510 



GUASAMOTA GUAYOGUIA 



[b. a. e. 



262, 1875 (misprint). Guarugumbe. — Fontaneda 

 quoted by Ternaux-Compans, op. cit., 32. Guaru- 

 gunve. — Fontaneda Mem. {en. Inlb), Smith trans., 

 13, lS.'i4. Guarungunve. — Ibid., 19. Guarunguve. — 

 Fontiinedii (iimted liy Ternaux-Compans., op. cit., 

 22. Metacumbe.— Present map form for tiie key. 

 Old Matacombe. — Romans, Fla., app., xxxiv, 1775 

 (tlie key; same?). 



Guasamota. A Cora pueblo on the 

 upper Rio Jesus Maria, on the e. slope 

 of the Sierra de Nayarit, in the n. part of 

 the territory of Tepic, Mexico (Lum- 

 holtz, Unknown Mexico, i, 487; ii, 16, 

 map, 1902). Orozco y Berra records it as 

 a Tepehuane settlement. 



Guasamota. — Lumlioltz, op. cit. Guazamota. — 

 Orozco V Berra, Geog., 281, 1864. Santa Haria 

 Guazamota.— Ibid., 318-319. 



Guasas. A tribe mentioned in Span- 

 ish narratives and reports on Texas in 

 the latter part of the 18th century as 

 enemies of the "northern Indians," 

 particularly of the Comanche. Accord- 

 ing to one narrative they were the only 

 people able to defeat the latter. They 

 are described as having lived in perma- 

 nent villages defended by adobe towers; 

 they called their warriors together by 

 means of drums in time of danger. They 

 were reputed to be of great stature and of 

 remarkable skill in horsemanship. Al- 

 though many of the things told about 

 them are entirely fabulou.s, a real tribe 

 appears to be referred to, probably one of 

 those which erected earth lodges. This 

 may have been the Osage { Wasash) or, 

 since an annotator of a letter written by 

 Ripperda in 1772 enumerates "Guasers" 

 and Osage separately, possibly they were 

 the Kansa or the Pawnee. (.J. r. s. ) 



Guasas.— Prieto, Hist, de Tamaulipas, 137, 1873. 

 Guasers.— Annotator of a letter of Ripperdd, 1772, 

 MS. cited by H. E. Bolton, inf'n, 1906. Guazas.— 

 Report of council at San Antonio in 1778, MS. 

 cited by H. E. Bolton, inf'n, 1906. 



Guasco. A province, possibly Caddoan, 

 visited in 1542 by Moscoso, of De Soto's 

 army, who there found much maize; sit- 

 uated probably in s. w. Arkansas or n. w. 

 Louisiana. See Gentl. of Elvas (1557) in 

 French, Hist. Coll. La., ii,.199, 1850. 



Guasig-ochic ('a flat'). A small ran- 

 cheria of the Tarahumare, n. e. of Noro- 

 gachic, Chihuahua, Mexico. — Lumholtz, 

 inf'n, 1894. 



Guaslaique. A former Chumashan vil- 

 lage near Purisima mission, Santa Bar- 

 bara CO., Cal. — Tavlor in Cal. Farmer, 

 Oct. 18, 1861. 



Guatitruti. Mentioned by Onate in 1598 

 (Doc. Ined., xvi, 114, 1871) as a pueblo 

 of the Jeinez in New Mexico. It has not 

 been identified with the present native 

 name of any ruins in the vicinity of 

 Jemez. In Onate's second list of Jemez 

 villages (ibid., 102) Fiapuzi and Triyti 

 are given. Comparison shows the first 

 name to be a misprint of the name of the 

 preceding pueblo mentioned ('Trea'), 

 improperly compounded with a misprint 

 ('puzi') of 'Guati,' the first part of the 



name Guatitruti; the other pueblo men- 

 tioned in the second list ('Triyti') being 

 a corruption of the latter portion ( 'truti' ) 

 of the name Guatitruti. (f. w. h.) 



