one of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>the first Nordic characters to vanish, but wherever
-in Europe we find great stature in a population
-otherwise lacking in Nordic characters we may
-suspect a Nordic crossing, as in the case of a
-large proportion of the inhabitants of Burgundy,
-of the Tyrol and of the Dalmatian Alps south to
-Albania.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These four characters, skull shape, eye color,
-hair color and stature, are sufficient to enable
-us to differentiate clearly between the three main
-subspecies of Europe, but if we wish to discuss the
-minor variations in each race and mixtures between
-them, we must go much further and take up other
-proportions of the skull than the cephalic index, as
-well as the shape and position of the eyes, the
-proportions and shape of the jaws, the chin and
-other features.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The nose is an exceedingly important character.
-The original human nose was, of course, broad
-and bridgeless. This trait is shown clearly in
-new-born infants who recapitulate in their development
-the various stages of the evolution of the
-human genus. A bridgeless nose with wide, flaring
-nostrils is a very primitive character and is still
-retained by some of the larger divisions of mankind
-throughout the world. It appears occasionally
-in white populations of European origin but is
-everywhere a very ancient, generalized and low
-character.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>The high bridge and long, narrow nose, the so-called
-Roman, Norman or aquiline nose, is characteristic
-of the most highly specialized races of
-mankind. While an apparently unimportant character,
-this feature is one of the very best clews to
-racial origin and in the details of its form, and especially
-in the lateral shape of the nostrils, is a
-race determinant of the greatest value.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The lips, whether thin or fleshy or whether clean-cut
-or everted, are race characters. Thick, protruding,
-everted lips are very ancient traits and
-are characteristic of many primitive races. A high
-instep also has long been esteemed an indication of
-patrician type while the flat foot is often the test
-of lowly origin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The absence or abundance of hair and beard
-and the relative absence or abundance of body
-hair are characters of no little value in classification.
-Abundant body hair is, to a large extent,
-peculiar to populations of the very highest as
-well as the very lowest species, being characteristic
-of the north European as well as of the Australian
-savages. It merely means the retention in both
-these groups of a very early and primitive trait
-which has been lost by the Negroes, Mongols and
-Amerinds.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Nordic and Alpine races are far better
-equipped with head and body hair than the Mediterranean,
-which is throughout its range a glabrous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>or relatively naked race but among the Nordics
-the extreme blond types are less equipped with
-body hair or down than are darker members of
-the race. A contrast in color between head hair
-and beard, the latter always being lighter than
-the former, may be one of the results of an ancient
-crossing of races.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The so-called red-haired branch of the Nordic
-race has special characters in addition to red
-hair, such as a greenish cast of eye, a skin of delicate
-texture tending either to great clarity or to
-freckles and certain peculiar temperamental traits.
-This was probably a variety closely related to the
-blonds and it first appears in history in association
-with them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While the three main European races are the
-subject of this book and while it is not the intention
-of the author to deal with the other human
-types, it is desirable in connection with the discussion
-of this character, hair, to state that the
-three European subspecies are subdivisions of one
-of the primary groups or species of the genus
-<em>Homo</em> which, taken together, we may call the
-Caucasian for lack of a better name.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The existing classification of man must be
-radically revised, as the differences between the
-most divergent human types are far greater than
-are usually deemed sufficient to constitute separate
-species and even subgenera in the animal kingdom
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>at large. Outside of the three European subspecies
-the greater portion of the genus <em>Homo</em> can
-be roughly divided into the Negroes and Negroids,
-and the Mongols and Mongoloids.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The former apparently originated in south Asia
-and entered Africa by way of the northeastern corner
-of that continent. Africa south of the Sahara is
-now the chief home of this race, though remnants
-of Negroid aborigines are found throughout south
-Asia from India to the Philippines, while the very
-distinct black Melanesians and the Australoids
-lie farther to the east and south.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Mongoloids include the round skulled Mongols
-and their derivatives, the Amerinds or American
-Indians. This group is essentially Asiatic
-and occupies the centre and the eastern half of
-that continent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A description of these Negroids and Mongoloids
-and their derivatives, as well as of certain aberrant
-species of man, lies outside the scope of
-this work.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the structure of the head hair of all races
-of mankind we find a regular progression from
-extreme kinkiness to lanky straightness and this
-straightness or curliness depends on the shape of
-the cross section of the hair itself. This cross
-section has three distinct forms, corresponding
-with the most extreme divergences among human
-species.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>The cross section of the hair of the Negroes is
-a flat ellipse with the result that they all have
-kinky hair. This kinkiness of the Negroes’ hair is
-also due somewhat to the acute angle at which the
-hair is set into the skin and the peppercorn form
-of hair probably represents an extreme specialization.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The cross section of the hair of the Mongols
-and their derivatives, the Amerinds, is a complete
-circle and their hair is perfectly straight and lank.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The cross section of the hair of the so-called
-Caucasians, including the Mediterranean, Alpine
-and Nordic subspecies, is an oval ellipse and consequently
-is intermediate between the cross-sections
-of the Negroes and Mongoloids. Hair of
-this structure is wavy or curly, never either kinky
-or absolutely straight and is characteristic of all the
-European populations almost without exception.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of these three hair types the straighter forms
-most closely represent the earliest human form of
-hair.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have confined the discussion to the most
-important characters but there are many other
-valuable aids to classification to be found in the
-proportions of the body and the relative length
-of the limbs. In this latter respect, it is a matter
-of common knowledge that there occur two distinct
-types, the one long legged and short bodied,
-the other long bodied and short legged.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>Without going into further physical details, it is
-probable that all relative proportions in the body,
-the features, the skeleton and the skull which are
-fixed and constant and lie outside of the range of
-individual variation represent dim inheritances
-from the past. Every generation of human beings
-carries the blood of thousands of ancestors, stretching
-back through thousands of years, superimposed
-upon a prehuman inheritance of still greater
-antiquity and the face and body of every living
-man offer an intricate mass of hieroglyphs that
-science will some day learn to read and interpret.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Only the foregoing main characters will be used
-as the basis for determining race and attention
-will be called later to such temperamental and
-spiritual traits as seem to be associated with distinct
-physical types.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We shall discuss only European populations and,
-as said, shall not deal with exotic and alien races
-scattered among them nor with those quarters of
-the globe where the races of man are such that
-other physical characters must be called upon to
-provide clear definitions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A fascinating subject would open up if we were
-to dwell upon the effect of racial combinations and
-disharmonies, as, for instance, where the mixed
-Nordic and Alpine populations of Lombardy usually
-retain the skull shape, hair color and stature
-of the Alpine race, with the light eye color of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>Nordic race, or where the mountain populations
-along the east coast of the Adriatic from the Tyrol
-to Albania have the stature of the Nordic race and
-an Alpine skull and coloration.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>III<br /> <span class='large'>RACE AND HABITAT</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The laws which govern the distribution of the
-various races of man and their evolution through
-selection are substantially the same as those controlling
-the evolution and distribution of the
-larger mammals.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Man, however, with his superior mentality has
-freed himself from many of the conditions which
-impose restraint upon the expansion of animals.
-In his case selection through disease and social
-and economic competition has largely replaced selection
-through adjustment to the limitations of
-food supply.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Man is the most cosmopolitan of animals and in
-one form or another thrives in the tropics and in
-the arctics, at sea level and on high plateaux, in
-the desert and in the reeking forests of the equator.
-Nevertheless, the various races of Europe
-have each a certain natural habitat in which it
-achieves its highest development.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'><span class='sc'>The Nordic Habitat</span></h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>The Nordics appear in their present centre of
-distribution, the basin of the Baltic, at the close
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>of the Paleolithic, as soon as the retreating glaciers
-left habitable land. This race was probably at
-that time in possession of its fundamental characters,
-and its extension from the plains of Russia
-to Scandinavia was not in the nature of a radical
-change of environment. The race in consequence
-is now, always has been and probably always will
-be, adjusted to certain environmental conditions,
-chief of which is protection from a tropical sun.
-The actinic rays of the sun at the same latitude
-are uniform in strength the world over and continuous
-sunlight affects adversely the delicate
-nervous organization of the Nordics. The fogs
-and long winter nights of the North serve as a protection
-from too much sun and from its too direct
-rays.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Scarcely less important is the presence of a
-large amount of moisture but above all a constant
-variety of temperature is needed. Sharp contrast
-between night and day temperature and between
-summer and winter are necessary to maintain the
-vigor of the Nordic race at a high pitch. Uniform
-weather, if long continued, lessens its energy. Too
-great extremes as in midwinter or midsummer in
-parts of New England are injurious. Limited but
-constant alternations of heat and cold, of moisture
-and dryness, of sun and clouds, of calm and cyclonic
-storms offer the ideal surroundings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Where the environment is too soft and luxurious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>and no strife is required for survival, not only are
-weak strains and individuals allowed to survive
-and encouraged to breed but the strong types also
-grow fat mentally and physically, like overfed
-Indians on reservations or wingless birds on
-oceanic islands, which have lost the power of flight
-as a result of prolonged protective conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Men of the Nordic race may not enjoy the
-fogs and snows of the North, the endless changes
-of weather and the violent fluctuations of the
-thermometer and they may seek the sunny southern
-isles, but under the former conditions they
-flourish, do their work and raise their families.
-In the south they grow listless and cease to breed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the lower classes in the Southern States of
-America the increasing proportion of “poor whites”
-and “crackers” are symptoms of lack of climatic
-adjustment. The whites in Georgia, in the Bahamas
-and, above all, in Barbadoes are excellent
-examples of the deleterious effects of residence outside
-the natural habitat of the Nordic race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The poor whites of the Cumberland Mountains
-in Kentucky and Tennessee present a more difficult
-problem, because here the altitude, even
-though moderate, should modify the effects of latitude
-and the climate of these mountains cannot
-be particularly unfavorable to men of Nordic
-breed. There are probably other hereditary forces
-at work there as yet little understood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>No doubt bad food and economic conditions,
-prolonged inbreeding and the loss through emigration
-of the best elements have played a large
-part in the degeneration of these mountaineers.
-They represent to a large extent the offspring of
-indentured servants brought over by the rich
-planters in early Colonial times and their names
-indicate that many of them are the descendants of
-the old borderers along the Scotch and English
-frontier. The persistence with which family feuds
-are maintained certainly points to such an origin.
-The physical type is typically Nordic, for the
-most part pure Saxon or Anglian, and the whole
-mountain population show somewhat aberrant but
-very pronounced physical, moral and mental characteristics
-which would repay scientific investigation.
-The problem is too complex to be disposed
-of by reference to the hookworm, illiteracy or
-competition with Negroes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This type played a large part in the settlement
-of the Middle West, by way of Kentucky, Tennessee
-and Missouri. Thence they passed both up
-the Missouri River and down the Santa Fé trail
-and contributed rather more than their share of
-the train robbers, horse thieves and bad men of
-the West.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Scotland and the Bahamas are inhabited by
-men of precisely the same race, but the vigor of
-the English in the Bahamas is gone and the beauty
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>of their women has faded. The fact that they
-were not in competition with an autochthonous
-race better adjusted to climatic conditions has
-enabled them to survive, but the type could not
-have persisted, even during the last two hundred
-years, if they had been compelled to compete on
-terms of equality with a native and acclimated
-population.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Another element entering into racial degeneration
-on many other islands and for that matter
-in many New England villages, is the loss through
-emigration of the more vigorous and energetic
-individuals, leaving behind the less efficient to
-continue the race at home.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In subtropical countries where the energy of
-the Nordics is at a low ebb it would appear that
-the racial inheritance of physical strength and
-mental vigor was suppressed and recessive rather
-than destroyed. Many individuals born in unfavorable
-climatic surroundings, who move back to
-the original habitat of their race in the north, recover
-their full quota of energy and vigor. New
-York and other Northern cities have many Southerners
-who are fully as efficient as pure Northerners.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This Nordic race can exist outside of its native
-environment as land owning aristocrats who are
-not required to do manual labor in the fields under
-a blazing sun. As such an aristocracy it continues
-to exist under Italian skies, but as a field laborer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>the man of Nordic blood cannot compete with
-his Alpine or Mediterranean rival. It is not to
-be supposed that the various Nordic tribes and
-armies, which for a thousand years after the fall of
-Rome poured down from the Alps like the glaciers
-to melt in the southern sun, were composed solely
-of knights and gentlemen who became the landed
-nobility of Italy. The man in the ranks also took
-up his land and work in Italy, but he had to compete
-directly with the native under climatic conditions
-which were unfavorable to his race. In this
-competition the blue eyed Nordic giant died and
-the native survived. His officer, however, lived in
-the castle and directed the labor of his bondsmen
-without other preoccupation than the chase and
-war and he long maintained his vigor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The same thing happened in our South before
-the Civil War. There the white men did not
-work in the fields or in the factory. The heavy
-work under the blazing sun was carried on by
-Negro slaves and the planter was spared exposure
-to an unfavorable environment. Under
-these conditions he was able to retain much of his
-vigor. When slavery was abolished and the
-white man had to plough his own fields or work
-in the factory deterioration began.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The change in type of the men who are now
-sent by the Southern States to represent them in
-the Federal Government from their predecessors
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>in ante-bellum times is partly due to these causes,
-but in greater degree it is to be attributed to the
-fact that a large portion of the best racial strains
-in the South were killed off during the Civil War.
-In addition the war shattered the aristocratic
-traditions which formerly secured the selection of
-the best men as rulers. The new democratic ideals,
-with universal suffrage in free operation among
-the whites, result in the choice of representatives
-who lack the distinction and ability of the leaders
-of the Old South.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A race may be thoroughly adjusted to a certain
-country at one stage of its development and
-be at a disadvantage when an economic change
-occurs, such as was experienced in England a century
-ago when the nation changed from an agricultural
-to a manufacturing community. The type
-of man that flourishes in the fields is not the type
-of man that thrives in the factory, just as the
-type of man required for the crew of a sailing
-ship is not the type useful as stokers on a modern
-steamer.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'><span class='sc'>The Habitat of the Alpines and Mediterraneans</span></h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>The environment of the Alpine race seems to
-have always been the mountainous country of
-central and eastern Europe, as well as western
-Asia, but they are now spreading into the plains,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>notably in Poland and Russia. This type has
-never flourished in the deserts of Arabia or the
-Sahara, nor has it succeeded well in maintaining
-its early colonies in the northwest of Europe within
-the domain of the Nordic long heads. It is,
-however, a sturdy and persistent stock and, while
-much of it may not be overrefined or cultured, undoubtedly
-possesses great potentialities for future
-development.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Alpines in the west of Europe, especially
-in Switzerland and the districts immediately surrounding,
-have been so thoroughly Nordicized and
-so saturated with the culture of the adjoining nations
-that they stand in sharp contrast to backward
-Alpines of Slavic speech in the Balkans and
-east of Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Mediterranean race, on the other hand, is
-clearly a southern type with eastern affinities.
-It is a type that did not endure in the north of
-Europe under former agricultural conditions nor is
-it suitable to the farming districts and frontiers
-of America and Canada. It is adjusted to subtropical
-and tropical countries better than any
-other European type and will flourish in our
-Southern States and around the coasts of the Spanish
-Main. In France it is well known that members
-of the Mediterranean race are better adapted
-for colonization in Algeria than are French Alpines
-or Nordics. This subspecies of man is notoriously
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>intolerant of extreme cold, owing to its susceptibility
-to diseases of the lungs and it shrinks from
-the blasts of the northern winter in which the Nordics
-revel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The brunet Mediterranean element in the native
-American seems to be increasing at the expense of
-the blond Nordic element generally throughout the
-Southern States and probably also in the large
-cities. This type of man, however, is scarce on
-our frontiers. In the Northwest and in Alaska in
-the days of the gold rush it was in the mining
-camps a matter of comment if a man turned up
-with dark eyes, so universal were blue and gray
-eyes among the American pioneers.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>IV<br /> <span class='large'>THE COMPETITION OF RACES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Where two races occupy a country side by side,
-it is not correct to speak of one type as changing
-into the other. Even if present in equal numbers
-one of the two contrasted types will have some
-small advantage or capacity which the other
-lacks toward a perfect adjustment to surroundings.
-Those possessing these favorable variations
-will flourish at the expense of their rivals and
-their offspring will not only be more numerous,
-but will also tend to inherit such variations. In
-this way one type gradually breeds the other out.
-In this sense, and in this sense only, do races
-change.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Man continuously undergoes selection through
-the operation of the forces of social environment.
-Among native Americans of the Colonial period
-a large family was an asset and social pressure
-and economic advantage counselled both early
-marriage and numerous children. Two hundred
-years of continuous political expansion and material
-prosperity changed these conditions and children,
-instead of being an asset to till the fields and guard
-the cattle, became an expensive liability. They
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>now require support, education and endowment
-from their parents and a large family is regarded
-by some as a serious handicap in the social struggle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These conditions do not obtain at first among
-immigrants, and large families among the newly
-arrived population are still the rule, precisely as
-they were in Colonial America and are to-day in
-French Canada where backwoods conditions still
-prevail.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The result is that one class or type in a population
-expands more rapidly than another and ultimately
-replaces it. This process of replacement
-of one type by another does not mean that the
-race changes or is transformed into another. It
-is a replacement pure and simple and not a transformation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The lowering of the birth rate among the most
-valuable classes, while the birth rate of the lower
-classes remains unaffected, is a frequent phenomenon
-of prosperity. Such a change becomes
-extremely injurious to the race if unchecked, unless
-nature is allowed to maintain by her own cruel
-devices the relative numbers of the different classes
-in their due proportions. To attack race suicide
-by encouraging indiscriminate reproduction is not
-only futile but is dangerous if it leads to an increase
-in the undesirable elements. What is needed in the
-community most of all is an increase in the desirable
-classes, which are of superior type physically,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>intellectually and morally and not merely an increase
-in the absolute numbers of the population.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The value and efficiency of a population are not
-numbered by what the newspapers call souls, but
-by the proportion of men of physical and intellectual
-vigor. The small Colonial population of
-America was, on an average and man for man, far
-superior to the present inhabitants, although the
-latter are twenty-five times more numerous. The
-ideal in eugenics toward which statesmanship should
-be directed is, of course, improvement in quality
-rather than quantity. This, however, is at present
-a counsel of perfection and we must face conditions
-as they are.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The small birth rate in the upper classes is to
-some extent offset by the care received by such
-children as are born and the better chance they
-have to become adult and breed in their turn. The
-large birth rate of the lower classes is under normal
-conditions offset by a heavy infant mortality,
-which eliminates the weaker children.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Where altruism, philanthropy or sentimentalism
-intervene with the noblest purpose and forbid nature
-to penalize the unfortunate victims of reckless
-breeding, the multiplication of inferior types is
-encouraged and fostered. Indiscriminate efforts
-to preserve babies among the lower classes often
-result in serious injury to the race. At the existing
-stage of civilization, the legalizing of birth control
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>would probably be of benefit by reducing the number
-of offspring in the undesirable classes. Regulation
-of the number of children is, for good or evil,
-in full operation among the better classes and its
-recognition by the state would result in no further
-harm among them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mistaken regard for what are believed to be
-divine laws and a sentimental belief in the sanctity
-of human life tend to prevent both the elimination
-of defective infants and the sterilization of such
-adults as are themselves of no value to the community.
-The laws of nature require the obliteration
-of the unfit and human life is valuable only
-when it is of use to the community or race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is highly unjust that a minute minority should
-be called upon to supply brains for the unthinking
-mass of the community, but it is even worse to burden
-the responsible and larger but still overworked
-elements in the community with an ever increasing
-number of moral perverts, mental defectives and
-hereditary cripples. As the percentage of incompetents
-increases, the burden of their support will
-become ever more onerous until, at no distant date,
-society will in self-defense put a stop to the supply
-of feebleminded and criminal children of weaklings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The church assumes a serious responsibility
-toward the future of the race whenever it steps in
-and preserves a defective strain. The marriage of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>deaf mutes was hailed a generation ago as a triumph
-of humanity. Now it is recognized as an
-absolute crime against the race. A great injury is
-done to the community by the perpetuation of
-worthless types. These strains are apt to be meek
-and lowly and as such make a strong appeal to
-the sympathies of the successful. Before eugenics
-were understood much could be said from a Christian
-and humane viewpoint in favor of indiscriminate
-charity for the benefit of the individual. The
-societies for charity, altruism or extension of
-rights, should have in these days, however, in their
-management some small modicum of brains, otherwise
-they may continue to do, as they have sometimes
-done in the past, more injury to the race than
-black death or smallpox.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As long as such charitable organizations confine
-themselves to the relief of suffering individuals,
-no matter how criminal or diseased they may be,
-no harm is done except to our own generation and
-if modern society recognizes a duty to the humblest
-malefactors or imbeciles that duty can be harmlessly
-performed in full, provided they be deprived
-of the capacity to procreate their defective strain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Those who read these pages will feel that there
-is little hope for humanity, but the remedy has been
-found, and can be quickly and mercifully applied.
-A rigid system of selection through the elimination
-of those who are weak or unfit—in other words,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>social failures—would solve the whole question in
-a century, as well as enable us to get rid of the
-undesirables who crowd our jails, hospitals and
-insane asylums. The individual himself can be
-nourished, educated and protected by the community
-during his lifetime, but the state through
-sterilization must see to it that his line stops with
-him or else future generations will be cursed with
-an ever increasing load of victims of misguided sentimentalism.
-This is a practical, merciful and inevitable
-solution of the whole problem and can be
-applied to an ever widening circle of social discards,
-beginning always with the criminal, the diseased
-and the insane and extending gradually to
-types which may be called weaklings rather than
-defectives and perhaps ultimately to worthless
-race types.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Efforts to increase the birth rate of the genius
-producing classes of the community, while most
-desirable, encounter great difficulties. In such
-efforts we encounter social conditions over which
-we have as yet no control. It was tried two thousand
-years ago by Augustus and his efforts to
-avert race suicide and the extinction of the old Roman
-stock were singularly prophetic of what some
-far seeing men are attempting in order to preserve
-the race of native Americans of Colonial descent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Man has the choice of two methods of race improvement.
-He can breed from the best or he can
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>eliminate the worst by segregation or sterilization.
-The first method was adopted by the Spartans,
-who had for their national ideals military efficiency
-and the virtues of self-control, and along these
-lines the results were completely successful. Under
-modern social conditions it would be extremely
-difficult in the first instance to determine which
-were the most desirable types, except in the most
-general way and even if a satisfactory selection
-were finally made, it would be in a democracy a
-virtual impossibility to limit by law the right to
-breed to a privileged and chosen few.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Interesting efforts to improve the quality as well
-as the quantity of the population, however, will
-probably be made in more than one country after
-the war has ended.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Experiments in limiting reproduction to the undesirable
-classes were unconsciously made in mediæval
-Europe under the guidance of the church.
-After the fall of Rome social conditions were such
-that all those who loved a studious and quiet life
-were compelled to seek refuge from the violence of
-the times in monastic institutions and upon such
-the church imposed the obligation of celibacy and
-thus deprived the world of offspring from these
-desirable classes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the Middle Ages, through persecution resulting
-in actual death, life imprisonment and banishment,
-the free thinking, progressive and intellectual
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>elements were persistently eliminated over
-large areas, leaving the perpetuation of the race to
-be carried on by the brutal, the servile and the
-stupid. It is now impossible to say to what extent
-the Roman Church by these methods has impaired
-the brain capacity of Europe, but in Spain
-alone, for a period of over three centuries from the
-years 1471 to 1781, the Inquisition condemned to the
-stake or imprisonment an average of 1,000 persons
-annually. During these three centuries no less
-than 32,000 were burned alive and 291,000 were
-condemned to various terms of imprisonment and
-other penalties and 17,000 persons were burned in
-effigy, representing men who had died in prison or
-had fled the country.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No better method of eliminating the genius producing
-strains of a nation could be devised and
-if such were its purpose the result was eminently
-satisfactory, as is demonstrated by the superstitious
-and unintelligent Spaniard of to-day. A similar
-elimination of brains and ability took place in
-northern Italy, in France and in the Low Countries,
-where hundreds of thousands of Huguenots were
-murdered or driven into exile.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Under existing conditions the most practical
-and hopeful method of race improvement is through
-the elimination of the least desirable elements in
-the nation by depriving them of the power to contribute
-to future generations. It is well known to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>stock breeders that the color of a herd of cattle can
-be modified by continuous destruction of worthless
-shades and of course this is true of other characters.
-Black sheep, for instance, have been practically
-obliterated by cutting out generation after
-generation all animals that show this color phase,
-until in carefully maintained flocks a black individual
-only appears as a rare sport.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In mankind it would not be a matter of great
-difficulty to secure a general consensus of public
-opinion as to the least desirable, let us say, ten per
-cent of the community. When this unemployed
-and unemployable human residuum has been eliminated
-together with the great mass of crime, poverty,
-alcoholism and feeblemindedness associated
-therewith it would be easy to consider the advisability
-of further restricting the perpetuation of
-the then remaining least valuable types. By this
-method mankind might ultimately become sufficiently
-intelligent to choose deliberately the most
-vital and intellectual strains to carry on the race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In addition to selection by climatic environment
-man is now, and has been for ages, undergoing
-selection through disease. He has been decimated
-throughout the centuries by pestilences such
-as the black death and bubonic plague. In our
-fathers’ days yellow fever and smallpox cursed
-humanity. These plagues are now under control,
-but similar diseases now regarded as mere nuisances
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>to childhood, such as measles, mumps and
-scarlatina, are terrible scourges to native populations
-without previous experience with them. Add
-to these smallpox and other white men’s diseases
-and one has the great empire builders of yesterday.
-It was not the swords in the hands of
-Columbus and his followers that decimated the
-American Indians, it was the germs that his men
-and their successors brought over, implanting the
-white man’s maladies in the red man’s world.
-Long before the arrival of the Puritans in New
-England, smallpox had flickered up and down the
-coast until the natives were but a broken remnant
-of their former numbers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the present time the Nordic race is undergoing
-selection through alcoholism, a peculiarly
-Nordic vice, and through consumption. Both
-these dread scourges unfortunately attack those
-members of the race that are otherwise most desirable,
-differing in this respect from filth diseases
-like typhus, typhoid or smallpox. One has only
-to look among the more desirable classes for the
-victims of rum and tubercule to realize that
-death or mental and physical impairment through
-these two causes have cost the race many of its
-most brilliant and attractive members.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>V<br /> <span class='large'>RACE, LANGUAGE AND NATIONALITY</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Nationality is an artificial political grouping
-of population usually centring around a single
-language as an expression of traditions and aspirations.
-Nationality can, however, exist independently
-of language but states thus formed, such as
-Belgium or Austria, are far less stable than those
-where a uniform language is prevalent, as, for example,
-France or England.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>States without a single national language are
-constantly exposed to disintegration, especially
-where a substantial minority of the inhabitants
-speak a tongue which is predominant in an adjoining
-state and, as a consequence, tend to gravitate
-toward such state.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The history of the last century in Europe has
-been the record of a long series of struggles to unite
-in one political unit all those speaking the same
-or closely allied dialects. With the exception of
-internal and social revolutions, every European
-war since the Napoleonic period has been caused
-by the effort to bring about the unification either
-of Italy or of Germany or by the desperate attempts
-of the Balkan States to struggle out of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>Turkish chaos into modern European nations on a
-basis of community of language. The unification
-of both Italy and Germany is as yet incomplete according
-to the views held by their more advanced
-patriots and the solution of the Balkan question
-is still in the future.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Men are keenly aware of their nationality and
-are very sensitive about their language, but only
-in a few cases, notably in Sweden and Germany,
-does any large section of the population possess
-anything analogous to true race consciousness, although
-the term “race” is everywhere misused to
-designate linguistic or political groups.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The unifying power of a common language works
-subtly and unceasingly. In the long run it forms a
-bond which draws peoples together—as the English-speaking
-peoples of the British Empire with those
-of America. In the same manner this linguistic
-sympathy will bring the German-speaking Austrians
-into a closer political community with the rest
-of Germany and will hold together all the German-speaking
-provinces.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It sometimes happens that a section of the population
-of a large nation gathers around language,
-reinforced by religion, as an expression of individuality.
-The struggle between the French-speaking
-Alpine Walloons and the Nordic Flemings of Low
-Dutch tongue in Belgium is an example of two
-competing languages in an artificial nation which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>was formed originally around religion. On the
-other hand, the Irish National movement centres
-chiefly around religion reinforced by myths of
-ancient grandeur. The French Canadians and
-the Poles use both religion and language to hold
-together what they consider a political unit. None
-of these so-called nationalities are founded on race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>During the past century side by side with the tendency
-to form imperial or large national groups,
-such as the Pan-Germanic, Pan-Slavic, Pan-Rumanian
-or Italia Irredenta movements, there has
-appeared a counter movement on the part of small
-disintegrating “nationalities” to reassert themselves,
-such as the Bohemian, Bulgarian, Serbian,
-Irish, and Egyptian national revivals. The upheaval
-is usually caused, as in the cases of the Irish
-and the Serbians, by delusions of former greatness
-now become national obsessions, but sometimes it
-means the resistance of a small group of higher culture
-to absorption by a lower civilization. The
-reassertion of these small nationalities is associated
-with the resurgence of the lower races at the
-expense of the Nordics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Examples of a high type threatened by a lower
-culture are afforded by the Finlanders, who are trying
-to escape the dire fate of their neighbors across
-the Gulf of Finland—the Russification of the Germans
-and Swedes of the Baltic Provinces—and by
-the struggle of the Danes of Schleswig to escape
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>Germanization. The Armenians, too, have resisted
-stoutly the pressure of Islam to force them
-away from their ancient Christian faith. This
-people really represents the last outpost of Europe
-toward the Mohammedan East and constitutes
-the best remaining medium through which
-Western ideals and culture can be introduced into
-Asia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In these as in other cases, the process of absorption
-from the viewpoint of the world at large is
-good or evil exactly in proportion to the relative
-value of the culture and race of the two groups.
-The world would be no richer in civilization with
-an independent Bohemia or an enlarged Rumania;
-but, on the contrary, an independent Hungarian nation
-strong enough to stand alone, a Finland self-governing
-or reunited to Sweden, or an enlarged
-Greece would add greatly to the forces that make
-for good government and progress. An independent
-Ireland worked out on a Tammany model
-is not a pleasing prospect. A free Poland, apart
-from its value as a buffer state, might be actually a
-step backward. Poland was once great, but the
-elements that made it so are scattered and gone
-and the Poland of to-day is a geographical expression
-and nothing more.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The prevailing lack of true race consciousness
-is probably due to the fact that every important
-nation in Europe as at present organized, with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>sole exception of the Iberian and Scandinavian
-states, possesses in large proportions representatives
-of at least two of the fundamental European
-subspecies of man and of all manner of crosses between
-them. In France to-day, as in Cæsar’s
-Gaul, the three races divide the nation in unequal
-proportions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the future, however, with an increased knowledge
-of the correct definition of true human races
-and types and with a recognition of the immutability
-of fundamental racial characters and of the
-results of mixed breeding, far more value will be
-attached to racial in contrast to national or linguistic
-affinities. In marital relations the consciousness
-of race will also play a much larger part
-than at present, although in the social sphere we
-shall have to contend with a certain strange attraction
-for contrasted types. When it becomes thoroughly
-understood that the children of mixed marriages
-between contrasted races belong to the lower
-type, the importance of transmitting in unimpaired
-purity the blood inheritance of ages will be
-appreciated at its full value and to bring half-breeds
-into the world will be regarded as a social
-and racial crime of the first magnitude. The laws
-against miscegenation must be greatly extended
-if the higher races are to be maintained.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The language that a man speaks may be nothing
-more than evidence that at some time in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>past his race has been in contact, either as conqueror
-or as conquered, with its original possessors.
-Postulating the Nordic origin and dissemination
-of the Proto-Aryan language, then in Asia
-and elsewhere existing Aryan speech on the lips
-of populations showing no sign of Nordic characters
-is to be considered evidence of a former dominance
-of Nordics now long vanished.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One has only to consider the spread of the language
-of Rome over the vast extent of her Empire
-to realize how few of those who speak to-day
-Romance tongues derive any portion of their blood
-from the pure Latin stock and the error of talking
-about a “Latin race” becomes evident.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There is, however, such a thing as a large group
-of nations which have a mutual understanding and
-sympathy based on the possession of a common
-or closely related group of languages and on the
-culture of which it is the medium. This assemblage
-maybe called the “Latin nations,” but never the
-“Latin race.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Latin America” is a still greater misnomer
-as the great mass of the populations of South
-and Central America is not even European and
-still less “Latin,” being overwhelmingly of Amerindian
-blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the Teutonic group a large majority of those
-who speak Teutonic languages, as the English,
-Flemings, Dutch, North Germans and Scandinavians,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>are descendants of the Nordic race while
-the dominant class in Europe is everywhere of
-that blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As to the so-called “Celtic race,” the fantastic
-inapplicability of the term is at once apparent
-when we consider that those populations on the
-borders of the Atlantic Ocean, who to-day speak
-Celtic dialects, are divided into three groups, each
-one showing in great purity the characters of one of
-the three entirely distinct human subspecies found
-in Europe. To class together the Breton peasant
-with his round Alpine skull; the little, long skulled,
-brunet Welshman of Mediterranean race, and
-the tall, blond, light-eyed Scottish Highlander of
-pure Nordic blood, in a single group labelled Celtic
-is obviously impossible. These peoples have neither
-physical, mental nor cultural characteristics
-in common. If one be of “Celtic” blood then the
-other two are clearly of different origin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was once a people who used the original
-Celtic language and they formed the western vanguard
-of the Nordic race. This people was spread
-all over central and western Europe prior to the irruption
-of the Teutonic tribes and were, no doubt,
-much mixed with Alpines among the lower classes.
-The descendants of these Celts must be sought to-day
-among those having the characters of the
-Nordic race and not elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In England the short, dark Mediterranean Welshman
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>talks about being “Celtic,” quite unconscious
-that he is the residuum of Pre-Nordic races of immense
-antiquity. If the Celts are Mediterranean
-in race then they are absent from central Europe
-and we must regard as Celts all the Berbers and
-Egyptians, as well as many Persians and Hindus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In France many anthropologists regard the
-Breton of Alpine blood in the same light and
-ignore his remote Asiatic origin. If these Alpine
-Bretons are Celts then there is no substantial
-trace of their blood, in the British Isles, as round
-skulls are practically absent there and all the
-blond elements in England, Scotland and Ireland
-must be attributed to the historic Teutonic invasions.
-Furthermore, we must call all the continental
-Alpines “Celts,” and must also include all
-Slavs, Armenians and other brachycephs of western
-Asia within that designation, which would be
-obviously grotesque. The fact that the original
-Celts left their speech on the tongues of Mediterraneans
-in Wales and of Alpines in Brittany must
-not mislead us, as it indicates nothing more than
-that Celtic speech antedates the Anglo-Saxons in
-England and the Romans in France. We must
-once and for all time discard the name “Celt”
-for any existing race whatever and speak only of
-“Celtic” language and culture.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Ireland the big, blond Nordic Danes claim
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>the honor of the name of “Celt,” if honor it be,
-but they are fully as Nordic as the English and
-the great mass of the Irish are of Danish, Norse
-and Anglo-Norman blood in addition to earlier
-and Pre-Nordic elements. We are all familiar with
-the blond and the brunet type of Irishman. These
-represent precisely the same racial elements as
-those which enter into the composition of the
-English, namely, the tall Nordic blond and the
-little Mediterranean brunet pure or combined with
-Paleolithic remnants. The Irish are consequently
-not entitled to independent national existence on
-the ground of race, but if there be any ground for
-political separation from England it must rest like
-that of Belgium on religion, a basis for political
-combinations now happily obsolete in communities
-well advanced in culture.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the case of the so-called “Slavic race,” there
-is much more unity between racial type and language.
-It is true that in most Slavic-speaking
-countries the predominant race is clearly Alpine,
-except perhaps in Russia where there is a very
-large substratum of Nordic type—which may be
-considered as Proto-Nordic. The objection which
-is made to the identification of the Slavic race
-with the Alpine type rests chiefly on the fact that
-a very large portion of the Alpine race is German-speaking
-in Germany, Italian-speaking in Italy
-and French-speaking in central France. Moreover,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>large portions of Rumania are of exactly the same
-racial complexion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Many of the modern Greeks are also Alpines; in
-fact, are little more than Byzantinized Slavs. It
-was through the Byzantine Empire that the Slavs
-first came in contact with the Mediterranean world
-and through this Greek medium the Russians, the
-Serbians, the Rumanians and the Bulgarians received
-their Christianity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Situated on the eastern marches of Europe, the
-Slavs were submerged during long periods in the
-Middle Ages by Mongolian hordes and were
-checked in development and warped in culture.
-Definite traces remain of the blood of the Mongols
-both in isolated and compact groups in south Russia
-and also scattered throughout the whole country as
-far west as the German boundary. The high tide
-of the Mongol invasion was during the thirteenth
-century. Three hundred years later the great Muscovite
-expansion began, first over the steppes to
-the Urals and then across Siberian tundras and
-forests to the waters of the Pacific, taking up in
-its course much Mongolian blood, especially during
-the early stages of its advance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The term “Caucasian race” has ceased to have
-any meaning except where it is used, in the
-United States, to contrast white populations with
-Negroes or Indians or in the Old World with Mongols.
-It is, however, a convenient term to include
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>the three European subspecies when considered as
-divisions of one of the primary branches or species
-of mankind but it is, at best, a cumbersome and
-archaic designation. The name “Caucasian” arose
-a century ago from a false assumption that the
-cradle of the blond Europeans was in the Caucasus
-where no traces are now found of any such
-race, except a small and decreasing minority of
-blond traits among the Ossetes, a tribe whose
-Aryan speech is related to that of the Armenians,
-and who while mainly brachycephalic still retain
-some blond and dolichocephalic elements which
-apparently are fading fast. The Ossetes now have
-about thirty per cent fair eyes and ten per cent fair
-hair. They are supposed to be to some extent a
-remnant of the Alans, the easternmost Teutonic
-tribe and closely related to the Goths. Both Alans
-and Goths very early in the Christian era occupied
-southern Russia, and were the latest known Nordics
-in the vicinity of the Caucasus Mountains. If
-these Ossetes are not partly of Alan origin they
-may possibly represent the last lingering trace of
-ancient Scythian dolichocephalic blondness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The phrase “Indo-European or Indo-Germanic
-race” is also of little use. If it has any meaning
-at all it must include all the three European races
-as well as members of the Mediterranean race in
-Persia and India. The use of this name also involves
-a false assumption of blood relationship
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>between the north European populations and the
-Hindus, because of their possession in common of
-Aryan speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The name “Aryan race” must also be frankly discarded
-as a term of racial significance. It is to-day
-purely linguistic, although there was at one time, of
-course, an identity between the original Proto-Aryan
-mother tongue and the race that first spoke
-and developed it. In short, there is not nor has
-there ever been either a Caucasian or an Indo-European
-race, but there was once, thousands of years
-ago, an original Aryan race long since vanished into
-dim memories of the past. If used in a racial
-sense other than as above, it should be limited to
-the Nordic invaders of Hindustan now long extinct.
-The great lapse of time since the disappearance of
-the ancient Aryan race as such is measured by
-the extreme disintegration of the various groups of
-Aryan languages. These linguistic divergences are
-chiefly due to the imposition by conquest of Aryan
-speech upon several distinct subspecies of man
-throughout western Asia and Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It may be pertinent before leaving this subject
-to point out that, as a whole, “Germans,”
-“French,” and “English,” as certain populations
-are now called, are but little more entitled to be
-considered the direct descendants, or even the exclusive
-modern representatives, of the ancient Germans,
-Franks or Anglo-Saxons, than are the living
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>Italians or Greeks to be regarded as the offspring
-of the Romans of the days of the Republic or the
-Hellenes of the classic period. There are, of course,
-many individuals and groups, perhaps even classes,
-in each of these nations, who do accurately represent
-the race from which the national name was derived.
-The Scandinavians, on the other hand, are
-racially what they were two thousand years ago,
-though diminished somewhat in race vigor by the
-loss through the emigration of some of their more
-enterprising members. Meanwhile, at the other
-end of Europe, the modern Spaniard probably more
-closely represents the Iberians before the arrival
-of the Gauls than did the Spaniard of five hundred
-years ago.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>VI<br /> <span class='large'>RACE AND LANGUAGE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>When a country is invaded and conquered by a
-race speaking a foreign language, one of several
-things may happen: replacement of both population
-and language, as in the case of eastern
-England when conquered by the Saxons or adoption
-of the language of the victors by the natives,
-as happened in Roman Gaul, where the invaders
-imposed their Latin tongue throughout the land
-without substantially altering the race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Romans probably modified the race in Gaul
-by killing a much larger proportion of the Nordic
-fighting classes than of the more submissive Alpines
-and Mediterraneans. This is confirmed by the
-fact that when the prolonged and brilliant resistance
-to Cæsar’s legions was finally broken, no serious
-attempt was ever again made to throw off the Roman
-yoke and a few centuries later the Teutonic
-invaders encountered no determined opposition
-from the inhabitants when they entered and
-occupied the land.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In England and Scotland later conquerors, Norsemen,
-Danes and Normans, failed to change radically
-the Saxon speech of the country and in Gaul the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>Teutonic tongues of the Franks, Burgundians and
-Northmen could not displace the language of
-Rome.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Autochthonous inhabitants frequently impose
-upon their invaders their own language and customs.
-In Normandy the conquering Norse pirates
-accepted the language, religion and customs
-of the natives and in a century they vanish from
-history as Scandinavian heathen and appear as the
-foremost representatives of the speech and religion
-of Rome.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Hindustan the blond Nordic invaders forced
-their Aryan language on the aborigines, but their
-blood was quickly and utterly absorbed in the
-darker strains of the original owners of the land.
-A record of the desperate efforts of the conqueror
-classes in India to preserve the purity of their
-blood persists until this very day in their carefully
-regulated system of castes. In our Southern States
-Jim Crow cars and social discriminations have
-exactly the same purpose and justification.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Hindu to-day speaks a very ancient form of
-Aryan language, but there remains not one recognizable
-trace of the blood of the white conquerors
-who poured in through the passes of the Northwest.
-The boast of the modern Indian that he is
-of the same race as his English ruler is entirely
-without basis in fact and the little swarthy native
-lives amid the monuments of a departed grandeur,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>professing the religion and speaking the tongue of
-his long-forgotten Nordic conquerors, without the
-slightest claim to blood kinship. The dim and uncertain
-traces of Nordic blood in northern India
-only serve to emphasize the utter swamping of the
-white man in the burning South.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The power of racial resistance of a dense and
-thoroughly acclimated population to an incoming
-army is very great. No ethnic conquest can be
-complete unless the natives are exterminated and
-the invaders bring their own women with them.
-If the conquerors are obliged to depend upon
-the women of the vanquished to carry on the
-race, the intrusive blood strain of the invaders
-in a short time becomes diluted beyond recognition.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It sometimes happens that an infiltration of population
-takes place either in the guise of unwilling
-slaves or of willing immigrants, who fill up waste
-places and take to the lowly tasks which the
-lords of the land despise, thus gradually occupying
-the country and literally breeding out their
-masters.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The former catastrophe happened in the declining
-days of the Roman Republic and the south
-Italians of to-day are very largely descendants of
-the nondescript slaves of all races, chiefly from the
-southern and eastern coasts of the Mediterranean,
-who were imported by the Romans under the Empire
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>to work their vast estates. The latter is occurring
-to-day in many parts of America, especially
-in New England.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The eastern half of Germany has a Slavic Alpine
-substratum which represents the descendants of
-the Wends, who first appear about the commencement
-of the Christian era and who by the sixth
-century had penetrated as far west as the Elbe,
-occupying the lands left vacant by the Teutonic
-tribes which had migrated southward. These
-Wends in turn were Teutonized by a return wave of
-military conquest from the tenth century onward,
-and to-day their descendants are considered Germans
-in good standing. Having adopted the German
-as their sole tongue they are now in religious,
-political and cultural sympathy with the pure
-Teutons; in fact, they are quite unconscious of
-any racial distinction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This historic fact underlies the ferocious controversy
-which has been raised over the ethnic origin
-of the Prussians, the issue being whether the populations
-in Brandenburg, Silesia, Posen, West Prussia,
-and other districts in eastern Germany, are
-Alpine Wends or true Nordics. The truth is that
-the dominant half of the population is purely Teutonic
-and the remainder of the population are merely
-Teutonized Wends and Poles of Alpine affinities.
-Of course, these territories must also retain some
-of their early Teutonic population and the blood
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>of the Goth, Burgund, Vandal and Lombard, who
-at the commencement of the Christian era were
-located there, as well as of the later Saxon element,
-must enter largely into the composition of the
-Prussian of to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Some anthropologists regard the Teutonized
-round heads of south Germany as a distinct subdivision
-of the Alpines because of the large percentage
-of blond hair and still larger percentage of
-light colored eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The most important communities in continental
-Europe of pure German type are to be found in
-old Saxony, the country around Hanover, and this
-element prevails generally in the northwestern part
-of the German Empire among the Low German-speaking
-population, while the High German-speaking
-population is largely composed of Teutonized
-Alpines.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The coasts of the North Sea extending from
-Schleswig and Holstein into Holland are inhabited
-by a very pure Nordic type known as the Frisians.
-They are the handsomest and in many respects
-the finest of the continental Nordics and are
-closely related to the English, as many of the
-Post-Roman invaders of England either came from
-Frisia or from adjoining districts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All the states involved in the present world war
-have sent to the front their fighting Nordic element
-and the loss of life now going on in Europe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>will fall much more heavily on the blond giant than
-on the little brunet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As in all wars since Roman times from a breeding
-point of view the little dark man is the final winner.
-No one who saw one of our regiments march
-on its way to the Spanish War could fail to be impressed
-with the size and blondness of the men in
-the ranks as contrasted with the complacent citizen,
-who from his safe stand on the gutter curb
-gave his applause to the fighting man and then
-stayed behind to perpetuate his own brunet type.
-In the present war one has merely to study the
-type of officer and of the man in the ranks to
-realize that, in spite of the draft net, the Nordic race
-is contributing an enormous majority of the fighting
-men, out of all proportion to their relative
-numbers in the nation at large.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This same Nordic element, everywhere the type
-of the sailor, the soldier, the adventurer and the
-pioneer, was ever the type to migrate to new countries,
-until the ease of transportation and the desire
-to escape military service in the last forty years
-reversed the immigrant tide. In consequence of
-this change our immigrants now largely represent
-lowly refugees from “persecution,” and other social
-discards.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In most cases the blood of pioneers has been lost
-to their race. They did not take their women with
-them. They either died childless or left half-breeds
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>behind them. The virile blood of the Spanish
-conquistadores, who are now little more than a
-memory in Central and South America, died out
-from these causes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This was also true in the early days of our
-Western frontiersmen, who individually were a far
-finer type than the settlers who followed them.
-In fact, it is said that practically every one of the
-Forty-Niners in California was of Nordic type.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>VII<br /> <span class='large'>THE EUROPEAN RACES IN COLONIES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>For reasons already set forth there are few communities
-outside of Europe of pure European blood.
-The racial destiny of Mexico and of the islands and
-coasts of the Spanish Main is clear. The white man
-is being rapidly bred out by Negroes on the islands
-and by Indians on the mainland. It is quite evident
-that the West Indies, the coast region of our
-Gulf States, perhaps, also the black belt of the lower
-Mississippi Valley must be abandoned to Negroes.
-This transformation is already complete in Haiti
-and is going rapidly forward in Cuba and Jamaica.
-Mexico and the northern part of South America
-must also be given over to native Indians with
-an ever thinning veneer of white culture of the
-“Latin” type.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Venezuela the pure whites number about one
-per cent of the whole population, the balance being
-Indians and various crosses between Indians, Negroes
-and whites. In Jamaica the whites number
-not more than two per cent, while the remainder are
-Negroes or mulattoes. In Mexico the proportion
-is larger, but the unmixed whites number less
-than twenty per cent of the whole, the others
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>being Indians pure or mixed. These latter are the
-“greasers” of the American frontiersman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whenever the incentive to imitate the dominant
-race is removed the Negro or, for that matter,
-the Indian, reverts shortly to his ancestral grade
-of culture. In other words, it is the individual
-and not the race that is affected by religion, education
-and example. Negroes have demonstrated
-throughout recorded time that they are a stationary
-species and that they do not possess the potentiality
-of progress or initiative from within. Progress
-from self-impulse must not be confounded
-with mimicry or with progress imposed from without
-by social pressure or by the slaver’s lash.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the impulse of an inferior race to imitate
-or mimic the dress, manners or morals of the
-dominant race is destroyed by the acquisition of
-political or social independence, the servient race
-tends to revert to its original status as in Haiti.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Where two distinct species are located side by side
-history and biology teach that but one of two things
-can happen; either one race drives the other out, as
-the Americans exterminated the Indians and as the
-Negroes are now replacing the whites in various
-parts of the South; or else they amalgamate and
-form a population of race bastards in which the
-lower type ultimately preponderates. This is a
-disagreeable alternative with which to confront
-sentimentalists but nature is only concerned with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>results and neither makes nor takes excuses. The
-chief failing of the day with some of our well meaning
-philanthropists is their absolute refusal to face
-inevitable facts, if such facts appear cruel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the Argentine white blood of the various
-European races is pouring in so rapidly that a
-community preponderantly white, but of the Mediterranean
-race, may develop, but the type is suspiciously
-swarthy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Brazil, Negro blood together with that of
-the native inhabitants is rapidly overwhelming the
-white Europeans, although in the southern provinces
-German immigration has played an important
-rôle and the influx of Italians has also been considerable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Asia, with the sole exception of the Russian
-settlements in Siberia, there can be and will be no
-ethnic conquest and all the white men in India,
-the East Indies, the Philippines and China will
-leave not the slightest trace behind them in the
-blood of the native population. After several centuries
-of contact and settlement the pure Spanish
-in the Philippines are about half of one per cent.
-The Dutch in their East Indian islands are even
-less, while the resident whites in Hindustan amount
-to about one-tenth of one per cent. Such numbers
-are infinitesimal and of no force in a democracy, but
-in a monarchy, if kept free from contamination, they
-suffice for a ruling caste or a military aristocracy.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>Throughout history it is only the race of the leaders
-that has counted and the most vigorous have been
-in control and will remain in mastery in one
-form or another until such time as democracy and
-its illegitimate offspring, socialism, definitely establish
-cacocracy and the rule of the worst and put
-an end to progress. The salvation of humanity
-will then lie in the chance survival of some sane
-barbarians who may retain the basic truth that
-inequality and not equality is the law of nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Australia and New Zealand, where the natives
-have been virtually exterminated by the whites, are
-developing into communities of pure Nordic blood
-and will for that reason play a large part in the
-future history of the Pacific. The bitter opposition
-of the Australians and Californians to the admission
-of Chinese coolies and Japanese farmers is
-due primarily to a blind but absolutely justified
-determination to keep those lands as white man’s
-countries.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Africa, south of the Sahara, the density of the
-native population will prevent the establishment
-of any purely white communities, except at the
-southern extremity of the continent and possibly
-on portions of the plateaux of eastern Africa.
-The stoppage of famines and wars and the abolition
-of the slave trade, while dictated by the
-noblest impulses of humanity, are suicidal to the
-white man. Upon the removal of these natural
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>checks Negroes multiply so rapidly that there will
-not be standing room on the continent for white
-men, unless, perchance, the lethal sleeping sickness,
-which attacks the natives far more frequently than
-the whites, should run its course unchecked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In South Africa a community of mixed Dutch
-and English extraction is developing. Here the
-only difference is one of language. English, being
-a world tongue, will inevitably prevail over the
-Dutch patois called “Taal.” This Frisian dialect,
-as a matter of fact, is closer to old Saxon or rather
-Kentish than any living continental tongue and the
-blood of the North Hollander is extremely close to
-that of the Anglo-Saxon of England. The English
-and the Dutch will merge in a common type just
-as they have in the past two hundred years in the
-Colony and State of New York. They must stand
-together if they are to maintain any part of Africa
-as a white man’s country, because they are confronted
-with the menace of an enormous black
-Bantu population which will drive out the whites
-unless the problem is bravely faced.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The only possible solution is to establish large
-colonies for the Negroes and to allow them outside
-of them only as laborers and not as settlers. There
-must be ultimately a black South Africa and a
-white South Africa side by side or else a pure
-black Africa from the Cape to the cataracts of the
-Nile.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>In upper Canada, as in the United States up to
-the time of our Civil War, the white population
-was purely Nordic. The Dominion is, as a whole,
-handicapped by the presence of an indigestible
-mass of French Canadians, largely from Brittany
-and of Alpine origin, although the habitant patois
-is an archaic Norman of the time of Louis XIV.
-These Frenchmen were granted freedom of language
-and religion by their conquerors and are
-now using those privileges to form separatist groups
-in antagonism to the English population. The
-Quebec Frenchmen will succeed in seriously impeding
-the progress of Canada and will succeed
-even better in keeping themselves a poor and
-ignorant community of little more importance to
-the world at large than are the Negroes in the South.
-The selfishness of the Quebec Frenchmen is measured
-by the fact that in the present war they will
-not fight for the British Empire or for France or
-even for clerical Belgium and they are now endeavoring
-to make use of the military crisis to secure a
-further extension of their “nationalistic ideals.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Personally the writer believes that the finest and
-purest type of a Nordic community outside of Europe
-will develop in northwest Canada and on the
-Pacific coast of the United States. Most of the
-other countries in which the Nordic race is now
-settling lie outside the special environment in which
-alone it can flourish.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>The Negroes of the United States while stationary,
-were not a serious drag on civilization until
-in the last century they were given the rights of citizenship
-and were incorporated in the body politic.
-These Negroes brought with them no language or
-religion or customs of their own which persisted
-but adopted all these elements of environment
-from the dominant race, taking the names of their
-masters just as to-day the German and Polish Jews
-are assuming American names. They came for
-the most part from the coasts of the Bight of
-Benin, but some of the later ones came from the
-southeast coast of Africa by way of Zanzibar.
-They were of various black tribes but have been
-from the beginning saturated with white blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Looking at any group of Negroes in America, especially
-in the North, it is easy to see that while they
-are all essentially Negroes, whether coal-black,
-brown or yellow, a great many of them have varying
-amounts of Nordic blood in them, which has
-in some respects modified their physical structure
-without transforming them in any way into white
-men. This miscegenation was, of course, a frightful
-disgrace to the dominant race but its effect on the
-Nordics has been negligible, for the simple reason
-that it was confined to white men crossing with
-Negro women and did not involve the reverse process,
-which would, of course, have resulted in the
-infusion of Negro blood into the American stock.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>The United States of America must be regarded
-racially as a European colony and owing to current
-ignorance of the physical bases of race, one
-often hears the statement made that native Americans
-of Colonial ancestry are of mixed ethnic
-origin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This is not true.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the time of the Revolutionary War the settlers
-in the thirteen Colonies were overwhelmingly
-Nordic, a very large majority being Anglo-Saxon
-in the most limited meaning of that term. The
-New England settlers in particular came from
-those counties of England where the blood was
-almost purely Saxon, Anglian, Norse and Dane.
-The date of their migration was earlier than the
-resurgence of the Mediterranean type that has so
-greatly expanded in England during the last century
-with the growth of manufacturing towns.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>New England during Colonial times and long
-afterward was far more Nordic than old England;
-that is, it contained a smaller percentage of
-small, Pre-Nordic brunets. Any one familiar with
-the native New Englander knows the clean cut face,
-the high stature and the prevalence of gray and blue
-eyes and light brown hair and recognizes that the
-brunet element is less noticeable there than in the
-South.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Southern States were populated also by
-Englishmen of the purest Nordic type but there is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>to-day, except among the mountains, an appreciably
-larger amount of brunet types than in the
-North. Virginia is in the same latitude as North
-Africa and south of this line no blonds have ever
-been able to survive in full vigor, chiefly because
-the actinic rays of the sun are the same regardless
-of other climatic conditions. These rays beat
-heavily on the Nordic race and disturb their nervous
-system, wherever the white man ventures too
-far from the cold and foggy North.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The remaining Colonial elements, the Holland
-Dutch and the Palatine Germans, who came over in
-small numbers to New York and Pennsylvania,
-were also largely Nordic, while many of the French
-Huguenots who escaped to America were drawn
-from the same racial element in France. The
-Scotch-Irish, who were numerous on the frontier
-of the middle Colonies were, of course, of pure
-Scotch and English blood, although they had resided
-in Ireland for two or three generations. They
-were quite free from admixture with the earlier
-Irish, from whom they were cut off socially by bitter
-religious antagonism and they are not to be considered
-as “Irish” in any sense.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was no important immigration of other
-elements until the middle of the nineteenth century
-when Irish Catholic and German immigrants
-appear for the first time upon the scene.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Nordic blood was kept pure in the Colonies
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>because at that time among Protestant peoples
-there was a strong race feeling, as a result of which
-half-breeds between the white man and any native
-type were regarded as natives and not as white
-men.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was plenty of mixture with the Negroes as
-the light color of many Negroes abundantly testifies,
-but these mulattoes, quadroons or octoroons were
-then and are now universally regarded as Negroes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was also abundant cross breeding along
-the frontiers between the white frontiersman and
-the Indian squaw but the half-breed was everywhere
-regarded as a member of the inferior race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the Catholic colonies, however, of New France
-and New Spain, if the half-breed were a good
-Catholic he was regarded as a Frenchman or a
-Spaniard, as the case might be. This fact alone
-gives the clew to many of our Colonial wars where
-the Indians, other than the Iroquois, were persuaded
-to join the French against the Americans
-by half-breeds who considered themselves Frenchmen.
-The Church of Rome has everywhere used
-its influence to break down racial distinctions. It
-disregards origins and only requires obedience to
-the mandates of the universal church. In that lies
-the secret of the opposition of Rome to all national
-movements. It maintains the imperial as contrasted
-with the nationalistic ideal and in that respect
-its inheritance is direct from the Empire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>Race consciousness in the Colonies and in the
-United States, down to and including the Mexican
-War, seems to have been very strongly developed
-among native Americans and it still remains in full
-vigor to-day in the South, where the presence of a
-large Negro population forces this question upon the
-daily attention of the whites.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In New England, however, whether through the
-decline of Calvinism or the growth of altruism,
-there appeared early in the last century a wave of
-sentimentalism, which at that time took up the
-cause of the Negro and in so doing apparently destroyed,
-to a large extent, pride and consciousness
-of race in the North. The agitation over slavery
-was inimical to the Nordic race, because it thrust
-aside all national opposition to the intrusion of
-hordes of immigrants of inferior racial value and
-prevented the fixing of a definite American type.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Civil War was fought almost entirely by
-unalloyed native Americans. The Irish immigrants
-were, at the middle of the last century,
-confined to a few States and, being chiefly domestic
-servants or day laborers, were of no social
-importance. They gathered in the large cities
-and by voting as a solid block for their own collective
-benefit quickly demoralized the governments
-of the municipalities in which they secured ascendancy.
-The German immigrants who came to
-America about the same time were chiefly enthusiasts
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>who had taken part in the German Revolution
-of ’48. In spite of the handicap of a strange language
-they formed a more docile and educated
-element than the Irish and were more prone to
-scatter into the rural districts. Neither the Irish
-nor the Germans played an important part in the
-development or policies of the nation as a whole,
-although in the Civil War they each contributed a
-relatively large number of soldiers to the Northern
-army. These Irish and German elements were for
-the most part of the Nordic race and while they
-did not in the least strengthen the nation either
-morally or intellectually they did not impair its
-physique.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There has been little or no Indian blood taken
-into the veins of the native American, except in
-States like Oklahoma and in some isolated families
-scattered here and there in the Northwest. This
-particular mixture will play no very important role
-in future combinations of race on this continent,
-except in the north of Canada.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The native American has always found and finds
-now in the black men willing followers who ask
-only to obey and to further the ideals and wishes
-of the master race, without trying to inject into the
-body politic their own views, whether racial, religious
-or social. Negroes are never socialists or
-labor unionists and as long as the dominant imposes
-its will on the servient race and as long as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>they remain in the same relation to the whites as in
-the past, the Negroes will be a valuable element in
-the community but once raised to social equality
-their influence will be destructive to themselves
-and to the whites. If the purity of the two races
-is to be maintained they cannot continue to live
-side by side and this is a problem from which there
-can be no escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The native American by the middle of the nineteenth
-century was rapidly acquiring distinct characteristics.
-Derived from the Saxon and Danish
-parts of the British Isles and being almost purely
-Nordic he was by reason of a differential selection
-due to a new environment beginning to show
-physical peculiarities of his own slightly variant
-from those of his English forefathers and corresponding
-rather with the idealistic Elizabethan than
-with the materialistic Hanoverian Englishman.
-The Civil War, however, put a severe, perhaps
-fatal, check to the development and expansion of
-this splendid type by destroying great numbers of
-the best breeding stock on both sides and by breaking
-up the home ties of many more. If the war
-had not occurred these same men with their descendants
-would have populated the Western
-States instead of the racial nondescripts who are
-now flocking there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There is every reason to believe that the native
-stock would have continued to maintain a high rate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>of increase if there had been no immigration of
-foreign laborers in the middle of the nineteenth
-century and that the actual population of the United
-States would be fully as large as it is now but
-would have been almost exclusively native American
-and Nordic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The prosperity that followed the war attracted
-hordes of newcomers who were welcomed by the
-native Americans to operate factories, build railroads
-and fill up the waste spaces—“developing
-the country” it was called.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These new immigrants were no longer exclusively
-members of the Nordic race as were the earlier ones
-who came of their own impulse to improve their
-social conditions. The transportation lines advertised
-America as a land flowing with milk and
-honey and the European governments took the
-opportunity to unload upon careless, wealthy and
-hospitable America the sweepings of their jails and
-asylums. The result was that the new immigration,
-while it still included many strong elements
-from the north of Europe, contained a large and
-increasing number of the weak, the broken and the
-mentally crippled of all races drawn from the lowest
-stratum of the Mediterranean basin and the
-Balkans, together with hordes of the wretched, submerged
-populations of the Polish Ghettos. Our
-jails, insane asylums and almshouses are filled with
-this human flotsam and the whole tone of American
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>life, social, moral and political has been
-lowered and vulgarized by them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With a pathetic and fatuous belief in the efficacy
-of American institutions and environment to reverse
-or obliterate immemorial hereditary tendencies,
-these newcomers were welcomed and given
-a share in our land and prosperity. The American
-taxed himself to sanitate and educate these
-poor helots and as soon as they could speak
-English, encouraged them to enter into the political
-life, first of municipalities and then of the
-nation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The native Americans are splendid raw material,
-but have as yet only an imperfectly developed
-national consciousness. They lack the instinct
-of self-preservation in a racial sense. Unless such
-an instinct develops their race will perish, as do all
-organisms which disregard this primary law of
-nature. Nature had granted to the Americans
-of a century ago the greatest opportunity in recorded
-history to produce in the isolation of a continent
-a powerful and racially homogeneous people
-and had provided for the experiment a pure race
-of one of the most gifted and vigorous stocks on
-earth, a stock free from the diseases, physical and
-moral, which have again and again sapped the
-vigor of the older lands. Our grandfathers threw
-away this opportunity in the blissful ignorance of
-national childhood and inexperience.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>The result of unlimited immigration is showing
-plainly in the rapid decline in the birth rate of
-native Americans because the poorer classes of
-Colonial stock, where they still exist, will not bring
-children into the world to compete in the labor market
-with the Slovak, the Italian, the Syrian and the
-Jew. The native American is too proud to mix
-socially with them and is gradually withdrawing
-from the scene, abandoning to these aliens the
-land which he conquered and developed. The
-man of the old stock is being crowded out of many
-country districts by these foreigners just as he is
-to-day being literally driven off the streets of New
-York City by the swarms of Polish Jews. These
-immigrants adopt the language of the native American,
-they wear his clothes, they steal his name
-and they are beginning to take his women, but they
-seldom adopt his religion or understand his ideals
-and while he is being elbowed out of his own home
-the American looks calmly abroad and urges on
-others the suicidal ethics which are exterminating
-his own race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the test of actual battle comes, it will, of
-course, be the native American who will do the
-fighting and suffer the losses. With him will
-stand the immigrants of Nordic blood, but there
-will be numbers of these foreigners in the large
-cities who will prove to be physically unfit for military
-duty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>As to what the future mixture will be it is evident
-that in large sections of the country the native
-American will entirely disappear. He will not
-intermarry with inferior races and he cannot compete
-in the sweat shop and in the street trench with
-the newcomers. Large cities from the days of
-Rome, Alexandria, and Byzantium have always
-been gathering points of diverse races, but New
-York is becoming a <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">cloaca gentium</span></i> which will produce
-many amazing racial hybrids and some ethnic
-horrors that will be beyond the powers of future
-anthropologists to unravel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One thing is certain: in any such mixture, the
-surviving traits will be determined by competition
-between the lowest and most primitive elements
-and the specialized traits of Nordic man; his
-stature, his light colored eyes, his fair skin and
-light colored hair, his straight nose and his splendid
-fighting and moral qualities, will have little part in
-the resultant mixture.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The “survival of the fittest” means the survival
-of the type best adapted to existing conditions of
-environment, which to-day are the tenement and
-factory, as in Colonial times they were the clearing
-of forests, fighting Indians, farming the fields
-and sailing the Seven Seas. From the point of
-view of race it were better described as the “survival
-of the unfit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This review of the colonies of Europe would be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>discouraging were it not for the fact that thus far
-little attention has been paid to the suitability of
-a new country for the particular colonists who
-migrate there. The process of sending out colonists
-is as old as mankind itself and probably in the last
-analysis most of the chief races of the world, certainly
-most of the inhabitants of Europe, represent
-the descendants of successful colonists.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Success in colonization depends on the selection
-of new lands and climatic conditions in harmony
-with the immemorial requirements of the incoming
-race. The adjustment of each race to its own peculiar
-habitat is based on thousands of years of rigid
-selection which cannot be safely ignored. A certain
-isolation and freedom from competition with
-other races, for some centuries at least, is also important,
-so that the colonists may become habituated
-to their new surroundings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Americans have not been on the continent
-long enough to acquire this adjustment and consequently
-do not present as effective a resistance
-to competition with immigrants as did, let us say,
-the Italians when overrun by northern barbarians.
-As soon as a group of men migrate to new surroundings,
-climatic, social or industrial, a new form of
-selection arises and those not fitted to the new
-conditions die off at a greater rate than in their
-original home. This form of differential selection
-plays a large part in modern industrial centres
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>and in large cities, where unsanitary conditions
-bear more heavily on the children of Nordics than
-on those of Alpines or Mediterraneans.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>PART II</em><br /> EUROPEAN RACES IN HISTORY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>I<br /> <span class='large'>EOLITHIC MAN</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Before considering the living populations of
-Europe we must give consideration to the extinct
-peoples that preceded them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The science of anthropology is very recent—in
-its present form less than fifty years old—but it has
-already revolutionized our knowledge of the past
-and extended prehistory so that it is now measured
-not by thousands but by tens of thousands of
-years.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The history of man prior to the period of metals
-has been divided into ten or more subdivisions,
-many of them longer than the time covered by
-written records. Man has struggled up through
-the ages, to revert again and again into savagery
-and barbarism but apparently retaining each
-time something gained by the travail of his ancestors.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So long as there is in the world a freely breeding
-stock or race that has in it an inherent capacity for
-development and growth, mankind will continue
-to ascend until, possibly through the selection and
-regulation of breeding as intelligently applied as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>in the case of domestic animals, it will control its
-own destiny and attain moral heights as yet unimagined.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The impulse upward, however, is supplied by a
-very small number of nations and by a very small
-proportion of the population in such nations. The
-section of any community that produces leaders or
-genius of any sort is only a minute percentage.
-To utilize and adapt to human needs the forces and
-the raw materials of nature, to invent new processes,
-to establish new principles, and to elucidate
-and unravel the laws that control the universe call
-for genius. To imitate or to adopt what others
-have invented is not genius but mimicry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This something which we call “genius” is not a
-matter of family, but of stock or strain, and is inherited
-in precisely the same manner as are the
-purely physical characters. It may be latent
-through several generations of obscurity and then
-flare up when the opportunity comes. Of this we
-have many examples in America. This is what
-education or opportunity does for a community; it
-permits in these rare cases fair play for development,
-but it is race, always race, that produces
-genius. An individual of inferior type or race
-may profit greatly by good environment. On the
-other hand, a member of a superior race in bad
-surroundings may, and very often does, sink to an
-extremely low level. While emphasizing the importance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>of race, it must not be forgotten that
-environment, while it does not alter the potential
-capacity of the stock, can perform miracles in the
-development of the individual.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This genius producing type is slow breeding and
-there is real danger of its loss to mankind. Some
-idea of the value of these small strains can be
-gained from the recent statistics which demonstrate
-that Massachusetts produces more than fifty times
-as much genius per hundred thousand whites as does
-Georgia, Alabama or Mississippi, although apparently
-the race, religion and environment, other than
-climatic conditions, are much the same, except for
-the numbing presence in the South of a large stationary
-Negro population.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The more thorough the study of European prehistory
-becomes, the more we realize how many
-advances of culture have been made and then lost.
-Our parents were accustomed to regard the overthrow
-of ancient civilization in the Dark Ages as
-the greatest catastrophe of mankind, but we now
-know that the classic period of Greece was preceded
-by similar dark ages caused by the Dorian
-invasions, that had overthrown the Homeric-Mycenæan
-culture, which in its turn had flourished
-after the destruction of its parent, the brilliant
-Minoan culture of Crete. Still earlier, some twelve
-thousand years ago, the Azilian Period of poverty
-and retrogression succeeded the wonderful achievements
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>of the hunter-artists of the Upper Paleolithic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The progress of civilization becomes evident only
-when immense periods are studied and compared,
-but the lesson is always the same, namely, that
-race is everything. Without race there can be
-nothing except the slave wearing his master’s
-clothes, stealing his master’s proud name, adopting
-his master’s tongue and living in the crumbling
-ruins of his master’s palace. Everywhere on the
-sites of ancient civilizations the Turk, the Kurd
-and the Bedouin camp; and Americans may well
-pause and consider the fate of this country which
-they, and they alone, founded and nourished with
-their blood. The immigrant ditch diggers and the
-railroad navvies were to our fathers what their
-slaves were to the Romans and the same transfer
-of political power from master to servant is taking
-place to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Man’s place of origin was undoubtedly Asia.
-Europe is only a peninsula of the Eurasiatic continent
-and although the extent of its land area
-during the Pleistocene was much greater than
-at present, it is certain from the distribution of
-the various species of man, that the main races
-evolved in Asia, probably north of the great Himalayan
-range long before the centre of that continent
-was reduced to a series of deserts by progressive
-desiccation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>The evidence based on man’s relatively large
-bulk, on the lack of the development of his fore
-limbs and particularly on his highly specialized
-foot structure all indicate that he has not been
-arboreal for a vast period of time, probably not
-since the end of the Miocene. The change of
-habitat from the trees to the ground may have been
-caused by a profound modification of climate,
-from moist to dry or from warm to cold, which
-in turn may have affected the food supply and compelled
-a more carnivorous diet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evidence of the location of the early evolution
-of man in Asia and in the geologically recent submerged
-area toward the southeast is afforded by
-the fossil deposits in the Siwalik hills of northern
-India; where the remains of primates have been
-found which were either ancestral or closely related
-to the four genera of living anthropoids and
-where we may confidently look for remains of
-the earliest human forms; and by the discovery in
-Java, which in Pliocene times was connected with
-the mainland over what is now the South China
-Sea, of the earliest known form of erect primate,
-the <em>Pithecanthropus</em>. This ape-like man is practically
-the “missing link,” being intermediate between
-man and the anthropoids and is generally
-believed to have been contemporary with the Günz
-glaciation of some 500,000 years ago, the first of
-the four great glacial advances in Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>One or two species of anthropoid apes have
-been discovered in the Miocene of Europe which
-may possibly have been remotely related to the
-ancestors of man but when the archæological exploration
-of Asia shall be as complete and intensive
-as that of Europe it is probable that more
-forms of fossil anthropoids and new species of man
-will be found there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Man existed in Europe during the second and
-third interglacial periods, if not earlier. We have
-his artifacts in the form of eoliths, at least as early
-as the second interglacial stage, the Mindel-Riss,
-of some 300,000 years ago. A single jaw found near
-Heidelberg is referred to this period and is the
-earliest skeletal evidence of man in Europe. From
-certain remarkable characters in this jaw, it has been
-assigned to a new species, <em>Homo heidelbergensis</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then follows a long period showing only scanty
-industrial relics and no known skeletal remains.
-Man was slowly and painfully struggling up from a
-culture phase where chance flints served his temporary
-purpose. This period, known as the Eolithic,
-was succeeded by a stage of human development
-where slight chipping and retouching of flints
-for his increasing needs led, after vast intervals of
-time, to the deliberate manufacture of tools. This
-Eolithic Period is necessarily extremely hazy and
-uncertain. Whether or not certain chipped or
-broken flints, called eoliths or dawn stones, were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>actually human artifacts or were the products of
-natural forces is, however, immaterial for man must
-have passed through such an eolithic stage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The further back we go toward the commencement
-of this Eolithic culture, the more unrecognizable
-the flints necessarily become until they finally
-cannot be distinguished from natural stone fragments.
-At the beginning, the earliest man merely
-picked up a convenient stone, used it once and
-flung it away, precisely as an anthropoid ape would
-act to-day if he wanted to break the shell of a tortoise
-or crack an ostrich egg.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Man must have experienced the following phases
-of development in the transition from the prehuman
-to the human stage: first, the utilization of
-chance stones and sticks; second, the casual adaptation
-of flints by a minimum amount of chipping;
-third, the deliberate manufacture of the simplest
-implements from flint nodules; and fourth, the invention
-of new forms of weapons and tools in ever
-increasing variety.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of the last two stages we have an extensive and
-clear record. Of the second stage we have in the
-eoliths intermediate forms ranging from flints that
-are evidently results of natural causes to flints that
-are clearly artifacts. The first and earliest stage,
-of course, could leave behind it no definite record
-and must in the present state of our knowledge rest
-on hypothesis.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>II<br /> <span class='large'>PALEOLITHIC MAN</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>With the deliberate manufacture of implements
-from flint nodules, we enter the beginning of Paleolithic
-time and from here on our way is relatively
-clear. The successive stages of the Paleolithic were
-of great length but are each characterized by some
-improvement in the manufacture of tools. During
-long ages man was merely a tool making and
-tool using animal and, after all is said, that is
-about as good a definition as we can find to-day
-for the primate we call human.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Paleolithic Period or Old Stone Age lasted
-from the somewhat indefinite termination of the
-Eolithic, some 150,000 years ago, to the Neolithic
-or New Stone Age, which began about 7000
-B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Paleolithic falls naturally into three great
-subdivisions. The Lower Paleolithic includes the
-whole of the last interglacial stage with the subdivisions
-of the Pre-Chellean, Chellean and Acheulean;
-the Middle Paleolithic covers the whole of
-the last glaciation and is co-extensive with the
-Mousterian Period and the dominance of the Neanderthal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>species of man.<a id='r1'></a><a href='#f1' class='c016'><sup>[1]</sup></a> The Upper Paleolithic
-embraces all the postglacial stages down to the
-Neolithic and includes the subdivisions of the
-Aurignacian, Solutrean, Magdalenian and Azilian.
-During the entire Upper Paleolithic, except the short
-closing phase, the Cro-Magnon race flourished.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. The Middle Paleolithic Period is suggested here for the first time.—<span class='sc'>Editor’s
-Note.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is not until after the third severe period of
-great cold, known as the Riss glaciation, nor until
-we enter, some 150,000 years ago, the third and
-last interglacial stage of temperate climate, known
-as the Riss-Würm, that we find a definite and ascending
-series of culture. The Pre-Chellean, Chellean
-and Acheulean divisions of the Lower Paleolithic
-occupied the whole of this warm or rather
-temperate interglacial phase, which lasted nearly
-100,000 years.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A shattered skull, a jaw and some teeth have
-been discovered recently in Sussex, England. These
-remains were attributed to the same individual,
-who was named the Piltdown Man. Owing to the
-extraordinary thickness of the skull and the simian
-character of the jaw, a new genus, <em>Eoanthropus</em>,
-the “dawn man,” was created and assigned to
-Pre-Chellean times. Some of the tentative restorations
-of the fragmentary bones make this skull
-altogether too modern and too capacious for a Pre-Chellean
-or even a Chellean.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>Further study and comparison with the jaws
-of other primates also indicate that the jaw
-belonged to a chimpanzee so that the genus
-<em>Eoanthropus</em> must now be abandoned and the Piltdown
-Man must be included in the genus <em>Homo</em>
-as at present constituted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In any event the Piltdown Man is highly aberrant
-and, so far as our present knowledge goes, does not
-appear to be related to any other species of man
-found during the Lower Paleolithic. Future discoveries
-of the Piltdown type and for that matter
-of Heidelberg Man may, however, raise either or
-both of them to generic rank.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In later Acheulean times a new human species,
-very likely descended from the early Heidelberg
-Man of Eolithic times, appears on the scene and is
-known as the Neanderthal race. Many fossil remains
-of this type have been found.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Neanderthaloids occupied the European
-stage exclusively, with the possible exception of
-the Piltdown Man, from the first appearance of
-man in Europe to the end of the Middle Paleolithic.
-The Neanderthals flourished throughout
-the entire duration of the last glacial advance
-known as the Würm glaciation. This period,
-known as the Mousterian, began about 50,000
-years ago and lasted some 25,000 years.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Neanderthal species disappears suddenly
-and completely with the advent of postglacial times,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>when, about 25,000 years ago, it was apparently
-supplanted or exterminated by a new and far
-higher race, the famous Cro-Magnons.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There may well have been during Mousterian
-times races of man in Europe other than the Neanderthaloids,
-but of them we have no record.
-Among the numerous remains of Neanderthals,
-however, we do find traces of distinct types showing
-that this race in Europe was undergoing evolution
-and was developing marked variations in
-characters.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Neanderthal Man was an almost purely meat
-eating hunter, living in caves or rather in their entrances.
-He was dolichocephalic and not unlike
-existing Australoids, although not necessarily of
-black skin and was, of course, in no sense a Negro.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The skull was characterized by heavy superorbital
-ridges, a low and receding forehead, protruding
-and chinless under jaw and the posture was imperfectly
-erect. This race was widely spread and
-rather numerous. Some of its blood may have
-trickled down to the present time and occasionally
-one sees a skull apparently of the Neanderthal
-type. The best skull of this type ever seen by the
-writer belonged to a very intellectual professor in
-London, who was quite unconscious of his value as
-a museum specimen. In the old black breed of
-Scotland the overhanging brows and deep-set eyes
-are suggestive of this race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>Along with other ancient and primitive racial
-remnants, ferocious gorilla-like living specimens
-of Paleolithic man are found not infrequently on
-the west coast of Ireland and are easily recognized
-by the great upper lip, bridgeless nose, beetling
-brow with low growing hair and wild and
-savage aspect. The proportions of the skull which
-give rise to this large upper lip, the low forehead
-and the superorbital ridges are certainly Neanderthal
-characters. The other traits of this Irish type
-are common to many primitive races. This is the
-Irishman of caricature and the type was very frequent
-in America when the first Irish immigrants
-came in 1846 and the following years. It seems,
-however, to have almost disappeared in this country.
-If, as it is claimed, the Neanderthals have
-left no trace of their blood in living populations,
-these Firbolgs are derived from some very ancient
-and primitive race as yet undescribed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the Upper Paleolithic, which began after the
-close of the fourth and last glaciation, about 25,000
-years ago, the Neanderthal race was succeeded by
-men of very modern aspect, known as Cro-Magnons.
-The date of the beginning of the Upper
-Paleolithic is the first we can fix with accuracy and
-its correctness can be relied on within narrow limits.
-The Cro-Magnon race first appears in the Aurignacian
-subdivision of the Upper Paleolithic. Like the
-Neanderthals, they were dolichocephalic but with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>a cranial capacity superior to the average in existing
-European populations and a stature of very remarkable
-size.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is quite astonishing to find that the predominant
-race in Europe 25,000 years ago, or more,
-was not only much taller, but had an absolute
-cranial capacity in excess of the average of the
-present population. The low cranial average of
-existing populations in Europe can be best explained
-by the presence of large numbers of individuals
-of inferior mentality. These defectives
-have been carefully preserved by modern charity,
-whereas in the savage state of society the backward
-members were allowed to perish and the race
-was carried on by the vigorous and not by the
-weaklings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The high brain capacity of the Cro-Magnons is
-paralleled by that of the ancient Greeks, who in a
-single century gave to the world out of their small
-population much more genius than all the other
-races of mankind have since succeeded in producing
-in a similar length of time. Attica between
-530 and 430 B. C. had an average population of
-about 90,000 freemen, and yet from this number
-were born no less than fourteen geniuses of the
-very highest rank. This would indicate a general
-intellectual status as much above that of the
-Anglo-Saxons as the latter are above the Negroes.
-The existence at these early dates of a very high
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>cranial capacity and its later decline shows that
-there is no upward tendency inherent in mankind
-of sufficient strength to overcome obstacles placed
-in its way by stupid social customs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All historians are familiar with the phenomenon
-of a rise and decline in civilization such as has occurred
-time and again in the history of the world
-but we have here in the disappearance of the Cro-Magnon
-race the earliest example of the replacement
-of a very superior race by an inferior one.
-There is great danger of a similar replacement of a
-higher by a lower type here in America unless the
-native American uses his superior intelligence to
-protect himself and his children from competition
-with intrusive peoples drained from the lowest
-races of eastern Europe and western Asia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While the skull of the Cro-Magnon was long, the
-cheek bones were very broad and this combination
-of broad face with long skull constitutes a
-peculiar disharmonic type which occurs to-day only
-among the very highly specialized Esquimaux and
-one or two other unimportant groups.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Skulls of this particular type, however, are found
-in small numbers among existing populations in
-central France, precisely in the district where the
-fossil remains of this race were first discovered.
-These isolated Frenchmen probably represent the
-last lingering remnant of this splendid race of hunting
-savages.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>The Cro-Magnon culture is found around the
-basin of the Mediterranean, and this fact, together
-with the conspicuous absence in eastern Europe of
-its earliest phases, the lower Aurignacian, indicates
-that it entered Europe by way of north Africa,
-as its successors, the Mediterranean race, probably
-did in Neolithic times. There is little doubt
-that the Cro-Magnons originally developed in Asia
-and were in their highest stage of physical development
-at the time of their first appearance in
-Europe. Whatever change took place in their
-stature during their residence there seems to have
-been in the nature of a decline rather than of a
-further development.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There is nothing whatever of the Negroid in the
-Cro-Magnons and they are not in any way related
-to the Neanderthals, who represent a distinct and,
-save for the suggestions made above, an extinct
-species of man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Cro-Magnon race persisted through the entire
-Upper Paleolithic, during the periods known
-as the Aurignacian, Solutrean and Magdalenian,
-from 25,000 to 10,000 B. C. While it is possible
-that the blood of this race enters somewhat into
-the composition of the peoples of western Europe,
-its influence cannot be great and the Cro-Magnons—the
-Nordics of their day—disappear from
-view with the advent of the warmer climate of
-recent times.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>It has been suggested that, following the fading
-ice edge north and eastward through Asia into
-North America, they became the ancestors of the
-Esquimaux but certain anatomical objections are
-fatal to this interesting theory. No one, however,
-who is familiar with the culture of the Esquimaux
-and especially with their wonderful skill in bone
-and ivory carving, can fail to be struck with the
-similarity of their technique to that of the Cro-Magnons.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To the Cro-Magnon race the world owes the birth
-of art. Caverns and shelters are constantly unearthed
-in France and Spain, where the walls and
-ceilings are covered with polychrome paintings or
-with incised bas-reliefs of animals of the chase. A
-few clay models, sometimes of the human form,
-are also found, together with abundant remains of
-their chipped but unpolished stone weapons and
-tools. Certain facts stand out clearly, namely,
-that they were purely hunters and clothed themselves
-in furs and skins. They knew nothing of
-agriculture or of domestic animals, even the dog
-being probably as yet untamed and the horse regarded
-merely as an object of chase.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The question of their knowledge of the principle
-of the bow and arrow during the Aurignacian and
-Solutrean is an open one but there are definite indications
-of the use of the arrow, or at least the
-barbed dart, in early Magdalenian times and this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>weapon was well known in the succeeding Azilian
-Period.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The presence toward the end of this last period
-of quantities of very small flints called microliths
-has given rise to much controversy. It is
-possible that some of these microliths represent the
-tips of small poisoned arrows such as are now in
-very general use among primitive hunting tribes
-the world over. Certain grooves in some of the
-flint weapons of the Upper Paleolithic may also
-have been used for the reception of poison. It is
-highly probable that the immediate predecessors of
-the Azilians, the Cro-Magnons, perhaps the greatest
-hunters that ever lived, not only used poisoned
-darts but were adepts in trapping game by means
-of pitfalls and snares, precisely as do some of the
-hunting tribes of Africa to-day. Barbed arrowheads
-of flint or bone, such as were commonly used
-by the North American Indians, have not been
-found in Paleolithic deposits.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the Solutrean Period the Cro-Magnons shared
-Europe with a new race known as the Brünn-Předmost,
-found in central Europe. This race
-is characterized by a long face as well as a long
-skull, and was, therefore, harmonic. This Brünn-Předmost
-race appears to have been well settled
-in the Danubian and Hungarian plains and this
-location indicates an eastern rather than a southern
-origin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>Good anatomists have seen in this race the last
-lingering traces of the Neanderthaloids but it is
-more probable that we have here the first advance
-wave of the primitive forerunners of one of the
-modern European dolichocephalic races.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This new race was not artistic, but had great
-skill in fashioning weapons and possibly is associated
-with the peculiarities of Solutrean culture and
-the decline of art which characterizes that period.
-The artistic impulse of the Cro-Magnons which
-flourished so vigorously during the Aurignacian
-seems to be quite suspended during this Solutrean
-Period, but reappears in the succeeding Magdalenian
-times. This Magdalenian art is clearly the
-direct descendant of Aurignacian models and in
-this closing age of the Cro-Magnons all forms of
-Paleolithic art, carving, engraving, painting and
-the manufacture of weapons, reach their highest
-and final culmination.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Nine or ten thousand years may be assigned to
-the Aurignacian and Solutrean Periods and we
-may with considerable certainty give the minimum
-date of 16,000 B. C. as the beginning of Magdalenian
-time. Its entire duration can be safely set
-down at 6,000 years, thus bringing the final termination
-of the Magdalenian to 10,000 B. C. All
-these dates are extremely conservative and the
-error, if any, is in assigning too late and not too
-early a period to the end of Magdalenian times.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>At the close of the Magdalenian we enter upon
-the last period of Paleolithic times, the Azilian,
-which lasted from about 10,000 to 7,000 B. C., when
-the Upper Paleolithic, the age of chipped flints,
-definitely and finally ends in Europe. This period
-takes its name from the Mas d’Azil, or “House of
-Refuge,” a huge cavern in the eastern Pyrenees
-where the local Protestants took shelter during the
-persecutions. The extensive deposits in this cave
-are typical of the Azilian epoch and here certain
-marked pebbles may be the earliest known traces
-of symbolic writing, but true writing was probably
-not developed until the late Neolithic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With the advent of this Azilian Period art entirely
-disappears and the splendid physical type of
-the Cro-Magnons is succeeded by what appear to
-have been degraded savages, who had lost the
-force and vigor necessary for the strenuous chase
-of large game and had turned to the easier life of
-fishermen.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the Azilian the bow and arrow are in common
-use in Spain and it is well within the possibilities
-that the introduction and development of this new
-weapon from the South may have played its part
-in the destruction of the Cro-Magnons; otherwise
-it is hard to account for the disappearance of this
-race of large stature and great brain power.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Azilian, also called the Tardenoisian in the
-north of France, was evidently a period of racial
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>disturbance and at its close the beginnings of the
-existing races are found.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From the first appearance of man in Europe
-and for many tens of thousands of years down to
-some ten or twelve thousand years ago all known
-human remains are of dolichocephalic type.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the Azilian Period appears the first round
-skull race. It comes clearly from the East. Later
-we shall find that this invasion of the forerunners
-of the existing Alpine race came from southwestern
-Asia by way of the Iranian plateau,
-Asia Minor, the Balkans and the valley of the
-Danube, and spread over nearly all of Europe.
-The earlier round skull invasions may as well have
-been infiltrations as armed conquests since apparently
-from that day to this the round skulls
-have occupied the poorer mountain districts and
-have seldom ventured down to the rich and fertile
-plains.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This new brachycephalic race is known as the
-Furfooz or Grenelle race, so called from the localities
-in Belgium and France where it was first discovered.
-Members of this round skull race have
-also been found at Ofnet in Bavaria where they
-occur in association with a dolichocephalic race,
-our first historic evidence of the mixture of contrasted
-races. The descendants of this Furfooz-Grenelle
-race and of the succeeding waves of
-invaders of the same brachycephalic type now
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>occupy central Europe as Alpines and form the
-predominant peasant type in central and eastern
-Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In this same Azilian Period there appear, coming
-this time from the South, the first forerunners
-of the Mediterranean race. The descendants of
-this earliest wave of Mediterraneans and their later
-reinforcements occupy all the coast and islands of
-the Mediterranean and are spread widely over
-western Europe. They can everywhere be identified
-by their short stature, slight build, long skull
-and brunet hair and eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While during this Azilian-Tardenoisian Period
-these ancestors of two of the existing European
-races are appearing in central and southern Europe,
-a new culture phase, also distinctly Pre-Neolithic,
-was developing along the shores of the Baltic. It
-is known as Maglemose from its type locality in
-Denmark. It is believed to be the work of the
-first wave of the Nordic race which had followed
-the retreating glaciers northward over the old land
-connections between Denmark and Sweden to occupy
-the Scandinavian Peninsula. In the remains
-of this culture we find definite evidence of the domesticated
-dog.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With the appearance of the Mediterranean race
-the Azilian-Tardenoisian draws to its close and with
-it the entire Paleolithic Period. It is safe to assign
-for the end of the Paleolithic and the beginning of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>the Neolithic or Polished Stone Age, the date of
-7,000 or 8,000 B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The races of the Paleolithic Period, so far as we
-can judge from their remains, appear successively
-on the scene with all their characters fully developed.
-The evolution of all these subspecies and
-races took place somewhere in Asia or eastern
-Europe. None of these races appear to be ancestral
-one to another, although the scanty remains
-of the Heidelberg Man would indicate that
-he may have given rise to the later Neanderthals.
