70 



APOHOL YTHAS AQUA DOCTA 



[b. a. e. 



Apoholythas. A Creek town in Indian 

 Ter., 10 ni. from the n. fork of Canadian 

 r.— Raines (1838) in H. R. Doc. 219, 

 27th Cong., 3d sess., 110, 1843. 



Apokak. A Kuskwogmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage near the mouth of Kuskokwim r., 

 Alaska; pop. 94 in 1880, 210 in 1890. 

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

 Apokachamute. — Hallock in Nat. Geog. Mag., 88, 

 isys. Apokagmute. — PetrofF, 10th Census, Alaska, 

 153, 1S84. 



Aponitre. A pueblo of the province of 

 Atripuv in the region of the lower Rio 

 Grande, N. Mex., in 1598.— Ofiate (1598) 

 in Doc. Ined., xvi, 115, 1871. 



Apontigoumy. An Ottawa village, at- 

 tacked b)' the Seneca in 1670. — Courcelles 



(1670) in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., ix, 788, 

 1855. 



Apoon. A Chnagmiut village on Apoon 

 pass, the n. mouth of Yukon r., Alaska. 

 Aphoon. — Post-route map, 1903. 



Aposon. See Opossum. 



Apoya. The extinct Sky clan of the 

 Zuili. 



Apoya-kwe.— Cushing in 13th Rep. B. A. E., 368, 

 1896 (A-;<'<'=' people' i. 



Apozolco. A former pueblo of the Col- 

 otlan division of the Cora and the seat of 

 a mission, situated on the Rio Colotlan, 

 a tributary of the Rio Crande de Santiago, 

 Jalisco, Mexico. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 

 280, 1864. 



Appeelatat. A Montagnais village on 

 the s. coast of Labrador. — Stearns, Labra- 

 dor, 271, 1884. 



Appoans. See Pone. 



Appocant. A village of the Powhatan 

 confederacy in 1608 on the n. bank of 

 Ohickahominy r., New Kent co., Va. — 

 Smith (1629), Virginia, map, repr. 1819. 



Appomattoc. A tribe of the Powhatan 

 confederacy formerly living on lower Ap- 

 pomattox r., Va. They had 60 warriors 

 in 1608, and were of some importance as 

 late as 1671, but were extinct by 1722. 

 Their principal village, which bore the 

 same name and was on the site of Ber- 

 muda Hundred, Prince George co., was 

 burned by the English in 1611. Appo- 

 matox v/as also one of the terms applied 

 to the Matchotic, a later combination of 

 remnants of the same confederacy. 



(j. M.) 

 Apamatica. — Perey n Purchas, Pilgrimes, iv,l,688, 

 1626. Apamaticks. — Lawson (1701), Hist. Carolina, 

 163, 1860. Apamatuck, — Smith quoted bv Drake, 

 Bk.Inds.,bk.4, 10, 1848. Apamatuk.— Smith (1629), 

 Virginia, ii, 12, repr. isig. Apomatock. — Batts 



(1671) in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., ill, 193, 1853. Ap- 

 pamatox. — Beverly, Virginia, 199, 1722. Appamat- 

 tocs. — Jefferson, Notes, 179, 1801. Appamattucks. — 

 Strachey (1612 ?), Virginia, Vi, 35, 1849. Appa- 

 matucks.— Smith (1629), Virginia, 1, 116, repr. 1819. 

 Appomatocks.— Macauley, N. Y., ll, 166, 1829. 

 Appomattake.— Doc. of 1643 in N. C. Col. Rec, I, 

 17, 1886. Appomatuck.— Doc. of 1728, ibid., II, 784, 

 1886. Appomotacks. — Boudinot, Star in the West, 

 12-5, 1816. 



Apukasasocha («/>oA7j = 'settlement'). A 

 former Seminole town of which Enehe- 

 mathlochee was chief in 1823, situated 20 



m. w. of the head of St Johns r., centra? 

 Fla.— H. R. Ex. Doc. 74, 19th Cong., 27, 

 1826. 



Apuki [A^pukl). A social divison of 

 the Pima, belonging to the Stoamohimal, 

 or White Ants,phratral group. — Russell, 

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



Aputitek. A ruined Eskimo village in 

 E. Greenland, lat. 67° 47^. — Meddelelser 

 om (xrcjiiland, xxvii, map, 1902. 



