Ethnology: in two parts ; fundamental ethnical problems ; the primary ethnical groups
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2011
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Beschreibung: | Orig. publ.: 1896 Enth.: 1. Fundamental ethnical problems ; 2. The primary ethnical groups |
Beschreibung: | XXX, 442 S. Ill. 21 cm |
ISBN: | 9781107648135 1107648130 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Ethnology |b in two parts ; fundamental ethnical problems ; the primary ethnical groups |c by A. H. Keane |
250 | |a 1. paperback ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Cambridge |b Cambridge Univ. Press |c 2011 | |
300 | |a XXX, 442 S. |b Ill. |c 21 cm | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
500 | |a Orig. publ.: 1896 | ||
500 | |a Enth.: 1. Fundamental ethnical problems ; 2. The primary ethnical groups | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804148409969410048 |
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adam_text | Titel: Ethnology
Autor: Keane, Augustus Henry
Jahr: 2011
CONTENTS.
PART I.
FUNDAMENTAL PROBLEMS.
CHAPTER 1.
PRELIMINARY.
Definitions?Anthropology General and Special?Ethnology?Ethnography?
Scope of Ethnology?General Nomenclatnre?Definite Terms : Race;
Clan; Tribe; Family; Totem; Brauch; Stock; Type?Indefinite Terms:
Division; Section; Croup; Horde; Nation; People?Ezample i?15
CHAPTER II.
PHYSICAL EVOLUTION OF MAN.
Man s Place in the Animal Kingdom?The Primates?Old Divisions: Quad-
rumana and Bimana?New Dhriskms: Lemnroidea and Anthropoidea?
Tbe five families of the Anthropoidea?Their ränge in time and Space?
Diagram of the Anthropoid families?Relation* of the fcmily Hominidae to
the family Simiidac?Comparative Table of the Simüdae and Hominidae:
Gibbon; Orang; Gorilla; Chimpanzee; Dryopithecns; Hominidae?
Points of resemblance to and diffierence from the Simiidac?Origin of
Man by Creation or Evolution?Creation Theory inadeqmte?Evolution
Theory adequate?Natural and Sapernatoral views reconcued?Difficolties
of the progressive evolutionist theory?Views of de Oaatre ges, de
MortiDet and Sergi?The Castenedolo Man?Sergi s Tertiary Hominidae
?Qoatemary Man?Caimstadt Man rejeeted?Ncanderthal affirmed?The
Quatemary Hominidae?KoDmann s Danertypns?Persistence of primitive
types?Views of Freuen, Engfish and American Anthropotogists?Diffi-
colties of the Dauertypus theory?Analogy of the Equidae?Their evolutioa
bz
xviii CONTENTS.
?Sergi s Tertiary Hominidae rejeeted?Persistence of, and Reversais to,
primitive types reconciled with evolutionary teachings?Comparative
Diagrams of Pleistocene Hominidae and Equidae?Broad stages of physical
evolution from a postulated Anthropoid Miocene precursor ? 16?39
CHAPTER III.
MENTAL EVOLUTION OF MAN.
Human incomparably greater than animal intelligence?Growth of mind
apparently out of proportion to that of its seat, the brain?Evolution of
organ and funetion correlated?Cranial to be distinguished from mental
capacity?Comparative cranial studies often contradictory?Chief physical
determinants of mental power not so much the volume of the brain as
its convolutions and the cellular struetore of the grey cortex?These
Clements capable of indefinite expansion tili arrested by the closing of the
cranial sutures?Difierent degrees of intelligence in different races aecounted
for?Such diflerences independent of the general bodüy strueture?Hence
physiqoe and mental power not necessarüy correlated and not always
developed pari /um»?But mind and cerebral strueture always corre-
spood?Hence comparative study of brain texture, as by Broca and
Miktakhc-Maclay, yidd best results?Brain and its funetion, tbought,
capable of indefinite firture expansion-Differ in degree only, not in kind,
from those of the krtrer Orders?Time alone needed to bridge the gap
¦?«?49
CHAPTER IV.
ANTIQUrnr OF MAN : GENERAL CONS1DERATIONS.
