The Popular Religion and Folk-lore of Northern India, Bind 2A. Constable & Company, 1896 |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 64
Side 12
... race , which survive to our days as the fairies . The belief in the fairies would thus go back to a time anterior to ... races in the country , place iron under a stringent taboo , and any Magahiya who breaks into a house with an iron ...
... race , which survive to our days as the fairies . The belief in the fairies would thus go back to a time anterior to ... races in the country , place iron under a stringent taboo , and any Magahiya who breaks into a house with an iron ...
Side 26
... races one object of the rite would seem to be to keep in the soul which is likely to depart at such a crisis in life as marriage . Thus , " in Celebes they think that a bridegroom's soul is apt to fly away at marriage , so coloured rice ...
... races one object of the rite would seem to be to keep in the soul which is likely to depart at such a crisis in life as marriage . Thus , " in Celebes they think that a bridegroom's soul is apt to fly away at marriage , so coloured rice ...
Side 30
... races beyond the Indian border is almost certainly the case.3 But though tattooing , a widespread practice of the Indian people , very possibly originated in totemism , still , as far as has hitherto been ascertained , no distinct trace ...
... races beyond the Indian border is almost certainly the case.3 But though tattooing , a widespread practice of the Indian people , very possibly originated in totemism , still , as far as has hitherto been ascertained , no distinct trace ...
Side 31
... races , but is more general among the lower than the higher castes . Thus , the Juâng women tattoo themselves with three strokes on the forehead just over the nose , and three on each of the temples . They attach no meaning to the marks ...
... races , but is more general among the lower than the higher castes . Thus , the Juâng women tattoo themselves with three strokes on the forehead just over the nose , and three on each of the temples . They attach no meaning to the marks ...
Side 38
... races , out of whom the votaries of the new faith were recruited . With some of these relics of the Buddha , such as his begging bowl , which was long kept in a Dagoba or Vihâra erected by King Kanishka , then removed for a time to ...
... races , out of whom the votaries of the new faith were recruited . With some of these relics of the Buddha , such as his begging bowl , which was long kept in a Dagoba or Vihâra erected by King Kanishka , then removed for a time to ...
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
animal appears ashes Baiga bamboo believed Bengal bird blood Bombay Brâhman bride bridegroom Campbell cattle ceremony charm child connected corpse custom Dalton dead deity demon Demonology Descriptive Ethnology Devak Drâvidian Etruscan Etruscan Roman Remains Evil Eye evil spirits festival fetish fire Folk-lore folk-tales Frazer Gazetteer ghost girl godling Golden Bough Gonds grain hair Hindu horse human sacrifice idea Indra jungle Kashmîr Katha Sarit Sâgara Kharwârs killed king Krishna Kunbis Lady Wilde legend Lorik magic marriage married Mathura milk Mirzapur mystic Nâga Nepâl night Nîm North Indian Notes Northern India Notes and Queries offering omen Oudh Panjâb Notes plants Popular priest primitive Purâna races Râja Râjputs rice rite round sacred Santâls scare serpent Settlement Report shrine snake Somadeva stone supposed Tawney temple tiger totem tree turmeric Tylor village Vishnu witch woman women worship Yaksha
Henvisninger til denne bog
Animism: Or, Thought Currents of Primitive Peoples George William Gilmore Ingen forhåndsvisning - 1919 |