1 Tawney, “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” i. 342; ii. 135, 230, 302, 363; “North Indian Notes and Queries,” iii. 13; Clouston, “Popular Tales,” i. 448.

2 Lâl Bihâri Dê, “Folk-tales,” 139.

3 Tawney, loc. cit., i. 499; ii. 276; Grimm, “Household Tales,” No. 33; i. 357; Knowles, “Folk-tales of Kashmîr,” 432; Campbell, “Santâl Folk-tales,” 22; Miss Cox, “Cinderella,” 496; Campbell, “Popular Tales,” i. 283.

4 Temple, “Wideawake Stories,” 74, 412; Lâl Bihâri Dê, loc. cit., 40, 106, 134, 138, 155, 210, 223; “Cinderella,” 526; “North Indian Notes and Queries,” iii. 13; Clouston, loc. cit., i. 223.

5 Campbell, “Notes,” 259.

6 “Rig Veda,” iv. 33; Datt, “History of Civilization,” i. 72 sq., 79; Monier-Williams, “Brâhmanism and Hinduism,” 329.

7 Wright, “History,” 165; “Iliad,” v. 265 sqq.; Tawney, “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” ii. 593.

8 Tawney, ibid., i. 130, 574, quoting Grimm, “Teutonic Mythology,” i. 392.

9 Campbell, “Popular Tales,” Introduction, lxxviii.

10 Miss Cox, “Cinderella,” 476; Clouston, “Popular Tales,” i. 373.

11 Clouston, loc. cit., i. 417; Grimm, “Household Tales,” ii. 479; Tawney, loc. cit., ii. 261; Clouston, ibid., 110, 218; Tawney, ibid., i. 13.

12 Rousselet, “India and its Native Princes,” 116.

13 “Indian Antiquary,” xi. 325 sq.; “Panjâb Notes and Queries,” ii. 2.

14 Campbell, “Notes,” 392.

15 “Germania,” 10.

16 Henderson, “Folk-lore of the Northern Counties,” 142.

17 Gubernatis, “Zoological Mythology,” i. 332.

18 “Panjâb Notes and Queries,” i. 113.

19 “Annals,” ii. 319.

20 Lubbock, “Origin of Civilization,” 275.

21 Campbell, “Notes,” 292.

22 Hislop, “Papers,” Appendix, i. iii.

23 Burton, “Arabian Nights,” ii. 340.

24 Knowles, “Folk-tales,” 90; Tawney, “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” ii. 168; Clouston, “Popular Tales,” i. 97; Grimm, “Household Tales,” ii. 419.

25 Tawney, loc. cit., i. 37, 78; ii. 28, 32; Grimm, loc. cit., ii. 404; Tawney, loc. cit., ii. 107.

26 Gubernatis, loc. cit., ii. 160.

27 Forsyth, “Highlands of Central Indian,” 278; Tod, “Annals,” ii. 660; Rowney, “Wild Tribes,” 139; Dalton, “Descriptive Ethnology,” 214; Frazer, “Golden Bough,” ii. 110.

28 Trumbull, “Blood Covenant,” 312; Tylor, “Primitive Culture,” i. 309; Sleeman, “Rambles,” i. 153 sqq.

29 “Folk-lore,” i. 169; Lyall, “Asiatic Studies,” 13; Spencer, “Principles of Sociology,” i. 323; Conway, “Demonology,” i. 313 sq.; Scott, “Letters on Demonology,” 174.

30 “Berâr Gazetteer,” 62; Wright, “History of Nepâl,” 38; Frazer, “Golden Bough,” ii. 101.

31 Dalton, loc. cit., 132, 133, 158, 214.

32 “Berâr Gazetteer,” 191 sq.; “Hoshangâbâd Settlement Report,” 255 sq.

33 See for example Knowles, “Kashmîr Folk-tales,” 3, 45, 46.

34 Dalton, loc. cit., 33.

35 Knowles, loc. cit., 47; Campbell, “Santâl Tales,” 18.

36 Wright, “History,” 169.

37 “Annals,” ii. 669.

38 Dalton, “Descriptive Ethnology,” 280.

39 “Rambles and Recollections,” i. 154 sqq.

40 “Zoological Mythology,” i. 160 sq.

41 Wright, “History,” 161; Tawney, “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” ii. 348 sq.

42 “North Indian Notes and Queries,” iii. 65.

43 Temple, “Wideawake Stories,” 116; Campbell, “Santâl Folk-tales,” 40; Clouston, “Popular Tales,” i. 146.

44 Sherring, “Sacred City,” 63, 65.

45 “Notes,” 276.

46 Cox, “Mythology of the Aryan Nations,” ii. 336.

47 “Journal Asiatic Society, Bengal,” lix. 212. The horror with which the Homeric Greeks regarded the eating of a corpse by dogs comes out very strongly in the Iliad.

