58 



ANGNOVCH AK ANNA WAN 



[b. a. e. 



Angnovchak. An Eskimo village in the 

 Nushagak district, Alaska; pop. 16 in 1890. 

 Angnovchamiut.— nth Census, Alaska, 164, 1893. 



Angoutenc. A former Huron village 

 situated between Wenrio and Ossossane, 

 about 2 m. from the latter place, in On- 

 tario. 



Angoutenc— J es. Rel. for 1638, 34, 1858. AngSiens — 

 Ibid., 1636, 116 (misprint). AngStenc— Ibid., o."i. 

 Angun. A Hutsnuwu village x. of 

 Hood bay, Admiralty id., Alaska; pop. 

 420 in 1880. The greater jiart of the peo- 

 ple have since remove<ltoKillisnoo, atish- 

 ing village established by the whites. 



Angoon. — Emmons in INIem. Am. Miis. Nat. Hist., 

 HI, 1>1. vii, 1903. Angun.— Krau.se, Tlinliit Ind., 

 105, 1885. Augoon,— Pt'trort', Tenth Census, 

 Alaska, 32, l.s.si. 



Angwassag. A Chippewa village near 

 8t Charles, Saginaw eo., Mich., with per- 

 hai^s 50 inliabitants in 1894. 

 Angwassag.— Smith iiuoted Ijv Maton in Nat. Mus. 

 Rep. 1902, 385, 1904. Angwasug.— Wm. Joues, inf'n, 

 1905 (sig. 'snags tioating in the water'). 



Angwusi. The Raven clan of the Ka- 

 china phratry of the Hopi. 

 Ang-wush-a. - Dorsey and Vuth, Mishongnovi 

 Ceremonies, 175, 1902 (Crow clan). Anwuci 

 ■win-wm.— Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., .584, 1900 

 ( i('/il(t'H = ' clan '). Aii-wu'-si wiin-wii. — Fewkes in 

 .\ra. Anthrop., vil, 404, 1894 (H'iin-wii = ' clan'). 

 TJn-wu'-si.— Stephen in 8th Kep. B. A. E., 39, 1891. 



Anibiminanisibiwininiwak. ( ' Pembina 

 (cranberry) river men,' from nibirnina 

 'high-bush cranberry,' liibiw 'river,' ini- 

 niwak 'men'). A Chippewa band liv- 

 ing on PemV)ina r. in extreme n. Min- 

 nesota and the adjacent i)art of Manitoba. 

 Thev removed from San<ly lake, Minn., 

 to that region about 1807, at the solici- 

 tation of the Northwest Fur Company. — 

 Gatschet, OjiV>wa MS., B. A. E. 



Chippewas of Pembena River —Lewis, Travels, 

 178. 1809. Pembina band —Events in Ind. Hist., 

 suppl., 013, 1841. 



Anicam. A Papago rancheria, probably 

 in Pima CO., s. Ariz.; \K)\). 96 in 1858. — 

 Bailey in Ind. Aff. Kep., 208, 1858. 



Anilco. A village, probably Quapaw, 

 presumably on the s. side of Arkansas r., 

 and said to contain 5,000 people when 

 visited by De Soto's army in 1542. 

 Anicoyanque.— Biednia (1.544) in French, Hi-st. 

 Coll. La., n, 107, 18.50. Anilco,— Gareilasso de la 

 Vega, Florida, 201, 1723. Anileos.-s^Ratinesque, 

 introd. Marshall, Kv., i, 34, 1824. Ilicos.— Ibid., 

 36. Nilco.— Gentleman of Elvas (1557) quoted by 

 French, Hist. Coll. La., ii, 184, 18.50. 



Anilukhtakpak. A Kaiyuhkhotana vil- 

 lage on Innoko r., Alaska; pop. 170 in 

 1844. 



Anilukhtakkak.— Zagoskin, Desc. Russ. Poss. Am., 

 map, 1844. 



