656 



ZANSAKI KAPOZHA 



[b. a. e. 



ftuans.— Bourgmont (1723) in Margry, D^c, vi, 

 393, 1886. Ukasa.— Gatsehet, MS., B. A. E. (Fox 

 Bame). TTkasak. — Ibid. 



Kansaki ( GantuVgl, Gdvi-'d^giyi) . The 

 name of several distinct Cherokee settle- 

 ments: (1) on Tnckasegee r., a short dis- 

 tance above the j)resent Webster, in 

 Jackson co., N. C. ; (2) on the lower part 

 of Canasauga cr., in McMinn co., Tenn.; 

 (3) at the junction of Conasauga and 

 Coosawatee rs., where afterward was situ- 

 ated the Cherokee capital. New Echota, 

 in Gordon co., Ga. ; (4) mentioned in the 

 De Soto narratives as Canasoga or Cana- 

 sagua, in 1540, on Chattahoochee r., pos- 

 sibly in the neighborhood of Kenesaw 

 mtn., Ga. (j. m. ) 



Canasagua— Gentl. of Elvas (1557) in HaklnytSoc. 

 Pub., IX, 61, 1851. Canasauga.— Rove e in 6th Rep. 

 B. A. E., map, 1887. Gansa'gi,— Moonev in 19tli 

 Rep. B. A. E.. 518, 1900. Gansagiyi.— Ibid." 



Eause ('Kansa'). The 14th Hangka 

 Osage gens and 7th on the right side of 

 the tribal circle. See Kavze. 

 A'k'a iniitakaci"'a. — Dorsey in 15tli Rep. B. A. E., 

 231, 1797 ('south wind people'). I'dats'e.— Ibid, 

 ('holds a lirebrand to the saered pipes to light 

 them'). Kansa.— Ibid. Kan'se. — Ibid. Pe'^se 

 i'nink'aci"'a. — Ibid, ('fire people'). Ta^se' i'n- 

 iqk'ac "'a. — Ibid, ('wind people'). 



Kantico, Kanticoy. See Cantico. 



Kanulik. A Nushagagmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on the left bank of Nushagak r., near 

 its mouth, in Alaska; pop. 142 in 1880, 54 

 in 1890. 



Kanoolik.— PetrofF, Rep. on Alaska, 47, 1880. Ka- 

 nulik.— I'etrofF in 10th Censu.s, Alaska, 17, 1884. 

 KaruLk.— Elliott, Our Arct. Prov., map, 1886. 



Kanutaluhi (Kanu^tdhVJil., 'dogwood 

 place'). A Cherokee settlement in n. 

 Georgia about the period of the removal 

 of the tribe in 1839. (j. m. ) 



Kanuti. A Koyukukhotana village on 

 Koyukuk r., Alaska, lat. 66° 18^, with 13 

 inhabitants in 1885. 



Kanuti.— Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. Ko- 

 ncotsna.- Allen, Rep. Alaska, 97, 1887. 



Kanwaiakaku ( Kan-ivaV-a-ka-ku ) . A 

 former Chumashan village near the mis- 

 sion of San Buenaventura, Cal. — Henshaw, 

 Buenaventura MS. vocab., B. A. E., 1884. 



Kanwasowaua {Kdnwdsowduc, 'long 

 tail' ). The panther gens of the Miami. 



Ka-nc zi'-wa. — Morgan, Anc. Soc., 168, 1877. 

 Kanwasowau''. — \Vm. Jones, inf'n, 1906. 



Kanyuksa Istichati (i-lan-a 'ground', 

 i-yuk-sa ' point ' or 'tip', i. e., point of 

 ground, or peninsula, V,s-/(-?crf-<i 'red men'). 

 The native name of that branch of the 

 Seminole, numbering 136 in 1881, residing 

 s. of Caloosahatchee r., at Miami and Big 

 Cypress Swamp settlements, Fla. — Mac- 

 Cauley in 5th Rep. B. A. E., 509, 1887. 



Kanze (archaic and untranslatable; rer- 

 dered by Donsey ' wind people ' ). The 5th 

 gens on the Hangashenusideof theOmaha 

 tribal circle. See Kanse. 



5a"ze.— Dorsey in 3d Rep. B. A. E., 220, 1885. 

 on-za.— Long, Exped. Rocky Mts., I, 327, 1823. 