-Other than this possible affinity, the various races
-of Paleolithic times are not related one to another.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>III<br /> <span class='large'>THE NEOLITHIC AND BRONZE AGES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>About 7,000 B.C. we enter an entirely new period
-in the history of man, the Neolithic or New Stone
-Age, when the flint implements were polished and
-not merely chipped. Early as is this date in European
-culture, we are not far from the beginnings
-of an elaborate civilization in parts of Asia and
-Egypt. The earliest organized governments, so far
-as our present knowledge goes, were Egypt and
-Sumer. Chinese civilization at the other end of
-Asia is later, but mystery still shrouds its origin and
-its connection, if any, with the Mesopotamian
-city-states. The solution probably lies in the central
-region of the Syr Darya and future excavations
-in those regions may uncover very early cultures.
-Balkh, the ancient Bactra, the mother of cities, is
-located where the trade routes between China,
-India and Mesopotamia converged and it is in this
-neighborhood that careful and thorough excavations
-will probably find their greatest reward.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>However, we are not dealing with Asia but with
-Europe only and our knowledge is confined to the
-fact that the various cultural advances at the end
-of the Paleolithic and the beginning of the Neolithic
-correspond with the arrival of new races.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>The transition from the Paleolithic to the Neolithic
-was formerly considered as revolutionary,
-an abrupt change of both race and culture, but
-a period more or less transitory, known as the
-Campignian, now appears to bridge over this gap.
-This is only what should be expected, since in
-human archæology as in geology the more detailed
-our knowledge becomes the more gradually
-we find one period or horizon merges into
-its successor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For a long time after the opening of the Neolithic
-the old-fashioned chipped weapons and implements
-remain the predominant type and the
-polished flints so characteristic of the Neolithic
-appear at first only sporadically, then increase in
-number until finally they entirely replace the
-rougher designs of the preceding Old Stone Age.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So in their turn these Neolithic polished stone
-implements, which ultimately became both varied
-and effective as weapons and tools, continued
-in use long after metallurgy developed. In the
-Bronze Period metal armor and weapons were
-for ages of the greatest value. So they were necessarily
-in the possession of the military and ruling
-classes only, while the unfortunate serf or common
-soldier who followed his master to war did
-the best he could with leather shield and stone
-weapons. In the ring that clustered around
-Harold for the last stand on Senlac Hill many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>of the English thanes died with their Saxon king,
-armed solely with the stone battle-axes of their
-ancestors.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Italy also there was a long period known to
-the Italian archæologists as the Eneolithic Period
-when good flint tools existed side by side with very
-poor copper and bronze implements; so that, while
-the Neolithic lasted in western Europe four or five
-thousand years, it is, at its commencement, without
-clear definition from the preceding Paleolithic
-and at its end it merges gradually into the succeeding
-ages of metals.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>After the opening Campignian phase there followed
-a long period typical of the Neolithic, known
-as the Robenhausian or Age of the Swiss Lake
-Dwellers, which reached its height after 5000
-B. C. The lake dwellings seem to have been the
-work chiefly of the round skull Alpine races and
-are found in numbers throughout the region of the
-Alps and their foothills and along the valley of the
-Danube.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These Robenhausian pile built villages were the
-earliest known form of fixed habitation in Europe
-and the culture found in association with them
-was a great advance over that of the preceding
-Paleolithic. This type of permanent habitation
-flourished through the entire Upper Neolithic and
-the succeeding Bronze Age. Pile villages end in
-Switzerland with the first appearance of iron but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>elsewhere, as on the upper Danube, they still existed
-in the days of Herodotus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Pottery is found together with domesticated animals
-and agriculture, which appear during the Robenhausian
-for the first time. The chase, supplemented
-by trapping and fishing, was still common
-but it probably was more for clothing than for food.
-A permanent site is not alone the basis of an agricultural
-community, but it also involves at least a
-partial abandonment of the chase, because only
-nomads can follow the game in its seasonal migrations
-and hunted animals soon leave the neighborhood
-of settlements.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Terramara Period of northern Italy was a
-later phase of culture contemporaneous with the
-Upper Robenhausian and was typical of the Bronze
-Age. During the Terramara Period fortified and
-moated stations in swamps or close to the banks of
-rivers became the favorite resorts instead of pile
-villages built in lakes. The first traces of copper
-are found during this period. The earliest human
-remains in the Terramara deposits are long skulled,
-but round skulls soon appear in association with
-bronze implements. This indicates an original
-population of Mediterranean affinities overwhelmed
-later by Alpines.</p>
-
-<div class='overflow'>
-
-<table class='table1'>
- <tr><th class='c012' colspan='10'>CLASSIFICATION OF THE RACES OF EUROPE<a id='t123'></a></th></tr>
- <tr><td class='c012' colspan='10'>&#160;</td></tr>
- <tr><th class='c012' colspan='10'>THEIR CHARACTERS AND DISTRIBUTION</th></tr>
- <tr><td class='c012' colspan='10'>&#160;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt brt c017'><span class='sc'>European Races</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Modern Peoples</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Ancient Peoples</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Skull Cephalic Index</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Face</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Nose</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Stature</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Hair Color</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Eye Color</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Language</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'><em>Nordic.</em></td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'>Homo sapiens nordicus, Homo sapiens europeus, Baltic, Indo-Germanic, Indo-European, Scandinavian, Teutonic, Germanic, Dolicho-lepto, Reihengraber, Finnic.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>All Norse, Swedes, Danes, Letts, many Finlanders, many Russians and Poles, North Germans, many French, Dutch, Flemings, English, Scotch, most Irish, Native Americans, Canadians, Australians, Africanders.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Sacæ, Massagetæ, Scythians, Cimmerians, Persians, Phrygians, Achæans, Dorians, Thracians, Umbrians, Oscans, Gauls, Galatians, Cymry, Belgæ, many Romans, Goths, Lombards, Vandals, Burgunds, Franks, Danes, Saxons, Angles, Norse, Normans, Varangians.<br />Reihengraber.<br />Kurgans.<br />Maglemose culture.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Long. 79 and less.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>High. Narrow. Long.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Narrow. Straight. Aquiline.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Tall.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Flaxen. Fair. Red. Light brown to chestnut. Never black.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Blue. Gray. Green. Light brown or hazel.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>All Aryan except Tchouds, Esths, many Finlanders, and a few tribes in Siberia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'><em>Alpine.</em></td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'>Homo sapiens alpinus (Eurasiatic), Celto-Slav or Kelts of the French, Sarmatian, Arvernian, Auvergnat, Slavic, Savoyard, Lappanoid, Armenoid.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Bretons, Walloons, Central French, some Basques, Savoyards, Swiss, Tyrolese, most South Germans, North Italians, German-Austrians, Bohemians, Slovaks, Magyars, many Poles, most Russians, Serbs, Bulgars, most Rumanians, most Greeks, Turks, Armenians, most Persians and Afghans.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Sumerians, Hittites, Medes, Khosars, Sarmatians, Wends, Sorbs.<br />Furfooz-Grenelle race, Swiss Lake Dwellers, Gizeh skulls.<br />Robenhausen.<br />Round Barrows.<br />Bronze culture.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Round.<br />80 and over.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Broad.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Variable.<br />Rather broad.<br />Coarse.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Medium. Stocky.<br />Heavy.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Dark brown.<br />Black.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Black or dark brown.<br />Often hazel or gray, in western Europe.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>In Europe all Aryan except Magyars, some Basques, and some Finlanders.<br />In Asia mostly Aryan, except Turcomans, Kirghizes, and other nomad tribes.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'><em>Mediterranean.</em></td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'>Homo sapiens mediterraneus (Eurafrican), Iberian, Ligurian, Atlanto-Mediterranean.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Many English, Portuguese, Spaniards, some Basques, Provençals, South Italians, Sicilians, many Greeks and Rumanians, Moors, Berbers, Egyptians, many Persians and Afghans, Hindus.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Egyptians, many Babylonians, Pelasgians, Etruscans, Ligurians, Phœnicians, most Greeks, many Romans, Cretans, Iberians. Long Barrows. Neolithic culture. Megalithic monuments.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Long. 79 and less.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>High. Narrow. Long.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Rather broad.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Short. Slender.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Dark brown. Black.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Black. Dark brown.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>In Europe all Aryan, except some Basques. In Africa all Non-Aryan. In Asia nearly all Aryan.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'><em>Upper Paleolithic.</em></td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'><em>Extinct races.</em></td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'>Furfooz-Grenelle.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Proto-Alpines.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Round, 79–85.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Medium.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Probably very dark.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Probably very dark.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Probably non-Aryan.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'>Brünn Předmost.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Long, 66–68.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Low and medium.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'>Homo sapiens cromagnonensis.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>A few Dordognois.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Cro-Magnons.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Long, with disharmonic broad face, 63–76.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Low and broad.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Narrow and aquiline.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Very tall and medium.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Probably very dark.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Probably very dark.</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>Probably non-Aryan.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c018'><em>Middle Paleolithic.</em></td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c018'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c018'>Homo neanderthalensis, Homo primigenius.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c018'>Doubtful traces among west Irish and among the old black breed of Scotland and Wales.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c018'>Neanderthals. Neanderthaloids.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c018'>Long.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c018'>Long.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c018'>Broad.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c018'>Short and powerful.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c018'>Probably very dark.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c018'>Probably very dark.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c018'>Probably non-Aryan.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>Neolithic culture also flourished in the north of
-Europe and particularly in Scandinavia now free
-from ice. The coasts of the Baltic were apparently occupied for the first time at the very beginning
-of this period, as no trace of Paleolithic industry
-has been found there, other than the Maglemose,
-which represents only the very latest phase of the
-Old Stone Age. The kitchen middens, or refuse
-heaps, of Sweden and more particularly of Denmark
-date from the early Neolithic and thus are somewhat
-earlier than the lake dwellers. Rough pottery
-occurs in them for the first time, but no traces
-of agriculture have been found and, as said, the dog
-seems to have been the only domesticated animal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From these two centres, the Alps and the North,
-an elaborate and variegated Neolithic culture spread
-through western Europe and an autochthonous development
-took place, comparatively little influenced
-by trade intercourse with Asia after the first
-immigrations of the new races.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We may assume that the distribution of races in
-Europe during the Neolithic was roughly as follows.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Mediterranean basin and western Europe,
-including Spain, Italy, Gaul, Britain and parts of
-western Germany, were populated by Mediterranean
-long heads. In Britain the Paleolithic population
-must have been very small and the Neolithic
-Mediterraneans were the first effectively to
-open up the country. Even they kept to the open
-moorlands and avoided the heavily wooded and
-swampy valleys which to-day are the main centres
-of population. Before metal and especially iron
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>tools were in use forests were an almost complete
-barrier to the expansion of an agricultural population.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Alps and the territories immediately adjacent,
-with Central Gaul and much of the Balkans,
-were inhabited by Alpine types. These Alpines
-extended northward until they came in touch in
-eastern Germany and Poland with the southernmost
-Nordics, but as the Carpathians at a much
-later date, namely, from the fourth to the eighth
-century A. D., were the centre of radiation of the
-Alpine Slavs, it is very possible that during the
-Neolithic the early Nordics lay farther north and
-east.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>North of the Alpines and occupying the shores
-of the Baltic and Scandinavia, together with eastern
-Germany, Poland and Russia, were located the
-Nordics. At the very base of the Neolithic and
-perhaps still earlier, this race occupied Scandinavia,
-and Sweden became the nursery of what has been
-generally called the Teutonic subdivision of the
-Nordic race. It was in that country that the peculiar
-characters of stature and blondness became
-most accentuated and it is there that we find them
-to-day in their greatest purity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>During the Neolithic the remnants of early
-Paleolithic man must have been numerous, but
-later they were either exterminated or absorbed by
-the existing European races.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>During all this Neolithic Period Mesopotamia
-and Egypt were thousands of years in advance of
-Europe, but only a small amount of culture from
-these sources seems to have trickled westward up
-the valley of the Danube, then and long afterward
-the main route of intercourse between western
-Asia and the heart of Europe. Some trade also
-passed from the Black Sea up the Russian rivers
-to the Baltic coasts. Along these latter routes there
-came from the north to the Mediterranean world
-the amber of the Baltic, a fossil resin greatly prized
-by early man for its magic electrical qualities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Gold was probably the first metal to attract the
-attention of primitive man, but could only be used
-for purposes of ornamentation. Copper, which is
-often found in a pure state, was also one of the
-earliest metals known and probably came first either
-from the mines of Cyprus or of the Sinai Peninsula.
-These latter mines are known to have been worked
-before 3400 B. C. by systematic mining operations
-and much earlier “the metal must have been obtained
-by primitive methods from surface ore.” It
-is, therefore, probable that copper was known and
-used, at first for ornament and later for implements,
-in Egypt before 4000 B. C. and possibly
-even earlier in the Mesopotamian regions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We now reach the confines of recorded history
-and the first absolutely fixed date, 4241 B. C., is
-established for lower Egypt by the oldest known
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>calendar. The earliest date as yet for Mesopotamia
-is somewhat later, but these two countries supply
-the basis of the chronology of the ancient world
-until a few centuries before Christ.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With the use of copper the Neolithic fades to
-its end and the Bronze Age commences soon thereafter.
-This next step in advance was made apparently
-before 3000 B. C. when some unknown genius
-discovered that an amalgam of nine parts of copper
-to one part of tin would produce the metal we now
-call bronze, which has a texture and hardness suitable
-for weapons and tools. The discovery revolutionized
-the world. The new knowledge was a long
-time spreading and weapons of this material were
-of fabulous value, especially in countries where
-there were no native mines and where spears and
-swords could only be obtained through trade or
-conquest. The esteem in which these bronze
-weapons, and still more the later weapons of iron,
-were held, is indicated by the innumerable legends
-and myths concerning magic swords and armor,
-the possession of which made the owner well-nigh
-invulnerable and invincible.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The necessity of obtaining tin for this amalgam
-led to the early voyages of the Phœnicians, who
-from the cities of Tyre and Sidon and their daughter
-Carthage traversed the entire length of the
-Mediterranean, founded colonies in Spain to work
-the Spanish tin mines, passed the Pillars of Hercules
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>and finally voyaged through the stormy
-Atlantic to the Cassiterides, the Tin Isles of Ultima
-Thule. There, on the coasts of Cornwall, they
-traded with the native British of kindred Mediterranean
-race for the precious tin. These dangerous
-and costly voyages become explicable only if the
-value of this metal for the composition of bronze
-be taken into consideration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>After these bronze weapons were elaborated in
-Egypt the knowledge of their manufacture and
-use was extended through conquest into Palestine,
-and northward into Asia Minor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The effect of the possession of these new weapons
-on the Alpine populations of western Asia was
-magical and resulted in an intensive and final expansion
-of round skulls into Europe. This invasion
-came through Asia Minor, the Balkans and the
-valley of the Danube, poured into Italy from the
-north, introduced bronze among the earlier Alpine
-lake dwellers of Switzerland and among the Mediterraneans
-of the Terramara stations of the valley
-of the Po and at a later date reached as far west
-as Britain and as far north as Holland and Norway,
-where its traces are still to be found among
-the living population.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The simultaneous appearance of bronze about
-3000 or 2800 B. C. in the south as well as in the
-north of Italy may possibly be attributed to a
-lateral wave of this same invasion which, passing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>through Egypt, where it left behind the so-called
-Gizeh round skulls, reached Tunis and Sicily. In
-southern Italy bronze may have been introduced
-from Crete. With the first knowledge of metals begins
-the Eneolithic Period of the Italians.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The close resemblance in design and technique
-among the implements of the Bronze Age in widely
-separated localities is so great that we can infer
-a relatively simultaneous introduction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With the introduction of bronze the custom of
-incineration of the dead also appears and replaces
-the typical Neolithic custom of inhumation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The introduction of bronze into England and
-into Scandinavia may be safely dated about one
-thousand years later, after 1800 B. C. The fact
-that the Alpines only barely reached Ireland indicates
-that at this time that island was severed
-from England and that the land connection between
-England and France had been broken. The
-computation of the foregoing dates, of course, is
-somewhat hypothetical, but the fixed fact remains
-that this last expansion of the Alpines brought
-the knowledge of bronze to western and northern
-Europe and to the Mediterranean and Nordic peoples
-living there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The effect of the introduction of bronze in the
-areas occupied chiefly by the Mediterranean race
-along the Atlantic coast and in Britain, as well as
-in north Africa from Tunis to Morocco, is seen
-in the construction and in the wide distribution of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>the megalithic funeral monuments, which appear
-to have been erected, not by Alpines but by the
-dolichocephs. The occurrence of bronze tools and
-weapons in the interments shows clearly that the
-megaliths of the south of France date from the beginning
-of the Bronze Age. The absence of bronze
-from the dolmens of Brittany may indicate an earlier
-age. It is, however, more likely that the opening
-Bronze Age in the South was contemporary
-with the late Neolithic in the North. The construction
-and use of these monuments continued at least
-until the very earliest trace of iron appears and in
-fact mound burials among the Vikings were common
-until the introduction of Christianity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Although there is evidence of very early use of
-iron in Egypt the knowledge of this metal as well
-as of bronze in Europe centres around the area occupied
-by the Alpines in the eastern Alps and its
-earliest phase is known as the Hallstatt culture,
-from a little town in the Tyrol where it was first
-discovered. This Hallstatt iron culture appeared
-about 1500 B. C. The Alpine Hittites in northeast
-Asia Minor were probably the first to mine and
-smelt iron and they introduced it to the Alpines of
-eastern Europe, but it was the Nordics who benefited
-by its use. Bronze weapons and the later iron
-ones proved in the hands of these Northern barbarians
-to be of terrible effectiveness. With these
-metal swords in their grasp, the Nordics conquered
-the Alpines of central Europe and then suddenly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>entered the ancient world as raiders and destroyers
-of cities. The classic civilizations of the northern
-coasts of the Mediterranean Sea fell, one after another,
-before the “Furor Normanorum,” just as
-two thousand years later the provinces of Rome
-were devastated by the last great flood of the Nordics
-from beyond the Alps.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first Nordics to appear in European history
-are tribes speaking Aryan tongues in the form of
-the various Celtic and related dialects in the West,
-of Umbrian in Italy and of Thracian in the Balkans.
-These barbarians, pouring down from the
-North, swept with them large numbers of Alpines
-whom they had already thoroughly Nordicized.
-The process of conquering and assimilating the Alpines
-must have gone on for long centuries before
-our first historic records and the work was so
-thoroughly done that the very existence of this
-Alpine race as a separate subspecies of man was
-actually forgotten for many centuries by themselves
-and by the world at large until it was revealed
-in our own day by the science of skull measurements.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Hallstatt iron culture did not extend into
-western Europe and the smelting and extensive
-use of this metal in southern Britain and northwestern
-Europe are of much later date and occur in
-what is called the La Tène Period, usually assigned
-to the fifth and fourth century B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>Iron weapons were, however, known sporadically
-in England much earlier, perhaps as far back as
-800 B. C., but were very rare and were probably
-importations from the Continent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hallstatt relics have only been found in the
-northeast or centre of France and it appears that
-the Bronze Age continued in the remainder of that
-country until about 700 B. C.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The spread of this La Tène culture is associated
-with the Nordic Cymry, who constituted the last
-wave of Celtic-speaking invaders into western Europe,
-while the earlier Nordic Gauls and Goidels
-had arrived in Gaul and Britain equipped with
-bronze only.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Roman times, following the La Tène Period,
-the main races of Europe occupied the relative
-positions which they had held during the whole
-Neolithic Period and which they hold to-day, with
-the exception that the Nordic subspecies was less
-extensively represented in western Europe than
-when, a few hundred years later, the so-called Teutonic
-tribes overran these countries; but on the
-other hand, the Nordics occupied large areas in
-eastern Germany, Hungary, Poland and Russia
-now mainly occupied by the Slavs of Alpine race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Many countries in central Europe were in Roman
-times inhabited by fair-haired, blue eyed barbarians,
-where now the population is preponderantly brunet
-and becoming yearly more so.</p>
-
-<table class='table1'>
- <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'><span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span></td></tr>
- <tr><th class='c012' colspan='3'>CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE<a id='r2'></a><a href='#f2' class='c016'><sup>[2]</sup></a></th></tr>
- <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'>&#8196;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt blt brt c019' colspan='3'>METALS</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020'><span class='sc'>Later Iron</span></td>
- <td class='c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#8196;&#8196;La Tène Culture</td>
- <td class='c020'>Europe</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>500 B. C.—Roman times</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020'><span class='sc'>Early Iron</span></td>
- <td class='c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020' rowspan='2'>&#8196;&#8196;Hallstatt Culture</td>
- <td class='c020'>Europe</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>1500–500 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
- <td class='c020'>Orient</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>1800–1000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020' rowspan='2'><span class='sc'>Bronze</span></td>
- <td class='c020'>Western and northern Europe</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>1800–500 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
- <td class='c020'>Orient</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>3000–2000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt brt c019' colspan='3'>NEOLITHIC</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020'><span class='sc'>Late Neolithic</span><br /><span class='sc'>Copper, Eneolithic</span></td>
- <td class='c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>3000–2000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020'><span class='sc'>Typical Neolithic</span></td>
- <td class='c020'>Swiss lake dwellings, Robenhausian culture</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>5000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020'><span class='sc'>Early Neolithic</span></td>
- <td class='c020'>Campignian culture</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>7000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt brt c019' colspan='3'>UPPER PALEOLITHIC</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020' rowspan='5'><span class='sc'>Postglacial</span></td>
- <td class='c020'>Caves and shelters:</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
- <td class='c020'>Azilian-Tardenoisian Nordic-Maglemose Furfooz-Grenelle race Proto-Mediterranean race</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>10,000–7000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
- <td class='c020'>Magdalenian Cro-Magnon race</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>16,000–10,000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
- <td class='c020'>Solutrean Brünn-Předmost race Cro-Magnon race</td>
- <td class='brt c021' rowspan='2'>25,000–16,000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
- <td class='c020'>Aurignacian Cro-Magnon race</td>
-
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'><span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt brt c019' colspan='3'>MIDDLE PALEOLITHIC</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020'>IV. <span class='sc'>Glaciation</span></td>
- <td class='c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#8196;&#8196;Würm</td>
- <td class='c020'>Mousterian Neanderthal race Caves and shelters</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>50,000–25,000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt brt c019' colspan='3'>LOWER PALEOLITHIC</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>III. <span class='sc'>Interglacial</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020' rowspan='3'>&#8196;&#8196;Riss-Würm</td>
- <td class='c020'>Acheulean, river terraces</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>75,000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
- <td class='c020'>Chellean, river terraces</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>100,000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
- <td class='c020'>Pre-Chellean and Mesvinian, river terraces</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>125,000 B. C.<br />150,000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt brt c019' colspan='3'>EOLITHIC</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>III. <span class='sc'>Glaciation</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#8196;&#8196;Riss</td>
- <td class='c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>200,000–150,000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>II. <span class='sc'>Interglacial</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#8196;&#8196;Mindel-Riss</td>
- <td class='c020'>Heidelberg Man</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>350,000–200,000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>II. <span class='sc'>Glaciation</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#8196;&#8196;Mindel</td>
- <td class='c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>400,000–350,000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>I. <span class='sc'>Interglacial</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#8196;&#8196;Günz-Mindel</td>
- <td class='c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c021'>475,000–400,000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c020' colspan='3'><span class='sc'>Glaciation</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#8196;&#8196;Günz</td>
- <td class='bbt c020'><em>Pithecanthropus</em></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c021'>500,000–475,000 B. C.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. After Henry Fairfield Osborn, 1915.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>IV<br /> <span class='large'>THE ALPINE RACE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Alpine race is clearly of Eastern and Asiatic
-origin. It forms the westernmost extension of a
-widespread subspecies which, outside of Europe,
-occupies Asia Minor, Iran, the Pamirs and the
-Hindu Kush. In fact the western Himalayas were
-probably its original centre of evolution and radiation
-and among its Asiatic members is a distinct
-subdivision, the Armenoids.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Alpine race is distinguished by a round face
-and correspondingly round skull which in the true
-Armenians has a peculiar sugarloaf shape, a character
-which can be easily recognized. The Alpines
-must not be confounded with the slit-eyed Mongols
-who centre around Thibet and the steppes of north
-Asia. The fact that both these races are round
-skulled does not involve identity of origin any more
-than the long skulls of the Nordics and of the Mediterraneans
-require that they be both considered of
-the same subspecies, although good anthropologists
-have been misled by this parallelism. The Alpines
-are of stocky build and moderately short
-stature, except sometimes where they have been
-crossed with Nordic elements. This race is also
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>characterized by dark hair, except where there has
-been a strong Nordic admixture as in south Germany
-and Switzerland. In Europe at the present
-time the eye, also, is usually dark but sometimes
-grayish. The ancestral Proto-Alpines from the
-highlands of western Asia must, of course, have had
-brunet eyes and very dark, probably black, hair.
-Whether we are justified in considering gray eyes
-as peculiar to populations of mixed Alpine and
-Nordic blood is difficult to determine, but one
-thing is certain, the combination of blue eyes and
-flaxen hair is never Alpine.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The European Alpines retain very little evidence
-of their Asiatic origin except the skull shape and
-have been in contact with the Nordic race so long
-that in central and western Europe they are
-everywhere saturated with the blood of that race.
-Many populations now considered good Germans,
-such as the majority of the Würtembergers, Bavarians,
-Austrians, Swiss and Tyrolese are merely
-Nordicized Alpines.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While the Swiss are to-day neither tall nor long-headed, their country was thoroughly conquered
-early in the Christian era by the Nordic Alemanni
-who entered from the Rhine Valley. The exodus
-of soldiers from the forest cantons throughout the
-Middle Ages to fight as mercenaries in France and
-Italy gradually drained off this Nordic element
-until the chief evidence of its former existence lies
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>to-day in the large amount of blondness among the
-Swiss. With the loss of this type the nation has
-ceased to be a military community.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first appearance in Europe of the Alpines
-dates from the Azilian Period when it is represented
-by the Furfooz-Grenelle race. There were later
-several invasions of this race which entered Europe
-from the Asia Minor plateaux, by way of the Balkans
-and the valley of the Danube, during Neolithic
-times and, also, at the beginning of the Bronze
-Age. It appears also to have passed north of the
-Black Sea, as some slight traces have been discovered
-there of round skulls which long antedate
-the existing population but the Russian brachycephaly
-of to-day is of much later origin and is due
-mainly to the eastward spread of Alpines from the
-regions of the Carpathians since the first centuries
-of our era.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This race in its final expansion far to the northwest
-ultimately reached Norway, Denmark and
-Holland and planted among the dolichocephalic
-natives small colonies of round skulls, which still
-exist. These colonies are found along the coast
-and while of small extent are clearly marked. On
-the southwestern seaboard of Norway these round
-heads are dark and relatively short.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When this invasion reached the extreme northwest
-of Europe its energy was spent and the
-invaders were soon forced back into central Europe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>by the Nordics. The Alpines at this time of
-maximum extension about 1800 B. C. crossed
-into Britain and a few reached Ireland and introduced
-bronze into both these islands. As the
-metal appears about the same time in Sweden it
-is safe to assume that it was introduced by this
-invasion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The men of the Round Barrows in England
-were Alpines, but their numbers were so scanty
-that they have left behind them in the skulls of
-the living population but little demonstrable evidence
-of their former presence. If we are ever able
-accurately to analyze the various strains that enter
-in more or less minute quantities into the blood
-of the British nation, we shall find many traces of
-these Round Barrow men as well as other interesting
-and ancient remnants especially in the western
-isles and peninsulas.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the study of European populations the great
-and fundamental fact about the British Isles is
-the almost total absence there to-day of true Alpine
-round skulls. It is the only important state in
-Europe in which the round skulls play no part and
-the only nation of any rank composed solely of
-Nordic and Mediterranean races in approximately
-equal numbers. To this fact are undoubtedly due
-many of the individualities and much of the greatness
-of the English people.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The cephalic index in England is rather low,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>about 78, but there is a type of tall men, with
-a tendency to roundheadedness allied to a very
-marked intellectual capacity, known as the “Beaker
-Maker” type. They are probably descended from
-the men of the Round Barrows, who while brachycephalic
-were tall and presumably dark and
-entered England on the east and northeast. The
-Beaker Makers appear at the very end of the
-Neolithic and, at least in the case of the last of
-them to arrive, are identified with the Bronze
-Age.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Before this tall, round-headed type reached Britain,
-they had absorbed many Nordic elements
-and they have nothing except the skull shape in
-common with the Alpines living closest, those of
-Belgium and France. However, they do suggest
-strongly the Dinaric race of the Tyrol and Dalmatian
-coast of the Adriatic. In addition to the
-Beaker Makers remains of short, thick-set brachycephs
-have also been found in small numbers.
-These last appear to have been true Alpines.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The invasion of central Europe by Alpines,
-which occurred in the Neolithic, following in the
-wake of the Azilian forerunners of the same type—the
-Furfooz-Grenelle race—represented a very
-great advance in culture. They brought with
-them from Asia the art of domesticating animals
-and the first knowledge of the cereals and of pottery
-and were an agricultural race in sharp contrast
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>to the flesh eating hunters who preceded
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Neolithic populations of the lake dwellings
-in Switzerland and the extreme north of Italy, which
-flourished about 5000 B. C., all belonged to this
-Alpine race. A comparison of the scanty physical
-remains of these lake dwellers with the inhabitants
-of the existing villages on the lake shores demonstrates
-that the skull shape has changed little or
-not at all during the last seven thousand years
-and affords us another proof of the persistency of
-physical characters.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This Alpine race in Europe is now so thoroughly
-acclimated that it is no longer Asiatic in any respect
-and has nothing in common with the Mongols
-except its round skulls. Such Mongolian elements
-as exist to-day in scattered groups throughout
-eastern Europe are remnants of the later
-invasions of Tatar hordes which, beginning with
-Attila in the fifth century, ravaged eastern Europe
-for hundreds of years.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In western and central Europe the present distribution
-of the Alpine race is a substantial recession
-from its earlier extent and it has been everywhere
-conquered and subordinated by Celtic- and
-Teutonic-speaking Nordics. Beginning with the
-first appearance of the Celtic-speaking Nordics in
-western Europe, the Alpine race has been obliged
-to give ground but has mingled its blood everywhere
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>with the conquerors and now after centuries
-of obscurity it appears to be increasing again at the
-expense of the master race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Alpines reached Spain, as they reached
-Britain, in small numbers and with spent force
-but they still persist along the Cantabrian Alps as
-well as among the French Basques on the northern
-side of the Pyrenees.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Anaryan Basque or Euskarian language
-may be a derivative of the original speech of these
-Alpines, as its affinities point eastward and toward
-Asia rather than southward and toward the littoral
-of Africa and the Hamitic speech of the Mediterranean
-Berbers. Basque was probably related to
-the extinct Aquitanian. The Ligurian language,
-also seemingly Anaryan, if ever closely deciphered
-may throw some light on the subject. There are
-dim traces all along the north African coast of a
-round skull invasion about 3000 B. C. through
-Syria, Egypt, Tripoli and Tunis and from there
-through Sicily to southern Italy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Alpine race forms to-day, as in Cæsar’s
-time, the great bulk of the population of central
-France with a Nordic aristocracy resting upon it.
-They occupy as the lower classes the uplands of
-Belgium, where, known as Walloons, they speak an
-archaic French dialect closely related to the ancient
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">langue d’oïl</span></i>. They form a majority of the
-upland population of Alsace, Lorraine, Baden, Würtemberg,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>Bavaria, Tyrol, Switzerland and northern
-Italy; in short, of the entire central <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">massif</span></i> of Europe.
-In Bavaria and the Tyrol the Alpines are
-so thoroughly Nordicized that their true racial
-affinities are betrayed by their round skulls alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When we reach Austria we come in contact with
-the Slavic-speaking nations which form a subdivision
-of the Alpine race appearing relatively late
-in history and radiating from the Carpathian
-Mountains. In western and central Europe in
-relation to the Nordic race the Alpine is everywhere
-the ancient, underlying and submerged type.
-The fertile lands, river valleys and cities are here in
-the hands of the Nordics but in eastern Germany
-and Poland we find conditions reversed. That is
-an old Nordic broodland with a Nordic substratum
-underlying the bulk of the peasantry, which now
-consists of round skulled Alpine Slavs. On top of
-these again we have an aristocratic upper class of
-comparatively recent introduction and of Saxon
-origin in eastern Germany. In Austria this upper
-class is Swabian and Bavarian.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The introduction of Slavs into eastern Germany
-is believed to have been by infiltration and not
-by conquest. In the fourth century these Wends
-were called Venethi, Antes and Sclaveni, and were
-described as strong in numbers but despised in war.
-Through the neglect of the Teutons they had been
-allowed to range far and wide from their homes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>near the northeastern Carpathians and to occupy
-the lands formerly belonging to the Nordic nations,
-who had abandoned their country and flocked into
-the Roman Empire. Goth, Burgund, Lombard
-and Vandal were replaced by the lowly Wend and
-Sorb, whose descendants to-day form the privates
-in the east German regiments, while the officers are
-everywhere recruited from the Nordic upper class.
-The mediæval relation of these Slavic tribes to the
-dominant Teuton is well expressed in the meaning—slave—which
-has been attached to their name
-in western languages.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The occupation of eastern Germany and Poland
-by the Slavs probably occurred from 400 A. D. to
-700 A. D. but these Alpine elements were reinforced
-from the east and south from time to time
-during the succeeding centuries. Beginning early
-in the tenth century, the Saxons under their Emperors,
-especially Henry the Fowler, turned their
-attention eastward and during the next two centuries
-they reconquered and thoroughly Germanized
-all this section of Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A similar series of changes in racial predominance
-took place in Russia where in addition to a nobility
-largely Nordic a section of the population is of
-ancient Nordic type, although the bulk of the peasantry
-consists of Alpine Slavs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Alpines in eastern Europe are represented
-by various branches of the “Slavic” nations.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>Their area of distribution was split into two sections
-by the occupation of the great Dacian plain first
-by the Avars about 600 A. D. and later by the
-Hungarians about 900 A. D. These Avars and
-Magyars came from somewhere in eastern Russia
-beyond the sphere of Aryan speech and their
-invasions separated the northern Slavs, known as
-Wends, Czechs, Slovaks, and Poles, from the
-southern Slavs, known as Serbs and Croats. These
-southern Slavs entered the Balkan Peninsula in the
-sixth century from the northeast and to-day form
-the great mass of the population there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The centre of radiation of all these Slavic-speaking
-Alpines was located in the Carpathians, especially
-the Ruthenian districts of Galicia and eastward
-to the neighborhood of the Pripet swamps
-and the head-waters of the Dnieper in Polesia,
-where the Slavic dialects are believed to have
-developed and whence they spread throughout
-Russia about the eighth century. These early
-Slavs were probably the Sarmatians of the Greek
-and Roman writers. Their name “Venethi” seems
-to have been a later designation. The original
-Proto-Slavic language being Aryan must have been
-at some distant date imposed by Nordics upon the
-Alpines, but its development into the present Slavic
-tongues was chiefly the work of Alpines.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In other words, the expansion of the Alpines of
-the Slavic-speaking group seems to have occurred
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>after the Fourth Century and they have spread
-in the East over areas which were originally Nordic,
-very much as the Teutons had previously
-overrun and submerged the earlier Alpines in the
-West. The Mongol, Tatar and Turk who invaded
-Europe much later reinforced the brachycephalic
-element in these countries. To some extent the
-round skulled Alpines in Russia have been reinforced
-by way of the Caucasus and the route
-north of the Black Sea by their kindred in western
-Asia. The greater part of the purely Asiatic types
-has been thoroughly absorbed and Europeanized
-except in certain localities in Russia more especially
-in the east and south, where Mongoloid tribes
-such as the Mordvins, Bashkirs and Kalmucks
-have maintained their type either in isolated
-and relatively large groups or side by side with
-their Slavic neighbors. In both cases the isolation
-is maintained through religious and social
-differences.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Avars preceded the Magyars in Hungary,
-but they have merged with the latter without
-leaving traces that can be identified. Certain
-Mongoloid characters found in Bulgaria are believed,
-however, to be of Avar origin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The original physical type of the Magyars and
-the European Turks has now practically vanished
-as a result of prolonged intermarriage with the
-original inhabitants of Hungary and the Balkans.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>These tribes have left little behind but their language
-and, in the case of the Turks, their religion.
-The brachycephalic Hungarians to-day resemble
-the Austrian Germans much more than they do the
-Slavic-speaking populations adjoining them on the
-north and south or the Rumanians on the east.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Driven onward by the Avars, the Bulgars appeared
-south of the Danube about the end of the
-seventh century, coming originally from eastern
-Russia where the remnants of their kindred still
-persist along the Volga. To-day they conform
-physically in the western half of the country to
-the Alpine Serbs and in the eastern half to the
-Mediterranean race, as do also the Rumanians of
-the Black Sea coast.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Little or nothing remains of the ancestral Bulgars
-except their name. Language, religion and
-nearly, but not quite all, of the physical type have
-disappeared.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The early members of the Nordic race in order
-to reach the Mediterranean world had to pass
-through the Alpine populations and must have
-absorbed a certain amount of Alpine blood. Therefore
-the Umbrians in Italy and the Gauls of western
-Europe, while predominantly Nordic, were
-more mixed especially in the lower classes with
-Alpine blood than were the Belgæ or Cymry or
-their successors, the Goths, Vandals, Burgundians,
-Alemanni, Saxons, Franks, Lombards, Danes and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>Northmen, all of whom appear in history as Nordics
-of the so-called Teutonic group.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In some portions of their range notably Savoy
-and central France the Alpine race is much less
-affected by Nordic influence than elsewhere but on
-the contrary it shows signs of a very ancient admixture
-with Mediterranean and even earlier elements.
-Brachycephalic Alpine populations in comparative
-purity still exist in the interior of Brittany
-as in Auvergne, although nearly surrounded by
-Nordic populations.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While the Alpines were everywhere overwhelmed
-and driven to the fastnesses of the mountains, the
-warlike and restless nature of the Nordics has enabled
-the more stable Alpine population to reassert
-itself slowly, and Europe is probably much less
-Nordic to-day than it was fifteen hundred years
-ago.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The early Alpines made very large contributions
-to the civilization of the world and were the
-medium through which many advances in culture
-were introduced from Asia into Europe. This
-race at the time of its first appearance in the west
-brought to the nomad hunters a knowledge of agriculture
-and of primitive pottery and of domestication
-of animals and thus made possible a great
-increase in population and the establishment of
-permanent settlements. Still later its final expansion
-was the means through which the knowledge
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>of metals reached the Mediterranean and Nordic
-populations of the west and north. Upon the appearance
-on the scene of the Nordics the Alpine
-race temporarily lost its identity and sank to the
-subordinate and obscure position which it still
-largely occupies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In western Asia members of this race seemingly
-are entitled to the honor of the earliest Mesopotamian
-civilization of which we have knowledge,
-namely, that of Sumer and its northerly neighbor
-Accad in Mesopotamia. It is also the race of early
-Elam and Media. In fact, the basis of Mesopotamian
-civilization belongs to this race. Later
-Babylonia and Assyria were Arabic and Semitic
-while Persia was Nordic and Aryan.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In classic, mediæval and modern times the Alpines
-have played an unimportant part in European
-culture and in western Europe they have
-been so thoroughly Nordicized that they exist
-rather as an element in Nordic race development
-than as an independent type. There are, however,
-many indications in current history which point to
-an impending development of civilization in the
-Slavic branches of this race and the world must
-be prepared to face changes in the Russias which
-will, for good or for evil, bring them more closely
-into touch with western Europe.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>V<br /> <span class='large'>THE MEDITERRANEAN RACE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Mediterranean subspecies formerly called
-the Iberian is a relatively small, light boned, long
-skulled race, of brunet coloring, becoming even
-swarthy in certain portions of its range. Throughout
-Neolithic times and possibly still earlier it
-seems to have occupied, as it does to-day, all the
-shores of the Mediterranean including the coast
-of Africa from Morocco on the west to Egypt on
-the east. The Mediterraneans are the western
-members of a subspecies of man which forms a
-substantial part of the population of Persia, Afghanistan,
-Baluchistan and Hindustan with perhaps a
-southward extension into Ceylon.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Aryanized Afghan and Hindu of northern
-India speak languages derived from Old Sanskrit
-and are distantly related to the Mediterranean race.
-Aside from a common dolichocephaly these peoples
-are entirely distinct from the Dravidians of south
-India whose speech is agglutinative and who show
-strong evidence of profound mixture with the ancient
-Negrito substratum of southern Asia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Everywhere throughout the Asiatic portion of
-its range the Mediterranean race overlies an even
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>more ancient Negroid race. These Negroids still
-have representatives among the Pre-Dravidians of
-India, the Veddahs of Ceylon, the Sakai of the
-Malay Peninsula and the natives of the Andaman
-Islands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This Mediterranean subspecies at the close of
-the Paleolithic spread from the basin of the Inland
-Sea northward by way of Spain throughout westernmost
-Europe including the British Isles and,
-before the final expansion of the Alpines, was widely
-distributed up to and, possibly, touching the domain
-of the Nordic dolichocephs. The Mediterraneans
-did not cross the Alps from the south but spread
-around the mountains. In attaining to Britain
-from Spain by way of Central France it is probable
-that they swept with them Paleolithic remnants
-from the ancient centre of population in the Auvergne
-district.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In all this vast range from the British Isles to
-Hindustan, it is not to be supposed that there is
-absolute identity of race. Certain portions, however,
-of the populations of the countries throughout
-this long stretch do show in their physique
-clear indications of descent from a Neolithic race
-of a common original type, which we may call
-Proto-Mediterranean.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Quite apart from inevitable admixture with late
-Nordic and early Paleolithic elements, the brunet
-type of Englishman has had perhaps ten
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>thousand years of independent evolution during
-which he has undergone selection due to the climatic
-and physical conditions of his northern habitat.
-The result is that he has specialized far away
-from the Proto-Mediterranean race which contributed
-his blood originally to Britain while it was,
-probably, still part of continental Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the other end of their range in India this
-race, the Mediterraneans, have been crossed with
-Dravidians and with Pre-Dravidian Negroids.
-They have also had imposed upon them other
-ethnic elements which came over through the Afghan
-passes from the northwest. The resultant
-racial mixture in India has had its own line of
-specialization. Residence in the fertile but unhealthy
-river bottoms, the direct rays of a tropic
-sun and competition with the immemorial autochthones
-have unsparingly weeded generation after
-generation until the existing Hindu has little in
-common with the ancestral Proto-Mediterranean.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is to the Mediterranean race in the British
-Isles that the English, Scotch and Americans
-owe whatever brunet characters they possess. In
-western Europe, wherever it exists, it appears to
-underlie the Alpine race and, in fact, wherever this
-race is in contact with either the Alpines or the
-Nordics it would seem to represent the more ancient
-stratum of the population.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So far as we know this Mediterranean type never
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>existed in Scandinavia and all brunet elements
-found there can be attributed to introductions in
-the Bronze Age or in historic times. Nor did the
-Mediterranean race ever enter or cross the high
-Alps as did the Nordics at a much later date on
-their way to the Mediterranean basin from the
-Baltic coasts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Mediterranean race with its Asiatic extensions
-is bordered everywhere on the north of its
-enormous range from Spain to India by round
-skulls but there does not seem to be as much evidence
-of mixture between these two subspecies of
-man as there is between the Alpines and the Nordics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Along its southern boundary the Mediterraneans
-are in contact with either the long skulled Negroes
-of Africa or the ancient Negrito population of
-southern Asia. In Africa this race has drifted
-southward over the Sahara and up the Nile Valley
-and has modified the blood of the Negroes in both
-the Senegambian and equatorial regions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Beyond these mixtures of blood, there is absolutely
-no relationship between the Mediterranean
-race and the Negroes. The fact that the Mediterranean
-race is long skulled as well as the Negro
-does not indicate relationship as has been suggested.
-An overemphasis of the importance of the skull
-shape as a somatological character can easily
-mislead and characters other than skull proportions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>must be carefully considered in determining
-race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From a zoological point of view Africa north of
-the Sahara is now and has been since early Tertiary
-times a part of Europe. This is true both of
-animals and of the races of man. The Berbers of
-north Africa to-day are racially identical with the
-Spaniards and south Italians while the ancient
-Egyptians and their modern descendants, the fellaheen,
-are merely well-marked varieties of this
-Mediterranean race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Egyptians fade off toward the west into
-the so-called Hamitic peoples (to use an obsolete
-name) of Libya, and toward the south the infusion
-of Negro blood becomes increasingly great until
-we finally reach the pure Negro. On the east in
-Arabia we find an ancient and highly specialized
-subdivision of the Mediterranean race, which has
-from time out of mind crossed the Red Sea and
-infused its blood into the Negroes of east Africa.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To-day the Mediterranean race forms in Europe
-a substantial part of the population of the British
-Isles, the great bulk of the population of the Iberian
-Peninsula, nearly one-third of the population
-of France, Liguria, Italy south of the Apennines
-and all the Mediterranean coasts and islands, in
-some of which like Sardinia it exists in great purity.
-It forms the substratum of the population of
-Greece and of the eastern coast of the Balkan Peninsula.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>Everywhere in the interior of the Balkan
-Peninsula, except in eastern Bulgaria and parts of
-Rumania, it has been replaced by the South Slavs
-and by the Albanians, the latter a mixture of the
-ancient Illyrians and the Slavs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the British Isles the Mediterranean race represents
-the Pre-Nordic population and exists in
-considerable numbers in Wales and in certain portions
-of England, notably in the Fen districts to
-the northeast of London. In Scotland it is far less
-marked, but has left its brunetness as an indication
-of its former prevalence and this dark hair and eye
-color is very often associated with tall stature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This is the race that gave the world the great
-civilizations of Egypt, of Crete, of Phœnicia including
-Carthage, of Etruria, of Mycenæan Greece,
-of Assyria and much of Babylonia. It gave us,
-when mixed and invigorated with Nordic elements,
-which probably predominated in the upper and
-ruling classes and imposed their guidance upon the
-masses, the most splendid of all civilizations, that
-of ancient Hellas, and the most enduring of political
-organizations, the Roman state.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To what extent the Mediterranean race entered
-into the blood and civilization of Rome, it is now
-difficult to say, but the traditions of the Eternal
-City, its love of organization, of law and military
-efficiency, as well as the Roman ideals of family
-life, of loyalty and truth, point clearly to a northern
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>rather than to a Mediterranean origin, although
-there must have been some Alpine strains mixed in
-with the Nordic element.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The struggles in early Rome between Latin and
-Etruscan and the endless quarrels between patrician
-and plebeian may have arisen from this existence
-in Rome, side by side, of two distinct and
-clashing races, probably Nordic and Mediterranean
-respectively. The Roman busts that have come
-down to us often show features of a very Anglo-Saxon
-cast but with a somewhat round head. The
-Romans were short in stature in comparison with
-the nations north of the Alps and in the recently
-discovered battlefield of the Teutoburgian Forest
-where Varus and his legions perished in the reign
-of Augustus the skeletons of the Romans, identified
-by their armor, were notably smaller and slighter
-than were those of the German victors. The indications
-on the whole point to a Nordic aristocracy
-in Rome with some Alpine elements. The Plebs,
-on the other hand, was largely Mediterranean and
-Oriental and finally in the last days of the Republic
-ceased to contain any purely Roman blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The northern qualities of Rome are in sharp
-contrast to the less European traits of the classic
-Greeks, whose volatile and analytical spirit, lack
-of cohesion, political incapacity and ready resort to
-treason all point clearly to southern and eastern
-affinities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>While very ancient, located for probably ten
-thousand years in western and southern Europe, and
-even longer on the south shore of the Mediterranean,
-nevertheless this subspecies cannot be called purely
-European. Its occupation of the north coast of
-Africa and the west coast of Europe can be traced
-everywhere by its beautifully polished stone
-weapons and tools. The megalithic monuments
-also, which are found in association with this race,
-may mark its line of advance in western Europe,
-although they extend beyond the range of the
-Mediterraneans into the domain of the Scandinavian
-Nordics. These huge stone structures were
-chiefly sepulchral memorials and are very suggestive
-of the Egyptian funeral monuments. They
-date back to the first knowledge of the manufacture
-and use of bronze tools by the Mediterranean
-race. They occur in great numbers, size and variety
-along the north coast of Africa and up the
-Atlantic seaboard through Spain, Brittany and
-England to Scandinavia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is admitted that the various groups of the
-Mediterranean race did not speak in the first instance
-any form of Aryan tongue and we know
-that these languages were introduced into the Mediterranean
-world by invaders from the north.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Spain the language of the Nordic invaders
-was Celtic and is believed to have nearly died out
-by Roman times. Its remnants and the ancient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>speech of the natives were in turn superseded,
-along with the Phœnician spoken in some of the
-southern coast towns, by the Latin of the conquering
-Roman. Latin mixed with some small
-elements of Gothic construction and Arabic vocabulary
-forms to-day the basis of modern Portuguese,
-Castilian and Catalan.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The native Mediterranean race of the Iberian
-Peninsula quickly absorbed the blood of these
-Celtic-speaking Nordic Gauls, just as it later
-diluted beyond recognition the vigorous physical
-characters of the Nordic Vandals, Suevi and Visigoths.
-A certain amount of Nordic blood still
-persists to-day in northern Spain, especially in
-Galicia and along the Pyrenees, as well as generally
-among the upper classes. According to
-classic writers there were light and dark types in
-Spain in Roman times. The Romans left no evidence
-of their domination except in their language
-and religion; while the earlier Phœnicians on the
-coasts and the later swarms of Moors and Arabs
-all over the peninsula, but chiefly in the south,
-were closely related by race to the native Iberians.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That portion of the Mediterranean race which
-inhabits southern France occupies most of the
-territory of ancient Languedoc and Provence and
-it was these Provençals who developed and preserved
-during the Middle Ages the romantic civilization
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>of the Albigensians, a survival of classic culture
-which was drowned in blood by a crusade from
-the north in the thirteenth century.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In northern Italy only the coast of Liguria is
-occupied by the Mediterranean race. In the valley
-of the Po the Mediterraneans predominated
-during the early Neolithic but with the introduction
-of bronze the Alpines appear and round
-skulls to this day prevail north of the Apennines.
-About 1100 B. C. the Nordic Umbrians and Oscans
-swept over the Alps from the northeast, conquered
-northern Italy and introduced their Aryan speech,
-which gradually spread southward. The Umbrian
-state was afterward overwhelmed by the Tyrrhenians
-or Etruscans, who were of Mediterranean
-race and who, by 800 B. C. had extended their
-empire northward to the Alps and temporarily
-checked the advance of the Nordics. In the sixth
-century B. C. new swarms of Nordics, coming this
-time from Gaul and speaking Celtic dialects, seized
-the valley of the Po and in 382 B. C. these Gauls,
-heavily reinforced from the north and under the
-leadership of Brennus, stormed Rome and completely
-destroyed the Etruscan power. From that
-time onward the valley of the Po became known as
-Cisalpine Gaul. Mixed with other Nordic elements,
-chiefly Gothic and Lombard, this population persists
-to this day, and is the backbone of modern
-Italy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>A continuation of this movement of these Gauls,
-or Galatians as the Greek world called them, starting
-from northern Italy occurred a century later
-when these Nordics suddenly appeared before Delphi
-in Greece in 279 B. C. and then crossed into
-Asia Minor and founded the state called Galatia,
-which endured until Christian times.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>South Italy until its conquest by Rome was
-Magna Græcia and the population to-day retains
-many Pelasgian Greek elements. It is among these
-classic remnants that artists search for the handsomest
-specimens of the Mediterranean race. In
-Sicily also the race is purely Mediterranean in spite
-of the admixture of types coming from the neighboring
-coasts of Tunis. These intrusive elements,
-however, were all of kindred race. Traces of Alpines
-in these regions and on the adjoining African
-coast are very scarce and wherever found may be
-referred to the final wave of round skull invasion
-which introduced bronze into Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Greece the Mediterranean Pelasgians speaking
-a Non-Aryan tongue were conquered by the Nordic
-Achæans, who entered from the northeast according
-to tradition prior to 1250 B. C. probably between
-1400 and 1300 B. C. Doubtless there were
-still earlier waves of these same Nordic invaders
-as far back as 1700 B. C., which was a period of
-general unrest and migration throughout the ancient
-world.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>The Nordic Achæans and Mediterranean Pelasgians
-as yet unmixed stand out in clear contrast in
-the Homeric account of the ten year siege of Troy,
-which is generally assigned to the date of 1194 to
-1184 B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The same invasion that brought the Achæans
-into Greece brought a related Nordic people to
-the coast of Asia Minor, known as Phrygians. Of
-this race were the Trojan leaders.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Both the Trojans and the Greeks were commanded
-by huge blond princes, the heroes of Homer—in
-fact, even the Gods were fair-haired—while
-the bulk of the armies on both sides was composed
-of little brunet Pelasgians, imperfectly armed
-and remorselessly butchered by the leaders on
-either side. The only common soldiers mentioned
-by Homer as of the same race as the heroes were
-the Myrmidons of Achilles.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>About the time that the Achæans and the Pelasgians
-began to amalgamate, new hordes of Nordic
-barbarians collectively called Hellenes entered
-from the northern mountains and destroyed this
-old Homeric-Mycenæan civilization. This Dorian
-invasion took place a little before 1100 B. C. and
-brought in the three main Nordic strains of Greece,
-the Dorian, the Æolian and the Ionian groups,
-which remain more or less distinct and separate
-throughout Greek history. Among these Nordics
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>the Dorians may have included some Alpine elements.
-It is more than probable that this invasion
-or swarming of Nordics into Greece was part of
-the same general racial upheaval that brought
-the Umbrians and Oscans into Italy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Long years of intense and bitter conflict follow
-between the old population and the newcomers
-and when the turmoil of this revolution settled
-down classic Greece appears. What was left of
-the Achæans retired to the northern Peloponnesus
-and the survivors of the early Pelasgian population
-remained in Messenia serving as helots their
-Spartan masters. The Greek colonies in Asia
-Minor were founded largely by refugees fleeing
-from these Dorian invaders.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Pelasgian strain seems to have persisted
-best in Attica and the Ionian states. The Dorian
-Spartans appear to have retained more of the character
-of the northern barbarians than the Ionian
-Greeks but the splendid civilization of Hellas was
-due to a fusion of the two elements, the Achæan
-and Hellene of Nordic and the Pelasgian of Mediterranean
-race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The contrast between Dorian Sparta and Ionian
-Athens, between the military efficiency, thorough
-organization and sacrifice of the citizen for the
-welfare of the state, which constituted the basis
-of Lacedæmonian power, and the Attic brilliancy,
-instability and extreme development of individualism,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>is strikingly like the contrast between Prussia
-with its Spartan-like culture and France with its
-Athenian versatility.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To this mixture of races in classic Greece the
-Mediterranean Pelasgians contributed their Mycenæan
-culture and the Nordic Achæans and Hellenes
-contributed their Aryan language, fighting
-efficiency and the European aspect of Greek life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first result of a crossing of two such contrasted
-subspecies as the Nordic and Mediterranean
-races has repeatedly been a new outburst of
-civilization. This occurs as soon as the older race
-has imparted to the conquerors its culture and before
-the victors have allowed their blood to be attenuated
-by mixture. This process seems to have
-happened several times in Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Later, in 338 B. C., when the original Nordic
-blood had been hopelessly diluted by mixture with
-the ancient Mediterranean elements, Hellas fell
-an easy prey to Macedon. The troops of Philip
-and Alexander were Nordic and represented the
-uncultured but unmixed ancestral type of the
-Achæans and Hellenes. Their unimpaired fighting
-strength was irresistible as soon as it was organized
-into the Macedonian phalanx, whether directed
-against their degenerate brother Greeks or against
-the Persians, whose original Nordic elements had
-also by this time practically disappeared. When
-in its turn the pure Macedonian blood was impaired
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>by intermixture with Asiatics, they, too,
-vanished and even the royal Macedonian dynasties
-in Asia and Egypt soon ceased to be Nordic
-or Greek except in language and customs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is interesting to note that the Greek states
-in which the Nordic element most predominated
-outlived the other states. Athens fell before Sparta
-and Thebes outlived them both. Macedon in
-classic times was considered quite the most barbarous
-state in Hellas and was scarcely recognized
-as forming part of Greece, but it was through the
-military power of its armies and the genius of Alexander
-that the Levant and western Asia became
-Hellenized. Alexander with his Nordic features,
-aquiline nose, fair skin, gently curling light hair
-and mixed eyes, the left blue and the right very
-black, typifies this Nordic conquest of the Near
-East.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is scarcely possible to-day to find in purity the
-physical traits of the ancient race in the Greek-speaking
-lands and islands and it is chiefly among
-the pure Nordics of Anglo-Norman type that there
-occur those smooth and regular classic features,
-especially the brow and nose lines, that were the
-delight of the sculptors of Hellas.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To what extent any of the blood of the ancient
-Hellenes flows in the veins of the Greeks of to-day
-is difficult to determine but it should be found,
-if anywhere, in Crete and in the Ægean Islands.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>The modern Greek is trying to purify his language
-back to classic Ionian and to appropriate the
-traditions of the mighty Past, but to do this something
-more is needed than the naming of children
-after Agamemnon and Hecuba. Even in Roman
-times, the ancient Greek of the classic period was
-little more than a tradition and the term Græculus
-given to the contemporary Hellenes was one of
-contempt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Concerning the physical type of classic in contrast
-to Homeric Greece, we know that the Greeks
-were predominantly long-headed and of relatively
-short stature in comparison with the northern barbarians.
-The modern Greeks are also relatively
-short in stature, but are moderately round-headed.
-As to color these modern Greeks are substantially all
-dark as to eye and hair, with a somewhat swarthy
-skin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Among Albanians and such Greeks as show blond
-traits light eyes are more than ten times as numerous
-as light hair. The Albanians are members of
-the tall, round-headed Dinaric race and have distant
-relationship with the Nordics. They may possibly
-represent an ancient cross between Nordics and Alpines
-and they constitute to-day a marked subdivision
-of the latter. They resemble the Round Barrow
-brachycephs who entered Britain just before
-or at the opening of the Bronze Age and who are
-still scantily represented among the living English
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>and Welsh. This type called the Beaker Maker or
-Borreby type is characterized by a moderately
-round head and great stature, strength and considerable
-intellectual force. The Albanian or Dinaric
-type was not, so far as we know, represented
-in ancient Greece although some modern archæologists
-have suggested that the Spartans were of
-this type. We have as yet no evidence of the color,
-size and skull shape of the Spartans, but we do
-know that their Dorian ancestors claimed to have
-come from or through the mountains of northern
-Epirus (Albania). The Dorian dialects are also
-said to be more closely related to modern Albanian—which
-is derived from the ancient Illyrian—than
-are the Ionian dialects. The Spartan character, if
-that be any test of race, was heavy, slow and
-steady, and would indicate northern rather than
-Mediterranean antecedents.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Concerning modern Europe north of the Alps,
-culture came from the south and not from the east
-and to the Mediterranean subspecies is due the
-foundation of our civilization. The ancient Mediterranean
-world was for the most part of this race;
-the long-sustained civilization of Egypt, which endured
-for thousands of years in almost uninterrupted
-sequence; the brilliant Minoan Empire of
-Crete, which flourished between 3000 and 1200
-B. C. and was the ancestor of the Mycenæan cultures
-of Greece, Cyprus, Italy and Sardinia; the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>mysterious Empire of Etruria, the predecessor and
-teacher of Rome; the Hellenic states and colonies
-throughout the Mediterranean and Black Seas; the
-maritime and mercantile power of Phœnicia and
-its mighty colony, imperial Carthage; all were the
-creation of this race. The sea empire of Crete,
-when its royal palace at Cnossos was burned by the
-‘sea peoples’ of the north, passed to Tyre, Sidon
-and Carthage and from them to the Greeks. The
-early development of the art of navigation is
-to be attributed to this race and from them the
-North centuries later learned its maritime architecture.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Even though the Mediterranean race has no
-claim to the invention of the synthetic languages
-and though it played a relatively small part in the
-development of the civilization of the Middle
-Ages or of modern times, nevertheless to it belongs
-the chief credit of the classic civilization of Europe
-in the sciences, art, poetry, literature and philosophy,
-as well as the major part of the civilization of
-Greece and a very large share in the Empire of
-Rome.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the Eastern Empire the Mediterraneans were
-the predominant factor under the guise of Byzantine
-Greeks. Owing to the fact that our histories
-have been written under the influence of Roman
-orthodoxy and because in the eyes of the Frankish
-Crusaders the Byzantine Greeks were heretics,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>they have been regarded by us as degenerate cowards.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But throughout the Middle Ages Byzantium
-represented in unbroken sequence the Empire of
-Rome in the East and as the capital of that Empire
-it held Mohammedan Asia in check for nearly
-a thousand years. When at last in 1453 the imperial
-city deserted by western Christendom was
-stormed by the Ottoman Turks and Constantine,
-last of Roman Emperors, fell sword in hand there
-was enacted one of the greatest tragedies of all
-time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With the fall of Constantinople the Empire of
-Rome passes finally from the scene of history and
-the development of civilization is transferred from
-Mediterranean lands and from the Mediterranean
-race to the North Sea and to the Nordic race.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>VI<br /> <span class='large'>THE NORDIC RACE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>We have shown that the Mediterranean race
-entered Europe from the south and forms part of
-a great group of peoples extending into southern
-Asia, that the Alpine race came from the east
-through Asia Minor and the valley of the Danube
-and that its present European distribution is merely
-the westernmost point of an ethnic pyramid, the
-base of which rests solidly on the round skulled
-peoples of the great plateaux of central Asia.
-Both of these races are, therefore, western extensions
-of Asiatic subspecies and neither of them can
-be considered as exclusively European.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With the remaining race, the Nordic, however,
-the case is different. This is a purely European
-type, in the sense that it has developed its physical
-characters and its civilization within the confines
-of that continent. It is, therefore, the <em>Homo europæus</em>,
-the white man par excellence. It is everywhere
-characterized by certain unique specializations,
-namely, wavy brown or blond hair and blue,
-gray or light brown eyes, fair skin, high, narrow
-and straight nose, which are associated with great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>stature and a long skull, as well as with abundant
-head and body hair.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A composite picture of this Nordic race and remarkable
-examples of its best contemporary types
-can be found in the English illustrated weeklies,
-which are publishing during this great war the lists
-and portraits of their officers who have fallen in
-battle. No nation, not even England although
-richly endowed with a Nordic gentry, can stand
-the loss of so much good blood. Here is the evidence,
-if such be needed, of the actual Passing of the
-Great Race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Abundance of hair is an ancient and generalized
-character which the Nordics share with the
-Alpines of both Europe and Asia, but the light colored
-eyes and light colored hair are characters of
-relatively recent specialization and consequently
-highly unstable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The pure Nordic race is at present clustered
-around the shores of the Baltic and North Seas
-from which it has spread west and south and
-east fading off gradually into the two preceding
-races.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The centre of its greatest purity is now in Sweden
-and there is no doubt that at first the Scandinavian
-Peninsula and later, also, the immediately
-adjoining shores of the Baltic were the centres of
-radiation of the Teutonic or Scandinavian branch
-of this race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>The population of Scandinavia has been composed
-of this Nordic subspecies from the commencement
-of Neolithic times and Sweden to-day represents
-one of the few countries which has never been overwhelmed
-by foreign conquest and in which there
-has been but a single racial type from the beginning.
-This nation is unique in its unity of race,
-language, religion and social ideals.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Southern Scandinavia only became fit for human
-habitation on the retreat of the glaciers about
-twelve thousand years ago and apparently was immediately
-occupied by the Nordic race. This is one
-of the few geological dates which is absolute and
-not relative. It rests on a most interesting series
-of computations made by Baron DeGeer, based on
-an actual count of the laminated deposits of clay
-laid down annually by the retreating glaciers, each
-layer representing the summer deposit of the subglacial
-stream.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Nordics first appear at the close of the
-Paleolithic along the coasts of the Baltic. The
-earliest industry discovered in this region, named
-the Maglemose and found in Denmark and elsewhere
-around the Baltic, is probably the culture
-of the Proto-Teutonic branch of the Nordic race.
-No human remains in connection therewith have
-been found.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The vigor and power of the Nordic race as a
-whole is such that it could not have been evolved
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>in so restricted an area as southern Sweden although
-its Teutonic or Scandinavian section did
-develop there in comparative isolation. The Nordics
-must have had a larger field for their specialization
-and a longer period for their evolution than is
-afforded by the limited time which has elapsed since
-Sweden became habitable. For the development
-of so marked a type there is required a continental
-area isolated and protected for long ages from the
-intrusion of other races. The climatic conditions
-must have been such as to impose a rigid elimination
-of defectives through the agency of hard
-winters and the necessity of industry and foresight
-in providing the year’s food, clothing and shelter
-during the short summer. Such demands on energy
-if long continued would produce a strong,
-virile and self-contained race which would inevitably
-overwhelm in battle nations whose weaker
-elements had not been purged by the conditions of
-an equally severe environment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An area conforming to these requirements is
-offered by the forests and plains of eastern Germany,
-Poland and Russia. It was here that the
-Proto-Nordic type evolved and here their remnants
-are found. They were protected from Asia on the
-east by the then almost continuous water connections
-across eastern Russia between the White Sea
-and the old Caspian-Aral Sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>During the last glacial advance (known as the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>Würm) which, like the preceding glaciations, is believed
-to have been a period of land depression,
-the White Sea extended far to the south of its
-present limits, while the enlarged Caspian Sea,
-then and long afterward connected with the Sea
-of Aral, extended northward to the great bend of
-the Volga. The intermediate area was studded
-with large lakes and morasses. Thus an almost
-complete water barrier of shallow sea located just
-west of the low Ural Mountains, separated Europe
-from Asia during the Würm glaciation and the
-following period of glacial retreat. The broken
-connection was restored just before the dawn of
-history by a slight elevation of the land and the
-shrinking of the Caspian-Aral Sea through the increasing
-desiccation which has left its present surface
-below sea level.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An important element in the maintenance of
-the isolation of this Nordic cradle on the south is
-the fact that from earliest times down to this day
-the pressure of population has been unchangeably
-from the bleak and sterile north, southward and
-eastward, into the sunny but enervating lands of
-France, Italy, Greece, Persia and India.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In these forests and steppes of the north, the
-Nordic race gradually evolved in isolation and at
-an early date spread north over the Scandinavian
-Peninsula together with much of the land now submerged
-under the Baltic and North Seas.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>Nordic strains form everywhere a substratum
-of population throughout Russia and underlie the
-round skulled Slavs who first appear a little over a
-thousand years ago as coming not from the direction
-of Asia but from south Poland. Burial mounds
-called kurgans are widely scattered throughout
-Russia from the Carpathians to the Urals and contain
-numerous remains of a dolichocephalic race,—in
-fact, more than three-fourths of the skulls are
-of this type. Round skulls first become numerous
-in ancient Russian graveyards about 900 A. D.
-and soon increase to such an extent that in the
-Slavic period from the ninth to the thirteenth centuries
-one-half of the skulls were brachycephalic,
-while in modern cemeteries the proportion of round
-skulls is still greater. The ancient Nordic element,
-however, still forms a very considerable portion of
-the population of northern Russia and contributes
-the blondness and the red-headedness so characteristic
-of the Russian of to-day. As we leave
-the Baltic coasts the Nordic characters fade out
-both toward the south and east. The blond element
-in the nobility of Russia is of later Scandinavian
-and Teutonic origin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the seas which separated Russia from Asia
-dried, when the isolation and exacting climate of
-the north had done their work and produced the
-vigorous Nordic type, and when in the fulness of
-time bronze for their weapons reached them these
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>men burst upon the southern races, conquering
-east, south and west. They brought with them
-from the north the hardihood and vigor acquired
-under the rigorous selection of a long winter season
-and vanquished in battle the inhabitants of older
-and feebler civilizations, but only to succumb in
-their turn to the softening influences of a life of
-ease and plenty in their new homes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The earliest recorded appearance of Aryan-speaking
-Nordics is our first dim vision of the
-Sacæ introducing Sanskrit into India, the Cimmerians
-pouring through the passes of the Caucasus
-from the grasslands of South Russia to invade the
-Empire of the Medes and the Achæans and
-Phrygians conquering Greece and the Ægean coast
-of Asia Minor. About 1100 B. C. Nordics enter
-Italy as Umbrians and Oscans and soon after other
-Nordics cross the Rhine into Gaul. The latter
-were the western vanguard of the Celtic-speaking
-tribes which had long occupied those districts in
-Germany which lay south and west of the Teutonic
-Nordics. These Teutons at this early date
-were confined probably to Scandinavia and the
-immediate shores of the Baltic and were just beginning
-to press southward.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This first Celtic wave of Nordics seems to have
-swept westward along the sandy plains of northern
-Europe, and entered France through the Low Countries.
-From this point as Goidels they spread north
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>into Britain, reaching there about 800 B. C. As
-Gauls they conquered all France and pushed on
-southward and westward into Spain and over the
-Maritime Alps into northern Italy, where they encountered
-the kindred Nordic Umbrians, who at an
-earlier date had crossed the Alps from the northeast.
-Other Celtic-speaking Nordics apparently migrated
-up the Rhine and down the Danube and
-by the time the Romans came on the scene the
-Alpines of central Europe had been thoroughly
-Celticized. These tribes pushed eastward into
-southern Russia and reached the Crimea as early
-as the fourth century B. C. Mixed with the natives,
-they were called by the Greeks the Celto-Scyths.
-This swarming out of what is now called
-Germany of the first Nordics was during the closing
-phases of the Bronze Period and was contemporary
-with and probably caused by the first great
-expansion of the Teutons from Scandinavia by way
-both of Denmark and the Baltic coasts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These invaders were succeeded by a second wave
-of Celtic-speaking peoples, the Cymry or Brythons,
-who drove their Goidelic predecessors still farther
-westward and exterminated and absorbed them
-over large areas. These Cymric invasions occurred
-about 300–100 B. C. and were probably the result
-of the growing development of the Teutons and
-their final expulsion of the Celtic-speaking tribes
-from Germany. These Cymry occupied northern
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>France under the name of Belgæ and invaded England
-as Brythons in several waves, the last being the
-true Belgæ. The conquests of these Cymric tribes
-in both Gaul and Britain were only checked by the
-legions of Rome.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These migrations are exceedingly hard to trace
-because of the confusion caused by the fact that
-Celtic speech is now found on the lips of populations
-in nowise related to the Nordics who first
-introduced it. But one fact stands out clearly, all
-the original Celtic-speaking tribes were Nordic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>What were the special physical characters of
-these tribes in which they differed from their Teutonic
-successors is now impossible to say, beyond
-the possible suggestion that in the British Isles the
-Scottish and Irish populations in which red hair
-and gray or green eyes are abundant have rather
-more of this Celtic strain in them than have the
-flaxen haired Teutons, whose china-blue eyes are
-clearly not Celtic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the peoples called Gauls or Celts by the
-Romans and Galatians by the Greeks first appear
-in history they are described in exactly the same
-terms as were later the Teutons. They were all
-gigantic barbarians with fair and very often red
-hair, then more frequent than to-day, with gray or
-fiercely blue eyes and were thus clearly members
-of the Nordic subspecies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first Celtic-speaking nations with whom the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>Romans came in contact were Gaulish and had
-probably incorporated much Alpine blood by the
-time they crossed the mountains into the domain
-of classic history. The Nordic element had become
-still weaker by absorption from the conquered
-populations when at a later date the Romans
-broke through the ring of Celtic nations and
-came into contact with the Nordic Cymry and
-Teutons.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>After these early expansions of Gauls and Cymry
-the Teutons appear upon the scene. Of the pure
-Teutons within the ken of history, it is not necessary
-to mention more than the most important of
-the long series of conquering tribes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The greatest of them all were perhaps the
-Goths, who came originally from the south of
-Sweden and were long located on the opposite
-German coast at the mouth of the Vistula. From
-here they crossed Poland to the Crimea where they
-were known in the first century. Three hundred
-years later they were driven westward by the Huns
-and forced into the Dacian plain and over the
-Danube into the Roman Empire. There they split
-up; the Ostrogoths after a period of subjection to
-the Huns on the Danube, ravaged the European
-provinces of the Eastern Empire, conquered Italy
-and founded there a great but shortlived nation.
-The Visigoths occupied much of Gaul and then
-entered Spain driving the Nordic Vandals before
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>them into Africa. The Teutons and Cimbri,
-destroyed by Marius in southern Gaul about 100
-B. C., the Gepidæ, the Alans, the Suevi, the Vandals,
-the Alemanni of the upper Rhine, the Marcomanni,
-the Saxons, the Batavians, the Frisians,
-the Angles, the Jutes, the Lombards and the
-Heruli of Italy, the Burgundians of the east of
-France, the Franks of the lower Rhine, the Danes,
-and, latest of all, the Norse Vikings emerge from
-the northern forests and seas one after another and
-sweep through history. Less well known but of
-great importance are the Varangians, who coming
-from Sweden in the ninth and tenth centuries, conquered
-the coast of the Gulf of Finland and much
-of White Russia and left there a dynasty and aristocracy
-of Nordic blood. In the tenth and eleventh
-centuries they were the rulers of Russia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The traditions of Goths, Vandals, Lombards and
-Burgundians all point to Sweden as their earliest
-homeland and probably all the pure Teutonic
-tribes came originally from Scandinavia and were
-closely related.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When these Teutonic tribes poured down from
-the Baltic coasts, their Celtic-speaking Nordic
-predecessors were already much mixed with the
-underlying populations, Mediterranean in the west
-and Alpine in the south. These “Celts” were not
-recognized by the Teutons as kin in any sense
-and were all called, Welsh, or foreigners. From this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>word are derived the names “Wales,” “Cornwales”
-or “Cornwall,” “Valais,” “Walloons,” and
-“Vlach” or “Wallachian.”</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>VII<br /> <span class='large'>TEUTONIC EUROPE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>No proper understanding is possible of the
-meaning of the history of Christendom or full appreciation
-of the place in it of the Teutonic Nordics
-without a brief review of the events in Europe
-of the last two thousand years.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When Rome fell and changed trade conditions
-necessitated the transfer of power from its historic
-capital in Italy to a strategic situation on the Bosporus,
-western Europe was definitely and finally
-abandoned to its Teutonic invaders. These same
-barbarians swept up again and again to the Propontis,
-only to recoil before the organized strength
-of the Byzantine Empire and the walls of Mikklegard.
-The final line of cleavage between the western
-and eastern Empires corresponded closely to
-the boundaries of Latin and Greek speech and differences
-of language no doubt were the chief cause
-of the political and later of the religious divergence
-between them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Until the coming of the Alpine Slavs the Eastern
-Empire still held in Europe the Balkan Peninsula
-and much of the eastern Mediterranean. The
-Western Empire, however, collapsed utterly under
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>the impact of hordes of Nordic Teutons at a
-much earlier date. In the fourth and fifth centuries
-of our era north Africa, once the empire of
-Carthage, had become the seat of the kingdom of
-Nordic Vandals. Spain fell under the control of
-the Visigoths and Lusitania, now Portugal, under
-that of the Suevi. Gaul was Visigothic in the
-south and Burgundian in the east, while the
-Frankish kingdom dominated the north until it
-finally absorbed and incorporated all the territories
-of ancient Gaul and made it the land of the Franks.
-Strictly speaking, the northern half of France and
-the adjoining districts, the country of Langued’oil,
-is the true land of the Franks while the southern
-Languedoc was never Frankish except by conquest,
-and was never as thoroughly Nordicized as the
-north. Whatever Nordic elements are still to be
-found there are Gothic and Burgundian but not
-Frankish.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Italy fell under the control first of the Ostrogoths
-and then of the Lombards. The purely
-Nordic Saxons with kindred tribes conquered the
-British Isles and meanwhile the Norse and Danish
-Scandinavians contributed a large element to all
-the coast populations as far south as Spain and
-the Swedes organized in the eastern Baltic what
-is now Russia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus when Rome passed all Europe had become
-superficially Teutonic. At first these Teutons
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>were isolated and independent tribes bearing some
-shadowy relation to the one organized state they
-knew, the Empire of Rome. Then came the Mohammedan
-invasion, which reached western Europe
-from Africa and destroyed the Visigothic
-kingdom. The Moslems swept on unchecked
-until their light horsemen dashed themselves to
-pieces against the heavy armed cavalry of Charles
-Martel and his Franks at Tours in 732 A. D.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The destruction of the Vandal kingdom by the
-armies of the Byzantine Empire, the conquest of
-Spain by the Moors and finally the overthrow of
-the Lombards by the Franks were all greatly facilitated
-by the fact that these barbarians, Vandals,
-Goths, Suevi and Lombards, with the sole exception
-of the Franks, were originally Christians
-of the Arian or Unitarian confession and as
-such were regarded as heretics by their orthodox
-Christian subjects. The Franks alone were converted
-from heathenism directly to the Trinitarian
-faith to which the old populations of the
-Roman Empire adhered. From this orthodoxy
-of the Franks arose the close relation between
-France, “the eldest daughter of the church,” and
-the papacy, a connection which lasted for more
-than a thousand years—in fact nearly to our own
-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With the Goths eliminated western Christendom
-became Frankish. In the year 800 A. D.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>Charlemagne was crowned at Rome and re-established
-the Roman Empire in the west, which included
-all Christendom outside of the Byzantine
-Empire. In some form or shape this Roman
-Empire endured until the beginning of the nineteenth
-century and during all that time it formed
-the basis of the political concept of European
-man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This same concept lies to-day at the root of the
-imperial idea. Kaiser, Tsar and Emperor each
-takes his name and in some way undertakes to
-trace his title from Cæsar and the Empire. Charlemagne
-and his successors claimed and often exercised
-overlordship as to all the other continental
-Christian nations and when the Crusades began
-it was the German Emperor who led the Frankish
-hosts against the Saracens. Charlemagne was a
-German Emperor, his capital was at Aachen within
-the present limits of the German Empire and the
-language of his court was German. For several
-centuries after the conquest of Gaul by the Franks
-their Teutonic tongue held its own against the
-Latin speech of the Romanized Gauls.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The history of all Christian Europe is in some
-degree interwoven with this Holy Roman Empire.
-Though the Empire was neither holy nor
-Roman but altogether secular and Teutonic, it
-was, nevertheless, the heart of Europe for ages.
-Holland and Flanders, Lorraine and Alsace, Burgundy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>and Luxemburg, Lombardy and the Veneto,
-Switzerland and Austria, Bohemia and Styria are
-states which were originally component parts of
-the Empire although many of them have since
-been torn away by rival nations or have become independent,
-while much of northern Italy remained
-under the sway of Austria within the memory of
-living men.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Empire wasted its strength in imperial ambitions
-and foreign conquests instead of consolidating,
-organizing and unifying its own territories
-and the fact that the imperial crown was elective
-for many generations before it became hereditary
-in the House of Hapsburg checked the unification
-of Germany during the Middle Ages.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A strong hereditary monarchy, such as arose in
-England and in France, would have anticipated
-the Germany of to-day by a thousand years and
-made it the predominant state in Christendom,
-but disruptive elements in the persons of great
-territorial dukes were successful throughout its
-history in preventing an effective concentration of
-power in the hands of the Emperor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That the German Emperor was regarded, though
-vaguely, as the overlord of all Christian monarchs
-was clearly indicated when Henry VIII of England
-and Francis I of France appeared as candidates
-for the imperial crown against Charles of Spain,
-afterward the Emperor Charles V.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>Europe was the Holy Roman Empire and the
-Holy Roman Empire was Europe predominantly
-until the Thirty Years’ War. This war was perhaps
-the greatest catastrophe of all the ghastly
-crimes committed in the name of religion. It destroyed
-an entire generation, taking each year for
-thirty years the finest manhood of the nations.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Two-thirds of the population of Germany was
-destroyed, in some states such as Bohemia three-fourths
-of the inhabitants were killed or exiled,
-while out of 500,000 inhabitants in Würtemberg
-there were only 48,000 left at the end of the war.
-Terrible as this loss was, the destruction did not
-fall equally on the various races and classes in
-the community. It bore, of course, most heavily
-upon the big blond fighting man and at the end
-of the war the German states contained a greatly
-lessened proportion of Nordic blood. In fact,
-from that time on the purely Teutonic race in
-Germany has been largely replaced by the Alpine
-types in the south and by the Wendish and
-the Polish types in the east. This change of race
-in Germany has gone so far that it has been computed
-that out of the 70,000,000 inhabitants of
-the German Empire, only 9,000,000 are purely
-Teutonic in coloration, stature and skull characters.
-The rarity of pure Teutonic and Nordic
-types among the German immigrants to America in
-contrast to its almost universal prevalence among
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>those from Scandinavia is traceable to the same
-cause.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In addition, the Thirty Years’ War virtually
-destroyed the land owning yeomanry and lesser
-gentry formerly found in mediæval Germany as
-numerously as in France or in England. The religious
-wars of France, while not as devasting to
-the nation as a whole as was the Thirty Years’ War
-in Germany, nevertheless greatly weakened the
-French cavalier type, the “petite noblesse de province.”
-In Germany this class had flourished and
-throughout the Middle Ages contributed great
-numbers of knights, poets, thinkers, artists and
-artisans who gave charm and variety to the society
-of central Europe. But, as said, this section of
-the population was practically exterminated in the
-Thirty Years’ War and this class of gentlemen
-practically vanishes from German history from
-that time on.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the Thirty Years’ War was over there remained
-in Germany nothing except the brutalized
-peasantry, largely of Alpine derivation in the
-south and east, and the high nobility which turned
-from the toils of endless warfare to mimic on a
-small scale the court of Versailles. After this long
-struggle the boundaries in central Europe between
-the Protestant North and the Catholic South follow
-in a marked degree the frontier between the
-northern plain inhabited chiefly by Nordics and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>the more mountainous countries in the south populated
-almost entirely by Alpines.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It has taken Germany two centuries to recover
-her vigor, her wealth and her aspirations to a place
-in the sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>During these years Germany was a political nonentity,
-a mere congeries of petty states bickering
-and fighting with each other, claiming and owning
-only the Empire of the Air as Napoleon happily
-phrased it. Meantime France and England
-founded their colonial empires beyond the seas.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When in the last generation Germany became
-unified and organized, she found herself not only
-too late to share in these colonial enterprises, but
-also lacking in much of the racial element and still
-more lacking in the very classes which were her
-greatest strength and glory before the Thirty Years’
-War. To-day the ghastly rarity in the German
-armies of chivalry and generosity toward women
-and of knightly protection and courtesy toward the
-prisoners or wounded can be largely attributed to
-this annihilation of the gentle classes. The Germans
-of to-day, whether they live on the farms
-or in the cities, are for the most part descendants
-of the peasants who survived, not of the brilliant
-knights and sturdy foot soldiers who fell in that
-mighty conflict. Knowledge of this great past
-when Europe was Teutonic and memories of the
-shadowy grandeur of the Hohenstaufen Emperors,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>who, generation after generation, led Teutonic
-armies over the Alps to assert their title to Italian
-provinces, have played no small part in modern
-German consciousness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These traditions and the knowledge that their
-own religious dissensions swept them from the
-leadership of the European world lie at the base
-of the German imperial ideal of to-day and it is
-for this ideal that the German armies are dying,
-just as did their ancestors for a thousand years
-under their Fredericks, Henrys, Conrads and Ottos.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the Empire of Rome and the Empire of
-Charlemagne are no more and the Teutonic type
-is divided almost equally between the contending
-forces in this world war. With the United States
-in the field the balance of pure Nordic blood will
-be heavily against the Central Powers, which pride
-themselves on being “the Teutonic powers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Germany is too late and is limited to a destiny
-fixed and ordained for her on the fatal day in 1618
-when the Hapsburg Ferdinand forced the Protestants
-of Bohemia into revolt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Although as a result of the Thirty Years’ War the
-German Empire is far less Nordic than in the Middle
-Ages, the north and northwest of Germany are
-still Teutonic throughout and in the east and south
-the Alpines have been thoroughly Germanized with
-an aristocracy and upper class very largely of pure
-Teutonic blood.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>VIII<br /> <span class='large'>THE EXPANSION OF THE NORDICS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The men of Nordic blood to-day form practically
-all the population of Scandinavian countries,
-as also a majority of the population of the British
-Isles and are almost pure in type in Scotland and
-eastern and northern England. The Nordic realm
-includes nearly all the northern third of France
-with extensions into the fertile southwest; all the
-rich lowlands of Flanders; all Holland; the northern
-half of Germany with extensions up the Rhine
-and down the Danube; and the north of Poland
-and of Russia. Recent calculations indicate that
-there are about 90,000,000 of purely Nordic physical
-type in Europe out of a total population of
-420,000,000.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Throughout southern Europe a Nordic nobility
-of Teutonic type everywhere forms the old aristocratic
-and military classes or what now remains
-of them. These aristocrats, by as much as their
-blood is pure, are taller and blonder than the native
-populations, whether these be Alpine in central
-Europe or Mediterranean in Spain or in the south
-of France and Italy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The countries speaking Low German dialects
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>are almost purely Nordic but the populations of
-High German speech are very largely Teutonized
-Alpines and occupy lands once Celtic-speaking.
-The main distinction between the two dialects is
-the presence of a large number of Celtic elements
-in High German.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In northern Italy there is a large amount of Nordic
-blood. In Lombardy, Venice and elsewhere
-throughout the country the aristocracy is blonder
-and taller than the peasantry, but the Nordic element
-in Italy has declined noticeably since the
-Middle Ages. From Roman times onward for a
-thousand years the Teutons swarmed into northern
-Italy, through the Alps and chiefly by way of
-the Brenner Pass. With the stoppage of these
-Nordic reinforcements this strain seems to have
-grown less all through Italy.<a id='r3'></a><a href='#f3' class='c016'><sup>[3]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. Procopius tells a significant story which illustrates the contrast in
-racial character between the natives and the barbarians. He relates
-that, at the surrender of Ravenna in 540 A. D. by the Goths to the army
-of the Byzantines, “when the Gothic women saw how swarthy, small
-men of mean aspect had conquered their tall, robust, fair-skinned barbarians,
-they were furious and spat in their husbands’ faces and cursed
-them for cowards.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the Balkan Peninsula there is little to show
-for the floods of Nordic blood that have poured in
-for the last 3,500 years, beginning with the Achæans
-of Homer, who first appeared <em>en masse</em> about
-1400 B. C. and were followed successively by the
-Dorians, Cimmerians and Gauls, down to the
-Goths and the Varangians of Byzantine times.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>The tall stature of the population along the
-Illyrian Alps from the Tyrol to Albania on the
-south is undoubtedly of Nordic origin and dates
-from some of these early invasions, but these Illyrians
-have been so crossed with Slavs that all
-other blond elements have been lost and the existing
-population is essentially of brachycephalic
-Alpine type. They are known as the Dinaric race.
