TatrasMountains Text
TatrasMountains Text
TatrasMountains Text
Tatras Mountains
BY: DR.
in the
GUSTAVE LE BON
My
Ap,
f7,
/928
uw adddL
um
and
amal a memmavie
Jm,
eape/uence
d atab.
?w dupp&d
M, pad-lkeadma
mmnm mfo
mdadzd- Me
mdtumetdad vde
nc& wecdacdab
J dewed in
(dapacdb
imjfa^J(Mr
mm an acmwA&m Me
w< Jtmdmence,
/ff79 awd,
and
M/outm
Me
ieac&n
mmm> Me
mtHmcamb
m imd/mfi,
w Mm d
Mme
nncp^m^ude^.
am&mtAcmb
demeddo*
nd aude m eap&d
as,
dMe modify
de w<m
tea/m?
J irnmedad^ acmdd Me
fab
meM&d, mtoodA, d.
<d!eb,
J&%
$u oMpdwa
J cvob,
dpb~am
dcmme,
a utwna man
/uu/~ -dwdmaadL.
adu> L^anaumA
omM Mew,
wfimameMr
'Mtedaucmjm, Mt&
& adbinmm.
map
fy/3 d/ermad
calm
<mj f Made
nd fo dmd Me
M& tM/t&xddde
aJwd
a/iea. <Js^
de 0<m
and J,
$u awdiad, adveh
ma
a%e n&w-
fo cmc&wi,,
ame
nd tmnaacmed.
mSmned m Me
adk. <de
(M Me dvmrd dpimafam
JO,
da
mice
m Me ddiad,
//mtdamb,
ledum
//fa/ttd
food mm
ddwvoe daefi^^ue,
lace,
apmmumcam, Me
mam
dt<m$ /off/
lamcdb m&Miim. dm, cwdudnt /xum, ma/ma (wmcMtdAam, Me madebb cuyyupam fo defewimma
a^fimAaMmfr a
wnpcadc
dxuedr,
mud aa
ve tddtmd
m afiu
mea#imdtd
d!mo
fo
c^tendaA a
tace.
Jadfc<} oMr.
d
wdtMmaa&n
emmMwmd m adwd, M^
anx- "toad
two,.
March
18,
1882)
we examined the methods applied to the study of races had provided and could provide. We demonstrated the extreme insufficiency of these methods, and showed that professed anthropologists, with the pretense of embracing all the sciences, hardly troubled themselves during their travels but to measure skulls and skeletons; that the majority of the measurements asked for by these travellers were entirely useless and caused them to waste precious time. We
In our previous article devoted to the state of anthropology in France,
results that the current
1
to believe that one knows something of a people just because one measured some bones, that many more important studies assert themselves to the attention of
it
is silly
such travellers. We finally arrived to this conclusion that, in order to assemble accurate and comparable records concerning the physical, intellectual and social state of the human races, there was urgency to draft in the form of a questionnaire very simple instructions.
The approval that the most authoritative anthropologists have expressly given to these weakness of the criticisms formulated against them by professed craniologists, anxious to see the uselessness of their research divulged, only serve to confirm us in the
principles that
we
have
set forth.
now
theoretical considerations,
we
shall
how
anthropology can be
useful to indicate
above simple instructions of which we have spoken exist, we believe what arefrom our personal experiencethe data that a traveller can easily
on a human agglomeration visited by him. It is evident that depending on the special knowledge of the traveller and the populations he observes, the questions to study can be vastly
collect
different; but, for
is
which
is
important to know.
only,
moreover, by
common ground that the reader can easily make out and way of suggestion that we have given the
be seen to follow.
the circumstances that induced
must
first
me
to undertake this
study.
determined on
my way
little
back from a
trip
to
surrounded on
all
speaking different
what the oldest mountainfolk said, I found here a short people inhabiting a territory which is sides by steep and nearly inaccessible mountains, beyond which exist nations languages from that of the mountainfolk and with which the latter has not
devoted to brigandage less than a century ago, they are today very honest and
is
united. Exclusively
of Europe in order to find a similar one, despite very infertile soil and an alimentary regimen truly Lacedaemonian (since oatmeal, milk and water compose pretty much the only elements), the Tatras mountainfolk of which I have spoken live in a state of remarkable prosperity. By their most
lively intelligence, their artistic
and from
by
their
their neighbors,
who
existence considerably
more
favorable.
