SUMATRA .189 
owner atid lo(3ger arc ffolen, each is to make oath to the other that he 
13 not concerned in the robbery, and the parties put up with their 
lofa, or retrieve it as they can. 
Oaths are ufually made on the koraan, or at the grave of an aticeflor, 
as- the Mahometiti reltgioD prevails more or lefs* The party intended 
to be fatisficd by the oath, geoeraliy prefcnbes the mode and purport 
of it. 
" B A N G O O K. 
BoIIars. 
" The hmtgoon or compenfation for the murder of a pamhsTah n coo Rangoon or 
Pitto — — or an micnoT proaUeef^ 250 formurd^c 
Ditto — — of a common perfon — man or boy 80 
Ditto — — . Ditto — woman or girl 150 
Ditto of the legitimate children or wife of a pamtamb 250^ 
Exclufive of the above, a fine of fifty dollars and a buifaloe, as tif- 
pong hoomze (expiation), is to be paid on the murder of a pamharab ; 
of twenty dollars and a buffalocj on the murder of any other ; which i 
goes to the pambarab and proatteens, 
•* The bangoon of an outlaw is fifty dollars, without tifprng hoomee, 
** No bangoon is to be paid for a perfon killed in the commifEon of a 
robbery* 
The bangoon of pambarabs and proatteens Ts to be divided between* 
the pangeran and pambarabs ; one haM*; and tlie family of thc de- 
-cea|ed the other half. 
The bangoon of private perfons is to he paitl to their families ; de- 
dueling the addat Gobjfan of ten per cent, to the jiambarabs and pro* 
atteens. 
If a man kills his Have, he pays half his price, as bangoon, to the 
pangeran, and the ttppohghcttmee iotht proatteens* 
** If a man kills his wife by he pays her bangoon to the proat- 
. ^tcensj or to her family, according as the taike kmko fubfifts or not* 
