Page:Rude Stone Monuments.djvu/579

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PHAYRE.
INDEX.
RHIND.
553

Phayre, Sir Arthur, on circle at Peshawur, 452.

Phœnicians, Romans, and Greeks of Marseilles, their influence upon architecture of rude nations, 508.

Phœnicians, voyages of, to Cornwall, 38; written characters at New Grange, 207; not builders of rude-stone monuments, 409.

Picardy, remains of Cave men in, 329.

Pictland, features of, 58.

Picts, origin and relations with Irish and Gauls, 267; their capitals, 271; language, ib.

Pierre branlante, Brittany, 348.

Pierre Martine, rocking stone, 347-8.

Pilgrim Scandinavian pirates, 244.

Pit-markings, 424.

Plas Newydd dolmen, 167-9.

Pliny, see Cæsar.

Plouharnel, double dolmen at, 358.

Poitiers, demi-dolmen, 346.

Poitou, Cave men's remains in, 329.

Poland and Posen, no dolmens in, 301.

Pomerania, dolmens in, 301.

Portugal, writers on its rude-stone monuments, 377; dolmens, ib.; Strabo, an authority for its dolmens, ib.; Cuneus, 378; distribution of dolmens, ib.; throws light upon theories, ib.; course taken by dolmen race, 378 et seq.; Arroyolos, dolmen at, 389.

Posen, see Poland.

Pownall, Governor, his disquisition upon marks at New Grange, 202, 207.

Pregel, dolmens on, 301.

Prehistoric prejudices, 406. See International.

Preissac, alignment at, 368.

Pre-Roman theory, 373.

Progressive theory, 406.

Prussia, dolmens rare in, 301.

Prussian Saxony, see Saxony.

Priam's house of brass, 35.

Prinsep, Mr., his translation of an edict of Asoka, 498.

Priority of dates, see Dates.

Ptolemy, mentioned in edict of Indian Prince, 498.

Pullicondah, cairn or dolmen, 491.

Purl, temple of Juggernaut at, 460.

Pyramids, inference as to climate from pictures in, 17; date of that at Gizeh, 31; antecedent structures supposed, ib.; contain tombs true and false, 46; probable date of, 408.

Pytheas, visit of, to Cimbrian Chersonese, 38.

Queen Charlotte's Sound, whether natives a race of mound-builders, 517.

Race, inference as to, from use of circles, 163; of dolmens, ib.; of circles and dolmens, ib.; divisions of, in Britain by Tacitus, 162; inference from simultaneous monuments of three kinds in Ireland as to races, 238; relations of Picts with Irish and Gaels, shown by comparison of monuments, 267, 271; circle-building and dolmen-building races, 274; whence each came, and course which each took, ib.; dolmens, historic, 302; distribution of, ib.; pre- historic theory leaves subject of races obscure, ib.; dolmen-building race not so ready converts to Christianity as the Celts, 328; inference from church architecture in South of France, 332; and Protestant feeling in South of France, ib.; non-progressive, ib.; Cimbri, Celts, and Gauls, 333; Cimbri and Aquitani related, ib.; race traced by dolmens from Brittany to Narbonne, 334; Iberians, Celtiberians, Turanians, 379; disturbed by Carthaginians, 379; Romans, 380; Moors, their easy conquest of Spain, how accounted for, 381; Spanish settlers in Ireland and Britain, ib.; Tara, 382; Lia Fail, ib.; Heremon, 381-3; ethnography of North Africa, 406, et seq.; different theories as to, ib.; connexion between races on the northern and southern sides of Mediterranean, 408; chief race in India, 458; Bhil, Cole, Gond, and Toda, non-progressive, 459; Hindus not immutable, ib.; inference from style of architecture, 495; peopling of America, 516; by what way, 516; Mound-builders, Redmen, Hydahs, 517; Aztecs and Toltecs, 515; Pastoral or Agricultural races, ditto Hunters in North America, ib.

Race-course, notion that alignments at Stonehenge were, 111.

Raguhilda, wife of Eric, 250.

Rail, Sanchi, 492.

Rajagriha, convocation at, 501.

Rajpootana, pertinacity of Bhil usages, 459.

Rajunkoloor, 468 et seq.

Ramayana, the date of, 455.

Ramé, M., describes alignment at Gré de Cojou, 377.

Rath at Dowth, residence of the Dagdha, 195.

Rath of Leoghaire, 195; singular direction by him as to his burial, ib.

Rath of Queen Meave, 193.

Rath na Riogh, 194 ; resembles Avebury, ib.

Rathcrogan, supposed burial-place of Queen Meave, 183.

Rayne, old circle at, 263.

Rectangular dolmens, 313. See Dolmens.

Redmen of North America, 517; not mound-builders, ib.

Redstone pillar, 200.

Relic worship in the East, 503.

Relig na Riogh, Dati's burial-place, 200.

Rhind, Mr., his bequest for Professorship