EARLY HISTORY or Till-. GREEK [NDIANS 
37 
No. 
Doc. toed. XIV. 
Dm- [ned. 
XXII 
< i\ iedo 
Peter Martyr. 
Navarrete. 
Barcia. 
1 
2 
Duache 1 
Chlcora 
Xapira. 
Duache 
Clricora 
Duahe 
Chicora 
f Xapira 
Duhareor Du- 
liarhe. 
Chicora 
Xapira 
Suache 
Chicora 
Xapira 
Duaarhe. 
Chicora. 
Xapira. 
4 
|yta 
Hilha 
U Tatanca] 
fVtha. 
1 
Taucal 
, 
Anicatiya 
7 
[Tihe 
I Tihie. 
s 
Cohoth. 
10 
Guacaya 
Xoxi 
Quacaya 
Xoxi 
isqui. .. 
Arambe 
Xaminambe. . 
Guacaya 
(iuacaia 
Guacaya 
Xoxi 
Xuacaya. 
n 
14 
15 
Arambe 
Xamunambe... 
Chuaque 
Tanzaca 
Ycnyochol 
Aranui 
Xamrmanuc. . 
Arambe 
Xamunambe.. 
Arambe 
Xamunambe.-. 
Arambe. 
Xumunaunbe. 
17 
Tancaca 
Tanaca 
Tanzacca 
Tanzaca 
Tamceca. 
Holpaos 
"1 
1 
Corixayn-si- 
guanin. 
, 
Ivnsiquanin... 
Inisiguanin. . . 
•■>•> 
■'■ 
Anoxa 
Anoxa 
Anoxa 
The variants of these names enable us, by comparing them with 
one another, to determine the originals with considerable certainty 
in most cases, though some still remain in question. As recon- 
structed, the list would be something like this: Duhare or Duache, 
Chicora, Xapira or Xapida, Yta or Hitha, Tancal or Tancac, Anica, 
Tire or Tihe, Cocayo, Quohathe, Guacaya, Xoxi, Sona, Pasqui, 
Arambe, Xamunambe, Huaque, Tanzaca, Yenyohol, Pahoc or 
Paor, Yamiscaron, Orixa, Insiguanin or Inziguanin, Anoxa. 
Yamisoaron without doubt refers to the Yamasee Indians, the 
ending probably being a Siouan suffix, and the whole possibly the 
original of the name Yamacraw applied at a much later date to a 
body of Indians at the mouth of the Savannah. There can be 
little question also that Orixa is the later Spanish Orista, and English 
Edisto, Cocayo the Coosa Indians of the upper courses of the rivers 
of lower South Carolina, or perhaps the town of "Cocapoy" 1 