-What few remnants of blondness occur in this district,
-more particularly in Albania, as well as the
-so-called Frankish elements in Bosnia, may probably
-be attributed to later infiltrations.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Tyrolese seem to be largely Nordic except in
-respect to their round skull.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Russia and in Poland the Nordic stature,
-blondness and long skull grow less and less pronounced
-as one proceeds south and east from the
-Gulf of Finland.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It would appear that in all those parts of Europe
-outside of its natural habitat, the Nordic
-blood is on the wane from England to Italy and
-that the ancient, acclimated and primitive populations
-of Alpine and Mediterranean race are subtly
-reasserting their long lost political power through
-a high breeding rate and democratic institutions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In western Europe the first wave of the Nordic
-tribes appeared about three thousand years ago and
-was followed by other invasions with the Nordic
-element becoming stronger until after the fall of
-Rome whole tribes moved into its provinces, Teutonizing
-them more or less for varying lengths of
-time.</p>
-
-<div class='overflow'>
-
-<table class='table1'>
- <tr><th class='c012' colspan='14'>PROVISIONAL OUTLINE OF NORDIC INVASIONS AND METAL CULTURES<a id='t191'></a></th></tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c022'></th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c019'>B. C.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c019'><span class='sc'>Great Britain</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c019'><span class='sc'>Scandinavia</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c019'><span class='sc'>Germany and Austria</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c019'><span class='sc'>France and Spain</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c019'><span class='sc'>Italy</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c019'><span class='sc'>Russia, Greece, and Balkans</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c019'><span class='sc'>Asia Minor</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c019'><span class='sc'>North Africa and Egypt</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c019'><span class='sc'>Mesopotamia and Persia</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c019'><span class='sc'>India and China</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c019'>B. C.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt brt c022'>&#160;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>1.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Before 3000</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Neolithic</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Neolithic.<br />Rough pottery.<br />Domesticated dog.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Neolithic.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Neolithic.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Terramara culture.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>3000 B. C. Commencement of early Minoan in Crete.<br />Copper.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Alpines (Hissarlik).<br />Founding of Troy.<br />Copper in Cyprus.<br />Introduction of bronze from Egypt.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Copper for ornaments, 4000.<br />Copper systematically mined, 3400.<br />Pieces of iron from interior of Great Pyramid of Gizeh, 3733.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Copper for ornaments.<br />Early Babylonian graves. Cylinder seals at Fara about 3400.<br />Cuneiform writing.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Mongolian bands come from west into the Yellow River Valley.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Before 3000</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>1.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>2.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>3000–2500</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Copper.<br />Great expansion of Alpines, introducing bronze into Austria and later into Germany.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Copper.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Copper.<br />Great expansion of Alpines, introducing bronze into north Italy.<br />Bronze introduced in South from Crete.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Bronze smelting.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Gizeh skulls; Alpine.<br />First illustration of ship in Egypt, 2800.<br />Pyramids, Memphis.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Ur in Sumer.<br />Nippur, 3000–2500.<br />Beginning of greatness of Babylonia.<br />Sargon of Accad (Semitic), 2750.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Chinese claim first empire, 2850–2730.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>3000–2500</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>2.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt c022'></th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>Neolithic.</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>Neolithic.</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>Eneolithic culture.</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>Great expansion of Alpines, introducing bronze from</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt brt c022'>&#160;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>3.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>2500–1800</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Copper.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Asia Minor.<br />Middle Minoan in Crete, 2000–1800.<br />Second city of Hissarlik—2000.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Destruction of Hissarlik II.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Period of agricultural depression with invasions from the desert.<br />Feudal Age in Egypt.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Sumer and Accad unite, 2500.<br />Babylon under Hammurapi supreme, 2100.<br />First horses from Kassites in Elam.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Phonetic writing in China, probably at 2000 B. C.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>2500–1800</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>3.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt c022'></th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c019' colspan='2'>Transition from stone to bronze.</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt brt c022'>&#160;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>4.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>1800–1600</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Alpine invasion with bronze culture.<br />Round Barrows.<br />Megaliths.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Alpine invasion with bronze culture reaches Denmark and southwest Norway.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Alpine invasion with bronze culture in France.<br />Later, same wave of invasion enters Spain.<br />Megaliths.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Early Nordic invasions.<br />Cnossos.<br />Mycenæan culture.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Beginnings of Hittite Empire.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Hyksos in Egypt, 1700.<br />First horses.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Kassite dynasty of Babylon begins.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>1800–1600</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>4.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt c022'></th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>Kassitites and Mitanni, 1700–1400.</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt brt c022'>&#160;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>5.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>1600–1400</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Hallstatt iron culture in Austrian Tyrol has first beginning.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Late Minoan in Crete, 1600–1450.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>First Aryan names of deities—Cappadocia.<br />Hittite Empire with iron.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Egyptian Empire at Thebes, 1600–1150.<br />Egyptian campaigns in Asia. Conquest of Syria.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>First Nordics in Persia.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>First Nordics enter India.<br />Nordic states in Punjab.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>1600–1400</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>5.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c022'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>Full Bronze Age.</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>Last Minoan, 1450–1200.</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>Nordic invasions.</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='blt brt c022'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>6.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>1400–1200</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Villanova culture.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Mycenæan culture. Bronze.<br />Nordic Achæans from south Russia introduce Aryan speech, 1400–1300. Have iron swords.<br />1200. Transition from bronze to iron in Crete.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Nordic Phrygians. (Trojan leaders.)</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Hittites invade Syria.<br />Rameses II.<br />1230. Sea peoples (Achæans) attack Egypt.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Semitic Babylonians overrun Sumer.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>1400–1200</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>6.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt c022'></th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>Hittites Alpines</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt brt c022'>&#160;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>7.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>1200–1000</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Beginning of cremation.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Hallstatt iron culture flourishes.<br />Mixed inhumation and incineration.<br />Goidels occupy Germany.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Cadiz founded in Spain, <em>c.</em> 1100, by Phœnicians.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'><em>c.</em> 1100. Umbrians and Oscans introduce first Aryan speech from northeast.<br />Iron in Etruria, 1100.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Hallstatt iron.<br />Trojan war, 1194–1184.<br />Nordic Hellenes—Dorians—enter Greece, 1100.<br />Iron in full development.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Armenians acquire Aryan tongue.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Phœnicia supreme at sea.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Nordic Sacæ introduce Sanskrit into India.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>1200–1000</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>7.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt c022'></th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>Nordic Teutons cross from Scandinavia to south coasts of Baltic and to Denmark.</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>1000. Nordic Goidels cross Rhine and introduce Aryan speech (Gaulish).</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt brt c022'>&#160;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>8.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>1000–800</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>First Nordics—Goidels.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>First invasion of Nordic Teutons from Scandinavia.<br />Other Celtic Nordics on Rhine and Danube, who Celticized the Alpines.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Hallstatt iron culture.<br />Before 950 Phœnicians masters of more than half of Spain.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>First settlements on the site of Rome.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Iron common in Greece.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Greek colonies in Asia Minor.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Carthage founded, 813.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Zoroaster. Nordic Persians recorded at Lake Urmia, 900.<br />Iron mines at Carchemish.<br />Assyrian chronology begins, 911 B. C.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>1000–800</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>8.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt c022'></th>
- <th class='blt c019'>800</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>First iron swords, 800.</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt brt c022'>&#160;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>9.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>800–600</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>First Aryan speech.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>The Goidels are driven south and west by the Cymry.<br />Expansion of the Cymry.<br />Pressure of Teutons in north.<br />Last Goidels expelled from Germany. Iron swords in Central Europe.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Gauls in France.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Expansion of Mediterranean Etruscans over Umbrians to Alps.<br />Legendary founding of Rome, 753.<br />First Greek colonies in south Italy—Magna Græcia.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Iron Age in Russia.<br />Megarian colonization, 700.<br />Greek colonies in Italy and Sicily.<br />Appearance of Cimmerians.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Early Nordic raids.<br />Cimmerians, 650.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Invasion of Scythians.<br />Assyrian Empire, 750–606, with armies equipped with iron borrowed from the Hittites.<br />Semitic Chaldeans rebuild Babylon.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Nordic Hiung-nu in western China become restless.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>800–600</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>9.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>10.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>600–400</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>First Goidels in Ireland, 600.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>La Tène iron culture.<br />Cymric Belgæ driven westward by Teutons.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>La Tène iron culture in France.<br />Nordic Goidels cross Pyrenees and introduce Aryan speech in Spain.<br />First Gallic money of Marseilles, silver.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Nordic Gauls in valley of Po—Cisalpine Gaul.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>500. End of non-Aryan speech in Crete.<br />Invasion of Scythia by Darius, 512 B. C.<br />Persian wars, 500–449.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Tyre under Babylonian yoke.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Persian conquest, 525.<br />The last of the native Pharaohs.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Nordic Persians overthrow Medes, 550.<br />Reign of Darius, 525–485.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Confucius, 551–479.<br />Buddha, <em>c.</em> 557–477.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>600–400</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>10.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt c022'></th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>La Tène iron.</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>La Tène Iron.</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt brt c022'>&#160;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>11.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>400–300</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>La Tène iron in Spain.<br />Cymric Belgæ conquer northern France.<br />Bronze money in western France.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Gauls under Brennus sack Rome, 382, and destroy Etruria. New invasion of Nordics into Cisalpine Gaul.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Macedon conquers Greece, 338.<br />Celto-Scyths in Crimea, 4th century B. C.<br />Alexander the Great, 356–323.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Alexander conquers Egypt, 332.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Conquests of Alexander.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Conquests of Alexander in India, 327.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>400–300</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>11.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt c022'></th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>Great expansion of Nordic Teutons out of Scandinavia.</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>Expansion of Teutons and expulsion of Cymry as far west as the Weser.</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt brt c022'>&#160;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>12.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>300–200</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Cymric Belgæ—invasion, <em>c.</em> 300. Known as Brythons.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'><em>c.</em> 250. First Teutons in Austria.<br />Gold, silver, and bronze money.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Gold coinage in northeast France.<br />Bronze coinage in the southwest.<br />Gaul fertile and well cultivated.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Expansion of Rome.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Decline of Scythians in Russia, and appearance in Russia of Alpine Sarmatians.<br />Nordic Galatians enter Thrace and Greece—Delphi, 279; cross into Asia Minor and found Galatia.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Nordic Galatians, 279.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Nordic Wu-Suns in Chinese Turkestan and Ting-Ling in Siberia.<br />Ts’in dynasty (255–209) resist Nomads and secure China against them by building the Great Wall.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>300–200</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>12.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='blt c022'></th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c019'>Punic Wars, 264–146.</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020' colspan='2'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt c020'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='blt brt c022'>&#160;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c022 bbt' rowspan='2'>13.</td>
- <td class='blt c020 bbt' rowspan='2'>200–100</td>
- <td class='blt c020 bbt' rowspan='2'>Few Cymry or Brythons in Ireland.</td>
- <td class='blt c020 bbt' rowspan='2'></td>
- <td class='blt c020 bbt' rowspan='2'>Teutons drive Cymry out of Germany.<br />Teutons cross the Rhine.</td>
- <td class='blt c020 bbt' rowspan='2'>Teutons enter France.<br />Marius destroys Teutones and Cimbri, 100 B. C.</td>
- <td class='blt c020 bbt' rowspan='2'>Slaves imported in Rome to work the latifundia.</td>
- <td class='blt c020 bbt' rowspan='2'></td>
- <td class='blt c020 bbt' rowspan='2'></td>
- <td class='blt c020 bbt' rowspan='2'></td>
- <td class='blt c019' colspan='2'>Nordic Alans in Sogdiana.</td>
- <td class='blt c020 bbt' rowspan='2'>200–100</td>
- <td class='blt brt c022 bbt' rowspan='2'>13.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Kian-Kuan in Turkestan. Hiung-nu, turned westward, drove the Wu-sun into the mountains about Ili and the great Yue-chih into the Tarim basin.</td>
-
-
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>14.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>100 to Christian Era</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>55. Julius Cæsar.<br />Copper and iron money as currency.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Cæsar conquers Gaul, 59–51.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Augustus and the organization of the Roman Empire.<br />Extinction of old Romans.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>100 to Christian Era</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>14.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c022'>15.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Defeat of Varus and Roman legions in old Saxony, 9 A. D.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>Sarmatians appear in Danube valley, 50 A. D.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c022'>15.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>These incoming Nordics intermarried with the
-native populations and were gradually bred out
-and the resurgence of the old native stock, chiefly
-Alpine, has proceeded steadily since the Frankish
-Charlemagne destroyed the Lombard kingdom and
-is proceeding with unabated vigor to-day. This
-process was greatly accelerated in western Europe
-by the Crusades, which were extremely destructive
-to the Nordic feudal lords, especially the Frankish
-and Norman nobility and was continued by the
-wars of the Reformation and by those of the Revolution.
-The world war now in full swing with its
-toll of millions will leave Europe much poorer in
-Nordic blood. One of its most certain results will
-be the partial destruction of the aristocratic classes
-everywhere in northern Europe. In England the
-nobility has already suffered in battle more than in
-any century since the Wars of the Roses. This will
-tend to realize the standardization of type so dear
-to democratic ideals. If equality cannot be obtained
-by lengthening and uplifting the stunted of
-body and of mind, it can be at least realized by the
-destruction of the exalted of stature and of soul.
-The bed of Procrustes operates with the same
-fatal exactness when it shortens the long as when it
-stretches the undersized.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>The first Nordics in Spain were the Gauls who
-crossed the western Pyrenees about the end of the
-sixth century before our era and introduced Aryan
-speech into the Iberian Peninsula. They quickly
-mixed with Mediterranean natives and the composite
-Spaniards were called Celtiberians by the
-Romans.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Portugal and Spain there are in the physical
-structure of the population few traces of these
-early Celtic-speaking Nordic invaders but the
-Suevi, who a thousand years later occupied parts
-of Portugal, and the Vandals and Visigoths, who
-conquered and held Spain for 300 years, have left
-some small evidence of their blood. In the provinces
-of northern Spain a considerable percentage
-of light colored eyes reveals these Nordic elements
-in the population.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Deep seated Castilian traditions associate aristocracy
-with blondness and the <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">sangre azul</span></i>, or blue
-blood of Spain, probably refers to the blue eye
-of the Goth, whose traditional claim to lordship
-is also shown in the Spanish name for gentleman,
-“hidalgo,” said to mean “the son of the Goth.”
-The fact that the blood shows as “blue” through the
-fair Nordic skin is also to be taken into account.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As long as this Gothic nobility controlled the
-Spanish states during the endless crusades against
-the Moors, Spain belonged to the Nordic kingdoms,
-but when their blood became impaired by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>losses in wars waged outside of Spain and in the
-conquest of the Americas, the sceptre fell from this
-noble race into the hands of the native Iberian,
-who had not the physical vigor or the intellectual
-strength to maintain the world empire built up by
-the stronger race. For 200 years the Spanish infantry
-had no equal in Europe but this distinction
-disappeared with the opening decades of the seventeenth
-century.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The splendid conquistadores of the New World
-were of Nordic type, but their pure stock did not
-long survive their new surroundings and to-day
-they have vanished utterly, leaving behind them
-only their language and their religion. After considering
-well these facts we shall not have to search
-further for the causes of the collapse of Spain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Gaul at the time of Cæsar’s conquest was under
-the rule of the Nordic race, which furnished the
-bulk of the population of the north as well as the
-military classes elsewhere and, while the Romans
-killed off an undue proportion of this fighting element,
-the power and vigor of the French nation
-have been based on this blood and its later reinforcements.
-In fact, in the Europe of to-day the
-amount of Nordic blood in each nation is a very
-fair measure of its strength in war and standing in
-civilization. The proportion of men of pure type
-of each constituent race to the mixed type is also
-a powerful factor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>When, about 1000 B. C., the first Nordics crossed
-the lower Rhine they found the Mediterranean
-race in France everywhere overwhelmed by an
-Alpine population except in the south. Long before
-the time of Cæsar the Celtic language of these
-invaders had been imposed upon the entire population
-and the country had been saturated with
-Nordic blood, except in Aquitaine which seems to
-have retained until at least that date its Anaryan
-Iberian speech. These earliest Nordics in the
-west were known to the ancient world as Gauls.
-These Gauls, or “Celts,” as they were called by
-Cæsar, occupied in his day the centre of France.
-The actual racial complexion of this part of France
-was overwhelmingly Alpine then and is so now,
-but this population had been Celticized thoroughly
-by the Gauls, just as it was Latinized as completely
-at a later date by the Romans.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The northern third of France, that is above
-Paris, was inhabited in Cæsar’s time by the Belgæ,
-a Nordic people of the Cymric division of Celtic
-speech. They were largely of Teutonic blood and
-in fact should be regarded as the immediate forerunners
-of the Germans. They probably represent
-the early Teutons who had crossed from Sweden
-and adopted the Celtic speech of their Nordic
-kindred whom they found on the mainland. These
-Belgæ had followed the earlier Goidels across Germany
-into Britain and Gaul and were rapidly displacing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>their Nordic predecessors, who by this
-time were much weakened by mixture with the
-autochthones, when Rome appeared upon the
-scene and set a limit to their conquests by the Pax
-Romana.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Belgæ of the north of France and the Low
-Countries were the bravest of the peoples of Gaul,
-according to Cæsar’s oft-quoted remark, but the
-claim of the modern Belgians to descent from this
-race is without basis and rests solely on the fact
-that the present kingdom of Belgium, which only
-became independent and assumed its proud name
-in 1831, occupies a small and relatively unimportant
-corner of the land of the Belgæ. The Flemings
-of Belgium are Nordic Franks speaking a
-Low German tongue and the Walloons are Alpines
-whose language is an archaic French.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Belgæ and the Goidelic remnants of Nordic
-blood in the centre of Gaul taken together probably
-constituted only a small minority in blood of
-the population, but were everywhere the military
-and ruling classes. These Nordic elements were
-later reinforced by powerful Teutonic tribes,
-namely, Vandals, Visigoths, Alans, Saxons, Burgundians
-and, most important of all, the Franks of
-the lower Rhine, who founded modern France and
-made it for long centuries “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">la grande nation</span></i>” of
-Christendom.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Frankish dynasties long after Charlemagne
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>were of purely Teutonic blood and the aristocratic
-land owning and military classes down to the great
-Revolution were very largely of this type, which
-by the time of the creation of the Frankish kingdom
-had incorporated all the other Nordic elements
-of old Roman Gaul, both Gaulish and Belgic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The last invasion of Teutonic-speaking barbarians
-was that of the Danish Northmen, who were,
-of course, of unmixed Nordic blood and who conquered
-and settled Normandy in 911 A. D. No
-sooner had the barbarian invasions ceased than
-the ancient aboriginal blood strains, Mediterranean,
-Alpine and elements derived from Paleolithic
-times, began a slow and steady recovery. Step by
-step with the reappearance of these primitive and
-deep rooted stocks the Nordic element in France
-declined and with it the vigor of the nation.
-Even in Normandy the Alpines now tend to predominate
-and the French blonds are becoming
-more and more limited to the northeastern and
-eastern provinces.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The chief historic events of the last thousand
-years have hastened this process and the fact that
-the Nordic element everywhere forms the fighting
-section of the community caused the loss in war
-to fall disproportionately as among the three races
-in France. The religious wars greatly weakened
-the Nordic provincial nobility, which was before
-the Massacre of St. Bartholomew largely Protestant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>and the extermination of the upper classes
-was hastened by the Revolutionary and Napoleonic
-wars. These last wars are said to have shortened
-the stature of the French by four inches; in other
-words, the tall Nordic strain was killed off in
-greater proportions than the little brunet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When by universal suffrage the transfer of power
-was completed from a Nordic aristocracy to lower
-classes predominantly of Alpine and Mediterranean
-extraction, the decline of France in international
-power set in. In the country as a whole, the long
-skulled Mediterraneans are also yielding rapidly to
-the round skulled Alpines and the average of the
-cephalic index in France has steadily risen since
-the Middle Ages and is still rising.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The survivors of the aristocracy, being stripped
-of political power and to a large extent of wealth,
-quickly lost their caste pride and committed class
-suicide by mixing their blood with inferior breeds.
-One of the most conspicuous features of some of
-the French nobility of to-day is the strength of
-Oriental and Mediterranean strains in them. Being
-for political reasons ardently clerical the nobility
-welcomes recruits of any racial origin as long
-as they bring with them money and devotion to
-the Church.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The loss in war of the best stock through death,
-wounds or absence from home has been clearly
-shown in France. The conscripts who were examined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>for military duty in 1890–2 were those descended
-in a large measure from the military rejects
-and other stay-at-homes during the Franco-Prussian
-War. In Dordogne this contingent showed
-seven per cent more deficient statures than the
-normal rate. In some cantons this unfortunate
-generation was in height an inch below the recruits
-of preceding years and in it the exemptions for defective
-physique rose from the normal six per cent
-to sixteen per cent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When each generation is decimated or destroyed
-in turn a race can be injured beyond recovery but
-it more frequently happens that the result is the
-annihilation of an entire class, as in the case of the
-German gentry in the Thirty Years’ War. Desolation
-of wide districts often resulted from the
-plagues and famines which followed the armies in
-old days but deaths from these causes fall most
-heavily on the weaker part of the population. The
-loss of valuable breeding stock is far more serious
-when wars are fought with volunteer armies of
-picked men than with conscript armies, because
-in the latter cases the loss is more evenly spread
-over the whole nation. Before England resorted
-in the present war to universal conscription the injury
-to her more desirable and patriotic classes was
-much more pronounced than in Germany where all
-types and ranks were called to arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the British Isles we find, before the appearance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>of the Nordic race, a Mediterranean population and
-no important element of Alpine blood, so that at
-the present day we have to deal with only two of
-the main races instead of all three as in France.
-In Britain there were, as elsewhere, representatives
-of earlier races but the preponderant strain of
-blood was Mediterranean before the first arrival of
-the Aryan-speaking Nordics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ireland was connected with Britain and Britain
-with the continent until times very recent in a
-geological sense. The depression of the Channel
-coasts is progressing rapidly to-day and is known
-to have been substantial during historic times.
-The close parallel in blood and culture between
-England and the opposite coasts of France also indicates
-a very recent land connection, possibly in
-early Neolithic times. Men either walked from
-the continent to England and from England to Ireland,
-or they paddled across in primitive boats or
-coracles. The art of ship-building or even archaic
-navigation cannot go much further back than late
-Neolithic times.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Nordic tribes of Celtic speech came to the
-British Isles in two distinct waves. The earlier
-invasion of the Goidels, who were still in the Bronze
-culture, arrived in England about 800 B. C. and
-in Ireland two centuries later. It was part of the
-same movement which brought the Gauls into
-France. The later conquest was by the Cymric-speaking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>Belgæ who were equipped with iron
-weapons. It began in the third century B. C. and
-was still going on in Cæsar’s time. These Cymric
-Brythons found the early Goidels, with the exception
-of the aristocracy, much weakened by intermixture
-with the Mediterranean natives and would
-probably have destroyed all trace of Goidelic speech
-in Ireland and Scotland, as they actually did in
-England, if the Romans had not intervened. The
-Brythons reached Ireland in small numbers only
-in the second century B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These Nordic elements in Britain, both Goidelic
-and Brythonic, were in a minority during Roman
-times and the ethnic complexion of the island was
-not much affected by the Roman occupation, as
-the legions stationed there represented the varied
-racial stocks of the Empire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>After the Romans abandoned Britain and about
-400 A. D., floods of pure Nordics poured into the
-islands for nearly six centuries, arriving in the north
-as the Norse pirates, who made Scotland Scandinavian,
-and in the east as Saxons and Angles, who
-founded England.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Angles came from somewhere in central
-Jutland and the Saxons came from coast lands
-immediately at the base of the Danish Peninsula.
-All these districts were then and are now almost
-purely Teutonic; in fact, this is part of old Saxony
-and is to-day the core of Teutonic Germany.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>These Saxon districts sent out at that time
-swarms of invaders not only into England but into
-France and over the Alps into Italy, just as at a
-much later period the same land sent swarming
-colonies into Hungary and Russia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The same Saxon invaders passed down the Channel
-coasts and traces of their settlement on the
-mainland remain to this day in the Cotentin district
-around Cherbourg. Scandinavian sea peoples
-called Danes or Northmen swarmed over as late
-as 900 A. D. and conquered all eastern England.
-This Danish invasion of England was the same that
-brought the Northmen or Normans into France.
-In fact the occupation of Normandy was probably
-by Danes and the conquest of England was largely
-the work of Norsemen, as Norway at that time
-was under Danish kings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Both of these invasions, especially the later, swept
-around the greater island and inundated Ireland,
-driving both the Neolithic aborigines and their
-Celtic-speaking masters into the bogs and islands
-of the west.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The blond Nordic element to-day is very marked
-in Ireland as in England. It is derived, to some
-extent, from the early invaders of Celtic speech,
-but the Goidelic element has been very largely
-absorbed in Ireland as in western England and in
-Scotland by the Iberian substratum of the population
-and is found to-day rather in the form of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>Nordic characters in brunets than in the entirely
-blond individuals who represent later and purer
-Nordic strains.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The figures for recruits taken some decades ago
-in the two countries would indicate that the Irish
-as a whole are considerably lighter in eye and
-darker in hair color than are the English. The
-combination of black Iberian hair with blue or gray
-Nordic eyes is frequently found in Ireland and also
-in Spain and in both these countries is justly admired
-for its beauty, but it is by no means an
-exclusively Irish type.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The tall, blond Irishmen are to-day chiefly Danish
-with the addition of English, Norman and
-Scotch elements, which have poured into the
-lesser island for a thousand years and have imposed
-the English speech upon it. The more primitive
-and ancient elements in Ireland have always
-shown great ability to absorb newcomers and
-during the Middle Ages it was notorious that the
-Norman and English colonists quickly sank to the
-cultural level of the natives.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In spite of the fact that Paleoliths have not been
-found there some indications of Paleolithic man
-appear in Ireland both as single characters and as
-individuals. Being, like Brittany, situated on the
-extreme western outposts of Eurasia, it has more
-than its share of generalized and low types surviving
-in the living populations and these types,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>the Firbolgs, have imparted a distinct and very
-undesirable aspect to a large portion of the inhabitants
-of the west and south and have greatly
-lowered the intellectual status of the population as
-a whole. The cross between these elements and the
-Nordics appears to be a bad one and the mental
-and cultural traits of the aborigines have proved
-to be exceedingly persistent and appear especially
-in the unstable temperament and the lack of coordinating
-and reasoning power, so often found
-among the Irish. To the dominance of the Mediterraneans
-mixed with Pre-Neolithic survivals in the
-south and west are to be attributed the aloofness
-of the island from the general trend of European
-civilization and its long adherence to ancient forms
-of religion and even to Pre-Christian superstitions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In England, the same two ethnic elements are
-present, namely the Nordic and the Mediterranean.
-There is, especially in Wales and in the west central
-counties of England, a large substratum of ancient
-Mediterranean blood but the later Nordic
-elements are everywhere superimposed upon it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Scotland is by race Anglian in the Lowlands and
-Norse in the Highlands with underlying Goidelic
-and Brythonic elements, which are exceedingly
-hard to identify. The Mediterranean strain is
-marked in the Highlands and is frequently associated
-with tall stature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>This brunetness in Scotland is, of course, derived
-from the same underlying Mediterranean stock
-which we have found elsewhere in the British
-Islands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The inhabitants of Scotland before the arrival
-of the Celtic-speaking Nordics seem to have been
-the Picts, whose language was almost surely Non-Aryan.
-Judging from the remnants of Anaryan
-syntax in the Goidelic and to a lesser degree in
-the Cymric languages, Pictish was related to the
-Anaryan Berber tongues still spoken in North
-Africa. No trace of this Pre-Aryan syntax is found
-in English.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Where one race imposes a new language on another,
-the change is most marked in the vocabulary
-while the ancient usage in syntax or the construction
-of sentences is the more apt to survive and these
-ancient forms often give us a valuable clew to the
-aboriginal speech. This same Anaryan syntax is
-particularly marked in the Irish language, a condition
-which fits in with the other Pre-Aryan usages
-and types found there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This divergence between the new vocabulary and
-the ancient habits of syntax is probably one of
-the causes of the extreme splitting up of the various
-branches of the Aryan mother tongue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Wales, like western Ireland, is a museum of
-racial antiquities and being an unattractive and
-poor country has exported men rather than received
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>immigration, while such invasions as did
-arrive came with spent force.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The mass of the population of Wales especially
-in the upland or moorland districts is Mediterranean,
-with a considerable addition of Paleolithic
-remnants. With changing social and industrial
-conditions these Neolithic Mediterraneans are pushing
-into the valleys or towns with a resultant replacement
-of the Nordic types.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Recent and intensive investigations reveal everywhere
-in Wales distinct physical types living side
-by side or in adjoining villages unchanged and unchangeable
-throughout the centuries. Extensive
-blending has not taken place though much crossing
-has occurred and the persistence of the skull
-shape has been particularly marked. Such individuals
-as are of pure Nordic type are generally
-members of the old county families and land owning
-class.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As to language in Wales, the Cymric is everywhere
-spoken in various dialects, but there are indications
-of the ancient underlying Goidelic. In
-fact, Brythonic or Cymric may not have reached
-Wales much before the Roman conquest of Britain.
-The earlier Goidelic survived in parts of
-Wales as late as the seventh century but by the
-eleventh century all consciousness of race and linguistic
-distinctions had disappeared in the common
-name of Cymry. This name should perhaps be limited
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>to the Brythons of England and not used for
-their kindred on the Continent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Cornwall and along the Welsh border racial
-types are often grouped in separate villages and
-the intellectual and moral distinctions between
-them are well recognized.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Nordic species of man in its various branches
-made Gaul the land of the Franks and made Britain
-the land of the Angles and the Englishmen
-who built the British Empire and founded America
-were of the Nordic and not of the Mediterranean
-type.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of the most vigorous Nordic elements in
-France, England and America was contributed by
-the Normans and their influence on the development
-of these countries cannot be ignored. The
-descendants of the Danish and Norse Vikings who
-settled in Normandy as Teutonic-speaking heathen
-and who as Normans crossed over to Saxon England
-and conquered it in 1066 are among the
-finest and noblest examples of the Nordic race.
-Their only rivals in these characters were the
-early Goths.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This Norman strain, while purely Nordic, seems
-to have been radically different in its mental makeup,
-and to some extent in its physical detail from
-the Saxons of England and also from their kindred
-in Scandinavia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Normans appear to have been “<em>fine race</em>” to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>use a French idiom and their descendants are often
-characterized by a tall, slender figure, much less
-bulky than the typical Teuton, of proud bearing
-and with clearly marked features of classic Greek
-regularity. The type is seldom extremely blond
-and is often dark. These Latinized Vikings were
-and are animated by a restless and nomadic energy
-and by a fierce aggressiveness. They played a
-brilliant role during the twelfth and following centuries
-but later, on the continent, this strain ran
-out, though leaving here and there traces of its
-former presence, notably in Sicily where the grayish
-blue Sicilian eye called “the Norman eye” is
-still found among the old noble families.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Norman type is still very common among
-the English of good family and especially among
-hunters, explorers, navigators, adventurers and officers
-in the British army. These latter-day Normans
-are natural rulers and administrators and it
-is to this type that England largely owes her
-extraordinary ability to govern justly and firmly
-the lower races. This Norman blood occurs often
-among the native Americans but with the changing
-social conditions and the filling up of the waste
-places of the earth it is doomed to a speedy
-extinction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Normans were Nordics with a dash of brunet
-blood and their conquest of England strengthened
-the Nordic and not the Mediterranean elements
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>in the British Isles, but the connection once established
-with France especially with Aquitaine later
-introduced from southern France certain brunet
-elements of Mediterranean affinities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The upper class Normans on their arrival in
-England were probably purely Scandinavian, but
-in the lower classes there were some dark strains.
-They brought with them large numbers of ecclesiastics
-who were, for the most part drawn from the
-more ancient types throughout France. Careful
-investigation of the graveyards and vaults in which
-these churchmen were buried revealed a large percentage
-of round skulls among them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In both Normandy and in the lowlands of Scotland
-there was much the same mixture of blood
-between Scandinavian and Saxon but with a smaller
-amount of Saxon blood in France. The result in
-both cases was the production of an extraordinarily
-forceful race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Nordics in England are in these days
-apparently receding before the Neolithic Mediterranean
-type. The causes of this decline are
-the same as in France and the chief loss is through
-the wastage of blood by war and through emigration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The typical British soldier is blond or red bearded
-and the typical sailor is always a blond. The migrating
-type from England is also chiefly Nordic.
-These facts would indicate that nomadism as well
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>as love of war and adventure are Nordic characteristics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An extremely potent influence, however, is the
-transformation of the nation from an agricultural
-to a manufacturing community. Heavy, healthful
-work in the fields of northern Europe enables the
-Nordic type to thrive, but the cramped factory
-and crowded city quickly weed him out, while the
-little brunet Mediterranean can work a spindle,
-set type, sell ribbons or push a clerk’s pen far better
-than the big, clumsy and somewhat heavy Nordic
-blond, who needs exercise, meat and air and cannot
-live under Ghetto conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The increase of urban communities at the expense
-of the countryside is also an important element
-in the fading of the Nordic type, because the
-energetic countryman of this blood is more apt to
-improve his fortunes by moving to the city than the
-less ambitious Mediterranean.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The country villages and the farms are the nurseries
-of nations, while cities are consumers and
-seldom producers of men. The effort now being
-made in America to settle undesirable immigrants
-on farms may, from the viewpoint of race replacement,
-be more dangerous than allowing them to
-remain in crowded Ghettos or tenements.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If England has deteriorated and there are those
-who think they see indications of such decline, it is
-due to the lowering proportion of the Nordic blood
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>and the transfer of political power from the vigorous
-Nordic aristocracy and middle classes to the
-radical and labor elements, both largely recruited
-from the Mediterranean type.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Only in Scandinavia and northwestern Germany
-does the Nordic race seem to maintain its full vigor
-in spite of the enormous wastage of three thousand
-years of the swarming forth of its best fighting men.
-Norway, however, after the Viking outburst has
-never exhibited military power and Sweden, in the
-centuries between the Varangian period and the rise
-of Gustavus Adolphus, did not enjoy a reputation
-for fighting efficiency. All the three Scandinavian
-countries after vigorously attacking Christendom
-a thousand years ago disappear from history as a
-nursery for soldiers until the Reformation when
-Sweden suddenly reappears just in time to save
-Protestantism on the Continent. To-day all three
-seem to be intellectually anæmic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Upper and Lower Austria, the Tyrol and Styria
-have a very considerable Nordic element which is
-in political control but the Alpine races are slowly
-replacing the Nordics both there and in Hungary.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Holland and Flanders are purely Teutonic, the
-Flemings being the descendants of those Franks
-who did not adopt Latin speech as did their Teutonic
-kin across the border in Artois and Picardy;
-and Holland is the ancient Batavia with the Frisian
-coast lands eastward to old Saxony.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>Denmark, Norway and Sweden are purely Nordic
-and yearly contribute swarms of a splendid type
-of immigrants to America and are now, as they
-have been for thousands of years, the chief nursery
-and broodland of the master race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In southwestern Norway and in Denmark, there
-is a substantial number of short, dark round heads
-of Alpine affinities. These dark Norwegians are
-regarded as somewhat inferior socially by their
-Nordic countrymen. Perhaps as a result of this
-disability, a disproportionately large number of
-Norwegian immigrants to America are of this type.
-Apparently America is doomed to receive in these
-later days the least desirable classes and types
-from each European nation now exporting men.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In mediæval times the Norse and Danish Vikings
-sailed not only the waters of the known Atlantic,
-but ventured westward through the fogs
-and frozen seas to Iceland, Greenland and America.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sweden, after sending forth her Goths and other
-early Teutonic tribes, turned her attention to the
-shores of the eastern Baltic, colonized the coast
-of Finland and the Baltic provinces and supplied
-also a strong Scandinavian element to the aristocracy
-of Russia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The coast of Finland is as a result Swedish and
-the natives of the interior have distinctly Nordic
-characters with the exception of the skull, which
-in its roundness shows an Alpine cross.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>The population of the so-called Baltic provinces
-of Russia is everywhere Nordic and their affinities
-are with Scandinavia and Germany rather than
-with Slavic Moscovy. The most primitive Aryan
-languages, namely, Lettish, Lithuanian and the
-recently extinct Old Prussian, are found in this
-neighborhood and here we are not far from the
-original Nordic homeland.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>IX<br /> <span class='large'>THE NORDIC FATHERLAND</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The area in Europe where the Nordic race developed
-and in which the Aryan languages originated
-probably included the forest region of eastern
-Germany, Poland and Russia, together with
-the grasslands which stretched from the Ukraine
-eastward into the steppes south of the Ural. From
-causes already mentioned this area was long isolated
-from the rest of the world and especially from
-Asia. When the unity of the Aryan race and of
-the Aryan language was broken up at the end of
-the Neolithic and the beginning of the Bronze
-Age, wave after wave of the early Nordics pushed
-westward along the sandy plains of the north and
-pressed against and through the Alpine populations
-of central Europe. Usually these early Nordics, as
-indeed many of the later ones, constituted only a
-thin layer of ruling classes and there must have
-been many countries conquered by them in which
-we have no historic evidence of their existence,
-linguistic or otherwise. This must have certainly
-been the case in those numerous instances where
-only the leaders were Nordics and the great mass
-of their followers slaves or serfs of inferior races.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>The Nordics also swept down through Thrace
-into Greece and Asia Minor, while other large and
-important groups entered Asia partly through the
-Caucasus Mountains, but in greater strength they
-migrated around the northern and eastern sides of
-the Caspian-Aral Sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That portion of the Nordic race which continued
-to inhabit south Russia and grazed their flocks
-of sheep and herds of horses on the grasslands
-were the Scythians of the Greeks and from these
-nomad shepherds came the Cimmerians, Persians,
-Sacæ, Massagetæ and perhaps the leaders of the
-Kassites, Mitanni and other early Aryan-speaking
-Nordic invaders of Asia. The descendants of these
-Nordics are scattered throughout Russia but are
-now submerged by the later Slavs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Well marked characters of the Nordic race, which
-were established in Neolithic times if not earlier,
-enable us to distinguish it definitely wherever it
-appears in history and we know that all the
-blondness in the world is derived from this source.
-As blondness is easily observed and recorded we
-are apt to lay too much emphasis on this single
-character. The brown shades of hair are equally
-Nordic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the Nordics first enter the Mediterranean
-world their arrival is everywhere marked by a
-new and higher civilization. In most cases the
-contact of the vigorous barbarians with the ancient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>civilizations created a sudden impulse of life and
-an outburst of culture as soon as the first destruction
-wrought by the conquest was repaired.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In addition to the long continued selection exercised
-by severe climatic conditions and the consequent
-elimination of ineffectives, both of which
-affects a race, there is another force at work which
-concerns the individual as well. The energy developed
-in the north is not lost immediately when
-transferred to the softer conditions of existence in
-the Mediterranean and Indian countries. This energy
-endures for several generations and only dies
-away slowly as the northern blood becomes diluted
-and the impulse to strive fades.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The contact of Hellene and Pelasgian caused the
-blossoming of the ancient civilization of Hellas,
-just as two thousand years later when the Nordic
-invaders of Italy had absorbed the science, art
-and literature of Rome, they produced that splendid
-century we call the Renaissance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The chief men of the Cinque Cento and the
-preceding century were of Nordic blood, largely
-Gothic and Lombard, which is recognized easily by
-a close inspection of busts or portraits in northern
-Italy. Dante, Raphael, Titian, Michael Angelo,
-Leonardo da Vinci were all of Nordic type, just as
-in classic times many of the chief men and of the
-upper classes were Nordic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Similar expansions of civilization and organization
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>of empire followed the incursion of the Nordic
-Persians into the land of the round skulled Medes
-and the introduction of Sanskrit into India by the
-Nordic Sacæ who conquered that peninsula. These
-outbursts of progress due to the first contact and
-mixture of two contrasted races are, however, only
-transitory and pass with the last lingering trace of
-Nordic blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In India the blood of these Aryan-speaking invaders
-has been absorbed by the dark Hindu and in
-the final event only their synthetic speech survives.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The marvellous organization of the Roman state
-made use of the services of Nordic mercenaries and
-kept the Western Empire alive for three centuries
-after the ancient Roman stock had virtually ceased
-to exist.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The date when the population of the Empire had
-become predominantly of Mediterranean and Oriental
-blood, due to the introduction of slaves from
-the east and the wastage of Italian blood in war,
-coincides with the establishment of the Empire
-under Augustus and the last Republican patriots
-represent the final protest of the old patrician Nordic
-strain. For the most part they refused to abdicate
-their right to rule in favor of manumitted
-slaves and imperial favorites and they fell in battle
-and sword in hand. The Romans died out but the
-slaves survived and their descendants form the
-great majority of the south Italians of to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>In the last days of the Republic, Cæsar was the
-leader of the mob, the Plebs, which by that time
-had ceased to be of Roman blood. Pompey’s
-party represented the remnants of the old native
-Roman aristocracy and was defeated at Pharsalia
-not by Cæsar’s plebeian clients but by his Nordic
-legionaries from Gaul. Cassius and Brutus were
-the last successors of Pompey and their overthrow
-at Philippi was the final death blow to the Republican
-party; with them the native Roman
-families disappear almost entirely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The decline of the Romans and for that matter
-of the native Italians began with the Punic Wars
-when in addition to the Romans who fell in battle
-a large portion of the country population of Italy
-was destroyed by Hannibal. Native Romans suffered
-greatly in the Social and Servile Wars as well
-as in the civil conflicts between the factions of
-Sylla, who led the Patricians, and Marius who represented
-the Plebs. Bloody proscriptions of the
-rival parties followed alternately the victory of one
-side and then of the other and under the tyranny
-of the Emperors of the first century also the old
-Roman stock was the greatest sufferer until it
-practically vanished from the scene.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Voluntary childlessness was the most potent
-cause of the decline under the Empire and when we
-read of the abject servility of bearers of proud names
-in the days of Nero and Caligula, we must remember
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>that they could not rally to their standard followers
-among the Plebs. They had only the choice
-of submission or suicide and many chose the latter
-alternative. The abjectness of the Roman spirit
-under the Empire is thus to be explained by a
-change in race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With the expanding dominion of Rome the native
-elements of vigor were drawn year after year
-into the legions and spent their active years in
-wars or in garrisons, while the slaves and those
-unfit for military duty stayed home and bred. In
-the present great war while the native Americans
-are at the front fighting the aliens and immigrants
-are allowed to increase without check and the parallel
-is a close one.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Slaves began to be imported into Italy in numbers
-in the second century B. C. to work the large
-plantations—latifundia—of the wealthy Romans.
-This importation of slaves and the ultimate extension
-of the Roman citizenship to their manumitted
-descendants and to inferior races throughout the
-growing Empire and the losses in internal and foreign
-wars, ruined the state. In America we find another
-close parallel in the Civil War and the subsequent
-granting of citizenship to Negroes and to
-ever increasing numbers of immigrants of plebeian,
-servile or Oriental races, who throughout history
-have shown little capacity to create, organize or
-even to comprehend Republican institutions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>In Rome, when this change in blood was substantially
-complete, the state could no longer be
-operated under Republican forms of government
-and the Empire arose to take its place. At the
-beginning the Empire was clothed in the garb of
-republicanism in deference to such Roman elements
-as still persisted in the Senate and among the
-Patricians but ultimately these external forms were
-discarded and the state became virtually a pure
-despotism.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The new population understood little and cared
-less for the institutions of the ancient Republic
-but they were jealous of their own rights of “Bread
-and the Circus”—“<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">panem et circenses</span>”—and there
-began to appear in place of the old Roman religion
-the mystic rites of Eastern countries so welcome to
-the plebeian and uneducated soul. The Emperors
-to please the vulgar erected from time to time new
-shrines to strange gods utterly unknown to the
-Romans of the early Republic. In America, also,
-strange temples, which would have been abhorrent
-to our Colonial ancestors, are multiplying and our
-streets and parks are turned over to monuments to
-foreign “patriots,” designed not to please the artistic
-sense of the passer-by but to gratify the national
-preference of some alien element in the electorate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These comments on the change of race in Rome
-at the beginning of our era are not mere speculation.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>An examination of many thousands of Roman columbaria
-or funeral urns and the names inscribed
-thereon show quite clearly that as early as the first
-century of our era eighty to ninety per cent of
-the urban population of the Roman Empire was of
-servile extraction and that about seven-eighths
-of this slave population was drawn from districts
-within the boundaries of the Empire and very
-largely from the countries bordering on the eastern
-Mediterranean. Few names are found which indicate
-that their bearers came from Gaul or the
-countries beyond the Alps. These Nordic barbarians
-were of more use in the legions than as household
-servants.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the beginning of the Christian era the entire
-Levant and countries adjoining it in Asia Minor,
-Syria and Egypt had been so thoroughly hellenized
-that many of their inhabitants bore Greek names.
-It was from these countries and from northern
-Africa that the slave population of Rome was
-drawn. Their descendants were the most important
-element in the Roman melting pot and
-even to-day form the predominant element in the
-population of Italy south of the Apennines. When
-the Nordic barbarians a few centuries later poured
-in, these Romanized Orientals disappeared temporarily
-from view under the rule of the vigorous
-northerners but they have steadily absorbed the
-latter until the Nordic elements in Italy now are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>to be found chiefly in the Lombard plains and the
-region of the Alps.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Byzantine Empire from much the same
-causes as the Roman became in its turn gradually
-less and less European and more and more Oriental
-until it, too, withered and expired.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Regarded in the light of the facts the fall of
-Rome ceases to be a mystery. The wonder is that
-the State lived on after the Romans were extinct
-and that the Eastern Empire survived so long with
-an ever fading Greek population. In Rome and in
-Greece only the language of the dominant race survived.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So entirely had the blood of the Romans vanished
-in the last days of the Empire that sorry
-bands of barbarians wandered at will through the
-desolated provinces. Cæsar and his legions would
-have made short work of these unorganized banditti
-but Cæsar’s legions were a memory, though
-one great enough to inspire in the intruders somewhat
-of awe and desire to imitate. Against invaders,
-however, brains and brawn are more effective
-than tradition and culture, however noble
-these last may be.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Early ascetic Christianity played a large part in
-this decline of the Roman Empire as it was at the
-outset the religion of the slave, the meek and the
-lowly while Stoicism was the religion of the strong
-men of the time. This bias in favor of the weaker
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>elements greatly interfered with their elimination
-by natural processes and the fighting force of the
-Empire was gradually undermined. Christianity
-was in sharp contrast to the worship of tribal
-deities which preceded it and it tended then as
-now to break down class and race distinctions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The maintenance of such distinctions is absolutely
-essential to race purity in any community
-when two or more races live side by side.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Race feeling may be called prejudice by those
-whose careers are cramped by it but it is a natural
-antipathy which serves to maintain the purity of
-type. The unfortunate fact that nearly all species
-of men interbreed freely leaves us no choice in the
-matter. Races must be kept apart by artificial
-devices of this sort or they ultimately amalgamate
-and in the offspring the more generalized or lower
-type prevails.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>X<br /> <span class='large'>THE NORDIC RACE OUTSIDE OF EUROPE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>We find few traces of Nordic characters outside
-of Europe. When Egypt was invaded by the Libyans
-from the west in 1230 B. C. they were accompanied
-by “sea peoples,” probably the Achæan
-Greeks. There is some evidence of blondness
-among the people of the south shore of the Mediterranean
-down to Greek times and the Tamahu
-or fair Libyans are constantly mentioned in Egyptian
-records. The reddish blond or partly blond
-Berbers found to-day on the northern slopes of the
-Atlas Mountains may well be their descendants.
-That this blondness of the Berbers, though small
-in amount, is of Nordic origin we may with safety
-assume, but through what channels it came we
-have no means of knowing. There is no historic
-invasion of north Africa by Nordics except the
-Vandal conquests but there seems to be little
-probability that this small Teutonic tribe left behind
-any physical trace in the native population.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There seem to have been traces of Nordic blood
-among the Philistines and still more among the
-Amorites. Certain references to the size of the sons
-of Anak and to the fairness of David, whose mother
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>was an Amoritish woman, point vaguely in this direction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>References in Chinese annals to the green eyes of
-the Wu-suns or to the Hiung-Nu in central Asia are
-almost the only evidence we have of the Nordic race
-in contact with the peoples of eastern Asia, though
-there are statements in ancient Chinese or Mongolian
-records as to the existence of blond and
-tall tribes and nations in those parts of northern
-Asia where Mongols are now found exclusively.
-We may expect to acquire much new light on this
-subject during the next few decades.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The so-called blondness of the hairy Ainus of the
-northern islands of Japan seems to be due to a trace
-of what might be called Proto-Nordic blood. In
-hairiness these people are in sharp contrast with
-their Mongoloid neighbors but this is a generalized
-character common to the highest and the lowest
-races of man. The primitive Australoids and
-the highly specialized Scandinavians are among
-the most hairy populations in the world. So in the
-Ainus this somatological peculiarity is merely the
-retention of a primitive trait. The occasional
-brown or greenish eye and the sometimes fair complexion
-of the Ainus are, however, suggestive of
-Nordic affinities and of an extreme easterly extension
-of Proto-Nordics at a very early period.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The skull shape of the Ainus is dolichocephalic or
-mesaticephalic, while the broad cheek bones indicate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>a Mongolian cross as among the Esquimaux.
-The Ainus, like many other small, mysterious
-peoples, are probably merely the remnants of one
-of the early races that are fast fading into extinction.
-The division of man into species and subspecies
-is very ancient and the chief races of the
-earth are the successful survivors of a long and
-fierce competition. Many species, subspecies and
-races have vanished utterly, except for reversional
-characters occasionally found in the larger races.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The only Nordics in Asia Minor, so far as we
-know, were the Phrygians who crossed the Hellespont
-about 1400 B. C. as part of the same migration
-which brought the Achæans into Greece, the
-Cimmerians who entered by the same route and
-also through the Caucasus about 650 B. C. and
-still later, in 270 B. C., the Gauls who, coming from
-northern Italy through Thrace, founded Galatia.
-So far as our present information goes little or no
-trace of these invasions remains in the existing
-populations of Anatolia. The expansions of the
-Persians and the Aryanization of their empire and
-the conquests of the Nordics east and south of the
-Caspian-Aral Sea, will be discussed in connection
-with the spread of Aryan languages.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>XI<br /> <span class='large'>RACIAL APTITUDES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Such are the three races, the Alpine, the Mediterranean
-and the Nordic, which enter into the
-composition of European populations of to-day and
-in various combinations comprise the great bulk of
-white men all over the world. These races vary
-intellectually and morally just as they do physically.
-Moral, intellectual and spiritual attributes are as
-persistent as physical characters and are transmitted
-substantially unchanged from generation to
-generation. These moral and physical characters
-are not limited to one race but given traits do
-occur with more frequency in one race than in another.
-Each race differs in the relative proportion
-of what we may term good and bad strains, just as
-nations do, or, for that matter, sections and classes
-of the same nation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In considering skull characters we must remember
-that, while indicative of independent descent,
-the size and shape of the head are not closely related
-to brain power. Aristotle was a Mediterranean
-if we may trust the authenticity of his busts
-and had a small, long skull, while Humboldt’s
-large and characteristically Nordic skull was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>equally dolichocephalic. Socrates and Diogenes
-were apparently quite un-Greek and represent remnants
-of some early race, perhaps of Paleolithic man.
-The history of their lives indicates that each was
-recognized by his fellow countrymen as in some
-degree alien, just as the Jews apparently regarded
-Christ as, in some indefinite way, non-Jewish.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mental, spiritual and moral traits are closely associated
-with the physical distinctions among the
-different European races, although like somatological
-characters, these spiritual attributes have in
-many cases gone astray. Enough remain, however,
-to show that certain races have special aptitudes
-for certain pursuits.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Alpine race is always and everywhere a race
-of peasants, an agricultural and never a maritime
-race. In fact they only extend to salt water at the
-head of the Adriatic and, like all purely agricultural
-communities throughout Europe, tend toward
-democracy, although they are submissive to authority
-both political and religious being usually
-Roman Catholics in western Europe. This race is
-essentially of the soil and in towns the type is
-mediocre and bourgeois.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The coastal and seafaring populations of northern
-Europe are everywhere Nordic as far as the
-shores of Spain and among Europeans this race is
-pre-eminently fitted for maritime pursuits. Enterprise
-at sea during the Middle Ages was in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>hands of Mediterraneans just as it was originally
-developed by Cretans, Phœnicians and Carthaginians
-but after the Reformation the Nordics seized
-and occupied this field almost exclusively.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Nordics are, all over the world, a race of
-soldiers, sailors, adventurers and explorers, but
-above all, of rulers, organizers and aristocrats in
-sharp contrast to the essentially peasant and democratic
-character of the Alpines. The Nordic race
-is domineering, individualistic, self-reliant and jealous
-of their personal freedom both in political and
-religious systems and as a result they are usually
-Protestants. Chivalry and knighthood and their
-still surviving but greatly impaired counterparts
-are peculiarly Nordic traits, and feudalism, class
-distinctions and race pride among Europeans are
-traceable for the most part to the north.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The social status of woman varies largely with
-race but here religion plays a part. In the Roman
-Republic and in ancient Germany women were held
-in high esteem. In the Nordic countries of to-day
-women’s rights have received much more recognition
-than among the southern nations with their
-traditions of Latin culture. To this general statement
-modern Germany is a marked exception.
-The contrast is great between the mental attitude
-toward woman of the ancient Teutons and that of
-the modern Germans.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The pure Nordic peoples are characterized by a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>greater stability and steadiness than are mixed peoples
-such as the Irish, the ancient Gauls and the
-Athenians among all of whom the lack of these
-qualities was balanced by a correspondingly greater
-versatility.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The mental characteristics of the Mediterranean
-race are well known and this race, while inferior in
-bodily stamina to both the Nordic and the Alpine,
-is probably the superior of both, certainly of the Alpines,
-in intellectual attainments. In the field of art
-its superiority to both the other European races is
-unquestioned, although in literature and in scientific
-research and discovery the Nordics far excel it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Before leaving this interesting subject of the
-correlation of spiritual and moral traits with physical
-characters we may note that these influences
-are so deeply rooted in everyday consciousness
-that the modern novelist or playwright does not
-fail to make his hero a tall, blond, honest and
-somewhat stupid youth and his villain a small, dark
-and exceptionally intelligent individual of warped
-moral character. So in Celtic legend as in the
-Græco-Roman and mediæval romances, prince and
-princess are always fair, a fact rather indicating
-that the mass of the people were brunet at the
-time when the legends were taking shape. In
-fact, “fair” is a synonym for beauty. Most ancient
-tapestries show a blond earl on horseback
-and a dark-haired churl holding the bridle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>The gods of Olympus were almost all described as
-blond, and it would be difficult to imagine a Greek
-artist painting a brunet Venus. In church pictures
-all angels are blond, while the denizens of the
-lower regions revel in deep brunetness. “Non Angli
-sed angeli,” remarked Pope Gregory when he first
-saw Saxon children exposed for sale in the Roman
-slave-mart.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In depicting the crucifixion no artist hesitates to
-make the two thieves brunet in contrast to the
-blond Saviour. This is something more than a
-convention, as such quasi-authentic traditions as
-we have of our Lord strongly suggest his Nordic,
-possibly Greek, physical and moral attributes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These and similar traditions clearly point to the
-relations of the one race to the other in classic,
-mediæval and modern times. How far they may
-be modified by democratic institutions and the rule
-of the majority remains to be seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The wars of the past two thousand years in Europe
-have been almost exclusively wars between
-the various nations of this race or between rulers
-of Nordic blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From a race point of view the present European
-conflict is essentially a civil war and nearly all the
-officers and a large proportion of the men on both
-sides are members of this race. It is the same old
-tragedy of mutual butchery and mutual destruction
-between Nordics, just as the Nordic nobility
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>of Renaissance Italy seems to have been possessed
-with a blood mania to murder one another. It is
-the modern edition of the old Berserker blood rage
-and is class suicide on a gigantic scale.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the beginning of the war it was difficult to
-say on which side there was the preponderance of
-Nordic blood. Flanders and northern France are
-more Nordic than south Germany, while the backbone
-of the armies that England put into the field
-as well as of those of her colonies was almost
-purely Nordic and a large proportion of the Russian
-army was of the same race. As heretofore
-stated, with America in the war, the greater part
-of the Nordics of the world are fighting against
-Germany.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Although the writer has limited carefully the
-use of the word “Teutonic” to that section of the
-Nordic race which originated in Scandinavia and
-which later spread over northern Europe, nevertheless
-this term is unfortunate because it is currently
-given a national and not a racial meaning
-and is used to denote the populations of the central
-empires. This popular use includes millions
-who are un-Teutonic and excludes millions of pure
-Teutonic blood who are outside of the political
-borders of Austria and Germany and who are bitterly
-hostile to the very name itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The present inhabitants of the German Empire,
-to say nothing of Austria, are only to a limited extent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>descendants of the ancient Teutonic tribes,
-being very largely Alpines, especially in the east
-and south. To abandon to the Germans and
-Austrians the exclusive right to the name Teuton
-or Teutonic would be to acquiesce in one of their
-most grandiose pretensions.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>XII<br /> <span class='large'>ARYA</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Having shown the existence in Europe of three
-distinct subspecies of man and a single predominant
-group of languages called the Aryan or synthetic
-group, it remains to inquire to which of the
-three races can be assigned the honor of inventing,
-elaborating and introducing this most highly developed
-form of human speech. Our investigations
-will show that the facts point indubitably
-to an original unity between the Nordic or rather
-the Proto-Nordic race and the Proto-Aryan language
-or the generalized, ancestral, Aryan mother
-tongue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of the three claimants to the honor of being the
-original creator of the Aryan group of languages,
-we can at once dismiss the Mediterranean race.
-The members of this subspecies on the south
-shores of the Mediterranean, the Berbers and the
-Egyptians, and many peoples in western Asia speak
-now and have always spoken Anaryan tongues.
-We also know that the speech of the original Pelasgians
-was not Aryan, that in Crete remnants of
-Pre-Aryan speech persisted until about 500 B. C.
-and that the Hellenic language was introduced
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>into Ægean countries from the north. In Italy the
-Etruscan in the north and the Messapian in the
-south were Anaryan languages and the ancestral
-form of Latin speech in the guise of Umbrian and
-Oscan came through the Alps from the countries
-beyond.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Spain a Celtic language was introduced from
-the north about 500 B. C. but with so little force
-behind it that it was unable to replace entirely
-the Anaryan Basque language of at least a portion
-of the aborigines.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Britain, Aryan speech was introduced about
-800 B. C. and in France somewhat earlier. In central
-and northern Europe no certain trace of the
-Anaryan languages at one time spoken there persists,
-except among the Lapps and in the neighborhood
-of the Gulf of Finland, where Non-Aryan
-Finnic dialects are spoken to-day by the Finlanders
-and the Esthonians.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We thus know the approximate dates of the introduction
-of Aryan speech into western and southern
-Europe and that it came in through the medium
-of the Nordic race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Spain and in the adjoining parts of France
-nearly half a million people continue to speak an
-agglutinative language, called Basque or Euskarian.
-In skull shape these Basques correspond
-closely with the Aryan-speaking populations around
-them, being dolichocephalic in Spain and brachycephalic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>or pseudo-brachycephalic in France. In
-the case of both the long skulled and the round
-skulled Basques the lower part of the face is long
-and thin, with a peculiar and pointed chin and
-among the French Basques the skull is broadened
-in the temporal region. In other words, their faces
-show certain secondary racial characters which have
-been imposed by selection upon a people composed
-originally of two races of independent origin, but
-long isolated by the limitations of language.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Euskarian language is believed to have been
-related to the ancient Iberian but has affinities
-which point to Asia as its place of origin and make
-possible the hypothesis that it may have been derived
-from the ancient language of the Proto-Alpines
-in the west.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The problem of the extinct Ligurian language
-must be considered in this connection. It seems to
-have been Anaryan, but we do not know whether
-it was the speech originally of Alpines or of Mediterraneans
-either of whom could be reasonably
-considered as a claimant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Other than the Basque language there are in
-western Europe but few remains of Pre-Aryan
-speech, and these are found chiefly in place names
-and in a few obscure words.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Remnants of Anaryan speech exist here and there
-throughout European Russia, but many of them
-can be traced to historic invasions. Until we reach
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>the main body of Ural-Altaic speech in the east of
-Russia, the Esthonians, with kindred tribes of Livonians
-and Tchouds, and the Finns are the only
-peoples who speak Non-Aryan tongues, but the
-physical type with the exception of the skull shape
-of all these tribes is distinctly Nordic. In this connection
-the Lapps and related groups in the far
-north can be disregarded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The problem of the Finns is a difficult one. The
-coast of Finland, of course, is purely Swedish, but
-the great bulk of the population in the interior is
-brachycephalic, though otherwise thoroughly Nordic
-in type.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Anaryan Finnish, Esthonian and Livonian
-languages were probably introduced at the same
-time as were round skulls into Finland. The
-shores of the Gulf of Finland were originally inhabited
-by Nordics and the intrusion of round
-skulled Finns probably came soon after the Christian
-era. This immigration and that of the Livonians
-and Esthonians may possibly have been part
-of the same movement which brought the Alpine
-Wends into eastern Germany. The earliest references
-to the Finns that we have locate them in
-central Russia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The most important Anaryan language in Europe
-is the Magyar of Hungary, but this we know was introduced
-from the eastward at the end of the ninth
-century, as was the earlier but now extinct Avar.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>In the Balkans the language of the Turks has
-never been a vernacular as it is in Asia Minor. In
-Europe it was spoken only by the soldiers and the
-civil administrators and by very sparse colonies
-of Turkish settlers. The mania of the Turks for
-white women, which is said to have been one of the
-motives that led to the conquest of the Byzantine
-Empire, has unconsciously resulted in the obliteration
-of the Mongoloid type of the original Asiatic
-invaders. Persistent crossing with Circassian and
-Georgian women, as well as with slaves of every
-race in Asia Minor and in Europe with whom they
-came in contact, has made the European Turk
-of to-day indistinguishable in physical characters
-from his Christian neighbors. At the same time,
-polygamy has greatly strengthened the hold of the
-dominant Turk. In fact, among the upper classes
-of the higher races monogamy and the resultant
-limitation in number of offspring has been a source
-of weakness from the viewpoint of race expansion.
-The Turks of Seljukian and Osmanli origin were
-never numerous and the Sultan’s armies were
-largely composed of Islamized Anatolians and Europeans.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Persia and India, also, the Aryan languages
-were introduced from the north at known periods,
-so in view of all these facts the Mediterranean
-race cannot claim the honor of either the invention
-or dissemination of the synthetic languages.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>The chief claim of the Alpine race of central Europe
-and western Asia to the invention and introduction
-into Europe of the Proto-Aryan form of
-speech rests on the fact that nearly all the members
-of this race in Europe speak well developed Aryan
-languages, chiefly in some form of Slavic. This
-fact taken by itself may have no more significance
-than the fact that the Mediterranean race in
-Spain, Italy and France speaks Romance languages,
-but it is, nevertheless, an argument of some
-weight.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Outside of Europe the Armenians and other
-Armenoid brachycephalic peoples of Asia Minor
-and the Iranian Highlands, all of Alpine race, together
-with a few isolated tribes of the Caucasus,
-speak Aryan languages and these peoples lie on
-the highroad along which knowledge of the metals
-and other cultural developments entered Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If the Aryan language were invented and developed
-by these Armenoid Alpines we should be
-obliged to assume that they introduced it along
-with bronze culture into Europe about 3000 B. C.
-and taught the Nordics both their language and
-their metal culture. There are, however, in western
-Asia many Alpine peoples who do not speak
-Aryan languages and yet are Alpine in type, such
-as the Turcomans and in Asia Minor the so-called
-Turks are also largely Islamized Alpines of
-the Armenoid subspecies who speak Turki. There
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>is no trace of Aryan speech south of the Caucasus
-until after 1700 B. C. and the Hittite language
-spoken before that date in central and eastern
-Asia Minor, although not yet clearly deciphered,
-was Anaryan to the best of our present knowledge.
-The Hittites themselves were probably ancestral
-to the living Armenians.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We are sufficiently acquainted with the languages
-of the ancient Mesopotamian countries to know
-that the speech of Accad and Sumer, of Susa and
-Media was agglutinative and that the languages of
-Assyria and of Palestine were Semitic. The speech
-of the Kassites was Anaryan, but they seem to have
-been in contact with the horse-using Nordics and
-some of their leaders bore Aryan names. The
-language of the shortlived empire of the Mitanni
-in the foothills south of Armenia is the only one
-about the character of which there can be serious
-doubt. There is, therefore, much negative evidence
-against the existence of Aryan speech in that part
-of the world earlier than its known introduction
-by Nordics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If, then, the last great expansion into Europe of
-the Alpine race brought from Asia the Aryan
-mother tongue, as well as the knowledge of metals,
-we must assume that all the members of the Nordic
-race thereupon adopted synthetic speech from
-the Alpines.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We know that these Alpines reached Britain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>about 1800 B. C. and probably they had previously
-occupied much of Gaul, so that if they are to be
-credited with the introduction of the synthetic
-languages into western Europe, it is difficult to
-understand why we have no known trace of
-any form of Aryan speech in central Europe or
-west of the Rhine prior to 1000 B. C. while we
-have some, though scanty, evidence of Non-Aryan
-languages.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It may be said in favor of this claim of the Alpine
-race to be the original inventor of synthetic
-speech, that language is ever a measure of culture
-and the higher forms of civilization are greatly
-hampered by the limitations of speech imposed
-by the less highly evolved languages, namely, the
-monosyllabic and the agglutinative, which include
-nearly all the Non-Aryan languages of the world.
-It does not seem probable that barbarians, however
-fine in physical type and however well endowed
-with the potentiality of intellectual and
-moral development, dwelling as hunters in the
-bleak and barren north along the edge of the retreating
-glaciers and as nomad shepherds in the
-Russian grasslands, could have evolved a more
-complicated and higher form of articulate speech
-than the inhabitants of southwestern Asia, who
-many thousand years earlier were highly civilized
-and are known to have invented the arts of agriculture,
-metal working and domestication of animals,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>as well as of writing and pottery. Nevertheless,
-such seems to be the fact.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To summarize, it appears that a study of the
-Mediterranean race shows that so far from being
-purely European, it is equally African and Asiatic
-and that in the narrow coastal fringe of southern
-Persia, in India and even farther east the last
-strains of this race gradually fade into the Negroids
-through prolonged cross breeding. A similar inquiry
-into the origin and distribution of the Alpine
-subspecies shows clearly the fundamentally Asiatic
-origin of the type and that on its easternmost
-borders in central Asia it marches with the round
-skulled Mongols, and that neither the one nor the
-other was the inventor of Aryan speech.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>XIII<br /> <span class='large'>ORIGIN OF THE ARYAN LANGUAGES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>By the process of elimination set forth in the preceding
-chapter we are competed to acknowledge
-that the strongest claimant for the honor of being
-the race of the original Aryans, is the tall, blond
-Nordic. An analysis of the various languages of
-the Aryan group reveals an extreme diversity which
-can be best explained by the hypothesis that the
-existing languages are now spoken by people upon
-whom Aryan speech has been forced from without.
-This theory corresponds exactly with the
-known historic fact that the Aryan languages, during
-the last three or four thousand years at least
-have, again and again, been imposed by Nordics
-upon populations of Alpine and Mediterranean
-blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Within the present distributional area of the
-Nordic race on the Gulf of Riga and in the very
-middle of a typical area of isolation, are the most
-generalized members of the Aryan group, namely
-Lettish and Lithuanian, both almost Proto-Aryan
-in character. Close at hand existed the closely
-related Old Prussian or Borussian, very recently
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>extinct. These archaic languages are relatively
-close to Sanskrit and exist in actual contact with
-the Anaryan speech of the Esthonians and Finns.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Anaryan languages in eastern Russia are
-Ugrian, a form of speech which extends far into
-Asia and which appears to contain elements which
-unite it with synthetic speech and may be dimly
-transitory in character. In the opinion of many
-philologists, a primitive form of Ugrian might have
-given birth to the Proto-Aryan ancestor of existing
-synthetic languages.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This hypothesis, if sustained by further study,
-will provide additional evidence that the site of
-the development of the Aryan languages and of
-the Nordic subspecies was in eastern Europe,
-in a region which is close to the meeting place between
-the most archaic synthetic languages and
-the most nearly related Anaryan tongue, the agglutinative
-Ugrian.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Aryan tongue was introduced into Greece
-by the Achæans about 1400 B. C. and later, about
-1100 B. C. by the true Hellenes, who brought in
-the classic dialects of Dorian, Ionian and Æolian.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These Aryan languages superseded their Anaryan
-predecessor, the Pelasgian. From the language
-of these early invaders came the Illyrian,
-Thracian, Albanian, classic Greek and the debased
-modern Romaic, a descendant of the Ionian dialect.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>Aryan speech was introduced among the Anaryan-speaking
-Etruscans of the Italian Peninsula
-by the Umbrians and Oscans about 1100 B. C.
-and from the language of these conquerors was derived
-Latin which later spread to the uttermost
-confines of the Roman Empire. Its descendants
-to-day are the Romance tongues spoken within
-the ancient imperial boundaries, Portuguese on the
-west, Castilian, Catalan, Provençal, French, the
-Langue d’oïl of the Walloons, Romansch, Ladin,
-Friulian, Tuscan, Calabrian and Rumanian.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The problem of the existence of a language
-clearly descended from Latin, the Rumanian, in the
-eastern Carpathians cut off by Slavic and Magyar
-tongues from the nearest Romance tongues presents
-difficulties. The Rumanians themselves make two
-claims; the first, which can be safely disregarded,
-is an unbroken linguistic descent from a group of
-Aryan languages which occupied this whole section
-of Europe, from which Latin was derived and of
-which Albanian is also a remnant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The more serious claim, however, made by the
-Rumanians is to linguistic and racial descent from
-the military colonists planted by the Emperor
-Trajan in the great Dacian plain north of the
-Danube. This may be possible, so far as the language
-is concerned, but there are some weighty objections
-to it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have little evidence for, and much against, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>existence of Rumanian speech north of the Danube
-for nearly a thousand years after Rome abandoned
-this outlying region. Dacia was one of the last
-provinces to be occupied by Rome and was the
-first from which the legions were withdrawn upon
-the decline of the Empire. The northern Carpathians,
-furthermore, where the Rumanians claim
-to have taken refuge during the barbarian invasions
-formed part of the Slavic homeland and it
-was in these same mountains and in the Ruthenian
-districts of eastern Galicia that the Slavic languages
-were developed, probably by the Sarmatians
-and Venethi, from whence they spread in all directions
-in the centuries that immediately followed
-the fall of Rome. So it is almost impossible to
-credit the survival of a frontier community of
-Romanized natives situated not only in the path
-of the great invasions of Europe from the east,
-but also in the very spot where Slavic tongues
-were at the time evolving.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rumanian speech occupies large areas outside
-of the present kingdom of Rumania, in Russian
-Bessarabia, Austrian Bukowina and above all in
-Hungarian Transylvania.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The linguistic problem is further complicated
-by the existence in the Pindus Mountains of Thessaly
-of another large community of Vlachs of Rumanian
-speech. How this later community could
-have survived from Roman times until to-day,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>untouched either by the Greek language of the
-Byzantine Empire or by the Turkish conquest is
-another difficult problem.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The evidence, on the whole, points to the descent
-of the Vlachs from the early inhabitants of Thrace,
-who adopted Latin speech in the first centuries of
-the Christian era and clung to it during the domination
-of the Bulgarians from the seventh century
-onward in the lands south of the Danube. In
-the thirteenth century the mass of these Vlachs,
-leaving scattered remnants behind them, crossed
-the Danube and founded Little and Great Wallachia.
-From there they spread into Transylvania
-and a century later into Moldavia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The solution of this problem receives no assistance
-from anthropology, as these Rumanian-speaking
-populations both on the Danube and in
-the Pindus Mountains in no way differ physically
-from their neighbors on all sides. But through
-whatever channel they acquired their Latin speech
-the Rumanians of to-day can lay no valid claim to
-blood descent even in a remote degree from the
-true Romans.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first Aryan languages known in western
-Europe were the Celtic group which first appears
-west of the Rhine about 1000 B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Only a few dim traces of Pre-Aryan speech have
-been found in the British Isles, and these largely
-in place names. The Pre-Aryan language of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>Pre-Nordic population of Britain may have survived
-down to historic times as Pictish.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Britain, Celtic speech was introduced in two
-successive waves, first by the Goidels or “Q” Celts,
-who apparently appeared about 800 B. C. and this
-form exists to this day as Erse in western Ireland,
-as Manx of the Isle of Man and as Gaelic in the
-Scottish Highlands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Goidels were still in a state of bronze culture.
-When they reached Britain they must have
-found there a population preponderantly of Mediterranean
-type with numerous remains of still earlier
-races of Paleolithic times and also some round
-skulled Alpines of the Round Barrows, who have
-since largely faded from the living population.
-When the next invasion, the Cymric or Brythonic,
-occurred the Goidels had been absorbed very largely
-by the underlying Mediterranean aborigines who
-had meanwhile accepted the Goidelic form of Celtic
-speech, just as on the continent the Gauls had
-mixed with Alpine and Mediterranean natives and
-had imposed upon the conquered their own tongue.
-In fact, in Britain, Gaul and Spain the Goidels and
-Gauls were chiefly a ruling, military class, while the
-great bulk of the population remained unchanged
-although Aryanized in speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These Brythonic or Cymric tribes or “P” Celts
-followed the “Q” Celts four or five hundred years
-later, and drove the Goidels westward through Germany,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>Gaul and Britain and this movement of
-population was still going on when Cæsar crossed
-the Channel. The Brythonic group gave rise to
-the modern Cornish, extinct within a century, the
-Cymric of Wales and the Armorican of Brittany.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In central Europe we find traces of these same
-two forms of Celtic speech with the Goidelic everywhere
-the older and the Cymric the more recent
-arrival. The cleavage between the dialects of the
-“Q” Celts and the “P” Celts was probably less
-marked two thousand years ago than at present,
-since in their modern form they are both Neo-Celtic
-languages. What vestiges of Celtic languages remain
-in France belong to Brythonic. Celtic was
-not generally spoken in Aquitaine in Cæsar’s time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the two Celtic-speaking races came into
-conflict in Britain their original relationship had
-been greatly obscured by the crossing of the Goidels
-with the underlying dark Mediterranean race
-of Neolithic culture and by the mixture of the
-Belgæ with Teutonic tribes. The result was that
-the Brythons did not distinguish between the blond
-Goidels and the brunet but Celticized Mediterraneans
-as they all spoke Goidelic dialects.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the same way when the Saxons and the Angles
-entered Britain they found there a population
-speaking Celtic of some form, either Goidelic or
-Cymric and promptly called them all Welsh (foreigners).
-These Welsh were preponderantly of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>Mediterranean type with some mixture of a blond
-Goidel strain and a much stronger blond strain of
-Cymric origin and these same elements exist to-day
-in England. The Mediterranean race is easily distinguished,
-but the physical types derived from
-Goidel and Brython alike are merged and lost in
-the later floods of pure Nordic blood, Angle, Saxon,
-Dane, Norse and Norman. In this primitive,
-dark population with successive layers of blond
-Nordics imposed upon it, each one more purely
-Nordic and in the relative absence of round heads
-lie the secret and the solution of the anthropology
-of the British Isles. This Iberian substratum was
-able to absorb to a large extent the earlier Celtic-speaking
-invaders, both Goidels and Brythons,
-but it is only just beginning to seriously threaten
-the later Nordics and to reassert its ancient brunet
-characters after three thousand years of submergence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In northwest Scotland there is a Gaelic-speaking
-area where the place names are all Scandinavian
-and the physical types purely Nordic. This is
-the only spot in the British Isles where Celtic
-speech has reconquered a district from the Teutonic
-languages and it was the site of one of the
-conquests of the Norse Vikings, probably in the
-early centuries of the Christian era. In Caithness
-in north Scotland, as well as in some isolated
-spots on the Irish coasts, the language of these
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>same Norse pirates persisted within a century. In
-the fifth century of our era and after the break-up
-of Roman domination in Britain there was much
-racial unrest and a back wave of Goidels crossed
-from Ireland and either reintroduced or reinforced
-the Gaelic speech in the highlands. Later, Goidelic
-speech was gradually driven northward and westward
-by the intrusive English of the lowlands and
-was ultimately forced over this originally Norse-speaking
-area. We have elsewhere in Europe evidence
-of similar shiftings of speech without any
-corresponding change in the blood of the population.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Except in the British Isles and in Brittany Celtic
-languages have left no modern descendants, but
-have everywhere been replaced by languages of Neo-Latin
-or of Teutonic origin. Outside of Brittany
-one of the last, if not quite the last, reference to
-Celtic speech in Gaul is the historic statement
-that “Celtic” tribes, as well as “Armoricans,” took
-part at Châlons in the great victory in 451 A. D.
-over Attila the Hun and his confederacy of subject
-nations.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the continent the only existing populations
-of Celtic speech are the primitive inhabitants of
-central Brittany, a population noted for their religious
-fanaticism and for other characteristics of a
-backward people. This Celtic speech is claimed to
-have been introduced about 450–500 A. D. by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>Britons fleeing from the Saxons. These refugees,
-if there were any substantial number of them, must
-have been dolichocephs of either Mediterranean or
-Nordic race or both. We are asked by this tradition
-to believe that their long skull was lost, but
-that their language was adopted by the round
-skulled Alpine population of Armorica. It is much
-more probable that the Cymric-speaking Alpines
-of Brittany have merely retained in this isolated
-corner of France a form of Celtic speech which was
-prevalent throughout northern Gaul and Britain
-before these provinces were conquered by Rome
-and Latinized and which, perhaps, was reinforced
-later by British Cymry. Cæsar remarked that
-there was little difference between the speech of the
-Belgæ in northern Gaul and in Britain. In both
-cases the speech was Cymric.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Long after the conquest of Gaul by the Goths
-and Franks Teutonic speech remained predominant
-among the ruling classes and, by the time it succumbed
-to the Latin tongue of the Romanized natives,
-the old Celtic languages had been entirely
-forgotten outside of Brittany.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An example of similar changes of language is
-to be found in Normandy where the country was
-inhabited by the Nordic Belgæ speaking a Cymric
-language before that tongue was replaced by Latin.
-This coast was ravaged about 300 or 400 A. D. by
-Saxons who formed settlements along both sides
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>of the Channel and the coasts of Brittany which
-were later known as the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Litus Saxonicum</span>. Their
-progress can best be traced by place names as our
-historic record of these raids is scanty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Normans landed in Normandy in the year
-911 A. D. They were heathen, Danish barbarians,
-speaking a Teutonic tongue. The religion, culture
-and language of the old Romanized populations
-worked a miracle in the transformation of everything
-except blood in one short century. So quick
-was the change that 155 years later the descendants
-of the same Normans landed in England as
-Christian Frenchmen armed with all the culture of
-their period. The change was startling, but the
-Norman blood remained unchanged and entered
-England as a substantially Nordic type.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>XIV<br /> <span class='large'>THE ARYAN LANGUAGE IN ASIA</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>In the Ægean region and south of the Caucasus
-Nordics appear after 1700 B. C. but there were
-unquestionably invasions and raids from the
-north for many centuries previous to our first
-records. These early migrations were probably
-not in sufficient force to modify the blood of the
-autochthonous races or to substitute Aryan languages
-for the ancient Mediterranean and Asiatic
-tongues.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These men of the North came from the grasslands
-of Russia in successive waves and among
-the first of whom we have fairly clear knowledge
-were the Achæans and Phrygians. Aryan names
-are mentioned in the dim chronicles of the Mesopotamian
-empires about 1700 B. C. among the
-Kassites and later, Mitanni. Aryan names of
-prisoners captured beyond the mountains in the
-north and of Aryan deities before whom oaths
-were taken are recorded about 1400 B. C. but one
-of the first definite accounts of Nordics south of the
-Caucasus describes the presence of Nordic Persians
-at Lake Urmia about 900 B. C. There were many
-incursions from that time on, the Cimmerians raiding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>across the Caucasus as early as 650 B. C. and
-shortly afterward overrunning all Asia Minor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The easterly extension of the Russian steppes or
-Kiptchak north of the Caspian-Aral Sea in Turkestan
-as far as the foothills of the Pamirs was occupied
-by the Sacæ or Massagetæ, who were also
-Nordics and akin to the Cimmerians and Persians,
-as were, perhaps, the Ephtalites or White Huns in
-Sogdiana north of Persia, destroyed by the Turks
-in the sixth century.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For several centuries groups of Nordics drifted
-as nomad shepherds across the Caucasus into the
-empire of the Medes, introducing little by little
-the Aryan tongue which later developed into Old
-Persian. By 550 B. C. these Persians had become
-sufficiently numerous to overthrow their rulers and
-under the leadership of the great Cyrus they organized
-the Persian Empire, one of the most enduring of
-Oriental states. The base of the population of the
-Persian Empire rested on the round skulled Medes
-who belonged to the Armenoid subdivision of the
-Alpines. Under the leadership of their priestly
-caste of Magi these Medes rebelled again and again
-against their Nordic masters before the two peoples
-became fused.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From 525 to 485 B. C. during the reign of
-Darius, whose sculptured portraits show a man of
-pure Nordic type, the tall, blond Persians had become
-almost exclusively a class of great ruling
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>nobles and had forgotten the simplicity of their
-shepherd ancestors. Their language belonged to
-the Eastern or Iranian division of Aryan speech
-and was known as Old Persian, which continued
-to be spoken until the fourth century before the
-Christian era. From it were derived Pehlevi, or
-Parthian as well as modern Persian. The great
-book of the old Persians, the Avesta, which was
-written in Zendic, also an Iranian language, does
-not go back to the reign of Darius and was remodelled
-after the Christian era, but the Old Persian
-of Darius was closely related to the Zendic of
-Bactria and to the Sanskrit of Hindustan. From
-Zendic, also called Medic, are derived Ghalcha,
-Balochi, Kurdish and other dialects.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The rise to imperial power of the dolichocephalic
-Aryan-speaking Persians was largely due to the
-genius of their leaders but the Aryanization of
-western Asia by them is one of the most amazing
-events in history. The whole region became completely
-transformed so far as the acceptance by the
-conquered of the language and religion of the Persians
-was concerned, but the blood of the Nordic
-race quickly became diluted and a few centuries
-later disappears from history.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>During the great wars with Greece the pure
-Persian blood was still unimpaired and in control.
-In the literature of the time there is little
-evidence of race antagonism between the Greek
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>and the Persian leaders although their rival cultures
-were sharply contrasted. In the time of
-Alexander the Great the pure Persian blood was
-obviously confined to the nobles and it was the
-policy of Alexander to Hellenize the Persians and
-to amalgamate his Greeks with them. The amount
-of pure Macedonian blood was not sufficient to
-reinforce the Nordic strain of the Persians and
-the net result was the entire loss of the Greek
-stock.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is a question whether the Armenians of Asia
-Minor derived their Aryan speech from this invasion
-of the Nordic Persians, or whether they received
-it at an earlier date from the Phrygians and from
-the west. These Phrygians entered Asia Minor
-by way of the Dardanelles and broke up the Hittite
-Empire. Their language was Aryan and probably
-was related to Thracian. In favor of the
-theory of the introduction of the Armenian language
-by the Phrygians from the west, rather
-than by the Persians from the east, is the highly
-significant fact that the basic structure of that
-tongue shows its relationship to be with the western
-or Centum rather than with the eastern or
-Satem group of Aryan languages and this, too, in
-spite of a very large Persian vocabulary.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Armenians themselves, like all the other
-natives of the plateaux and highlands as far east
-as the Hindu Kush Mountains, while of Aryan
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>speech, are of the Armenoid subdivision, in sharp
-contrast to the predominant types south of the
-mountains in Persia, Afghanistan and Hindustan,
-all of which are dolichocephalic and of Mediterranean
-affinity but generally betraying traces of
-admixture with still more ancient races of Negroid
-origin, especially in India.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We now come to the last and easternmost extension
-of Aryan languages in Asia. As mentioned
-above, the grasslands and steppes of Russia extend
-north of the Caucasus Mountains and the
-Caspian Sea to ancient Bactria, now Turkestan.
-This whole country was occupied by the Nordic
-Sacæ and the closely related Massagetæ. These
-Sacæ may be identical with the later Scythians.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Soon after the opening of the second millennium
-B. C. and perhaps even earlier, the first Nordics
-crossed over the Afghan passes, entered the plains
-of India and organized a state in the Punjab, “the
-land of the five rivers,” bringing with them Aryan
-speech to a population probably of Mediterranean
-type and represented to-day by the Dravidians.
-The Nordic Sacæ arrived later in India and introduced
-the Vedas, religious poems, which were at
-first transmitted orally but which were reduced to
-written form in Old Sanskrit by the Brahmans at
-the comparatively late date of 300 A. D. From
-this classic Sanskrit are derived all the modern
-Aryan languages of Hindustan, as well as the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>Singalese of Ceylon and the chief dialects of
-Assam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There is great diversity among scholars as to the
-date of the first entry of these Aryan-speaking
-tribes into the Punjab but the consensus of opinion
-seems to indicate a period between 1600 and 1700
-B. C. or even somewhat earlier. However, the very
-close affinity of Sanskrit to the Old Persian of
-Darius and to the Zendavesta would strongly indicate
-that the final introduction of Aryan languages
-in the form of Sanskrit occurred at a much later
-time. The most recent tendency is to bring these
-dates somewhat forward.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If close relationship between languages indicates
-correlation in time then the entry of the Sacæ into
-India would appear to have been nearly simultaneous
-with the crossing of the Caucasus by the Nordic
-Cimmerians and their Persian successors.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The relationship between the Zendavesta and
-the Sanskrit Vedas is as near as that between High
-and Low German and consequently such close
-affinity prevents our thrusting back the date of the
-separation of the Persians and the Sacæ more than
-a few centuries.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A simultaneous migration of nomad shepherds
-on both sides of the Caspian-Aral Sea would naturally
-occur in a general movement southward
-and such migrations may have taken place several
-times. In all probability these Nordic invasions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>occurred one after another for a thousand years or
-more, the later ones obscuring and blurring the
-memory of their predecessors.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When shepherd tribes leave their grasslands
-and attack their agricultural neighbors, the reason
-is nearly always a famine due to prolonged drought
-and causes such as these have again and again in
-history put the nomad tribes in motion over large
-areas. During many centuries fresh tribes composed
-of Nordics or under the leadership of Nordics
-but all Aryan-speaking, poured over the
-Afghan passes from the northwest and pushed before
-them the earlier arrivals. Clear traces of these
-successive floods of conquerors are to be found in
-the Vedas themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Zendic form of the Iranian group of Aryan
-languages was spoken by those Sacæ who remained
-in old Bactria and from it is derived a whole group
-of closely related dialects still used in the Pamirs of
-which Ghalcha is the best known.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Sacæ and Massagetæ were, like the Persians,
-tall, blond dolichocephs and they have left behind
-them dim traces of their blood among the living
-Mongolized nomads of Turkestan, the Kirghizes.
-Ancient Bactria maintained its Nordic and Aryan
-aspect long after Alexander’s time and did not become
-Mongolized and receive the sinister name of
-Turkestan until the seventh century, when it was
-the first victim of the series of ferocious invasions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>from the north and east, which under various
-Mongol leaders destroyed civilization in Asia and
-threatened its existence in Europe. These conquests
-culminated in 1241 A. D. at Wahlstatt in
-Silesia where the Germans, though themselves
-badly defeated, put a final limit to this westward
-rush of Asiatics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Sacæ were the most easterly members of
-the Nordic race of whom we have definite record.
-The Chinese knew well these “green eyed devils,”
-whom they called by their Tatar name, the “Wu-suns,”—the
-tall ones—and with whom they came
-into contact about 200 B. C. in what is now Chinese
-Turkestan. Other Nordic tribes are recorded
-in this region. Evidence is accumulating that central
-Asia had a large Nordic population in the
-centuries preceding the Christian era. The discovery
-of the Aryan Tokharian language in Chinese
-Turkestan considered in connection with other
-facts indicates intensive occupation by Nordics of
-territories in central Asia now wholly Mongol, just
-as in Europe dark-haired Alpines occupy large territories
-where in Roman times fair-haired Nordics
-were preponderant. In short we find both in Europe
-and in western and central Asia the same
-record of Nordic decline during the last two thousand
-years and their replacement by races of inferior
-value and civilization.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This Tokharian is undoubtedly a pure Aryan
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>language related, curiously enough, to the western
-group rather than to the Indo-Iranian. It has
-been deciphered from inscriptions recently found
-in northeast Turkestan and was a living language
-prior to the ninth century A. D.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of all the wonderful conquests of the Sacæ there
-remain as evidence of their invasions only these
-Indian and Afghan languages. Dim traces of
-their blood have been found in the Pamirs and
-in Afghanistan, but in the south their blond traits
-have vanished, even from the Punjab. It may be
-that the stature of some of the Afghan hill tribes
-and of the Sikhs and some of the facial characters
-of the latter are derived from this source, but all
-blondness of skin, hair or eye of the original Sacæ
-has utterly vanished.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The long skulls all through India are to be attributed
-to the Mediterranean race rather than to
-this Nordic invasion, while the Pre-Dravidians and
-Negroids of south India, with which the former are
-largely mixed, are also dolichocephs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In short, the introduction in Iran and India of
-Aryan languages, Iranian, Ghalchic and Sanskrit,
-represents a linguistic and not an ethnic conquest.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>In concluding this revision of the racial foundations
-upon which the history of Europe has been
-based it is scarcely necessary to point out that the
-actual results of the spectacular conquests and invasions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>of history have been far less permanent
-than those of the more insidious victories arising
-from the crossing of two diverse races and that in
-such mixtures the relative prepotency of the various
-human subspecies in Europe appears to be in
-inverse ratio to their social value.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The continuity of physical traits and the limitation
-of the effects of environment to the individual
-only are now so thoroughly recognized by
-scientists that it is at most a question of time when
-the social consequences which result from such
-crossings will be generally understood by the public
-at large. As soon as the true bearing and import
-of the facts are appreciated by lawmakers a complete
-change in our political structure will inevitably
-occur and our present reliance on the influence of
-education will be superseded by a readjustment
-based on racial values.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bearing in mind the extreme antiquity of physical
-and spiritual characters and the persistency
-with which they outlive those elements of environment
-termed language, nationality and forms of
-government, we must consider the relation of these
-facts to the development of the race in America.
-We may be certain that the progress of evolution
-is in full operation to-day under those laws of nature
-which control it and that the only sure guide
-to the future lies in the study of the operation of
-these laws in the past.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>We Americans must realize that the altruistic
-ideals which have controlled our social development
-during the past century and the maudlin sentimentalism
-that has made America “an asylum
-for the oppressed,” are sweeping the nation toward
-a racial abyss. If the Melting Pot is allowed to
-boil without control and we continue to follow our
-national motto and deliberately blind ourselves to
-all “distinctions of race, creed or color,” the type
-of native American of Colonial descent will become
-as extinct as the Athenian of the age of Pericles,
-and the Viking of the days of Rollo.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>APPENDIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The maps shown facing pages <a href='#i_266o'>266</a>, <a href='#i_268o'>268</a>, <a href='#i_270o'>270</a>, and <a href='#i_272o'>272</a> of
-this book attempt in broad and somewhat hypothetical lines
-to represent by means of color diagrams the original distribution
-and the subsequent expansion and migration of the
-three main European races, the Mediterranean, the Alpine
-and the Nordic, as outlined in this book.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c023'><span class='sc'>The Maximum Expansion of the Alpines with Bronze Culture, 3000–1800 B. C.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c015'>The first map (Pl. I) shows the distribution of these races
-at the close of the Neolithic, as well as their later expansion.
-It also indicates the sites of earlier cultures. The distribution
-of megaliths in Asia Minor on the north coast of Africa
-and up the Atlantic seaboard through Spain, France and
-Britain to Scandinavia is set forth. These great stone
-monuments were seemingly the work of the Mediterranean
-race using, however, a culture of bronze acquired from the
-Alpines. The map also shows the sites throughout Russia
-of the kurgans, or ancient artificial mounds, distribution of
-which seems to correspond closely with the original habitat
-of the Nordics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In southwestern France there is indicated the area where
-the Cro-Magnon race persisted longest and where traces of it
-are still to be found. The site is shown of the type station
-of the latest phase of the Paleolithic known as the Mas
-d’Azil—a great cavern in the eastern Pyrenees from which
-that period took its name of Azilian.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the entrance of the Baltic Sea is also shown the type
-station of the Maglemose culture which flourished at the
-close of the Paleolithic and was probably the work of early
-Nordics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the centre of the district occupied by the Alpines is
-located Robenhausen, the most characteristic of the Neolithic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>lake dwelling stations and also the Terramara stations in
-which a culture transitional between the Neolithic and the
-bronze existed. In the Tyrol the site is indicated of the
-village of Hallstatt, which gave its name to the first iron
-culture.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The site of La Tène at the north end of Lake Neuchâtel
-in Switzerland is also shown. From this village the La
-Tène Iron Age takes its name.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The difficulty of depicting the shifting of races during
-twelve centuries is not easily overcome, but the map attempts
-to show that at the close of the Neolithic all the coast
-lands of the Mediterranean and of the Atlantic seaboard up
-to Germany and including the British Isles were populated
-by the Mediterranean race, in addition, of course, to remnants
-of earlier Neanderthals and Cro-Magnons, who probably,
-at that date, still formed an appreciable portion of
-the population.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The yellow arrows indicate the route of the migrations of
-Mediterranean man, who appears to have entered Europe
-from the east along the African littoral. But the main invasions
-passed up through Spain and Gaul into the British
-Isles, where from that time to this they have formed the
-substratum of the population. In the central portion of
-their range these Mediterraneans were swamped by the
-Alpines, as shown by the spreading green, while in northern
-Gaul and Britain the Mediterraneans were submerged afterward
-by Nordics, as appears on the later maps.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The arrows and routes of migration shown on the yellow
-area of this map indicate changes which occurred during the
-Neolithic and perhaps earlier, but the pink and red arrows in
-the northern and southeastern portions represent migrations
-which were in full swing and in fact were steadily increasing
-during the entire period involved. The next map shows
-these Nordics bursting out of their original homeland in
-every direction and in their turn conquering Europe.</p>
-
-<div id='i_266o' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_266o.jpg' alt='MAXIMUM EXPANSION of ALPINES with BRONZE CULTURE—3000–1800 B.C. (generalized scheme) by Madison Grant' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>Between these two races, the Mediterranean and the Nordic,
-there entered a great intrusion of Alpines, flowing from
-the highlands of western Asia through Asia Minor and up
-the valley of the Danube throughout central Europe and
-thence expanding in every direction. Forerunners of these
-same Alpines were found in western Europe as far back as
-the closing Azilian phase of the Paleolithic, where they are
-known as the Furfooz-Grenelle race and are thus contemporary
-in western Europe with the earliest Mediterraneans.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>During all the Neolithic the Alpines occupied the mountainous
-core of Europe, but their great and final expansion
-occurred at the close of the Neolithic and the beginning of
-the Bronze Period, when a new and extensive Alpine invasion
-from the region of the Armenian highlands brought in the
-Bronze culture. This last migration apparently followed the
-routes of the earlier invasions and, in the extreme southwest,
-it even reached Spain in small numbers, where its
-remnants can still be found in the Cantabrian Alps. The
-Alpines occupied all Savoy and central France, where from
-that day to this they constitute the bulk of the peasant
-population. They reached Brittany and to-day that peninsula
-is their westernmost outpost. They crossed over in
-small numbers to Britain and some even reached Ireland.