naturally
this
influences of crossbreeding
why,
in spite
of the
very
difficult
conditions of existence,
works published about these mountains and which I had studied before my trip mute on these questions. The memoirs written about the Tatras, and notably the fundamental work published in the Mittheilungen by Koristka (of Prague) fifteen years ago, only discuss the physical geography. It seemed interesting to me to seek out the solution to the problem which presented itself before me.
rare
The
were
entirely
in the Bulletins
The reader who peruses it will see how one can quite with the resources at the disposal of a traveller, arrive at a sufficient knowledge of the physical, intellectual, moral and social state of a people, how it was possible for me to clearly
differentiate the
its
reconstituted
observed population from the neighboring populations and how, after having past with the tools of anthropology, psychology and linguistics, it was easy to
bring to light the influences of crossbreeding, natural selection, and the environment which have
given birth to the present race. Simply wishing to present an idea of the results provided by the
I shall limit
summary of each
section.
Geography and Ethnography of the Tatras. Before entering upon the study of a people it is important to first understand the land where they live, their environment, as well as the populations which surround them and have been able to influence them. With such records obtained about these elements of valuable information, one is put on the scent of the research to effectuate. We can then begin with a rapid examination of the country. Our first pages are devoted to the geography of the Tatras, mountains whose beauty and wild aspect one can only compare to the most picturesque regions of Switzerland. The reader will easily convince himself of this by examining, in the journal le Tour du monde of last year, the reproductions of the
photographs that
we have executed
in this country.
villages inhabited
named Podhale exists, where the by the short people of which we have undertaken this study are situated. This territory is hemmed in by a belt of not easily accessible mountains, so that the Podhaleans there are almost as isolated as those living on an out-of-the-way island in the ocean.
It is at
From
is
just as complete.
Beyond the
BWBB^^Hti
By
and
people
their neighbors.
Wood
Germans,
latter, as
etc.,
whom
the
proven by an inspection of the registers of the parish churches, have never united. It is only on the northern frontier of the country that the Podhaleans find themselves in touch with
number of
inhabitants
of
of which
map of the
drawing
a
the country's
configuration,
by means of a
have
laid
particular system
parallel
It is
plans that
we
way of
representing the relief of a country which will, I believe, interest geographers. In fact, the only
other methods that geographers presently possess for expressing the relief of the land surface are,
as one knows, level curves, hachures, and perspective panoramas.
The
first
the relief of a country only after one performs a very long and necessary labor in order to
transform them into profiles. Hachures do not give but a quite warped notion of the actual height
of mountains. Perspective panoramas, meanwhile, deform objects so much that one acknowledge them as what originates from a picturesque representation.
is
only able to
Along with our geometric panorama, we have presented, besides, a perspective panorama of one of the most interesting parts of the Tatras, executed by means of the photographs that we took in the country. The perspective panorama shows things as one sees them, but not as they are.
objects,
really are,
but not
as one sees them. Respecting this latter panorama, one can carry out
Nothing similar
is
The Environment.
From various
it
showed
that
Podhale
differs
soil
climate, 2) a barrenness
of the
its
from all the adjoining regions by possessing 1) a very harsh which binds its inhabitants to an entirely unique alimentary
difficult to distinctly define
is
given the present state of science, but of which the visible result
that goiter,
which spreads
is
itself
over
all
is
unknown
The
living in
Podhale
studied in
another section.
of life
is
bound to
create,
we
have examined the present conditions. The state of landed property, agriculture, and industry,
the alimentary regimen of the mountainfolk, their sources of income, their expenses, the state of
the family, their manners and customs, etc. have been studied in turn.
Not being
able in this
summary to
upon these
is,
different questions,
we
composed almost
entirely
most vigorous natures are able to withstand such a modest diet and rigorous climate. Of the eight or ten infants that the majority of Podhalean families produce, only a small number reach adulthood. In this manner there operates on each generation a selection process which only permits the strongest and most resistant individuals to
live.
