Net Maui For C Developers Build Crossplatform Mobile And Desktop Applications 1st Edition Jesse Liberty

duffecryaryp 10 views 35 slides May 17, 2025
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Net Maui For C Developers Build Crossplatform Mobile And Desktop Applications 1st Edition Jesse Liberty
Net Maui For C Developers Build Crossplatform Mobile And Desktop Applications 1st Edition Jesse Liberty
Net Maui For C Developers Build Crossplatform Mobile And Desktop Applications 1st Edition Je...


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his first decade, xx;
Legatio Babylonica, xx;
acc. by Harrisse, xx;
by Schumacher, xx;
by Heidenheimer, xx;
Die Schiffung, xxi;
Poemata, xxi;
De Nuper sub D. Carolo repertis insulis, xxi;
facs. of title, xxii;
De orbe novo, xxi;
Extrait ou Recueil, xxi;
De rebus oceanicis, xxiii;
Summario, xxiii;
joined with Oviedo, xxiii;
Eden’s Decades, xxiii;
Willes’ Hist. of Travayle, xxiii;
edited by Hakluyt, xxiii;
by Lok, xxiii;
Opus Epistolarum, xxiv;
on the Ethiopian origin of the tribes of Yucatan, 117;
describes the Maya and Nahua picture-writings, 203.
Maryland, docs. in her Archives, xiv;
Hist. Soc., xviii; Indians, 325.
Masks, Mexican, 419.
Mason, Geo. C., on the Newport mill, 105;
Rem. of Newport, 105.
Mason, O. T., on the mounds, 402;
bibliog. of anthropology, 411;
on anthropology in the U. S., 411;
his anthropolog. papers, 439.
Massachusetts Bay map, 100.
Massachusetts Hist. Soc., Library Catalogue, xvii;
on the statue of Leif Ericson, 98;
on Rafn’s over-confidence, 100.
Massachusetts Indians, 323.
Massachusetts Quart. Rev., 96.
Massachusetts State Library, xvii.
Massilia founded, 26.

Mastodon, carvings of, 405;
mound, 409;
remains of man associated with the, 388;
how long disappeared, 389.
Materiaux pour l’histoire primitive, 411.
Mather, Cotton, on Dighton Rock, 103, 104;
Wonderful works of God, 104;
on Jews in New England, 115;
on supposed remains of a giant, 389;
and the Royal Society, 442.
Mather, Increase, his letter to Leusden, 322.
Mather, Saml., America known to the ancients, 40.
Mathers, their library, i.
Matienzo, Juan de, Gobierno de el Peru, 261.
Matlaltzinca, 148.
Matthews, W., Language of the Hidatsa, 425;
Hidatsa Indians, 440.
Maudsley, A. P., Guatemala, 197.
Maurault, Abenakis, 322.
Maurer, Konrad, Altnord. Sprache, 84;
Island, 85;
Isländische Volkssagen, 85;
on the Zeni, 113;
Rechtgesch. des Nordens, 85.
Mauro, Fra, map (1457), 53, 117;
facs. of northern parts, 120.
Maury, Alfred, 374.
Mavor, Voyages, xxxvi.
Maximilian, Emperor of Mexico, his library, viii.
Maximilian, Prince, Reise, 319;
Travels, 392.
Maxtla, 146.
Maya d’Ahkuil-Chel, 426.
Mayapan, 152; deserted, 153.

Mayas, origin of, 134, 152;
name first heard, 135;
nations comprised, 135;
acc. of, 152;
hieroglyphics, 152, 426;
Katunes, 152;
calendar, 152;
manuscripts, 162;
Chilan Balam, 164;
Popul Vuh, their sacred book, 166;
their last pueblo, 175;
picture-writing, 197;
metals among, 418;
languages of, 427;
dialects, 427;
allied to the Greek, 427;
general references, 427;
religion of, 433;
hero-gods, 430, 434.
Mayberry, S. P., on Florida shell heaps, 393.
Mayda, 31, 47, 51, 53.
Mayer, Brantz, on Sparks, vii;
Mexico, 170;
Observations on Mex. hist., 184.
Mayhews, the Indian missionaries, 322.
Mayta, Ccapac, Inca, 229.
Mazahuas, 136.
Mazetecs, 136.
McAdams, W., 409;
Anc. Races in the Mississippi Valley, 403, 410;
Cahokia, 408.
McCaul, John, 99.
McCharles, A., 410.
McClellan, G. B., 440.
McClintock and Strong’s Cyclop. bibl. lit., 384.
McClure and Parish, Mem. of Wheeloch, 322.
McCoy, Isaac, Baptist Indian missions, 369.

