286 



Armas, on Carib cannibalism 50 1 



Abuuages, an ancient Antillean race 219 



Asis, Ruiz DE, expedition '27^ 



AXES. (.Sec Celts.) 



Aymamon, a Porto Eican cacique 3S-39 



Bachillek y Morales, Antonio— 



Antillean language studied by "" 



citing &IUller on dance plazas >S0 



citing Perez on areito t>9 



on Antillean name tor Creator .W 



on Cuban caneys f<- 



on Fernando Columbu.s's life of father. 5.'> 

 on human bones found in Porto Kicii.. 29 

 Bahama islands— 



aborigines ;J0. 2is 



pictography 148 



slavery 2:j, '2.^ 



Baikd, Prof. S. F., on contour cf Porto 



Kico 129 



Ball courts. (Sec Juegos de bola. ) 

 Baltazar de Castro, on Carib raid on Porto 



Rico 28 



Bancroft— 



on Cempoalan ruins 233,236 



on ruins in Vera Cruz 231 



Bandelier, on Mexican mounds 271 



Barbados — 



archeological collections IS, 19 



archeological reconnoissance x v 



Barnum, William, work of xxiii 



Barra Chachalicas, clay objects from.. 26S-270 



Basketry, Antillean 212-213 



Bateys. (See Juegos de bola.) 



Batons 195 



Batres, SeSob, visit of, to Cempoalan . . . 234-235 



Beads 108-109,192 



Becerrillo 40 



Behechio, a Haitian cacique 49,70,81 



Benton, Dr Elbert J., work of xxiii 



Benzoni— 



as a historian 19-20 



on character of .\ntilleans 31 



on grinding maize 106 



on Haitian ceremony for crops 67 



on Haitian zemis 54 



on treatment of sick 61-62 



stone muUers figured by 99 



Bernaldez, Andros — 



on dress of Cuban cacique and wife 35 



on second voyage of Columbus 203 



on sentiments of Antilleans 32 



on wearing of masks by Antilleans 136 



Berra, Orozco y. {See Orozco.) 



Bifa, a vegetable dye 31 



Blake, Edith, cited on Jamaican shell 



heaps S7 



Boas, Dr Franz, work of mi,.\ix-xx 



Bon, derivation of name 130 



(Sec also Priesthood, Antillean. i 



BoMBAs, negro dances 69, 210 



Bone CARVING, Antillean 192-193 



Boone, William— 



acknowledgments to 24.') 



on paddle .stones 261 



BoRiNyuES, discussion of the name 78 



{See also Porto Kico.) 



Page 



BORINQUENOS — 



agriculture 50-51 



as potters 179-180, 189 



bone carving 192-193 



cannibalism 50 



canoes 208, 217 



cave-dwellers 41 



chief authorities on 19-20 



clans or phratries 42 



culture 47, 89-90, 91, 178-179, 214-216, 216 



dances 69 



effect of Spanish conquest on 25 



food 22, .51, 106 



government 33-35 



hieroglyphic writing 149 



houses 41-47, 84, 217 



human sacrifice 168 



hunting and fishing 48-50 



idols 197 



language 77-78 



line of descent 47 



marriage 48 



medicine practices 61-64 



mental and moral characteristics 31-32 



mortuary customs 58.80, 82-83, 19*., 217 



myths 73 



naming children 47 



occupations 107 



physical characteristics 28-31 



population 23-24 



priesthood 69-60 



race and kinship 21 , 26-28, 90, 219 



religion 42,. 53-54, 129-132 



researches among 19-21 



resistance to Spaniards 31 



rites and ceremonies — 



ceremony for crops 66-69 



general account 64-66 



mortuary rites 69-72 



shell carving 192-193 



skeletal remains 82-83 



slavery 23-24 



weapons 93, 209 



zemis 54-.59 



{See also Antilleans, Porto Rico, i 



Brasseub deBoureourg— 



Antillean vocabulary by 77 



map of 243 



Brau, SeSor— 



on Antillean pueblo 33 



on enslavement of Indian- 24 



on population of Porto Ki'-i> 23 



principal work 24, 40 



Brazil, antiquity of man in 220 



Brett, Rev. W. H., on Aravvak dance 72 



Brigstock, Master, on origin of Carib.. 217-218 



Brinton, Dr D. G.— 



on Antillean aborigines 218 



on Antillean language 78 



on Arawak language 77 



on petroglyph from St Vincent 159 



Brooks, Prof. W. K., on Lucayan skulls.. 30 



Bboyuan. (See Urayoan.) 



Buhiti. {See Boii, also Priesthood, Antillean.) 



Buret de Longchamps, on Borinqueno tra- 

 dition 130 



Cabello, Doctor, acknowledgment to 83 



