1884.] Rev. G. Parker— Notes on " Kashgaria.' 195 



of the rivers Hi, Tekes, Koon- 

 ges and the two Yulduz)." 



The last line of p. 92 referring to 

 the Djoongars says : " The 

 Mongol type of countenance 

 is especially well-preserved 

 amongst the first of these." 

 * Wok or Wot (mot) Son. Their 

 * or king lived in the city 

 of * situated to the north 

 of the Celestial mountains and 

 to the east of the lake * 

 which is the Temomton of our 

 day. This people had blue 

 eyes, and fair or red hair. In 

 the third century B. C. they 

 lived together with the * 

 to the north-west of China. 

 Kot- (gap) -Kat (gap) - Si (Kafcas 

 G. P.) The ancestors of the 

 Kirghiz of our day. They are 

 probably a people of the 

 Samoyede race blended with 

 the * who belonged to the 

 same fair race as the * 

 (The * Ting- Ling dwelt in 

 Siberia upon the Irtyshe, Ob., 

 and upper Yenisei (200 B. C.). 

 Under the Han dynasty (200 

 B. C.) the Hakas were called 

 * Kin-Kun, and it was not 

 till the time of the * Tang 

 dynasty (700 A. D.) that they 

 received the name of * 

 Their settlement began to the 

 west of the Uigurs and to the 

 north of * or Kharashar and 

 extended northward as far as 

 the Irtyshe and the Ob, in 

 Southern Siberia. The men 



* Word in Chinese character not 

 decipherable. 



