Chapter 30

27Scott Robertson,Káfirs of the Hindu-Kush, p. 194.

27Scott Robertson,Káfirs of the Hindu-Kush, p. 194.

28Krasheninnikoff,op. cit.p. 232.

28Krasheninnikoff,op. cit.p. 232.

29Veniaminof, quoted by Petroff, ‘Report on Alaska,’ inTenth Census of the Untied States, p. 155.

29Veniaminof, quoted by Petroff, ‘Report on Alaska,’ inTenth Census of the Untied States, p. 155.

30Sproat,Scenes and Studies of Savage Life, p. 152.

30Sproat,Scenes and Studies of Savage Life, p. 152.

31von Humboldt,Personal Narrative of Travels, v. 422.

31von Humboldt,Personal Narrative of Travels, v. 422.

32Stirling, inSouth Ammerican Missionary Magazine, iv. 11. Bridges, inA Voice for South America, xiii. 210.

32Stirling, inSouth Ammerican Missionary Magazine, iv. 11. Bridges, inA Voice for South America, xiii. 210.

33Curr,The Australian Race, i. 64, 85sq.Mathew, inJour. & Proceed. Roy. Soc. N. S. Wales, xviii. 398.

33Curr,The Australian Race, i. 64, 85sq.Mathew, inJour. & Proceed. Roy. Soc. N. S. Wales, xviii. 398.

34Codrington,Melanesians, p. 345.

34Codrington,Melanesians, p. 345.

In Savage Island the slaying of a member of another tribe—that is, a potential enemy—“was a virtue rather than a crime.”35To a young Samoan it was the realisation of his highest ambition to be publicly thanked by the chiefs for killing a foe in mortal combat.36“According to Fijian beliefs, men who have not slain any enemy are, in the other world, compelled to beat dirt with their clubs—the most degrading punishment the native mind can conceive—because they used their club to so little purpose;37and in Futuna it was deemed no less necessary to have poured out blood on the field of battle in order to hold a part in the happy future life.38In the Western islands of Torres Straits “it was a meritorious deed to kill foreigners either in fair fightor by treachery, and honour and glory were attached to the bringing home of the skulls of the inhabitants of other islands slain in battle.”39In the Solomon Islands,40New Guinea,41and various parts of the Malay Archipelago, he who has collected the greatest number of human heads is honoured by his tribe as the bravest man; and some peoples do not allow a man to marry until he has cut off at least one human head.42Among many of the North American Indians, again, he who can boast of the greatest number of scalps is the person most highly esteemed.43Among the Seri Indians the highest virtue “is the shedding of alien blood; and their normal impulse on meeting an alien is to kill, unless deterred by fear.”44Among the Chukchi “it is held criminal to thieve or murder in the family or race to which a person belongs; but these crimes committed elsewhere are not only permitted, but held honourable and glorious.”45So, too, the Gallas consider it honourable to kill an alien, though criminal to kill a countryman.46

In Savage Island the slaying of a member of another tribe—that is, a potential enemy—“was a virtue rather than a crime.”35To a young Samoan it was the realisation of his highest ambition to be publicly thanked by the chiefs for killing a foe in mortal combat.36“According to Fijian beliefs, men who have not slain any enemy are, in the other world, compelled to beat dirt with their clubs—the most degrading punishment the native mind can conceive—because they used their club to so little purpose;37and in Futuna it was deemed no less necessary to have poured out blood on the field of battle in order to hold a part in the happy future life.38In the Western islands of Torres Straits “it was a meritorious deed to kill foreigners either in fair fightor by treachery, and honour and glory were attached to the bringing home of the skulls of the inhabitants of other islands slain in battle.”39In the Solomon Islands,40New Guinea,41and various parts of the Malay Archipelago, he who has collected the greatest number of human heads is honoured by his tribe as the bravest man; and some peoples do not allow a man to marry until he has cut off at least one human head.42Among many of the North American Indians, again, he who can boast of the greatest number of scalps is the person most highly esteemed.43Among the Seri Indians the highest virtue “is the shedding of alien blood; and their normal impulse on meeting an alien is to kill, unless deterred by fear.”44Among the Chukchi “it is held criminal to thieve or murder in the family or race to which a person belongs; but these crimes committed elsewhere are not only permitted, but held honourable and glorious.”45So, too, the Gallas consider it honourable to kill an alien, though criminal to kill a countryman.46

35Thomson,Savage Island, p. 104. See alsoibid.p. 94.

