112 



OIDOINGKOYO OKA 



[b. a. k. 



ibid., 356. S. Augustin, — Venegas, Hist. Cal., i, 

 map, 1759. S. Augustinus. — Kino, map (1702) in 

 St6cljleiii,NeueVVelt-Bott, 74, 1726. 



Oidoingkoyo. A former Maidu village 

 near the headwaters of Feather r. and 

 a])out 10 rn. n. of Prattville, Plumas co., 

 Cal. — Dixon in Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 

 XVII, pi. 38, 1905. 



Ointemarhen. A village or tribe said to 

 have been in the region between Mata- 

 gorda bay and Maligne (Colorado) r., 

 Tex. The name was given to Joutel in 

 1687 by the Ebahamo Indians who dwelt 

 in that country and who were probably 

 Karankawan. See Gatschet, Kavankawa 

 Indians, i, 35, 46, 1891. (a. c. f.) 



Ointemarhen. — Joutel (1687) in Margry, Dec, in, 

 288, 1878. Otenmarhem.— Joutel (1687) in French, 

 Hist. Coll. La., I, 137, 1846. Otenmarhen.— Ibid., 

 152. 



Oitac. A Maricopa rancheria on the Rio 

 Gila in 1744. — Sedelmair (1744) cited bv 

 Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 366, 1889." 



Oivimana {Olvimana, 'scabby people' ; 

 sing. Otrimdn). A principal division of 

 the Cheyenne; also a local nickname for 

 a part of the Northern Cheyenne. 

 Hive.— Dorsey in Field Columb. Mus. Pub. 103, 

 62, 1905. Ho i« i' ma na^^.— Grinnell, Social Org. 

 Chevennes, 136, 1905. 6' ivima' na.— Muoney in 

 14tli"Rep. B. A. E., 1025, 1896. Scabby band.— Dor- 

 sey in Field Columb. Mus. Pub. 99, 13, 1905. 



Ojageght {Hodjage'de\ 'he is carrying 

 a fish by the forehead strap.' — Hewitt). 

 A Cayuga chief, commonly called Fish 

 Carrier, whose name appears on the treaty 

 of 1790. A tract of land a mile square 

 had been reserved for him in 1789, and 

 in that year a letter from Buffalo Creek 

 was signed by Ojageghte or Fish Carrier, 

 and 10 other Cayuga chiefs. In 1792 he 

 had a silver medal from Washington, long 

 preserved. In 1795 his name appears as 

 Ojageghti, and in 1807 as Hojawgata. He 

 was venerated and brave. The later Fish 

 Carriers are Canadian Cayuga, preserving 

 the name. (w. m. b. ) 



Ojai. A former Chumashan village 

 about 10 m. up Buenaventura r. , Ventura 

 CO., Cal. 



Au-hai'. — Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., 1SS4. Aujay.— Tavlor in Cal. Farmer, 

 July 24, 1863. Ojai.— Ibid. 



Ojana. A former Tano pueblo s. of the 

 hamlet of Tejon, about lat. 35° 20^ San- 

 doval CO., N. Mex. It was inhabited 

 when visited by Oiiate in 1598, and prob- 

 ablv as late as 1700. — Bandelier in Arch. 

 Inst. Papers, iii, 125, 1890; iv, 109, 1892. 

 Ojana.— Ofiate (1598) in Doc. InM., xvi, 114, 1871. 

 0-ja-na. — Bandelier, op. cit., in, 125 (aboriginal 

 name). 



Ojeegwyahnng ( 'tisher-skins' ). Atribe, 

 probably Athapascan, known to the Ot- 

 tawa. 

 Ojeeg Wyahnug.— Tanner, Nnrr., 316, 1830. 



Ojeejok (UcMchak, 'crane'). A gens of 

 the Chippewa. 



Ad-je-jawk. — Tanner, Narr., 315, 1830. Attoch- 

 ingochronon.— Jes. Rel. 1640, 35, 1858 (Huron 

 name). Aud-je-jauk. — Ramseyin Ind.Aff.Rep.,91, 

 1850. 0-jee-jok'.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 166, 1877. 



