INDEX. 



The Roman uumeraLs refer to tlie I'rofaoe. 



Abenakis, 218. 



Abraham, Rev. Andrew, 4C3, 519, r)20. 



Acliaotinne, or Slave Lake Indians, 231 ; dialects, 232 ; 

 system of relationship, 2.34. 



Acowan dialect, 261. 



Adams, William, a Delaware Indian, 289, 291. 



Agriculture, Indian, 249. 



Ahahnelins, 226 ; vocabulary, 209 ; system of relation- 

 ship, 226, 291. 



Algoukin Nations, 200 ; area of occupation, ih.; language, 

 201. 



Amazulus, or Kafirs, 463 ; system of relationship, ib.; 

 note, 465, 520. 



Andrews, Judge Lorin, observations on Hawaiian system 

 of relationship, 452 note, 519. 



Apaches, 241 ; area of occupation, i7). 



Arabic, 51 ; system of relationship, ib. 



Aramaic branch of Semitic family, 63. 



Arapahoe vocabulary, 214. 



Architecture of village Indians, 257 ; tends to explain 

 that of Mexico and Central America, 488 note. 



Arickarees, 195, 198 ; system of relationship, 291. 



Arink, Dr. Gerard, 74. 



Armenians, 48 ; system of relationship, ih. 



Aryan Family, 16; system of relationship, ib., 77. 



Asiniboines, 171, 175 ; system of relationship, 291. 



Athapascans, 230 ; area of occupation, ib. 



Athapasco-Apache nations, 230. 



B. 



Barbarian Family, 480, 491. 



Barbarism, ages of, 497 ; sequence of customs and 

 institutions in, 480 ; sequence indicating successive 

 epochs, ib, 1. Promiscuous intercourse. 2. Intermar- 

 riage of brothers and sisters. 3. The Communal Fa- 

 mily. 4. The Hawaiian custom. -5. The Malayan Sys- 

 tem of relationship. 6. The Tribal Organization. 7. 

 The Turanian and Ganowanian systems of relation- 

 ship. 8. Marriage between single pairs. 9. The Bar- 

 barian Family. 10. Polygamy. 11. The Patriarchal 

 Family. 12. Polyandria. 13. Property, and lineal 

 succession to estates. 14. The Civilized Family. 15. 

 Overthrow of the classificatory system of relationship, 

 and substitution of descriptive, ih. 

 74 June, 1870. 



Bear's Paw Mountain, 185 note. 



Beaver Indians, vocabulary, 232 ; area of ocifupation, 

 283 note. 



Belgian system of relationship, 36, 77. 



Bengali system of relationship, 408, 520. 



Berendt, Dr. H., 263. 



Bingham, Rev. Hiram, 458, 460 note, 518, 520. 



Bishop, Rev. Artemus, 449 ; observations upon Polyne- 

 sian nations, ib., 519, 520. 



Blackfeet, vocabulary, 209 ; Piegan Blackfoot system of 

 relationship, 225, 291 ; Blood Blackfeet, 291. 



Blackfoot Dakotahs, 171 ; svstem of relationship, 291. 



Bliss, Porter C, 264 note. 



Blood relationships, 11. 



Bohemian system of relationship, 41. 



Bonnacks, 251. 



Bopp, Prof. F., 75. 



Brothers and sisters, intermarriage of, 480, 488. 



Brules, 171 ; system of relationship, 291. 



Bulgarian system of relationship, 42. 



Burmese, 438 ; system of relationship, 439, 520 ; resem- 

 blance to American Indians, 441 note. 



Byington, Rev. Dr. Cyrus, 135, 190, 2S6, 291. 



Cahuillos, 251. 



Caldwell, Dr. R., 400. 



Canarese, 397; system of relationship, ih., 520. 



Capotes, 251. 



Cass, Lewis, ix. 



Cataubas, 190. 



Cayugas, 154 ; system of relationship, 291. 



Celtic Nations, 44; system of relationship, purely de- 

 scriptive, ib.; strictly the typical system of Aryan 

 Family, ib. 



Chehalis, 244. 



Chepewyans, vocabulary, 232 ; area of occupation, 233 

 note. 



Cheraws, 218. 



Cherokees, 183; vocabulary, ifi. ; system of relationship, 

 192, 291 ; pronominal forms, 137 note. 



Chibcha village and Indians of New Grenada, 260 ; 

 system of relationship, 265, 291. 



Chickasas, 189 ; system of rel.atiouship, 291. 



( 585 ) 



