670 



KATGEN KEGI 



[b. a. e. 



Ka-ye Pu.— Bandelier ifi Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 106, 

 1892 (native name). Pueble Blanco.— Bandelier 

 in Ritcli, N. Mex., 201, iss,'. (misprint). Pueblo 

 Blanco.— Ibid. (Span.: ' white house'). 



Kaygen. A Seneca village on the s. 

 bank of Chemung r., below Kanestio r., 

 N. Y.— Pouchot, map (1758) in N. Y. Doc. 

 Col. Hist., X, 694, 1858. 



Kaynaguntl ( ' people at the mouth of the 

 canyon'). An Apache clan or band at 

 San Carlos agency and Ft Apache, Ariz., 

 in 1881. — Bourke in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 111, 1890. 



Kayomasho. The progressive party in 

 Laguna pueblo, N. Mex. (Loew in Wheeler 

 Survey Kep., vii, 339, 1879). According 

 to Bandelier this party constitutes a 

 phratry. See Kapaits. 



Kayung {<l'ai/(Vn). A Haida town on 

 Masset inlet, Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. 

 Col., just above Masset. It was occu- 

 pied by the Kuna-lanas, who owned 

 the place, and the Sagui-gitunai. John 

 Work does not give separate figures for 

 the population of this town in 1836-41, 

 but the old people estimate the number 

 of houses at 14, which would indicate 

 about 175 people. The place was at one 

 time entirely abandoned, but two or three 

 families have recently returned to it. 



(j. K. S. ) 

 K-'aya'ng.— Boas, 12tli Rep. N. VV. Tribes Can., 23, 

 1898. Kayung.— Dawson, tjneen Charlotte Ids., 

 163b, 1880. Q,!aya'n Inaga'-i, — Swanton, Cont. 

 Haida, 281, 1905 (the people). 



Kchegagonggo ( K'cM-qd-gong^-go,^ 

 'pigeon-hawk'). A gens of the Abnaki 

 (q. v.). — Morgan, Anc. Soc.,174, 1877. 



Kdhun ('thunder being'). The 7th 

 Tsichu gens of the Osage tribe. 

 Wan._i),,rsev, Osage MS. vocab., B. A. E., 1883. 

 ^jiun.- Dorsey in 1.5th Rep. B. A. E., 234, 1897. 

 Ma'xe.— Ibid, ('upper-world people'). Niq'ka 

 •wakan'^asn.— Ibid, ('mysterious male being'). 

 Thunder People. — Dor.sey in Am. Nat., 114, 1884. 

 Tsi'haci".— Dorsey in 15th Rep., op cit. ('camp 

 last'). 



Ke. The Bear clan of the Tewa pueblo 

 of Nambe, N. Mex., and of Hano, Ariz. 

 Cac— Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 39, 1891 (Navaho 

 name). Ho'-nau.— Ibid. (Hopiname). Ke.— Ibid. 

 (Tewaname). Ke-tdoa.— Hodge in Am.Anthrop., 

 IX, 349, 1896 (Nambe form; <dtiu=' people'). 

 Ke'-to-wa.— FewkesinAm. Anthrop., vii,166, 1894. 



Kechayi. A division of the Y'okuts, for- 

 merlylivingonSan Joaquin r., Cal. 

 Kechayi. — A. L. Kroeber, inf'n, 1906. Kech-eel,— 

 Ind. Aff. Rep., 2'23, 1851 (same?). 



Kechemeclieg. A division of the New 

 Jersey Delawares mentioned by Evelin 

 (Proud, Pa., i, 113, 1797; Smith, Hist. 

 N. J., 29, 1765, rep. 1890) as living in 

 1648 in the s. part of the state, at the 

 mouth of Delaware r., and numbering 50 

 men. Some old authorities locate here 

 the Naraticon. 



Kechemudluk. A Kevalingamiut vil- 

 lage at C. Seppings on the Arctic coast of 

 Alaska; pop. 50 in 1880. 



Cape Sepping.— PetiotT, Rep. on Alaska, 59, 1900. 

 Cape Seppings.— Nelson in ISth Rep. B. A. E., map, 

 1899. Kechemudluk.— Hydrog. chart cited by 

 Baker, Geog, Diet. Alaska, 115, 1902. Kivalinge.— 

 Eleventh Census, Alaska, 162, 1893. 



