532 



HANOCOUCOUAIJ HARAMES 



[b. a. e. 



Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 220, 1854 (Navaho 

 name). Tano.— Ward (juoted 1)V Donaldson, Mo- 

 qui Pueblo Inds., 14, l.s93. Tanoi.— Hodge, field 

 notes, B. A. E., 189.5 (Lsletaname). Tanoquevi. — 

 Schooleraft, Ind. Tribes, 1,519, 1853. Tanoquibi.— 

 Calhoun quoted by Donaldson, Moqui Pueblo 

 Inds., 14, 1893. Tanos.— Villa-Seiior, Theatro Am., 

 pt. 2, 42.5, 174!S. Tanus.— Esciidero, Noticias de 

 Chihuahua, 231, 1834. Taucos.— Cortez (1799) in 

 Whipple, Pac. R. R. Rep., in, pt. 3, 121, 185G. 

 Te-e-wun-na. — Whipple, ibid. , 13, 1856 ( Zun i name ) . 

 Teh-wa. — Stephen in Donald.son, Moqui Pueblo 

 Inds., 14, 1893. Tewa. — Popular but incorrect 

 name for the pueblo (sQeTewa). Tewe. — Shiplev 

 in Ind. Aft. Rep., 310, 1891. Towas.— Davis, El 

 Gringo, 115, 1857. 



Hanocoucouaij . A village on the e. coast of 

 Florida, x. of C. Canaveral, in the 16th cen- 

 tury. — De Bry, Brev. Nar., ii, map, 1591. 

 Hantiwi. A Shastan tribe or band for- 

 merly living in Warm Spring valley, 

 Modoc CO., Cal. 



Han-te'-wa.— Powers in Cent. N. A. Ethnol., in, 

 2(57, 1877. 



Hanut Cochiti (hanut, 'above', + Co- 

 chiti, q. V. ). The sixth town successively 

 occupied by the people of Cochiti; situated 

 about 12 m. n. w. of Cochiti pueblo, 

 in the Potrero Viejo, N. Mex. 

 Ha-nut Cochiti. — Lummis in Scribner's Monthly, 



100, isys. 



Hapaluya. A former large village in up- 

 per Florida, visited by De Soto in 1539. — 

 Gentl. of Elvas (1557) in French, Hist. 

 Coll. La., II, 133, 1850. 



Hapanyi. The Oak clans of the Keresan 

 pueblos of Laguna, Acoma, Sia, San Felipe, 

 and Cochiti, N. Mex. The Oak clan of 

 Laguna claims to have come originally 

 from Rio Grande pueblos, by way of I\It 

 Taylor, and to form a phratry with the 

 Mokaich (Mountain Lion) clan; while 

 that of Acoma claims phratral relationship 

 with the Showwiti (Parrot) and Tanyi 

 (Calabash) clans. The Oak clan of Sia is 

 extinct. (f. av. h.) 



Hapai-hanoi^h. — Hodge in Am. Anthrop., ix, 351, 

 IS'.'G (Laguna form; lidno<^h =' people'). Hapan- 

 hano. — Ibid. (Siaform). Ha-pan-ni. — Stevensonin 

 nth Rep. B. A. E., 19, 1894 (Sia form). Hapanyi- 

 hano. — Hodge, op. cit. (San Felipe fonnl. Ha- 

 panyi-hanoq'^''.— Ibid. (xVcoma form). Hapanyi- 

 hanuch.— Ibid. (Cochiti form). 



Hapes. A small tribe found by Spanish 

 explorers on the lower Rio Grande in the 

 vicinity of Eagle Pass, Tex., although 

 Uhde (1861) places it near Lampazos, in 

 Nueva Leon, Mexico, some distance far- 

 ther w. They numbered 490 in 85 huts in 

 1688, but an e])idemic of smallpox raged 

 among them soon afterward, and in 1689 

 the survivors were attacked by coast 

 Indians and exterminated, with the ex- 

 ception of some boys who were carried 

 off. (.1. R. s. ) 



Apes. — Fernando del Bosque (1675) in Nat. Geog. 

