BULL. 30] 



HONAIS-KI HOOK-STONES 



559 



Honanki ( Hopi : ' bear house ' ) . A pre- 

 historic cliff-village, attributed to the 

 Hopi, in the valley of Oak cr., in the 

 "red-rock" countrv s. of Flagstaff, Ariz. — 

 Fewkes in 17th Rep. B. A. E., 558-569, 

 1898. 



Honau {Ho'-na-u). The Bear phratry 

 of the Hopi, comprising the Honau 

 (Bear), Tokochi (Wild-cat) , Chosro (Bird 

 [blue]), Kokyan (Spider), and Hekpa 

 (Fir) clans. According to Fewkes these 

 people are traditionally said to have been 

 the first to arrive in Tusayan. Although 

 reputed to be the oldest people in Walpi 

 they are now almost extinct in that pue- 

 blo, and are not represented in Sicho- 

 movi. They exist however at Mishong- 

 novi. 



Honau.— Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 584,1900. 

 Ho'-nau-iih. — Fewkes in Am. Anthrop., vn, 104, 

 1894. Honin njnimu. — Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 

 38,1891 (ni/!(»H( = 'phratrv'). Hon-namu. — Voth, 

 Traditions of the Hopi, 36, 1905. 



Honau. The Bear clan of the Hopi. 

 Honan. — Bourke, Snake Dance, 117, 1884 (mis- 

 print). Ho'-nau.— Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 

 39, 1891. Honau winwu. — Fewkes in 19th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 584, 1900. Honawuu.— Dorsey and Voth, 

 Mishongnovi Ceremonies, 175, 1902. 



Honayawus. See Farmer's Brother. 



Honeoye ( ' his finger lies. ' — Hewitt) . A 

 former Seneca settlement on Honeoye cr. , 

 near Honeoye lake, N. Y. ; destroyed by 

 Sullivan in 1779. 



Anagangaw.— Livermore (1779) in N. H. Hist. Soc. 

 Coll., VI, 327-329, 1850. Anjageen.— Pouchot, map 

 (1758) in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., x, 694, 1858. An- 

 nagaugaw. — Livermore, op. cit. Anyayea. — Hubley 

 (1779) quoted by Conover, Kanadega and Geneva 

 MS., B. A. E. Hannayaye. — Sullivan (1779) quoted 

 by Conover, ibid. Hanneyaye. — Nukerck (1779), 

 ibid. Haunyauya. — Grant (1779), ibid. Honeyoye. — 

 Dearborn (1779), ibid. Honneyayea. — Fellows 

 (1779), ibid. Onnayayou. — McKendry (1779), ibid. 

 Onyauyah. — Barton (1779), ibid. 



Honest John. See Tedyuskung. 



Honetaparteenwaz. Given as a division 

 of the Yankton of the North under chief 

 Tattunggarweeteco in 1804, but probably 

 intended for the Hunkpatina. 

 Hone-ta-par-teen-waz. — Lewis and Clark, Discov., 

 34, 1806; Orig. Jour. Lewis and Clark, vi, 99, 1905. 



Honkut. A division of Maidu living 

 near the mouth of Honcut cr., Y''uba co., 

 Cal. 



Hoancuts.— Powers in Overland Mo., xii, 420, 1874. 

 Hoan'-kut. — Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 

 282, 1877. Honcut.— Bancroft, Nat. Races, i, 450, 

 1874. 



Honmoyaushu {Hon-mo-yau^ -cu) . A 

 foi-mer Chumashan village at El Barranco, 

 near San Pedro, Ventura co., Cal. — Hen- 

 shaw, Buenaventura MS. vocab., B. A. 

 E., 1884. 



