640 



KAEKIBI KAHLCHANEDI 



[b. a. b. 



gat*, Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. Col. It 

 waM occupied by the Kaiahl-lanas, who 

 took their name from the place before 

 they moved to Kaisun. (j. r. s. ) 



Kaekibi. A traditionary pueblo of the 

 Asa people of the Hopi, who were of Tewa 

 ori^;in; situated on the Rio Chama, N. 

 Mex., near the present Abiquiu. — Stephen 

 in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 30, 1891. 



Kaersok. An Eskimo village and trad- 

 ing post in w. Greenland, lat. 72° 39^. — 

 Meddelelser om Gronland, viii, map, 1 889. 



KafFetalaya ( Kafi-talaia, ' sai saf ras 

 thicket'). A former Choctaw town on 

 Owl cr., Neshoba co., Miss. The name 

 was extended to cover a large district in 

 that territory. — Halbert in Miss. Hist. 

 Soc. Pub., VI, 427, 1902. 

 Cofetalaya, — Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., i, 108, 

 1884. Coflfadeliah,— West Florida map, ca. 1775. 

 Kaffi talaya. — Romans, Florida, map, 1775. 



Kagahanin { Ku^ giihuriin) . The Thun- 

 der cTan of the Caddo. — ]\Iooney in 14th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 1093, 1896. 



Kagaih {Ka^g'uili). The Crow clan of 

 theCaddo.— Moonevinl4thRep. B.A.E., 

 1093, 1896. 



Kagakwisuwug {Kdgakwiswmgi, 'they 

 go by the name of pigeon-hawk ' ) . A 

 Thunder gens of the Sauk and Foxes. 



Kaga'kwisuwag'. — Wm. Jones, iiif'n, 1906. Ka-ka- 

 kwis'-so-uk. — Morgan, Anc. Soc, 170, 1877. 



Kaganhittan ('sun -ho use people'). 

 Given by Boas as a social group of the 

 Tlingit at Wrangell, Alaska, but it is 

 actually only the name of the people of 

 a house belonging to the Kiksadi, q. v. 



GrAgj'nhittan. — Swan ton, field note.", B. A. E., 1904. 

 K-agan hit tan.— Boas, 5th Kep. N. W. Tribes of 

 Can., 25, 1889. 



Kagials-kegawai (Qd^ gials qe'gawa-i, 

 ' those born at Kagials ' ). An important 

 family of the Raven clan of the Haida, 

 which derives its name from a reef near 

 Lawn hill, at the mouth of Skidegate in- 

 let. Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. Col., 

 whore some of the people formerly lived. 

 A second name was tqe^nol-lf/nas, ' peo- 

 ple of [the town of] Cumshewa', whence 

 one portion of the Kagials-kegawai is 

 said to have moved. Their own town 

 was Skedans, and their chief was one 

 of the most influential on the islands. 

 Subdivisions of the family were the 

 KilM-haidagai and Kogaahl-lanas, the 

 latter being of low social rank. The 

 Kagials-kegawai claim to have sprung 

 from a woman who floated ashore at Hot 

 Springs id. in a cockleshell. They were 

 closely connected with the Tadji-lanas, 

 whoappfiarto have originated in thesame 

 locality. _ (,i. r. s.) 



K-agyalsk'e'o-wai. — Boas, 12th Rep. N. W. Tribes 

 Can., 24, 1898. iqe'noi la'nas. — S wanton, Cont. 

 Haida, 269, 1905. aa'gialsqe'gawa-i.— Ibid. Tlki- 

 notl la'nas. — Boas, op. tit. 



Kagokakat. A village of the Ingalik 

 division of the Kaiyuhkhotana, at the 

 mouth of Medicine cr., n. bank of Yukon 

 r., Alaska; pop. 9 in 1843, 115 in 1880. 

 Eagokhakat. — Zago.skin in Nouv. Ann. Voy., 5th 

 s., XX, map, 1850. Eakagokhakat. — Zago.skin 



quoted by Petroff in 10th Censu.s, Alaska, 37, 1884. 

 Khatnotoutze. — Petroff, ibid., 12. 