-In England they were the men of the Round Barrows, but
-nearly all trace of this invasion has vanished from the living
-population.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Alpines also reached Holland, Denmark and southwestern
-Norway and traces of their colonization in these
-countries are still found.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The author has attempted to indicate the lines of this
-Alpine expansion by means of the solid green spreading over
-central Europe and Asia Minor, with outlying dots showing
-the outer limits of the invasion. Black arrows proceeding
-from the east denote its main lines and routes. Those
-Alpines who crossed the Caucasus passed through southern
-Russia and a side wave of the same migration passed down
-the Syrian coast to Egypt and along the north coast of
-Africa, entering Italy by way of Sicily. The last African
-invasion left behind it the Giza round skulls of Egypt.
-This final Alpine expansion taught the other races of Europe,
-both Mediterranean and Nordic, the art of metallurgy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Nordics apparently originated in southern Russia,
-but long before the Bronze Period they had spread northward
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>across the Baltic into Scandinavia, where they specialized
-into the race now known as the Scandinavian or Teutonic.
-On the map the continental Nordics are indicated
-by pink and the Nordics of Scandinavia are shown in red.
-At the very end of the period covered by this map, these
-Scandinavian Nordics were beginning to return to the continent.
-The routes of these migrations and their extent are
-indicated by red arrows and circles respectively.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To sum up, this map shows the expansion from central
-Asia of the round skull Alpines across central Europe, submerging,
-in the south and west, the little, dark, long skulled
-Mediterraneans of Neolithic culture, while at the same time
-they pressed heavily upon the Nordics in the north and introduced
-Bronze culture among them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This development of the Alpines at the expense of the
-Mediterraneans had a permanent influence in western Europe,
-but in the north their impress was of a more temporary
-character. It is probable that in the first instance they
-were able to conquer the Nordics by reason of the superiority
-of bronze weapons to stone hatchets. But no sooner
-had they imparted the knowledge of the manufacture and
-use of metal weapons and tools to the Nordics than the latter
-turned on their conquerors and completely mastered them,
-as appears on the next map.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c023'><span class='sc'>The Expansion of the Pre-Teutonic Nordics, 1800–100 B. C.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c015'>The second map (Pl. II) of the series shows the shattering
-and submergence of the green Alpine area by the pink
-Nordic area. It will be noted that in Italy, Spain, France
-and Britain the solid green and the green dots have steadily
-declined and in central Europe the green has been torn
-apart and riddled in every direction by pink arrows and
-pink dots, leaving solid green only in mountainous and infertile
-districts. This submergence of the Alpines by the
-Nordics was so complete that their very existence was forgotten
-until in our own day it was discovered that the
-central core of Europe was inhabited by a short, stocky,
-round skulled race originally from Asia. To-day these Alpines are gradually recovering their influence in the world
-by sheer weight of numbers. On this map the green Alpine
-area is shown to be everywhere shrinking except in the
-countries around the Carpathians and the Dnieper River,
-where the Sarmatians and Wends are located. It was in
-this district that the Slavic-speaking Alpines were developing.
-Simultaneously with this expansion toward the west,
-south and east of the continental Nordics, the Scandinavian
-or Teutonic tribes appear on the scene in increasing numbers,
-as shown by the red area and red arrows, pressing upon and
-forcing ahead of them their kinsmen on the mainland.</p>
-
-<div id='i_268o' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_268o.jpg' alt='EXPANSION OF THE PRE-TEUTONIC NORDICS 1800–100 B.C. (generalized scheme) by Madison Grant' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>The pink arrows in Spain show the invasion of Celtic-speaking
-Nordics, closely related to the Nordic Gauls who
-a little earlier had conquered France. This same wave of
-Nordic invasion crossed the Channel and appears in the
-pink dots of Britain and Ireland, where the intruders are
-known as Goidels. These early Nordics were followed
-some centuries later by another wave of kindred peoples
-who were known as Brythons or Cymry in Britain and as
-Belgæ on the continent. These Cymric Belgæ or Brythons
-probably represented the mixed descendants of the earliest
-Teutons who crossed from Scandinavia and had adopted
-and modified the Celtic languages spoken by the continental
-Nordics. These Cymric-speaking Nordics drove before
-them the earlier Gauls in France and the Goidels in Britain,
-but their impulse westward was very likely caused by the
-oncoming rush of pure Teutons from Scandinavia and the
-Baltic coasts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Italy the pink arrows entering from the west show the
-route of the invading Gauls, who occupied the country north
-of the Apennines and made it Cisalpine Gaul, while the arrows
-entering Italy from the northeast show the earlier invasions
-of the Nordic Umbrians and Oscans, who introduced
-Aryan speech into Italy. Farther east in Greece and the
-Balkans, the pink arrows show the routes of invasion of the
-Achæans and the kindred Phrygians of Homer as well as the
-later Dorians and Cimmerians. In the region of the Caucasus,
-the routes of the invading Persians are shown and,
-north of the Caspian Sea, the line of migration of the Sacæ
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>from the grasslands of southern Russia toward the east. In
-the inset map in the upper right corner is shown the expansion
-of these Nordics into Asia, where the Sacæ and closely
-related Massagetæ occupied what is now Turkestan and
-from this centre swarmed over the mountains of Afghanistan
-into India and introduced Aryan speech among the
-swarming millions of that peninsula.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the northern part of the main map the expansion of the
-Teutonic Nordics is shown, with the Goths in the east and
-Saxons in the west of the red area, but the salient feature is
-the expansion of the pink at the expense of the green and
-the ominous growth of the red area centring around Scandinavia
-in the north.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c023'><span class='sc'>The Expansion of the Teutonic Nordics and Slavic Alpines, 100 B. C. to 1100 A. D.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c015'>This map (Pl. III) shows the yellow area greatly diminished
-in central and northern Europe, while it retains its supremacy
-in Spain and Italy as well as on the north coast of
-Africa. In the latter areas the green dots have nearly vanished
-and have been replaced by pink and red dots. In central
-Europe the green area is still more broken up and reduced
-to a minimum. In the Balkans and eastern Europe,
-however, two large centres of green, north and south of the
-Danube respectively, represent the expanding power of the
-Slavic-speaking Alpines. The pink area of the continental
-Nordics is everywhere fading and is on the point of vanishing
-as a distinctive type and of merging in the red. The
-expansion of the Teutonic Nordics from Scandinavia and
-from the north of Germany is now at its maximum and
-they are everywhere pressing through the Empire of Rome
-and laying the foundations of the modern nations of Europe.
-The Vandals have migrated from the coasts of the Baltic to
-what is now Hungary, then westward into France and
-finally, after occupying for a while southern Spain, under
-pressure of the kindred Visigoths to northern Africa, where
-they established a kingdom which is the sole example we
-have of a Teutonic state on that continent. The Visigoths
-and Suevi laid the foundations of Spain and Portugal, while
-the Franks, Burgundians and Normans transformed Gaul
-into France.</p>
-
-<div id='i_270o' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_270o.jpg' alt='EXPANSION OF THE TEUTONIC NORDICS AND SLAVIC ALPINES 100 BC–1100 AD (generalized scheme) by Madison Grant' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>Into Italy for a thousand years floods of Nordic Teutons
-crossed the Alps and settled along the Po Valley. While
-many tribes participated in these invasions, the most important
-migration was that of the Lombards, who, coming
-from the basin of the Baltic by way of the Danubian plains,
-occupied the Po Valley in force and scattered a Teutonic
-nobility throughout the peninsula. The Lombard and
-kindred strains in the north give to that portion of the
-peninsula its present predominance over the provinces south
-of the Apennines.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The conquest of the British Isles by the Teutonic and Scandinavian
-Nordics was far more complete than was their conquest
-of Spain, Italy or even northern France. When these
-Teutons arrived upon the scene, the ancient, dark Neolithics
-had very largely absorbed the early Nordic invaders, Goidels
-and Cymry alike. Floods of Saxons, of Angles and later of
-Danes, crossed the Channel and the North Sea and displaced
-the old population in Scotland and the eastern half of England,
-while Norse Vikings following in their wake occupied
-nearly all of the outlying islands and much of the coast.
-Both these later invasions, Danish and Norse, passed around
-the greater island and inundated Ireland, so that the big,
-blond or red-haired Irishman of to-day is to a large extent a
-Dane in a state of culture analogous to that of Scotland
-before the Reformation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This map shows that the vitality of Scandinavia was far
-from exhausted after sending for upward of two thousand
-years tribe after tribe across to the continent and that it
-was now producing an extraordinarily vigorous type, the
-Vikings in the west and the equally warlike and energetic
-Varangians in the east, who migrated back to the motherland
-of the Nordics and laid the foundations of modern
-Russia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While all these splendid conquests were in full swing a
-little known group of tribes was growing and spreading in
-eastern and southern Germany and in Austria-Hungary
-and occupying the lands left vacant by the Teutonic nations,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>which had invaded the Roman Empire. From this centre
-in the neighborhood of the Carpathians and in Galicia eastward
-to the head of the Dnieper River, the Wends and Sarmatians
-expanded in all directions. They were the ancestors
-of those Alpines who are to-day Slavic-speaking. From this
-obscure beginning came the bulk of the Russians and the
-South Slavs. The expansion of the Slavs is one of the most
-significant features of the Dark Ages and the author has
-attempted to indicate the centre of expansion of these
-tribes by green dots and green arrows, radiating in all directions
-from the solid green area in Europe. To sum up this
-map, the yellow area has steadily declined everywhere,
-while in western Europe the green area is now limited to
-the infertile and backward mountain regions. In eastern
-Europe, however, this same green Alpine area is showing a
-marvellous capacity for recovery, as will appear from the
-map of the races of to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The red area is widely spread and occupies the river valleys
-and the fertile lands and represents everywhere the ruling,
-military aristocracy more or less thinly scattered over
-a conquered peasantry of Mediterranean and Alpine blood.
-One phenomenon of dire import is shown on the map, where,
-coming from the districts north and east of the Caspian Sea,
-certain black arrows are seen shooting westward into Europe,
-reaching in one extreme instance as far as Châlons in France,
-where Attila nearly succeeded in destroying what remained
-of western civilization. These arrows mark respectively
-Huns, Cumans, Avars, Magyars, Bulgars and other Asiatic
-hordes, probably for the most part of Mongoloid origin and
-coming originally from central Asia far beyond the range
-of Aryan speech. These hordes of Mongoloids destroyed
-the budding culture of Russia, while at a later date kindred
-tribes under the name of Turks or Tatars flooded the Balkans
-and the valley of the Danube but these later invasions entered
-Europe from Asia Minor.</p>
-
-<div id='i_272o' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_272o.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic003'>
-<p>PRESENT DISTRIBUTION<br />OF<br />EUROPEAN RACES<br />(generalized scheme)<br />by<br />Madison Grant</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>
- <h3 class='c023'><span class='sc'>The Present Distribution of European Races</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>The preparation of the last map (Pl. IV), showing the
-present distribution of European races, was in some respects
-a more intricate task than that of the earlier maps. The
-main difficulty is that, as a result of successive migrations
-and expansions, the different races of Europe are now often
-represented by distinct classes. Numerically one type may
-be in a majority, as are the Rumanians in eastern Hungary,
-where they constitute nearly two-thirds of the population.
-At the same time this majority is of no intellectual or social
-importance, since all the professional and military classes in
-Transylvania are either Magyar or Saxon. Under the existing
-scheme of showing majorities by color these ruling minorities
-do not appear at all. In this last map the yellow is
-beginning to expand, especially in the British Isles. The
-green also is recovering somewhat in central and western
-Europe, but in the Balkans, eastern Germany, Austria
-and above all in Poland and Russia, it has largely replaced
-the former Nordic color. The pink, <em>i. e.</em>, the continental
-Nordics as a distinct type, has entirely vanished and has
-been everywhere replaced by the Teutonic red. This does
-not mean that there are no existing remnants of the continental
-Nordics, but it does mean that these remnants cannot
-now be distinguished from the all-pervading and masterful
-type of the Teutonic Nordics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In general, this last map, as compared with the earlier ones,
-although showing a steady shrinkage of the Nordic area,
-brings out clearly the manner in which it centres around the
-basins of the Baltic and the North Sea, radiating thence in
-every direction and in decreasing numbers. The menace
-of the continued expansion of the green area westward and
-northward into the red area of the Nordics is undoubtedly
-one of the causes of the present world war. This expansion
-began as far back as the fall of Rome, but only in our day and
-generation has this backward race even claimed a parity of
-strength and culture with the Master Race.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>DOCUMENTARY SUPPLEMENT</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The purpose of these notes is to meet an insistent demand
-for authorities for the statements made in the body of the
-book. As was mentioned in the Introduction, in a work of
-this compass and aim, mere lack of space forbade all but
-the barest outlines, so that often an appearance of dogmatism
-was the result.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There is a vast literature on the subjects discussed and
-to give all the references would be almost a physical impossibility.
-It is particularly difficult to name all that has appeared
-in periodicals, since they have become so numerous,
-especially during the last few years.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The author has in mind to refer only to those works which
-bear directly on the most essential statements made and,
-necessarily, to but a part of these. In many cases only books
-which are most easily available have been used. The author
-has intentionally quoted chiefly works in English, where
-these exist, and when using foreign authorities has translated
-the statements.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It must be clearly understood that the references are given
-for the facts rather than the theories they contain. In no
-case, unless specifically stated, is the author committed to
-the conclusions drawn in the works cited. In order to present
-all sides, authorities who differ in viewpoint are sometimes
-listed, the reader being left to make his own decision
-of the case.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is hoped that the references will be of assistance to students
-of anthropology and to those who care to inquire
-further into the subjects under discussion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Where an author is quoted frequently or for more than
-one book, he is referred to merely by name; the book is
-given by number immediately following. Its full title may
-be ascertained in the bibliography.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span></div>
-<div class='chapter ph2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>DOCUMENTARY SUPPLEMENT</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c014'><em>PART I</em><br /> INTRODUCTION</h3>
-
-<p class='c015'>Page xix&#160;: line 22. Immutability of somatological or
-bodily characters. Charles B. Davenport, pp. 225 <em>seq.</em> and
-252 <em>seq.</em>: William E. Castle, 1, pp. 125 <em>seq.</em>; Frederick
-Adams Woods, 3, p. 107; and Edwin G. Conklin, 1, pp. 191
-<em>seq.</em> See the note to p. 226, 7 for a quotation from Conklin
-bearing on this point.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>xix&#160;: 23. Immutability of psychical predispositions and
-impulses. See note above. Professor Irving Fisher said,
-on p. 627 of <cite>National Vitality</cite>, speaking of laws relating to
-eugenics: “What such laws might accomplish may be judged
-from the history of two criminal families, the ‘Jukes’ and
-the ‘Tribe of Ishmael.’ Out of 1,200 descendants from the
-founder of the ‘Jukes’ through 75 years, 310 were professional
-paupers&#160;... 50 were prostitutes, 7 murderers, 60
-habitual thieves, and 130 common criminals.” Certainly
-these facts were not all due entirely to identity or similarity
-of environment. On p. 675 we read: “Similarly, the ‘Tribe
-of Ishmael,’ numbering 1,692 individuals in six generations,
-has produced 121 known prostitutes and has bred hundreds
-of petty thieves, vagrants and murderers. The history of
-the tribe is a swiftly moving picture of social degeneration
-and gross parasitism extending from its seventeenth century
-convict ancestry to the present day horde of wandering and
-criminal descendants.” See R. L. Dugdale and Oscar C.
-McCulloch, pp. 154–159. For transmission of opposite tendencies
-see pp. 675–676, Fisher. The Jukes were a family of
-Dutch descent, living in an isolated valley in the mountains
-of northern New York. The Ishmaels were a family of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>central Indiana which came from Maryland through Kentucky.
-The Kalikak family is another striking instance.
-See also Davenport, 1, and the note to p. 226: 7.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>xxi&#160;: 5. Professor Charles B. Davenport says in correspondence:
-“By the way, it was Judge John Lowell who
-added ‘free and’ to the words of the Declaration in writing
-the Constitution of Massachusetts in the latter part of the
-eighteenth century.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>xxiii&#160;: 20–25. <cite>A Statistical Account of the British Empire.</cite>
-J. R. McCulloch, vol. I, pp. 400 seq.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER I. RACE AND DEMOCRACY</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>4&#160;: 6. Archbishop Ussher, 1581–1656. See the <cite>New Schaff-Herzog
-Religious Encyclopedia</cite>; also other religious encyclopedias.
-Taylor, <cite>Origin of the Aryans</cite>, p. 8.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5&#160;: 15. See Émile Faguet, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Culte de l’Incompétence</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6&#160;: 3. <em>Cf.</em> <cite>The Loyalists of Massachusetts</cite>, by James H.
-Stark.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9&#160;: 7. A good description of conditions is to be found
-in Bryce’s <cite>The Remarkable History of the Hudson’s Bay Company</cite>,
-p. 73, all of chapter XLII and elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10&#160;: 3 <em>seq.</em> Charles B. Davenport, <em>passim</em>, has discussed
-migratory instincts, see especially 1.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10&#160;: 16–17. These conditions are quaintly described in
-what is known as the <cite>Italian Relation</cite>, translated by Charlotte
-Augusta Sneyd. See especially pp. 34 and 36. The resulting
-laws may be found in Sir James Fitzjames Stephen’s <cite>History
-of the Criminal Law of England</cite>, vol. III, pp. 267 seq.;
-Pollard’s Political History of England, vol. VI, pp. 29–30;
-Green’s <cite>History of the English People</cite>, vol. II, pp. 20; and
-elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11&#160;: 3. See the note to p. 79: 15.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11&#160;: 17. See Notes to p. 218: 16.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11&#160;: 20. For a very interesting series of letters written
-from Santo Domingo in 1808 concerning conditions among
-the whites as the negro slaves were gaining the ascendancy,
-consult the anonymous <cite>Secret History, or The Horrors of
-Santo Domingo</cite>, in a series of letters written by a lady at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>Cape François to Colonel Burr (late Vice-President of the
-United States), principally during the command of General
-Rochambeau. Lothrop Stoddard, in his <cite>French Revolution
-in San Domingo</cite>, pp. 25 <em>seq.</em>, gives a vivid picture of these
-times and conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11&#160;: 24. <cite>Immigration Restriction and World Eugenics</cite>,
-Prescott Hall, pp. 125–127.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER II. THE PHYSICAL BASIS OF RACE</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>13&#160;: 7. See W. D. Matthew, <cite>Climate and Evolution</cite>; John
-C. Merriam, <cite>The Beginnings of Human History, Read from the
-Geological Record: The Emergence of Man</cite>, especially pp. 208–209
-of the first part; and Madison Grant, <cite>The Origin and
-Relationships of North American Mammals</cite>, pp. 5–7.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13&#160;: 20. Mendelism. See Edwin G. Conklin, 1, chap.
-III, C, pp. 224 <em>seq.</em>, or 2, vol. X, no. 2, pp. 170 <em>seq.</em> Also
-Punnett’s <cite>Mendelism</cite>, or the appendix to Castle’s <cite>Genetics
-and Eugenics</cite>, which is a translation of Mendel’s paper.
-Practically all late writers on heredity give Mendel’s principles.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13&#160;: 22–14&#160;: 10 For these and other statements on heredity
-see the writings of Charles B. Davenport, Frederic Adams
-Woods, G. Archdall Reid, Edwin G. Conklin, Thomas Hunt
-Morgan, E. B. Wilson, J. Arthur Thomson, William E.
-Castle, and Henry Fairfield Osborn, 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14&#160;: 10 <em>seq.</em> Blends. E. G. Conklin remarks in correspondence:
-“In so far as races interbreed, their characters
-mingle but do not blend or fuse, and come out again in all
-their purity in descendants.” See also the same authority,
-1, pp. 208, 280, 282–287.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Every now and then an observation is met with which
-corroborates this statement. The inheritance from one parent
-or the other of the shape of the skull, in a fairly pure
-form, has been noted a number of times.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fleure and James in their study of the <cite>Anthropological
-Types in Wales</cite>, p. 39, make the following observation: “It
-may be said that certain component features of head form,
-in many cases, seem to segregate more or less in Mendelian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>fashion, but this is a matter for further investigation; we
-are on safer ground in saying that the children of parents
-of different head form very frequently show a fairly complete
-resemblance to one or other parent, <em>i. e.</em>, that head form is
-frequently inherited in a fairly pure fashion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Von Luschan found still more striking evidence of this
-in his study of modern Greeks, which he describes in his
-<cite>Early Inhabitants of Western Asia</cite>. He has found that the
-children of parents of different head form inherit in quite
-strict fashion the shape of skull of one or the other parent,
-and that the population, instead of being mesaticephalic, is
-to-day as distinctly divided into two groups, dolichol- and
-brachycephalic, as in prehistoric times, in spite of the constant
-intermixture that has occurred.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14&#160;: 18. See notes to p. 13. This is a statement made
-by Dr. Davenport, in correspondence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15&#160;: 17. On the Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon types consult
-Professor Arthur Keith, 1, pp. 101–120, and 2; also Henry
-Fairfield Osborn, 1, the table on p. 23, pp. 214 <em>seq.</em>, 289 <em>seq.</em>,
-291–305 and elsewhere, and the authorities given.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the resurgence of types, see Beddoe, 4; Fleure and
-James; Giuffrida-Ruggeri; Parsons; and numerous other recent
-anthropologists.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15&#160;: 25. See the notes to p. xix of the Introduction to
-this book, and Keith, 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15&#160;: 29 <em>seq.</em> Professor G. Elliot Smith, <cite>The Ancient Egyptians</cite>,
-chap. IV, and pp. 41 <em>seq.</em> On p. 43 we read: “If we
-want to add to such sources of information and complete
-the picture of the early Egyptian&#160;... he can be found reincarnated
-in his modern descendants with surprisingly little
-change, either in physical characteristics or mode of life, to
-show for the passage of six thousand years.” On p. 44:
-“Although alien elements from north and south have been
-coming into Upper Egypt for fifty centuries, it has been a
-process of percolation, and not an overwhelming rush; the
-population has been able to assimilate the alien minority
-and retain its own distinctive features and customs with only
-slight change; and however large a proportion of the population
-has taken on hybrid traits resulting from Negro, Arab,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>or Armenoid admixture, there still remain in the Thebaid
-large numbers of its people who present features and bodily
-conformation precisely similar to those of their remote ancestors,
-the Proto-Egyptians.” See also G. Sergi, 1, p. 65,
-and 4, p. 200.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17&#160;: 5. See Franz Boas, <cite>Changes in the Bodily Form of the
-Descendants of Immigrants</cite>, pp. 9, 27, etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17&#160;: 28–18&#160;: 7. See the notes to p. 13.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18&#160;: 13. See notes to p. 14. Also Ripley, pp. 465–466 for
-a statement as to brunetness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18&#160;: 24–19&#160;: 2. E. G. Conklin, 1, pp. 454–455, and 2, especially
-vol. X, no. 1, pp. 55–58.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19&#160;: 3. Anders Retzius was the first to make use of the
-head form in anthropological study, and to give the impetus
-to the index measurement system in <cite>The Form of the Skulls
-of the Northern Peoples of Europe</cite>. See also A. C. Haddon, 1,
-chap. I, in which he discusses these traits in full, and Ripley,
-chap. III, especially pp. 55 <em>seq.</em> Modern physical anthropologists
-still agree that the skull form is a most stable and
-reliable character.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19&#160;: 25. Ripley, p. 39.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19&#160;: 27–pp. 20 and 21. Beddoe, Broca, Collignon, Livi,
-Topinard and a host of other anthropologists all affirm the
-existence of three European racial types, which Ripley has
-discussed exhaustively. Deniker alone differs from them in
-classifying the populations of Europe, from the same data,
-into six principal races and four or more sub-races. See
-Appendix D, in Ripley’s <cite>Races of Europe</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The three terms, Nordic, Alpine and Mediterranean, have
-now become quite generally accepted designations for the
-three European races. The term Nord, rather than Nordic,
-has been chosen, perhaps more wisely, by some authors.
-In the present book these names are applied with quite different
-connotations from those usually understood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It cannot be too clearly stated that in speaking of Nordics,
-the proto-type was probably quite generalized, with hair
-shades including the browns and reds. In the author’s
-opinion the blond Scandinavian represents an extreme specialization
-of Nordic characters. (See p. 167 of this book.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>20&#160;: 5–24. The term Nordic was first used by Deniker.
-The authorities for the descriptions of these races may all
-be found in Ripley. The Mediterranean race was first defined
-by Sergi, who also calls it Eurafrican. The term Alpine,
-proposed by Linnæus, was revived by DeLapouge, and
-later adopted by Ripley, since when it has come into general
-use. Sergi and Zaborowski prefer that of Eurasian. While
-this latter name does cover the requirements, since it correctly
-signifies not only the European and Asiatic range of the people
-under discussion, but also their actual relationship to
-Asiatics, it is objectionable because it implies the adoption
-of the similarly constructed term Eurafrican, which, as defined
-by Sergi, is misleading. Correct as Eurafrican may be
-for signifying the European and African range of the Mediterranean
-race, it involves an acceptance of the theory put
-forward by its sponsor, that the Mediterranean race originated
-in Africa and is closely related to the negro, both being
-long skulled peoples, descended from a common stock, the
-Eurafrican.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The chief objection to the term Mediterranean is that the
-race extends in habitat beyond the Mediterranean region,
-but the name is now so generally accepted and this fact so
-well known that misunderstandings are unlikely. The term
-Alpine, also, is not as inappropriate as it might seem, since
-the word Alps is frequently not confined to the Swiss ranges
-but extended to many other mountain chains, and Alpine,
-like the term Mediterranean, is not, at this late date, apt to
-be misunderstood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20&#160;: 24–21: 9. Von Luschan, <cite>The Early Inhabitants of
-Western Asia</cite>, pp. 221–244, and G. Elliot Smith, <cite>The Ancient
-Egyptians</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22&#160;: 10. Thomson, <cite>Heredity</cite>, p. 387; Darwin, <cite>Descent of
-Man</cite>; Boas, <cite>Modern Populations of America</cite>, p. 571.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22: 25. Haddon, 1, pp. 15 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22&#160;: 29. The same, pp. 12–14.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23&#160;: 8. Clark Wissler, in <cite>The American Indian</cite>, makes
-clear the general uniformity of American Indian types in
-chap. XVIII. See also Haddon, 1, p. 8, and Hrdlička, <cite>The
-Genesis of the American Indian</cite>, pp. 559 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>23&#160;: 13. Haddon, 1, pp. 10 and 11. There are numerous
-other references to this fact, especially in articles in various
-anthropological journals, and general works on anthropology,
-such as those of Deniker, Collignon, Martin and Ratzel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23&#160;: 16. For the differentiation of skull types in Europe
-during the Paleolithic period, see Keith, 2, the chapters on
-Pre-Neolithic, Mousterian and Neanderthal man; and 1,
-pp. 74 <em>seq.</em>; as well as Osborn, 1, who also gives the dates of
-the Paleolithic in the table on p. 18.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24&#160;: 3–5. This claim was put forth by Sergi, in his <cite>Mediterranean
-Race</cite>, pp. 252, 258–259, and was followed by Ripley
-in his <cite>Races of Europe</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24&#160;: 14. Deniker, <cite>Races of Man</cite>, pp. 48–49; Ripley, p. 465.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25&#160;: 5. Topinard, 1, 4; Collignon, 1; and Virchow, 1, p.
-325; Ripley, p. 64. Ripley says: “If the hair be light, one
-can generally be sure that the eyes will be of a corresponding
-shade. Bassanovitch,&#160;... p. 29, strikingly confirms
-this rule even for so dark a population as the Bulgarian.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25&#160;: 6. See p. 163 of this book on the Albanians.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25&#160;: 8. Ripley, pp. 75–76 and the footnote on p. 76.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25&#160;: 11. Deniker, 2, p. 51. Also Davenport, <em>passim</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25&#160;: 13. Sir Edmund Loder, in correspondence, February,
-1917, asks: “Has it been noticed at Creedmore and elsewhere
-in America that nearly all noted shots have blue eyes? It
-has been very noticeable at Wimbledon and Bisby, where it
-was quite exceptional to find a man in the front rank of
-marksmen with dark colored eyes. There was, however, one
-man who shot in my team who had very dark eyes and was
-one of the best shots of the day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25&#160;: 16. There are said to be blue eyes occasionally in
-other races, where traces of Nordic blood cannot be discovered.
-Green and blue eyes have been found among the
-Rendeli (Desert Masai), although they are otherwise normal
-negroes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25&#160;: 19. The following quotation is from Von Luschan,
-1, p. 224: “In Marmaritza near Halikarnassos, where a
-British squadron had a winter station for many years, a
-very great proportion of the children is said to be ‘flaxen-haired.’”
-According to a statement made to the author by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>Professor G. Elliot Smith on May 4, 1920, a similar nest of
-blondness is found in the Egyptian delta near Aboukir and
-is due to the fact that after the battle of the Nile the Seaforth
-Highlanders were long stationed there. At one time
-this blondness was supposed to bear some relation to the
-ancient Lybian blondness depicted on the monuments.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25&#160;: 25 <em>seq.</em> On the Berbers see Sergi, 4, pp. 59 <em>seq.</em>, and
-Topinard, 3. In regard to the Albanians, Ripley refers to
-their blondness, on p. 414, as follows: “The Albanian colonists,
-studied by Livi and Zampa in Calabria, still, after four
-centuries of Italian residence and intermixture, cling to many
-of their primitive characteristics, notably their brachycephaly
-and their relative blondness.” See also Zampa, 1,
-and Deniker, 1, for scientific discussions of their physical
-characters. Giuffrida-Ruggeri gives a summary of the most
-recent literature on Albania.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25&#160;: 29–26: 6. See Beddoe, <cite>The Races of Britain</cite>, pp. 14,
-15 and <em>passim</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26&#160;: 18. Beddoe, 4, p. 147.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em> See Ripley, pp. 399–400 for a summary of observations
-on this point. See also Darwin, <cite>Descent of Man</cite>,
-pp. 340–341 and 344 <em>seq.</em>; and Fleure and James, p. 49.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27&#160;: 14–28: 19. Haddon, 1, p. 2; also 2; Deniker, 2, chap.
-II and <em>passim</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28&#160;: 19. Davenport, <em>passim</em>; Ripley, <em>passim</em>; and any
-general book on anthropology.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28&#160;: 24–29: 17. Ripley, pp. 80, 81, 84, 108–109, 131, 132,
-252, 271, 307. Also see Davenport and Conklin, <em>passim</em>,
-and the notes to p. 18 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>30&#160;: 18–31: 8. For a very interesting discussion of this
-question see Conklin, 2, vol. IX, no. 6, pp. 492–6; Deniker,
-2, p. 18; Haddon, 2, chap. IV; and Louis R. Sullivan, <cite>The
-Growth of the Nasal Bridge in Children</cite>, are other authorities.
-Some special studies of the nose have been made by Majer
-and Koperniki, Weisbach, and Olechnowicz, for which see
-Ripley, pp. 39 4–395. Jacobs, pp. 23–62, is particularly good
-on nostrility.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>31&#160;: 9. Deniker, 2, p. 83.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>31&#160;: 13. On the shape of the foot as a racial character see
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>Rudolf Martin, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Lehrbuch der Anthropologie</span></cite>, pp. 317 <em>seq.</em>; and
-Beddoe, 4, pp. 245 <em>seq.</em>; W. K. Gregory, 2, p. 14, and John
-C. Merriam, vol. IX, pp. 202 <em>seq.</em>, have both discussed the
-evolution of the foot and the hand, and the anatomical differences
-which distinguish those of man from those of the
-apes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>31&#160;: 16. P. Topinard, 2, chap. X, and Rudolf Martin,
-pp. 367 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>32&#160;: 4. Beard lighter than head hair. Darwin, <cite>Descent
-of Man</cite>, p. 850.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>32&#160;: 8. The red-haired branch of the Nordics. On red
-hair see Beddoe, 4, pp. 3, 151–156; Fleure and James, <cite>Anthropological
-Types in Wales</cite>, pp. 118 <em>seq.</em>; Ripley, pp. 205–207,
-based on Arbo; T. Rice Holmes, <cite>Cæsar’s Conquest of Gaul</cite>,
-p. 337; and F. G. Parsons, <cite>Anthropological Observations on
-German Prisoners of War</cite>, pp. 32 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>32&#160;: 21. See notes to p. 66.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>33&#160;: 7. Haddon, 1, p. 9 <em>seq.</em>; Deniker, <cite>Races of Man</cite>;
-Ratzel, <cite>History of Mankind</cite>; etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>33&#160;: 13. Haddon, 1, p. 16 <em>seq.</em>; Deniker; Ratzel; etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>33&#160;: 23–34: 21. Haddon, 1, pp. 2 and 3, and Deniker, 2,
-pp. 42 <em>seq.</em> While this classification is substantially sound,
-and sufficient for our purpose, recent investigations have
-shown that other factors also contribute to straightness or
-kinkiness, such as coarseness of texture, as opposed to fineness.
-Probably these will be determined by Mr. Louis R.
-Sullivan, of the American Museum of Natural History, who
-is working on the subject. It has been found that the Japanese
-and Eskimo are exceptions to the rule of “straight hair,
-round cross section,” for they show an ellipse. There is also
-a wide range of variation in the cross-sections of hair for individuals
-of any race, who are classified according to the
-preponderance of cross-sections of a single type. For a fine
-series of plates which are photographs of the magnified hair
-of individuals of various races, see <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Das Haupthaar und seiner
-Bildungsstatte bei den Rassen des Menschen</span></cite>, Gustave Fritsch.
-Another recent paper is the study by Leon Augustus Hausmann
-of Cornell, “The Microscopic Structure of the Hair
-as an Aid in Race Determination.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>35&#160;: 27. Livi, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Antropometria Militare</span></i>, and Ripley, pp.
-115, 255 and 258.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>36. Deniker, 1; Zampa, 1,2; Weisbach, 1, 2, 3; and others
-given by Ripley, pp. 411–415.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER III. RACE AND HABITAT</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>37&#160;: 6. Sir G. Archdall Reid, <cite>The Principles of Heredity</cite>,
-chaps. VII, VIII, IX.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>37&#160;: 17. Ripley discusses them in full in chap. VI.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>37&#160;: 20–38&#160;: 2. W. Boyd Dawkins, <cite>Early Man in Britain</cite>,
-p. 233; Keane, <cite>Ethnology</cite>, pp. 110 <em>seq.</em>; Osborn, <cite>Men of the
-Old Stone Age</cite>, pp. 220, 479–486 <em>seq.</em>; Keith, <cite>Antiquity of
-Man</cite>, p. 16.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>38&#160;: 10. Ellsworth Huntington, 1, p. 83; Charles E.
-Woodruff, 1, pp. 85–86; also the Report of the Smithsonian
-Institution for 1891, which contains an article on “Isothermal
-Zones.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>38&#160;: 17 <em>seq.</em> Ellsworth Huntington, 1, pp. 86 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>40&#160;: 27. Ellsworth Huntington, 1, pp. 14, 27.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>41&#160;: 25–42. G. Retzius, <cite>On the So-called North European
-Race of Mankind</cite>, p. 300; and many other authorities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>43&#160;: 23. Ripley, pp. 352 <em>seq.</em> and 470.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>44&#160;: 17. G. Elliot Smith, 1, p. 61; G. Sergi, 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>44&#160;: 26. Ripley, pp. 443 and 582–583.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>45&#160;: 2. Beddoe, 4, p. 270.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER IV. THE COMPETITION OF RACES</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>47&#160;: 17. Prescott F. Hall, <cite>Immigration Restriction and
-World Eugenics</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>49&#160;: 15–51. See the <cite>Eugenics Record Office Bulletins</cite>, 10A
-and 10B, by Harry H. Laughlin, Cold Spring Harbor, Long
-Island. Part I is “The Scope of the Committee’s Work”;
-Part II, “The Legal, Legislative and Administrative Aspects
-of Sterilization.” See also H. H. Hart, <cite>Sterilization as a
-Practical Measure</cite>; and Raymond Pearl, <cite>The Sterilization of
-Degenerates</cite>; as well as <cite>The Eugenical News</cite> for April, May
-and August, 1918.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>52&#160;: 17. Sir Francis Galton, <cite>Hereditary Genius</cite>, pp. 351–359;
-Darwin, <cite>The Descent of Man</cite>, p. 218.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>53&#160;: 6. Galton, <cite>Hereditary Genius</cite>, pp. 345–346.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>55&#160;: 3 <em>seq.</em> Sir G. Archdall Reid, 2, p. 182; <cite>The Handbook
-of the American Indian</cite>, under <cite>Health and Disease</cite>; Payne,
-<cite>A History of the New World Called America</cite>; and elsewhere in
-early accounts. Also, Paul Popenoe, <cite>One Phase of Man’s
-Modern Evolution</cite>, p. 618.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER V. RACE, LANGUAGE AND NATIONALITY</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>60&#160;: 18. See the note to p. 18.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>62&#160;: 2. Ripley, <em>passim</em>; and the notes to pp. 142&#160;: 23,
-172&#160;: 22, 187&#160;: 23, 188&#160;: 15, 195&#160;: 18, 213 and 247 of this
-book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>63&#160;: 13. This absence of round skulls was universally accepted,
-but recent studies show an appreciable Alpine element
-which is increasing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>64&#160;: 2 <em>seq.</em> See pp. 201 and 203.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>64&#160;: 18. Ripley discusses the Slavs in full in chap. XIII,
-and gives the original sources for all of his information.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>65&#160;: 1. Ripley, pp. 422–428.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>65&#160;: 3. Von Luschan, 1; Ripley, pp. 406–411.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>65&#160;: 14. Ripley, pp. 361 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>66&#160;: 4. Blumenbach was the first to divide the races into
-Caucasian, Mongolian, Ethiopian, American and Malayan,
-in his <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">De Generis Humani Varietate Nativa</span></cite>, in 1775.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>66&#160;: 8–23. Ossetes. For a full description of these people
-see Zaborowski, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les peuples aryens d’Asie et d’Europe</span></cite>,
-pp. 246–272. Deniker likewise treats of them in <cite>Races of
-Man</cite>, p. 356. Minns, <cite>Scythians and Greeks</cite>, p. 37, says:
-“Klaproth first proved in 1822 that the Ossetes are the same
-as the Caucasian Alans, and this is supported by the testimony
-of the chroniclers, Russian, Georgian, Greek and
-Arab. From Ammianus Marcellinus (XXXI, II, 16–25) we
-know that at the time of the Huns’ invasion these Alans pastured
-their herds over the plains to the north of the Caucasus,
-and made raids upon the coast of the Mæotis and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>peninsula of Taman. The Huns passed through their land,
-plundering Ermanrich, the king of the Goths.... Ammianus
-means by Alans all the nomadic tribes about the Tanais
-(Don) and gives a description of their habits, borrowed from
-the account of the Scythians in Herodotus. For the first
-three centuries of our era we find these Alans mentioned
-(Pliny, <cite>N. H.</cite>, IV, 80; Dionysius Perigetes, 305, 306; Fl.
-Josephus, Bell. Jud., VII, VII, 4; Ptolemy, etc.), as neighbors
-of the Sarmatians on this side or the other of the Don, living
-the same life and counting as one of their tribes. That
-is, that the Ossetes, Jasy, Alans, Sarmatians<a id='r4'></a><a href='#f4' class='c016'><sup>[4]</sup></a> are all of one
-stock, once nomad, now confined to the valleys of the central
-chain of the Caucasus. The Ossetes are tall, well-made,
-and inclined to be fair, corresponding to the description of
-the Alans in Ammianus (XXXI, II, 21) and their Iranian
-language answers to the accounts of the Sarmatians, of
-whom Pliny says ‘<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Medorum ut ferunt soboles</span>’ (<cite>N. H.</cite>, VI,
-19).”</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. The author agrees with Zaborowski and differs from Minns in
-his belief that the Ossetes are of Nordic stock while the Sarmatians
-were Alpines.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Chantre found among the Ossetes 30 per cent of blonds.
-See Chantre, 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>66&#160;: 16. Alans. See Jordanes, <cite>History of the Goths</cite>,
-Mierow translation. Procopius, writing about 550 A. D.,
-says: “At this time the Alani and the Absagi were Christians
-and friends of the Romans of old and lived in the
-neighborhood of the Caucasus.” In his vol. III, chap. II,
-2–8, we read of the period from 395–425 A. D. “There were
-many Gothic nations in earlier times just as also at the
-present, but the greatest and most important of all are the
-Goths, Vandals, Visigoths and Gepædes. In ancient times,
-however, they were named Sauromatæ and Melanchlæni,
-and there were some too who called these nations Getic.
-All these, while they are distinguished from one another by
-their names, as has been said, do not differ in anything else
-at all. For they all have white bodies and fair hair and are
-tall and handsome to look upon, and they use the same
-laws, and practise a common religion. For they are all of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>the Arian faith and have one language called ‘Gothic.’”
-(Procopius thinks they all came originally from one tribe,
-and were distinguished later by the names of those who led
-each group of old. They dwelt north of the Danube and
-later the Gepædes took possession of the portion south of the
-river. In regard to the derivation of the Goths and other
-tribes from the Sauromatæ, compare the note on Sarmatians,
-for p. 143&#160;: 21.) As to the Goths in the Crimea see Zeuss,
-<cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Deutschen</span></cite>, pp. 432 seq.; F. Kluge, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Geschichte der götischen
-Sprache</span></cite>, pp. 515 <em>seq.</em> Crim-götisch existed as a language in
-southern Russia up to the 16th century.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>66&#160;: 23. Scythians. See the note to p. 214&#160;: 10.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>66: 24. Indo-European. The earliest known occurrence
-of this term is in an article in <cite>The Quarterly Review</cite> for 1813,
-written by Doctor Thomas Young (no. XIX, p. 225).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Indo-Germanic. This term, although said not to have
-been invented by Klaproth, was used by him as early as
-1823. See Leo Meyer, in <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Über den Ursprung der Namen
-Indo-Germanen, Semiten und Ugro-finner, Göttingergelehrte
-Nachrichten, philologisch-historische Klasse</span></cite>, 1901, pp. 454 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>67&#160;: 4. The idea of an Aryan race was first promulgated
-by Oscar Schrader in his <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Sprachvergleichung und Urgeschichte</span></cite>.
-That there was an original Aryan tongue but no Aryan race
-was the idea of Broca. Pösche identified the Aryans with
-the Reihengraber type. Consult also Penka, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Herkunft der
-Arier</span></cite> and <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Origines Ariacæ</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>67&#160;: 12. See Zaborowski, 1, pp. 1–10.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>67&#160;: 15. See the notes to p. 70: 22 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>67&#160;: 19. See the notes to p. 242: 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>68&#160;: 11. See pp. 192–193 and elsewhere, in this book.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER VI. RACE AND LANGUAGE</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>69&#160;: 10. See T. Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 185–199. The same
-thing may have happened in Britain at Cæsar’s conquest,
-and still more in the Saxon conquest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>70&#160;: 4 <em>seq.</em> See p. 206&#160;: 13 and note.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>70&#160;: 12–71: 6. These paragraphs elicited a very interesting
-letter from a British officer in Howrah, Bengal, India,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>in October, 1919. He says: “May I offer one or two remarks
-on points of detail? On p. 70 it is stated ‘The Hindu
-to-day speaks a very ancient form of Aryan language but
-there remains not one recognizable trace of the blood of the
-white conquerors who poured in through the passes of the
-Northwest,’ and again at p. 261, ‘Of all the wonderful conquests
-of the Sacæ there remain as evidence of their invasions
-only these Indian and Afghan languages. Dim
-traces of their blood, as stated before, have been found in
-the Pamirs and in Afghanistan, but in the South their blond
-traits have vanished, even from the Punjab. It may be
-that the stature of some of the Afghan hill tribes and of the
-Sikhs, and some of the facial characters of the latter, are
-derived from this source, but all blondness of skin, hair and
-eye of the original Sacæ have utterly vanished.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This hardly agrees with my own observations during two
-years’ service in the Punjab and Northwest Frontier Province.
-I should say that among the Pathans living in British
-territory about Peshawar, blond traits,—fair skin, the color
-of old ivory, red or brown hair, grey, green, or blue eyes,—are
-as common as really black hair is in Scotland; while among
-Panjabi Mussulmans living about Jhelum these traits are,
-if not common, at least not extremely rare. Judging from
-the experience of one squadron of cavalry, I should put the
-proportion of men with blond traits at not less than one
-per cent. The women, whom one does not see, must be
-fairer than the men, as elsewhere. I have seen a small Panjabi
-Mahommedan girl, from about Dera Ismail Khan with
-<em>yellow</em> hair. I have also seen a <em>Sikh</em> with <em>red</em> hair, but that
-was certainly exceptional.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“These remarks are based on what I have seen myself,
-though no statistics are kept and it is possible that I am
-generalizing from insufficient data. It would not, however,
-I think, be too much to say that ‘Blond traits are not uncommon
-in Afghanistan, and are even to be found among
-Mussulmans in the Northwestern Panjab.’ (Afghans and
-Indian Mussulmans of course sometimes dye their beards
-red, but this artificial blondness has not been confused with
-the real thing.)”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>The following quotation is from <cite>The Outlook</cite> for March
-10, 1920, which contains an article entitled “The Present
-Situation in India,” by Major-General Thomas D. Pilcher,
-of the British Army.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Beside these castes there are tribes, and the Brahmin
-from the Punjab has very little indeed in common with the
-Brahmin from Bengal or Madras. Many Pathans and
-Punjabi Mohammedans have blue eyes and are no darker
-than a southern European, whereas some of the depressed
-tribes are as black as Negroes. Many of the northern peoples
-are at least as tall as men of our own race, whereas other
-tribes do not average five feet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>70&#160;: 16. Castes. Deniker, 2, p. 403: “About 2,000 castes
-may be enumerated at the present day, but year by year
-new ones are being called into existence as a certain number
-disappear.” In his footnote Deniker says: “The so-called
-primitive division into four castes: Brahmans (priests),
-Kshatriya (soldiers), Vaisyas (husbandmen and merchants),
-and Sudra (common people, outcasts, subject peoples?),
-mentioned in the later texts of the Vedas, is rather an indication
-of the division into three principal classes of the ruling
-race as opposed, in a homogeneous whole, to the conquered
-aboriginal race (fourth caste).” He continues: “The essential
-characteristics of all castes, persisting amid every change
-of form, are endogamy within themselves and the regulation
-forbidding them to come into contact one with another and
-partake of food together.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See also Zaborowski, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les peuples aryens</span></cite>, p. 65. There is,
-of course, an enormous number of books which deal with the
-caste system of India.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>71&#160;: 7. Sir G. Archdall Reid, 2, p. 186: “If history teaches
-any lesson with clearness, it is this, that conquest, to be
-permanent, must be accompanied with extermination; otherwise,
-in the fulness of time, the natives expel or absorb the
-conquerors. The Saxon conquest of England was permanent;
-of the Norman conquest there remains scarcely a trace.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>71&#160;: 24. See pp. 217–222 and notes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>72&#160;: 4. See the notes to p. 141&#160;: 4 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>72&#160;: 19. Ripley, pp. 219–220, says: “The race question
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>in Germany came to the front some years ago under rather
-peculiar circumstances. Shortly after the Franco-Prussian
-War, De Quatrefages promulgated the theory&#160;... that the
-dominant people in Germany were not Teutons at all, but
-were directly descended from the Finns. Being nothing but
-Finns, they were to be classed with the Lapps and other
-peoples of western Russia.... Coming at a time of profound
-national humiliation in France&#160;... the book created
-a profound sensation.... A champion of the Germans
-was not hard to find. Professor Virchow of Berlin set himself
-to work to disprove the theory which thus damned the
-dominant people of the empire. The controversy, half political
-and half scientific, waxed hot at times.... One great
-benefit flowed indirectly from it all, however. The German
-government was induced to authorize the official census of
-the color of hair and eyes of the six million school children of
-the empire.... It established beyond question the differences
-in pigmentation between the North and the South of
-Germany. At the same time it showed the similarity in
-blondness between all the peoples along the Baltic. The
-Hohenzollern territory was as Teutonic in this respect as the
-Hanoverian.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>73&#160;: 6. Deniker is one of these. See his <cite>Races of Man</cite>,
-p. 334. Collignon is another. See the <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bulletin de la Société
-d’anthropologie</span></cite>, Paris, 1883, p. 463; and <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Anthropologie</span></cite>, no.
-2, for 1890.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>73&#160;: 11. See Keith, 3, p. 19; Beddoe, 4, p. 39; and Ripley,
-section on Germany.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>73&#160;: 19. Beddoe, 4, pp. 39–40; Deniker, 2, p. 339; Ripley,
-p. 294.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>74&#160;: 12. See the note to p. 198&#160;: 22.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER VII. THE EUROPEAN RACES IN COLONIES</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>76&#160;: 16. An old edition of the <cite>Encyclopædia Britannica</cite>
-states: “The pure white population [of Venezuela] is estimated
-at only one per cent of the whole, the remainder of
-the inhabitants being Negroes (originally slaves, now all free),
-Indians and mixed races (Mulattoes and Zambos).”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>The 11th edition of the <cite>Encyclopædia Britannica</cite> estimates
-the percentage of whites, the creole element (whites of European
-descent), at 10 per cent, as in Colombia, and the mixed
-races at 70 per cent, the remainder consisting of Africans,
-Indians and resident foreigners.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>76&#160;: 19. Jamaica. <cite>The New International Encyclopedia</cite>,
-1915 edition, gives as follows figures which agree with the
-1915 <cite>Statesman’s Yearbook</cite>:</p>
-
-<table class='table1'>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Year</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>White</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Colored</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Black</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Others</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c017'><span class='sc'>Total</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c024'>1861</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>13,816</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>81,065</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>346,374</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>441,255</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c024'>1871</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>13,101</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>100,346</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>392,707</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>506,154</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c024'>1881</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>14,432</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>109,946</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>444,186</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>12,240</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>580,804</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c024'>1891</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>14,692</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>121,955</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>488,624</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>14,220</td>
- <td class='brt c024'>639,491</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c024'>1911</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c024'>15,605</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c024'>163,201</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c024'>630,181</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c024'><a id='r5'></a><a href='#f5' class='c016'><sup>[5]</sup></a>22,396</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c024'>831,383</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. East Indians, 17,380; Chinese, 2,111; not stated, 2,905.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>76&#160;: 21. The 11th edition of the <cite>Encyclopædia Britannica</cite>
-gives the entire population of Mexico as 13,607,259, of which
-less than one-fifth (19 per cent) were classed as whites, 38
-per cent as Indians, and 43 per cent as mixed bloods.
-There were 57,507 foreign residents, including a few Chinese
-and Filipinos.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>78&#160;: 5. The Argentine Republic. In 1810 the population
-was approximately 250,000; in 1895, 3,955,110; in 1914,
-7,885,237. For a total of fifty-nine years in which the statistics
-have been kept, the number of immigrants from Montevideo
-is 4,711,013. They were divided by nationality as
-follows:</p>
-
-<table class='table2'>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Italians</td>
- <td class='c011'>2,259,933</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Spaniards</td>
- <td class='c011'>1,492,848</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>French</td>
- <td class='c011'>225,049</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>English</td>
- <td class='c011'>56,448</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Austrians</td>
- <td class='c011'>81,186</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Swiss</td>
- <td class='c011'>33,326</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Germans</td>
- <td class='c011'>62,329</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Belgians</td>
- <td class='c011'>23,091</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Russians</td>
- <td class='c011'>135,962</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Ottomans</td>
- <td class='c011'>121,177</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Other nationalities</td>
- <td class='c011'>189,664</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>For added information on the Argentine, see the <cite>Statistical
-Book of the Argentine Republic</cite>, 1915; <cite>Argentine Geography</cite>,
-published by Urien &amp; Colombo; and Juan Alsina’s <cite>European
-Immigration to the Argentine</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>78&#160;: 22. Philippines. The following figures were taken
-from the <cite>New International Encyclopedia</cite> and the <cite>Statesman’s
-Yearbook</cite> for 1915. The size of the population was established
-in June, 1914.</p>
-
-<table class='table2'>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Total population</td>
- <td class='c009'>8,650,937</td>
- <td class='c025'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Native-born</td>
- <td class='c009'>6,931,548</td>
- <td class='c025'>or</td>
- <td class='c011'>99.2%</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Chinese</td>
- <td class='c009'>41,035</td>
- <td class='c025'>or</td>
- <td class='c011'>0.6%</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Americans and Europeans</td>
- <td class='c009'>20,000</td>
- <td class='c025'>or</td>
- <td class='c011'>0.3%</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c026'>The natives are mostly of the Malayan race with the exception
-of 25,000 Negrito tribesmen.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>78&#160;: 24. Dutch East Indies. The figures are taken from
-the census of 1905.</p>
-
-<table class='table2'>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Total population is approximately</td>
- <td class='c011'>38,000,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Europeans</td>
- <td class='c011'>80,910</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Chinese</td>
- <td class='c011'>563,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Arabs</td>
- <td class='c011'>29,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Other Orientals</td>
- <td class='c011'>23,000</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c007'>78&#160;: 25. British India. The figures are from the census
-of 1911:</p>
-
-<table class='table2'>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Total population</td>
- <td class='c011'>315,156,396</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td class='c012' colspan='2'>(Of these 650,502 were not born in India.)</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c007'>The remainder are divided according to the languages
-spoken:</p>
-
-<table class='table2'>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>East Asiatics</td>
- <td class='c011'>4,410,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Tibeto-Chinese</td>
- <td class='c011'>12,970,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Dravidian</td>
- <td class='c011'>62,720,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Aryan</td>
- <td class='c011'>232,820,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>European</td>
- <td class='c011'>320,000</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c007'>81&#160;: 5. See Francis Parkman, <cite>The Old Régime in Canada</cite>,
-vol. II, pp. 12 and 13.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>82&#160;: 10. See Sir Harry Johnston, <cite>The Negro in the New
-World</cite>, p. 343.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>83&#160;: 8. See the <cite>Genealogical Records of the Society of the
-Colonial Wars</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>84&#160;: 6. See the notes to p. 38.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>84&#160;: 11 <em>seq.</em> A letter from Abraham C. Strite, a lawyer of
-Hagerstown, Maryland, contains additional information on
-the so-called Pennsylvania Dutch. Mr. Strite says: “They
-are not Palatine Germans, but largely Swiss who speak a
-dialect of German. The writer happens to be of this stock.
-Its characteristics are round head, black hair, dark brown
-eyes, stocky stature, brunet type, all clearly indicating, according
-to your analysis, an Alpine origin. This description
-fairly well averages up the prevailing Pennsylvania Dutch
-type of this section although there are some red heads and
-some blonds which would indicate a Nordic admixture,
-again meeting your argument. There are many other varieties
-of Teutons in this section, but I am confining my remarks
-to the class known as the Pennsylvania Dutch. I have never
-made any head measurements among them but I am of the
-opinion that the round-headed type vastly predominates.
-The ancestors of these people emigrated from southern Europe,
-mostly Switzerland, in quite some numbers between the
-years 1700 and 1775, and settled in Lancaster County, Pa.;
-from thence they have spread out over the adjoining sections
-of Pennsylvania, down through the Cumberland valley
-and into the valley of Virginia, and to-day they form an
-important element of the population. They are the organizers
-in America of the religious sect known as the Mennonites.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The early settlers of Germantown who were Mennonites,
-were of Palatine stock. Of this there can be no doubt.
-Later immigration to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, which
-constituted the bulk of the Pennsylvania Dutch stock will be
-found, I think, largely to have come from Switzerland, although
-not exclusively. Rupp’s <cite>30,000 Names of Immigrants
-to America</cite> gives the names, dates and sailings of this Mennonite
-stock. Your conclusions are correct enough for all
-practical purposes but it seemed to me that the immigrants
-from Switzerland and from the Palatinate might be distinguished.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>Doctor C. P. Noble, of Radnor, Pa., writes concerning the
-Pennsylvania Dutch: “I have seen much of them as patients
-and as I have observed them they have the medium stature
-and stocky build of the Alpines, also they have, usually,
-broad, round faces which are associated with brachycephaly
-and certainly they have always exhibited peasant traits.
-Moreover, it is unusual to find a blond among them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Doctor Jordan, of the Pennsylvania Historical Society,
-furnished Doctor Noble with some data concerning them.
-That there were some Alpine elements among them will appear
-from what follows. Doctor Jordan agreed that the
-present day Pennsylvania Germans are almost exclusively
-brunet, with stocky bodies of moderate height. Existing
-portraits of various leaders among them when they arrived
-in Pennsylvania showed the same types. Furthermore,
-Doctor Jordan’s extensive reading of early documents relating
-to them tends to confirm the belief that the present day
-descendants represent the original types. Tall blonds
-are very rare among them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Doctor Noble knows some individuals with Nordic traits,
-but these were acquired by intermarriage with Anglo-Saxons.
-Most of these groups came from southern Germany, from
-Silesia on the east to the Palatinate on the west.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The following are Doctor Jordan’s notes:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Moravians. They were located in Pennsylvania, at first
-in Bethlehem and later in Nazareth. The land in Nazareth
-was purchased of Whitfield, the predestinarian Methodist.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Moravian immigration was carefully supervised. The
-church either owned or chartered the vessels which brought
-over the immigrants. Frequently it was definitely arranged
-as to how many artisans of each trade should come over so
-that they would prosper on arrival.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Moravian immigration was small—about 500 up to
-1750. Until about 1840 the Moravian settlements were
-closed towns—no non-Moravians could buy property.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Not one quarter of the present Moravians are descendants
-of the early settlers. The rest are converts or descendants
-of converts. A connection exists between the Moravians,
-Huss and his Protestant followers, and the Waldenses. A
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>short résumé of this will be found in the <cite>Encyclopædia Britannica</cite>—under
-Huss and Moravians—from the world standpoint.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Moravians migrated from Bohemia to Saxony and were
-protected by Count Zinzendorf—a liberal Lutheran—and
-lived on his estates. He assisted in their migration to Pennsylvania.
-Some went to Georgia and later to Pennsylvania.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Schwenkfelders. These were the followers of Kaspar
-Schwenkenfeld (1490–1561). See the <cite>Encyclopædia Britannica</cite>
-for a short account. They formed a sect in Silesia
-which has persisted. In 1720 a commission of Jesuits was
-sent to convert them by force. Most of them fled into Saxony
-and were protected by Count Zinzendorf. From thence
-they migrated to Holland, England and Pennsylvania.
-Frederick the Great, when he seized Silesia, protected those
-remaining there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ursinus College, Collegeville, is Schwenkfelder. The sect
-is not large and was located in or around Montgomery County.
-Their migration to Saxony and also to Pennsylvania antedated
-that of the Moravians. Generally speaking, they have
-been much more aggressive and vigorous than the Moravians.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Dunkards, Mennonites, Amish, and Seventh Day
-Baptists (Wissahickon and Ephrata, Pennsylvania), came
-from south Germany and the Palatinate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Harmony Society, small in numbers, the Lutherans
-and German Reformed, came largely from south Germany
-and the Palatinate, but also from other parts of Germany.
-The Lutherans and the Reformed were the large sects in
-Pennsylvania.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Germans from the Hudson valley migrated to Berks County
-around Reading. The Swedes in New Jersey were almost
-exclusively below Philadelphia—from Gloucester down the
-Delaware River. Before the Revolution there were about
-30,000 Germans in Pennsylvania, out of a total estimated
-population of 100,000 to 120,000.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>84&#160;: 16. Scotch-Irish. See <cite>The Scotch-Irish in America</cite>,
-by Henry Jones Ford; and also Sir George Trevelyan on the
-Irish Protestants in chap. XI, vol. II, of <cite>George III and
-Charles Fox</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>87&#160;: 24. In this connection it is interesting to note that
-an early Egyptian king said almost the same concerning the
-negroes of his time. The quotation is taken from Hall’s
-<cite>Ancient History of the Near East</cite>, pp. 161–162, and is a translation
-of a portion of the manifesto of Senusert III, of the
-XIIth dynasty, which he caused to be set up at the time
-of the Nubian wars: “Vigor is valiant, but cowardice is vile.
-He is a coward who is vanquished on his own frontier, since
-the negro will fall prostrate at a word; answer him, and he
-retreats; if one is vigorous, he turns his back, retiring even
-when on the way to attack. Behold, these people have nothing
-terrible about them; they are feeble and insignificant;
-they have buttocks for hearts. I have seen it, even I, the
-majesty; it is no lie....”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>88&#160;: 9. Barrett Wendell, <cite>A Literary History of America</cite>,
-chap. III.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>88&#160;: 28. The belief in the approximation of the Anglo-Saxon
-in America to the Amerindian is widespread, but is
-entirely without justification, scientific or otherwise.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>89&#160;: 1. Hall, <cite>Immigration Restriction and World Eugenics</cite>,
-and especially his <cite>Immigration</cite>, pp. 107–112.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>91&#160;: 1. Hall, 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>94&#160;: 1. Beddoe, 5, p. 416. For similar conclusions see
-DeLapouge, <em>passim</em>; G. Retzius, 3; and Roese, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Beiträge zur
-Europäischen Rassenkunde</span></cite>. Fleure and James, pp. 125 and
-151–152 make similar observations.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>
- <h3 class='c023'><em>PART II</em><br /> EUROPEAN RACES IN HISTORY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER I. EOLITHIC MAN</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>97&#160;: 10. Osborn, 1, the tables on pp. 18 and 41.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>98&#160;: 15. Galton, pp. 309–310; Woods, 1, chap. XVIII.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>99&#160;: 5–10. <cite>A Statistical Study of American Men of Science</cite>,
-J. McKeen Cattell, especially <cite>Science</cite>, vol. XXXII, no. 828,
-pp. 553–555.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>99&#160;: 22. The authorities quoted by J. B. Bury in his
-<cite>History of Greece</cite> are complete and concise. In chap. I he
-discusses the Dorian conquest from p. 57 forward, and the
-Homeric-Mycenæan period (1600–1100 B. C.) from p. 20. A
-very interesting instance of the truth of the picture of Mycenæan
-culture as drawn by Homer occurs on p. 50, where
-it is stated that much described by the poet, even to small
-articles, has been unearthed during archæological investigations.
-“Although the poets who composed the Iliad and
-Odyssey probably did not live before the ninth century, they
-derived their matter from older lays.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>99&#160;: 27. Crete. For systems of Cretan writing see Sir
-Arthur J. Evans, <cite>Cretan Pictographs and Pre-Phœnician
-Script</cite>, <cite>Further Discoveries of Cretan and Ægean Script</cite>, <cite>Reports
-of Excavations at Cnossus</cite>, <cite>Prehistoric Tombs of Knossos</cite>, and
-<cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Scripta Minoa</span></cite>. That the aboriginal “Eteocretan” language
-existed until historic times is attested by the discoveries of
-later inscriptions belonging to the fifth and succeeding centuries
-B. C., which were written in Greek letters at this time
-but in the indigenous, undecipherable tongue. They are
-described by Comparetti, <cite>Mon. Ant.</cite>, III, pp. 451 <em>seq.</em>, and by
-R. S. Conway, 2, 3, especially pp. 125 <em>seq.</em>, in vol. VIII. In
-1908 another discovery was made by the Italian Mission at
-Phæstus, of a clay disk with printed hieroglyphics which did
-not belong to the Cretan system of writing. It is supposed
-to have come from Asia Minor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>For other discoveries in Crete and other authorities see
-R. M. Burrowes, C. H. and H. B. Dawes. On Cretan pottery
-see Sir Duncan Mackenzie, 2, and Sir Arthur Evans, 2.
-Sir Duncan Mackenzie also has a book on the Cretan palaces.
-Bury, in his <cite>History of Greece</cite>, pp. 9 <em>seq.</em>, gives a brief
-description of Crete as revealed by archæologists. According
-to them, the palaces of Cnossus and Phæstus were erected
-before 2100 B. C., when Cretan civilization was well advanced.
-See also the note to p. 119&#160;: 1 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>99&#160;: 28. Azilian period. See p. 115 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>100&#160;: 20 <em>seq.</em> Osborn, 1, p. 49 <em>seq.</em>, and the note VII of
-the appendix. See also the notes to p. 13 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>100&#160;: 28. Progressive dessication. Ellsworth Huntington,
-2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>101&#160;: 5. Arboreal Man. See the work of W. K. Gregory,
-especially 3, p. 277; and John C. Merriam, pp. 203 and 206–207.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>101&#160;: 12. Osborn, 1, note VII, p. 511, of the appendix;
-and Merriam, pp. 205–208.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>101&#160;: 15. J. Pilgrim, <cite>The Correlation of the Siwaliks with
-Mammal Horizons of Europe</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>101&#160;: 21. Java and the Pithecanthropus erectus. Dubois,
-E. Fischer, and particularly G. Schwalbe. For the land connection
-of Java with the mainland see Alfred Russel Wallace’s
-<cite>Island Life</cite>, and <cite>The Geography of Mammals</cite>, by W. L.
-and P. L. Sclater.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>101&#160;: 27. Gunz glaciation. See Osborn’s table of Geologic
-Time, in 1, p. 41. The date given here is that made
-by Penck.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>102&#160;: 1. W. D. Matthew, <cite>Revision of the Lower Eocene
-Primates</cite>, and W. K. Gregory, <cite>The Evolution of the Primates</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>102&#160;: 13. Schoetensack, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Der Unterkiefer des Homo Heidelbergensis
-aus den Sanden von Mauer bei Heidelberg im Beitrag
-zur Paläontologie des Menschen</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>102&#160;: 21. At the beginning of this Eolithic period wood
-was used for clubs and probably as levers along with the
-chance flints. Perhaps it was employed even earlier, but of
-course no remains would come down to us.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>
- <h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER II. PALEOLITHIC MAN</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>For the material in this chapter the authorities, such as
-Cartailhac, Boule, Breuil, Obermaier and Rutot are all
-given in Osborn, 1, together with useful discussions of the
-evidence. In special instances additional sources are inserted
-here.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>105&#160;: 17. Piltdown Man. See Charles Dawson, the discoverer,
-1, 2 and 3. There is a tremendous bibliography on
-the Piltdown Man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>106&#160;: 1. <cite>The Jaw of the Piltdown Man</cite>, Gerrit S. Miller.
-From a later paper by Mr. Miller (2) we quote the following
-from pp. 43–44:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The combined characters of the jaw, molars and skull
-were made the basis of a genus Eoanthropus, placed in the
-family Hominidæ.... While the brain case is human in
-structure, the jaw and teeth have not yet been shown to
-present any character diagnostic of man; the recognized
-features in which they resemble human jaws and teeth are
-merely those which men and apes possess in common. On
-the other hand, the symphyseal region of the jaw, the canine
-tooth and the molars are unlike those known to occur in any
-race of men.... Until the combination of a human brain
-case and nasal bones with an ape-like mandible, ape-like
-lower molars and an ape-like upper canine has actually been
-seen in one animal, the ordinary procedure of both zoology
-and paleontology would refer each set of fragments to a
-member of the family which the characters indicate. The
-name Eoanthropus dawsoni has therefore been restricted to
-the human elements of the original composite (Family Hominidæ),
-and the name Pan vetus has been proposed for the
-animal represented by the jaw (Family Pongidæ).”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See also <cite>The Dawn Man of Piltdown, England</cite>, by W. K.
-Gregory. Ray Lancaster has made some interesting observations
-and is the most recent authority on this subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>106&#160;: 14. On the Neanderthal Man see Osborn and his
-authorities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>107&#160;: 21. A note on p. 385 of Rice Holmes’s <cite>Ancient Britain</cite>
-is useful in this connection. “MM. de Quatrefages and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>Hamy affirm that the Neanderthal race has left a permanent
-imprint on the population, and refer to various skulls
-of the Neolithic and later periods which resemble more or
-less closely that of Neanderthal. Moreover, it is generally
-admitted that even at the present day a few individuals here
-and there belong to the same type. But it does not follow
-that these persons to whom Dr. Beddoe and M. Hamy refer
-were descended from men who lived in Britain in the Paleolithic
-age.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Taylor, <cite>Origin of the Aryans</cite>, mentions several famous
-men who had typical Neanderthal skulls, among them Robert
-Bruce.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>108&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em> Beddoe, 4, pp. 265–266; Ripley, pp. 326–334,
-but especially pp. 266, 330–331.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>108: 16. Alés Hrdlička, <cite>The Most Ancient Skeletal Remains
-of Man</cite>, considers the Neanderthal type extinct, as
-do Keith, <cite>Antiquity of Man</cite>, <em>passim</em>, and A. C. Haddon.
-Consult Barnard Davis, <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Thesaurus Craniorum</span></cite>, especially p.
-70, and Beddoe, 2, as well as Osborn, 1, p. 217.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>108&#160;: 18. Firbolgs. See the note above to line 1; also
-Taylor, <cite>Origin of the Aryans</cite>, p. 78.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>109&#160;: 8. Broca, according to Osborn, is responsible for
-this theory.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>109&#160;: 17 <em>seq.</em> See pp. 329 <em>seq.</em> of Galton’s <cite>Hereditary Genius</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>110&#160;: 8. In Dordogne, France, there are people who look
-as it is thought the Cro-Magnons did. These modern people
-may belong to that type in the same way that here and there
-people resembling the Neanderthals are still found. In
-Dordogne these Cro-Magnon features are quite common,
-and differ markedly from those of other Frenchmen. For
-studies of this type see Collignon, 1. For full discussions of
-the ancient Cro-Magnons see Keith, 1 and 2, and Osborn, 1.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>110&#160;: 11. Dr. Charles B. Davenport, in correspondence,
-remarks: “There can be no doubt that the prolific shall inherit
-the earth or the proletariat shall inherit the earth, which
-is etymologically the same thing. We see this law in action
-in Russia to-day.... Can we build a wall high enough
-around this country, so as to keep out these cheaper races,
-or will it be only a feeble dam which will make the flood all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>the worse when it breaks? Or should we admit the four
-million picks and shovels which many of our capitalists are
-urging Congress to admit in order to secure what wealth we
-can for the moment, leaving it for our descendants to abandon
-the country to the blacks, browns and yellows, and seek
-an asylum in New Zealand? I am inclined to think that the
-thing to do is to make better selection of immigrants, admitting
-them in fairly large numbers so long as we can sift out
-the defective strains.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>111&#160;: 20 <em>seq.</em> É. Cartailhac says, in <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La France préhistorique</span></cite>:
-“The race of Cro-Magnon is well determined. There
-is no doubt about their high stature and Topinard is not the
-only one who believes that they were blonds.” See also G.
-Retzius, 3. But he derives the Nordics from them. On
-the other hand, the Dordogne people to-day are dark, and
-many anthropologists are inclined to the belief that the
-Cro-Magnons were brunets, a theory in which the writer
-heartily concurs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>112&#160;: 1. L’Abbé H. Breuil, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les subdivisions du paléolithique
-supérieur et leur signification</span></cite>, pp. 203–205. Other writers
-such as Nilsson and Dawkins have also held this theory.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>112&#160;: 21. One of the few references to the bare possibility
-of a Magdalenian dog occurs in Obermaier’s <cite><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">El Hombre
-Fósil</span></cite>, the footnote on pp. 221 and 223. From this it appears
-that certain conclusions are drawn that if the Alpera
-paintings are of late Magdalenian age, if certain nondescript
-animals in those paintings are intended for dogs and if
-those dogs are meant to be in a state of domestication, then
-there can be no doubt whatever that the dog was domesticated
-in Magdalenian times. But Obermaier does not feel
-that this furnishes satisfactory proof.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>112&#160;: 25–p. 113. Bow and Arrow. Obermaier, 1, chap.
-V, <cite>The Upper Paleolithic</cite>, p. 112, says: “The coarse stone
-implements of the lower Paleolithic no longer exist, being
-replaced by an industry of very fine flints and&#160;... certain
-lances with points made of bone, horn or ivory, which were
-very generally used. The use of the bow is proved by certain
-representations in mural pictures (<em>i. e.</em>, the Archers of
-Alpera, etc., eastern Spain, Magdalenian; Archer of Laussel,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>France, Aurignacian).” See the corresponding plates in
-chap. VII.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On p. 217 of chap. VII, <cite>Quaternary Art</cite>, there is a man
-depicted in the pose of an archer. On p. 239 Obermaier
-says: “Among&#160;... [the paintings of Alpera] are sketches
-of more than 70 human figures,&#160;... 13 are shown in the
-act of shooting an arrow at other men or animals.”<a id='r6'></a><a href='#f6' class='c016'><sup>[6]</sup></a> On
-p. 241 he continues: “The paintings of eastern Spain of
-Quaternary age also show archers.” A recent letter from
-the Abbé Henri Breuil says that the bow and arrow did not
-exist in France in Paleolithic times, and he is, of course,
-aware of the Laussel figure found by Lalanne and referred
-to by Obermaier as proof. Alpera is agreed by Obermaier
-to be of Tardenoisian age, consequently of the transition
-period to the Neolithic. Beside Alpera, the only other instance
-of pictured bows and arrows noted occurs at Calpatá,
-said to be of Upper Paleolithic age and Capsian industry.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. If the Alpera paintings are of this (Magdalenian?) period, then
-the bow certainly existed at this time, but there is reason to believe
-that the paintings belong to a later epoch.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>See Fig. 174, p. 353, of Osborn, 1, giving a large bison drawing
-in the cavern of Niaux on the Ariège, showing the supposed
-spear or arrowheads, attached to large shafts, which
-are represented as having pierced its side. On p. 354 Osborn
-says: “It is possible, although not probable, that the
-bow was introduced at this time and that a less perfect flint
-point, fastened to a shaft like an arrowhead, and projected
-with great velocity and accuracy, proved to be far more
-effective than the spear.... From these drawings and
-symbols (Fig. 174), it would appear that barbed weapons of
-some kind were used in the chase, but no barbed flints occur
-at any time in the Paleolithic, nor has any trace been found
-of bone barbed arrowheads, or any direct evidence of the
-existence of the bow.” On p. 410: “Here [Cavern of Niaux]
-for the first time are revealed the early Magdalenian methods
-of hunting the bison, for upon their flanks are clearly traced
-one or more arrow or spear heads with the shafts still attached;
-the most positive proof of the use of the arrow is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>the apparent termination of the wooden shaft in the feathers
-which are rudely represented in three of the drawings.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>113&#160;: 3. Osborn, p. 456: “The flint industry [of the Azilian]
-continues the degeneration begun in the Magdalenian
-and exhibits a new life and impulse only in the fashioning of
-extremely small or microlithic tools and weapons known as
-‘Tardenoisian.’” See also pp. 465–475 for a more complete
-discussion and their distribution as traced by de Mortillet.
-Also Breuil, 2, pp. 2–6, and 3, pp. 165–238, but especially
-pp. 232–233.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Osborn continues, p. 450: “If it is true&#160;... that Europe
-at the same time became more densely forested, the chase
-may have become more difficult and the Cro-Magnons may
-have begun to depend more and more upon the life of the
-streams and the art of fishing. It is generally agreed that
-the harpoons were chiefly used for fishing, and that many
-of the microlithic flints, which now begin to appear more
-abundantly, may have been attached to a shaft for the
-same purpose. We know that similar microliths were used
-as arrowpoints in pre-dynastic Egypt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The microliths may have been used on darts for bird
-hunting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>113&#160;: 21. See Osborn, pp. 333 <em>seq.</em>, and in this book the
-note to p. 143&#160;: 13 on the Tripolje culture.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>115&#160;: 9. Compare what Rice Holmes has to say on pp.
-99–100 of his <cite>Ancient Britain</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>117&#160;: 18. Maglemose. This culture was first found and
-described by G. F. L. Sarauw, in a work entitled <cite><span lang="da" xml:lang="da">En Stenolden
-Boplads: Maglemose ved Mullerup</span></cite>. The same material is
-given in “Trouvaille fait dans le nord de l’Europe datant
-de la période de l’hiatus,” in the <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Congrès préhistorique de
-France</span></cite>. A site equivalent to the Maglemose in culture, but
-discovered later, is described in “Une trouvaille de l’ancien
-âge de la pierre” (Braband), by MM. Thomsen and Jessen.
-See also Obermaier, 2, pp. 467–469.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>117&#160;: 23. The Abbé Breuil, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les peintures rupestres d’Espagne</span></cite>
-(with Serrano Gomez and Cabre Aguilo), IV, “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les
-Abris del Bosque à Alpéra (Albacete)</span>” says: “Other peoples
-known at present only from their industries, were advancing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>toward the close of the Upper Paleolithic along the northern
-and southern shores of the Baltic and persisted for an appreciable
-time before the arrival of the tribes introducing the
-early Neolithic-Campignian culture which accumulated in the
-Kitchen Middens along the same shores. Like the southern
-races of the Azilian-Tardenoisian times these northerly tribes
-were truly Pre-Neolithic, ignorant of both agriculture and
-pottery; they brought with them no domesticated animals
-excepting the dog, which is known at Mugem, at Tourasse
-and at Oban, in northwestern Scotland.”</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER III. THE NEOLITHIC AND BRONZE AGES</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>119: 1. See the Osborn tables. As evidence of far earlier
-dates of the Neolithic in the east we may quote Sir A. J.
-Evans, 2, p. 721. He calculates that the earliest settlement
-at Knossos in Crete, which was <cite>Neolithic</cite>, is about 12,000
-years old, for he assumes that in the western court of the
-palace the average rate of deposit was fairly continuous.
-Professor Montelius, in <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Anthropologie</span></cite>, t. XVII, p. 137,
-argues from the stratigraphy of finds at Susa that the beginning
-of the Neolithic Age in the east may be dated about
-18,000 B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>119: 6. See the note to p. 147.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>119: 15. Balkh. Balkh, in Afghanistan, was the capital
-of Bactria, the ancient name of the country between the
-range of the Hindu Kush and the Oxus, and is now for the
-most part a mass of ruins, situated on the right bank of the
-Balkh River. The antiquity and greatness of the place are
-recognized by the native populations who speak of it as the
-“Mother of Cities,” and it is certain that at a very early
-date it was the rival of Ecbatana, Nineveh, and Babylon.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bactria was subjugated by Cyrus and from then on formed
-one of the satrapies of the Persian Empire. Zaborowski, 1,
-p. 43, says: “After the conquests of Alexander there was
-founded a Greco-Bactrian kingdom&#160;... which embraced
-Sogdiana, Bactria and Afghanistan. The Greco-Bactrian
-kings struck a quantity of coins. They bore a double legend,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>the one Greek, the other still called Bactrian, which is not
-Zend, nor even the language really spoken in Bactria. It is
-a popular dialect derived from Sanskrit.” Again on p. 185:
-“Zend has been called, and is still called, Bactrian or Old
-Bactrian, it may be because Bactria has been conceived as
-the original country or an ancient place of sojourn of the
-Persians; it may be because Zoroaster, a Median Magus, had,
-according to a legend, fled to the Bactrians where he found
-protection under Prince Vishtaspa. Eulogy of this prince
-is often incorporated in the sayings of Zoroaster.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Later a new race appeared, tribes called Scythians by
-the Greeks, amongst which the Tochari, identical with the
-Yuë-Chih of the Chinese, were the most important. According
-to Chinese sources, they entered Sogdiana in 159
-B. C.; in 139 they conquered Bactria, and during the next
-generation they had made an end to the Greek rule in eastern
-Iran. In the middle of the first century B. C. the whole of
-eastern Iran and western India belonged to the great “Indo-Scythian”
-Empire. In the third century the Kushan dynasty
-began to decline; about 320 A. D. the Gupta Empire was
-founded in India. In the fifth the Ephtalites, or “White
-Huns,” subjugated Bactria; then the Turks, about A. D.
-560, overran the country north of the Oxus. In 1220 Jenghis
-Khan sacked Balkh and levelled all buildings capable of defence,
-while Timur repeated this treatment in the fourteenth
-century. Notwithstanding this, Marco Polo could still, in
-the following century, describe it as “a noble city and a
-great.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See also Raphael Pumpelly, <cite>Explorations in Turkestan</cite>,
-where 10,000 years is said to be the age of the remains of
-early civilization. More modern authorities, however, do
-not accept these ancient dates.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>119: 21. Osborn, 1, p. 479.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>120: 1 <em>seq.</em> Osborn, 1, pp. 493–495; Ripley, pp. 486–487,
-and also S. Reinach, 3, and G. Sergi, 2, pp. 199–220.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>120: 28 <em>seq.</em> Oman, <cite>England before the Norman Conquest</cite>,
-pp. 642 <em>seq.</em>, says: “The position which he [Harold] chose is
-that where the road from London to Hastings emerges from
-the forest, on the ground named Senlac, where the village of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>Rattle now stands.... This hill formed the battleground....
-On reaching the lower slopes of the English position
-the archers began to let fly their shafts, and not without effect,
-for as long as the shooting was at long range, there was
-little reply, since Harold had but few bowmen in his ranks,
-(the Fyrd, it is said, came to the fight with no defensive
-weapons but the shield, and were ill-equipped, with javelins
-and instruments of husbandry turned to warlike uses), and
-the abattis, whatever its length or height, would not give
-complete protection to the English. But when the advance
-reached closer quarters, it was met with a furious hail of
-missiles of all sorts—darts, lances, casting axes, and stone
-clubs such as William of Poictiers describes, and the Bayeux
-Tapestry portrays—rude weapons, more appropriate to the
-neolithic age.... Many a moral has been drawn from
-this great fight.... Neither desperate courage, nor numbers
-that must have been at least equal to those of the invader,
-could save from defeat an army which was composed
-in too great a proportion of untrained troops, and which was
-behind the times in its organization.... But the English
-stood by the customs of their ancestors, and, a few years
-before, Earl Ralph’s attempt to make the thegnhood learn
-cavalry tactics (see the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle), had been
-met by sullen resistance and had no effect.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>121&#160;: 4. See the note top. 128&#160;: 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>121&#160;: 15. F. Keller, <cite>The Lake-Dwellings of Switzerland and
-Other Parts of Europe</cite>; Schenck, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La Suisse préhistorique</span></cite>, pp.
-533–549; G. and A. de Mortillet, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Préhistorique</span></cite>, part 3,
-and Munro, <cite>The Lake Dwellings of Europe</cite>. The lake-dwelling,
-known as Pont de la Thièle, between the lakes of Bienne
-and Neuchâtel, according to Grilliéron’s calculations, is
-dated 5000 B. C. See Keller, p. 462; Lyell, Antiquity of
-Man, p. 29; Avebury, <cite>Prehistoric Times</cite>, p. 401; and De Mortillet,
-<cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Préhistorique</span></cite>, p. 621.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>121&#160;: 17. Schenck, p. 190, says concerning Switzerland:
-“There were three [cultural] stages, stone, bronze, and iron....
-On the other hand, from the anthropological point of
-view, this subdivision can also be made. In the first stage
-[Neolithic Lacustrian], we find only brachycephalic crania;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>in the second there are an almost equal number of brachycephalic
-and dolichocephalic; in the third there is a predominance
-of dolichocephalic” (that is, Schenck divides the
-Neolithic into three periods according to skulls, and the
-last runs into the age transitionary to bronze).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See also G. Hervé, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les populations lacustres</span></cite>, p. 140; His
-and Rütimeyer, <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Crania Helvetica</span></cite>, pp. 12, 34, etc.; and the
-note on p. 275 of Rice Holmes’s <cite>Cæsar’s Conquest of Gaul</cite>.
-Ripley gives useful and concise discussions on pp. 120, 471,
-488 and 501.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>121&#160;: 19. See both Keller and Schenck for the numbers of
-dwellings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>121&#160;: 22. <em>There were, of course, the caves and rock shelters
-used during a large part of the year, but probably no other
-regularly constructed dwellings served as permanent, all-the-year-round
-places of abode prior to the lake dwellings, and it is
-doubtful if these were inhabited in winter. It is generally believed
-that the custom of building pile villages arose from considerations
-of safety. This protection would be absent when
-the lakes were frozen over, and at the same time the huts would
-be exposed on all sides, including the floor, to the wintry blasts
-sweeping the lakes. They would in this way be rendered practically
-uninhabitable during the winter season.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Keller declares that the same type of dwelling is found
-in the whole circle of countries which were formerly Celtic.
-(Introduction, p. 2.) The Crannoges of Scotland and Ireland
-continued in use until the age of iron in those countries. In
-Switzerland the lake dwellings disappeared about the first
-century (p. 7). The population was numerous (p. 432),
-large enough to have to depend upon cattle and agriculture
-(p. 479).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This type of dwelling is found from Ireland to Japan, and
-even in South America. Many lake dwellings exist at the
-present day. The Welsh, Scotch and Irish Crannoges are
-related in structure to the European fascine types (Keller,
-p. 684 and Introduction). Others are built somewhat differently,
-and are, of course, of independent origin. An ancient
-site was unearthed at Finsbury, on the outskirts of
-London not long since, where there used to be a marsh.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>The inhabitants of this lake-dwelling were native outcasts
-during Romano-British times.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>121&#160;: 26. See Schenck, and Keller, p. 6. On p. 140 of
-Keller we read: “The Pile Dwellings of eastern Switzerland
-ceased to exist before the bronze age or at its beginnings;
-those of western Switzerland came to their full development
-during this period.” On p. 37, describing the settlement of
-Mooseedorfsee Keller says: “A very striking circumstance
-ought to be mentioned, namely, that even heavy implements,
-such as stone chisels, grinding or sharpening stones, etc.,
-were found quite high in the relic bed, while lighter objects,
-such as those made out of bone, were met with much deeper.”
-It is known that the Mooseedorfsee settlement is very old.
-No metal has been found here, but a bone arrowhead is
-described by Keller on p. 38. He remarks that the bones of
-very large animals were uncommonly numerous. It seems
-as if the earlier inhabitants were users of bone rather than
-of stone implements.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>122&#160;: 1. Herodotus, V, 16 describes them. He also is the
-source of our information regarding the keeping of cattle,
-although archæological finds have proved the location of
-stables out on the platforms between the houses. His interesting
-account is given herewith: “Their manner of
-living is the following. Platforms supported upon tall piles
-stand in the middle of the lake, which are approached from
-land by a single narrow bridge. At the first the piles which
-bear up the platforms were fixed in their place by the whole
-body of the citizens, but since that time the custom which
-has prevailed about fixing them is this: they are brought
-from a hill called Orbêlus, and every man drives in three for
-each wife that he marries. Now the men all have many
-wives apiece; and this is the way in which they live. Each
-has his own hut, wherein he dwells, upon one of the platforms,
-and each has also a trap door giving access to the lake beneath;
-and their wont is to tie their baby children by the
-foot with a string, to save them from rolling into the water.
-They feed their horses and their other beasts upon fish,
-which abound in the lake to such a degree that a man has
-only to open his trap door and to let down a basket by a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>rope into the water and then to wait a very short time,
-when he draws it up quite full of them. The fish are of two
-kinds, which they call the paprax and the tilon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>122&#160;: 3. In the Introduction, p. 2, and elsewhere Keller
-says regarding cattle: “Cattle were kept, not on land, as in
-the Terramara region, but on the platforms themselves,
-out in the lakes. Many charred remains of stables and
-stable refuse have been taken from the lakes, but only from
-certain parts of the sites, between those of the houses.”
-See also Schenck, p. 188.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rice Holmes, pp. 89–90 of <cite>Ancient Britain</cite>, says of that
-country that agriculture was limited in the Neolithic, but
-flourished in the Bronze Age.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>122&#160;: 14. The Terramara Period. Keller, pp. 378 <em>seq.</em>
-As related to Switzerland, pp. 391, 393. For swamp and
-river bank sites, pp. 391, 397 <em>seq.</em> For bronze in Terramara
-settlements, p. 386. For the Upper Robenhausian, see
-Schenck, p. 190, and Montelius, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La civilisation primitive en
-Italie</span></cite>. Peet, <cite>The Stone and Bronze Ages in Italy</cite>, and Munro,
-<cite>The Lake Dwellings of Europe</cite> and <cite>Palæolithic Man and the
-Terramara Settlements</cite> must also be read in this connection.
-Schwerz, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Völkerschaften der Schweiz</span></cite>, gives, for the average
-cranial indices of the Lake Dwellers, 79 during the Stone
-Age, 75.5 in the Copper Age, and 77 in the Bronze Age. Of
-these last 14 per cent only were brachycephalic, 20 per
-cent were extremely long-headed. In the Iron Age 46
-per cent were brachycephalic. Consult also Deniker, 2,
-p. 316.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>122&#160;: 21. Ripley, pp. 502–503; Sergi, 2; Robert Munro, 2;
-Peet, 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>122&#160;: 27–123: 4. See the note to p. 117&#160;: 18.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>123&#160;: 5. On the Kitchen Middens, see especially Madsen,
-Sophus Müller and others in <cite><span lang="da" xml:lang="da">Affaldsdynger fra Stenaldern i
-Danmark</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>123&#160;: 12. Salomon Reinach, 3 and 5; Deniker, 2, p. 314;
-and Peake, 2, p. 156, where we find the following: “Over the
-greater part of Sweden,—all, in fact, except a strip of coastline
-on the western side of Scania,—and all along the shore of
-the Baltic from the Gulf of Bothnia southwards and westwards
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>as far as a point midway between the Vistula and the
-Oder, there are found abundant remains of a primitive civilization
-which dates from the Neolithic Age, and indeed, from
-early in that age. This civilization, known as the East
-Scandinavian or Arctic culture, extended, perhaps later, over
-the whole of Norway.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Consult the notes to pp. 125: 4 <em>seq.</em> for western trade.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>123&#160;: 20. Sergi, 4; Beddoe, 4, pp. 26, 29; Fleure and James,
-pp. 122 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>123&#160;: 23. Paleolithic Population. Fleure and James,
-<cite>Anthropological Types in Wales</cite>, p. 120. Rice Holmes, <cite>Ancient
-Britain</cite>, p. 380, says they were confined to the South.
-No Paleolithic implements were found north of Lincoln, or
-at least of the East Riding of Yorkshire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>123&#160;: 26. John Munro, <cite>The Story of the British Race</cite>, p.
