Page:Folk-lore - A Quarterly Review. Volume 18, 1907.djvu/534

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488

Index.

Folklore of Aristotle, by T. E. Lones, 212-5; folktales, 17, 193; Homeric Folk-Lore, by W. Crooke, 361 ; proverbs, 19, 21, 226 ; revenge image, 67 ; taboos, jataka parallels to, 22

Greek islands: ^see ahoQoz; Cyclades; Kephalos ; and Lemnos) ; Folk- Medicine, Nurser}'-Lore, etc. from the ^gean Islands, by W. R. Paton, 329-32

Green : bird causes rabies, Greek islands, 329 ; knight, in folktale, 52, 304 ; plate in charm for child, Seivia, 256

Greenland : {see also Eskimo) ; dead not removed through door, 373 ; mourning custom, 400

Gretford : mysteriously-disturbed cof- fins, 387-8

Grey mullet : in charm to increase mother's milk, Greek islands, 330

Grimsby : origin of name, 353

Grisons, Canton of, see Davos Platz

Grottoes, see Caves

Guanches : bathing rite, 264

Guernsey : guy burnt on last night of year, 449

Guiana : taboos at puberty, 408

Guinea, South : bathing rite, 264

Guiromelans, King, see King Guiro- melans

Guy Fawkes Day : Guernsey, 449-50; Lincolnshire, 438, 450

Gwalchmai, see Gavvain

Gwen ap Nii3 as king of Hades, 140

Gwydion the enchanter, 145-6, 152-3

Gwydion, god of light, 143

Gypsies, see Gipsies

Haarlem : string game, 328

Haddon, Prof. A. C; Burial of Ampu- tated Limbs, 216 ; review by, — Pitt Rivers' The Evolution of Ct/llure and Other Essays, 217-20

Hades : Avallac, kint; and country, (Welsh), 32 ; The Development of the Idea of Hades in Celtic Litera- ture, by Miss E. Hull, i, 7, 121-65, 339-40, 445-8; visits to Other- World, Highlands, 26, Ireland, 27

Hades the deity, see Pluto

Hair : conger's blood promotesgrowth, Greek inlands, 330 ; parted only by married women, Gallas, 324 ; women's carefully covered, Palestine Jews, 71

Hall, H. R. : review by, — Wiede- mann's Altcigyptische Sagen und Alarchen, 1 1 6-8 Halle : babies come from wells, 267-8 Hallowe'en : bobbing for apples, Ros- i common, 437-8 ; cake, Roscommon, I 437 ; circuiting fields with torches, Braemar, 85 ; divination on, Ros- common, 438 ; fairies blight berries on, Roscommon, 437 ; practical joking on, Roscommon, 438 Hamath : libation custom, 67 Hamilcar, burning of son of, 221 Hammer of Thor a substitute for stone,

137 Hampshire, see New Forest Hand : amulet against evil eye, Italy, 189 ; signed on Moslem and Jewish houses, Palestine, 66-7 Hanover, see Goslar Hare: in animal cycle, China, 1 19; eggs sought, Easter, Penn., 35,7 ; in folktale, Africa, 239-40 ; in moon, India, 21 Harisu, All Father, Elema, 468 Harpanahalli Taluq, see Mailar Lin-

gappa Harranians : fasts, ceremonial, 414-8 Harrison, Mrs. M. C. : Serpent-Pro- cession at Cocullo, 1 87- 1 91 {plates) Hartland, E. S. : A Brittany Marriage Custom, 448-9 ; Travel Notes in South Africa ; a Correction, 445 ; reviews by, — Durkheim's L' Annie Sociologique, 95-102, 460-6 ; Sebil- lot's l.e Folk-lore de France, II0-2 ; Thomas' Kinship Organisations and Group Marriage in Australia, 105- 10 ; Thomas' Natives of Australia, 105-6 ; Werner's The Natives of British Central Africa, 243-5 '■> Tevons' Religion in Evolution,

336-7

Harvest customs and beliefs : ( 'ee also Corn spirits, vegetation souls, and the like) ; exchanging wives, Besisi, 455 5 Po'^ feast, India, 334

Hassa, see Astragali

Haunted springs, Palestine, 55-6

Haussa : religious society of, Algiers, 246

Haussmann, W. A. : Folktale Wan- ted, 93-4

" Hava-mal " verses, 222, 224

Haws : blighted by fairies on Hal- lowe'en, Roscommon, 437

Hays of Errol cut mistletoe, 26