622 



ISALWAKTEN ISLETA 



[B. A. E. 



population of Scott valley occupied 7 vil- 

 lages and was estimated V)y Gibbs ( School- 

 craft, Ind. Triljes, in, 171, 1853) to num- 

 ber 420. One of these settlements was 

 apparently Watsaghika. 

 Iruai'tsu.— K. B. Dixon, int'ii, 1903 (correct name). 

 I'ruwai.— Curtin, M.S. vocab., B. .\. E., 1885. Scott's 

 Valley Indians.— McKee (1851) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 

 32d Cong., spec, sess., 170, 1853. Scott Valley In- 

 dians.— Steele in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1864, 120, IStio. 



Isalwakten. A body of Salish of Fraser 

 superintendency, Brit. Col. 

 Isalwakten. — Can. Ind. Aft'., 79, 1878. Isalwalken. — 

 Ibid., 138, 1879. 



Isamis. A body of Salish of Fraser 

 superintendency, Brit. Col. — Can. Ind. 

 Aff., 78, 1878. 



Isamuck. A body of Salish of Fraser 

 superintendency, Brit. Col. 



Isammuck. — Can. Ind. Aff., 138, 1879. Isamuck. — 

 Ibid., 78, 1878. 



Isanthcogna. A former Gabrielefio 

 rancheria in Los Angeles co., Cal., at a 

 locality later called Mission Vieja. — Ried 

 (1852) quoted by Hoffman in Bull. Essex 

 Inst., -wii, 2, 1885. 



Isanyati ('Santee'). A Brule Sioux 

 band, probably originally Santee. 

 Isaijyati.— Cleveland quoted by Dorsey in 15th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 219, 1897. Isa°yati.— Ibid. 



Isfanalgi. Anextinctclanof theCreeks, 

 said by Gatschet to be seemingly analo- 

 gous to the Ishpani phratry and clan of 

 the Chickasaw. 



Is-fa-nul'-ke.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 161, 1877. Ish- 

 fanalgi.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., i, 156, 1884. 



Isha. A former populous Chumashan 

 village near San Pedro, Ventura co., Cal. 

 I-ca'.— Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., 1884. 



Ishauu. The Coyote clan of the Hopi. 

 I'-sau-iih wiin-wii. — Fewkes in Am. Anthrop , vii, 

 403, 1894 ( w a n-wu= 'clan') . Isauu winwu. — 

 Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 584, 1900. Ish.— 

 Voth, C)rail)i Summer Snake C'eremony, 2S2, 1903. 

 I-sha-hue.— Bourke, Snake Dance, 171, 1884. Ish- 

 awu. — Dorsey and Voth. Oraibi Soj'al, 12, 1901. 

 I'shawuu. — Voth, Hopi Proper Names, 81, 1905. 

 Shahue.— Donaldson, Moqui Pueblo Inds., 65, 1893 

 (misquoting Bourke). 



Ishgna. A former Chumashan village 

 located by Taylor near the mouth of 

 Saticoy r., Ventura co., Cal. Perhaps 

 the same as Isha. 



Ishgua.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, July 24, 1863. 

 Ishguaget. — Ibid. 



Ishipishi. A Karok village on the w. 

 bank of Klamath r., n. w. Cal., a mile 

 above the mouth of the Salmon, opposite 

 Katimin, and, like it, burned by the 

 whites in 1852. 



Ish-e-pish-e.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Mar. 23, 

 1860. Ishipishi. — A. L. Kroeber, inf n, 1904 (Karok 

 name). Isshe-pishe-rah. — Gibbs, MS. .Misc., B. A. 

 E., 1852. Kepar. — Kroeber, inf'n, 1904 (Yurok 

 name). 



Ishpani ('Spanish'). A Chickasaw 

 phratry and clan. 

 Ish-pan-ee. — Morgan, Anc. Soc, 163, 1877. Ish- 



fani.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., I, 96, 1884. 

 spani. — Ibid., 1.56. 



