652 



K ANG I A ETSO A K K A NNEHOU AN 



[b. a. e. 



Kangiartsoak. An Eskimo village and 

 Danish settlement in w. (Greenland, lat. 

 72° 47^— Kane, Arctic Exped., 472, 1854. 



Kangidli. An Ita Eskimo village at C. 

 York, N. Greenland. — Stein in Peter- 

 manns Mitt., ix, map, V- 02. 



Kangigdlek. An Angmagsalingmiut 

 Eskimo village on Angmagsalik fjord, e. 

 Greenland, lat. 65° 40^— Meddelelser om 

 Gronland, xvi, map, 1896. 



Kangikhlukhmut ( Kang-iq-xlu-q' miit, 

 'he:id-of-the- rapid-river people': Kani- 

 agniiut name). A division of the Ah- 

 tena at the head of Copper r., Alaska. — 

 Hoffman, ISIS, vocab. B." A. E., 1882. 



Kangisunka. See Crow Dog. 



Kangivamiut ('people at the head'). 

 A subtribe of the Sukinimiut Eskimo, 

 living in the region of George r. , n. Lab- 

 rador. 



Kingivamiut.— Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., map, 

 1888. Kan'gukfilua'luksoagmyut.— Turner in lltli 

 Rep. B. A. E., 176, 1S94( = 'people of the great bay'). 

 Kiiiuktlual'ikFoa-myut.— Turner in Trans. Roy. 

 Soe. Can.. V, 99, 1888. 



Kangmaligmiut ('distant ones'). An 

 Arctic Eskimo tribe between Manning pt 

 and Herschel id. The name has been 

 attached to different local groups all the 

 wav from Pt Hope to Mackenzie r. 

 Kadjakians.— Rink in, Tour. Anthrop. Inst., XV. 240, 

 1886. Kak' a kg.— Zasroskin, Descr. Kuss. Poss. 

 Am., pt. I, 74 1.S47. Kingiugdlit.— Rink, op. cit., 

 240. Kmgmali-enyui .— liichardson, Polar Re- 

 gion'^, 300, 1861. Kangmali^meut,— Murdoch in 

 Ninh Rep. B. A. E., 46, 1892. Kangmali'gmut.— 

 Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., i, 10, 1877. Kangmali- 

 innuin. — Simpson quote<l by Dall, ibid. Ka gma- 

 lik.— Woolle in 11th Census, Alaska, 130, 1893. 

 K ngnialis. — Keane in Stanford, Compend., 517, 

 187S. KxnmaU-enyuin.— Murdoch in 9th Kep. B. 

 A. E, 45, 1892. Kunmu'd'lin.— Ibid., 43,46. W stern 

 Mackenzie Innuit.— Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., 

 I, 12, 1877 (collective term including Kopagmiut 

 and Kangmaligmiut). 



Kangormiut ( 'goose people' ). A tribe 

 of Central Eskimo living in Victoria land. 

 Kang-orr-Moeoot. — Franklin, Journ. to Polar Sea, 

 IT, 43, 1824. Kanq-or-mi-ut.— Richardson, Arct. 

 Exped., I, 362, 1S.51. Kanp-meut.— Petitot in Bib. 

 Li'ig. et Ivhnol. Am., ni, 11, 1876 (Chiglit name). 

 White-Goose Eskimos. — Franklin, op. cit., 42. 



Kanhada {G-arihada, meaning obscure). 

 One of the 4 clans or phratries into which 

 all Indians of the Chimmesyan stock are 

 divided. It is also applied specifically 

 to various local subdivisions of the clan. 

 One such is found in the Niska town of 

 Lakku'zap and one in each of the Kitk- 

 san towns— Kitwingach, Kitzegukla, and 

 Kishpiveoux.— Boas in 10th Rep. N. W. 

 Tribes Can., 49-50, 1895. 



Kanhanghton. A former Delaware vil- 

 lage about the mouth of Chemung r., in 

 the N. part of Bradford co., Pa. It was 

 de.stroyed by the Iroquois in 1764 on 

 accourit of the hostility of its inhabitants 

 to the wh'tes.— Johnson (1764) in N. Y. 

 Doc. Col. Hist., VII, 625, 1856. 



Kaniagmiut ( 'people of Kodiak' ). The 

 largest and most powerful Eskimo tribe 

 on thf Alaskan coast, inhabiting Kodiak 

 id. and the mainland from Iliamna lake 



to Ugashik r., the s. coast to Ion. 159° w. 