Kagoughsage (Seneca: Kakon^sd' -ge,' &t 

 false-face place' ). The Iroquois name of 

 a Shawnee village, known also as Akon- 

 warage (Akoiiwari'-ge, the Mohawk 

 equivalent), in 1774, apparently in Ohio 

 or w. Pa. (j. N. B. H. ) 



Agonwarage. — Johnson Hall conf. (1774) in N. Y. 

 iJoc. ( 'ol. Hist., VIII, 426, 1857. Akonwarage.— Ibid. 

 Kagoughsage. — Ibid. 



Kagsersuak. An Eskimo village and 

 trading post in w. Greenland, lat. 73° 5^. 



Kagerssauk. — Science, xi, 2.59,1888. Kagsersuak. — 

 Meddelelser om Grimland, viii, map, 1889. Ka- 

 sarsoak. — Kane, Arct. Explor., li, 293, 1853. 



Kaguyak. A Kaniagmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on the s. w. coast of Kodiak id., 

 Alasha; pop. 109 in 1880, 112 in 1890. 

 Alsentia. — Coast Surv. map, 1898. Kaguiak. — 

 Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 29, 1884. Kagu- 

 yak, — Coast Surv. map, 11th Census, Alaska, 1893. 

 Kaniag-miut. — Russ.-Am. Co. map, 1849. Ka- 

 niagmjut. — Holmberg, Ethnog. Skizz., 142, map, 

 1855. Kawnjagmjut. — Ibid. 



Kaguyak, A Kaniagmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on Shelikof strait, Alaska; pop. 85 in 

 1890. 



Douglas. — 11th Census, Alaska, map, 1893. Kaia- 

 iak.— Tebenkof (1849) quoted by Baker, Geog. 

 Diet. Alaska, 1902. Kaiayakak.— Lutke (183.5), 

 quoted, ibid. Kayayak. — Coast Surv. charts prior 

 to 1884, quoted, ibid. 



Kagwantan ('burnt [house] people' ). A 

 large and important Tlingit division at 

 Sitka, Chilkat, Huna, and Yakutat, Alas- 

 ka, being especially strong at the two first- 

 mentioned places. It belongs to the Wolf 

 phratry. 



Kagontan.— Krause, Tlinkit Ind., 116, 118, 1885. 

 Ka'gwantan. — Swanton, field notes, 1904, B. A, E. 

 Kar-gwan-ton. — Emmons in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. 

 Hist.. Ill, pi. vi, 1903. Kokvontan.— Lutke, Voy. 

 Autour du Monde, i, 195, 1835. Koukhontans. — 

 Ibid. 



Kahabi {Ka-ha^-bi). The Willow clan 

 of the Pakab (Reed) phratrv of the 

 Hopi.— Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 

 39, 1891. 



Kahansuk. Marked as a Delaware 

 tribe on the e. bank of lower Delaware 

 r., about Low cr., Cumberland co., N. J., 

 on Herrman's map ( 1670) in Maps to Ac- 

 company the Report of the Commission- 

 ers on the Boundary line between Vir- 

 ginia and Maryland, 1873. 



Kahendohon {Kd'Jii'^fidc/'Jwn'). A for- 

 mer Iroquois village belonging to the 

 Two-clans of the Turtle. The locality is 

 not known. (j. n. b. h. ) 



Kahhendohhon.— Hale, Iroquois Book of Rites, 

 118, 1883.— Kah ken doh hon.— Ibid., 119. 



Kahesarahera ('a rotten log lying on 

 the top of it. ' — Hewitt ) . A Seneca village 

 in New York in 1691 ; location unknown. — 

 Markham (1691) in N. Y. Doc. Col. 

 Hist., Ill, 805, 1853 



Kah-ge-ga-gah-bowh. See Copivay. 



Kahl. The Forehead clan of the Hopi, 

 represented in their pueblo of Mishong- 

 novi. 



Kahl. — Dorsev and Voth, Mishongnovi Cere- 

 monies, 175, 1902. Kal-namu.— Voth, Trad, of the 

 Hopi, 58, 1905. 



Kahlchanedi {Q/AtlcAne^dt, 'people of 

 Kahlchan r.'). An extinct Tlingit divi- 



