BULL.. 301 



IKOGMIUT ILLINOIS 



597 



Ikogmiut proper. Holmberg divided 

 the natives of the delta into the Kwik- 

 pagmiut and the Kwikhiagniiut, living 

 respectively on the Kwikpak and Kwik- 

 luak passes. The villages are Asko, 

 Bazhi, Ignok, Ikatlek, Ikogmiut, Inga- 

 hame, Ingrakak, Katagkag, Kenunimik, 

 Kikhkat, Koko, Koserefski, Kuyikannik- 

 pul, Kvikak, Makak, Nukluak, Nunaikak, 

 Nunaktak, Paimute, Pogoreshapka, and 

 Uglovaia. 



EkSg'mut.— Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., i, 17, 1877. 

 Ekogmuts. — Dall, Alaska, 407, 1870. Hekinx- 

 tana.— Doro.schin in Radloff, Worterbuch ' d. 

 Kinai-Spr., 29, 1874 (Kinai name). Ikogmjut. — 

 Holmberg, Ethnog. Skizz., map, 142, 1855. Ikvog- 

 mutes. — St'hwatka, Milit. Kecon., E.xplor. in 

 Alaska, 353, 1900. Kahvichpaks.— Elliott, Cond. 

 Aff. in Alaska, 29, 1874. Koikhpagamute.— Petroff 

 in Am. Nat., XVI, 670, 1882 (Eskimo: 'iieopk^of the 

 Kwikpak, the big river'). Kuwichpackmiiten. — 

 Wr.uigell, Ethnog. Nachr., 122, 1839. Kvikhpag- 

 mute. — Zagoskin qnotccl by Petroff in 10th Census, 

 Ala.ska, 37, 1884. Kwichliuagmjuten. — Holmberg, 

 Ethnog. Skizz., 5, 1855. Kwichpacker. — Wrangell, 

 Ethnog. Nachr., 122, 1839. Kwichpagmjuten. — 

 Holmberg, Ethnog. Skizz., 5, 1855. Kwichpak. — 

 Whvmper, Trav. in Alaska, map, 1808. Kwikh- 

 pag-'mut.— Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., I, 17, 1877. 



Ikogmiut. An Ikogmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on the lower Yukon, Alaska, where 

 the Ru.^sians established a mission about 

 1843. Pop. 148 in 1880, 140 in 1890, 166 

 in 1900. 



Icogmute. — Bruce, Alaska, map, 1885. Ikogh- 

 miout. — Zagoskine in Nouv. Ann. \'oy., nth s., 

 XXI, map, 1850. Ikogmut.— Nelson in "l8th Rep. 

 B. A. E., pi. ii, 1899. Ikogmute.— Petroff, Rep. 

 on Alaska, map, 1884. Ikuagmjut. — Holmberg, 

 Ethnog. Skizz., map, 18.55. 



Ikolga. A former Aleut village on Un- 

 alaska, Aleutian id.s., Alaska. — Coxe, 

 Russian Discov., 164, 1787. 



Iktigalik. A Kaiyuhkhotana village 

 on Unalaklik r., Alaska, having 10 houses 

 in 1866. 



Igtigalik. — Whvmper in Jour. Roy. Geog. Soc, 

 225, 18(58. Iktigalik.— Dall, Alaska, 26, 1870. 

 New Ulukuk. — Whymper, Trav. in Alaska, 175, 

 1869. No ve Ulukuk. — Ibid. (Russian name). 



Ikuak. A Chnagmiut village on the 

 lower Yukon, Alaska, near the head of the 

 delta; pop. 65 in 1890. 



Iko-agmiut. — 11th Censu.s. Alaska, 165, 1893. Iku- 

 agmiut. — Tikhmenief (1861) quoted by Baker, 

 Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1901. Ikuak. — Baker, ibid. 

 Yukagamut. — Kaymond (1869), quoted by Baker, 

 ibid. 



Ikwopsum. A Squawmish village com- 

 munitv on the left bank of Squawmisht 

 r., Brft. Col. 



Eukwhatsum. — Survey map, U. S. Hydrog. Office. 

 Ikwo'psum.— Hill-Tout in Rep. Brit. A. A. S., 47.5, 

 1900. Yik'oa'psan.— Boas, MS., B. A. E., 1887. 



Ilamatech. A formerTepehuane pueblo 

 in Durango, Mexico, and the seat of a 

 niis.-ion. 



