BULL. 30] 



GUAC4EJ0HE GUARUNGUNVE 



509 



the 19th century, the two peoples were 

 probably not the same, Guas or Guaes 

 being apjaarently a Wichita or Pawnee 

 name, or a corruption thereof, (f. w. h.) 

 Guaes.— CaStafledalm. 1560) in 14th Rep. B. A. E., 

 503, 1896. Guas.— Ibid., 529. Guyas.— Castaneda 

 in Ternaux-Compans, Voy., ix, 194, 1838 (mis- 

 print). 



Guagejohe. — Given as one of the Co- 

 manche divisions, living about 1857 on 

 the plains n. of Texas. Possibly a mis- 

 print Spanish form of Kvxihari, q. v. 

 Gua-ge-j6-he. — Butciier and Lyendecher, MS. Co- 

 manclic Vdcab., B. A. E., 1867. 



Guaguatu. An unidentified peojile de- 

 scribed early in the 17th century, by the 

 Acoma and Jemez Indians of New Mexico, 

 as resemljling the Mexicans in language 

 and dress, and as living in straw-covered 

 houses in a mild country somewhere to 

 the westward of the Navaho, toward the 

 Pacific. The name suggests the pueblo 

 of Awatobi, q. v. 



Guaguatu.— Zarate-Salmeron {ca. 1629), Rel., in 

 LandofSnnshine, 183, Feb., 1900. Guaputu.— Ibid. 



Guahate. A fertile province, probably 

 in the present s. w. Arkansas, heard of 

 by De Soto in 1541 at Quipana as being 8 

 davs s. of that place. — Gentl. of Elvas 

 (1557) in French, Hist. Coll. La., ii, 182, 

 1850. 



Guailopo. A subdivision of the Varohio 

 in w. Chihuahua, Mexico. They lived 

 with the Chinipa in the pueblo of San 

 Andres Chinipas. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 

 58, 325, 1864. 



Guainonost. A former Chumashan vil- 

 lage near Santa Barbara mission, Cal. — 

 Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 24, 1863. 



Guaislac. A former Chumashan village 

 near Santa Inez mission, Santa Barbara 

 CO., Cal. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 

 1861. 



Guajochic ('place of the guajo,' a small 

 variety of mosquito). A small rancheria 

 of the Tarahumare, not far from Noro- 

 gachic. Chihuahua, Mexico. — Lumholtz, 

 Unknown Mexico, i, 218, 1902. 



Gualala. A name applied by Powers 

 to the Pomo living along Gualala r., 

 in Sonoma co., Cal. The people living 

 along this stream belong to two dialectic 

 groups, one occupying the territory chiefly 

 along the lower course of Russian r., the 

 other that along the immediate coastline 

 w. of Gualala r. ; but as Powers' state- 

 ments are not explicit, it is not possible 

 to say whether the people speaking one 

 or the other of these dialects is meant. 

 The name itself comes undoubtedly from 

 ivalali, a name applied to the point at 

 which the waters of any two streams 

 flow together, or at which any stream 

 flows into the ocean. (s. a. b. ) 



Gua-la-la.— Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 

 186, 1877. Walhalla.— Bancroft, Nat. Races, i, 362, 

 1874. 



Guale. The Indian name by which the 

 Spaniards knew the present Amelia id.. 



N. coast of Florida, and a part of the ad- 

 jacent Florida and Georgia coast, in the 

 16th century. There is strong probabil- 

 ity that the tribe in occupancy was that 

 known later as Yamasi. In 1597 the son 

 of the chief of Guale led a revolt against 

 the missions that had been established 

 by the Spanish Franciscans a few years 

 before. There were then on the island 

 at least 3 mission villages — Asao, Asopo, 

 and Ospo. The missions were reestab- 

 lished in 1605 and may have continued 

 until their destruction by the English and 

 their Indian allies in 1704-06. ( .i. m. ) 



Gualdape. — Fontaneda Memoir {ca. 1575), Smitli 

 trans., 16. is.54. Guale. — Ibid. Quale. — Fontane- 

 da in Ternaux-Compans, Voy., xx, 16, 1841. 

 ftuate.— Fontaneda misquoted by Shipp, De Soto 

 and Fla., 585, 1881. 



Gualta. Given by the Yavapai to Fray 

 Francisco Garces in 1776 as the name of a 

 tribe, possibly in the vicinity of the Rio 

 Colorado.— Garces, Diarv (1775-76), 405, 

 1900. 



Guamua. The Yavapai name of a tribe 

 evidently on or in the vicinity of the Rio 

 Colorado in Arizona or California, in the 

 18th centurv. — Garces (1775-76), Diary, 

 404, 1900. Cf. Gueymura. 

 Guamoa,— Cortez (1799) in Pac. R. R. Rep., Ill, 

 pt. 3, 126, 1856. 



Guanabepe. The Yavapai name of a 

 tribe, evidently Yuman, on the lower 

 Colorado in Arizona or California, in the 

 18th centurv. 



Guanabepe.— Garc(§s (1776), Diary, 404, 1900. Gua- 

 navepe. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 349, 1864 (after 

 Garces). 



Guanacos (Span.: Los Guanacos.) A 

 group of ruined pueblos 8 m. s. of Tempe, 

 in the Salt River valley, Ariz. So named 

 from a number of figurines, resembling 

 the guanaco, found there. — Cushing in 

 Compte-renclu Internat. Cong. Am., vii, 

 178, 1890. 



Guancane. Mentioned by Garcilasso de 

 la Vega (Florida, 201, 1723) as a province 

 visited Ijy De Soto's army in 1542. Situ- 

 ated proV)ably in s. w. Arkansas, near 

 Naguatex, q. v. 

 Guacane— Shipp, De Soto and Florida, 430, 1881. 



Guanipas. A former Coahuila tribe, 

 belonging perhaps to the Coahuiltecan 

 stock. — Revillagigedo (1793) quoted by 

 Orozco y Berra, Geog., 306, 1864. 



Guanlen. A former village, presum- 

 ably Costanoan, connected with Dolores 

 mission, San Francisco, Cal. — Tavlor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Guarungunve ('town of weeping'). A 

 Calusa village on one of the keys of the 

 s. w. coast of Florida, about 1570. Brin- 

 ton (Floridian Benin., 114, 1859) thinks 

 the word is another name for Old IMata- 

 cumbe (Metacumbe) key, described by 

 Romans (1775) as one of the last refuges 

 of the Calusa Indians. ( J. m. ) 



Guaragunve. — Fontaneda quoted by Ternanx. 

 Compans.Voy., xx, 10, 1841. Guardgumve.— Fonta. 

 neda quoted by French, Hist. Coll. La., 2d s., ii 