48 “Indian Antiquary,” v. 358 sq.

49 “Original Inhabitants,” 157 sq.

50 “Archæological Reports,” xxiii. 26.

51 “North Indian Notes and Queries,” i. 118.

52 Campbell, “Notes,” 276 sq.

53 Wright, “History,” 39 sq.

54 Hislop, “Papers,” 6.

55 “Folk-lore,” iii. 127; “Panjâb Notes and Queries,” iii. 94, 148; iv. 46, 150, 173; “North Indian Notes and Queries,” iii. 18, 67; Knowles, “Folk-tales of Kashmîr,” 36, 429; Clouston, “Popular Tales,” ii. 166; Tawney, “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” ii. 90; “Gesta Romanorum,” Introd. xlii.

56 Conway, “Demonology,” i. 134; Gregor, “Folk-lore of North-East Scotland,” 126 sq.

57 “Remaines,” 53.

58 Risley, “Tribes and Castes,” i. 79 sq.

59 “Panjâb Notes and Queries,” i. 88.

60 “Journal Asiatic Society, Bengal,” 1847, p. 234.

61 “Household Tales,” ii. 444.

62 Atkinson, “Himâlayan Gazetteer,” ii. 329.

63 “Folk-lore,” iv. 351; “Gesta Romanorum,” 25.

64 Brand, “Observations,” 583.

65 Robertson-Smith, “Kinship,” 194.

66 “Demonology,” i. 122.

67 “North Indian Notes and Queries,” i. 15.

68 Brand, “Observations,” 785.

69 “Epigrams,” i. 6.

70 “Panjâb Notes and Queries,” iv. 131; Moorcroft, “Travels,” i. 22; “Journal Asiatic Society Bengal,” 1840, p. 572; “Aîn-i-Akbari,” i. 289.

71 Miss Cox, “Cinderella,” 473.

72 Muir, “Ancient Sanskrit Texts,” i. 24 sq.; iii. 166, 310 sq.; McLennan, “Fortnightly Review,” 1870, 198 sq.

73 Cox, “Mythology of the Aryan Nations,” i. 107, 437 sq.; ii. 49 sq.

74 Romesh Chandra Datt, “History of Indian Civilization,” i. 253 sq.

75 Bühler, “Sacred Laws,” Part i. 64, 119, note.

76 Rajendra Lâla Mitra, “Indo-Aryans,” ii. 134; Muir, “Ancient Sanskrit Texts,” i. 24 sqq.

77 Schliemann, “Ilios,” 112; Rawlinson, “Herodotus,” ii. 27 sq., 41; Ewald, “History of Israel,” ii. 4; Robertson-Smith, “Kinship,” 196; Frazer, “Golden Bough,” ii. 40.

78 Campbell, “Notes,” 285.

79 Gubernatis, “Zoological Mythology,” i. 3 sqq.; Cox, “Introduction,” 151 sqq.; Kuenen, “Religion of Israel,” i. 236 sq.; Goldziher, “Mythology among the Hebrews,” 226, 343; Wake, “Serpent-worship,” 35; Spencer, “Principles of Sociology,” i. 340; McLennan, “Fortnightly Review,” 1870, p. 199.

80 “Golden Bough,” ii. 60.

81 Hartland, “Legend of Perseus,” i. 158.

82 Sellon, “Memoirs Anthropological Society of London,” i. 328.

83 “Institutes,” xi. 60, 80.

84 Tawney, “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” i. 227.

85 “North Indian Notes and Queries,” iii. 215.

86 Atkinson, “Himâlayan Gazetteer,” ii. 914; “Râjputâna Gazetteer,” ii. 67.

87 “North Indian Notes and Queries,” iii. 39.

88 Miss Gordon-Cumming, “From the Hebrides to the Himâlaya,” i. 141.

89 Atkinson, loc. cit., ii. 771; Wright, “History of Nepâl,” 82.

90 “Panjâb Notes and Queries,” iii. 109.

91 “North Indian Notes and Queries,” i. 154.

92 Dyer, “Popular Customs,” 18.

93 Yule, “Marco Polo,” ii. 341.

94 Dalton, “Descriptive Ethnology,” 283.

95 “Indian Antiquary,” i. 348 sq.

96 Atkinson, “Himâlayan Gazetteer,” ii. 913.

97 Jarrett, “Aîn-i-Akbari,” ii. 348, quoting Erskine; “Babar,” Introduction, 47.

98 “Rambles,” i. 199 sqq.

99 “Central India,” i. 329, note; ii. 164.

100 Balfour, “Journal Asiatic Society Bengal,” xiii. N.S.; Gunthorpe, “Notes on Criminal Tribes of Berâr,” 36.

101 Ball, “Jungle Life,” 165; “North Indian Notes and Queries,” i. 60; “Calcutta Review,” lxxx. 53, 58.

102 Gubernatis, “Zoological Mythology,” i. 75.

103 “Notes,” 287.

