BULL. 30] 



GUAYOTRI GUEVAVI 



511 



printed, the latter part of the first name 

 and a misprint of tlie first part of the 

 other forming "Guayoquia." 



Guayotri. Apparently a Tigua pueblo 

 in New Mexico in 1598. Mentioned by 

 Oiiate (Doc. Ined., xvi, 115, 1871) in 

 connection with Puaray. See Tiguex. 



Guayusta. A village of the Rumsen 

 division of the Costanoan family, for- 

 merly at Pt Pinos, near Monterey, Cal., 

 the inhabitants of which were connected 

 with San Carlos mission. 



Guayusta.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 20, 1860. 

 Point Plnos.— Ibid. 



Guazapar. A division of the Tarahu- 

 mare occupying the village of Guazapares, 

 w. Chihuahua, Mexico. It includes also 

 the Temoris who inhabit the pueblos of 

 Santa INIaria Magdalena, Nuestra Sefiora 

 del Valle Humbroso, and Cerocahui. 

 The Guazapar dialect is said to resem- 

 ble more closely the Tarahumare proper 

 than the Varohio. (f. w. h. ) 



Guazapar.— Orozco y Berra, Geog., map, 1864. 

 Guazapare. — Ibid., 58. 



Guazapares. A village of the Guazapar 

 division of the Tarahumare in the district 

 of Arteaga, w. Chihuahua, Mexico; pop. 

 542 in 1900. 



Guazayepo.— Orozco y Berra, Geog., 324, 1864. 

 Santa Teresa de Guazapares. — Ibid. 



Guazarachic. A Tarahumare settlement 

 in the Hidalgo district. Chihuahua, 

 Mexico. 



Guasarochic— Orozco y Berra, Geog., 322, 1864. 

 Guazarachis. — Ibid., 59 (given as Apache, but 

 doubtless Pimaii). 



Guazavas (probably from Opata gfuasaca, 

 'where the (pitahaya) fruit ripens first.' — 

 Rudo Ensayo). A former Coguinachi 

 Opata pueblo, containing also some 

 Apache, and the seat of a Spanish mission 

 founded in 1645, on Rio Bavispe, about 

 lat. 29° 40^ Sonora, Mexico. Its inhabit- 

 ants numbered 632 in 1678, and 191 in 

 1730. A new church was built in 1764. 

 The place is now civilized, but 50 Yacjui 

 were settled in and about the town in 

 1900. (f. w. H.) 



Buasdabas.— Ribas (1645) quoted by Bandelier in 

 Arch. Inst. Papers, ni, 58, 1890. Goasavas.— de 

 Croi.x (17(;9) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., ii, 25. 

 1856. Guasavas.— Orozco y Berra, Geog., 343, 1864. 

 Guayavas. — Hamilton, Me.x. Handbook, 47, 1883. 

 Guazaca. — Doc. of 1730 quoted by Bandelier in 

 Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 505, 1892. Guazava. — Mange 

 (ca. 1700) quoted by Bancroft, No. Mex. States, 

 I, 233, 1884. Huassabas. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. 

 Papers, in, 58, 1890. Huassavas,— Ibid., 56. San 

 Francisco Guazava. — Rivera (1730) quoted by Ban- 

 croft, op. cit., 514. San Francisco Javier de Gua- 

 zava.— Zapata (1678), ibid., 246. 



Guazave. A subdivision of the Vaco- 

 regue, formerly occupying the pueblos of 

 San Pedro Guazave and Tamazula, on Rio 

 Sinaloa, about lat. 25° 45', n. w. Sinaloa, 

 Mexico. The Vacoregue were also some- 

 times known as Guazave. A Jesuit mis- 

 sion was established among them in 1600, 

 but the natives burned the church and 

 fled. They were brought back, however, 

 and the offenders hanged. Between 1646 



and 1649 they again threatened trouble. 

 Vjut they later became Christianized and 

 noted for their faith in the new religion. 

 Orozco y Berra (Geog., 332, 1864) says: 

 ' ' In Guazave were united several factions, 

 and although they were known as Gua- 

 zaves they speak the Mexican tongue be- 

 tween themselves; this is the civilized 

 language in all parts." (f. w. h.) 



Gubo. A former rancheria, probably 

 of the Papago, visited by Father Kino in 

 1694; situated 13 leagues e. of Sonoita, 

 which was on the Rio Salado of Sonora, just 

 below the Arizona boundary. 

 Gubo.— Kino (1094) in Doe. Hist. Mex., 4th s., i, 

 252,18.56. Guvoverde.— Kino (1699) quoted by Ban- 

 croft, No. Mex. States, I, 267,1884. 



Gueguachic. A former Tarahumare set- 

 tlement in Chihuahua, Mexico. — Orozco 

 y Berra, Geog., 322, 1864. 



Gneiquesales. A former tribe of s. 

 Texas, probably Coahuiltecan, living 

 near the Manos Prietas, Bocores, Haeser, 

 Pinanaca, Escaba, Cacastes, Cocobipta, 

 Codame, Contotores, Colorados, Babia- 

 mares, and Taimamares. Perhaps iden- 

 tical with the Guisoles, and probably the 

 Susolas of Cabeza de Vaca. (j. r. s. ) 

 Gueiquesales. — Fernando del Bosque (1675) in 

 Nat. Geog. Mag., XIV, 340, 1903. Gueiquizales. — 

 Revillagigedo MS. (1793) quoted bv Bancroft, 

 Nat. Races, 1,611, 1886. 



Guepacomatzi. A former Opata ran- 

 cheria N. of Oputo, E. Sonora, Mexico. It 

 was abandoned in the 18th century owing 

 to the hostility of the Apache, Suma, 

 and Jocome. Not to be confounded with 

 Huepaca. 



Guepa Comatzi. — Doc. of 18th cent, quoted by 

 Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 525, 1892. 



Guerachic. Mentioned as a Tepehuane 

 pueblo on the Upi)er Rio Fuerte, in the 

 Sierra ]\Iadre, Chihuahua, ]\Iexico. 

 Guerachic. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 324, 1864. 

 Guerechic. — Ibid., 322 (apparently the same). 

 Huerachic, — Lumholtz, Unknown Mexico, I, 299, 

 note, 1902. 



Guess, George. See Sequoya. 



Guetela ('northern people'). A sept 

 of the true Kwakiutl which formerly 

 formed one tribe with the Komoyue, but 

 separated on account of some quarrel. 

 The clans are Maamtagyila, Kukwakum, 

 Gyeksem, Laalaksentaio, and Sisintlae. 

 They now live at Ft Rupert, Brit. Col. 



Gue'tEla.— Boas in Nat. Mus. Rep., 330, 1896. 

 Kue'xamut.— Ibid. (=-' fellows of theKueha'). 



Guetela. A clan of the Wikeno, a 

 Kwakiutl tribe. — Boas in Nat. Mus. Rep., 

 330, 1895. 



Guevavi. A former Sobaipuri settle- 

 ment and the seat of a Spanish mission, 

 established about 1720-32; situated on the 

 w. bank of Rio Santa Cruz, below Tubac, 

 at or near the present Nogales, Arizona- 

 Sonora boundary. In 1750 it was plun- 

 dered by the Indians and abandoned, but 

 was reoccupied two years later as a mis- 

 sion under the protection of Tubac. In 

 1760-64 Guevavi contained 111 natives; 