Ishtakhechiduba {Icla^qe tci duba, 'four 

 white men's houses'). One of the later 

 villages occupied by the Kansa in their 

 migration up Kansas r. — Dorsey, Kansa 

 MS. vocab., B. A. E., 1883. 



Ishtowa. The extinct Arrow clans of 

 Sia and San Felipe pueblos, N. Mex. 

 ish'to-hano. — Ilodge in Am. Anthrop., i.x;, 348, 

 1896 (San Felipe form; fidno = 'people'). Ishtowa- 

 hano. — Ibid. (Sia form). 



IshtuaYene (Keresan: ishtoa, 'arrow'). 

 A place above Santo Domingo, N. Mex., 

 whence fled the Cochiti inhabitants of 

 Kuapa when pursued in prehistoric times 

 by the mythical Pinini (q. v.), or pyg- 

 mies, according to San Felipe tradition. 

 The place is so called on account of nu- 

 merousarrowpoints found there. — Bande- 

 lier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 166, 1892. 

 Isht-ua Yen-e. — Bandolier, op. cit. 



Ishtunga ( ' right side ' ) . The name ap- 

 plied to those divisions of the Kansa 

 that camped on the right side of the 

 tribal circle. 

 Ictuiiga.— Dorsey in 1.5th Rep. B. A. E., 230, 1897. 



Ishwidip. A Karok village on Klamath 

 r., Cal., inhabited in 1860. 

 E-swhedip.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Mar. 23, 1860. 

 Ishwidip.— .4. L. Kroeber, inf'n, 1905. 



Isi (a red and white flower). A clan 

 of San Felipe pueblo, N. Mex., of which 

 there was but a single survivor in 1895. 

 I'si-hano. — Hodge in Am. Anthrop., i.v, 350, 189& 

 {hCtno = 'people'). 



Isisokasimiks {T-sls^-o-kas-im-iks, 'hair 

 shirts' ). A division of the Kainah. 

 Hair Shirts. — Grinnell, Blackfoot Lodge Tales, 

 209, 1892. I-sis'-o-kas-im-iks.— Ibid. The Robes, 

 with Hair on the outside. — Culbertson in Smithson. 

 Rep. 1850, 144, 18.51. 



Isituclii. A former Aleut vdllage oa 

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

 group of the Aleutians, now uninhabited. 



Isknlani ('small' [people]). A Choc- 

 taw clan of the Watakihulata phratry. — 

 Morgan, Anc. Soc, 162, 1878. 



Isle aux Tourtes (French: 'turtle-dove 

 island'). A French Sulpitian missiou 

 station, probably on Ottawa r., Quebec, 

 begun for the Algcmkin and Nipissing 

 abi lut 1 720, butshortly afterward removed 

 to Oka, q. v.— Shea, Cath. Miss., 333, 1855. 



Isle of St John's. A village or resort of 

 a band of Micmac, probably in Nova 

 Scotia, in 1760.— Frye (1760") in Mass. 

 Hist. Soc. Coll., 1st s., X, 115, 1809. 



Isleta ( Span : 'islet ' , so named from the 

 location of the old village on a delta or 

 island between the bed of a mountain 

 torrent and the Rio Grande. The native 

 name of the pueblo is Shlewhihak, ' knife 

 laid on the ground to play xvhib,' whib be- 

 ing a native foot race. The name was 

 perhaps suggested by the knife-like shape 

 of the lava ridge on which the pueblo is 

 built. — Lummis). A Tigua pueblo on the 

 w^ bank of the Rio Grande, about 12 m. 

 s. of Alliuquerque, N. Mex. According 

 to Lummis it stands on the site it occu- 

 pied at the time of the Spanish discovery 

 in 1540, when it formed one of the vil- 

 lages of the province of Tiguex of Coro- 

 nad(j's chroniclers. It was the seat of the 

 Franciscan mission of San Antonio de 

 Isleta from prior to 1629, and about 1 675 



