BULL. .''.O] 



KHWESHTUNNE KIASKUSIS 



681 



ment on the coast, in Sonoma co., Cal. 

 The origin of the name is not known. 



(S. A. B.) 

 Chwachamaju.— WraiiKfll, Kthnol. Nach.. SO, 1S39. 

 Chwachmaja.— LiidewiK, Aborig. Lang., 170, 185S. 

 Khwakhamaiu,— S. A. Barrett, inf'n, 190.5. Korth- 

 erners. — Iliid. Severnovskia.— Ibid. Severnovze. — 

 Ibid. Severnovzer. — Ibid. Severnovzi. — Ibid. 



Khweshtunne. A former JMinhikliwnt- 

 metunne village on Co(juille r., Oreg., next 

 above Coqnillecity, 



Q,wec' ^iinne. — Dor.sey "in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 

 iio2. isyo. 



Khwunrghunme. Seemingly the Tolowa 

 name of a Yurok village on the coast of 

 California, just s. of the mouth of Kla- 

 math r. 



Kal'-a-qn-ni-me'-ne tun'-ne. — Dorsey, Chetco MS. 

 vouab.. B. A. E., 183, 1884 (Chetco name). Kal- 

 hwun'-iin-me'-e-ni te'-ne. — Iiorsey.SmitliKiver .MS. 

 voeab., B. A. E., 1SS4. ftwun-rxiin'-me. — l>(irscy in 

 Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 237, 18'.t0 (Naltuniie 

 name). 



Kiabaha. A village or tribe, now ex- 

 tinct, said to have existed between Mata- 

 gorda l)ay and Maligne [Colorado] r., 

 Tex. The name seems to have been 

 given to Joutel in 1687 by the Ebahamo 

 Indians, probably closely affiliated to the 

 Karankawa, whose domain was in this 

 region. A rancheria called Cabras (ap- 

 parently the same name as Kial)aha), 

 with 26 inhabitants, was mentioned in 

 1785 as being near the presidio of Bahia 

 and the mission of Esju'ritu Santo de Zu- 

 niga (q. v. ) on the lower Rio San Antonio 

 (Bancroft, No. Mex. States, i, 659, 1886). 

 See Gatschet, Karankawa Ind., 23, 35, 

 1891. a. Kahayr. (a. c. f.) 



Cabras. — Bancroft, op. eit. Kiabaha. — Joutel 

 (1687) in Margry, Dee., nr, 288, 1878. Kiaboha.— 

 Shea, note in Cliarlevoix, New France, iv, 78, ls70. 

 Kiahoba.— Joutel (1C.87) in French, Hist. Coll. La., 

 I, 137, 1S1(',. Kiobobas. — Barcia, En.sayo, 271, 1723. 

 Kiabaha. Jontel (1687) in French, op. cit., 152. 



Kiaken {Kldke^n, 'palisade' or 'fenced 

 village'). Two Sciuawmish village com- 

 munities in British Columbia; one on the 

 left bank of Squawmisht r., the other on 

 Burrard inlet. — Hill-Tout in Rep. Brit. 

 A. A. S., 474, 475, 1900. 



Kiakima {K'ylVkima, 'home of the 

 eagles'). A former Zufii jnieblo at the 

 s. w. base of Thunder mtn., 4 m. s. e. of 

 Zuni pueblo, w. N. Mex. It was occu- 

 pied in the 16th and 17th centuries as 

 one of the "Seven Cities of Cibola," and, 

 according to Zuni tradition, was the scene 

 of the death of the negro Estevanico, who 

 had been a companion of Cabeza de Vaca, 

 and hadaccompanied Fray JNIarcosdeNiza 

 on his journey from Mexico in 1539; but 

 historical evidence])lacesthat eventat Ila- 

 wikuh. It was avisita of the mission of 

 Halona, probably from 1629, and contained 

 about 800 inhal)itants, but on the in- 

 surrection of the l*uel)los against Spanish 

 authority in KiSO, Kiakima was ])erma- 

 nently abandoned, the inhabitants fleeing 

 to Thunder mtn. for safety. See Bande- 

 lier, cited below; Mindeleff in 8th Rep. 



B. A. E., 85, 1891; Lowery, Span. Settle- 

 ments in IL S., 1901. (f. w. h.) 

 Caquima. — Vetancurt (1693) in Teatro Mex., in, 

 321), 1871. Caquimay. — Doc. of 103.5 quoted by Ban- 

 rtelier in Arch. In.st. Papers, v, 165, 1890. Caqui- 

 neco.— Ladd, Story of N. Mex. ,34, 1891. Coaque- 

 ria.— Onate (1.59,s) in Doc. Ined., xvi, 133, 1871. 

