644 



KAIYUHKHOTANA KAKINONBA 



[b. a. e. 



1891 ('people of the willows'). Lowlanders. — 

 Dull in Froc. Am. A. A. S., xviii, 270, 1S70. 



Kaiyuhkhotana. A division of ttie Kai- 

 yuhkhotana, living on Kaiyuh r. Their 

 village was Kutul. 



KainnKhotana.— Fftroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 161, 

 1884 (misprint). Kaiyuk'a-kho-tan'a. — Dall in 

 Cont. N. A. Ethnol., l, 26, 1S77. 



Kaiyuwuntsunitthai ( ' roc-ky land ' ) . A 

 former Kuitsh village on lower Umpqua 

 r., Oreg. 



Kai'-yu-wun-ts'u'-nit t'pai'. — Dorsev in Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lor, III, 231, 1890. 



Kajechadi. iKd-jech-adi). Given by 

 Krause (Tlinkit-Ind., 116, 1885) as a 

 Tlingit division living in the town of 

 Chilkoot, Alaska. Unidentified. 



Kajienatroene ('eagle people.' — Hew- 

 itt). One of the 6 "castles" of the Ottawa 

 near Michiliinackinar, Mich., in 1723. — 

 Albany conf. (1723) in N. Y. Doc. Col. 

 Hist., V, 69.{, 1855. 



Kaka ('crows'). A band or society of 

 the Ankara. 



Crows.— Culbertson in Smith=on. Rep. 1850, 143, 

 1851. Ka-ka'.— Hayden, Lthnog. and Philol., 357, 

 1862. 



Kakagshe { Kii-kag^ -she, 'crow'). A 

 gens of the Potawatomi. — Morgan, Anc. 

 Soc, 167, 1877. 



Kakake ( Kakdke, ' crow' ) . A subphratry 

 or gens of the Menominee. — Hoffman in 

 14th Rep. B. A. E., pt. i, 42, 1896. 



Kakake. Given as the Pigeon-hawk 

 gens of the Chippewa, but really the 

 Raven (Kagigi) gens of that tribe. 

 Kagagi. — Will. Jones, inf'n, 1906. Ka-kaik. — Tan- 

 ner, Narr., 314, 1830 ('hen hawk'). Ka-kake'.— 

 Morgan, Anc. Soc., 166, 1877 ('pigeon hawk'). 



Kakanatzatia. A former village of the 

 Sia (q. V. ), opposite the present Sia pueblo, 

 on Jemez r., n. central N. Mex. Accord- 

 ing to Sia tradition, war broke out be- 

 tween the inhabitants of this village and 

 those of Kohasaya, the former being 

 driven southward by an attempt of the 

 latter to burn their pueblo, the Kohasaya 

 afterward moving to the site of Sia. It 

 is not improliable that one of the two 

 pueblos mentioned was occupied at the 

 time of Espejo's visit in 1583, an 1 thus 

 formed one of the villages of his province 

 of Punames. 



Ka-kan A-tza Tia. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Pa- 

 pers IV, 198, 1892. 



Kakapoya ('inside fat.' — Morgan). 

 Given as a division of the Piegan tribe of 

 the Siksika. Perhaps the same as Inuk- 

 sikahkopwaiks, q. v. 



Inside Fat.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 171, 1877. Ka-ka'- 

 po-ya. — Ibid. 



Kakawatilikya {Qd^' qninatilik'a). A 

 gensoftheTsawatenok,aKwakiutl tribe. — 

 Boas in Rep. Nat. Mus. 1895, 331, 1897. 



Kake. A Tlingit tribe on Kupreanof 

 id., Alaska. The designation is often 

 extended to include the people of Kuiu 

 and Sumdum (q. v.). Their winter vil- 

 lage is K..ke, near Hamilton harbor. 

 Pop., including pn)l)ably tlie Kuiu people, 

 234 in 1890. Their social divisions are 



Kahlchanedi (extinct), Katchadi, Nesadi, 

 Sakutenedi, Bhunkukedi, Tsaguedi, 

 ■Tanedi, and Was-hinedi. (j. r. s. ) 



Cakes.— Seward, Speeches on Alaska, 5, 1869. Ka- 

 acks. — Crosbie in H. R. Ex. Doc. 77, 36th Cong., 

 lstsess..8, 1860. Kake.— Kane, Wand, in N. A., 

 app., 1859. Kakus. — Halleck in Rep. Sec. War, pt. 

