596 



IHASHA IKOGMIUT 



[b. a. e. 



IhaQktoijwaij. — Dorses' in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 218, 

 1897. Ihaiiktonwa".— ibid. 



Ihasha ('red lips'). A band of the 

 Hunkpatina or Lower Yanktonai Sioux. 

 Iha-ca.— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 218, 1897. 

 Iha-sa. — Ibid. 



Ihonatiria. A former Huron village 

 in Siincoe co., Ontario, built about 1634 

 and depopulated by pestilence in 1636. 

 The Jesuits esta))lished there the mission 

 of Immaculate Conception. 

 Ihonatiria. — Jes. Rel. for 1635, 30, 1858. Ihonat- 

 tiria.— ,Jes. Rel. for 1637, 153, 1858. Immaculate 

 Conception.— Shea, Cath. Mi.s.s., 173, 1855. 



Ijelirtung. The northernmost summer 

 settlement of the Akudnirmiut Eskimo of 

 Baffin land. — Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., 

 441, 1888. 



Ijirang. A fabulous people of central 

 Eskimo mythology. — Boas in 6th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 640, 1888. 



Ika. A Cochimi tribe of Lower Cali- 

 fornia, paid by Father Baegert to have 

 lived about 40 m. inland from Magdalena 

 bay in the 18th century, 

 lea.— Miihlenpl'ordt, Mexico, n, 2, 443, 1844. 

 Ikas. — Baegert, Nauhrieliten, 96, 1773. 



Ikak. An Aglemiut Eskimo village 

 near Naknek lake, Alaska; pop. 162 in 

 1880. 



Ik-khagmute. — Petroff in 10th Censu-s, Ahiska, 17, 

 1884. Savonoski.—Spurr and Post (1898) quoted bv 

 Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. TJkak.— Dall", 

 Alaska, map, 1870. 



Ikalu. A winter village of the Ita Es- 

 kimo on Whale sd., n. Greenland. 

 Idkalloo. — Markham in Trans. Ethnol. Soc. Lond., 

 129,1866. Ika'rlo. — Stein in Petermanns Mitt., no. 

 9, map, 1902. 



Ikanachaka {Ikana 'ground', atchaka 

 'reserved,' 'set apart,' 'beloved,' 'sa- 

 cred'). A former Upper Creek town, 

 located by Meek ( Romantic Passages in 

 S. W. Hist., 278, 1857) on the s. side of 

 Alabama r., between Pintlala and Big 

 Swamp cr., in Lowndes co., Ala. It was 

 built on "holy ground" and hence was 

 thought to be exempt from hostile in- 

 roads. Weatherford and the "prophet" 

 Hillis Hadjo resided there, and the Creek 

 forces were defeated there Dec. 23, 1813, 

 at which date it contained 200 houses 

 and included some Shawnee. 



(n. w. H.) 

 Eckanachacu. — Clay bourne (181 4) in Boudinot, Star 

 in the West, 254, 1816. Eckanakaka.— Drake, Bk. 

 Inds., bk. IV, 58, 1848. Econachaca.— Pickett, Hist. 

 Ala., II, 323, 1851. E-cun-cha-ta.— Rovce in 18th 

 Rep. B. A. E., Ala., map, 1899. Holy Ground.— 

 Claybourne (1814) in Boudinot. op. cit. Ikanatch- 

 aka.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., l, 132, 1884. 



Ikanhatki ( ' white ground ' ) . A former 

 Upper Creek town on the right bank of 

 lower Tallapoosa r., Montgomery co., 

 Ala., immediately below Kulumi town. 

 Swan, who passed there in 1791, says it 

 had been settled by Shawnee, who had 

 4 villages in the vicinity, and they are 

 called by him Shawnee refugees, but 

 Bartram (1775) states that they spoke 

 Muscogee. Under the name Ekundutske 

 the village was said to contain 47 families 

 in 1832. (a. s. G.) 