McCulloh, James H., Researches on America, 169, 372;
on the mounds, 399.
McCullough, John, captive to the Indians, 292, 319.
McElmo cañon, 395.
McFarland, R. W., 408.
McGee, W. J., 377;
on glacial man, 330, 343;
on the Columbia period, 343;
his lacustrine explorations, 349;
on Iowa mounds, 409.
McIntosh, John, Disc. of America, 372.
McKenney, T. L., Memoirs, 320;
his career, 320;
(with James Hall) Indian Tribes, 320.
McKinley, Wm., 410.
McKinney, W. A., 41.
McLennan, J. F., Primitive Marriage, 380;
Studies in Anc. Hist., 380.
McMaster, S. Y., 111.
McParlin, J. A., 397.
McWhorter, T., 408.
Measures of length used by the Mexicans, 420.
Meddelelser om Grönland, 86.
Medel on the Mex. hieroglyphics, 200.
Megatherium, 389.
Megiser, H., Sept. Novantiquus, xxxiv, 111.
Meigs, J. A., on Morton’s collection, 372;
Catal. human crania, 372;
Obs. on the cranial forms, 374;
Form of the occiput, 375.
Meineke, A., ed. Strabo, 34.
Mela, Pomponius, his views of the extension of Africa, 10;
relations with Ptolemy, 10;
on men supposed to be carried from America to Europe, 26;

De Situ Orbis, 36.
Melgar, E. S. de, 279.
Melgar, J. M., De las Teogonias en los manuscritos Méxicanos, 431.
Melgar, Señor, 116.
Melkarth, 24.
Melo, Garcia de, 260.
Menana, 102.
Mendieta, Hist. Eçcles. Ind., 157.
Mendoza, Gumesindo, 155;
curator of Museo Nacional in Mexico, 444.
Menendez, Geog. del Peru, 212.
Mengarini, G., Flat-head Grammar, 425.
Mentone caves, 390.
Menzel, Bibl. Hist., ii.
Menzies, Wm., his library and catalogue, xii.
Mer de l’Ouest, 79.
Mercator map (1538), 125.
Mercer, H. G., 405.
Mercurio Peruano, 276.
Meredith, a Welsh bard, 109.
Merian, M., xxxi.
Merida, 188.
Meridian, the first, where placed by the ancients, 8.
Merivale, C., Conversion of the Northern Nations, 85.
Merom, Ohio, 408.
Meropes, 22.
Merry Meeting Bay, 102.
Mesa, Alonso de, 260;
Anales del Cuzco, 270.
Metal, use of, 418;
working in Peru, 256;

among the early Americans, 417.
Metz, Dr. C. L., finds palæolithic implements in Ohio, 340, 341;
Prehist. Mts. Little Miami Valley, 408.
Meunier, V., Les ancêtres d’Adam, 383.
Mexia y Ocon, J. R., 279.
Mexico (country), linguistics of, viii;
held to be Fousang, 78, 80, 81;
correspondences in languages with Chinese, 81;
with Sanskrit, 81;
Asiatic origin of games, 81;
jade ornaments in, 81;
Asiatic origin, references on, 81;
obscurities of its pre-Spanish history, 133;
early race of giants, 133;
chronologies, 133;
the Toltecs arrive, 139;
the confederacy growing, 147;
its nature, 147;
portraits of the kings, 148;
sources of pre-Spanish history, 153;
the early Spanish writers, 153;
the courts and the natives, 160;
MS. annals, 162;
general accounts in English, 169;
Archives de la Com. Scient. du Méxique, 270;
ethnology of, 172;
character of its civilization, 173, 176;
the confederacy, 173;
diverse views of the extent of the population, 174;
disappearance of their architecture, 174;
map by Santa Cruz, 174;
mode of government, 174, 175;
their palaces, 175, 176;
notes on the ruins, 176;
astronomy in, 179;
idols still preserved, 180;
superstitions for writings, 180;
origin of the people, 375;
copper, use of, 418;
variety of tongues in, 426;
culture, 329, 330.

See Toltecs, Nahuas, Anahuac, Aztecs, Chichimecs.
Mexico (city), founded, 133, 144;
Clavigero’s map in facs., 143;
its lakes, 143;
other maps, 143;
facs. of the map in Coreal’s Voyages, 145;
a native acc. of the capture, 162;
calendar stone, 179;
used to regulate market days, 179;
Museo Nacional, 419, 444;
its Anales, 444;
view of, 180, 181;
forgeries in, 180;
no architectural remains, 182;
the city gradually sinking, 182;
relics still beneath the soil, 182;
Bandelier’s notes, 182;
old view of the city, 182;
early descriptions, 182;
its military aspect, 182;
relics unearthed, 182;
temple of (views), 433, 434.
Meye, Heinrich, Copan und Quiriguá, 196, 197.
Meyer, A. B., 417.
Meyer, J., map of Greenland, 131.
Mica, 416.
Michel, Francisque, Saint Brandan, 48.
Michigan mounds, 408.
Michinacas, 136.
Michoacan, 149, 433.
Micmacs, 321;
language, 425;
legends, 431;
missions, 321;
traditions of white comers among, 99.
Mictlan, 184, 435.
Mictlantecutli, 435.