-45; Rice Holmes, <cite>Ancient Britain</cite>, p. 68; and Fleure and
-James, pp. 40, 69–74, 122 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>124&#160;: 4. For the Alpines see pp. 134 <em>seq.</em> of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>124&#160;: 9. Consult the note to p. 143 on this subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>124&#160;: 15. On the Nordics see pp. 167 <em>seq.</em> and 213 <em>seq.</em>
-On the Scandinavian blonds see the note to p. 20&#160;: 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>124&#160;: 20. See the notes to pp. 168 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>125&#160;: 1. G. Elliot Smith, <cite>The Ancient Egyptians</cite>, especially
-pp. 146 and 149 <em>seq.</em>; Breasted, 1, 2 and 3; Keane, <cite>Ethnology</cite>,
-pp. 72 <em>seq.</em>; Sophus Müller, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Europe préhistorique</span></cite>, p. 49;
-Hall, <cite>Ancient History of the Near East</cite>, p. 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>125&#160;: 4. Deniker, 2, pp. 314–315: “The great trade route
-for amber, and perhaps tin, between Denmark and the
-Archipelago is well known at the present day; it passes
-through the valley of the Elbe, the Moldau and the Danube.
-The commercial relations between the north and the south
-explain the similarities which archæologists find between
-Scandinavian bronze objects and those of the Ægean district.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See also E. H. Minns, <cite>Scythians and Greeks</cite>, for trade in
-the East, via the Vistula, Dnieper and Danube, pp. 438–446,
-458, 459, 465, 493, etc.; and Déchellette, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Manuel d’Archéologie</span></cite>,
-t. I, p. 626, and II, p. 19. Herodotus IV, 33, gives the
-trade route from the Hyperboreans to Delos. Félix Sartiaux,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span><cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Troie, La Guerre de Troie</span></cite>, pp. 162, 181, also discusses
-the trade routes for amber.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>125&#160;: 7. Amber. Tacitus, <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Germania</span></cite>: “They [the tribes
-of the Æstii] ransack the sea also and are the only people
-who gather in the shallows and on the shore itself the amber
-which they call in their tongue ‘glæsum.’ Nor have they,
-being barbarians, inquired or learned what substance or
-process produces it; nay, it lay there long among the rest of
-the flotsam and jetsam of the sea, until Roman luxury gave
-it a name. To the natives it is useless; it is gathered crude,
-it is forwarded to Rome unshaped; they are astonished to
-be paid for it. Yet you may infer that it is the exudation
-of trees: certain creeping and even winged creatures are continually
-found embedded; they have been entangled in its
-liquid form and as the material hardens, are imprisoned. I
-should suppose, therefore, that, just as in the secluded places
-of the East, where frankincense and balsam are exuded, so
-in the islands and lands of the West, there are groves and
-glades more than ordinarily luxuriant,” etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Amber, if rubbed, has magnetic qualities and develops electricity.
-Our word “electricity” is derived from its Greek
-name, “electron.” Tacitus says: “If you try the qualities
-of amber by setting fire to it, it kindles like a torch and soon
-dissolves into something like pitch and resin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>125&#160;: 13. Gowland, <cite>Metals in Antiquity</cite>, pp. 236, 252 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>125&#160;: 15 <em>seq.</em> Copper. Reisner’s opinion that the pre-dynastic
-Egyptians invented the use of copper (<cite>Naga-ed-Dêr</cite>,
-I, p. 134) which is followed by Elliot Smith (<cite>Ancient
-Egyptians</cite>, p. 3), is not the view held by all scholars. Hall
-believes that the knowledge of the use of metal came to the
-prehistoric southern Egyptians (<cite>Ancient History of the Near
-East</cite>, p. 90), toward the end of the pre-dynastic age from
-the north. But he counts the Mount Sinai and Cyprus deposits
-as northern centres of origin from which a knowledge
-of the working of the metal radiated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The mines of the Sinaitic peninsula were worked for copper
-at the time of Seneferu, about 3733 B. C., and probably
-much earlier (Gowland, p. 245, and elsewhere), “but long
-before the actual mining operations were carried on, how
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>long it is impossible to say, the metal must have been obtained
-by primitive methods from the surface ore. It is
-hence not unreasonable to assume that at least as early as
-about 5000 B. C. the metal copper was known and in use in
-Egypt.” The same writer believes “that an earlier date
-than 5000 B. C. should be assigned to the first use of copper
-in the Chaldean region.” In this he bases himself on the
-discovery of copper figures associated with bricks and tablets
-bearing the name of King Ur-Nina (about 4500 B. C.), and
-the fact that the upper Tigris region is known to contain
-rich deposits of the mineral. Jastrow, Jr., assigns the date
-of 3000 B. C. to Ur-Nina, which may be more correct.
-Gowland dates copper in Cyprus at 2500 B. C., or even 3000,
-judging by the finds at Crete dated 2500 B. C. In the Troad
-he thinks it was used not later than in Cyprus. For China
-the date is unknown, but if we accept 2205, given in the
-Chinese annals as the time when the nine bronze caldrons
-were cast, which are often mentioned in the historical records,
-then copper may have been in use as early as 3000, or even
-earlier. De Morgan dates copper at 4400 B. C. in Egypt,
-where it was found in the supposed tomb of Menes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See also Lord Avebury, <cite>Prehistoric Times</cite>, pp. 71–72, who
-gives 3730 for copper-working in Sinai, and its first appearance
-about 5000 B. C. Montelius, 1, p. 380, gives copper in
-Cyprus as about 2500 B. C., hardly 3000; and for Egypt
-5000; he regards it as having been known in Babylon at
-about the same time. Breasted, <cite>Ancient Times</cite>, assigns the
-date of the earliest copper as at least 4000 in Egypt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>125&#160;: 27. Eduard Meyer, 1, p. 41. But <em>cf.</em> Reisner, <cite>Naga-ed-Dêr</cite>,
-I, p. 126, note 3. Also Hall, <cite>Ancient History of the
-Near East</cite>, p. 28.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>126&#160;: 1. Elliot Smith, 1, p. 8: “Most serious scholars who
-concern themselves with the problems of the ancient history
-of Egypt and Babylonia have now abandoned these inflated
-estimates of the lengths of the historical periods in
-the two empires; and it is now generally admitted that
-Meyer’s estimate of 3400±100 B. C. is a close approximation
-to the date of the union of Upper and Lower Egypt
-and that the blending of Semitic and Sumerian cultures in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>Babylonia took place shortly after the time of this event in
-the Nile valley.” See also Hall, <cite>Ancient History of the Near
-East</cite>, p. 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>126&#160;: 7. Bronze. Rice Holmes, 1, p. 125: “The oldest
-piece of bronze that has yet been dated was found at Medûm,
-in Egypt, and is supposed to have been cast about 3700 B. C.
-But the metal may have been worked even earlier in other
-lands; for a bronze statuette and a bronze vase, which were
-made twenty-five centuries before our era have been obtained
-from Mesopotamia and the craft must have passed
-through many stages before such objects could have been
-produced. Yet it would be rash to infer that either the
-Babylonians or the Egyptians invented bronze for neither
-in Egypt nor in Babylonia is there any tin. The old theory
-that it was a result of Phœnician commerce with Britain has
-long been abandoned and British bronze implements are
-so different from those of Norway and Sweden, Denmark and
-Hungary, that it cannot have been derived from any of these
-countries. German influence was felt at a comparatively
-late period, but from first to last British bronze culture was
-closely connected with that of Gaul and through Gaul with
-that of Italy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>126&#160;: 9. Gowland, p. 243: “It has been frequently stated
-that the alloy used by the men of the Bronze Age generally
-consists of copper and tin in the proportions of 9 to 1. I
-have hence compared the analyses which have been published
-with the following results:</p>
-
-<table class='table2'>
- <tr><th class='c012' colspan='3'>EARLY WEAPONS AND IMPLEMENTS. 57 ANALYSES</th></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>In</td>
- <td class='c009'>25</td>
- <td class='c027'>the tin ranges from about 8 to 11 per cent.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>„</td>
- <td class='c009'>6</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;11&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;13&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>„</td>
- <td class='c009'>26</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;3&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;8&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><th class='c012' colspan='3'>LATER PALSTAVES AND SOCKETED AXES. 15 ANALYSES</th></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>In</td>
- <td class='c009'>13</td>
- <td class='c027'>the tin ranges from about 4.3 to 13.1 per cent.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>„</td>
- <td class='c009'>2</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;was about 18.3 per cent.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><th class='c012' colspan='3'>SPEAR AND LANCE HEADS</th></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>In</td>
- <td class='c009'>5</td>
- <td class='c027'>the tin ranges from about 11.3 to 15.7 per cent.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'><span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><th class='c012' colspan='3'>STILL LATER. SWORDS. 33 ANALYSES</th></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>In</td>
- <td class='c009'>14</td>
- <td class='c027'>the tin ranges from about 8 to 11 per cent.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>„</td>
- <td class='c009'>12</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;12&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;18&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c025'>„</td>
- <td class='c009'>7</td>
- <td class='c027'>&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;„&#8196;&#8196;is less than 9 per cent.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is obvious, therefore, that these statements do not accurately
-represent the facts. And if we consider the different
-uses to which the implements or weapons were put, it is
-evident that no single alloy could be equally suitable for
-all.... It is worthy of note that these proportions (<em>i. e.</em>,
-different hardnesses for different implements) appear to have
-been frequently attained, and for this the men of the later
-Bronze Age are deserving of great credit as metallurgists and
-workers in metal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the percentages of tin with copper for bronze see also
-Montelius, 1, pp. 448 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>126&#160;: 12. Schenck, p. 241, describes a copper axe exactly
-like those of polished stone, and another of bronze, of very
-primitive pattern, showing that these were copied from the
-earlier stone models.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Some authorities think that iron, in Egypt at least, came
-in about the same time as bronze, or even earlier. Certain
-peoples missed altogether one or another of these stages, as
-the absence of remains indicates. For instance, the central
-Africans had, as far as is known, no bronze age, but passed
-directly from the use of stone to that of iron. (See Rice
-Holmes, <cite>Ancient Britain</cite>, p. 123.) See the notes to p. 129
-on the value of iron. Occasional implements of any material
-better than that ordinarily in use, which had been introduced
-by trade or acquired by fighting, were very highly
-prized. Any books on primitive peoples contain references
-to the value of such “foreign tools.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>126&#160;: 24. Diodorus Siculus, V. Consult <cite>Crania Britannica</cite>,
-by Davis and Thurnam, the chapter on the “Historical
-Ethnology of Britain,” for evidence that the Phœnicians did
-have intercourse with Britain. For a full discussion of this
-disputed question see pp. 483–514 in Rice Holmes’s <cite>Ancient
-Britain</cite>. Herodotus and other early writers allude to the
-fleets of the Phœnicians, and of course the voyage of Pythias
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>about the last half of the fourth century B. C. was undertaken
-to discover the source of the Phœnician tin. See
-Holmes’s <cite>Britain</cite>, pp. 217–226; D’Arbois de Jubainville, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les
-premiers habitants de l’Europe</span></cite>, vol. I, chap. V; Hall, <cite>Ancient
-History of the Near East</cite>, pp. 158, 402–403; and G. Elliot Smith,
-<cite>Ancient Mariners</cite>, on the Phœnicians.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On pp. 251–252 of <cite>Ancient Britain</cite>, Rice Holmes makes the
-suggestion that the export of tin from Britain may have died
-down by Roman times.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>127&#160;: 9 <em>seq.</em> G. Elliot Smith, 1, p. 178, and map 3. Deniker,
-2, p. 315, says: “It is generally admitted that the ancient
-Bronze Age corresponds with the ‘Ægean Civilization’ which
-flourished among the peoples inhabiting, between the thirtieth
-and twentieth centuries B. C., Switzerland, the north
-of Italy, the basin of the Danube, the Balkan peninsula, a
-part of Anatolia, and lastly, Cyprus. It gave rise, between
-1700 and 1100 B. C., to the ‘Mycenæan Civilization,’ of
-which the favorite ornamental design is the spiral.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Myers, in <cite>Ancient History</cite>, pp. 134–135, states that in Crete
-the metal development began as early, at least, as 3000
-B. C., and was at its height in the island about 1600 or 1500
-B. C. Articles of Cretan handiwork found in Egypt point
-to intercourse with that country as early as the sixth dynasty,
-which he makes about 2500 B. C. See also G. Elliot Smith,
-1, pp. 147, 179–180, and the authorities quoted on bronze.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>127&#160;: 26–128&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em> G. Elliot Smith, 1, pp. 178–180.
-Rice Holmes, 1, p. 123, gives in a footnote the sixth dynasty
-as about 3200 B. C. (<em>cf.</em> above), when Elliot Smith says the
-movement first began (<em>ibid.</em>, pp. 169, 171). They do not
-agree on the date of this dynasty. See also Rice Holmes
-(<em>ibid.</em>, p. 125), and Breasted, 3, p. 108. Montelius assigns
-2100 B. C. for the small copper daggers of northern Italy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>128&#160;: 2. The Eneolithic period. G. Elliot Smith, 1, pp.
-20 <em>seq.</em>, 37 and 163 <em>seq.</em> Professor Orsi is responsible for the
-introduction of this term. See T. E. Peet, <cite>The Stone and
-Bronze Ages in Italy</cite>, and G. Sergi, <cite><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Italia</span></cite>, pp. 240 <em>seq.</em>, on the
-Eneolithic period in Italy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>128&#160;: 13. Oscar Montelius, <cite>The Civilization of Sweden in
-Heathen Times</cite>, and <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Kulturgeschichte Schwedens von den ältesten
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>Zeiten</span></cite>; Sophus Müller, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Nordische Alterthumskunde</span></cite>. The
-latter gives 1200 B. C. See also Rice Holmes, 1, pp. 64, 127,
-424–454; Beddoe, 4, p. 15; Haddon, 3, p. 41. According to
-Gjerset, in his <cite>History of the Norwegian People</cite>, the Bronze
-Age in Norway began about 1500 B. C., the Iron Age at
-500 B. C. Lord Avebury, pp. 71–72; Read, <cite>Guide to the Antiquities
-of the Bronze Age</cite>; and Deniker, 2, p. 315, give 1800
-B. C. for Britain, and for northern Europe Avebury assigns
-2500 B. C. 1800 is the generally accepted date for the beginning
-of the Bronze Age in Britain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>128&#160;: 16. Alpines in Ireland. Beddoe, 4, p. 15; Fleure
-and James, pp. 128–129, 135, 139; Rice Holmes, 1, p. 432;
-Ripley, pp. 302–303; Abercromby, pp. 111 <em>seq.</em>; Crawford, pp.
-184 <em>seq.</em> But Fleure and James say, p. 138, that other Alpines
-without brow ridges are to be found at the present
-time in considerable numbers on the east coast of Ireland.
-Ripley’s strong assertion that no Alpines have remained in
-the British Isles has been proved by more recent study to
-require modification.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>128&#160;: 17. See in this connection Fleure and James, p. 127.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>128&#160;: 26. <em>Cf.</em> Elliot Smith, 1, pp. 20–21, 163, 181; Peet,
-2; Reisner, <cite>Early Dynastic Cemeteries of Naga-ed-Dêr</cite>; and
-Rice Holmes, 1, p. 65 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>129&#160;: 2–8. The megaliths were not erected by Alpines,
-for there are practically none in central Europe, according
-to Keane, <cite>Ethnology</cite>, pp. 135–136, and Dr. Robert Munro, in
-a discussion published in the <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, 1889–1890,
-p. 65. On the other hand, Peet, 1, pp. 39, 64, says
-they are being discovered in the interior—a few in Germany.
-He does not mention bronze among the finds in the
-megaliths of France, but there was a little gold. Bronze was,
-however, found in Spain. Consult Fleure and James, pp.
-128 <em>seq.</em>; Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 8–9; and, for an exhaustive archæological
-study, Déchellette, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Manuel d’archéologie</span></cite>, vol. I,
-chap. III, especially paragraph v, pp. 393 <em>seq.</em>, for dolmens in
-Brittany. Concerning the contents of these we may quote
-the following:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Polished hatchets, often enough of rare stone, beads from
-necklaces, and pendants of Callais or of divers materials,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>implements of flint, knives, arrow points which are wing-shaped,
-scrapers, nodules, grinding stones, pottery, vases,
-grains of baked earth, some rare jewels of gold, collars and
-bracelets, such is, in general, the composition of the contents
-of the neolithic dolmens of Brittany, contents different,
-as we shall see, from those of the sepulchres of the Bronze
-Age in the same region. These vast Armorican crypts belong
-certainly to the end of the Neolithic period, in spite of
-the absence of copper, the habitual forerunner of bronze objects.
-The smallness of the crypt, the size of the tumulus,
-the mixture of construction in huge blocks and in walls seem
-to indicate, as M. Cartailhac has observed, a more recent
-age than that of ordinary dolmens. In the pure Bronze
-Age the monolithic supports are replaced by the walls of
-unmortared stones.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Moreover, we shall see that there have been found in
-certain covered alleys in Brittany, pottery of a very characteristic
-type called calciform vases, pottery belonging in
-the south of France and southern Europe with the first objects
-of copper and bronze. Jewels of gold confirm, on the
-other hand, these chronological determinations.” On p.
-397: “The dolmen sepulchres of the Bronze Age in Brittany,
-and notably in Finisterre, are distinguished more often by
-the type of their construction from those of the Stone Age.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The dolmens of Normandy and Isle de France contain
-some stone objects, fragments of vases, and numerous debris
-of human skeletons.” The end of the pure Neolithic is the
-date of the megaliths in Armorica, as we read on p. 407.
-The first metals, imported from the south, penetrated into
-northern Gaul a little later than in the southern provinces.
-That is why certain typical objects of the end of the pure
-Neolithic in Armorica, such as Callais and the calciform
-vases, are associated with the first objects of copper or bronze
-in the funerary crypts of Provence and Portugal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>G. Elliot Smith and W. H. R. Rivers claim that there is a
-close connection throughout the eastern hemisphere between
-the distribution of megalithic monuments and either ocean
-or fresh-water pearls, but this appears to the author to be
-far-fetched. Two very recent articles dealing with megaliths
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>are “Anthropology and Our Older Histories,” by Fleure
-and Winstanley, and “The Menhirs of Madagascar,” by
-A. L. Lewis.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>129&#160;: 8. Rice Holmes, <cite>Cæsar’s Conquest of Gaul</cite>, p. 9.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>129&#160;: 12. Earliest iron in the north. See the notes to
-pp. 131&#160;: 1 and 131&#160;: 9 on the La Tène period. Also Montelius,
-2, and Sophus Müller, 2, pp. 145 and 165 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>129&#160;: 13. Mound burials among the Vikings. Montelius,
-2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>129&#160;: 15. Iron in Egypt. Some authorities think that
-iron in Egypt came in about the same time as bronze, or
-even earlier. A piece of worked iron was found in the Great
-Pyramid, to which a date of about 3500 B. C. has been assigned.
-But, according to the archæological investigations
-of Professor Flinders Petrie, iron came into general use only
-about 800 B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Myres, in <cite>The Dawn of History</cite>, is quoted from p. 60 for
-the following neat summary, although any of the authorities
-on Egypt, such as Petrie, Maspero, Hall, Breasted, Elliot
-Smith, Reisner, Meyer, etc., should be consulted as original
-investigators: “The presence of iron, rare though it is, as
-far back as the first dynasty, puts Egypt into a position
-which is unique among metal-using lands; for, apart from
-these rare, but quite indisputable finds, Egypt remains for
-thousands of years a bronze-using, and for long, a merely
-copper-using, country.... In Egypt iron was known as
-a rarity, worn as a charm and an ornament, and even used,
-when it could be gotten ready made, as an implement;
-and it does not seem to have been worked in the country,
-and probably its source was unknown to the Egyptians.
-In historic times they still called it the ‘metal of heaven’ as
-if they obtained it from meteorites; and it looks at present
-as though their earliest knowledge of it was from the south;
-for central Africa seems to have had no bronze age but direct
-and ancient transition from stone to iron weapons. Yet
-when they conquered Syria in the sixteenth century, they
-found it in regular use and received it in tribute. At home,
-however, they had no real introduction to an ‘Age of Iron’
-until they met an Assyrian army in 668 B. C. and began to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>be exploited by Greeks from over sea.” In this connection
-see also Ridgeway, <cite>The Early Age of Greece</cite>, pp. 613–614.
-The same author, pp. 154 <em>seq.</em>, discusses the value of iron in
-these early times.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Deniker, p. 315 of his <cite>Races of Man</cite>, says Italy had iron
-as early as 1200 B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Montelius assigns 1100 for iron in Etruria.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>129&#160;: 19. Hallstatt iron culture. See Baron von Sacken,
-<cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Das Grabfeld von Hallstatt</span></cite>; Dr. Moritz Hoernes, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Hallstattperiode</span></cite>;
-Bertrand and Salomon Reinach, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Celts dans les
-vallées du Pô et du Danube</span></cite>; and Ridgeway, <cite>The Early Age of
-Greece</cite>, pp. 407–480 and 594 <em>seq.</em> There is a brief summary
-by Ridgeway which it will serve to quote: “Everywhere
-else the change from iron weapons to bronze is immediate
-but at Hallstatt iron is seen gradually superseding bronze,
-first for ornament, then for edging cutting implements, then
-replacing fully the old bronze types and finally taking new
-forms of its own. There can be no doubt that the use of
-iron first developed in the Hallstatt area and that thence it
-spread southwards into Italy, Greece, the Ægean, Egypt and
-Asia, and northwards and westwards in Europe. At Noreia,
-which gave its name to Noricum, less than forty miles from
-Hallstatt, were the most famous iron mines of antiquity,
-which produced the Noric swords so prized and dreaded by
-the Romans. (See Pliny, <cite>Hist. Nat.</cite>, XXXIV, 145; Horace,
-<cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Epod.</span></cite>, 17&#160;: 71.) This iron needed no tempering and the
-Celts had found it ready smelted by nature just as the Eskimos
-had learned of themselves to use telluric iron embedded
-in basalt.... The Hallstatt culture is that of the Homeric
-Achæans (see Ridgeway, <cite>Early Age of Greece</cite>, pp. 407 <em>seq.</em>),
-but as the brooch (along with iron, cremation of the dead,
-the round shield and the geometric ornament), passed down
-into Greece from central Europe, and as brooches are found
-in the lower town at Mycenæ, 1350 B. C., they must have
-been invented long before that date in central Europe. But
-as they are found here in the late bronze and early iron age,
-the early iron culture of Hallstatt must have originated long
-before 1350 B. C., a conclusion in accordance with the absence
-of silver at Hallstatt itself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>Keller, p. 160, describes an iron sword modelled after the
-same pattern as those of bronze; Schenck, p. 341, mentions
-a copper axe exactly like those of stone, and another of bronze
-of very primitive pattern. These and numerous other examples
-show the gradual growth of each age.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The generally accepted date for Hallstatt is about 900 or
-1000 B. C. Even Rice Holmes approves of this. (See 2,
-p. 9.) But if we believe that iron spread from Hallstatt,
-and it was in Etruria at 1200–1100 B. C., and in Greece, in
-the form of swords like those of Hallstatt, at 1400 B. C.
-(according to Ridgeway), together with pins and various
-other objects which originated in the Tyrol, it is certainly
-very conservative to place the appearance of iron in Austria
-at 1500 B. C. Iron weapons were found in the remains
-of Troy from the war of 1184 B. C. See Ridgeway,
-<em>op. cit.</em>, and Lartiaux, p. 179.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We may quote from Hoernes as follows regarding the dates:
-“The temporal limits of the Hallstatt period are uncertain,
-according to the districts which one includes and the phenomena
-which one considers. It is now known that the Hallstatt
-relics for the most part belong to the first half of the
-last millennium B. C. But while some assign these relics as
-from the time of perhaps 1200 to perhaps 500, others are
-satisfied with the period from 900 to 400, or bring them even
-farther forward. It is certain that one must differentiate in
-these questions between the west and the east of the Hallstatt
-culture areas; in the one the particular Hallstatt forms
-would come nearer to the close than in the other. One or
-perhaps more centuries lie between the first appearance of
-the La Tène forms in Western Germany and in the eastern
-Alps. Also the beginning varies according to the locality
-and the criteria which one takes for a guide, that is to say,
-according to whether the phenomena of the time about 1000
-B. C. are considered as belonging still in the pure Bronze
-Age, to a transition period, or indeed to the first Iron Age.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>129&#160;: 26. Ridgeway, speaking of the Achæans, says:
-“They brought with them iron which they used for their
-long swords and cutting implements.... The culture of
-the Homeric Achæans” (these are dated about 1000 B. C.,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>about the time of the Dorians, according to Bury, p. 57)
-“corresponds to a large extent with that of the early Iron
-Age of the Upper Danube (Hallstatt) and to the early Iron
-Age of Upper Italy (Villanova).”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Myres, <cite>Dawn of History</cite>, p. 175, says that there was a
-gradual introduction of iron, first for tools and then for
-weapons. It had been known as “precious metal” in the
-Ægean since the late Minoan third period, or even the late
-Minoan second period, which is usually dated with the
-XVIIIth Egyptian dynasty as about 1500–1350. Most other
-writers, however, including Bury, p. 57, Myers, <cite>Anc. Hist.</cite>,
-p. 136, and Deniker, <cite>Races of Man</cite>, p. 315, ascribe the general
-use of iron to a much later invasion, namely that of the
-Dorians, about 1100 B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>129&#160;: 29. Iron swords of the Nordics. Ridgeway, 1, pp.
-407 <em>seq.</em>: “Their chief weapon was a long iron sword; with
-trenchant strokes delivered by these long swords the Celts
-had dealt destruction to their foes on many a field. They
-used not the thrust, as did the Greeks and Romans of the
-classical period. This is put beyond doubt by Polybius
-(II, 30) who in his account of the great defeat suffered by
-the combined tribes of Transalpine Gæsatæ, Insubres, Boii
-and Taurisci, when they invaded Italy in 225 B. C., tells us
-that the Romans had the advantage in arms ‘for the Gallic
-sword can only deliver a cut but cannot thrust.’ Again in
-his account of the great victory gained over the Insubres
-by the Romans in 223 B. C., the same historian tells us that
-the defeat of the Celts was due to the fact that their long
-iron swords easily bent, and could only give one downward
-cut with any effect, but that after this the edges got so
-turned and the blades so bent, that unless they had time to
-straighten them out with the foot against the ground, they
-could not deliver a second blow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“‘When the Celts had rendered their swords useless by
-the first blows delivered on the spears the Romans closed
-with them and rendered them quite helpless by preventing
-them from raising their hands to strike with their swords,
-which is their peculiar and only stroke, because their blade
-has no point. The Romans, on the contrary, having excellent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>points to their swords, used them not to cut but to thrust;
-and by thus repeatedly smiting the breasts and faces of the
-enemy, they eventually killed the greater number of them.’
-(II, 33 and III.)”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Further evidence in support of our contention that iron
-was in use much earlier than is generally admitted, comes
-from an unexpected quarter. J. N. Svoronos, in a recent
-book on ancient Greek coinage, entitled <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Hellénism primitif
-de la Macédoine, prouvé par la numismatique</span></cite>, p. 171, remarks:
-“In the first place, indeed, it is forgotten that some of this
-information, that which is derived from people of ‘mythical’
-times, can be referred not only to the invention of the first
-money struck in precious metal (gold, electrum, or silver),
-but even to obelisks of iron, or to cast plinths in the form of
-copper axes, which, of a determined weight, and legally
-guaranteed by the state, constituted, already before the
-XVth century, as we positively know at the present time, the
-first legal money.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>130&#160;: 2. Keary, <cite>The Vikings in Western Christendom</cite>,
-chap. XIII; Steenstrup, <cite><span lang="nb" xml:lang="nb">Normannerne</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>130&#160;: 4. “Furor Normanorum.” On account of the suffering
-inflicted by the Vikings and other northern raiders in
-Europe, a special prayer, <cite>A furore Normanorum libera nos</cite>
-was inserted in some of the litanies of the West.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>130&#160;: 5. Rome was sacked by Alaric in 410 A. D., and
-during the forty years following the German tribes seized
-the greater part of the Roman provinces and established in
-them what are known as the Barbarian Kingdoms. Consult
-Villari, <cite>The Barbarian Invasions of Italy</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>130&#160;: 8 <em>seq.</em> See chap. XIII, pp. 242 <em>seq.</em>, of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>130&#160;: 13 <em>seq.</em> Ripley, pp. 125–126. The discovery of the
-Alpine type was the work of Von Baer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>130&#160;: 24. The Iron Age in western Europe. Deniker, 2,
-p. 315, says: “So also, according to Montelius, the introduction
-of iron dates only from the fifth or third century B. C.
-in Sweden, while Italy was acquainted with this metal as
-far back as the twelfth century B. C. The civilization of
-the ‘iron age,’ distributed over two periods, according to
-the excavations made in the stations of Hallstatt (Austria)
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>and La Tène (Switzerland), must have been imported from
-central Europe into Greece through Illyria. The importation
-corresponds perhaps with the Dorian invasion of the
-Peloponnesus.... The Hallstattian civilization flourished
-chiefly in Carinthia, southern Germany, Switzerland, Bohemia,
-Silesia, Bosnia, the southeast of France and southern
-Italy (the pre-Etruscan age of Montelius). The period which
-followed, called the second, or iron age or the La Tène period,
-was prolonged until the first century B. C. in France, Bohemia
-and England. In Scandinavian countries the <em>first
-iron age</em> lasted until the sixth century, and the <em>second iron
-age</em> until the tenth century A. D.” Referring to the La Tène
-period in a footnote, Deniker says: “This term, first used in
-Germany, is accepted by almost all men of science. The
-La Tène period corresponds pretty nearly with the ‘<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Âge
-Marmien</span>’ of French archæologists and the ‘Late Celtic’ of
-English archæologists. <em>Cf.</em> M. Hoernes, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Urgeschichte d.
-Mensch.</span></cite>, chapters VIII and IX.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rice Holmes, 1, p. 231, remarks: “Iron in Britain is hardly
-older than 500 B. C. (<em>i. e.</em> the earliest products of the British
-iron age were traded in. See p. 229). In Gaul the Hallstatt
-period is believed to have lasted from about 800 to about
-400 B. C.” On p. 126: “It is certain that in the southeastern
-districts iron tools began to be used not later than
-the fourth century B. C.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See also Sir John Evans, <cite>Ancient Bronze Implements</cite>, pp.
-470–472. Consult especially Déchellette, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Manuel d’archéologie</span></cite>,
-t. II, pp. 152 <em>seq.</em>, on iron in western Gaul during the
-La Tène period.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>130&#160;: 28. La Tène Period. M. Wavre and P. Vouga,
-<cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Extrait du Musée neuchatelois</span></cite>, p. 7; V. Gross, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La Tène, un
-oppidum helvète</span></cite>; E. Vouga, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Helvètes à La Tène</span></cite>; and F.
-Keller, <cite>The Lake Dwellings of Switzerland</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>131&#160;: 3. Montelius suggests this date. Lord Avebury,
-in <cite>Prehistoric Times</cite>, even goes so far as to suggest 1000 B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>131&#160;: 5. Rice Holmes, 2, the footnote to p. 9; Déchellette,
-<cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Manuel d’archéologie</span></cite>, t. II, p. 552.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>131&#160;: 9. La Tène culture and the Nordic Cymry. This
-is also in Britain termed the “Late Celtic period.” See Rice
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>Holmes, 2, p. 318. For the expansion of the Celtic empire
-and La Tène see Jean Bruhnes, p. 779. G. Dottin, in his
-<cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Manuel celtique</span></cite>, devotes a whole chapter to the Celtic empire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Cymry. See the note to p. 174&#160;: 22 of this book. As to
-the Nordic characters of these people, see Rice Holmes, 1,
-P. 234.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>131&#160;: 12. Nordic Gauls and Goidels as users of bronze.
-Rice Holmes, 1, pp. 126, 229, and elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>131&#160;: 15. Haddon, <cite>Wanderings of People</cite>, p. 49.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>131&#160;: 19. S. Feist, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Europa im Lichte der Vorgeschichte</span></cite>,
-p. 9, etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>131&#160;: 23. Tacitus, <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Germania</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>131&#160;: 26. Tacitus, <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Germania</span></cite>, 4: “Personally I associate
-myself with the opinion of those who hold that in the peoples
-of Germany there has been given to the world a race untainted
-by intermarriage with other races, a peculiar people
-and pure, like no one but themselves; whence it comes that
-their physique, in spite of their vast numbers, is identical;—fierce
-blue eyes, red hair, tall frames,” etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See Beddoe, 4, pp. 81–82; Fleure and James, pp. 122, 126,
-151–152; and Ripley, <em>passim</em>, for remarks on the increasing
-brunetness of Britain and other parts of Europe which were
-formerly more blond.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The recent article by Parsons entitled “Anthropological
-Observations on German Prisoners of War,” contains an interesting
-reference, on p. 26, to the resurgence of Alpine
-types in central Europe.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER IV. THE ALPINE RACE</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>134&#160;: 1. There seem to have been at least three distinct
-types of Alpines, one with a broad head and developed occiput
-typical of western Europe, a second with a flat occiput
-and a high crown, represented by such peoples as the Armenoids
-of Asia Minor, and a third, of which little notice has
-been taken, except by such men as Zaborowski (2) and
-Fleure and James, pp. 137 <em>seq.</em> This third type is encountered
-here and there in nests which “stretch at least from
-southern Italy to Ireland, by way of the Straits of Gibraltar
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>and across France by the dolmen line.” Fleure and James
-may be quoted for the following discussion. “Questions
-naturally arise as to the homologies of this type, and its distribution
-beyond the line here mentioned. If we had the
-type in Britain, by itself, we should be inclined to connect
-it with the general population of Central Europe, the dark,
-broad-headed Alpine type. We should, however, retain a
-little hesitation about this, as our type is sometimes of extraordinary
-strength of build and, while often fairly short,
-it is occasionally outstandingly tall; moreover, the hair is
-frequently quite black, and this is not on the whole an
-Alpine character. But, when we note the coastal distribution
-of this type, our hesitation is much increased, for the
-Alpine type has spread typically along the mountain flanks
-and its characteristic rarity in Britain is evidence of how
-little it has followed the sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We cannot but wonder also whether what Deniker calls
-the Atlanto-Mediterranean type is not a result of averaging
-these dark broad-heads with the true Mediterranean type.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Seeking further distributional evidence, we find that the
-dark broad-heads are highly characteristic of Dalmatia and
-may be an old-established stock, but it would appear that
-this region is famous for the height of the heads there, and
-our type is not specially high-headed. Broad-head brunets
-do, however, occur farther east in Asia Minor, the Ægean,
-and Crete, for example. Many are certainly hypsicephalic,
-but in others it seems that the brow and head are moderate
-and the forehead rather rectangular, as in our type....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is interesting that there should be evidence of our dark
-broad-heads beyond the Irish end of the line now discussed,
-the line of intercourse which Déchellette thinks must be older
-than the Bronze Age. The chief evidences for the type beyond
-Ireland are:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“1. Ripley (p. 309) shows that a dark, broad-headed element
-is present in Shetland, West Caithness, and East
-Sutherland. This is sometimes called the Old Black
-Breed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“2. Arbo finds the coast and external openings of the
-more southerly Norwegian fjords have a broad-headed population,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>whereas the inner ends of the fjords and the interior
-are more dolichocephalic. The broad-heads stretch from
-Trondhjemsfjord southward, and from their exclusively
-coastwise distribution he supposes them to have come across
-from the British Isles.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The population is darker than the rest of Norway and
-its area of distribution, as Dr. Stuart Mackintosh has kindly
-pointed out to us, is, like that of the same type in the British
-Isles, characterized by a pelagic climate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Von Luschan has fully discussed the Armenoid type in
-his <cite>Early Inhabitants of Western Asia</cite>, and with E. Petersen,
-in <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Reisen in Lykien, Milyas, und Kibyratis</span></cite>. A special study
-was made by Chantre in his <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Recherches anthropologiques dans
-l’Asie occidentale</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first type, then, the western European, has a short,
-thick stature, round head, and rather light pigmentation;
-the second, Armenoid, a rather tall stature, square, high
-head, flat occiput, and dark pigmentation. The third, the
-Old Black Breed, is rather small and dark.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In addition to these we have a fourth type, which has been
-called the Bronze Age race, or, better, the Beaker Maker
-type (Borreby). This has been discussed by Greenwell and
-Rolleston, Beddoe, and Keith, especially as to their possible
-survivors at the present day; by Abercromby, in <cite>Bronze Age
-Pottery</cite>; by Crawford, <cite>The Distribution of Early Bronze Age
-Settlements in Britain</cite>; and by Peake, in a discussion of the
-last work in the same number of the <cite>Geographical Journal</cite>.
-Fleure and James describe it also. See the note to p. 138&#160;: 1
-of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Further anthropological studies may simplify the problem
-somewhat, but the author is now inclined to believe
-that the above-mentioned third brachycephalic type, the
-“Old Black Breed,” represents the survivors of the earliest
-waves of the round-head invasion—in Britain antedating the
-arrival of the Neolithic Mediterraneans, while the first type
-mentioned above represents the descendants of the last
-great Alpine expansion. This type in southern Germany
-has been so thoroughly Nordicized in pigmentation that these
-blond South Germans are sometimes discussed as though
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>they were a distinct Alpine subspecies. The type is scantily
-represented in England, and when found may be partly attributed
-to ecclesiastics and other retainers brought over
-by the Normans.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The second of the above types, the Armenoids, are virtually
-absent from Europe, and seem to be characteristic of eastern
-Anatolia and the immediately adjacent regions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The author regards the fourth, Borreby or Beaker Maker
-type of tall, round heads as distinct from the three preceding
-types. The distribution of their remains would indicate
-they entered Britain from the northeast. We
-have no clew as to their origin. A similar type is found in
-the so-called Dinaric race of Deniker (which Fleure and James
-mention in connection with the third type but hesitate to
-class with it), which extends from the Tyrol along the mountainous
-east coast of the Adriatic into Albania. Further
-study of the Tripolje culture (see note to p. 143&#160;: 15) and the
-mixture of population north of the Carpathians, where the
-early Nordics and early Alpines came in contact, may throw
-light on this question, as well as upon the problem of the
-acquisition of Aryan languages by the Alpines.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All these four round skulled types seem to have been of
-West Asiatic origin, but their relationship to each other and
-to the true Mongols of central Asia is as yet undetermined.
-One thing is certain, that the Alpine Slavs north and east of
-the Carpathians, and, to a less degree, the inhabitants of
-Hungary and Bulgaria, have in their midst a very considerable
-Mongoloid element, which has entered Europe since the
-beginning of our era.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>134&#160;: 12 <em>seq.</em> For further characters of the Alpines see
-Ripley, pp. 123–128, 416 <em>seq.</em>, and p. 139 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>135&#160;: 1. Haddon, <cite>Races of Man</cite>, pp. 15–16; Deniker,
-<cite>Races of Man</cite>, pp. 325–326.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>135&#160;: 14 <em>seq.</em> Zaborowski, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les peuples aryens</span></cite>, p. 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>135&#160;: 17. See the authorities given in Ripley; for the
-Würtembergers, pp. 233–234; for Bavaria and Austria, p.
-228; for Switzerland, pp. 282–286; and for the Tyrolese, p.
-102.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>135&#160;: 22. Beddoe, 4, chap. VI, is particularly good on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>physical anthropology of the Swiss, while His and Rütimeyer,
-<cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Crania Helvetica</span></cite>, are classic authorities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>135&#160;: 23. <cite>The Historical Geography of Europe</cite>, by Freeman;
-and Beddoe, 4, pp. 75 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>135&#160;: 25 <em>seq.</em> Beddoe, 4, p. 81, says: “As Switzerland,
-especially its central region, was for ages the great recruiting
-ground of mercenary soldiers, it is probable that the tall,
-blond, long-headed element would emigrate at a more rapid
-rate than the brown, short-headed one. In this way may
-also be accounted for the apparent decline in the stature of
-the modern Swiss, who certainly do not, as a rule, now justify
-the descriptions given of their huge physical development
-in earlier days, the days of halberds, morgensterns and two-handed
-swords.” These mercenaries were Teutonic, but their
-Celtic predecessors were addicted to the same habit as G.
-Dottin has shown on p. 257 of his <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Manuel Celtique</span></cite>: “When
-the Celts could not battle on their own account or against
-their neighbors, they offered their services for the price of
-silver to foreign kings. There is hardly a country that was
-not overrun with Celtic mercenaries, nor struggles in which
-they had not taken part. As far back as 368 B. C. an army
-sent by Denys, the Ancient, to Corinth to aid the Spartiates,
-was in part formed of Celtic foot soldiers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Pas d’argent, pas de Suisses,” as the old saying has it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See also Gibbon, <cite>Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire</cite>,
-chap. LV, where are described the Teutonic Varangians in
-Constantinople, who became the body-guard of the Greek
-Emperor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>136&#160;: 5. Osborn, 1, pp. 458 and 479 <em>seq.</em> See p. 116 of
-this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>136&#160;: 7. G. Elliot Smith, 1, p. 179; Haddon, 3; Peake, 2,
-pp. 160–163; Deniker, 2, p. 313; Zaborowski, 1, pp. 172 <em>seq.</em>;
-Hervé, 1, IV, p. 393, and V, p. 18; and the authorities quoted
-in Osborn.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>136&#160;: 14. Russian brachycephaly. See Ripley, pp. 358
-<em>seq.</em>, and the authorities quoted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>136&#160;: 16. See p. 143&#160;: 13 of this book, and notes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>136&#160;: 19–26. Brachycephalic colonies in Scandinavia.
-See p. 211&#160;: 6 and notes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>136&#160;: 29. Ripley, p. 472.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>137&#160;: 2. See the notes to p. 128&#160;: 13.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>137&#160;: 8. See pp. 138&#160;: 1, and 163&#160;: 26 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>137&#160;: 21. See the notes to p. 128&#160;: 16.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>137&#160;: 29 <em>seq.</em> Beddoe, 4, pp. 231–232.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>138&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em> Beddoe, 4, pp. 15, 17, 231–233; Davis and Thurnam;
-Keane, 1, p. 150; Rice Holmes, 1, pp. 194, 441; Ripley,
-pp. 308–309. Holmes suggests that the Beaker Makers may
-have come from Denmark. Compare this theory with that
-expressed by Fleure and James, pp. 128 <em>seq.</em> and 135; and
-by Abercromby, Crawford and Peake as given there. The
-Beaker Makers are quite fully discussed on pp. 86–88, 117,
-128 <em>seq.</em>, and 135–137, in the article by Fleure and James. See
-also Greenwell, <cite>British Barrows</cite>, pp. 627–718, and J. P. Harrison,
-<cite>On the Survival of Certain Racial Features in the Population
-of the British Isles</cite>. Fleure and James describe the
-type as follows on p. 136: “With the beakers have long been
-associated the broad-headed, strong-browed type, long known
-to archæologists as the Bronze Age race, but better called
-the ‘Beaker Makers,’ or Borreby type, for we now think that
-these people reached Britain without a knowledge of bronze....
-The general description of them is that they must
-have been taller than the Neolithic British, averaging 5
-feet 7 inches, rather strongly built, with long forearms and
-inclined to roughness of feature. The head was broad
-(skull index over 80, often 82 or more) and the supraciliary
-arches strong, but very distinctly separated in most cases
-by a median depression, and thus strongly contrasted with
-the continuous supraciliary ridges of <em>e. g.</em>, Neanderthal
-man&#160;... Keith&#160;... thinks it [the type] was usually
-brown to fair in colouring at all periods, and this seems to
-be a very general opinion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>138&#160;: 3. Beddoe, 4, p. 16: “On the whole, however, we
-cannot be far wrong in describing the British skulls of the
-bronze period as distinctly brachycephalic; and this seems
-to have been the case in Scotland as well as in England (see
-D. Wilson, <cite>Archæological and Prehistoric Annals</cite>, pp. 168–171).
-Whencesoever they came, the men of the British
-bronze race were richly endowed, physically. They were, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>a rule, tall and stalwart, their brains were large and their
-features, if somewhat harsh and coarse, must have been
-manly and even commanding. The chieftain of Gristhorpe,
-whose remains are in the Museum of York, must have looked
-a true king of men with his athletic frame, his broad forehead,
-beetling brows, strong jaws and aquiline profile.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>138&#160;: 14. Rice Holmes, 1, p. 425.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>138&#160;: 17. Dinaric Race. Deniker, 1, pp. 113–133; also
-2, p. 333. For allusions to this and descriptions see Ripley,
-pp. 350, 412, 597, 601–602.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>138&#160;: 18. Remains of Alpines. Fleure and James, pp.
-117, no. 3, and pp. 137–142.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>138&#160;: 22. See the notes to p. 122&#160;: 3. Also Jean Bruhnes
-in <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Correspondant</span></cite> for September, 1917, p. 774.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>139&#160;: 3. See p. 121&#160;: 16.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>139&#160;: 6 <em>seq.</em> Sergi, <cite>Africa</cite>, p. 65; Studer and Bannwarth,
-Crania <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Helvetica Antiqua</span></cite>, pp. 13 <em>seq.</em>; His and Rütimeyer,
-<cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Crania Helvetica</span></cite>, p. 41.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>139&#160;: 16. See p. 144 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>139&#160;: 22 <em>seq.</em> See p. 130.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>140&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em> See DeLapouge, <em>passim</em>; Ripley, p. 352;
-Johannes Ranke, Der Mensch, vol. II, pp. 296 <em>seq.</em>; part II
-of Topinard’s <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’anthropologie générale</span></cite>, and the note to p.
-131&#160;: 26.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>140&#160;: 4 <em>seq.</em> Alpines in the Cantabrian Alps. See Ripley,
-p. 272, and Oloriz, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Distribución geográfica del Indice cephalica</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>140&#160;: 9. Basques and the Basque language. See the notes
-to p. 234&#160;: 24 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>140&#160;: 15. Aquitanian. See p. 248&#160;: 14. Ligurian. See
-the notes to p. 235&#160;: 17.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>140&#160;: 17. Round skulls on North African coast. See pp.
-127–128.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>140&#160;: 22 <em>seq.</em> See the authorities quoted in Ripley, chap.
-VII. For the Walloons see Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 323–325, 334;
-Deniker, 2, p. 335; D’Arbois de Jubainville, 2, pp. 87–95;
-G. Kurth, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La frontière linguistique en Belgique</span></cite>; L. Funel,
-<cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les parlers populaires du département des Alpes-Maritimes</span></cite>,
-pp. 298–303.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The dialects or patois spoken to-day in France all fall
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>under one of these two languages. They can be classified
-as follows:</p>
-
-<table class='table2'>
- <tr><th class='c012' colspan='2'>LANGUE D’OC</th></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c028'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='c025'><span class='sc'>Patois</span></th>
- <th class='c027'><span class='sc'>Spoken in the Departments of</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Languedocian</td>
- <td class='c028'>Gard, Hérault, Pyrénées-Orientales, Aude, Ariège, Haute-Garonne, Lot-et-Garonne, Tarn, Aveyron, Lot, Tarn-et-Garonne.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Provençal</td>
- <td class='c028'>Drôme, Vaucluse, Bouches-du-Rhône, Hautes- and Basses-Alpes, Var.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Dauphinois</td>
- <td class='c028'>Isère.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Lyonnais</td>
- <td class='c028'>Rhône, Ain, Saône-et-Loire.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Auvergnat</td>
- <td class='c028'>Allier, Loire, Haute-Loire, Ardèche, Lozère, Puy-de-Dôme, Cantal.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Limousin</td>
- <td class='c028'>Corrèze, Haute-Vienne, Creuse, Indre, Cher, Vienne, Dordogne, Charente, Charente-Inférieure, Indre-et-Loire.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Gascon</td>
- <td class='c028'>Gironde, Landes, Hautes-Pyrénées, Basses-Pyrénées, Gers.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c028'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><th class='c012' colspan='2'>LANGUE D’OÏL</th></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c028'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Norman</td>
- <td class='c028'>Normandie, Bretagne, Perche, Maine, Anjou, Poitou, Saintonge.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Picard (modern French)</td>
- <td class='c028'>Picardie, Île-de-France, Artois, Flandre, Hainault, Basse Maine, Thiérache, Rethelois.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Burgundian</td>
- <td class='c028'>Nivernais, Berry, Orléanais, lower Bourbonnais, part of Ile-de-France, Champagne, Lorraine, Franche-Comté.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c007'>140&#160;: 28 <em>seq.</em> For the distribution of the Alpines see Ripley,
-p. 157.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>141&#160;: 6. Austria and the Slavs. See Ripley’s authorities
-mentioned on pp. 352 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>141&#160;: 9. See p. 143 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>141&#160;: 13. See the notes to chap. IX.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>141&#160;: 23–142: 4. Introduction of the Slavs into eastern
-Germany. See Jordanes, <cite>History of the Goths</cite>, V, 34, 35, and
-XXIII, 119; Freeman, <cite>Historical Geography of Europe</cite>, pp.
-113 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>141&#160;: 25. Wends, <cite>Antes and Sclaveni</cite>. See the notes to
-p. 143&#160;: 13 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>142&#160;: 4. Haddon, 3, p. 43.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>142&#160;: 9. Ripley, p. 355 and the authorities quoted. The
-word Slave originally signified <em>illustrious</em> or <em>renowned</em> in
-Slavic language, but in Europe was a word of disdain for the
-backward Slavs. See T. Peisker, <cite>The Expansion of the
-Slavs</cite>, Hist., vol. II, p. 421, n. 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>142&#160;: 13. See pp. 143–144 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>142&#160;: 23. Russian populations. Ripley, based on Anutschin,
-Taranetzki, Niederle, Zakrewski, Talko-Hyrncewicz,
-Olechnowicz, Matiezka, Kharuzin, Retzius, Bonsdorff, etc.
-Consult his chap. XIII, especially pp. 343–346 and 352.
-Olechnowicz and Talko-Hyrncewicz both remark on the
-dolichocephaly and blondness of the upper classes of
-Poland.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>143&#160;: 1. Keane, 2, pp. 345–346; Beddoe, 1, p. 35; Freeman,
-1, pp. 107, 113–116, 155–158.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>143&#160;: 3. Avars. See the authorities just given; also
-Eginhard, <cite>The Life of Charlemagne</cite>; Gibbon, <cite>Decline and Fall
-of the Roman Empire</cite>, chaps. XLII, XLV and XLVI.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>143&#160;: 4. Hungarians. That the Hungarians as such
-were known earlier than this date appears from a passage in
-Jordanes, written about 550 A. D. See the <cite>History of the
-Goths</cite>, V, 37, where he says: “Farther away and above the
-sea of Pontus are the abodes of the Bulgares, well known from
-the disaster our neglect has brought upon us. From this
-region, the Huns, like a fruitful root of bravest races, sprouted
-into two hordes of people. Some of these are called Altziagiri,
-others, Sabiri; and they have different dwelling places.
-The Altziagiri are near Cherson, where the avaricious traders
-bring in the goods of Asia. In summer they range the
-plains, their broad domains, wherever the pasturage for their
-cattle invites them, and betake themselves in winter beyond
-the sea of Pontus. Now the Hunuguri are known to us
-from the fact that they trade in marten skins. But they
-have been cowed by their bolder neighbors.” Also on the
-Hunuguri see Zeuss, p. 712.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>143&#160;: 5 <em>seq.</em> The invasion of the Avars and the Magyars.
-See Freeman, 1, pp. 107, 113, 115–116; Beddoe, 1, p. 35; and
-Ripley, p. 432.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>143&#160;: 13 <em>seq.</em> Haddon, 3, chap. III, <cite>Europe</cite>, especially p.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>40; and A. Lefèvre, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Germains et Slavs</span></cite>, p. 156. Minns, in an
-article on the Slavs, says: “Pliny (N. H., IV, 97) is the first
-to give the Slavs a name which can leave us in no doubt.
-He speaks of the Venedi (<em>cf.</em> Tacitus, <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Germania</span></cite>, 46, Veneti);
-Ptolemy (<cite>Geog.</cite>, III, 5, 7, 8) calls them Venedæ and puts
-them along the Vistula and by the Venedic Gulf, by which
-he seems to mean the Gulf of Danzig; he also speaks of the
-Venedic mountains to the south of the sources of the Vistula,
-that is, probably the northern Carpathians. The name
-Venedæ is clearly Wend, the name that the Germans have
-always applied to the Slavs. Its meaning is unknown. It
-has been the cause of much confusion because of the Armorican
-Veneti, the Paphlagonian Enetæ, and above all the
-Enetæ-Venetæ at the head of the Adriatic.... Other
-names in Ptolemy which almost certainly denote Slavic
-tribes are the Veltæ on the Baltic. The name Slav first occurs
-in Pseudo-Cæsarius (Dialogues, II, 110; Migne, P. G.,
-XXXVIII, 985, early 6th century), but the earliest definite
-account of them under that name is given by Jordanes
-(Getica [<cite>History of the Goths</cite>], V, 34, 35), about 550 A. D.:
-‘Within these rivers lies Dacia, encircled by the Alps as by
-a crown. Near their left ridge, which inclines toward the
-north, and beginning at the source of the Vistula, the populous
-race of the Venethi dwell, occupying a great expanse
-of land. Though their names are now dispersed amid various
-clans and places, yet they are chiefly called Sclaveni and
-Antes. The abode of the Sclaveni extends from the city of
-Noviodunum and the lake called Mursianus, to the Dnâster,
-and northward as far as the Vistula. They have swamps
-and forests for their cities. The Antes, who are the bravest
-of these peoples dwelling in the curve of the sea of Pontus,
-spread from the Dnâster to the Dnâper, rivers that are
-many days’ journey apart.’” See also Zaborowski, 1, pp.
-272 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The name <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Wends</span></i>, as has been said, was used by the Germans
-to designate the Slavs. It is now used for the Germanized
-Polaks, and especially for the Lusatian Wends or Sorbs.
-It is first found in English used by Alfred. Canon I. Taylor,
-in <cite>Words and Places</cite>, p. 42, says: “The Sclavonians call themselves
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>either <i><span lang="cu" xml:lang="cu">Slowjane</span></i>, ‘the intelligible men,’ or else <i><span lang="cu" xml:lang="cu">Srb</span></i>
-which means ‘kinsmen,’ while the Germans call them
-<i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Wends</span></i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haddon, 3, p. 47, says: “The Slavs, who belong to the
-Alpine race, seem to have had their area of characterization
-in Poland and the country between the Carpathians and the
-Dnieper; they may be identified with the Venedi.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the author’s opinion these people have, so far as is
-known, nothing whatever to do with the tribe of Veneti at
-the head of the Adriatic, nor with the Veneti in western
-Europe in what is now Brittany. Of the former Ripley, p.
-258, says that they have been generally accepted as of Illyrian
-derivation and cites D’Arbois de Jubainville, Von
-Duhn, Pigorini, Sergi, Pullé, Moschen and Tedeschi as
-authorities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Veneti in Italy are tall, broad-headed and some
-are blond, having mixed with the Teutons. They possessed
-some eastern habits, such as their marriage customs, as set
-forth in Herodotus. They were flourishing, wealthy and
-peaceful. Later they were driven to what is now Venice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Veneti in Gaul were a powerful maritime people, who
-carried on a sea trade with Britain. Strangely, perhaps, the
-ancient name of northern Wales was Venedotia. The name
-Veneto, however, has nothing to do with that of Vandal.
-For some theories as to the relationships of some of these
-Veneti, see Zaborowski, 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>143&#160;: 15. Gallicia and the Tripolje Culture. <em>Cf.</em> pp.
-113–114. Gallicia is not far from the known location of the
-Brünn-Prêdmost race, which was <em>dolichocephalic with a long
-face</em>. This early appearance of a dolichocephalic race at the
-point where the dolichocephalic Nordics later came in contact
-with the Alpines is very significant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The locality is in the neighborhood of the Tripolje area in
-southern Russia, for which see Minns, <cite>Scythians and Greeks</cite>,
-pp. 130–142, and Peake, 2, p. 164.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Minns says: “The first finds of Neolithic settlements in
-Russia were made near the village of Tripolje, on the Dnêpr,
-forty miles below Kiev, and this name has since been extended
-to the culture of a large area in southern Russia. The remains
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>consist of so-called ‘areas’ with buildings which had
-wattled, clay-covered walls which were fired when dry to
-give them greater hardness. Pottery is present in great
-abundance and variety of forms. These bear painted decorations
-which are very artistic. There are a few figurines.
-The buildings were not dwellings but probably chapels.
-The homes were probably pit dwellings. Bodies of the dead
-were incinerated and deposited in urns.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The theory has been abandoned that this was an autochthonous
-development, typical of the Indo-Europeans [Nordics]
-before they differentiated (<em>cf.</em> Chvojka, the first discoverer).
-Although similar to Ægean art this was earlier
-(see Von Stern, <cite>Prehistoric Greek Culture in the South of
-Russia</cite>). It came suddenly to an end and had no successor
-in that region. The people were agriculturalists long before
-the Scythians, but the next people who lived there were thorough
-nomads. Niederle (<cite>Slav. Ant.</cite>, I) dates them 2000
-B. C. The Tripolje people either moved south or were
-overwhelmed by new comers.” As Peake says, 2, pp. 164–165,
-here was a very likely point of contact between the Nordic
-and Alpine stocks, a mixture which, in the opinion of the
-author, may ultimately throw some light on the origin of
-the Dinaric and Beaker Maker types. Through this region
-both Alpines and Nordics must have passed many times in
-their wanderings. Here perhaps the Alpines became partly
-Nordicized, especially as to their language.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>143&#160;: 21. Sarmatians. There has been considerable confusion
-over these people, owing to the various ways in which
-the name has been spelled by early and later writers, and to
-the fact that they dwelt in the region where both Alpines
-and Nordics must have existed side by side. The name Sarmatians
-has been applied at one time to Nordics, at another
-to Alpines or even Mongolians, depending on the dates when
-they were discussed and the bias of various writers. We
-have no generic name for the Alpine peoples who must have
-been in this region in early times, except that of Sarmatians
-or Scythians. As the Scythians are apparently strongly
-Nordic in character, the name Sarmatians seemed more fitting
-to apply to the Alpine tribes who were certainly there.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>Not all authorities are agreed as to their affiliations, however,
-as has been said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jordanes declares that the Sarmatians and the Sauromatæ
-were the same people. Stephanus Byzantius states that
-the Syrmatæ were identical with the Sauromatæ. They are
-first mentioned by Polybius as being in Europe in 179 B. C.
-(XXV, II; XXVI, VI, 12). But in Asia we hear of them as
-early as 325 B. C., according to Minns, p. 38, who says that
-they gradually shifted westward, until in 50 A. D. they
-were in the Danube valley. Jordanes later speaks of the
-Carpathian mountains as the Sarmatian range. Mierow,
-in the notes to his translation of Jordanes, makes the Sarmatians
-a great Slavic people dwelling from the Vistula to
-the Don, in what is now Poland and Russia. (See also
-Hodgkin, <cite>Italy</cite>, vol. I, part I, p. 71.) According to Jordanes,
-the Sarmatians were beyond Dacia (the ancient Gothic land)
-and to the north (XII, 74). It is with these statements in
-mind that the author has designated them as Alpines.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Minns describes the Sarmatians as nomads of the Caspian
-steppes who wore armor like the Hiung-nu. About
-325 B. C. there was a decline of the Scyths and they appear.
-During the second and third centuries A. D. was the time
-when they spread over the vast regions from Hungary to the
-Caspian. Minns, however, is firm in the belief that they
-were Iranians [Nordics], like the Alans, Ossetes, Jasy, etc.
-In the second half of the fourth century B. C. they were still
-east of the Don or just crossing; for the next century and a
-half we have very scanty knowledge of what was happening
-in the steppes. Procopius, III, II, also makes them
-Goths. (See the note to p. 66&#160;: 16.) Feist, 5, p. 391, quotes
-Tacitus as to their being horse-loving nomads of south
-Russia. See also D’Arbois de Jubainville, 4, t. I, and Gibbon,
-chaps. XVIII, XXV, etc., for further discussions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>144&#160;: 11 <em>seq.</em> See the authorities quoted, in Ripley, pp.
-361–362. The Bashkirs, however, are partly Finn, partly
-Tatar as well.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>144&#160;: 26–145: 1. Ripley, pp. 416 <em>seq.</em> and 434.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>145&#160;: 3. Ripley, p. 434.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>145&#160;: 7. Freeman, 1, pp. 113–115; Haddon, 3, p. 45.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>145&#160;: 10. Ripley, p. 421. These are the Volga Finns.
-Old Bulgaria, according to Pruner-Bey, 2, t. I, pp. 399–433,
-P. F. Kanitz and others, seems to have been between the
-Ural mountains and the Volga. The old Bulgarians were a
-Finnic tribe (just which is a matter of much dispute). They
-crossed the Danube toward the end of the seventh century.
-See Freeman, 1, pp. 17, 155.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>145&#160;: 11 <em>seq.</em> Ripley, p. 426, based on Bassanovič, p. 30.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>145&#160;: 16. Ripley, p. 421.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>145&#160;: 19. Of the numerous tribes who, since the Christian
-Era, have entered Europe and Anatolia from western Asia
-some were undoubtedly pure Mongoloids, like the Huns of
-Attila, or the hordes of Genghis Khan. Others were probably
-under Mongoloid leaders, and included a large proportion
-of West Asiatic Alpines (<em>i. e.</em>, Turcomans), while still others
-may have been substantially Alpines. The Mongols in their
-sweep into Europe would naturally gather up and carry with
-them many of the tribes of western Asia, or perhaps more
-often would drive the latter ahead of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>146&#160;: 3 <em>seq.</em> Ripley, p. 139; Taylor, 1, p. 119; Peake, 2,
-p. 162.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>146&#160;: 8. Ripley, p. 136. These primitive nests occur also
-in Norway.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>146&#160;: 12. See the note to p. 131&#160;: 26.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>146&#160;: 19–147&#160;: 6. See pp. 122 and 138 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>147&#160;: 7 <em>seq.</em> Accad and Sumer. Prince, and Zaborowski
-(after de Sarzec) give the earliest date of Accad as about
-3800 B. C., but Prince thinks this date too old by 700–1000
-years. See also Zaborowski, 1, pp. 118–125. H. R. Hall, in
-<cite>The Ancient History of the Near East</cite>, reviews the entire work
-in this field in his first chapter. According to him, dates in
-Babylonia can be traced as far back as those of Egypt,
-without coming to a time when there was no writing or metal,
-while Egyptian records begin in a Neolithic culture. The
-earliest dates so far established are in the fourth millennium
-B. C., but already a high degree of civilization had been
-reached there or elsewhere by people who brought it to
-Babylonia. Hall, p. 176, says: “The most ancient remains
-that we find in the city mounds are Sumerian. The site of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>the ancient Shurripak, at Fârah in Southern Babylonia, has
-lately been excavated. The culture revealed by this excavation
-is Sumerian, and metal-using, even at the lowest levels.
-The Sumerians apparently knew the use of copper at the
-beginning of their occupation of Babylonia, and no doubt
-brought this knowledge with them.” See chap. V of Hall’s
-book, and the two great works of King, the <cite>Chronicles Concerning
-the Early Babylonian Kings</cite>, and <cite>The History of Sumer
-and Akkad</cite>, as well as Rogers’s <cite>History of Babylonia and Assyria</cite>.
-In his preface to the first mentioned of his two works
-King states that the new researches are resulting in a tendency
-to reduce the dates of these ancient empires very considerably,
-especially for the dynasties. Thus for Su-abu, the
-founder of the first dynasty, a date not earlier than 2100
-B. C. is now given, and for Hammurabi one not earlier than
-the twentieth century B. C. Accad is by many authors, including
-Breasted, considered to have been Semitic from the
-beginning, and to have been established about 2800 B. C.
-But Zaborowski claims that it was not originally Semitic, but
-Semitized at a very early date. He makes both city-kingdoms
-originally Turanian [by which he means Alpine and
-pre-Aryan] with an agglutinative language related to the
-Altaic. See also Zaborowski, 2. He dates the cuneiform inscriptions
-between 3700 and 4000 B. C., after de Sarzec and
-de Morgan. Hall draws attention to the remarkable resemblance
-of the Sumerians to the Dravidians, and is inclined
-to believe that they may have come from India.
-Both G. Elliot Smith and Breasted claim the Babylonians
-derived their culture from Egypt, but the weight of evidence
-is gradually accumulating against them. See Hall,
-chap. V. The relations of the two regions and Egyptian
-dates are treated in Reisner’s <cite>Early Dynastic Cemeteries of
-Naga-ed-Dêr</cite>; and Eduard Meyer, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Geschichte des Altertums</span></cite>,
-should also be consulted. Against these Egyptologists are
-most of the later writers, such as Hall and King and many
-others. The location of Babylonia is a fact distinctly in
-favor of its earlier beginnings. There is no denying the very
-remote origin of Egyptian culture, which in its isolation for
-so many centuries had ample time to develop its own peculiar
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>features and to become sufficiently strong to later extend a
-very wide influence. There is an interesting study of the
-fauna of Egypt by Lortet and Gaillard, which proves that
-much of it was originally African, not Asiatic, as those who
-wish to prove the opposite theory, that Egyptian culture was
-derived from the east in very remote times, have endeavored
-to establish. There is no doubt that the Egyptians were
-sufficiently plastic and adaptable in the earlier centuries of
-their development, wherever they may have come from, to
-make use of what the continent of Africa contributed in the
-way of resources. (See also Gaillard, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Tatonnements des
-Égyptiens</span></cite>, etc., and H. H. Johnston, <cite>On North African Animals</cite>.)
-To claim that the civilization of Sumer was derived
-directly from Elam, which in turn obtained its earliest culture
-from Egypt, is, in the opinion of the author, to reverse
-the truth. Some authorities believe that Elam was the
-origin from which came the civilization found by Pumpelly
-in Turkestan, and believed by him to have been not earlier
-than the end of the third millennium B. C. (For a further
-reference to this see the note to p. 119&#160;: 15 of this book, on
-Balkh.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See Hall as to the relationship of the Accadians and Sumerians
-with Elam. Zaborowski says they were all of the same
-Alpine stock, that is, the very early Sumerians and Accadians
-and Elamites. See 2, p. 411. For Susa, Elam and Media,
-see <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les peuples Aryens</span></cite>, pp. 125–138, and Hall, chap. V.
-For the Persians, Zaborowski, 1, pp. 134 <em>seq.</em> Ripley, pp.
-417, 449–450, discusses some of the eastern tribes, among
-them the Tadjiks, whom general opinion makes round skulled.
-These, according to Zaborowski, are the living
-prototypes of the Susians, Elamites and Medes. Many
-writers consider the Medes to have been Nordics and related
-to the Persians. The author, however, follows Zaborowski
-in classing them as the early brachycephalic population of
-Elam or its highlands or plateau, which was conquered by
-the Persians. On the Medes and Media see the notes to
-p. 254&#160;: 13.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>
- <h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER V. THE MEDITERRANEAN RACE</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>148&#160;: 1. The Mediterranean Race. Sergi, 4; Ripley; and
-Elliot Smith, 1.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>148&#160;: 14. Deniker, 2, pp. 408 <em>seq.</em>; Ripley, pp. 450–451.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>148&#160;: 15. See the notes to pp. 257–261.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>148&#160;: 18. Dravidians. Bishop R. Caldwell, <cite>Comparative
-Grammar of the Dravidian or South Indian Family of Languages</cite>;
-G. A. Grierson, <cite>Linguistic Survey of India</cite>, vol. IV,
-<cite>Munda and Dravidian Languages</cite>; Friedrich Müller, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Reise der
-österreichischen Fregatte Novara um die Erde in den Jahren</span></cite>
-1857–1859, etc., pp. 73 <em>seq.</em>; <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Grundriss der Sprachwissenschaft</span></cite>,
-vol. III, pp. 106 <em>seq.</em> See also Haddon, 3, p. 18.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>148&#160;: 22 <em>seq.</em> Deniker, 2, p. 397; Haddon, 1, 3, but Haddon
-has pointed out that the Andamanese are not racially of the
-same stock as the Sakai, Veddahs, etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>149&#160;: 6. Haddon, 3, and Sergi, 4, p. 158; Ripley; Fleure
-and James; Peake; etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>149&#160;: 12. Peake, 2, p. 158.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>149&#160;: 21. On this point, Ripley, pp. 465 <em>seq.</em>, quotes Von
-Dueben, Retzius, Arbo, Montelius, Barth, Zograf, Lebon,
-Olechnowicz, etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>150&#160;: 8. See the notes to p. 149.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>150&#160;: 12. See the notes to p. 257.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>150&#160;: 21. Beddoe, 4, and 3, pp. 384 <em>seq.</em>, and Ripley, pp.
-326, 328 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>150&#160;: 24 seq. See the notes to p. 149.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>150&#160;: 29–151&#160;: 3. A. Retzius, 1, 2; G. Retzius, 1, 2; Peake,
-2, p. 158. Taylor, <cite>Origin of the Aryans</cite>, p. 101, says the
-Iberian type is not found in northern Europe east of Namur.
-In the British Isles, however, it extends to Caithness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>151&#160;: 3 <em>seq.</em> See the notes to p. 149; Ripley, pp. 461–465;
-Sergi, 4, p. 252; Osborn, 1, p. 458.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>151&#160;: 18. Sir Harry Johnston, <em>passim</em>; G. Elliot Smith, 1,
-pp. 18, 30, 31, and chap. V.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>151&#160;: 22 <em>seq.</em> G. Elliot Smith, 1, p. 30. For a contrary
-opinion see Sergi, 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>152&#160;: 3. W. L. and P. L. Sclater, <cite>The Geography of Mammals</cite>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>pp. 177 <em>seq.</em>; Flower and Lydekker, <cite>Mammals, Living
-and Extinct</cite>, pp. 96–97.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>152&#160;: 6. Elliot Smith, 1, chap. IV and elsewhere; Sergi,
-4, chap. III.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>152&#160;: 12. Negroes seem to have been unknown in Egypt
-and Nubia in pre-dynastic days and only appear in small
-numbers in the third and fourth dynasties, in the South.
-The great ruins on the Zambezi at Zimbabwe were probably
-the work of the Mediterranean race and are to be dated
-about 1000 B. C. In other words, all northeast Africa, including
-Nubia, the northern Sudan, the ancient Kingdom of
-Meroë at the junction of the Blue and White Niles, Abyssinia
-and the adjoining coast were originally part of the domain
-of the Mediterranean race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the recent kingdom of the Mahdi, the predominant element
-was not Negro but Arab more or less mixed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>152&#160;: 16. Sir Harry Johnston, <em>passim</em>; Ripley, pp. 387,
-390; Hall, <cite>Ancient History of the Near East</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>152&#160;: 27. Sardinia. See Ripley and Von Luschan. A
-recent article by V. Giuffrida-Ruggeri, entitled “A Sketch
-of the Anthropology of Italy,” in the <cite>Journal of the Royal
-Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland</cite>, is well
-worth consideration. On pp. 91–92 the author gives a
-short sketch of the Sardinians and his authorities are to be
-found in a footnote on p. 91.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>153&#160;: 4. Albanians. See the notes to p. 163&#160;: 19.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>153&#160;: 6 <em>seq.</em> Fleure and James, pp. 122 <em>seq.</em>, 149; Beddoe,
-4, pp. 25–26; Davis and Thurnam, especially p. 212; Boyd
-Dawkins, <cite>Early Man in Britain</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>153&#160;: 10. Scotland. See the notes to pp. 150&#160;: 10 and
-204&#160;: 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>153&#160;: 14 <em>seq.</em> See the notes to p. 229&#160;: 5–12.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>153&#160;: 24 <em>seq.</em> The Mediterranean Race in Rome. Montelius,
-<cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La Civilisation primitive en Italie</span></cite>; Peet, <cite>The Stone and
-Bronze Ages in Italy</cite>; Munro, <cite>Palæolithic Man and the Terramara
-Settlements</cite>; Modestov, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Introduction à l’histoire romain</span></cite>;
-Frank, <cite>Roman Imperialism</cite>. Giuffrida-Ruggeri, in <cite>A Sketch
-of the Anthropology of Italy</cite>, p. 101, says of the composition
-of the population of Rome: “The three fundamental European
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>races, <em>H. mediterraneus</em>, <em>H. alpinus</em>, and <em>H. nordicus</em>, had their
-representatives among the ancient Romans, although the
-skeletal remains of the Mediterraneans and the Northerners
-are difficult to distinguish from each other. It is also possible
-that the Northerners belonged to the aristocrats who
-preferred to burn their dead. In the calm tenacity and quiet
-growth of the Roman people perhaps the descendants of <em>H.
-nordicus</em> represented the turbulent restlessness of violent and
-bold individuals which, even in Roman history, one is able
-to discern from time to time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In this connection it is interesting to note what Charles
-W. Gould has said on p. 117, in <cite>America, a Family Matter</cite>,
-concerning Sulla. He describes him as follows: “Even during
-the terror Sulla found time for enjoyment. Tawny hair,
-piercing blue eyes, fair complexion readily suffused with color
-as emotion and red blood surged within, Norseman that he
-was, he presided over constant and splendid entertainments,
-taking more pleasure in a witty actor than in the degenerate
-men and women of the old nobility who elbowed their way
-in.” Also see the notes to p. 215&#160;: 21.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>154&#160;: 5. Quarrels between the Patricians and the Plebs.
-See Tenney Frank, <cite>Roman Imperialism</cite>, pp. 5 <em>seq.</em>, for a discussion
-of the mixture of races, “only we cannot agree that
-a social state can accomplish race amalgamation. The two
-races are still there.” Boni, <cite><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Notizie degli Scavi</span></cite>, vol. III p.
-401, believes that the Patricians were the descendants of the
-immigrant Aryans, while the Plebeians were the offspring of
-the aboriginal Non-Aryan stock. Compare this with the
-statements of early writers concerning the conditions in
-Gaul, especially as summed up by Dottin in his <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Manuel
-Celtique</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Frank says, concerning the quarrels, in chap. II, <em>op. cit.</em>:
-“Roman tradition preserved in the first book of Livy presents
-a very circumstantial account of the several battles by which
-Rome supposedly razed the Latin cities one after another....
-Needless to say, if the Latin tribe had lived in such
-civil discord as the legend assumes, it would quickly have
-succumbed to the inroads of the mountain tribes.” Thus
-probably the quarrels between Latin and Etruscan have
-been overrated. See again, p. 14, for the oriental origin of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>some intruding people. He says, in a note at the end of
-the chapter: “Ridgeway, in <cite>Who were the Romans</cite>, 1908,
-has ably, though not convincingly developed the view that
-the Patricians were Sabine conquerors. Cuno, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Vorgeschichte
-Roms</span></cite>, I, 14, held that they were Etruscans. Fustel de Coulanges,
-in his well-known work, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La cité antique</span></cite>, proposed the
-view that a religious caste system alone could explain the
-division. Eduard Meyer, the article on the Plebs in <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Handwörterbuch
-der Staatswissenschaften</span></cite>, and Botsford, <cite>Roman
-Assemblies</cite>, p. 16, have presented various arguments in favor
-of the economic theory. See Binder, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Plebs</span></cite>, 1909, for a
-summary of many other discussions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Breasted, <cite>Ancient Times</cite>, pp. 495 <em>seq.</em>, and Sir Harry Johnston,
-<cite>Views and Reviews</cite>, p. 97, are two who have touched
-upon these questions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On Etruria see the note to p. 157&#160;: 14.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>154&#160;: 11. An allusion to the short stature of the Roman
-legions of Cæsar in Gaul may be found in Rice Holmes, 2,
-p. 81. D’Arbois de Jubainville, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Celts en Espagne</span></cite>, XIV,
-p. 369, says in describing a combat between P. Cornelius
-Scipio and a Gallic warrior: “Scipio was of very small stature,
-the Celtiberian warrior with the high stature which in all
-times in the tales of the Roman historians characterizes the
-Celtic race; and the beginning of the struggle gave him the
-advantage.” Taylor, <cite>Origin of the Aryans</cite>, p. 76, says:
-“The stature of the Celts struck the Romans with astonishment.
-Cæsar speaks of their <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">mirifica corpora</span></i> and contrasts
-the short stature of the Romans with the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">magnitudo corporum</span></i>
-of the Gauls. Strabo, also, speaking of the Coritavi, a
-British tribe in Lincolnshire, after mentioning their yellow
-hair, says: ‘To show how tall they are, I saw myself some of
-their young men at Rome and they were taller by six inches
-than anyone else in the city.’” See also Elton, <cite>Origins</cite>,
-p. 240.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>154&#160;: 18 <em>seq.</em> Nordic Aristocracy in Rome. Tenney
-Frank, <cite>Race Mixture in the Roman Empire</cite>. But he also
-makes Gauls and Germans on the same level as other conquered
-people, as legionaries, etc. See also Giuffrida-Ruggeri,
-p. 101.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>155&#160;: 5 <em>seq.</em> G. Elliot Smith, 1; Peet, 2, pp. 164 <em>seq.</em>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>Fleure and James use the terms Neolithic and Mediterranean
-interchangeably. Recent study is giving a somewhat
-different interpretation to the significance of the megaliths.
-See the article by H. J. Fleure and L. Winstanley
-in the 1918 <cite>Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of
-Great Britain and Ireland</cite>. On the megaliths see also the
-note to p. 129&#160;: 2 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>155&#160;: 22 <em>seq.</em> See the notes to p. 233 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>155&#160;: 27–156&#160;: 4. See the notes to p. 192.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>156 1 4. See the notes to p. 244&#160;: 6.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>156&#160;: 8. Sergi, 4, p. 70.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>156&#160;: 10. Gauls. D’Arbois de Jubainville, 1, XIV, p.
-364, says: “Hannibal left Spain for Italy in 218, but he left
-there a Carthaginian army in the ranks of which marched
-auxiliaries furnished by the Celtic peoples of Spain; Roman
-troops came to combat this army and four years after the
-departure of Hannibal, (<em>i. e.</em> in 214), they gave many battles
-to the Carthaginian generals where the Celts were vanquished.
-In the booty there were found abundant Gallic
-trappings, especially a great number of collars and bracelets
-of gold; among the dead of the Carthaginian army left upon
-the plain were two petty Gallic kings, Moencapitus and Vismarus.
-Livy, who tells us these things, says distinctly that
-the trappings were Gallic (Gallica) and that the kings were
-Gallic. See Livy, I, XXIV, c. 42.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>156&#160;: 13. See the note to p. 192.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>156&#160;: 16. Feist, 5, p. 365, is one of the authors who notes
-the fact that classic writers spoke of light and dark types in
-Spain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>156&#160;: 18. This of course means racial evidence. See
-Mommsen, <cite>History of the Roman Provinces</cite>, I, chap. II, and
-Burke, <cite>History of Spain</cite>, p. 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>156&#160;: 25–157&#160;: 3. On the history of the Albigenses the
-most important authority is C. Schmidt, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Histoire de la secte
-des Cathares ou Albigeois</span></cite>, Paris, 1849. The Albigenses were
-deeply indebted to the Arabic culture of Saracenic Spain,
-which was the medium through which much of the ancient
-Greek science and learning was preserved to modern times.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>157&#160;: 4. Ripley, pp. 260 <em>seq.</em> For an exhaustive résumé
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>of the subject see Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 277–287. Also consult
-the notes to p. 235&#160;: 17 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>157&#160;: 6. See p. 122 for the predominance of the Mediterraneans.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>157&#160;: 10. Umbrians and Oscans. It is fair to assume that
-some people brought the Aryan languages into Italy from the
-north, and this introduction is credited to the Umbrians and
-Oscans. (See Helbig, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Italiker in der Poebene</span></cite>, pp. 29–41;
-Ridgeway, <cite>Early Age of Greece</cite>; Conway, <cite>Early Italic Dialects</cite>.)
-The Umbrians and Oscans were closely allied in regard to
-their language, whatever may have been their ethnic affinities.
-In a remoter degree they were connected with the
-Latins. From the time and starting-point of their migrations,
-as well as from their type of culture, it would appear
-that they were cognate with the early Nordic invaders of
-Greece. Whether they were wholly Nordic, or were thoroughly
-Nordicized Alpines, or merely Alpines with Nordic
-leaders is not of particular moment in this connection, but
-if they were the carriers of Aryan language and culture they
-were Nordicized in a degree comparable to the genuine Nordics
-who invaded Greece. Giuffrida-Ruggeri, in one of the
-latest papers on Italy, as well as many earlier authorities,
-regards the Umbrians as Alpines, but he says they were not
-all round skulled. “The Osci, the Sabines, the Samnites,
-and other Sabellic peoples were Aryans or Aryanized, although
-they inhumated their dead instead of burning them.
-It is possible that the founders of Rome consisted of both
-families, as we find both rites in ancient Rome” (p. 100).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>157&#160;: 14. Etruscans. The author is familiar with the
-persistent theory that the Etruscans came from Asia Minor
-by sea, but he nevertheless regards them as indigenous inhabitants
-of Italy, that is, the Pre-Aryan, Pre-Nordic Mediterraneans,
-who, as part of a large and extended group, were
-spread over a great part of the shores of the Mediterranean,
-and were at that time the Italian exponents of the prevailing
-Ægean culture. During the second millennium in which this
-culture flourished, they were much influenced by Crete, although
-they developed their civilization along special lines.
-The Etruscan language, excluding the borrowed elements
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>from later Italic dialects, is apparently in no sense Aryan.
-<em>Cf.</em> Hall, <cite>Ancient History of the Near East</cite>, pp. 53–54.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>157&#160;: 16. The date 800 is given by Feist, 5, p. 370.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>157&#160;: 18. Livy, V, 33 <em>seq.</em>, is the authority for the date of
-the sixth century. See also Polybius, 1, II, c. XVII, § 1.
-Myers, <cite>Ancient History</cite>, makes the settlement of the Gauls
-in Italy about the fifth century B. C. Most authorities follow
-Livy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>157&#160;: 21. To show how approximate the authorities are
-on this date, Rice Holmes, 2, p. 1, and Myers, <cite>Ancient History</cite>,
-make it 390, while Breasted gives 382.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>157&#160;: 23. Livy, V, 35–49, treats of the taking of Rome by
-the Gauls. The name Brennus means raven; it is from the
-Celtic <em>bran</em>, raven, crow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>157&#160;: 26. There is a considerable Frankish element there
-also, among the aristocracy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>158&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em> An interesting discussion of this event is
-given by Salomon Reinach, 2. The invasion was resisted
-first at Thermopylæ and later at Delphi. On p. 81 Reinach
-says: “In the detailed recital which Pausanius has left us
-of the invasion of the Galatic bands in Greece, dealing with
-the glorious part which the Athenians played in the defence
-of the Pass of Thermopylæ. But, when the defile had
-been forced, the Athenians departed and Pausanius makes
-no more mention of them in relating the defence of Delphi,
-where only the Phocians, four hundred Locrians and two
-hundred Ætolians figured. It is only after the defeat of the
-Gauls that the Athenians, according to Pausanius, came back,
-together with the Bœotians, to harass the barbarians in
-their retreat....” On p. 83 he says: “The barbarians are
-incontestably the Galatians.” See also by the same author,
-<cite>The Gauls in Antique Art</cite>. G. Dottin, pp. 461–462 gives us the
-following: “Hannibal, traversing southern Gaul, found on
-his passage only Gauls. On the other hand, Livy mentions
-the arrival of Gauls in Provence at the same time as their
-first descent into Italy, and Justinius places the wars of the
-Greeks of Marseilles against the Gauls and Ligurians before
-the taking of Rome by the Gauls. The invasion of the
-Belgæ is placed then in the third century. It is doubtless
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>contemporaneous with the Celtic invasion of Greece which
-was perhaps caused by it.” See also the notes to p. 174&#160;: 21
-of this book. According to Myers, <cite>Ancient History</cite>, where
-the account of these events is briefly given on pp. 269–270,
-the year was 278 B. C. Breasted, 1, p. 449, gives 280 B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As late as the fourth century of our era, Celtic forms of
-speech prevailed among the Galatians of Asia Minor. According
-to Jerome (Fraser’s <cite>Golden Bough</cite>, II, p. 126, footnote),
-the language spoken then in Anatolia was very similar
-to the dialect of the Treveri, a Celtic tribe on the Moselle,
-of whose name Treves is the perpetuator. “It was to these
-people that St. Paul addressed one of his epistles.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is interesting to note that at the present time the finest
-soldiers of the Turkish army are recruited in the district of
-Angora which includes the territory of ancient Galatia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>158&#160;: 13. Procopius, IV, 13, says that a number of Moors
-and their wives took refuge in Sicily and also in Sardinia
-where they established colonies. The recent article by
-Giuffrida-Ruggeri sums up the data for Sicily, Sardinia and
-Corsica. See also Gibbon, <em>passim</em>, and Ripley, pp. 115–116.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>158&#160;: 16. G. Elliot Smith, 1, pp. 94 <em>seq.</em>, and the notes to
-pp. 127&#160;: 26 and 128.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>158&#160;: 21. Pelasgians. Sergi, 4, followed by many anthropologists,
-describes as Pelasgian one branch of the Mediterranean
-or Eurafrican race of mankind and one group of
-skull types within that race. Ripley, pp. 407, 448, considers
-them Mediterraneans in all probability, as this is the oldest
-layer of population in these regions. So also do Myres,
-<cite>Dawn of History</cite>, p. 171, and most of the other authorities.
-In his <cite>History of the Pelasgian Theory</cite>, Myres sums up all
-that was written up to that time. Homer and other early
-writers make them the ancient inhabitants of Greece, who
-were subdued by the Hellenes. It is generally agreed that
-a people resembling in its prevailing skull forms the Mediterranean
-race of north Africa was settled in the Ægean area
-from a remote Neolithic antiquity. D’Arbois de Jubainville,
-4, t. I, devotes a chapter or more to them, and declares
-on p. 110: “In fact the Pelasgians and the Hellenes are of
-different origin; the first are one of the races which preceded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>the Indo-Europeans in Europe, the others are Indo-European.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Another recent writer who deals with this puzzling problem
-is Sartiaux, in his <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Troie</span></cite>, pp. 140–143. Finally, Sir William
-Ridgeway says: “The Achæans found the land occupied
-by a people known by the ancients as Pelasgians who continued
-down to classical times the main element in the population,
-even in the states under Achæan, and later, under Dorian
-rule. In some cases the Pelasgians formed a serf class, <em>e. g.</em>
-in Penestæ, in Thessaly, the Helots in Laconia and the Gymnesii
-at Argos; whilst they practically composed the whole
-population of Arcadia and Attica which never came under
-either Achæan or Dorian rule. This people had dwelt in the
-Ægean from the Stone Age, and though still in the Bronze
-Age at the Achæan conquest, had made great advances in
-the useful and ornamental arts. They were of short stature,
-with dark hair and eyes, and generally dolichocephalic.
-Their chief centers were at Cnossus, Crete, in Argolis, Laconia
-and Attica, in each being ruled by ancient lines of
-kings. In Argolis, Prœtus built Tiryns but later under
-Perseus, Mycenæ took the lead until the Achæan conquest.
-All the ancient dynasties traced their descent from Poseidon,
-who at the time of the Achæan conquest was the chief male
-divinity of Greece and the islands.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As to the Pelasgian being a Non-Aryan tongue, the ancient
-script at Crete has not yet been deciphered. Since the ancient
-Cretans were presumably Pelasgians, it is safe to identify
-them with this Non-Aryan language, although Conway,
-2, pp. 141–142, is inclined to believe that it is related to the
-Aryan family. See also Sweet, <cite>The History of Language</cite>, p.
-103.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>158&#160;: 22. Nordic Achæans. Ridgeway, 1, p. 683, says:
-“We found that a fair-haired race greater in stature than the
-melanochroous Ægean people had there [in Greece and the
-Ægean] been domiciled for long ages, and that fresh bodies
-of tall, fair-haired people from the shores of the northern
-ocean continually through the ages had kept pressing down
-into the southern peninsulas. From this it followed that the
-Achæans of Homer were one of these bodies of Celts [<em>i. e.</em>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>Nordics], who had made their way down into Greece and
-had become the masters of the indigenous race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This conclusion we further tested by an examination of
-the distribution of the round shield, the practise of cremation,
-the use of the brooch and buckle, and finally the diffusion of
-iron in Europe, North Africa and western Asia. Our inductions
-showed that all four had made their way into Greece
-and the Ægean from Central Europe. Accordingly as they
-all appeared in Greece along with the Homeric Achæans, we
-inferred that the latter had brought them with them from
-central Europe.” Elsewhere, in the same book, Ridgeway
-identifies the Homeric age with the Achæan and Post-Mycenæan,
-the Mycenæan with the Pre-Achæan and Pelasgian.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bury, <cite>The History of Greece</cite>, p. 44, says: “The Achæans
-were a people of blond complexion, of Indo-European speech.
-Among the later Greeks, there were two marked types, distinguished
-by light and dark hair. The blond complexion
-was rarer and more prized. This is illustrated by the fact
-that women and fops used sometimes to dye their hair yellow
-or red, the <span lang="grc" xml:lang="grc">κομης ξανθίσματα</span> mentioned in the Danæ of Euripedes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>159&#160;: 4–5. Date of the siege of Troy. Hall, <cite>Ancient History
-of the Near East</cite>, p. 69, and many other authorities accept
-the Parian Chronicle, which makes it 1194–1184 B. C.
-For the whole question of the Trojan War see Félix Sartiaux,
-<cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Troie, La Guerre de Troie</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>159&#160;: 6 <em>seq.</em> See the notes to p. 225&#160;: 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>159&#160;: 10 <em>seq.</em> Bury, <cite>History of Greece</cite>, p. 44; DeLapouge,
-<cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les sélections sociales</span></cite>. Beddoe noted in his <cite>Anthropological
-History of Europe</cite> that almost all of Homer’s heroes were
-blond or chestnut-haired as well as large and tall. There are
-many passages in the Iliad which refer to the blondness and
-size of the more important personages.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>159&#160;: 19 <em>seq.</em> Bury, <cite>History of Greece</cite>, pp. 57, 59, describes
-the Greek tribes which moved down before the Dorians, conquering
-the Achæans—the Thessalians, Bœotians, etc. But
-see Peake, 2, for Thessalians. Also D’Arbois de Jubainville,
-4, t. II, p. 297, and Myers, <cite>Anc. Hist.</cite>, pp. 127, 136 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>159&#160;: 23. Dorians. See the authorities quoted above;
-also Ridgeway, Von Luschan, Deniker, 2, pp. 320–321, and
-Hawes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>160&#160;: 1. C. H. Hawes, p. 258 of the <cite>Annal of the British
-School at Athens</cite>, vol. XVI, “Some Dorian Descendants,”
-says the Dorians were Alpines, and this view is shared by
-many others, among them Von Luschan. See also Myres,
-<cite>The Dawn of History</cite>, pp. 173 <em>seq.</em> and 213. While this may
-be partially true even of the bulk of the population, all the
-tribes to the north of the Mediterranean fringe carried a
-large Nordic element, which practically always assumed the
-leadership.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>160&#160;: 17. For the character of the Dorians, see Bury,
-p. 62.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>161&#160;: 20. The philosopher Xenophanes, a contemporary
-of both Philip and his son, in discussing man’s notion of
-God, insists that each race represents the Great Supreme under
-its own shape: the Negro with a flat nose and black face,
-the Thracian with blue eyes and a ruddy complexion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>161&#160;: 27. Loss of Nordic blood among the Persians. See
-the note to p. 254&#160;: 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>162&#160;: 8. Barbarous Macedonia. Bury, <cite>The History of
-Greece</cite>, pp. 681–731.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>162&#160;: 14. Alexander the Great. Descriptions of Alexander
-are found in Plutarch, who quotes the memoirs of
-Aristoxenus, a contemporary of Alexander, regarding the
-agreeable odor exhaled from his skin; Plutarch also says,
-without giving his authority, who was probably the same,
-that Alexander was “fair and of a light color, passing to
-ruddiness in his face and upon his breast.” An authority
-for the statement of blue and black eyes is Quintus Curtius
-Rufus, a Roman historian of the first century A. D., in <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Historiarum
-Alexandri Magni, Libri Decem</span></cite>. This was written
-three and one-half centuries after the death of Alexander.
