BULL. 30] 



OKINOYOKTOKAWIK OKLAFALAYA 



115 



nekonep, Kluckhaitkwu, Kinakanes, and 

 Milakitekwa. The Kinakanes appear to 

 be the Okinagan proper. He also clashed 

 the Sanpoil with them, but says "these 

 are also claimed by the Spokans," and in 

 fact they ai-e still oftener placed by them- 

 selves. To Gibbs' list should be added 

 the Intietook band of Ross. The follow- 

 ing villages or bands are enumerated in 

 the Canadian Reports of Indian Affairs: 

 Ashnola, Chuchunayha, Keremeus, Nka- 

 maplix, Nkamip, Okanagan Lake, Pentic- 

 ton, Shennosquankin, and Spahamin. 

 Teit gives four others: Kedlamik, Kom- 

 konatko, Ntlkius, and Zutsemin. Dawson 

 adds Whatlminek. See also Skamoynu- 

 machff. 



Kank-'utla'atlam.— Boas in 5th Rep. N. W. Tribes 

 Can., 10, 18.S9 ( ' flatheads ' : Kutenai name) . Kina- 

 kanes.--(;ibb8 in Pae. R. R. Rep., I, 412, 18.%. 

 KokEnu'k'ke. — Chamberlain in 8th Rep. N. W. 

 Tribes Can., 7, 1892 (Kutenai name). Oakana- 

 gans. — Ross, Fur Hunters, I, 44,1855. Oakinacken, — 

 Ross, Adventures, 287, 1847 (used collectively and 

 also as applying to a subdivision). Oakinagan. — 

 Cox, Columb. R., II, 86. 1831. Ochinakein.— Giorda, 

 KalLspel Diet., i, 439, 1877-79. Okanagam.— Duflot 

 de Mofras, Oregon, ii, 100, 1844. Okanagan. — Par- 

 ker, Journal, 298, 1840. Okanagon. — Teit in Mem. 

 Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., ii. 167, 1900. 0-kan-a-kan.— 

 Morgan, Consang. and Atfln., 290, 1871. Okana- 

 kanes.— De Smet, Letters, 230. 1843. Okanaken. — 

 Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., map, 1890. 

 O'Kanies-Kanies. — Stevens in H. R. Doc. 48, 34th 

 Cong., 1st sess., 3, 1856. Okenaganes. — Shea, Cath. 

 Miss., 477, 1855. Okenakanes.— De Smet, Letters, 

 224, 1843. Okiakanes,— Stevens in Ind. Aff. Rep. 

 1856, 190, 1857. Okinaganes.— De Smet, op. cit., 37. 

 Okinagans. — M'Vickar, Exped. Lewis and Clark, 

 II, 386, 1842. Okinahane. — Stevensin Sen. Ex. Doc. 

 66, 34th Cong., 1st sess., 12, 18.56. OKinakain.— Gal- 

 latin in Trans. Am. Ethnol. Soc., ll, 27, 1848. Oki- 

 nakan.— Hale in U. S. Expl. Exped., VI, 205, 1846. 

 Okinakanes.— Stevens in Ind. Aff. Rep., 392, 1854. 

 O'Kinakanes.— Taylor in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 40th Cong., 

 spec, sess., 26, 1867. Okina'ken. — Boasin 5th Rep. 

 N. W. Tribes Can., 10, 1889. O'kina'k-en.— Cham- 

 berlain in 8th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 7, 1892. 

 Okinekane. — De Smet, Letters, 215, 1843. Okin-e- 

 Kanes.— Craig in H. R. Ex. Doc. 76, 34th Cong., 

 3d sess., 171, 18.57. O-kin-i-kaines.— Shaw in H. R. 

 Ex. Doc. 37, 34th Cong., 3d sess., 113, 1857. Okino- 

 kans. — Watkins in Sen. Ex. Doc. 20, 45th Cong., 

 2d sess., 5, 1878. 0-ki-wah-kine. — Ross in Ind. Aff. 

 Rep., 27, 1870. Oknanagans. — Robertson (1846) in 

 H. R. Ex. Doc. 76, 30th Cong., 1st sess., 9, 1848. 

 Okonagan.— Wilkes, U. S. P^xpl. Exped., iv, 431, 

 1845. Okonagon.— Dart in Ind. Aff. Rep., 216, 18.51. 

 Okonegan^Wilkes, ibid., 461, 1854. Omahanes. — 

 Stevens in Sen. Ex. Doc. 66, 34th Cong., 1st sess., 

 10, 1856. Onkinegans.— Lane in Sen. Ex. Doc. 62, 

 31st Cong., 1st .sess., 170, 1850. Oo-ka-na-kane — 

 Dawson in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., sec. ii, 6, 1891 

 (Ntlakvapamuk name). Oukinegans. — Lane in 

 Ind. Air. Rep., 159, 18.50. Schit-hu-a-ut.— Mackay 

 quoted in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., sec. ii, 6, 1891. 

