BOLL. 30] 



KUTSHAMAKIN KWAHARI 



74g 



Kutshamakin. One of the Massachuset 

 sachems who signed the treaties of 1643 

 and lt)45. He was properly the sachem 

 of the country about Dorchester, Mass., 

 part of which he sold to the EngUsh. It 

 was his people to whom John Eliot tirst 

 preached. Though at tirst opposed to 

 the English, Kutshamakin afterward be- 

 came Christianized and served them in 

 many ways, particularly as inter{)reter. 

 To his killing and scalping a Peciuot In- 

 dian in 1636 has been attributed (Drake, 

 Inds. of N. A., 116, 1880) the outbreak of 

 a horrible war. (a. f. c. ) 



Kutshittan ( ' bear house people ' ) . 

 Given as a subdivision of the Tlingit 

 group Nanyaayi ((]. v.), but in reality 

 it is merely the name of the occupants of 

 a certain house. 



ftuts hit tan. — Boas in 5tli Rep. N. W. Tribes Can- 

 a<ia, i!o. is,s<,». Xvits! hit tan. — Swantoii, field notes, 

 B. A. E., 1904. 



Kutshundika ( ' buffalo e.aters ' ) . A band 

 of the Bannock. 



Buffalo-Eaters.— ^elioolcraft, Ind. Tribes, i, 522, 

 IS.'io. Kutsh' undika. — Hoffman in Proc. Am. Philos. 

 Sof., XXX III, 2',i9, 1S86. 



Kutshuwitthe {Ku^-pu-wV-t^v). A for- 

 mer Yaquina village on the s. side of 

 Yaciuina r., Greg. — Dorsev in Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, in, 229, 1890. 



Kutssemliaath ( Ka^(>:f;Etji]iaat}i ) . A divi- 

 sion of the Seshart, a Nootka tribe. — 

 Boas in 6th Eep. N. W. Tribes Canada, 

 32, 1890. 



Kutul. A Kaiyuhkhotana village on 

 Yukon r., Alaska, 50 m. above Anvik; 

 pop. 16 in 18-44. 



Hultulkakut.— Raymond in Sen. Ex. Doc. 12, 42d 

 Cong-., 1st sess., 2.5, 1871. Khutulkakat. — Zagoskin 

 quoted bv Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 37, 1884. 

 Kutul.— Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. 



Kuuanguala. A former pueblo of the 

 Pecos tribe, more commonly known as 

 Las Ruedas (Simn.: 'the wheels'), situ- 

 ated a few miles s.e. of Pecos, near Arroyo 

 Amarillo, at the present site of the village 

 of Rowe, N. Mex. In the opinion of 

 Bandelier it is not unlikely that tbis 

 pueblo, together with Seyupaella, was 

 occupied at the time of Espejo's visit in 

 1583. 



Ku-uang-ual-a. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, 

 IV, 125, 1892. Kuuang TJa-la.- Ibid., ill, 128, 1890. 

 Pueblo de las Ruedas. — Ibid. 



Kuu-lana ( A7r/i* la'va). AHaidatown 

 occupied by the Koetas, in Naden harbor, 

 Graham id.. Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. 

 Col.— Swanton, Cont. Haida, 281, 1905. 



Kuyama. A former Chumashan village 

 near Santa Inez mission, Santa Barbara 

 CO., Cal. 



Cuyama. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 

 Kuyam. — Ibid. 



Kuyamskaiks ( Kuydm-Skd-iks, ' craw- 

 fish trail'). A branch of the Klamath 

 settlement of Yaaga, on Williamson r., 

 Lake co., Oreg.— Gatschet in Cont. N. A. 

 Ethnol., II, pt. I, xxix, 1890. 



Kuyanwe. The extinct Turquoise Ear- 

 pendant clan of the Tewa pueblo of Hano, 

 N. E. Ariz. See Kungya. 



Ku-yan--we. — Fewkes in Am. Anthrop., vii, 166, 

 1894. Kuyanwe-towa.— Hodge, ibid., ix, 362, 1896 

 (tO-wa = 'people'). 