Middle Ages, geographical notions, 30.
Miedna, 78.
Migration of nations in pre-Spanish times, 137, 139, 369;
disputes over, 138;
Gallatin’s view, 138;
bibliog., 139;
Dawson’s map of those in North America, 381;
generally from the north, 381.
Mil, A., De origine Animalium, 370.
Milfort, a creek, 326.
Miller, J., Modocs, 327.
Miller, W. J., Wampanoags, 102.
Mindeleff, V., on Pueblo architecture, 395.
Minnesota mounds, 409.
Minutoli, J. H. von, on Palenqué, 191;
Stadt in Guatemala, 195.
Miocene man, 387.
Miquitlan, 184.
Mirror of Literature, 110.
Mission Scientifique au Méxique, Ouvrages, 207.
Missions’ effect on the Indians, 318.
Mississippi Valley, loess of, 388;
mounds, 410.
Missouri, mounds, 409;
pottery, 419.
Missouri River, lacustrine age, 348.
Mitchell, S. L., on the Asiatic origin of the Americans, 76, 371;
on the Northmen, 102.
Mitchell, A., 410.
Mitchell, W. S., on Atlantis, 44.
Mitchener, C. H., Ohio Annals, 407.
Mitla, ruins of, 184;
plan, 184.

Mitre, Gen. B., Ollantay, 282.
Miztecs, 136;
subjugated, 149.
Mochica language, 227, 275, 276.
Modocs, 327.
Mohawks put English arms on their castles, 304, 324.
Mohegan Indians, their language, 423.
Moke, H. T., Hist. des peuples Américains, 172.
Moletta (Moletius) on the Zeno map, 129.
Molina, Alonzo de, 156.
Molina, Christoval de, in Peru, 262;
Fables and Rites of the Incas, 262;
on the Incas, 436.
Molina, Vocabulario, viii;
Arte de la lengua Méx., viii.
Möllhausen, Reisen, 396;
Tagebuch, 396.
Moluccan migration to South America, 370.
Monardes, Dos Libros, xxix;
Hist. Medicinal, xxix;
likeness, xxix;
Joyfull Newes, xxix.
Monboddo, Lord, on Irish linguistic traces in America, 83.
Moncacht-Ape, 77.
Money, 420.
Mongolian stock on the Pacific coast, 82.
Mongols in Peru, 82.
Monhegan, alleged runes on, 102.
Monogenism, 374.
Monotheism in America, 430.
Monro, R., Anc. Scotch lake dwelling, 393.
Montalboddo, Paesi Nov., xix.
Montana mounds, 409.

Montanus, Nieuwe Weereld, i;
on the Zeni, 111;
America, xxxiv;
on the sagas, 92;
on the Madoc voyage, 109.
Monte Alban, 184.
Montelius, O., Bibliog. de l’archéol. de la Suède, 444.
Montémont, A., Voyages, xxxvii.
Montesinos, F., in Peru, 263;
Memorias antiguas, 82, 263;
Anales, 263;
Mémoire historique, 263;
on Jews in Peru, 115;
Mémoires, 273.
Montesquieu, Esprit des Lois, 380.
Montezuma (hero-god), 147, 150.
Montezuma (first of the name), 146;
in power, 147;
various spelling of the name, 147;
dies, 148.
Montezuma (the last of the name), 148;
forebodings of his fall, 148;
hears of the coming of the Spaniards, 149;
his “Dinner”, 174, 175.
Montfaucon, Collectio, 30.
Montgomery, James, Greenland, 69.
Moore, Dr. Geo. H., at the Lenox Library, xii;
account of, xii.
Moore, Martin, 322.
Moore, M. V., 41.
Moore, Thos., Hist. Ireland, 61.
Moosmüller, P. O., Europäer in America, 88, 90.
Moquegua, 277.
Moqui Indians, 397, 429;
representatives of the cliff dwellers, 395.

