UPON THE SERIES OF PREHISTORIC CRANIA. 659 



female clavicles from the cremation long barrows of Market 

 Weig-hton and Crosby Garrett as in the non-cremation loug- 

 barrows of Gloucestershire. 



As regards the skeletons of the stone age which have been 

 examined in this country, the aphorism enunciated by Dr. Kuhff 

 (R6vue d' Anthropologic, iv. 3, 1875, p. 435) to the effect that 

 'plus s'on se rapproche des origines de Thomme, et plus Ton 

 voit s'effacer les caracteres differentiels sexuels dans la squelette ' 

 appears to me to be the very reverse of the actual state of the case, 

 though the skulls are not rarely subequal in the two sexes. The 

 reason for this disproportion ^ lies in the facts of the earlier attain- 



* The greatest discrepancy iii tlie stature of the two sexes recorded by Weisbach in 

 his measurements in the Anthropological pai-t of the Voyage of the Novara (1867, 

 p. 217) is that observed in the Javanese, where the males were found to average 

 1679 mm. = nearly 5' 6" in stature, as against 1461 mm. = nearly 4' 9'5" for the females. 

 The Eev. Richard Abbay, Fellow of Wadham College, tells me that the Javanese 

 women are put to vei-y hard labour, carrying enormous weights upon their backs. 

 The philologist who may be inclined to explain the existence of Turanian or non- 

 Arian traits in Welsh and Irish grammar, by supposing that these traits are the 

 result of the assimilation by bronze-importing Celts of the supposed non-Ai-yan tribes 

 of the stone age, may be interested in comparing the following account of the treat- 

 ment of the Mongolian female in modern days with the foregoing description of the 

 osteological characters of the female of om* long-barrow period. The Rev. James 

 Gilmour, Medical Missionary at Peking, writes thus in the Eleventh Report of the 

 London Missionary Society's Hospital at Peking, 1875, p. 37 : ' The women of 

 Mongolia are hardy and capable. They look ruddy and strong-limbed. They work 

 hard, and are badly treated. Woman's place in the tent is next the door ; the felt 

 she sleeps on is the thinnest and poorest. She does the milking and the di-udgery 

 generally, and when she sits in the tent, usually has nothing better than a worn cow- 

 hide to protect her from the damp and cold of the gi-ound. She jumps into the 

 saddle and rides over the plains as recklessly as a man. She takes little care of 

 herself, and has little care bestowed upon her. An old woman spoke some truth, at 

 least, when she said to me, " The women are ti'eated like the dogs which are fed 

 outside the tent." The result is as might have been expected: strong, hardy and 

 healthy as the women look, almost every one who has passed the stage of girlhood 

 has some chronic malady or suffering. There are many exceptions, especially among 

 the richer class ; but as a rule, women suffer more, age sooner, and die younger than 

 the men ; and there is little prospect of a change for the better in this respect, till 

 women are treated more considerately, and have accorded to them a fair share of the 

 meagre comforts of tent-life.' Diodorus Siculus, again (v. 39), after dwelling with 

 emphasis on the hard life of the race which Vergil speaks of as assuetmn nialo 

 Ligurem, says that the wives take an equal share with their husbands in all their toils 

 and endurances. The craniographer may object to the relevancy of these striking 

 passages, on the ground that the Mongolian are a brachy-cephalic and the long-barrow 

 folk, like the Basques, a dolicho-cephalic stock. To this the non-anatomical enquirer 

 might reply that the question was not one of human osteology, but of human motives 

 and beha^iour ; but writing as a craniographer I will answei", firstly, that I have received 

 from Professor Eichwald a Tartar skull from Kazan with a cephalic index of 76, and 

 a very close general resemblance to the Eskimo type ; and secondly, that most ethnogra- 

 phers are agreed, dolicho-cephaly notwithstanding, to consider this latter stock as un- 

 mistakeably Mongolian. For the Australians, whom their mode of life and command 



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