KILL. 30] 



APALACHICOLA APOHOLA 



69 



1836. Conchaques. — Iberville in Margry, Dec, 

 IV, 594, 1880. English Indians.— Arehdale in Car- 

 roll, Hist. Coll. S. C. 11, 107, 1707. Italua 'lake — 

 (jatschet. Creek Migr. Leg., I, 115, 1884 ('great 

 town': popular Creek name). Pahlachocolo. — 

 Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 578, 18.54. Pah-lo- 

 cho-ko-los.— Drake, Bk. Inds., iv, 94, 1S48. Pala- 

 chicolas.— JetYerys, French Dom., map, 134, 1761. 

 Palachocalas.— Stevens, Hist. Ga., 117, 1847. Pala- 

 choocla. — Hodgson in Hawkins, Sketch (1799), 

 17, 1.S4S. Pa-la-chooc-le.— Hawkins, ibid., 65. 

 Palachuckolas.— McCall, Hist. Georgia, I, 363, 1811. 

 Palachuola, — Swan (1791) in Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, v, 262, 1855. Parachuctaus.— Bnudinot, 

 Star in West, 128, 1816. Paracpoocla.— Hodgson 

 in Hawkins, Sketch, 17, 1848. Polachucolas, — 

 Drake, Bk. of Inds., 29, 1848. PooUachuchlaw.— 

 Moll, map in Humphrevs. Hist. Acct., 1730. 

 Tallawa Thlucco.— U. S. Ind. Treat. (1827), 420, 



1837. Tal-lo-wau thlucco.— Hawkins, Sketch (1799), 

 65, 1848. Talua 'lako,— (iatschot, Creek Migr. 

 Leg., I, 145, 1.SS4. Tolowarch. - H. R. Ex. Doc. 276, 

 24th Cong. 308, 1836. Tolowar thlocco.— School- 

 craft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 578, is.54. 



Apalachicola. A town on Savannah r., 

 in what is now Hampton cc, S. C. , vvliere 

 wa.s settled a remnant of the Apalachee 

 from the towns about Apalachee bay, 

 which were carried thither as captives 

 when the tribe was destroyed by Gov. 

 Moore in 1703. (a. s. g.) 



Apalou. An unidentified village near 

 the mouth of St Johns r., Fla., in 1564.— 

 Laudonniere in French, Hist. Coll. La., 

 n. s., 315, 1869. 

 Appalou.— De Bry, Brev. Nar., map, 1591. 



Apangasi. A former Miwok village on 

 Tiiokimne r., Tuolumne co. , Cal. 

 Apangape. — McKee et al. (1851) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 

 4, 32d Cong., spec, sess., 74, 1853 (misprint). 

 Apangasi. — Latham in Trans. Philol. Soc. Lond., 

 81, 1856. Apangasse. — Barbour et al. (1851) in Sen. 

 E.x. Doc. 4. o2d Cong., spec, sess., 70, 1853. 

 A-pang-assi. — Johnston (1851) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 

 61, 32d Cong., 1st sess., 22, 18.52. Apoung-o-sse. — 

 Ind. Aff. Kep., 222, 1851. Ap-yang-ape.— Barbour 

 (1852) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 32d Cong., spec, sess., 

 252, 1853 (misprint). 



Apannow. See Epanow. 



Apap ( A^pap) . A social division of the 

 Pima, belonging to the Stoaraohimal, 

 or White Ants, phratral group. — Russell, 

 Pima MS., B. A. E., 313, 1903. 



Apaqssos ('deer'). A subphratry or 

 gens of the Menominee. — Hoffman in 

 14th Rep. B. A. E., pt. 1, 42, 1896. 



Apatai ('a covering,' from apatayas, 

 * I cover ' ) . A former subordinate village 

 of the Lower Creek town Kasihta, on a 

 creek 20 m. e. of Chattahoochee r., Ga., 

 probably on the site of the present town 

 of IJpatoie, on a creek of the same name 

 in Muscogee co., Ga. 

 Au-put-tau-e.— Hawkins, Sketch (1799), .59, 1848. 