S. Antonio Ilamatech. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 319, 

 1864. 



Ildjunai-hadai {Fldjvna-i xd'da-i, 'val- 

 uable-house people'). A subdivision of 

 the Yadus, a family of the Eagle clan of 

 the Ha da in w. British Columbia. The 

 name is derived irom that of a house. — 

 Swanton, Cont. Haida, 276, 1905. 



Llle Percee. A French mission, proba- 

 bly among the Micmac, on the Gulf of 



St i^awrence in the 17th century. — Shea, 

 Miss. Val., 85, 1852. 



Ilex cassine. See Black drink. 



Iliamna. A Kaniagmiut Eskimo village 

 on the s. shore of Iliamna lake, Alaska; 

 pop. 49 in 1880, 76 in 1890. 

 Iliamna. — Uth Census, Alaska, 95, 1893. Ilyam- 

 na.— Petroff, 10th Census, Alaska, 17, 1884. 



His ( ' spread-legs beach ' ) . A Ninikish 

 Kwakiutl village on Cormorant id., Alert 

 bay, Brit. Col., opposite Vancouver id. 

 Some Kwakiutl proper come here during ' 

 the salmon season. — Boas in Bull. Am. 

 Geog. Soc, 227, 1887. 



I-lis.— Daw.son in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., sec. n, 65, 

 1887. 



Ilisees. Mentioned by Ker ( Travels, 98, 

 1816) as the native name of a tribe, num- 

 bering about 2,000, which he says he met 

 on upper Red r. of Louisiana, apparently 

 in the n. e. corner of Texas. Their chief 

 village was said to be Wascoo. Both the 

 tribe and the village are seemingly imag- 

 inary. 



Iliuliuk (Aleut: 'harmony'). A town 

 on Unalaska id., Alaska, the headquar- 

 ters of the commercial interests of the 

 Aleutians (Schwatka, Mil. Recon., 115, 

 1885). Pop. 196 in 1831, 406 in 1880, 317 in 

 1890. 



Gavanskoe.— Veniaminoff, Zapiski, ii, 202, 1840 

 (Russian: 'harbor'). Gavanskoi.— Elliott, Cond. 

 Aff. Alaska, 1875. Gawanskoje. — H(jlmberg, Eth- 

 nog. Skizz., map, 18.55. Iljljuljuk.— Ibid. lUoo- 

 look.— Elliott, Our Aret. Prov., map, 1886. Oona- 

 laska.— Schwatka, Mil. Recon., 115, 1885. Una- 

 laska.— 11th Census, Alaska, 88, 1893. 



Iliutak. A Kuskwogmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on Kuskokwim bay, Alaska; pop. 

 40 in 1880. 

 Iliutagamute.— Petroff, Rep. on Alaska, 53, 1884. 



Ilkatsho ( ' the big fattening ' ) . A vil- 

 lage of the Ntshaautin on the lake at the 

 head of Blackwater r., Brit. Col. The 

 population is a mixed one of Takulli and 

 Bellacoola descent, 

 al'katco. — Morice in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., 109, 



1892. I'ka-tco. — Morice, Notes on W. D6n6s, 25, 



1893. Uhlchako.— Can. Ind. Aff., 285, 1902. 

 Illinois [lliniirek, from iUni 'man', iiu 



^\s\ek plural termination, changed by the 

 French to ois). A confetleracy of Algon- 

 quian tribes, formerly occupying s. Wis- 

 consin, n. Illinois, and sections of Iowa and 

 Missouri, comprising the Cahokia, Kas- 

 kaskia, Michigamea, Moingwena, Peoria, 

 and Tamaroa. 



The Jesuit Relation for 1660 represents 

 them as livings, w. of Green bay. Wis., in 

 60 villages, and gives an extravagant esti- 

 mate of the population, 20,000 men, or 

 70,000 souls. The statement in the Jes- 

 uit Relations that they came from the 

 border of a great sea in the far W. arose, 

 no doubt (as Tailhan suggests), from a 

 misunderstanding of the term "great 

 water," given by the Indians, which in 

 fact referred to the Mississippi. Their 

 exact location when first heard of by the 

 whites can not be determined with cer- 

 tainty, as the tribes and bands were more 