The Geologicti Sequence in its bearing on the Asriniiryof Man?Table of the
Geologie*! Seouence: Primary; Secondary; Tertiary; Quaternary; Pre-
hnto«; Histofic?The Glacial Problem?Reactionary Views?Croffs
Periodicity Theory?Objectionj and Limitations of Time by Prestwich?A
redncrJo ad absurdum?Arguments based on influence of Gulf Stream and
Aba^tfGlaaationmeariiggtofat^
reaffirmed?^AkmgperWof tmjeiieedW ton!eet aü tb«cc«dirioiis: Re-
dnteftrrtMBof Ln»J and Wat«; Intermingfing of Arctic and Tropical
fcunas; Scounng out of great river Valleys; Man long associated wim
extmet aiunals; Britta twfce sahtnerged smee its occupation by m»;
Lattfc trace of pnmitive man in the bot port^acial deposit» of the Nor*
?Two Ice-ages and long Inter-glacial period esaential fartors?Difficolties
CONTENTS. xix
of the Intermingled Arctic and Tropical Faunas?Lyell and Boyd-Dawkins
Seasonal-Migration Theory discussed?Long association of reindeer
and hyaena explained?Great age of the flints found in the high-level
drift, boulder-clay, plateaux and riverside terraees?Pre-, Inter- and Post-
Glacial Man?The problem restated?General Conclusion?Pliocene
Hominidae rejeeted?Specialised Inter-glacial Hominidae reaffirmed?
Their probable age?Post-glacial Man a nondescript . . 50?70
CHAPTER V.
THE ANTIQUITY OF MAN : PALjEOLITHIC AGE.
Palaeoliünc Man spread over the whole world?But in many places early and
later Culrores run in parallel lines, not in time sequence?Hence the Time
relations often obscured, objeets of human industry not belüg everywhere
tests of age, but only of grades of eulture?Even these grades not always
clearly distinguished?Palaeolithic art not stationary but progressive, and
in some respects outstripping that of neoüthic times?Materials available
for the study of primitive Man: implements, monuments and human
remains?Unreasonable objectkms to implements (palaeoliths) as evidence
of antiquity?Value of implements determined by their provenance and
associations in geological formatkms or in caves?Stalagmite beds not
necessarily a test of age?Kitchen-middens of all ages, some very old,
some recent and of rapid growth, hence to be judged on their merits?
Human remains reserved for special treatment?Quatemary Man in
Britain: Evidence of Hatfield Beds; Kent s Cavern; Brixham Cave;
Cresswell and Victoria Caves; Lotherdaue and Pont NewyddCaves; Vale
ofChryddCaves; Thames river-drift; High-levelgravels; Chaukplateau,
Kent; Eoliths from Canterbury gravels, Stoke Newington, c-?Quater-
nary Man in France: Somme Valley river-drifts, St Acheul?Grades of
Pauaeottunc Cultme?De MortSlet s Four Epochs: Chelüan Age, tyräcal
implements; Moustierian Age, typicalimplements; Solutrian Age, rypical
implements; Madrimian Age, typical implements?The Dordogne School
of Art?Piacard Cave: Superimposed Colture eras?Evidences of Palaec-
lithic Man in France and Italy?Quatemary Man in Africa (Egypt,
Algeria, the Cape); in Asia(Syria, Pakstme, Asm Minor, Caocasus, Mon-
goha, India, Japan); in Aostralia and New Zraland ; in America (Tierra
del Fuego, Patagonia, Argentina and Brazü, Mexico, United States and
Canarla) ; evidence from the Trenton gravels; Mississippi Basin and other
localities; Views of Chamberiin, Hohnes, Masoo and other conservatives
on the value of this evidence; the Caiaveras Skull?General Difiusion of
Primitive Man thronghoat North America?The Mound-boilders not
quatemary; their Cuttere neoljthic, prehistoric and historic . 71?107
XX CONTENTS.
CHAPTER VI.
ANTIQUITY OF MAN: NEOLITHIC AND METAL AGES.
Marked difference between the Old and New Stone Ages?Comparative Table
of Palaeo- and Neolithic Cultures?A Break of Continuity in some regions,
notably in Britain?But not everywhere?No universal hiatus possible?
Continuous evolution in the south and south-east?Probable duration of
neolithic times?The late palaeolithic era of the West synchronous with
the early neolithic era of the South-east?Great duration of neolithic
times argued on general considerations?The Danish peat-bogs a time
gange?The Danish kitchen-middens?Origin and growth of aquatic
stations?The Swiss Lake-Dwellings?The Irish and Scotch crannogs?
Neolithic structures?Reducible to two types: The polylith or cell, and
monolith or block, originating in Burial and Ancestry worship?Polylithic
and monolithic nomendature?Evolution of the Cromlech or Dolmen
through the Barrow from the Cell?Popularly associated with druidical
rites?The Sessi and Stazzone of Malta and Corsica?The Nuraghi of
Sardinia?The Talayots of the Balearic Islands?The Russian Kurgans?
