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p. 197

INDEX.

ACOSTA, 136

Affinities of American and Asiatic languages, 99

Agattou and Semitchi Islands, 69

Agave americana, 37, 162, 171

Age of stone or bronze, 162, 165

Ainos or Jebis, extent of the race, 11; called Crab Barbarians, ib.; when first described, 12; called Hairy People, ib.; embassy to Japan, ib.; wars against Japan, 14; images of, 22; paint themselves, 140; same as Mao-jen, 174. Vide Appendix.

Akkad, 100

Albert Gallatin on American languages, 156

Alceste Island, 66

Aleutian or Fox Islands, 11, 22, 70

Aliaska on the early maps, 148

Aloe, Mexican, known in China, 162

Amakirima, 67

Amazonia, 29

Ambassadors from Fusang, 184; Ambassade des Hollandais, 129; first Japanese to China, 173

America, how first populated, 8; formation of American races, ib.; their unity, ib.

American coast, castaways on, 43, 76

Amur or Amoor River, 132; Tartars on the, 145

Anahuac, 35

Ancient races of North American Indians, 100 et seq.

Ancient records of Mexico, 86

Ancient vessels of North-eastern Asia, 64

Andræ and Geiger, 166

p. 198

Antecedent probability that Orientals went to America, 59

Aztec god of war, 36; computation of time, 39

Aztecs declare they came from the north, 136; later accounts of, 33

"Archiv für die wissenschaftliche Kunde von Russland," 149

Arrow-heads made of flint, 165

Atsowma, 175

Attou Island, 68

Avatcha, 146; Bay of, 68

Aymara, Peruvian, 100

 

BAY of St Lawrence, Siberia, 75

Baikal, Lake, 144

Bartlett, John Russell, 151

Beans, Mexican (frijoles), 135

Behring's Straits or Anadir, 9

"Bibliotheca Sinologica," 166

Bigandet, Father R. R., 93

Bison and oxen, 153

Black Dragon River, 15

"Book of Mountains and Seas," 12

Brasseur de Bourbourg, L’Abbé, 151

Bretschneider, Dr, his opinion of Hoei-shin, 165; his discussion of Fusang, ib.; his opinion of all who believe in Fusang, 169; he approves of Father Hyacinth's expression, 170; Reply to Dr Bretschneider, 176; summary of his argument, 185

Broussonetia papyrifera, 172, 180

Buache, Philip, his map, 126, 147

Buddha, images of, 119; attitude of, 120

Buddhism, 4; its influence in partly breaking Chinese exclusiveness, 5; in Fusang, 28; its extension, 31; introduced into Fusang, 143; its progress, 113; not understood by Deguignes, 155; introduced into Japan, 156, 163

Buddhist priests in America, discussed by Simson, 162; monks, 5; Trinity, ib.; writings an important part of Chinese literature and history, 65; travels of, 87

Burlinghame, 175

Burnouf, works of, 156

 

p. 199

CACTUS, in ancient Mexican, tuna, 119

California, coast of, 147; Chinese merchants there in early times, 150

Cape San Lucas, 71

Carpin, Jean du Plan de, 33

Catacualcans, 136

Catlin, 152

Chan-hai-king on Fusang, 143

Chamo, great desert of, 130

Charlevoix, "Histoire de la Nouvelle France," 137

Che-goi tribes, sable hunters, 132 et seq.

Chicago, ancient skulls from, 111

Children, change in appearance of, in new climates, 78

Chinese precepts relative to the outer world, 3; early embassies, 4; reception of envoys, ib.; knowledge of foreign countries, 6; pride and vanity, ib.; acquire knowledge of North-eastern Asia, 9; Chinese and Japanese in Kamtschatka and the Hawaiian group, 43; et seq.; Recorder and Missionary Journal, 165; Chinese poets, 169

Chippeway perpetual fire, 184

Chi-tao-an, 89

Chi-wu-ming-shi-tu-k’ao, drawing of Hibiscus in the, 170

Chu-kon, Kon-sang, Kon-shu, 172

Chu-kin, Chi-kin, Jiki, synonyms for Hibiscus rosa siniensis, 170

Chy-wei Youtché or Youtchy, 144

Cibola, 152

Clavigero, Storia Antica del Messico, 35

Clarke Hyde, Mr, 99

Cocom, Indian chief, shows picture of a cow; ancient prophecy told by him, 154

Cochran, Lieutenant, 130

Colours applied to cycles of time, 40

Columbus, 75; his vessels, 76

Continental Magazine (N.Y.) for 1862 contained a portion of the present work, 163

Cooper, Fenimore, name of vessel, 68, 76

Copper in Fusang, 28, 38

Criminals in Fusang, 46, 47

Currents, the Japanese, 74; the Peruvian or Humboldt Current, ib.

