554 



HLIELUNG-STUSTAE HOBOMOK 



[ B. A. E. 



river of the same name (called Hiellen 

 on Dawson's map). (j. r. s. ) 



Dl'ia'lEn kunilnagai'.— Boas, r2th Rep. N.W. Tribes 

 Can., 23, 189S. £i'elAn kun Inaga'-i. — Swanton, 

 Cont. Haida, 270, 1905. 



Hlielung-stustae {H^eUn stAsta^-i, 'Stus- 

 tas of Hlielmig'). A subdivision of the 

 Stustas, an important family of the Eagle 

 clan of the Haida, occupying the town 

 at the mouth of Hlielung or Hiellen 

 r., Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. Col. Pos- 

 sibly a synonym of Hlielung-keawai. — 

 Swanton, Cont. Haida, 276, 1905. 



Hlimulnaas-hadai {iiiin.i'l na'as xa'- 

 da-i, 'hlimul-skin-house people'). A 

 subdivision of the Salendas, a Haida fam- 

 ily of the Eagle clan. They were so 

 called from one of their houses; hlirnul 

 was a name applied to the skins of cer- 

 tain mainland animals. — Swanton, Cont. 

 Haida, 276, 1905. 



Hlingwamaas-hadai {dbingwd^-i na^ as 

 xa'da-i, 'world-house people'). A sub- 

 division of the Aokeawai, a family of the 

 Raven clan of the Haida; probably named' 

 from a house. — Swanton, Cont. Haida, 

 272, 1905. 



Hlkaonedis (Tlingit: iiqa^onedis, 'peo- 

 ple of tqao river'). A subdivision of 

 the Koetas, a family of the Raven clan of 

 the Haida, living principally in Alaska. 

 They may have received their name from 

 a camping place. — Swanton, Cont. Haida, 

 272, 1905. 



Hlkia (ik.'ilV, ' chicken-hawk town ' 

 or ' saw-bill town ' ) A former Haida town 

 on the outer side of Lyell id.. Queen 

 Charlotte ids., Brit. Col. It was occupied 

 by the Kona-kegawai. — Swanton, Cont. 

 Haida, 278, 1905. 



Hlkoayedi (iqo^ayedi). A Tlingit divi- 

 sion at Klawak, Alaska, said to be part of 

 the Shunkukedi, q. v. (.J. e. s. ) 



Hlukahadi. A division of the Raven 

 phratry of the Chilkat, formerly living in 

 thetownof Yendestake, Alaska. Accord- 

 ing to the Chilkat themselves the name 

 means ' quick people ' , but according to in- 

 formants at Wrangell, ' peojjle of Hlukak ' 

 (fcnqa^x), a creek near Wrangell. 

 Chlukoach-adi.— Krause, Tlinkit Ind., 116, 1886. 

 Kaduwot-kedi. — Ibid, (given as a distinct social 

 group), iuqa'xadi. — Swanton, field notes, B. A. E., 

 1904. 



Hlukkuhoan [tAxq.'vxo-dn, 'town where 

 people do not sleep much'). A former 

 Tlingit town in Alaska. (.J. R. s. ) 



Hluln lihdn). A former Haida town 

 in Naden harbor, Graham id.. Queen 

 Charlotte group, Brit. Col. — Swanton, 

 Cont. Haida, 281, 1905. 



Hoabonoma. Evidently the Pima or 

 Maricopa name of a tribe of Avhich Father 

 Kino learned while on the lower Rio Gila, 

 Ariz., in 1700. Unidentified, although 

 probably Yuman. They have sometimes 

 been loosely classed as a part of the Cocopa. 

 Heabenomas.— Consag (1746) quoted by Taylor in 



Cal. Farmer, Dec. 6, 1861. Hebonumas. — Venegas, 

 Hist. Cal., n, 171, 1759. Hoabonoma.— Kino (1700) 

 quoted by Coues, Garc^s Diary, 548, 1900. Hoabo- 

 nomos. — Mayer, Mexico, ii, 38, 1853. Hobonomas. — 

 Venegas, Hist. Cal., i, 801, 1759. Oaboponoma. — 

 Kino (1700) in Doc. Hist. Mex.,4th s.,i, 349, 1856. 



Hoaiels. Mentioned by Baudry des Lo- 

 zieres (Voy. Louisiane, 242, 1802) in a 

 list of tribes with no indication of habitat. 

 Possibly intended for Theloel, a name 

 given sometimes to part, at others to all 

 the Natchez. 



Hoako. A former Maidu village on the 

 w. bank of Feather r., below Marysville, 

 Sutter CO., Cal. (r. b. d.) 



Hoak.— Wozencraft (1851) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 32d 

 Cong., spec, sess., 206, 1853. Hoako.— Dixon In 

 Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., xvn, pt. 3, map, 124, 

 1905. Hock.— Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., ni, 

 282, 1877. Hocks.— Ind. Aff. Rep., 129, 1850. 

 Hoka.— Cnrtin, MS. vocab., B. A. E., 1885. Huk.— 

 Hale, Ethnol. and PhiloL, vi, 631, 1846. 



Hobatinequasi. A clan of the Acheha 

 phratry of the ancient Timucua of 

 Florida. — Pareja {ca. 1614) quoted by 

 Gatschet in Am. Philos. Sec. Proc. , xvii, 

 492, 1878. 



Hobbamock, Hobbamoco. See Hobomok, 

 Hohomoko. 



Hobeckentopa. A locality, possibly a 

 town, where a treaty with the Choctaw 

 was concluded Aug. 31, 1803. It was on 

 Tombigbee r. , in the e. part of Washington 

 CO., Ala., perhaps on or near a bluff of the 

 same name upon which St Stephens now 

 stands. (h. w. h.) 



Hobeckenlopa. — Am. State Papers, Ind. Aff. (1805), 

 I, 749, 1832. Hoe-Buckin-too-pa.— U. S. Ind. Treat. 

 (1803), 103, 1837. 



Hobnuts. A folk-etymological corrup- 

 tion of hobbenis, the name of a tuberous 

 root ( Owntiumaquaticum)m the Delaware 

 dialect of Algonquian. Rev. A. Hesselius 

 (cited by Nelson, Inds. of N. J., 78, 1894), 

 writing in the early years of the 18th cen- 

 tury in New Jersey, mentions "the first 

 fruits of roots, which grow in swamps, 

 not unlike nuts, called tachis, or by the 

 English hojmuts." The Delaware hobbe- 

 nis is a diminutive of bobbin, which was 

 afterward applied by these Indians to the 

 potato. The Swedish colonists called this 

 root hopnis. (a. f. c. ) 



Hobomok. A chief of the Wampanoag 

 who was the life-long friend of the Eng- 

 lish, from the time he met them at Plym- 

 outh in 1621. He helped to strengthen 

 the friendship of Massasoit for the colo- 

 nists, but, unlike Massasoit, he became a 

 Christian, and died, before 1642, as a 

 member of the English settlement at 

 Plymouth. He was of great service to the 

 English in warning them of Indian con- 

 spiracies. He was present at some of the 

 battles in which Standish performed val- 

 orous deeds, but was not an active partici- 

 pant. The name is identical with Abba- 

 mocho, Hobbamoco, Habamouk, Hobba- 

 mock, Hobomoko, etc. See the follow- 

 ing, (a. F. c.) 



