BULL. 30] 



COPS CORA 



347 



KWAKIUTL CER E MO 



Copper; length 



INCHES. (boas) 



The Antiquarian, i, 1897; Nadaillac, Pre- 

 hist. Amer., 1884; Niblack in Nat. Mus. 

 Eep. 1888, 1890; Packard in Am. Antiq., 



XV, no. 2, 1893"; Patterson in Nova Scotia 

 Inst, of Sci., VII, 1888-89; Putnam (1) in 

 Peabody Mus. Eeps., 



XVI, 1884, (2) in Proc. 

 A. A. A. S., XLiv, 1896; 

 Rau (1) Archieol. Coll. 

 Nat. Mus., 1876, (2) in 

 Smithson. Rep. 1872, 

 1873; Revnolds in Am. 

 Anthrop.', i, no. 4, 1888; 

 Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, 

 1,1851; Short, N. Am. of 

 Antiquity, 1880; Slaf- 

 ter, Prehist. Copper 

 Impl.,1879; Squier, An- 

 tiq. of N. Y. and the 

 West, 1851; Squier and 

 Davis, Ancient Monu- 

 ments, 1848; Starr, First 

 Steps in Human Progress, 1895; Strachey 

 (1585), Hist. Va., Hakluvt Soc. Publ., 

 VIII, 1843; Thomas in 12th'Rep. B. A. E., 

 1894; Whittlesey, Ancient MiningonLake 

 Superior, Smithson. Cont., xiii, 1863; 

 Willoughbv in Am. Anthrop., v, no. 1, 

 1903; Wilson, Prehist. Man, 1862; Win- 

 chell in Engin. and Min. Jour., xxxii, 

 Sept. 17, 1881. (w. n. h.) 



Cops. A former Papago rancheria vis- 

 ited by Kino and Mange in 1699; situated 

 w. of the Rio San Pedro, probably in the 

 vicinity of the present town of Arivaca, 

 s. ^\. of Tubac, s. Ariz. 



Cops. — Mange (1701) quoted bv Bancroft, Ariz, 

 and N. Mex., 35.S, 18S9. Humo.-^Mange, ibid. 



Copway, George {Kar/'igegabo, 'he who 

 stands forever. ' — W. J. ) . A young Chip- 

 pewa chief, born near the mouth of Trent 

 r., Ontario, in the fall of 1818. His pa- 

 rents were Chippewa, and his father, until 

 his conversion, was a medicine-man. 

 George was educated in Illinois, and 

 after acquiring considerable knowledge 

 in English books returned to his people 

 as a Wesleyan missionary. For many 

 years he was connected with the press of 

 New York city and lectured extensively 

 in Europe and the United States, but he 

 is noted chiefly as one of the few Indian 

 authors. Among his published writings 

 are: The Life, History, and Travels of 

 Kah-ge-ga-gah-bowh ((jeorge Copwav), 

 Albany, 1847, and Philadelphia, 1847; 

 The Life, Letters, and Speeches of Kah- 

 ge-ga-gah-bowh, New York, 1850; The 

 Traditional History and Characteristic 

 Sketches of the Ojibway Nation, London 

 and Dublin, 1850, and Boston, 1851; 

 Recollections of a Forest Life, London, 

 Edinburgh, and Dublin, 1851, and Lon- 

 don, 1855; Indian Life and Indian His- 

 tory, Boston, 1858; The Ojibway Con- 

 quest, a Tale of the Northwest, New York, 



1850; Organization of a New Indian Ter- 

 ritory East of the Missouri River, New 

 York, 1850; Running Sketches of Men and 

 Places in England, France, Germany, Bel- 

 gium and Scotland, New York, 1851. 

 Copway also wrote a hymn in the Chip- 

 pewa language (London, 1851) and co- 

 operated with the Rev. Sherman Hall in 

 the translation of the Gospel of St Luke 

 (Boston, 1837) and the Acts of the 

 Apostles (Boston, 1838). He died at 

 Pontiac, Mich., aljout 1863. 



Coquilt. One of the Diegueno ranche- 

 rias represented in the treaty of 1852 at 

 Santa Isabel, s. Cal. — H. R. Ex. Doc. 76, 

 34th Cong., 3d sess., 133, 1857. 



Coquite. Mentioned by Mota Padilla 

 (Historia,_ 164, 1742, repr. 1870) in con- 

 nection with Jimena (Galisteo) and Zitos 

 (Silos) as a pueblo which lay between 

 Pecos and the Keresan villages of the Rio 

 Grande in New Mexico when visited by 

 Coronado in 1540-42.. It was seemingly 

 a Tano ])ueblo. 



Coquitlam. A coast Salish tribe speak- 

 ing the Cowichan dialect and inhabiting 

 Eraser valley just above the delta, in Brit- 

 ish Columbia. They owned no land, 

 being practically slaves of the Kwantlen. 

 Pop. 25 in 1904. 



Coquet-lane.— Can. Ind. Aff., pt. I, 268, 1889. Co- 

 quetlum.— Ibid., 309, 1879. Coquilain,— Trutch, 

 Map Brit. Col., 1870. Coquitlam.— Can. Ind. Aff., 

 413, 1898. Coquitlan,— Ibid., 74, 79, 1878. Coquit- 

 lane.— Ibid., 276, 1894. Coquitlum.— Ibid., 316, 

 1880. Koquitan,— Brit. Col. Map, Victoria, 1872 

 (named as a townl. Kwiko^?em. — Boas, MS., B. 

 A. E., 1887. Kwi'kwitlEm.— Hill-Tout in Ethnol. 

 Surv. Can., .54, 1902. 



Cora. A tribe or group of tribes be- 

 longing to the Piman family and occupy- 

 ing several villages and rancherias in the 

 Sierra de Nayarit and on the Rio de 

 Jesus Man'a, Jalisco, Mexico. They were 

 a brave and warlike people, living inde- 

 pendently in the mountain glens and 

 ravines until 1721-22 when they were 

 subjugated by the Spaniards and mis- 

 sions established among them. Accord- 

 ing to Jose de Ortega ( Vocab. Leng. Cas- 

 til. y Cora, 1732, 7, repr. 1888) the Cora 

 language consisted of 3 dialects: the 

 Muutzizti, spoken in the middle of the 

 sierra; the Teacuacueitzisti, spoken in 

 the lower part of the sierra toward the 

 w., and the Ateacari, spoken on the 

 banks of the Rio Nayarit (Jesus Maria). 

 Orozco y Berra (Geog., 59, 281, 1864) fol- 

 lows the same grouping and adds Colo- 

 tlan as a dialect, while he quotes Alegre 

 to the effect that the Cora are divided 

 into the Cora (proper), the Nayarit, and 

 the Tecualme or Gecualme. These are 

 probably identical with Ortega's divi- 

 sions. Nayari, or Nayariti, is the name 

 by which the Cora are known among 

 themselves. They still use their native 

 language, which is guttural although 



