BILL. 30] 



ESTA.TOEE ETCHAKEOTTINE 



439 



ated 4 leagues .s. of the mission of Sarie, 

 which was just s. of the Arizona l:)oundary. 

 la Estancia. — Anza quoted bv Bancroft, Ariz, and 

 N. Mex., 389, 1889. 



Estatoee. Two former Cherokee settle- 

 ments, one on Tugaloo r. helow the junc- 

 tion of Chattooga and Tallulah rs., in 

 Oconee co., S. C, the other in the n. w. 

 part of Pickens co. The former was 

 generally known as Old Estatoee. 



Estalaoe— Rovce in Isth Rep. B. A. E., pi. clxi, 

 1900. Estatoe.— Royce in 5th Rep. B. A. E.,map, 

 ISST. Estatoie. — Doe. of 1756 quoted bv Royce, 

 ibid.. 113. Estotowe.— Bartram, Travels," 372, 1792 

 (on Tugaloo r.). Estotowe great. — Ibid, (town on 

 another river). 



Estero. An unidentified tribe men- 

 tioned l)yLangsdorff (Voy., ii, 163,1814) 

 as inhabiting the coast of California. 



Estocoloco, A Chumashan village on 

 one of the northern Santa Barbara ids., 

 Cal., in 1542.— Cabrillo, Narr. (1542) in 

 Smith, Colec. Doc. Fla., 186, 1857. 

 Coloco, — Cabrillo, op. cit., 186. Estilococo. — Tav- 

 lor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 17, 1863. 



Estuc. A former Chumashan village 

 near San Marcos, in the vicinity of Santa 

 Barbara, Cal. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, 

 Apr. 24, 1863. 



Estufa. See Kira. 



Etaa. The Turtle clan of the Zufii of 

 New Mexico. It appears to be extinct. 



itaa-kwe.— Cashing in 13th Rep. B. A. E., 386, 

 1896 (kive=' people'). 



Etaatthatunne ('people at the cove'). 

 A village of the Tututni of Oregon. 

 E'-ta-a'-tfa ^iin'ne. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, III, 233, 1890 (Tututni name). E'-ta-a-t'fut' 

 ^unne'. — Ibid. (Naltunnetunne name). 



Etagottine ('people in the air'). A 

 Nahane band or division in the valleys of 

 the Rocky mts. between the P^sbataottine 

 and theTukkuthkutchin, lat. H6°, British 

 Anierica. Their totem is the lynx. 

 Dabo'-tena. — Ross (|Ui)te<i bv Dawson in Rep. 

 Geol. Surv. Can. 1887-8.S, 200b, i889. Daha-dinneh.— 

 Dunn, Hist. Oregon, 79, 1814. Dahadinnes.— Rich- 

 ardson, Arct. Exped., I, ISO, 1851. Daha-dtinne.— 

 Richardson quoted l>y Petitot, Diet. Deiie-Dindjit?, 

 XX, 1876. Da-ha-dumies. — Hind, Expl. Exped., ll, 

 159, 1860. Dahodinni.— Latham in Trans. Philol. 

 Soc. Lond., 66, 1856. Daho-tena.— Bancroft, Native 

 Races, l, 119, 1882. Daho'-tena'.— Dallin Cont. N.A. 

 EthnoL, I, 33, 1877. Dawhoot-dinneh.— Franklin, 

 Narr., li, 84, 1824. Ehta-Gottine.— Petitot, Autour 

 dulacde9Esclaves,362. 1891. Eta-gottine.— Petitot, 

 Diet. Dt-n^-Dindjie, xx, 1.S76 (trans, 'mountain 

 people'). Eta-Gottine.— Petitot, Autour du Grand 

 lac des Esclaves, 301, 1891. ^ta-Ottine.— Petitot, 

 Grand lac des Ours, 66, 1893 (trans. ' Rocky moun- 

 tain people'). Gensde la montagne.— Petitot, Diet. 

 Dene-DindjitJ, xx, 1876. Gens d' En-haut.— Pet- 

 itot, Autour du Grand lac des Esclaves. 363, 1891. 

 Gens des Montagnes-Rocheuses. — Petitot, CJrand lac 

 des Ours, 66. 1893. Gens en Pair.— Petitot, Autour, 

 op. cit., '262. Hunters.— -Prichard. Phys. Hist., 

 V. 377, 1847. Mountain Indian. — Richardson, Arct. 

 Exped., I 400, 1851. Naha-'tdinne.— Ibid. Noh'ha- 

 i-e.— Ibid., ii, 7, 1851 (so called bv Kutchin). 

