INDEX 



Aral, sea of, in Pliocene age, 26 ; 

 possibly known to the Aryans, 

 129. 



Arctic circle in Eocene and Mio- 

 cene periods, 63. 



Aria probably not connected with 

 Aryan, 80. 



Ario-vistus, root of, probably not 

 Arya, 80. 



Aristotle, Charles Darwin ranked 

 with, 310. 



Arkwright, Sir Richard, and social 

 conditions, 187, 188. 



Armada, Spanish, and heretics hi 

 Spain, 231. 



Armenia once supposed to be cradle 

 of human race, 1 34. 



Armenian language, added to Indo- 

 European group, 80 ; a division of 

 Aryan speech, 83. 



Arnold, Matthew, on an Eternal 

 Power, 272. 



Arrival of Man in Europe, The, 33- 

 67. 



Art, rudimentary beginnings of, 185. 



Arya, in Persian proper names, 76 ; 

 not the root of Aria, Arii, and 

 Erin, 80. 



Aryan, applied to Indo-Persian area, 

 74 ; derivation of the word, 75 ; 

 root of the word in Persian proper 

 names, 76 ; applied to Indo-Eu- 

 ropean area, 76, 81 ; never the 

 name of a European people, 80. 



Aryan Forefathers, Our, 68-96. 



Aryan language, discovery of, 78- 

 82, 97 ; eight principal divisions 

 of, 82; what its extent implies, 

 91 } consonant-changes in, 103 

 108 ; vowel-changes in, 108 ; 

 words for month in, 109, 137; 

 legends in, 113 ; words for house 

 in, 114, 115; words for "village 

 in, 115; words for town in, 1 1 6 ; 

 words for "wall in, 117; words 

 for roof in, 117; words for door 

 in, 117, 118 ; words for -window 

 in, 1 1 8 ; words for cow and bull 

 in, 119, 120; words for money 



in, 141 ; words for horse in, 122, 

 125 ; words for cat in, 125, 126 j 

 words for mouse in, 126 ; words 

 for fly in, 1 26 ; words for bee in, 

 127; words for intoxicating drinks 

 in, 127} words for sea in, 128, 

 129 ; its vocabulary unrelated to 

 the Semitic, 135 ; its inflection 

 and syntax unrelated to Semitic, 

 136 ; dispersion of, 148. 

 Aryana of the present day, 82 ; area 

 of, in the Old World, 875 non- 

 Aryan languages in, 87. 

 Aryana Vaejo, creation of, by 

 Ahura-Mazda, 68 ; in the Vendi- 

 dad, 68 ; in the Minokhired, 73 ; 

 located near the sources of the 

 Oxus and Jaxartes, 75 ; the home 

 of the Aryan race, 75, 81, 95. 

 Aryans, their invasion of Europe, 

 45> 65, 93 ; physical characteris- 

 tics of, 45 ; intermingling of 

 Iberians and, 46 ; separation of 

 Indo-Persians and Europeans from, 

 73 ; the name of ancient Persians 

 and Hindus, 73 ; Medes called, 

 74 ; Aryana Vaejo in central 

 Asia the home of, 75 ; as the 

 people who speak the Aryan lan- 

 guage, 89, 91 ; as an ethnologi- 

 cal term, 89, 95 ; the light com- 

 plexion of, in Indo-Europeans, 93, 

 94 ; prehistoric civilization of, 

 reconstructed by means of lan- 

 guage, 113-129, 147; political 

 organization of, extremely simple, 

 130; early heroes of, unknown, 

 185 ; compared with Iroquois 

 Indians, 203. See Indo-Euro- 

 peans and Old Aryan. 



Asia, northern extent in Pliocene 

 age, 25 ; separated from Europe 

 in Tertiary period, 25 ; repeatedly 

 joined to North America, 133. 



Asses, learned, 286. 



Assyrian language closely related to 

 Hebrew and Syriac, 146, 147. 



Asturias, language of the, 88. 



Athanasians, 237. 



342 