35Thomson,Savage Island, p. 104. See alsoibid.p. 94.

36Pritchard,Polynesian Reminiscences, p. 57.

36Pritchard,Polynesian Reminiscences, p. 57.

37Seemann,Viti, p. 401.Cf.Williams and Calvert,op. cit.p. 97sq.; Erskine,Islands of the Western Pacific, p. 248.

37Seemann,Viti, p. 401.Cf.Williams and Calvert,op. cit.p. 97sq.; Erskine,Islands of the Western Pacific, p. 248.

38Smith, inJour. Polynesian Society, i. 39.

38Smith, inJour. Polynesian Society, i. 39.

39Haddon, inReports of the Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits, v. 277.

39Haddon, inReports of the Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits, v. 277.

40Romilly,Western Pacific, p. 73. Penny,Ten Years in Melanesia, p. 46. Codrington,op. cit.p. 345.

40Romilly,Western Pacific, p. 73. Penny,Ten Years in Melanesia, p. 46. Codrington,op. cit.p. 345.

41Romilly,Western Pacific, p. 76.

41Romilly,Western Pacific, p. 76.

42Bock,Head-Hunters of Borneo, pp. 216, 221, &c. (Dyaks). Bickmore,Travels in the East Indian Archipelago, p. 205 (Alfura of Ceram). Dalton,op. cit.p. 40 (Nagas of Upper Assam).

42Bock,Head-Hunters of Borneo, pp. 216, 221, &c. (Dyaks). Bickmore,Travels in the East Indian Archipelago, p. 205 (Alfura of Ceram). Dalton,op. cit.p. 40 (Nagas of Upper Assam).

43The well-known practice of scalping, though very common, was not universal among the North American Indians (see Gibbs, ‘Tribes of Western Washington and Northwestern Oregon,’ inContributions to N. American Ethnology, i. 192; Powers,Tribes of California, p. 321).

43The well-known practice of scalping, though very common, was not universal among the North American Indians (see Gibbs, ‘Tribes of Western Washington and Northwestern Oregon,’ inContributions to N. American Ethnology, i. 192; Powers,Tribes of California, p. 321).

44McGee, ‘Seri Indians,’ inAnn. Rep. Bur. Ethnol.xvii. 132.

44McGee, ‘Seri Indians,’ inAnn. Rep. Bur. Ethnol.xvii. 132.

45Georgi,Russia, iii. 183.

45Georgi,Russia, iii. 183.

46Macdonald,Africana, i. 229. For other instances, see Harmon,op. cit.p. 301 (Tacullies); Burton,City of the Saints, p. 139 (Dacotahs); Macpherson,Memorials of Service in India, p. 94 (Kandhs); MacMahon,Far Cathay, p. 262 (Indo-Burmese border tribes); Macdonald,Africana, i. 194sq.(Eastern Central Africans); Johnston,Kilima-njaro Expedition, p. 419 (Masai).

46Macdonald,Africana, i. 229. For other instances, see Harmon,op. cit.p. 301 (Tacullies); Burton,City of the Saints, p. 139 (Dacotahs); Macpherson,Memorials of Service in India, p. 94 (Kandhs); MacMahon,Far Cathay, p. 262 (Indo-Burmese border tribes); Macdonald,Africana, i. 194sq.(Eastern Central Africans); Johnston,Kilima-njaro Expedition, p. 419 (Masai).