Kuyedi ('people of Kuiu'). A Tlingit 

 division on the Alaskan island which bears 

 their name. 

 Kujeedi.— Krause, Tlinkit Ind., 120, 1886. 



Kuyikanuikpul. An Ikogmiut Eskimo 

 village on the right bank of Yukon r., be- 

 low Koserefski, Alaska. — Ravniond 

 (1869) quoted by Baker, Geog." Diet. 

 Alaska, 1902. ' 



Kuyuidika ('sucker-eaters'). A Pavi- 

 otso band formerly living near the site of 

 Wadsworth, on Truckee r., w. Nev. 

 Coo-er-ee.— Campbell in Ind. Aff. Rep., 119, 1866. 

 Cooyu-wee-weit. — Powers in Smithson. Rep., 450, 

 187t!. Ku-yu-i'-di-ka.— Powell, Paviotso MS. vo- 

 cab., B. A. E.. 1881. Wun-a-muc-a's (the Second) 

 band.— Ind. Atf. Rep. 1859, 374, 1860. _ 



Kvichak. An Aglemiut Eskimo village 

 on the river of the same name in Alaska; 

 pop. 37 in 1890. 



Kivichakh.— Eleventh Census, Alaska, 164, 1893. 

 Kvichak.— Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. 



Kvigatluk. A Kaialigmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage in the lake district n. w. of Kusko- 

 kwim r., Alaska; pop. 30 in 1880. 

 Kvigathlogamute. — Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 

 map, 1884. Kvigatluk. — Baker, <ieog. Diet. Alaska, 

 1902. Kwigathlogamute.— Petroff, Rep. on Alaska, 

 54, issi. Kwigathlogumut. — Nelson in 18th Rep. 

 B. A. E., map, 1899. 



Kvigimpainag. A Jugelnute Eskimo 

 village, of 71 persons in 1844, on the e. 

 bank of the Yukon, 20 m. from Kvikak, 

 Alaska. 



Kvigimpainagmute. — Zagoskin quoted by Petroff 

 in 10th Census, Alaska, 37,1884 (the people). 



Kviguk. A Malemiut Eskimo village 

 at the mouth of Kviguk r., n. shore of 

 Norton bay, Alaska. 



Kvieg-miut. — Tikhmenief (1861) quoted by Baker, 

 Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. Kvieguk-miut. — Ibid. 

 Kviguk. — Baker, ibid. Kvigukmut. — Zagoskin, 

 Desc. Russ. Po.ss. Am., pt. I, 72, 1847. 



Kvikak. An Ikogmiut Eskimo village 

 on Yukon r., 30 in. above Anvik, Alaska; 

 formerlv a Kaiyukhotana village. 

 Kvikak.— Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. Kvik- 

 hagamut. — Nelson in 18th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1900. 



Kvinkak. A Malemiut Eskimo village 

 on a river of the same name at the upper 

 end of Norton sd., Alaska; pop. 20 in 

 1880. 



Kvinghak-mioute. — Zagoskin in Nouv. Ann. Voy., 

 XXI, map, 1850. Kvinkhakmut. — Zagoskin, Descr. 

 Russ. Poss. Am., pt. 1, 72, 1S47. Ogowinagak. — 

 Nelson in 18th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1899. Ogowin- 

 anagak. — Petroff, Rep. on Alaska, 59,1881. 



Kwachelanokumae. The name of an 

 ancestor of a gens of the Mamalelekala, 

 a Kwakiutl tribe; also applied to the 

 gens itself. — Boas in Petermanns Mitt., 

 pt. 5, 130, 1887. 



Kwae {Kird'-e). A summer village of 

 the Tsawatenok at the head of Kingcome 

 inlet, Brit. Col. — Dawson in Trans. Roy. 

 Soc. Can. for 1887, sec. ii, 73. 



Kwahari ( ' antelopes ' ) . An important 

 division of the Comanche, whose mem- 

 bers frequented the prairie country and 

 Staked plains of Texas, hence the name. 

 They were the last to come in after the 

 surrender in 1874. (j. m. ) 



