BULL. 30] 



CHICHEEOHE CHICKAHOMIN Y 



259 



ond journey, and Joutel and Cavelier 

 were at Chicago in 1687-88, followed b_v 

 La Hontan the following year. Chicago 

 was also the name of a chief of the Illinois 

 about 1725. See Hoffman in 14th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 238. 



Apkaw.— St Cosme (1699) in Shea, Early Voy., 52, 

 1861 (apparently intended for Chicago). Checa- 

 gou. — Membre (16.S1) in Shea, Discov. Miss. R., 

 166, 1S52. Chegagou.— Doc. of 1695 in N. Y. Doe. 

 Col. Hist., IX, 619, 1855. Chegakou.— La Hontan 

 (1703), NewVov., l, 231, 17a5. Chekakou.— Ibid., 

 I, 135, 1703. Chicago.— Iberville (1702) in Minn. 

 Hist. Soc. Coll., 1, 341, 1872. Chicagou.— Document 

 of 1695 in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., ix, 627, 1855. 

 ChicagS.— St Cosme (1699) in Shea, Early Voy., 56, 

 1861. ChicagS.— Croghan (1765) in N. Y'. Doc. Col. 

 Hist.. VII, 7S5, 1856. Chicagu.— St Cosme, op. 

 cit.,51. Chicagvv. — Ibid., 59. Chicaqw. — Ibid. ,54. 

 Chigagou.— Ibid.. 68. Chikago. — La Tour, map, 1784. 

 Chikagons. — La Potherie, Hist. Amer., ii, 346, 

 17.53. Chikagou.— St Cosme (1699) in Shea, Early 

 Vov., 55, 1861. Chikagoiia.— Gravier (1700), ibid., 

 116^117. Chikagu.— St Cosme, op. cit., 51. Chi- 

 kagw. — Shea, Rel. Mission de Miss., 22, 1861. 

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

 Hist., IV, 908, 1854. Quadoghe.— Jefferys, French 

 Dom. Am., -pt. 1, map, 1761. 



Chicherohe. A former Cherokee settle- 

 ment on "War Woman cr., in n. w. Rabun 

 CO., Ga. ; destroyed in the Revolutionary 

 war. (.1. M. ) 



Chichigone (seemingly cognate with 

 Chippewa sJiishikwe, 'rattlesnake'. — 

 W. J.). A tribe mentioned by La Ches- 

 naye as living n. of L. Superior in 1697, 

 and generally trading with the English on 

 Hudson bay. They can not be identified 

 with any Icnown tribe, but they were evi- 

 dently A Igonquian. (.1. M.) 

 Chichigoue.— La (hesnaye (1697) in Margry, Dec, 

 VI, 7, 1886. Chichigoueks. — La Potherie, Hist, de 

 I'Amer., ir, 49, 1753. 



Chichilek. A Scjuawmish village com- 

 munitv on Burrard inlet, Brit. Col. 

 Tcitcile'Ek,— Hill-Tout in Rep. Brit. A. A. S.,475, 

 1900. 



ChicMlticalli (Nahuatl: cMchUtic 'red,' 

 calli 'house': 'red house'). A ruined 

 pueblo visited by Coronado's army on its 

 journey to Cibola (Zufii) in 1540; appar- 

 ently situated on the Gila, e. of the mouth 

 of the San Pedro, s. Ariz., probably not 

 far from Solomonsville. Owing to the 

 glowing account of the place given by 

 Fray Marcos de Niza in the preceding 

 year, Coronado and his followers were 

 "much affected l>y seeing that the fame 

 of Chichilticalli was summed up in one 

 tumble-down house without any roof, al- 

 though it ajjpeared to have been a strong 

 place at some former time when it was in- 

 habited, and it was very plain that it had 

 been built by a civilized and warlike race 

 of strangers who had come from a dis- 

 tance" (Castaneda). The same writer also 

 states that it "was formerly inha})ited by 

 people who had separated from Cibola." 

 ]\lany writers have wrongly identified it 

 with the present Casa Grande. See Ban- 

 delier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iii, 178,' 

 1890; Hodge, Coronado's March, 1899; 

 Winship, Coronado Exped., 14th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 1896. " (f. w. H.) 



Chichicticale.— Castaneda (1.596) in Ternaux- 

 Conipans, Vov., i.\, 12, ISoS. Chichillicale. — Kern, 

 map in ^chuc'ilcral't, Ind. Tribes, iv. 38, 1^.54. Chi- 

 chilte Calli.— .laramillo in Ternau.x- Com pans, 

 Voy., IX, 365,1838. Chichilti.— Gallatin in 'i'raiis. 

 Ani. Ethnol. Soc, ll, Ixxviii, 1848. Chichilticah.— 

 Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, i, 117, 1881 (mis- 

 print). Chichilti-cal.— Galhitin, op. cit., Ixix. 

 Chichilticala.— Ugilby, America, 299, 1671. Chi- 

 chilticale.— Coronado (1.540) in Hakluyt. Voy., 448^ 

 1600. Chichilticalen.— De Wsle, map Am. Sept., 

 1700. Chichilticali.—Mota-Padilla, Hi.st.de la Con- 

 quista, 113, 1742. Chichilti-calli.— Gallatin, op. 

 cit.,lx. Chichiltic-Calli.— Jaramillo in Ternau.x- 

 Compans, Voy., ix, 368, 1838. Chichiltie,— Jara- 

 millo in Doc Iiied., xiv, 307, 1870, Chichiltie 

 Alli. — Jaramillo quoted bv Bancroft, Ariz, and 

 N. Mex., 40, 1889. Chichiticala.— Heylyn, Cosmog- 

 raphy, 968,1703. Chichiticale.— Coronado (1.540) 

 in Ramnsi<i, Nav. etViaggi, lll, 362(f), 1.565. Chi- 

 chitte Calli,— Jaramillo in Doc Ined., xiv. 304, 

 1870. Chilticale.— Beadle, Undeveloped West, 468, 

 1873. Red House.— Wallace in Atl. Monthly, 219, 

 Aug., 1880 (or Chichiticale). Red Town.— Dome- 

 nech, Deserts N. A., i, 175, 1860 (or Chichilticale). 

 Roode Huis. — ten Kate, Reizen in N.A., 161, 1885 

 (Dutch form). 



Chichinak. A Kaialigmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on a small river flowing into Etolin 

 str., Alaska; pop. 6 in 1880, 84 in 1890. 

 Chechinamiut.— 11th Census. Alaska, 164, 1893. 

 Chichinagamute, — Petroff, Rep. on Alaska, 54, 1880. 



Chicliipe Outip^ (Chippewa has T'di- 

 prumtijic, 'curly-head.' — W. J.). A large 

 Potawatomi village in 1838 near South 

 Bend, St Joseph co., Ind. (.t. m. ) 



Chichiveachic (probably from the na- 

 tive term signifying 'peaks' + chic 'place 

 of). A Tarahumare rancheria in Chi- 

 huahua, Mexico. — Lumholtz, inf'n, 1894. 



ICKAHOMINY MAN 



Chickahominy ( from K'clnck-aJuuii-jn ii/- 

 noiif/h, ' coarse -jjoundt^d corn ])eo])le,' 

 'hominy people' — Tooker; or from Tslii- 

 kcltilimn, a pla<'e iifune, meaning 'swept,' 