Silbury Hill?The Cell becomes a Family Vault with later develop-
ments?The Menhir, its origin and wide diffusion?Its development in
linear and drcular direction?The Alignments and CycloHths (Stone
Circles)?Their origin and purpose explained?Erdeven; Stonehenge;
New Grange; Menec, Camac district?The Irish Round Towers?
Geographical Distribution of the Megaliths?Chief Centres: Bahrein
Islands; Moab; Manritania; Gaul, Britain, Scandinavia?Bearingonthe
question of early migrations?Europe re-settled in Neolithic times from
two quarters?Routes indicated by the presence or absence of Mega-
lithic Structures?These wrongly accredited to the Kelts who followed
the non-megalithic route?Astronomie and religious ideas attributed to
the megalith-builders?Prehistoric monuments in the New World?General
Survey?Tiahuanaco, cnlminaring giory of American Megalithic archi-
tecture?Tiahnanaco Cultnre an independent local development ro8?140
CHAPTER VIL
SPECIFIC UNITY OF MAN.
Specific or Varietal unity deeided by extent of divergence between past and
present races?Speäes and Variety?The Physiological test: inter-racial
fertility?The Canidae, Equidae and Hominidae?The Palaeolithic races?
CONTENTS. XXI
Their remains: Trinil: Homo Neanderthalensis; La Naulette; La Denise;
Spy; Kent; Podbaba; Predmost; Marcilly; Mentone; Olmo; Eguis-
heira; Laugerie; Palaeolithic races exclusively long-headed?Neolithic
races at first also long-headed, then mixed, and later exclusively round-
headed in some places?But all intermingled?Fertile miscegenation
established for prehistoric times?In the historic period mixture the rule,
racial purity the exception?The Mestizos of Latin America?The Paulistas,
Franco-Oanadians, and Dano-Eskimo?The United States Indians and
half-breeds?Eugenesis established for the New World, and for Africa:
The Griquas, Abyssinians, Sudanese, and West African Negroes?Mixed
races in Asia, Malaysia, and Polynesia?The Pitcairn Islanders?The physio-
logical test conclusive against the Polygenists?The anatomical test?The
Polygenist linguistic argument: Independent stock races inferred from
independent stock languages?Fallacy of this argument?Specific Unity
unanected by the existence of Stock Languages?which are to be other-
wise explained?The Monogenist view established?and confirmed by the
universal difrusion of articulate speech?Psychic argument?The question
summed up by Blumenbach ... ... 141?161
CHAPTER VIII.
VARIETAL DIVERSITY OF MAN : PHYSICAL CRITERIA OF RACE.
Difficulties of defining, and detenmning the number of, the primary human
varieties?Schemes of the first systematists: Bernier; Linnl; Blumenbach;
Cuvier; Virey; Desmoulins; Bory de Saint-Vincent; Morton; Gliddon
and Agassiz; Latham; Carus; Peschel?The Philologists?The Ethno-
logists : Bufion; Prichard?The Anatomists: Geoflroy Saint-Hilaire;
Retzius; Broca; Virchow; Mantegazza; Bamard Davis; Rolleston;
Flower; Cope?Recent Schemes: Haeckel s; de Quatrefages s; Huxley s;
Broca s; Fr. Müller*s; DermWs; Flower and Lydekker s?General
remarks on these Groupings?Elements of Classification: Physical and
Mental Characters?Physical tests of Race: Colour of the Skin?Colour
and Textnre of the Hair?The Beard; Hirsuteness?Shape of the Skull?
Cephalic Indices?Tables of Doucho-, Mesati- and Brachycephali?
Gnathism?Facial Index?Table of Sub-nasal Prognathism?The Denti-
tion?The Nose: Nasal Index?Crfour and Shape of the Eye?The
General Expression?Stature: Tables of Heights?Other Physical Factors
t6»?189
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER IX.
VARIETAL DIVERSITY OF MAN : MENTAL CRITERIA OF RACE
Cranial Capacity?Size of brain and Mental Capacity correlated in the animal
series?and partly in man?Comparative Tables of Cranial Capacity?
