520 



HAGI-LANAS HAIDA 



[b. a. k. 



Bolkus ids., Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. 

 Col. It derived its name from a reef 

 which, in local mythology, was the first 

 land to appear above the waters of the 

 flood, bearing the ancestress of all the 

 Raven people upon it. The town was oc- 

 cupied by a Ninstints division of the same 

 name. — Swanton, Cont. Ilaida, 277, 1905. 



Hagi-lanas {Xdgl-ld^nas, 'people of 

 striped (?) town'). A subdivision of the 

 Haida, belonging to the Raven clan and 

 occupying the town of Hagi, on Hagi id., 

 Queeii Charlotte ids., Brit. Col. From 

 the circumstanceattendingtheir supposed 

 origin (see Hagi) the family claimed to 

 be the oldest on the islands, but it is now 

 represented by only two or three indi- 

 viduals. There were two subdivisions, 

 the Huldanggats and the Keda-lanas. — 

 Swanton, Cont. Haida, 268, 1905. 



Haglli. A Yuman tril)e or division 

 which in 1604-05 occupied 5 rancherias 

 on the lower Rio Colorado, between the 

 Cohuanas (Yuma) and the Halligua- 

 mayas, of which latter (identifiable with 

 the Quigyuma) they apparently formed 

 a part. 



HacUi,— Bandelier in Aroh. Inst. Papers, iii, 110, 

 1890. Haglli.— Zarate-Salmeron {ca. 1629). Rel., in 

 Land of Sunshine, 106, Jan. 1900. Tlaglii.— Ban- 

 croft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 156, 1889. 



Hagonchenda. A former Iroquois town, 

 probably belonging to the people of 

 Tequenondahi, and situated in 1535 not 

 far from the junction of Jacques Cartier 

 r. with the St Lawrence. The chief of 

 this town gave a small girl to Cartier on 

 his second voyage, ami placed Cartier on 

 his guard against the machinations of the 

 chiefs of the peoples dwelling around 

 Stadacona and elsewhere on the St Law- 

 rence. For this reason Cartier, in his 

 third voyage, in 1540, gave this chief 2 

 small boys to learn the language, and also 

 a "cloake of Paris red, which cloake was 

 set with yealow and white buttons of 

 Tinne, and small belles." See Cartier, 

 Bref Recit, 67, 1863. (.J. N. b. h.) 



Hagwilget (Tsimshian: 'well dressed'). 

 The chief village of the Hwotsotenne, 

 on Bulk ley r., 3 m. s. e. of Hazelton, Brit. 

 Col.; pop. 500 in 1870, 161 in 1904. 

 Achwlget.— Hiiretzky, Canada on Pac, 103, 1874. 

 Ahwilgate.— Dawson' in Rep. Geol. Surv. Can., 

 1879-80, 20b, 18S1. Hagulget.— Seott in Ind. AiY. 

 Rep. 1869, 563, 1870. Hagwilget.— Can. Ind. Aff. 

 1904, pt. 2, 73, 1905. Ha-gwil'-ket.— Hensliaw, MS. 

 note, B. A. E., 1887. Tschah.— Morice in Trans. 

 Rov. Soc. Can., map, 1892. Tsitsk.— Can. Ind. 

 Aff'., 212, 1902 (Kit ksnn form). 



Hahamatses ('old mats'). A subdivi- 

 sion or sept of the Lekwiltok, a Kwakiutl 

 tribe. They received their name because 

 they were slaves of the Wiwekae sept. 

 Recently they have taken the name of 

 Walitsum, 'the great ones.' Pop. 53 in 

 1901, 43 in 1904. 



Chachamatses. — Boas in Petermanns Mitt., pt. 5, 

 131, 1887. H'ah'amatses.— Boas in Bull. Am.Geog. 

 Soc., 230, 1387. Kahk-ah-mah-tsis.— Can. Ind. Aff , 

 119,1880. Kakamatsis.— Brit. Col. map, 1872. Qa'- 



qamatses. — Boas, 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 55, 

 1890. "Wa'-lit-sum. — Davv.son in Trans. Roy. Soc. 

