ABSTRACT

Hades, 9 i 24622, 3 1 1 ; 11 6 7 1; 12 6122, 182, 406, 40971, 426, 438-9, 45771, fig. 2 1 ; 13 103&72, 19 1, 380/2; 14 80/2, 3 16 ; 15 2 10 , 2 14 ; 16 4 18 , 455, 468; 18 243;

Babylonian, 8 845; descent to, 12 438; entrances to, 5 572; journey to, see journey s.v.; as quaternity, 1 1 672; see also hell; nekyia; night sea journey; underworld

Hadfield, J . A., 18 (p i), 44, 74, 390 haemoptysis, simulation of, 1 305 Haeussermann, F.: Wartempfang und

Symbol in der alttestamentlichen Prophetie, 11 3272

Hagar, 11 7 13 Hagen, 5 6 1 1 Hagen, F. W.: “Zur Theorie der

Hallucination,” 1 9772, 1002272, 1017272, 12472

Haggadah, 14 59022 Haggadic tradition, 13 4 17 ; 14 585 Haggard, H. Rider, 5 678; 9 i 6022,

145; 10 85, 87; 15 137 , 143; “ She,” and anima-figure, 7 298-9; 9 i 60, 64, 145, 356, 516 , 51872; 9 ii 42422; 10 75; 17 33972, 3 4 1; 18 12 79 -8 1; coniunctio of, 16 42172; mana-personality of, 7 375; soul, immortality of, 7 3 ° 3 ; w o r k s :

Ayesha: The Return of She, 9 i x4 5 » 356» 10 88; 15 142; 16

She, 7 29822, 303; 9 i 145, 356; 9 ii 42422; 10 88, 13 13122; 15 142; 16 42122; 17 33922; 18 457, 1280, 12 8 1; Wisdom*s Daughter, 9 i 145; 10 75

Hagia Sophia, 11 40; 12 18 1 ; in dream, 12 176

Hahn, C. H., 9 ii 139; Geschichte der Ketzer im Mittelalter, 9 ii 1392272, 22572, 22672

Hahn, E.: Demeter und Baubo, 5 2 1422

Hahn, R., 1 15 1-6 5 ; review o f J . ’s “ Zur Psychologie und Pathologie sogenannter occulter Phanomene,” 1 i 5 i &72

Haida Indians, Northwest America, 5fig. 32

hair, 13 122, 360, 375*1, 3 8 1, 4 1 1 , 462;

at birth, 17 56; curly, 14 98, 62 5&ti; -dresser,, analyst as, 13 479; and heat, 5 366; o f hero, loss of, 5 366; 11 348; 12 440; 14 277; 16 455; red, see c o l o u r s : red s.v. ; woman’s, 13 107

Hajos, L., see under Ranschburg half-life, 8 959 H ali,s^ Haly Halirrhothios, 5 372, 39222 Hall, G. Stanley, 8 552; 18 399;

autobiography, 15 52 Hall, M. P.: Codex Rosae Cruets, 12

33222 Haller, M.: Das Hohe Lied, 14 2422 hallucination(s), 1 1 1 , 34; 3 72, 166,

18 0 -1; 6 47; 7 3 12 ; 8 584; 9 i 395«; 10 597n > 609, 714 ; 11 474; 12 57, 59, 353; 13 47, 374; 16 50 1; 18 7 1 1 , 922, 1 1 1 3 - 1 4 ; t i t l e : “On Hallucination,” 18

body-, 7 469; complexes and, 8 593; creative, 1 25; in dementia praecox,s«? schizo­ phrenia s.v. ; in grande hysterie, 1 13 ; hypnagogic, 1 28, 43, 10 0 -1; I8.778; incipient, 3 457; induced, 1 2 1-2 ; intuitive, 1 106; and neologisms, 3 157 ; olfactory, 18 767, 780; among primitives, 6 46, 254; in prodromal stage, 1 28 1; psychogenic, 1 29; of saints, 1 1 17 ; o f all the senses/sense organs, 1 n > 4 3 ;

o f skeletons, 1 7, 26; Socrates and, 6 240; and somnambulism, 1 97-8; 3 16 1; systematic nature of, 1 43; teleological, 1 136; 3 304; and unconscious, 3 452-3; verbal, see voice/vox s.v. hal­ lucinatory; waking, 1 37; i n s t a n c e s : o f dead people and skeletons, 1 7-8; o f female gen­ itals, 3 63-4; o f snake, 7 6/415; o f levitation, 8 949; o f solar phallus, see solar phallus; o f theft o f money, 1 252; see also visions

Halm, K. F., 13 9m ; ed., Rhetores Latini minores, 12 457w

halo/nimbus, 7 108; at finger-ends, 5 2 7 1 ; meaning of, 5 13 3 n; snake wearing, 13 Jig. 12 ; as symbol, 5 163

Haloa festival, 18 264/1; regenerative symbol of, 5 pi.