Honniasontkeronon (Iroquois: 'people of 

 the place of crook-necked squashes,' or 

 'people of the place where they wear 

 crosses'). An unidentified people of 

 whom Gallinee was informed by the Iro- 

 quois as living on Ohio r., above the falls 

 at Louisville, Ky. On a map of De I'lsle, 

 dated 1722, a small lake called L. Onia- 

 sont, around which are the words ' les 

 Oniasontke,' is placed on the s. side, ap- 



parently, of the "Ouabache, otherwise 

 called Ohio or Beautiful river," and the 

 outlet of L. Oniasont is made to flow into 

 the Ouabache. It may be inferred that 

 the Iroquois statement as to the location 

 of this people was substantially correct; 

 that is, that they lived on a small lake e. 

 of Wabash r. and having an outlet into 

 that stream, although Honniasontke'roii- 

 no" is an Iroquois euphemism for the 

 land of departed spirits. ( J. n. b. h. ) 



Honniasontkeronons. — Gallin(§e (1669) in Margry 

 Dec. , 1, 116, 1875. Oniasontke. — De I'Isle, map, 1772. 

 Oniasont-Keronons, — Fernow, Ohio Valley, 32,1890. 



Honosonayo ('white deer'). A clan of 

 the ancient Timucua of Florida. 

 Honoso Nayo.— Pareja {ca. 1613) quoted by Gat- 

 schet in Am. Philos. Soc. Proc, xvir, 492, 1878. 



Honowa ( Ho'novd, ' poor people ' ; sing., 

 Hf/now). A principal division of the 

 Cheyenne, q. v. 



H6f nowa. — Grinnell, Social Org. Cheyennes, 136, 

 1905. Ho'no-wa.— Mooney, inf'n,1905. Poor.— Dor- 

 sey in Field Columb. Mus. Pub., no. 103, 62, 1905. 



Honsading. A former Hupa village situ- 

 ated on the right bank of Trinity r.,Cal., 

 near the entrance of the canyon through 

 which the river flows after leaving Hupa 

 vallev. (p. E. G. ) 



Aknutl— Goddard, inf'n, 1903 (Yurok name). 

 Hoonselton. — Ind. Aff. Rep.,66,1872. Hoonsolton. — 

 Ind. Aff. Rep., 82, 1870. Hun'-sa-tung.— Powers in 

 Cont. N. A. Ethnol., Ill, 73, 1877. Loonsolton.— H. R. 

 Rep. 98, 42d Cong., 3d sess., 428, 1873. Okahno.— 

 Meyer, Nachdem Sacramento, 282, 1855. Oka-no. — 

 Mckee in Sen. E.x. Doc. 4, 32d Cong., spec. se.ss., 

 194, 18.53. Oke-noke. — Gibbs in Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, iii, 139, 18.53. Okenope.— Gibbs, MS. , B. A. E., 

 1852. 



Honwee Vallecito. A Diegueno ranch- 

 eria represented in the treaty of 1852 at 

 Santa Isabel, s. Cal.— H. R. Ex. Doc. 76, 

 34th Cong., 3d sess., 132, 1857. 



Hook. One of the small tribes or bands 

 formerly living in South Carolina on the 

 lower Pedee and its affluents, and possibly 

 of Siouan stock. Lawson (Hist. Car., 45, 

 1860) refers to them as foes of the Santee 

 and as living in 1701 about the mouth of 

 Winyaw bay, S. C. Consult Mooney, 

 Siouan Tribes of the East, Bull. B. A. E., 

 1895. See Backhook. 



Hooka {Ho'-o-ka). The Dove clans of 

 the Keresan pueblos of Santa Ana, San 

 Felipe, and Sia, New Mexico. That of 

 the last-mentioned village is extinct. 

 Hohoka-hano. — Hodge in Am. Anthrop., ix^, 350, 

 1896 (Sia form; hdno = 'people'). ^ Hooka-hano. — 

 Ibid. (Santa Ana form). Huuka-hano. Ibid. (San 

 Felipe form). 



Hook-stones. A variety of prehistoric 

 artifacts to which no particular purpose 

 can be assigned. They are heavy, hook- 

 like objects, from 1 to 4 or 5 in. in 

 length and of diversified proportions. 

 The principal variety standing on the 

 heavy rounded base resembles somewhat 

 the letter Z; others are longer and more 

 slender, with the base less developed, but 

 with the hook more pronounced. An 

 example with hook at both ends, prob- 

 ably not properly included in this group, 



