568 



PKIMITIVE HISTORY OF THE lONIANS. 



Jarbliainel = 



Eaua. 



Semias, Soim. 



Daglida, Tait, Tuatha. 



Nuadh, Neid. Gaur, Gorias = Beachoil. 



Joudaoi, Danan. 



Ealathan. 



Gablmeoin. 



Heremon. 



I 

 Irial. 



Milesius. 



II. 



Falias. 



Ercii, Urien, March = Adur (?) ■= 



I 

 Awen, Owen, Don. 



Seon. 



Matabnme. 



Galaliad, 

 Ealadli. 



Patarus, Tarw, Bedwyr, 

 Idris Ga"WT, Fetlniir, 

 Pescheur, Oetosyrus, 



Gawaine, Echemeint, 

 Albanact, Penninus. 



III. 



Tydaiu, Gwyddion. 



Pandrasus, 

 Amathaon, 

 Pendai'an, 



PeUes. 



i'i*Ermmsul, Harimella = Heidr (?) = 



Johannes, Onar, Vanir. 



Sonne, Sonar. 



Tag, Dagr. 



Andvari, Hnitbiarga? Tyr, Kvasir. 



Donar, Ondurdis, Noatun. 



Gladsheim. 



Geban, Gefn. 



Baldag, Balder. 



VII.— PERSIAN CONNECTION. 

 In Pei'sian mythology Strabo's Oinanus and Anadatus,"^ and Homa, 

 Tir and Aban challenge comparison with Onam and Jonathan, 

 Shammai, Abishnr and Ahban, the latter of whom, however, answers 

 better to Agman."^* The only deity to whom, at present, I direct 

 attention is Mithras, the sun and the mediator. Guigniaut points 

 out the fact that Pliny gives this name to the first king of Helio- 



171* The Germanic gods Erminsul and Harimella must, I imagine, preserve tlie memory 

 of Jeralimeel, whose name may have sur^dved in the Marcomanni. For the connection of the 

 Persian Tir with the Scandinavian Tyr, vide, Le Dabistan, Paris, i. 39. 



"2 Strabo, xi. S, 4. 



172* Guigniaut, i. 784. Behram, a deity, may be a Brahma form of Ram, who should not be 

 forgotten ia an empire that contained Araohosia, named after his father. Tahmouras, a name 

 I have supposed to relate to Athom-ra, may, in the form Symouras sometimes given, denote 

 Sliammai-ra„ ; 