At the same time there are, among the lower races, various instances in which the rule, “Thou shalt not kill,” applies even to foreigners. Hospitality, as will be seen in a subsequentchapter, is a stringent duty in the savage world. Custom requires that the host should entertain and protect a stranger who comes as his guest, and by killing him the host would perpetrate an outrage hardly possible. Moreover, even in the case of intertribal relations, we must not conclude that what is allowed in war is also allowed in times of peace. The prohibition of homicide may extend beyond the tribal border, tomembers of different tribes who for some reason or other are on friendly terms with each other.47We must not suppose that a tribe of savages generally either lives in a state of complete isolation, or is always at odds with its neighbours. In Australia, for instance, one tribe of natives, as a rule, entertains amicable relations with one, two, or more other tribes.48Among the Central Australian natives, say Messrs. Spencer and Gillen, “there is no such thing as one tribe being in a constant state of enmity with another”; on the contrary, where two tribes come into contact with one another on the border land of their respective territories, friendly feelings are maintained between the members of the two.49Some uncivilised peoples are even said to have no wars. The Veddahs of Ceylon never make war upon each other.50According to the reports of the oldest inhabitants of Umnak and Unalaska, the people there had never been engaged in war either among themselves or with their neighbours, except once with the natives of Alaska.51To the Greenlanders described by Dr. Nansen war is “incomprehensible and repulsive, a thing for which their language has no word.”52

47See,e.g., Scott Robertson,op. cit.p. 194 (Káfirs of the Hindu-Kush).

47See,e.g., Scott Robertson,op. cit.p. 194 (Káfirs of the Hindu-Kush).

48Curr,The Australian Race, i. 62sq.

48Curr,The Australian Race, i. 62sq.

49Spencer and Gillen,Native Tribes of Central Australia, p. 32.

49Spencer and Gillen,Native Tribes of Central Australia, p. 32.

50Sarasin,op. cit.iii. 488.

50Sarasin,op. cit.iii. 488.

51Coxe,op. cit.p. 244.

51Coxe,op. cit.p. 244.

52Nansen,Eskimo Life, p. 162.

52Nansen,Eskimo Life, p. 162.

That savages to some extent recognise the existence of intertribal rights in times of peace is obvious from certain customs connected with their wars. Some South Sea Islanders and North American Indians consider it necessary for a party which is about to attack another to give notice beforehand of their intention, in order that their opponents may be prepared to meet them.53The cessation of hostilities is often accompanied by the conclusion of a special treaty and by ceremonies calculated to make it binding.54The Tahitians, for instance, wove a wreath ofgreen boughs furnished by each side, exchanged two young dogs, and, having also made a band of cloth together, offered the wreath and the band to the gods with imprecations on the side which should first violate so solemn a treaty of peace.55Nor does savage custom always allow indiscriminate slaughter even in warfare. The inviolability of heralds is not infrequently recognised.56Among the aborigines of New South Wales the tribal messenger known to be a herald by the red net which he wears round his forehead, passes in safety between and through hostile tribes;57and among the North American Omahas “the bearer of a peace pipe was generally respected by the enemy, just as the bearer of a flag of truce is regarded by the laws of war among the so-called civilised nations.”58And many uncivilised races have made it a rule in war to spare the weak and helpless.

53Hale,U.S. Exploring Expedition. Vol. VI. Ethnography and Philology, p. 72 (Micronesians). Gibbs,loc. cit.p. 190 (Indians of Western Washington and North-Western Oregon).

53Hale,U.S. Exploring Expedition. Vol. VI. Ethnography and Philology, p. 72 (Micronesians). Gibbs,loc. cit.p. 190 (Indians of Western Washington and North-Western Oregon).

54See Farrer,Military Manners and Customs, p. 162sq.

54See Farrer,Military Manners and Customs, p. 162sq.

55Ellis,Polynesian Researches, i. 318.

55Ellis,Polynesian Researches, i. 318.

56See Farrer,Militarv Manners and Customs, p. 161.

56See Farrer,Militarv Manners and Customs, p. 161.

57Fraser,Aborigines of New South Wales, p. 41.

57Fraser,Aborigines of New South Wales, p. 41.

58Dorsey, ‘Omaha Sociology,’ inAnn. Rep. Bur. Ethn.iii. 368.

58Dorsey, ‘Omaha Sociology,’ inAnn. Rep. Bur. Ethn.iii. 368.

