792 



MAKAK MAKOUA 



[b. a. e. 



by Executive order of Oct. 12 of the 

 same year, by which the Makah res. was 

 definitely defined. The Ozette res. was 

 estal)lished bv order of Apr. 12, 1893. 

 Ba-qa-6.— McCaw, P\iyalhir) MS. vocab., B. A. E., 

 1885 (I'livalluii iiaine)- Cape Flattery. — Lane in 

 Ind. .\ff. keii.,lii2,l.sr)0. Classet.— Farnham.Trav., 

 II, 310, 1843 (Xddtka name: 'outsiders'). Clat- 

 set. — Dunn, Hist. Oregon, '231, 1844. Clossets. — 

 Starling in Ind. Aff. Rep., 171, 1.S.5J. Flattery — 

 Ibid., 170. Klaizarts. — .Armstrong, Oregon, 136, 

 18.57. Kla-iz-zarts.—.Jewitt,Narr., 7.5, 1849. Klas- 

 set. — Swan in Sniith.son. Cont., xvi, 1, 1870. Kwe- 

 net-che-chat. — Ibid, (own name: 'cape people '). 

 Kwe-net-sat'h. — Ibid. (Salisli name). Macau. — 

 Lane in Ind. Aff. Rep., 16'2, 18.50, Ma-caw,— Star- 

 ling in Ind. Aft'. Rep. , 170, 18,52, Maccaws, — Hanna 

 in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1857, 337, 1858. Mackahs.— Taylor 

 in Cal. Farmer, Aug. 1, 18(52. Makahs.—(3ibbs, Clal- 

 lam and Lummi, v, 1863. Makans. — Stevens in 

 Ind. Aff. Rep., 448, 1«.54. Makas. — Simmons in 

 Ind. Aft". Rep., 335, 1857. Makaw.— Lane in Sen. 

 E.\. Doc. 52, 31st Cong., 1st sess,, 173,1850, Makha.— 

 U. 8. Ind. Treat. (18.55), 461, l,s73. Mak-kah.— Swan 

 in Smithson. Cont., XVI, 1, 1870, Mi-caws, — Jones 

 (18.53) in H,R. Ex. Doc. 7b, 34th Cong,, 3d sess., 7, 

 1857. ftuenait chechat. — Swan, inf n, Feb. 1886. 

 Que-nait'-sath, — Swan,N,W, Coast, 211, 1857. Q,uine- 

 chart.— Orig. .lour. Lewis and Clark (1806), vi, 70, 

 190-5. Quin-na-chart.— lliid., IV, 169, l'J05. Quinne- 

 chant,— Lewis and Clark, E.xped., II, 120, 1814. 

 ftuinnechart, — Ibid,, 474, Tatouche, — Nicolet, Ore- 

 gon, 143, 1846, Tla'asath,— Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. 

 Tribes Can., 31, 1890 (' outside people': Nootka 

 name). Yacaws.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, vi, 

 689, 1857. 



Makak. An Ikoginiut Eskimo village 

 on the right bank of the Yukon below 

 Anvik, Alaska; jjop. 121 in 1880, 50 in 

 1890. 



Akka.— Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 226, 1902. Ma- 

 kagamute. — Raymond in Sen. Ex, Doc. 12, 4'2d 

 Cong,, 1st sess,, 25, 1,871. Makag'miit, — Dall in 

 Cont. N. A. Ethnol., i, 17, 1877. Makeymut— Nel- 

 son in 18th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1899. Makey- 

 mute.— Petroff, Rep. on Alaska, 57, 1881. Makki.— 

 Zagoskin inNouv. Ann. Voy., 5tli s., xxi, map, 

 1.8.50. Manki. — Raymond, op. cit., 31 (so called 

 by whites). 



Makak. See Mocuck. 



Makan ('medicine'). A Ponca gens, 

 in two subgentes: Real Ponka and Gray 

 Ponka. 



Majta".— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 228, 1897. 

 Noh'-ga. .—Morgan, Anc. Soc, 155, 1877. je-sinde- 

 it'aji. — Dorsey, op. cit. ('does not touch buft'alo 

 tails'). 



Makataimeshekiakia. See Black Hawk. 



Makatananamaki, See Black Thunder. 



Makatapi ('black men.' — Hewitt). A 

 name given in the Walam Olum of the 

 Delawares as that of a tribe encountered 

 by them during their migrations. — Brin- 

 ton, Lenape Leg., 190, 1885. 



