BULL. 30] 



JUNATCA KABAYE 



637 



alive, whence the name jokingly bestowed 

 upon him by his Iriend.s. He went west 

 with his people in the removal of 1838, 

 but returned to North Carolina, and as a 

 special recognition of his past services was 

 given citizenship rights and a tract of 

 land at Cheowa, near the present Kob- 

 binsville, Graham co., N. C., where he 

 died in 1858. See ]Mooney in 19th Rep. 

 B. A. E.,97, 164-5, 1900. 



Junatca. A former tribe or village, pre- 

 sumably Costanoan, from which Dolores 

 mission, San Francisco, Cal., drew some 

 of its neophytes. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, 

 Oct. 18, 1861. 



Junetre. A ruined pueblo of the Tewa 

 in Rio Arriba co., N. 5lex. — Bandelierin 

 Ritch, N. Mex., 201, 1885. See Tajique. 

 Juniamuc. A former village, presumably 

 Costanoan, connected with Dolores mis- 

 sion, San Francisco, Cal. — Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Juniata (from Tyu'mP>i/ate, 'projecting 

 rock,' in the Seneca and other Iroquois 

 dialects, a name said to refer to a stand- 

 ing stone to which the Indians paid rev- 

 erence. — Hewitt). An unidentitied tribe 

 that lived at and about the mouth of 

 Juniata r.. Pa. Their village, known by 

 the same name, was situated on Duncan 

 id., in the Susquehanna. About 1648 

 they were the forced auxiliaries of the 

 Conestoga. (j. m. ) 



Ihon-a-Does.— Writer (ra. 1648) quoted by Proud, 

 Penn., i, 114, 1797. lottecas,— Map (c«. I(ii4) in N. 

 Y. Doc. Col. Hist., I, 1866. John-a-does.— San ford, 

 U. S., cxlviii, 1819. Juneauta. — Brainerrt (1745) 

 quoted by Day, Penn., 27.5, 1843 (the village). 



Junostaca. A former rancheria, prob- 

 ably Papago, visited by Kino and Mange 

 in 1699; situated near San Xavier del 

 Bac, in the present s. Arizona. — Mange 

 quoted bv Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 

 358, 1889; 



Junqueindundeh ('it has a rock.' — Hew- 

 itt). A village, probably of the Hurons, 

 situated in 1766 on Sandusky r., Ohio, 

 24 m. above its mouth. — Smith, Bouquet 

 Exped., 67, 1766. 



Junundat ('one hill.' — Hewitt) . A Hu- 

 ron village in 1756 on a small creek that 

 empties into a little lake behjw the mouth 

 of Sandusky r., Seneca co., Ohio. 

 Ayonontouns. — La Jonquiere (17.51) in N. Y. Doc. 

 Col. Hist., X, 240, 1858. Ayonontout.— Ibid., VI, 733, 

 1855. Canundageh. — Guv Park conf. (177.5), ibid., 

 VIII, 556, 1857. Chenunda.— Croghan (1759) quoted 

 by Rupp, We.st. Penn., 14(5, 1846. Chenundea.— 

 Croghan (17.59) quoted by Proud, Penn. ,11. 296, 1798. 

 Chinundeda.— Croghan (1760) in Mass. Hist. Poc. 

 Coll., 4ths., IX, 261, 1871. Junundat.— Peters (1760), 

 ibid., 258. Sunyendeand.— Sniitli (1799i quoted by 

 Drake, Trag. Wild., 201, 1S41. Wyandot Town.— 

 Hutehins, map in Smith, Bouquet Exped., 1766. 

 Juraken. Two former villages under 

 Iroquois rule, one situated on the right 

 bank of Susquehanna r., just below the 

 fork, at the site of Sunbury, Pa., the 

 other on the left bank of the e. branch of 

 the Susquehanna. — Popple, Nouv. Carte 

 Particuliere de I'Amerique [n. d.]. 



(.1. N. B. H.) 



-Taris. A former village, presumably 

 Costanoan, connected with Dolores mis- 

 sion, San Francisco, Cal. — Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Jurlanoca. A former village on the In- 

 dian trail of N. Florida, 8 m. e. of Alachua. 

 Jefferys (Topog. N. Am., chart, 67, 1762) 

 has here a river joining the St Johns from 

 the s. w. 



Jarnmpa. Given by Rev. J. Cabal leria 

 (Hist. San Bernardino Val., 1902) as a 

 former village, probably Serrano, at River- 

 side, s. California. The Spanish Rancho 

 Jurnpa shows the same name. 



Jutun. A Calusa village on the s. w. 

 coast of Florida, about 1570. 

 Futun. — Fnnlaneda as quoted by Sliipp, De Soto 

 and Fla., 586, 18si (misprint). Jutun.— Fontaneda 

 Memoir (ca. 1575), Smith trans., 19, 1854. 



Juyubit. A former rancheria connected 

 with San Gabriel mission, Los Angeles 

 CO., Cal. The locative ending, bit, shows 

 the name to be Serrano rather than 

 Gabrieleiio. 



Jujubit. — Latham in Proc. Philol. Soc. Lond., vi, 

 76, 18-54. Juyubit.— Duflot de Mofras, Explor., I, 

 394, 1844. 



Kaadnaas-hadai ( Q.'cVad na'as XacW-i, 

 ' dogtish hou.se people ' ). A subdivision 

 of the Yaku-lanas, a family of the Raven 

 clan of the Haida, living in s. w. Alaska. 

 The name is probably derived from that 

 of a particular house. (j. k. s. ) 



K-'at nas :had'a'i.— Boas, 5th Rep_. N. \\. Tribes 

 Canada, 26, 1898. Q!a'adna'asXada'-i. — Swanton, 

 Cunt. Haida, 271, 1905. 



Kaake {Qa^a<je). A Salish tribe which 

 formerly occupied the s. e. coast of V aldez 

 id. Brit. Col., and spoke the Comox 

 dialect. It is now extinct. — Boas, MS., 

 B. A. E., 1887. 



Kaana. The Corncob clan of the pue- 

 blo of Taos, N. Mex. ' 



Kaana-taiina.— Hodge, field notes, B. A. E., 1899 

 (?((/(;(a = 'people'). 



Kaayahunik. A Squawmish village on 

 the w. bank of Squawmisht r. , Brit. Col. — 

 Brit. Adm. chart, no. 1917. 



Kaayu (Kad-yu). A pueblo built, oc- 

 cupied, and abandoned by the Nambe 

 tril)e prior to the Spanish advent in the 

 16th century. Situated with Agawano 

 in the vicinity of the " Santuario," in the 

 mountains about 7 m. e. of the Rio 

 Grande, on Rio Santa Cruz, Santa Fe co., 

 N. Mex. — Bandelier in Arch, Inst. Pa- 

 pers, IV, 84, 1892. 



Kabahseh ('sturgeon'). A gens of the , 

 Al)naki. 



Ka-bah'-seh. — Morgan. Anc. .Soc, 174, 1877. Ka- 

 basa. — J. Dyneley Prince, inf'n, 1905 (modern St 

 Francis Abnaki form). 



Kabaye. A tribe or village formerly in 

 the country lying between Matagorda bay 

 and jMaligne (Colorado) r., Tex. Joutel 

 in 1687 obtained the name from the 

 Ebahamo Indians, who were probably 

 closely affiliated to Karankawan tribes 

 living in this region. They are probably 

 identical with the Cabia of Manzanet. 

 See Joutel in French, Hist. Coll. La., i, 