This section concludes with a comparison between the Podhaleans' economic and social
conditions of existence and those of all the neighboring populations. This comparison shows that
of an extremely harsh climate, an exceedingly poor soil, the Podhaleans occupy, as much from the physical point of view as from the intellectual point of view, a situation very much more favorable and prosperous than their neighbors.
in spite
The description of the intellectual and moral aptitudes of a more important than that furnished by
some skeletons, we have tried to thoroughly investigate the psychological state of the Podhaleans. The mental constitution of a people being mainly derived from its past state,
have to study
this past state.
we
one of those which does not appear in history, and therefore for this reconstitution we have had to have recourse to the study of their legends and tales. These are then the kind of important records which modern
is
bright light
feeling
of the peoples
1
The psychological
qualities
of the personages of
we
is to say, the particularities of their character and intelligence. We have pointed out the development of their imagination and their love of the marvellous, their literary and very extraordinary musical aptitudes, their religious sentiments, their superstitions,
of their morality. The study of this latter has provided us with a new proof of the following fact which we have previously insisted upon in our prior work-that is, of the complete
and the
state
independence existing between the development of religious sentiments and morality. 4 At a time not that remote, the mountainfolk devoted themselves entirely to robbery, and yet they were extremely religious. The priest and the highwayman were at that time the powers who possessed
the most prestige.
The
first
whose power
was
The legends that one of the brigand Janosik that we have related, are replete with evidence of the protection which heaven accorded to the highwaymen. It is asserted that the old church of Saint Anne, at Nowy Targ, was built by some thieves in gratitude for the divine protection obtained for one of their expeditions.
appealing to
the saints for the success of the enterprise.
circulate throughout the country, notably the
without
God and
Physical Qualities of the Race. Having established that the psychological qualities of the Podhaleans clearly differ from those of the surrounding races, it was interesting to investigate
word much debated nowadays, we have ascribed to it the most generally adopted sense and have indicated that we simply mean by this expression a union of individuals possessing common
"race," so
qualities
Two
Among men, as with animals, the title of race can only be acquired when, through acts of crossbreeding repeated over a long time, heredity has
fixed in the individuals living together uniform qualities
regularity
which reappear from father to son with and constancy. The inhabitants of the United States or the French themselves will perhaps form one day a race: they do not make up one yet. Too many ill-mixed diverse
populations
compose them.
Our anthropological measurements have been carried out on 50 individuals of the 5 masculine sex. The numbers and totals that these measurements have generated, and which we
shall
reproduce
later
on,
gave
skull.
us
the
following
indications:
short
height,
very
great
rest
brachycephalism, voluminous
auburn or dark-colored
hair;
Half of the subjects observed had blond hair, and the 50 percent had a straight nose, 30 percent an aquiline nose.
The study which was undertaken not only on the individuals that we had measured and 6 all those that we had encountered, led us to recognize that the different physiognomies observed among the Podhaleans of the Tatras amount to two fundamental types more or less pure that one meets with quite often, and whose description
photographed, but also upon
follows.
The
first
type presents the following characteristics: roundish and even figure, cheekbones
often prominent, blue or gray eyes (very rarely dark-colored), blond or auburn hair (hardly ever
dark), nose frequently turned up.
The second
rare
type,
as general characteristics
is
the following: generally elongated figure, straight or often aquiline nose (this latter shape
most
among
most often
light,
with the
hair presenting
the nuances from clear blond to the deepest black. Exceedingly rare
among
dark hair
this
tint,
by
contrast, is
met with
in a third
second type.
The
but
I
first
type that
is
frequently found
among
very
much more
surrounding populations.
