BULL. 30] 



HOT SPKINGS HOYALAS 



573 



Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 27, 1889) as the 

 name of a sulxiivision of the Yaku-lanas, 

 a family of the Raven clan of the Haida 

 in Alaska. It is in reality only a house 

 name belonging to that family. ( ,i. r. s. ) 



Hot Springs. A summer camp of the 

 Sitka Indians on Baranoff id., Alaska. 

 There were 26 people there in 1880. — Pe- 

 troff in Tenth Census, Alaska, 32, 188-i. 



Hottrochtac. A Costanoan village situ- 

 ated in 1819 -within 10 m. of Santa Cruz 

 mission, Cal. — Tavlor in Cal. Farmer, 

 Apr. o, I860. 



Houaneiha. An unidentified village or 

 tribe mentioned to Joutel (Margrv, Dec, 

 III, 409, 1878) in 1687, while he was stay- - 

 ing with the Kadohadacho on Red r. of 

 Louisiana, by the chief of that tribe as 

 being among his enemies. 



Houattoehronon (Huron: Kwnthoge'- 

 roDon, 'people of the sunsetting or of 

 the west'). One of a number of tribes, 

 mentioned in the Jesuit Relation for 

 1640, which w^ere reputed to be seden- 

 tai-y, populous, and agricultural. Later 

 the form Quatoghe, or Quadoge, is 

 found as the name of the s. end of L. 

 Michigan, being so employed on Mitch- 

 ell's map of the British Colonies in N. A., 

 of 1755, and on Jefferys' and D'Anville's 

 maps, the one of 1777 and the other of 

 1775. Meaning simply 'people of the 

 west', it was evidently the name of some 

 people living in the w., at the s. end of 

 L. Michigan. For some unknown reason 

 the name Quatoghees or Quatoghies was 

 applied to the Tionontati by Colden, and 

 by Gallatin, Schoolcraft, and others who 

 followed him; but this is an apparent 

 error, as the Tionontati, or Hurons du 

 Petun, never lived at the s. end of L. 

 Michigan. In the famous deed of the 

 hunting grounds of the Five Nations to 

 the King of England, in 1701, Quadoge 

 is given as the western boundary, at a 

 point w. of the Miami. Father JPotier, 

 who resided at Detroit in 1751, says that 

 8atoeronnon (Ouatoieronon and Quatoke- 

 ronon being cognate forms) was the 

 Huron name for the Sauk. ( j. n. b. h. ) 

 Houattoehronon.— Jes. Rel.. index, 1858. Hvat- 

 toehronon. -.Tes. Rel. 16^0, 35, 1858. Satoeronnon.— 

 Potier, Rac. Hur. et Gram., MS., 1751. 



Houjets. An unidentified tribe contain- 

 ing 40 men described as of fine stature, 

 living on a branch of Red r. of Louisiana, 

 6 leagues from the main stream, at the 

 beginning of the 19th century. — Baudry 

 des Lozieres, Vov. a la Louisiana, 242, 

 249, 1802. 



Houtgna. A former Gabrieleiio ran- 

 cheria in Los A-ngeles co., Cal., ata locality 

 later called Ranchitode Lugo. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, June 8, 1860. 



Howakeeas. Mentioned with the Choc- 

 taw as forming a small partv which was 

 defeated by the Creeks (Oglethorpe, 1743, 



in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist, vi, 242, 1S55). 

 Possibly a bad misprint for Timucua. 



Howiri. A ruined pueblo, formerly oc- 

 cupied by the Tewa, at the Rito Colo- 

 rado, about 10 m. w. of the Hot Springs, 

 near Abiquiu, Rio Arriba co., N. Mex. 

 See Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, in, 

 61, 1890; IV, 22, 1892; Hewett in Bull. 32, 

 B. A. E., 40, 1906. 

 Ho-ui-ri. — Bandelier, op. cit. 



Howkan (^c/ok.'ian, aTlingit word prob- 

 ablv referring to a stone which stood up 

 in front of the town, although some 

 derive it from qowaka'n, 'deer,' deer be- 

 ing numerous there). A Haida town on 

 Long id., facing Dall id., Alaska, below 

 which a great canoe fight took place, 

 resulting in the occupancy of part of 

 Prince of Wales id. by the Kaigani Haida. 

 It was the seat of several families, but 

 the Chaahl-lanas owned it. According 

 to John Work's estimate (1836-41) there 

 were 27 houses and 458 inhal)itants. 

 Petroff gave the population as 287 in 

 1880-81; in 1890 there were 90; in 1900, 

 145, including whites. (.i. r. s. ) 



Hau kan hade.— Krause, Tlinkit Indianer, 304, 

 1885. Hou a guan.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, v, 489, 

 1855 (after Work, 1836-41). Houkan Haade.— 

 Harrison in Proc. and Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., sec. 

 n, 125, 1895. How-a-guan. — Dawson, Q.Charlotte 

 Ids., 173b, 1880 (after Work). Howakan.— Petroff in 

 10th Census, Alaska, 32, 1884. Howkan.— Eleventh 

 Census, Alaska, 31, 1890. TJon-a-gan.— Kane, 

 Wand, in N. A., app., 1859 (misprint from Work). 



Howungkut. A Hupa village of the 

 southern division, nearly due s. of Medild- 

 ing, from which it is separated by Trinity 

 r., Cal. At this village the first day's 

 dancing of the white deer-skin dance of 

 the Hupa takes place. (p. e. q. ) 



Wang'-kat.— Powers in Cont. X. A. Ethnol., in, 

 73, 1877. Xowiinkut. — Goddard, Life and Culture 

 of the Hupa, 12, 1903. 



Hoya. The name of a chief and also of 

 a former settlement on or near the s. coast 

 of South Carolina, visited by Jean Ribault 

 in 1562. Apparently the Ahoya men- 

 tioned by Vandera in 1567. The people 

 were friendly with and were possibly 

 related to the Edisto, q. v. 

 Ahoya.— Vandera (1567) in Smith, Colec. Doc. Fla., 

 16, 1857. Hoya.— Ribault (1562) in Hakluyt.Vov., 

 1600, 379, 1800. 



Hoya {Xo'ya, 'raven' in the Skide- 

 gatedialect). One of the two great phra- 

 tries or clans into which the Haida are 

 divided. (j. r. s. ) 



K'oa'la.— Boas, Fifth and Twelfth Reps. N. \V. 

 Tribes Canada, passim (improperly applied; 

 K'oa'la or K.'oa'las means simply 'people of an- 

 other clan '). Yehl.— Swanton, iiif'n, 1900 (name 

 in Mrtsset dialect). 



Hoyagundla {Xo^ya gA'nui, 'raven 

 creek'). A Haida town' on a stream of 

 the same name which flows into Hecate 

 str. a short distance s. of C. Fife, Queen 

 Charlotte ids., Brit. Col. It was occupied 

 b}' the Djahui-gitinai. — Swanton, Cont. 

 Haida, 280, 1905. 



Hoyalas ('the troubled ones'). A 

 Kw'akiutl tribe formerly occupying the 



