Periodical Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London Volume 4 (1866)
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Image 1 of Volume 4 (1866) 7gigtrgiglt414VZPf76 eLt 4A17t4W c1 4_4101314714ritirs12
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Image 2 of Volume 4 (1866) LIBRARY OF CONGRESS SMITHSONIAN DEPOSIT Chap Shelf Ezsc UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
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Image 3 of Volume 4 (1866) TRANSACTIONS OF THE ETHNOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON
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Image 5 of Volume 4 (1866) TRANSACTIONS OF THE ETHNOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON VOL IV NEW SERIES LONDON PUBLISHED FOR THE ETHNOLOGICAL SOCIETY By JOHN MURRAY ALBEMARLE STREET 1866
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Image 6 of Volume 4 (1866) LONDON T RICETARD3 37 GREAT QUEEN STUNT
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Image 7 of Volume 4 (1866) effpological otitfil of Sonbon FOR THE STUDY OF THE HUMAN RACE IN ALL ITS VARIETIES AND IN ALL THE PHASES OF ITS HISTORY AND PROGRESS OFFICERS AND COUNCIL FOR 18656 Vresibent JOHN…
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Image 9 of Volume 4 (1866) CONTENTS PAGE r On the supposed Stone Bronze and Iron Ages of Society By JORA CRAWFURD Esq FRS 1 ri Civilisation and Cerebral Development some Observations on the Influence of Civilisation on…
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Image 10 of Volume 4 (1866) Viii CONTENTS FAGE xv On the True Assignation of the Bronze Weapons etc sup posed to indicate a Bronze Age in Western and Northern Europe By THOMAS WRIGHT Esq MA FSA etc…
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Image 11 of Volume 4 (1866) TRANSACTIONS OF THE ETHNOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON 1 On the Supposed Stone Bronze and Iron Ages of Society By JOHN CRAWFORD ESQ FRS Read Nay 10th 1864 THE theory which supposes three…
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Image 12 of Volume 4 (1866) 2 J CRAWFURDStone Bronze and _Iron Ages islanders who had invented stone arms and tools and who were very far from being abject savages were unacquainted with pottery and in their ignorance…
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Image 13 of Volume 4 (1866) J CRAWFURDStone Bronze and _Iron Ages 3 had invented iron however simple the process and had forged tools and cutting implements of it in substitution of stone imple ments Even if malleable…
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Image 14 of Volume 4 (1866) 4 J CRAWFURDStone Bronze and Iron Ages agriculture and the useful arts with written language While the languages of the savages of Borneo are different from those of these two civilised nations…
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Image 15 of Volume 4 (1866) J ORAWFURDStone Bronze and Iron Ages 5 Among these relics I am not aware that a single tool or cutting instrument of bronze has ever been discovered Neither have there been of…
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Image 16 of Volume 4 (1866) 6 J CRAWFURDStone Bronze and Iron Ages ments would precede it After the Greek and Roman conquests iron which was the material at the time of the tools and cutting instruments of…
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Image 17 of Volume 4 (1866) J CRAWFURDStone Bronze and Iron Ages 7 materially differ at the present day from what they were in the time of Kmmpfer the cheapness of copper its long use and its intrinsic…
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Image 18 of Volume 4 (1866) 8 J CRAWFURDStone Bronze and Iron Ages of iron but no notice is taken of his sword When David col lected materials for the temple which his son and successor was to…
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Image 19 of Volume 4 (1866) J CRAWFURDStone Bronze and Iron Ages 9 rapid decomposition we have necessarily fewer relics of it Ac cording to Mr Layard it was indeed an export from Assyria to Egypt Iron and…
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Image 20 of Volume 4 (1866) 10 J ORAWFITRDStone Bronze and Iron Ages As to the races of man in Europe in so far at least as the more advanced of them are concerned the use of iron…
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Image 21 of Volume 4 (1866) J CRAWFURDStone Bronze and Iron Ages 11 party no other weapons than those of hard stone being left to the conquerors Then as the pristine people supposed by the theory to have…
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Image 22 of Volume 4 (1866) 12 J ORAWFURDStone Bronze and Iron Ages Germans call robbers Cimbri that they were some of those German nations who dwell by the Northern Sea The same writer describes the arms and…
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Image 23 of Volume 4 (1866) 13 IL Civilisation and Cerebral Development some Observations on the Influence of Civilisation upon the Development of the Brain in the Different Races of Man By ROBERT DuNri FRCS Read June 7th…
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Image 24 of Volume 4 (1866) 14 R DUNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development intellectual nature the mental differences which they exhibit being differences in degree and not of kind Now the antiquity of man since the publication of Sir…