The frequent
characteristics
belonging to the opposite type (for example, blue eyes with dark hair) proves that these
two types
have been intermixing with one another for a long time. We have, besides, clear proof of this by the intermediate forms that link the two extreme types that we have described and who are by far
the most numerous.
majority, the
fundamental types, from which these forms are derived and of which they are nothing more than atavistic reminiscences already quite attenuated, will have disappeared, and the present race in
it
is
it
is
nevertheless
much more
among the majority of other races that we have had the opportunity to observe. Whatever may be the physiognomic type to which the inhabitants of Podhale belong, all possess a pronounced brachycephalism, while at the same time one generally counts among the neighboring
observed,
I
races about 12 non-brachycephalics out of every 100 subjects. Concerning the 50 Podhaleans
did not find a single one
skull,
who was
not brachycephalic.
it is
As
volume of the
111
from the
now
lay stress
on
it
here as
this matter.
human
race.
perhaps not be useless to remark in passing that the anthropological qualities of any race only have value because of the manner in which they are associated, and above all by
their frequency.
There are scarcely any qualities which one can say exclusively belong to one The most obvious are only of importance by their frequency. It is not only among the Mongols and the Chinese that one finds oblique eyes, but it is among these peoples that one encounters the largest number of individuals possessing such eyes. Because of its frequency,
its
besides
of the
making
classifications.
Likewise for
other
no matter what-prognathism or prominent cheekbones, for example. Such marks are not the exclusive attribute of any people since, in reality, one finds among all peoples individuals who possess them. Only these marks frequency and their constant association with other qualities form the natural endowment of certain races and enable one to make a distinction between these races.
1
Differentiation
of the Race.
it
--
remained to examine the analogies and differences that she presents As our verifications of fundamental differences allowed us to
race,
it
of a novel
formation.
Our comparative
Germans-that
situation
among them,
first.
we
was obliged to take account of all the were some-the Magyars and the These peoples, sufficiently far away from
there
the frontiers of Podhale, form isolated and different islets such that the Podhaleans, by their social
and language, never coalesced with the former and were consequently not influenced by them. What remained to be studied were the Jews and Poles of Galicia as well as the Ruthenians
needless, because this
and the Slovaks on the Hungarian side of the Tatras. To repeat our measurements on them was work had already been done on the first three peoples by a learned anthropologist of Krakow, Dr. Kopernicki. I therefore only had to compare my measurements to
immediately perceive the analogies or the differences that
his in order to
may
exist
between the
compared populations.
Among
the races measured by the author that have just been mentioned,
Slovaks on the southern side of the Tatras; but the differences existing between the Podhaleans
at first sight.
Independently of the
way of
life,
The Slovaks are individuals of tall height and large stature, most sought after for this reason during the era when the regiments of Hungarian grenadiers were only composed of individuals of gigantic height; but at the same time they are thick-headed and lazy. The
external differences.
Podhaleans, by contrast, are short in height, general appearance rather slim than robust, and in a
word have
a constitution
much
lively
less
vigorous than the Slovaks; but, instead of being like them lazy
are,
peoples; they maintain quite poor communications, and for a very long time no one has ever
The
conducted
at
examining the
of the border
Here now
is
upon which we have effectuated corresponding measurements. Dr. we have done the same in order to render our results comparable. The reader who chooses to refer to the table presented a little further on will easily see to what extent groupings in series show more convincing and conclusive results than do
Dr, Kopernicki and those
the averages.
Dr.
Le Bon was
the
first
Frenchman to
visit
Skull Measures
(in centimeters)
Jews
Ruthenians
Poles of
Podhaleans
of the
Galicia
Tatras
Average
cranial
. .
circumference.
54.3
54.6
54.3
56.4
Anterior-posterioi
diameter
18.3
18.2
18.0
18.5
Transverse diameter
15.3
15.2
15.2
15.9
Cephalic index.
