(Unless otherwise specified, entries from pp. 1 to 225 refer to Egypt; pp. 229 to 379 to Babylonia; and those in Vol. II. pp. 1 to 383 to China.)
Aah-hotep, Queen, 403, 406 n. Aahmes, founder of 17th Dyn., 119. Aahmes, "Beautiful Companion of," her mummy discovered, 120. Aahu, the fields of, 151, 152. Abbott papyrus, 59, 165. Abijatha, coins of King, 508. Abraham and the kings, verisimili- tude of the story of, 274. Abstract deities worshipped under 6th Dyn., 153. Abulfeda, ii. 217.
Abundance and industry associated in Egypt, 151.
Abydos, ancient holy city of, 19, 21. Abyssinia, Sabæan inscriptions from, 519.
Accepting and establishing as wife, 206.
Acci, foster-father of Sargon, 275. Accumulation of wealth discouraged in Egypt, 161.
Acquired property virtually secured to children in Egypt, 216. Acquisitions of abdicated father go to family funds, 458. Acquisitions of junior members of
tarwads, how disposed of, 576. Acquisitions, Thesawaleme on, 559. Action by royal scribe against priest of Mut, 60.
Actresses and courtezans, ii. 220. Ada, grant of lands confiscated from, 344.
Adinna, diminutive of Ada, 429. Adopted sons of eunuchs, ii. 137. Adoption "by ten hands" in Malabar, 548. Adoption, deed of, in Egypt, 219; deeds of, in Babylonia, 363, 370, 378; Gortyn laws on, 481. Adulteration forbidden in Chow Li, ii. 56; by trade guilds, 320; penal- ties for, 367.
Adumilik, grandfather of Agukakrime, 286.
Advance of rent like Malabar loan and lease, ii. 358.
Ælius Gallus, Arabian expedition of, 498.
Æthalians, 478, 479.
Agade, Sargon, king of, 256. Agate found at Nipur, 250.
Age for marriage in ancient China, ii.
Agency, doctrine of, in Babylonia, 351. Agglomeration of land in China, ii.
114, 151; under the Mongols, 229; laws in restraint of, 363. Agglomerators, struggle between the peasantry and, ii. 252.
Agrarian innovations of state of T'sin, ii. 98-100; extended to rest of empire, 101.
Agrarian legislation of T'sin and Wei, ii. 126.
Agreement to cultivate, temp. Ptolemy Euergetes, 189.
Agricultural imagery in the Ritual, 151. Agricultural interest, rate of, in Egypt and Babylonia, 193, 332-4. 'Agricultural Precepts" of ancient Babylonia, 335-
Agricultural produce, rate of, per head in China and France, ii. 305, 306. Agriculture and manufactures, com- bination of, ii. 304-7.
Agriculture, Carthaginian treatises on, 408, 409.
Agriculturist free to migrate, ii. 56. Agu, the Great or elder, 286.
Agu-amir or Agu-a-shi, Agukakrime descended from, 287. Agukakrime, inscription of, 286. Ahaz, king of Judah, 305.
Ahmed (Achmath or Ahama), Kubla's finance minister, ii. 225, 227.
Ahmes, scribe, accused of not having
apprentice taught, 106. Ahouit and ahouiti, antiquity and meaning of terms, 140. Aiklon in Sparta, 470. Akar-sallu, battle between Kardunias and Assyria at, 288.
Akbar, Mahomedan merchant at court of, on China, ii. 269. Akhir el Benat, "Defender of the village maiden," 531.
Akkad - Northern and Central Baby- lonia, 264.
Akkad to destroy Kutu, Lullubu and
Sutu, etc., 285. Akkadian and Chinese roots, Mr.
Ball's comparison of, ii. 480-7. Akko, murder of Babylonians at, com-
plained of to Egyptian king, 292. Akouta, prince of the Kin, ii. 172. Aksum, advanced agriculture around, 510; decoration of monoliths at, 511.
Akurga, king and patesi, 262, 263. Alabaster bas-reliefs, crude brick walls lined with, 249.
Alabaster statue of nomarch dragged with ropes, 102.
Alala, the eagle, beloved of Istar, 250. Alambra, necropolis of, 405. Alarodian and Hamitic civilization,
common points of, 424. Alarodian, term for certain archaic European stocks, 384. Alashan, heat and drought in, ii. 4. Alasia, king of, untranslated letter
Albanians, ancient and modern, 456. Alexander and the Rhodians, 442. Allotments, village, in China, ii. 45. Alman, land of, 286.
Al-Mukarram, son of Lady Asma, 522. Alphabet of Lemnos inscription, 418. Alusharshid dedicates spoils of Elam to Bel, 254.
