134 SATURDAY LECTURES. 



science on a permanent basis. Of his own work in Anthro- 

 pology, it is impossible, in the limits of a lecture, to give any 

 adequate account. His friend, Professor Pozzi, has attempted 

 a bibliography of his writings which he admits to be im- 

 perfect, and which yet covers seventeen pages, in double 

 columns of small type of the Revue d'anthropologie, which 

 is a large octavo in size. I have been able to add some few 

 articles to Pozzi's list, and, of the whole, have made the fol- 

 lowing enumeration : 



Broca's contributions to the medical sciences, embracing 

 anatomy and physiology, both normal and pathological, and 

 surgery, number 243 articles and volumes. His papers on 

 the anatomy and functions of the brain are 53 in number. 

 His last and most important work on this subject, a treatise 

 on the morphology of the brain, was left unfinished. 



In anthropology, I find 109 articles and volumes upon 

 comparative anatomy and general anthropology ; 48 papers 

 on general craniology, and 35 on special craniology ; 27 

 papers on ethnology, and 19 on miscellaneous subjects. 

 The total number of his printed articles and volumes, so 

 far as ascertained, is 534. It is to be remembered that a 

 large part of these papers "are quite extensive, running- 

 through several numbers of the journals in which they ap- 

 peared. Man}" of them were reprinted in pamphlet form, 

 and he, himself, commenced a collection of his anthropo- 

 logical memoirs, of which three large volumes were pub- 

 lished. Among the more important of these contributions 

 may be mentioned his paper on Linguistics and Anthro- 

 pology ; his General Instructions for Observations on An- 

 thropology. This last was a codification of the rules neces- 

 sary to be observed by travelers and investigators; it was 

 issued in 1865, and was completed ten years later bj'" the 

 Instructions in Craniology and Craniometry. This very 

 valuable and original work had immense success, and was 

 translated into nearly every modern language. Of his 

 writings on the brain, the more important are his memoir 

 upon cranio-cerebral topograph}'; on the great limbic lobe; 

 on the olfactory centres, and his admirable treatise on cer- 



