SPANISH ANTHROPOLOGY. 113 



portant as is the nasal form, we have as yet too little 

 accurate knowledge about it. The Guanches were leptor- 

 rhine, like the Homme-Mort type in France. 



The authors incline to attribute the potency of the blond 

 dolicholepto type in South-west Galicia to the Suevian 

 colony, which had a long occupation. Perhaps they only 

 reinforced a type already planted there by some kindred of 

 the Tamahu, or by the ruling caste of some Gallokeltic 

 tribe. The Irish Milesians, if they came from Spain, as I 

 believe they did, came "white of skin, and brown of hair,'* 

 according to Mac Firbis. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



LAGNEAU. Les Ligures, memoire comm. a VInstitut. Paris, 1876. 

 Lagneau. Des Anciens Peuples de 1' Hispanic Comptes Rendus 



de T Academic, 1 88 1. 

 Lagneau. Ethnologie de la Peninsule du S.W. Alan. Soc. 



Anthr., 2nd serie, t. ii., 1882. 

 TUBINO. Rechs. d'Anthropologie Sociale. Revue d' Anthrope., 



vol. vi., 1877. 

 De Aranzadi y Unamuno. El Pueblo Euskalduna. San 



Sebastian, 1889. 

 De Hoyos-Sainz and De Aranzadi. Un Avance a la Antro- 



pologia de EspaTia. Madrid, 1892. 

 Ol6riz. Distribution Geografica del Indice Cefalico en Espaiia. 



Madrid, 1894. 



John Beddoe. 



only. Now these are precisely the Alpuxarra Mountains, where the Moors 

 held out longest against Ferdinand and Isabella, and the chief theatre of 

 the Morisco war in a later age. 



