ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND ETHNOLOGICAL RESEARCHES IN CRETE. 251 



Names of Cretan Schoolboys at Palaikastro, Crete. 



1. Georgios Mavrokoukoulakis. 



2. Gregorios Papadhakis. 



3. Konstantinos Avronidhakis. 5 



4. Georgios Bonatsakis. 



5. Georgios Relakis. 



6. ' Christos ' Christodhoulakis. 



7. Konstantinos Ailamakis. 



8. Nikolaos Christodhoulakis (brother 



No. 6). 



9. Pandelis Gorbadzakis. 



10. Joannis Mavrokoukoulakis. 



11. Gregorios Brylakis. 



12. Konstantinos Avronidhakis. 1 



13. Nicholaos Stephanakis. 



14. Manoel Tsandhakis. 



15. Manoel Bonatsakis. 



16. Joannis Xipolitakis. 



17. Joannis Gremiakis (Jeremiakis), 



18. Emmanoel Tsimitakis. 



19. Konstantinos Scaromariolakis. 



20. Gregorios Mavrokoukoulakis. 



Names of Cretan Schoolgirls at Vori, Crete. 



1. 



2. 



3. 



4. 



5. 



6. 



7. 



8. 



9. 

 10. 

 11. 

 12. 

 13. 



Andronike Phortiades (Epirote — sec 



boy No. 6). 

 Eirene Nicolitakis. 

 Ourania Kontsifakis. 

 Aristea Zorzakakis. 

 Katina Papadhakis. 

 Elene Mpistogianakis. 

 Marianthi Askoxylakis. 

 Elene Pitharakis. 

 Chrysanthi Polydhakis. 

 Pagona Papadhakis. 

 Chrysanthi Papadhakis. 

 Marigo Kardhianis. 

 Evangelia NicoUdhakis. 



14. Kallirhoe Makridhakis. 



15. Andronike Amargiolakis. 



16. Kalliope Kapellakis. 



17. Eugenea Miserlakis. 



18. Asymenia Mproulgidhakis. 



19. Elene Zorzakakis. 



20. Evangelia Askoxylakis. 



21. Evangelia Dhendhrakis. 



22. Kyriakis Xenogianakis. 



23. Angelike Frangoulakis. 



24. Evangelia Krasadhakis. 



25. Elene Makridhakis. 



26. Elene Gianakakis. 



APPENDIX III. 



Some Remarks on Dr. Duckworth' s Report (Appendix II.). 

 By Charles H. Hawes. 



The point I wish to remark upon in Dr. Duckworth's paper is the 

 suggestion that the Venetian occupation of Crete is to be held account- 

 able for the broader heads of the Sitians in Crete. 



But before taking this up I should like to mention that, outside of 

 the Venetian question, my large mass of figures in the main bears out 

 Dr. Duckworth's results. To his data for hair-colour, and his remark 

 on the absence of red hair, I may add that out of 2,000 children observed 

 by me, 10 had red hair, and of 2,48S men 11 were red-headed — a pro- 

 portion of half, and less than half per cent. Also, while the age inde- 

 pendence of eye-colour compared with hair-colour is marked, it is not 

 absolute. I could find no change through the periods of adolescence 

 and maturity save one. Certainly there was no darkening tendency, but 

 rather the opposite, in the case of some dark eyes. This class of eye 

 is perhaps best described as fonce" ; it is bafflingly opaque, and this 

 tempts one to label it black, but no one who has seen the black eye of 

 a Negrito would do so. This eye changes in many cases, not in all, at 

 puberty or before, into a dark-brown or even brown eye. 



Turning to the Venetian question, I agree most heartily with Dr. 

 Duckworth that the history of the Venetian occupation of Crete would 

 well repay study, and it is to be regretted that no English student has 

 yet extracted it from the archives of Venice. 



1 Possibly Mavronidhakis. 



