BULL. 30] 



IVIMIUT JACONA 



627 



Ivimiut. An Eskimo settlement near 

 Lindendv fjord, k. (Jreenland, \vith 12 

 inhabitantsin 18-9. — (iraah, Exped., 114, 

 1837. 



Ivitachuco. A. former principal town 

 of the Apalachee, possibly near the pres- 

 ent Wacahotee, Fla. 



Attachooka.— Archdale (1707) in Carroll, Hist. 

 Coll. S. C, II, 3r.2, ],H3t;. Ibitachka.— Ibid., 575. 

 Ivitachma.— Bancroft, Hist. V. S., n, 194, 1884. 

 Ivitachua. — Jefferys, Fr. Dom. Am., West Indies 

 map, 17til. Ivi-ta-chuco. — Biedma (1544) in 

 French, Hist. Coll. La., ll, 99, 1850. Ivitanoa — 

 Jefferys, Fr. Dom. Am., 135, map, 1761. Vita- 

 chuco.— Gentl. of Elvas (1557) in French, Hist. 

 Coll. La., II, 134, 1850. Yvitaohua. — Bartram, 

 Trav., I, map, 1799. 



Ivory, See Boueuork. 



Ivy Log. A Cherokee settlement, about 

 the period of the removal of the tribe to 

 Indian Ter. in 1839, on Ivy Log cr., 

 Union co., n. Ga. (.i. m. ) 



Iwai. A former Yaquina village on the 

 N. side of Yaquina r. , Oreg. 

 I-wai'. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 229, 

 1890. 



Iwayusota ('uses up by begging for'; 

 'uses up with the moutii'). A band of 

 the Oglala Sioux. — Dorsey (after Cleve- 

 land) in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 220, 1897. 



Iwi. The Eagle gens of the Kadoha- 

 dacho. — Mooney in 14th Rep. B. A. E., 

 1093, 1896. 



Ixtacan. A pueblo of the Cora and the 

 seat of a mission; situated on the s. Ijank 

 of the Rio San Pedro, about lat. 22°, 

 Tepic, Mexico. 



Diskatan,— Hrdlicka, infn, 1906. S. Pedro de 

 Ixtacan.— Orozco y Berra, Geeg , 280, 1864. 



lyaaye {Ii/a-ai/e, 'sunflower'). An 

 Apache clan or band at San Carlos 

 agency and Ft Apache in 1881. — Bourke 

 in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 111, 1890. 

 See Yacldn. 



lyakoza ('wart on a horse's leg'). A 

 band of the Brule Teton Sioux. 

 A-a-ko-za.— Harden, Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. 

 Val., 376, 1862. Big Ankle band.— Ibid. Big-legged 

 horses. — Culbertson in Pmithson. Rep. 1850, 141, 

 1851. lyakoza.— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 218, 

 1897. lyak'oza.— Ibid. 



lyama Ateuna ('those ofa^ie upper- 

 most'). A phratry embracing the 

 Kyakyali (Eagle) and Ana (Tobacco) 

 clans of the Zufii. — Cushing, infn, 1891. 



lyis. A Karok village on Klamath r., 

 Cal., inhabite<l in 1860. 



I-yiss. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Mar. 23, 1860. 



Iza. A settlement of which Coronado 

 was informed by the Indian known as 

 The Turk, while on the Rio Grande in 

 New Mexico in 1540-41, as a place, 6 

 or 7 days' journey distant, at which the 

 army could obtain provisions on its way 

 to "Copala" and Quivira. It was possi- 

 bly imaginary; if not, it may have been 

 a settlement of the Eyish, a Caddoan 

 tribe of Texas. See Mota-Padilla (1742), 

 Nueva Galicia, 164, 1870. (f. w. h.) 



Iztacans. A name adopted by Rati- 

 nesque (introd. to Marshall, Ky., i, 26, 

 1824) for an imaginarv prehistoric race of 

 the United States. 



Jack. See Kintpnash. 



Jackash. A name of the American 

 mink (I'ntorinit rimv) in use in the fur 

 country (Coues, N. Am. Must., 172, 1877). 

 From afcliukdit, the name of this animal 

 in the Cree dialect of Algonquian. This 

 word Lacombe (Diet., 316, 1874) explains 

 as a diminutive of iriUiikiiji, signifying 

 'genitals,' in reference to the glands of the 

 creature. (a. f. c. ) 



Jack Indians. An unidentilied tribe 

 mentioned by Dobbs (Hudson Bay, 13, 

 1744), who states that in 1731 they came 

 to trade at the mouth of Albany r., 

 N. W. Ter., Canada. Named as distinct 

 from Moose River Indians (Monsoni), 

 Sturgeon Indians (Nameuilini), ancl 

 French Indians. 



Jackquyome (Jack-qui/^ome) . A body of 

 Salish of Kamloops agency, Brit. Col.; 

 pop. 2.")7 in 18S4, when their name ap- 

 pears for the last time. — Can. Ind. Aff. 

 for 1884, 188. 



Jacobs Cabins. A settlement on Yough- 

 ioghenv r. in 1753 (Gist in Mass. I list. 

 Soc. Coll., 3d s., V. 102, 183(5). It may 

 have been near Jacobs cr., Fayette co.. 

 Pa., and was perhaps named from Cap- 

 tain Jacobs. (.1. M. ) 



Jacobs, Captain. A Delaware chief who 

 participated in the ambush of Gen. Brad- 

 dock's army, and a leader in conjunction 

 with Shingis in the raids and massacres 

 on the frontiers of the settlements of 

 Pennsylvania that followed the British 

 disaster. A price was set on Doth their 

 heads. They had a rendezvous at Kit- 

 tanning, Pa., whither they took their 

 spoils and captives. Col. John Armstrong 

 marched against this place and assailed 

 it at daybreak on Sept. 8, 1756. The 

 Pennsylvanians surrounded the village 

 and the Indians defended themselves 

 bravely but hopelessly from their burn- 

 ing wigwams. Jacobs was killed with all 

 his family.— Drake, Bk. Inds.. 534, 1880. 



Jacona ( Span, form of Tewa Sdkona) . 

 A former small Tewa pueblo situated 

 with Cuyamunque a short distance w. of 

 Nambe, on the s. side of Pojoaque r., 

 Santa Fe co. , N. Mex. At the time of the 

 Pueblo rebellion of 1680 it was a visita 

 of Nambe mission. It was aban<loned in 

 1696, its inhabitants settling among the 

 other Tewa pueblos, and in 1 702 the grant 

 of land that liad been made to it by 

 Spain became the property of Ignacio de 

 Roybal. See Randelier in Arch. Inst. 

 Papers, IV, 85, 1892. (f. w. h. ) 



lacona. — Busehmann,'Neu-Mex., 230, 1858. Oaco- 

 ma. — Davis, El Gringo, 88, 18.57. Jacona. — Vetan- 

 curt (1693) Teatro Mex., in, 317, 1871. Sacona.— 

 Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, IV, 85, 1892 (.Ja- 

 cona, or). Sa'kona.— Hodge, field notes, B. A. 

 E., 1885 (Tewa pronunciation). S. Domingo de 

 Xacomo. — .lefierys, Am. Atlas, map 5, 1776. S. 

 Domingo de Xacoms. — Walch, Charte America, 

 1805. S. Domingo deXacona. — D'Anville, map Am. 

 Sept., 1746. Xacona. — Do I'lsle, carte Mexiq e et 

 Floride, 1703. Xacono. — De I'lsle, Atlas Nouveau, 

 map 60, 1733. 



