Handbook to the ethnographical collections . of the Ainu areoblong with gable-roof, the frame-work being of wood and the roofand sides of rushes. Each househas a kind of ante-room. The eastend of the main living-room isconsidered sacred, and it is here thatthe inao (see below) are kept. Thehearth is in the centre, and theplatforms which serve as beds run along each side. Near eachhouse is a smaller building raised on piles as a protection againstrats; this is a storeroom where grain, meat, &c., are kept. InYezo there is a little cultivation in garden plots near the houses;but new ground is bro


Handbook to the ethnographical collections . of the Ainu areoblong with gable-roof, the frame-work being of wood and the roofand sides of rushes. Each househas a kind of ante-room. The eastend of the main living-room isconsidered sacred, and it is here thatthe inao (see below) are kept. Thehearth is in the centre, and theplatforms which serve as beds run along each side. Near eachhouse is a smaller building raised on piles as a protection againstrats; this is a storeroom where grain, meat, &c., are kept. InYezo there is a little cultivation in garden plots near the houses;but new ground is broken every two or three years. In Sakhalienmany of the Ainu houses resemble those of the Gilyak, beingmade of logs, and having a birchbark roof. Food consists of fish, usually smoked, beans, millet andpotatoes, and more rarely venison and bears flesh. Cooking isdone in an iron pot, fire being j^rocured b) means of a flint-and-steel, when modern Japanese matches are not available. In oldtimes fire is said to have been obtained by friction. Fig. 4;t. -Ainu Avitli bowquiver. iiul NORTHERN AND CENTRAL ASIA 63 The in-iucipal garment of the Ainu is a long coat rather likethe Japanese limono (fig. 49). This is usually woven on a primitivenative loom, the thread being made of elm-bark ; the browncloth which is made is thus a kind of woven bark-cloth. Thisfoundation is often covered by Japanese cloth of cotton or silkand ornamented by the women with tasteful coloured em-broidery of designs similar to those carved on their woodenutensils. Nowadays the garments worn in Yezo are commonlymade in Japan. The personal ornaments worn consist chiefly of necklaces, metalear-rings, and finger-rings imported from Japan. But the womenalso wear a kind of leather collar on which plates of cast whitemetal are fixed. In Sakhalien the women wear belts ornamentedwith Chinese cash or brass ornaments. The men wear pieces ofred cloth in the lobe of the ear. Girls are tatued in infancy roundthe mouth, so that


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Keywords: ., bookauthorjoycetho, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1910