626 



ITIJARELLING IVIKAT 



[b. a. e. 



I-techees.— McKeeetal. (1851) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 

 32d Cong., spec, sess., 75, 1S53. It-i'-cha. — Powers 

 in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., iii, 370, 1«77. I-to-ches.— 

 Barbour (185'2) in Sen. Ex. Doc.4,32d Cong., spec, 

 ses-i., 252, 1852. Ituchas. — Lewis in Ind. Aff. Rep., 

 399, 1858 (a band of the Wattokes high up on 

 Kings r.). 



Itijarelling. A summer settlement of 

 Padlimiut Et^kimo on Exeter sd., Baffin 

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

 1888. 



Itivimiut ('people of the farther side,' 

 so called by the Eskimo of Labrador 

 proper). A tribe of Labrador Eskimo 

 hihabiting the e. coast of Hudson bay, 

 from lat. 53° to 58°; pop. estimated at 500. 

 These people hunt in the interior half- 

 way across the peninsula, continually 

 scouring the coast for seal and the plains 

 and hills for caribou to obtain necessary 

 food and clothing. 



Itivimiut. — Tnrner in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., ii, 99, 

 1888. Thiviment.— Boas in Am. Antiq., 40, 1888 

 (misprint). 



Itivliarsuk. An Eskimo village in w. 

 Greenland, lat. 73° 30^. — Science, xi, map, 

 259, 1888. 



Itiwa Ateuna ( ' those of the midmost 

 all'). A Zuni phratry embracing the 

 Pichi or Mula (Parrot or Macaw), Taa 

 (Seed or Corn), and Yatokya (Sun) 

 clans. — Gushing, inf'n, 1891. 



Itliok. A Squawmish village commu- 

 nity on the left bank of Squawmisht r., 

 Brit. Gol. 



Itli'oq.— Hill-Tout in Rep. Brit. A. A. S., 474, 1900. 

 Yi«e'q.— Boas, MS., B. A. E., 1887. 



Itokakhtina ('dwellers at the south'). 

 A band of the Sisseton Sioux; an off- 

 shoot of the Basdecheshni. 

 ItokaK-tina.— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 217, 

 1897. Itokaq-tina. — Ibid. 



ItDmapa. Mentioned by Martin (Hist. 

 La., I, 252, 1820) as a tribe, on the w. side 

 of the lower Mississippi, which sent a 

 deputation to the village of the Acolapissa 

 in 1717 to meet Bienville. Gf. Ibitoupa. 



Itrahani. The Cottonwood clan of Co- 

 chiti pueblo, N. Mex. 



Hiits Hanyi. — Bandelier, Delight Makers, 256, 

 1890 (.same?). I'trahani hanuch. — Hodge in Am. 

 Anthrop., ix, 350, 1896 (/(a»/.Mc/( = ' people'). 



Itsaatiaga ( It-sd^-d-ti-a-ga). A Paviotso 

 band formerly living about Unionville, 

 w. Nev.— Powell, Paviotso MS., B. A. E., 

 1881. 



Itscheabine. A division of the Assini- 

 boin, numbering 850, including 250 war- 

 riors, in 100 tipis, when seen by Lewis 

 and Clark in 1804, at which time they 

 roved on the headwaters of Mouse (Sou- 

 ris), Qu'Appelle, and Assiniboine rs., in 

 the United States and Canada. In 1808, 

 according to Henry (Cones, New Light, 

 II, 522, 1897), they were at enmity with 

 the Dakota, Shoshoni, and with some of 

 the Arikara and other tribes, but were 

 friendly with the Gree. They lived by 

 huntinsr, conducting trade with the Hud- 

 son's Bay, Northwest, and X. Y. fur 

 companies, whose posts were 150 m. n. of" 



Ft Mandan. They are said to have paid 

 little attention to their engagements and 

 were great drunkards. In 1853 they 

 numbered 10 lodges under chief Les 

 Yeux Gris. (f. w. h.) 



