BOLL. 30] 



LAGUTSTA LA JOYA 



753 



the inhabitants estabhshing permanent 

 residences in the former summer villages 

 of Casa Blanca, Cubero, Hasatch, Paguate, 

 Encinal, Santa Ana, Paraje, Tsiama, and 

 Puertecito. Of these, Paguate is the old- 

 est and most populous, containing 350 to 

 400 inhabitants in 1891. Former villages 

 ■were Shinats and Shunaiki. The Laguna 

 peo]:)le numbered 1,384 in 1905. See 

 Keresan Family, Moqui)io, Pueblos, Rito, 

 Shumasitscha, and the villages above 

 named. (f. w. h. ) 



Bierai.— Gatschet, Isleta MS. vocab., 1885 (Isleta 

 name of puoblo). Bieride.— Ibid. (pi. Biernin; 

 Isli'ta name of people). Ka-hua-i-ko. — Jonven- 

 eeau in Cath. Pion., l, no. 9, 13, 1906. Kairai- 

 kome.— Klngsley, Stand. Nat. Hist., vi, 1S3, 1885. 

 Kajwaika.— Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 30, 1891 

 (Hopi name of pueblo). Kan-Ayko. -Loew in 

 Wheeler Surv. Rep., app. LL, 178, 1.S75 (I^agnna 

 name of pueblo, « = ;/). Ka-uay-ko.— Bandelierin 

 Arch. Inst. Papers, iii, 260, 1890 (Laguna name of 

 pueblo). Kawahykaka.—Voth, Traditions of the 

 Hopi, 11, 1895 (Hopl name). Kawaihkaa. — Ibid., 

 113. Kawaik'.— Hodge, field notes, B. A. E., 1895 

 (Laguna name of pueblo). Ka-waik'. — ten Kate, 

 Synonymie, 7, 18,S4 (Laguna name of pueblo). 

 Ka-waika'. — Ibid. Kawaikama. — Hodge, field 

 notes, B. A. E., 1895 (Santa .\na name of tribe). 

 Kawaikame. — ten Kate, Reizen in N. A., 230, 1885 

 (Laguna name of tribe). Kawaik'-ka-me.— ten 

 Kate, Synonymie, 7, 1884 (Laguna name of tribe). 

 Kawaikome.— Powell in Am. Nat., xiv, 601, Aug. 

 isso (mentioned distinctly from Laguna). K6- 

 iks.— Lummls, Man who Married the Moon, 202, 

 1894 (native nameof Laguna). Ko-stete.— Loewin 

 Wheeler Surv. Rep., vii,339, 1879 (given as proper 

 name of pueblo). Kiihkweai. — Hodge, field 

 notes, B. A. E., 1895 (Isleta ami Samiia name: see 

 Bicrai, above). K'ya-na-thlana-kwe. — Gushing, 

 inl'n, 1891 (Zuiii name: " people of the great pool 

 or pond'). Lagana.— Gatschet in Wheeler Surv. 

 Rep., VII, 405, 1879 ( misprint). Lagouna.— Gallatin 

 in Nouv. Ann. Voy., 5th s., xxvii, 297, 1851. 

 Laguna. — MS. of 1702 quoted bv Bandelier in Arch. 

 Inst. Papers, v, 189, 1890; Villa-Senor, Theatre 

 Am., pt. 2, 421, 1748. Lagune.— Gatschet in Mag. 

 Am. Hist., 263, Apr. 1882. Lagunes. — Simp.son in 

 Rep. Sec. War, 150. 1850. Lagunians.— ten Broeck 

 (18.52) in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 81, 88, 18.54. 

 La haguna.— Domenech, Deserts N. Am., i, 443, 

 181)0. Layma.— ten Broeck in Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, iv, 77, 1854 (misprint). Saguna. — Klett in 

 Pop. Sci. Monthly, v, 584, 1874 (misprint). San 

 Jose de la Laguna — Ward in Ind. .\ti'. Rep. 1867, 

 213, 1868 (mission name). San Josef de La Laguna. — 

 Alencaster (1805) in Prince, N. Mex., 37, 1883. 

 Seguna.— Pike, Exped., 3d map, 1810 (misprint). 

 Sitsime.— Gatschet in Mag. Am. Hist., 263, Apr. 

 1S,S2 (Laguna name for themselves). Taguna. — 

 Wallace, Land of the Puebl( s, 4.5, 1888 (misprint). 

 To-zan'-ne'.— ten Kate, Synonymie, 6, 1884 ('much 

 water'; Navaho name). Tozjanne. — ten Kate, 

 Reizen in N. A., 231, 1885 (Navaho name). Tuzh- 

 lani.— Hodge, field notes, B. A. E., 1895 (Navaho 

 name of people). 



