512 



GUEVU GUNACHONKEN 



[b. a. b. 



in 1772, 86, and with its visitas (Calabazas, 

 Jamac, Sonoita, and Tumacacori), 337. 

 It was abandoned before 1784, Tumacacori 

 becoming head of the mission estabUsh- 

 ment. (f. w. h.) 



Genevavi. — Kino, map (1701) in Bancroft. Ariz, 

 and N. Mex., 300, 1889 (misprint). Guazavez. — 

 Writer (ca.l713) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4tla s., v, 175, 

 1857. Guebavi. — Kino, map (1701) in Stocklein, 

 NeueWelt-Bott, 74, 1726. Guevavi.— Mango (1699) 

 quoted by Bancroft, op. cit., 3.58. Guevavi-Gussu- 

 dac. — Orozco y Bcrra, Gens-, 347,1864. Gusudac. — 

 Riido Ensayo*(1763) , 149,1863 (I'imananu': 'great 

 water'). Gusutaqui. — Mange quottd by Bancroft, 

 op. cit., 358. San Felipe de Jesus Guevavi. — Villa- 

 Senor quotcil Ijy Bancrdft, Xo. Mex. States, i, 531, 

 1884. San Miguel. — liancrofl, Ariz, and N. Mex., 

 384, 1889 (Jesuit name). San Miguel de Guevavi. — 

 Ibid., 362 (probably not so named until 1732). 

 San Rafael. — Ibid., 384 (Jesuit name). Santos 

 Angeles. — Ibid. (Franciscan name). S.luis Gue- 

 bavi. — ^■enegas, Hist. Cal., I, map, 1759. 



Guevu. A Calusa village on the s. w. 

 coast of Florida, about 1570. 

 Gueva. — Fontaneda quoted in Doc. In(5d., v, 539, 

 1866. Guevu. — Fontaneda Mem. (ca. 1675), Smith 

 trans., 19, 1854. 



Gueymura. A tribe speaking tlie Die- 

 gueno dialect, formerly living about Santa 

 Catalina mi8.sion, n. Lower California. 

 (Dufiot de Mofras, A"oy., i, 217, 228, 1844). 

 Cf. C'umeijn, Giiamua, (Juilmur. 



Gueyniotitesliesgue ('four tribes'). A 

 phratry of the Caughnawaga Iroquois. 



Gueza. An Indian settlement in w. 

 South Carolina, probal)ly in the present 

 Edgefield co., visited liy Juan Pardo in 

 1565. — Vandera in Smith, Colec. Doc. 

 Fla., I, 17, 1857. ^ 



Guhlaniyi {GulanVyl). A Cherokee 

 and Natchez settlement formerly at the 

 junction of Brasstowncr. witliHivvasseer., 

 a short distance al)ove Murphy, Cherokee 

 CO., N. C— Moonev in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 

 520, 1900. 



Guhlga {Gii'iga). A legendary Haida 

 town on the n. shore of Skidegate inlet, 

 just above the present town of Skidegate, 

 Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. Col., where 

 there are now works for refining dog-fish 

 oil. No native pretends to say what 

 family occupied this town. (.i. r. s. ) 



Gii'igar— Swanton, Cont. Haida, 279, 1905. auilh- 

 cah.— Deans, Tales from Hidery, 67, 1.899. 



Guhlkainde ( GiVtka-Vmle, ' )ilains peo- 

 ple ' ) . A division of the Mescalero Apache 

 who claim as their original habitat the 

 Staked plains region e. of Pecos r., in 

 New Mexico and Texas. See Gohlhthin. 



(j. M.)- 

 Cuelcajen-ne. — Escudero, Not. do Chihuahua, 212, 

 1834 (probably identical) . Gu'l'ka-i'nde. — Mooney, 

 field notes, B. A. E., 1.897. Llaneros. — Orozco y 

 Berra, Geog., .59, 1.864 (Cuelcajon-ne or). 