104 Dalton, “Descriptive Ethnology,” 131.

105 “Golden Bough,” ii. 93.

106 Manu, “Institutes,” ii. 41.

107 Burton, “Arabian Nights,” ii. 508; Tawney, “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” i. 166; Clouston, “Popular Tales,” i.; “Gesta Romanorum,” Tale xviii.

108 Wright, “History,” 81.

109 Blochmann, “Aîn-i-Akbari,” i. 121.

110 Führer, “Monumental Antiquities,” 8, 73, 105, 188; Cunningham, “Archæological Reports,” i. 225.

111 Tawney, “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” i. 73, 177, 328 sq.; ii. 102, 215, 500, 540; Knowles, “Kashmîr Folk-tales,” 17.

112 Black, “Folk Medicine,” 152.

113 Führer, loc. cit., 161.

114 Campbell, “Notes,” 267.

115 Brand, “Observations,” 739.

116 “Panjâb Notes and Queries,” iv. 2.

117 Hunt, “Popular Romances,” 377.

118 For the crow in English folk-lore, see Henderson, “Folk-lore of the Northern Counties,” 126; Gregor, “Folk-lore of N.E. Scotland,” 135 sq.

119 Gubernatis, “Zoological Mythology,” ii. 253 sq.; “Panjâb Notes and Queries,” i. 27.

120 Tawney, “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” ii. 64, 73.

121 Balfour, “Journal Asiatic Society of Bengal,” N.S. xiii.

122 Monier-Williams, “Brâhmanism and Hinduism,” 301; Atkinson, “Himâlayan Gazetteer,” ii. 329.

123 “North Indian Notes and Queries,” i. 15.

124 Lady Wilde, “Legends,” 81 sq., 172; “Panjâb Notes and Queries,” iii. 24; Brand, “Observations,” 732; Henderson, “Folk-lore of the Northern Counties,” 239 sq.; Aubrey, “Remaines,” 197; “North Indian Notes and Queries,” ii. 215.

125 “Mythology of the Aryan Nations,” ii. 219 sq.

126 “Notes,” 264.

127 “Folk-lore,” iv. 350.

128 Grimm, “Teutonic Mythology,” iii. 977.

129 Leland, “Etruscan Roman Remains,” 354.

130 Robertson-Smith, “Kinship,” 196 sq.

131 “North Indian Notes and Queries,” i. 12, 42, 60; ii. 29; iii. 161; Grimm, “Household Tales, i. 367; ii. 428, 573.

132 McLennan, “Fortnightly Review,” vi. 582.

133 Knowles, “Kashmîr Folk-tales,” 449.

134 Brand, “Observations,” 699.

135 Rhys, “Lectures,” 175.

136 Ferguson, “History of Indian Architecture,” 54; Tennent, “Ceylon,” i. 484.

137 Gubernatis, “Zoological Mythology,” ii. 307 sqq.

138 Lady Wilde, “Legends,” 177.

139 Hislop, “Papers,” 6.

140 “North Indian Notes and Queries,” iii. 178.

141 Tawney, “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” ii. 105.

142 Brand, “Observations,” 701.

143 Leland, “Etruscan Roman Remains,” 272.

144 “Panjâb Notes and Queries,” iii. 81; “North Indian Notes and Queries,” iii. 162.

145 “Zoological Mythology,” i. 375.

146 Tawney, “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” ii. 18.

147 Temple, “Wideawake Stories,” 139, 205, 255 sqq.

148 “Folk-lore,” iii. 342.

149 “North Indian Notes and Queries,” i. 4, 38.

150 Rhys, “Lectures,” 553.

151 Lady Wilde, “Legends,” 238 sq.

152 Rousselet, “India and its Native Princes,” 402; “North Indian Notes and Queries,” i. 76; ii. 57, 93; iii. 130.

153 Atkinson, “Himâlayan Gazetteer,” ii. 380, 775.

154 Tawney, “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” i. 24, 207; ii. 599.

155 Knowles, “Folk-tales,” 27, 158.

156 Cox, “Mythology of the Aryan Nations,” i. 292, note; ii. 25 sq.

157 Hartland, “Science of Fairy Tales,” 65.

158 Buchanan, “Eastern India,” iii. 532.

159 Grimm, “Household Tales,” ii. 407.

160 Tawney, loc. cit., ii. 271.

161 “Gloucestershire Folk-lore,” 9.

162 Tawney, loc. cit., ii. 594; Grimm, loc. cit., i. 357.

163 Hunt, “Popular Romances,” 130.

164 “Panjâb Notes and Queries,” iii. 8.

165 Brand, “Observations,” 685.

166 “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” ii. 39.

167 Buchanan, “Eastern India,” ii. 157.

168 Dyer, “Popular Customs,” 270.