 1, 38, 1868. Kates.— Colver ( Louthan) in Iiid. AfF. 

 Rep., .573, 1870. _ Kaykovskie— Elliott, Cond. Aff. 

 Alaska, '227, 18(5 (transliterated from Veniam- 

 inoff). Kehk.— l^etrott' in 10th Census, Alaska, 32, 

 1884. Kehons.— Scott in Ind. Aff. Rep., 313, 1868 

 (name on Riis.sian charts). Kek. — Tikhraenieff, 

 Russ. Am. ('o., II, 341, 1863. Kekch-kon. — Krause, 

 Tlinkitlnd.,120, 1885. Kekuvskoe.— Veniaminofl, 

 Zapiski, ii, pt. 3, 30, 1840. Keq!— Stvanton, field 

 notes, B. A. E.,1904. Khekhu. — Holmberg,Ethnog. 

 Skizz., map. 18.55. Kyacks. — Scottin Ind. Aff.Rep., 

 314, 1S6S. Rat tribe.— Mahony (1869) in Sen. Ex. 

 Doc. 68, 41st Cong., 2d sess., 20, 1870. 



Kake. The modern name of the village 

 of the Kake Indians on the n. w. coast of 

 Kupreanof id., Alaska; pop. 234 in 1890. 

 Keq :.— Swan ton, field notes, B. A. E., 1904. Kluk- 

 wan.— Petroff in Tenth Census, Alaska, 32, 1884. 

 SlikAnAxsa'ni. — Swanton, op. cit. (said to be 

 proper naii'e of the town, perhaps meaning ' from 

 a black hear town') . 



Kakegha ('making a grating noise'). 

 A division of the Brule Teton Sioux. 

 Kakega.— Dorsev (after Cleveland) in 15th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 219, 1S97. Kak'exa.— Ibid. 



Kakekt (Xdx'eqt). An extinct Salish 

 tribe whicli formerly lived at C. Lazo, e. 

 coast of Vancouver id., and spoke the 

 Comox dialect.— Boas, MS., B. A. E., 

 1887. 



Kakhan. The Wolf clan of the Keresan 

 pueblo of Laguna, N. Mex. It claims to 

 have come originally from Sandia. 

 Ka-kr,n. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, in, '293, 

 1890 (given as name of the wolf fetish). Kakhan- 

 hano'i'.— Hodge in Am. Anthrop., ix, 352, 1896 

 (AuHcif'i = ' people'). 



Kakhmiatonwan ( ' village at the bend ' ) . 

 A division of the Sisseton Sioux. 



Kahmi-atogwaij. — Dor.^ey in loth Rep. B. A. E., 

 217, 1897. Kaqmi-ato"wa".— Ibid. 



Kakhtshanwaish. A former Alsea vil- 

 lage on the N. side of Alsea r., Oreg. 

 Kaq-tcan-waic'. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 2'oO, 1890. 



Kakick. According to Coxe a tribe for- 

 merly on an island of the same name in 

 Tennessee r., above the Chickasaw; pos- 

 sibly Creek. See (ochal.i. 

 Kakick.— Coxe, Carolana, map, 1741. Kakigue. — 

 Ibid., 14. 



Kakinonba. A tribe mentioned by sev- 

 eral early French writers about the close 

 of the 18th century as living apparently 

 on Tennessee or Cumberland r., although 

 the exact locality and the relationship of 

 the tribe can not be determined. Mar- 

 quette's map places them e. of the Mis- 

 sissippi, about the region of Kentucky, 

 in 1674. The Senex map of 1710 locates 

 them along the middle of Tennessee r. 

 St Cosine speaks of them as in s. Illinois 

 in 1699. Tennessee r. was called Casquin- 

 am beaux, Casquinampo, and Kaskinenpo 

 by early French explorers. 

 Cakinonpas.— Sauvole (1701) in French, Hist. Coll. 

 La.. Ill, '238, 1851. Caskinampo. — Senex, map of 

 N. Am., 1710. Kakinonba,— Marquette's map [ca. 

 1674) in Shea, Diseov. Miss., 1852. Karkinonpols. — 