 Coquimas. — Pike, Exped., 3il map, 1810. Coquimo. — 

 Bandelier quoted in The Millstone, ix, 65, Apr. 

 1884. HeshotaO'aquima. — Bandelier, Gilded Man, 

 1.59,1893 (misprint). Ke'ia-/.-I-)«e.— Powell, 2d Kep. 

 B.A.E.,xxvi,1883. K'ia-ki-ma.— Cushing in The 

 Millstone, IX, 65, Ajir. 1884. K'ia' ki me. — Ibid., 

 225, Dec. 1884. K'iakime.— Cushing, Zuni Folk 

 Tales, 65, 1901. Kyakima.— Bandelier in Arch. 

 Inst. Papers, iii, 133, 1.S90. K'ya'-ki-me. — Cushing 

 in Compte-rendu Internat. Cong. Am., vil, 156, 

 1.H90. O'aquima.— Bandelier, Gilded Man, 158, 

 1893 (misprint). Qa-quima. — Bandelier in Revue 

 d'Ethnog., 201, 1886. ftuaguina.—Senex, map, 1710. 

 ftuaquima. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Rep., v, 41, 

 1884. Quaquina.— De I'lsle, Carte Mex. et Flo- 

 ride, 1703. Uuiaquima. — Bandelier in Jour. Am. 

 Ethnol. and Arcliaol., in, 16, 1892. Quia-Q,uima.— 

 Ibiil., 29. Guiquimo. — Giissefeld, Charte Nord Am., 

 1797. 



Kialdagwuns ( K!ia^ldagwAy\s, ' Sand- 

 pipers '). A subdivision of the Sagui- 

 gitunai, a family belonging to the Eagle 

 clan of the Haida. 



Klia'ldagwAns. — Swanton, Cent. Haida, 274,1905. 

 Kyia'ltkoangas. — Boas, 12th Rep. N. \V. Tribes of 

 Canada, 23, ]sy8. 



Kialegak, A Yuit Eskimo village near 

 Southeast cape, St Lawrence id., Bering 

 sea. 



Kahgallegak. — Elliott, Our .\rct. Prov., map, 1886. 

 Kgallegak.— Tebenkof (1819) quoted by Baker, 

 Geog.Dict. Alaska. 1902. Kialegak.— Russ. chart, 

 quoted bv Baker, ibid. Kiallegak. — Nel.son in 

 18th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1899. 



Kialinek. A former village of the Ang- 

 magsalingmiut on the e. coast of Green- 

 land, lat. 66° 50^, where they hunted the 

 narwhal and the bear throughout the 

 year. Some of its people are said to 

 have emigrated northward. — Meddelelser 

 om Grr>niand, ix, 382, 1889. 



Kiamislia. A former Caddo village at 

 the junction of Kiamichi and Red rs., 

 in the present Choctaw nation, Okla. It 

 contained 20 families in 1818. 

 Cayameechee. — Bell in Morse, Rep. to Sec. War, 

 255, 1822 (the river). Kamissi — Thevenot quoted 

 by Shea, Discov., 268, 1852 (identical?). Kiam- 

 isha. — Trimble (1818) in Morse, op. cit., 2,59 (the 

 river). Kio Michie.— Rublo (1840) in H. R. Doc. 25, 

 27th Cong., 2d se.ss.,14,1841. 



Kianusili [Kia'nusUt, 'cod people'). 

 A family l>elonging to the Raven clan of 

 the Haida. Kian is the name for the 

 common cod. This family grouj) formerly 

 lived on the w. coast of Queen Charlotte 

 ids. ,_near Hippa id. , Brit. Col. ( J. r. s. ) 



Kianosili. — Harrison in Proc. and Trans. Roy. Soc. 

 Canada, ll, 123, 1895. Kia'nusili.— Swanton,' Cont. 

 Haida, 271, 1905. Kya'nusla.— Boas, 12th Rep. 

 N. W. Tribes Canada, 22, 1898. 



Kiashita. A former pueblo of the Jemez 

 in ( luadalupe canyon, n. of Jemez pueblo, 

 N. Mex. 



Kiashita.— Hodge, field notes, B. A. E., 1895. 

 Q,uia-shi-dshi. — Bandelierin Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 

 207, l.'^92. 



Kiaskusis ( ' small gulls ' ) . A small Cr 3e 

 band residing in 1S56 aroimd the fourth 

 lake from Lac Qu'Aijelle, N. W. Ter., 