 

p. 200

D'ACOSTA, 150

Dakota or Sioux language, 101; affinity with Ural-Altaic languages, 102; resemblance of Dakotas to Tartars, 192

Dead placed in trees by the Tunguse, 10

Deer, 10

Deguignes, Klaproth, and D’Eichthal, 125; Deguignes determined that Wenshin was Jeso, 129; old writers cited by, ib.; his account of the different people on the route more detailed than Neumann's, 131; determined that Fusang was New Mexico, 133; remarks on Kingdom of Women, 134; his argument, 138; wrote according to his title, 139; on the second itinerary, 143 et seq.; traces the route, 148 et seq.; cited by Bretschneider, 166

D’Eichthal, his memoir, 125, 127 et seq.; his defence of Deguignes, 125 et seq.; observations on Aleutian Islands, 132; on distance from Tahan, 140

De Laët, 127; describes Pueblo Indians, 136

De Landa, Diego de, on Yucatan, 153

De Long, Mr, on the Ainos and Japanese, 189

Delaware Indians called women, 134

De l’Isle, M. Guillaume, 147

"Description of Western Countries," a Chinese work destroyed in Pekin, 89

Distance between Corea and middle of Niphon, 140; from China to Fusang, as claimed by the believers in Hoei-shin, fully admitted by Dr Bretschneider, 182

Djourdje, ancestors of the present Mongols, 144

Dogs, swine, devils, and savages, Chinese names for races of the north, south, east, and west, 6; dogs in Kamtschatka, 20; dog smelling land, 73

Domestic animals in Fusang, 40

Dryanda cordata, 171

 

EASTERN and Central Asiatic History, 6

Edrisi, 30

Elæococca verucosa, 171

Empress Tai-Hau of the Wei dynasty, possibly the patroness of Hoei-shin, 6

Esquimaux, 11

p. 201

Ethnology, accuracy in, 114

Ewbank, Thomas, 151

 

FA-HIAN, 89, 90; Travels of, 92

Fa-kiai-ngan-litu, i.e., More Certain Tables of Religion, 32

Feathers, ball of, seen by Mexican goddess, 36

Fishermen, Chinese and Japanese, 66

Flying natives of Fusang, fable of, 143

Florida, Straits of, 74

Flower of the Centre, name for China, 6

Fogs in Kamtschatka, 73

Formosa, 11, 67

Foster, Y. W., LL.D., 115

Fox Islands, 11, 70.

Fruit preserved, 69

Furs in the Aleutian Islands, 132

Fusang, kingdom of, 25 et seq.; latest discussions of, 142, 161; Fusang-tree, 45, 162; malvaceous, 164; envoys from Pusan; to China, 175; not in Japan, 142, 173

Future of Eastern Asia, 46

 

GALLATIN Albert, 7, 56, 195

Garments and colours peculiar to the King of Fusang, 27

Gaubil, "Observations Mathématiques," 9, 40; researches in Chinese astronomy, 128

Gentleman's Magazine, 165

Geographers, early, probably possessed information relative to the North Pacific Ocean now lost, 147

Gipsy names for animals, 41, 164; affinities with Hindoos, 192

Gobineau, Count, his ideas as to ancient America, 176; regards it as the world's cradle, 176

Goei-chi (A.D. 510), 129

Gold in Fusang, 28

Good Hope, Cape of, 75

Great Ireland, 24

Green-corn festival of the Creek Indians, 56; dance of the, ib.

Grellon, Père, finds a Huron woman in Tartary, 137

p. 202

Grijalva, Juan de, nephew of Velasquez, 36

Greek priest and family in Atcha, 69

Grotius, 127

 

HAKODODI, 67

Han, history of the later, 173; in Corea, ib.

Hanley, Mr, 172

Hawaiian Spectator, 44

Hei-chi, black-toothed men, 167

Herrera, Antonio de, 38

Hiao-wou-te of Souang, reign of, 155

Hibiscus rosa siniensis, called Fusang in Pekin, 170; Hibiscus syriacus, ib.

