BDLL. 30] 



HUWI ICHENTA 



593 



Ibid. Hu-wan-i-ki'-ka-ra'-tea-da. — Dorsey in 15th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 240, 1897. 



Huwi. The Dove clan of the Chua 

 (Rattlesnake) phratry of the Hopi. 

 He- wi.— Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E. . 38, 1891 . Hiiwi 

 winwu.— Fewkes in 19tli Rep. B. A. E., 582, 1901 

 {icinivu = ' clan' ). Hii'-wi wun-wii. — Fewkes in 

 Am. Anthrop., vn, 402, 1894. 



Hwades ( Xude^s, ' cut beach ' ) . The 

 principal village of the Koskimo and Ko- 

 prino atQuatsino narrows, Vancouver id. 

 Hwat-es'.— Dawson in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can. for 

 1887, sec. 11, 05, 1888. Hwot-es. — Daw.son in Can. 

 Geol.Surv., map, 1887. Xude's.— Boas, inf'n,1906. 



Hwahwatl (Qwa^qwa//). A Salish tribe 

 on Englishman r., Vancouver id., speak- 

 ing the Puntlatsh dialect. — Boas, MS. 

 B. A. E., 1887. 



Hwotat. A Hwotsotenne village on the 

 E. side of Babine lake, near its outlet, 

 in British Columbia. 



Hwo'-tat.— Morice in Trans. Rov. Soc. Can. ,x, 109, 

 1893. Whalatt.— Dowiiie in Mayne, Brit. Col., 453, 

 1861 (misprint ). Whatatt. — Downie in Jour. Roy. 

 Geog. Soc., XXXI, 2.53, 1861. Wut-at. — Dawson in 

 Geol. Surv. Can., 26b, 1881. 



Hwotsotenne ( ' people of Spider river ' ) . 

 A Takulli tribe, belonging to the BaVjine 

 branch, living on Bulkley r. and hunting 

 as far as Frangois lake, Brit. Col. They 

 are somewhat mixed with their imme- 

 diate neighbors, the Kitksan (Morice in 

 Trans. Can. Inst., 27, 1893). Their vil- 

 lages are Hagwilget, Hwotat, Keyerhwot- 

 ket, Lachalsap,Tsechah, and Tselkazkvvo. 

 Akwilget.— Morice, Notes on VV. Dent's, 27, 1893 

 (' well dressed': Kitksan name) . Hwotso'tenne. — 

 Morice in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., map, 1892. Out- 

 sotin. — British Colurnbia map, 1872. 



Hykehah. A former Chickasaw town, 

 one of a settlement of five, probably in or 

 near Pontotoc co.. Miss. 

 Hikihaw.— Romans, Florida, 63, 1775. Hikkihaw.— 

 W. Florida map, ca. 1775. Hykehah, — Adair, Am. 

 Ind., 352, 1775. 



Hykwa. See Hiatwa. 



Hyperboreans (Greek). Applied bv Ban- 

 croft (Nat. Races, i, 37, 1882) to the'tribes 

 of extreme n. w. America, n. of lat. 55°, 

 including western and southern Eskimo, 

 Aleut, Tlingit, and Athapascan tribes; by 

 others the name is employed to designate 

 all the circumpolar tribes of both the Old 

 and the New World. 



Hyukkeni. A former Choctaw settle- 

 ment, noted by Romans in 1775, but not 

 located on his map unless it be an unnum- 

 bered town on the e. side of Buckatunna 

 cr., N. E. of Yowani, in the present Mis- 

 sissippi. — Halbertin Miss. Hist. Soc. Pub., 

 VI, 432, 1902. 



lahenhouton ('at the caves.' — Hewitt). 

 A Huron village in Ontario in 1637. — Jes. 

 Rel. for 1637, 159, 1858. 



lalamma. A former Chumashan vil- 

 lage subordinate to Purisima mission, 

 Santa Barbara co., Cal. — Tavlor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Oct. 18,1861. 



lalamne. A former Chumashan village 

 subordinate to Santa Inez mission, Santa 

 Barbara co., Cal. (Taylor in Cal. Farmer, 



Oct. 18, 1861). Possibly the same as 

 lalamma. 



lalmuk (la^lmuq). A Squawmish vil- 

 lage community at Jericho, Burrard in- 

 let, Brit. Col.— Hill-Tout in Rep. B. A. 

 A. S., 475, 1900. 



lalostimot ( Ltlr/stimot, ' making good 

 fire'). A Talio division among the Bel- 

 lacoola of British Columbia; named from 

 a reputed ancestor. 



lalo'stimot.— Boas in 7th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can- 

 ada, 3, 1891. T'a't'Entsait, — Ibid. (' a cave pro- 

 tecting from rain ': secret .society name). 



lana [la'na). The Corn clan of the 

 pueblo of Taos, N. Mex. 

 lana-taiina. — Hodge, field notes, B. A. E., 1895 

 (taiina = ' people'). 



Ibache ('holds the firebrand to sacred 

 pipes'). A Kansa gens. Its subgentes 

 are Khuyeguzhinga and Mikaunika- 

 shinga. 



Hanga jiiiga. — Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 231, 

 1897 ('small Hanga'). Ibatc'e.— Ibid. 



Ibln. A former Aleut village on Agattu 

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

 the Aleutians, now uninhabited. 



Ibitoupa. A small tribe of unknown 

 affinity, but the theory that they were 

 connected with the Chickasaw has more 

 arguments in its favor than any other. 

 In 1699 they formed one of the villages 

 mentioned by Iberville (Margry, Dec, 

 IV, 180, 1880) as situated on Yazoo r., 

 Ibitoupa being near the upper end of the 

 group between the Chaquesauma (Chak- 

 chiuma) and the Thysia (Tioux) , accord- 

 ing to the order named, which appears 

 to be substantially correct, although Coxe 

 (Caroiana, 10, 1741) who omits Thysia, 

 makes the Ibitoupa settlement expressly 

 the uppermost of the series. The Ibitoupa 

 and Chakchiuma, together with the Ta- 

 poucha (Taposa), were united in one 

 village on the upper Yazoo by 1798. 

 What eventually became of them is not 

 known, but it is probable that they were 

 absorbed by theChickasaw. See Itomapa. 



(a.s. G.) 

 Bitoupas.— Penicaut (1700) in French, Hist. Coll. 

 La., n. s , I, 61, 1869. Epjtoupa.— Coxe, Caroiana, 

 10, map, 1741. Ouitoupas.— Penicaut (1700) in 

 Margry, Dec, v, 401, 1883. Outapa.— Iberville 

 (1699), ibid., iv, 180, 18s0. Outaypes.— Martin, 

 Hist. La., I, 249, 1827. Witoupo.— Alcedo, Die. 

 Geog., V, 343, 1789 (misprint). Witowpa.— Esnauts 

 et Rapilly, map, 1777. Witowpo.— Philippeaux, 

 map of English Col., 1781. Ybitoopas. — Romans, 

 Fla., I, 101, 1775. Ybxtoupas.— Baudry des Lo- 

 zieres, Voy. a la Louisiane, 245, 1S02 



Icayme. Given as the native name of 

 the site on which San Luis Rey mission, 

 s. California, was founded; perhaps also 

 the name of a neighboring Diegueiio vil- 

 lage. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Feb. 22, 

 1860. 



Ichenta. A village of the Chalone divi- 

 sion of the Costanoan family, formerly 

 near Soledad mission, Cal. 

 Ichenta.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 20, 1860. 

 San Jose. — Ibid. 



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