Friyti.— Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex.,136, 1889(mis- 

 print). Guatitritti. — Columbus Memorial Vol., 

 155, 1893 (mLsprint). Trivti.— Bandelier in Arch. 

 Inst. Papers, iv, 207, 1892 (misquoting Oiiate). 

 Triyti.— Onate (1598) in Doc. Ined., xvi, 102, 1892. 

 Guauaenok. A Kwakiutl tribe living 

 on Drury inlet, Brit. Col. The gentes are 

 Gyigyilkam, Kwakowenok, and Kwi- 

 koaenok. Summer villages are Hohopa 

 and Kunstamish. Pop. 46 in 1885. 

 Guau'aenoq. — Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 

 55, 1890. Guau'aenox. — Boas in Rep. Nat. Mus., 

 331, 1895. Kwauaenoq. — Boas in Bull. Am. Geog. 

 Soc, 228, 1887. Kwa-wa-ai-nuk. — Dawson in Trans, 

 Roy. Soc. Can., sec. ir, 73, 1887. Kwa-wa-a-nuk.— 

 Ibid, ftuai-iunough. — Brit. Col. map, 1872. ftua- 

 i-nu. — Kane, Wand, in N. Am., app., 1859. Quauae- 

 noq.— Boas in Petermanns Mitt., pt. 5, 130, 1887. 



Guaxule. A village, apparently of the 

 Creeks, visited by De Soto in 1540". Coxe 

 seems to locate it near the head of Mobile 

 r. ; Shipp places it on the Chattahoochee, 

 and Thomas (12th Rep. B. A. E., 649, 

 1894) nearCartersville, in Bartow co., Ga. 

 The Spaniards were entertained so well 

 at this place that to the army its name 

 became a synonym for good fortune. See 

 Etoirah mound. 



Guachoula.— Shipp, De Soto and Florida, 368, 1881. 

 Guachoule.— Mooney in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 520, 

 1900 (given as an early form ) . Guachule. — Mooney, 

 Siouan Tribes of the East, 57, 1894. Guasili.— 

 Mooney in 19th Rep., op. cit. Guasula.— Ibid. 

 Guasuli.— Biedma (1544) in Hakluyt Soc. Pub., ix, 

 182, 1851. Guaxula.— Coxe, Carolana, 23, 1741. 

 Guaxule. — Gentleman of Elvas (1557) in French, 

 Hist. Coll. La., ll, 147, 1850. 



Guaya. A former village of the Calusa 

 confederacy near the s. end of Florida 

 (Fontaneda, ca. 1575, in Ternaux-Com- 

 pans, Voy., XX, 22, 23, 1841). The vil- 

 lage is not given in B. Smith's translation 

 of Fontaneda' s narrative. 



Guayabas. A Huichol rancheria and 

 religious place, containing a temple; situ- 

 ated about 2^ m. s. w. of San Andres 

 Coamiata, q. v. — Lumholtz, Unknown 

 Mex., II, 52, 1902. 



Temolikita.— Lumholtz, ibid. (' where trees and 

 flowers are budding': native name). 



Guaycones, An unidentified tribe visit- 

 ed by Cabeza de Vaca (Smith trans., 84, 

 1851) during his sojourn in Texas in 

 1528-34. 

 Gualciones. — Barcia, Historiadores, I, 1749. 



Guaynamota. A former Cora pueblo 

 and the seat of a mission, situated on the 

 E. bank of Rio San Pedro, lat. 22° 30^ 

 Jalisco, Mexico. 



S. Ignacio Guaynamota. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 

 280, 1864. 



Guayoguia. Mentioned by Onate in 1598 

 (Doc Ined., xvi, 114, 1871) as a pueblo 

 of the Jemez in New Mexico. It has 

 not been identified with the present 

 native name of any ruins in the vicinity 

 of Jemez. In Onate's second list (ibid., 

 207) Yxcaguayo and Quiamera are men- 

 tioned. The names are obviously mis- 



