BULL. 30] 



AQUASCOaOC— ARAHASOMI 



71 



from Casco and Saco, Me., and peeminglv 

 allied with the Ahnaki. — Niles {r<i. 176l') 

 in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 3d s., vi, 217, 18^57. 

 Aquascogoc. An Algonquian village on 

 the coast of Hyde co., N. C, at the time 

 of the tir.st visit of the English. It was 

 burned by them in 1585. 



Agnascoga. — Martin, N. C, I, 30, 1829. Aguasco- 

 sack. — Bdzinaii, Maryland, I, 60, 1837. Aquasco- 

 goc. — Lane (15.S(;) in Smith (1629), Virginia, I, Mi. 

 repr. 1819. Aquascogoke. — Straclii'V (rn. Itii2), 

 Virginia, 145, 1S49. Aquoscojos.— Scli'oolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, vi, 93, 18-57. Aqusoogock. — Dntcli majj 

 (1621) in X. Y. D(H\ Col. Hist., I, 18.56. 



Aquebogue ( the word suggests the Chip- 

 pewa akiipii/'Kj, a locative term referring 

 to the place wliere land and water meet; 

 it has the meaning 'shore,' but the spe- 

 citic use is for ' the edge of the water,' the 

 point of view being from the land; aku 

 refers to the 'end,' 'edge,' pi to 'wa- 

 ter.' — Wm. Jones). A village, probably 

 of the Corchaug, al)out the year 1650, on 

 a creek entering the m. side of Great 

 Peconic bay, Long Island (Ruttenber; 

 Thompson). In 1905 R. N. Penny (in 

 Rec. of Past, iv, 223, 1905) discovered the 

 remains of an ancient village " of 12-wig- 

 wam size" in a thick wood near Aque- 

 bogue, inland from Peconic bay, w. of the 

 w. l)ran(h of Steeple Church cr. and l)e- 

 tween that stream and a large tributary 

 of Peconic r. These maybe the remains 

 of the ancient Aquebogue. 

 Accopogue. — Rnttenber, Tribes Hudson R., 365, 

 1872. Aquebogue.— Thompson, Long Id., 181, 1839. 



Aquetnet {(K/uetu-et, 'at an island.' — 

 Trumbull). A village in 1655 at Skau- 

 ton neck. Sandwich tp., Barnstable co., 

 Mass., under chief Ackanootus, in the 

 territor}' of the Xauset. The word 

 seems to be the same as Aquidneck 

 (Quidnick) , R I., which TrumbuUthinks 

 means ' place at the end of the hill,' com- 

 pounded from ukque-adeue-Kuke; or pos- 

 sibly 'place beyond the hill,' ogqne-adenc- 

 auke. Mentioned l)v a writer of 1815 in 

 Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 2d s., iv, 293, 



1816. (.T. M.) 



Aqui. A former Maricopa rancheria on 

 the Rio Gila, s. w. Ariz. — Sedelmair 

 (1744) quoted by Bancroft, Ariz, and N. 

 Mex., 366, 1889. 



Aquicabo. A pueblo of the province of 

 Atripuv in the region of the lower Rio 

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

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

 Aquicato. — Oiiate misquoted bv Bancroft, Ariz, 

 and N. Mex., 135, 1889. 



Aquile. A village in n. w. Fla. on the 

 border of the Apalachee territorv, visited 

 bv De Soto in 1539. -Biedma (1544) in 

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



Aquimundurech. A former Maricopa 

 rancheria on the Rio Gila, s. w. Ariz. — 

 Sedelmair (1744) (pioted bv Bancroft, 

 Ariz, and N. Mex., 366, 1889". 



Aquimuri (probably from Vnna. a khmirl, 

 'river'). A rancheria of one of the 



Piman tribes, probably Papago, visited 

 by Father Kino about 1700; situated in 

 Sonora, on the headwaters of the Rio 

 Altar, just s. of the Arizona boundary. 

 It was later a visita of the mission of 

 Guevavi. Consult Rudo En.savo (1763), 

 150, 1863; Kino, map (1701) in Bancroft, 

 Ariz, and N. Mex., 360, 1889. 

 Akimuri, — Kino, map (17U1) in Stocklein, Neue 

 Welt-Hott, 74, 1726. Aquimuricuca.— Cancio (1768) 

 in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., ii, 270, 18.56. S. Ber- 

 nardo Aquimuri. — Kino quoted bv Bancroft, No. 

 Mex. States, i, .501, 1884. 



Aqninsa. Mentioned by Oiiate in 1598 

 as one of 6 villages occupied by the 

 Zuni in New Mexico. In the opinion of 

 Bandelier (Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 338, 

 1892) it is identical with Pinawan, a 

 now ruined pueblo U m. s. w. of Zuni 

 pueblo. Gushing (in Millstone, ix, 55, 

 1884) regarded Ketchina, 15 m. s. w. of 

 Zuiii, as the probable Aquinsa of the 

 Spaniards, and in 1888 (Internat. Cong. 

 Amer., vii, 156, 1890) the same authority 

 gave Kwakina in connection with Pina- 

 wan as the pueblo to which Onate referred. 



Aquitun {AkneJiini/, 'creek mouth' — 

 Russell). A former Pima rancheria 5 

 ill. w. of Picacho, on the border of the 

 sink of Rio Santa Cruz, s. Ariz., visited 

 by Father Garces in 1775. It was aban- 

 doned about the beginning of the 19th 

 century. A few Mexican families have 

 occupied its vicinity for many years. 

 The present Pima claim that it was a vil- 

 lage of their forefathers. See Akiichin)/. 

 Akutciny.— Russell, Pima MS., B. A. E., 16, 1902 

 ( Pima name; tr = ch ). Aquitun. — .\rricivita. Cron. 

 SerAf., II, 416, 1792. Bajio de Aquituno. — Anza and 

 Font (1780) quoted hv KaiuToft, Ariz, and N. 

 Mex.. 392. 1889. Equituni.— (farces (1776), Diarv, 

 65, 1900. 



Aquixo. A town visited by De Soto's 

 army in 1541, situated on the w. bank of 

 the ^Mississippi, not far from the mouth 

 of St Francis r.. Ark., and perhaps be- 

 longing to the Quapaw. (Gentl. of Elvas, 

 1557, quoted in French, Hist. Coll. La., 

 II, 169, 18.50.) 



Aquouena. An unidentified town w. of 

 upper St Johns r., Fla., in 1565. — De Bry, 

 Brev. Nar., ii, map, 1591. 



Aracuchi. An unidentified village ap- 

 parently in X. w. S. C, visited by Juan 

 Pardoin 1565. — Vandera (1567) in Smith, 

 Colec. Docs. Fla., i, 17, 1857. 

 Arauchi, — Vandera, op. cit. 



Aragaritka. The name given by the 

 IroqiK lis t( ) the tribes, including the Huron 

 and Tionontati, which they drove out 

 from the i^eninsula lietween L. Huron 

 and L. Erie and from lower Michigan. — 

 Iroquois deed (1701) in N. Y. Doc. Col. 

 Hist., IV, 908, 1854. 



Arabasomi ( 'l)eargens,' irora <ira 'black 

 bear, ' haaom I ' family ' ) . A Timucua clan 

 of the Chulutichi phratry. — Pareja (ca. 

 1612) quoted bv Gatschet in Proc. Am. 

 Philos. Soc, XVII, 492, 1878. 