Language the chief mental criterion?Relation of speech to Anthropology
?Phonesis a physical funetion which cannot be neglected by the anthro-
pologist?Valne of language to the ethnologist?Evolution of speech
from the inorganic to the organic State?The faculty originated most pro-
bably m a Single centre?Reply to the linguistic polygenists?Speech of
relatively recent growth?Hence at first unstable and subjeet to great
fluctuaöons-Hence also linguistic divergence more rapid than physical
types, forming species and genera which cannot mix-Hence no mixed
languages-Consequent value of speech as a racial test-Linguistic more
easüy distmguished than physical groups-Table of mixed peoples speak-
mg mmuxed languages-Table of peoples whose speech has shifted with-
out nuxing-Table of peoples whose physical type has changed, their
^^persistmg-Hencespeechandracenotconvertote^
often a great aid m determming ethnical elements-The morphological
orters of speech-Old views of linguistic growth-The Root theory-
Mon^Uabam »ot fte first but the last stage of growth-The sentence
ü« sörimg-pomt-The monosyllabic languages originally polysyllabic-
SoT^A,f P 0neÜC te^~ n« ^Wan root theory e^loded-
£T rf ^ f * ?* ** ^«»««-Agglutination-Its n*ure and
tf?2 TtZ* ^ Orders not fixed species-but transitional phases
?^~^T T* to ^«tim^^Aggmtination passes into
Inflecuon and Polysynthes^PoIysynthesis not a primitive Ca late
£»^ *P«ch-Du1ers in kind from Aggluthation-Nature of In-
flec^n-Ihagram of hnguistic evohrtion-Devetopment of speech not
hrn^but m parallel hnes-Synthesis and Polysynthesb tenTtowards
-^flahe ar^yss-Change from pre- to post-position in the Aryan
^r^Oangeü* Umversal Lawof all living speech-Social State: Fish-
K! ^^gnC,atnre ° ** °f «-Socäl üsages poor criteria-
aS^Z^1 and devd°Pment »f nature and ameestry worship-
AtuhrofKmwrphism due to the common psychic character of maa-Hence
«»?on rehgKms ideas no proof of common origin or of conttct-Like
«agesno evidence of common descent.....190?»19
CONTENTS. xxiii
PART II.
THE PRIMARY ETHNICAL GROUPS.
CHAPTER X.
MAIN DIVISIONS OF THE HOMINIDiE
Four Primary Groups?Homo Aithiopicus, MongoHcus, Americanns, Caucasi-
cus?Family Tree of the Hominidae?The primary groups derived, not
one from the other, but independently from a common precursor?Their
differences determined by their different environments?Position of the
several groups?The Negro?The Mongol and American?The Caucasian
?Remarks on this Terminology?Comparative Table of the physical and
mental characters of the four primary groups?Centre of Evolution?Dis-
tribution of land and water in Secondary and Tertiary Times?The Isdo-
African Continent?The Austral Continent?The Eurafrican Continent?
The Euramerican Continent?America accessible from Europe and from
Asia?Theory of de Quatrefages on the migrations of primitive man?His
linguistic argument?Views of Dallas?and Brinton?Evolution with a
jump ?The Missing Link?Probable centre of Evolution and Dispersion
the Indo-African and Austral regions, true Home of the Lemurs and of
the Anthropoids?Characters of the pliocene precursor and of the pleisto-
cene sub-gronps persistent in the Afro-Austral regions?Pliocene and
pleistocene migrarioos from the primeval home?Order of Development
of the primary groups in their several centres of evolution?Monogenist
and Polygenist views reconciled?Flower and Lydekker on the spread of
the Hominidae over the globe.......im?141
CHAPTER XL
HOMO ÄTHIOPICUS.
Two divisions: African and Oceanic?Negro Family Tree?The Negritoes:
Two divisions?Early migrations?The African Negritoes?The Akkas
and Batwa?The Boshmen and Hottentots?Fast and present Hottentot-
XXtV CONTENTS.
Bushman domains?The Oceanic Negritoes?The Black dement in Iudia
?The Oceanic Negrito groups: Andamanese; Sakais of the Malay
Peninsula; Aetas of the Philippines; Karons of New Guinea; Kalangs
of Java?The Negro divisions compared?The African Negro unprogressive
without miscegenation?Testimony of H. H. Johnston, Manetta, Runin
and Sir Spencer St John?Historie evidence?Low State of Negro culture
?Two mainsub-divisions: Sudanese and Bantu?The Sudanese Negroes
?Mixed Sudanese groups ?The Fulahs?The Negroid Bantus?The Zulu-
Kafirsand Wa-Huma?The Bantu linguistic family?General intermingling
of the Sudanese and Bantu populations?Hence Classification impossible
except on a linguistic basis?Tables of the Sudanese and Bantu groups?