Hieronymus d’Angelis, 46

Hinds domesticated in Fusang, 154

Hiouen-thsang, life and travels of, 88

"Histoire des Huns, des Turcs, des Mongoles," &c., par Joseph Deguignes. 138

History and journeys of fifty-six monks of the dynasty of Thang, 92

History of the Master of the Law of the three collections of the Convent of Grand Benevolence, 91

Hoai-nan-tsu, the, on Fusang, 143

Hoam-ho River, 131

Hoang-hoin, 144

Hodgson, works of, 156

Hoei-shin, Hoei-schin, Hui-shên, name how written, vi.; verification of his assertions, 187; narrative as translated by Professor Neumann from the Chinese, and revised by him, 3; meaning of the word, 25; his journey, 58; his route, 130; his description of the American aloe, 172; he confuses plants, ib.; Hui-shên, "a lying priest," according to Bretschneider, 166; narrative of Hoei-shin as given by Bretschneider, 168

Hoei-khé Turks, 144

Hoei-li, 91

Hoei-seng and Seng-yung, memoir of, 93

Hoffmann, 14

Hong-ing-ta, the expounder of King in the times of Tang, 25

p. 203

Hong Kong Island, 67 Hontan, Baron de, 137 Horne, George, 136

Horses in Fusang, 41, 51, 170

Hing-goci, native name for Kamtschatka, 15

Huitzilopotschli, 36

Humboldt, "Views of the Cordilleras," 156; "New Spain," 40

Hyde Clarke, 54

Hyacinth, Father, 170

 

ICHI, the King of Fusang, 27; Ichi and Irica, 52

Identity of Tartars and North American Indians, 7

Than, the celebrated astronomer, 15

Incas, 50; going forth of, 52; ritual of, ib.; garments of, their colours, 53; married their own sisters, 56

Indian women of North America greatly resemble the Chinese, 135 Iron in Fusang, 28, 172

Irving, Washington, "Knickerbocker History of New York," 127

Islands in the Aleutian Chain, Boulder, Kusha, Amtchitka, Krysi, or Rat Island, in the Andranof group, Tonago, Adakh, Atkha, Animnak, 69

Itölmen, or natives of Kamtschatka, 17; dwellings of, ib.; clothing, 19; music, 20

 

JAPAN, Notes and Queries on China and, 161; coast of, 66, 74; Ainos in, 140; as it was, 54; not Fusang, 142; Buddhism introduced, 143, 156; Broussonetia in, 172; origin of name, 174

Japanese year-books, 12; annals from 661 until 696, 14; facetiæ, 29; junk, 44; Government, 45, 75; junk wrecked, 45; vessel in America, ib.; charts, 76; junk picked up, 77; resemblance of, to Sandwich Islanders, 77; religion, 78; navigation, 81; early discovery of America by, 126; Wenshin N.W. of Japan, 129; maps, 147

Jean du Plan de Carpin, 32

Jeddo, 4

Jeso, 14; sea of, 130

Jesuit missionaries, 43

Jetschay, 16; Jetschaykno, ib.

Juan de Grijalva, nephew of Velasquez, 36

p. 204

Juen-kien-hui-han, 14

Jipen, 174

 

KALOSCHEN, 10

Kampfer, the first who spoke of America as known from early times to the Japanese, 126.

Kamtschatka, 11, ] 4; in the time of Tang, 15; distance from Sigan, the capital of China, ib.; description of, by Steller, ib.; identity with Lieu-kuei, ib.; dwellings, 19; climate, ib.; habits of the people, ib.

Kang-hi, encyclopædia of, 14

Kao-thsang, the Emperor, 89

Kapilapura, King of, 5

Kara-korum, 144

Karl Gutzlaff, 45

Kennon, Colonel Barclay, his assistance, 63; letter from, 65; brief memoir of, 94; his personal knowledge of the North Pacific, 126 el seq.; on furs, 133

Khi-nie, itinerary of, 92

Khirgiz or Kirkis, 144

Kien-hai Lake or Baikal, 168

Kie-kia-ssu, countries of, 168

Kingdom and nobles of Fusang, 27

King-tschu, 25

Kipin, five beggar monks from, introduce Buddhism into Fusang, Kipin, and Beloochistan, 31; Kipin, Koppen, Bokhara, 155.

