124 



BAf!ANORA BAGADUCE 



[b. a. e. 



Bacatu de Guachi. — Mange (ra. 1700) quoted bv 

 Bancroft. No. Mex. States. I, 233, IWSJ. San Luis 

 Bacadeguachi. — Rivera (1730), ibid., 514. San Luis 

 Gonzaga de Bacadeguatzi. — Doc. of 17ti4 quoted bv 

 Bandelierin Arch. Inst. Papers, ill, 56, 1890. S. 

 Luis Gonzaga Bacadeguachi, — Zapata (1678), ibid., 

 246. 



Bacanora. A pueblo of the Eudeve di- 

 vision of the Opata and the seat of a 

 Spanish mission founded in 1627; situated 

 in E. Sonora, Mexico, on Kio Batepito, 

 lat. 29° 10^ long. 109°. Pop. 253 in 1678, 

 116 in 1730. 



Bacanora. — Rivera (1730) quoted by Bancroft. No. 

 Mex. States, l, 513, 1884. Basacora.— AlleRre 

 quoted by Bancroft, ibid., 523 (probably the same). 

 S. Ignacio Bacanora. — Zapata (1678). ibid., 245. 



Bacanuchi. A rancheria, apparently of 

 the Opata, on the e. bank of the Rio 

 Sonora, Sonora, Mexico, in lat. 30° 40'. 

 It was visited by Father Kino in Oct., 

 1706, and was the seat of a mission with 

 266 inhabitants in 1777 (Doc. Hist. Mex., 

 4th s., I, app., 1856). Distinct from Ba- 

 cuachi. 



Bacanuchi. — Kino, map (1702) in Stocklein, Neue 

 Welt-Bott, 74. 1726. Real de Bacanuchi. — Kino 

 quoted by Bancroft, No. Mex. States, I, 501, 1881. 



Bacapa (said by Buelna to signify 'reed 

 grass' (carrizo), but the term bac, or vac, 

 in Pima signifies ' house, ' ' ruined house ' ) . 

 A Papago rancheria in n. w. Sonora, Mex- 

 ico, located slightly s. e. of Carrizal on 

 the map of Father Kino ( 1 701 ) , by whom 

 it was visited in 1700, and by Anza and 

 Font in 1 776. Not to be confounded with 

 Matape in any of its various forms, but 

 identical with the later Quitobac in lat. 

 31° 40^ long. 112° 45^ (f. w. h.) 

 Guitobac— Font, map (1777) in Bancroft, Ariz, and 

 N. M., 393, 1889. San Louis de Bacapa. -Venegas, 

 Hist. Cal., n, 176, 1759. San Luis Bacupa, — Ban- 

 croft, op. cit., 359. San Luis Beltran de Bacapa. — ■ 

 Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, v, 123, 1890. 

 S. Ludlov de Bacapa.— Kino, map (1702) in Stock- 

 lein, Neue WeltBott, 74, 1726. S. Luis Bacapa.— 

 Kino, map (1701) in Bancroft, op. cit., 360.— S. 

 Luis de Bacapa.— Venegas, Hist. Cal., I, map, 

 1759. S, Luis ftuitobac- Anza and Font (1774) 

 quoted by Bancroft, op. cit., 393. St. Ludlovic de 

 Vacapa. — Bandelier, op. cit., 122. 



Bachipkwasi (a species of lizard). A 

 clan of the Lizard (Earth or Sand) phra- 

 try of the Hopi. 



Ba-tci'p-kwa-si.— Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 

 39, 1891. 



Backhook. One of the small tribes for- 

 merly living on lower Pedee r. and its 

 branches in South Carolina. Almost 

 nothing is known of it. With the Hook 

 tribe they are mentioned l)y Lawson as 

 foes of the Santee and as living in 1701 

 about the mouth of Winyah bay, S. C. 



(.1. M.) 



Backhook.— Lawson (1714), Hist. Car., 45, 1860. 

 BackHook.— Rivers, Hist. S. C, 35, 1856. Black 

 Hook.— Ibid., 36. 



Bacoburito. A rancheria, apparently 

 occupied by one of the Cahita tribes of 

 the Piman family, situated on the Rio 

 Petatlan, or Rio Sinaloa, in lat. 26°, n. w. 

