BULL. 30] 



KUMARMIUT KUNGTSOA 



735 



Kumarmiut. An Angmagsalingmiut 

 Eskimo village on an island at the mouth 

 of Angmagsalik fjord, Greenland, lat. 65° 

 45^; pop. 28 in 1884.— INIeddelelser om 

 Grdnland, ix, 379, 1902. 



Kumbatuash. The native name of the 

 inhabitants of Kumbat, a rocky tract of 

 land s. w. of Tule or Rhett lake, Cal. , ex- ' 

 tending froni the lake shore to the Lava- 

 beds. These people are a mixture of 

 Klamath Lake and ]Modoc Indians, and 

 are said to have separated from these after 

 1830. 



Cum-ba-twas.— Meacham, Wigwam and Warpath, 

 677, 1S75. Gumbatkni.— Gatschet in Cont. N. A. 

 B:tlinol.,n. pt. II, 160 1890. Kumbatkni,— Ibiri. 

 Kumbatuash. — Ibid. Kumbatuashkni. — Ibid. Kum- 

 batwash. — Ibid., pt. I, x.xxiv, 1890. Rocklndians. — 

 INIeaeham, op. cit., 610. 



Kumiyus {K'v'-mi-yiis^). A former 

 Siuslaw village on Siuslaw r., Oreg. — 

 Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 230, 

 1890. 



Kumkwu ( K'u m-kir{i^ ) . A former Sius- 

 law village on Siuslaw r., Oreg. — Dorsey 

 in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, ni, 230, 1890. 



Kumsukwum {K' uni^-su-k' ii'um). A 

 former Yaiiuina village on the s. side of 

 Yaquina r., Oreg. — Dorsev in Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, in, 229, 1890. 



Kun. The Corn clans of the Tewa 

 pueblos of San Juan and Santa Clara, N. 

 Mex. See Konglo. 



Khun-tdoa.— Hodge in Am. Anthrop., ix^349, 1896 

 (Santa Clara form; tdoa = ' people') . Kun-tdoa. — 

 Ibid. (San Juan form). 



Kuna-lanas {Ku'na Wnas, 'town people 

 of the point '). An important family of 

 the Raven clan of the Haida. According 

 to one story it was so named because its 

 people lived on a point in the legendary 

 townof Skena (see Tadji-lanas); but more 

 probably it refers to the point at Naikun 

 where these people were at one time 

 settled. The Teeskun-lnagai, Hlielung- 

 kun-lnagai, Saguikun-lnagai, and Yagun- 

 kun-lnagai were subdivisions, (j. r. s.) 

 Ku'na lanas.— Swanton, Cont. Haida, 270, 1905. 

 Kun la'nas.— Boas, liitli Rep. N. W. Tribes Canada, 

 23, 1898. Kwun Lennas. — Harrison in Proc. and 

 Trans. Roy. Soe. Canada, see. n, 12.5, 1895. 



Kundji {Ku'ndji). A legendary Haida 

 town on the s. shore of Copper bay, 

 Moresby id.. Queen Charlotte group, 

 Brit. Col. The family living there is said 

 to have been the Daiyuahl-lanas. An- 

 other town of this name formerly stood on 

 the w. side of Prevost id., in theNinstints 

 country. — Swanton, Cont. Haida, 279, 

 1905. 



KTinechiii(Quwe^<cm). A Seechelt sept 

 which formerly lived at the head of 

 Qiieen's reach, Jervis inlet, Brit. Col. 

 The founder of this division is said to 

 have come from ^^t Rupert. — Hill-Tout in 

 Jour. Anthr. Inst., 23, 1904. 



Kuneste (Wailaki: 'Indian'). The 

 southernmost Athapascan group on the 



Pacific coast, consisting of several tribes 

 loosely or not at all connected politically, 

 but speaking closely related dialects and 

 possessing nearly the same culture. They 

 occupied the greater part of Eel r. basin, 

 including the whole of Van Duzen fork, 

 the main Eel to within a few miles of 

 Round valley, the s. fork and its tributa- 

 ries to Long and Cahto valleys, and the 

 coast from Bear River range s. to Usal. 

 Their neighbors were the Wishosk on the 

 N.,the Wintun on the w., and on the s. 

 the Yuki, whose territory they bisect at 

 Cahto, where they penetrate to the Pomo 

 country. The Kuneste subdivisions are 

 Lassik, Wailaki, Sinkine, Kato, and JNIat- 

 tole. (p. K. G.) 



Ken'-es-ti. — Powers in Cont. N. A. I'^thnol., nr, 

 114, 1877 (own name). Kool. — A. L. Kroeber, 

 inf'n, 1903 (Yuki name). Kuneste.— P. E. God- 

 dard, inf'n, 1904 (Wailaki name). 



Kung {Qau). a former Haida town, 

 owned l)y the Sakua-lanas, at the mouth 

 of Naden harbor, Graham id., Queen 

 Charlotte group, Brit. Col. Possibly this 

 is the place referred to by John Work as 

 Nigh-tasis (q. v.), where there were said 

 to be 15 houses and 280 inhabitants in 

 1836-41. Old people remember 12 houses 

 there. The inhabitants have all moved 

 to Masset. (.i. r. s. ) 



K-ang.— Boas, Twelftli Rep. N. W. Tribfes Can., 

 23, 1898. Nigh-tasis.— Work (1836-41) in Dawson, 

 Q. Charlotte Ids., 173b, 1880. aAn.— Swanton, 

 Cont. Haida, 281, 1905. 



Kungaii. The Sweet-corn clan of San 

 Ildefonso pueblo, N. Mex. 

 Ku"aii-td6a.— Hodge in Am. Anthrop., ix, 349, 

 1896 (Moa = ' people'). 



Kungfetdi. The Black-corn clan of 

 San Ildefonso pueblo, N. Mex. 

 Kunfetdi-tdoa.— Hodge in Am. Anthrop., ix, 349, 

 1896 (/(/(■(0=' people'). 



Kungga [QlA'nga, * help received unex- 

 pectedly'). A former Haida town, oc- 

 cupied by the Kona-kegawai, on the s. 

 shore of Dog id.. Queen Charlotte group, 

 Brit. Col. The inhabitants movert to 

 K loo.— Swanton, Cont. Haida, 278, 1905. 



Kungielung {K.'n^ngielAn). A former 

 Haida town on the w. side of the en- 

 trance to Masset inlet. Queen Charlotte 

 ids., Brit. Col. — Swanton, Cont. Haida, 

 281, 1905. 



Kungpi. The Red-corn clan of San 

 Ildefonso pueblo, N. Mex. 

 Kunpi-tdoa.— Hodg^ in Am. Anthrop., ix, 349,1896 

 (;f/ua = 'iie(iple'). 



Kungtsa. The White-corn clan of San 

 Ildefonso pueblo, N. Mex. 

 Kuitsa-tdoa. — Hodge in Am. Anthrop., ix, 349, 

 1896 (/r/ (■;« = • people'). 



Kungtsei. The Yellow-corn clan of 

 San Ildefonso pueblo, N. Mex. 

 Ku"tsei-td6a.— Hodge in Am. Anthrop., ix, 349, 

 1896 (/(/-'((( = ' people'). 



Kungtsoa. The Blue-corn clan of San 

 Ildefonso pueblo, N. Mex. 

 Ku"tsoa-td6a.— Hodge in Am. Anthrop., ix, 349, 

 1896 (W(;a = ' people'). 



