3 i6 RELIGION 



At the present time twenty directors of studies give 

 instruction in sixteen departments, of each of which but 

 brief mention can be made. The department, director 

 or directors, courses in 1914-1915, and important pub- 

 lications are given in order. 



Religions of uncivilized peoples, Marcel MAUSS. 



Primitive religions of Europe, Henri HUBERT: Irish 

 mythology; The sculptured monuments of the religion 

 of the Gauls. (Mauss and Hubert, both vigorous ad- 

 herents of the sociological school, have collaborated in 

 other publications beside the one already mentioned; 

 see "Essai sur la nature et la fonction du sacrifice," 

 "L'Annee sociologique," vol. II, 1899, pp. 29-138). 



Religions of pre-Columbian America, Georges RAY- 

 NAUD: Civil and religious history of pre-Columbian 

 Central America, Hieratic writings and hieroglyphics 

 of the same. 



Religions of the Far East, Marcel GRANET: Feasts of 

 ancient China ("Revue de Thistoire des religions," 

 LXIX, 1914, No. 2, "Programme d'etudes sur Pancienne 

 religion chinoise.") 



Religions of India, (i) Sylvain Lfvi ("La science des 

 religions et les religions dTnde," Paris, 1892; Asanga: 

 Mahayana-sutralamkara, "Expose de la doctrine du 

 grand vehicule selon le systeme Yogacara," 2 vols., 

 Paris, 1907-1911). (2) Alfred FOUCHER: The Chan- 

 dogya-Upanishad, Buddhist texts. 



Assyro-Babylonian religion, Charles FOSSEY: Some 

 Babylonian and Biblical myths ("La magie assyrienne," 

 Paris, 1902; "Manuel d'assyriologie," vol. I, Paris, 1904). 



Religions of Egypt, fimile AMELINEAU: Ancient texts 

 relative to the religion and morals of Egypt, Book of the 

 Dead, ch. CXLVI ("Essai sur 1'evolution historique et 

 philosophique des idees morales dans 1'figypte ancienne," 

 Paris, 1895; "Prolegomnes a 1'etude de la religion 