Animas (Span, 'souls'). An Apache 

 settlement, apparentlv near Gila r., Ariz., 

 in 1769.— Anzain Doc. Hist. Max., 4th s., 

 II, 114, 1856. 



Animikite. An impure massive niineral, 

 according to Dana (Text- book Mineral., 

 420, 1888) supposed to be a silver anti- 

 monide, found at Silver islet, L. Superior; 

 derived from Aiihniti, a local place name 

 which in the Chippewa and closely re- 



lated Algonquian dialects signifies 'thun- 

 der.' (a. k. c. ) 



Animism. See lieligion. 



Animpayamo. A former village of the 

 Kalindaruk, a division of the Costanoan 

 Indians, connected with San Carlos mis- 

 sion, Cal. — Tavlor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 

 20, 1860. 



Aniyak. A village of the Nunatogmiut 

 Eskimo on the Arctic coast just n. of 

 Kotzebue sd., Alaska; pop. 25 in 1880. 

 Aniyak.— Baker, lieog. Diet, .\laska. 1901. Ani- 

 yakh.-I'ctroir, Rep. on Ahiska, 4, 1884. 



Ankachagmiut. A local subdivision of 

 the Chnagmiut Eskimo living on Yukon 

 r. above Andreafski, Alaska. 



Angechag'emiit, — Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., i, 

 17, 1877. 



Ankachak. A Chnagmiut village, the 

 home of the Ankachagmiut, on the right 

 bank of the lower Yukon, Alaska; per- 

 haps i<lentical with Kenunimik. 

 Ankachagamuk. — Raymond in Sen. E.\. Doc. 12, 

 42d <'i>ng,, 1st sess., 25. 1871. Ankatchag-miout. — 

 Zagiiskin in Nouv, Ann. Voy., 5th ser., xxi, 

 map, 18.50. Ankatschagmiut. — Holmberg. Ethnol. 

 Skizz., map, 18.55. Ankochagamuk. — Post route 

 map, 1903. 



Ankakehittan ( ' people of the hcmse in 

 the middle of the valley' ). A Kolusch- 

 an division at Killisnoo, Alaska, belonging 

 to the Raven clan; they are said to have 

 separated from the Deshitan on account 

 of some domestic trouble. 

 Am-khark-hit-ton.— Emmons in Mem. Am. Mus. 

 Nat. Hist., Ill, pi. vii, 1903. Anq!a'ke hit tan. — 

 Swanton, Held notes. B. A. E., 1904. Nanch- 

 agetan.— Krause, Tlinkit Ind., 118, 1885. Ula'ke- 

 tan, — Swanton, op. cit. 



Anlik, A Kaviagmiut village on Go- 

 lofnin bay, Alaska. 

 Anlygmjuten.— Holmberg, Ethnol. Skizz., 6, 18.55. 



Annaooka. A Tuscarora town in North 

 Carolina at the beginning of the 18th cen- 

 tury. 

 AnnaOoka.— Lawson (ra. 1701), Hist. Car., 383,1860. 



Annapolis. One of the 7 districts of the 

 territory of the Micmac, as recognized 

 by themselves. It includes the s. w. 

 part of Nova Scotia. — Rand, First Mic- 

 mac Reading Book, 81, 1875. 



Annas. An unidentified tribe men- 

 tioned by Rivera (Diario y Derrotero, 

 leg. 2,602, 1736) as living in s. Tex. 



Annawan. A Wampanoag sachem, the 

 chief captain and counselor of Philip, 

 who untler that chief's father had won a 

 reputation for prowess in wars with many 

 different tribes. When King Philip fell 

 Annawan rallied the warriors and safely 

 extricated them from the swamp where 

 they were surrounded. Afterward he 

 ranged through the woods, harrying the 

 settlers of Swansea and Plymouth, until 

 Capt. Benjamin Church raised a new ex- 

 pedition to hunt the Indians as long as 

 there was one of them in the woods. Some 

 were captured by Capt. Church's Indian 

 scouts, but Annawan eluded pm-suit, never 

 camping twice in the sauie spot. Having 

 learned from a captive where the old 