83.5
84.3
84.4
85.7
Hair Color
(in
Percent
%)
23.2
Blond
31.9
45.0
32.0
Auburn
Dark/black
Total
37.0
34.0
34.1
36.4
34.0
39.8
18.6
34.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
Eves
(in
Percent
%)
45.5
Light-colored
60.7
39.3
70.1
70.0
Dark-colored
Total
54.5
29.9
100.0
30.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
Nose
(in
Percent
%)
59.6 68.1
Straight
67.4
50.0
Aquiline
30.9
6.1
6.4
29.5
Turned-up
Total
9.5
25.8 100.0
26.2
100.0
20.5
100.0
100.0
162.3
164.0
162.2
159.4
66%
hair,
10
Almost as important a quality to add to the preceding ones, we must mention as well the relative frequency of curly hair among the Podhaleans (16%), compared to its extreme rarity
among the
examination of the preceding table shows that the Podhaleans present with the diverse populations of Galicia the following principal differences:
An
by
contrast, larger;
Brachycephalism a
little
more
general.
Cranial circumference
much bigger;
among the
among
among
the Poles and Ruthenians (about 6%); a large proportion of Jews (almost
among
all
the
considerable enlargement of the diameters and circumference of the skull, joined to the special
we have described and the short height of the Podhaleans, clearly them from the neighboring populations. One can formulate these striking differences by saying that a Podhalean differs as much from the Poles and Ruthenians of Galicia as these two peoples differ from the Jews, that is to say, from one of the races that is the easiest to distinguish from all the others.
physiognomic type which
differentiates
qualities likewise
Tatras are by no means the simple result of crossbreeding of the populations that
now
surround
them, because they possess particular qualities that these races do not possess.
Without a doubt, with regard to the aquiline noses, the Jews possess them as much as the is not worth examining, because less in Galicia than everywhere and less yet in Podhale than in the rest of Galicia, the Jew does not mix with his neighbors.
Besides, the Podhaleans have a deep contempt and abhorrence for them.
most important is the very and of its circumference. This fact, given the intellectual superiority of the Podhaleans, confirms what we have tried to demonstrate in another work-that the dimensions of the skull are always correlated with the state of intelligence, whenever, disregarding the individual exceptions, one considers them in series.
great development of the diameter of the skull
Among the
differences that
we have just
The following
table summarizes
from
this point
of view the
who
fall
of
shown
column.
11
One of
(the districts
this
table's
cranial
circumferences of Galician peasants from the regions adjoining the northern border of Podhale
of Limanowa and Zywiec), that Dr. Kopernicki has kindly consented to extract for
us from the registers of the anthropology section of the very foot of the Tatras. The latter two columns,
Academy of
next column has been calculated by means of the 50 Podhaleans measured at Zakopane, at the
owed
in the
Tatras mountains.
12
Galician peasants
Cranial
bordering
the Tatras
Podhaieans of the
Tatras
Learned and
Middle-class
Parisians
cultured
Parisians
Circumference
(in centimeters)
50 to 51
51 to 52
12.0
13.2
45.0
6.0
0.6
1.9
2.5
52 to 53
53 to 54
16.6
f J
")
t 6.0 J
8.0
- )
2.0
2.0
( J
>
44.7
> J
^
>
28.0
54 to 55
55 to 56
20.
18. 6
10. 9
56 to 57 57 to 58
58 to 59
V J
"\
49.5
6.2 ")
14.0
4.0
6.0 18.0
20.0
24.0
> 52.0
24.5
J
V 52.8
|
J
I
70.0
4.5
0.4 0.6
V
'
I
5.5
24.5^
14.9
7.6
36.0 "V
18.0 8.0
8.0
59 to 60
60 to 61
Total (%)
100.0
100.0
56.4
5.8^
100.0
100.0
Average Circumference
54.2
57.1
57.6
45.0
6.0
2.5
2.0
Percentage with
average-sized
heads
Percentage with
large heads
49.5
52.0
44.7
28.0
5.5
42.0
100.0
52.8
70.0 100.0
100.0
13
Studying
all
we
discover a verification
of the following law which was enunciated by us in a previous work-that the hierarchical position of a race is determined by the more or less considerable number of voluminous brains that this
race contains.
5
Our tables,
in effect,
show us
this;
whose head circumference exceeds 57 centimeters; with 100 Podhaleans, there are 42; among 100 middle-class Parisians, there are 53; with 100 learned and cultured Parisians, 70.
