BULL. 30] 



LETAIYO LILLOOET 



765 



who applied to them the name At-te- 

 shu-pe-sha-loh-pan-ga, which INIatthews 

 states is probably an attempt to give the 

 Hidatsa word for Black-lodge people. 



Letaiyo. The Gray-fox clan of the 

 Kokop (Firewood) phratry of the Hopi. 

 letaiyo wiiiwu. — Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 

 5S4, 1900 ( «'n7 )('!( = 'clan'). Le-tai-yo wun-wvi. — 

 Fewkes in Am. Anthrop., vii, 403, 189-1. 



Leush [Le'-ush). A former Modoc set- 

 tlement on the N. side of Tule (Rhett) 

 lake, s. w. Oreg. — Gatschet in Cont. N. 

 A. EthnoL, ii, pt. i, xxxii, 1890. 



Lewistown. A village of Shawnee aud 

 Seneca, taking its name from the Shaw- 

 nee chief Captain Lewis, formerly near the 

 site of the present Lewistown, Logan co., 

 Ohio, on lands granted to them by treaty 

 of Sept. 29, 1817, but sold under the pro- 

 visions of the Lewistown treaty of July 

 20, 1831. See Howe, Hist. Coll.'Oho, ii, 

 102, 1896; Royce in 18th Rep. B. A. E., 

 686,732,1899. (.r. m.) 



Leyva. Located on various early maps 

 apparently as a settlement of New Mex- 

 ico, but in reality designed to indicate a 

 point supposed to have been reached by 

 Francisco Leyva Bonilla on an unauthor- 

 ized expedition, about 1594-96, to the 

 Quivira region, by whose inhabitants he 

 and his i:)ftrty were killed. See Bancroft, 

 Ariz, and N. Hex., 108, 1889; D'Anville, 

 map Am. Sept., 1746; Squier in Am. Re- 

 view, II, 520, 1848. 



leyza.— Giissefeld, Charte America, 1797 (mis- 

 print). 



Lgalaiguhl-lanas {L' gala'-igid Wnas). 

 A former subdivision ' of the Gitins of 

 Skidegate, Queen Charlotte ids. , Brit. Col. , 

 a family of the Eagle clan of the Haida. 

 It has long been extinct. The name may 

 mean 'people of the town of Lgalai.' — 

 Swanton, Cont. Haida, 274, 1905. 



Liam. A former Chumashan village in 

 Ventura CO., Cal. — Tavlor inCal. Farmer, 

 July 24, 1863. 



Liaywas. An unidentihed tribe which 

 participated in the Yakima treaty of 

 1855, and was placed on Yakima res.. 

 Wash. It may have been a division of 

 the Yakima. (l. f. ) 



Li-ay-was.— U. S. Ind. Treat. (1855), ii, 524,1903. 

 Siaywas.— Ind. AfF. Rep., 110, 1874. 



Libantone. A former village, presuma- 

 bly Costanoan, connected with Dolores 

 mission, San Franci.sco, Cal. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Lichtenau (Ger. : 'pastures of light'). 

 A village of Moravian Delawares on the 

 E. side of the Muskingum, 3 m. below 

 Coshocton, Coshocton co., Ohio, estab- 

 lished in 1776. Some time afterward it 

 was abandoned by the ^Moravians on ac- 

 count of the hostilities of the Hurons and 

 other warlike tribes, and reoccupied, un- 

 der the name of Indaochaie, by hostile 

 Indians, until destroyed by the Americans 

 in 1781. See Missions, (.i. m.) 



Indaochaie . — Butterfleld , Washington-Ir vin e Corr. , 

 52, 1882. Lichtenau.— Loskiel, Hist. Miss. United 

 Breth., pt. 3, 110, 1794; Heckevvelder in Trans. Am. 

 Philos. Soc, n. s., iv. 390, 1834. 



Lichtenfels (Ger.: 'rocks of light'). 

 A Moravian mission station in w. Green- 

 land. — Crantz, Hist. Greenland, i, map, 

 1767. 



Lick Town. A Shawnee (?) village, in 

 1776-82, on upper Scioto r., Ohio, proba- 

 bly near Circleville. The true name was 

 Erobably Piqua or Chillicothe. (.i. m.) 

 ick Town. — Huti'hins, map in Smith, Bouquet's 

 Exped.,17iit). Salt lick Town.— Smith, ibid., 67 

 (not Salt Lick Town on Mahoning cr.). 



Lidlipa. A former Nishinam village in 

 the valley of Bear r., n. Cal. 

 Lidlepa.— Powers in Overland Mo., xii, 22, 1874. 

 lid'-li-pa.— Powers in Cont. N. A. EthnoL, in, 316, 

 1877. 



Liebig-stag. An Ahtena village on the 

 left bank of Copper r., Alaska, lat. 61° 

 57^, Ion. 145° 45'; named from its chief. 

 Liebigstag's village. — Allen, Rep. on Alaska, 120, 

 1887. 



Liesnoi (Russian: 'woody'). A Kani- 

 agmiut village on Wood id., near Kodiak, 

 Alaska.; pop. 157 in 1880, 120 in 1890. 

 Lesnoi. — Eleventh Census, Alaska, 75, 1893. 

 Lesnova. — Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska, map, 

 1884. Tanignagmjut. — Holmberg, Ethnog. Skizz., 

 map, 1855. 



Liggige. A village connected with Con- 

 cho, or Loreto, 2 leagues n. of that mission, 

 which was situated opposite the island of 

 Carmen, lat. 26°, Lower California (Picolo 

 in Stocklein, Neue Welt-Bott, no. 72, 

 35, 1726). Not to be confounded with 

 Ligui, about 14 leagues farther s. 



Lightning stick. See Bull-roarer. 



Lignite. See Jet. 



Likatuit. A division of the Olamentke, 

 occupying a part of Marin co., Cal. Their 

 last great chief was INIarin (q. v. ), accord- 

 ing to Powers, and they were among the 

 Indians under San Rafael mission, 

 lecatuit. — Bancroft, Nat. Races, i, 4.53, 1874. Li- 

 kat'-u-it.— Powers in Cont. N. A. EthnoL, in, 195, 

 1877. 



Lilibeque. A Chumashan village on one 

 of the Santa Barbara ids., Cal., probably 

 Santa Rosa, in 1542. 



Lilibique,— Cabrillo, Narr. (1542), in Smith, Colec. 

 Doc. Fla., 186, 1857, Lillibique.— Taylor in CaL 

 Farmer, Apr. 17, 1863. 



Lillooet ('wild onion'). One of the 4 

 principal Salish tribes in the interior of 

 British Columbia, situated on Eraser r. 

 around the mouths of Cayoosh cr. and 

 Bridge r., on Seton and Anderson lakes, 

 and southward from them to Harrison 

 lake. Pop. 978 in 1904. Bands: Anderson 

 Lake, Bridge River, Cayoosh Creek (2), 

 Douglas, Enias, Fountain, Kanlax, Lil- 

 looet (2), Mission, Niciat, Pemberton 

 Meadows, and Schloss. It is sometimes 

 divided into the Lower Lillooet, inchiding 

 the Douglas and Pemberton Meadows 

 bands, and the Upper Lillooet, including 

 all the rest. Consult Teit, Lillooet In- 

 dians, in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., iii, 

 pt. 5, 1906. (j. R. s.) 