Guia. An unidentified ruined pueblo 

 on the Rio Grande in the vicinity of 

 Albuquerque, N. Mex. — Loew in Wheeler 

 Survey Rep., vii, 338, 1879. 



Guias, A Maricopa rancheria on the 

 Rio Gila, s. Ariz., in 1744. — Sedelmair 

 quoted by Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 

 366, 1889. 



Guika. A former Tanos pueblo on the 

 Rio Grande, in the vicinity of Albuquer- 



que, N. Mex. — Loew in Wheeler Survey 

 Rep., VII, 338, 1879. 



Gui-k'ati. See Sleeping Wolf. 



Guilitoy. A tribe of the Patwin divi- 

 sion of the Copehan family, formerly liv- 

 ing in Napa CO., Cal.; one of the seven 

 which made peace with Gov. Vallejo in 

 1836. 



Guilitoy.— Bancroft, Hist. Cal., iv, 71, 1886. Guil- 

 licas.— Taylor In Cal. Farmer, Mar. 30, 1.S60. Gui- 

 lucos. — Bancroft, op. cit., 72. TXlucas. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, June 7, 1861. 



Guima. A former Chumashan village 

 near Santa Barbara, Cal. — Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Apr. 24, 1863. 



Guimen. A division of the Olamentke 

 branch of the Moquelumnan family of 

 California, according to Choris and Kot- 

 zebue, who state that the people spoke 

 the same language as the Tamal and 

 Sonomi. 



Guimen. — Choris, Voy. Pitt., 6, 1,822. Guymen. — 

 Chamisso in Kotzebiie, Voy., in, 51, 1.821. 



Guiomaer. A village said to be 40 

 leagues from St Helena, probably in or 

 near the present Barnwell co., S. C; vis- 

 ited by Juan Pardo in 1566. — La Vandera 

 (15(59) in Smith, Colec. Doc. Fla., 1, 16, 1857. 

 Guipago. See Love Wolf. 

 Guismanes. An imaginary province, 

 located in the great plains, in the region 

 of (^uivira. — Zarate-Salmeron {ca. 1629), 

 Relacion, in Land of Sunshine, 187, 1900. 

 Guisoles. A tribe of Coahuila or Texas, 

 prol)ably Coahuiltecan, noted in a manu- 

 script quoted by Orozco y Berra, Geog., 

 306, 1864. It may be identical with the 

 Gueiquesales, or with the Qnitoles of 

 Cabeza de \"aca. 



Gulhlgildjing ( GAligVldjiJl, probably 

 ' mussel-chewing town ' ) . A Haida town 

 on the s. shore of Alliford bay, Moresby 

 id., Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. Col. 

 Another name for this place (or for one 

 near it) was Skama. It was occupied by 

 a low social division of the Djahui- 

 skwahladagai. — Swantoh, Cont. Haida, 

 279, 1905. 



Sqa'ma. — Ibid, (probably identical with above: 

 ' woman's needle case') '. 



Gull Lake Band. A Chippewa band for- 

 merly on Gull lake, on the upper Missis- 

 sippi, in Cass co., Minn. They sold their 

 lands in 1863. (j. m.) 



Gulf Lake reservation. — Washington treaty (1867) 

 in U. S. Ind. Treat., 273, 1873 (misprint). Gull 

 Lake band.— Washington treaty (1863), ibid., 215. 



Guloismistac. A former village, pre- 

 sumably Costanoan, connected with Do- 

 lores mission, San Francisco, Cal. — Tay- 

 lor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Gumisachic ( ' arroyo ' ) . A Tarahumare 

 rancheria about 20 m. n. e. of Noroga- 

 chic. Chihuahua, Mexico. — Lumholtz, 

 infn, 1894. 



Gunachonken. Given by Krause as one 

 of the Tlingit social groups living at Yak- 

 utat, Alaska, but it is actually only a 

 name for the people of Gonaho ( Go'naxo), 

 q. v., a small town in that neighborhood. 