Moravian missions, 308, 318.
Moravian Quarterly, 109.
Morellet, Arthur, Voyage, 194;
Travels, 195.
Morgan, Col. Geo., 319.
Morgan, L. H., his Montezuma’s dinner, ix, 174;
attacked by H. H. Bancroft, ix, 174;
on the cradle of the Mexicans, 138;
his exaggerated depreciation of the Mexican civilization, 173, 174;
his relations with the Iroquois, 174;
Houses and House life, 175, 420;
Ancient Society, 175, 382;
controverted, 380;
his publications, 175;
his death, 175;
on Rau’s views as respects the Tablet of the Cross, 195;
on centres of migrations, 381;
on human progress, 382;
on the Pueblo race, 395;
on the ruins of the Chaco cañon, 396;
on the ruins on the Animas River, 396;
on the social condition of the Pueblos, 397;
on the moundbuilders, 401;
finds their life communal, 402;
on their houses, 402;
League of the Iroquois, 325, 416;
on bone implements, 417;
on linguistic divisions, 422;
on Indian life, 325;
Iroquois laws of descent, 437;
Bestowing of Indian names, 437;
Houses of American Aborigines, 437.
Morgan, Thomas, on Vinland, 98.
Morillot, Abbé, Esquimaux, 105.
Morisotus, C., Epist. Cent. duæ, 370.
Morlot, A., 395; on the Phœnicians in America, 41.
Mormon bible, its reference to the lost tribes, 116.
Morris, C., 403.

Morse, Abner, Anc. Northmen, 105.
Morse, Edw. S., Arrow Release, 69;
on the tertiary man, 387;
on prehistoric times, 412.
Morse, Jed., Report on Indian affairs, 320.
Mortillet, G. de, Le Signe de la Cross, 196;
Antiq. de l’homme, 383;
founds the Materiaux, etc., 411, 442;
L’homme, 442;
Dict. des Sciences Anthropologique, 442.
Morton, S. G., Inquiry into the distinctive characteristics of the aborig. race, 437;
Crania Amer., 372;
his collection of skulls, 372;
Physical type of the American Indian, 372;
Aboriginal Race of America, 372;
Some observations, 372;
on the moundbuilders’ skulls, 399, 403.
Morton, Thomas, New English Canaan, 369.
Mossi, H., on the Quichua language, 280.
Motolinía, Historia, 156.
Motupé, 276.
Moulton, J. W., New York, 93.
Moulton, M. W., 409.
Moundbuilders, connected with the Irish, 83;
with the Welsh, 111;
with the Jews, 116;
with the later peoples of Mexico, 136, 137;
Morgan on their houses, 175;
Haynes’s views, 367;
literature of, 397;
early Spanish and French notices of, 398;
accounts by travellers, 398, 402;
held to be ancestors of the Aztecs and other southern peoples, 398;
emblematic mounds, 400;
the most ancient, 402;
believed to be of the Indian race, 400, 401, 402;
earliest advocates of this view, 400;
vanished race view, 400, 401, 402;

Great Serpent mound, 401;
no clue to their language, 401;
mounds in New York built by the Iroquois, 402;
date of their living, 402;
divisions of the United States by their characteristics, 402;
held to be Cherokees, 402;
agriculturalists, 402, 410;
sun-worshippers, 402;
age of, 403;
contents of the mounds, 403;
fraudulent relics, 403;
geographical distribution of their works, 404;
built by Finns, 405;
by Egyptians, 405;
maps, 406;
use of copper, 408;
pipes, 409;
military character, 409;
turned hunters, 410;
their textile arts, 419;
cloth found, 419;
pottery, 419.
Movers, Die Phoenizier, 24.
Mowquas, 111.
Moxa, 428.
M’Quy, Dr., 191.
Mudge, B. F., 409.
Muellenhof, Alterthumskunde, 4.
Muhkekaneew Indians, 116.
Mühlenpfordt, E. L., Versuch, 184.
Muiscas. See Muyscas.
Mujica, M. A., 282.
Müller, C., Geog. Græci, 34.
Müller, F., Allgemeine Ethnographie, 375.
Müller, J. G., on the Peruvian religion, 270;
Amer. Urreligionen, 380, 430;
on Quetzalcoatl, 433.