The Oceanic Negro domain?An area of great ethnical confusion?T«o
main sub-divisions: Insular Negroes and Negroid Australians?Nomen-
clature: Melanesians; Papuans?The Papuan domain, past and present?
The Papuan type?The linguistic problem?Wide diflusion of Malayo-
Polynesian speech not due to Malay or Polynesian Migrations?Still less
to Melanesian Migrations?The true explanation; the Caucasic factor?
The Australian sub-division?Not homogeneous?Constituent elements of
the Negroid Australians?and of the Tasmanians?Tasmanian culture
eolithic..........141?»94
CHAPTER XII.
HOMO MONGOLICUS.
Asia home of the Mongol race?easily accessible to the pliocene precursor?
Transition from the generalised human type to the Mongol variety?
Chief Mongol physical characters?Diffusion of the Mongol race?Early
Mongolo-Caucasic interminglings?Hence aberrant Mongolic groups?
Mongol Family Tree?Chief Mongol sub-divisions?Their domain?The
Akkads?Early linguistic relations?The Mongolo-Tatar sub-division?-
Nomenclature: Mongol; Tatar; TürJd?Divergent Finno-Turki types?
The Samoyedes?The Lapps?The Baltic Finns; Krel«« ; Tavastians
?White elements in the Mongolo-Tatar domain?Avars?Magyars??
Bulgars?Osmanli affinities?Koreo-Japanese group?The Koreans?The
Japanese: Physical qualities; Mental qualities?The Hyperbarea^s ,?
The Chnkchi problem?The Tibeto-Indo-Chmese sub-division?General
physical unilbrmity?Tibeto-Chinese linguistic relations?Function of
Tone in the Isolating Languages?Tibetan linguistic afSnities?Indo-
Oceanic linguistic relations?The Indooeäans?The Malay problem?
Malay physical type?Malagasy affinities?Malayo-PolynesUn linguistic
relations?Ethnical relations in die Phüippme Islands. . 195?333
CONTENTS. xxv
CHAPTER XIII.
HOMO AMERICANUS.
America peopled from the Eastem Hemisphere during the Stone Ages?The
bronze age of Chimu (Peru) no proof of later intercourse between the
Old and New Worlds?Hence the American aborigines are the direct
descendants of palaeolithic and neolithic man?and their later culture is
consequently an independent local development?But Homo Americanus
is not autochthonous, but a specialised form of a Mongol prototype?
General Uniformity of the American physical type?Texture of the hair;
colour of the skin? White and Black aborigines no proof of
early migrations from Europe or Melanesia?Arguments of De Quatrefages
discussed?The Japanese myth exposed?The stranded junk argument
?Culture of the early Stone Age identical in both hemispheres?But
after that age the arts and industries show continuous divergence in
America?Argument based by Retzius on the two types of American
crania?Contrasts between the present Mongol and American physical
types?Mental Capacity of the American aborigines superior to the
Negro, on the whole inferior to the Mongol?But the Cranial Capacity
inferior both to Mongol and Negro?Striking uniformity of the mental
characters of the aborigines?in North America?in South America?
Uniform character of American speech in its general morphology?
Fundamentally distinct from the strueture of the languages of the Old
World?Surprising number of American stock languages despite their
common polysyntbetic type?Classification of the aborigines must always
be mainly based on language?Fsunily Tree of Homo Americanus?
America probably peopled by two routes?From Europe by palaeolithic,
from Asia by neolithic man?Present distiibution of the two types?
The Eskimo question?Its Solution?Prof. Masoa s theory of the peopling
of America from Indo-Malaysia?Negative Objections to this theory?
Positive Objections?True explanation of the eoineidences between
certain usages and mental aspects of the inhabitants of the Old and
New Worlds?Due not to contact or borrowings, but to their common
psychic Constitution?Results of the discovery and re-settlement of
America on die aborigines in Latin America?In Angto-Saxon America
?The Anglo-American type due, not to miseegenation, but to con-
vergence..........334?373
xxvi CONTENTS.
CHAPTER XIV.
HOMO CAUCAS1CUS.
North Africa probable cradle of the Caucasic race?which spread thence east
to Asia and north to Europe?The Cro-Magnon and other early European
races affiliated to the fair Berbers of Mauritania?West Europe occupied
by several varieties of Homo Caucasicus in the Stone Ages?Who were of
non-Aiyan speech like the still surviving Basques?The Ibero-Berber
problem?Basques and Picts?Family Tree of Homo Caucasicus?