Uj-e-jauk. — Warren in Minn. Hist. Soc. Coll., v,44, 

 1885. Tltcitcak.— Wm. Jones, inf'n, 1906 (proper 

 form; tr=cli}. 



Ojiataibues. A Maricopa rancheria on 

 Gila r., Ariz., in the 18th century. 

 Ojia-taibues. — Rudo Ensayo {ca. 1763), 22^1863. Ox- 

 itahibuis. — Sedelmair (1744) quoted by Bancroft, 

 Ariz, and N. Mex., 366, 1889. S. lacobus de Oiadai- 

 buisc. — Kino, map (1702), in Stocklein, Neue Welt- 

 Bott, 74, 1726. 



Ojio. A former Sobaipuri rancheria vis- 

 ited by Father Kino in 1697; situated on 

 the E. bank of San Pedro r. near its junc- 

 tion with the Gila, s. Arizona, not far 

 from the present Dudleyville. 

 Ojio. — Bernal (1697) quoted bv Bancroft, Ariz, and 

 N. Mex., 356, 1889. Victoria".— Ibid. Victoria de 

 Ojio.— Kino (1697) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., i, 

 280, 1856. 



Ojiopas. The Piman name of appar- 

 ently a Yuman tribe, members of which 

 visited Father Kino while among the 

 Quigyuma of the lower Rio Colorado in 

 1701. In all probability they are not the 

 Bagiopa. 



Giopas.— Kino (1701) cited in Rudo En.sayo {ca. 

 1763), Guiteras trans., 132, 1894; Coues, Garces 

 Diary, ,551, 1900; Bancroft, No. Mex. States, i, 497, 

 1884. Ojiopas.— Ibid. 



Ojistatara. An Oneida chief in 1776, 

 popularly called The Grasshopper. His 

 name appears as Peter Ojistarara in 1785, 

 andamongthe Kirkland papers isa speech 

 of The Grasshopper, addressed to Gov. 

 Clinton of New York, Jan. 27, 1785. He 

 was then principal 'chief, but died that 

 year. There was a later chief of the same 

 name. (w. m. b. ) 



Ojito de Samalayuca. A mission estab- 

 lished among the Suma (q. v.), in 1683; 

 situated 8 leagues 1)elow El Paso, in 

 Chihuahua, ]Mexico. — Escalante (1775) 

 quoted by Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 

 192, 1889. 



Ojo Caliente (Span.: 'warm spring'; 

 native name, K'iapkwainakwin, 'place 

 whence flow the hot waters'). A Zufii 

 summer village about 14 m. s. w. of Zuiii 

 pueblo, N. Mex., not far from the ruined 

 town of Hawikuh. See Mindeleff in 8th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 96, 1891. 

 AguaaCalientes, — Bandelier quoted inAreh.Inst. 

 Rep., v, 43, 1884. Caliente. — Donaldson, Moqui 

 Pueblo Inds., 127, 1893. Hos Ojos Calientes,— 

 Gushing in Millstone, ix, 19, Feb. 1884 (misprint 

 Hos for Los). K'iap-kwai-na. — Gushing, ibid., i.x, 

 55, Apr. 1884 (Z\ini name). K'iap'-kwai-na-kwe. — 

 Ibid. ( = 'people of the town whence flow the hot 

 waters'). E4ap kwai na kwin,— Gushing in 4th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 494, 1886. Ojo Caliente.— Common 

 map form. Ojos Calientes, — Gushing in Mill- 

 stone, IX, 225, Dec. 1884. Tkap-que-na.— Steven- 

 son in 5th Rep. B. A. E., 542, 1887. 



Oka. A modern village of Iroquois, 

 Nipissing, and Algonkin, on L. of the 

 Two Mountains, near Montreal, Quebec. 

 Cuoq says oka is the Algonkin name 

 for goldfish or pickerel (see Occov). 

 The Iroquois name, Kanesatake, signifies 

 'on the hillside', from onesata 'slope or 

 mountainside,' ke 'at or on.' 



The village was settled in 1720 by 

 Catliolic Iroquois, who were previously at 

 the Sault au RecoUet, and who numbered 