Klaproth, Julius von, 125; passed translation from the Chinese as his own, 12,174; attempted to refute Deguignes, 125 et seq.; "Récherches sur le Pays de Fou-sang," 138; ridicules Deguignes, ib.; thought Tahan was Kamtschatka, 141; argument against Deguignes, ib.; contradicts his text according to D’Eichthal, 142, 156; according to Bretschneider, he refuted Deguignes, 168; "Tableau Historiques," 168; his disciple, Bretschneider, 176; severely judged, 183

Kronotski, Cape of, 68

Knickerbocker Magazine for 1850 contained the first English version of Neumann's work on Fusang, now given in this volume, 163

Ko-li-han, or Choran, country of, 130

p. 205

Kong, the Hill of, 25

Kou-li-han, country of, 144

Kousang plant resembles the maguey, 180

Kocoima walrus-hunters often carried on ice-fields from the Asiatic to the American shore, 137

Krusenstern, Straits of, 66

Ku, country of, 168

Kuang-wu, reign of, 173

Kurile or Aleutian Islands, 11, 65, 67, 132

Kuro-suvo, or Japanese current, 71, 74

 

LADRONE Islands, 74

Lao-tse, 3

La Perouse, Strait of, 141

Leang, dynasty of, 24; Leang-schu, 25

Leao-tong, northern province of China, 128, 140

Leg of mutton, time measured by roasting, 10

Lew-Chew, Loo-Choo, natives of, without iron, 172

Li, Chinese measure of distance, 128; in the fifth century, 140; twenty thousand li from Tahan, 141

Liang dynasty, history of, 166

Liang-ssu-kung-ki, passage from the, stating that ambassadors went from Fusang to China, 175, 184

Liang-sze-kung-ki, the, 184

Lieu-kuei, its situation, 15; meaning of the word, 16; king of, sent his son to China, 145

Life of Gaudama, 93

Li-pe-tai on Fusang, 143

Li-sao, the, on Fusang, T43

Li-yen, a Chinese historian, speaks of Fusang, 127

Loo-chooese and Japanese, 79

Lorchas Islands, 74

 

MADJICO Sima group, 67

Maguey or Agave americana, 37, 162, 171

Malvacea, Fusang-tree, 170-180

Mamma or ama, found in many languages, 107

Mandans, 152; their heaven and hell, 153

p. 206

Mandeville, Sir John, and other travellers, 33

Mantchou tribes dressed in fish-skins, 20; Jupi, ib.

Mao jen, the hairy men, or Ainos, 12, 174

Ma (or Man) tu-an-lin, 12, 14, 24, 166

Marriage in Fusang, 46

Marvels and romances of Fusang, 32; marvels narrated by Hoei-shin, 94

Matsumai, 67

Maury (vide Revue des Deux Mondes, April 1858), 132

Mau-shin, Mosin, 11

Melendez, Pedro, 136

"Mémoirs de l’Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres," 22, 125, 126, 148

Memoirs of the kingdoms of Buddha, 90

Merchants, foreign, clothed in silk among the Catacualcans, 136

Metals and money, 38

Mexican antiquities, 113; god of air, ib.; monuments, pyramidal form of, 35; money, 38; nobility, four orders of, 39

Metals and money in Fusang, 38

Miles, Colonel, translator of the "Shajrat-ul-Atrak," his translation of "tung," 9

Milk known to ancient Mexicans, 154

Mirambecs, Indians near the Great Salt Lake, 137

Mirrors brought from Fusang, 184; Peruvian mirrors, ib.

Mitla and Palenque, ruins of, 34

Moko or Mongolians, 16

Mongols, Mongol or Mog, 9

Mongolian, affinity of languages to Dakota Indian; a Mongol resembles an Apache, 95

Montesinos, 53

Mormonism not Christianity, as stated by Dr Bretschneider, 184

Mormon country, 173

Morton, Dr S., his views of American Indians, 194

Moslem, 31

Mossman, S., on the early Japanese, 190

Mound-builders, 110; character of, ib.

