< Page:Rude Stone Monuments.djvu
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HOLLAND. INDEX. INTERMENTS. 545

IJ^DEX.

INTERMENTS. 547 Holland, Rov. Mr., cited as to Sinai, 443 ; find by, 444. Holstt'iii, (lolinons in, 301. Holy Land, see ralestino. Horsa, his burial-place, 119-21; battle be- tween and Vortijjern, 119. Horses, sacrifices of, in the Steppes, 449- 52. Horstcad, Horsa perhaps there buried, 121. Houel's monuments in Malta, 416. Howes, Danish and Saxon burials in, 104 ; British ditto, to wliat date, ib. ; Danish kings buried, 250 ; to what date, argu- ment from, 297. Hoxay, 249-50. Hubba tlie Dane, his era, 104. Hue and Gabet cited as to monasticism m the East, 502. Human remains, see Finds. Human sacrifices amongst Anglo-Saxons. 284-5 ; and Khonds in India, 4G0 ; in Cuttack, 465. Humble, tomb of, 299. Hunebeds, 318, et seq. ; Emmen, 320-1 ; Ballo,321 ; were they originally covered, 321 ; Groningen and Frieslaud, 322 ; use and date, ib. Huuestadt, dragon at, 245. Hwitaby circles and Bacta stones, 290. Hydahs in Alaska, 18 ; compared to Cave men, ib.; accounts of, 18 vote; â– wiiether of race of mound builders, 517. Hy Fiachrach cited, 233. Hyperboreans, mentioned by Diodorus, 8 ; circular temples amongst, ib. ; falsely supposed to be inhabitants of Britain, ib. Iberians, or Celtiberians, 227 ; in Britain, 162 ; in Donegal, 227 ; dolmens, 228 ; Ii'ish dolmens, 238 ; not very ready converts to Christianity, 228. Idols, worship of, Councils forbidding, 24, 25. Ham, find at, 13. Images, headless, 425 ; of dead on tombs, 449. India, temples of, 1 ; no Druids in, 6 ; observations on, 7 ; when iron first known in, 35 ; tombs in, 41 ; holed stones, 343 ; westernmost dolmen, 443 ; rude -stone monuments, 455 ; dates of Aryans crossing Indus, of Vedas and laws of Menou, 455 ; no existing stone building prior to Asoka, ib. ; progress of Indian architecture contrasted with that of other countries, 457 ; Hindu not immutable, 459 ; but other races are so, 459-461 ; Khassia Hills, 462 ; rude monuments there similar to European examples, ib. ; cremation amongst Khassias, 463 ; funereal seats, ib. ; origin of menhirs there, stone turbans, 464 ; menhirs and tables, ib.; turban-stone, stone-table, trilithon, ib. ; no circles and align- ments, tunndi, nor sculptures, but coincidences with Western nations, 465 ; points of sindlarity and of dissimilarity to Druidical institutinns, ib.; date of monuments, ib. ; Kamarupa, 466 ; Sylhet, ib. ; Western India, ib. ; Bel- gaum altars or tables, 467 ; small cir- cles, central stones, worship of Betal, ib. ; dolmen at Kajunkoloor, 468 ; closed dolmen, 469 ; find, 470 ; cairns, ib. ; Ilaichore Doab dolmens surrounded by double circles, 470 ; arrangement of dolmens at Knjunkoloor, ib. ; cairns at Jewurgi, find, 471 ; purpose of each set of dolmens, 472 ; their ages, ib. ; double dolmen, Coorg, 473 ; tomb, Nilgiri Hills, ib. ; sepulchral circles at Amravati, 474 ; circular rail, 475; dis- tribution of dolmens in India, ib.; Karumbers Buddhists, 477 ; Dra- vichans or Tumulians, 478 ; Karumbers and Singalese, connexion of, ib. ; im- portance of the unexplored territory of Nizam, ib. ; Travancore cromlechs, 479 ; mode of interment, offerings to de- jjarted spirits, explanation of miniature utensils, 479 ; finds, 4S0 ; age of monu- ments, iron how long known in India, iron pillar at Kutub, Delhi, 481 ; sculp- tured Indian dolmen, 483 ; Iwallee, 484 ; group at Shahijoor, 485 ; cross and dolmen at Kat;ipur, 486-7 ; dolmen with cross at Nirmul Jungle, 488 ; dagobas in Ceylon, 489, 490 ; dolmen at PuUicondah, 491 ; Sanclii, rail near, 422 ; author's view as to dates of hewn and rude-stone buildings, ignorance of natives, 493-4 ; Eastern and Western dolmens, similarities between, how far proof of connexion, 495 ; tomb of Akbar at Agra, 496; proof from literature inconclusive, 496 ; from Asoka's rock- engraved edict, 498. Indian Buddhists, rails of, 48 ; art in- fluences elsewhere, 414. Indian origin of Essenes, 500. Inhumation, different kinds and history of, 30. Inigo Jones, his treatise on Stonehenge, 23. Inquisition, 332. Inscriptions in Maes-Howe, 246 ; Newton Stone, perhaps earliest Scotch inscrip- tion, 271 ; Kirkliston, 271 ; Ogham inscription, 271, Interments, place of, in case of circles, 132, 151; at Shap, Hakpen, and Crichie, 131-2; Saxon (see Beowulf); articles deposited by Saxons, 145-6; theory of successive interments, 146 ; secondary interments, 165-6; fallacy as to, 288-9 ; Sir John Lubbock's argu- ment respecting siunmit interments, 166.

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