Amanum, mountain of cedars, 269. Amar-muballit, father of Hammurabi, 280. Amasis (Aahmes), anecdote concern-
ing, 47; priest's son dispossessed by, 53; endows his mercenaries with temple lands, 61 ; mother of, 120; Greek mercenaries of, 134; secularization of temple lands, 179; alliance with Lydia, 317. Amathus, tombs at, 405. Amazons, legends of, and localities assigned to, 454, 455. Ambattha Sutta quoted, 108. Amber, early trade in, 401. Amen, inscription of, 84, 96, 112.
Amenemhat I., Instructions of, 78; disturbed reign of, 119.
Amenemhat III., Hammamat quarry- men temp., 110.
Amenemhat IV., married and reigned with his sister, 119.
Amenemhat, 12th Dyn., stele of Prince, 160.
Amenemheb, general of Thothmes III., on his troops, 142. Amenhotep I. reigns with his mother and marries his sister, 119; ad- dressed as son-in-law of Tushratta,
293. Amenhotep III., Semitic wife of, 120;
Nimmuriya of cuneiform corre- spondence, 292; dispute about dowry of Babylonian princess with, 294.
Amenhotep IV., Napkhururiya of cuneiform correspondence, 292; letter from Tushratta to, 293. Amenhotep appealed to by a workman about a house, 59, 186; called "king of the city," 59.
Amenhotep, architect of statue of Memnon," 102; surnamed the Wise, temple of Kak founded by,
Amenhotep,chief priest of Amon under Rameses III., 178.
Amenophis, see Amenhotep. Amenophis the scribe, author of Table of precedence, 76.
Amenti, the, 48, 50, 151. Amherst, embassy of Lord, ii. 289. Amiaud on comparative chronology of Egypt and Babylonia, 270.
Ammiditana, contract tablets of, 284. Ammizadugga, contract tablets of, 284. Amon, hymn to, 51, 57; of Thebes
called suten, not erpa, 117; patron of 4 nomes, 150.
Ampère on Mehemet Ali, 75; on caste in Egypt, 126. Amphictyonic body, 422, 423. Amraphel identified with father of Hammurabi, 258.
Amten, 4th Dyn., officer of Senoferu, 49, 123, 140.
Amu (Syrians) in wall paintings at
Amusements, modern Chinese, ii. 381. Amyot's memoir on interest in China,
184, ii. 323; on Chinese meaning of tributary, 130; on credit of Mantchu soldiery, 279; on family intercourse, 295; on tenancy in China, 358.
Anaia, or "protection," of Kabyle tribes, 536.
Ana-ittisu tablets, 367. Analects, Confucian, ii. 43. Anandravan, Nair "next relation," 556. Anarchy, preached by Chuang-tze, ii. 93, 94.
Anatomical treatise translated into Mantchu, ii. 280.
Ancestor," slave claims to be son of an, 357.
Ancestor worship in China, 152, 154. Ancestral halls and burial grounds of great families, ii. 360.
Ancestral property, Gortyn code on sale of, 481; Spartan law against sale of, 485.
"Ancestral usage" of Rhodians to support the poor, 441.
Ancient deeds with more ancient seals, ii. 359.
Ancient Empire, religious feeling during, 170; six dynasties of, ii. 408.
Ancient kingdoms of South Arabia, 496.
Ancient laws of Ireland on stock farming, 135.
Andorre, duration of families in, 213. Andreia, common meals in Crete called, 471.
Andrew, Bishop of Zayton (Chinchow), ii. 231.
Anglo-Saxon approach to Welsh mort- gage, ii. 418.
Ani, maxims of scribe, 46, 52, 77, 81, 88, 112, 144.
Animal worship in Egypt, 145; faint
traces of, in China, 148, ii. 37; not confounded with ancestor, 147. Animals, human qualities idealized in,
146; feeding the sacred, in Egypt, 148; Lady Duff Gordon on, 149; penalties for neglect of imperial,
Anna or Anu, the sky god, 239. Annals of the Bamboo Books, ii. 28; 477.
Annals record the name of leading scholars in examination lists, ii. 209.
Annanadi Anja-nadi, or five rivers, 546.
Annual tenancy of cultivators, 341, 345.
Annunaki, spirits of earth, 233. Anson, Sir George, in the China seas, ii. 272, 288.
Antef, 11th Dynasty poem of, 122. Anti-Buddhist edicts and memorials, ii. 125, 145-9.
Antichresis, origin of, in Babylonia and Egypt, 183.
Antichresis tacita, ii. 146; among the
Antichretic mortgages, earliest example of, 322, 331; terms of various, 340, 355, 356; perhaps referred to in inscription of Halicarnassus, 436; forbidden by Georgian code, 459; Syro-Roman code on, 490; developed into rent in feudal state, 572; the only kind lawful in China, ii. 362; see also Welsh mortgages and vifgage.
Anti-Christian edicts and memorials, ii. 281.
Antidamas, description of, 408. Anti-foreign, conservative feeling of Chinese undergraduates, ii. 380. Anti-Malthusianism in ancient Egypt, 71.
Antiquity of written deeds in Baby- lonia, 191.