Cunhutke. — Bartram, Trav., 461, 1791. Econau- 

 tckky. — Sen. Ex. Doc. 425, 24th Cong., 1st sess., 

 255, 1836. Econautske. — Ibid. E-cun-hut-ke. — 

 Hawkins (1799), Sketch, 34, 1848. Ecunhutlee.— 

 Schoolcraft, Ind. 'tribes, IV, 380,1854. E kun 

 duts ke.— Census of 1832, ibid., 578. Ekunhutke.— 

 Pickett, Hist. Ala., ii, 267, 1851 (inhabited by 

 Shawanese). Ikan'-hatki.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. 

 Leg., I, 132, 1884. Kenhulka.— Swan (1791) in 

 Schoolcraft, op. cit., v, 262, 1855. White Ground. — 

 Finnelson (1792) in Am. State Pap., Ind. AfT., i, 

 289, 1832. 



Ikaruck. Mentioned as a Shasta band 

 of Shasta valley, n. Cal., in 1851, but it is 

 really a man's personal name. (r. b. d. ) 



I-ka-nuek. — McKee (1851) ia Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 32<i 

 Cong., spec, sess., 171, 1853. Ika-ruck, — Gibbs 

 (1851) in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, in, 171, 1853. 



Ikatchiocata. A former Choctaw town 

 between the headwaters of Chicasawhay 

 and Tombigbee rs., Miss. 

 Ikachioc ta. — Lattr6, map U. S., 1784. Ikechipou- 

 ta.— Philippeaux, map, 1781. 



Ikatek. An Angmagsalingmiut Eskimo 

 village on Sermilik fjord, e. Greenland; 

 pop. 58 in 1884. — Meddelelser om Gron- 

 land, X, map, 1888. 



Ikatikunahita {ikd^U 'swamp', kUnahVta 

 'long': Long Swamp town). A Chero- 

 kee settlement, about the period of the 

 removal in 1839, situated on Long Swamp 

 or., about the boundary of Forsyth and 

 Cherokee COS., N. w. Ga. (j. m.) 



Long Swamp Village. — Royce in 5th Rep. B. A. E., 

 map, 1887. 



Ikatlek. An Ikogmiut Eskimo village 

 on Yukon r., Alaska, 30 m. below Anvik; 

 pop. 9 in 1880. 



Ikaklagmute. — Raymond in Sen. Ex. Doc. 12, 

 42d Cong., 1st sess., 25, 1871. Ikatlegomut.— Nel- 

 son in 18lh Rep. B. A. E., map, 1899. Ikatlego- 

 mute. — PetrotY in 10th Census, Alaska, map, 1884. 

 Ikoklag'mut.— Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., 1,17, 

 1877. 



Ikerasak. A northern settlement of 

 the Angmagsalingmiut Eskimo of e. 

 Greenland, lat. 66°. — Meddelelser om 

 Gronland, xxvii, 22, 1902. 



Ikherkhamut {I-qer-qa-muV, 'end of 

 river people': Kaniagmiut name). A 

 division of the Ahtena near the mouth 

 of Copper r. , Alaska. — Hoffman, MS., 

 B. A. E., 1882. 



Ikmun (referring to an animal of the 

 cat kind). A band of the Yankton 

 Sioux. 



Ikmuij.— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 217, 1897. 

 Ikmu".— Ibid. 



Iknetuk. A Kaviagmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on Golofnin bay, Alaska; pop. 100 

 in 1880. 



Ignituk.— Nelson in 18th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1899. 

 Iknetuk. — Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1901. 

 Kniktag'emiit.— Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., I, 16, 

 1877. 



Ikogmiut. A tribe of Alaskan Eskimo 

 inhabiting both banks of the Yukon as 

 far as Makak. They have hairy bodies 

 and strong beards and exhibit a marked 

 variation in physique, customs, and dia- 

 lect from the Eskimo n. and e. of Norton 

 sd., being more nearly allied to the other 

 fishing tribes s. of them. Dall estimated 

 their number at 1,000 in 1870, includmg 

 the Chnaginiut. In 1890 there were 172 