 Kun'-za.— Morgan, Anc. Soc., 155, 1877. 



Kanze ( Kansa) . Given by J. O. Dorsey 

 as the 4th Kansa gens, consisting of the 

 Tdjeunikashinga and Tadjezhinga sub- 

 gentes. 



Ic'-ha-she.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 156, 1877 (trans. 

 ' tent'). Ka"ze.— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 231, 

 1897. Last-lodge. — Ibid. Lodge-in-the-rear. — 

 Ibid. Tci haci".— Ibid. 



Kapachichin ( ' sandy shore ' ). A Ntla- 

 kyapamuk town on the w. side of Eraser 

 r., about 28 m. above Yale, Brit. Col.; 

 pop. 52 in 1901. 



Kapatci'tcin. — Teit in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 

 II, 169, UOO. Kapatsitsan.- Can. Ind. Afl. for 

 1901, pt. II. 164. Klapatci'tcin.— Hill-Tout in Rep. 

 Ethnol. Surv. Can., 5, 1.S99. Kopachichin,— Brit. 

 Col. map, Ind. AfF., Vi<'toria, 1872. North Bend. — 

 Teit, op. cit. (name given by whites). 



Kapaits. The conservative party among 

 the Lagunas of New Mexico (Loew in 

 Wheeler Surv. Kep., vii, 339, 1879). Ac- 

 cording to Bandelier this party constitutes 

 a phratry. See Kai/omasho. 



Ka-paka, (Kd^-pa-ka). A former Nishi- 

 nam village in the valley of Bear r., n. 

 Cal. — Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., iii, 

 316, 1877. 



Kapanai. A former village of the same 

 Costanoan group as Kalindaruk, and con- 

 nected with San Carlos mission, Cal. 



Capanay.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 20, 1860. 

 Kapanai. — A. L. Kroeber, inf'n, 1905. 



Kaparoktolik. A summer settlement of 

 Tununirusirmiut Eskimo near the en- 

 trance to Ponds inlet, Baffin land. — 

 McClintock, Voy. of Fox, 162, 1859. 



Kapaslok (A'"flyt)rt.s/o(/, 'sand roof). A 

 viUage of Ntlakyapamuk on Eraser r., 

 above Suk, Brit. Col. It was formerly a 

 large settlement. — Hill-Tout in Rep. 

 Ethnol. Surv. Can., 5, 1899. 



Kapawnich. A village of the Powhatan 

 confederacy on the n. bank of the Rappa- 

 hannock, about Corotoman r., Lancaster 

 CO., Va., in 1608.— Smith (1629), Va., i, 

 map, repr. 1819. 



Kapiminakouetiik. Mentioned in the 

 Je.'^uit Relations (26, 1646) as a tribe liv- 

 ing at some distance n. of Three Rivers, 

 Can. Doubtless Montagnais, and possibly 

 the Papinachois, q. v. 



Kapisilik. An Eskimo village not far 

 from Godthaab, n. Greenland. — Nansen, 

 First Crossing of Greenland, ii, 219, 1890. 

 Kapkapetlp ( Qapqajtetip, ' place of 

 cedar' [V]). A Squawmish village com- 

 munitv at Point (.irev, Burrard inlet, 

 Brit. Col.— Hill-Tout in Rep. Brit. A. A. 

 S., 475, 1900. 



Kapozha ( ' not encumbered with much 

 baggage ' ) . A Mdewakanton Sioux band. 

 In 1811 they lived between Cannon r. and 

 Minnesota r., and their village, known as 

 Kaposia, was on the e. bank of the Mis- 

 sissippi 15 m. below the mouth of the 

 Minnesota. At that time the chief was 

 Little Crow (Chetanwakanmani), q. v. 

 In 1830 their village was said to be 8 

 leagues below the mouth of Minnesota 

 r. Another Little Crow, who was chief 

 in 1862, was killed at the close of the 

 Sioux outbreak. 



Ca-po-cia band.— Smithson. Misc. Coll., XIV, art. 6, 

 1878. His-scarlet-people. — Neill, Hist. Minn., 144, 

 note, 18,58. Kah-po-sia. — Prescott in Schoolcraft, 

 Ind. Tribes, pt. 2, 171, 1852. Kahpozhah.— Snelling, 