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Image 25 of Volume 4 (1866) R DUNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development 15 dom That Alfouro woman with her flattened face transverse nostrils thick lips wide mouth projecting teeth eyes halfclosed by loose swollen upper eyelids ears circular pendulous…
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Image 26 of Volume 4 (1866) 16 R DuNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development Negros have the hearts and the consciences of man a moral and religious nature like our own and who can gainsay it 1 it may then…
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Image 27 of Volume 4 (1866) R DuNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development 17 records which we possess of the state of the world when the earth was first peopled shows that there existed a nomadic population who lived in…
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Image 28 of Volume 4 (1866) 18 R DUNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development peans For where civilisation is progressive under the exciting and stimulating influence of outward circumstances social status and intellectual culture there is increased activity among the…
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Image 29 of Volume 4 (1866) R DUNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development 19 of the whole brain and a special fulness in the intellectual and moral regions But as physiological psychologists are agreed that the Cerebrum or great hemispherical…
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Image 30 of Volume 4 (1866) 20 R DUNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development throughout the hemispheres of the brain and in their tripartite division into anterior middle and posterior lobes with Gratiolet three stages or planes of development 1…
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Image 31 of Volume 4 (1866) R DuNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development 21 Further and more fully to discuss these ascensive planes of cerebral development would here be out of place but I hope enough has been said to…
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Image 32 of Volume 4 (1866) 22 R DUNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development development which accord with and indeed are found to indicate and correlate corresponding differences in their psychical activities He dwells on the striking contrast which is…
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Image 33 of Volume 4 (1866) R DUNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development 23 also particularly described and carefully figured the brain of the Hottentot Venus and his remarks respecting it are exceedingly important and instructive The convolutions of the…
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Image 34 of Volume 4 (1866) 21 R DUNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development ward to the microscopical examination of the ultimate structure of the vesicular substance or grey matter of the brain in the typical races as pregnant with…
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Image 35 of Volume 4 (1866) R DUNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development 25 development is equally as true of the brain as it is of any other of our bodily organs so that in the changing forms of the…
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Image 36 of Volume 4 (1866) 26 R DUNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development call to mind how the Negroes have been kept in ignorance and subjugated to the bondage of slavery in the Southern States and how in the…
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Image 37 of Volume 4 (1866) It DuNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development 27 place in instances in which although there has been no intermix ture of European blood the influence of a higher civilisation has been powerfully exercised for…
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Image 38 of Volume 4 (1866) 28 R DUNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development and malariousof degradation of type It has been well ob served by our friend Mr Burke that Negro Africa is a large ethnic centre in which…
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Image 39 of Volume 4 (1866) R DUNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development 29 still well populated A stream of life still pours over the mountain wall and the sources of this stream must be very abundant Of this degraded…
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Image 40 of Volume 4 (1866) 30 IL DUNNCivilisation and Cerebral Development ward circumstances and social states The Turks the Magyars and the Bosjesmans present examples of such and cases in point The Turks are an eastern people…
About this Item
Title
- Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London
Names
- Ethnological Society of London
Created / Published
- London : for the Ethnological Society by J. Murray, 1861-1869.
Headings
- - Ethnology--Periodicals
- - Ethnologie--Périodiques
- - Ethnology
- - Etnografie
Genre
- rare books
- Periodicals
Notes
- - New ser., vol. 1 (1861)-new ser., vol. 7 (1869).
- - Journal of the Ethnological Society of London (1869) 1368-0374 (DLC)sn 87022076 (OCoLC)14367961
Medium
- 7 volumes : illustrations ; 23 cm
Call Number/Physical Location
- GN2 .E85
Digital Id
Library of Congress Control Number
- 2005252421
OCLC Number
- 1568318
ISSN Number
- 1368-0366
Online Format
- image
- online text