BULL. 30] 



CHUPICHNUSHKUCH CIENEGA 



299 



Chap-pah-seins. — Johnston (1851) in Sen. Ex. Dop. 

 61, 32cl Cons., 1st sess., 20, 1852. Chap-po-sans.— 

 Rver (1S.51), ibid., 21. Chopees.— Ind. Aff. Re\>., 

 219, 1S61. Chupcan.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 

 18, 18{il. Tchupukanes. — Kotzebne, New Voy., ll, 

 146, 1880. 



Chupiclinuslikuch. A former Kuitsh vil- 

 \a^e near lower Umpqua r. , Oreg. 

 Tc'u'-pitc n'u' ckUtc, — Dorsev in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, III, 231, 1S90. 



Chupumni. A former Mi wok village 

 not far s. of Cosumnes r., Cal. 

 Chupumnes. — Hale, Ethnog. and Philol., vi, 630, 

 1846. 



Churamuk. A former considerable vil- 

 lage on the E. side of Susquehanna r., 18 

 m. above Oswego, N. Y. ; destroyed by 

 Sullivan in 1779. — Livermore (1779) in 

 N. n. Hist. Soe. Coll., vi, 322, 1850. 



Churan ( ' red-eye people ' ) . One of the 

 two divisions or fraternities of Isleta pueb- 

 lo, N. Mex. See SJiifiudn. 



Chu-ran'.— Hodge, field' notes, B. A. E., 1895. 

 Shuren.— Gatsehet, Isleta MS. voeab., B. A. E., 

 1885 (given as a clan). 



Churchcates. — A small unidentified tribe 

 mentioned by Gov. Arehdale, of South 

 Carolina, in the latter part of the 18th 

 century, in a complaint that the Appa- 

 lachicoloes, or English Indians, had at- 

 tacked and killed 3 of tliem. — Carroll, 

 Hist. Coll. S. C, II, 107, 1836. 



Churchers. A body of Indians living 

 E. and N. E. of the white settlements in 

 New England in 1634 (Wood, 1634, 

 quoted by Barton, New Views, xviii, 

 1798). Not the Praying Indians, as the 

 period is too early. 



Churehu. The Mole clan of Isleta 

 pue])lo, N. Mex. 



Churehu-f ainin. — Lummis quoted by Hodge in 

 Am. Anthrop., ix, 351, 1896 (#'ahw?i=' people'). 



Churmutce. A former village, presum- 

 ably Costanoan, connected with Dolores 

 mission, San Francisco, Cal. — Tavlor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Churuptoy. A tribe of the Patwin di- 

 vision of the Copehan family, formerly 

 living in Yolo and perhaps in Napa co., 

 Cal. It was one of the 7 which made 

 peace with <tov. Yallejo in 1836. — Ban- 

 croft, Hist. Cal., IV, 71, 1886. 



Chusca. The name ( Tsus-kai, Ts6-is- 

 kai) given by the Navaho to a promi- 

 nent hill on the Navaho res., n. w. N. 

 Mex. Geographers extend the name 

 (Choiska) to the whole mountain mass 

 from which the knoll rises. Cortez in 

 1779 (Pac. R. R. Rep., iii, pt. 3, 119, 

 1856) recorded it, witli doubtful pro- 

 priety, as the name of a Navaho settle- 

 ment. In these mountains are the re- 

 mains of breastworks and other evidences 

 of a disastrous fight that took place before 

 1850, according to Navaho informants, be- 

 tween their warriors and INIexican troops. 



(\V. M.) 



Chuscan. A former village, presumably 

 Costanoan, connected with Dolores mis- 



sion, San Francisco, Cal. — Tavlor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Chushtarghasuttun. A former village 

 of the Chastacosta on the n. side of Rogue 

 r., Oreg. 



Tc'uc'-ta-rxa-sut'-tun. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, III, 234, 1890. 



Chusterghutmunnetun. A former vil- 

 lage of the Chastacosta, the highest on 

 Rogue r. , ( )reg. 



Tc'us-te'-rxut-mun-ne'-tun. — Dorsev in Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, in, 234, 1890. 



Chutchin. A former village, presumably 

 Costanoan, connected with Dolores mis- 

 sion, San Francisco, Cal. — Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Chutil (named from a slough on which 

 it was situated) . A former village or 

 camp of the Pilalt, a Cowichan tribe of 

 lower Chilliwack r'., Brit. Col. 

 Tcuti'l.— Hill-Tout in Ethnol. Surv. Can., 48, 

 1902. 



CliTittusgelis. The reputed site of Sole- 

 dad mission, Cal. — Engelhardt, Francis- 

 cans in Cal., 380, 1897. 



Chuttushshunche. A former village of 

 the Chastacosta on the n. side of Rogue 

 r. , Oreg. 



Tcut'-tdccun-tce. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 234, 1890. 



ChuwutukawTituk ( TciVviutukaimltuk, 

 'earth hill'). A former Pima village in 

 s. Arizona.— Russell, Pima MS., B. A. E., 

 16, 1902. 



Chuyachic ( ' the point of a ridge ' ). A 

 small rancheria of the Tarahumare, not 

 far from Norogachic, Chihuahua, Mex- 

 ico. — Lumholtz, inf'n, 1894. 



Chwaiyok. A former Chumashan vil- 

 lage E. of San Buenaventura, Ventura CO., 

 Cal., a locality now called Los Pitos. 

 Tc'-wai-yok. — Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. vo- 

 eab., B. A. E., 1884. 



Chynau. A former village, presumably 

 Costanoan, connected with Dolores mis- 

 .sion, San Francisco, Cal. — Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Cibolas (Mexican Span.: 'buffaloes'). 

 A term applied liy early Spanish writers 

 to any buffalo-hunting Indians. The 

 name Va(|ueros (see Quereeho) was simi- 

 larly applied to the Apache of the Texas 

 plains in the 16th century. 



Cicacut. A Chumashan village at Go- 

 leta, w. of Santa Barbara, Cal., in 1542. — 

 Cabrillo in Smith, Colec. Doc, 181, 1857. 

 Cicauit,— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 17, 1863. 

 Pueblo de las Sardinas. — Cabrillo, op. cit. 



Cienega (Span.: 'marsh,' 'moor,' and 

 in s. w. U. S., 'meadow'; Tewa name, 

 Tzigwna, 'lone Cottonwood tree'). A 

 pueblo formerly occupied by the Tano, 

 but apparently containing also some 

 Queres, situated in the valley of Rio 

 Santa Fe, 12 m. s. w. of Santa Fe, N. 

 Mex. In the 17th century it was a 

 visita of San Marcos mission. Of this 

 pueblo Bandelier says: "It was aban- 

 doned at a time when the Pueblos were 



