G. B. ii. 13.
409
G. B. iii. 327.
410
Compare i. 232.
411
G. B. i. 5.
412
Strabo, v. 3, 12.
413
Spencer and Gillen, pp. 134-135.
414
Folk Lore, March 1901, p. 21. Presidential address.
415
Callaway, Religion of the Amazulu, p. 10 1868.
416
Primitive Culture, ii. pp. 312, 313, 1873.
417
Callaway, p. 29.
418
Callaway, p. 41; Folk Lore, ut supra, p. 23.
419
Callaway, p. 10, note 25.
420
Ibid. p. 21.
421
Ibid. p. 17.
422
Ibid. pp. 26, 27.
423
Umdabuko is derived from ukadabuka, to be broken off, a word implying the pre-existence of something from which the division took place. Callaway, i. note 3, 50, note 95. It is usually a vaguely metaphysical term.
424
Callaway, pp. 52, 53.
425
Waitz, Anthropologie, i. 167.
426
Ibid. p. 59, and note 12.
427
Ibid. 61, and note 17, 9, and note 22.
428
Callaway, 63, and note 23.
429
Ibid. p. 65.
430
Waitz, Anthropologie, pp. 105, 106.
431
Missionary Travels, p. 158.
432
Folk Lore, March 1901, pp. 26, 27.
433