Müller, J. W. von, Reisen, 185.
Müller, Max, on early Mexican history, 133;
on Ixtlilxochitl, 157;
on the Popul Vuh, 167;
on E. B. Tylor, 377;
on American monotheism, 430.
Müller, P. E., Icelandic Hist. Lit., 84;
(with Velchow, J.) ed. Saxo Gram., 92;
Sagenbibliothek, 85.
Müller, Handbuch des klas. Alterth., 5.
Muller, Frederik, xvi.
Mummies, in American caves, 391;
of Incas, 234, 235;
Peruvian, 276, 277.
Munch, P. A., Det Norske Folks Hist., 84;
Olaf Tryggvesön, 90;
Norges Konge-Sagaer, 90.
Munich, Gesellschaft für Anthropologie, 443.
Muñoz, J. B., 191; Historia, ii; on the Norse voyages, 92.
Munsell, Frank, xv.
Munsell, Joel, xv;
his publications, xv;
sketch by G. R. Howell, xv.
Münster, Sebastian, his map, xxv;
Cosmographia, xxv;
likeness, xxvi, xxvii;
Kosmograffia, xxviii;
translations, xxviii;
on the Greenland geography, 126.
Murphy, H. C., his library, ix;
his Catalogue, ix;
dies, ix.
Murray, Andrew, Geog. Distrib. Mammals, 82, 106.
Murray, Hugh, Travels, 93, 111;
Disc. in No. America, 72;
on the Northmen, 93.

Múrua, M. de, Hist. gen. del Peru, 264.
Museo Erudico, 276.
Museo Guatemalteco, 168.
Museo Mexicano, 444.
Music, 420.
Musical instruments, 420.
Mutsun language, 425.
Muyscas, myths of, 436;
idol, 281;
origin of, 80.
Myths, not the reflex of history, 429;
literature of American, 429.
Naaman Cêeek, rock shelter at, 365.
Nachan, 135.
Nadaillac, Marquis de, L’Amérique préhistorique, 369, 412, 415;
Prehistoric America, 415;
on the autochthonous theory, 375;
De la période glaciaire, 388;
Les prem. hommes, 369, 412;
Mœurs des peuples préhistorique, 412;
Les pipes et le tabac, 416;
L’art préhist. en Amérique, 419.
Nahuas, origin of, 134;
direction of their migration controverted, 134, 136, 137, 138;
earliest comers, 137;
from the N. W., 137;
date disputed, 137;
their governmental organizations, 174;
places of their kings, 174;
their buildings, 182;
picture-writing, 197;
myths, 431.
See Aztecs, Mexico.
Narborough, Magellan Straits, xxxiv.
Narragansetts, 323.

Nasca, Peru, 271, 277.
Nasmyth, J., 50.
Natchez Indians, 326;
supposed descendants of Votanites, 134.
Natchez, relics at, 389.
Natick language, 423.
National Geographic Society, 438.
Natural Hist. Soc. of Montreal, 438.
Nature, 443.
Naugatuck valley, 323.
Naulette cave, 377.
Nauset, 102.
Navajos, 327;
expedition against, 396;
weaving among, 420.
Neanderthal, race, 377;
skull, 377, 389.
Nebel, Carlos, Viaje pintoresco, 179, 180.
Negro race, as primal stock, 373;
of a stock earlier than Adam, 384.
Nehring, A., on animals found in Peruvian graves, 273.
Neill, E. D., on the Ojibways, 327.
Neolithic Age, 377;
implements of, 377.
See Stone Age.
Nepeña, 276.
Neue Berlinische Monatsschrift, 371.
Neumann, K. F., Amerika nach Chinesischen Quellen, 78, 80.
Névome language, 425.
New Brunswick shell heaps, 392.
New England Hist. Geneal. Society, xvii.
New England Indians, 322;
mounds in, 404;

visited by the Northmen, 94, 95, 96;
shell heaps, 392.
New Grenada, map, 209;
tribes of, 282.
New Hampshire, bibliog., xv;
Indians, 322.
New Jersey, copies of docs. in her Archives, xiv;
Indians, 325;
shell heaps, 393.
New Mexico, map of ruins in, 397.
New Orleans, human skeleton found near, 389.
New York Acad. of Science, 438.
New York city, as a centre for the study of Amer. hist., xvii;
its Hist. Soc. library, xvii;
Astor Library, xvii;
private libraries, x, xviii.
New York State, local history in, v;
its library at Albany, xviii;
the French import goods into, for the Indian trade, 311;
its trade with the Indians, 311;
Indians, 323;
missions, 323;
mounds, 404.
Newark, Ohio, map of mounds at, 407;
described, 408.
Newcomb, Simon, opposes Croll’s theory, 387.
Newfoundland, early visited by the Basques, 75;
in the early maps, 74;
Eskimos in, 106;
Indians of, 321.
Newman, J. B., Red Men, 46.
Newport stone tower claimed to be Norse, 105.
Nezahualcoyotl, 146, 147;
dies, 148.
Nezahualpilli, 148.
Nicaragua, early footprint in, 385;

