The Primitive Inhabitants of Scandinavia: An Essay on Comparative Ethnography, and a Contribution to the History of the Development of Mankind: Containing a Description of the Implements, Dwellings, Tombs, and Mode of Living of the Savages in the North of Europe During the Stone AgeLongmans, Green and Company, 1868 - 272 pages |
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The Primitive Inhabitants of Scandinavia: An Essay on Comparative ... John Lubbock,Sven Nilsson No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
amber amongst ancient Sagas animals antiquities appears Archæology arrows axes belong bone breadth British Museum broad Bronze Age caves chipped chisels civilisation corpses crania cranium Denmark described diorite Ditto ditto doubt dwarfs dwellings earth edge Esquimaux Europe evidently feet fish-hooks flint flint implements flint spear former found in Scania gallery gallery-graves gallery-tomb giants goblins graves Greenland groove Hammer hammer-stone handle harpoons hole human hunting huts imple inches Indians inhabitants Iron Age javelin kind knife knives Kurile Islands Laplanders length living Lund manner ments metal North America occasionally Odin ornaments peat-bogs period polar race probably race reindeer resemble round savage savage nations Scandinavia Scania sepulchres shaft shape sharpened side similar skeletons sketched on Pl skull sling sling-stones sometimes south of Sweden Stone Age stone implements Sweden Thor Tierra del Fuego tombs traces tribes tumuli weapons West Göthland wooden worn worship
Popular passages
Page 230 - And there we saw the giants, the sons of Anak, which come of the giants: and we were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight.
Page 261 - Among all this people there were seven hundred chosen men lefthanded ; every one could sling stones at an hair breadth, and not miss.
Page 263 - ... much less described; though I summed up all the fortitude I was master of on the occasion, it was with difficulty that I could refrain from tears; and I am confident that my features must have feelingly expressed how sincerely I was affected at the barbarous scene I then witnessed; even at this hour I cannot reflect on the transactions of that horrid day without shedding tears.
Page 185 - It ought to have been mentioned in its proper place, that in making our retreat up the river, after killing the Esquimaux on the West side, we saw an old woman sitting by the side of the water, killing salmon, which lay at the foot of the fall as thick as a shoal of herrings. Whether from the noise of the fall, or a natural defect in the old woman's hearing, it is hard to determine, but certain it is, she had no knowledge of the tragical scene which had been so lately transacted at the tents, though...
Page 182 - Indians having possession of all the land side, to no side could they fly for shelter. One alternative only remained, that of jumping into the river; but as none of them attempted it, they all fell a sacrifice to Indian barbarity !
Page lx - ... to be able, by availing itself of the same comparative method, to collect the remains of human races long since passed away, and of the works which they...
Page 180 - It is perhaps worth remarking, that my creAV, though an undisciplined rabble, and by no means accustomed to war or command, seemingly acted on this horrid occasion with the utmost uniformity of sentiment. There was not among them the least altercation or separate opinion; all were united in the general cause, and as ready to follow where Matonabbee led, as he appeared to be ready to lead, according to the advice of an old Copper Indian, who had joined us on our first arrival at the river where this...
Page 261 - But they discovered that the point of the deerhorn is harder and also more stubborn; therefore, in a slit, like lead in our pencils, they introduced a slip of this substance and secured it by a strong thong, put on wet, but which on drying became very rigid. Here we can not fail to trace ingenuity, ability, and a view to ornament.
Page xii - ... history. We will commence, then, with the Palaeolithic Age. This is the most ancient period in which we have as yet any decisive proofs of the existence of man. M. Desnoyers some years ago called attention to some bones from the Pliocene beds of St.
Page 183 - I was at length obliged to desire that they would be more expeditious in despatching their victim out of her misery, otherwise I should be obliged out of pity to assist in the friendly office of putting an end to the existence of a fellowcreature who was so cruelly wounded. On this request being made, one of the Indians hastily drew his spear from the place where it was first lodged, and pierced it through her breast near the heart. The love of life, however, even in this most miserable state, was...