INDEX 



Consonant-changes in Aryan lan- 

 guages, 103-108. 



Continents, their position practically 

 the same throughout the ages, 

 13 ; change in superficial con- 

 tour of, 14. 



Contour of Europe, in Silurian age, 

 14; in Carboniferous, Triassic, 

 Juriassic, and Cretaceous, 1 5 ; in 

 Eocene, 1 6 ; in Miocene, 20 ; in 

 Pliocene, 26 ; in Pleistocene, 29, 

 33 ; in Glacial period, 30, 56, 

 58 ; in Recent period, 40. 



Contract and status, 133. 



Cook, Captain James, numerals in 

 the language of Tahiti at the time 

 of, 156. 



Coral-reefs, Darwin on, 314. 



Cornwall, Kymric dialect formerly 

 spoken in, 85. 



Corporate responsibility, in the tribal 

 system, 217, 127-130, 243, 261, 

 290 ; feeling of, pervaded the life 

 of ancient society, 218, aa6, 

 261 ; as the main cause of perse- 

 cution, 119, 230-232, 261 ; at 

 the root of Spanish persecution, 

 131 ; and the persecutions of 

 Mary Tudor, 231 ; conditions 

 which fostered it, overthrown by 

 establishment of the Roman Em- 

 pire, 233, 243, 290 ; overthrown 

 by Christianity, 235, 243 ; as- 

 sumption of, by the church, 238, 

 239, 241. 



Correlation of forces, 254; and 

 molecular motion, 255 ; simul- 

 taneous discoveries in, 332. 



Coulanges, N. D. F. de, works of, 

 176. 



Cow, Aryan words for, 119, 120 5 

 prominent in early Aryan thought, 

 121 ; used as money, 121 ; ma- 

 ternal instinct of the, 288. 



Cranes, Miocene, 22. 



Creeds, religious, the destruction of 

 present, 247, 249. 



Cretaceous epoch, trees in, 6 ; physi- 

 cal contour of Europe in, 15. 



Croatian a branch of Slavonic speech, 

 87. 



Croll, James, on our comprehension 

 of a million of years, 10 ; his Cli- 

 mate and Time, 12; on position 

 of the great oceans, 14 ; astro- 

 nomical interpretation of glaciation 

 of northern hemisphere, 4865. 



Cruelty, connected with primitive 

 warfare, 202 ; in persecutions, 

 204 ; diminution of, due to the 

 widening of human sympathies, 



206 ; diminished by industrialism, 



207 ; replaced by humane feelings, 

 207, 208. 



Cruelty to Animals, Society for the 



Prevention of, 208. 

 Crusades and persecution in southern 



France, 240. 



Crustaceans, earliest, 5, 7. 

 Cuneiform inscriptions, of Darius, 



74; Persian, 83. 

 Cuvier, G. C. L. F.D., Baron, and 



Eocene mammals, 18 ; and the 



comparative method of study, 77. 

 Cycads, Miocene, 22. 



Daevas of Ahriman, 68. 



Dalton, J. C., and the believers in 

 phlogiston, 176. 



Danube, valley of, in the Miocene 

 age, 20 ; as a Keltic name, 84. 



Darius Hystaspes, and the Zenda- 

 vesta, 69 ; declares himself an 

 Aryan, 74. 



Darwin, Charles, author of a medi- 

 cal essay, 311. 



Darwin, Charles R., on our concep- 

 tion of a million of years, 10 ; his 

 death premature, 308, 309 ; his 

 freshness of spirit and sagacity, 

 308, 309; achievements of, 310 ; 

 his family name already famous at 

 the time of his birth in 1809, 

 310; his ancestors, 310, 311; 

 his relatives and sons, 311 ; re- 

 lieved from the necessity of earn- 

 ing a living, 312; receives Mas- 

 ter's degree and embarks on the 



346 