As
is
even more
striking:
among the
Galician
peasants there
58 of 100 among the Podhaleans. Lastly, as regards the skulls that one does not ever find them among the Podhaleans nor among
whose
among
is
number of learned and cultured Parisians upon which we precisely equal to the number of Podhaleans that we have
whose cranial circumference is smaller than 54 centimeters; with 100 Galician peasants, there are 45. The differences existing between the Podhaleans and the peoples to which we have compared them are much more eloquently made evident by these numbers than
Podhaleans, there are only 6
by whatever
differences the
This same table further shows us that the Podhaleans form, at least as far as the shape of
the skull
is
concerned, a race
among
among the former. We have already emphasized this homogeneity more important-the generality of their brachycephalism.
discussion,
we
can
say
that
the
firmly
established
anthropological differences existing between the Podhaleans and their neighbors are as large as
those existing between the European races that science has believed itself well-founded in
distinguishing.
To be
sure,
we believe
qualities
and
the Podhaleans of the Tatras as constituting a special race differing clearly from
the
Haw the Present Race ofPodhale Has Formed Itself. that the inhabitants
remains for
Having demonstrated the fact ofPodhale constitute a race distinctly different from all the adjacent peoples, it us to investigate the conditions of environment, crossbreeding, and immigration that
it.
have seen to enumerate, certainly each played its part, and in a direct or indirect way the environment above all had its own role. We have already shown how the environment in which the Podhaleans live, their diet, and way of life differ from that
influences that
Among the
we
14
70%
42%
15
which the neighboring populations experience. More particularly, we have seen that the infertility of the soil obliges the inhabitants to devote themselves to various trades requiring all their effort
and resources; additionally, the conditions of existence are so difficult and the climate so harsh that the majority of infants succumb, and only those then who are possessors of a most vigorous
constitution are able to endure these conditions.
Under
who
upon the infants and adults, would contribute to form, by the slow accumulation of acquired by each generation, the vigorous and intelligent race of the Tatras that we have
It is
mechanism that one might undoubtedly explain the formation of the present-day Anglo-American. In their battle against nature that the first American pioneers undertook, it was necessary to either tame it or die. Only the most vigorous, most
intelligent,
observed.
qualities that
and most capable were able to be triumphant and bequeath to their descendants the had made them victorious.
The environment and natural selection therefore have to be important factors in the formation of the race currently living at the foot of the Tatras. But it is necessary not to forget that the environment can only act under certain special conditions, very often unrecognized. If the environment is a strong factor, heredity, which represents the aptitudes accumulated during the
passage of an immense length of time,
is
an even
factor.
Numerous
historical
is
by heredity are so
is
and
thus that in
manner
heredity
of Israel conserve their invariable type; it is also in this of Egypt has been powerless, despite its energy, to transform the
it,
who have
successively invaded
and
who
all
their
tomb.
Only
strong enough to struggle against heredity, and for this reason the environment can
upon new
upon races
between
Under
of the past find themselves annulled or dissociated by hereditary influences of an equal weight, and the environment, not having anymore then to struggle against such influences, can freely act.
influences so heavy
is
population is numerous enough to provide for itself, it does not crossbreed anymore with other peoples; and, by dint of intermixing more and more with itself as well as submitting itself to the action of the same environment and same natural selection process, it tends to become homogeneous. But in an earlier time, when the steeply sloped and hardly accessible regions of the Tatras served as shelter for any adventurers from neighboring countries who, for various reasons, had need for refuge, all these individuals of diverse origins would necessarily and
so.
be
unceasingly intermix.
recalling
One
should realize that the most varied elements must have been present by
the
how diverse the nationalities are who surround the Tatras, and how numerous have been peoples who have invaded this part of Europe since the days of the primitive Aryans and the
hordes of Attila.
16
that
it will be necessary to determine the elements were able to contribute in former times to the formation of the present race. The solution to such a problem is not easy, because there does not exist any historical document that permits us to
know
in
villages
out.