Antonia, wife of Pythodorus, 439. Anubis called Chief of the Thirty, 56. Anzan, country of Cyrus, 23; nucleus of Persian kingdom, 318. Appeals, system of judicial, ii. 375. Appointing a successor to the family," ii. 345.
Apprentices, number of, limited by trade guilds, ii. 319.
Apprenticeship in ancient Egypt, 106, 107; of slaves, 358. Apries, related to
Arab princess and gods restored by Esarhaddon, 313; war maiden, 529,531; Amazons, 528, 529; trade with Southern China, ii. 215; tra- vellers in China, ii. 140–142. Arabia Felix, on the lucky (right) side,
266; date of its prosperity, 511. Arabia, first settlements in South, 270. Arabian campaigns of Tiglath-
pileser III., 306; Arabian and Chinese conservatism, 496; Ara- bian monarchies, character of, 502; Arabian campaigns of Se- nacherib, Esarhaddon, and As- surbanipal, 511.
Arable land contrasted in Babylonian inscriptions with towns, 324. Arabs taught to take "squeezes" of inscriptions, 510; world-wide wanderings of, ii. 236.
Arad Samas appears to marry his sisters, 369.
Arad Ulmassitu appears as landlord and tenant, 336.
Aradus, walls of, 405.
Arch, not really understood in Assyria,
Archaic art, mannerisms of, 404; usages
found on same lines as archaic monuments, 416.
Archaic customs, evidence of, 383. Archæological discoveries, bearing of
recent, 383; evidence of Leuco- Syrian influence on Greeks, 415. Archbishop of Tournon, mission of, ii. 278.
Archery and warlike arts, examina- tions in, ii. 212. Architect, office of, 53; architect and builders in Egypt, 101; architect to Amenhotep, III; inscription of twin brothers, 119. Architecture of Babylonia and Assyria,
Ardys, son of Gyges, acknowledges supremacy of Assurbanipal, 311. Area of town lots, how measured, 354. Argistis, king of Armenia, conquers Hittite country, 302.
Aristotle on possessions, I; Aristotle
and Kallisthenes on Babylonian chronology, 256; his description of Carthaginian constitution, 391; on Locri, 417; on laws of Cha- rondas, 450.
Arithmetical calculations of Egyptian scribes, 54. Armanakarsalu, 289.
Armenia submits to Assurnasirabal, 298; Assyrian campaigns in, 301- 305; Sargon's campaigns against, 312. Armenian kings, list of, 302; Ar- menian succession, laws of Jus- tinian on, 559; virgins dedicated to the temple, 457.
Armenians, photographs of modern,
Army, payment of Chinese, ii. 152 n. Arsapi? Reseph, letter in? Hittite, by king of, 293.
Art, early Egyptian and Babylonian, compared, 257; of Sargon, archaic, 266; of South Arabia, 509. Artesian well in Phoenicia, 406. Artizans, work of the, ii. 60-62. Arverni, Macedonian coins copied by, 402.
Asaba, those who go to battle together, 524.
Asaris, villain in Story of the Peasant, 86. Asb'en, men of, join their wives' tribes, 539.
Ashurim=Asur of Minæan inscrip- tions, 500.
Asia Minor, archaic elements in cul- ture of, 387; difference between S. & W. coasts of, 415.
As Sulayhi, king of Yemen, 522. Assur, mentioned in Babylonian epos, 285; king of, claimed as tributary by Thothmes III., 291. Assurbanipal destroys temples and tombs in Elam, 233; bi-lingual tablets of, 236; colophon on bi- lingual tablet of, 242; recovers image carried off by Kudurnan- chundi, 254; Armenian ambassa- dor to, 304; account of Gyges, king of Lydia, by, 310; Egyptian expedition of, 313; meaning of name, 313; Arabian campaigns of, 314; Arabian conquests of, 499. Assurbelkala, son of Tiglath-pileser, 296.
Assurdanan, king of Assyria, 291, 295. Assurisisi, king of Assyria, 295. Assurnadinahi, father of Assuruballit,
288; receives twenty talents of gold from Egypt, 292. Assurnasirapal restores Caleh, 296, 298; his inscriptions, 297, 298. Assurnisisu, king of Assyria, 288. Assuruballit, his dealings with Baby-
lonia, 288; writes desiring gold from Egypt, 292; letter from, in Gizeh Museum, ii. 426.
Assyria, need for irrigation in, 229; cardinal points in, 265.
Assyrian deeds, earliest, 345; Assyrian monarchy, causes of its rapid de- struction, 314, 315; records pre- served by rapid ruin of cities, 315. Astrologers, important low caste in Malabar, 564.
Astrology, Chinese scholars' report on, ii. 132.
Astronomical knowledge of Canary
islanders, 543; of ancient Chinese, ii. 23; clans, 24; Astronomical Work, i. 278, 285, ii. 436; obser- vations in Peru, ii. 450.
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