Laguna. A Ponio l)and on the w. 

 shore of Clear lake, Cal. — Revere, Tour 

 of Duty, 120, 1849. See Clear Lake Indians. 



Laguna. A Diegueno village in \\. San 

 Diego CO., Cal. (Jackson and Kinnev, 

 Rep. Miss. Ind., 24, 1883). The name "is 

 now applied tooneof the so-called Campo 

 reservations, comprising 320 acres, mostly 

 of desert land, and containing only 5 in- 

 habitants in 1906 ( Kelsey, Rep., 25, 1906). 



Lahanna. A name applied l)y Lewis and 

 Clark in 1805 to a body of Indians, said to 

 number 2,000 in 120 houses, on both sides of 



Columbia r. about Clarke's fork. This is 

 in the country of the Pend d'Oreilles and 

 Senijextee, but Lahanna corresponds to 

 no known division. 



Lahama.— Bancroft. Nat. Races, i, 314, 1882 (mis- 

 quoting Morse). Lahanna.— Lewis and Clark, 

 Exped., II, 475, 1814. La-hanna.— Orig. Jour. Lewis 

 and Clark, vi, 119, 1905. 



Lahaui {Ld^qau'i). A village of the 

 Nicomen tribe of Cowichan at the mouth 

 of Wilson cr., on the .s. side of Fraser r., 

 Brit. Col.— Boas in Rep. Brit. A. A. S., 

 454, 1894. 



Lahoocat. Mentioned by Lewis and 

 Clark as an old Arikara village, occupied 

 in 1797, abandoned about 1800. It was 

 situated on an island in Missouri r., below 

 the present Cheyenne River agency, S. 

 Dak., and when occupied consisted of 17 

 lodges arranged in a circle and walled. 

 Lahoocat. — Lewis and Clark, Exped., I, 97, 1814. 

 La hoc catt. — Orig. Jour. Lewis and Clark, i, 179, 

 1904. 



Laidukatuwiwait ( Lai' -du-ka-tu-wi- 

 vxiit). A Paviotso band formerly living 

 about the sink of the Humboldt, in w. 

 Nevada.— Powell, Paviotso MS., B. A. E., 

 1881. 



Laimon. Venegas (Hist. Cal., i, 55, 

 1759) states that the Indian.s of Loreto- 

 Concho mission have specific names for 

 the tribes of Lower California according 

 to the regions occupied by them, as the 

 Edu, Eduu, or Edues in the s. ; that 

 they call themselves Monquis, and those 

 N. of Loreto are called Laymones; the 

 latter are in fact Cochimi, the Edues vir- 

 tually Pericui, though both, the Edues 

 and the Laymones, contain some tribes of 

 the Monquis. Cagnaguetand Kadakaman 

 are given as Laimon divisions. 

 Lamoines. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, May 18, 1860. 

 Layamon.— Latham In Trans. Philol. Soc. Lond., 

 88,1856. Laymon.— Prichard, Nat. Hist. Man., II, 

 553, 18.55. Layrnona.— Baegert in Smithson. Rep. 

 1864, 393, 1865. Laymones.— Venegas, Hist. Cal., I, 

 .55, 1759. Limonies. — Taylor in Browne, Res. Pac. 

 Slope, app., .54, 1869. 



Lajas (Span.: 'stone slabs,' translation 

 of the native name). A Tepehuane 

 l^ueblo, of 900 inhabitants, in the ex- 

 treme N. part of the territory of Tepic, 

 Mexico, about lat. 23°, Ion. 105°. The 

 children of the town, who prior to about 

 1890 had never seen a white person, are 

 now instructed in Spanish and the rudi- 

 ments of civilization and Christianity. 



Eityam.—Lumholtz, Unknown Mexico, l, 4.57, 1902 

 (native name). Lajas. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 

 319, 1864. San Francisco Lajas.— Ibid, (full Span- 

 ish name). 



La Joya(Span. : 'the jewel'). ALuiseno 

 village X. of San Luis Rey, in San Diego 

 CO., Cal., from which 180 Indians are said 

 to have been present at the Temecula 

 meeting in 1865 (Lovett in Rep. Ind. 

 Aff., 124, 1865). The settlement is now 

 on Potrero res., 75 m. from Mission Tule 

 River agenc}'.. 



La JoUa.— Jackson and Kinney, Rep. Mi.ssion 

 Inds,, 2r1,l883. La Joya.— Haves (1850) quoted by 

 Bancroft, Nat. Races, i, 460,1882. 



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