Types of mankind or, Ethnological researches : based upon the ancient monuments, paintings, sculptures, and crania of races, and upon their natural, geographical, philological and Biblical history, illustrated by selections from the inedited papers of Samuel George Morton and by additional contributions from L. Agassiz; W. Usher; and H. S. Patterson / by J. C. Nott, and Geo. R. Gliddon.
- Josiah C. Nott
- Date:
- 1854
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Types of mankind or, Ethnological researches : based upon the ancient monuments, paintings, sculptures, and crania of races, and upon their natural, geographical, philological and Biblical history, illustrated by selections from the inedited papers of Samuel George Morton and by additional contributions from L. Agassiz; W. Usher; and H. S. Patterson / by J. C. Nott, and Geo. R. Gliddon. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by The University of Leeds Library. The original may be consulted at The University of Leeds Library.
781/796 (page 729)
![No. (of Notes, ilc.) 1838, pp. 71-7; and Inscriptions Him- yariques, pp. 34, 67-9.— Pauthier, Chine, pp. 94-100, notes.—D'Herbelot, Bibliotheque Orientale, voce Salo- mon, and Thahamurath. — De Wette, ii. pp. 248-65.—Forster, Geog., i. pp. 33-8, and Maps. — Bochart, pp. 146-56. 601 KAUILaH. Bochart,pp. 161-3.—Forster, i. pp. 9, 38, 54. 602 SaBTVaH. Lenormant, Conrs, pp. 237-8. — Strabo, xvi. p. 771, Fr. Transl.— Jomard, Arabie, pp. 373, 389-90.— Pliny, vi. 32. —Volney, iv. p. 232.— Fresnel, Inscrip. Himyar., pp. 51-2. — Forster, Geog., i. pp. 57-8. — Bochart, pp. 252-4. 603 RAaMaH. Volney, iv. p. 235.—Forster, i. pp. 59-76; ii. 223-7. —Fresnel, 4me et 5me Lettres, 1838.—Wellsted, Trav. in Arabia, 1838, ii. p. 430 —Burck- hardt, Arabia, ii. p. 385. — Bochart, p. 247. 604 SaBT«eKA. References as above, No. 603. 605 SseBA. Munk, Palestine, p. 438, on Ezra.1'—De Wette, ii. pp. 47-8.— Forster, ii. pp. 323-4 ; and i. pp. 71-3. — Bochart, pp. 249-51. 606 DeDaN. Bochart, p. 248.—Forster, i. 38; and Maps. — Letronne, Venus Ange- rone, Mem. et Doc, Rev. Archeol., 1849, p. 277.—Glaire, Les Livres Saints venges, Paris, 1845, passim. — Rev. Sidney Smith, Elementary Sketches of Moral Philos., New York ed., 1850; p. 254.—Strauss, Vie de Jesus, trad. Littre, Paris, 1839 ; Preface, p. 8. 607 NiMRoD. Vide-W. W.'s profound articles Scripture, and Verse, in Kitto, ii. pp. 717, 910.— [For hallucinations on Nimrod, see Anc. Univ. Hist., i. p. 275, seq.; Faber, Origin of Pagan Idolatry, and Bryant, Anc, Mythology, passim ; Hales, Analysis of Chron., i. pp. 358-9, and ii.] Nimrod, a Dis- course on certain passages of History and Fable. London, 1829. printed for Richard Priestley. — Higgins, Anaca- lypsis, London, 1836, i. p. 6.—Wiseman, Lectures, i. p. 37.—Birch, Two Egypt. Cartouches, 1846, pp. 168-70.—Lepsius, Chron. der jEgvp., i. p. 223. — Bunsen, iEgyptens Stel'le, iii. p. 133. — Sharpe, in Bonomi's Nineveh, 1852, pp. 69-78. —Rawlinson, Commentary, pp. 4, 6, 7, 22.—Layard, Babylon, pp. 33, 123 —De Saulcy, Dead Sea, ii. p. 544.—D'Herbe- lot, voce Nimrod; and Ouseley, Oriental Collections, ii. p. 375. — Jose- phus, Antiq. i. 4. 21. 608-609 De Sola, Lindenthal, and Raphall, Scriptures in Heb. and English; Lon- don, 1846; p. 40, notes. — Glaire, Liv. Sts. venges, i. pp. 313-20.