BULL. 30] 



GUNAKHE GYAZRU 



513 



Go'naxoqoan. — Swanton, field notes, B. A.E.,1904. 

 Gunachokon. — Krause, Tlinkit Ind., IKi, 1885. 



Gunakhe. The principal village of the 

 Lakweip, situated on a branch of upper 

 Stikine r., Brit. Col. 



Gunaqa'— Boas, 10th Rep. X. W. Tribes Can., 34, 

 1895. 



Gunasquamekook ( ' long gravel bar join- 

 ing the island'). A former Passama- 

 quoddy village on the site of St Andrews, 

 New Brunswick, on Passaniaquoddy bay. 

 The Indians were dispossessed by the 

 whites and were finally settled at Pleas- 

 ant Point, ]Me. — Vetroniiie, Abnakis, 55, 

 1866. 



Gunghet-haidagai ('Ninstints people'). 

 A part of the Haida living about the s. 

 end of Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. Col. 

 In the Masset dialect their name is An- 

 ghethade. The whites f(jrmerly called 

 them Ninstints people, from the name by 

 which their chief to.wn was generally 

 known. Their language differs some- 

 what from that spoken by the Haida far- 

 ther N. The remnant lives principally 

 at Skidegate. (j. r. s. ) 



AngitHaade. — Harrison in Proe. Royal Soc. Can., 

 sec. II, 125, 1895. CapeSt. James tribe. —I'oole, Queen 

 Charlotte Ids., 195, 1372. G.v'nxet Xa'-idAga i.— 

 Swanton, Cont. Haida, 272, 1905. Kunqit.— Swan- 

 ton, field notes, 1900-1901. Kunxit.— Dawson, 

 Queen Charlotte Ids., 169, 1880 (proper name of 

 the villasre, Ninstance being the name of the 

 chief). 



Gunghet-kegawai ( GA^n.vet-qe^gawa-i, 

 'those born in the Ninstints country' ). 

 A subdivision of the Stasaos-kegawai, a 

 division of the Kaven clan of the Haida, 

 probably descended from women who 

 had married in the Ninstints country. 

 It is to he distinguished from another and 

 more important division of the same name 

 at Ninstints which belonged to the Eagle 

 clan. — Swanton, Cont. Flaida, 270, 1905. 



Gunghet-kegawai. A subdivision of the 

 Eagle clan of the Haida, belonging, as 

 the name implies, to one of the Ninstints 

 or Gunghet group. They were sometimes 

 called also Gunghet-gitinai. — Swanton, 

 Cont. Haida, 270,' 1905. 



Gupa. A former Agua Caliente village 

 on the headwaters of San Luis Key r., s. 

 Cal., better knownas Agua Caliente "(q. v. ). 

 Its inhabitants were removed to Pala res. 

 in 1902. 



Agua Caliente.— Ind. Afl. Rep. 1902, 176, 1903. Aqua 

 Caliente.— .laekson and Kinnev, Rep. Miss. Ind., 

 20, 1883. Gupa.— A. L. Kroeber, inf'n, 1905 (own 

 name). Gupa -nga- git -om. — Ibid, (own name: 

 'Gupa-at-people' ). Ha-koo-pin. — Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, May 11, ISfiO. Hakupin. — \. L. Kroeber, 

 inf'n, 1905 (Dieguefio name). Ko-pa. — Barrows, 

 Ethno-Bot. Coahuillalnd., 31, 1900 (Kawianame). 



Gusti ( GustV) . A traditional Cherokee 

 settlement on Tennessee r. , near Kings- 

 ton, Roane co., Tenn. — Mooney in 19th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 521, 1900. 



Gutgunest-nas-hadai ( Gutgune'st nas:- 

 had'd'i 'owl-house people'). Given by 

 Boas (Fifth Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 26, 

 1889) as the name of a subdivision of the 



Yaku-lanas, a division of the Raven clan 

 «)f the Haida. It is really only a house 

 name belonging to that family, (j. r. s. ) 



Gutheni ( (TAt-hVni, ' salmon creek ' ). A 

 former Tlingit town situated n. of Dry bay, 

 Alaska, (j. r. s. ) 



Gutubur. A Pima rancheria visited by 

 Father Kino in 1694; definite locality un- 

 known. — Kino in Doc. Hist. Max., 4th s., 

 I, 251, 1856. 



Guwisguwi. See Cooiveescoowee; Boss 

 {John). 



Guyasuta. See Kiasutha. 



Gwaeskun ( Gwd-iskun, ' end of island ' ) . 

 Formerly the northernmost Haida town 

 on Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. Col. It 

 was named from the cape near by and is 

 said to have Ijeen owned by the Stustas, 

 but it has long been abandoned. — Swan- 

 ton, t;ont. Haida, 281, 1905. 



Gwaidalgaegins ( Gwai-dalga^-iglns, 'is- 

 land that floats along ' ) . A former Haida 

 fort belonging to the Kadusgo-kegawai 

 of Kloo. It was near the mountain called 

 Kinggi, famous in native legend, on Queen 

 Charlotte ids., Brit. Col. (j. r. s. ) 



Gwalgahi ( Gwafgd^hi, ' frog, place ' ) . 

 A place on Hivvassee r., in the Cherokee 

 country, just above the junction of Peach- 

 tree cr., near Murphy, Cherokee co., 

 N. C. ; about 1755 the site of a village 

 of refugee Natchez, and later of a Baptist 

 mission. — Mooney in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 

 521, 1900. 



Gwaugweh ('one took out a locust.' — 

 Hewitt). Probaljly a former Seneca vil- 

 lage near Niagara r., N. Y. 



Carrying Place Village.— Morgan, League Iroq., 

 466, 1851. Gwa-u-gueh. — Ibid., map. Gwa'-u- 

 gweh. — Ibid.. 466. 



Gweghkongh, A village in 1657, proba- 

 bly belonging to the Unami Delawares 

 and apparently situated in n. New Jersey, 

 near Staten id., or in the adjacent part of 

 New York. 



Gweghkongh. — Deed of 16.57 in N. Y. Doc. Col. 

 Hist., XIV, 393, 1883. Hweghkongh.— Ibid. 



Gweundus {GiveA^ndAs). A subdi- 

 vision of low social rank of the Hlgahet- 

 gitinai, a family of the Eagle clan of the 

 Haida. — Swanton, Cont. Haida, 274, 1905. 



Gwinwah. A former Niska village on 

 Nass r., Brit. Col. 



Gu'n-wa. — Swanton, field notes, 1900-01 (name ob- 

 tained from the Haida). Gwinwah. — Dorsey in 

 Am. Antiq., xi.x, 281, 1897. 



Gyagyilakya {G'dg'g'ilak'a, 'always 

 wanting to kill people') . A gens of the 

 Tsawatenok, a Kwakiutl tribe. — Boas in 

 Rep. Nat. Mus., 331, 1895. 



Gyaushk ('gull'). A gens of the Chip- 

 pewa (q. v.). 



Gi-oshk.— Tanner, Narr., 315, 1830. Gyaushk.— 

 Warren in Minn. Hist. Soc. Coll., v, 44. 18.S5. 



Gyazru. The Parrot clan of the Hopi. 



Gyarzobi.— Mindelefl in Sth Rep. B. A. E., 120, 1891. 

 Gya'-zro —Stephen, ibid., 39. Gyazru winT^u. — 

 Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., bS-l. 1^00 {will wu = 

 'clan'). iCaro.— Voth, Hopi Proper Names, 81, 

 1905. Karro.— Dorsey and Voth, Mishongnovi 

 Ceremonies, 175, 1902. 



Bull. 30—05- 



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