312 AUTHORITIES FOR CHAPTER I. 



Palestrina, wliich is to my knowledge in the Barberini 

 palace at Rome. 



(4) See the Natural History of the younger Pliny, 

 ii. 172; vii. 2. 



(5) Eegnum Congo : hoc est Vera Descriptio Eegni 

 Africani quod tarn ab incolis qnara Lusitanis Congus 

 appellatur, per Philippum Pigafettam, olim ex Edoardo 

 Lopez acromatis lingua Italica excerpta, nunc Latio 

 sermone donata ab Aug. Cassiod. Eeinio. Iconibus 

 et imaginibus rerum memorabilium quasi vivis, opera 

 et industria Joan. Theod. et Joan. Israelis de Bry, 

 fratrum exornata (Francofurti, mdxcviii.). 



(C) Abhandlungen derKonigl. Bayrischen Akademie 

 der Wissenschaften (iii. cl. ix. div. 1). 



(7) A voyage to Congo and several other countries 

 in Southern Africa, Church collection of voyages and 

 travels (London, 1744), i. 65L 



(8) Eelation d'un voyage fait en 1695-97 aux cotes 

 d'Afrique, etc. (Paris, 1699). 



(9) Nouveau voyage en Guinee, p. 74. 



(10) Observationes Medicos (Amsterdam), § 56. I 

 have recently had occasion to doubt whether Tulpe's 

 representation of an ape is not founded on that of an 

 orang-utan of average size. At any rate, the head of 

 the animal given by this anatomist reminds me more 

 of an orang than of a chimpanzee. 



(11) The Anatomy of a Pygmy, compared with that 

 of .a Monkey, an Ape, and a Man. With an Essay con- 

 cerning the Pygmies, etc., of the Ancients (edit, i., 

 London, 1699; edit, ii., 1751). 



(12) Purchas, His Pilgrims. I have made use of 

 the edition published in London in 1625 (vol. ii. 982). 



(13) Beschryvinge dcs Afrikaensche gewesten van 

 Egypten, Barbaryen, Lybien, Biledulgerid, Negrosland, 

 Ethiopien, Abyssinie, etc. (Amsterdam, 1688; edit. ii. 

 1679). I have made use of the German version of 1760. 



