574 



HOYIMA HUDA 



[B. A. E. 



upper shores of Quatsino sd. ; they were 

 exterminated by the Koskimo. 

 Ho-ya.— Dawson in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can. for 

 1897, sec. II, 70. Xo'yalas. — Boas in Mem. Am. 

 Mus. Nat. Hist., v, pt. 2, 401, 1902. Xoya'les.— 

 Boas in Rep. Nat. Mus. for 1895, 332. 



Hoyima. A former Yokuts ( Mariposan ) 

 tribe on San Joaquin r., Cal. — A. L. Kroe- 

 ber, infn, 1906. 



Huachi. A former Costanoan village 

 near Santa Cruz mission, Cal. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Apr. 5, 1860. 



Huachinera (so called on account of the 

 tascal wood found there in abundance. — 

 Rudo Ensayo). An Opata pueblo and 

 seat of a Spanish mission, founded about 

 1645, which afterward became a visita of 

 Baseraca; situated on Tesorobabi cr., a 

 branch of Rio Bavispe, e. Sonora, Mexico, 

 near the Chihuahua border. Population 

 538 in 1678; 285 in 1730, but as it became 

 the place of refuge of the inhabitants of 

 Baquigopa and Batesopa on the abandon- 

 ment of those villages later in the 18th 

 century, the population was augmented. 

 Total pop. 337 in 1900. (f. w. h. ) 



Guatzinera, — Rudo Ensayo {ca. 1763), Guiteras 

 trans., 217, 1894. Huachinera. — Bandelier in Arch. 

 Inst. Papers, lll, pt. 1, 59, 1890. San Juan Guachi- 

 rita. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 343, 1864 (mentioned 

 as if distinct from Huachinera) . S. Juan de Gua- 

 chinela, — Rivera, Diario, leg. 1444, 1736. S. Juan 

 Guachinera, — Zapata (1678) quoted by Bancroft, 

 No. Mex. States, i, 246, 1884. 



Huadjinaas-hadai. [Xu^Adjt na^as xa^- 

 da-i, ' people of grizzly-bear house ' ) . A 

 subdivision of the Koetas family of the 

 Kaigani Haida of British Columbia. — 

 Swanton, Cont. Haida, 272, 1905. 



Huados (A'hck/o^.s, 'standing- water peo- 

 ple,' in allusion to the swampy nature 

 of the land around their towns). A di- 

 vision of the Raven clan of the Haida, 

 formerly occupying the e. shore of Gra- 

 ham id., Queen Charlotte group, Brit. Col. 

 Originally they were settled at Naikun, 

 but on account of wars they moved to C. 

 Ball, thence to Skidegate. The Naikun- 

 kegawai seem to have been a sort of aristo- 

 cratic branch of this family, (j. r. s. ) 

 ftua'dos.— Boas, 12th Rep. N. W. Tribes Canada, 

 24, 1898. Xuado's.— Swanton, Cont. Haida, 270, 

 1905. 



Huados. A small Haida town, inhabited 

 by a family bearing the same name, near 

 the town of Hlgihla-ala, n. of C. Ball, 

 Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. Col. — Swan- 

 ton, Cont. Haida, 280, 1905. 



Haalga. Given by Bourke (Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, ii, 180, 1889) as the Moon clan 

 of the Mohave; but according to Kroe- 

 ber, so far as known the Mohave do not 

 name their clans, and their name for moon 

 is halya. 



Hualimea. A former Cochimi rancheria 

 under San Ignacio mission, Lower Cali- 

 fornia, about lat. 28° 40^— Tavlor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Jan. 17, 1862. 



Hualquilme. A former Costanoan vil- 

 lage near Santa Cruz mission, Cal. — 

 Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 5, 1860. 



Huanes. A former tribe of s. Texas, 

 mentioned with the Pampoas, Mesquites, 

 Pastias, Camamas, Cacanas, and Canas, as 

 a tribe for which mission San Jos6 at San 

 Antonio had been founded. 

 Xuanes.— Solis, Diario, 1767-68, cited by H. E. Bol- 

 ton, infn, 1906. 



Huaque. Mentioned by Oviedo (Hist. 

 Gen. Indies, iii, 628, 1853) as one of the 

 provinces or villages visited by Ayllon in 

 1520. Probably on the South Carolina 

 coast. 



Huascari. A tribe or band, probably 

 Paiute, living in 1775 in lat. 38° 3^, doubt- 

 less ins. Utah. — Dominguezand Escalante 

 in Doc. Hist. Mex., 2d s., i, 537, 1854. 



Huashpatzena ( h iiaxhpa — ' dance-kilt ' ) . 

 A pueblo occupied after 1605 by the an- 

 cestors of the inhabitants of Santo Do- 

 mingo pueblo, near the present site of 

 the latter, on the e. bank of the Rio 

 Grande, n. central New Mexico. The 

 pueblo was erected after the destruction, 

 by a freshet, of the second Gipuy (q. v.) 

 to the eastward. A part of Huashpatzena 

 was also carried away by flood, compel- 

 ling the villagers to move farther east, 

 where they built the pueblo of Kiua — 

 the present Santo Domingo, q. v. 

 Euash-pa Tzen-a. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Pa- 

 pers, IV, 187, 1892. Uash-pa Tze-na.— Ibid., in, 34, 

 1890. 



Huasna. A former Chumashan village 

 near Purisima mission, Santa Barbara co., 

 Cal.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Huatabampo. One of the principal set- 

 tlements of the Mayo, in Sonora, Mexico; 

 pop. 1,553 in 1900. — Censo del Estado de 

 Sonora, 96, 1901. 



Huaxicori. A former Tepehuane pueblo 

 in lat. 23°, long. 105° 30^ Sinaloa, Mexico. 

 Huajicori. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., map, 1864. 

 Huaxicori.— Ibid., 281. 



Huchiltchik {IliVtdlttcU; ' round clear- 

 ing ' ) . A Pima village below Santa Ana, 

 on the N. bank of the Gila, ins. Arizona. 

 Hbrltchdletchok.— ten Kate quoted by Gatschet, 

 MS., B. A. E., x.\, 199, 1888 (tran.s. 'plain'). Hu'- 

 tcmtcik.— Russell, Pima MS., B. A. E., 1902. Buen 

 llano.— Bailey in Ind. Aff. Rep., 208, 1858. Llano.— 

 Brown, Apache Country. 270, 1869. 



Huchnom. A division of the Yuki of n. 

 California, speaking a dialect divergent 

 from that of the Round Valley Indians. 

 They lived on South Eel r. above its con- 

 fluence with the middle fork of Eel r., or 

 in adjacent territories, and on the head- 

 waters of Russian r. in upper Potter val- 

 ley. To the N. of them were the Witu- 

 komnom Yuki, to the e. the Wintun, and 

 on the other sides were Pomo tribes. 

 The Pomo call them Tatu, the whites 

 Redwoods, from Redwood cr. 

 Hiich'-nom.— Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 

 126, 1877 (trans, 'outside the valley'). Red- 

 woods.— Ind. Aff. Rep., 75, 1870. Tahtoos.— Powers 

 in Overland Mo., ix, 507, 1872. Ta-tu.— Powers 

 in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., op. cit., 139 (so called by 

 Pomo of Potter valley). 



Huda ( ' wind ' ) . A Yuchi clan. 

 Huda taha.— Gatschet, Uchee MS., B. A. E., 70, 

 1885. 