The Samoans considered it cowardly to kill a woman;59and even in Fiji the “enlightened party” objected to the killing of women, urging that it is “just as cowardly to kill a woman as a baby.”60The Abipones, in their wars, “generally spared the unwarlike, and carried away innocent boys and girls unhurt.”61An old Spanish writer tells us of the Guanches of Gran Canaria that, “in their wars, they held it as base and mean to molest or injure the women and children of the enemy, considering them as weak and helpless, therefore improper objects of their resentment”;62and similar views prevail among the Berbers (Shluḥ) of Southern Morocco, as also among the Algerian Kabyles63and the Touareg.64Though the Masai and Wa-kikuyu “are eternally at war to the knife with each other, there is a compact between them not to molest the womenfolk of either party.”65“The Masai,” says Mr. Hinde, “never interfere with women in their raids, and the women cheerloudly and encourage their relatives during the fight.”66Among the Latukas, though women are employed as spies and thus become exceedingly dangerous in war, there is nevertheless a general understanding that no woman shall be killed.67The Basutos maintain that respect should be paid during war to women, children, and travellers, as also that those who surrender should be spared and open to ransom; and, though these rules are not invariably respected, the public voice always disapproves of their violation.68

The Samoans considered it cowardly to kill a woman;59and even in Fiji the “enlightened party” objected to the killing of women, urging that it is “just as cowardly to kill a woman as a baby.”60The Abipones, in their wars, “generally spared the unwarlike, and carried away innocent boys and girls unhurt.”61An old Spanish writer tells us of the Guanches of Gran Canaria that, “in their wars, they held it as base and mean to molest or injure the women and children of the enemy, considering them as weak and helpless, therefore improper objects of their resentment”;62and similar views prevail among the Berbers (Shluḥ) of Southern Morocco, as also among the Algerian Kabyles63and the Touareg.64Though the Masai and Wa-kikuyu “are eternally at war to the knife with each other, there is a compact between them not to molest the womenfolk of either party.”65“The Masai,” says Mr. Hinde, “never interfere with women in their raids, and the women cheerloudly and encourage their relatives during the fight.”66Among the Latukas, though women are employed as spies and thus become exceedingly dangerous in war, there is nevertheless a general understanding that no woman shall be killed.67The Basutos maintain that respect should be paid during war to women, children, and travellers, as also that those who surrender should be spared and open to ransom; and, though these rules are not invariably respected, the public voice always disapproves of their violation.68

59Turner,Nineteen Years in Polynesia, p. 304.

59Turner,Nineteen Years in Polynesia, p. 304.

60Seemann,Viti, p. 180.

60Seemann,Viti, p. 180.

61Dobrizhoffer,op. cit.ii. 141.

61Dobrizhoffer,op. cit.ii. 141.

62Abreu de Galindo,History of the Discovery and Conquest of the Canary Islands, p. 66.

62Abreu de Galindo,History of the Discovery and Conquest of the Canary Islands, p. 66.

63Hanoteau and Letourneux,La Kabylie, ii. 76.

63Hanoteau and Letourneux,La Kabylie, ii. 76.

64Hourst,Sur le Niger et au pays des Touaregs, p. 223sq.

64Hourst,Sur le Niger et au pays des Touaregs, p. 223sq.

65Thomson,Through Masai Land, p. 177.

65Thomson,Through Masai Land, p. 177.

66Hinde,The Last of the Masai, p. 6, n.*

66Hinde,The Last of the Masai, p. 6, n.*

67Baker,Albert N’yanza, i. 355.

67Baker,Albert N’yanza, i. 355.

68Casalis,op. cit.p. 223sq.For regard paid to women, old people, and children in war, see also Richardson,Arctic Searching Expedition, i. 367 (Western Eskimo); Catlin,North American Indians, ii. 240; Azara,Voyages, ii. 145 (Payaguas).

68Casalis,op. cit.p. 223sq.For regard paid to women, old people, and children in war, see also Richardson,Arctic Searching Expedition, i. 367 (Western Eskimo); Catlin,North American Indians, ii. 240; Azara,Voyages, ii. 145 (Payaguas).

Sometimes custom even requires that the life of the captive shall be spared.

