234 



CHAMADA CHANSHUSHKA 



[b. a. e. 



mission, C'al. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, 

 Apr. 5, 1860. 



Chamada. A former rancheria of the 

 Jova division of the Opata, near the 

 Sonora-Chihuahua boundary, about lat. 

 29°, Mexico. It appears to have been 

 abandoned after 1690, the inhabitants 

 finally moving to Sahuaripa. — Doc. of 

 18th century quoted by Bandelier in 

 Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 511, 1892. 



Chamampit. An Atfalati band which 

 lived on Wapatoo cr., at the e. end of 

 Wapatoo lake, Yamhill co., Oreg. 

 Tcha mampit. — Gatschet, Atfalati MS., B. A. E., 

 1877. 



Chamblee. See Shabonee. 



Chamliallach. A former village on 

 French prairie, Marion co., Oreg., prob- 

 ably belonging to the Ahantchuyuk. — 

 Lyman in Oreg. Hist. Soc. Quar., i, 323, 

 1900. 



Chamifu. The Lakmiut name of a San- 

 tiani band on Yamhill cr., a w. tributary 

 of Willamette r. , Oreg. 



Tch'ammifu, — Gatschet, Calapooya MS., B. A. E., 

 1877. 



Chamifu. A Yamei band formerly liv- 

 ing between the forks of Yamhill r., Yam- 

 hill CO., Oreg. 



Tcha mifu amim. — Gatschet, Atfalati MS., B. A. E., 

 1877. 



Chamisso. A village of the Malemiut 

 Eskimo on Chamisso id., in Eschscholtz 

 bav, Alaska. — Nelson in 18th Rep. B. 

 A.'E., map, 1899. 



E-ow-ick.— Beechey (1827) quoted by Baker, Geog. 

 Diet. Alaska, 1901 (native name). 



Chamiwi. The Lakmiut name of a 

 Yamel band on Yamhill cr., a w. tribu- 

 tary of Willamette r., and near Inde- 

 pendence, Oreg. 



Tch'ammiwi. — Gatschet, Calapoova MS., B. A. E., 

 1877. 



Chamkhai. The name, in the upper Clear 

 lake dialect, of a Pomo band or village 

 on the E. fork of Russian r. , Cal. ( a . l. k. ) 



Champikle. A Yamel band on Dallas 

 (La Creole) cr., a w. tributary of Willa- 

 mette r., Oreg. 



Tch'ampikle ami'm. — Gatschet, Lakmiut MS., B. 

 A. E., 1877. 



Champoeg. A Kalapooian village be- 

 tween Chemeketa and Willamette falls, 

 Oreg. It is not known to which division 

 of the family it belonged. 

 Champoeg. — Kees in Trans. Oreg. Pion. Assn., 25, 

 1879. Champoicho. — Slocum (1837) in Sen. Doc. 

 24, 25th Cong., 2rt sess., 15, 1838 (mi.sprint). Cham- 

 poicks.— Slocum (1835) in H. Rep. 101, 25th Cong., 

 3d sess. , 12, 1839. 



Chananagi ('ridge of land,' or 'hill 

 ridge ' ) . A former Upper Creek town e. 

 of the site of Montgomery, Ala. 



Chanahuniege. — Giussefeld, map of U. S., 1784. 

 Chanahunrege. — Jefferys, French Dom. Am., I, 

 134, map, 1761. Cheurkany,— H. R. Ex. Doc. 276, 

 2-lth Cong., 310, 1836. 



Chanatya. The extinct ' ' Pegwood ' ' 

 (?) clan of the Keresan pueblo of Sia, 

 N. Mex. 



Chanatya hano. — Hodge in Am. Anthrop., ix,351, 

 1896 {hdno =' people '). 



Chanchampenau. The Lakmiut name of 

 a Santiam band formerly living e. of Wil- 

 lamette r., Oreg. 



Tchantchampenau amim. — Gatschet, Lakmiut MS., 

 B.A. E.,],S77. 



Chancliantu. The Lakmiut name of a 

 former Santiam band in Oregon. 

 Tchan-tchantu amim. — Gatschet, Lakmiut MS., B. 

 A. E., 1877. 



Chanco. A Powhatan Indian of Vir- 

 ginia who gave timely warning to the 

 English of the intended massacre by 

 Opechancanough, in Mar., 1622, thus pre- 

 serving a number of lives. — Drake, Bk. 

 Inds., 361, 1880. 



Chanech. A Co.stanoan village for- 

 merly situated near the mission of Santa 

 Cruz, Cal., as stated by Friar Olbez in 

 1819. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 5, 

 1860. 



Chaneleghatchee. Probably a former 

 Creek town in Alabama, between Talla- 

 poosa and Chattahoochee rs. (Robin, 

 Voy., II, map, 1807.) Not identifiable. 



Chanigtac. A former village, presuma- 

 bly Costanoan, connected with Dolores 

 mission, San Francisco, Cal. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Chankaghaotina ('dwellers in logs' [i. e., 

 log huts?] ) . A division of the Wahpeton 

 Sioux. 



Can-kaga-otina. — Dorsey (after Ashley) in 15th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 216, 1897. Tcan-kaxa-otina.— Ibid. 



Chankaokhan ('sore back,' referring to 

 horses). A Hunkpapa division of the 

 Teton Sioux. 



Cag-ho-ham'-pa.— Hayden, Ethnog. and Philol. 

 Mo. Val., 376, 1862. Caijka oKan.— Dorsey in 15th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 221, 1897. Sore backs.— Culbertson 

 in Smithson. Rep. 1850, 141, 1851. Tcanka-oqa".— 

 Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 221, 1897. 



Chankute ('shoot in the woods among 

 the deciduous trees ' ; a name of derision). 

 A division of the Sisseton Sioux. 



Cag kute.— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 217, 

 1897. Tcan-kute.— Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 IV, 260, 1891. 



Chankute. A division of the Yankton 

 Sioux. 



Barbarole, — Gass, Journal, 49, 1807. Caij kute. — 

 Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 217, 1897.— Jonkta.— 

 Gass, op. cit. (told by an Indian that he belonged 

 to the Jonkta or Barbarole people). Tcan-kute.— 

 Dorsey, op. cit. 



Chanona ( ' shoot at trees ' ) . A division 

 of the Upper Yanktonai Siou.x, from 

 which sprang the Hohe or Assiniboin. 



Caij ona.— Dor.sey in 1.5th Rep. B. A. E., 218, 

 1897. Tca^-ona.— Ibid. Wazi-kute.— Ibid, ('shoot- 

 ers among the pines'). 



Chansdachikana (from the name of 

 the chief, otherwise known as Istabba, 

 Sleepy Eyes). A division of the Sisseton 

 Sioux, bne of the Dakota bands below 

 L. Traverse, Minn., formerly considered 

 a part of the Kahmiatonwan. 



Caijsdacikana.— S. R. Riggs, letter to Dorsey, 

 1882. Sleepy Eyes band.— Ind. Aff. Rep. 1859, 60, 

 102, 1S60. 



Chanshushka ( ' box elder ' ) An uni- 

 dentified division of the Dakota. 



