PROGRESS OF ANTHROPOLOGY IN 1890. 533 



(5) A new inuseuin for inediajval aud modern times in other eouu- 

 tries of Europe. 



(G) Etlino^rapbie Museum, arranged to show the civilizations of tlie 

 worhl by tribes. Tiiis was probably the tirst collection in iMirope to 

 be laid out upon a strictly ethnographic basis. 



(7) Royal Museum of classic antiquities in Prinzens Palais, 



(8) Royal collection of coins in Prinzens Palais. 



No mention is made here of the royal galleries of art nor of the col- 

 lection of crania and skeK-tons in the Zoiilogical Museum. The visitor 

 to Copenhagen never fails to spend a day in the Thorwalsden Museum, 

 into which the affectionate esteem of his fellow citizens has gathered 

 the works of the great sculptor and his personal effects and displayed 

 them most attractively. 



A work of i)rimary importance, which the director of every other 

 anthropological museum should imitate with great i)romptuess and care, 

 is J>r. Hamy's volume entitled Origines dii Mus(''e d'Ethnographie du 

 Trocadero, Paris. The first exotic presents known to have come to 

 France were the gifts of Haroun al Raschid to Cbarlemagne, 801 and 

 807, A, D. From that moment to the present all sorts of treasures, 

 gotten in many ways, have been in the charge of public keepers. The 

 modern museum is shown by this volume to have been the growth of 

 ages, the beginning or germ being the curiosity of the king or some of 

 the nobility. It would be well if every important museum could have 

 a volume of history like Dr. Hamy's " Origines." 



lu addition to a thorough history of each public museum, prepared 

 by its own authorities, the exigencies of intercommunication have led 

 to the founding of a journal for museum workers, entitled, Interna- 

 tionales Archiv fiir Ethno(jraiihie (Leyden), and in February, appeared 

 the first number of the Bulletin des Musees, Paris, It is edited by Mr. 

 Edward Garnier and Leonce Benedite, aud resembles the Berlin " Year 

 Book of the Royal Prussian Art Collections," under the heading of 

 "Mouvement des Musees it gives notes on other national galleries aud 

 collections, and a bibliography. 



The standard list of journals remains the same, ISTo anthropologist 

 can afford to neglect the following list : 



The American Anthropologist^ Washington ; Archiv fiir Anthropologic, 

 Braunschweig ; 'Archivio per V Antropologia, Fireuze ; Bulletins de la So- 

 ciete (T Anthropologic de Paris; Internationales Archiv fiir Etitnographie, 

 Leyden ; Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and 

 Ireland, London; V Anthropologic, Paris; Mitthcilungen der Anthrojxilo- 

 gischen Gesellschaft in Wien ; Verhandlungen dcr Berliner Gcsellschaft 

 fiir Anthropologie, etc., Berlin; Zeitschrift fiir Ethnologic, by the same 

 society. 



Journals of a popular character which can not be neglected are: 

 Academy, London; The American NatHraUst, New York; Atheinvum, 

 London ; Amland, Stuttgard; Nature, London; Popular Science Monthly, 

 New York; Revue Scientifique, Paris; Science, New York. 



