698 



KINTYEL KIOHERO 



[b. a. fi. 



who were now reduced to 50, besides 

 about 120 women and children. The 

 whites had lost 65 killed, soldiers and 

 civilians, including two Indian scouts, 

 with 63 wounded, several mortally. The 

 Modoc prisoners were removed to Ft Kla- 

 math, where, in July, 6 of the leaders 

 were tried by court-martial for the mur- 

 der of Gen. Canby, Mr Thomas, and the 

 settlers, and 4 of them condemned, 

 namely. Jack, youngSconchin, Black Jim, 

 and Boston Charley, who were hanged 

 together Oct. 3, 1873, thus closing what 

 Bancroft calls "their brave and stubborn 

 fight for their native land and liberty — a 

 war in some respects the most remark- 

 able that ever occurred in the history of 

 aboriginal extermination." The remain- 

 der of the band were not permitted to 

 rejoin their people on Klamath res., but 

 were deported to the s. e. corner of Okla- 

 homa, where a part of them still remain. 

 See Modoc. Consult Bancroft, Hist. Ore- 

 gon, II, 1888; Commissioner of Ind. Affs. 

 Reports for 1872-73; Dunn, Massacres of 

 the Mts., 1886; Gatschet in Cont. N. A. 

 Ethnol., II, 1890. (j. M.) 



Kintyel (Navaho: Kintyel, or Khitye'li, 

 from Am 'pueblo house', tyel 'broad': 

 'broad house.' — Matthews).. An unusu- 

 ally large, ancient, circular pueblo ruin 

 on Leroux wash, about 23 m. n. of Navajo 

 station, on the S. F. Pac. K. R., Ariz. 

 According to Zufii tradition the village 

 was built by the Hleetakwe, during the 

 migration of the Bear, Crane, Frog, Deer, 

 Yellow-wood, and other Zuni clans. The 

 Zuiii origin of the pueblo has been borne 

 out by archeological study of the ruins. 

 SeeCushingin 4th Rep. B. A. E., xxxviii, 

 1886; Mindeleff in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 91- 

 94, 1891; Fewkes in 22d Rep. B. A. E., 

 124, 1904. 



He-sho-ta-pathl-taie.— Gushing quoted by Powell 

 in -Ith Rep. B. A. E., xxxviii, 1886 (Zuni name). 

 K'in'i K'el.— Ibid. Kin-Tiel.— MindeletY quoted 

 in 6th Rep. B. A. E., xxiv,1887. Pueblo Grande.— 

 Mindeleff in Sth Rep. B. A. E., 91, 1891. 



Kintyel. A ruined pueblo in Chaco 

 canyon, n. w. N. Mex. It figures in Nav- 

 aho legend as in course of erection during 

 one of their early migrator}^ movements, 

 and later as a ruLn. Its builders are not 

 known. 



Kintail.— Bickford in Century Mag., XL, 903, Oct. 

 1890. Kintyel.— Matthews in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 2-21, 1890. Kintye'li.— Ibid. 



Kinugumiut. An Eskimo tribe of Alaska, 

 inhabiting the region of C. Prince of 

 Wales on Kaviak penin. About 1860 they 

 overran the country as far as Selawik r., 

 oppressing other tribes and collecting an- 

 nual tribute from the Kaviagmiut. They 

 now visit the shores of Kotzebue sd. to 

 barter with the inland tribes, and are the 

 keenest traders among the Eskimo and 

 the most vicious, perhaps from longer in 

 tercourse with whalemen. Their dialect 

 is more guttural than that of the Kaviag- 



miut and other tribes of Alaska, resem- 

 bling that of the Yuit. They numbered 

 400 in 1880, 652 in 1890. Their villages 

 are: Eidenu, Kingegan, Mitletukeruk, 

 Nuk, Pikta, Shishmaref, Sinauk, and 

 Takchuk. For illustrations of types see 

 Esikimo. 



Einegans. — Kelly, Arct. Eskimo in Alaska, 9, 1890. 

 Kingee'ga-mut. — Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., I, 

 16, 1877. Kiiiugmut.— Rep. U. S. Bur. Ed., Circ. of 

 Inf n No. 2, chart, 1901. Kinugumut. — Nelson in 

 18th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1899. Kinik Mute.— Rep. 

 U. S. Bur. Ed., op. cit. Ki'xmi. — Bogoras, Chuk- 

 chee, 21, 1904 (Yuit name: 'the inhabitant of 

 Kihi,' i. e., of Prince of Wales id.). 



Kinuhtoiah {Gyidnadd^eks, 'people of 

 the rapids'). A former Tsimshian divi- 

 sion and town near Metlakatla, Brit. Col. 

 Gyidnada'eks. — Boas in Zeitsch. fiir Ethnol., 232, 

 1888. Keen-ath-toix. — Kane, Wand, in N. Am., 

 app., 1859. Kenath tui ex. — Howard, Notes on 

 Northern Tribes visited in 1854, MS., B. A. E. Kin- 

 nato-iks. — Krau.se, Tlinkit Ind., 318, 1885. Kinns- 

 toucks. — Brit. Col. map, 1S72. Einuhtoiab. — Tol- 

 mie and Dawson, Vocabs. Brit. Col., 114b, 1884. 



Kinyaali (Navaho: Ki'Uia'^, 'high 

 house.' — Matthews). A small ruined 

 pueblo about 30 m. s. and 5 m. w. of Pueblo 

 Bonito, on the Thoreau road, n. w. New 

 Mexico. It is in the Chaco drainage, but 

 on an open plain. The ruin is rectangular, 

 165 by 90 ft, and without an inclosed court; 

 the foundations are true to the cardinal 

 points and a perfect parallelogram. Some 

 circular depressions indicate the former 

 presence of kivas. A small wing 30 ft 

 square is at the s. e. corner of the build- 

 ing. A portion of the w. wall stands 30 ft 

 high and partly incloses a large kiva which 

 still stands 3 stories high. The material is 

 dark-brown laminated sandstone, which 

 must have been brought from the moun- 

 tains 3 m. away. The stones used were 

 the largest employed in the construction 

 of any of the Chaco canyon group of 

 buildings, to which group Kinyaah is 

 evidently related by all cultural aftinities 

 that have been discovered. Some small 

 pueblo ruins exist near by, and a large irri- 

 gation ditch and two reservoirs are dis- 

 cernible, (e. l. h. ) 



Kio. The Pine clan of the pueblo of 

 Jemez, N. Mex. A corresponding cian 

 existed also at the former related pueblo 



oi Pecos. 



Kiotsaa.— Hodge in Am. Anthrop., ix, 351, 1896 

 {tsad, or tsadsh,— 'people'). E'otsaa'. — Ibid. 

 (Pecos form). 



Kioch's Tribe. A body of Salish of Wil- 

 liams Lake agency, Brit. Col., numbering 

 45 in 1886, the last time the name ap- 

 pears.— Can. Ind. Aff. for 1886, 232. 



Eiohero ( ' where reeds float.' — Hewitt). 

 A former Cayuga settlement on the e. 

 side of the n. end of Cayuga lake, N. Y. 

 It was occupied by descendants of incor- 

 porated Hurons and other prisoners. In 

 1670 the French had there the mission 

 of St Etienne. (.i. m. ) 



Kiohero.— Jes. Rel. for 1670, 63.1858. Sannio.— Zeis- 

 berger (1750) quoted bv Conover, Kanadega and 

 Geneva, MS., B. A. E. SaintEstienne.— Jes. Rel. for 