 The tribe numbered 1,154 in 1890. Their 

 villages are Afognak, Aiaktalik, Akhiok, 

 Aleksashkina, Alexandrovsk, Ashivak, 

 Chiniak, Fugitive, Igak, Iliamna, Kagu- 

 yak, Kaluiak, Kanatak, Karluk, Katmai, 

 kattak, Kiliuda, Kodiak, Kuiukuk, 

 Kukak, Liesnoi, Mitrofania, Nauklak, 

 Nunamiut, Nuniliak, Orlova, Ostrovki, 

 Seldovia, Sutkum, Three Saints, Uganik, 

 Uhaiak, Uhaskek, Ukshivikak, Uyak, 

 Uzinki, Yalik, and Yelovoi. 

 Achkugmjuten.— Holmberg, Ethnog. Skizz., 4, 1855 

 (applied to Agleniiut and Kaniagniiut by the 

 people of Norton sd.;=' inhabitants of the warm 

 cotnitry'). Kadiagmuts. — Am. Nat., XV, 1.5(i, 1881. 

 Kadjacken.— Wrangell, Ethnol. Nach., 117^ 1839. 

 Kanagist.— Co.\e, Russ. Disc, 135, 1787. Kaniag'- 

 mut.— Diill in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., l, 20, 1M77. 

 Kaniagmut. — Rink, Eskimo Tribes, 32, 1887. 

 Kinaghi.— Morse, Syst. of Mod. Geog., l, 74, 1814. 

 Konagens. — Drake, Bk. of Inds., viii, 1848. 

 Konagis. — Latham in Jour. Ethnol. Soc. Lond., 

 I, 1S3, 1848. Konasgi.— Prichard, Phys. Hist., 

 Man, 371. 1847. Koniagi. — Humboldt, New Spain, 

 11,392.1811. Koniagmutes.— Dall in Proc. Am. A. 

 A. S., XVIII, 267, 1870. Konjagen.— Holmberg, 

 Ethnog. Skizz., 4, 1855. Southern Eskimos.— Form 

 used by various English writers. 



Kanig. A former Chnagmiut village on 

 the N. bank of Yukon r., Alaska, near its 

 mouth. 



Kanig-miout.— Zagoskin in Nouv. Ann. Voy., 

 5th s., XXI, map, 1850. Kanygmjut.— Holmberg, 

 Ethnog. Skizz., map, 1855. 



Kanikaligamut {Ka'ni-qa-li-ga-mut, 

 'people close to the river': Chugachig- 

 miut name). An unidentified division of 

 the Knaiakhotana living on Cook inlet, 

 Alaska.— Hoffman, MS., B. A. E., 1882. 



Kanikluk. A Chugachigmiut village on 

 theN. shore of Prince William sd., Alaska; 

 pop. 54 in 1880, 73 in 1890. 

 Kanikhluk.— Petrolf in lOth Census, Alaska, 29, 

 1884. Kanikluk.— Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaskii, 229, 

 1902. 



Kanlaz {Nxo^istsn, 'the point'). An 

 Upper Lillooet town at the junction of 

 Bridge and Eraser rs., interior of British 

 Columbia; pop. 104 in 1904. 



Bridge river.- Can. Ind. Aff. Rep. 1904, pt. 2. 72, 

 19 5. Kan-lax'.— Dawson in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can. 

 for 1891, sec. 11, 44. Nxo'istEn.— Boas, inf'n, 1906. 

 Kanna (' eel' ) . A clan of the Tuscarora. 

 According to Morgan (League Iroq., 70, 

 1877 ) an Eel clan is found among the Tus- 

 carora, the Onondaga, and the Cayuga. 



Eel.— Morgan, op. cit. Ka'"'-na.— Hewitt, inf'n, 

 1886 (Tuscarora form). 



Kannawalohalla ( 'a head fastened to the 

 endof an object. '—Hewitt). An Iroquois 

 village on the site of Elmira, N. Y., 

 which was destroyed bv Sullivan in Aug., 

 1779._j(,ur. Mil. Exped. Gen. Sullivan 

 (1779), 232, 1887. 



Kannehouan. An unidentified tribe, pos- 

 sibly of Caddoan affinity, heard of by La 

 Salle's partv in 1687 as living to the w. 

 or N. w. of'Maligne (Colorado) r., Tex. 

 Cf. Cahirimo, Kanohatino. 

 Caniouis — Alccdo, Die. Geog., i, 341, 1786 (possibly 

 identical). Cannaha.— Joutel(1687)inMargry,Di5c., 

 Ill, 409, 1878. Cannahios.— Ibid. Cannehovanes.— 

 Barcia, Eiisavo, 271, 1723. Kannehonan.— JotUel 

 (1687), Jour. Voy., 90, 1719. Kannehouan.— Joutel 