It is against Masai tradition to kill prisoners of war.69Among the Kabyles “il faut que l’exaspération des partis soit extrême pour qu’un blessé ou un prisonnier soit mis à mort.”70The Touareg do not kill their prisoners after a fight.71Among the Bedouins of the Euphrates “the person of the enemy is sacred when disarmed or dismounted; and prisoners are neither enslaved nor held to other ransom than their mares.”72“Captives,” says Mr. Dorsey, “were not slain by the Omahas and Ponkas. When peace was declared the captives were sent home, if they wished to go. If not they could remain where they were, and were treated as if they were members of the tribe.”73Among the Wyandots prisoners of war were frequently adopted into the tribe. “The warrior taking the prisoner has the first right to adopt him. If no one claims the prisoner for this purpose, he is caused to run the gauntlet as a test of his courage. If at his trial he behaves manfully claimants are not wanting, but if he behaves disgracefully he is put to death.”74

It is against Masai tradition to kill prisoners of war.69Among the Kabyles “il faut que l’exaspération des partis soit extrême pour qu’un blessé ou un prisonnier soit mis à mort.”70The Touareg do not kill their prisoners after a fight.71Among the Bedouins of the Euphrates “the person of the enemy is sacred when disarmed or dismounted; and prisoners are neither enslaved nor held to other ransom than their mares.”72“Captives,” says Mr. Dorsey, “were not slain by the Omahas and Ponkas. When peace was declared the captives were sent home, if they wished to go. If not they could remain where they were, and were treated as if they were members of the tribe.”73Among the Wyandots prisoners of war were frequently adopted into the tribe. “The warrior taking the prisoner has the first right to adopt him. If no one claims the prisoner for this purpose, he is caused to run the gauntlet as a test of his courage. If at his trial he behaves manfully claimants are not wanting, but if he behaves disgracefully he is put to death.”74

69Hinde,op. cit.p. 64.

69Hinde,op. cit.p. 64.

70Hanoteau and Letourneux,op. cit.75.

70Hanoteau and Letourneux,op. cit.75.

71Hourst,op. cit.p. 207.

71Hourst,op. cit.p. 207.

72Blunt,op. cit.ii. 239.

72Blunt,op. cit.ii. 239.

73Dorsey, ‘Omaha Sociology,’ inAnn. Rep. Bur. Ethn.iii. 332.

73Dorsey, ‘Omaha Sociology,’ inAnn. Rep. Bur. Ethn.iii. 332.

74Powell,ibid.i. 68.

74Powell,ibid.i. 68.

Thus we notice even among uncivilised races very obvious traces of what is called “international law,”75if not as a rule, at least as an exception. On the other hand, thereadiness with which war is engaged in, not only in self-defence or out of revenge, but for the sake of gain, indicates how little regard is paid to human life outside the tribe. The Kandhs, for instance, maintain “that a state of war may be lawfully presumed against all tribes and nations with whom no express agreement to the contrary exists.”76And if a few savage peoples live in perpetual peace, it seems that the chief reason for this is not a higher standard of morality, but the absence of all inducements to war.

75See also Wheeler,The Tribe, and Intertribal Relations in Australia,passim.

75See also Wheeler,The Tribe, and Intertribal Relations in Australia,passim.

76Hunter,Annals of Rural Bengal, iii. 75.

76Hunter,Annals of Rural Bengal, iii. 75.