 Sicanees.— Dall in Cont. N. A. EthnoL, i, 33, 1877 

 (sometimes so called by traders). Yeta-ottine.— 

 Petitot, Autour du Grand lac des Esclaves, 363. 

 1891 (trans, 'dwellers in the air'). 



Etah. An Ita Eskimo village at C. Ohl- 

 sen, on Smith sd., w. Greenland, lat. 78° 

 20^ See Ita. 



Ahipa.— Mark ham in Trans. Ethnol. Soc. Lond., 

 9, 1866. Appah,— Kane, Arct. Explor., ii, 212, 



1856. Etah. — Bessels, Am. Nordpol. Exped., map, 

 1878. Igita.— Kroeber in Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. 

 Hist., xii, 269, 1900. 



Etakmehu. A division of Salish now on 

 Port Madison res., Wash. 

 Etak-bush.— Mallelt in Ind. Aflf. Rep.. 198, 1877. 

 Etakmehu.— Boulet, letter, B. A. E., Mar. 22, 1886. 

 Etakmurs.— Ind. Atl'. Rep., 176, 1S75. 



Etanie. A former Seminole town in 

 Putnam co., Fla., of which Checota Hajo 

 was chief in 1823. There is now a town 

 of Etoniah in the w. part of the county, 

 and also a creek of the same name. See 

 H. R. Ex. Doc. 74 (1823), 19th Cong., 

 1st sess., 27, 1826. 



Etarita. A village of the Wolf clan of 

 the Tionontati, where the Jesuits estab- 

 lislied the mission of St Jean; destroyed 

 by the Iroquois in 1649. 



Etarita.— Parkman, Jes., 403, 1883. Etharita. — 

 Garreau (164S) (juoted in Hist. Mag., 1st s., v, 263, 

 1861. Sainct lean.— Jes. Rel. for 1640, 95, 1858. 

 Saint lean. —Jes. Rel. for 1648. 61, 1858. St. 

 John's.— Shea, Cath. Miss., 192, 1855. 



Etatchogottine ( ' hair people' ) . A di- 

 vision of the Kawchodinneh dwelling n. 

 and E. of Great Bear lake and on Great 

 cape, Mackenzie Ter., Can. Their totem 

 is a white wolf. 



Ehta-tcho-Gottine, — Petitot, Grand lac des Ours, 

 66, 1S93. 



Etchaottine. An Etchareottine division 

 living w. and n. w. of Great Slave lake 

 between Liard r. and the divide, along 

 Black, Beaver, and Willow rs., British 

 America. The Bistchonigottine and 

 Krayiragottine are two of the divisions. 

 Dene ^tcha-Ottine.— Petitot, Autour du lac des 

 Esclaves, 301, isyi. Esclaves.— Ibid. Etcha-Ot- 

 tine.— Ibid. Gens du lac la Truite. — Petitot, Diet. 

 Dene-Dindjie, xx, 1876. Slaves proper.— Kenni- 

 cott, MS. vocab., B. A. E. 



Etchareottine ('people dwelling in the 

 shelter'). An Athapascan tribe occupy- 

 ing the country w. of Great Slave lake 

 and upper Mackenzie r. to the Rocky 

 mts., including the lower Liard valley, 

 British America. Their range extends 

 from Hay r. to Ft Good Ho])e, and they 

 once lived on the shores of L. Athabasca 

 and in the forests stretching northward to 

 Great Slave lake. They were a timid, 

 pacific people, called ' the people sheltered 

 by willows' by the Chipewyan, indicat- 

 ing a riparian fisher folk. Their Cree 

 neighbors, who harried and plundered 

 them and carried them off into bondage, 

 called them Awokanak, 'slaves,' an epi- 

 thet which in its French and English 

 forms came to be the name under which 

 they are best known. Early in the 18th 

 century they were dispossessed of their 

 home, rich in fish and game, and driven 

 northward to Great Slave lake whither 

 they were still followed by the Cree, 

 known only as Enna, ' the enemy, ' a name 

 still mentioned with horror as far as Great 

 Bear lake. On the islands where they 

 took refuge a fresh carnage took place. 

 The Thlingchadinneh and Kawchodin- 

 neh, who speak the same dialect with 



