Mutual Aid; a factor of evolution eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 335 pages of information about Mutual Aid; a factor of evolution.

Mutual Aid; a factor of evolution eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 335 pages of information about Mutual Aid; a factor of evolution.

24.  Post, in Afrik.  Jurisprudenz, gives a series of facts illustrating the conceptions of equity inrooted among the African barbarians.  The same may be said of all serious examinations into barbarian common law.

25.  See the excellent chapter, “Le droit de La Vieille Irlande,” (also “Le Haut Nord”) in Etudes de droit international et de droit politique, by Prof.  E. Nys, Bruxelles, 1896.

26.  Introduction, p. xxxv.

27.  Das alte Wallis, pp. 343-350.

28.  Maynoff, “Sketches of the Judicial Practices of the Mordovians,” in the ethnographical Zapiski of the Russian Geographical Society, 1885, pp. 236, 257.

29.  Henry Maine, International Law, London, 1888, pp. 11-13.  E. Nys, Les origines du droit international, Bruxelles, 1894.

30.  A Russian historian, the Kazan Professor Schapoff, who was exiled in 1862 to Siberia, has given a good description of their institutions in the Izvestia of the East-Siberian Geographical Society, vol. v. 1874.

31.  Sir Henry Maine’s Village Communities, New York, 1876, pp. 193-196.

32.  Nazaroff, The North Usuri Territory (Russian), St. Petersburg, 1887, p. 65.

33.  Hanoteau et Letourneux, La Kabylie, 3 vols.  Paris, 1883.

34.  To convoke an “aid” or “bee,” some kind of meal must be offered to the community.  I am told by a Caucasian friend that in Georgia, when the poor man wants an “aid,” he borrows from the rich man a sheep or two to prepare the meal, and the community bring, in addition to their work, so many provisions that he may repay the debt.  A similar habit exists with the Mordovians.

35.  Hanoteau et Letourneux, La kabylie, ii. 58.  The same respect to strangers is the rule with the Mongols.  The Mongol who has refused his roof to a stranger pays the full blood-compensation if the stranger has suffered therefrom (Bastian, Der Mensch in der Geschichte, iii. 231).

36.  N. Khoudadoff, “Notes on the Khevsoures,” in Zapiski of the Caucasian Geogr.  Society, xiv. 1, Tiflis, 1890, p. 68.  They also took the oath of not marrying girls from their own union, thus displaying a remarkable return to the old gentile rules.

37.  Dm.  Bakradze, “Notes on the Zakataly District,” in same Zapiski, xiv. 1, p. 264.  The “joint team” is as common among the Lezghines as it is among the Ossetes.

38.  See Post, Afrikanische Jurisprudenz, Oldenburg, 1887.  Munzinger, Ueber das Recht und Sitten der Bogos, Winterthur 1859; Casalis, Les Bassoutos, Paris, 1859; Maclean, Kafir Laws and Customs, Mount Coke, 1858, etc.

39.  Waitz, iii. 423 seq.

40.  Post’s Studien zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Familien Rechts Oldenburg, 1889, pp. 270 seq.

41.  Powell, Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnography, Washington, 1881, quoted in Post’s Studien, p. 290; Bastian’s Inselgruppen in Oceanien, 1883, p. 88.

42.  De Stuers, quoted by Waitz, v. 141.

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