394 



DJIHUAGITS DOHASAN 



[b. a. 



who was also the ancestress of the Kai- 

 ahl-laiias, Kona-kegawai, and Stawas-hai- 

 dagai, is said to have come. They lived in 

 the town of Kloo. — Swan ton, Cont. Haida, 

 273, 1905. 



Tsegoatl la'nas.— Boas, 12th Bep. N. W. Tribes 

 Can.,25, 1S9S. 



Djihuagits [Djixudgtts, Masset dialect 

 Cliawat/is, 'always low water'). A Haida 

 town on a creek just s. of Naikun, e. coast 

 of Graham id., n. w. Brit. Col. Anciently 

 it belonged to the Naikun-kegawai, but 

 afterward to the Chawagis-stustae. — 

 Swanton, Cont. Haida, 280,1905. 



Djishtangading. A Hupa village at a 

 bend in Trinity r. at the extreme s. end 

 of Hupa valley, Cal., below the mouth of 

 Tishtangatang cr. (p. e. g. ) 



Djictanadin.— Goddard, Life and Culture of the 

 Hupa, 12, 19l«. Pa-tes-oh.— MeKee (1851) in Sen. 

 Ex. Doe. 4, o2d drnti., spec, sess., 194, 1853. Pat- 

 isch-oh.— Mever.Nacli dem Saeramento, 282, 1855. 

 Peht-sau-an.— Gil)l)s, M8., B. A. E., 18.52. Pepht- 

 soh,— (:;i))l)s in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, in, 139, 

 1853. Petsawan.— Goddard, inf'n, 1903 (Yurok 

 name). Tish-tan'-a-tan. — Powers in Cent. N. A. 

 Ethnol., HI, 73, 1877. 



Djus-hade {Djus xade' , ' people of Djus 

 island ' ). A division of the Eagle clan of 

 the Haida, living on an island of the 

 same name at the entrance of Tsooskahli, 

 Queen Charlotte ids., and closely related 

 to the Widja-gitunai, Tohlka-gitunai, and 

 Chets-gitunai. They afterward moved 

 to the mouth of Masset inlet. A branch 

 of the Kuna-lanas received the same 

 name. — Swanton, Cont. Haida, 275, 1905. 

 Dzos haedrai'.— Boas, 12th Rep. N.W. Tribes Can., 

 23, IS9.S. 



Dockmackie. A name of the maple- 

 leaved arrowwood ( Viburnum acerifo- 

 linm). The Indians used this plant for 

 external application in tumors, etc. The 

 terminal -ie suggests that the word came 

 from them first to the Dutch, and from 

 these to English-speakers. According to 

 Miss L. S. Chamberlain (Am. Nat., xxxv, 

 3, 1901), the Delawares smoked dogehi- 

 mal-. W. R. Gerard (Gard. and For., ix, 

 262, 1896) says it is from a Mahiean word 

 meaning 'it is cooling,' which would be 

 related to the Chippewa takaiamagad, ' it 

 is cool.' A Delaware origin is however 

 more probable. (a. f. c. ) 



Doestoe ('live where there are large 

 falls of water' ). A subdivision of Apache 

 under chiefs Chiquito and Disalin in 1875. 

 Does-to'-e. — White, Apache Names of Ind. Tribes, 

 MS.,B.A.E. 



Dog. A former division of the Foxes. 



Dog. See Many Horses. 



Dog Creek. A Shusvvap village or band 

 on upper Fraser r. below the mouth of 

 Chilcotin r., Brit. Col. Pop. 14 in 1904.— 

 Can. Ind. Aff. 1904, pt. 2, 72, 1904. 



Dogachamus. A name for Cornus clr- 

 cinata, cited by Gerard (Gard. and For., 

 IX, 263, 1896). who states that it is a cor- 

 ruption of damaganatikwamosi, ' pipe- 



stem l)ush,' in the Penobscot dialect of 

 Algonquian. The word is also spelled 

 dogackernie. (a. f. c. ) 



bogekumak. See Dockmackie. 



Dogi. Mentioned by Lederer ( Discov. , 

 2, 1672) as a people who inliabited the 

 piedmont region of Virginia before the 

 appearance of the historic tribes in that 

 section. They were extinct at the time 

 of his journey in 1670. Apparently dis- 

 tinct from the Doeg (Nanticoke). 



Tacci. — Lederer, op. cit. 



Do-gitunai [Do-git Ana' -i, 'Gitans of 

 the west coast' ). A division of the p]agle 

 clan of the Haida. They are said to have 

 branched off from the Mamun-gitunai, 

 and, as the name implies, their towns 

 and camping places were on the w. coast 

 of Queen Charlotte id., Brit. Col. — Swan- 

 ton, Cont. Haida, 275, 1905. 

 Togyit'inai'.— Boas, 12th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 

 22,1898. 



Dogs. A band or a secret order of the 

 Hidatsa. — Culbertson in Smithson. Rep. 

 1850, 143, 1851. 



Dogs. See Domestication. 



Dog Soldiers. See Military societies. 



Doguenes. A tribe or division of a tribe 

 met by Cabeza de Vaca about 1527, when 

 they were living on the mainland near 

 the coast, probably in the vicinity of San 

 Antonio bay, Tex. The region was prob- 

 ably occupied by Karankawan people, 

 but the data are too meager to determine 

 the ethnic relations of the Doguenes. 

 SeeGatschet, Karankawalnds., 46, 1891. 

 Aguenes.— Cabeza de Vaca (15.55), Bandolier trans., 

 120,1905. Deaguanes,— Ibid.,79. Deguenes.— Ibid., 

 123. Doguenes.— Cabeza de Vaca, Smith trans., 

 137, 1871. Draguanes.— Ibid., 5ii, ed. 18.51. 



Dohasan {Dohdsdn, 'little bluff' ; also 

 Doha, Dohate, 'bluff'). The hereditary 

 name of a line of chiefs of the Kiowa for 

 nearly a century. It has been borne by 

 at least four members of the family, viz: 

 (1) The first of whom there is remem- 

 brance was originally called Pd-do'gd^-i 

 or Pado'gA, ' White-faced-buffalo-bull,' 

 and this name was afterward changed 

 to Dohi'i or Dohdte. He was a promi- 

 nent chief. (2) His son was originally 

 called A^anon^te (a word of doubtful 

 etymology), and afterward took his 

 father's name of Dohate, which was 

 changed to Dohasiin, 'Little Dohate,' or 

 'Little-bluff,' for distinction. He be- 

 came a great chief, ruling over the whole 

 tribe from 1833 until his death on Cimar- 

 ron r. in 1866, since which time no one 

 has had unquestioned allegiance in the 

 tribe. His portrait was painted in 1834 

 by C'atlin, who calls him Teh-toot-sah, 

 and his name appears in the treaty of 

 1837 as " To-ho-sa, the Top of the Moun- 

 tain." (3) His son, whose widow is An- 

 kimii, inherited his father's name, Do- 

 hdsiin. He was also a distinguished 