Makawichia [Ma-ka-m-chia' , 'place of 

 many doves ' ) . A Tarahumare rancheria 

 near Palanquo, Chihuahua, Mexico. — 

 Lumholtz, infn, 1894. 



Makay. An unidentified village for- 

 merly on Pamlico r., N. C, marked on 

 the map of the Hoinann heirs, 1756. 



Makhelchel. A name applied by Pow- 

 ers to the people of the vicinity of Lower 

 lake, one of the southern arms of Clear 

 lake, Lake co., Cal. The name was used 

 particularly to designate the people of 

 Lower Lake id., who were supposed by 

 Powers (Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 214, 



1877 ) to belong to the Copehan ( Wintun ) 

 linguistic stock, but who have been found 

 to belong to the Kulanapan (Pomo) 

 stock. The people inhaljiting this island 

 called the island and the village itself 

 Koi. (s. A. B. ) 



Hesley.— Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 214, 

 1877(from hbsch'-la, 'island', in the Makhelchel 

 dialect; applied by the whites both to the island 

 and its original inhabitants), Hessler, — Ibid. 

 Kelsey.— Ibid. Kessler. — Ibid. Makh'-el-chel. — 

 Ibid. 



Makhenikashika {Maqe-nikaci/^a, 'up- 

 per world people'). A Quapaw gens; 

 probably identical with the Wakantaeni- 

 kashika. — Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 

 230, 1897. 



Makhpiya-luta. See Red Cloud. 



Makhpiyamaza ( ' iron cloud ' ) . A band 

 of the Matantonwan division of the 

 Mdewakanton Sioux, named from its 

 chief. It numl)ered 153 in 1836 and 123 

 in 1859, at which latter date they resided 

 on the w. bank of the Mississippi, above 

 the mouth of St Croix, at the site of the 

 present Hastings, Minn. 



Iron-Cloud.— Neill, Hist. Minn., 144, note, 1858. 

 Iron Cloud's Village.— Koyce in 18th Rep. B. A. E., 

 Minn, map, 1899. Marcpeeah Mahzah. — School- 

 craft, Ind. Tribes, lll, 612, 18.53. Ma-rpi-ya-ma-za. — 

 Neill, op. cit. 



Makhpiyawichashta ('cloud man'). A 

 village of the Mdewakanton Sioux in 

 Minnesota in 1836, numbering 157; named 

 from the chief. 



Cloud Man's band.— Ind. Aff. Rep. 1859, 100, 1860. 

 Marc pee wee Chastah, — Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, 

 III, 6rj, 1.S.53. Sky Man,— Neill, Hist. Minn., 144, 

 note, 1858. 



Maklykaut. An Eskimo missionary 

 station on Disko bay, w. Greenland. 

 Maklykout.— Crantz, Hist. Greenland, i, map, 1767. 



Makokos. See Maycock. 



Makoma. A name used, evidently ow- 

 ing to some confusion on the part of early 

 writers, for the Indians who formerly 

 lived in the vicinity of Clear lake and the 

 mountains of Napa and Mendocino cos., 

 Cal., but they are said by Wrangell (Eth- 

 nog. Nachr., 80, 1839)" to have dwelt 

 northward of Ft Ross in Russian r. val- 

 ley. The term undoubtedly comes from 

 Maiyukma, the name of a prominent 

 Yukian Wappo village near Calistoga, 

 Napa CO. (s. A. B.) 



Maiyakma,— S, A. Barrett, infn, 1906 (correct 

 name), Mayacmas. — Bancroft, Nat. Races, 1,451, 

 1874. Mayacomas, — Ibid,, 363. Mipacmas. — Ibid., 

 362. Myacmas, — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, June 22, 

 1860. Myacomaps.— Ibid., June 7, 1861. 



Makomitek. An Algonquian tribe or 

 band mentioned in 1671 as residing in the 

 vicinity of Green bay. Wis. Tailhan 

 identifies them with the Makoukuwe, 

 which is doubtful. 



Makamitek.— Sieur de St Lusson (1671) in N. Y. 

 Due. C.il. Hist., IX, 803, 1855, Makomiteks.— Prise 

 de I'o.^^session (1671) in Tailhan, Perrot Mem., 293, 

 1864. 



Makoua ('bear'). A tribeor band living 

 near the village of St Michel, in central 

 Wisconsin, in 1673; probably adivision or 

 gens of the Foxes. 