-The quotation, from North’s translation of Plutarch, reads:
-“But when Appeles painted Alexander holding lightning in
-his hand he did not shew his fresh color, but made him somewhat
-blacke and swarter than his face in deede was; for
-naturally he had a very fayre white colour, mingled also
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>with red which chiefly appeared in his face and in his
-brest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In Gabon’s <cite>Inquiries into the Human Faculty</cite>, original English
-edition, frontispiece, is a composite photograph of Alexander
-the Great from six different medals selected by the
-curator in the British Museum. The curly hair and Greek
-profile are significant features. The sarcophagus of Alexander
-in the Constantinople Museum called the Sidonian,
-throws some light on this point, although there is some uncertainty
-among archæologists as to whether or not it is Alexander’s
-sarcophagus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>162&#160;: 19. See Von Luschan, <cite>The Early Inhabitants of
-Western Asia</cite>, the section on Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>163&#160;: 7. <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Græculus</span></i>, -<em>a</em>, -<em>um</em>. According to the Latin dictionaries,
-the diminutive adjective, understood mostly in a
-depreciating, contemptuous sense—a paltry Greek.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>163&#160;: 10. Physical types in early Greece. Ripley, pp.
-407–408, quotes Nicolucci, Zaborowski, Virchow, DeLapouge
-and Sergi. <em>Cf.</em> Peake, 2, pp. 158–159, also Ripley, p. 411.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>163&#160;: 14. Physical types of modern Greeks. See the authorities
-given on p. 409 of Ripley’s book, and Von Luschan,
-pp. 221 <em>seq.</em> Von Luschan and most other observers say that
-the modern Greeks, at least in Asia Minor, are a very mixed
-people. See his curve for head form.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>163&#160;: 16. Von Luschan, p. 239: “As in ancient Greece a
-great number of individuals seem to have been fair, with
-blue eyes, I took great care to state whether this were the
-case with the modern ‘Greeks’ in Asia. I have notes for
-580 adults, males and females. In this number there were
-8 with blue and 29 with gray or greenish eyes; all the rest
-had brown eyes. There was not one case of really light colored
-hair, but in nearly all the cases of lighter eyes the
-hair also was less dark than with the other Greeks.” See
-Ripley for European Greeks.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>163&#160;: 19. Albanians. Deniker, 2, pp. 333–334; Von Luschan,
-p. 224; Ripley, p. 410. Most Albanians are tall and
-dark. C. H. Hawes, <cite>Some Dorian Descendants</cite>, p. 258 <em>seq.</em>,
-says that the percentage of light eyes over light hair is nearly
-ten times as great, <em>i. e.</em>, there is 3 per cent of light hair to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>30–38 per cent light eyes among Albanians and selected
-Greeks and Cretans. Also Glück, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Zur Physischen Anthropologie
-der Albanesen</span></cite>, pp. 375–376, and the note to p. 25&#160;: 25
-of this book. Hall gives some interesting data on p. 522 of
-his <cite>Ancient History of the Near East</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>163&#160;: 26. See the note to p. 138&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>164&#160;: 4 <em>seq.</em> Dinaric type identified with the Spartans.
-See C. H. Hawes, <em>op. cit.</em>, pp. 250 <em>seq.</em>, where he discusses the
-Spartans and the Dinaric type, and Hall, <cite>Ancient History of
-the Near East</cite>, pp. 74 and 572.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>164&#160;: 12. On p. 57 of his <cite>History of Greece</cite> Bury inclines
-to the belief that the Dorians came through Epirus, and attributes
-the cause of their invasion to the pressure of the
-Illyrians, to whom the Dorians were probably related. It is
-known that the Illyrians were round-headed. Finally they
-left the regions of the Corinthian Gulf, and sailed around the
-Peloponnesus to southeast Greece, where they settled, leaving
-only a few Dorians behind, who gave their name to the
-country they occupied, but ever afterward were of no consequence
-in Greek history. Some bands went to Crete,
-others on other islands and some to Asia Minor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>164&#160;: 15. Character of the Spartans. See Bury, <cite>History
-of Greece</cite>, pp. 62, 120, 130–135.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>164&#160;: 22. See p. 153 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>165&#160;: 6 <em>seq.</em> <em>Cf.</em> the note to p. 119&#160;: 1 and that to p. 223&#160;: 1.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>165&#160;: 10. G. Elliot Smith, <cite>Ancient Mariners</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>165&#160;: 14. See the note to p. 242&#160;: 5 on languages.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>166&#160;: 3. Gibbon, chap. XLVIII.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER VI. THE NORDIC RACE</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>167&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em> <em>Cf.</em> Peake, 2, p. 162, and numerous other
-authorities. Peake’s summary is brief, clear and up to date.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>167&#160;: 13 <em>seq.</em> R. G. Latham was the first to propound the
-theory of the European origin of the Indo-Europeans. He
-says that there is “a tacit assumption that as the east is the
-probable quarter in which either the human species or the
-greater part of our civilization originated, everything came
-from it. But surely in this there is a confusion between the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>primary diffusion of mankind over the world at large and
-those secondary movements by which, according to even
-the ordinary hypothesis, the Lithuanians, etc., came from
-Asia into Europe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>167&#160;: 17. See <cite>The So-Called North European Race of Mankind</cite>,
-by G. Retzius. Linnæus and DeLapouge were the
-first to use this term, <em>homo Europæus</em>. See Ripley, pp. 103
-and 121.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>168&#160;: 13. See the notes to pp. 31&#160;: 16 and 224&#160;: 19.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>168&#160;: 19 <em>seq.</em> Ripley, chap. IX, p. 205, based on Arbo,
-Hultkranz and others. G. Retzius, in the article mentioned
-above, pp. 303–306, and also <cite>Crania Suecica</cite>; L. Wilser; K.
-Penka; O. Schrader, 2 and 3; Feist, 5; Mathæus Much; Hirt,
-1; and Peake, 2, pp. 162–163, are other authorities. There
-are many more.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>169&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em> G. Retzius, 3, p. 303. See also 1, for the
-racial homogeneity of Sweden.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>169&#160;: 9. Osborn, 1, pp. 457–458, and authorities given.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>169&#160;: 14. Gerard de Geer, <cite>A Geochronology of the Last
-12,000 Years</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>169&#160;: 20 <em>seq.</em> See the note to p. 117&#160;: 18.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>170&#160;: 3 <em>seq.</em> Cuno, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Forschungen im Gebiete der alten Völkerkunde</span></cite>;
-Pösche, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Der Arier</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>170&#160;: 10 <em>seq.</em> Peake, 2; Woodruff, 1, 2; and Myres, 1, p.
-15. See also the notes to pp. 168&#160;: 19 and Chap. IX of this
-book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>170&#160;: 21. See the notes to pp. 213 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>170&#160;: 29–171&#160;: 12. See Osborn’s map, 1, p. 189.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>171&#160;: 12. <em>Cf.</em> Ellsworth Huntington, <cite>The Pulse of Asia</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>171&#160;: 25. Peake, 2, and Montelius, <cite>Sweden in Heathen
-Times</cite>, and most of the authors already given on the subject
-of the Nordics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>172&#160;: 1–25. Ripley, pp. 346–348, and pp. 352 <em>seq.</em>, together
-with the authorities quoted. Also Feist, 5, and Zaborowski,
-1, pp. 274–278. Marco Polo, about 1298, in chap. XLVI, of
-his travels, says that the Russian men were extremely well
-favored, tall and with fair complexions. The women were
-also fair and of a good size, with light hair which they were
-accustomed to wear long.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>173&#160;: 9. See Bury, <cite>History of Greece</cite>, pp. 111–112, and the
-notes to Chap. XIV of this hook.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>173&#160;: 11. Saka or Sacæ. See the notes to p. 259&#160;: 21.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>173&#160;: 11. Cimmerians. For an interesting summary see
-Zaborowski, 1, pp. 137–138. For a lengthy discussion of them
-and of their migrations, and of their possible affiliations with
-the Cimbri, see Ridgeway, 1, pp. 387–397. According to the
-best Assyriologists the Cimmerians are the same people who,
-known as the Gimiri or Gimirrai, according to cuneiform inscriptions,
-were in Armenia in the eighth century B. C.
-See Hall, <cite>Ancient History of the Near East</cite>, p. 495. Bury,
-<cite>History of Greece</cite>, also touches on their raids in Asia Minor.
-Minns, p. 115, believes them to have been Scythians. G.
-Dottin, p. 23 and elsewhere, speaking of the Cimmerians and
-Cimbri, says: “The latter are without doubt Germans, therefore
-the Cimmerians who are the same people are not ancestors
-of the Celts.” The Cimmerians were first spoken
-of by Homer (Odyssey, XI, 12–19) who describes them as
-living in perpetual darkness in the far North. Herodotus
-(IV, 11–13) in his account of Scythia, regards them as the
-early inhabitants of south Russia, after whom the Bosphorus
-Cimmerius and other places were named, and who were
-driven by the Scyths along the Caucasus into Asia Minor,
-where they maintained themselves for a century. The
-Cimmerii are often mentioned in connection with the Thracian
-Treres who made their raids across the Hellespont,
-and possibly some of them took this route, having been cut
-off by the Scyths as the Alani were by the Huns. Certain
-it is that in the middle of the seventh century B. C., Asia
-Minor was ravaged by northern nomads (Herodotus, IV, 12),
-one body of whom is called in Assyrian sources Gimirrai
-and is represented as coming through the Caucasus. They
-were Aryan-speaking, to judge by the few proper names preserved.
-To the north of the Euxine their main body was
-merged finally with the Scyths. Later writers have often
-confused them with the Cimbri of Jutland. There is no relation
-between the Cimbri and the Cymbry or Cymry, a
-word derived from the Welsh Combrox and used by them to
-denote their own people. See note to p. 174&#160;: 26</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>173&#160;: 14. Medes. See the notes to p. 254&#160;: 13.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>173&#160;: 14. Achæans and Phrygians. See Peake, 2, who
-dates them at 2000 B. C. Bury says, pp. 5 and 44 <em>seq.</em>:
-“after the middle of the second millennium B. C., but there
-were previous and long-forgotten invasions.” Consult also
-Ridgeway, 1, and the notes to pp. 158–161 and 225&#160;: 11 of
-this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>173&#160;: 16. See the note to p. 157&#160;: 10.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>173&#160;: 18. The Nordics cross the Rhine into Gaul. Rice
-Holmes, 2, pp. 11–12, gives the seventh century B. C. as the
-date when tall fair Celts first crossed the Rhine westward,
-“but it is unlikely that they were homogeneous....
-Physically they resembled the tall fair Germans whom Cæsar
-and Tacitus describe, but they differed from them in character
-and customs as well as in speech.” See also p. 336, at
-the bottom, where he remarks: “Early in the Hallstatt period
-a tall dolichocephalic race appeared in the Jura and the Doubs,
-who may have been the advanced guard of the Celts.” 1000
-B. C. for the appearance of the Celts on the Rhine is a very
-moderate estimate of the date at which these Nordics appear
-in western Europe, as that would be nearly four centuries
-after the appearance of the Achæans in Greece and
-fully two centuries after the appearance of Nordics who spoke
-Aryan in Italy. The Hallstatt culture (see p. 129) with which
-the invasion of these Nordics is generally associated had
-been in full development for four or five centuries before the
-date here given for the crossing of the Rhine. 700 B. C.,
-given by many authorities, seems to the author too late by
-several centuries.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>173&#160;: 18 <em>seq.</em> G. Dottin, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Manuel Celtique</span></cite>, pp. 453 <em>seq.</em>,
-says: “If the Celts originated in Gaul, it is likely that their
-language would have left in our nomenclature more traces
-than we find, and above all, that the Celtic denominations
-would be applied as well to mountains and water courses as
-to inhabited places.... According to D’Arbois de Jubainville,
-these names were Ligurian. Thus the Celts would have
-named only fortresses, and the names properly geographic
-would be due to the populations which preceded them....
-These constituted for the most part the plebs, reduced almost
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>to the state of slavery, which the Celtic aristocracy of Druids
-and Equites dominated.... On the other hand, if one
-derives the Celts from central Europe, one explains better
-both the presence in central Europe of numerous place names,
-proving the establishment of dwellings of the Celts, and their
-invasions into southeastern Europe, more difficult to conceive
-if they had had to traverse the German forests. The
-migration of a people to a more fertile country is natural
-enough; the departure of the Celts from a fertile country like
-Gaul to a less fertile country like Germany would be very
-unlikely.” And it must be remembered that Tacitus wondered
-why anyone should want to live in Germany, with its
-disagreeable climate, trackless forests and endless swamps.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dottin adds the interesting bit of information, on p. 197,
-that the Gauls, mixed with the Illyrians (Alpines) were the
-farmers of old Gaul. The real Gauls were warriors and
-hunters.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>173&#160;: 22. Teutons. Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 546 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>173&#160;: 26 <em>seq.</em> Deniker, 2, p. 321; Oman, <cite>England Before
-the Norman Conquest</cite>, pp. 13 <em>seq.</em> For Celts and Teutons
-consult also G. de Mortillet, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La formation de la nation française</span></cite>,
-pp. 114 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>174&#160;: 1. Goidels. Rice Holmes, 1, pp. 229, 409–410, and
-2, pp. 319–320, says not earlier than the sixth or seventh
-centuries B. C., but Montelius and others give 800. G. Dottin,
-pp. 457–460, and D’Arbois de Jubainville, 4, t. I, pp.
-342–343, contend that there is no historical record of it. The
-date depends upon whether the word <span lang="grc" xml:lang="grc">κασσίτερος</span>, which designates
-“tin” in the Iliad, is a Celtic word. See also Oman,
-2, pp. 13–14, and Rhys and Jones, <cite>The Welsh People</cite>, pp. 1, 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>174&#160;: 7. Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 308 <em>seq.</em> and 325 <em>seq.</em>; Dottin,
-pp. 1 and 2, and his Conclusion. Also numerous other
-writers, especially D’Arbois de Jubainville, in various volumes
-of the <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Revue Celtique</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>174&#160;: 10. Nordicized Alpines. Dottin, p. 237: “Cæsar
-tells us that the Plebs of Gaul was in a state bordering on
-slavery. It did not dare by itself to do anything and was
-never consulted.” <em>Cf.</em> note to p. 173&#160;: 20.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>174&#160;: 11 Gauls in the Crimea. Ridgeway, <cite>Early Age of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>Greece</cite>, p. 387, quotes Strabo (309 and 507) and the long Protogenes
-inscription from Olbia (<cite>Corp. Inscr. Græc.</cite>, II, no.
-2058).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>174&#160;: 15. Migration of Nordics from Germany. It occurred
-about the eighth century B. C., according to many
-authors, among them G. Dottin, pp. 241, 457–458. “Cæsar,
-Livy, Justinius, summing up Pompeius Trogus, Appian and
-Plutarch, without doubt following a common source, even
-think that excess population is the cause of the Gallic migrations.
-It is one of the reasons to which Cæsar attributes the
-emigration of the Helvetii. Cisalpine Gaul nourished an
-immense population.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>174&#160;: 21. Cymry move westward. See Rice Holmes, 2,
-pp. 319–321; Oman, 2, pp. 13 <em>seq.</em> and especially p. 16;
-Deniker, 2, pp. 320–322; Dottin, pp. 460 <em>seq.</em> Both Rhys and
-Jones, in the <cite>Welsh People</cite>, and G. Dottin, suggest that this
-movement was only part of one great migration which dispersed
-the Nordics from a central home. Their appearance
-in Greece as Galatians at about the same time may be ascribed
-to this migration. See the notes to p. 158&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Oman and many other authorities think the movement
-occurred some time before 325 B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>174&#160;: 21 <em>seq.</em> Cymry and Belgæ. The Cymry or Belgæ
-were “P Celtic” in speech. They first appeared in history
-about 300 B. C., equipped with a culture of the second iron
-period called La Tène. The classic authors were apparently
-uncertain as to whether or not they were Germans (or Teutons),
-but they appear to have been largely composed of this
-element, and to have arrived previously from Scandinavia
-and to have adopted the Celtic tongue. These Belgæ drove
-out the earlier “Q Celts” or Goidels, and the pressure they
-exerted caused many of the later migrations of the Goidels
-or Gauls.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The groups of tribes which in Cæsar’s time occupied the
-part of France to the north and east of the Seine were known
-as Belgæ, while the same people who had crossed to the north
-of the channel were called Brythons. To avoid designating
-these groups separately the author has called all these tribes
-Cymry, although the term can properly be applied only to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>the “<em>P</em> Celts” of Wales, who adopted this designation for
-themselves about the sixth century A. D., according to Rhys
-and Jones, p. 26, where we read: “The singular is Cymro,
-the plural Cymry. The word Cymro, is derived from the
-earlier Cumbrox or Combrox, which is parallel to the Gaulish
-Allobrox (plural Allobroges) a name applied by the Gauls to
-certain Ligurians whose country they conquered.... As
-the word is to be traced to Cumbra-land (Cumberland), its
-use must have extended to the Brythons” (see Rice Holmes,
-2, p. 15, where he says the Brythons spread the La Tène
-culture). “But as the name Cymry seems to have been unknown,
-not only in Brittany, but also in Cornwall, it may be
-conjectured that it cannot have acquired anything like national
-significance for any length of time before the battle
-of Deorham in the year 577, when the West Saxons permanently
-severed the Celts west of the Severn from their kinsmen
-(of Gloucester, Somerset, etc., as now known).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thus it is probable that the national significance of the
-term Cymro may date from the sixth century and is to be
-regarded as the exponent of the amalgamation of the Goidelic
-and Brythonic populations under high pressure from without
-by the Saxons and Angles.” Therefore it is a purely Welsh
-term, properly speaking. Broca, in the <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mémoires d’anthropologie</span></cite>,
-I, 871, p. 395, is responsible for the word as applied
-to the invaders of Gaul who spoke Celtic. He called them
-Kimris. See also his remarks in the <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bulletin de la société
-d’Anthropologie</span></cite>, XI, 1861, pp. 308–309, and the article by L.
-Wilser in <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Anthropologie</span></cite>, XIV, 1903, pp. 496–497.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>175&#160;: 12 <em>seq.</em> See the notes to p. 32&#160;: 8; also Rice Holmes,
-2, p. 337; Fleure and James, pp. 118 <em>seq.</em> Taylor, 1, p. 109,
-says that there is a superficial resemblance between the Teutons
-and Celts, but a radical difference in skulls, the Teutonic
-being more dolichocephalic. Both are tall, large-limbed
-and fair. The Teuton is distinguished by a pink
-and white skin, the Celt is more florid and inclined to freckle.
-The Teuton eye is blue, that of the Celt gray, green, or grayish
-blue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>175&#160;: 21 <em>seq.</em> Rice Holmes, 2, p. 326 <em>seq.</em>, gives a summary
-of the descriptions of various classic authors. Salomon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>Reinach, 2, pp. 80 <em>seq.</em>, discusses Pausanias’ detailed recital
-of the event. For the original see Pausanias, X, 22. <em>Cf.</em>
-also the note to p. 158&#160;: 1.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>176&#160;: 15–177&#160;: 27. The series of notes which were collected
-by the author on the wanderings of these Germanic
-tribes proved so lengthy, and the relationships of the peoples
-under discussion so intricate, that they grew beyond all
-reasonable proportions as notes, and carried the subject far
-afield. Hence it has seemed best to omit them in this connection
-and to embody them in another work.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Perhaps it will therefore be sufficient to say here that the
-results of the research have made it clear that all of these
-tribes were related by blood and by language, and came
-originally from Scandinavia and the neighborhood of the
-Baltic Sea. For some unknown reason, such as pressure of
-population, they began, one after another, a southward
-movement in the centuries immediately before the Christian
-Era, which brought them within the knowledge of the Mediterranean
-world. Their wanderings were very extensive
-and covered Europe from southern Russia and the Crimea
-to Spain, and even to Africa. Many of these tribes broke
-up into smaller groups under distinct names, or united with
-others to form large confederacies. Not only did some of
-them clash with each other almost to the point of extermination
-in their efforts to obtain lands, but in attempting to
-avoid the Huns came into contact with the Romans, and
-broke through the frontier of the Empire at various points.
-From the Romans they gained many of the ideas which were
-later incorporated by them in the various European nations
-which they founded. The result of their conquests was to
-establish a Nordic nobility and upper class in practically
-every country of Europe,—a condition which has remained
-to the present day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>177&#160;: 12. Varangians. See the note on the Varangians,
-to p. 189&#160;: 24.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>177&#160;: 18. See Jordanes, <cite>History of the Goths</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>177&#160;: 27. D’Arbois de Jubainville, 2, pp. 92–93; Taylor,
-<cite>Words and Places</cite>, p. 45; and G. Dottin, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Manuel Celtique</span></cite>, p.
-28. This word came from <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Volcæ</span></i>, the name of a Celtic tribe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>of the upper Rhine. Their name, to the neighboring Teutons,
-came to designate a foreigner. The Volcæ were separated
-into two branches, the Arecomici, established between
-the Rhone and the Garonne, and the Tectosages, in the region
-of the upper Garonne. The term Volcæ has become among
-the Germans <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Walah</span></i>, then <em>Walch</em>, from which is derived
-<em>Welsch</em>, which designates the people of Romance language,
-such as the Italians and French. Among the Anglo-Saxons
-it has become <i><span lang="ang" xml:lang="ang">Wealh</span></i>, from which the derivation <em>Welsh</em>, which
-designates the Gauls, and nowadays their former compatriots
-who migrated to England and settled in Wales.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER VII. TEUTONIC EUROPE</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>179&#160;: 10. Mikklegard. “The Great City.” This was
-the name given to Byzantium by the Goths.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>180&#160;: 2–11. Procopius, <cite>Vandalic War</cite>; Gibbon, chaps.
-XXXI-XXXVIII; Freeman, <cite>Historical Geography of Europe</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>181&#160;: 14. Gibbon, chaps. XXXVII and XXXVIII.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>182&#160;: 1. Eginhard, <cite>The Life of Charlemagne</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>183&#160;: 24. <cite>The Political History of England</cite>, vol. V, by H.
-A. L. Fisher, p. 205: “While the sovereigns of Europe were
-collecting tithes from their clergy for the Holy War, and
-papal collectors were selling indulgences to the scandal of
-some scrupulous minds, the empire became vacant by the
-death of Maximilian on January 19, 1519. For a few months
-diplomacy was busy with the choice of a successor. The king
-of France (Francis I) poured money into Germany, and was
-supported in his candidature by the pope; the king of England
-(Henry VIII) sent Pace to counteract French designs
-with the electors; but the issue was never really in doubt.
-Germany would not tolerate a French ruler; and on June 28,
-1519, Charles of Spain was elected king of the Romans.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>184&#160;: 8. Depopulation. (Thirty Years’ War.) <cite>Cambridge
-Modern History</cite>, vol. IV, p. 418, says that Germany
-was particularly afflicted. The data are unreliable, but the
-population of the empire was probably reduced by two-thirds,
-or from 16,000,000 to less than 6,000,000. Bavaria,
-Franconia and Swabia suffered most. W. Menzel says:
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>“Germany is reckoned by some to have lost one-half, by
-others, two-thirds, of her entire population during the Thirty
-Years’ War. In Saxony 900,000 men had fallen within ten
-years; in Bohemia the number of inhabitants at the demise
-of Frederick II, before the last deplorable inroads made by
-Barier and Torstenson, had sunk to one-fourth. Augsburg,
-instead of 80,000 had 18,000 inhabitants. Every province,
-every town throughout the Empire had suffered at an equal
-ratio, with the exception of Tyrol.... The working class
-had almost totally disappeared. In Franconia the misery
-and depopulation had reached such an extent that the Franconian
-estates, with the assent of the ecclesiastical princes,
-abolished in 1650 the celibacy of the Catholic clergy and permitted
-each man to have two wives.... The nobility were
-compelled by necessity to enter the services of the princes,
-the citizens were impoverished and powerless, the peasantry
-had been utterly demoralized by military rule and reduced
-to servitude.” It has been said that the city of Berlin contained
-but 300 citizens; the Palatinate of the Rhine but 200
-farmers. In character, intelligence and in morality, the
-German people were set back two hundred years. There
-are, in addition to the authorities quoted here, numerous
-others who make the same observations, in fact, this depopulation
-is one of the outstanding results of the Thirty
-Years’ War.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See also Anton Gindely, <cite>History of the Thirty Years’ War</cite>,
-p. 398.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>184&#160;: 22 <em>seq.</em> The <cite>British Medical Journal</cite> for April 8,
-1916; and Parsons, <cite>Anthropological Observations on German
-Prisoners of War</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>185&#160;: 6. See the note to p. 196&#160;: 27.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER VIII. THE EXPANSION OF THE NORDICS</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>188&#160;: 5. Beddoe, 4; Ripley, chap. VI.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>188&#160;: 11. <cite>British Medical Journal</cite> for April 8, 1916.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>188&#160;: 15. Ripley, pp. 221 and 469, and the authorities
-quoted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>188&#160;: 24–189&#160;: 6. P. Kretschmer; and, on the history of
-High and Low German, see Herman Paul, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Grundriss der
-Germanischen Philologie</span></cite>; <cite>The Encyclopædia Britannica</cite>, under
-German Language, gives a good summary.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>189&#160;: 7. Ripley, p. 256.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>189&#160;: 12. Villari, <cite>The Barbarian Invasions of Italy</cite>; Thos.
-Hodgkin, <cite>Italy and Her Invaders</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>189&#160;: 15. Brenner Pass. See Rice Holmes, <cite>Cæsar’s Conquest
-of Gaul</cite>, p. 37; Ripley, p. 290; and most histories of the
-incursions of the barbarians into Italy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>189&#160;: 24. Varangians. Most of the early historians of
-Russia and Germany and the monk Nestor, who was the
-earliest annalist of the Russians, agree in deriving the Varangians
-or Varegnes from Scandinavia. They probably were
-more of the same people whom we find as Varini on the continental
-shores of the North Sea. The names of the first
-founders of the Russian monarchy are Scandinavian or
-Northman. Their language, according to Constantine Porphyrogenitus,
-differed essentially from the Sclavonian. The
-author of the annals of St. Bertin, who first names the Russians
-(Rhos) in the year 939 of his annals, assigns them Sweden
-for their country. Luitprand calls them the same as the
-Normans. The Finns, Laplanders and Esthonians speak of
-the Swedes to the present day as Roots, Rootsi, Ruorzi,
-Rootslane or Rudersman, meaning rowers. See Schlözer, in
-his <cite>Nestor</cite>, p. 60; and <cite>Malte Brun</cite>, p. 378, as well as <cite>Kluchevsky</cite>,
-vol. I, pp. 56–76 and 92. The Varangians, according to
-Gibbon, formed the body-guard of the Greek Emperor at
-Byzantium. These were the Russian Varangians, who made
-their way to that city by the eastern routes. Canon Isaac
-Taylor, in <cite>Words and Places</cite>, p. 110, remarks that “for centuries
-the Varangian Guard upheld the tottering throne of
-the Byzantine emperors.” This Varangian Guard was very
-largely reinforced by Saxons fleeing from the Norman Conquest
-of England. The name Varangi is undoubtedly identical
-with <em>Frank</em>, and is the term used in the Levant to designate
-Christians of the western rite, from the days of the
-Crusades down to the present time. <em>Cf.</em> Ferangistan—<em>land
-of the Franks</em>, or, as it is now interpreted, “Europe,” especially
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>western Europe. E. B. Soane, To <cite>Mesopotamia and Kurdistan
-in Disguise</cite>, uses the phrase <em>á la ferangi</em> as describing
-anything imported from western Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>190&#160;: 1. Deniker, 2, pp. 333–334; Ripley.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>190&#160;: 9. Deniker, the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>190&#160;: 13. Ripley, pp. 281–283.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>190&#160;: 15. Ripley, pp. 343 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>190&#160;: 19. See the notes to pp. 131&#160;: 26, 140&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em> and
-196&#160;: 18.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>190&#160;: 26. See p. 140 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>192&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em> D’Arbois de Jubainville, 1, t. XIV, pp. 357–395;
-Feist, 5, p. 365. Col. W. R. Livermore, in correspondence,
-says that practically all students on the Celtiberian
-question agree upon the point where the Celts entered Spain,
-namely, that designated by de Jubainville. They passed
-along the Atlantic coast, across the Pyrenees, where the railroad
-from Paris to Madrid now crosses, about 500 B. C.,
-between the time of Avienus, ± 525 and Herodotus, ± 443.
-In the time of Avienus the Ligurians had both ends of the
-Pyrenees from Ampurias to Bayonne, and controlled the
-sources of the Batis. In the time of Herodotus, the Gauls
-had the country up to the Curretes. See also Müllenhoff,
-<cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Deutsche Altertumskunde</span></cite>, II, p. 238, and Deniker, 2, p. 321.
-D’Arbois de Jubainville, <em>op. cit.</em>, especially pp. 363–364, says:
-“The name Celtiberian was adopted at the time of Hannibal,
-who entered Spain, married a Celt, and thus won the assistance
-of the Celts in his march on Rome.... The name
-Celtiberian is the generic term for designating the Celts established
-in the center of Spain, but the word is sometimes
-taken in a less extended sense to designate only one part of
-this important group.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>192&#160;: 8. Sergi, 4, p. 70. See also p. 156 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>192&#160;: 14. See the note to p. 156, or Ridgeway, <cite>The Early
-Age of Greece</cite>, p. 375.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>192&#160;: 18. Ridgeway, <em>op. cit.</em>, p. 375. This may refer to
-the veins showing blue through the fair Nordic skin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>192&#160;: 18. Ridgeway, <em>op. cit.</em>, p. 375. Here he says: “The
-Visigoths became the master race, and from them the Spanish
-Grandees, among whom fair hair is a common feature,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>derive their <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">sangre azul</span></i>. After a glorious struggle against
-the Saracens, which served to keep alive their martial ardor
-and thus brace up the ancient vigor of the race, from the
-16th century onward the Visigothic wave seems to have exhausted
-its initial energy, and the aboriginal stratum has
-more and more come to the surface and has thus left Spain
-sapless and supine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>102&#160;: 22. Taylor, 2, pp. 308–309, says: “From the name of
-the same nation,—the Goths of Spain,—are derived curiously
-enough, two names, one implying extreme honor, the other
-extreme contempt. The Spanish noble, who boasts that the
-<i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">sangre azul</span></i> of the Goths runs in his veins with no admixture,
-calls himself an <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">hidalgo</span></i>, that is, a son of the Goth, as his
-proudest title.” A footnote to this reads: “The old etymology
-<i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">Hijo d’algo</span></i>, son of someone, has been universally given
-up in favor of <em>hi’ d’al Go</em>, son of the Goth. (More correctly
-<em>hi’ del Go’</em>.) See a paper ‘On Oc and Oyl’ translated by
-Bishop Thirlwall, for the <cite>Philological Museum</cite>, vol. II, p.
-337.” Taylor goes on to say, however, that the version
-<em>hi’ d’ algo</em>, son of someone, is still given as the origin of this
-word in R. Barcia’s <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Primer Diccionaria Géneral Étimologico
-de la Lengua Español</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Concerning some other derivations Taylor continues: “Of
-Gothic blood scarcely less pure than that of the Spanish
-Hidalgos, are the Cagots of Southern France, a race of outcast
-pariahs, who in every village live apart, executing every
-vile or disgraceful kind of toil, and with whom the poorest
-peasant refuses to associate. These Cagots are the descendants
-of those Spanish Goths, who, on the invasion of the
-Moors, fled to Aquitaine, where they were protected by
-Charles Martel. But the reproach of Arianism clung to
-them, and religious bigotry branded them with the name
-<em>câ gots</em> or ‘Gothic Dogs.’ a name which still clings to them,
-and keeps them apart from their fellow-men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Elsewhere we find the following: “The fierce and intolerant
-Arianism of the Visigothic conquerors of Spain has given
-us another word. The word Visigoth has become Bigot,
-and thus on the imperishable tablets of language the Catholics
-have handed down to perpetual infamy the name and nation
-of their persecutors.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>193&#160;: 14 <em>seq.</em> <em>Cf.</em> DeLapouge, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Aryen</span></cite>, p. 343, where he
-says that the exodus of the Conquistadores was fatal to
-Spain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>193&#160;: 17. Rice Holmes, 2; and the note to p. 69 of this
-book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>194&#160;: 1. See the note to p. 173.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>194&#160;: 8. Ridgeway, 1, p. 372, says: “We know from Strabo
-and other writers that the Aquitani were distinctly Iberian.”
-Consult also Rice Holmes, 2, p. 12, where he quotes Cæsar.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>194&#160;: 14 <em>seq.</em> Ridgeway, <em>op. cit.</em>, pp. 372 and 395; Ripley,
-chap. VII, pp. 137 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>194&#160;: 19 <em>seq.</em> Rice Holmes, 2, under Belgæ, pp. 5, 12, 257,
-259, 304–305, 308–309, 311, 315, 318–325; and <cite>Ancient Britain</cite>,
-p. 445. The modern composition of the French population
-has been investigated by Edmond Bayle and Dr. Leon
-MacAuliffe, who find that there is decided race mixture, with
-chestnut pigmentation of hair and eyes predominating.
-Blond traits were found to be almost confined to the north
-and east, while brunet characters prevail in the south. Pure
-black hair is exceedingly rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>195&#160;: 14. Vanderkindere, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Recherches sur l’Ethnologie de
-la Belgique</span></cite>, pp. 569–574; Rice Holmes, 2, p. 323; Beddoe, 4,
-pp. 21 <em>seq.</em> and 72.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>195&#160;: 18. Ridgeway, 1, p. 373; Ripley, p. 127; Rice
-Holmes, 2; and Feist, 5, p. 14.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>195&#160;: 25 <em>seq.</em> Franks of the lower Rhine. Eginhard, in
-his <cite>Life of Charlemagne</cite>, p. 7, states the following: “There
-were two great divisions or tribes of the Franks, the Salians,
-deriving their name probably from the river Isala, the Yssel,
-who dwelt on the lower Rhine, and the Ripuarians, probably
-from <em>Ripa</em>, a bank, who dwelt about the banks of the middle
-Rhine. The latter were by far the most numerous, and
-spread over a greater extent of country; but to the Salians
-belongs the glory of founding the great Frankish kingdom
-under the royal line of the Merwings” (Merovingians).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>196&#160;: 2 <em>seq.</em> Ripley, p. 157; DeLapouge, <em>passim</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>196&#160;: 7 <em>seq.</em> Oman, 2, pp. 499 <em>seq.</em>; Beddoe, 4, p. 94 and
-chap. VII; Fleure and James, pp. 121, 129; Taylor, 2, p. 129;
-Ripley, pp. 151–153, 316–317.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>196&#160;: 18 <em>seq.</em> DeLapouge, <em>passim</em>; Ripley, pp. 150–155.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>197&#160;: 3. See David Starr Jordan, <cite>War and the Breed</cite>, pp.
-61 seq. This stature has somewhat recovered in recent years.
-It is now, in Corrèze, only 2 cm. below the average for the
-whole of France. See Grillière, pp. 392 <em>seq.</em> W. R. Inge,
-<cite>Outspoken Essays</cite>, pp. 41–42: “The notion that frequent war
-is a healthy tonic for a nation is scarcely tenable. Its dysgenic
-effect, by eliminating the strongest and healthiest of
-the population while leaving the weaklings at home to be
-the fathers of the next generation, is no new discovery. It
-has been supported by a succession of men, such as Tenon,
-Dufau, Foissac, DeLapouge and Richet in France; Tiedemann
-and Seeck in Germany; Guerrini in Italy; Kellogg and
-Starr Jordan in America. The case is indeed overwhelming.
-The lives destroyed in war are nearly all males, thus disturbing
-the sex equilibrium of the population. They are in
-the prime of life, at the age of greatest fecundity; and they
-are picked from a list out of which from 20 to 30 per cent
-have been rejected for physical unfitness. It seems to be
-proved that the children born in France during the Napoleonic
-wars were poor and undersized, 30 millimeters below the
-normal height.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>197&#160;: 11. DeLapouge, <em>passim</em>; Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 306 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>197&#160;: 29–198: 10. R. Collignon, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Anthropologie de la
-France</span></cite>, pp. 3 <em>seq.</em>; DeLapouge, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Sélections sociales</span></cite>; Ripley,
-pp. 87–89; Inge, p. 41; Jordan, <em>passim</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>198&#160;: 22. Conscript Armies. Two interesting letters bearing
-on the racial differences composing conscript and volunteer
-armies in the recent World War may here be quoted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first, from Mr. T. Rice Holmes, relates to the English
-army of Kitchener in 1915. “Perhaps it may interest you
-to know that in 1915 when recruits belonging to Kitchener’s
-army were training near Rochampton, I noticed that almost
-every man was fair,—not, of course, with the pronounced
-fairness of the men of the north of Scotland, who are descended
-from Scandinavians, but with such fairness as is to be seen
-in England. These men, as you know, were volunteers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The second, from DeLapouge, concerns our American
-army in France. “I have been able to verify for myself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>your observations on the American army. The first to arrive
-were all volunteers, all dolicho-blonds; but the draft
-afterwards brought in inferior elements. At St. Nazaire, at
-Tours, and at Poictiers, I have been able to examine American
-soldiers by the tens of thousands and I have been able to
-formulate for myself a very definite conception of the types.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>199&#160;: 9. H. Belloc, <cite>The Old Road</cite>; Peake, <cite>Memorials of
-Old Leicestershire</cite>, pp. 34–41; Fleure and James, p. 127.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>199&#160;: 23. See the notes to pp. 174&#160;: 21 and 247&#160;: 3 of this
-book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>199&#160;: 29–200&#160;: 11. See p. 131 of this book; also Rice
-Holmes, 1, pp. 231–236, 434, 455–456; and 2, p. 15.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>200&#160;: 10. <em>Cf.</em> Rice Holmes, 1, pp. 446, 449 and the note
-on 451; also Oman, 2, p. 16.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>200&#160;: 12. Inferred from Rice Holmes, 1, p. 232; also Beddoe,
-4, p. 31.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>200&#160;: 18. Oman, 2, pp. 174–175 and chap. III <em>seq.</em>, treats
-specially of these times. See also Beddoe, 4, pp. 36, 37 and
-chap. V.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>200&#160;: 24. Oman, 2, pp. 215–219.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>201&#160;: 1. Villari, vol I, or Hodgkin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>201&#160;: 6 <em>seq.</em> Oman, 2; Ripley, pp. 154, 156; Beddoe, 4,
-p. 94; Fleure and James, pp. 121, 129; Taylor, 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>201&#160;: 11 <em>seq.</em> Beddoe, 4, chap. VII and the notes to p.
-196&#160;: 7 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>201&#160;: 18 <em>seq.</em> See pp. 63, 64.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>201&#160;: 23 <em>seq.</em> See the notes to p. 247. Decline of the
-Nordic type in England. Beddoe, H.; Fleure and James;
-Peake and Horton, <cite>A Saxon Graveyard at East Shefford, Berks</cite>,
-p. 103.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>202&#160;: 4. Beddoe, 4, p. 148.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>202&#160;: 13. Beddoe, 4, p. 92 and also chap. XII.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>202&#160;: 17. Ripley, under Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>202&#160;: 23 <em>seq.</em> See the notes to p. 108&#160;: 1.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>203&#160;: 5 <em>seq.</em> The intellectual inferiority of the Irish. If
-there is any indication of the intellectual rating of various
-foreign countries to be derived from the draft examinations
-of our foreign-born, grouped according to place of nativity,
-a paper by Major Bingham of Washington, in regard to “The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>Relation of Intelligence Ratings to Nativity” may be quoted.
-The total number of foreign-born examined, which formed
-the basis of this report, was 12,407, while the total number of
-native-born whites was 93,973. Only countries were considered
-which were represented by more than 100 men in the
-examinations. The tests were divided into those for literates
-and those for illiterates, so that even men not speaking English
-could be graded. In these examinations the Irish made
-a surprisingly poor showing, falling far below the English
-and Scotch, who stood very high, as well as below the Germans,
-Austrians, French Canadians, Danes, Dutch, Belgians,
-Swedes and Norwegians, being about on a par with
-the Russians, Poles and Italians. Therefore, if these tests
-are any criterion of intellectual ability, the Irish are noticeably
-inferior.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>203&#160;: 18. See p. 123 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>203&#160;: 24. Beddoe, 4, p. 139 and chap. XIV.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>204&#160;: 1. See the note to p. 150&#160;: 21.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>204&#160;: 5. There is an amusing discussion in Rice Holmes,
-1, on the Pictish question. See pp. 409–424. Rice Holmes
-contends that the Picts were not pure remnants of the Pre-Celtic
-inhabitants, but a mixture of these with Celts. The
-term Picts has been very widely accepted as a designation for
-those Pre-Celtic inhabitants, who were certainly there. No
-other name has been given for them and it is in this sense
-that it is used here, and that Rice Holmes himself is obliged
-to use it on p. 456. It will be useful to the reader to peruse
-pp. 13–16 of Rhys and Jones, <cite>The Welsh People</cite>. Appendix
-B, of that volume (pp. 617 <em>seq.</em>), written by Sir J. Morris
-Jones, entitled “Pre-Aryan Syntax in Insular Celtic,” shows
-the Anaryan survivals in Welsh and Irish to be remarkably
-similar to ancient Egyptian, which, with the Berber of intermediate
-situation, belongs to the great Hamitic family of
-languages and was the tongue of the primitive Mediterraneans.
-For Beddoe’s opinion see 4, p. 36. On p. 247 he
-says, speaking of the Highland people: “Every here and there
-a decidedly Iberian physiognomy appears, which makes one
-think Professor Rhys right in supposing that the Picts were
-in part, at least, of that stock.” See Hector McLean, 1,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>p. 170, where he suggests that the Picts were originally the
-Pictones from the south bank of the Loire in Gaul.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The name Pixie, met with so frequently in Irish legends,
-and relating to little people similar to dwarfs, may have some
-connection with these shy little Mediterraneans whom the
-Nordics found on their arrival and who were forced back by
-them into inaccessible districts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>204&#160;: 19. See the article on “Pre-Aryan Syntax in Insular
-Celtic,” just mentioned, and Beddoe, 4, p. 46, quoting
-Elton, p. 167. For other Non-Aryan remnants, especially in
-names, see Hector McLean, 1, <em>passim</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>205&#160;: 3. See Fleure and James, pp. 62, 73, 119–128, and
-especially pp. 125 and 151.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>205&#160;: 10. The same, pp. 38–39, 75 and elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>205&#160;: 16. This is intimated by Rhys and Jones, in <cite>The
-Welsh People</cite>, p. 33.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>205&#160;: 20 <em>seq.</em> The same, chap. I, especially p. 35 and pp.
-502 <em>seq.</em>; Fleure and James, p. 143.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>206&#160;: 3. Fleure and James, pp. 38, 75, 119, 152. These
-gentlemen say, on p. 38, that they believe that certain types,
-without any intervening social or linguistic barrier for centuries,
-have apparently persisted side by side in very marked
-fashion in certain parts of Wales.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A letter from Mr. Baring Gould confirms this: “In Wales
-there are two types, the dark Siluric and the light Norman.
-Here in the west of England we have the same two types.
-In this neighborhood one village is fair, the next dark and
-sallow. It is the same in Cornwall; in certain villages the
-type is dark and sallow, in others fair. There is no comparison
-between the capabilities moral and physical between
-the two types. The dark is tricky, unreliable and goes
-under, and the fair type predominates in trade, in business,
-in farming and in every department.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Beddoe, Fleure and James, and also Hector McLean remark
-on the various moral and mental capabilities of the
-different physical types.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>206&#160;: 13. Beddoe, 4, chap. VIII.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>206&#160;: 16 <em>seq.</em> Taylor, 2, p. 129; Keary, pp. 486 <em>seq.</em> On
-the Normans see Beddoe, chaps. VIII, IX and X.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>207&#160;: 2. Beddoe, the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>207&#160;: 11. Gibbon, chap. LVI; Taylor, 2, p. 133.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>207&#160;: 15. Beddoe, chap. VIII.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>208&#160;: 8. Beddoe, 4, p. 95. The breadth of skull “of the
-Norman aristocracy may probably have been smaller, but
-the ecclesiastics of Norman or French nationality, who
-abounded in England for centuries after the conquest and
-who, in many cases, rose from the subjugated Celtic [Alpine]
-layer of population, have left us a good many broad and round
-skulls. Thus the crania of three bishops of Durham&#160;...
-yield an index of 85.6, while those of eight Anglican canons
-dating from before the conquest yield one of 74.9. So far,
-however, as the actual conquest and armed occupation of
-England was concerned, the aristocracy and military caste,
-who were largely of Scandinavian type, came over in much
-larger proportion than the more Belgic or Celtic lower ranks,
-insomuch that it has been said that more of the Norman
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">noblesse</span></i> came over to England than were left behind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>During the Middle Ages the church was a very democratic
-institution, and it was only through its offices that the lower
-ranks succeeded in working their way up. This was partly
-because the older peoples possessed the Roman learning, and
-because the northern invaders were more addicted to martial
-than to priestly pursuits. The conquered people had no
-chance to rise in political, aristocratic or military circles, and
-contented themselves with the church. At the present time,
-in many Catholic countries, notably Ireland, the priests are
-derived from the lowest stratum of the population, as may
-be clearly recognized in their portraits.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>208&#160;: 14. Beddoe, <em>passim</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>208&#160;: 20. Beddoe, 4, p. 270; G. Retzius, 3; Ripley; Fleure
-and James, p. 152; Alphonse de Candolle, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Histoire des sciences
-et des savants depuis deux siècles</span></cite>, p. 576; Peake and Horton,
-p. 103; and the note to p. 201&#160;: 23 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>208&#160;: 26. Beddoe, 4, p. 148.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>210&#160;: 5. <em>Cf.</em> Beddoe, p. 94.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>210&#160;: 20. Ripley, pp. 228, 283, 345.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>210&#160;: 24. Holland and Flanders. Ripley, pp. 157 and
-293 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>210&#160;: 25. Flemings and Franks. See Sir Harry Johnston,
-<cite>Views and Reviews</cite>, p. 101.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>211&#160;: 6. The authorities quoted in Ripley, p. 207. See
-also Fleure and James, p. 140; Zaborowski, 2; and C. O.
-Arbo, <cite>Yner</cite>, p. 25.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>211&#160;: 26. Ripley, pp. 363–365; Feist, 5; and Dr. Westerlund
-as quoted in “The Finns,” by Van Cleef.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>212&#160;: 1. Ripley, p. 341.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>212&#160;: 4. See the note to p. 242&#160;: 16.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER IX. THE NORDIC FATHERLAND</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>213&#160;: 1–23. <em>Cf.</em> O. Schrader, 2 and 3; Mathæus Much;
-Hirt, 1, 2; Zaborowski, 1, pp. 109–110; Peake, 2, pp. 163–167;
-Feist, 1, p. 14; Taylor, 1; Ripley, p. 127; Ridgeway, 1, p.
-373 and the notes to pp. 239&#160;: 16 <em>seq.</em>, and 253&#160;: 19 of this
-book. D’Arbois de Jubainville, 4, t. I, pp. ix and 214, gives
-the date when the Indo-Europeans were united as 2500 B. C.
-Feist, 5, believes the Nordics were still in their homeland
-between 2500 and 2000 B. C. This was the transition period
-from Stone to Bronze in north-middle and eastern Europe.
-Breasted, <cite>Ancient Times</cite>, says: “It has recently been scientifically
-demonstrated on the basis, chiefly, of the Amarna
-tablets and other cuneiform evidence, that the Aryans had
-by 2000 or 1800 B. C. begun to leave a home on the east or
-southeast of the Caspian, where they divided into two
-branches, one going southeast into India, the other southwest
-into Babylon.” “The first occurrence of Indo-European
-names is in the Tell-el-Amarna (Egyptian) correspondence,”
-says Myres, <cite>Dawn of History</cite>, p. 153, “which gives so vivid
-a picture of Syrian affairs in the years immediately after
-1400. They represent chieftains scattered up and down
-Syria and Palestine, and they include the name of Tushratta,
-king of the large district of Mitanni beyond Euphrates....
-But this is a minor matter; nothing is commoner in the history
-of migratory peoples than to find a very small leaven of
-energetic intruders ruling and organizing large native populations
-without either learning their subjects’ language or
-improving their own until considerably later, if at all. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>Norman princes, for example, bear Teutonic names, Robert,
-William, Henry; but it is Norman French in which they
-govern Normandy and correspond with the king of France.
-All these Indo-European names (mentioned in the tablets),
-belong to the Iranian group of languages, which is later found
-widely spread over the whole plateau of Persia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>214&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em> See pp. 158–159 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>214&#160;: 7 <em>seq.</em> Herodotus, IV, 17, 18, 33, 53, 65, 74, etc., for
-notes on the Scythians. Wheat was cultivated in the southern
-part of Scythia. Corn was an article of trade, and the
-loom was used. See also Zaborowski, 1; Ripley; Feist, 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>214&#160;: 10. Scythians. According to Zaborowski, 1, the
-Scythians were the earliest known Nordic nomads of Scythia,
-or southern Russia, from whom no doubt came the Achæans,
-Cimmerians, etc., and later the Persian conquerors, the leaders
-of the Kassites and Mitanni, etc. The Sacæ were an
-eastern branch of the Scythians (and likewise the Massagetæ),
-who threw off branches into India. Possibly the Wu-Suns
-and the Epthalites, or White Huns, were eastern offshoots.
-Owing to the fact that Scythia has been swept time
-and again by various hordes moving east and west, and has
-served no doubt as a meeting-ground for Alpines, Nordics
-and Mongols, these may all, at some period or another, have
-been called Scythians because they inhabited this little-known
-territory. But the indications are strongly in favor
-of the original Scythians being Nordics. It is in this sense
-that the name is here applied. Minns, <cite>Scythians and Greeks</cite>,
-and D’Arbois de Jubainville, 4, t. I, are two other authorities
-who have discussed the Scythians at length.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>214&#160;: 11. Cimmerians. See the note to p. 173. On the
-Persians, see the notes to p. 254. For the Sacæ, the note to
-p. 259&#160;: 21; for the Massagetæ, the same; for the Kassites,
-that to p. 239&#160;: 13. These last are Non-Aryan, according
-to some authors, including Prince, but Hall, <cite>The Ancient
-History of the Near East</cite>, says they are undeniably Aryans.
-For the Mitanni see the note to p. 239&#160;: 16.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>214&#160;: 26–215&#160;: 3. See p. 161 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>215&#160;: 15. See p. 160 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>215&#160;: 25. Dante Alighieri. It is interesting to know that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>the name Aligheri is Gothic, a corruption of Aldiger. It belongs
-to such German names as those which include the word
-“<em>ger</em>,” spear, as in Gerhard, Gertrude, etc. This name came
-into the family through Dante’s grandmother on the father’s
-side, a Goth from Ferrara, whose name was Aldigero. With
-regard to the origin of his grandfather and mother, the attempt
-to connect him with Roman families is known to be
-a pure fiction on the part of the Italian biographers, who
-thought it more glorious to be a Roman than anything else;
-but his descent from pure Germanic parentage is practically
-proved, since the grandfather was a warrior, knighted by the
-emperor Conrad, and Dante himself declares that he belonged
-to the petty nobility. Even to the beginning of the
-fifteenth century many Italians are described in old documents
-as Alemanni, Langobardi, etc., <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ex alamanorum genere</span></i>,
-<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">legibus vivens Langobardorum</span></i>, etc. Though the majority of
-them had adopted Roman law, whereby the documentary
-evidence of their descent usually disappeared, they were
-thoroughly Germanic in blood, especially those to whom
-Rome owes much. See Franz Xaver Kraus, Dante, pp.
-21–25, and Savigny, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Geschichte des römischen Rechte im Mittelalter</span></cite>,
-I, chap. III.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>216&#160;: 1. See the notes to p. 254&#160;: 13–15.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>216&#160;: 4. Nordic Sacæ. See the notes to p. 259&#160;: 21.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>216&#160;: 9. See the notes to pp. 70 and 242&#160;: 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>216&#160;: 12. Gibbon, especially vols. III and IV, which contain
-numerous references, and the note to p. 135&#160;: 25.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>216&#160;: 17. Tenney Frank, <cite>Race Mixture in the Roman Empire</cite>,
-pp. 704 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>217&#160;: 3. Plutarch’s <cite>Life of Pompey the Great</cite>, and his <cite>Life
-of Cæsar</cite>; also Ferrero, <cite>The Greatness and Decline of Rome</cite>,
-vol. II, “Cæsar,” chap. VII.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>217&#160;: 12. Decline of the Romans and the Punic Wars.
-Livy, I, XXI <em>seq.</em>, and Appian, <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">De rebus hispaniensibus</span></cite>, and
-<cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">De bello Annibalico</span></cite>. Also Pliny, I, and Polybius, I. D’Arbois
-de Jubainville, 1, section entitled “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Celtibères pendant
-la seconde guerre punique</span>,” pp. 44 <em>seq.</em>, says that Hannibal’s
-success in Rome was due to the aid of the Celts and
-the Celtiberians. Hannibal gained much of his army from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>the Celts of Spain, Gaul, and Cis-Alpine Gaul, as he marched
-toward Rome.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>217&#160;: 16. Social and Servile Wars. Plutarch’s <cite>Lives</cite> of
-Fabius Maximus and of Sylla.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>217&#160;: 26. See the note to p. 51&#160;: 18.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>218&#160;: 16. Tenney Frank, 1 and 2; Dill, 2, book II, chaps.
-II and III; and 1, book II, chap. I; Myers, <cite>Ancient History</cite>,
-pp. 498–499, 523–525. Bury, in <cite>A History of the Later Roman
-Empire</cite>, vol. I, chap. III, makes slavery, oppressive taxation,
-the importation of barbarians and Christianity the four
-chief causes of the weakness and failure of the Empire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Gibbon, vol I, at the end of chap. X, says, in speaking
-of the extinction of the old Roman families, that only the
-Calpurnian gens long survived the tyranny of the Cæsars.
-See the last three or four pages of the chapter. Also Frederick
-Adams Woods, <cite>The Influence of Monarchs</cite>, p. 295.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>219&#160;: 11–220&#160;: 19. Frank, 1, p. 705.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>220&#160;: 21. See p. 216 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>221&#160;: 25. Gibbon; Lecky, <cite>The History of European Morals</cite>;
-and the note to p. 218&#160;: 16.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER X. THE NORDIC RACE OUTSIDE OF EUROPE</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>223&#160;: 2. Hall, <cite>Ancient History of the Near East</cite>, pp. 380
-<em>seq.</em>; Myers, <cite>Ancient History</cite>, p. 33, footnote. Also consult
-Von Luschan, <cite>The Early Inhabitants of Western Asia</cite>, p. 230.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>223&#160;: 5. DeLapouge, L’Aryen, pp. 200 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>223&#160;: 5. Tamahu. Authorities above; Sergi, 4, pp. 59
-<em>seq.</em>; Beddoe, 4, p. 14, for the question of their race.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>223&#160;: 12. Broca, 1; Collignon, 5 and 7; Sergi, 1; and Ripley,
-p. 279. There are numerous articles on the blond Berbers
-and references to their relation to the Vandals. Ripley,
-based on Broca, gives the essential information. Gibbon,
-chap. XXXIII, is an important reference.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Blond Moors. Procopius says, IV, 13, describing the fighting
-with the Moors in Mauretania beyond Mt. Aurasium,
-which is thirteen days’ journey west of Carthage: “I have
-heard Ortaias say that beyond these nations of Moors, beyond
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>Aurasium, which he ruled” [apparently south] “there
-was no habitation of men, but desert land to a great distance,
-and that beyond this desert there are men, not black-skinned
-like the Moors, but very white in body and fair-haired.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mr. J. B. Thornhill relates that about fifteen years ago he
-was in Morocco (presumably near Tangier) and while there
-he saw several purely blond Berbers from the Riff mountains.
-A young girl, especially, was an almost pure Swedish blond.
-The coloring, however, was pale and whitish rather than
-pink; the eyes were blue and the hair wavy and very blond.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>223&#160;: 21. For the Philistines, Anakim and Achæans see
-Ridgeway, 1, pp. 618 <em>seq.</em> Sir William Ridgeway places the
-appearance of the Philistines as nearly synchronous with
-that of the Achæans, and states that their weapons and armor
-were similar to those of the Achæans, but different from those
-of the other nations of the early world. <em>Cf.</em> also Hall, <cite>Ancient
-History of the Near East</cite>, p. 72, especially footnote 1, where he
-says: “The Philistines were specially receptive of Hellenic
-culture and eager to claim relationship with the Greeks, and
-disassociate themselves from the Semites. Their coin types
-shew this, see p. 399, n.” He regards them as Cretans.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>223&#160;: 22–23. Sons of Anak. Numbers, XIII, 33: “And
-there we saw the giants, the sons of Anak, which came of
-the giants; and we were in our own sight as grasshoppers
-and so we were in their sight.” Deuteronomy, I, 28:
-“Whither shall we go up? Our brethren have discouraged
-our heart, saying, ‘The people is greater and taller than we;
-the cities are great and walled up to heaven; and moreover
-we have seen the sons of the Anakim there.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fairness of David. I Samuel, XVI, 11, 12: “And Samuel
-said unto Jesse, Are here all thy children? And he said,
-There remaineth the youngest, and behold, he keepeth the
-sheep. And Samuel said unto Jesse, Send and fetch him;
-for we shall not sit down till he come hither. And he sent,
-and brought him in. Now he was ruddy, and withal of a
-beautiful countenance, and goodly to look to....” Chap.
-XVII, 41,42: “And the Philistine came on and drew near unto
-David, and when the Philistine looked about, and saw David,
-he disdained him; for he was but a youth, and ruddy and of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>a fair countenance.” In the Hebrew, the phrase <cite>Of a Beautiful
-Countenance</cite> means fair of eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The presence of Nordics in Syria among the Amorites is
-indicated by the tall stature, long-headedness and fair skin
-with which they are depicted on the Egyptian monuments.
-In some instances their eyes are blue. See p. 59 of Albert
-T. Clay’s <cite>The Empire of the Amorites</cite>, also Sayce, and Hall.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>224&#160;: 3. Wu-Suns and Hiung-Nu. Minns, <cite>Scythians and
-Greeks</cite>, p. 121. DeLapouge, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Aryen</span></cite>, mentions the existence
-of a number of central Asiatic tribes in addition to the Wu-Suns,
-who were Nordic. See also J. Klaproth, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Tableaux historiques
-de l’Asie</span></cite>. Zaborowski, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les peuples aryens</span></cite>, p. 286,
-says: “The Hiung-Nu hurled themselves upon the Illi, and
-upon another blond people the Wu-Suns, whose importance
-was such that the Chinese, who have made them known to
-us, sought their alliance against the Huns. The Chinese
-knew then, in Turkestan, only the Wu-Suns, the Sse, or
-Sacæ, and the Ta-hia (our Tadjiks).”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Yuë-Tchi, repulsed by the Wu-Suns in 130 B. C.,
-hurled themselves upon Bactria” (see the notes to p. 119&#160;: 13).
-“The Sacæ were then masters of it and their dispossession
-resulted in pressing them in part into India where they
-founded a kingdom and also in part into the Pro-Pamirian
-valleys, especially that of the Oxus. The Yuë-Tchi ruled
-over central Asia until 425 A. D. They were dispossessed
-in their turn by the Hoas, or Ephtalite Huns” (White Huns).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The remainder of the chapter, pp. 287–291 is concerned
-with Turkestan, the Wu-Suns, Huns, Kirghizes, etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>224&#160;: 13. Deniker, 2, pp. 59 and 371, says the Ainus are
-dolichocephalic and have in addition other Nordic traits.
-See also Haddon, 1, pp. 8, 15–16, 49–50, Ratzel and others.
-The Ainus are, according to Darwin, <cite>Descent of Man</cite>, p. 852,
-the hairiest people in the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>224&#160;: 19. See the notes to pp. 31: 16–32&#160;: 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>224&#160;: 28. Deniker, 2, pp. 59 and 371; Haddon, 1, pp. 8, 15.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>225&#160;: 11. Phrygians. Bury, <cite>History of Greece</cite>, pp. 46–48,
-says: “But about this very time (1287 B. C.) the Hittite
-power was declining and northwestern Asia Minor as far as
-the valley of the Sangarius, was wrested from their rule by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>swarms of new invaders from Europe. These were the
-Phrygians to whose race the Dardanians belonged and who
-were so closely akin to the Thracians that we may speak of
-the Phrygo-Thracian division of the Indo-European family.”
-On p. 44 we read: “The dynasty from which the Homeric
-kings, Agamemnon and Menelaus sprang, was founded according
-to Greek tradition, early in the 13th century (B. C.)
-by Pelops, a Phrygian. Agamemnon and Menelaus represent
-the Achæan stock.... The meaning of this Phrygian relationship
-is not clear.” But if we follow the extent of the
-Achæan invasions and the relation of the art and language
-of archaic Phrygia to archaic Greece, the difficulty seems
-solved. See Hall, <cite>Ancient History of the Near East</cite>, p. 475.
-The <cite>Encyclopædia Britannica</cite> (Phrygia) says: “According to
-unvarying Greek tradition the Phrygians were most closely
-akin to certain tribes of Macedonia and Thrace; and their
-near relationship to the Hellenic stock is proved by all that
-is known of their language and art, and is accepted by
-almost every modern authority.... The inference has
-been generally drawn that the Phrygians belonged to a stock
-widespread in the countries which lie around the Ægean
-Sea. There is, however, no conclusive evidence whether this
-stock came from the east, over Armenia, or was European in
-origin and crossed the Hellespont into Asia Minor; but modern
-opinion inclines decidedly to the latter view”; and we
-may add that the recently demonstrated linguistic affiliations
-strengthen this assumption. See also Ridgeway, 1,
-pp. 396 and elsewhere; Peake, 2, p. 172; Feist, 5, p. 407;
-Félix Sartiaux, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Troie, la guerre de Troie</span></cite>; and O. Schrader,
-Jevons translation, p. 430.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>225&#160;: 15. Cimmerians. See the note to p. 173&#160;: 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>225&#160;: 17. Gauls and Galatians. See the note to p. 158&#160;: 1.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>225&#160;: 19. Von Luschan, p. 243, says: “All western Asia
-was originally inhabited by a homogeneous, melanochroic
-race, with extreme hypsi-brachycephaly and with a ‘Hittite’
-nose. About 4000 B. C. began a Semitic invasion from the
-southeast, probably from Arabia, by people looking like
-modern Bedawy. 2000 years later commenced a second invasion,
-this time from the northwest by xanthochrous and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>long-headed tribes like the modern Kurds, and perhaps connected
-with the historic Harri, Amorites, Tamahu and Galatians.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The modern ‘Turks,’ Greeks and Jews are all three
-equally composed of these three elements, the Hititte, the
-Semitic, and the xanthochrous Nordic. Not so the Armenians
-and Persians. They, and still more, the Druses, Maronites,
-and the smaller sectarian groups of Syria and Asia Minor,
-represent the old Hittite element, and are little, or not at
-all, influenced by the somatic characters of alien invaders.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Von Luschan means by Persians, the round-headed Medic
-element, which has always been in the majority and which
-has, at the present day, practically submerged the once
-powerful, dominant Nordic class, which he says is still seen
-not rarely in some old noble families.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>225&#160;: 20. Until rather recently nothing much was known
-about the wild Kurdish tribes living in southeast Anatolia,
-and what reports there were, were frequently conflicting.
-There are two kinds of Kurds, dark and light. More data
-has gradually accumulated, however, and it seems that the
-true Kurds are tall, blond people, who resemble very much
-the inhabitants of northern Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ratzel, <cite>History of Mankind</cite>, says, quoting Polak: “The
-Kurds are, in color of skin, hair and eyes, so little different to
-the northern, especially the Teutonic breed, that they might
-easily be taken for Germans. There is nothing to contradict
-this racial affinity in the reputation for honor and courage,
-which in spite of their rapacious tendencies, the Kurds
-enjoy wherever it has been found possible to compel them to
-labor or to the trade of arms. In Persia the Shah entrusts
-the security of his person to Kurdish officers rather than to
-any others. Their loyalty to their hereditary Wali, which
-neither Turks nor Persians have been able to shake, is also
-noted with praise. The Kurd prefers to wander with his
-herds and in the winter lives in caves like Xenophon’s Carduchi....
-The Kurds are a highly mixed race of a type
-chiefly Iranian, which has been compared with the Afghan
-but is not homogeneous. The eastern Kurds must have received
-a larger infusion of Turkish blood than the western.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>‘Husbandmen by necessity, fighters by inclination.’ says
-Moltke, ‘the Arab is more of a thief, the Kurd more of a
-warrior.’ They are a vigorous, violent race, running wild in
-tribal feuds and vendettas.... Their women hold a freer
-position than those of the Turks and Persians.” The quotation
-is from vol. III, p. 537.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Von Luschan, <em>op. cit.</em>, p. 229, describes them thus: “[They]
-have long heads and generally blue eyes and fair hair. They
-are probably descended from the Kardouchoi and Gordyæans
-of old historians. They live southeast of the Armenian mountains.
-The western Kurds are dolichocephalic and more
-than half of them are fair. The eastern Kurds are little
-known but are apparently darker and more round-headed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Soane, in <cite>To Mesopotamia and Kurdistan in Disguise</cite>, gives
-a very full description of them, confirming the above. There
-are so many tribes differing from one another, that only the
-briefest summary may be given. It is found on pp. 398 <em>seq.</em>
-“Judged as specimens of the human form, there is probably
-no higher standard extant that that of the Kurds. The
-northerner is a tall, thin man (obesity is absolutely unknown
-among the Kurds). The nose is long, thin and often a little
-hooked, the mouth small, the face oval and long. The men
-usually grow a long moustache, and invariably shave the
-beard. The eyes are piercing and fierce. Among them are
-many of yellow hair and bright blue eyes; and the Kurdish
-infant of this type, were he placed among a crowd of English
-children, would be indistinguishable from them, for he has
-a white skin. In the south the face is a little broader sometimes,
-and the frame heavier. Of forty men of the southern
-tribes taken at random, there were nine under six feet,
-though among some tribes the average height is five feet
-nine. The stride is long and slow, and the endurance of
-hardship great. They hold themselves as only mountain
-men can do, proudly and erect.... Many and many a
-man have I seen among them who might have stood for the
-picture of a Norseman. Yellow, flowing hair, a long drooping
-moustache, blue eyes, and a fair skin—one of the most
-convincing proofs, if physiognomy be a criterion (were their
-language not a further proof), that the Anglo-Saxon and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>Kurd are one and the same stock.” For a list of Kurdish
-tribes and their numbers and affiliations see Mark Sykes,
-vol. XXXVIII of the <cite>Jour. of the Roy. Anth. Soc. of Great
-Britain and Ireland</cite>, and Von Luschan, <em>op. cit.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From all this evidence by men who have travelled among
-them it would appear that the Kurds are descendants of
-some ancient Nordic invaders who have found refuge in the
-mountain regions north of Mesopotamia. <em>Cf.</em> the note to
-p. 239&#160;: 16.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER XI. RACIAL APTITUDES</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>226&#160;: 7. Conklin, in <cite>Heredity and Environment</cite>, p. 207,
-says: “Psychological characters appear to be inherited in
-the same way that anatomical and physiological traits are;
-indeed, all that has been said regarding the correlation of
-morphological and physiological characters applies also to
-psychological ones. No one doubts that particular instincts,
-aptitudes and capacities are inherited among both animals
-and men, nor that different races and species differ hereditarily
-in psychological characteristics. The general tendency
-of recent work on heredity is unmistakable, whether
-it concerns man or lower animals. The entire organism,
-consisting of structures and functions, body and mind, develops
-out of the germ, and the organization of the germ determines
-all the possibilities of development of the mind no
-less than of the body, though the actual realization of any
-possibility is dependent also upon environmental stimuli.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Cf.</em> Haeckel, <cite>The Riddle of the Universe</cite>, <em>passim</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>226&#160;: 17. Deniker, 2, pp. 76, 97–104.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>227&#160;: 1. <em>Cf.</em> their busts with other Greek statues.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>227&#160;: 15. This does not refer to the peculiar nests of
-round heads alluded to by Fleure and James, and Zaborowski,
-but to the Alpines proper.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>227&#160;: 20. DeLapouge, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Sélections sociales</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>228&#160;: 18. See Tacitus, <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Germania</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>229&#160;: 6. It may be interesting in this connection to quote
-Fleure and James, pp. 118–119, who, after giving illustrations
-of Mediterranean types, say of them: “Types 1(a) to 1(c)
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>contribute considerable numbers to the ministries of the various
-churches, possibly in part from inherent and racial leanings,
-but partly also because these are the people of the
-Moorlands. The idealism of such people usually expresses
-itself in music, poetry, literature and religion, rather than in
-architecture, painting and plastic arts generally. They rarely
-have a sufficiency of material resources for the latter activities.
-These types also contribute a number of men to the
-medical profession, for somewhat similar reasons, no doubt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The successful commercial men, who have given the Welsh
-their extraordinarily prominent place in British trade (shipping
-firms, for example), usually belong to types 2 or 4”
-[Nordic and Nordic-Alpine, Beaker Maker], “rather than to
-1, as also do the great majority of Welsh members of Parliament,
-though there are exceptions of the first importance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Nordic type is marked by ingenuity and enterprise
-in striking out new lines. Type 2(c)” [Beaker Maker] “in
-Wales is remarkable for governmental ability of the administrative
-kind as well as for independence of thought and
-critical power.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The following remarks are taken from Beddoe, 4, p. 142:
-“In opposition to the current opinion it would seem that the
-Welsh rise most in commerce, the Scotch coming after them
-and the Irish nowhere. The people of Welsh descent and
-name hold their own fairly in science; the Scotch do more,
-the Irish less. But when one looks to the attainment of
-military or political distinction, the case is altered. Here
-the Scotchmen, and especially the Highlanders bear away
-the palm; the Irish retrieve their position and the Welsh are
-little heard of.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See also p. 10 of Beddoe’s <cite>Races of Britain</cite>, and Hector
-McLean in vol. IV, pp. 218 <em>seq.</em> of the <cite>Anthropological Review</cite>
-and elsewhere. The following quotation from Hall’s <cite>Ancient
-History of the Near East</cite> is interesting:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Knowing what we do of the psychological peculiarities
-of the different races of mankind, it is perhaps not an illegitimate
-speculation to wonder whence the Greeks inherited this
-sense of proportion in their whole mental outlook. The
-feeling of Hellenes for art in general was surely inherited
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>from their forebears on the Ægean, not the Indo-European
-side.<a id='r7'></a><a href='#f7' class='c016'><sup>[7]</sup></a> The feeling for naturalistic art, for truth of representation,
-may have come from the Ægeans, but the equally
-characteristic love of the crude and bizarre was not inherited:
-the sense of proportion inhibited it. In fact, we may ascribe
-this sense to the Aryan element in the Hellenic brain, to
-which must also be attributed the Greek political sense, the
-idea of the rights of the folk and of the individual in it.<a id='r8'></a><a href='#f8' class='c016'><sup>[8]</sup></a>
-The Mediterranean possessed the artistic sense without the
-sense of proportion: the Aryan had little artistic sense but
-had the sense of proportion and justice, and with it the political
-sense. The result of the fusion of the two races we see
-in the true canon of taste and beauty in all things that had
-become the ideal of the Greeks,<a id='r9'></a><a href='#f9' class='c016'><sup>[9]</sup></a> and was through them to
-become the ideal of mankind.”</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. “We have only to look around and seek, vainly, for any self-developed
-artistic feeling among the pure Indo-Europeans. The
-Kassites had none and blighted that of Babylonia for centuries: the
-Persians had none and merely adopted that of Assyria: the Goths
-and Vandals had none: the Celts and Teutons have throughout the
-centuries derived theirs from the Mediterranean region.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. The predominance of the Aryan element in Greek political ideas
-is obvious. It is not probable that the old Ægean had any more
-definite political ideas than had his relative the Egyptian.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. “In matters of political and ordinary justice between man and
-man they fell short of their ideal often enough, but they had the
-reasonable ideal: the barbarians had none. The Egyptians were
-an imaginative race, but their imagination was untrammelled by
-the sense of proportion: their only thinker with reasonable and
-logical ideas, Akhenaten, soon became as mad a fanatic as any unreasonable
-Nitrian monk or Arab Mahdi. Ordinarily speaking,
-Egyptian and Semitic ideals were purely religious, and so, to the
-Greek mind, beyond the domain of reason. The Babylonians, Assyrians,
-and Phœnicians cannot be said ever to have possessed any
-ideals of any kind.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>229&#160;: 22. Fleure and James, p. 146, say: “In the folk
-tales, it is true, the people are called fairies but colouring is
-mentioned only in one case—that is of a trader from the sea
-who is said to be fair; <em>i. e.</em>, fair hair is treated as something
-worthy of special mention. The fairy children (changelings)
-are always described in such a way as to suggest that they
-were dark, and that they were the children of the Upland-folk
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>of our hypothesis—<em>i. e.</em>, mostly of Mediterranean race.
-In the romances the princes and princesses are said to be
-fair, as though that were exceptional. Our friend, Mr. J.
-H. Shaxby, draws our attention to the probability that the
-word fair in ‘fair’ or ‘fair-folk’ does not refer to physical
-traits, but is an adulatory term such as men so generally
-use in describing beings about whom their superstitions
-gather.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>230&#160;: 5. Pope Gregory, about 578 A. D.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>230&#160;: 9. For evidence as to the blond characters of
-Christ and the indications of His descent, see Haeckel, <cite>The
-Riddle of the Universe</cite>, chap. XVII.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Every now and then some reference to this question is
-noted in the daily papers. Not long ago, in one of the large
-New York dailies, there appeared a short paragraph concerning
-the letter of Lentulus. All mention of the extremely
-doubtful authenticity of this letter was omitted. The
-<cite>Catholic Cyclopædia</cite>, vol. IX, discusses the matter as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Publius Lentulus, A fictitious person said to have been
-the governor of Judea before Pontius Pilate and to have
-written the following letter to the Roman Senate: “Lentulus,
-the Governor of the Jerusalemites, to the Roman Senate
-and People, greetings. There has appeared in our times
-and there still lives, a man of great power (virtue), called
-Jesus Christ. The people call him prophet of truth; his
-disciples son of God. He raises the dead, and heals infirmities.
-He is a man of medium size (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">statura procerus, mediocris
-et spectabilis</span></i>); he has a venerable aspect, and his beholders
-can both fear and love him. His hair is of the color of the
-ripe hazel nut, straight down to the ears, but below the ears
-wavy and curled, with a bluish and bright reflection flowing
-over his shoulders. It is parted in two on the top of the
-head, after the pattern of the Nazarenes. His brow is smooth
-and very cheerful, with a face without a wrinkle or spot,
-embellished by a slightly ruddy complexion. His nose and
-mouth are faultless. His beard is abundant, of the color of
-his hair, not long, but divided at the chin. His aspect is
-simple and mature, his eyes are changeable and bright. He
-is terrible in his reprimands, sweet and amiable in his admonitions,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>cheerful without loss of gravity. He was never
-known to laugh, but often to weep. His stature is straight,
-his hands and arms beautiful to behold. His conversation
-is grave, infrequent and modest. He is the most beautiful
-among the children of men.” The letter was first printed
-in <cite>The Life of Christ</cite>, by Ludolph the Carthusian, at Cologne,
-1474. According to the manuscript of Jena, a certain Giacomo
-Colonna found the letter in an ancient Roman document
-sent to Rome from Constantinople. It must be of
-Greek origin and have been translated into Latin during the
-thirteenth or fourteenth century, though it received its
-present form at the hands of a humanist of the fifteenth or
-sixteenth century.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The description agrees with the so-called Abgar picture of
-Our Lord. It also agrees with the portrait of Jesus Christ
-drawn by Nicephorus, St. John Damascene, and the Book
-of Painters (of Mt. Athos). Munter, (<cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Sinnbilder und
-Kunstvorstellungen der alten Christen</span></cite>, Altona, 1825, p. 9),
-believes he can trace the letter down to the time of Diocletian,
-but this is not generally admitted. The Letter of Lentulus
-is certainly apocryphal; there never was a governor of
-Jerusalem; no procurator of Judea is known to have been
-called Lentulus; a Roman governor would not have addressed
-the Senate, but the Emperor; a Roman writer would
-not have employed the expressions, “prophet of truth,”
-“sons of men,” “Jesus Christ.” The former two are Hebrew
-idioms, the third is taken from the New Testament.
-The letter, therefore, shows us a description of Our Lord such
-as Christian piety conceived him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There is considerable literature touching on this letter,
-for which see the <cite>Catholic Cyclopædia</cite>. Although we cannot
-credit the letter as genuine, it is interesting, as the article
-indicated, in showing the popular attitude to the traits in
-question, and in attributing these Nordic characters to
-Christ, as are the occasional efforts to bring the matter up
-again in the journals of to-day.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>
- <h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER XII. ARYA</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>233&#160;: 4. Synthetic. See the note on languages, p. 242&#160;: 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>233&#160;: 13. Tenney Frank, 2, pp. 1, 2, and the authorities
-quoted at the end of the chapter. Also Peake, 2, pp. 154–173;
-Freeman, <cite>Historical Geography of Europe</cite>, pp. 44–45.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>233&#160;: 20. See the note to p. 99&#160;: 27.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>233&#160;: 24. Ridgeway, 1; Conway, 1; Peake, 2; and numerous
-other authorities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>234&#160;: 2. The Messapians, according to Ridgeway, 1, p.
-347, were the remnants of the primitive Ligurians, who once
-occupied central Italy but who migrated, under the pressure
-of the Umbrians, toward the south. There some of them
-survived under the name Iapyges or Messapians, in the heel
-of the peninsula. “The name Iapyges seems identical with
-that of the Iapodes, that Illyrian tribe which dwelt on the
-other side of the Adriatic, largely contaminated with the
-Celts (Nordics) who had flowed down over them. That the
-Umbrians had a deadly hatred of a people of the same name,
-who had survived in their coast area, is proved by the
-Iguvine Tables, where the <em>Iapuzkum numen</em> is heartily cursed
-along with the Etruscans and the men of Nar.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See also Giuffrida-Ruggeri.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>234&#160;: 3 <em>seq.</em> See the notes to pp. 157&#160;: 10 and 157&#160;: 14.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>234&#160;: 7. See the note to p. 192&#160;: 1–4.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>234&#160;: 12. See pp. 174, 199 and 247 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>234&#160;: 13 <em>seq.</em> Non-Aryan traces in central Europe. Deniker,
-2, pp. 317, 334; D’Arbois de Jubainville, 3, pp. 153 <em>seq.</em>,
-gives Ligurian place names. See also 4, t. II. It all depends
-on whether one considers the Ligurians as Non-Aryan.
-D’Arbois de Jubainville is inclined to class them as Aryans.
-Burke, <cite>History of Spain</cite>, says, in his footnote to p. 2, that
-Basque place names are found all over Spain. For survivals
-in the British Isles see the notes to pp. 204&#160;: 5 and 204&#160;: 19,
-and for the general question, Taylor, <cite>Words and Places</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>234&#160;: 18. Finnic dialects. Zaborowski, 3, pp. 174–175,
-says there are very ancient traces of Germanic elements in
-the Finnic languages of the Baltic. Prior to the fourth century
-they had a Gothic character.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>234&#160;: 24 <em>seq.</em> Agglutinative language. See the note to
-p. 242&#160;: 5. For the physical characters of the Basques, Collignon,
-3, p. 13; and Ripley, pp. 190 <em>seq.</em>, who bases himself
-upon Collignon. On the language see Pruner-Bey, 1; Feist, 5,
-pp. 362–363, and Ripley, pp. 20, 183–185. There are of course
-other writers on the Basque language. As a result of the
-epoch-making study of Keltic by Professor J. Morris Jones,
-of the University College, Bangor, Wales, which appears as
-Appendix B, in Rhys and Jones, <cite>The Welsh People</cite>, pp. 616–641,
-the assertion is made that Basque is apparently allied
-to Berber, and that other problems hitherto unsolved may
-be unravelled. It has not been possible to learn if any very
-recent progress has been the result of this new method.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>235&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em> Pseudo-brachycephaly of the Basques. A.
-C. Haddon, correspondence, says: “The Basque skull is long,
-but with a broadening in the temporal region, in the French
-Basques, which forms a spurious kind of brachycephaly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>235&#160;: 11. See the notes above, to p. 234&#160;: 24.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>235&#160;: 17. Liguria and the Ligurian language. Sergi, 4;
-Ripley, chap. X. The modern Liguria comprises virtually
-the coast lands of Italy around the Gulf of Genoa as far
-south as Pisa. For ancient Liguria, which once extended
-into Gaul, see Déchellette, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Manuel d’archéologie</span></cite>, t. II, pp.
-6–25. D’Arbois de Jubainville treats of the Ligurians at
-length in several of his works mentioned, but Déchellette
-shows his wrong reasoning, rather convincingly it seems to
-the author. The opinions of Jullian, as given in his <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Histoire
-de la Gaule</span></cite>, are also discussed by Déchellette. A full discussion
-in English, of all the authorities on ancient Liguria,
-the Ligurians and their language is given in Rice Holmes,
-<cite>Cæsar’s Conquest of Gaul</cite>, pp. 277–287. The language is
-treated on pp. 281–284, and 318, and by Peet, <cite>The Stone and
-Bronze Ages in Italy</cite>, pp. 164 <em>seq.</em>; see also D’Arbois de Jubainville,
-3, pp. 152 <em>seq.</em> Feist, 5, p. 369, says that the Ligurians
-were Mediterraneans. A number of others agree with him.
-The evidence points rather to their having been an early
-Alpine people, somewhat less brachycephalic than those who
-came later, and this is the opinion held by Ratzel, vol. III, p.
-561. The name Ligurian in this book designates a Pre-Nordic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>race of Alpine affinities, with a Pre-Aryan language.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The peculiar and discontinuous distribution of Alpine
-peoples with names which are variations of the term Veneti,
-a condition rather analogous to the scattered groups of Pelasgians
-as noted by various authors of antiquity, may indicate
-the last traces of a once widely distributed race. It is possible
-that the Ligurians displaced these “Veneti” in southern
-Europe, and later became confined to a part of Gaul and
-northern Italy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>235&#160;: 23. Deniker, 2, p. 317, and the note to p. 234&#160;: 13
-of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>235&#160;: 27–236&#160;: 6. See the note to p. 234&#160;: 17.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>236&#160;: 9. Feist, 1 and 5; G. Retzius, 2, 3; Ripley, p. 351;
-Nordenskiöld.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>236&#160;: 14. Livs and Livonians. Ripley, pp. 358 <em>seq.</em>;
-Abercromby, <cite>The Pre- and Proto-Finns</cite>; Peake, 2, p. 150.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>236&#160;: 17 <em>seq.</em> Ripley, pp. 365–367. Feist, 5, p. 55, says the
-Finnish language was once agglutinative but is now inflectional.
-See also another reference to it on p. 231, and our
-note to languages, p. 242&#160;: 5 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>236&#160;: 26. Magyar language. The most authoritative
-books on Finnish, Ugrian, and Hungarian speech are those of
-Szinnyei. See also Feist, pp. 394 <em>seq.</em>, and Deniker, 2, pp.
-349–351.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>237&#160;: 1. Ripley, p. 415, says: “Turkish is the westernmost
-representative of a great group of languages, best known,
-perhaps, as the Ural-Altaic family. This comprises all those
-of northern Asia, even to the Pacific Ocean, together with
-that of the Finns in Russian Europe.... According to
-Chantre the word Turk seems quite aptly to be derived from
-a native root meaning <em>Brigand</em>.” Also see pp. 404–405 and
-419 in Ripley.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>237&#160;: 13. Ripley, p. 418, and Von Luschan, <em>op. cit.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>237&#160;: 21. Gibbon, chap. LVII, on the “Seljukian Turks.”
-On the Osmanli Turks see Ripley, pp. 415 <em>seq.</em> On Turks in
-general see Von Luschan.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>237&#160;: 25. See the notes to p. 173&#160;: 11 and to pp. 253–261.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>238&#160;: 12. G. Elliot Smith, <cite>Ancient Egyptians</cite>, pp. 134 <em>seq.</em>;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>Zaborowski, 1, and the table of languages in the note to p.
-242&#160;: 5. Practically any book dealing with Aryans gives this
-information.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>238&#160;: 24. Ripley, p. 415; Von Luschan.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>239&#160;: 1. See the notes to pp. 158 and 253.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>239&#160;: 2. Hittites and the Hittite Empire. See S. J. Garstang,
-<cite>The Land of the Hittites</cite>; L. Messerschmidt, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Hetiter</span></cite>
-(<cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Der Alte Orient</span></cite>, IV, 1); Feist, 5, pp. 406 <em>seq.</em>, and the
-Hittite Inscriptions, Cornell Expedition of 1911. The history
-of the Hittite Empire has been brought to light by the
-research and investigations of Professor Sayce. See his <cite>Hittites</cite>.
-There are a number of short general descriptions in
-practically all of the histories of ancient peoples, and in those
-of the Near East. See for instance, Bury, <cite>History of Greece</cite>,
-pp. 45, 64; Hall, <cite>Ancient History of the Near East</cite>, pp. 200,
-334 seq.; Myres, <cite>Dawn of History</cite>, pp. 118 seq., 152 <em>seq.</em> and
-199 seq.; Myers, <cite>Ancient History</cite>, pp. 91–93; Feist, <cite>Kultur</cite>,
-pp. 406 <em>seq.</em>; Von Luschan, pp. 242–243; and Zaborowski, 1,
-pp. 121, 134, 138 and 160, deal more with the physical characters
-of the Hittites.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>According to some of the most recent authorities, the Hittites
-were an extraordinarily powerful nation and held Syria
-from about 3700 B. C. to 700 B. C., when the Assyrians
-overcame them. They had some contact with Babylon and
-probably their development was influenced thereby. They
-seem to have been the Kheta or Khatti of the Ancient Egyptians.
-“About 1280 B. C.,” according to Von Luschan,
-“when Khattusil made his peace with Rameses II, there existed
-a large empire, not much smaller than Germany, reaching
-from the Ægean Sea to Mesopotamia and from Kadesh
-on the Orontes to the Black Sea. We do not know at present
-if this Hittite Empire ever had a really homogeneous
-population, but we have a good many Hittite reliefs and all
-these, without one single exception, show us the high and
-short heads, or the characteristic noses of our modern brachycephalic
-groups, (Armenoids).”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As to their language, J. D. Prince, correspondence, says
-that it was not Aryan, in spite of all conjectures to the contrary.
-“Friedrich Delitzsch analyzed some of the only syllabized
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>material we have of this language, and I analyzed it
-still further in the <cite>Journal of the American Oriental Society</cite>,
-vol. XXII, ‘Hittite Material in the Cuneiform Inscriptions,’
-reaching the conclusion as to the Non-Aryan character of
-this idiom. The so-called ‘Hittite Inscriptions’ are in hieroglyphs
-and give us no clue as to the pronunciation and hence
-none to the character of the language.” Von Luschan, p.
-242, says: “Orientalists are unanimous in assuming that the
-Hittite language was not Semitic.” A very recent communication
-from Fr. Cumont, in <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Académie des inscriptions
-et belles lettres</span></cite> for April 20, 1917, says that the tongue is
-proved to have been Aryan.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As to their physical characters, all are agreed that the
-Hittites had short, brachycephalic heads, and thick, prominent
-noses. Myres, p. 44, remarks that the earliest portraits,
-which he dates about 1285 B. C., have been thought by
-some to be Mongoloid, but the evidence is still scanty and
-inconclusive. Surely if the older likenesses were Mongoloid,
-they bear no resemblance to the later types. On the monuments
-bearded figures are frequent and the type is Armenoid.
-See Hall, <cite>The Ancient History of the Near East</cite>, p. 334, for a
-criticism of the Mongol theory.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>239&#160;: 10. Sumer. J. D. Prince, in his article on the Sumerians
-in the <cite>Encyclopædia Britannica</cite>, classes the Sumerian
-language as agglutinative. The language of Susiana is also
-known as Anzanite, Susian or Elamite. The Anzanite may
-have been a dialect of Susian. Schiel’s work with de Morgan’s
-mission shows that Elamite was agglutinative and
-that inflections found in derived words are due to the influence
-of another language. The locality of Anzan is not
-known exactly, but is believed to have been in the plain
-south or southeast of Susa. See also Zaborowski, 1, pp. 149–150,
-and Hall, <cite>The Ancient History of the Near East</cite>. Hall
-agrees with Prince that Sumerian is agglutinative (p. 171).
-He also states that Elamite was agglutinative, but not otherwise
-like Sumerian. See his chap. V for the relationships of
-Sumerians and Elamites.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For Media see the notes to p. 254&#160;: 13.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>239&#160;: 12. Assyria and Palestine. Breasted, <cite>Ancient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>Times</cite>, p. 173 and Fig. 112; Hall, <cite>History of the Near East</cite>;
-Myres, <cite>Dawn of History</cite>, pp. 114–116, 140; and other histories
-of the Near East.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>239&#160;: 13. Kassites. See Hall, pp. 198–200. Very little
-is known about the Kassites. Hall declares that there is
-very little doubt but that they were Indo-European; Prince,
-from the same information, says this could not possibly be
-the case. They are supposed to have been an Elamite tribe
-who were living in the northwestern mountains of Elam,
-immediately south of Holwan, when Sennacherib attacked
-them in 702 B. C. They attacked Babylonia in the ninth
-year of Samsu-iluma, the son of Khammurabi, overran it
-and founded a dynasty there in 1780 B. C., which lasted 576
-years. They became absorbed into the Babylonian population;
-the kings adopted Semitic names and married into the
-royal family of Assyria. Like the other languages of the
-Non-Semitic tribes of Elam, according to Prince, that of the
-Kassites was agglutinative. That the Kassites had been in
-contact with the horse-using nomads of the northern steppes,
-is indicated by the fact that they first introduced the horse
-into Mesopotamian lands, whence its use for riding and
-drawing chariots spread into Egypt in 1700 B. C. See
-Breasted, <cite>Ancient Times</cite>, p. 138.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>239&#160;: 16. Mitanni. Very little is known of the Mitanni.
