I5IBLI0GRAPHY OF THE IROOUOIAN LANGUAG1:S 



By James C. Pilling. 



[An asterisk witliio parentheses indicates that tiie compiler has seen no copy of the work referred to. 



A. 



Adair (James). The | history | of the | 

 American ludiaus; | particularly | 

 Those Nations adjoiuing to the Missi- 

 sippi [sic], east and | west Florida, 

 Georgia, South and North Carolina, and 

 Virginia: | containing | An Account of 

 their (Jrigiu, Language, Manners, Re- 

 ligious and I Civil Customs, Laws, 

 Form of Government, Punishments, 

 Condtict in | War and Domestic Life, 

 their Habits, Diet, Agriculture, Mann- ! 

 factures, Diseases and Method of Cnre, 

 and other Particulars, suffi- ] cient to 

 render it | a | complete Iti^dian system. | 

 With I Observations on former Histo- 

 rians, the Conduct of our Colony | Gov- 

 ernors, Superintendents, Missionaries, 

 &c. I Also I an appendix, | contain- 

 ing | A Description of the Floridas, and 

 the Missisippi [sic] Lands, with their 

 Prodnc- | tions — The Benefits of colo- 

 nising Georgiana, and civilizing the In- 

 dians — I And tlie way to make all the 

 Colonies more valuable to the Mother 

 Country. | With a new Map of the 

 Country referred to in the History. | By 

 James Adair, Esfpiirc, | A Trader with 

 the Indians, and Resident in their 

 Country for Forty Years. | 



London: | Printed for Edward and 

 Charles Dilly, in the Poultry. | 

 MDCCLXXY [177.-)]. 



Half title verso blank 1 I. contents 1 1. title 

 verso blank 1 1. dedication 2 11. preface 1 1. con- 

 tents 1 l.toxt pp. 1-4G4, niaj) 4-. 



Argument v, " Their language and dialects," 

 pp. 37-74; Argument vi, "Their manner of 

 counting time," pp. 74-80; and Argument xxii, 



Adair (J.) — Continued. 



"Their choice of names adapted to their cir- 

 cumstances,' pp. 191-194, contain terms in 

 various Indian languages, among them the 

 Cheerake. 



Copies seen: Astor, Bancroft, Boston Athe- 

 n:eum, Briuton, British Museum, Brown, Con- 

 gress, Dunbar, Massachusetts Historical So- 

 ciety, Trumbull, Watkinson. 



Priced in Stevens's Nuggets, No. :!li, \l. Is. 

 Brought at the Field .sale, No. Ki, .$9.50; at the 

 Menzies, No. 7, "half crushed blue levant mo- 

 rocco, gilt top, uncut," $ir).r)0; at the Siiuier, 

 No. 7, $9.75. Priced by Loclerc, 1878, No. 17, 

 50 fr. ; by Quaritch, No. 11007, \l. 16«. At the 

 Brinley sale, No. 53JJ, an uncut copy, brought 

 .$7, and a broken copy, No. 5353, $5.50 ; at the 

 Murphy sale. No. 14, it sold foi- $1'2. Quaritch 

 again prices it, No. 29910, with " ])Oucil notes," 

 21. 10a., and another copy, No. 29911, -ll. ; Clarke, 

 of Cincinnati, 188G, No. Cijl, $1.5. 



I have seen a Geinian tratislation. Breslau, 

 1782, 8', which con tains no linguistics. (Brown.) 

 Hi.story of the North American In- 

 dians, their customs, isic. By James 



Adair. 



In King (E.), Auticpiitics of Mexico, vol. 8, 

 pp. 273-375, London, 1848, folio. 



Contains Arguments i-xxiii of Adair's work, 

 followed by " Notes and Illustrations to Adair's 

 History of the North American ludiaus," by 

 Lord Kingsbarough, which occupies i)p. 

 :57.")-400.— Aigument v, i^p. 295-311; Argument 

 vi, pp. 311-314 ; Argument xxii, pp. 3G3-3C4. 

 Adam (Lncicn). Examen grammatical 

 compare de seize langiies aincricaines. 



In Cougr^s Int. des Americanistea, Compte- 

 rendu, second session, vol. 2, pp. 101-244, Lux- 

 embourg & Paris, 1878, 8=. 



The live folding sheets at the end contain a 

 number of vocabularies, among them an Iro- 

 quois. 



Issued .separately as follows: 



