The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Band 1Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 1872 Includes articles on issues of worldwide anthropological interest. |
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Seite 32
... Celtic and Teutonic families of Europe . It will be well , indeed , if we should , even by remote approximation ... Celts of Gaul , and , I may add , of Britain , as compared with other Aryan peoples of Europe . They are shut in from ...
... Celtic and Teutonic families of Europe . It will be well , indeed , if we should , even by remote approximation ... Celts of Gaul , and , I may add , of Britain , as compared with other Aryan peoples of Europe . They are shut in from ...
Seite 33
... Celtic area of the west , it seems , in conjunction with Britain , to have suffered from the collapse of energy and vigour , which in due sequence succeeded that period of greatness during which Brennus marched on Rome . Not that we ...
... Celtic area of the west , it seems , in conjunction with Britain , to have suffered from the collapse of energy and vigour , which in due sequence succeeded that period of greatness during which Brennus marched on Rome . Not that we ...
Seite 34
... Celtic area by Teutonic conquerors , however effective at the moment , can only be temporary in most of its effects ; the sole permanent result apparently obtain- able from the colonial extension of an alien people over a foreign area ...
... Celtic area by Teutonic conquerors , however effective at the moment , can only be temporary in most of its effects ; the sole permanent result apparently obtain- able from the colonial extension of an alien people over a foreign area ...
Seite 35
... Celtic , like the Classic area , is duplex and bipolar ; the French , in this epicycle of a previous era , representing the Greeks , while conversely the English are a maritime and insular reproduction of the Romans . It is doubtful ...
... Celtic , like the Classic area , is duplex and bipolar ; the French , in this epicycle of a previous era , representing the Greeks , while conversely the English are a maritime and insular reproduction of the Romans . It is doubtful ...
Seite 36
... Celtic type of character is perceptible in the nobility , and more especially what we should call the gentry , of France . The Teutonic element in the south and centre was becoming absorbed , and as a result feudalism disappeared , and ...
... Celtic type of character is perceptible in the nobility , and more especially what we should call the gentry , of France . The Teutonic element in the south and centre was becoming absorbed , and as a result feudalism disappeared , and ...
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Adamites Africa ancient animals Anthropological appears Arabs archæologists Aryan Atlantean Australian avenue belong bones brachycephalic brain called cave Celtic Celts character Chinese circle civilisation common coronal suture cromlech customs Dartmoor derived dialects distinct dolichocephalic dolmens Ethnological evidence existence fact father father's brother feet feminine flint Gaelic Gaul gender grandson gravel ground head Hottentot human implements India inhabitants Kalmucks Kazaks Khan Khasi Kimmerian kistvaen languages latter lines male masculine means megalithic menhirs ment Merivale Bridge Mohammedans monuments mother native nature nephew Nogai nouns Nyamwezi original Panthays paper period plural portion prefix present probably pronouns race regard remains remarkable river Roman Semitic sex-denoting side similar singular Sir John Lubbock skull Society specimens spirits stones suffixes supposed suture Swahili Tehuelches term termination Teutonic tion traces tribes tumuli Turanian Turks whilst word
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 261 - It is true that a little philosophy inclineth man's mind to atheism, but depth in philosophy bringeth men's minds about to religion. For, while the mind of man looketh upon second causes scattered, it may sometimes rest in them and go no further, but, when it beholdeth the chain of them confederate and linked together, it must needs fly to Providence and Deity.
Seite 224 - Ye shall not round the corners of your heads, neither shalt thou mar the corners of thy beard. 28 Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead, nor print any marks upon you : I am the LORD.
Seite 42 - A glance at the names of a few of the great organizations instituted in different parts of the world at the close of the last and beginning of the present century...
Seite 372 - President, in the Chair. The Minutes of the last General Meeting were read and confirmed. The following Annual Report of the Council was then read : — ANNUAL REPORT OF THE COUNCIL.
Seite 273 - Meeting. It has therefore become necessary, in order to give an opportunity to the Committees of doing justice to the several communications, that each Author should prepare an Abstract of his Memoir, of a length suitable for insertion in the published Transactions of the Association, and that...
Seite 319 - Proceedings of the Geological and Polytechnic Society of the West Riding of Yorkshire.
Seite 184 - Sheridan once said of some speech in his acute, sarcastic way, that " it contained a great deal both of what was new and what was true : but that unfortunately what was new was not true, and what was true was not new.
Seite xcvi - De la Beche describes Dartmoor as " an elevated mass of land, of an irregular form, broken into numerous minor hills, many crowned by groups of picturesque rocks, provincially termed tors ; and, for the most part, presenting a wild mixture of heath, bog, rocks, and rapid streams.
Seite xxxiv - A CATALOGUE OF MAPS OF THE BRITISH POSSESSIONS IN INDIA. AND OTHER PARTS OF ASIA. Published by Order of Her Majesty's Secretary of State for India in Council. Royal 8vo, sewed, is. A continuation of the above, sewed, price 6d., is now ready. ^- Messrs. Henry S. King &
Seite 262 - ... and that he now limits it to " adaptive changes of structure". Mr. Wright states that the only difference, on purely scientific grounds, between the views of Mr. Darwin and those of Mr. Mivart, who is himself an evolutionist, is in regard to the extent to which the process of natural selection has been effective in the modifications of species. He adds that " Mr. Darwin himself, from the very nature of the process, has never supposed for it, as a cause, any other than a co-ordinate place among...