explorers of, 197;
mythology, 434;
sources of its history, 169.
Nicholas V, alleged bull about Greenland, 69.
Nicholls and Taylor, Bristol, 50.
Nienhof, Brasil. Zee-en Lantreize, xxxiv.
Nijhoff, Martin, xvii.
Nilsson, Stone Age, 412.
Niza, Marco de, Quito, 268.
Noah, M. M., American Indians descendants of the Lost tribes, 116.
Nodal, J. F., on the Quichua tongue, 280;
Ollanta, 281.
Nonohualcas, 136.
Nordenskjöld, A. E., Exped. till Grönland, 86;
his belief in a colony on east coast of Greenland, 109;
portrait, 113;
on the Zeni, 114;
Bröderna Zenos, 114;
Trois Cartes précolumbiennes, 114, 117;
Studienund Forschungen, 114;
finds the oldest maps of Greenland, 117;
his projected Atlas, 125;
on the Olaus Magnus map (1567), 125.
Norman, B. M., Rambles in Yucatan, 186.
Norman sailors on the American coasts, 97.
Norris, P. W., 409.
Norse. See Northmen.
North Carolina, antiquities, 410;
rock inscriptions, 411.
Northmen, cut of their ship, 62;
plan of same, 63;
ship discovered at Gokstad, 62;
another at Tune, 62;
one used as a house, 64;
depicted in the Bayeux tapestry, 64;
flags, 64;

weapons, 64;
characteristics, 67;
in Greenland, 68;
in Iceland, 83;
alleged visits to America, 98;
their voyages seldom recognized in the maps of the xvth cent., 117.
Northwest coast, the Berlin Museum’s Nordwest Küste, 76.
Nortmanus, R. C., De origine gent. Amer., 370.
Norton, Charles B., his Lit. Letter, xv.
Norumbega held to be a corruption of Norvegia, 98.
Norway, early map, 118;
in Fra Mauro’s map, 120;
in Olaus Magnus, 124, 125;
by Bordone, 126;
in Gallæus, 129.
Nott, J. C. (with Gliddon), Types of Mankind, 372;
Physical Hist. of the Jews, 373;
Indigenous Races, 374.
Nova Scotia, Indians, 321;
shell-heaps, 392.
Nova Scotia Institute of Nat. Science, 438.
Novo y Colson, D. P. de, and Atlantis, 45.
Noyes, New England’s Duty, 322.
Noymlap, 275.
Numismatic and Antiq. Soc. of Philadelphia, 438.
Nuttall, Thomas, Arkansa Territory, 326.
Nuttall, Mrs. Zelia, on Mexican communal life, 175;
on the so-called Sacrificial Stone, 185;
on complemental signs in the Mexican graphic system, 198;
on Mexican feather-work, 420;
on terra cottas from Teotihuacan, 182.
Nyantics, 323.
O’Bêáen, M. C., grammatical sketch of the Abnake, 423.
O’Curry, Eugene, Anc. Irish history, 50.

O’Flaherty, Islands of Arran, 50;
Ogygia, 51.
Oajaca, 149, 433;
sources of its history, 168;
ruins in, 184;
teocalli at (view), 436.
Obando, Juan de, his Quichua dictionary, 279;
grammar, 279.
Ober, F. A., Travels in Mexico, 170;
Anc. Cities of America, 177.
Obsidian, 417;
implements, 358.
Ocean, ancient views of the, 7;
depth of, 383.
Ocean Highways, 442.
Ococingo, 135.
Odysseus, voyage of, 6;
his wanderings, 40.
Ogallala Sioux, 327.
Ogilby, America, i, xxxiv.
Ogygia, 12, 13, 23.
Ohio Archæological and Hist. Quarterly, 407.
Ohio Land Company (1748), formation of the, 309.
Ohio, mounds in, 405;
bibliog. and hist., 406;
Centennial Report, 406;
pictographs, 410;
State Board of Centennial managers, Final Report, 407.
Ohio Valley, ancient man in, 341;
ancient hearths in, 389;
caves, 391;
English attempts to occupy, 312;
frontier life, 319; Indians, 326.
Ojeda, A. de, describes pile dwellings, 364.
Ojibways, 327.

Olaf, Tryggvesson, 62;
saga, 90;
editions, 90.
Olaus Magnus, 65;
Hist. de Gentibus Septent, 67.
Olivarez, A. F., 282.
Ollantai or Ollantay, 425;
drama, 274, 242, 281;
different texts, 281;
its age, 282.
Ollantay-tampu or tambo, ruins, 220, 221, 271.
Olmecs, migration of, 135;
earliest comers, 135;
overcame the giants, 137.
Olmos, A. de, 156, 276, 279.
Olosingo, 196.
Omahas, 327.
Onas, 289.
Ondegardo, Polo de, in Peru, 260, 261;
Relaciones, 261.
Onderdonk, J. L., 412.
Ongania, Sammlung, 47, 53.
Onondaga language, 424.
Onontio, 289.
Ophir of Solomon, 82, 369;
found in Palenqué, 191.
Orbigny, A. d’, L’homme Américain, 271;
Voyages, 271;
his ethnographical map of South America, 271.
Orcutt, S., Indians, 323;
Stratford, 323.
Ordoñez, Ramon de, La Creacion del Cielo, etc., 168;
Palenqué, 191.
Oré, L. G. de, Rituale, 227, 280.