Aputosikainah ( 'northern Bloods'). A 

 l)and of the Kainah division of the Sik- 

 sika. 



Ap-ut'-o-si-kai-nah. — (irinnell, Blackfoot Lodge 

 Tales, 209, 1892. 



Apyu. The Yurok name of the north- 

 ern part of the important Karok village 

 of Katimin, on Klamath r., Cal., a mile 

 above the mouth of the Salmon. ( a.l.k. ) 



Aqbirsiarbing ( ' a lookout for whales' ). 

 A winter settlement of Nugumiut at C. 

 True, Baffin land. — Boas in 6th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 422, 1888. 



Aquacalecuen. A Timuquanan village 

 near Suwannee r., n. w. Fla., visited by 

 De Soto in 1539.— Biedma (1544) in 

 French, Hist. Coll. La., ii, 98, 1850. 

 Caliquen. — Gentl. of Elvas (1557) in French, op. 

 cit., 131. 



Aquackanonk ( from ach-quoa-k-kan- 

 nonk, 'a place in a rapid stream where 

 fishing is done with a bush-net. ' — Nelson ) . 

 A division of the Unami Delawares 

 which occu])ied lands on Passaic r., N. J., 

 and a considerable territory in the in- 

 terior, including the tract known as Dun- 

 dee, in Passaic, just below the Dundee 

 dam, in 1678. In 1679 the name was used 

 to describe a tract in Saddle River town- 

 ship, Bergen co., as well as to designate 

 "the old territory, which included all of 

 Paterson s. of the Passaic r., and the city 

 of Paterson." The Aquackanonk sold 

 lands in 1676 and 1679. See Nelson and 

 Ruttenber, 1)elow. 



Achquegenonck. — Doc. of 1714 quoted by Nelson, 

 Inds. N. J., 122, 1S94. Achquickenoungh. — Doc. of 

 1696, ibid. Achquickenunck.— Doc. of 1698, ibid. 

 Achquickenunk. — Doc. of 169('>, ibid. Achquika- 

 nuncque, — Doc. of 1698, ibid. Ackquekenon, — Doc. 

 f)f 1679, ibid. Acquackanonk, — Ruttenber, Tribes 

 Hud.son R., 91, 1872. Acquicanunck. — Doc. of 

 1692 quoted by NeLson. o]>. cit. Acquiggenonck. — 

 Doc. of 1693, ibid. Acquikanong.— Doc. of 1706, 

 ibid. Amakaraongky.— I>c Lact (ra. 1633) in N. Y. 

 Hist. Soc. Coll., 2d s., I, 31-'>, 1S41 («ime?). Aquach- 

 onongue. — Doc. of 1696 (luoted by Nelson, op. cit. 

 Aquackanonks. — De Laet, op. cit. Aquaninoncke. — 

 Doc. of 1683 quoted l>y Nelson, dp. cit. Aquaqua- 

 nuncke. — Doc. of 16,S4, ibid. Aqueckenonge. — Doc. 

 of 1696, ibid. Aqueckkonunque.— Doc. ( if Ifi'.iS, il)id. 

 Aquegnonke,— Doc. of 1679, ibid. Aqueyquinunke — 

 Doc. of 1682. ibid. Aquickanucke. — Doc. of 1678, 

 ibid. Aquickanunke.— DdC. of 1685, ibid. Aquoe- 

 chononque, — Doc. of 1698, ibid. Hackquickanon. — 

 Doc. of 1694, ibid. Hacquickenunk.— Doc. of 1696, 

 ibid. Haghquagenonck. — Doc. of 1736, ibid. 

 Haquequenunck. — De Lact, op. cit. Haquicquee- 

 nock. —Doc. of 167s, ilii<l. Hockquackanonk. — Doc. 

 of 1707, ibid. Hockquackonong. — Ibid. Hock- 

 quecanung. — Doc. of ]tis3, iliid. Hockquekanung. — 

 Doc. of 1680, ibid. Hockquickanon. — Doc. of 

 1693, ibid. 



Aquadocta. The dwelling place of "a 

 tribe of Indians" in 1690, living westward 



