HARKINGTON] PLACE-NAMES 357 



trustworthy San Ildefonso informant, place T' am.vjog.e somewheve 

 in the mountains east of Nambe, as indeed the name might sug- 

 gest the location to be. The informant referred to insists that it 

 is a real place, not niAthioal. 



Nambe TuhagehiCit 'bowed back corner' {Tttbage, see Tubage'Qywikcp 

 [22:un]ocated], below; &(^'m 'large low roundish place'). 



This is a corner in the hills near the upper course of 3Iahy,powe 

 [22:39]; see Tubag.e'oyvnkeji [22:unlocated], below. 



Nambe Tuiage'qrjwikeji 'bowed back pueblo ruin' ifu 'back'; iage 

 state of being 'bowed' 'bent as luider a load'; ■ qijwik'eji 'pueblo 

 ruin' < ^qywi 'pueblo', heji 'old' postpound). 



This is a pueblo ruin at Tubcig_ebu''t/, a dell in the hills some- 

 where near the upper course of Mahi^prnve [23:46]. See Tuiage- 

 bi/^u [22:unlocated], above. 



Nambe Tftrjofiyf, Tfu'jiikefice, TfiCjo, TfiPjae of obscure etymol- 

 ogy {tfu'jo said by the old Indian who gave the name to refer to 

 some kind of black material; this is all he would explain, and no 

 other informant of whom inquiry was made was able to ex- 

 plain it at all; piyf 'mountain'; Icewe 'peak'; \'- diminutive). 

 This is a mountain north of Baldy Peak [22:.53] and south of 

 Eujotfa [22:31J. It is a high mountain, it is said, but not so high 

 as Baldy Peak. 



San Juan, San Ildefonso, and Nambe Wijo^ywilej i ' pueblo ruin of 

 the great gap,' referring to [22:29] {Wijo, see [22:;39]; "qywihfji 

 'pueblo ruin' < '091/' j 'pueblo,' heji 'old' postpound). 



This pueblo pla^s an important role in one version of the Tewa 

 migration legend. It was built, so it is related, by the united 

 Summer and Winter people after they had wandered separated 

 for generations. It was here that two-cacique government was 

 first instituted. So far as the writer is aware, this ruin has not 

 hitherto been mentioned in print. It has not been possilile to 

 learn of its location more definitely than that it is somewhere in 

 or near the great gap [22:29]. It is said that the ruin is not very 

 large. See [22:29J. 



Nameless mineral spring. It is said that Mr. Fritz MiUler, of Santa 

 Fe, owns a mineral spring situated in the hills south of Nambe 

 and east of Tesuque. The water is cold. Some of it has been 

 bottled and sold in Santa Fe. 



[23] namb6 sheet 



This sheet (map 23) shows some of the country around Nambe 

 Pueblo, especially to the south. The region is claimed by the 