Oregon, Indians, 328;
mounds, 409;
shell heaps, 393.
Orozco y Berra, helped by the collections of Icazbalceta and Ramirez, 163;
Geog. de las lenguas de México, 135, 172, 427;
Dic. Universal de Hist., 172;

Mexico, 172;
El Cuauhxicalli de Tizoc, 185;
Códice Mendozino, 200.
Orrio, F. X. de, Solution, del gran problema, 76.
Ortega, C. F., ed. Veytia, 159.
Ortelius, on the Zeni, 111;
holds Plutarch’s continent to be America, 40;
believed Atlantis to be America, 43;
map of the Atlantic Ocean (1587), 58;
map of Scandia, 129;
and the sagas, 92.
Otomis, 136, 424;
their language, 81.
Otompan, 140.
Otté, E. C., 271.
Otumba, fight at, 175.
Ovid, Fasti, 3.
Oviedo y Baños, J. de, Venezuela, 444.
Oxford Voyages, xxxiv.
Oztotlan, 139.
Paccará -taméu, 223.
Pachacamac, 234, 277.
Pachicuti, J. de S. C., Reyno del Piru, 436.
Pachacutec, Inca, 230, 277.
Pacific Ocean, great Japanese current, 78;
its islands in geol. times, 383;
long voyages upon, in canoes, 81.
Pacific Railroad surveys, 440.
Packard, A. S., on the Eskimos, 105.
Padoucas, 110.
Pæsi Novamente, xix;
Newe unbek. landte, xx;
fac-simile of title, xxi;

Nye unbek. lande, xx;
Itinerariū Portugal, xx;
Sensuyt le nouveau monde, xx;
Le nouv. monde, xxi.
Paez, 428.
Paéz-Castellano language, 425.
Page, J. R., 410.
Paijkull, C. W., Summer in Iceland, 83.
Paint Creek, map, 406.
Painter, C. C., Mission Indians, 328.
Palacio, Diego Garcia de, Carta, 168, 427.
Palacio, M., 281.
Palæolithic age, named by Lubbock, 377;
its implements, 331;
cut of, 331;
man in America, 357, 358;
could he talk? 421;
developments towards the neolithic state, 365.
See Stone Age.
Palenqué, position of, 151;
ruins described, 191;
first discovered, 191;
age of, 191;
restorations, 192;
tablet, 193;
sculptures from the Temple of the Cross, 193, 195;
seen by Waldeck, 194;
plans, 195;
views, 195;
statues, 196.
Palfrey, J. G., on the Northmen, 96;
on the Newport tower, 105;
on the Indians, 323.
Palin, Du, Study of hieroglyphics, 204.
Pallas, Vocab. comparativa, 424.
Palmer, Edw., 409;
on a cave in Utah, 390.

Palmer, Geo., Migrations from Shinar, 374.
Palomino, 260.
Palos, Juan de, 155.
Palszky, F., 374.
Panchæa, 12.
Pandosy, M. C., Yahama language, 425.
Papabucos, 136.
Papantla, 178.
Paracelsus, Theoph., on the plurality of the human race, 372.
Paradise, position of, 31, 47.
Paraguay, 370.
Paravey, C. H. de, Fou-Sang, 80;
Nouvelles preuves, 80;
Plateau de Bogota, 80;
replies to Jomard, 80.
Pareja, F., La Lengua Timuquana, 425.
Pareto, Bart. de, his map (1455), 56.
Paris, peace of (1763), 312, 313;
Société de Géographie founded, 441;
Recueil de Voyages, 441;
Bulletin, 441.
Parkman, F., California and the Oregon trail, 327;
France and England in North America, 316;
on the Indian character, 317;
La Salle, 318.
Parmenides, 3.
Parmentier, Col., 81.
Parmunca, 275.
Parsons, S. H., 437.
Parsons, Usher, on the Nyantics, 323.
Passamaquoddy legends, 431.
Patin, Ch., xxiv.
Pattison, S. R., Age of Man, 387;