When we from the lower races pass to peoples more advanced in culture, we find that the social unit has grown larger, that the nation has taken the place of the tribe, and that the circle within which homicide is prohibited as a crime of the first order has been extended accordingly. But the old distinction between injuries committed against compatriots and harm done to foreigners remains. Even when the subject is not touched upon in the laws referring to homicide we may, from the general attitude of the people towards members of other nations, infer that public opinion is not very scrupulous as to the taking of their lives. How the Chinese looked upon the “red-haired barbarians,” the “foreign devils,” is well known from recent history. In former days, Japan’s attitude towards her neighbours and the whole world was that of an enemy and not of a friend.77The Vedic hymns are full of imprecations of misfortune upon men of another race.78That among the ancient Teutons the lot of a stranger was not an enviable one is testified even by language; the German wordelenderhas acquired its present meaning from the connotation of the older word which meant an “outlandish” man.79The stranger as such—unless he belonged to a friendly, neighbouring tribe—had originally no legal rights at all; for his protection he was dependent on individualhospitality, and hospitality was restricted by custom to three days only.80According to the Swedish Westgöta-Lag, he who killed a foreigner had to pay no compensation to the dead man’s relatives, nor was he outlawed, nor exiled.81The Laws of King Ine let us understand in what light a stranger was looked upon:—“If a far-coming man, or a stranger, journey through a wood out of the highway, and neither shout nor blow his horn, he is to be held for a thief, either to be slain or redeemed.”82However, as commerce increased and the stranger was more often seen in Teutonic lands, royal protection was extended to him; and a consequence of this was that thenceforth he who killed the stranger had to pay awergeld, part, or the whole, of which went to the king.83In Greece, in early times, the “contemptible stranger”84had no legal rights, and was protected only in case he was the guest of a citizen;85and even later on, at Athens, whilst the intentional killing of a citizen was punished with death and confiscation of the murderer’s property, the intentional killing of a non-citizen was punished only with exile.86The Latin wordhostiswas originally used to denote a foreigner;87and the saying of Plautus, that a man is a wolf to a man whom he does not know,88was probably an echo of an old Roman proverb. Mommsen suggests that in ancient days the Romans did not punish the killing of a foreigner, unless he belonged to an allied nation; but already in the prehistoric period a change was introduced, the foreigner being placed under the protection of the State.89

77Griffis,Religions of Japan, p. 129.

77Griffis,Religions of Japan, p. 129.

78Roth, ‘On the Morality of the Veda,’ inJour. American Oriental Society, iii. 338.

78Roth, ‘On the Morality of the Veda,’ inJour. American Oriental Society, iii. 338.

79Cf.Grimm,Deutsche Rechtsalterthümer, p. 396; Gummere,Germanic Origins, p. 288.

79Cf.Grimm,Deutsche Rechtsalterthümer, p. 396; Gummere,Germanic Origins, p. 288.

80Grimm,op. cit.p. 397sqq.Brunner,Deutsche Rechtgeschichte, i. 273.

80Grimm,op. cit.p. 397sqq.Brunner,Deutsche Rechtgeschichte, i. 273.

81Westgöta-Lagen I.Af mandrapi, v. 4 p. 13.

81Westgöta-Lagen I.Af mandrapi, v. 4 p. 13.

82Laws of Ine, 20.Cf.Laws of Wihtræd, 28.

82Laws of Ine, 20.Cf.Laws of Wihtræd, 28.

83Brunner,op. cit.i. 273sq.Gummere,op. cit.p. 288. Pollock and Maitland,History of English Law before the Time of Edward I.i. 52.

83Brunner,op. cit.i. 273sq.Gummere,op. cit.p. 288. Pollock and Maitland,History of English Law before the Time of Edward I.i. 52.

84Iliad, ix. 648.

84Iliad, ix. 648.

85Hermann-Blümner,Lehrsbüch der griechischen Privatalterthümer, p. 492. Schmidt,Ethik der alten Griechen, ii. 325.

85Hermann-Blümner,Lehrsbüch der griechischen Privatalterthümer, p. 492. Schmidt,Ethik der alten Griechen, ii. 325.

86Meier and Schömann,Der altische Process, p. 379.

86Meier and Schömann,Der altische Process, p. 379.

87Cicero,De officiis, i. 12.

87Cicero,De officiis, i. 12.

88Plautus,Asinaria, ii. 4. 88.

88Plautus,Asinaria, ii. 4. 88.

89Mommsen,Römisches Strafrecht, p. 622sqq.

89Mommsen,Römisches Strafrecht, p. 622sqq.