Apatsiltlizhihi ( ' black [tUzJu'] Apache' ). 

 A divi.«ion of the Jicarilla Apache who 

 claim the district of Mora, N. Max., as 

 their former home. (.i. m.) 

 Apa'tsil-tli-zhi'hi, — Moonev, field notes, B. A. E., 

 1897. 



Apeche. A LuiseiTo village w. of San 

 Luis Rev mi,«sion, San Diego co., Cal. — 

 Jackson and Kinney, Rep. Miss. Inds., 

 29, 1883. 



Apena. A pueblo of New Mexico in 

 1598; doubtless situated in the Salinas, 



in the vicinity of Abo, and occupied by 

 the Tigua or the Piros.— Onate (1598) in 

 Doc. Ined., xvi, 114, 1871. 



Aperger. The Yurok name of a Karok 

 village on the w. bank of Klamath r., sev- 

 eral miles below Orleans Bar, said to con- 

 sist of 10 houses in 1852. (a. l. k. ) 

 Sogorem. — Kroebcr, inf'n, 1903 (said to be the 

 Karok name). 



Apewantanka {(tpe 'leaf,' 'fin,' apehin- 

 'mane,' tangku 'large': 'large manes 

 [of horses]'). A division of the Brule 

 Sioux. 



Apewan tanka. — Dorseyin 1.5th Rep. B. A. E., 218, 

 1897. Apewa"-tanka. — Ibid. 



Apichi. A "family" or division of the 

 Cuyuhasomi phratry of the Timucua. — 

 Pareja (ca. 1612) quoted by Gatschet'in 

 Am. Philos. Soc. Proc, xvii, 492, 1878. 



Apikaiyiks ('skunks'). A division of 

 the Kainah and of the Piegan. 

 Ah-pe-ki', — Morgan, Anc. Soc, 171, 1877 ( Kainah). 

 Ah-pe-ki'-e.— Ibid. (Piegan). Ap'-i-kai-yiks. — 

 Grinnell, Blackfo(jt Lodge Tales, 209, 1892 (Kai- 

 nah and Piegan). A-pi-kai'-yiks, — Havden, Eth- 

 nog. and Philol. Mo. Val., 264, 1862 (Piegan). 



Apil. A Costanoan village, containing 

 neophytes in 1819 according to Friar 

 Olbez; situated near the mission of Santa 

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

 5, 1860. 



Apish, Apisha. See Pishaug. 



Apishamore. A saddle blanket, made 

 of buffalo-calf skins, used oii the great 

 prairies (Bartlett, Diet. Americanisms, 

 15, 1877). An impossible derivation of 

 this word from the French empcchernent 

 has been suggested. Meaning and form 

 make it evident that the term is a cor- 

 ruption of apishiiiion, which in the Chip- 

 pewa and closely related dialects of 

 Algonquian signifies ' anything to lie 

 down upon.' (a. p. c. ) 



Apishaug. See Pixhaitg. 



Apistonga. An unidentified tribe ap- 

 parently in N. Ala. ; marked on Mar- 

 quette's map of 1673 (Shea, Discov., 268, 

 1852). 



Aplache. Given as the name of a band 

 and its village on upper Tuolumme r., 

 Tuolumne co., Cal., in 1850. According 

 to Adam Johnson (Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, iv, 407, 1854) the people could 

 not speak the Miwok language; neverthe- 

 less, judging by their location and the 

 bands with which they are mentioned, it 

 is probable that they belonged to the 

 Moquelumnan family. 



Ap-la-che.— Barbour (1852) in Sen. Ex. Doc.4, 32d 

 Cong., spec. .sess., 252, 1853. 



Apohola ('buzzard'). A Timucua 

 phratry which included the Nuculaha, 

 Nuculahaqus, Nuculaharuqui, Chorofa, 

 Usinaca, Ayahanisino, Napoya, Amaca- 

 huri, Hauenayo, and Amu.saya clans. 

 The_V were prohibited from marrying 

 among themselves. — Pareja {ca. 1612) 

 quoted by Gatschet in Proc. Am. Philos. 

 Soc, XVII, 492, 1878. 