Earth and the Word, 383.
Patton, A., 408.
Pauw., De, Recherches, 173.
See De Pauw.
Pawnees, 327.
Paynal, 432.
Payta, 275.
Pazos-kanki, V., his Quichua work, 280.
Peabody, Geo., 439.
Peabody Academy of Science, 438.
Peabody Institute (Balt.), xviii.
Peabody Museum of Archæology and Ethnology, 439;
Reports, 439;
Special Papers, 439.
Peale, T. R., 409, 410.
Pech, Nakuk, 164.
Peck, W. F., Rochester, 323.
Pecos, ruins, 396.
Pederson, Christiern, ed. of Saxo, 92.
Peet, S. D., The Pyramid in America, 177;
on Pueblo architecture, 395;
on the serpent symbol, 401;
on the moundbuilders, 403, 408, 409;
on mounds as totems, 408;
on the Saint Louis mounds, 409;
on early agriculture, 417;
human faces in American art, 420;
Religious beliefs of the Aborigines, 431;
Animal worship and Sun worship, 431;
Religion of the Moundbuilders, 431;
edits Amer. Antiquarian, 439.
Pégot-Ogier, E., Archipel des Canaries, 48.
Peirce, C. S., on the Newport mill, 105.
Pelaez, Paula G., Guatemala, 168.

Pemicooks, 323.
Pemigewassets, 322.
Penafiel, Antonio, Nombres géog. de México, 427.
Penn, Wm., on Jews in America, 115.
Pennant, Tour of Wales, iii.
Pennock, B., 85.
Pennsylvania, Indians in, 306, 325;
mounds, 405;
settlers of, 307;
their treatment of the Indians, 309.
Penobscots, 322;
their legends, 431.
Pentland, J. B., map of Lake Titicaca, 246.
Pequods, 323.
Percy, Bishop, ed. Mallet’s Northern Antiquities, 91.
Perdita, island, 48.
Perez, José, 77, 117, 404;
preserver of Maya MSS., 163.
Perez, Pio, Chron. Yucateca, 164;
his notes, 164.
Periegetes, D., Periplus, 39.
Peringskiöld, ed. Heimskringla, 91.
Perizonius, 22, 40.
Perkins, Fred. B., his sketch of Gowans, xv;
Scrope, xv.
Pernetty, D., controverts De Pauw, 370;
Examen, 370;
De l’Amérique, 370.
Perrine, T. M., 408.
Perrot, Nic., Mémoires, 429.
Pertuiset, E., Le Trésor des Incas, 272.
Pertz, G. H., Mon. Germ. Hist., 88.
Peru, Mongols in, 82;

giants in, 82;
the Ophir of Solomon, 82;
Chinese in, 82;
Jews in, 115;
Votanites in, 134;
civilization in, 209;
evidences of it, 209;
maps, 210, 211;
bounds, 212;
length of the settled condition of the Inca race, 212;
plants and animals domesticated, 212;
ancient burial-places, 214;
pre-Inca people, 214;
cyclopean remains, 220;
water sacrifices, 221;
deity of, 222;
Pirua dynasty, 223, 225;
its people, 227;
Tampu Tocco, 223;
Inca dynasty, 223;
its duration, 225;
list of the kings, 223;
origin of the Incas, 223;
their rise under Manco, 225;
their original home, 226;
their subjugation of the earlier peoples, 227;
establish their power at Cuzco, 228;
portraits of the Incas, 228, 267;
picture of warriors, 230;
Chanca war, 230;
Inca Yupanqui, 230;
war between Huascar and Atahualpa, 231, 262;
names of the Incas, 231;
succession of the Incas, 231, 232;
their religion, 232;
belief in a Supreme Being, 233;
sun-worship, 233;
plan of the Temple of the Sun, 234;
religious ceremonials, 236, 240;
astronomical knowledge, 236;
their months, 236;
festivals, 237;
human sacrifices, 237, 238;

learned men, 241;
the Quichua language, 241;
the court language, 241;
references on the Inca civilization, 241;
their bards, 242;
dances, 242;
musical instruments, 242;
dramas, 242;
quipus records, 242;
healing art, 243;
the central sovereign, 244;
tributes, 245;
the Inca insignia, 245;
their architecture, 247;
two stages of it, 247;
their thatching, 247;
ruins, 247;
social polity, 249;
the Inca family, 249;
divisions of the empire, 249;
provinces, 250;
ruins of a village, 251;
laborers, 251;
bringing up of children, 251;
land measure, 251;
their agriculture, 252;
hanging gardens, 252;
irrigation, 253;
peculiar products, 253;
their flocks, 253;
their roads, 254, 261;
travelling, 254;
map of roads, 254;
colonial system, 255;
military system, 255;
arts, 255;
metal-workers, 256;
pottery, 256, 257, 258;
weapons, 257;
spinning, weaving, and dyeing, 257;
cloth-making, 258;
authorities on ancient Peruvian history, 259;
the conquerors as authors, 260;

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