 Schit-hu-a-ut-uh. — Ibid. Sinkuaili. — Gatschet, MS., 

 B. A. E. (properly Isonkuaili, 'our people': own 

 name). Ske-luh. — Mackay quoted by Dawson in 

 Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., sec. ii, 7, 1891 (own name). 

 Soo-wan'-a-mooh.— Daw.son, ibid., 5 (Shuswap 

 name). Su-a-na-muh. — Mackay quoted by Daw- 

 son, ibid. TcitQua'ut.— Boiis in 5th Rep. N. W. 

 Tribes Can., 10, 1889 (Ntlakvapamuk name). 

 TT-ka-nakane. — Mackav quoted bv Dawson, op. 

 fit., 6. 



Okinoyoktokawik. A small Kaviagmiut 

 Eskimo village on the coast opposite 

 Sledge id., Alaska. — 11th Census, Alaska, 

 162, 1893. 



Okiogmiut. A name sometimes given 

 collectivelv to the Eskimo of St Lawrence 



and the Diomede ids. , Alaska. The 

 former belong properly to the Yuit of 

 Asia; for the latter, see Imaklimiut and 

 IngvkUmiat. 



Island Innuit. — Dall in Proc. A. A. A. S., XXXIV, 

 377, 1885. Kokh'lit innuin. — Simpson quoted by 

 Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., i, 15, 1877. Okee- 

 og'-mut. — Dall, ibid. Okeeogmutes. — Dall in Proc. 

 A. A. A. S., xviil, 266, 1869. Okhaganak.— Petroffi 

 in 10th Census, Alaska, map, 1884. 



Okiosorbik. A former Eskimo village 

 on Aneretok fjord, e. Greenland; pop. 50 

 in 1829. 



Okkiosorbik.— Graah, Exped. E. Coast Greenland, 

 114, 1837. 



Okisko. A chief of the Weapemeoc of 

 Virginia, in 1585-86, who with Menatonon 

 gave to Ralfe Lane most of the informa- 

 tion communicated to Sir Walter Raleigh 

 respecting the surrounding region. Al- 

 though independent, Okisko was domi- 

 nated to some extent by Menatonon, who 

 indticed him to acknowledge subjection to 

 the English queen. Nevertheless Lane 

 accused him of beingtheleaderin the plot 

 formed by his tribe, the Mandoag (Notto- 

 way ) , and other Indians, to massacre the 

 colonists. (c. T. ) 



Okitiyakni (Hitchiti: Oki-tiydkni, prob- 

 ably 'whirlpool' or 'river bend'). A 

 former Lower Creek village on the e. 

 bank of Chattahoochee r., 8 m. below 

 Eufaulf., in Quitman co., Ga. Pop. 580 

 in 1822. 



Octiyokny. — Woodward, Reminis., 107, 1859. 

 O-he-te-yoe-on-noe.— Hawkins (1814) in Am. State 

 Pap., Ind. Aff., l, 859, 1832. Oka-tiokinans.— 

 Morse, Rep. toSec.War, 364, 1822. Oketayocenne. — 

 Hawkins, op. cit., 860. Okete Yocanne. — Ibid., 

 845. O-ke-teyoc-en-ne.— Hawkins (1799), Sketch, 

 66, 1848. Oki-tiyakni.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., 

 I, 140, 1884. 



Oklafalaya ('the long people'). One 

 of the three great divisions into which 

 the Choctaw (q. v.) were divided for at 

 least a third of a century prior to their re- 

 moval to Indian Ter. Originally it may 

 have been the name of a town, extended 

 in time to include all the settlements in 

 the region in which it was situated. Un- 

 like those in the eastern divisions, the 

 Indians of this section were scattered in 

 small settlements over a great extent of 

 territory. ' ' The boundary line separating 

 this from the northeastern district began 

 in the vicinity of the present little town 

 of Cumberland, in Webster co. [Miss.]; 

 thence ran southwesterly on the dividing 

 ridge separating the headwaters of Tibbee 

 (Oktibbeha) on the e. from the Big Black 

 waters on the w. down to the vicinity of 

 Dido, in Choctaw co. ; thence in a zigzag 

 cour.se on the dividing ridge between the 

 Noxubee and the Yokenookeny waters to 

 the vicinity of New Prospect; thence it 

 zigzagged more or less easterly between 

 the headwaters of Pearl r. and the Noxu- 

 bee waters to a point on the ridge not far 

 s. of Old Singleton ( not the present Sin- 

 gleton); thence southerly on the ridge 

 between the Pearl r. waters on the w. and 



