Sir James George Frazer (1854–1941). The Golden Bough. 1922.
Subject Index
India, Central Provinces of, rain-charms in, 73; sacred trees in, 119; peacock worshipped among the Bhils of, 474; expulsion of disease in, 565 |
——, North-eastern, harvest home festival in, 556 |
——, Northern, the Emblica officinalis sacred in, 119; coco-nuts sacred in, 119; eyes of owl eaten in, 497 |
——, South-eastern, precautions against demon of smallpox in, 549 |
——, Southern, inspired priest in, 94; husband’s name tabooed in, 249; kings formerly killed after a twelve years’ reign in, 274; ceremonies at eating the new rice in, 482; expulsion of demon in, 563 |
Indian ceremonies analogous to the rites of Adonis, 336; legend parallel to Balder myth, 701 |
—— Archipelago, the, head-hunting in, 441; expulsion of diseases in, 566; birth-custom in, 679 |
Indonesian ideas of the rice soul, 414; treatment of the growing rice as a breeding woman, 414 |
Indra, great Indian god, 67, 701 |
Industrial progress essential to intellectual progress, 48; evolution from uniformity to diversity of function, 106 |
Infanticide, 293 |
Infants, exposed to attacks of demons, 226, 245; tabooed, 231 |
Infidelity of wife thought to injure absent husband, 23, 25 |
Ingiald, son of King Aunund, 496 |
Ingniet or Ingiet, a secret society, 680 |
Initiation, rites of, 692, 693 |
Innovations, the savage distrust of, 225 |
Ino and Melicertes, 290, 291 |
Inquisition, the, 101, 102 |
Insects, homoeopathic magic of, 31; charms to protect the fields against, 530, 531 |
Inspiration, 93; two modes of producing temporary, 94; prophetic, 334; savage theory of, 356 |
Intellectual progress dependent on economic progress, 48 |
Invulnerability, conferred by decoction of a parasitic orchid, 660; of Balder, 667; attained through blood brotherhood with animal, 684 |
Invulnerable warlock or giant, stories of the, 668 |
Ireland, woman burnt as a witch in, 56; magical powers of kings in, 89; belief as to green boughs on May Day in, 119; May Day in, 121; May Queen in, 131; taboos observed by kings in ancient, 173; cut hair preserved against the day of judgment in, 236; old kings of, might not have any blemish, 273; harvest customs in, 404; hunting the wren in, 537; Beltane fires in, 621; Hallowe’en in, 634; Midsummer fires in, 646; story of the external soul in, 673 |
Iron, tabooed, 221, 224; used as a charm against spirits, 225, 481; mistletoe gathered without the use of, 660 |
Iron-Beard, Dr., a Whitsuntide mummer, 297, 300, 307 |
Iroquois, the, 112, 553 |
Ishtar, great Babylonian goddess, 325, 330 |
Isis, how she discovered the name of Ra, 260; sister and wife of Osiris, 363, 382; her many names, 382; a corn-goddess, 382; her discovery of wheat and barley, 382; identified with Demeter, 383; popularity of her worship in the Roman Empire, 383; resemblance to the Virgin Mary, 383; dirge of, 424 |
Islay, the island of, 403 |
Isle de France, the May-tree and Father May in, 126; harvest customs in, 427, 430; Midsummer giant burnt in, 655 |
Isle of Man, the, 81; St. Bridget in, 135; hunting the wren in, 536; Midsummer fires in, 630, 645; old New Year’s Day in, 633; Hogmanay song in, 634; Hallowe’en in, 636 |
Israelites, 210, 472 |
Issapoo, negroes of, 501 |
Italones, the, 498 |
Italy, disposal of loose hair by women in, 236; “killing the Hare” at harvest in, 453; resemblance between the Carnival of modern and the Saturnalia of ancient, 586; Midsummer fires in, 631; the mistletoe in, 659; birth-trees in, 682 |
——, ancient, spinning on highroads forbidden to women, 20; forests of, 110; tree-worship in, 111; oaks sacred to Jupiter in, 160 |
Itonamas of South America, 180 |
Ivy, eaten by Bacchanals, 95; prohibition to touch or name, 174; sacred to Attis, 352; sacred to Osiris, 381; associated with Dionysus, 387 |
Ja-Luo tribes of Kavirondo, 215 |
Jablonski, P. E., 384 |
Jabme-Aimo, abode of the dead, 529 |
Jack-in-the-Green, 129, 299 |
Jackal’s heart not eaten lest it make the eater timid, 495 |
Jagas, a tribe of Angola, 293 |
Jambi in Sumatra, temporary kings in, 287 |
Jana, another form of Diana, 164–165 |
Janus, 164, 165, 167; as a god of doors, 166; explanation of the two-headed, 166 |
Japan, black dog sacrificed for rain in the mountains of, 73; rain-making by means of a stone in, 76; ceremony to make trees bear fruit in, 114; the Mikado of, 168; bear festival of the Aino in, 505; the mistletoe in, 660 |
Jar, the evils of a whole year shut up in a, 567 |
Jars, wind kept by priests in, 170 |
Jaundice, 15, 16 |
Java, 30; rain-charms in, 66, 68, 72; sexual intercourse to promote the growth of rice in, 136; custom when child is first set on the ground, 181; remedy for gout or rheumatism in, 196; superstitions as to the head in, 230; ceremony at rice-harvest in, 418; earthworms eaten by dancing girls in, 496 |
Jawbones, magical use of, 18, 78; of slain animals propitiated by hunters, 526 |
Jaws of corpse tied up to prevent the escape of the soul, 180 |