—Rawlinson, Commentary, p. 14. —Lanci, Paralipo- meni, ii. parte 8va. — Gesenius, in De Wette, i. p. 435.—Meyer, Hebraisches Wurzel- Worterbuch ; cited by Bunsen, Disc, on Ethnol.,1847, p. 273.—D' Olivet, Langue Hebraique restituee, 1815; pp. 281, 343. —Bochart, 256-60. £•10 Gliddon, MS. Remarks on the Intro- duction of Camels and Dromedaries, 92 No. (of Notes, <fc.) for Army-Transportation, Carriage of Mails, and Military Field-service, into the States and Territories lying south and west of the Mississippi, between the Atlantic and Pacific coasts—pre- sented to the War-department, Wash- ington, Oct. 1851. As I intend to pub- lish an entire account of this affair for public edification ere long, it is sufficient now to determine the very recent intro- duction of the Arabian camel into Africa by quoting Humboldt (Aspects of Nature, p. 71); Ritter (Das Kameel, in Asien, viii. pp. 755-9); Procopius (Bello Vandalico, i. 8 ; ii. 11) ;r Corippus (iv. 598-9); and Bodichon, Etudes sur I'Algerie, pp. 62-3.—G. R. G. 611 LUDIM. Bochart, pp. 299-310. — Gra- berg de Hemso, Marocco, pp. 69, 246, 251, seq.—Castiglione, Recherches sur les Berberes Atlantiques, Milan, 1846; pp. 89, 100-1.—Lacroix, Numidie, p. 4. — D'Avezac, Afrique Anc, p. 28.— Yanoski, L'Afrique Byzantine, pp. 93, 99. — Ebn-Khaledoon, Fee ahbar el- Berber, 3d book; transl. Schulz, in Jour. Asiat., 1828; pp. 140-1.—Asiatic Miscellany, p. 148. — Marmol, op. cit., trad. Perrot, 1667, i. p. 68. —Leo Afri- canus (Hassan ebn Mohammed el Gharnritee) Africa? Descriptione, 1556, p. 5. — Bertholet, Guanches, Mem. Soc. Ethnol., Paris, 1841; Part i., pp. 130-46. Agassiz, Diversity of Origin of Human Races; Christian Examiner, Boston, July, 1850, p. 16.—Dureau de la Malle, Carthage, pp. 1-3, 13. —Gibbon, Mil- man's, viii., pp. 227-8.— Bodichon, Etudes, pp. 32, 64, 103, 109. —Quatre- mere, 1st art. on Hitzig's Philistaer; Jour, des Savans, 1846, May ; pp. 260, 266: — [That these views upon the Ludim are new, the reader can per- ceive by opening Munk (Palestine, p. 432); Lenormant (Cours, p. 244); Cahen (Genese i. pp. 27, 184); Kitto (Cyclop., pp. 397-8); and all English commen- tators.] 612 AoNaMIM. Forster, i. pp. 56-9.—De Saulcy, Dead Sea, 1853; i. p. 64; ii. p. 837.—Birch, Hieratic Canon of Turin, p. 6. — Anthon, Class. Diet., p. 872.— Bochart, p. 322. 613 LeHaBIM. Bochart, p. 316.— Anthon, Anc. and Mod. Geog., pp. 708, 749.— D'Avezac, Afrique, pp. 4, 28, 64-9.— Champollion, fig. s. 1. Phar., ii. p. 363. — Parthey, Vocab. Copt., pp. 497, 530. — Gliddon, Otia, p. 131. 614 NiP7<aiaT<uKAIM. Bochart, pp. 317-21. Otia, pp. 9, 16, 133, 136.—Nott, Bibl. and Phys. Hist., pp. 144-5.— Champol- lion, op. cit., i. p. 55, ii. pp. 5, 31, 144 seq.— Parthey, pp. 110, 506, 530.— Herod., ii., § 18.—Champollion,Lettres, p. 124 ; and the hieroglyphics in Gram., pp. 169, 363, 406; Diet., pp. 339, 341. — Peyron, Gram. Ling. Coptica?, pp. 30, 36-8.— Hengstenberg, p. 211 ; and Gliddon, Chapters, p. 41.—Lenormant, Cours, pp. 235, 244-5.—Brugsch, Scrip- tura iEgyptiorum Demotica, p 25.—De Saulcy, Lettre a M. Guigniaut, p. 18.— Lepsius, Lettre a M. Rosellini, p. 66.-](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21510404_0783.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)