But, lacking historical documents, the combined resources of anthropology, linguistics, and psychology allow us to make conjectures, albeit somewhat removed from the truth, about the
In
first
mention.
we
it
have
said,
two
distinctly separate
peoples
who do
so. We can sometimes find proof of this of Podhale, notably in the village of Koscielisko, one of the nearest to the Hungarian border, by observing individuals of tall height (quite similar to the Slovaks) who by
but
their
These are undoubtedly atavistic influences from ancestral forms which have made their reappearance in the present-day race, and which tend more and more to disappear as a result of crossbreedings by the
Podhaleans with recent influences.
The probability of the influence of Slovak blood from a more or less remote time is also confirmed by linguistic indications. The language spoken throughout the Tatras is Polish, but the Slovakian influence amongst the Podhaleans is proven by the alteration of certain words, especially by the abandonment of the nasal vowels as well as the elimination of proper phonetic
as, for example, the frequent employment of the letter G~for example hruby instead of gruby 7 One also finds the vowel A replaced by the vowel E, as in czerny; the vowel O replaced by A or E, as happens in Slovakian. The verb "to be" is frequently conjugated in the Slovakian manner; for example, ja sent (I am),
of the
of tyjestes.
Finally, a certain
number of words,
like
Psychology likewise offers us valuable resources in this difficult task of reconstitution. The Podhaleans, as we have said, are literate people, musicians, poets, and very religious. The
an environment as harsh as that of Podhale-can hardly create such qualities. It is therefore probable that heredity alone was able to have produced them. Now, among the races that surround Podhale, there are scarcely any but the Ruthenians possessing
all
environment-above
these aptitudes. In the Ruthenians these aptitudes are combined with a quite capricious nature, a lack of energy, activity, and perseverance which is the opposite of the qualities that the Podhaleans possess; but the contrary qualities possessed by the latter had to have been
engendered by the conditions of existence that we have detailed. It is from the influence of Ruthenian blood then that we are inclined to attribute the previously mentioned particularities. As
for the quite remarkable development
it
that
it is
is likely
exercise of intelligence and activity that they are obliged to engage in constantly.
is
an
elementary fact of physiology that organs exercised develop and expand; less than any other, the
brain does not
know how to
We
that
shall
not persist anymore with our conjectures relative to the origin of the elements
may have
As incomplete
as
they have to be, our conjectures suffice to demonstrate whatever light today's scientific methods
are able to cast
of a people (while tradition and history remain entirely silent on such). The main fact to remember, because it seems to us clearly proven, is that there is an on-going formation at the foot of the Tatras of a new race differing significantly from those who
origins
it.
upon the
From
the results of our study, the process responsible for this race's
which presently populates the Podhale was formed through a blending of individuals originating from very different peoples. As these individuals isolated themselves more and more, by not intermixing with any others but themselves, and by incessantly submitting themselves to the action of the same environment and same natural selection process, the primitive agglomeration became more and more homogeneous; it ended up forming a new race whose homogeneity will be able to increase further, but which already possesses common hereditary qualities which clearly distinguish
In the remote past, the race
it
from
all
We
shall
conclude what
we
is
state
it
of anthropology and
seems to us that
this
way which
we
own
research,
But theories come from individual interpretations which are independent of the facts upon which they are based. Future anthropologists will perhaps be able to modify with their discoveries some of our results, though the methods that we have utilized to obtain them may remain a mystery to these scientists.
and
contested.
we
may be
JjmodfM
oL&
ti)(M7,
18
FOOTNOTES
1
In declaring that the majority of the anthropological measurements carried out for the last twenty years
at the price
lost
much
better
employed
have only stated above what a great many anthropologists have thought to themselves. Faced with the evidence, the
I found a curious example of these confessions in "You know only," wrote a former assistant of Broca. "that the measurements which the travellers have transmitted to us and which have produced such an effect upon those who obligate themselves to regard them, are dead letters, because we do not have anything which one can compare and reconcile them with." The author added that when, for want of a basis of operation, "we proceed at random, ignoring that which gives us systems of operations and has value, the measurements that we take in our journeys will be sterile and will only result in a waste of time." As for cranial measurements, the same author judges them in the following way: "Today it is the skull that is in vogue; emanating from the ideas and a prion issues of phrenology concerning the topographical relations of the skull and brain, one
believes that
it
races.
