INDEX 



British Isles, in Silurian age, 14; 

 in Eocene, 16, 17 ; in Miocene, 

 ai ; in Pliocene, 26 ; in glacial 

 epoch, 30 5 in Pleistocene, 3 3 ; 

 in Recent, 40. 



British people, complexion of, 94. 



Brittany, dialect of, as Kymric, 85. 



Bronze age, the, 45. 



Brother^ derivation of, 103. 



Buckle, H. T., on changes in Ara- 

 bian civilization before and after 

 Mohammed, 171 ; on intellectual 

 and moral progress in civilization, 

 193 } on causes of persecution, 

 194196 ; on Scotch divines, 

 197 ; on expulsion of the Moors 

 from Spain, aaa. 



Biichner, F. K. C. L., and tendency 

 of modern thought, 247 j mate- 

 rialism as held by, 253. 



Bulgarian, Old, as branch of Slavonic 

 speech, 87. 



Bull, Aryan words for, xao. 



Bunsen, C. K. J., Baron, on crea- 

 tion of the sixteen countries by 

 Ahura-Mazda, 70. 



Caballus, in Latin, 124. 



Cabul, known as Ariana in classical 

 antiquity, 74. 



, Julius, Froude's life of, and 

 Mommsen's, compared, 1 82. 



California, antiquity of man in, 28. 



Calvin, John, and persecution, 194 j 

 and essential truths of religion, 

 273. 



Cambrian epoch, records of life in, 

 4, 7- 



Camel, Eocene representative of, 19. 



Camphor-trees, Miocene, 22. 



Carafla, G. P. (Paul IV.), and 

 persecution, 194. 



Carboniferous epoch, 5, 7 ; physi- 

 cal contour of Europe in, 15. 



Carlyle, Thomas, his great -man 

 method of dealing with history 

 commented upon by Spencer, 



I 73~ I 75 j on God in the uni- 

 verse, 275. 



344 



Carnivora, Eocene, 19 ; reached 

 their highest point in Miocene 

 age, 22. 



Carpathian mountains in Eocene age, 

 16. 



Caspian Sea, in Tertiary period, 26 ; 

 possibly known to the Aryans, 

 189. 



Cat, Aryan words for, 125, 126; 

 not domesticated by the Greeks 

 and Romans, 126. 



Catholic Church in the future, 263. 



Caucasus, aboriginal dialects in, 88 ; 

 languages of, belong to the Finno- 

 Tataric family, 150. 



Caucasus mountains in Eocene age, 

 16. 



Cause, 304. 



Cave-men, advent of, 34, 47 ; con- 

 temporary with the woolly rhi- 

 noceros and mammoth, 365 where 

 found, 37 ; their mode of life, 

 37 ; their drawings and carvings 

 of animals, 38, 185 ; probably 

 identical with Eskimos, 39, 47 ; 

 antiquity of, 65 ; gleams of divine 

 intelligence in, 66. 



Celebes, languages of, 156. 



Cervantes Saavedra, M. de, and ex- 

 pulsion of the Moriscoes, 223. 



Chalk, Huxley on, 1 5. 



Chamois, Pleistocene, 29. 



Changes in communities, as due to 

 accumulated influences of individ- 

 uals, 164, 165 j Outlinet of Cos- 

 mic Philosophy on, 170-171} 

 influence of environment in, 1 66, 

 167533 due to the cumulative 

 effect of individual actions in re- 

 lation to environing conditions, 

 167; Bagehot on, 168 ; Grant 

 Allen on, 168. 



Chemistry, the new, introduction of, 



33*- 

 Chert implements of the river-drift 



men, 35. 

 Chili, its flora and fauna compared 



with those of the Galapagos Is- 

 lands, 316. 