 Can. ,v. sec. 11, 65. 1887. Wau-lit-sah-mosk. — Sproat 

 in Can. Ind. Aff., 149, 1879. Waw-lit-sum.— Can. 

 Ind. Aff., 189, 1884. Xa'xamatsEs, -Boas in Rep. 

 Nat. Mus., 331, 1895. 



Hahamogna, A former Gabrieleno 

 rancheria in Los Angeles co., Cal., at a 

 locality later called Rancho Verdugos. — 

 Ried (1852) quoted by Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, June 8, 1860. 



Hahas. A former Chumashan village 

 at the principal port of Santa Cruz id., 

 Cal., probably at Prisoners' harbor. — 

 Hensliaw, Buenaventura MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., 1884. 



Hahatonwanna ('small village at the 

 falls'). A former Sioux village or divi- 

 sion at the Falls of St Anthony, Minn.; 

 mentioned doubtfully by Dorsey (1880). 

 Given by Lewis and Clark in 1804 as a 

 subdivision of the Yankton of the north, 

 of which Mahpeondotak was chief. The 

 name may refer to an incorporated Chip- 

 pewa band. 



Hahatouadeba. — Jefferys, Am. Atlas, map 5, 1776. 

 Hah-har-tones.— Orig. Jour. Lewis and Clark, VI, 

 99, 1905. Har-har-tones. — Lewis and Clark, Dis- 

 cov.,34, 1806. Horheton.— Del' Isle (1701), map in 

 Neill, Hi<t. Minn., 164, 1858. Horhetton.— .Tefferys, 

 Am. Atlas, map 5, 1776. Morheton.— La Tour, 

 Am. Sept., map, 1779 (misprint). 



Hahekolatl {IWMqoUiL, descendants of 

 Hakolatl ' ). A subdivision of the Lalau- 

 itlela, a gens of the Tlatlasikoala (q. v.), 

 a Kwakiutl tribe. — Boas in Rep. Nat. 

 Mus., 332, 1895. 



Hahuamis. A Kwakiutl tribe living on 

 AVakeman sd., Brit. Col.; pop. 63 in 1901, 

 the last time they were officially reported. 

 They are divided into three gentes: Gyek- 

 sem, Gvigvilkam, and Haaialikyauae. — 

 Boas in Rep. Nat. Mus., 331, 1895. 



Ah-knaw-ah-mish.— Can. Ind. Afl., 189, 1884. Ah- 

 know-ah-mish, — Ibid., 314, 1892. Ah-wha-mish. — 

 Ibid.,:;('i4, 1.S97. A-kwa'-amish. — Dawson in Trans. 

 Roy. Soc. Can. for 1S87, sec. li, 65. A-qua-mish. — 

 Kane, Wand, in N.Am., app., 1859. Chachua'mis. — 

 Boas in Petermanns Mitt., pt. 5, 130, 1887. Ecqua- 

 mish. — Brit. Col. map, 1872. H'ah'uamis. — Boas in 

 Bull. Am.Geog. Soc, 228, 1887. Haqua'tnis.— Boas, 

 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 55, 1890. Haxua'mis,— 

 Boas in Rep. Nat. Mus. 331, 1895. 



Haida {Xa'lda, 'people'). The native 

 and jiopular name for the Indians of the 

 Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. Col., and the 

 s. end of Prince of Wales id. , Alaska, com- 

 prising the Skittagetan family (q.v.). By 

 the natives themselves the term may be 

 applied generally to any human being or 

 specifically to one speaking the Haida 

 language. Some authors have improperly 

 restricted the application of the term to 

 the Queen Charlotte islanders, calling the 

 Alaskan Haida, Kaigani (q. v. ). Several 

 English variants of this word owe their 

 origin to the fact that a suffix usually ac- 

 companies it in the native language, mak- 

 ing it Ha^de in one dialect and Haidaga^i 

 in the other. 



On the ground of physical characteris- 

 tics the Haida, Tlingit, and Tsimshian 



