480 



FUSIHATCHI GAEDI 



[b. a. e. 



in a voyage made by Buddhist monks in 

 the 5th century a. d. Some have sought 

 to identify it witli America; there is good 

 reason to beheve that Fu Sang was Corea, 

 Japan, Sakhalin, or the Liu-kiu ids., or 

 all of them. Japan has played a part in 

 the myths of the Chinese similar to the 

 garden of the Hesperides in Greek story. 

 DeGuignes was an early propagator of the 

 Fu Sang theory; more recent advocates 

 were C. G. Leland (Fu-Sang, 1875) and 

 Vining (An Inglorious Columbus, 1885). 

 Arguments on the other side have been 

 advanced by W. H. Dall in Science, Nov. 

 5, 1886; H. Mueller in Verb. d. Berl. Ges. 

 F. Anthr., 1883, and A. F. Chamberlain 

 in Am. Notes and Queries, ii, 84, 1888, 

 but the whole matter has been effectual- 

 ly disposed of by the authoritative inves- 

 tigations of Gustav St'hlegel, an eminent 

 Chinese scholar, in his Fou-Sang (1892). 

 Schlegel attributes what is not mythical 

 in the Chinese legends to the island of 

 Sakhalin, etc. (a. f. c. ) 



Fusihatchi {Creek: fu^swa ' forest bird ' , 

 ha'tchi 'creek,' 'river'). A former Up- 

 per. Creek town in Macon co., Ala., on 

 the N. bank of lower Tallapoosa r., 2 m. 

 below Huhliwahli. Remains of a walled 

 town were visible from the opposite bank 

 of the river at the close of the 18th cen- 

 tury, (a. s. g.) 

 Foosce-hat-che.— Hawkins (1799), Sketch, 33, 1848. 

 Fooschatchee. — Hawkins (1813) in Am. State Pa- 

 pers, Ind. Aff., 1, 854, 1832. Foosee Hatchee.— Ibid., 

 848. Fooskahatche.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 

 380, ISfil; Fusahatche.— Bartram, Trav., 461, 1791. 

 Tusehatche. — Barnard (1793) in Am. State Papers, 

 Ind. Aff., 1, 38t), 1832 (misprint). 



Fusualgi. The Forest Bird (?) clan of 

 the Creeks. 



Bird. — Morgan, Anc. Soc, Ifil, 1878. Fusualgi.— 

 Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., I, 15.5, 1884. Tus'-wa.— 

 Morgan, op. cit. (misprint). 



Fwaha. The Fire clan of the former 

 pueblo of Pecos, N. Mex. 

 Fwah.— Hewett in Am. Anthrop., n. s., vi, 431, 

 1904. Fwa-ha'.— Hodge, ibid., ix,_a50, 1896. 



Fyules. A former village in California, 

 said to have been Esselen. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Apr. 20, 1860. 



Gaandowanang ( Gd^-an-do-wa-na»n, ' it 

 is a great tree.' — Hewitt). A former 

 Seneca village on Genesee r., near Cuy- 

 lerville, N. Y. 



Big Tree.— Morris deed (1797) in Am. State Papers, 

 Ind. Aff., I, 627, 1832. Chenondoanah. — Johnson 

 (17.54) in N. Y. Doc. Ool. Hist., vi, 899, 1855. Ga'- 

 an-do-wa-na"n. — Hewitt, inf'n, 1886 (Seneca 

 name). Ga-un-do'-wa-na.— Morgan, League Iroq., 

 468, 18.51. Kanvagen.— Pouchot, map (17.58) in 

 N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., x, 694, 1858. 



Gabacamaniui. A rancheria, probably 

 Cochimi, connected with Purisima (Cade- 

 gomo) mission. Lower California, in the 

 18th century. — Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., v, 

 190, 1857. 



