The history of mankind (1896) (14761384414)
Summary
Identifier: historyofmankind01ratz (find matches)
Title: The history of mankind
Year: 1896 (1890s)
Authors: Ratzel, Friedrich, 1844-1904 Butler, Arthur John, 1844-1910
Subjects: Ethnology Anthropology
Publisher: London, Macmillan and co., ltd. New York, The Macmillan co.
Contributing Library: Wellesley College Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Wellesley College Library
Text Appearing Before Image:
, build rectangular houses withseveral rooms and ornamented doors, form the transition to the Malays ofMadagascar and the Indian Archipelago, and to the races of the Pacific, whoserichly-ornamented and often large houses, very various in design, offer the mostperfect work found in the way of timber-building among natural races. Amongthem, however, we find at the same time (as on Easter Island) the beginnings ofmasonry in connection with monumental sculpture. The Polar races live in stonebuildings or in huts in which snow takes the place of wood. A zone of stonehouses with several stories passes through India, Arabia, and the Berber regionsof Africa. Contiguous stone houses for hundreds of families occur among the THE HISTORY OF MANKIND Indians of New Mexico and Arizona ; and these bring us to the great monumentalbuildings of the races who were outside the sphere of Old-world culture, as theMexicans, Central Americans, and inhabitants of the South American plateaux. aräaa(?sä; P»SÄ
Text Appearing After Image:
JfSPS The so-called Dwarfs House at Chichen-Itza. (After Charnay.) Independently of all these variations, special kinds of habitation and buildingdevelop themselves from the fundamental idea of shelter. Men were led tofound permanent abodes in the water—not that of the insecure and violent sea, butalways only in calm inland lakes or rivers with gentle current—at first obviouslyby the wish to protect themselves from beasts of prey and enemies of their own HABITATIONS species; but later, and on higher planes of civilization, with the view of avoidingthe crush and pressure of g-reat assemblages of human beings in a limited space,as in China with its excessive population, and some parts of Further India. Inthe former case the favourite method of surrounding oneself with the protectim*-water was to build on piles and platforms ; in the other, large rafts or condemnedbarges served for dwellings, whence again pile buildings were evolved, but on alarger scale than in the former stage, whi