Mourning for the dead in Fusang, 28

p. 207

Mu-kin, 170

Mulberry-trees in Fusang, 143

Mummies in Aliaska, 192

"Münchener Gelehrte Anzeigen," 24

 

NAGERA, Castañeda de, 151

Naked men, lands of, 167

Names, how given by newcomers into strange lands, 164

Nan-su, the historian, 134

Narrative of Hoei-shin, with comments by Professor C. F. Neumann, 1; as given by Bretschneider, 165

Na-to-scha, nobles of Fusang, 27

Nausse or history of the southern dynasty, 22

Navigation, early Chinese, 64

Neumann, Professor C. F., memoir of, vi.; education and life, ib.; his works, xiv.; his work on Fusang, 3; Neumann not read by Dr Bretschneider, but attacked by the latter, 178

New Spain, 36

New Mexico, early seat of ancient Mexican civilisation, 151; Indians of New Mexico, 135

Niça, Father, saw white Indians, 152

Nineveh Library, discovery of, 50

Niphon, 67

Northern California, Chinese traded with, in remote times, 136

Norsemen in America, 32

North American Indians, resemblance of, to Mongolians, 80

Notes and Queries on  China and Japan, request in, for information on Fusang, 173; on Fusang, 161, 166

Nu-wang-kuo, 175

 

ODIN, EIGHT RINGS OF, 36

Onon, the River, 144

Orchon, left bank of, 144

Ordos or Ho-tao country, 144

Oregon, 71

"Ost-Asien and West-Amerika, Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Erdkunde," April 1864, an article by Neumann which refers the nativity of Hoei-shin to China, 139

p. 208

Ostrogoths and European nations, 8

Oxen in Fusang, 40

 

PACHACOMAC, 55

Pacific Islands to the leeward of Japan, 79

Papua or New Guinea, 12

Parsees, the, 95

Pears in Fusang, 28

Pe-hai, North Sea, and Schao-hai, Little Sea, 16

Perez José, in Revue Orientale et Americaine, 142

Peru and Fusang, 49 et seq.; Peruvian Incas, 60; houses, 51; cycles, 53; traditions of the Deluge, 54; of the good Deity, ib.; Peruvian and Chinese policy alike, 55; graves, 7

Peter and Paul's Haven, 15

Peti or northern savages, 9

Pictures by Chinese botanists, 179

Pi-khieou or priests of Buddha, 155

Piljo-tai-hotun, 131

Polaris, crew of, 137

Popol Vuh, 161, 154

Posten, Hon. C. D., 95

Postpositions, 107

"Prehistoric Races of the United States of America," 115

Prescott, "History of Mexico," 34, 37

Prester John, 33

Prisons in Fusang, 46, 153

Probability of voyages made by ancient Japanese, 74

Prostitution or polygamy in Utah, 182

Pueblo Indians of light colour, 135; cloth, ib.; dwellings, ib.

Pun-tsao, 171

Pun-tsao-kang-mu, 170

 

QUIVIR, 136

 

RED Indians and Chinese, affinities between, 192

"Relation des Mongols ou Tartares," by Jean du Plan de Carpin, 33

Remarks on the text of Professor Neumann, 49

p. 209

Renzi, "Memoires de la Société des Antiquaires, Partie linguistique," 8 "Reports of Explorations and Surveys for the Pacific Railroad," 151

Revue des Deux Mondes, 149

Revue Archæologique, 132

Roehrig, F. L. O., 100

Roger's Straits, 66

Romances of Fusan;, 143; poets who have written on it, ib.

Rosny, Léon de, 169

Russian establishments on St Paul and St George, 132

 

SAGHALIEN, Fusang according to Bretschneider, 175; not in a temperate climate, 172

Sákka, Sakkū, a swan, 161

Salt Lake City, 173

Samarcaud, a stronghold of Buddhism, 155; Bonzes from, ib.

San Bias, 33

Sanson, his map, 147

Sandwich Islanders resemble Japanese, 77

Saturday Review, 115

Schakia, religion of, 36

Schan-hai-king, 12

Schensi, district of, 15

Shajrat-ul-Atrak, or genealogical tree of the Turks and Tartars, 9

Shapa, capital of Loo-choo Islands, 67

Siebold, "Japanese Archives," 14

Sigan, the ancient capital of China, 15

Silver in Fusang, 28

Simson Theos., 161 et seq.; approved by Dr Bretschneider, 179

Simson, William, F.R.G.S., 99

Sitka, 71, 149

Sloane, Hans, 148

Song, Great Light of, 28

Stags in Fusang, 28; stag-horns, 40

Stanislas, Julien, 88 et seq.

