50 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. {N.S., XVI, 
The photographs (pl. VI) I now show you are portraits 
of two Armenians from the new Julfa, both skilled mechanics. 
The first is that of a man (fig. ]) who may be said to repre- 
sent the Armenoid type somewhat refined'; the second 
(fig. 2) represents a man of strongly mixed type. In the 
one you will note the disproportionate development of the upper 
part of the head, very high sloping forehead and calvaria, the 
abrupt posterior termination of the head with the peculiar — 
dint so characteristically Armenoid, the long somewhat hooked 
nose, with its tumid nostrils, the long upper lip, the poorly- 
developed lower jaw. In the other you see traces of the same 
type in the high forehead and long nose, but both forehead 
and nose have a very different outline and the head is of quite 
a different form, showing little trace of the Armenoid type. 
You will see from these photographs and from the state- 
Fia. 4. 
ments given in the description of plate VI that these two racial 
types differ from one another, so far as the head is con- 
to t T 
tionately broader by measurements than the first, but appears 
from its outline, and particularly from the convexity of its pos- 
, longer. In short the measurements and 
in the other (B) it does not fit at all. Even here we are dealing 
will now show you some photographs illustrating racial 
1 Educated Persian Armenians to whom I have shown von Luschan’s 
ss 98 Shoes recognize his portraits of Syrian Armenians as resembling 