 Mag., XIV, 9, 347, 1903. Apis.— Manzanet (1689) in 

 Tex. Hist. Ass. Quar., ii, 25, 1898. Hapes,— De Leon 

 (1689), ibid., VIII, 205, 1905. lapies.— Lin.schotn, 

 Descr. de I'Am^r., map, 1, 1638. Japies. — De Laet, 

 Hist. Nouv. Monde, 234, 1640. Jeapes. — Fernando 

 del Bosque, op. cit. Xapes.— Uhde, Liiuder, 121, 

 1861. Xapies.— Navarette, Memorial v Noticias 

 Sacras, 104, ](i46. 



Hapkug. A former Aleut village on 

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

 group of the Aleutians, now uninhabited. 



Happy Hunting Ground. See Popular 



j'allarics. 



Haqihana ('wolves'). A local band of 

 the Arapaho, q. v. 



Haqui, A Caddoan ( ?) tril^e, apparently 

 in N. E. Texas, mentioned in 1687 as at war 

 with the "Ccenis" or main body of the 

 Caddo confederacy. Perhaps the Adai. 



Aquis.— Joutel(1687) in Margry, Dec., in, 409, 1878. 

 Hakesians. — Hennepin, New Discov., 41, 1698. 

 Haquis.— Douav (1687) quoted by Shea, Discov. 

 Miss. Val., 217, "1852. 



Harahey. One of the various forms of 

 the name of a province of which Coro- 

 nado, while among the New Mexico 

 pueblos in 1540-41, learned from a native 

 thereof who said that it lay beyond 

 Quivira (the Wichita country of E. cen- 

 tral Kansas), and contained much gold. 

 This Indian, who was known as The 

 Turk (q. V.) and who served as a guide to 

 Coronado's army, became a traitor to the 

 Spaniards by leading them astray on the 

 buffalo plains of Texas. After 12 days' 

 journey from Pecos r. in New jNIexicothe 

 Spaniards, then on the Staked plain, were 

 informed by The Turk that Haxa, or 

 Haya, was one or two days' journey 

 toward sunrise. A party was sent for- 

 ward to find it, and although settlements 

 of Indians were found, amongst them 

 Cona, occupied by the Teya (Texas?), 

 Haxa does not appear to have been 

 reached; it is therefore possible that 

 Haxa, or Haya, is but another form of 

 Harahey, which was far n. of where the 

 Spaniards then were. Arriving at Qui- 

 vira, Coronado learned more of Harahey, 

 which was the next province beyond. 

 The Spaniards did not visit it, but sent 

 for their chief, named Tatarrax, who 

 came with 200 warriors, "all naked, with 

 bows, and some sort of things on their 

 heads." From the characteristic head- 

 dress of The Turk and the other mem- 

 bers of the tribe, and their proximity and 

 apparent relationship with the Quivira, 

 or Wichita, the Harahey people may have 

 been the Pawnee, and their habitat at 

 this date (1542) in the vicinity of Kansas 

 r. in E. Kansas. See Brower, Quivira, 1898; 

 Hodge, Coronado's March, in Brower, 

 Harahey, 1899; Winship, Coronado Ex- 

 ped., 14th Rep. B. A. E., 1896. (f. w. h. ) 

 Araal.— Barcia, En.savo, 21, 1723. Arache.— Jara- 

 millo (after 1542) in"l4th Rep. B. A. E., 588, 1896. 

 Arae.— Rel.del Suceso («j. 1.542), ibid., 577. Ara- 

 hei. — Jaramillo, op. cit. Arche. — Castaiieda (fa. 

 1565) in 14th Rep. B. A.E., 503, 1896. Axa.— Go- 

 mara (15.53) quoted by Winship in 14th Rep. 

 B. A E.. 492, 1896. Axaas.— Volney, America, 

 map, 1804. Axas.— Gii.ssefeld, Charte Nord Amer- 

 ica, 1797. Harae.— Herrera, Historia, vi, 206, 1728. 

 Harahey. — Jaramillo, op. cit., 590. Harale.— Rel. 

 del Suceso, op. cit. Harall.— Doc. of 1541 in Doc. 

 Ined., XIV, 325, 1870. Haxa.— Castaiieda (ca. 1565) 

 in 14th Rep B. A. E., 505, 1896. Haya.— Ibid. Hu- 

 rall.- Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 51, 1889. 

 Xaqueuira.— Galvano(1563)inHakluytSoc.Publ., 

 XXX, 227, 1862 (apparently Axa and Quivira con- 

 fused). 



Harames. A former tribe of Coahuila, 

 N. E. Mexico, gathered into the mission 