-Von Luschan, p. 230, dates them around the fourteenth century
-B. C. In 1380 they called themselves Harri, from Harri-ya,
-an old form of the word Aryan. Myres, <cite>Dawn of History</cite>,
-says: “The conquest of Syria in 1500 B. C. brought
-Egypt face to face with a homogeneous state called Mitanni,
-occupying the whole foothill country east of the Euphrates....
-The Egyptian conquest came just in time to relieve
-the kingdom of Mitanni from severe pressure exerted simultaneously
-and probably in collusion, by its neighbors in the
-foothills,—Assyria on the east, and the Hittites west of the
-Euphrates. Egypt made friends with Mitanni and more
-than one marriage was arranged between the royal houses.
-Soon after the treaty between Egypt and Mitanni, Subiluliuma,
-king of the Hittites of Cappadocia, whom Egyptian
-scribes conveniently abbreviate as Saplel, was overlord apparently
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>of a number of outpost baronies in north Syria.
-Assured of their help, and watching his opportunity, he flung
-his whole force, about 1400 upon Mitanni.... This closed
-the career of Mitanni.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The racial affinities of Mitanni are doubtful. Prince, correspondence,
-says the language of Mitanni was certainly not
-Aryan. It has been thoroughly analyzed by Ferdinand
-Bork, in his <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Mitanni Sprache</span></cite>, who compares it with the
-Georgian or Imeretian branch of the Caucasic linguistic
-groups. The Mitanni are not to be confused with the Ossetes,
-who speak a highly archaic, real Aryan language. Mitanni,
-in structure, is like the polysynthetic North American groups.
-Feist, 1, p. 14, says the Mitanni were Nordics and inhabited
-the western mountains of Iran, in Zagros. In 5, p. 406, he
-places them on the north of the Euphrates during the fifteenth
-and sixteenth centuries B. C. See also Hall, p. 200, the following
-note and that to p. 213&#160;: 1–23 of this book. Hall
-also considers them Nordics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>239&#160;: 16 <em>seq.</em> Von Luschan, p. 230, asks: “Can it be mere
-accident that a few miles north of the actual frontier of
-modern Kurdish languages there is Boghaz-Köi, the old
-metropolis of the Hittite Empire, where Hugo Winckler in
-1908 found tablets with two political treaties of King Subiluliuma
-with Mattiuaza, son of Tušrata, king of Mitanni, and
-in both of these treaties Aryan divinities, Mithra, Varuna,
-Indra and Nasatya are invoked, together with Hittite divinities,
-as witnesses and protectors? And in the same inscriptions,
-which date from about 1380 B. C., the king of Mitanni
-and his people are called Harri, just as nine centuries later
-in the Achæmenidian inscriptions Xerxes and Darius call
-themselves Har-ri-ya, ‘Aryans of Aryan stock.’ So the
-Kurds,” concludes Von Luschan, “are the descendants of
-Aryan invaders and have maintained their type and their
-language for more than 3300 years.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See also the notes to p. 173&#160;: 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>239&#160;: 29. See pp. 128 and 137 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>240&#160;: 4 <em>seq.</em> See the notes to p. 173.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>240&#160;: 15 <em>seq.</em> See the notes to p. 242&#160;: 5.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>
- <h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER XIII. ORIGIN OF THE ARYAN LANGUAGES</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>242&#160;: 5. The following notes on languages were taken
-mostly from the <cite>History of Language</cite>, by Henry Sweet, and
-were supplemented by the writings of W. D. Whitney, and
-an article on “Indo-European Languages,” by Peter Giles.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All languages may be roughly divided into two great
-groups, <em>isolating</em> and <em>agglutinative</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The isolating languages are constructed on the principle
-of single, distinct words for each idea, and do not employ
-forms which add or drop syllables, or letters, in order to obtain
-variety of expression, tense, mode, person, number, etc.
-However, the element of intonation frequently plays a large
-part in multiplying the number of possible forms, and therefore
-of ideas, in isolating languages, by imparting to otherwise
-identical words different meanings through pitch, rising
-or falling inflection or accent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To the isolating languages belong most of those of southeastern
-Asia,—Chinese, Burmese, Siamese, Thibetan, Annamite,
-Cochin-Chinese, Malayan, etc. The term isolating
-does not necessarily imply words of one syllable, although
-there is a tendency in this direction since the roots are
-stripped of all incumbrances of a modifying nature so common
-in agglutinative or synthetic languages. The Chinese,
-Burmese, Siamese and Annamite are classed as monosyllabic,
-the Thibetan as half-monosyllabic, while the Malay is
-polysyllabic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Because languages are isolating in structure does not mean
-that they necessarily all belong to one family. They merely
-have this structural principle in common. To establish
-family relationships it is necessary to investigate the sets of
-phonetics used, the root forms, the types of ideas expressed,
-the composition of the sentence and various other important
-points included under the psychology of habit and growth
-forms of speech. No one of these alone is ordinarily sufficient
-to prove that two languages are of one common stock,
-since extensive borrowing of all kinds has occurred since time
-immemorial.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>Nevertheless, in point of fact, taking languages as they
-now exist, only those have been shown related which possess
-a common structure, or have together grown out of the more
-primitive radical stage, since structure proves itself a more
-constant and reliable evidence than vocabulary. But, on
-the other hand, since all structure is the result of growth,
-and any degree of difference of structure, as well as of difference
-of material, may be explained as the result of discordant
-growth from identical beginnings, it is equally inadmissible
-to claim that the diversities of languages prove them to have
-had different beginnings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In isolating languages, word order is very important, but
-here again the peculiar character of any tongue of this type
-depends upon the order selected, or the relative importance
-of ideas (general, specific, etc.). The employment of particles
-makes possible a freer word order.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The <em>agglutinative</em> languages are those which combine roots
-or parts of words or elements into new wholes to express
-other related ideas than those imparted by the single forms,
-or else entirely new concepts. Frequently these combinations
-are still separable on occasion into their original elements,
-or, if inseparable in their secondary meanings, their
-original parts with their derivations are still recognizable as
-such. Again, the component parts are no longer independent,
-but form a firmly knit whole.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In some languages certain classes of elements have arisen
-which may be added in a perfectly formal manner to other
-fixed roots or elements, with or without slight phonetic modifications
-of either or both parts. Since this occurs in conformity
-with fairly fixed rules, the meanings of the resultant
-combinations are, according to the class of the attached elements
-used, fairly analogous. Thus in English many verb
-roots obtain the present participle by the addition of the
-formal element <em>ing</em>, in itself now meaningless, but once, no
-doubt, a separate root.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The process of agglutination may be accomplished in many
-different ways, any of which may be characteristic of whole
-groups of unrelated languages. These may be roughly
-divided first into mono- or oligo-synthetic and polysynthetic.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>The former very nearly approach the isolating languages,
-since usually only one element may be added at a time, but
-the process of addition may be accomplished in any of the
-ways possible to agglutination.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Agglutination includes prefixing, suffixing and infixing
-in all degrees of complexity and fixity. Thus languages may
-be spoken of as agglutinative only in a relative sense. Some
-are much more so than others, both in point of the number
-of elements which it is possible to add, and their dependence
-upon one another and the root, denoting a higher or lower
-degree of inextricability in blending.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Many languages are only loosely agglutinative and the
-component parts of the compounds readily resolve. In
-others, as in the inflecting languages, the combination is
-inextricable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus under the head of agglutinative we have the merely
-agglutinative or synthetic, readily resolvable combinations,
-which are often hardly distinguishable from isolating languages,
-and the less easily divisible inflectional and incorporating
-types. Any or all of the three processes of infixing,
-prefixing and suffixing may be employed in simple agglutinative
-combinations.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In inflectional languages the root is attended by prefixes
-or suffixes which form inseparable modifiers. At times
-phonetic changes occur which render the complex unlike the
-simple joining of its component parts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As Mr. Sweet says: “If we define inflection as ‘agglutination
-run mad’ we may regard incorporation as inflection
-run madder still, for it is the result of attempting to develop
-a verb into a complete sentence.” In some languages, such
-as the incorporating, a verb is sufficiently distinct in its meaning
-not to require an independent pronoun. French and
-Spanish, though not belonging to this category, contain
-words with the incorporating idea, as in Spanish <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">hablo</span></i>, I
-speak, and French, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pluit</span></i>, it rains. Where polysynthesism
-is the prevailing character, the verb may be sufficiently comprehensive
-to include the objective pronoun as well as the
-subjective, so that it is possible to find in one word a transitive,
-as well as in others an intransitive, sentence. But this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>is only rudimentary incorporation, and borders on inflection.
-Some American Indian languages carry it to a very high
-degree, appending to or inserting into this simple complex
-not only nouns which may stand in apposition to the implied
-or actual pronouns, but particles and modifiers of every description.
-(See the <cite>Handbook of American Indian Languages</cite>,
-published by the Bureau of American Ethnology at Washington.)
-Frequently during this process various parts undergo
-phonetic changes in accordance with fixed laws, so that
-the final complex may not at all resemble a string of the
-original elements, but becomes a new, inseparable and fixed
-word containing a whole sentence of ideas. This sentence,
-in some languages, may carry throughout certain modifiers
-for all noun elements—for instance, as to whether the objects
-under discussion are visible or invisible. These modifiers
-bear definite relationships to the nouns, and the “sentence
-word” in each of its parts must then be conjugated as a verb
-in an even more complicated manner. This is agglutination
-par excellence, and is frequently so complex as to be utterly
-bewildering to the Indo-European mind, even though the
-Indo-European languages themselves employ agglutination
-to a limited degree and of certain varieties, particularly of
-the inflectional order.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Compared to the most complicated Indian tongues, English
-is in the position of Chinese to Indo-European languages
-in its structural simplicity, though of course in Chinese we
-have an added complexity in the use of pitch, etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There are certain types of speech which secure changes
-(plurals, etc.) by internal vowel modification. English itself
-makes use of this device, but it is the outstanding feature
-of Semitic tongues.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sweet says: “There are many other minor criteria of morphological
-classification. The most important of these is
-perhaps that of the agglutinative or inflectional elements
-before or after the word or stem [modified]. In Turkish
-and in other Altaic languages, as also in Finnish, these are
-always post-positions, so that every word begins with the
-root which always has chief stress. The Bantu languages of
-South Africa, on the other hand, favor prefixes.... The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>Semitic languages favor prefixes and post-positions about
-equally. The Aryan languages are mainly post-positional,
-with occasional use of prefixes, most of which, however, are
-of later origin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It must not be supposed that languages fall into absolutely
-distinct categories because of their structure. No
-language to-day is purely of one type or another. There
-have been too many centuries of borrowing and change for
-that condition to now be possible for any language, nor
-are there any longer what might be called primitive tongues.
-They have all long since outgrown that state, whatever it
-may have been, even the Botocudo of Brazil, which is generally
-ranked as the most primitive.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Languages may now be classified only according to their
-prevailing tendencies. Thus, modern English is in part
-isolating, in part inflectional and in part agglutinative, as
-that term is generally applied. Basque is an incorporating
-language, far removed geographically and linguistically from
-any other of that character. The Indo-European family
-may be considered as inflectional, because that process is a
-prominent feature, but it is by no means the only one present,
-nor is it exclusively typical of that family.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There is no doubt that all languages pass through certain
-stages in their development, but it is not at all true that they
-all have eventually the same or even similar histories. There
-are endless possibilities of growth and decay, and this fact
-alone excludes any set evolutionary scheme. Nor are the
-isolating languages the most primitive. On the contrary,
-they are as complex in their way as the most agglutinative
-North American tongues, and as expressive, for some psychological
-categories.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There is little doubt that all languages have begun on an
-isolating principle of simple roots for single ideas, from which
-they have diverged in endless variety. Probably all inflectional
-languages had an isolating and agglutinative stage,
-although this is by no means proved. The Chinese seems to
-have undergone an agglutinative past of some sort, but to
-have resolved again into simple roots, with only traces of
-fuller forms, but with the added complexity of tone, accent,
-and order, to give, as Sweet puts it, “that extreme of elliptical
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>conciseness and concentrated force of expression,
-which excites our admiration.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>English has become analytical, for many older inflected
-words have now been worked over into combinations of independent
-words, but this is far from a complete or consistent
-process. Probably it will never become like the Chinese,
-for to do away now with its inflectional system entirely
-would necessitate a complete upheaval of structure which
-is not likely to happen in the course of normal inner development,
-particularly with a vast literature to assist in stabilizing
-present forms.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As regards polysynthesism, or amount of agglutination, the
-Aryan tongues are intermediate; they allow affixes, but only
-within certain limits.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Languages undoubtedly differ from one another in their
-richness and power of expression, but may not be used as a
-test of the intellectual capacity of those who now speak them.
-In fact, men of any race can learn any language, unless abnormal.
-To account for the great and striking difference of
-structure among human languages is beyond the power of
-the linguistic student, and will doubtless always continue so.
-We are not likely to be able even to demonstrate a correlation
-of capacities, saying that a race which has done this
-and that in other departments might have been expected to
-form such and such a language. Every tongue represents
-the general outcome of the capacity of a race as exerted in
-this particular direction, under the influence of historical
-circumstances which we can have no hope of tracing, but
-there are striking anomalies to be noted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Chinese and the Egyptians have shown themselves
-to be among the most gifted races the earth has known;
-but the Chinese tongue is of unsurpassed jejuneness, and the
-Egyptian, in point of structure, little better, while among
-the wild tribes of Africa and America we find tongues of
-every grade up to a high one or the highest. This shows
-clearly enough that mental power is not measured by language
-structure. On the whole the value and rank of a
-language are determined by what its users have made it
-do—a poor tool in skilful hands can do vastly better work
-than the best tool in unskilful hands, even as the ancient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span>Egyptians, without steel or steam, turned out products
-which, both for colossal grandeur and for exquisite finish,
-are the despair of modern engineers and artists.” In other
-words, we must not underestimate the important part played
-by habit or inertia. “The formation of habit is slow, and
-once formed it exercises a constraining as well as a guiding
-influence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Indo-European language is one of the most highly
-organized families of tongues that exist, and its greatest
-power lies (in modern English, etc.) in its mixed structural
-and material character. So to the Indo-European family
-belongs incontestably the first place, and for many reasons,—the
-historical position of the peoples speaking its dialects,
-who have now long been the leaders in world history, the
-abundance, variety and merit of its literatures ancient and
-modern and, most of all, the great variety and richness of its
-development. These have made it an illustration of the
-history of human speech, which is extremely valuable and
-the training ground of comparative philology.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>W. D. Whitney gives the following linguistic groups in
-order of their importance from a literary standpoint:</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd> 1. Indo-European (Indo-Germanic). 2. Semitic. 3. Hamitic. 4. Monosyllabic or
- Southeastern Asiatic. 5. Ural-Altaic (Scythian, Turanian). 6. Dravidian or South
- Indian. 7. Malay-Polynesian. 8. Oceanic— <em>a.</em> Australian and Tasmanian.
- <em>b.</em> Papuan and Negrito, etc. 9. Caucasian— <em>a.</em> Circassian.
- <em>b.</em> Mitsjeghian. <em>c.</em> Lesghian, Georgian. 10. European Remnants—
- Basque. Etruscan? Lydian? <span class='pageno' id='Page_401'>401</span>11. South African, Bantu. 12. Central African. 13. American.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first ten groups are families. So little is or was
-known about the last three groups that the author of the
-article classed together what are now known to be vast
-agglomerations of families. For instance, the American
-languages include several hundred distinct stocks, of which
-fifty are found in California alone. These are all, according
-to our present knowledge, utterly unrelated. It is known
-that the central African tongues belong to a different group
-than the southern, and it would be advisable to consult Sir
-Harry Johnston’s recent large work on the Bantu languages.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The subdivision of the Indo-European family into cognate
-languages is given here to show the great diversity of tongues
-that may spring from one ancestor. Not all the dialects,
-nor even languages, have been included, but only those best
-known:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>I. Centum (European).</div>
- <div class='line in2'>1. Greek.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in15'><span class='sc'>Ancient</span> <span class='sc'>Modern</span></div>
- <div class='line in13'>{ Latin. Portuguese</div>
- <div class='line in13'>{ Oscan. Spanish.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>2. Italic. { Umbrian Catalan.</div>
- <div class='line in13'>{ Minor dialects of Provençal.</div>
- <div class='line in13'>{ ancient Italy.</div>
- <div class='line in35'>French. { Tuscan.</div>
- <div class='line in35'>Italian. { Calabrian.</div>
- <div class='line in35'>Friulian.</div>
- <div class='line in35'>Ladin.</div>
- <div class='line in35'>Romansch.</div>
- <div class='line in35'>Rumanian.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in13'>{ { Irish.</div>
- <div class='line in13'>{ <em>Q.</em> Celtic { Manx.</div>
- <div class='line in13'>{ { Scotch Gaelic.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>3. Celtic {</div>
- <div class='line in13'>{ { Ancient Gaulish.</div>
- <div class='line in13'>{ <em>P.</em> Celtic { Welsh.</div>
- <div class='line in13'>{ { Cornish.</div>
- <div class='line in13'>{ { Breton or Armorican.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in14'><span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>{ Gothic.</div>
- <div class='line in14'>{ { Swedish.</div>
- <div class='line in14'>{ { Danish.</div>
- <div class='line in14'>{ Scandinavian { Norwegian.</div>
- <div class='line in14'>{ { Icelandic.</div>
- <div class='line in14'>{ { Old Norse.</div>
- <div class='line in14'>{</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Germanic or {</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Teutonic {</div>
- <div class='line in14'>{</div>
- <div class='line in14'>{ { English.</div>
- <div class='line in14'>{ { Frisian.</div>
- <div class='line in14'>{ West { Low Frankish { Dutch.</div>
- <div class='line in14'>{ Germanic { { Flemish.</div>
- <div class='line in14'>{ { Low German.</div>
- <div class='line in14'>{ { High German.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>5. Armenian.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>[6. Tokharian?]</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>II. Satem. (Eastern Europe and Asia.)</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in20'>{ { Zend.</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ Sanskrit { Old Persian.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>1. Aryan or { { Modern Persian.</div>
- <div class='line in6'>Indo-Iranian {</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ Hindu, and nearly all the modern languages</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ of India [and of the Pamirs].</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in20'>{ { Lithuanian.</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ { Lettish.</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ <em>a</em> { Old Prussian or Borussian, extinct</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ { since the 17th century.</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ { { Old Bulgarian.</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ { { { Great Russian</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ { 1. S.E. { { and White Russian.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>2. Balto-Slavonic { { Slavic { Russian. { Little Russian or</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ { { Ruthenian.</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ <em>b</em> { { Servian.</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ { { Slovene.</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ {</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ { 2. West { Polish.</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ { Slavic. { Czech or Bohemian.</div>
- <div class='line in20'>{ { { Sorb.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>3. Albanian.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>242&#160;: 16. <em>Cf.</em> S. Feist, 2, p. 250. On the archaic character
-of Lithuanian, see Taylor, 1, p. 15, and the authorities he
-quotes. Also Schrader, Jevons translation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>242&#160;: 20–243&#160;: 4. Deniker, 2, p. 320, sums up Hirt’s position
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>on this question in the footnote: “According to Hirt the
-home of dispersion of the primitive Aryan language would
-be found to the north of the Carpathians, in the Letto-Lithuanian
-region. From this point two linguistic streams
-would start flowing around the mountains to the west and
-east; the western stream, after spreading over Germany
-(Teutonic languages), left behind the Celtic languages in
-the upper valley of the Danube, and filtered through on the
-one side into Italy (Latin languages), on the other side into
-Illyria, Albania, and Greece (Helleno-Illyrian languages).
-The eastern stream formed the Slav languages in the plains
-traversed by the Dnieper, then spread by way of the Caucasus
-into Asia (Iranian languages and Sanscrit). In this
-way we can account, on the one hand, for the less and less
-marked relationship between the Aryan languages of the
-present day and the common primitive dialect, and on the
-other hand, for the diversity between the two groups of
-Aryan languages, western and eastern.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If this were so, Sanskrit should more closely resemble the
-Slavic than the western languages. As it is, the old Vedic
-speech, the earliest form of Sanskrit, is said to show more
-affiliations with Greek than with any other of the Aryan
-tongues (see Taylor, 1, p. 21, and authorities quoted), a
-fact which merely adds another proof to our hypothesis that
-sometime between 2000 and 1500 B. C. the Nordics filtered
-down the Balkan peninsula in their earliest wave and about
-the same time other branches found their way into northwestern
-India. The Sanskrit alphabet is more closely related
-to the Phœnician than to any other. At the time of
-the first Nordic expansion their language was not reduced
-to writing. The alphabet used for early Sanskrit, was, according
-to Professor Bühler, probably introduced into India
-by traders from Mesopotamia about 800 B. C. Another
-authority on the relations of Greek and Sanskrit is Johannes
-Schmidt, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Verwandtschaftsverhältnisse der Indo-germanischen
-Sprachen</span></cite>, Weimar, 1872.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>243&#160;: 4. Prof. J. D. Prince, correspondence, in discussing
-the kinship of prehistoric Ugrian to Aryan says that, although
-it is a temptation to believe in it, there is insufficient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>data for proving it. As careful a scholar as Szinnyei,
-in his <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Vergleichende Grammatik der Ugrischen Sprache</span></cite>, is
-careful not to commit himself. But see Zaborowski, 3;
-also the notes to p. 236&#160;: 26; and Deniker, 2, pp. 349–351.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>243&#160;: 12. Deniker, 2, p. 320 and the authorities he quotes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>243&#160;: 20. See the notes to pp. 158&#160;: 21 and 159.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>243&#160;: 25. See p. 158 and also the notes on languages to
-p. 242&#160;: 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>244&#160;: 1. See p. 157 and the notes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>244&#160;: 6. Latin derivatives. Zaborowski, 1, p. 2. See
-table of languages, in the note to p. 242&#160;: 5 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>244&#160;: 12–28. Ripley, pp. 423–424; Freeman, 2, p. 217;
-Obédénare, p. 350; Ratzel, vol. III, p. 564; and the articles
-on the Balkans and Hungary in the <cite>Geographical Review</cite>, by
-Cvijič and Wallis. <em>Cf.</em> G. Poisson, <cite>The Latin Origin of the
-Rumanians</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>244&#160;: 29–245&#160;: 3. Freeman, 1, p. 439.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>245&#160;: 3. Jordanes, <cite>History of the Goths</cite>; Procopius, <cite>The
-History of the Wars</cite>; Gibbon, <cite>Decline and Fall of the Roman
-Empire</cite>, chaps. I and XI; Freeman, <cite>The Historical Geography
-of Europe</cite>, pp. 70–71; also the notes to pp. 143 and 156&#160;: 10.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>245&#160;: 12. Sarmatians. See the note to p. 143&#160;: 21. The
-same for the Venethi. Under the Roman dominion Latin
-speech appears to have spread from the Adriatic coast eastward
-over the Balkans replacing the native dialects except
-along the shores of the Ægean and in the large cities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>246&#160;: 9. Freeman, 1, pp. 440–441.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>246&#160;: 15. Ripley, p. 425.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>246&#160;: 24. See the note to p. 173 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>246&#160;: 27. Rhys and Jones, <cite>The Welsh People</cite>, pp. 12, 13.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>247&#160;: 3. See the note to p. 174; Oman, 2, pp. 13, 14; Rice
-Holmes, 1, pp. 409–410; 2, pp. 319–320; Rhys and Jones,
-pp. 1, 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>247&#160;: 9. Goidels. Rice Holmes, 1, pp. 227, 291 and 455–456.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>247&#160;: 16. Rice Holmes, 1, pp. 229, 456; Oman, 2, p. 16.
-See also p. 174 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>247&#160;: 23. Ripley, p. 127; Feist, 4, p. 14; Ridgeway, 1,
-p. 373; and pp. 195 and 212 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>247&#160;: 27. See the note to p. 247&#160;: 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>248&#160;: 3. Fleure and James, pp. 146, 148; D’Arbois de
-Jubainville, 2, p. 88.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>248&#160;: 6. Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 319–321; Taylor, 2, pp. 138,
-167–168; Beddoe, 4, p. 20.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>248&#160;: 12. Neo-Celtic. D’Arbois de Jubainville, 2, p. 88;
-Fleure and James, p. 143.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>248&#160;: 14. Rice Holmes, 2, p. 12.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>248&#160;: 29–249&#160;: 4. See the notes to pp. 177–178 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>249&#160;: 16. Beddoe, 4, p. 223.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>249&#160;: 20. The same, pp. 241–242; Ripley’s maps, pp. 23
-and 313; but consult Beddoe, 4, p. 66, for criticisms of evidence
-derived from place names; Taylor, 2, p. 119.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>249&#160;: 27–250&#160;: 1. Beddoe, 4, pp. 139, 241–242.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>250&#160;: 1 <em>seq.</em> Taylor, 2, p. 173; Palgrave, vol. I of <cite>The English
-Commonwealth</cite>; Oman, 2, pp. 158 seq.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>250&#160;: 6. Taylor, 2, pp. 170–171.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>250&#160;: 14. Ripley, p. 22; Taylor, 2, pp. 137–138.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>250&#160;: 20. Jordanes, XXXVI; Gibbon and others.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>250&#160;: 24. Ripley, pp. 531–533.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>250&#160;: 28 <em>seq.</em> <em>Cf.</em> Ripley, pp. 101, 151 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>251&#160;: 7 <em>seq.</em> <em>Cf.</em> Rice Holmes, 2, pp. 309–314.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>251&#160;: 18. See the note to p. 182 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>251&#160;: 26. Since the Belgæ were the last wave of the Celts,
-and Cymric was the later Celtic, this deduction is inevitable,
-even if there were no facts, such as place names, history, etc.,
-to prove it. See the note to p. 248&#160;: 6.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>251&#160;: 28–252&#160;: 2. Beddoe, 4, p. 35; Ripley, pp. 101, 152;
-Taylor, 2, pp. 95, 98.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>252&#160;: 5. See the note to p. 196&#160;: 7.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c014'>CHAPTER XIV. THE ARYAN LANGUAGE IN ASIA</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>253&#160;: 1. See p. 158 and note. Also Peake, 2, p. 165;
-Breasted, 1, p. 176; Von Luschan, pp. 241–243; Zaborowski,
-1, p. 112; DeLapouge, 1, p. 252, says: “Aryans were in India
-about 1500 B. C.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>253&#160;: 10. See Peake, 2; also pp. 170–171 and 213 of this
-book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>253&#160;: 13. See the note to p. 225&#160;: 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>253&#160;: 13–15. Eduard Meyer, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Zur ältesten Geschichte der
-Iranier</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>253&#160;: 16 <em>seq.</em> See the note to p. 239&#160;: 16 seq.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>253&#160;: 19. Zaborowski, 1, pp. 137 and 214.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>254&#160;: 1. See pp. 173 and 225 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>254&#160;: 3 <em>seq.</em> For Sacæ see the note to p. 259&#160;: 21. Cahun,
-<cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Histoire de l’Asie</span></cite>, says on p. 35: “The Sacæ and the Ephtalites
-and Massagetæ were from the Kiptchak.” See also
-Zaborowski, 1, pp. 94, 100–101, 215 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>254&#160;: 6. Massagetæ. See the note to p. 259&#160;: 21.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>254&#160;: 8. Ephtalites, or White Huns. Cahun, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Histoire de
-l’Asie</span></cite>, pp. 43–55: “The Turks destroyed in the first half of
-the seventh century a powerful nation, the Ephtalites of
-Soghdiana, north of Persia. They were called Ephtalites,
-or White Huns or Tie-le-urn Turks.” See also the notes to
-pp. 119&#160;: 15 and 224&#160;: 3 of this book, and chap. XXVI in
-Gibbon on the Huns in general.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Procopius, vol. I, says in speaking of the Ephtalite Huns
-and describing their war with the Persians about 450 A. D.:
-“The White Huns are of the stock of the Huns in fact as
-well as in name, living in the territory north of Persia, and
-are settlers on the land in contrast to the Nomadic Huns
-who live at a distance.... They are the only ones among
-the Huns who have white bodies and countenances that are
-not ugly and they are far more civilized than are the other
-Huns.” The general impression gained from Procopius is
-that they were not true Huns. “Massagetæ” is used as
-another name for Huns by Procopius. He describes them
-as mounted bowmen. It is clear that in using this name he
-refers to Huns only.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>254&#160;: 13. Medes. The name Medes is variously applied
-by different authorities; by many the Medes are regarded as
-a branch of the Persians, one of two kindred tribes of Nordics.
-The author follows Zaborowski in applying the name
-to the round skulled population which was conquered by
-the Persians. See Zaborowski, 1, chaps. V and VI, especially
-part II and p. 125. Also Herodotus in the references given
-for Persia. Hall, <cite>Ancient History of the Near East</cite>, p. 459,
-gives an interesting bit of their story.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>254&#160;: 15. Persians. The Persians were a branch of Nordics
-who invaded the territory of the round skulled Medes,
-and gradually imposed their language and much of their culture
-on the subjugated populations. See Herodotus, book
-I, especially 55, 71, 72, 74, 91, 95, 101, 107, 125, 129, 135, 136;
-and book VI, 19, where he discusses both Medes and Persians.
-For modern commentary the author follows Zaborowski,
-1, pp. 138–139, 153 <em>seq.</em>, chap. VI, and also pp. 212–214.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Von Luschan, pp. 233–234, describes the present day Persians,
-showing that there has been a resurgence of types and
-that the Nordic elements have been largely absorbed by the
-original inhabitants. He adds, however, on p. 234, that
-while he never saw Persians with light hair and blue eyes,
-he was told that in some noble families fair types were not
-very rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>254&#160;: 19. See the note on the Medes, and Zaborowski, p.
-156, on the Magi.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>254&#160;: 26. Darius. Zaborowski, 1, p. 12. Herodotus, I,
-209, says: “Now Hystaspes the son of Arsames was of the
-race of the Achæmenidæ and his eldest son Darius was at
-that time twenty years old.” Another name for Hystaspes
-was Vashtaspa, whose father was Arsames (Arsháma). He
-traced his descent through four ancestors to Achæmenes
-(Hakhámamish).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Von Luschan, p. 241, says: “Nothing is known of the
-Achæmenides who called themselves ‘Aryans of Aryan
-stock’ and who brought the Aryan language to Persia.
-About 1500 B. C. or earlier, there seems to have begun a
-migration of northern men to Asia Minor, Syria, Persia,
-Egypt and India. Indeed we can now connect even Further
-India with the Mitanni of central Asia Minor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>See Zaborowski in regard to the Behistun tablet, etc., although
-practically any writers on Persia and Mesopotamia
-discuss this great monument.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>255&#160;: 2. Zaborowski, 1, pp. 116–117.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>255&#160;: 6. See the note on the Medic language, 255&#160;: 13.
-Also Zaborowski, 1, pp. 34, 182–184.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>255&#160;: 7 <em>seq.</em> Zaborowski, 1, pp. 180–184; Feist, 5, p. 423.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span>255&#160;: 13. Bactria and Zendic. See the notes to pp.
-119&#160;: 15 and 257&#160;: 12.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>255&#160;: 13. Zendic or the Medic language. See Zaborowski,
-1, chap. VI. According to the Census of India, vol. I, pp.
-291 <em>seq.</em>, both Persian and Medic tongues belong to the
-Aryan stock. They are divided in the following table:</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_408.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c026'>Zaborowski, 1, p. 146, positively identifies Medic as agglutinative,
-in which he agrees with Oppert. See chaps. V and
-VI, especially part II and p. 125. For early data on the
-Medes see the Herodotus references given under Persia.
-Zaborowski says, p. 121, that Medic was spoken until 600
-B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>255&#160;: 15. Kurdish. Von Luschan, p. 229: “The Kurds
-speak an Aryan language.... The eastern Kurds are
-little known.... They speak a different dialect from the
-western tribes, but both divisions are Aryan.” On the
-Kurds as a people, see the notes to p. 225&#160;: 20.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>255&#160;: 20. Zaborowski, 1, p. 216–217.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>255&#160;: 23. Von Luschan, p. 234, and the note to p. 225&#160;: 19
-of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>255&#160;: 26–256&#160;: 10. See Plutarch’s <cite>Life of Alexander</cite>; <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Historia
-Alexandri Magni de præliis</span></cite>; Zaborowski, 1, p. 171.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>256&#160;: 3. Alexander the Great and the Persians. Plutarch,
-<cite>Life of Alexander</cite>: “After this he accommodated himself
-more than ever to the manners of the Asiatics, and at the
-same time persuaded them to adopt some of the Macedonian
-fashions, for by a mixture of both he thought a union might
-be promoted much better than by force, and his authority
-maintained when he was at a distance. For the same reason
-he selected 30,000 boys and gave them masters to instruct
-them in the Grecian literature as well as to train them to
-arms in the Macedonian manner. As for his marriage with
-Roxana, it was entirely the effect of love.... Nor was the
-match unsuitable to the situation of his affairs. The barbarians
-placed greater confidence in him on account of that
-alliance.... Hephæstion and Craternus were his two
-favorites. The former praised the Persian fashions and
-dressed as he did; the latter adhered to the fashions of his
-own country. He therefore employed Hephæstion in his
-transactions with the barbarians and Craternus to signify
-his pleasure to the Greeks and Macedonians.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>256&#160;: 11 <em>seq.</em> Armenians. Ridgeway, 1, p. 396, speaking
-of language, says: “That the Armenians were an offshoot of
-the Phrygians as mentioned in Herodotus VII, 73, is proved
-by the most modern linguistic results, which show that Armenian
-comes closer to Greek than to the Iranian tongues.”
-<em>Cf.</em> also Hall, <cite>Ancient History of the Near East</cite>, p. 475. This
-need not imply racial affinity, however. The following notes
-on Armenian were contributed by Mr. Leon Dominian:
-“The proof of Aryan affinities in the Hittite language has
-not yet been established. The great difficulty in establishing
-the pre-Aryan relation of Armenian is due to the fact
-that the earliest text dates only from the fifth century
-A. D.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Cimmerians and Scythians, coming from southern
-Europe by way of the Caucasus (Herodotus, IV, 11, 12),
-reached Armenia about 720 B. C. (see Garstang, <cite>The Land of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>the Hittites</cite>, p. 62). The old Vannic language antedating this
-invasion resembles the Georgian of the Caucasus, according
-to Sayce (<cite>Jour. Roy. As. Soc.</cite>, XIV, p. 410), who has studied
-the local inscriptions. On p. 409 he infers that the Aryan
-occupation of Armenia was coeval with the victory of Aryanism
-in Persia at the end of the sixth century, B. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The fact that Armenia is linguistically related to the
-western groups of the Indo-European languages and that
-the Persian element consists of loan words is corroborated by
-geographical evidence. The Armenian highland culminating
-in the 17000 foot altitude of Mt. Ararat has acted as a barrier
-dividing the plateau of Anatolia from that of Iran.
-Herodotus called the Armenians the ‘beyond’ Phrygians.”
-See also O. Schrader, Jevons translation, p. 430.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>256&#160;: 14 <em>seq.</em> Phrygians. See the note to p. 225.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>256&#160;: 15. Félix Sartiaux, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Troie, la guerre de Troie</span></cite>, pp. 5–9.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>256&#160;: 16–17. See the note to p. 239&#160;: 2 <em>seq.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>256&#160;: 21 <em>seq.</em> See the table of languages to p. 242&#160;: 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>256&#160;: 27–257&#160;: 7. See pp. 20, 134, 238–239, of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>257&#160;: 12. Bactria. See the note to p. 119&#160;: 15.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>257&#160;: 16 <em>seq.</em> See the notes to pp. 158 and 253. Also
-Von Luschan, p. 243; Zaborowski, 1, p. 112; and the Indian
-Census, 1901, vol. I, p. 294.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>257&#160;: 19. Punjab. <em>Panch</em>—five, <em>ab</em>—river, in Hindustani.
-<em>Cf.</em> the Greek <em>penta</em>—five.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>257&#160;: 22. Dravidians. See pp. 148–149 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>257&#160;: 23. See the note to. p. 259&#160;: 21 and Zaborowski, 1,
-pp. 113 seq.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>257&#160;: 28–258&#160;: 2. See the note to p. 242&#160;: 5. George
-Turnour’s edition in 1836, of the Mahavamsa, first made it
-possible to trace Sinhalese history and to prove that about
-the middle of the sixth century B. C. a band of Aryan-speaking
-people from India, under Vijaya conquered and settled
-Ceylon permanently. There are a number of later
-works on Ceylon, dealing with its archæology, flora, fauna,
-history, etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>According to the British Indian Census of 1901 nearly
-two-thirds of the inhabitants of Assam were Hindus, and the
-language of Hinduism has become that of the province. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>vernacular Assamese is closely related to Bengali. E. A.
-Gait has written a <cite>History of Assam</cite> (1906).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>258&#160;: 3. See the notes to pp. 158 and 253 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>258&#160;: 8. Zaborowski, 1, pp. 184–185. Compare de Morgan’s
-dates with those of Zaborowski, the Indian Census
-and Meillet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>258&#160;: 19. See Meillet, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Introduction á l’étude des langues
-européens</span></cite>. On p. 37 he claims that the relation between the
-two is comparable to that prevailing between High and Low
-German. Zaborowski, 1, p. 184, says: “The language of the
-Avesta, the Zend, is a contemporary dialect of the Persian
-of Darius (<em>i. e.</em>, of Old Persian), from whence has come the
-Pehlevi and its very close relative. It even presents the
-closest affinities with the Sanskrit of the Vedas, from which
-was derived, in the time of Alexander, classical Sanskrit.
-This Sanskrit of the Vedas is itself so close to Old Persian
-that it can be said that one and the other are only two pronunciations
-of the same tongue.” See also the Indian Census
-for 1901, vol. I, p. 294.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>258&#160;: 25 <em>seq.</em> Zaborowski, 1, pp. 213–216; Peake, 2, pp.
-165 <em>seq.</em> and especially pp. 169 and 172.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>259&#160;: 4. Ellsworth Huntington, <cite>The Pulse of Asia</cite>; Peake,
-2, p. 170; and Breasted, <em>passim</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>259&#160;: 9. See pp. 173, 237, 253–254 and 257 of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>259&#160;: 16. See the notes to pp. 119&#160;: 13 and 255&#160;: 7.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>259&#160;: 21. Sacæ or Saka. The Sacæ or Saka were the blond
-peoples who carried the Aryan language to India. Strabo,
-511, allies them with the Scythians as one of their tribes.
-Many tribes were called Sacæ, especially by the Hindus, who
-used the term indiscriminately to designate any northern
-invaders of India.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One tribe gained the most fertile tract in Armenia which
-was called Sacasene, after them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Zaborowski, 1, p. 94, relates the Sacæ with the Scythians,
-and says: “The Tadjiks are a people composed of suppressed
-elements where blonds are found in an important minority.
-These blonds, saving an atavistic survival of more ancient
-or sporadic characters I can identify. They are the Sacæ.”
-He continues, in a note, that a great error has been committed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>on the subject of the Sacæ. “Repeating an assertion
-of Alfred Maury, whose very sound erudition enjoyed a
-merited reputation, I myself once repeated that the Sacæ
-who figures on the rock of Behistun was of the Kirghiz type.
-This assertion is completely erroneous. I have proved it
-and can say that the Sacæ and the Scythians were identical.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Zaborowski, p. 216, also identifies the Sacæ with the Persians.
-On this whole subject see Herodotus, VII, 64; also
-Feist, 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>259&#160;: 21. Massagetæ. Zaborowski, 1, p. 285, says: “The
-first information of history concerning the peoples of Turkestan
-refers to the Massagetæ, whose life was exactly the
-same as that of the Scythians (Herodotus, I, 205–216).
-They enjoyed a developed industrial civilization while they
-remained nomads. They were doubtless composed of ethnic
-elements different from the Scythians, but probably already
-spoke the Iranian tongue, like them. And since the time of
-Darius, at least, there were in Turkestan with them and beside
-them, Sacæ, whom the Greeks have always regarded as
-Scythians come from Europe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Minns, <cite>Scythians and Greeks</cite>, p. 11, says: “The Scyths and
-the Massagetæ were contemporaneous and different. The
-Massagetæ are evidently a mixed collection of tribes without
-an ethnic unity; the variety of their customs and states of
-culture shows this and Herodotus does not seem to suggest
-that they are all one people. They are generally reckoned
-to be Iranian.... The picture drawn of the nomad Massagetæ
-seems very like that of the Scythians in a rather ruder
-stage of development.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Herodotus, I, 215, describes them as follows: “In their
-dress and mode of living the Massagetæ resemble the Scythians.
-They fight both on horseback and on foot, neither
-method is strange to them.... The following are some of
-their customs,—each man has but one wife, yet all wives are
-held in common; for this is a custom of the Massagetæ and
-not of the Scythians, as the Greeks wrongly say. Human
-life does not come to its natural close with this people; but
-when a man grows very old, all his kinsfolk collect together
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_413'>413</span>and offer him up in sacrifice; offering at the same time some
-cattle also. After the sacrifice they boil the flesh and feast
-on it; and those who thus end their days are reckoned the
-happiest. If a man dies of disease they do not eat him, but
-bury him in the ground, bewailing his ill fortune that he did
-not come to be sacrificed. They sow no grain, but live on
-their herds and on fish, of which there is great plenty in the
-Araxes. Milk is what they chiefly drink. [<em>Cf.</em> the eastern
-Siberian tribes of the present day.] The only god they worship
-is the sun, and to him they offer the horse in sacrifice,
-under the notion of giving to the swiftest of the gods, the
-swiftest of all mortal creatures.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>D’Arbois de Jubainville, 4, t. I, p. 231 declares they were
-the same as the Scyths.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Horse sacrifices are said to prevail among the modern
-Parses. On the whole, the Massagetæ appear to have been
-largely Nordic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>259&#160;: 24. Kirghizes. See Zaborowski, 1, pp. 216, 290–291.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>259&#160;: 25 <em>seq.</em> See the note to p. 119&#160;: 15.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>260&#160;: 3. Gibbon, chap. LXIV. Also called the battle of
-Lignitz. Lignitz is the duchy, and Wahlstatt a small village
-on the battlefield.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>260&#160;: 8. See the notes to pp. 224&#160;: 3 and 259&#160;: 21.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>260&#160;: 17. Feist, 5, pp. 1, 427–431, says the Tokharian is
-related to the western rather than to the Iranian-Indian
-group of languages, and places the Tokhari in northeast
-Turkestan. (See the note to p. 119&#160;: 13.) On p. 471 he
-identifies the Yuë-Tchi and Khang with Aryans from Chinese
-Turkestan, basing himself on Chinese annals, the date being
-given as 800 B. C. <em>Cf.</em> also the notes to p. 224&#160;: 3 of this
-book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>260&#160;: 21. See DeLapouge, 1, p. 248; Feist, 5, p. 520.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>260&#160;: 29–261&#160;: 5. See Feist, above, in the note to 260&#160;: 17.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>261&#160;: 6. Traces. See the note to p. 70&#160;: 12.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>261&#160;: 17. Deniker, 2, pp. 407 <em>seq.</em>; G. Elliot Smith, <cite>Ancient
-Egyptians</cite>, p. 61; Ripley, p. 450.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>BIBLIOGRAPHY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<ul class='index c002'>
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- <li>5. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Étude sur l’ethnographie générale de la Tunisie</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bull. de géographie historique et descriptive</span></cite>, Paris, 1887.</li>
- <li>6. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’indice céphalique des populations françaises</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Anth.</span></cite>, série 1, pp. 200–224, 1890.</li>
- <li>7. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Répartition de la couleur des yeux et des cheveux chez les Tunisiens sédentaires</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Rev. d’anth.</span></cite>, série 3, t. III, 1888.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Comparetti, Domenico. “Le leggi di gortyna, e le altre iscrizioni arcaiche cretesi,” <cite>Monumenti Antichi</cite>, vol. III, Milano, 1893.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Conklin, Edwin G.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Heredity and Environment.</cite> Princeton University Press, 1915.</li>
- <li>2. “The Mechanism of Evolution in the Light of Hereditary Development,” <cite>Scientific Monthly</cite>, vols. IX, no. 6, 1919, and X, nos. 1, 2, 3, 1920.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Constantinus Porphyrogenitus. <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Corpus scriptorum historiæ byzantinæ.</span></cite></li>
- <li class='c029'>Conway, R. S.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Early Italic Dialects.</cite> Cambridge University Press, 1897.</li>
- <li>2. “The Pre-Hellenic Inscriptions of Præsos,” <cite>Annual of the British School at Athens</cite>, vol. VIII, pp. 125–157.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_421'>421</span>3. “A Third Eteocretan Fragment,” <cite>Ann. Brit. Sch. at Athens</cite>, vol. X, pp. 115–127.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Crawford, O. G. S. “Distribution of Early Bronze Age Settlements in Britain,” <cite>Geographical Journal</cite>, XL, pp. 184 <em>seq.</em>, 1912.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cuno, J. G. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Forschungen im Gebiete der alten Völkerkunde.</span></cite> Berlin, 1871.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cvijič, Jovan:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “The Geographical Distribution of the Balkan Peoples,” <cite>Geographical Review</cite>, vol. V, no. 5, pp. 345–361, May, 1918.</li>
- <li>2. “The Zones of Civilization of the Balkan Peninsula,” <cite>Geog. Rev.</cite>, vol. V, no. 6, June, 1918.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002'>Darwin, Charles. <cite>The Descent of Man</cite>, 2d ed. London, John Murray, 1901.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Davenport, Charles B.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>The Feebly Inhibited, Nomadism&#160;... Inheritance of Temperament.</cite> Washington, D. C., Carnegie Institution, 1915.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>Heredity in Relation to Eugenics.</cite> New York, Henry Holt &amp; Co., 1911.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Davis, J. Barnard:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Thesaurus Craniorum</span>.</cite> London, 1867.</li>
- <li>2. (With J. Thurnam.) <cite>Crania Britannica.</cite> 2 vols. London, 1865.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Dawkins, W. Boyd. <cite>Early Man in Britain.</cite> London, Macmillan, 1880.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Dawson, Charles:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “On the Discovery of a Palæolithic Human Skull and Mandible in a Flint-bearing Gravel Overlaying the Wealden (Hastings Beds) at Piltdown, Fletching, Sussex.” With an appendix by Prof. G. Elliot Smith (with A. Smith Woodward), <cite>Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society</cite>, vol. LXIX, part I, pp. 117–151, London, 1913.</li>
- <li>2. “Prehistoric Man in Sussex,” <cite>Zoologist</cite>, series 4, vol. XVII, pp. 33–36.</li>
- <li>3. “Supplementary note, On the Discovery of a Palæolithic Human Skull and Mandible,” <cite>Quart. Jour. Geol. Soc.</cite>, vol. LXX, pp. 82–99, London, 1914.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Déchelette, J. <cite>Manuel d’archéologie.</cite> Paris, A. Picard et Fils, 1908.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_422'>422</span>Deniker, J.:
- <ul>
- <li><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">1. “Les races de l’Europe, Note préliminaire,” <cite>L’anthropologie</cite>, vol. IX, pp. 113–133, Paris, 1898.</span></li>
- <li>2. <cite>The Races of Man</cite>. New York, Scribner; London, Walter Scott, 1902.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Dill, Samuel:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Roman Society in the Last Century of the Western Empire</cite>, 2d ed. Macmillan, 1906.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>Roman Society from Nero to Marcus Aurelius.</cite> Macmillan, 1905.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Diodorus Siculus. <cite>Bibliothecæ historicæ.</cite></li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Dionysius Perigetes. <cite>Orbis descriptio.</cite></span></li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Dottin, G. <cite>Manuel Celtique.</cite> Paris, Édouard Champion, 1915.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Dubois, E. <cite>Pithecanthropus Erectus, eine menschenähnliche Uebergangsform aus Java.</cite> Batavia, 1894.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Duckworth, W. L. H.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Morphology and Anthropology.</cite> Cambridge University Press, 1904.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>Prehistoric Man.</cite> New York, Putnam, 1912.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Dugdale, R. L. <cite>The Jukes.</cite> New York, Putnam, 1877.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Eginhard. <cite>Life of Charlemagne</cite>, Glaister translation. London, George Bell &amp; Sons, 1877.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Evans, Sir Arthur J.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “Cretan Pictographs and Pre-Phœnician Script,” <cite>Journal of Hellenic Studies</cite>, vol. XIV, part 2, pp. 270–373. 1895.</li>
- <li>2. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Essai de classification des époques de la civilisation minoienne</span>,” <cite>Report of the British Association</cite>, 1904 (1905), London, 1906.</li>
- <li>3. “Further Discoveries of Cretan and Ægean Script,” <cite>Jour. of Hellenic Studies</cite>, vol. XVII, pp. 327–395. 1898.</li>
- <li>4. <cite>Prehistoric Tombs of Knossos.</cite> 1906.</li>
- <li>5. “Reports of Excavations at Cnossus,” <cite>Ann. Brit. Sch. at Athens</cite>, vols. VI-X.</li>
- <li>6. <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Scripta minoa.</span></cite> Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1909.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Evans, Sir John. <cite>Ancient Bronze Implements&#160;... of Great Britain and Ireland.</cite> Longmans, Green &amp; Co., 1881.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Faguet, Émile. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le culte de l’incompétence.</span></cite> Paris, B. Grasset, 1914.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_423'>423</span>Feist, Sigismund:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Address to the International Congress at Gratz.</cite> 1909.</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Beiträge z. Geschichte der Deutschen Sprache u. Literatur</span></cite>, XXXI, 2, Sept. 15, 1910.</li>
- <li>3. <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Europa im Lichte der Vorgeschichte “Quellen und Forschungen zur alten Geschichte und Geographie,” 19, 1910.</span></li>
- <li>4. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Geschichte Deutschen Sprachen und Kultur der Indo-Germanen.</span></cite> 1913.</li>
- <li>5. Kultur, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Ausbreitung und Herkunft der Indo-Germanen</span></cite>. Berlin, Weidmann, 1913.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Ferrero, Guglielmo. <cite>The Greatness and Decline of Rome.</cite> New York, Putnam, 1909.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Fischer, Eugen. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Rehobother Bastards.</span></cite> Jena, Fischer, 1913.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Fischer, E. “Fossile Hominiden,” <cite>Sonderabdruck Handwörterbuch Naturwissenschaft</cite>, Bd. IV, Jena, 1913.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Fisher, H. A. L. <cite>The Political History of England</cite>, vol. IV. Edited by William Hunt and Reginald Poole. London, Longmans, Green &amp; Co., 1906.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Fisher, Irving. <cite>National Vitality, Its Wastes and Conservation.</cite> Senate Document, no. 676, vol. III, 60th Congress, 2d Session. Washington, D. C., Government Printing Office, March, 1910.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Fleure, H. J. (with James, T. C.). “Anthropological Types in Wales,” <cite>Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland</cite>, vol. XLVI, pp. 35–154.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Fleure, H. J. (with L. Winstanley). “Anthropology and Our Older Histories,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XLVIII, pp. 155 seq.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Flower and Lydekker. <cite>Mammals, Living and Extinct.</cite> London, Adam and Charles Black, 1891.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ford, Henry Jones. <cite>The Scotch-Irish in America.</cite> Princeton University Press, 1915.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Frank, Tenney:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “Race Mixture in the Roman Empire,” <cite>American Historical Review</cite>, vol. XXI, no. 4, July, 1916.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>Roman Imperialism.</cite> Macmillan, 1914.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Freeman, E. A.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>A Historical Geography of Europe.</cite> Edited by J. B. Bury, 3d ed. London, Longmans, Green &amp; Co., 1912.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_424'>424</span>2. <cite>Race and Language.</cite> Historical Essays, series 3, pp. 173–230. New York and London, Macmillan, 1879.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Fritsch, Gustave. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Das Haupthaar und seine Bildungsstätte bei den Rassen des Menschen.</span></cite> Berlin, 1912.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Funel, L. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les parlers populaires du département des Alpes-Maritimes</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bull. géogr. hist. et descrip.</span></cite>, no. 2, 1897.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Fustel de Coulanges. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La cité antique</span></cite>, 2me éd. Paris, L. Hachette et Cie., 1866.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Gaillard, Claude. (See Lortet, Louis.) <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Les Tatonnements des Égyptiens de l’ancien empire à la recherche des animaux à domestiquer,” <cite>Revue d’ethnographie</cite>, 1912.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Galton, Sir Francis. <cite>Hereditary Genius.</cite> London and New York, Macmillan &amp; Co., 1892.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Garstang, S. J. <cite>The Land of the Hittites.</cite> London, Constable &amp; Co., 1910.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Gatterer, J. C. <cite>Comm. Societ. Reg. Scient.</cite>, XIII, Göttingen.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Geer, Baron Gerard de. “A Geochronology of the Last 12,000 Years,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Compte-Rendue de la session 1910, du Congrès Géol. Intern.</span></cite>, vol. XI, fasc. 1, pp. 241–257.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Gibbon. <cite>Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.</cite></li>
- <li class='c029'>Gindely, Anton. <cite>History of the Thirty Years’ War</cite>. New York, G. Putnam’s Sons, 1884.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Giuffrida-Ruggeri, V. “A Sketch of the Anthropology of Italy,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XLVIII, pp. 80–103. 1918.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Gjerset, Knut. <cite>The History of the Norwegian People.</cite> New York, Macmillan, 1915.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Glück, Leopold. “Zur Physischen Anthropologie der Albanesen,” <cite>Wissenschaftliche Mitteilungen aus Bosnien und Herzegovina</cite>.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Gowland, W. “The Metals in Antiquity,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XLII, pp. 235–288.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Grant, Madison. “The Origin and Relationships of North American Mammals,” <cite>Eighth Annual Report of the New York Zoological Society</cite>, New York, 1904.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Green, John R. <cite>A History of the English People.</cite> New York, Harper, 1878.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_425'>425</span>Greenwell, W., Canon. <cite>British Barrows.</cite> Oxford, 1877.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Gregory, W. K.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “The Dawn Man of Piltdown, England,” <cite>American Museum Journal</cite>, vol. XIV, New York, May, 1914.</li>
- <li>2. “Facts and Theories of Evolution, with Special Reference to the Origin of Man,” <cite>Dental Cosmos</cite>, pp. 3–19, March, 1920.</li>
- <li>3. “Studies on the Evolution of the Primates,” <cite>Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist.</cite>, vol. XXXV, article xix, New York, 1916.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Gross, V. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La Tène, un oppidum helvète.</span></cite> Supplément, 1886, to <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Protohelvètes</span></cite>. Berlin, 1883.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Grierson, G. A. <cite>A Linguistic Survey of India</cite>, vol. IV, <cite>Munda and Dravidian Languages</cite>. Calcutta, 1906.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Grillière, M. le Dr. “La taille des conscrits corréziens de la classe 1910,” <cite>Bull. Soc. d’anth.</cite>, série VI, t. IV, pp. 392–400. 1913.</span></li>
- <li class='c002'>Haddon, A. C.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>The Races of Man and Their Distribution.</cite> London, Milner &amp; Co.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>The Study of Man.</cite> New York, Putnam; and London, Bliss Sands, 1898.</li>
- <li>3. <cite>The Wanderings of Peoples.</cite> Cambridge University Press, 1912.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Haeckel, Ernest. <cite>The Riddle of the Universe.</cite> Harper, 1901.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hall, H. R. <cite>The Ancient History of the Near East</cite>, 3d edition. London, Methuen &amp; Co., 1916.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hall, Prescott F.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Immigration</cite>, 2d ed. New York, Henry Holt &amp; Co. 1908.</li>
- <li>2. “Immigration Restriction and World Eugenics,” <cite>Journal of Heredity</cite>, vol. X, no. 3, pp. 125–127, Washington, D. C., March, 1919.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Harrison, J. P. “On the Survival of Racial Features in the Population of the British Isles,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XII, pp. 243–258.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hart, H. H. <cite>Sterilization as a Practical Measure.</cite> Russell Sage Foundation.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hauser, O. See Klaatsch.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hawes, C. H.: 1. “Some Dorian Descendants?” <cite>Ann. Brit. Sch. at Athens</cite>, no. XVI, pp. 254–280. 1909–1910.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_426'>426</span>2. (With H. B. Hawes.) <cite>Crete, the Forerunner of Greece</cite>, 1911.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Herodotus. <cite>History of the World.</cite></li>
- <li class='c029'>Hervé, G.:
- <ul>
- <li><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">1. “Les brachycéphales néolithiques,” <cite>Revue d’école d’anthropologie</cite>, tome IV, pp. 392–406, Paris, 1894; V, pp. 18–28, 1895.</span></li>
- <li><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">2. “Les populations lacustres,” <cite>Rev. d’école d’anth.</cite>, t. V, pp. 137–154, Paris, 1895.</span></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hirt, Herman:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Indo-Germanen, ihre Verbreitung, ihre Urheimat und ihre Kultur.</span></cite> Strassburg, Trübner, 1905.</li>
- <li>2. “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Urheimat&#160;... der Indo-Germanen</span>,” <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Geographische Zeitschrift</span></cite>, Bd. I, Leipsig, 1895.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>His and Rütimeyer. <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Crania Helvetica.</span></cite> Basel, 1861.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hodgkin, Thos. <cite>Italy and Her Invaders.</cite></li>
- <li class='c029'>Hoernes, Moritz:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Hallstattperiode</span>,” <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Archive für Anthropologie</span></cite>, Bd. XXXI, pp. 233–283. 1905.</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Urgeschichte d. Mensch.</span></cite> Wien, 1890.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Holmes, T. Rice:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Ancient Britain, and the Conquests of Julius Cæsar.</cite> Oxford University Press, 1907.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>Cæsar’s Conquest of Gaul.</cite> Oxford University Press, 1911.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Homer. The Iliad; the Odyssey.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Horace. <cite>Epodes.</cite></li>
- <li class='c029'>Hrdlička, Aleš.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “The Genesis of the American Indian,” <cite>19th International Congress of Americanists</cite>, pp. 559 <em>seq.</em>, Washington, D. C., 1915.</li>
- <li>2. “The Most Ancient Skeletal Remains of Man,” <cite>Report, Smithsonian Institution</cite>, pp. 481–552, Pub. 2300, 1913. Washington, D. C., Government Printing Office, 1914.</li>
- <li>3. “Old White Americans,” <cite>19th Internat’l Congress of Americanists</cite>, pp. 582 <em>seq.</em> Washington, D. C., 1915.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hoton. See Peake.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Huntington, Ellsworth:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Civilization and Climate.</cite> Yale University Press and Oxford University Press, 1915.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>The Pulse of Asia.</cite> Boston, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1907.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002'><span class='pageno' id='Page_427'>427</span>Jacobs, J. “On the Racial Characteristics of Modern Jews,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XV, pp. 23–62. 1885–1886.</li>
- <li class='c029'>James, T. C. (with Fleure, H. J.). “Anthropological Types in Wales,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XLVI, pp. 35–154. 1916.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Jessen, A. (Et Thomsen, Thomas). <cite>Une trouvaille de l’ancien âge de la pierre.</cite> Copenhague, Braband, 1906.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Johnston, Sir Harry H.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>The Negro in the New World.</cite> London, Methuen &amp; Co., 1910.</li>
- <li>2. “On North African Animals, A Survey of the Ethnography of Africa,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XLIII, pp. 375–422.</li>
- <li>3. Various writings.</li>
- <li>4. <cite>Views and Reviews.</cite> London, Williams and Norgate, 1912.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Jones, David B. (With Rhys, John.) <cite>The Welsh People.</cite> London, Macmillan, 1900.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Jones, Sir J. Morris. “Pre-Aryan Syntax in Insular Celtic,” Appendix B of Rhys and Jones, <cite>The Welsh People</cite>. London, Macmillan, 1900.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Jordan, David Starr. <cite>War and the Breed.</cite> Boston, The Beacon Press, 1915.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Jordanes. <cite>History of the Goths</cite>, Mierow translation. Princeton University Press, 1915.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Josephus, Flavius. <cite><span lang="pt" xml:lang="pt">De Bello Judaico</span></cite>, or <cite>The Jewish War of Flavius Josephus</cite>, translated by Robert Traill. London, Houlston &amp; Stoneman, 1851.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Kanitz, P. F. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Donau-Bulgarien und der Balkan.</span></cite> Leipsig, 1875.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Keane, A. H.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Ethnology.</cite> Cambridge University Press, 1896.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>Man, Past and Present.</cite> Cambridge University Press, 1900. Also new edition by Ouiggin &amp; Haddon.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Keary, C. F. <cite>The Vikings in Western Christendom.</cite> London, T. Fisher Unwin, 1891.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Keith, Arthur:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Ancient Types of Man.</cite> Harper, 1911.</li>
- <li>2. The <cite>Antiquity of Man.</cite> London, Williams and Norgate, 1915.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_428'>428</span>3. “Presidential Address to the Royal Anthropological Society of Great Britain and Ireland,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XLV, pp. 12–23. 1915.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Keller, Ferdinand. <cite>The Lake-Dwellings of Switzerland and Other Parts of Europe</cite>, translated by John Edward Lee, F.S.A., F.G.S., 2d edition. London, Longmans, Green &amp; Co., 1878.</li>
- <li class='c029'>King, L. W.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Chronicles Concerning the Early Babylonian Kings.</cite> London, Luzac &amp; Co., 1907.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>The History of Babylonia and Assyria.</cite> London, Chatto.
- <ul>
- <li>Vol. I, <cite>The History of Sumer and Akkad</cite>, 1910.</li>
- <li>Vol. II, <cite>The History of Babylon</cite>, 1915.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Klaatsch, H. <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Homo-Aurignacius Hauseri</span></cite>, 1909.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Klaatsch, H., and O. Hauser. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Archiv für Anthropologie</span></cite>, 1908.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Klaproth, J. <cite>Tableaux historiques de l’Asie.</cite> Paris, 1826.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Kluchevsky, V. O. <cite>A History of Russia</cite>, 3 vols., translated by C. J. Hogarth. London, Dent &amp; Sons; New York, E. P. Dutton, 1911–1913.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Kolrausch, F. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Deutsche Geschichte.</span></cite></li>
- <li class='c029'>Kraus, Franz Xaver. <cite>Dante.</cite> Berlin, 1897.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Kretschmer, P. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Einleitung in die Geschichte der Griechischen Sprache</span></cite>. Göttingen, 1896.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Kurth, G. “La frontière linguistique en Belgique,” <cite>Mém. couronnés Acad. R. Scien. Lit. et Beaux Arts de Belg.</cite>, XLVIII, vol. I, 1895; vol. II, 1898. Brussels.</span></li>
- <li class='c002'>Lapouge, V. C. de:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Aryen, son rôle sociale.</span></cite> Paris, 1899.</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Sélections sociales.</span></cite> Paris, 1896.</li>
- <li>3. Various writings.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Laughlin, Harry H. <cite>Eugenics Record Office Bulletins</cite>, 10A and 10B. Part I. “The Scope of the Committee’s Work.” Part II. “The Legal, Legislative and Administrative Aspects of Sterilization.” Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, N. Y., Feb., 1914.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Lecky, W. E. H. <cite>A History of European Morals</cite>, 2 vols. New York, D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1900.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Lefèvre, A. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Germains et Slavs.</span></cite> 1903.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Lewis, A. L. “The Menhirs of Madagascar,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XLVII, pp. 448–455. 1917.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_429'>429</span>Livi, R. <cite><span lang="pt" xml:lang="pt">Antropometria Militaire</span></cite>, Parte I, “<span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Dati Antropologia ed Etnologici.</span>” Roma, 1896.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Livius, Titus. <cite>Historiæ romanæ decades.</cite></li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lortet, Louis. (And Gaillard, Claude.) “La faune momifiée de l’ancienne Égypte,” <cite>Musée d’histoire naturelle de Lyon, Archives</cite>, vol. VIII, no. 2; vol. IX, no. 2. Lyon, 1903–1907.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Lydekker. See Flower.</li>
- <li class='c002'>McCulloch, J. R. <cite>A Statistical Account of the British Empire</cite>, 3 vols. London, Longmans, Brown, Green &amp; Longmans, 1854.</li>
- <li class='c029'>McCulloch, Oscar C. “The Tribe of Ishmael,” <cite>Report of the 15th Annual Conference of Charities and Corrections</cite>, pp. 154–159. 1888.</li>
- <li class='c029'>MacCurdy, George Grant:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “Eolithic and Palæolithic Man,” <cite>American Anthropologist</cite>, N. S., vol. XI, no. 1, pp. 92–101. 1909.</li>
- <li>2. “The Eolithic Problem,” <cite>Amer. Anth</cite>, N. S., vol. VII, no. 3, pp. 425–480. 1905.</li>
- <li>3. “Recent Discoveries Bearing on the Antiquity of Man in Europe,” <cite>Smithsonian Report</cite> for 1909. Washington, D. C., Government Printing Office, 1910.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Mackenzie, Sir Duncan:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “The Middle Minoan Pottery of Knossos,” <cite>Jour. of Hellenic Studies</cite>, vol. XXVI, pp. 243–268. 1906.</li>
- <li>2. “Cretan Palaces,” <cite>Ann. Brit. Sch. at Athens</cite>, vols. XI-XIV.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>MacLean, Hector:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “The Ancient Peoples of Ireland and Scotland Considered,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XX, pp. 154–179. 1890–1891.</li>
- <li>2. “On the Comparative Anthropology of Scotland,” <cite>Anthropological Review</cite>, vol. IV, pp. 209–226. 1866.</li>
- <li>3. Various writings.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Madsen, A. P. (With Sophus Müller, etc.) <cite><span lang="da" xml:lang="da">Affaldsdynger fra Stenalderen i Danmarck.</span></cite> Kjobenhavn, 1900.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Malte-Brün, V. A. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Carte archéologique de la France</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bull. Soc. de Géogr.</span></cite>, série 6, XVII, pp. 319–526, Paris, 1879.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_430'>430</span>Martin, Rudolf. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Lehrbuch der Anthropologie.</span></cite> Jena, Gustave Fischer, 1914.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Matthew, W. D.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “Climate and Evolution.” Published by the <cite>New York Academy of Sciences</cite>, vol. XXIV, pp. 171–318. New York, 1915.</li>
- <li>2. “Revision of the Lower Eocene Primates,” <cite>Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist.</cite>, vol. XXXIV, pp. 429–483, New York, Sept., 1915.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Meillet, Antoine. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Introduction à l’étude comparative des langues Indo-Européens.</span></cite> Paris, Hachette et Cie., 1912.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Menzel, W. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Geschichte der Deutschen.</span></cite> Stuttgart, 1834.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Merriam, John C. “The Beginnings of Human History Read from the Geological Record: The Emergence of Man,” <cite>Scientific Monthly</cite>, vols. IX and X, 1919–1920.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Messerschmidt, L. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Hetiter</span></cite> (<i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">der Alte Orient</span></i>, IV, 1), 2te Auflage, 1902. Leipsig, 1909.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Metchnikoff, Elie. <cite>Nature of Man.</cite> Putnam, 1903.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Meyer, Eduard:
- <ul>
- <li><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">1. <cite>Ægyptische Chronologie.</cite> Berlin, 1904–1907.</span></li>
- <li><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">2. <cite>Geschichte des Altertums</cite>, 2te Auflage, 1ster Bd., 2te Hälfte. Stuttgart und Berlin, 1909.</span></li>
- <li><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">3. <cite>Die Sclaverei im Altertum.</cite> Dresden, 1898.</span></li>
- <li><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">4. <cite>Sumerier und Semiten in Babylonien.</cite> Berlin, 1906.</span></li>
- <li><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">5. “Zur ältesten Geschichte der Iranier,” <cite>Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung</cite>, 1907.</span></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Meyer, Leo. “Über den Ursprung der Namen Indo-Germanen, Semiten und Ugro-Finner,” <cite>Göttinger Gelehrte Nachrichten, philologische-historische Klasse</cite>, 1901.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Miller, Gerrit S.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “The Jaw of the Piltdown Man,” <cite>Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections</cite>, vol. LXV, no. 12. Washington, D. C., Nov., 1915.</li>
- <li>2. “The Piltdown Jaw,” <cite>American Journal of Physical Anthropology</cite>, vol. I, no. 1, pp. 25–52, Jan.-Mar., 1918.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Minns, E. H. <cite>Scythians and Greeks.</cite> Cambridge University Press, 1913.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Modestov, Vasilii Ivanovich. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Introduction à l’histoire romaine.</span></cite> Paris, F. Alcan, 1907.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mommsen, Theodor. <cite>A History of the Roman Provinces</cite>, translated by William P. Dickson. Scribner, 1887.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_431'>431</span>Montelius, Oscar:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Chronologie der ältesten Bronzezeit</span>,” <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Arch. f. Anth.</span></cite>, Bd. 25, pp. 443 seq. 1900.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>The Civilization of Sweden in Heathen Times</cite>, translated by F. H. Woods. London, Macmillan, 1888.</li>
- <li>3. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La Civilisation primitive en Italie</span></cite>, Stockholm, 1895.</li>
- <li>4. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Kulturgeschichte Schwedens von den ältesten Zeiten.</span></cite> Leipsig, 1906.</li>
- <li>5. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Anthropologie</span></cite>, série XVII, 1906.</li>
- <li>6. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Archive f. Anth.</span></cite>, Bd. XVII, pp. 151–160; XIX, pp. 1–21; XXI, pp. 1–40.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Morgan, de. <cite>Rev. de l’école d’anth.</cite>, t. XVII, p. 411, 1907.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Morgan, Thomas Hunt:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Heredity and Environment.</cite> Princeton University Press, 1915.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>Heredity and Sex.</cite> Columbia University Press, 1914.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Mortillet, G. de
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Formation de la nation Française.</span></cite> Paris, 1897.</li>
- <li>2. (With A. de Mortillet.) <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le préhistorique.</span></cite> C. Reinwald, Paris, 1883.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Much, Mathæus. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Heimat der Indo-Germanen im Lichte der urgeschichtlichen Forschung.</span></cite> Berlin, 1902.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Müllenhoff, C. V. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Deutsche Altertumskunde.</span></cite> Berlin, 1870–1892.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Müller, Friedrich:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Grundriss der Sprachwissenschaft.</span></cite> Wien, 1884.</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Reise der österreichischen Fregatte Novara um die Erde in den Jahren 1857–9, unter den Befehlen des Commodore B. von Wiellerstorf-Ubair.</span></cite> Wien. Linguistischer, 1867.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Müller, Sophus:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="da" xml:lang="da">Affaldsdynger fra Stenalderen i Danmarck</span></cite>, Kjobenhavn, 1900. (With A. P. Madsen, etc.)</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Europe préhistorique</span></cite>, tr. du Danois,&#160;... par Emmanuel Philipot. Paris, J. Lamarre, 1907.</li>
- <li>3. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Nordische Alterthumskunde.</span></cite> Strassburg, 1897.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Munro, Dana Carleton. <cite>A Source Book of Roman History.</cite> D. C. Heath &amp; Co. Boston, New York and Chicago, 1904.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Munro, John. <cite>The Story of the British Race.</cite> New York, D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1907.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Munro, R.: 1. <cite>The Lake-Dwellings of Europe.</cite> London, Cassell &amp; Co., 1890.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_432'>432</span>2. <cite>Palæolithic Man and the Terramara Settlements.</cite> Macmillan, 1912.</li>
- <li>3. Discussion in <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite> for 1890.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Myres, J. L. “A History of the Pelasgian Theory,” <cite>Jour. of Hellenic Studies</cite>, vol. XXVII, pp. 170–226, 1907.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Nansen, Fridtjof. <cite>In Northern Mists.</cite> New York, Frederick A. Stokes, 1911.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Nordenskiöld, Erland. “Finland: The Land and the People,” <cite>Geographical Review</cite>, vol. VII, no. 6, pp. 361–375, June, 1919.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Obédénare, M. G. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La Roumanie économique.</span></cite> Paris, 1876.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Obermaier, Hugo:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “<span lang="es" xml:lang="es">El Hombre Fósil</span>,” <cite><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">Museo National de Ciencias Naturales</span></cite>, Madrid, 1916.</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Der Mensch der Vorzeit.</span></cite> München, R., 1912.</li>
- <li>3. (With Breuil.) See Breuil, 2.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Oloriz. “<span lang="es" xml:lang="es">Distribución geográfica del Indice cefálica</span>,” <cite><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">Boletín Sociedad Geográfica de Madrid</span></cite>, vol. XXXVI, 1894.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Oman, Sir Charles:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>The Dark Ages.</cite> London, Rivington’s Press, 1905.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>England before the Norman Conquest.</cite> London, Methuen &amp; Co.; or New York, Putnam, 1913.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Oppert, Jules. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le peuple et la langue des Mèdes.</span></cite> Paris, 1879.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Osborn, Henry Fairfield:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Men of the Old Stone Age</cite>, 2d edition. New York, Scribner, 1918.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>The Origin of Life.</cite> New York, Scribner, 1917.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002'>Palgrave, Sir Francis. <cite>The Rise and Progress of the English Commonwealth.</cite> London, 1832.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Parkman, Francis:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>The Old Régime in Canada.</cite> Boston, Little, Brown &amp; Co., 1905.</li>
- <li>2. Various writings.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Parsons, F. G. “Anthropological Observations on German Prisoners of War,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XLIX. 1919.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pausanias. <cite>Description of Greece.</cite></li>
- <li class='c029'>Payne, Edward John. <cite>A History of the New World Called America.</cite> Oxford Press, vol. I, 1892; vol. II, 1899.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_433'>433</span>Peake, H. J. E.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Memorials of Old Leicestershire.</cite> 1911.</li>
- <li>2. “Racial Elements Concerned in the First Siege of Troy,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XLVI, pp. 154–173. 1916.</li>
- <li>3. (With Hoton.) “A Saxon Graveyard at East Shefford, Berks,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XLV, pp. 92–131.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Pearl, Raymond. “The Sterilization of Degenerates,” <cite>Eugenics Review</cite>, April, 1919.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Peet, T. E.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Rough Stone Monuments and Their Builders.</cite> Harper, 1912.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>The Stone and Bronze Ages in Italy.</cite> Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1909.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Penck, Albrecht:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Das Alter des Menschengeschlechts</span>,” <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Zeitschr. f. Eth.</span></cite>, Jahrg. 40, Heft 3, pp. 390–407. 1908.</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Alpen im Eiszeitalter</span></cite>, Bd. I, II, III, Leipsig, 1909.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Penka, K.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Herkunft der Arier.</span></cite> Wien, 1886.</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Origines Ariacæ.</span></cite> Wien, 1883.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Petersen, E. (With F. von Luschan.) <span lang="de" xml:lang="de"><cite>Reisen in Lykien, Milyas und Kibyratis.</cite> Wien, 1889.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Petrie, W. M. F.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “Migrations,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XXXVI, pp. 189–233. 1906.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>Revolutions of Civilization.</cite> Harper, 1912.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Peyrony, M. (and Capitan). <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bulletins de la Société d’anthropologie de Paris</span></cite>, 1909–1910.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pilcher, Maj.-Gen. Thomas L. “The Present Situation in India,” <cite>Outlook</cite>, March 10, 1920.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pilgrim, J. “The Correlation of the Siwaliks with the Mammal Horizons of Europe,” <cite>Records of the Geological Survey of India</cite>, vol. XLIII, part 4, pp. 264–326.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pliny. <cite>Natural History.</cite></li>
- <li class='c029'>Plutarch’s <cite>Lives</cite>, Langhorne translation. London, Frederick Warne &amp; Co.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Poirot, J. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Review of Atlas de Finlande</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Annales de géographie</span></cite>, vol. XXII, pp. 310–325 and 417–426.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Poisson, G. “L’Origine latin des Roumaniens,” <cite>Revue anthropologique</cite>, t. XXVII, pp. 357–379, Paris, 1917.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Pollard, A. F. <cite>A Political History of England</cite>, vol. IV. London, Longmans, Green &amp; Co., 1915.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Polybius. <cite>History.</cite></li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_434'>434</span>Popenoe, Paul. “One Phase of Man’s Modern Evolution,” <cite>19th Internat’l Congress of Americanists</cite>, pp. 617 <em>seq.</em>, Washington, D. C., 1915.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pösche, T. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Der Arier.</span></cite> Jena, 1878.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Procopius. <cite>A History of the Wars</cite>, translated by H. B. Dewing, Loeb Classical Library. New York, Putnam; and London, Wm. Heinemann, 1919.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pruner-Bey:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “<span lang="eu" xml:lang="eu">Sur la langue Euskara</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bull. Soc. d’anth.</span></cite>, pp. 39–71, 1867.</li>
- <li>2. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sur l’origine de l’ancienne race égyptienne</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mém. Soc. d’anth.</span></cite>, t. I, pp. 399–433. 1860.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Pumpelly, Raphael. <cite>Explorations in Turkestan.</cite> Washington, D. C., Carnegie Inst., 1905 and 1908.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Punnett, R. C. <cite>Mendelism</cite>, 3d edition. Macmillan, 1911.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Quintus Curtius Rufus. <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Historiarum Alexandri Magni Libri Decem.</span></cite></li>
- <li class='c002'>Ranke, Johannes. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Der Mensch.</span></cite> Leipsig, 1886–7.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ratzel, Friedrich. <cite>The History of Mankind.</cite> Macmillan, 1908.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Read, Charles H. <cite>A Guide to the Antiquities of the Bronze Age.</cite> British Museum Handbook.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Reade, Arthur. <cite>Finland and the Finns.</cite> New York, 1915.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Reid, Sir G. Archdall:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>The Laws of Heredity.</cite> London, Methuen &amp; Co., 1910.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>The Principles of Heredity.</cite> London, Chapman &amp; Hall, 1905.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Reinach, Salomon:
- <ul>
- <li><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">1. “Les Gaulois dans l’art antique,” <cite>Revue Archéologique</cite>, série 3, t. XII, pp. 273–284; série 3, t. XIII, pp. 13–22, 187–203, 317–352. 1888–1889.</span></li>
- <li><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">2. “Inscription attique relative à l’invasion des Galates en Grèce,” <cite>Rev. Celtique</cite>, série 11, pp. 80–85.</span></li>
- <li><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">3. “Le Mirage oriental,” <cite>L’Anth.</cite>, série 4, pp. 539–578, 697–732.</span></li>
- <li><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">4. <cite>Repertoire de l’art quaternaire.</cite> Paris, 1913.</span></li>
- <li><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">5. “La sculpture en Europe avant les influences gréco-romaines,” <cite>L’Anth.</cite>, série 5, pp. 15–34,173–186, 288–305; 6, pp. 168–194.</span></li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_435'>435</span>(With Alexandre Bertrand.) <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Les Celts dans les vallées du Pô et du Danube.</cite> Paris, E. Leroux, 1894.</span></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Reisner, George A. <cite>The Early Dynastic Cemeteries of Naga-ed-Dêr.</cite> University of California publications, 1908; Leipsig, J. C. Hinrichs, 1905.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Renwick, George. <cite>Finland Today.</cite> New York, 1911.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Retzius, A.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Ethnologische Schriften.</span></cite> Stockholm, 1864.</li>
- <li>2. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mémoire sur les formes du crâne des habitants du Nord</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Annales des Sciences naturelles</span></cite>, série 3, Zoologie, t. VI, pp. 133–172. 1846.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Retzius, G.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Anthropologia Suecica, Beiträge zur Anthropologie der Schweden</span></cite>, Stockholm, 1902.</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Crania Suecica Antiqua.</span></cite> Stockholm, 1900.</li>
- <li>3. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Matériaux pour servir à la connaissance des caractères ethniques des races finnois</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Compte-rendue, Congrès intern. d’anth.</span></cite>, session VII, t. II, pp. 741–765, Stockholm.</li>
- <li>4. “The So-Called North European Race of Mankind,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XXXIX, pp. 277–314. 1909.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Rhys, Sir John. (With D. B. Jones.) <cite>The Welsh People.</cite> London, Macmillan, 1900.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Rice Holmes, T.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Ancient Britain and the Conquests of Julius Cæsar.</cite> Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1907.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>Cæsar’s Conquest of Gaul.</cite> Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1911.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Ridgeway, Sir William:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>The Early Age of Greece.</cite> Cambridge, 1901.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>The Origin and Influence of the Thoroughbred Horse.</cite> Cambridge University Press, 1905.</li>
- <li>3. “Who Were the Romans?” <cite>Proceedings of the British Academy</cite>, 1907–1908.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Ripley, William Z. <cite>The Races of Europe.</cite> New York, D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1899.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Roese. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Beiträge zur Europäischen Rassenkunde</span></cite>, 1906.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Rutot, A. de:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les industries primitives</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bull, et Mém. Soc. d’anthr.</span></cite>, t. XX, Mém. III, Bruxelles, 1902.</li>
- <li>2. Various writings.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002'><span class='pageno' id='Page_436'>436</span>Sacken, Baron von. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Das Grabfeld von Hallstatt.</span></cite> Wien, 1868.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sarauw, G. F. L. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">En Stenolden Boplads: Maglemose ved Mullerup</span></cite>, 1913. Or “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Trouvaille fait dans le nord de l’Europe, datant de la période de l’hiatus</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Congr. préhist. de France</span></cite>, Perigeux, 1905.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sartiaux, Félix. <cite>Troie, la guerre de Troie.</cite> Paris, Hachette et Cie., 1915.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Savigny, Friedrich Karl. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Geschichte des römischen Rechtes im Mittelalter.</span></cite></li>
- <li class='c029'>Sayce, Archibald Henry:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>The Ancient Empires of the East.</cite> Scribner, 1898.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>The Hittites.</cite> 1888.</li>
- <li>3. <cite>Jour. Roy. Ass. Soc.</cite>, vol. XIV, p. 410.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Schenck, A. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La Suisse préhistorique.</span></cite> Lausanne, Rouge et Cie., 1912.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Schleicher, August. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Altpreussische Grammatik.</span></cite></li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Schlözer, Kurd von. <cite>Nestor, Koch. Revolut. de l’Europe.</cite></span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Schoetensack, Otto. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Der Unterkiefer des Homo Heidelbergensis aus den Sanden von Mauer bei Heidelberg: Ein Beitrag zur Paläontologie des Menschen.</span></cite> Leipsig, 1908.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Schrader, Oscar:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Indo-Germanen.</span></cite> Leipsig, 1911.</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Reallexicon der Indo-germanischen Altertumskunde.</span></cite> Strassburg, Trübner, 1917.</li>
- <li>3. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Sprachvergleichung und Urgeschichte.</span></cite> Jena, 1890.
- <ul>
- <li>Or <cite>Prehistoric Antiquities of the Aryan Peoples</cite>, a translation by F. B. Jevons. London, 1890.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Schwalbe, G.:
- <ul>
- <li><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">1. “Studien über Pithecanthropus erectus Dubois,” <cite>Zeitschrift für Morphologie und Anthropologie</cite>, Bd. I, Heft 1, 1899.</span></li>
- <li><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">2. “Vorgeschichte des Menschen,” <cite>Zeitschrift für Morphologie und Anthropologie</cite>, 1906.</span></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Schwerz, Franz. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Völkerschaften der Schweiz von der Urzeit bis zur Gegenwart.</span></cite> Stuttgart, 1915.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sclater, W. L. and P. L. <cite>The Geography of Mammals.</cite> London, Kegan Paul, Trench. Trübner &amp; Co., 1899.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sergi, G.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Africa: Antropologia della Stirpe Cannitica (Specie Eurafricana).</span></cite> Torino, 1897.</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Arii e Italici.</span></cite> Torino, 1898.</li>
- <li>3. <cite><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Italia le Origini.</span></cite> Torino, Fratelli Bocca, Editori, 1919.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_437'>437</span>4. <cite>The Mediterranean Race.</cite> New York, Scribner; and London, Walter Scott, 1901.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Siculus, Diodorus. See Diodorus Siculus.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Skeat, W. W. <cite>The Wars of Alexander</cite>, translated chiefly from <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Historia Alexandri Magni preliis</span></cite>. London, N. Trübner &amp; Co., 1886.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Smith, G. Elliot:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>The Ancient Egyptians.</cite> Harper, 1911.</li>
- <li>2. “Ancient Mariners,” <cite>Journal of the Manchester Geographical Society</cite>, vol. XXXIII, parts 1–4, pp. 1–22, 1917. Manchester and London, April, 1918.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Sneyd, Charlotte Augusta, translator. <cite>A Relation of the Island of England about the Year 1500 (known as The Italian Relation).</cite> Published by the Camden Society, 1847.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Soane, E. B. <cite>To Mesopotamia and Kurdistan in Disguise.</cite> Boston, Small, Maynard &amp; Co.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Stark, James H. <cite>The Loyalists of Massachusetts.</cite> W. B. Clark Co., 1910.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="nb" xml:lang="nb">Steenstrup, J. C. H. R. <cite>Normannerne.</cite> Kjøbenhavn, 1876–1882.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Steenstrup, J. J. S.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Kjøkken Møddinger: eine gedrängte Darstellung dieser Monumente sehr alter Kulturstadien.</span></cite> Kopenhagen, 1886.</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sur les Kjökkenmöddings de l’âge de pierre et sur la faune et la flore préhistorique du Dänemark.</span></cite> Kopenhagen, 1872.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Stephen, Sir James Fitzjames. <cite>A History of the Criminal Law of England</cite>, 3 vols. London, Macmillan, 1883.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Stoddard, Lothrop. <cite>The French Revolution in San Domingo.</cite> Boston, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1914.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Strabo. <cite>Geography.</cite></li>
- <li class='c029'>Studer, T. (With E. Bannwarth.) <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Crania Helvetica Antiqua</span></cite>, Leipsig, 1894.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sullivan, Louis R. “The Growth of the Nasal Bridge in Children,” <cite>American Anthropologist</cite>, N. S., vol. XIX, no. 3, pp. 406–409, 1917.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Svoronos, J. N. <cite>L’Hellénisme primitif de la Macédoine prouvé par la numismatique, et l’or du Pangée.</cite> Paris, Ernest Leroux; Athens, M. Eleftheroudakis, 1919.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_438'>438</span>Sweet, Henry. <cite>The History of Language.</cite> London, 1900.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sykes, Mark. “The Kurds,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XXVIII, pp. 45 seq., 1908.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Szinnyei, Josef:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Finnische-Ugrische Sprachwissenschaft.</span></cite> Berlin u. Leipsig, Sammlung Göschen, 1910. Leipsig; G. J. Göschen’sche Verlagshandlung, G.m.b.H., 1912.</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Ungarische Sprachlehre.</span></cite> Berlin, Göschen, 1912.</li>
- <li>3. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Vergleichende Grammatik der Ugrischen Sprache.</span></cite></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002'>Tacitus. <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Germania</span></cite>, translated by M. Hutton, Loeb Classical Library. New York, Macmillan; and London, Wm. Heinemann, 1914.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Taylor, Isaac Canon:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>The Origin of the Aryans.</cite> London, Walter Scott, 1890.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>Words and Places</cite>, edited by A. Smythe Palmer. New York, E. P. Dutton &amp; Co.; and London, Routledge &amp; Son.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Thomsen, Thomas (et A. Jessen). <cite>Une trouvaille de l’ancien âge de la pierre</cite>, Copenhague, (Braband), 1906.</span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Thomson, J. Arthur. <cite>Heredity.</cite> New York, Putnam; and London, John Murray, 1910.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Thunman. <cite>Untersuchungen über der Geschichte der östlichen Europäischen Völker.</cite></span></li>
- <li class='c029'>Thurnam, J. (With J. B. Davis.):
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Crania Britannica</span></cite>, 2 vols. London, 1865.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>Mem. Anth. Soc.</cite>, vol. I, pp. 120–168, 485–519; III, pp. 41–75, London.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Topinard, P.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Carte de la couleur des yeux et des cheveux en France</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Rev. d’anth.</span></cite>, série 3, IV, pp. 513–530.</li>
- <li>2. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Éléments d’anthropologie générale.</span></cite> Paris, Delahaye et Lecrosnier, 1885.</li>
- <li>3. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les types indigènes de l’Algérie</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bull. Soc. d’anth.</span></cite>, série 3, t. IV, pp. 438–469, Paris, 1881.</li>
- <li>4. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sur la couleur des yeux et des cheveux en Norvège</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Rev. d’anth.</span></cite>, IV, série 3, pp. 293–405.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Tout, Thomas Frederick. <cite>The Empire and the Papacy.</cite> London, Rivington’s Press, 1903.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Trevelyan, Sir George. <cite>George III and Charles Fox.</cite> London, Longmans, Green &amp; Co., 1914.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Trogus Pompeius. <cite>History.</cite></li>
- <li class='c002'><span class='pageno' id='Page_439'>439</span>Van Cleef, Eugene. “The Finn in America,” <cite>Geographical Review</cite>, vol. VI, pp. 185–214. 1917.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Vanderkindere, Léon. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Recherches sur l’ethnologie de la Belgique</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Compte-Rendue du Congrès international d’anth.</span></cite>, session VI, pp. 569–574, Bruxelles, 1872.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Villari, Pasquale. <cite>The Barbarian Invasions of Italy</cite>, translated by Linda Villari, 2 vols. Scribner, 1902.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Virchow, Rudolf:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Gesammtbericht&#160;... über die Farbe der Haut, der Haare, und der Augen der Schulkinder in Deutschland</span>,” <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Archive f. Anth.</span></cite>, Bd. XVI, pp. 275–477.</li>
- <li>2. “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Über die kulturgeschichtliche Stellung des Kaukasus unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der ornamentirten Bronzegürtel aus transkaukasischen Gräbern</span>,” <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Berlin Akademie der Wissenschaften Abhandlungen</span></cite>, pp. 1–66, Berlin, 1895.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Von Luschan, F.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “The Early Inhabitants of Western Asia,” <cite>Jour. Roy. Anth. Inst.</cite>, vol. XLI, pp. 221–244.</li>
- <li>2. (With E. Petersen.) <span lang="de" xml:lang="de"><cite>Reisen in Lykien, Milyas und Kibyratis.</cite> Wien, 1889.</span></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Vouga, E. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Helvètes à La Tène.</span></cite></li>
- <li class='c029'>Vouga, P. (With M. Wavre.) <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Extrait du musée neuchatelois.</span></cite> Mars-Avril, 1908.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Wallace, Alfred Russel. <cite>Island Life.</cite> Macmillan, 1902.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Wallis, B. C.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “The Rumanians in Hungary,” <cite>Geographical Review</cite>, Aug., 1918.</li>
- <li>2. “The Slavs of Northern Hungary,” <cite>Geo. Rev.</cite>, Sept., 1918.</li>
- <li>3. “The Slavs of Southern Hungary,” <cite>Geo. Rev.</cite>, Oct., 1918.</li>
- <li>4. “Central Hungary: Magyars and Germans,” <cite>Geo. Rev.</cite>, Nov., 1918.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Wavre, M. (With P. Vouga.) <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Extrait du musée neuchatelois.</span></cite> Mars-Avril, 1908.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Weisbach, A.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Bosnier</span>,” <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Anthropologische Gesellschaft Mitteilungen</span></cite>, Bd. XXV, pp. 206–239, Wien, 1895.</li>
- <li>2. “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Körpermessungen verschiedener Menschenrassen</span>,” Ergänzungsband, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Zeitschr. f. Eth.</span></cite>, Berlin, 1877.</li>
- <li>3. “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Serbokroaten der Adriatischen Küstenländer</span>,” <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Zeitschr. f. Eth.</span></cite> (supplement), 1884.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_440'>440</span>Weissbach, Franz H. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Achämenidenschriften</span></cite>, Zweiter Art. Leipsig, 1890.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Wendell, Barrett. <cite>A Literary History of America.</cite> Scribner, 1900.</li>
- <li class='c029'>White, Horace. <cite>Appian’s Roman History</cite>, 2 vols. London, Wm. Heinemann; New York, Macmillan, 1912–1913.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Wilser, L. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Germanen.</span></cite> Eisenach u. Leipsig, 1904.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Wilson, Sir D. <cite>The Archæology and Prehistoric Annals of Scotland.</cite> Edinburgh, 1851.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Winstanley, L. See Fleure.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Wissler, Clark. <cite>The American Indian.</cite> New York, Douglas C. McMurtrie, 1917.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Woodruff, C. E.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>The Effect of Tropical Light on White Men.</cite> New York and London, Rebman Co., 1905.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>The Expansion of Races.</cite> New York, Rebman Co., 1909.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Woods, Frederick Adams:
- <ul>
- <li>1. <cite>Heredity in Royalty.</cite> New York, Henry Holt &amp; Co., 1906.</li>
- <li>2. <cite>The Influence of Monarchs.</cite> Macmillan, 1913.</li>
- <li>3. “Significant Evidence for Mental Heredity,” <cite>Jour. of Hered.</cite>, vol. VIII, no. 13, pp. 106–112. Washington, D. C., 1917.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002'>Zaborowski, M. S.:
- <ul>
- <li>1. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les peuples aryens d’Asie et d’Europe</span>” (part of the <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Encyclopédie scientifique</span></cite>), Octave Doin, Éditeur. Paris, 1908.</li>
- <li>2. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Relations primitives des Germains et des Finnois</span>,” <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bull. Soc. d’anth.</span></cite>, pp. 174–179, Paris, 1907.</li>
- <li>3. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les races de l’Italie.</span></cite> Paris, 1897.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Zampa, R.:
- <ul>
- <li><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">1. “Anthropologie illyrienne,” <cite>Rev. d’anth.</cite>, série 3, t. I, pp. 625–647. 1886.</span></li>
- <li>2. “<span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Il tipo umbro</span>,” <cite><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Arch. per l’ant.</span></cite>, vol. XVIII, pp. 175–197. 1888.</li>
- <li>3. “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Vergleichende anthropologische Ethnographie von Apulien</span>,” <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Zeitschr. f. Eth.</span></cite>, Bd. XVIII, pp. 167–193, 201–232. 1886.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Zeuss, J. K. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die Deutschen und die Nachbarstamme.</span></cite> München, 1837.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_441'>441</span>
- <h3 class='c023'>ANONYMOUS PUBLICATIONS, COLLECTIONS, ENCYCLOPÆDIAS, ETC.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'><cite>Argentine Geography.</cite> Published by Messrs. Urien y Colombo.