This
is
an
error."
This ferocious zeal of the neophyte breaking his ancient idols produces
some
size
pleasure,
but
it
is
difficult
to
share
in
it.
which are not. Choosing to reject en bloc the methods in anthropology and limiting oneself to the impressions produced by the exterior aspect, this is to go backward many centuries and profess a little
too
work of Broca (pictured left). It is truly saddening to which certain pupils of the eminent master, all speaking without cease of their admiration for him. do not waste an occasion to indirectly attack his work. It was surely not when Broca was living that one would have made the declarations that I have cited above, or would have challenged his having been the true creator of craniometry that one now pretends to have experienced many centuries of existence. It seems that Broca presaged that which has attended his memory when, in his last work, he retraced the history of craniology and showed what it was before him. It is not without sadness. I repeat, that we are witnesses to this spectacle, and it is certainly the same sentiment which the former president of the Societe d'Anthropologie. the learned Professor Dally, yielded to when, in a recent publication, he expressed astonishment at seeing the author, whose extracts I have reproduced above, publish a "troublesome imitation" of a work of Broca where the name of the author himself was not even mentioned.
disdain for the
see the ease with
much
it
which
this
question
may be of interest.
the Podhaieans
is
Polish
little
old-fashioned.
The idiom
spoken by the Slovaks sufficiently approximates Polish, because the two peoples quickly succeed in understanding
each other; but
to
kingdoms of Bohemia and Moravia. It turns out that it is. in reality, the same language which is spoken between Prague, Budapest and Warsaw. With Polish. Czech, Slovakian, and Moravian being as close to Ruthenian as French is near to Italian, and as Ruthenian, which is spoken by 15 million individuals, does not differ much from Russian, one sees that in reality no other European language is spoken over an extended territory as vast as that covered by the Slavic language. If. as one might claim quite wrongly, a race can be defined by saying that it is the assemblage of populations speaking the same language, then no other race can pretend to equal the
part of the former
19
L'Homme
II,
1881.
been performed with a simple tape-measure and the instrument that I have is extremely easy to cany in one's pocket. A person can easily build this instrument by following the model that I have presented in the Bulletins de la Societe d'anthropologie and in the work that I have published under this title: la Method graphique et les appareils enregistreurs, avec 63 figures dessinees en parti e d'apres des instruments nouveaux au laboratoire de Vauteur.
These measurements have
all
To be sure, camera equipment producing cumbersome than the bulky tools that yield the proportions of a skull to nearly 1 millimeter." The importance of photography is nowadays no more denied than by the behind-the-times craniologists, for this art has rendered cooperation between subject and investigator as little useful as what the stagecoaches have become after the invention of the railroads. It is childish to contest the fundamental utility of an art of which all the anthropological laboratories of Europe (with maybe one exception) make daily use. In order to speak about the deformations produced by cameras, it is necessary to be up-to-date on
asserts itself as the
all
anthropological studies.
and
the progress realized in the construction of aplanatic lenses over the last several years as well as to understand the
artistic
aim
in
allow for measurements to be taken; but, in order to be able to utilize photographs for this purpose,
observe some very simple rules about
sufficient to
the focal length of the lenses one can choose, 2) the distance
which
exists
from the photographer to the individual whose image is to be reproduced, and 3) the successive positions of the face and profile to procure of the subject. In certain easy observing conditions, the individual to be photographed can be considered as a noticeably flat image, and the contours reproduced in the picture are just as exact as are those of the geographical maps reduced or enlarged by photography. In order to get photos of the various types of individuals rigorously exact, that is to say, perspective images that substantially conform in practice with geometric
projections, the rules to follow are infinitely easier than those that allow for exactly reconstructing the geometric
form of
if I
objects in
most plans, as
who
would be able
it.
to install for
nowadays and as Monsieur Civiale notably has done for the me towards the end of his life him a photo laboratory on his premises, which unfortunately proved too confined to
still is
the fashion
permit
owe
my treatise,
earlier
in order to confirm
my hypothesisa
from an
exist,
am
as to Doctors Chalubinski
at the University of
I
of whom
20