| Henry Ling Roth - 1896 - 566 str.
...opened it in hopes of getting the head, and were disappointed for their trouble." (ibid.) " The Uru Ais believe that the persons whose heads they take will become their slaves in the next world." (Brooke Low.) Bishop Chambers speaking to the Banting Dyaks of Heaven in accordance with Christian... | |
| Albert Ernest Jenks - 1905 - 582 str.
...be the most efficient means of securing. He quotes Axel. Dalrymple as follows (p. 141) : The Uru Ais believe that the persons whose heads they take will become their slaves in the next world. On the same page he quotes others to the same point regarding other tribes of Borneo. Roth states (p.... | |
| Philippines. Division of Ethnology - 1905 - 600 str.
...be the most efficient means of securing. He quotes Axel. Dalrymple as follows (p. 141) : The Uru Ais believe that the persons whose heads they take will become their slaves in the next world. On the same page he quotes others to the same point regarding other tribes of Borneo. Roth states (p.... | |
| Frank George Carpenter - 1923 - 402 str.
...headhunting was established. It is largely connected with religious superstition. Some of the tribes say that the persons whose heads they take will become their slaves in the next world, and others that the acquisition of a fresh human head means prosperity to the family by which it was taken. On its... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1897 - 694 str.
...pretty general method of a young man ingratiating himself with the maiden of his choice. Some tribes believe that the persons whose heads they take will become their slaves in the next world ; and Sir Hugh Low states that among the Kayans, before a person can be buried, a head must be obtained.... | |
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