BULL. 30] 



KANATAK KANGHIYUHA 



651 



19th Rep. B. A. E., 480, 524, 1900 (abbreviated 

 form). Kanastun'yi. — Ibid. 



Kanatak. A Kaniagmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on Shelikof strait, Alaska; pop. 26 in 

 1890 (11th Census, Alaska, 163, 1893). 



Kanatakowa ( ' great village.' — Hewitt). 

 The village of the Onondaga situated at 

 the place still called Onondaga Castle, 

 N. Y. It was the ]jrincipal village of the 

 tribe as early as 1654. (.i. m.) 



Ka-na-ta-go'-wa. — Morgan, League Iroci., 471, 1S51. 

 Ka-na-ta-ko'-wa. — Hewitt, inf'n, 18.% (Onondaga 

 form). Onondaga. — Grecnlialgh (1677) (luoted t)y 

 Morgan, League Iroq., H16, IS.^il. Onondaga Cas- 

 tle. — Ibid., 471 (common English name). Onon- 

 daghara.— Macauley, N. Y., ll, 177, 1829. Onon- 

 dagharie. — Ibid. 



Kanatiochtiage ( ' place of wild rice ' ) . A 

 former Iroquois settlement or village on 

 the N. shore of L. Ontario, inhabited 

 chiefly by "Dowaganhaes," and reputed 

 to be "near theSennekes [Seneca] coun- 

 try." It was situated iiearTchojachiage, 

 or approximately on the site of Darling- 

 ton or Port Hope, in the New Castle dis- 

 trict, Ontario. Three nations, composing 

 16 " castles ", came to settle there by Iro- 

 quois permission. (j. n. b. h. ) 

 Ganadatsiagon. — Frontenac (1673) in N. Y. Doc. 

 Col. Hist., IX, 112, IS.SS. Ganatcheskiagon.— Ibid., 

 note. Ganatoheskiagon. — Ibid. Kanatiochtiage. — 

 Doc. of 1700, ibid., iv, 694, 18-=>4. 



Kanchati ('red ground,' 'red earth'). 

 A name applied to several places, one of 

 the best known being the principal village 

 of the Alibamu, formerly on the e. bank 

 of Alabama r., below Koasati and a little 

 w. of Montgomery, Ala. Hawkins de- 

 scribed it in 1799 as a small village on the 

 left bank of Alabama r. , with its fields on 

 the right side in a cane swamj), and its 

 people poor and indolent. A census of 

 1832 (Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 578, 

 1854) gave the number of families as 55. 

 The name has been applied also to a 

 township in the Creek Nation, Okla*., 

 and to a village a few miles n. w. of Tal- 

 ladega, Ala. ( A. s. G. ) 

 Con ohante ti. — Census of 1832 in Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, iv, 578. 18i4. Con-chant-ti.— Gatschet, 

 Creek Migr. Leg., i, 133, 1884. Conchart ee.— H. 

 R. Ex. Doe. 276, 24th Cong., 1st sess., 312, 1836. 

 Ecanchatty. — Woodward, Reminiscences. 12, 18ii9. 

 Ecumchate.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 380, 18.^4. 

 E-cun-cha-ta. — Rovcc in 18th Rep. B. A. E., Ala. 

 map. 18'.i9. E-cun-chate.— Hawkins (1799), Sketch, 

 36, 1848. Ikan-tchati.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. 

 Leg., I, 88, 1884. Kanshade.— Ibid., 133. O-cun- 

 c a-ta.— Bell in Morse, Rep. to Sec. War, 307, 1822. 

 Ked Grounds.— Ibid., 364. 



Kandoucho. A former village of the 

 Neutrals in Ontario, near the Huron 

 countrv. 



Kandoucho.— Jes. Rel. for 1641, 75, 1858. Tous les 

 Saints. — Ibid, (mission name). 



Kaneenda. A former fishing station of 

 the Onondaga, situated at the fork of 

 Seneca and Onondaga rs. , N. Y. , 8 m. 

 from their palisa<led village. It was also 

 their landing place when they returned 

 from hunting on the n. side of L. Ontario. 



(.1. N. B. H.) 

 Kanienda.— Doc. of 1700 in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., 

 IV, 649, 1854. 