Gabrieleno. A Shoshonean division and 

 dialectic group which formerly occupied 

 all of Los Angeles co., Cal., s. of the San 

 Bernardino mts., with the probable ex- 

 ception of a strip of coast from Santa 



Monica westward, and Orange co. to Ali- 

 sos cr. ; ihe territory did not extend very 

 far E. of the Los Angeles co. line. Santa 

 Catalina id. also was occupied by them, 

 and possibly San Nicolas id. The name 

 has been loosely applied by the Spanish 

 inhabitants from the name of the mission 

 of San Gabriel, near Los Angeles, where 

 many were at one time collected. This, 

 in the absence of an appropriate native 

 term, may be accepted as the most conven- 

 ient designation. Their rancherias were: 

 Acuragna, Ahapchingas, Alyeupkigna, 

 Awigna, Azucsagna, Cahuenga, Chokish- 

 gna, Chowigna, Cucomogna, Hahamogna, 

 Harasgna, Houtgna, Hutucgna, Isanth- 

 cogna, Kowanga, Maugna, Nacaugna, 

 Okowvinjha, Pascegna, Pasinogna, Pu- 

 bugna, Pimocagna, Saway-yanga, Si- 

 bagna, Sisitcanogna, Sonagna, Suangna, 

 Taybipet, Techahet, Tibahagna, and 

 Yangna. 



Gabrilenos.— Loew in Ann. Rep. Chief of Eng., pt. 

 Ill, .542, 1876. Kij.— Hale, Ethnog. and Philol., 222, 

 1846. Kizh.— Ibid., 569; Gatschet in Rep. Chief of 

 Eng., Ill, .556, 1876 (trans, 'houses'). Playsanos.— 

 Hoffman in Bull. Es.sex Inst., xvii, 26, 1885 (seems 

 to l)e applied to tlie California Shoshoni living in 

 the lowlands, and especially near the coast in the 

 region of Los Angeles^. San Gabriel.— Hale, op. 

 cit., 222. Tobikhars. — Gatschet, op. cit., 5.56 (said 

 to mean 'settlers,' but probably taken from Tobo- 

 har, the mythical first man). Tumangamalum. — 

 A. L. Kroeber, inf'n, 1905 (Luiseiio name: 'north- 

 erners'). 



Gachigundae {GatcHgu^nda-i, 'village 

 always moving to and fro'). A Haida 

 town on the n. e. shore of Alliford bay, 

 Moresby id., Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. 

 Col., occupied by a socially low branch 

 of the Djahui-sliwahladagai. — Swanton, 

 Cont. Haida, 279, 1905. 



Gachwechnagechga ('islanders.' — 

 Hewitt). The name applied to the Le- 

 high Indians formerly on Lehigh r.. Pa.; 

 so called, according to Pyrlseus, after the 

 island they occupied. 



Gachwechnagechga. — Gatschet in Am. Antiq., iv, 

 75, 1881-82. Lecha.— Ibid. Lehigh.— Ibid. 



Gadaho {Gd-'ifcV-ho', 'sand bank.' — 

 Hewitt). A former Seneca village that 

 occupied the site of Castile, Genesee co., 

 N. Y. 



Ga'd'a'ho'. — Hewitt, inf'n, 1886 (Seneca form). 

 Ga-da'-o'. — Morgan, League Iroq., 435, 1851. Gar- 

 deau.— Morris deed (1797) in Am. State Papers, 

 Ind. Aff., I, 627, 1832. Gardow.— Morgan, op. cit., 

 467. Guardou. — Conover, Kanadega and Geneva 

 MS., B. A. E. 



GadincMnCrush,' 'reed grass'). Given 

 as a clan of the Pinal Coyotero living in 

 1881 at San Carlos agency, Ariz. — Bourke 

 in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 'in, 112, 1890. 



Gado (Gadd^). A Haida town said to 

 have stood on the s. side of De la Beche 

 inlet, Moresby id., Queen Charlotte ids., 

 Brit. Col. Another town of the same 

 name is said to have stood on the e. side 

 of Lyell id., near the town of Hlkia. — 

 Swanton, Cont. Haida, 278, 1905. 



Gaedi (Gd^-idt, the name of a fish). 

 A Haida town on the n. e. shore of a small 