Xanthochroi and Melanochroi?Blacks of Caucasic Type?Physical
Characters of Homo Caucasicus?White, Brown and Dark Hamites?
The Tamahu Hamites of the EgyptUn records?The New Race in
the Nile Valley?The Eastern Hamites: Afars; Bejas; Gallas and
Somals; Masai and Wa-Huma?Ethnical relations in Abyssinia: Hiro-
yarites; Agaos; The present Abysshtian populations?Relations of the
Hamites to the Semites?The Semitic Domain?The Semitic Groups?
Semitic physical and mental characters?The Semitic Languages?The
Aryan-speaking Peoples?Aryan a linguistic not a racial expression?
Troe character of the Aryan migrations?Illustrated by the Teutonic in-
vasion of Britain; and by the Hindu mvasion of India?The Aryan
Cradleland?Primitive Aryan Culture?Schrader shypothesis?Conflicting
views regarding the Aryan Cradleland reconcBed?The Eurasian Steppe
true home of the primitive Aryan Groups?The primitive Aryan type
dimcult to determine?Bot probably xanthochroid?The Aryan problem
summed up?Recent expansion of the Aryan-speaking Peoples?The
Greater Britain ?The Aryan linguistic fianily?Table of the Aryan
linguistic groups?Desintegration of primitive Aryan speech?The Teu-
tonic phonetic System?Ethnical and linguistic relations in the Caucasus
?Main Divisions of the peoples and languages of Caucasia?Ethnical
and linguistic relations of the Dravidas?Sporadic Caucasic Groups:
Todas; Ainos.........374?4110
Addbnda...........411?4*6
IKBHC...........427?442
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Keane, Augustus Henry 1833-1912 |
author_GND | (DE-588)117504475 |
author_facet | Keane, Augustus Henry 1833-1912 |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Keane, Augustus Henry 1833-1912 |
author_variant | a h k ah ahk |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV039579454 |
classification_rvk | LB 30000 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)740690419 (DE-599)HBZHT016888876 |
discipline | Sozial-/Kulturanthropologie / Empirische Kulturwissenschaft |
edition | 1. paperback ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV039579454 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T00:06:41Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781107648135 1107648130 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-024430780 |
oclc_num | 740690419 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-11 |
owner_facet | DE-11 |
physical | XXX, 442 S. Ill. 21 cm |
publishDate | 2011 |
publishDateSearch | 2011 |
publishDateSort | 2011 |
publisher | Cambridge Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Keane, Augustus Henry 1833-1912 Verfasser (DE-588)117504475 aut Ethnology in two parts ; fundamental ethnical problems ; the primary ethnical groups by A. H. Keane 1. paperback ed. Cambridge Cambridge Univ. Press 2011 XXX, 442 S. Ill. 21 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Orig. publ.: 1896 Enth.: 1. Fundamental ethnical problems ; 2. The primary ethnical groups Ethnologie (DE-588)4078931-7 gnd rswk-swf Ethnologie (DE-588)4078931-7 s DE-604 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024430780&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Keane, Augustus Henry 1833-1912 Ethnology in two parts ; fundamental ethnical problems ; the primary ethnical groups Ethnologie (DE-588)4078931-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4078931-7 |
title | Ethnology in two parts ; fundamental ethnical problems ; the primary ethnical groups |
title_auth | Ethnology in two parts ; fundamental ethnical problems ; the primary ethnical groups |
title_exact_search | Ethnology in two parts ; fundamental ethnical problems ; the primary ethnical groups |
title_full | Ethnology in two parts ; fundamental ethnical problems ; the primary ethnical groups by A. H. Keane |
title_fullStr | Ethnology in two parts ; fundamental ethnical problems ; the primary ethnical groups by A. H. Keane |
title_full_unstemmed | Ethnology in two parts ; fundamental ethnical problems ; the primary ethnical groups by A. H. Keane |
title_short | Ethnology |
title_sort | ethnology in two parts fundamental ethnical problems the primary ethnical groups |
title_sub | in two parts ; fundamental ethnical problems ; the primary ethnical groups |
topic | Ethnologie (DE-588)4078931-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Ethnologie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024430780&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT keaneaugustushenry ethnologyintwopartsfundamentalethnicalproblemstheprimaryethnicalgroups |