Kanesadageh (Kane'sada'^ge^). A for- 

 mer Iroquois village belonging to the 



Two-clans of the Turtle; location un- 

 known, (j. N. B. H.) 

 Kaneghsadakeh, — Hale, Iroquois Book of Rites, 

 118, 1883. Kanesadakeh.— Ibid, 119. 



Kanestio. A village occupied by Dela- 

 wares and others, subject to the Iroquois, 

 formerly on the upper Susquehanna, 

 near Kanestio cr., in Steuben co., N. Y. It 

 was burned by the Iroquois in 1764, on 

 account of hostilities committed by the 

 inhabitants against the whites. It then 

 contained about 60 houses. 

 Oanestio. — Vaudreuil (1757) in N. Y. Doc. Col. 

 Hist., X, 588, 18.58 (naraeof the creek). "Kanestio.— 

 Pouchot, map (1758), ibid., 694. 



Kang. The Mountain Lion clans of the 

 Tewa pueblos of San Juan, San Ildefonso, 

 and Nambe, N. Mex. 



Chang Doa.—Bandelier, Delight Makers, 464, 1890. 

 Kan-tdoa. —Hodge in Am. Anthrop., ix, 351, 1S96 

 (San Juan and San Ildefonso form; tdua = 'peo- 

 ple'). Q,en-td6a. — Ibid. (Nambe form; q = Ger- 

 man ch). 



Kangarsik. A village of the Angmag- 

 salingmiut on a large island at the mouth 

 of Angmagsalik fjord, Greenland, lat. 65° 

 33^; pop. 34 in 1884.— Meddelelser om 

 Gronland, \x, 379, 1889. 



Kangek. An Eskimo settlement 10 m. 

 s. of Godthaab, w. Greenland, lat. 64° 

 10^— Nansen, Eskimo Life, 166. 1894. 



Kangerdluksoa ( 'the great fjord' ). An 

 Ita Eskimo settlement in Inglefield gulf, 

 N. Greenland. 



Kangerdlooksoah. — Wychoff in Scribner's Mag., 

 xxvni, 447, 1900. Kangerdlu'hsoa.— Stein in Peter- 

 manns Mitt., ix, map, 1902. 



Kangertloaping ('remarkable fjord'). 

 A summer settlement of Okomiut Eskimo 

 of Saumia, at the head of an inlet empty- 

 ing into Cumberland sd., Baffin land. — 

 Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1888. 



Kangertluk ( ' fjord ' ) . A spring and fall 

 settlement of Iglulirmiut Eskimo on n. 

 Melville penin. near the Fox Basin coast. — 

 Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1888. 



Kangertlukdjuaq ('great fjord'). A 

 summer settlement of Okomiut Eskimo 

 of Saumia, at the head of an inlet empty- 

 ing into Cumberland sd., Baffin land. — 

 Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1888. 



Kangertlung ('fjord'). A sunmier set- 

 tlement of Talirpia Okomiut Eskimo on 

 the s. w. coast of Cumberland sd. — Boas 

 in 6th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1888. 



Kangguatl-lanas {Q<yngiinL Jd'nas) . An 

 extinct subdivision of the Stustas, a fam- 

 ily of the Eagle clan of the Haida of 

 British Columbia. (j. r. s.) 



K-anguatl la'nai — Boas, 12th Rep. N. W. Tiribes 

 Can., 22, 1898. Qa'iiguaL la'na.s. — Swanton, Cent. 

 Haida, 276, 1905. 



Kanghishunpegnaka ('those who wear 

 crow feathers in their hair' ). A division 

 of the Sihasapa or Blackfoot Sioux. 



Kaijgi-suij-pegnaka. — Dorsey in 1.5th Rep. B. A. E., 

 219, 1S97. fca"xi-cu"-pegnaka.— Ibid. 



Kanghiyuha ('crow keepers'). A 

 division of the Brule Teton Sioux. 

 Kag-gi yu-ha.— Tatankawakan, letter to Dorsey, 

 ]S8!J. Kar)gi-yuha.— Dorsey in l'ith Rep. B. A. E.. 

 218.1897. Kaiixi-yuha.— Ibid. Thosethateatcrows. — 

 Culbertson in Smith.son. Rep. 1850, 141, 1851. 