Gens de Feuilles. — Lewis and Clark, Exped., i, 217, 

 1893. Gensdela Feuille. — Badin (1830) in Ann.de 

 la I'rop. de la Foi, iv, .536, 1843 (same?). Gens des 

 fees or Girls. — Orig. Jour. Lewis and Clark, vi, 

 104, 1905 (given as traders' nickname). Gens 

 des filles.— Maximilian, Trav., 194, 1843. Gens des 

 Tee,— Orig. ,Iour. Lewisand Clark, op. cit. Girls' 

 band. — Hayden quoted by Dorsey in 15th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 222, 1897. Itscheabine. — Maximilian, op. 

 cit. Little Girl Assiniboines, — Cones, Henry and 

 Thompson Jour. (ISOS), ii, ,522, 1897. Na-co'-tah 

 0-see-gah.— Orig. Jour. Lewis and Clark, op. cit. 

 Osgeegah . — Ibid. We-che-ap-pe-nah. — D e n i g 

 (18.53)quoted bv Dorsey, op. cit. Wi-ic'-ap-i-nali. — 

 Hayden, Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. Val., 387, 1862. 

 Witci-yanpina,— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 223, 

 1897. 



Itseyi {Itsef/1, 'new green place,' or 

 'place of fresh green'; often falsely ren- 

 dered 'Brasstown,' from the confusion of 

 Itseyi and UfdsaiyV, the latter term sig- 

 nifying 'brass'). The name of several 

 former Cherokee settlements. One was 

 on Brasstown cr. of Tugaloo r., in Oconee 

 CO., S. C. ; another was on Little Tennessee 

 r., near the present Franklin, Macon co., 

 N. C, and probably about the junction of 

 Cartoogaja cr. ; a third, known to the 

 whites as Brasstown, was on upper Brass- 

 town cr. of Hiwassee r. , Towns co., Ga. — 

 Mooney in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 523, 1900. 

 Echay. — Mouzon map quoted by Rovce in 5tli Rep. 

 B. A. E., 143, 1887. Echia.— Mooney, op. cit. 

 Echoe.— Bartram, Travels, 371, 1792. Echoee.— 

 Doc. of 1755 quoted by Royce, op. cit. Etchoe, — 

 Scaife, Hist. Catawba, 7, 1896. Etchowee. — 

 Mooney, op.. cit. 



Ittatso. The principal village of the 

 Ucluelet (q v.) on Ucluelet arm of Bar- 

 clay sd., w. coast of Vancouver id. — Can. 

 Ind. Aff., 263, 1902. 



Ituc. A former Chumashan village 

 near Santa Barbara, Gal. — Taylor in Gal. 

 Farmer, Apr. 24, 1863. 



Itukemuk. A former Luiseiio village 

 in the neighborhood of San Luis Rey 

 mission, s. Gal. — Taylor in Gal. Farmer, 

 May 11, 1860. 



Ivan. A Kaiyuhkhotana village on 

 the divide between Unalaklik and Yukon 

 rs., Alaska. Allen (Rep. Alaska, 131, 

 1877) gave the population as 69. 



Ivan's barrabora.— Dall, Alaska, 631, 1870. 



Ivigtite. A variety of paragonite. Ac- 

 cording to Dana (Text-book of Mineral., 

 354, 1888) it occurs in yellow scales, also 

 granular, with cryolite from Greenland. 

 It was named from Ivigtuk, Greenland, 

 where it was discovered, a place-name 

 derived from the Eskimo language. The 

 -He is an English suffix. (a. f. c.) 



Ivigtut. A settlement of Europeans 

 and Eskimo in s. w. Greenland, lat. 61° 

 15^— Nansen, First Crossing, ii, 182, 1890. 



Ivikat. A missionary station 16 m. n. 

 of Julianehaab, s. Greenland. — Kol- 

 dewey, German Arct. Exped., 203, 1874. 



