242 ETHNOGEOGEAPHY OF THE TEWA INDIANS [eth. axx. 29 



above, north of Jemez Pueblo. Probably the corresponding 

 Pecos form, of which Stevenson has fortunately given us a record, 

 had the same meaning, being applied to the Tewa and other tribes 

 living up country from the Pecos. The " ka-a' " of the Pecos 

 form first given remains unexplained. 



(7) Pecos "Ak'-e-ji".' 



(8) Cochiti Kdipa. This name is said to have no etymology 

 known to the Cochiti. "Kai'p'a".- 



(9) "Sia 'Tinjititja me"'.= The last syllable is evidently mse. 

 'people'. 



(10) Acoma "Kaiipa".'' 



(11) Oraibi Hopi jYasaie' I'teira ' middle Tewa ' (nasaie'e ' middle' ; 

 T6wa 'Tewa'). So called because Santa Clara is the central vil- 

 lage of the Tewa villages on the Rio Grande, lying between San 

 Ildefonso and San Juan. 



(12) Navaho "Ana S'ushI 'tribe like bears'".^ It is explained 

 that the Santa Claras are so named from their skunk-skin moccasins 

 which at first were thought to be of bear skin. 



(13) Probably Keres or Tiwa "Caypa"." This name is con- 

 founded with San Juan. 



(14) Eng. Santa Clara. (<Span.). = Span. (15). 



(15) Span. Santa Clara 'Saint Clara'. =Eng. (14). "Santa 

 Clara".' "S?Clara".» "S?" Clara"." "S. Clara "'.'» 



With JCapo compare the name of the pueblo ruin Kapo' oywikeji 

 [5:23] and Bandelier's "Ka-po"' given as the name of a pueblo ruin 

 near Golden, New Mexico [29 : unlocated]. Bandelier describes Santa 

 Clara Pueblo:" "Jemez, Santa Clara, and San Felipe are each a 

 double quadrangle with two squares." "At Santa Clara . . , 

 the Yutas . . . have assiduously contributed to the propagation 

 of the species"." A Santa Clara informant knew nothing of the 

 Ute blood at Santa Clara Pueblo. "The church of Santa Clara was 

 first used in 1761 "." The present pueblo is the third to bear the 

 name Ivapo according to Santa Clara tradition. The first ICapo 

 pueblo was [14:11G], a short distance northwest of the present 

 Santa Clara Pueblo. This was abandoned, so the story goes, its 

 inhabitants building a second village called K'apo at a site some- 

 what northeast of the present Santa Clara; see [14:117J. 



1 Hodge, field notes, Bur. Amer. Ethn., 1835 (Handbook Inds., pt. 2, p. 457, 1910). 



> Hodge, ibid. 



" Spinden, Sia notes, 1910. 



* Hodge, op. fit. 



5 Curtis, .\merican Indian, i. p. 138, 1907. 



• Oflate (1.598) in Doc. Inid., xvi, p. 256, 1871. 

 'Ibid., p. 116. 



» De I'Isle, Carte Mex. et Flor., 1703. 



9 D'Anville, Map Am^r. Septentrionale, 1746. 

 '» Cr^py, Map Am^r. Septentrionale, 1783 (?) 

 " Final Report, pt. i, p. 265, 1890. 

 ■2 Ibid., pp. 261-62. 

 " Ibid,, p. 207, note. 



