440 ETHNOGEOGKAPHY OF THE TEWA INDIANS [eth. ANN. 29 



Span. (13). "Cachiti".' "06tyi-ti".' "Cochiteiio.s"':^ Span- 

 for 'Cocbiti^ people'. "Kotiyti".^ "Ko-chi-ti'"'.^ "Kotyiti".^ 



(8) Sia "Kot/iti"." =Cochiti (7), Acoma (9). 



(9) Acoma "Kotu'fi".' "Kotyit"'.' =Cochiti (7), Sia (8). 



(10) Oraibi Hopi Kwitfitl: doubtless from the Keresan forms. 



(11) Navaho "To Gad 'cedar water'".* ^^TqugWul 'the 

 Cochiti [people]'"." "Tqoga' 'Cochiti' ".»" 



(12) Eng. Cochiti. (<Span.). = Span. (13). 



(13) Span. Cochiti, derived from .some Keresan form; see 

 Cochiti (7), Sia (8), Acoma (9). 



(14) "San Buena Ventura de Cochiti." '' " San Buenaventura de 

 Cochiti."'- "San Buenaventura." '^ "San Buena Ventura de 

 Cochita."" 



(15) "St. Bartholomew. " '^ "San Bartolomeo. " " 



Cochiti Pueblo (pi. 19, A) is the most northerly of the Keresan- 

 speaking pueblos, and the one nearest to the Tewa country. The 

 Tewa say that in ancient times the relations between the Tewa and 

 the Cochiti were normally unfriendly. 



The invariable element in tlie migration traditions is that the 

 Cochiti people have occupied and abandoned successively a num- 

 ber of sites, beginning with Tfo'onfe [28:12] and ending with 

 their present village. The sites are, as the writer obtained 

 them from Mr. John Dixon of Cochiti in 1908: (1) Tfoonfe 

 [28:12], (2) M{katahmethVmaUeS6iiia [28:26], (3) TsSfa- 

 tetavflcdt'etfamahd^afMafoiiia [28:unlocated], (4) Ilaafseka- 

 matsefoma [28:39], ' (5)' 'KiHfetehrth'jglurnftttafoma [28°:()1], 

 (6) Kotfeteha'aftetafoma [28:unlocatedJ, and (7) Kotfete [28:77]. 

 Lists of the sites obtained liy Bandelier, I^ummis, and Hewett 

 differ somewhat from this, although some of them were obtained 

 from the same informant." It will be noticed that the pres- 



> Bandelier, Gilded Man, p. 216, 1893. 



^'Lniamisiii Scribtier's Mag., p. 92, ]S9"i. 



8 Fidd Columb. Mus. Pub. 96, p. 11. 1905. 



< Handbook Inds., pt. 1, p. 317, 1907. 



s Hewett, Communaiit(58, p. 47, 1908. 



6i3pinden, Sia notes, MS., 1911. 



' Hodge, field notes. Bur. Amer. Elhn., 1895 (Handbook Inds., pt. 1. i.. 31S, 1907). 



8 Curtis, American Indian, i, p. 13,8, 1907. 



» Franciscan Fathers, Ethu. Diet, of the Navaho Language, p. 128, 1910. 



i»Ibid., p. 135. 



11 Alencaster (1805) in Meline, Two Thousand Miles, p. 212, 1867. 



12 Ind. Aff. Rep. for 1867, p. 213, 1868. 



13 Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Max., p. 281, 1.S89. 



n Donaldson, Moqui Pueblo Indians, p. 91, 1893. 



IS Pike, Trav., p. 273, 1811 (a mistake, intended for San Buenaventura, according to Handbo(tk 

 Ind.s., pt. 1, p. 318,1907). 



isiliihlenpfordt, Mejico, ll, p. 533, 1844. 



1' See Bandelier, Final Report, pt. ii, p. 21, 1892; Lummis, The Land of Poco Tiempo, 189S, pp. 

 136-154; Hewett, The Excavations at El Rito de los Frijoles in 1909, in Papers School Amer. Arcluxol., 

 No. 10, and Amrr. Aiithr., ii. No. 4, Oet.-Dec, 1909, pp. 670-73. 



