HANDBOOK OF THE INDIANS 



NA. For all names beginning with this 

 abbreviation and followed by Sa., 

 Sra., or Seilora, see Nueslra Seilora. 



Naagarnep. See Nagonub. 



Naagetl. A Yurok village on lower 

 Klamath r., just below Ayootl and above 

 the mouth of Blue cr., n. w. Cal. 

 Naagetl. ^A. L. Kroeber, iiif'n, 1905. Kai-a-gutl. — 

 Gibbs (lS.il) iu Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, in, 138, 

 1853. 



Naahmao (Nd-ah-ind^-o, 'turkey'). A 

 clan of the Mahican. — Morgan, Anc. Soc, 

 174, 1877. 



Naai ('monocline'). A Navaho clan. 

 Kaa'i.— Matthews in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 

 104, 1890. Naa'i^ine.— Ibid. (/«ne = 'people'). 

 Naa'ii^jie', — Matthews, Navaho Legends, 30, 1897. 



Naaik {N'a^tEl; or N'e^iEk, 'the bear- 

 berry'). A village of the Nicola band of 

 Ntlakyapamuk near Nicola r., 39 m. 

 above Spences Bridge, Brit. Col.; pop. 

 141 in 1901, the last time the name 

 appears. 

 Na-ai-ik. — Dawson in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., sec. 



II, 44, 1891. N'a'iEk.— Teit in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. 

 Hist., II, 174, 1900. N'e'iEk.— Ibid. Ni-ack.— Can. 

 Ind. Aff. 1884, 189, 1885. 



Naaish [Na-aic^). A Yaquina village 

 on the s. side of the mouth of Yaquina r., 

 Oreg. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 



III, 229, 1890. 



Naalgus-hadai {Xa^a^lgAs xd^da-i, ' dark- 

 house people'). A subdivision of the 

 Yadus, a family of the Eagle clan of the 

 Haida. — Swanton, Cont. Haida, 276, 1905. 



Naalye (Na-al-ye). A division of the 

 Skoton, living, according to the treaty of 

 Nov. 18, 1854, on Rogue r., Oreg. — Com- 

 pend. Ind. Treaties, 23, 1873. 



Naansi. An extinct tribe, probably Cad- 

 doan, said by Douay to be numerous in 

 1687. They were allied with the Haqui 

 and Nabiri in a war against the Kadoha- 

 dacho and the Hainai at the time La 

 Salle's party were traveling toward the 

 Mississippi after their leader's death. 

 Naansi. — Douay in Shea, Discov. Miss. Val., 217, 

 1852. Nansi. — Hennepin, New Discov., ii, 41, 

 1698. 



Naapope. See Nahpope. 



Naas-Glee. Given as a Chimmesyan 

 village at the headwaters of Skeena r., w. 

 Brit. Col. — Downie in Jour. Roy. Geog. 

 Soc, XXXI, 253, 1861. 



3456— Bull. 30, pt 2—07 1 



Naasumetunne ('people dwelling on or 

 near the Naasu ' ) . A clan or band, prob- 

 ably Yakonan, on a small stream called 

 Naasu by the Naltunnetunne, s. of Sal- 

 mon r. and n. of the mouth of Siletz r., 

 Oreg. 



Naaskaak. — Scouler (1846) in Jour. Ethnol. Soc. 

 Lond., I, 233, 1848 (probably identical). Na'-a-su 

 me' ^iinne. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 231, 

 1890 (Naltunnetunne name). Naausi, — McKen- 

 ney and Hall, Ind. Tribes, in, 81, 1854. 



Nabatutuei. {Nabathu^ -tU/ ei, 'white 

 village'). A traditional pueblo of the 

 Tigua of Isleta, N. Mex. 



Nabat'hii'-tii'ei. — Gatschct, Mythic Tale of Isleta, 

 210, 1S91. Nah-bah-too-too-ee.— Lummis, Man who 

 Married the Moon, 12, 1894. White Pueblo.— Gat- 

 schet, op. cit., 214. 



Nabedache ( Nd'-bai-dd'-che, said to be a 

 fruit resembling the blackberry. Gat- 

 schet says the archaic name of the tribe 

 y^as, Nawadishe, from witlsh, 'salt'; Joutel 

 (Margry, Dec, in, 390,1878) corrobo- 

 rates this by saying that Naoudiche means 

 'salt', and that the village bearing this 

 name was so called because of the salt 

 supply near by). One of the 12 or more 

 tribes of the Hasinai, or southern Cad- 

 do, confederacy. They spoke the com- 

 mon language of the group. Their main 

 village stood for a century or more 3 

 or 4 leagues w. of Neches r. and near 

 Arroyo San Pedro, at a site close to 

 the old San Antonio road, which became 

 known as San Pedro. This name clung 

 to the place throughout the 18th century, 

 and seems still to cling to it, since San 

 Pedro cr. and the village of San Pedro, in 

 Houston CO., Tex., are in the same gen- 

 eral vicinity as old San Pedro. In 1687 

 a well-beaten path led past this village to 

 the Hasinai hunting grounds beyond the 

 Brazos (Joutel in Margry, Dec, in, 325, 

 326, 332, 1878) . It perhaps became a part 

 of the later San Antonio road. 



The Nouadiche mentioned by Bien- 

 ville in 1700 (Margry, Dec, iv, 441, 1881) 

 and the Amediche mentioned by La Harpe 

 in 1719 (ibid., vi, 262, 1886) are clearly 

 the Nabedache of San Pedro. Joutel 

 (ibid., in, 388, 187S) tells us that the 

 Naodiche village, which he passed 

 through some 15 leagues n. e. of San 



