726 



KOPANO— KOROVINSKI 



[b. a. e. 



1876. Tapeopmeut.— Ibid., 11 (= 'those who live 

 bv the sea'). Tarreor-meut. — Dall in Cont. N.A. 

 EthnoL,i,10, 1877. Tchiglit.--Petitot, Monogr., 11 

 (applied to Mackenzie and Anderson r. tribes). 

 Tciglit.— Ibid. 



KOPAGMIUT GIRL. 



Kopano. A small tribe formerly living 

 on or near Copano Bay, s. Texas. There 

 is no doubt that it belonged to the 

 Karankawan linguistic stock, but it is sel- 

 dom mentioned. 



Coopanes.— Solis (1768) cited bv H. E. Bolton, 

 inf'n, 1906. Copanes.— Rivera, Diario, leg. 2602, 

 1737. 



Kopeli. The extinct Pink Conch clan 

 of the Tewa of Hano pueblo, n. e. Ariz. 

 Ko'-pe-li.— Fewkesin Am. Anthrop., vii, 166, 1894. 

 Kopeli-towa.— Hodge in Am. Anthrop., l.\, 352, 

 1896 (toica — 'people'). 



Kopiwari {Ko-j)i-wa^-ri). An ancient 

 village once occupied by the Nambe peo- 

 ple, situated about 5 m. n. of the present 

 Nambe pueblo, N. Mex. (f. w. h.) 



Koprino. A Kwakiutl tribe speaking 

 the Koskimo subdialect. They lived 

 formerly at the entrance of Quatsino sd., 

 and were divided into the Koprmo and 

 Kotlenok clans, but they are now amal- 

 gamated with the Koskimo proper. Pop. 

 14 in 1884, the last time they were sepa- 

 rately enumerated. 



Ga'plenox".— Boas in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 

 V, pt. 2, 393, 1902. G'o'p'enox.— Boas in Rep. Nat. 

 Mus. 1895, 329, 1897. Keope-e-no.— Can.Ind. Aff.,190, 

 1883. Keroopinough.— Brit. Col. map, 1872. Kiaw- 

 pino.— Dawson in Trans. Roy. See. Can. for 1887, 

 sec. II, 65. Koprinos.— Can. Ind. Aff., 145, 1879. 

 Kyo'p'enoq.— Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 

 53, 1890. 



Koprino. A gens of the Koprino, q. v. 



Koquapilt. A Chilliwack town in 

 lower Chilliwack valley, Brit. Col.; pop. 

 16 in 1904. 



Co-qua-piet.— Can. Ind. Aff., pt. I, 268, 1889. Co- 

 quopiet.— Ibid., 309, 1879. Coquopilt.— Ibid., 74, 

 1878. Koquahpilt.— Ibid., 78. Koquapilt.— Brit. Col. 



map, Ind. Aff., Victoria, 1872. Kwaw-kwaw-aplet.— 

 Can. Ind. Aff., 413, 1898. K-wawkwawapilt.— Can. 

 Ind. Aft"., pt. 11, 1.58, 1901. 



Kordlubing. A summer settlement of 

 the Kingnaitmiut Eskimo near the head 

 of an inlet emptying into Cumberland 

 sd. from the n. side. 

 Qordlubing.— Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1888. 



Koremiut. An Eskimo settlement at 

 Narket fjord, lat. 61° 17^ e. (Treenland.— 

 Nansen, First Crossing, i, 306, 1890. 



Kornok. An Eskimo villagein w. (Green- 

 land, lat. 64° 30'.— Hansen, First Cross- 

 ing, II, 329, 1890. 



Koroa. A small tribe, perhaps related 

 to the Tonika, whose home was on the w. 

 bank of the Mississippi below the 

 Natchez, on the Yazoo, and in the 

 country intervening westward from the 

 Mississippi. They were visited early in 

 1682 by La Salle, who described their 

 cabins as tlome-shaped, about 15 ft high, 

 formed chiefly of large canes, and with- 

 out windows (Margry, Dec, i, 558, 

 1876). They were considered warlike, 

 and were cruel and treacherous. In 1705 

 a party of them, hired by the French 

 ]>riest Foucault to convey him by water to 

 the Yazoo, murdered him and two other 

 Frenchmen. LaSalle observed that their 

 language differed from that of the Taensa 

 and Natchez, but their customs were the 

 same. All afterward moved to and set- 

 tled on Yazoo r., Miss., where in 1742 

 they lived in the same village as the Ya- 

 zoo. They were then allies of the Chick- 

 asaw, but were later merged with the 

 Choctaw and their identity as a separate 

 organization was lost. Allen Wright, 

 whose grandfather was of this tribe, in- 

 formed Gatschet (Creek Migr. Leg., i, 48, 

 1884) that the term Koroa, or Coroa, was 

 neither Choctaw nor Chickasaw, and that 

 the Koroa spoke a language differing en- 

 tirely from the Choctaw. 



Akoroa. — Marquette, map (1673) in Shea, Discov. 

 Miss., 1852. Coiras.— Richebourg {ca. 1716) in 

 French, Hist. Coll. La., in, 246, 1851. Coloa.— 

 Iberville (1699) in Margry, D^c, iv, 179, 1880. 

 Coroa.— Barcia, Ensayo, 246, 1723. Coroha. — Tonti 

 (1684) in Margrv, Dl^c, i, 603, 1876. Corois.— 

 McKenney and Hall, Ind. Tribes, in, 81, 1854. 

 Corroas. — Coxe, Carolana,9, 1741. Corrois. — Char- 

 levoix (1729), New France, vi, 85. 102, 1872. Cor- 

 roys.— Le Petit quoted bv Kip, Jesuit Missions, 289, 

 1866. Couroas.— .Tefferys, French Dom., I, 144, 

 1761. Courois.— La Harpe (1699) in French, Hist. 

 Coll. La., Ill, 19, 28, 18.51. Curois.— Ibid., 32. 

 Ikouera.— La Salle (16811 in Margry, Dec, ll, 189, 

 198, 1877. Kolwa.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., i, 

 48, 1S84 (Choctaw name). Koroas.— La M(Stairie 

 (1682) quoted by French, Hist. Coll. La., ii, 22, 

 1875. Kouera.— "Proces verbal (1682) in French, 

 Hist. Coll. La.. I, 47, 1846. Kourouas.— Coxe, Car- 

 olana, 10, 1741. Kourovas. — Alcedo, Die. Geog., 

 V, 394, 1789. Kowronas —Morse, N. Am., 254, 1776 

 (perhaps quoting Coxe). Kulua. — Gatschet, 

 Creek Migr. Leg., i, 48, 1884 (Choctaw name). 



Korovinski. A former Aleut village on 

 Atkaid. at Korovin))ay, which the natives 

 deserted for Nazan across the island. The 

 Russians built a church there in 1826 and 



