N ABESN AT A N" A N AC AMEEI 



[B. A. E. 



eracies, and the survivors are now on the 

 (allotted) Wichita res. in Oklahoma, but 

 are not separately enumerated. ( h. e. b. ) 

 Amediche. — La Harpe (1719) in Margrv, Dec, in, 

 194, 1878. Amedichez.— Ibid., VI, 206, 1886. Ana- 

 baidaitcho. — Gatschet, Creeli Migr. Leg., 1,43,1884. 

 Nabadaches.— Sibley, Hist. Slcetches, 67, 1806. 

 Kabadachies. — Penicaiit (1701) in French, Hist. 

 Coll. La., n. s., I, 73, 1869. Nabadatsu,— Gatsehet, 

 op. cit., 43. Nabaducho. — Latham in Trans. Philol. 

 See. Lond., 104, 1856. Nabaduchoe.— Burnet (1847) 

 in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, i, 239, 1851. Nabai- 

 datcho, — Gatschet, Caddo and Yata.ssi MS., B. A. 

 E., 77. Na-ba'-i-da'-tu.— J. O. Dorsey, Inf'n, 1881 

 (own name). Nabato. — Tex. State Archives, Cen- 

 sus, Sept. 16, 1790. Nabaydacho. — Jesus Maria, Re- 

 lacion^ MS., 1691. Nabedaches. — Sibley, Hist. 

 Sketches, 71, 1806. Nabedoches. — Braclienridge, 

 Views of La., 87,1815. Nabeidacho, — Hidalgo, let- 

 ter, Oct. 6, 1716, MS. in Archivo Gen. Nabeida- 

 tcho.— Gatschet, Caddo and Yatassi MS., B. A. E., 

 42. Nabeidtacho. — Representacion (1/16) in Mem. 

 de Nueva Espana, x.xviii, 163, MS. Nabidachos. — 

 Rivera, Diario, leg. 2093, 1736. Nadatcho.— Delisle 

 (1687) in Margry, D^c, in, 409, 1878 (identical?). 

 Nadeches.— Neill, Hist. Minn., 173, 1858. Nadei- 

 cha,— Delisle (1687) in Margry, D6c., in, 409,1878. 

 Nahodiche.— La Harpe (1719) in French, Hist. 

 Coll. La., Ill, 72, 1851. Nahordikhe.— Joutel (1687), 

 ibid., I, 163, 1846. Nahoudikhe.— Shea, note in 

 Charlevoix, New France, iv, 108, 1870. ^Nahudi- 

 ques. — Barcia, Ensavo, 278, 1723. Naodiche. — Tonti 

 (1690) in French, Hist. Coll. La., i, 71, 1846. Na- 

 onediche. — De la Tour, map Amcrique Septen- 

 trionale, 1779. Naouadiche.— Tonti (1690) in 

 French, Hi.st. Coll. La., I, 74, 1846. Naoudiche.— 

 Ibid., 75. Naoudishes.— Martin, Hist. La., i, 220, 

 1827. Naouediches. — .\nville, map N. A., 17-52. 

 Naouidiche. — Joutel (l»i87) in Margrv, Dec, in, 394, 

 1888. Naouydiches.— La Harpe ( 1719) , ibid., vi, 262, 

 1886. Naovediche.— Tonti (1690) in French, Hist. 

 Coll. La., I, 73, 1846. Navadacho.— Bull. Soc 

 Geogr. Mex., 267, 1870. Navedachos.— Morfl 

 quoted by Shea in Charlevoix, New France, iv, 

 80, 1870. Navenacho. — Linares (1716) in Margry, 

 Dec, VI, 217, 1886. Navidacho.— Bull. Soc. Geogr. 

 Mex., 504, 1^69. Nawadishe.— Gatschet, Caddo 

 and Yata.ssi MS., B. A. E., 81 (archaic name, fr. 

 wltish, '.salt'). Nebadache. — Brown, West. Gaz., 

 214, 1817. Nebedache.— Ibid., 215. Nevachos.— 

 San Denis (1716) in Mem. de Nueva Espana, 

 XXVII, 123, MS. Nevadizoes.— Meziercs (1778) in 

 Bancroft, No. Mex .States, i, 661 , 18,s6. Noadiches. — 

 Barcia, Ensayo, 283, 1723. Nouadiche.— Bienville 

 (1700) in Margry, Dl'c, iv, 441, 1880. Nouidiches.— 

 De risle, map Am6r., 1700. Novadiches, — Barcia, 

 En.sayo, 288, 1723. Ouadiches. — McKenney and 

 Hall, Ind. Tribes, in, 81, 1851. Ouidiches.— Douav 

 (1687) in Shea, Discov. Miss. Val., 218, 18.52'. 

 Ouidiches.— Hennepin, New Discov., II, 43, 1698. 

 Yneci. — Jesus Maria, Relaci6n, 1691, MS. 



Nabesnatana. A division of the Tenan- 

 kutchin dwelling on the Nabesna branch 

 of Tanana r. , Alaska, and having the vil- 

 lage of Khiltat at its mouth. — Allen, Rep. 