-(Members of the Academy of American History
-and Numismatics, 1914.)</p>
-
-<p class='c031'><cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Atlas de Finlande.</span></cite> <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Société de Géographie de Finlande, Helsingfors,
-1911.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c031'><cite>British Indian Census</cite>, 1901, 1911.</p>
-
-<p class='c031'><cite>Cambridge Modern History.</cite> (Planned by Lord Acton, edited
-by A. W. Ward, Litt.D., G. W. Protheroe, Litt.D., and
-Stanley Leathes.) New York, Macmillan Co., 1902–1913.</p>
-
-<p class='c031'><cite>Dutch East Indian Census</cite>, 1905.</p>
-
-<p class='c031'><cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Fontes Rerum Bohemicarum</span></cite>, 5 vols. Prague, 1873–1893.</p>
-
-<p class='c031'><cite>Genealogical Records of the Society of Colonial Wars.</cite> Publications
-and documents on file with the secretary-general
-of the Society of Colonial Wars, New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c031'><cite>Handbook of the American Indian.</cite> Bureau of American
-Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C.,
-1907.</p>
-
-<p class='c031'><cite>Hittite Inscriptions.</cite> Cornell Expedition, Ithaca, New York,
-1911.</p>
-
-<p class='c031'><span lang="es" xml:lang="es"><cite>El libro statistico de la republica argentina.</cite> Dirección géneral
-de comercio e industria. Talleres gráficos del ministerio
-de agricultura, Buenos Aires, 1905.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c031'><cite>Schaff-Herzog Religious Encyclopedia.</cite></p>
-
-<p class='c031'><cite>Secret History, or The Horrors of Santo Domingo, in a series
-of Letters Written by a Lady at Cape François to Colonel
-Burr (late Vice-President of the United States) principally
-during the Command of General Rochambeau.</cite> Philadelphia,
-Bradford and Inskeep, R. Carr, printer, 1808.</p>
-
-<p class='c031'><cite>The Statesman’s Yearbook for 1915.</cite> London, Macmillan.</p>
-
-<p class='c031'><cite>Statisk Arsbok for Finland, 1917.</cite> Helsingfors, 1918.</p>
-
-<p class='c031'><cite>The Statistical Yearbook of the Argentine Republic</cite>, 1915.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_445'>445</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<ul class='index c002'>
- <li class='c029'>Aachen, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Accad, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Achæans, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>–161, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>at Troy, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>;</li>
- <li>invade Greece, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>–159;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Acheulean period, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>–106, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Achilles, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Actinic rays, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Adamic theory, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Adriatic, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ægean, islands of, Hellenes in, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Ægean region, Nordics in, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Æolian language, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Æolians, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Afghan hill tribes, physical character of, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;</li>
- <li>passes, Nordics in, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Afghanistan, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mediterranean race in, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>physical types of, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Afghans, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Africa, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li>Bronze Age in, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>cephalic index in, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;</li>
- <li>hunting tribes of, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>megaliths in, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>Negro population of, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</li>
- <li>no Nordic blood in, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic invasion of, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;</li>
- <li>North Africa, as part of Europe, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>;</li>
- <li>Berbers of, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>;</li>
- <li>under Vandals, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>;</li>
- <li><em>South Africa</em>, density of native population barrier to white conquest, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Agglutinative languages, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Agriculture, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>–124, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ainus, physical characters of, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>–225;
- <ul>
- <li>crossed with Mongols, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Alabama, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Alani, or Alans, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Alaska, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Albania, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>stature in, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Albanian language, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>origin of, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>–244;</li>
- <li>Albanian type, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Albanians, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>blondness of, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Balkan peninsula, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Albigensians, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Albinos, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Alcoholism, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Alemanni, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Alexander the Great, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>–162, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Alexandria, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Algeria, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Alphabet, earliest traces of, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Alpine race, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>–147, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>an agricultural race, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>–139, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li>and Aryan language, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>–241;</li>
- <li>and Dorians, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>;</li>
- <li>and High German, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>and iron, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>and lake dwellings, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>;</li>
- <li>and Proto-Slavic language, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;</li>
- <li>and Round Barrows, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>;</li>
- <li>as aristocracy in Rome, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>Asiatic, and earliest civilizations, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;</li>
- <li>bringers of bronze, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>–128;</li>
- <li>of cereals, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li>of culture, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li>of domesticated animals, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_446'>446</span>of metals, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>–147;</li>
- <li>of pottery, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li>Celticized, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;</li>
- <li>centre of radiation of, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>–143;</li>
- <li>conquered by Nordics, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>–147;</li>
- <li>crossed with Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>crossed with Nordics, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>discovery of type of, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>;</li>
- <li>distribution of, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>;</li>
- <li>eastern spread of, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>final invasion of Europe, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>–128;</li>
- <li>first appearance of, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>;</li>
- <li>in Europe, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>habitat of, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>–44;</li>
- <li>hair of, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</li>
- <li>in Africa (North), <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alsace, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>Armorica, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>Asia, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>;</li>
- <li>Austria, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;</li>
- <li>Auvergne, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li>Baden, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>Bavaria, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>Belgium, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>Britain, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>–138, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>–240, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>(present absence of, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>);</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li>British Isles, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, Brittany, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li>Canada, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</li>
- <li>cities, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;</li>
- <li>Denmark, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>Egypt, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>Europe, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a> (central, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>–139, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>);
- <ul>
- <li>(eastern, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>);</li>
- <li>(western, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>);</li>
- <li>(during the Neolithic, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>);</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li>France, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>Gaul, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>;</li>
- <li>Germany, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;</li>
- <li>Greece, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>Holland, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>Italy, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a> (north, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>);</li>
- <li>Ireland, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>;</li>
- <li>Lake Dwellings, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>;</li>
- <li>Lorraine, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>Neolithic period, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>Norway, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>Po valley, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>Rome, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>Russia, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>–144;</li>
- <li>Savoy, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li>Sicily, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>Spain, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>Switzerland, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>Syria, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>Terramara, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;</li>
- <li>Tyrol, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>Würtemberg, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li>maximum extension of, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>–137;</li>
- <li>migrations, route of, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>;</li>
- <li>mixed with Celts, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;</li>
- <li>with Nordics, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>–36, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>–136;</li>
- <li>Nordicized, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;</li>
- <li>north of the Black Sea, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>;</li>
- <li>origin of, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>;</li>
- <li>original language of, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>;</li>
- <li>physical characters of, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>–36, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;</li>
- <li>racial aptitudes of, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>;</li>
- <li>reinforced by others, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>;</li>
- <li>replacing Nordics in Europe, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>;</li>
- <li>resurgence of in Europe, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>–147, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>–191, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>retreat of from northwest Europe, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>–138;</li>
- <li>skull of, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>;</li>
- <li>speech of, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;</li>
- <li>substratum in eastern Germany, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>;</li>
- <li>underlying population, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>(in relation to Nordics in central Europe, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>);</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li>unimportant in modern culture, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Alps, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>;</li>
- <li>lake dwellings in, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Alsace, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Amber, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>America, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>change of religion in, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>;</li>
- <li>genius in, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>;</li>
- <li>immigrants to, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;</li>
- <li>in Colonial times, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>–48, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>–85;</li>
- <li>Mediterranean element in, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic immigration to, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>;</li>
- <li>Norman type in, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>;</li>
- <li>race development in, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>–263;</li>
- <li>replacement of types in, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>result of immigration to, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>–94, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>Scandinavian element in, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>American aristocracy, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>characters, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>;</li>
- <li>colonies, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;</li>
- <li>democracy, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>;</li>
- <li>factories, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>;</li>
- <li>farming and artisan classes, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>;</li>
- <li>Indians, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>
- <ul>
- <li>(eliminated by smallpox, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;</li>
- <li>arrowheads of, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>);</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li>mines, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>;</li>
- <li>Negro, provenience of, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>;</li>
- <li>Revolution, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Americans, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>–90, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>birth rate decline of, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;</li>
- <li>brunet type of, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_447'>447</span>destruction of in Civil War, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li>future race mixture of, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>–93, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;</li>
- <li>in competition with immigrants, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;</li>
- <li>individualism of, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>;</li>
- <li>national consciousness of, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic element of, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li>race consciousness among, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>;</li>
- <li>southerners, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</li>
- <li>typical hair shade of, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Amerindian blood, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Amerinds, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Amorites, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Anak, sons of, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Anaryan languages, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>–236;
- <ul>
- <li>survivals of in Europe, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>–236, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>;</li>
- <li>in Russia, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>;</li>
- <li>in the British Isles, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Anatolia, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>present population of, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Anatolians, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Andaman Islands, Negroids in, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Angles, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Britain, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–249;</li>
- <li>in England, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;</li>
- <li>in Scotland, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>origin of, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Anglian blood of American settlers, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Anglian type, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Anglo-Norman type, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Anglo-Normans of Ireland, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Anglo-Saxons, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and genius, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</li>
- <li>in Colonial America, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Animals, domesticated, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Antes, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Anthropoid Apes, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>–102.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Anthropology, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in the British Isles, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Apes, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>–102.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Aquitaine, Iberian language of, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>brunet elements from, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;</li>
- <li>and Celtic language, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Aquitanian language, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Arabia, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Arabic language, in Spain, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Arabic race, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Arabs, in Spain, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Aral Sea; <em>see also</em> Caspian-Aral Sea, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Argentine, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Arian faith of the barbarians, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Aristocracy, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>–142, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>–154, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>–189, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>–192, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>–197;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpine, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>Austrian, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>Bavarian, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>British, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>French, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>German, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>Greek, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>Italian, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>;</li>
- <li>military, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>Persian, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;</li>
- <li>Roman, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>Russian, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>;</li>
- <li>Spanish, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>Swabian, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>a true, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Aristocrats, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Aristotle, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Armenians, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>–239, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Armenoid Alpines, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Armenoids, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Armies, conscript and volunteer, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Armor, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>of the Romans, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Armorica; <em>see also</em> Brittany;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>Celts in, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>–251.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Armorican language, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Armoricans, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Arrow, in the Azilian Period, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in the Palæolithic Period, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Art, Cro-Magnon, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Magdalenian, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Palæolithic Period, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>;</li>
- <li>decline of in the Solutrean Period, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Artois, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Arya, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>–241.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Aryan deities, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Aryan language or speech, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and Alpines, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>;</li>
- <li>associated with the Nordics, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>–242;</li>
- <li>diversity of, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>;</li>
- <li>first appearance of in Europe, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_448'>448</span>imposed upon the Alpines and Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>;</li>
- <li>in Armenia, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>;</li>
- <li>in Asia, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>–263;</li>
- <li>in Asia Minor, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>–239;</li>
- <li>in the Caucasus, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>–239;</li>
- <li>in Iran, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>–239;</li>
- <li>introduced into Etruria, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>;</li>
- <li>into Europe, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>into Greece, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>into India, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>;</li>
- <li>into Media, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;</li>
- <li>into Spain, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>language of the Ossetes, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>;</li>
- <li>of Hindustan, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>origin of, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>–252;</li>
- <li>place of development of, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>;</li>
- <li>primitive 212;</li>
- <li>Pre-Aryan, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>Proto-Aryan, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>–243.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Aryan race, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Asia, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>;</li>
- <li>area of man’s evolution, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>;</li>
- <li>Aryan languages in, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>–263;</li>
- <li>Aryanization of, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>;</li>
- <li>blondness in, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>;</li>
- <li>cradle of mankind, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>–101;</li>
- <li>cradle of the Negro, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>;</li>
- <li>early civilizations in, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>;</li>
- <li>ethnic conquest of, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>(western) Hellenization of, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>;</li>
- <li>(western) Macedonian dynasties of, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterranean languages in, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterranean race in, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>–149;</li>
- <li>Mongols destroy civilization in, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>;</li>
- <li>Negrito substratum in, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>–149;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>–263.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Asia Minor, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>Armenians in, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>;</li>
- <li>bronze weapons in, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;</li>
- <li>Cimmerians in, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;</li>
- <li>early iron in, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>Gauls in, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li>Greek colonies in, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>;</li>
- <li>Hellenized, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>invaded by Phrygians, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>Turkish language in, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Asiatic types, Europeanized, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Asiatics, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Assam, dialects of, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Assyria, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ancient civilizations of, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>languages of, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Athenians, instability and versatility of, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Athens, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Atlas Berbers, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Atlas Mountains, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Attica, and genius, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Pelasgians in, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Attila, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Augustus, Emperor, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Aurignacian Period, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Australia, Nordic race in, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Australians, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>opposing the Japanese and Chinese, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Australoids, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>hairiness of, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Austria, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>present population of, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>–232;</li>
- <li>Slavs in, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Austrians, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Auvergne, Alpines in, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ancient centre of population, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Avars, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>–145;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Avesta, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Azilian Period (Azilian-Tardenoisian), <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>–117, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and brachycephalics, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>;</li>
- <li>and Mediterranean race, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>;</li>
- <li>bow and arrow in, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Azilians, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Babylonia, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ancient civilization of, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Bactra, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Bactria, language of, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mongolization of, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>;</li>
- <li>Sacæ in, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Baden, Alpines in, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Bahamas, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>English in, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Balkan Peninsula, Albanians in, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Illyrians in, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterranean substratum in, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>–153;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;</li>
- <li>Slavs in, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_449'>449</span>Balkan Question, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>–157.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Balkans, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>immigrants from, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;</li>
- <li>language in, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Balkh, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Balochi dialect, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Baltic, coasts, Neolithic occupation of, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>–123;
- <ul>
- <li>Pre-Neolithic culture of, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>;</li>
- <li>Provinces, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>;</li>
- <li>Race, <em>see</em> Nordic race;</li>
- <li>Russification of, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;</li>
- <li>Sea, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>subspecies, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;</li>
- <li><em>see also</em> Nordic race.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Baluchistan, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Bantus, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Barbadoes, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Bashkirs, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Basques, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of and its affinities, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>;</li>
- <li>physical characters of, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>–235.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Bas-reliefs, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Batavia, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Batavians, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Bavaria, Alpines in, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>dolichocephalics in, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Bavarians, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Beaker Maker type, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Bedouins, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Belgæ, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>–195, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Britain, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>in England, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>;</li>
- <li>in France, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>;</li>
- <li>Gaul, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>Normandy, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>mixed with Teutons, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Belgians (modern), <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Belgium, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>divided into Walloons and Flemings, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</li>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>Walloons in, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Benin, Bight of, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Berbers, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>;</li>
- <li>related to the Spaniards and South Italians, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Berserker, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Bessarabia, Rumanian language in, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Birth control, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>–49;
- <ul>
- <li>increase, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;</li>
- <li>privilege of, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>;</li>
- <li>rate in upper and lower classes, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>–52, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;</li>
- <li>unconscious part played by church in, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Black Belt of Mississippi, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Black Breed of Scotland, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Black Sea, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines north of, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Blends, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Blond Hair, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Blond type, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>–26, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>crossed with brunet, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>;</li>
- <li>origin of, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Blondness, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>associated with glabrous skin, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;</li>
- <li>with red hair, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;</li>
- <li>of Ainus, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>;</li>
- <li>of Albanians and Greeks, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>of Berbers, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;</li>
- <li>of Libyans, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;</li>
- <li>of Swiss, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>of Tamahu, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;</li>
- <li>in Asia, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>;</li>
- <li>in Bosnia, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>in central Europe in Roman times, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>in Ireland, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>in literature as special trait, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>;</li>
- <li>in Poland, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>in Russia, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>in Spain, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>of Christ, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Blonds, mixed with brunets, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Bohemia, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>revolt of, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>;</li>
- <li>loss of population in during Thirty Years’ War, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Bohemian national revival, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Bone-carving, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Borreby type (<em>see</em> Beaker Makers), <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Borussian language, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Bosnia, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Boundaries, of Catholics and Protestants, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>of Nordics and Alpines, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>–186;</li>
- <li>of Eastern and Western Empires, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Bow and arrow in the Paleolithic Period, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Brachycephalic, as a term, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>races, first appearance of, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Brachycephaly, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>–128, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>–138, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_450'>450</span>increase of in France, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>Russian, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Brahmans, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Brandenburg, population of, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Brazil, Negro blood in, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Brenner Pass, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Brennus, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Bretons, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Asiatic origin of, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Britain, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpine invasion of, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>;</li>
- <li>Angles in, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–249;</li>
- <li>Aryan language in, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>;</li>
- <li>Beaker Makers in, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>;</li>
- <li>Belgæ in, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>bronze in, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;</li>
- <li>Bronze Age in, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>Celtic language in, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>Celts in, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>Danes in, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>Goidels in, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>iron in, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>–131;</li>
- <li>land connection of, with France, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>with Ireland, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>loss of Roman power in, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>(<em>see also</em> British Isles and England)</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li>Neolithic population of, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;</li>
- <li>Normans in, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>Norse in, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>Paleolithic population of, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;</li>
- <li>Proto-Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;</li>
- <li>race mixture in, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>racial composition of, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>Round Barrow Men in, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>Saxons in, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–249;</li>
- <li>Welsh in, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–249.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>British, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>native British stature, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>British Empire, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>British Isles (<em>see also</em> Britain and England);
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines absent in, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>absence of round skulls in, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>anthropology of, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>brunets of, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;</li>
- <li>conquered by Saxons, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>Celtic languages in, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>–250;</li>
- <li>Iberian substratum in, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>invaded by Belgæ or Cymry, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>by Brythons, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>by Goidels, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>–206, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>;</li>
- <li>Saxon and Danish parts of, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li>Saxons in, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>Teutonic languages in, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>Vikings in, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Brittany, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>
- <ul>
- <li>(<em>see</em> Armorica);</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>;</li>
- <li>Armorican language in, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>Celtic language in, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>–252;</li>
- <li>Celts in, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>–251;</li>
- <li>dolmens in, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>megaliths in, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>ravaged by the Saxons, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>–252.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Bronze, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>associated with Alpines, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>composition and invention of, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li>effect of, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>fabulous value of, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li>implements, wide diffusion of common types, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>in Crete, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>in England, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>;</li>
- <li>in Ireland, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>;</li>
- <li>in Italy, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>–128;</li>
- <li>in megalithic monuments, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>in north Africa, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>in Scandinavia, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>in Sweden, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>;</li>
- <li>introduction of, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li>on Atlantic coasts, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>absence of in dolmens, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Bronze Period (Age), <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>–122, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>–133, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and Beaker Makers, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>;</li>
- <li>in the South contemporary with the northern neolithic, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Brunet, crossed with blond, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Brunetness, among Greeks, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in central Europe, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>in literature, as a special character, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>;</li>
- <li>in England and America, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>in Scotland, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Brünn-Předmost race, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Brutus, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Brythonic elements, in Scotland, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_451'>451</span>(Cymric) invasion, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>language, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>in France, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>in Wales, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Brythons, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>–249, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>on the continent, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;</li>
- <li>in England, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>;</li>
- <li>in Ireland, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Bukowina, Rumanian language in, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Bulgaria, Mongoloid characters in, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Bulgarian national revival, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Bulgarians and Christianity, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>domination of in Thrace, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Bulgars, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Burgund, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Burgundians, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Gaul, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Burgundy, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>–183.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Byzantine Army, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Empire, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>–166, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>;</li>
- <li>decline of, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;</li>
- <li>Greeks in, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Byzantium, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Cacocracy, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cæsar, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>–195, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Caithness, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Calabrian, language, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>California, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Californians, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Caligula, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Campignian Period, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>culture of, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Canada, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</li>
- <li>French Canada, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Canadians (French), <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>origin of, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</li>
- <li>Alpine character of, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</li>
- <li>(Irish), <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>;</li>
- <li>Indian, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Cantabrian Alps, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Carpathian Mountains, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>–245.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Carthage, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ancient civilization of, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Carthaginians, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Caspian Sea (<em>see also</em> Caspian-Aral Sea), <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Caspian-Aral Sea, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cassiterides, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cassius, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Castes, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Castilian language, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Catalan language, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Catholic boundaries in Europe, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Catholic colonies, the half-breed in, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Caucasian race, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>hair of, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</li>
- <li>in the United States, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>origin of the name, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Caucasus, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>–239, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Cimmerian raids in, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Caucasus Mountains, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cavalier type, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Caverns of France and Spain, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Celtiberians, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Celtic dialects, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Celtic languages, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>antedating Anglo-Saxons in England, and Romans in France, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>in Spain, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>;</li>
- <li>Celtic and High German, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;</li>
- <li>Celtic in France, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>Celtic language of the Nordics, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>first crosses the Rhine westward, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>;</li>
- <li>introduced into Britain, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>–250;</li>
- <li>in Brittany, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>–251;</li>
- <li>in Gaul, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;</li>
- <li>descendants of, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;</li>
- <li>remnants of, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>–156.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Celtic Nordics, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Celtic race, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>–64.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Celtic-speaking nations, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>–177, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>physical characters of, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_452'>452</span>Celtic tribes, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Armorica, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Celto-Scyths, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Celts, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in the Rhine valley, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Danube valley, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;</li>
- <li>expulsion of from Germany, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;</li>
- <li>physical characters of, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>;</li>
- <li>mixed with Mediterraneans and Alpines, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;</li>
- <li>“Q” and “P,” <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>–248.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Central America, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Centum group of Aryan languages, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cephalic index, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>–24;
- <ul>
- <li>in England, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>;</li>
- <li>increase of in France, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Cereals, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ceylon, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mediterranean race in, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>Negroids in, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;</li>
- <li>Veddahs in, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Châlons, battle of, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Channel coasts, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>depression of, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Characters, unit, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a> <em>et seq.</em></li>
- <li class='c029'>Charlemagne, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>capital of, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;</li>
- <li>coronation of, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;</li>
- <li>empire of, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;</li>
- <li>language of the court of, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Charles V, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Charles Martel, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Chase, the, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Chellean Period, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>–105, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Pre-Chellean, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>–105.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Cherbourg, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>China, whites in, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Chinese, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in California and Australia, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic elements among, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Chinese civilization, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Chinese coolie, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Chinese Turkestan, Wu-Suns in, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Tokharian language in, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Chivalry, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Christ, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>blondness of, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Christianity, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>–183, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>–222.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Chronological table, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>–133.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Chronology, Hebrew, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Church, and birth control, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>harboring defective strains, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>–50.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Church of Rome and democracy, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cimbri, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cimmerians, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cinque cento, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Circassians, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cisalpine Gaul, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cities, consumers of men, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Civil War, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>–43, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Civilization, foundation of European, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and race mixture, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li>of Nordics and Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>–216.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Climate and arboreal man, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Climatic conditions, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>–42, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cnossos, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Colonial American families, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>–48, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>–85.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Colonial population, of America, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Colonial Wars, causes of, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Colonies, American, Nordic blood in, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Catholic, in New France and New Spain, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Colonization, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Columbaria, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Competition of races, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>–55.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Conquistadores, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Conscript Armies, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>–198.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Constantine, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Constantinople, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a> (<em>see</em> Byzantium).</li>
- <li class='c029'>Consumption, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Continuity of physical characters, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Copper, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Egypt, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li>first appearance of in Europe, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;</li>
- <li>implements, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>;</li>
- <li>mines, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_453'>453</span>Cornish language, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cornwales, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cornwall, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>racial types in, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>;</li>
- <li>Phœnicians in, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Cotentin, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>“Crackers,” <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cretans, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Crete, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ancient civilization of, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>bronze in, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>Hellenes in, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>;</li>
- <li>Minoan culture of, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;</li>
- <li>Pre-Aryan language, remnants in, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Crimea, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Gauls in, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Croats, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cro-Magnon, race, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>–107, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>–115, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and art, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>;</li>
- <li>and Esquimaux, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>;</li>
- <li>cranial capacity of, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</li>
- <li>culture of, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>–113;</li>
- <li>direction of entrance of, into Europe, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>;</li>
- <li>disappearance of, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>–111, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>;</li>
- <li>disharmonic features of, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>distribution of, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>;</li>
- <li>first appearance of, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>;</li>
- <li>genius of, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</li>
- <li>in France, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>;</li>
- <li>origin of, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>;</li>
- <li>race characters of, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>–109;</li>
- <li>remnants of, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>skull of, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>weapons of, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Crossing, brunets and blonds, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Crucifixion, in art, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Crusades, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cuba, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Culture, European, derivation of, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cumberland Mountains, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Cymric invasions, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>(Brythonic), <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Cymric language, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Anaryan syntax of, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>;</li>
- <li>in Britain, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>in central Europe, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>in Normandy, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>in Wales, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Cymry, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>–206, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and La Tène, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>in Britain, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;</li>
- <li>in France, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Cyprus, mines of, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mycenæan culture of, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Cyrus, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Czechs, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Da Vinci, Leonardo, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Dacia, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Dacian Plain, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>–245;
- <ul>
- <li>occupation of, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Dalmatian Alps, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>coast, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Danes, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>along the Atlantic coasts, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>in Britain, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>invasion of, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;</li>
- <li>of Ireland, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>–64, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>of Schleswig, Germanization of, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>–59.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Danish barbarians, identified with Normans, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Danish blood of American settlers, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>;</li>
- <li>Danish Peninsula, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Dante, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Danube, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>–245;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines, in valley of, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;</li>
- <li>lake dwellings of, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;</li>
- <li>routes of, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Dardanelles, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Darius, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>–255;
- <ul>
- <li>Nordic type, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Dark Ages, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Dart, barbed, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>poisoned, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>David, fairness of, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>mother of, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>–224.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Dawn Man, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Dawn stones, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>–103.</li>
- <li class='c029'>DeGeer, Baron, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Delphi, Galatians at, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Democracy, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and socialism, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Democratic forms of government, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Denmark, Alpines in, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>kitchen middens of, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;</li>
- <li>Maglemose culture in, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>;</li>
- <li>Teutons from, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Dinaric race, or type, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>–164, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Diogenes, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_454'>454</span>Diseases, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Disharmonic combinations of physical characters, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Dnieper river, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Dog, the, domesticated, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Paleolithic, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Dolichocephalic, as a term, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Dolichocephalics, earliest races in Europe, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Dolichocephaly, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>–149, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Dolichocephs and megaliths, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Dolmens, of Brittany, absence of bronze in, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Domesticated animals, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>–123, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Dominion of Canada, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Dordogne, stature in, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Dorian dialects, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>invasion of Greece, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>–160.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Dorians, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>–160, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Dravidians, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>mixed with Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Dutch, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in the East Indies, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>in New York, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</li>
- <li>in South Africa, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002'>East Indies, whites in, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Dutch in, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Eastern Empire of Rome, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>–166, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ecclesiastics among Normans, brachycephalic, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Egypt, Alpines in, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ancient civilization of, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;</li>
- <li>bronze weapons in, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;</li>
- <li>copper in, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li>culture synchronous with the northern Neolithic, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li>(lower) earliest fixed date of, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li>fellaheen of, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;</li>
- <li>freedmen of, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>;</li>
- <li>Hellenized, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>invaded by Libyans, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;</li>
- <li>iron in, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>Macedonian dynasties of, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterranean race in, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>monuments in, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>national revival of, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Egyptians, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ancient, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Elam, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Elimination of the weak and unfit, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>–54.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Eneolithic Period, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Energy of the Nordics, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>England, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>–186;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>;</li>
- <li>Angles in, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;</li>
- <li>blond elements in, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>bronze introduced into, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>Brythons in, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>;</li>
- <li>cephalic index in, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>;</li>
- <li>conquered by the Danes, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>by the Normans, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>–207;</li>
- <li>by the Norsemen, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</li>
- <li>by the Saxons, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</li>
- <li>blonds mixed with brunets in, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>;</li>
- <li>deterioration of, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;</li>
- <li>economic change in, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;</li>
- <li>ethnic elements in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>–210;</li>
- <li>Goidelic elements in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>Goidelic speech in, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;</li>
- <li>Iberian substratum in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>iron in, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>–131;</li>
- <li>land connection of with Ireland and France, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>loss of Nordics in, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterranean race in, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>–210;</li>
- <li>megaliths in, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>nobility in, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic race in, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>–210;</li>
- <li>decline of Nordic element in, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>–210;</li>
- <li>Norman type in, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>–208, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>;</li>
- <li>physical types in, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>Post-Roman invaders of, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;</li>
- <li>race elements in, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>Round Barrow men of, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>–138;</li>
- <li>Saxon invasion of, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>–201;</li>
- <li>Saxon speech of, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</li>
- <li>severed from France and Ireland, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>stone weapons in, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>–121;</li>
- <li>in world war, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>English, the, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>brunet, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>–150;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_455'>455</span>borderers, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;</li>
- <li>characters, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Bahamas, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;</li>
- <li>in New York, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</li>
- <li>in South Africa, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</li>
- <li>modern, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>;</li>
- <li>Norman type among, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>;</li>
- <li>Round Barrow survivals among, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;</li>
- <li>typical hair shade of, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>English Channel, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>English language, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>a world language, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>English race related to the Frisians, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Environment, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>–39, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>–99;
- <ul>
- <li>effects of, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><em>Eoanthropus</em>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>–106.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Eolithic culture, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>man, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>–103;</li>
- <li>Period, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>–103, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Eoliths, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>–103.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ephtalites, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Epirus, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Erse language, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Esquimaux, and Cro-Magnons, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Esthonians, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>;</li>
- <li>immigration of, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Esths, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Eternal City, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ethiopia, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ethiopian Negro, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Etruria, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ancient civilization of, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>struggles of with the Latins, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>empire of, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Etruscans, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>;</li>
- <li>empire of, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>power of destroyed, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>learn Aryan, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Eugenics, ideal in, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Eurasia, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Europe, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>abandoned to invaders, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>;</li>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>;</li>
- <li>Anaryan survivals in, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>–235;</li>
- <li>brain capacity of, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>;</li>
- <li>Cro-Magnons in, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>;</li>
- <li>dolichocephalic, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>;</li>
- <li>early man in, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>;</li>
- <li>glaciation in, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>–102;</li>
- <li>not the home of the Alpines, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>;</li>
- <li>nor of the Slavs, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>German types in, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;</li>
- <li>iron in, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>–131;</li>
- <li>(mediæval), <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>;</li>
- <li>megaliths in, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>Mongols in, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic aristocracy in, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><em>see also</em> Aristocracy;</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>peninsula of Asia or Eurasia, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;</li>
- <li>Pre-Aryan speech in, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>;</li>
- <li>Teutonic, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>–187;</li>
- <li>Turkish language in, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>;</li>
- <li>(western) introduction of Aryan speech into, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Europe (Paleolithic), <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>European culture, derivation of, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>European man, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>,000 years ago, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>European races, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>–21, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>–30, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>natural habitat of, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</li>
- <li>physical characters of, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</li>
- <li>present distribution of, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>–273.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>European wars and Nordics, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>causes of, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Europeans, in Brazil, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>modern, cranial capacity of, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Euskarian language; <em>see also</em> Basque, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Euskarians (Basques), <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Eye color, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Farms, immigrants on, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>nurseries of nations, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Fellaheen, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Fen districts, Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ferdinand of Hapsburg, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Fertility and infertility of races, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Feudalism, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Finland, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>colonized by Sweden, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>conquered by the Varangians, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_456'>456</span>Finlanders, language of, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Finnic dialects, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Finns, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>round skulled, invasion of, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Firbolgs, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Flanders, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Flemings, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;</li>
- <li>descended from the Franks, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Flints, chipped, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>–104, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>–121;
- <ul>
- <li>polished, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>–120.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Foot, as a race character, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Forests, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Forty-Niners, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>France, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and the church, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Huguenots, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>;</li>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>Aryan language in, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>;</li>
- <li>Athenian versatility of, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li>Basques in, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>Bronze Age in, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>Brythonic language in, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>caverns in, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>;</li>
- <li>Celtic language in, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–251;</li>
- <li>connection of by land with Britain, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>cephalic index in, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>conquered by Gauls, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>;</li>
- <li>Cro-Magnon race in, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>Cymry or Belgæ in, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>decline of international power in, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>first Alpines in, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>;</li>
- <li>Hallstatt relics in, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>in Cæsar’s time, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>–195;</li>
- <li>invasion of by Gauls, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>loss through war, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>megaliths in, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>mercenaries in, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic aristocracy in, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>;</li>
- <li>Normans in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>Paleolithic,</li>
- <li>remnants in, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>racial composition of, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>religious wars of, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>;</li>
- <li>Saxons in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>severed from England, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>stature in, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>;</li>
- <li>Tardenoisian Period of, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>;</li>
- <li>variation of physical characters in, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Francis I, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Franco-Prussian War, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Frankish aristocracy, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>dynasties, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;</li>
- <li>kingdom, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Franks, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>founders of France, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;</li>
- <li>in Belgium, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;</li>
- <li>in Gaul, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>;</li>
- <li>conquer the Lombards, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>;</li>
- <li>conversion of, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>;</li>
- <li>control western Christendom, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>;</li>
- <li>defeat the Moslems, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>;</li>
- <li>kingdom of, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>–196.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>French, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>stature of, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>–198;</li>
- <li>conscripts, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>;</li>
- <li>language, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>;</li>
- <li>Revolution, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>French Canadians, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Frisia, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Frisian coast, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>dialect (Taal), South Africa, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Frisians, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Nordic character of, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Friulian language, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Frontiersmen of America, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>–75, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Furfooz-Grenelle race, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>“Furor Normanorum,” <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Gaelic, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Galatia, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Galatians, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>physical character of, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Galicia, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Gallicia, Slavs in, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Gaul, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Cisalpine Gaul, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>Roman Gaul, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</li>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>;</li>
- <li>Belgæ in, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>Burgundians in, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>Celtic speech in, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;</li>
- <li>conquered by the Goths and Franks, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>Franks in, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>;</li>
- <li>Goidels in, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>languages in, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>–70;</li>
- <li>Latinized, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>Latin speech in, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>–194;</li>
- <li>Nordics or Celts cross into, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_457'>457</span>Teutonic speech in, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>Visigoths in, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Gauls, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ancient, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>;</li>
- <li>conquer France, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;</li>
- <li>enter Spain, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>in Asia Minor, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Crimea, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;</li>
- <li>in France, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>in Galatia, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>in Greece, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li>in Italy, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>in south Russia, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;</li>
- <li>in Thrace, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>mixed with Alpines, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>mixed with Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>physical characters of, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>;</li>
- <li>as a ruling class, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Genius and leaders, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and education or environment versus race, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>;</li>
- <li>in Greece, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</li>
- <li>in various states, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;</li>
- <li>genius producing type and rate of increase, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Georgia, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Georgians, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Gepidæ, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>German, Emperor, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>–183;
- <ul>
- <li>Empire, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>;</li>
- <li>immigrants to America, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Civil War, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</li>
- <li>in Brazil, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>language, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>–189;</li>
- <li>Revolution, of 1848, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</li>
- <li>type, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Germans, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Austrian Germans, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>;</li>
- <li>defeat Mongols, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>;</li>
- <li>descendants of Wends, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>;</li>
- <li>immediate forerunners of, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>in America, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</li>
- <li>in Brazil, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>in Civil War, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</li>
- <li>of the Palatinate, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</li>
- <li>Russification of, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;</li>
- <li>stature of, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Germany, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>–142, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>–187, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;</li>
- <li>Celts in, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>–174, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>change of race in, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>–142, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>–185;</li>
- <li>Christian overlordship of, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;</li>
- <li>early Nordics in, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>gentry of, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>;</li>
- <li>Goidels in, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>–248;</li>
- <li>imperial idea in, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>;</li>
- <li>loss of population of during Thirty Years’ War, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;</li>
- <li>in Middle Ages, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;</li>
- <li>modern population of, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>–232;</li>
- <li>nobility of, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>–142, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>–188, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>;</li>
- <li>peasantry (Alpine) in, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>;</li>
- <li>race consciousness of, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</li>
- <li>race mixture in, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;</li>
- <li>racial composition of, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>;</li>
- <li>Slavic substratum in, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>–142;</li>
- <li>Teutons in, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>–189;</li>
- <li>Thirty Years’ War, effect of, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>–187, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>;</li>
- <li>unified, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>–57, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>;</li>
- <li>Wends in, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>;</li>
- <li>women of, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>;</li>
- <li>in world war, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>–187, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Ghalcha, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ghalchic, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ghettos, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Gizeh round skulls, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Glacial stages, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>–106, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Glaciation, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>–106, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Goidelic dialects, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>–201, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>elements in Scotland, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>language, Anaryan syntax in, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>;</li>
- <li>in Wales, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>;</li>
- <li>older in central Europe, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Goidels, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>–174, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>–195, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>crossed with Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–249;</li>
- <li>invade Britain, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>late wave of from Ireland to Scotland, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;</li>
- <li>a ruling class, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Gold, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Gothic language in Spain, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Goths, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>–177, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>–181, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>early home of, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>;</li>
- <li>in Italy, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Græculus, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Greece, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ancient, absence of Dinaric type in, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;</li>
- <li>ancient civilization of, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>classic period of, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>–161;</li>
- <li>conquered by Achæans, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_458'>458</span>culture of, contrasted with that of the Persians, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>;</li>
- <li>dark period of, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;</li>
- <li>Dorian invasion of 99, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>;</li>
- <li>Homeric, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>–164;</li>
- <li>Homeric-Mycenæan culture of, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterranean substratum in, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>;</li>
- <li>modern, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>–164;</li>
- <li>Hellenes in, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>;</li>
- <li>Mycenæan culture of, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>–160, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</li>
- <li>Pelasgians in, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li>race mixture in, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li>war of with Persia, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Greek language, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>origin of, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Greek states, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Greeks, in Asia Minor, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>ancient, cranial capacity of, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>brunets among, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>blonds among, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>genius of, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li>classic, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>blondness of, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>brunets among, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>–161;</li>
- <li>character of, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic type of, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>;</li>
- <li>physical character of, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>race mixture among, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>–161</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li>modern, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines among, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>physical character of, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>–163.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Greenland, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Gregory, Pope, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Grenelle race, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Gulf States, Negroes in, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Günz glaciation, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Günz-Mindel glaciation, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Gustavus Adolphus, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Hair, of the head, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>character of, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>–34.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hair color, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hairiness, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>of the Ainus, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>;</li>
- <li>of the Australoids, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>;</li>
- <li>of the Scandinavians, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Haiti, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hallstatt iron culture, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>–132.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hamitic peoples, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>speech, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hannibal, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hanover, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hapsburg, House of, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Ferdinand of, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Harold, King of England, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hebrew chronology, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Heidelberg jaw, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>man, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hellas, ancient civilization of, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>conquered by Macedon, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>–162.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hellenes, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>–163, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>–234.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hellenic colonies, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>–234;</li>
- <li>states, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Henry VIII, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Henry the Fowler, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Heredity, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a> <em>et seq.</em>;
- <ul>
- <li>in relation to environment, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>;</li>
- <li>unalterable, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>–19.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Heroes, blondness of, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Heruli, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hidalgo, meaning of the term, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>High German, and Teutonized Alpines, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and Celtic elements, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;</li>
- <li>High German people, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;</li>
- <li>High and Low German, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Highlanders, Scottish, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Highlands, Goidelic speech in, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Himalayas, western, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hindu Kush, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hindus, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_459'>459</span>Aryan speech of, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>;</li>
- <li>languages of, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hindustan, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>–149, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic invaders of, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>physical types of, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;</li>
- <li>whites in, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hittite empire, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hittites, ancestors of the Armenians, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and iron, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hiung-Nu, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hohenstaufen emperors, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Holland, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>bronze in, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hollanders, related to Anglo-Saxons of England, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Holstein, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Holy Roman Empire, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Homer, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Homeric-Mycenæan civilization, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'><em>Homo</em>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><em>eoanthropus</em>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>–106;</li>
- <li><em>europæus</em>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;</li>
- <li><em>heidelbergensis</em>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>;</li>
- <li><em>pithecanthropus</em>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Horse, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>“House of Refuge,” <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hudson Bay Company, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Huguenots, exterminated in France, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in exile, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>;</li>
- <li>in America, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Humboldt, skull of, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hungarian nation, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hungarians, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>modern, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Hungary, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines and Nordics in, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>early Nordics in, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>independent, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>;</li>
- <li>languages in, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>;</li>
- <li>Saxons in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>Slavs in, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Huns, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hunting, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Hybridism, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Iberian language, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Iberian Peninsula, Aryan language in, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>states, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Iberian subspecies, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a> (<em>see</em> Mediterranean race);
- <ul>
- <li>as substratum in British Isles, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>in England, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>in Ireland, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Iberian type or race, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a> (<em>see</em> Mediterranean race);
- <ul>
- <li>resurgence of, in Scotland, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Iberians, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Iceland, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Illyria, stature in, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Illyrian language, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>origin of, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Illyrians, mixed with Slavs, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Immigrants, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Americanization of, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>–91;</li>
- <li>and American institutions and environment, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>;</li>
- <li>in America, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>–92, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;</li>
- <li>German and Irish, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</li>
- <li>large families among, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>;</li>
- <li>Norwegian, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>Scandinavian, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>skulls of, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>;</li>
- <li>Teutonic and Nordic types of, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Immigration, and decline of American birth rate, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>German, in Brazil, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>Italian, in Brazil, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>Japanese and Chinese, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>;</li>
- <li>result of, in the United States, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>–94.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Immigration Commission, Congressional, report of, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Immutability of characters, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Imperial idea, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>of Germany, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Implements, bronze, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>copper, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li>flint, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>–104;</li>
- <li>wide diffusion of, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Incineration, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Increase of native Americans, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and immigration, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>India, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Aryan languages in, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>–261;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_460'>460</span>conquering classes in, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>;</li>
- <li>Dravidians in, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>fossil deposits in, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>–151, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;</li>
- <li>Negroids in, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;</li>
- <li>physical types of, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;</li>
- <li>Pre-Dravidians in, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;</li>
- <li>prehistoric remains in, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>;</li>
- <li>race mixture in, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;</li>
- <li>Sacæ in, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>–258;</li>
- <li>Sanskrit introduced into, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</li>
- <li>selection in, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;</li>
- <li>whites in, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Indian languages, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>–261.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Indians, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Individualism, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Indo-European race, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Indo-Germanic race, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>;</li>
- <li>Indo-Iranian group of Aryan languages, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Inequality, law of nature, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Inheritance of genius, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Inhumation, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Inquisition, in selection, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Instep, as race character, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Intellect, privilege of, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Interglacial periods, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Invaded countries, effect on language and population in, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>–73.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ionia, Pelasgians in, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ionian language, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>–164, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ionians, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Iran, Alpines in, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Iranian, division of Aryan languages, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>plateaux, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Ireland, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>blond elements in, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>Celtic language in, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>connection of, by land, with Britain, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>Danes in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>Erse language in, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>Goidelic element in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>Goidelic invasion of, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;</li>
- <li>Goidelic speech in, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;</li>
- <li>Goidels leave Ireland for Scotland, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;</li>
- <li>Iberian substratum in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>Paleolithic man in, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>–203;</li>
- <li>Paleolithic remnants in, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>;</li>
- <li>religion in, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>severed from England, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Irish, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>immigrants, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</li>
- <li>instability and versatility of, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>;</li>
- <li>intellectual inferiority of, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>Neanderthal type of, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>;</li>
- <li>race elements in, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>–203, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>;</li>
- <li>red hair of, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>;</li>
- <li>stature of, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Irish Canadians, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Irish Catholic immigrants to America, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</li>
- <li>Irish coasts, Norse language on, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>–250;</li>
- <li>Irish immigrants in the Civil War, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</li>
- <li>Irish language, Pre-Aryan syntax of, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>Irish national movement, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;</li>
- <li>Irish recruits, pigmentation of, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>;</li>
- <li>Irish type, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Iron, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>discovery and effect of, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>fabulous value of, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li>first appearance of, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>;</li>
- <li>in Asia Minor, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>in eastern Europe, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>in Egypt, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>in western Europe, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>;</li>
- <li>weapons, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Iroquois, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Islam, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Isle of Man, language of, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Italia Irredenta Movement, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Italians, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>decline of, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>;</li>
- <li>descended from slaves, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</li>
- <li>loss in war, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</li>
- <li>(south) immigrants in Brazil, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>(south) mixture of, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>;</li>
- <li>related to the Berbers, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Italy, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>–140, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Huguenots, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>;</li>
- <li>bronze in, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;</li>
- <li>introduction of, from Crete, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>Eneolithic Period in, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_461'>461</span>Gauls in, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>Goths in, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>Lake dwellings in, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>;</li>
- <li>languages in, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>;</li>
- <li>Lombards in, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>–158;</li>
- <li>mercenaries in, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;</li>
- <li>Mycenæan culture in, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>–221, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>–271;</li>
- <li>Ostrogoths in, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>races in the north, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;</li>
- <li>races in the south, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li>Terramara Period in, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;</li>
- <li>Teutons in, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>slaves in, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;</li>
- <li>Saxons in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>Umbrians and Oscans in, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>;</li>
- <li>under Austria, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;</li>
- <li>unification of, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Ivory carving, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Jamaica, population of, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Japan, Ainus of, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Japanese, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in California and Australia, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Java, connection of with mainland, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>prehistoric remains in, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Jews, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>–18, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Jutes, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Jutland, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Kalmucks, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Kassites, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>;</li>
- <li>Aryan names among, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Kentish dialect, related to Frisian and Taal, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Kentucky, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Kiptchak, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Kirghizes, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Kitchen Middens, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Kurd, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Kurdish dialect, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Kurgans, Russian, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Lacedæmonian power, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ladin language, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Lake Dwellers, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>physical characters of, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Lake Dwellings, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>bronze in, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Languages, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>–263;
- <ul>
- <li>and nationality, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>–57;</li>
- <li>changes in, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>–252;</li>
- <li>through superposition, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>;</li>
- <li>in invaded countries, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>a measure of culture, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>;</li>
- <li>nationalities founded on, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</li>
- <li>no indication of race, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>–68.</li>
- <li><em>See also under</em> various languages.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Languedoc, Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Langue d’oïl, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Lapps, language of, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>La Tène culture, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Period, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>–132, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Latifundia, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>“Latin America,” <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Latin language, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ancestral forms of, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>;</li>
- <li>derivation of, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>;</li>
- <li>descendants of, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>;</li>
- <li>in Gaul, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>in Normandy, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>in Spain, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>limiting Western Roman Empire on the east, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>;</li>
- <li>Teutons adopt it in Artois and Picardy, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>Vlachs in Thrace adopt it, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>;</li>
- <li>Latin nations, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>;</li>
- <li>race, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>stock, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>;</li>
- <li>type, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Latins, struggle of with Etruria, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Leaders and genius, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Legendary characters and physical types, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>–230.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Leonardo da Vinci, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Lettish language, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Levant, Hellenization of, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Libya, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Libyans, blondness of, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>invade Egypt, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Liguria, Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ligurian language, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Lips, as race character, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_462'>462</span>Literary characters and physical types, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>–230.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Lithuanian language, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>“<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Litus Saxonicum</span>,” <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Livonian language, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Livonians, or Livs, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Lombards, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Italy, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>overthrow of, by Franks, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Lombardy, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>London, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Long skulls in India, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Lorraine, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Low Countries and the Huguenots, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Low German language, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and the Nordics, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>–189.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Low German people, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Lower Paleolithic, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>–106, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Loyalists, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Lusitania (Portugal), occupied by the Suevi, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Luxemburg, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Macedon, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>–162.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Macedonian dynasties, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Macedonians, mixed with Asiatics, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>–162.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Magdalenian bow, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>–113;
- <ul>
- <li>Period, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;</li>
- <li>art, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Magi, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Maglemose culture, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Magna Græcia, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Magyar language, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Magyars, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Malay Peninsula, Negroids in, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Male, as indicating the trend of the race, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Man, ancestry of, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>–118;
- <ul>
- <li>arboreal, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>;</li>
- <li>ascent of, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>–98;</li>
- <li>classification of, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;</li>
- <li>definition of, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>;</li>
- <li>earliest skeletal evidence of, in Europe, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>;</li>
- <li>evolution of, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>;</li>
- <li>phases of development of, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>–103;</li>
- <li>place of origin, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;</li>
- <li>predisposition to mismate, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>;</li>
- <li>race, language, and nationality of, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;</li>
- <li>three distinct subspecies of, in Europe, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>–22.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Manx language, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Marcomanni, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Maritime architecture, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Marius, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Marriages between contrasted races, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mas d’Azil, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Massachusetts, genius produced in, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Massagetæ (<em>see</em> Sacæ), <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>physical characters of, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><em>Massif</em> Central, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Medes, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Nordics in the Empire of, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Media, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>;</li>
- <li>introduction of Aryan language into, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Mediæval Europe, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>–188.
- <ul>
- <li><em>See also</em> Middle Ages.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Medic language (<em>see</em> Media, also Zendic language), <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mediterranean basin, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>immigrants from to America, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Mediterranean race, or subspecies, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>–167, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and Alpine race, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>;</li>
- <li>and ancient civilization, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>–215;</li>
- <li>and Aryan speech, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>–238, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;</li>
- <li>and Celtic language, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>–251;</li>
- <li>and Gauls, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>and Negroes, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>and Negritos, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>and synthetic languages, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>;</li>
- <li>as sailors, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>–228;</li>
- <li>classic civilization due to, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>–166;</li>
- <li>Celticized, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_463'>463</span>crossed with Goidels, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>description of, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>distribution of, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>–149, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>;</li>
- <li>distribution in the Neolithic, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>–149;</li>
- <li>in the Paleolithic, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;</li>
- <li>to-day, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a> <em>seq.</em>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>habitat of, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</li>
- <li>hair of, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</li>
- <li>expansion of, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>;</li>
- <li>eye color of, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;</li>
- <li>forerunners of, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>;</li>
- <li>handsomest types of, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li><em>in</em> Afghanistan, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>Africa, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>–152, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>Algeria, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;</li>
- <li>America, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</li>
- <li>Arabia, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>Argentine, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>Asia, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>–150, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;</li>
- <li>Azilian Period, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>;</li>
- <li>Baluchistan, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>Britain (<em>see also</em> British Isles and England), <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>–249;</li>
- <li>British Isles, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>–153, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a> (Pre-Nordic), <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>–199, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>Bronze Age, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>Eastern Bulgaria, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>;</li>
- <li>Canada, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;</li>
- <li>Ceylon, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>cities, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;</li>
- <li>north and western Europe, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>Egypt, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>England, or the British Isles, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>–210, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>France, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>Greece, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>–161;</li>
- <li>Iberian Peninsula, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>India, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;</li>
- <li>Italy, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li>Languedoc, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>Liguria, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>Morocco, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>Nile Valley, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>Paleolithic Period, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;</li>
- <li>Persia, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>Po Valley, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>Provence, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>Rome, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>–154;</li>
- <li>Sahara, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>Scotland, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>–204;</li>
- <li>Senegambian regions, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>in Sicily, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li>in South America, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>in Spain, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>–156, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Terramara Period, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;</li>
- <li>in Wales, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>;</li>
- <li>increasing in America, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>–158, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>(in Spain, Italy, and France, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>);</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li>knowledge of metallurgy, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li>mental characteristics of, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>;</li>
- <li>mixed with Celts, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;</li>
- <li>with Dravidians, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;</li>
- <li>with Gauls, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>with Negroids, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>;</li>
- <li>with Nordics, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li>with other ethnic elements, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>–166;</li>
- <li>never in Scandinavia, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>–151;</li>
- <li>not in the Alps, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>not purely European, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>;</li>
- <li>origin of, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>;</li>
- <li>original language of, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>;</li>
- <li>physical characters of, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>racial aptitudes of, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>–229;</li>
- <li>rise of, in Europe, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>route of migration of, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>resurgence of, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>;</li>
- <li>in England, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;</li>
- <li>skulls of, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>;</li>
- <li>stature of, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;</li>
- <li>underlying the Alpines and Nordics in western Europe, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;</li>
- <li>victims of tuberculosis, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</li>
- <li>yielding to the Alpines at the present time, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;</li>
- <li>Proto-Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Mediterranean Sea, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Megalithic monuments, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>–129;
- <ul>
- <li>distribution of, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Melanesians, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Melting Pot, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mendelian characters, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mercenaries, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mesaticephaly, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mesopotamia, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>chronicles of, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;</li>
- <li>city-states of, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>;</li>
- <li>copper in, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li>culture synchronous with the northern Neolithic, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li>earliest fixed date of, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Messapian language, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Messina, Pelasgians in, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mesvinian river terraces, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Metallurgy, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>–132, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>–240, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Metals, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>–132.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mexican War, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_464'>464</span>Mexico, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>peons of, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Michael Angelo, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Microliths, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Middle Ages, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>civilization of, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>;</li>
- <li>elimination of good strains of, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>–53.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Middle Paleolithic Period, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Middle West, settlement of by poor whites, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Migrating types, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mikklegard, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mindel glaciation, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mindel-Riss Interglacial stage, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Minoan culture of Crete, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Minoan Empire, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Miocene Period, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>–102.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Miscegenation, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mississippi, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>black belt of, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Missouri, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>river, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Mitanni, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Aryan names among, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;</li>
- <li>Empire of, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Mixture of races, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><em>see also</em> race mixture.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Mohammedan invasion of Europe, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Moldavia, Vlachs in, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mongolian elements in Europe, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mongolians, <em>see</em> Mongols.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mongoloid race, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>hair of, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</li>
- <li>invasions of Europe by, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>–260, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Mongols, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>crossed with Ainus, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>crossed with Esquimaux, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>in Russia, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Monosyllabic languages, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Moors, in Spain, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Moral, intellectual and physical characters, race differences in, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a> <em>et seq.</em></li>
- <li class='c029'>Mordvins, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Morocco, bronze in, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mediterranean race in, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Mosaics, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Moscovy, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Moslems in Europe, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mound burials, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mousterian Period, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>–107, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Muscovite expansion in Europe, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mycenæ, ancient civilization of, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Mycenæan civilization, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>culture, of Crete, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;</li>
- <li>of Greece, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;</li>
- <li>of Sardinia, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Myrmidons, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Napoleon, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Napoleonic Wars, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>National consciousness of Americans, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>National movements, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>types, absorption of higher by lower, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Nationalities, formed around language and religion, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Nationality, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>artificial grouping, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;</li>
- <li>and language, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>–68.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Navigation, development of, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Neanderthal man, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>–107, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>habits of, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</li>
- <li>race characters of, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</li>
- <li>remnants or survivals of, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>–108;</li>
- <li>skull of, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>–108.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Neanderthaloids, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>–107;
- <ul>
- <li>remnants of, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Negritos, and Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>as substratum in southern Asia, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>–149.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Negroes, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>African, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</li>
- <li>American, provenience of, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>;</li>
- <li>and genius, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Mediterranean race, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>–152;</li>
- <li>and socialism, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</li>
- <li>citizenship of, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;</li>
- <li>hair of, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</li>
- <li><em>in</em> Africa, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</li>
- <li>America, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>;</li>
- <li>Brazil, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>Haiti, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_465'>465</span>Mexico, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>New England, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>;</li>
- <li>South America, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>Southern States, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</li>
- <li>United States, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>–87, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;</li>
- <li>West Indies, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic blood in, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>;</li>
- <li>rapid multiplication of, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>;</li>
- <li>replacing whites in the South, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>–78;</li>
- <li>a servient race, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li>stationary character of their development, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Negroids, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>crossed with Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;</li>
- <li>hair of, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</li>
- <li>(in India) physical character of, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Neo-Celtic languages, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Neo-Latin, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Neolithic (New Stone Age), <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>–214, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Beaker Makers in, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>;</li>
- <li>beginning of, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>–122;</li>
- <li>duration of, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>;</li>
- <li>distribution of races during, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>–124;</li>
- <li>in western Europe, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>;</li>
- <li>northern Neolithic contemporary with southern Bronze, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>Pre-Neolithic, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>;</li>
- <li>Upper or Late Neolithic, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;</li>
- <li>and writing, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Neolithic ancestors of the Proto-Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>invasion of the Alpines, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Nero, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>New England, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>immigrants in, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>;</li>
- <li>lack of race consciousness in, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>;</li>
- <li>Negro in, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic in Colonial times, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>;</li>
- <li>race mixture in, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>;</li>
- <li>settlers of, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>New England type, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>New France, Catholic colonies in, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>New Spain, Catholic colonies in, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>New Stone Age, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><em>see</em> Neolithic.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>New York, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>immigrants in, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>New Zealand, whites in, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Nile river, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Nile valley, Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Nobility (French), Oriental and Mediterranean strains in, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Nomads, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><em>see also</em> migratory types.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Non-Aryan, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><em>See</em> Anaryan.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Nordic aristocracy, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>
- <ul>
- <li><em>see also</em> aristocracy;</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><em>in</em> Austria, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>Britain, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>eastern Germany, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>France, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>–197;</li>
- <li>Gaul, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>Germany, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>;</li>
- <li>Greece, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>Italy, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>;</li>
- <li>Lombardy, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;</li>
- <li>Persia, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;</li>
- <li>Rome, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>Russia, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>;</li>
- <li>Spain, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>southern Europe, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>Venice, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;</li>
- <li>loss of through war, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Nordic broodland, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a> <em>et seq.</em>;
- <ul>
- <li>Nordic conquerors of India, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</li>
- <li>fatherland, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>–222;</li>
- <li>immigrants to America, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>invaders of Italy, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>;</li>
- <li>invasions of Asia, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>–259;</li>
- <li>nations, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Nordic race, or subspecies, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>–178;
- <ul>
- <li>adventurers, pioneers and sailors, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>;</li>
- <li>affected by the actinic rays, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</li>
- <li>allied to the Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>;</li>
- <li>depleted by war, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>–74;</li>
- <li>a European type, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Great War, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;</li>
- <li>habitat of, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>–38;</li>
- <li>hair of, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</li>
- <li>in Italy, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</li>
- <li>in the subtropics and elsewhere outside of its native habitat, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>–42;</li>
- <li>location of, in Roman times, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>mixed with Alpines, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>–36, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>–136;</li>
- <li>mixed with other types in the United States, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>–94;</li>
- <li>passing of, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;</li>
- <li>physical character of, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>–168;</li>
- <li>at the present time, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_466'>466</span>racial aptitudes of, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>–228;</li>
- <li>red-haired branch of, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Nordic stature, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Nordic substratum in eastern Germany and Poland, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Russia, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Nordic troops of Philip and Alexander, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Nordic type, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>among native Americans, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li>in California, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>;</li>
- <li>in Scotland, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Nordic vice, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Nordics, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>absorption of by conquered nations, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>;</li>
- <li>and alcoholism, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;</li>
- <li>and consumption, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;</li>
- <li>and Low German, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>–189;</li>
- <li>and Aryan languages, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>–242;</li>
- <li>and Proto-Slavic languages, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;</li>
- <li>and specialized features, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>;</li>
- <li>around the Caspian-Aral Sea, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</li>
- <li>among the Amorites, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;</li>
- <li>among the Philistines, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;</li>
- <li>as mercenaries, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</li>
- <li>as officers, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>;</li>
- <li>as raiders, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>;</li>
- <li>Celtic dialects of, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>Celtic and Teutonic Nordics, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>;</li>
- <li>centre of evolution of, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>–171;</li>
- <li>checked by the Etruscans in their advance southward, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>carriers of Aryan speech, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>;</li>
- <li>conquer Alpines, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;</li>
- <li>continental, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;</li>
- <li>cross the Rhine westward, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>;</li>
- <li>decline of, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>;</li>
- <li>(in England) 208–210, (in India) 216, (in Europe and Asia) 260, (in Spain) 192;</li>
- <li>destroyed by war, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>–231;</li>
- <li>distribution of, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>;</li>
- <li>early movements of, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;</li>
- <li>energy of, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>;</li>
- <li>expansion of, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>–212;</li>
- <li>first, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>–132;</li>
- <li>first appearance of along the Baltic, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>;</li>
- <li>first appearance of in Scandinavia, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>;</li>
- <li>founders of France, England and America, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>;</li>
- <li><em>in</em> agriculture, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;</li>
- <li>Africa, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;</li>
- <li>Afghan passes, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;</li>
- <li>the Ægean region, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;</li>
- <li>the Alps, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>:</li>
- <li>Austria, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>Asia, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>;</li>
- <li>Asia Minor, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>the Balkan Peninsula, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;</li>
- <li>the British Isles, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>the Caucasus, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>south of the Caucasus, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>–254;</li>
- <li>cities, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;</li>
- <li>colonies, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</li>
- <li>England (Britain), <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>France, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>;</li>
- <li>Flanders, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>;</li>
- <li>Gaul, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>–194;</li>
- <li>Germany, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>;</li>
- <li>Europe, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>Hindustan, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>;</li>
- <li>Holland, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>Galicia, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>Greece, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>–160, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</li>
- <li>India, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;</li>
- <li>Ireland, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>Italy, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>–221;</li>
- <li>Lombardy, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;</li>
- <li>Persia, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;</li>
- <li>Poland, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>Portugal, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>the Punjab, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>–258;</li>
- <li>Rome, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>Russia, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>;</li>
- <li>Scandinavia, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>Scotland, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>Spain, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>Styria, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>Thrace, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</li>
- <li>the Tyrol, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>invade Greece, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>–160;</li>
- <li>landed gentry in Wales, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>;</li>
- <li>later in central Europe, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>long skulls of, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>;</li>
- <li>loss of through war, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>–193, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>–197;</li>
- <li>mixed with Alpines, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>–135, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>with Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>Neolithic location of, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>;</li>
- <li>outside of Europe, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>–224;</li>
- <li>owners of fertile lands and valleys, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>physical characters of, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</li>
- <li>Protestants, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>;</li>
- <li>reach the Mediterranean Sea through the Alpines, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;</li>
- <li>seize the Po valley, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Norman language, spoken by French Canadians, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Norman type, in England and America, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_467'>467</span>Normandy, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>conquest of, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>;</li>
- <li>Belgæ in, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>change of language in, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>Cymric language in, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>Latin speech in, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>Normans in, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>;</li>
- <li>Norse pirates in, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>ravaged by Saxons, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>–252.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Normans, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>–207;
- <ul>
- <li>characters of in Sicily, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>;</li>
- <li>ecclesiastics among, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;</li>
- <li>in Britain, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>in England, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>;</li>
- <li>racial aptitudes of, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>–208;</li>
- <li>racial mixture among, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;</li>
- <li>settle Normandy, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>;</li>
- <li>transformation of, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Norse, along the Atlantic coasts, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Norse blood of American settlers, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>;</li>
- <li>Norse in Britain, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>in Ireland, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;</li>
- <li>in Scotland, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>Norsemen, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>Norse pirates, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;</li>
- <li>Norse Vikings, <em>see</em> Vikings.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>North Europeans, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>North Germans, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>North Sea, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Northmen, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>invasion of, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Norway, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>bronze in, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;</li>
- <li>intellectual anæmia of, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Norwegian immigrants, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Nose form, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Ofnet race, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Oklahoma, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Old Persian, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>–255, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Old Prussian, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Old Sanskrit, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Old Saxon (related to Frisian and Taal), <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Old South, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>–43.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Old Stone Age (<em>see also</em> Paleolithic), <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Oscan language, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Oscans, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Osmanli Turks, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ossetes, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Ostrogoths, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Italy, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Ottoman Turks, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Paintings, polychrome, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Palatine Germans, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Paleolithic Period, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>art of, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>;</li>
- <li>close of, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;</li>
- <li>dates of, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>;</li>
- <li>man, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>–118, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>–108, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;</li>
- <li>in Ireland, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>;</li>
- <li>remnants of in England, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;</li>
- <li>in Wales, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>;</li>
- <li>races of the Paleolithic Period, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>;</li>
- <li>Lower Paleolithic Period, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>–106, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>;</li>
- <li>Middle Paleolithic Period, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>;</li>
- <li>Upper Paleolithic Period, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;</li>
- <li>close of, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Palestine, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>bronze weapons in, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Pamirs, the, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Pan-Germanic movement, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pan-Rumanian movement, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pan-Slavic movement, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Parthian language, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Patagonia, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Patricians in Rome, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pax Romana, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Peasant, European, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><em>see also under</em> Alpines <em>and</em> Racial aptitudes.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Pehlevi language, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pelasgians, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>–161, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>at Troy, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Peloponnesus, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pennsylvania Dutch, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Peons, Mexican, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pericles, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Persia, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Aryan language in, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>;</li>
- <li>Aryanization of, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>language of (<em>see</em> Old Persian), <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>;</li>
- <li>physical types in, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_468'>468</span>wars of with Greece, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Persian Empire, organization of, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Persians, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>–256, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>culture of, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>;</li>
- <li>date of separation of, from the Sacæ, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>;</li>
- <li>expansion of, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>Hellenization of, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>;</li>
- <li>as Nordics, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>;</li>
- <li>physical character of, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Pharsalia, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Philip of Macedon, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Philippi, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Philippines, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Spanish in, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>whites in, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Philistines, Nordics among, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Phœnicia, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>ancient civilization of, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Phœnician language in Spain, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Phœnicians, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>colonies of, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li>in Spain, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>voyages of, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>–127.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Phrygians, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>invade Asia Minor, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Physical types and literary or legendary characters, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>–230;
- <ul>
- <li>physical types of Normans, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>–208;</li>
- <li>of British soldiers and sailors, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;</li>
- <li><em>see also under</em> various races.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Picardy, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pictish language, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Picts, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pile dwellings, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Piltdown man, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>–106.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pindus mountains, Vlachs in, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>–246.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pioneers, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>–75.</li>
- <li class='c029'><em>Pithecanthropus erectus</em>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Plebeians or Plebs of Rome, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>–218.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pleistocene Period, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pliocene Period, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Po valley, Alpines in, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>as Cisalpine Gaul, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>seized by Nordics, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>Terramara settlements in, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Poetry, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Poland, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>–142;</li>
- <li>blondness in, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>dolichocephaly in, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>–213;</li>
- <li>Nordic substratum in, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>Slavs in, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>;</li>
- <li>stature in, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Poles, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>increase in East Germany, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Polesia, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Polish Ghettos, immigrants from, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Polish Jews, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in New York, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Polished Stone Age, <em>see</em> Neolithic;
- <ul>
- <li>beginning of, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>–119.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Polygamy, among the Turks, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pompey, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>“Poor Whites,” <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>–40;
- <ul>
- <li>physical types of, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Population, direction of pressure of, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>effect of foreign invasion on, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>–71;</li>
- <li>infiltration into, of slaves or immigrants, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>;</li>
- <li>value and efficiency of a, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Portugal, Nordics in, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>occupied by the Suevi, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Portuguese language, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Posen, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Post-Glacial Periods, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>–106, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>–133.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Post-Roman invaders of Britain, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pottery, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>first appearance of, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>–123.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Pre-Aryan language, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in the British Isles, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Pre-Dravidians, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>physical character of, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_469'>469</span>Pre-Neolithic culture on the Baltic, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pre-Nordic brunets in New England, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pre-Nordics, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>of Ireland, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Primates, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>erect, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Pripet swamps, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Procopius, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Propontis, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Proto-Alpines, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>;</li>
- <li>physical characters of, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Proto-Aryan language, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and Alpines, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic origin of, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Proto-Mediterranean Race, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>descended from the Neolithic, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>–150.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Proto-Nordics, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Russia, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Proto-Slavic language, Aryan character of, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Proto-Teutonic race, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Provençal, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Provençal language, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Provençals, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Provence, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Prussia, Spartan culture of, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Prussian, Old (Borussian), language, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Prussians, ethnic origin of, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Punic Wars, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Punjab, the, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>entrance of Aryans into, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>;</li>
- <li>decline of Nordics in, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Puritans, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Pyrenees, caverns of, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Quebec Frenchmen, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Race, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Aryan, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>;</li>
- <li>Caucasian, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>;</li>
- <li>Celtic, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>;</li>
- <li>Indo-Germanic, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>;</li>
- <li>Latin, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>;</li>
- <li>adjustment to habitat of, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>;</li>
- <li>characters, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
- <li>consciousness, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>;</li>
- <li>in Germany, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</li>
- <li>in Sweden, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</li>
- <li>in the United States, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>;</li>
- <li>degeneration, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>–43, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</li>
- <li>determination, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>;</li>
- <li>disharmonic combinations of, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>distinguished from language and nationality, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</li>
- <li>effect of democracy on, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>;</li>
- <li>feeling, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>;</li>
- <li>importance of, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>–100;</li>
- <li>physical basis of, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>–16;</li>
- <li>positions of the three main races in Roman times, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>resistance to foreign invasion, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>;</li>
- <li>selection, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>;</li>
- <li>versus species and subspecies, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Race mixture, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>among the Gauls, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>;</li>
- <li>among the Normans, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;</li>
- <li>among the Turks, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>;</li>
- <li>among the Umbrians, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>;</li>
- <li>and civilization, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>–216;</li>
- <li>in North Africa, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>in South Africa, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Argentine, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>in Brazil, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>in Britain, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>in Canada, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</li>
- <li>in Europe, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>–262;</li>
- <li>in Germany, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;</li>
- <li>in Greece, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li>in Jamaica, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>in large cities, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>;</li>
- <li>in Macedon, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li>in Mexico, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Roman Empire, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>;</li>
- <li>in Rome, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>in Russia, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;</li>
- <li>in Spain, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>in Switzerland, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;</li>
- <li>in the United States, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>–94;</li>
- <li>in Venezuela, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>in Tunis, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li>of Alpines and Celts, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;</li>
- <li>of Alpines and Nordics, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>of Alpines and Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>of Ainus and Mongols, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>of Belgæ and Teutonic tribes, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>of Celts and Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;</li>
- <li>of Goidels and Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>of Mediterraneans and Dravidians and Negroids, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;</li>
- <li>of Nordics and Negroes, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>;</li>
- <li>of late Nordics and Paleoliths, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_470'>470</span>of Slavs and Illyrians, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Race supplanting, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>–48, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Races, European distribution of during the Neolithic, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Europe, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>laws of distribution of, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</li>
- <li>evolution of through selection, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a> <em>et seq.</em></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Racial, aptitudes, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>–232;
- <ul>
- <li>of Alpines, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>–139, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li>of Negroes, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</li>
- <li>of Normans, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>–208;</li>
- <li>elements of the Great War, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>;</li>
- <li>resistance of acclimated populations, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>;</li>
- <li>types, intellectual and moral differences of, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Raphael, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ravenna, surrender of, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Recapitulation of development in infants, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Reformation, the, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in England, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Regiments, German, composition of, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Religion, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>nationalities founded on, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Renaissance, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Republic, a true, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Resurgence of types, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>of Alpines in Europe, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>–147, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>–191, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>of Iberians in Scotland, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>of Mediterraneans, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>;</li>
- <li>in England, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Revolution, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>French, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>German, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Revolutionary Wars, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Riss glaciation, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Riss-Würm, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>interglacial, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Robenhausian culture, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Period, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>;</li>
- <li>Upper, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Rollo, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Romaic language, origin of, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Roman, abandonment of Britain, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>aristocracy, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>;</li>
- <li>busts, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>church, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>;</li>
- <li>Empire, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>–72, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>–182, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>–222;</li>
- <li>component states of, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;</li>
- <li>fall of, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;</li>
- <li>Eastern Empire, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>–166;</li>
- <li>population of, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>slaves in, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</li>
- <li>Western Empire, re-established, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;</li>
- <li>ideals, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>occupation of Britain, effect of, ethnically, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;</li>
- <li>provinces, Teutonized, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li>Republic, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>;</li>
- <li>State, ancient civilization of, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</li>
- <li>stature, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>stock, extinction of, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Romance tongues, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Romans, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>–176, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>–221, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>decline of, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>–222;</li>
- <li>features of, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>in Britain, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;</li>
- <li>in France, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>in Spain, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>a modified race in Gaul, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</li>
- <li>stature of, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Romansch language, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Rome, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>–221, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines, Nordics and Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>change of race in, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>–220;</li>
- <li>change of religion in, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>;</li>
- <li>early struggles in, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>in Dacia, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>Northern qualities of, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>–154;</li>
- <li>race mixture in, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>slaves in, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>–220;</li>
- <li>stormed by Brennus, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Rough Stone Age, <em>see</em> Paleolithic.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Round Barrows, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>–138, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>brachycephalic survivals of, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>–164.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Round skulls, absence of in Britain, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><em>See also</em> physical characters of the Alpines, Armenoids, etc.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Rumania, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_471'>471</span>Rumanian language, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>–246;
- <ul>
- <li>origin of, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>–245;</li>
- <li>distribution of, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Rumanians, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and Christianity, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>descent of, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>–246;</li>
- <li>Latin language of, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>–246.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Russia, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alans and Goths in, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>;</li>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>–144, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;</li>
- <li>Anaryan survivals in, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>;</li>
- <li>Asiatic types in, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>;</li>
- <li>Baltic provinces of, Nordic, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>;</li>
- <li>blondness in, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>Bulgars from, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>;</li>
- <li>burial mounds or kurgans in, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>;</li>
- <li>changes in racial predominance in, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>–144, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;</li>
- <li>dolichocephaly in, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>early Nordics in, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>;</li>
- <li>Esthonians in, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>;</li>
- <li>Finns in, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>;</li>
- <li>Gauls in, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;</li>
- <li>grasslands and steppes of, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>–254, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;</li>
- <li>language in, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>–236, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>;</li>
- <li>Livs in, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>;</li>
- <li>Mongols in, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>;</li>
- <li>Muscovite expansion in, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic substratum in, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>–214, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>;</li>
- <li>organized by Sweden, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>race mixture in, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;</li>
- <li>races in, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>;</li>
- <li>Saxons in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>Slavs or Alpines in, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>;</li>
- <li>Slavic dialects in, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;</li>
- <li>Slavic future of, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;</li>
- <li>stature in, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>Swedes in, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>Varangians in, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;</li>
- <li>water connections across, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Russian brachycephaly, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>–137;
- <ul>
- <li>settlements of Siberia, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Russians and Christianity, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ruthenia, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Slavs in, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002'>Sacæ, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a> (<em>see</em> Massagetæ);
- <ul>
- <li>date of separation from Persia, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>;</li>
- <li>evidence of conquests of, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;</li>
- <li>identified with the Wu-Suns, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>;</li>
- <li>in India, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>–258;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>;</li>
- <li>physical characters of, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Sahara, the, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>–152.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>St. Bartholomew, Massacre of, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sakai, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'><i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">Sangre Azul</span></i>, derivation of the term, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sanskrit, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>–258, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>introduction of into India, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>.</li>
- <li><em>See</em> Old Sanskrit.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Santa Fé Trail, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sardinia, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>;</li>
- <li>Mycenæan culture of, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Sardinian, the, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>stature of, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Sarmatians, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Satem group of Aryan languages, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Saviour, the, blondness of, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Savoy, Alpines in, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Savoyard, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Saxon blood of American settlers, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Normandy and Scotland, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;</li>
- <li>Saxon type, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Saxons, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>–142, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Britain, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–249;</li>
- <li>in Brittany, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>–252;</li>
- <li>in England, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>–201;</li>
- <li>in France, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>in Hungary, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>in Italy, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>in Russia, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>invaders, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>invasions of, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>–201, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>;</li>
- <li>origin of, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;</li>
- <li>ravage Normandy, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>–252.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Saxony, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>–201.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Scandinavia, brunets in, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>centre of radiation of the Teutons, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;</li>
- <li>character of the population of, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>;</li>
- <li>first Nordics in, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>;</li>
- <li>first occupation of by human beings, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>;</li>
- <li>introduction of bronze into, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>megaliths in, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans never in, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>–151;</li>
- <li>Neolithic culture in, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_472'>472</span>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Scandinavian blood in Normandy and Scotland, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>place names in Scotland, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>states, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Scandinavians, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>hairiness of, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Schleswig, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sclaveni, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Scotch, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>brunet type of, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;</li>
- <li>red hair of, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>;</li>
- <li>stature of, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Scotch borders, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Highlanders, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Scotch-Irish in America, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Scotland, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Angles in, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>blond elements in, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>blonds mixed with brunets in, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>;</li>
- <li>brunetness in, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>;</li>
- <li>Brythonic elements in, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>Gaelic area in, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>Goidelic element in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>Goidelic speech in, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;</li>
- <li>Goidels invade from Ireland, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;</li>
- <li>Iberian substratum in, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>;</li>
- <li>language in, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>–250;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>Neanderthal type in, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic type in, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>Norse pirates in, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>racial elements in, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>–204, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>;</li>
- <li>resurgence of types in, especially the Iberian, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li>Scandinavian place names in, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Scots, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Scottish Highlands, language of, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Scythians, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Selection, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>–55, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>by elimination of the unfit, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>–54;</li>
- <li>in Colonial times, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>;</li>
- <li>in colonies, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>;</li>
- <li>in tenements and factories, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>;</li>
- <li>practical measures in, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>–55;</li>
- <li>through alcoholism, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;</li>
- <li>through disease, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>–55;</li>
- <li>through social environment, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Seljukian Turks, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Semitic language, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>race, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Senegambian regions, Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Senlac Hill, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Serbian national revival, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Serbs, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and Christianity, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>in Bulgaria, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Serfs and serfdom, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Servile wars in Rome, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ship-building, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Siberia, Russian settlements of, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Siberian tundras, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sicily, Alpines in, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li>Normans in, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Sidon, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sikhs, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Silesia, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sinai Peninsula, mines of, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Singalese, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Siwalik Hills, fossil deposits of, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Skin color and quality, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>–28.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Skull shape, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>among immigrants, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>;</li>
- <li>antiquity of distinction between long and round, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>;</li>
- <li>as a race character, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</li>
- <li>of the Ainus, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>;</li>
- <li>African, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;</li>
- <li>American Indian, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;</li>
- <li>Asiatic, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>;</li>
- <li>Cro-Magnon, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>European, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>–21;</li>
- <li>Neanderthal, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</li>
- <li>best method of determining race, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>–24;</li>
- <li><em>see also</em> Brachycephaly, Dolichocephaly, Mesaticephaly, and the physical characters of the various races.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Slave trade, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Slavery, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>–11, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Slaves, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>–11, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Italy, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;</li>
- <li>in Rome, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>source of, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Slavic Alpines in Germany, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_473'>473</span>homeland, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>;</li>
- <li>languages, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>–145, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>–237, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>–245;</li>
- <li>Proto-Slavic, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;</li>
- <li>race, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>;</li>
- <li>as an Alpine race, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Slavs, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>of Alpine race, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</li>
- <li>area of distribution of, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;</li>
- <li>expansion of, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>;</li>
- <li>in Austria, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Balkans, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>eastern Europe, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>eastern Germany, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>–142;</li>
- <li>Greece, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>Middle Ages, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>Poland, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>;</li>
- <li>Russia, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</li>
- <li>mixed with Illyrians, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>northern and southern, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Slovaks, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Social environment, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Social wars in Rome, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Socialism, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Socrates, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sogdiana, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Solutrean Period, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>–113;
- <ul>
- <li>culture of and the Brünn-Předmost race, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Cro-Magnon race, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Sorb, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>South Africa, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Dutch and English in, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>South America, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Southern States of America, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>brunets in, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterranean element in, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic type in, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</li>
- <li>“poor whites” of, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;</li>
- <li>race consciousness in, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Southerners, effect of climate on, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>–43.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Spain, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>Arabic spoken in, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>Arabs in, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>aristocracy of, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>Basques in, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>;</li>
- <li>blondness in, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>bow and arrow of the Azilians in, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>;</li>
- <li>cause of the collapse of, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>;</li>
- <li>caverns in, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>;</li>
- <li>Celtic language in, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>;</li>
- <li>decline of the Nordic element in, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>;</li>
- <li>elimination of genius producing classes in, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>;</li>
- <li>Gauls in, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>Gothic language in, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>Goths in, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>Latin language in, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>–156;</li>
- <li>megaliths in, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>Moorish conquest of, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>;</li>
- <li>Moors in, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>–156, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>–193, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>;</li>
- <li>Phœnician language in, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>Phœnicians in, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>racial change in, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>Romans in, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>Teutons in, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>tin mines in, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>;</li>
- <li>types in, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>Vandals in, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>Visigoths in, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Spaniards or Spanish (modern), <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>(ancient), <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>;</li>
- <li>in Mexico, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>;</li>
- <li>and Nordics, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Philippines, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>related to the Berbers, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Spanish conquistadores, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>infantry, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>;</li>
- <li>Inquisition in selection, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>;</li>
- <li>Spanish Main, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;</li>
- <li>islands and coasts of, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>Spanish-American War, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Sparta, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Spartans, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and Dinaric race, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>;</li>
- <li>physical character of, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Specializations, racial, recent, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Species, significance of the term, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Stature, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>–30, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>affected by war, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>–198;</li>
- <li>of the Romans, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</li>
- <li>in Albania, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>in France, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>;</li>
- <li>in Illyria and the Tyrol, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Scottish Highlands, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>–29, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>in Sardinia, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>–29.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Sterilization of the unfit, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Stoicism, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Stone weapons in England, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>–121.
- <ul>
- <li>For <em>Stone Ages</em> <em>see</em> Neolithic and Paleolithic.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Styria, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_474'>474</span>Suevi, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Portugal, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Sumer, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Susa, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Swabians, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Sweden, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>centre of Nordic purity, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>;</li>
- <li>colonizes Finland, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>colonizes Russia, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>cradle of Teutonic branch of the Nordics, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;</li>
- <li>bronze introduced into, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>;</li>
- <li>first Nordics in, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>;</li>
- <li>intellectual anæmia of, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>Kitchen Middens in, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic race in, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>–136, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>–170, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>–211;</li>
- <li>race consciousness in, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</li>
- <li>saves Protestantism, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>unity of race in, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Swedes, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>organization of Russia by, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>Russification of, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Swiss, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>blondness of, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>Swiss Lake Dwellers, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Switzerland, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>;</li>
- <li>Lake Dwellings in, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>;</li>
- <li>mercenaries in, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;</li>
- <li>race mixture in, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Sylla, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Synthetic languages, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>–240, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Syr Darya, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Syria, hellenized, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>round skull invasion of, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Syrians, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Taal dialect, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Tamahu, blondness of, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Tardenoisian Period, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Tatars, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Tchouds, language of, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Tennessee, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Terramara Period, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Terramara settlements, bronze in, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>copper in, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;</li>
- <li>human remains in, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Teutoburgiana forest, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Teutonic, as a term, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>–232;
- <ul>
- <li>branch of the Nordic race, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>–170, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>expansion of, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>;</li>
- <li>invaders of Gaul, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</li>
- <li>invasions, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>–184, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>–196;</li>
- <li>languages of, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>–251;</li>
- <li>duration of Teutonic language in Gaul, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;</li>
- <li>Teutonic tribes mixed with the Belgæ, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>speech in the British Isles, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>–250;</li>
- <li>Proto-Teutonics, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Teutons, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>–142, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>–174, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>–177, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>–196;
- <ul>
- <li>division of in the Great War, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>;</li>
- <li>physical characters of, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>;</li>
- <li>route of expansion of, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Thebes, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Thessaly, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Thibet, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Thirty Years’ War, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>–187, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Thrace, Nordics in, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>early inhabitants of, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>;</li>
- <li>Gauls in, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Thracian language, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>origin of, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Tin, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>–127.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Tin Isles of Ultima Thule, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Titian, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Tokharian language, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>–261.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Tools, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>–104, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>–121, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Tours, battle of, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Trade routes, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>–125.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Trajan, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Transylvania, Rumanian language in, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Vlachs in, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Trapping, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Trinitarian faith of the Franks, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Tripoli, round skull invasion of, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_475'>475</span>Trojans, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Troy, siege of, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Tunis, Alpines in, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>bronze in, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>race mixture in, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Turcomans, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>or Turkomans, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Turkestan, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Nomads of, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>;</li>
- <li>Tokharian language in, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Turki or Turks, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>–145, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>–238;</li>
- <li>race mixture among, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Tuscan language, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Tyre, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Tyrol, the, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Alpines in, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;</li>
- <li>Dinaric race in, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;</li>
- <li>stature in, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Tyrolese, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>physical character of, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Tyrrhenians, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Ugrian language, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ukraine, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ultima Thule, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Umbrian language, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Umbrians, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Unit characters, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>intermixture of, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>;</li>
- <li>unchanging, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>–18, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Unitarian faith of the barbarians, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>United States of America, affected by immigration, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a> <em>et seq.</em>;
- <ul>
- <li>as a European colony, racially, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</li>
- <li>German and Irish immigrants in, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>;</li>
- <li>Indian element in, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</li>
- <li>Negroes of, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordic blood in the colonies, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>–85;</li>
- <li>race consciousness in, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>;</li>
- <li>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</li>
- <li>in the world war, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>;</li>
- <li><em>see also</em> America.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Upper Neolithic, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Upper Paleolithic, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>close of, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Upper Robenhausian, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ural mountains, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ural-Altaic speech, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Urmia, Lake, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Ussher, Archbishop, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Vagrancy, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Valais, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Vandal kingdom, destruction of, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>conquests, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Vandals, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>–177, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Africa, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>in Spain, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>–177, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Varangians, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Varus, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Vassalage, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Vedas, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>–259.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Veddahs, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Venethi, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Veneto, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Venezuela, population of, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Venice, Nordic aristocracy of, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Vikings, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>–207, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in America, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</li>
- <li><em>see also</em> Norse pirates.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Villein, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Virginia, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Visigoths, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Gaul, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>in Spain, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>kingdom of destroyed, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Vlachs, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>–246.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Volga river, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Voluntary childlessness, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Volunteer armies, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Wahlstatt, battle of, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Wales, Celtic language in, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Cymric language in, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>derivation of the name, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</li>
- <li>Goidelic language in, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>;</li>
- <li>Mediterraneans in, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_476'>476</span>Nordics in, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>racial elements and survivals in, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>–205.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Wallachia, Little and Great, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Wallachian, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Walloons, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>War and racial elements, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>effect of on populations, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>–187, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>–193, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>–198, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>;</li>
- <li>Great World War, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>–232.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Wars, European, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>–232;
- <ul>
- <li>losses from, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>–198;</li>
- <li>Nordic element in, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>;</li>
- <li>of the Roses, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li>Punic, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>;</li>
- <li>Servile, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>;</li>
- <li>Social, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Wealth, privilege of, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Weapons, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>–115, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>–121, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>–130, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Welsh, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>–178;
- <ul>
- <li>in Britain, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>;</li>
- <li>Round Barrow survivals among, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Wends, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>–143, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>increase of in east Germany, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>West Indian sugar planters, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>West Indies, Negroes in, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>West Prussia, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Western Empire, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Westphalia, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>White Huns, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>White race, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>White Sea, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Whites, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>–77;
- <ul>
- <li>in the Argentine, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>in Australia, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>;</li>
- <li>in Brazil, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>in China, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>in the East Indies, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>in India, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>in Jamaica, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>in Mexico, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Philippines, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>in New Zealand, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>;</li>
- <li><em>see also</em> Nordics, the Nordic race, and Teutons.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Women, lighter in pigmentation than men, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>more primitive, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</li>
- <li>social status of among the races, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Writing, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Wu-Suns, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Würm glaciation, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Würtemberg, Alpines in, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>–141;
- <ul>
- <li>loss of population in during the Thirty Years’ War, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c029'>Würtembergers, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>.</li>
- <li class='c002'>Zanzibar, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Zendavesta, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c029'>Zendic language, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes x-ebookmaker'>
-
-<div class='chapter ph2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
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-
- <ol class='ol_1 c002'>
- <li>Silently corrected obvious typographical errors and variations in spelling.
-
- </li>
- <li>Retained archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.
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- </ol>
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-</div>
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