INbEJ. 



645 



iMace procured from Kew Guinea, 

 308. 



^ladajE^ascsr^ island of, and Africa, 



marked diflOTence between the 



productions of, 11, 

 Madeira, beetles, 346, 

 Mnc-indano pirates, 341. 

 Makariki, vifiit to, 355. 

 Miikian, island of, 4, 320 ; ralcanio 



eruptions in, 5 ; volcano of, 27 ». ; 



visit to, IS ; coast of, 243. 

 Mahomctjm priest at l>obbo, 479, 

 Jlahonietaus in Sijjffapore, 20 ; of 



CemiJi, 352 ; of the lalanda, 



425. 



Malacca, and Mount Ophir, 25; 

 dcscrii>tiou of tho town, jtc., ib, \ 

 descriptiou of, by Liuschott, 270 

 yuars ago, 26; present position 

 of the trade of, 27 ; jmpulatiou, 

 curious churiicter of, and of ihe 

 laimuuge, 27 ; the works and 

 binfa of, 28 \ elephants in, 83. 



Mulatig, ruins of, in Java, 106. 



Ma-lay anchor, 543, 



Malay Archi[>elago, tm etseq.i the 

 author'a views aa to the races 

 of man in the, 582 et seq.\ two 

 strongly contrajsted races, the 

 Mabys and the Papuans^ 5S2 (sm 

 Malays and Papuans); an indi- 

 genous race in the islaiid of 

 Ceram, 588; tribes of the island 

 of Timor, ib. ; the bla«k woolly- 

 haired races of the Philippines 

 and the Malay ]jenin9uhi, 5&0; 

 general view as to their origin and 

 dBnitiea, 590, SSI; the Poly- 

 iifi^iau race^, 591, 592|; on the 

 crania and the races of man in 

 the, 599, 000, 



Malay peninsula, non-volcanic, 7. 



Malay race of Ternatc, 3Ui, 



Malay votabularj', <j04, 



Malaya, a peculiarly Lute resting race, 

 found only in tho iliday Archi- 

 pelago, 1, 2 ; villages, &c., des- 

 troye.1 by volcanoes, 6-7 ; in 

 SingnpoiMj, 20; a Malay Governor 

 and liOUae, 64 [ste Gudoug) ; 

 Malay vilhiges, 125 ; of liatchian, 

 331 ; diifereut from the Papuans, 

 415; contrast between the, 417; 

 contrast of cliuracter with the, 



42S , psychology of the, 434 ; 

 widely Bejiarateil fruni the Pa- 

 puans, 435 ; of the Malay Archi- 

 pelago;, 582 ; the most itnportaiit 

 of tho races, iJb. \ their physieal 

 and mental chajactoriatics, ih. ; 

 different tribes, 683; ihe savage 

 Malays, li. ; personal cUaracler- 

 istics, ih. ; imptissive character 

 tSif 684 ; different accounts al 

 them, 5S5; on tho crania and 

 languages of the, 69@, 600. 

 JTaleos, singular birds, in Celebes, 

 263 ; description of the hinls, 265; 

 and eggs, 265,266; their breeding- 

 place, 302. 

 Mammalia, or warm-blooded quatl- 

 rujwdsofthe ludo-Malay I*.litnds, 

 14fj; of the Tinutr gruup, 208; 

 of Celebes, 276; of the WoUiccas, 

 391 ■ of Xew Guinea, 575. 

 Mangusteen fruit Durian), in 



Sarawak, 84, 138. 

 Mauipa, island tif, 3P0. 

 Mauowolko, f hi? largest of the Coram 

 group, 363 ; map of, 364 ; do- 

 scrii>tion of, 3fi5 ; people and 

 TOCOS of, %b,i return to, 370, 

 Mansinam, ialund of, 494, 496, 

 Manuel, a Portuguese bii-d skinner, 

 engaged by the author, 155; his 

 philusonhy, 160-162. 

 Marrh, islaud of, 320. 

 Maros river, 228; Adls of the river, 

 234 ; precipices, li3() ; abscuee of 

 llowen^ 237; drought folio wt*d by 

 a deluge of rain, 239 ; «ffects of, 

 240 {see Mcnado). 

 Marsuiiiiils in the Malay Archi- 

 pelago, 9 ; of ('elcb»'i«, 278 ; of tho 

 Moluccas, 393; of the Papuan 

 Islands, 575. 

 Maasaratty vocabulary, 605. 

 Matabello Ishuids, 365 ; dang>>n) 

 of tho voj'age to, 366 ; trade of, 

 367; cocoa-nut tree« of, ib,; vil- 

 lages of, 373, 374 ; savage life of, 

 374; palm-wino one of the few 

 lu-xuries of, 368; wild fruits of, 

 369 ; strange ideas of the people 

 rfispecting thfi Ilujwjan war ib.\ 

 their extravagant tiotion.-i of the 

 Turks, ih. 

 Matabello vocabulary, 607- 