 Sinaloa, Mexico. Christianized early in 

 17th century, the natives rebelled about 

 1604 and burned their church, but the up- 



rising was soon quelled b}' Gov. Hurtaide 

 who put the leading rebels to death and 

 compelled the others to rebuild the 

 edifice. — Bancroft, No. Mex. States, i, 

 213, 1886. 



Bacuachi. A former pueblo of theTegui- 

 ma Opata and the seat of a Spanish mission 

 founded in 1650; situated on the head- 

 waters of the Rio Sonora, in Sonora, Mex- 

 ico, below latitude 31°. It still existed as 

 a mission in 1777 (Doc. Hist. Max., 4th s., 

 I, app., 1856). Pop. 195 in 1678, and 51 

 in 1730, but Bartlett (Personal Narr., i, 

 278, 1854) found it almost depopulated in 

 1851. 



Bacatzi. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 530, 

 1,892 (misprint). Bacoachi. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 

 343, 1864. Bacoaiz.— Ibid. Bacoatzi. — Rudo En- 

 sayo (1763), 16U, 1.S63. Bacouiz.— Rivera (1730) 

 quoted by Bancroft. No. Mex. States, 514, 1884. 

 Bacuachi. — Kino, map (1702) in Stocklein, Neue 

 Welt-Bott, 74, 1726. Biquache.— Hrdlicka in Am. 

 Anthrop., vi, 72, 1904. S. Miguel Bacuachi.— Za- 

 pata (1678) quoted by Bancroft, op. cit., 246. 



Bacuancos. A Pima rancheria visited 

 by Father Kino about 1697; situated 7 

 leagues s. of the mission of Guevavi in 

 . Pimeria Alta, n. w. Sonora, Mexico. 

 Probably the later Buena vista. See Qui- 

 quiborica. 



Bacuancos.— Bernal (1697) quoted by Bancroft, 

 Ariz, and N. M.. 356, 1889. Bacuanos.— Mange, 

 ibid., 356. S. Antonio(?). — Ibid. S, Luis Bacuan- 

 cos.— Ibid., 35,S. 



Bacum. A Yaqui settlement on the s. 

 bank of the lower Rio Yaqui, s. w. So- 

 nora, Mexico, with an estimated popula- 

 tion of 4,000 in 1849. 



Bacum. — Velasco, Notieias de Sonora, 84, 1850. 

 Bahium.— Orozco y Berra, Geog., 355, 1864. Santa 

 Cruz Bacum, — IVjid. 



Bacuvia. Mentioned as an early settle- 

 ment apparently within the province of 

 Apalachee, Fla. 



Bacutia. — Barcia, Ensayo, 339, 1723. Bacuvia. — 

 Ibid.. 336. 



Bad Arms. A Brule band. — Culbertson 

 in Smithson. Rep. 1850, 141, 1851. 



Badeuachi. A former Opata village, 

 now in ruins, a short distance w. of Rio 

 Sonora, about lat. 30°, near Huepaca and 

 Aconchi, n. central Sonora, Mexico. — 

 Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, in, 71, 

 1890. 



Badwisha. A Mariposan tribe on Ka- 

 weah r., Cal., said to have lived near the 

 Wikchamni. Mentioned by Hoffman in 

 1886 as formerly on Kaweah r., but then 

 at Tule agency. 



Badwis'ha. — Hoffman in Proc. Am. Philos. Soc, 

 XXIII, 301, 1886. Balwisha. — Kroeber, inf'n, 1905. 

 Pal-wish-a.— Barbour (1852) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 32d 

 Cong., spec, .sess., 255, 1853. Pat-wish-a.— Johnston 

 (1851) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 61, 32d Cong., 1st sess., 23, 

 1852. Pol-we-sha.— Wessells (1853) in H. R. Ex. 

 Doc. 76, 34th Cong., 3d sess., 32, 1857. 



Bagaduce. The name of the peninsula 

 in Hancock co., Me., on which Castine 

 is situated. Purchas mentions Chebegna- 

 dose (« should probably be u) as a town 

 in 1602-1609 on Penobscot r. in Abnaki 

 territory, with 30 houses and 90 men, 

 which may be connected with the more 



