Lighting Culinary and table equipment Various 
kinds of food The preparation and cooking of food Preparing the food 
Cooking the food Food restrictions and taboos Meals Ordinary meals 
Festive meals 
CHAPTER IX. 
Narcotic and stimulating enjoyments 
Drinks used by the Manobos Sugar-palm wine Báhi toddy Sugarcane 
brew Extraction of the juice Boiling Fermentation Mead Drinking 
General remarks The sumsúm-an Drinking during religious and social 
feasts Evil effects from drinking Tobacco preparation and use The 
betel-nut masticatory Ingredients and effect of the quid Betel chewing 
accessories 
CHAPTER X. 
Means of subsistence 
Agriculture General remarks The time and place for planting rice The 
sowing ceremony The clearing of the land The sowing of the rice and 
its culture The rice harvest The harvest feast The culture of other crops 
Hunting Hunting with dogs Offering to Sugúdun, the spirit of hunters 
The hunt Hunting taboos and beliefs Other methods of obtaining game 
Trapping Trapping ceremonies and taboos The bamboo spear trap 
Other varieties of traps Fishing Shooting with bow and arrow Fishing 
with hook and line Fish-poisoning The túba method The túbli method 
The lágtañg method Dry-season lake fishing Fishing with nets, traps,
and torches 
CHAPTER XI. 
Weapons and implements 
Introductory remarks Offensive weapons The bow and arrow The bolo 
and its sheath A magic test for the efficiency of a bolo The lance The 
dagger and its sheath Defensive weapons The shield Armor Traps and 
caltrops Agricultural implements The ax The bolo The rice header 
Fishing implements The fishing bow and arrow The fish spear 
Fishhooks Hunting implements The spear The bow and arrow The 
blowgun 
CHAPTER XII. 
Industrial activities 
Division of labor Male activities Female activities Male industries in 
detail Boat building Mining Plaiting and other activities Female 
industries in detail Weaving and its accessory processes Pottery 
Tailoring and mat making 
 
PART III. GENERAL SOCIOLOGICAL 
CULTURE 
 
CHAPTER XIII. 
Domestic life and marital relations 
Arranging the marriage Selection of the bride Courtship and 
antenuptial relations Begging for the hand of the girl Determination of 
the marriage payment The marriage feast and payment The
reciprocatory payment and banquet Marriage and marriage contracts 
The marriage rite Marriage by capture Prenatal marriage contracts and 
child marriage Polygamy and kindred institutions Endogamy and 
consanguineous marriages Intertribal and other marriages Married life 
and the position of the wife Residence of the son-in-law and the 
brother-in-law system 
CHAPTER XIV. 
Domestic life: Pregnancy, birth, and childhood 
Desire for progeny Birth and pregnancy taboos Taboos to be observed 
by the husband Taboos to be observed by the wife Taboos to be 
observed by both husband and wife Taboos enjoined on visitors 
Abortion Artificial abortion Involuntary abortion The approach of 
parturition The midwife Prenatal magic aids Prenatal religious aids 
Accouchement and ensuing events Postnatal customs Taboos The birth 
ceremony The naming and care of the child Birth anomalies 
Monstrosities Albinism Hermaphroditism 
CHAPTER XV. 
Domestic life: Medicine, sickness, and death 
Medicine and disease Natural medicines and diseases Magic ailments 
and means of producing them The composition of a few "Kometán" 
Other magic means Bodily ailments proceeding from supernatural 
causes Sickness due to capture of the "soul" by an inimical spirit 
Epidemics attributed to the malignancy of sea demons Propitiation of 
the demons of contagious diseases Sickness and death The theory of 
death Fear of the dead and of the death spirits Incidents accompanying 
deaths Preparation of the corpse The funeral Certain mourning taboos 
are observed Death and burial of one killed by an enemy, of a warrior 
chief, and of a priest The after world The death feast 
CHAPTER XVI.
Social enjoyments 
Instrumental music The drum The gong Flutes The paúndag flute The 
to-áli flute The lántui The sá-bai flute Guitars The vine-string guitar 
The bamboo-string guitar The takúmbo The violin The jew's-harp The 
stamper and the horn of bamboo Sounders Vocal music The language 
of song The subject matter of songs The music and the method of 
singing Ceremonial songs Dancing The ordinary social dance The 
religious dance Mimetic dances The bathing dance The dagger or 
sword dance The apian dance The depilation dance The sexual dance 
The war dance 
CHAPTER XVII. 
Political organization: System of government and social control 
Clans Territories of the clans and number of people composing them 
Interclan relations The chief and his power The source of the chief's 
authority Equality among the people Respect for ability and old age 
The warrior chief General character Insignia and prowess of the warrior 
chief The warrior's title to recognition Various degrees of warrior 
chiefship The warrior chief in his capacity as chief The warrior chief as 
priest and medicine man 
CHAPTER XVIII. 
Political organization: War, its origin, inception, course, and 
termination 
Military affairs in general The origin of war Vendettas Private seizure 
Debts and sexual infringements Inception of war Declaration of war 
Time for war Preparations for war The attack    
    
		
	
	
	Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
 
	 	
	
	
	    Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the 
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.
	    
	    
