BULL. 30] 



HANGING-MAW HANO 



531 



utanandji. — Iliid. ('Hanjra apart from the rest'). 

 Hung-ga ni-ka-shing-ga. — Stubbs, Kaw MS. vo- 

 cab., B. \. K., 2.i, ls77. Hun-go-tin'-ga. — Morgan, 

 Anc. S<iL'., iriil, ]S77. Ta nika-shing-ga. — Stubbs, 

 op. cit. Ta sindje qaga. — Dorsev in 1.5th Rei>. 

 B. A. E., 231, isy7. 



Hanging-maw ( UskyxVlt-giY (d/his stom- 

 ach hangs down'). A jn'ominent Chero- 

 kee chief of the Revohitionarv periocL — 

 31 coney in 19th Kep. B. A. E.," 543, 1900. 



Hanginihkashina ('night people'). A 

 subdivision of the Tsishu division of the 

 Osage. Its subdivisions in turn are 

 Haninihkashina and Wasape. 

 Ha" i'nink'aci"'a. — Dorsey in l!ith Rep. B. A. E., 

 ■J34, 1>97. Huinihkaci"a. — Dorsev, Osage MS, vo- 

 cals, B. A. E., 1S.S3. Tse'fsanka'.— Dorsev in 15th 

 Kep. B. A. E., 234, 1.S97. Tsi'ou we'hai[i0e.— Ibid. 



Hangka ('leader'). One of the three 

 divisions of the Osage, the last to join the 

 tribe, dividing witli the Wazhazhe the 

 right or war side of the camp circle. 

 Haniia.— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 233, 1897. 



Hangkaahutnn ( ' Hangka having 

 wings'). A gens of the Hangka division 

 of the Osage, in two subgentes, Husadta- 

 wanun and Husadta. 



Eagle people.— Dorsev, Osage MS. vocab., B, A. E., 

 IS.So. Han'^ia a'hii tu"'. — Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. 

 E., 234, 1897. Hu'sa^a. — Ibid, ('limbs stretched 

 stiff ') . Qu^ i'niqk 'acin'a. — Ibid. ( ' white eagle peo- 

 ple' I. 



Hangkaenikashika ('those who became 

 human l)eings l)y means of the ancestral 

 animal ' ). A Quajiaw gens. 

 Ancestral gens. — Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 229, 

 1897. Hanifa e'nikaci'jja. — Ibid. 



Hangkautadhantsi ( 'Hangka apart from 

 the rest ' ) . A gens on the Hangka side of 

 the Osage tribal circle. 



Eaiiita uta'f^an^si. — Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 

 234, 1897. Qu0a'qtsii'niqk'aci"'a. — Ibid. (' real eagle 

 people'). 'War eagle people. — Dorsey, Osage Mtj. 

 vocab., B. A. E., 1S83. 



Hangnikashinga ( 'night people'). A 

 sul>gens of the Han gens of the Kansa. 

 Ha" nikaci'iga. — Dorsev in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 231, 

 1897. 



Hanilik. A former Aleut village on 

 Agattu id., Alaska, one of the Near id. 

 group of the Aleutians, now uninhabited. 



Haninihkashina ( 'night people proper'). 

 A subdivision of the Haninihkashina di- 

 vision of the Osage. — Dorsev in 15th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 234, 1897. 



Hankutchin ( 'river people' ). AKutchin 

 tribe on ujiper Yukon r. below Klondike 

 r., Alaska. They make Ijaskets of tama- 

 rack roots with hair and porcupine quills 

 tastefully woven into them. When these 

 are used for cooking, the -water is boiled 

 by putting red-hot sti mes into them. The 

 Hankutchni are noted for their skill in 

 catching large salmon. Gibbs stated that 

 fiOhuntersvisited Ft Yukon in 1854. They 

 still trade at that post. SuI)divisions are 

 Katshikotin, Takon, and Tsitoklinotin. 

 Villages are Fetutlin, Johnnys, Nuklako, 

 Tadush, and Tutchonekutchin. 

 Ai-yan.— Schwatka, Rep. on Alaska, 82, 1885, Ai- 

 ya-na. — r)awson m Rep. Geol. Surv. Can., 200-b, 

 18N7 An-Kutchin.— Whymper, Alaska, 223, 1868. 

 Au Kotchins. — Ravmond quoted bvColver in Ind. 

 Aff. Rep. 1S69, 593, 1870. Ayans.'— Scliwatka in 

 Century Mag., 821, Sept. 1885. Gens de Bois.— Dall 



in Proe. A. A. A. S., xviii, 271, 1870. Gens-de- 

 fine.— Ravmond quoted bv Colver in liid. .Vff. 

