The Golden Bough: A Study in Magic and Religion (Third Edition, Vol. 12 of 12)
iii. 285
—— of the head, iii. 252 _sqq._; of the corn, viii. 110
—— or pollution, their equivalence in primitive religion, iii. 145, 158, 224
—— and uncleanness not clearly differentiated in the primitive mind, x. 97 _sq._
Sanctuary of Balder on the Sogne fiord in Norway, x. 104
Sand, souls of ogres in a grain of, xi. 120
Sanda-Sarme, a Cilician king, father-in-law of Ashurbanipal, v. 144
Sandacus, a Syrian, father of Cinyras, v. 41
Sandal of Perseus, at Chemmis in Upper Egypt, iii. 312 _n._ 2
Sandan, legendary or mythical hero of Western Asia, v. 125 _sqq._, ix. 368, 388 _sqq._; the burning of, v. 117 _sqq._; identified by the Greeks with Hercules, v. 125, 143, 161, ix. 388; said to have founded Tarsus, v. 126; burnt in effigy on a pyre at Tarsus, v. 126, ix. 389; monument of, at Tarsus, v. 126 _n._ 2; his figure on coins of Tarsus, v. 127
—— (Sandon, Sandes), Cappadocian and Cilician god of fertility, v. 125
—— and Baal at Tarsus, v. 142 _sq._, 161
Sandanis the Lydian, dissuades Croesus from marching against the Persians,