Kechepukwaiwah. A former Chippewa 

 village on a lake of the same name, near 

 Chippewa r.. Wis. — Warren (1852) in 

 Minn. Hist. Soc. Coll., v, 314, 1885. 



Kechipauan ('town of the spread-out 

 grit' ; evidently referring to the sandstone 

 mesa). A former pueblo of the Zufii on 

 a mesa e. of Ojo Caliente, or Kyajikwaina- 

 kwin, 15 m. s. w. of Zuf.i pueblo, N. INIex. 

 According to Cushing it was called also 

 Kyanawe, which Bandelier identifies with 

 the CanalJ of Oilate in 1598, and therefore 

 regards it as one of the Seven Cities of 

 Cibola of Marcos de NizaandCoronadoin 

 1539-42. Spanii-h Franciscans evidently 

 began the establishment of a mission at 

 this pueblo, probably in 1629, when the 

 first missionaries resided among the Zuui, 

 but judging from the character of the 

 church building, the walls of which are 

 still standing, it was never finished. See 

 Mindeleff in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 81, 1891, 

 and authorities cited below, (f. w. n. ) 

 Canabe. — Cushing in Compte-rendu Interiiat. 

 Cong. Am., vii, 1.56, 1890 (misprint of early Span- 

 ish form). Canabi.— Onate (1.598) in Doc. Ined., 

 XVI, 133, 1871. Chan-a-hue. — Bandelier in Arch. 

 Inst. Papers, in, 133, 1890. Cjyanahue.— Ibid., v, 

 171, 1891; IV, 338, 1, 92. Chyanaue.— Ibid., Ill, 133, 

 note, 1890. Chek-e-pa-wha.— F' wkes in Jour. Am. 

 Eth. and Arch., l, 101, 1891. Ee tchi-na.— Cushirg 

 in Millstone, l.x, 55, Apr. 1884. Kotch:p-a-huan.— 

 Bandeli' r in 10th Rep. Arch. Inst. Am., 137, 1889. 

 Ketchip-a-uan. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, 

 III, 133, 181)0; IV, 329, 1892; v, 171, 1S91 (recor.led as 

 distinct from Kyanawe). Kia'anaan. — ten Kate, 

 Reizen in N. A.,"291, 1885. Kia-na-wa.— Cushing 

 in Millstone, IX, 55, Apr. 1884. K'\a-na--wc. — 

 Cu.shing in Compte-rendu Internat. Cong. ->m., 

 VII, 156, 1890. Viliag3 of Odd Waters.— Cushing, 

 Zuni Folk-tale.s, 104, 1901 (possibly identical). 



Kecoughtan. A small tribe of the Pow- 

 hatan confederacy residing in 1607 at the 

 mouth of James r., in what is now Eliz- 

 abeth City CO., Va. According to Capt. 

 John Smith their fighting men did not 

 exceed 20.— Smith (1629), Hist. Va., i, 

 116, map, repr. 1819. 



Keda-lanas {Qli^da Wnas, 'strait peo- 

 ple'). A sulidivision of the Hagi-lanas, 

 a family of Ninstints belonging to the 

 Raven clan of the Haida. They re- 

 ceived their name from a narrow strait in 

 frontof the town. — Swanton, Cont. Haida, 

 268, 1905. 



Kedlamik ( Q^/mmix, ' broad patch of 

 bushes'). An Okinagan village near Ni- 

 cola lake, Brit. Col. 



Lka'iamix.— Teit in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., ir, 

 174,1900. Ce'iairix.— Ibid. 



Keeches. Mentioned by Barbour ( Sen. 

 Ex. Doc. 4, 32d Cong., spec, sess., 61, 1853) 

 as a hostile tribe living N. and k. of San 

 Joaquin r., among the foot-hills of the 

 Sierra Nevada, on the headwaters of the 

 Tuolumne, Merced, and Mariposa rs., 

 Cal., in 1851. It was probably of Moque- 

 lumnan stock. 



Kegi. The House clan of the Tewa of 

 Hano pueblo, N. e. Ariz. 



Ke'gi.— Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 39, 1 -fll. 

 Ki-a'-ni.— Ibid. (Navaho name). Ki'-hu.— iDid. 

 (Hopi name). 