 Kep. 1869, 593, 1870. Gens de Fou.— Hardistv in 

 Smithson. Rep. 1866, 311, 1872. Gens de Foux.— 

 Whymper in Jour. Roy. CJcog. Soc, 233. 1868. 

 Gens des Bois. — Raymond in Sen. Ex. Doc. 12, 42d 

 Cong., 1st sess., 34,"1n71. Gens des faux.— Petroff, 

 Alaska, 160, 1884. Hai-ankutchin.— Dall in Proc. 

 A. A. A. S., xx.xiv, 376, l.ssc. Han-kutchi.— Rich- 

 ardson, Arct. E.xped., l, 396, 1851. Han kutchin. — 

 Dall in Proc. A. A. A. S., -XVin, 271, 1870. Han- 

 Kutchin.— Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., I, 31, 1877. 

 Han-kuttchin.— Petitot, Diet. Dene-Dindjie, xx, 

 1876. Hong-Kutchin.— Jones in Smith.son. Rep. 

 1866, 321, 1S72. Hun-koo-chin.— Hardisty, ibid., 

 311. Hun-Kutchin. — Ravmond in Sen. Ex. Doc. 

 12, 42d Cong., 1st sess., 34, 1871. Hun'kutch-in.— 

 Ross, MS. notes on Tinne, B. A. E. (trans.: 'peo- 

 ple of the river cotmtrv') . Lower Gens de fou. — 

 Ibid. 'Wood people.— iiall in Proc. A. .\. A. S., 

 xviir, 271, 1S70. 



Hannakallal. A triljeor Ixmd, probably 

 Athapascan, numbering 600 in 1804, and 

 dwellings, of the 'Luckkarso' (Kosotshe) 

 on the Pacific coast; possibly the Khai- 

 nanaitetunne or the Henaggi. 

 Hannakalals. — Lewis and Clark, Exped., ii, 119, 

 1814. Hannakallah. — Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, ni, 

 571, 1S53. Han-na-kal-lal. — Orig. Jour. Lewis and 

 Clark, VI, 117, 1905. 



Hano (contracted from ^4/(0^^/, 'eastern 

 people.' — Fewkes). The easternmost 

 ])ueblo of Tusayan, x. e. Ariz., and famil- 

 iarly spoken of as one of the Hopi vil- 

 lages; it is, however, occupied by Tewa 

 people, whose ancestors, early in the 18th 

 century, migrated from the upper Rio 

 Grande, in New Mexico, principally from 

 an ancient pueblo known as Tsawarii, 

 above the present town of Santa Cruz, 

 where the hamlet of La Puebla now 

 stands (Hodge). The Hano people 

 have largely intermarried with the Hopi. 

 In 1782 the population was 110 families; 

 m 1893 it numbered 163 individuals, 

 including 23 husbands of Hano women. 

 In addition, there were 16 Hano people 

 living in the Hopi pueblos. The clans 

 represented at Hano are the Ke ( Hear) , 

 Kun (Corn), Sa (Tobacco), Tenyo 

 (Pine), Okuwa (Cloud), Nang (Earth), 

 Kachina, and Tang (Sun). Formerly 

 there were also the Kapulo (Crane), Pe 

 (Timber), Kopeli (Pink conch), Pohulo 

 (Herb), Kuyanwe (Turquoise ear pend- 

 ant), Ku (Stone), and Ta (Grass) clans, 

 but these have become extinct since the 

 Hano people settled in Tusayan. Con- 

 sult Fewkes (1) in 17th Rep. B. A. E., 

 636, 1898; (2) in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 612, 

 1900; (3) in Am. Anthrop., vii, 162, 1894; 

 Mindeleff in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 62, 1891. 

 Hano. — Gatschet in Wheeler Surv. Rep., vn, 412, 

 1879. Hanoki. — Ibid. Hanom. — ten Kate, Keizen 

 in N. A., 259,1885 (Hopi name for the people). 

 Ha-no-me.— ten Kate, Synonymic, 7, 1884 (Hopi 

 name for the people). Hanomuh.— Stephen and 

 Mindeleff in 8th Kep. B. A. E., 36, 1891. Harno.— 

 Ten Broeck in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, map, 

 24-'25, 87, 1854. Haro.— Keane in Stanford, Cf)m- 

 pend., 515, 1878. lano.— Tavlor in Cal. Farmer, 

 June 19, 1863. Jane- Garces (1776), Diary. 394, 

 1900. Janogualpa. — Garces quoted by Bancroft, 

 Ariz, and N. Mex., 137, 395, Iss'.i ( Haiu'iand Walpi 

 combined). Koyoshtu. — HoiIkc, lield notes, B. A. 

 E., 1895 (Acoma name). Na-ca-ci-kin. — Stephen, 

 MS., B. A.E., 1887 (Navaho name: 'foreign bear 

 people's house'). Nah-shah-shai. — Eaton in 



