LEIPSIC MUSEUM OF ETHNOLOGY. 409 



Money — Contiuued. 

 Paper-money. 



Certificates of indebtedness. 

 Medals, badges, and other outer decora- 

 tions. 



IG. — Piiblic life. 



All objects which relate to judiciary and 

 police affairs. 



Medical practice. 



Eleemosynary and reform. 



Birth and lineage. 



Baptism. 



Marriage. 



Education. 



Burial and sepnlchers. 



Feasts, &c. 



NOTICE. 



The objects mentioned in the foregoing catalogue are designed to 

 exhibit human nature and culture in all parts of the earth, in historical 

 as well as in prehistoric times. 



Where the obtaining of originals is impossible or imj)racticable, as, 

 for example, of buildings, &c., let proper models, casts, other imitations, 

 drawings, photographs, &c., be taken. (It is exceedingly important to 

 have photographs and truthful sketches of men in the performance of 

 all the occupations which designate culture.) 



Also, in general, the raw material is desirable (as already mentioned 

 in different places above) out of which the different objects .are made; 

 also the finished and unfinished products of industry and handicraft. 



Of drawings, especially those of human subjects, it is desirable to 

 take as many as possible of the natural size, and to state whether they 

 were taken immediately from the original subject or were otherwise 

 procured. 



Drawings intended to illustrate races of men should exhibit both the 

 full face and the profile. 



The object and the place of its discovery should be accurately noted; 

 also the people or race from whom it is procured or by whom it is used. 



It is further necessary regarding discoveries, especially prehistoric 

 discoveries, accurately to describe the nature of the places where they 

 are made so far as practicable, and especially to state the kind of soil 

 when feasible, accompanied with specimens or proofs. Gjenerallj" care 

 ful and diligent attention must be paid to the whole geological and 

 topographical surroundings, likewise to the depth at which the dis- 

 covery was made, the time, as well as to other attending circumstances; 

 to which are to be added accounts of objects which are found lying 

 with them or near at hand, as, for example, of human relics, bones of 

 animals, vegetable remains, weapons, tools, vessels, objects of dress, 

 ornaments, &c. 



And, further, great attention should be paid to ancient human habi- 

 tations and settlements, to cave-dwellings, and pile-structures, and to 

 whatever is in relation therewith ; also to graves, burial-grounds, monu- 

 mental stones, &c., with the accompanying relics of ancient human and 

 animal bones, old weapons and tools, old vessels, urns, and like objects. 



Likewise is to be associated with the museum a library, which shall 



