If there had
been no social grouping through reproduction, there would yet have
been ultimately filiation of men for the sake of mutually profitable
enterprises. Blood-brotherhood and the treaty are devices indicating
that early man had sufficient inventive imagination to do this.
The tribal group may, in fact, be described as a fighting male
organization living in a group of females.]
[Footnote 123: See L. von Dargun, _Mutterrecht und Vaterrecht_.]
[Footnote 124: J.W. Powell, "Wyandot Government", _First Annual Report
of the Bureau of American Ethnology_, 1879-80, pp. 61ff.]
[Footnote 125: Waitz-Gerland, _Anthropologie der Naturvoelker_, Vol. V,
pp. 107ff.]
[Footnote 126: Lippert, _Kulturgeschichte_, Vol. II, p. 50.]
[Footnote 127: C.N. Starcke, _The Primitive Family_, p. 37.]
[Footnote 128: H.R. Schoolcraft, _History, Condition, and Prospects of
the Indian Tribes of the United States_, Vol. V, p. 167.]
[Footnote 129: Ibid., pp. 174-76.]
[Footnote 130: Bancroft, _Native Races of the Pacific States_, Vol. I,
p. 351.]
[Footnote 131: Ibid., Vol. I, p. 219.
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