How little regard is felt for the lives of strangers also appears from the readiness with which war is waged onforeign nations, combined with the estimation in which the successful warrior is held by his countrymen. The ancient Mexicans were never at a loss for an excuse to pick a quarrel with their neighbours, so as to be able to procure victims for sacrifices to their gods.90“No profession was held in more esteem amongst them than the profession of arms. The deity of war was the most revered by them, and regarded as the chief protector of the nation.”91The Mayas not only wanted to increase their dominions by encroachments upon their neighbours’ territory, but undertook raids with no other object than that of obtaining captives for sacrifice.92Speaking of the wars of the ancient Egyptians, M. Amélineau observes, “Nous n’avons pas un seul mot dans la littérature égyptienne, même dans les œuvres égypto-chrétiennes, qui nous fasse entendre le plus léger cri de réprobation pour la guerre et ses horreurs.”93Among the Hebrews the most cruel wars of extermination were expressly sanctioned by their religion. That an idolatrous people had no right to live was taken as a matter of course; but wars were also unscrupulously waged from worldly motives, and in their moral code there is no attempt to distinguish between just and unjust war.94Among the Mohammedans it is likewise the unbeliever, not the foreigner as such, that is regarded as the most proper object of slaughter. Although there is no precept in the Koran which, taken with the context, justifies unprovoked war,95the saying that “Paradise is under the shadow of swords”96is popularly applied to all warfare against infidels. Among the Celts97and Teutons a man’s highest aspiration was to acquire military glory. The Scandinavians considered it a disgrace for a man to diewithout having seen human blood flow;98even the slaying of a tribesman they often regarded lightly when it had been done openly and bravely. In Greece, in ancient times at least, war was the normal relation between different states, and peace an exception, for which a special treaty was required;99while to conquer and enslave barbarians was regarded as a right given to the Greeks by Nature. The whole statecraft of the early Republic of Rome was no doubt based upon similar principles;100and in later days, also, the war policy of the Romans was certainly not conducted with that conscientiousness which was insisted upon by some of their writers.

90Bancroft,Native Races of the Pacific States, ii. 420. Clavigero,History of Mexico, i. 371.

90Bancroft,Native Races of the Pacific States, ii. 420. Clavigero,History of Mexico, i. 371.

91Clavigero,op. cit.i. 363.

91Clavigero,op. cit.i. 363.

92Bancroft,op. cit.ii. 740, 745.

92Bancroft,op. cit.ii. 740, 745.

93Amélineau,L’évolution des idées morales dans l’Égypte ancienne, p. 344.

93Amélineau,L’évolution des idées morales dans l’Égypte ancienne, p. 344.

94Cf.Seldeft,De Synedriis et Præfecturis Juridicis veterum Ebræorum, iii. 12, p. 1179sqq.; Lament,Études sur l’histoire de l’humanité, i. 384sq.

94Cf.Seldeft,De Synedriis et Præfecturis Juridicis veterum Ebræorum, iii. 12, p. 1179sqq.; Lament,Études sur l’histoire de l’humanité, i. 384sq.

95This was later on admitted by Lane (Modern Egyptians, p. 574), who had previously maintained that the duty of waging holy war is strongly urged in the Koran.

95This was later on admitted by Lane (Modern Egyptians, p. 574), who had previously maintained that the duty of waging holy war is strongly urged in the Koran.

96Pool,Studies in Mohammedanism, p. 246.

96Pool,Studies in Mohammedanism, p. 246.

97Logan,The Scottish Gael, i. 101. de Valroger,Les Celtes, p. 186.

97Logan,The Scottish Gael, i. 101. de Valroger,Les Celtes, p. 186.

98Njála, ch. 40, vol. i. 167. Maurer,Rekehrung des Norwegischen Stammes, ii. 172.

98Njála, ch. 40, vol. i. 167. Maurer,Rekehrung des Norwegischen Stammes, ii. 172.

99Schmidt,Ethik der alten Griechen, ii. 280. Laurent,op. cit.i. 46. Plato,Leges, i. 625. Livy, xxxi. 29: “Cum alienigenis, cum barbaris aeternum omnibus Graecis bellum est.”

99Schmidt,Ethik der alten Griechen, ii. 280. Laurent,op. cit.i. 46. Plato,Leges, i. 625. Livy, xxxi. 29: “Cum alienigenis, cum barbaris aeternum omnibus Graecis bellum est.”


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