 Alaska, 79, 1887. 



Nabeyxa. A former tribe of Texas, 

 mentioned as being n. e. of the Nabe- 

 dache by Francisco de Jesus Maria, a mis- 

 sionary among the latter tribe, in his MS. 

 relation of August, 1691. He included it 

 in his list of Texias ('allies'). Inas- 

 much as in the same hst he mentions the 

 Naviti (apparently the Nabiri), the Na- 

 beyxa must have been supposed by him 

 to be a different tribe. It was probably 

 Caddoan. (h. e. b. ) 



Nabiri. An extinct village or tribe of 

 Texas, possibly Caddoan, mentioned by 

 Douay in 1687 as i^opulous and as allied 

 with the Haqui and Naansi in a war 



against the Kadohadacho and the Hainai. 

 According to De 1' Isle's map of 1707 the 

 people then lived n. of Washita r. in s. Ar- 

 kansas. See Douay in Shea, Discov. Miss. 

 Yal., 2ded, 221, 1903. 



Nabari.— McKenney and Hall, Ind. Tribes, in, 

 81, 1854. Nabiri. — Hennepin, New Discov., ii, 41, 

 1698. Nabites. — Baudry des Lozi^res, Voy. a la 

 Louisiane, 243, 1802 (probably identical). Na- 

 biti.— Del' Lsle, map (1701) in Winsor, Hist. Am., 

 II, 294, 1886. Nahari. — Coxe, CaroUma, map, 1741. 

 Nahiri. — Shea in Cliarlevoix, New France, iv, 

 108, note, 1870. Naviti. — Francisco de Jesus Maria, 

 Relacion, 1691, MS. (apparently identical). 



Nabisippi. A former Montagnais sta- 

 tion on the N. shore of the Gulf of St 

 Lawrence, opposite Anticosti id., Quebec. 



Nabisippi. — Stearns, Labrador, 269, 1884. Napis- 

 sipi.— Hind, Lab. Penin,, n, ISO, 1863. 



Nabobish. {Nuhobiifh, 'poor soup.') A 

 Chippewa village, named from a chief, 

 that formerly stood at the mouth of 

 Saginaw r., Mich. The reservation was 

 sold in 1837. 



Nababish.— Detroit treaty (1837) in U. S. Ind. 

 Treaties, 215, ls73. Nabobask, — Saginaw treaty 

 (1820), ibid., 141, 1837. Na-bo-bish.— Detroit treaty 

 (1837), ibid., 249, 1873. 



Nabogame (from Navogeri, 'where no- 

 pals [uavo'] grow.'' — Lumholtz). ATepe- 

 hnane pueblo in the district of Mina, 17 

 m. N. of Guadalupe y "Calvo, in the s. w. 

 corner of Chihuahua, Mexico, about lat. 

 26° 20^ 



Nabogame. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 324, 1864. 

 Navogame. — Ibid., 322. Navogeri. — Lumlioltz, Un- 

 known Mex., I, 423, 1902 (Tepchuane name). 



Nabowu (named from an unknown 

 plant ) . A clan of the Chua ( Rattlesnake) 

 phratry of the Hopi. 



Nabovii winwii. — Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 

 582, 1900 { I vinw 11=:' clan'). Na'-bowU wun-wii, — 

 Fewkes in Am. Anthrop., vii, 402, 1894. 



Nabukak. A Yuit Eskimo village of 48 

 houses and about 275 people on East cape, 

 N. E. Siberia. 



Nabu'qak.— Bogoras, Chukchee, 30, 1904. Ne'- 

 eaklit. — Ibid., 20 (Chukchee name of people). 

 Ne'ekan. — Ibid. (Chukchee name of the village). 

 Pe'ekit, — Ibid. (Chukchee derisive name of peo- 

 pie.) 



Nacachau, One of the 9 tribes men- 

 tioned in a manuscript relation by Fran- 

 cisco de Jesus Maria, in 1691, as consti- 

 tuting the Hasinai confederacy in Texas. 

 They lived just n. of the Neche tribe and 

 on the E. side of Neches r. In 1716 San 

 Francisco de los Texas mission was estab- 

 lished, according to Ramon, in tiieir vil- 

 lage; and, according to one of Ramon's 

 companions, for them, the Neche, the Na- 

 bedache, and the Nacono. The mission 

 soon became known as San Francisco de 

 los Neches and the name Nacachau dis- 

 appears, the tribe being absorbed, prob- 

 ably, by the Neche. (h. e. b. ) 

 Nacachao. — Hidalgo, letter, Oct. 6, 1716, Archivo 

 General. Nacachas, — Representaci6n of the mis- 

 sionaries, 1716, Mem. de Nueva Espaiia, xxvii, 

 163, MS. Nacoches. — Ramon, Derrotero, 1716, 

 Mem. de Nueva Espaiia, xxvii, 157, MS. 



Nacameri ('bat dM'elling.' — Och). A 

 former pueblo of the Pima and the seat 

 of a Spanish mission founded in 1638; 