Steller, "Description of Kamtschatka," 11, 17

Stems, Mongol and Mantchou, 40

Sterculia plantanifolia, 171

p. 210

Sultoi-Noss, 145

Sum or Sung dynasty, 145

Sun makes his toilet in Fusang, 143

Sung-yen, the mission of, 92, 93; probably contemporary with Hoei-shin, 92

 

TAHAN, means Great China, 24; distance, 33, 57, 127, 129; five thousand li between Jesso and Tahan, 131; travellers' route to, ib. reached by sea, 133; Tahan to Fusang, 166; 20,000 li, 140; route to, 144, 146; envoys from, first came to China in seventh century, 168; according to Bretschneider in Siberia, 175

Tai-Hau, Empress Dowager, 93

Tam-chu, route to America, 131, 133

Tang dynasty, history of, 167, 174

Tang-schu or year-books of Tang, 12; ruler of Tang, 13; Kamtschatka described in the time of, 15; error in Tang-schu, 16

Tapia, Señor José Ortiz, 113

Tarai-kai, was it Tahan? 141

Taravey, his two works on the Fusang question, 166

Tartars' Hades, 8; Tartar cycle and its colours, 53

Tattooing by Wen-shin and by North American Indians, 167

Tchitchagoff, 68

Tchung-cheou-kiang-tching, 131

Temperature of Bhering's Straits, 74; of Matsumai, 75

Ternaux Company, 151

"The devil who runs through," i.e., Lien-kuei, 16

"The devil's companion," i.e., Jetschay, 16

Thom, Mr Robert, 90

Time measured by roasting legs of mutton, 130

Tolteks, 35, 113

Tomsk, 168

Travellers, the old, not now entirely discredited because they narrated marvels, 175

Tschen, dynasty of, 11

Tschuktschi or Koljuschens, 10, 16

Tschu-tschu or Land of Dwarfs, 12

Tuilu, nobles of Fusang, 27

Tuna, Mexican word for cactus, 179

T’ung, the tree, 171

p. 211

Tunguse, Turks, Mongolians, &c., identical with the Esquimaux races, 7; Tungese Eastern barbarians, 8; geographical situation of, 9; customs, 10

Turner, Professor W. W., 151; works of, 156

 

"UNIVERSAL Compassion," meaning of the name Hoei-shin, 25

Uries, Strait of, 130

 

Vasco de Gama, 75

Vasquez, Fr., de Coronado, 136

Vancouver's Island, 71

Ven-hien-tum-kao, the historian (A.D. 515), 131, 134

Vessels driven by storms to America from Asia, 134

Vestal virgins in Peru, 55; among the Pueblo Indians, to keep their fire burning, 195

Vine known in Mexico, 152

Viracocha, 55

Visnago, Cactæ globosæ, 179

Voyages can be made from China to America in sight of land, 71

 

WENJAMINOW, Father, "Sur les Isles Aleoutiennes du District de Unalaska," 149

Wen-shin or Painted People, 11, 22; the country of the, same as Jeso, 140

"Western Countries, Memoirs of," edited by Hioen-thsang, 91 Western Mountain of the Gods, 4

Whipple, Lieutenant A. W., report by, 151

White aborigines in Mexico, 152

Winaland or Vineland, 32

Wilson, Daniel, LL.D., "American Ethnology," 193

Wo, ancient name for Japan, 174

Women and children, Japanese and Chinese, go to sea with head of family, 77

Women, Kingdom of, in Fusang, 29; situated 1000 li east of Fusang, 134; tribes of aborigines in North America called women, ib.; story of the Kingdom of Women only given as a report by Hoei-shin, ib.; not in Japan, 142, 169; no mammæ, ib.; suckle children, ib.; kingdom, where situated, 173, 182, 286 (sic); in Japan, 175

p. 212

Wo-nu, envoys from the, 173

Woo-sung River, 66

Wog or Mog Mongolians, 9

Wrangell, Rear-Admiral, "Les Renseignements, &c., sur les Possessions Russes," 148

Writing, Chinese, introduced into Japan A.D. 280, 174

Wu-ti, Emperor, 173

 

YAMATO or Ye-ma-t'ai, 175, 280 (sic)

Yang-kon, Valley of, 143

Yang-tse-kiang, 66

Year-books of the Chinese Empire, 5, 15; of the Southern dynasty, 22; year-books of Leang, 22, 26

Ye-ma-t'ai, 173

Yenissey, 168

Yen-thsang, 91

Y. J. A. inquires in Chinese Notes and Queries as to Fusang, 161 et seq.

Yucatan, 73

Yu-tche, a race derived from the Che-goei, 133

Yu-t'ung tree, 171

 

ZENGHIS Khan or Tschinggs Chakan, 9

Zuni, White Indians at, 152

 

 

 

THE END.