BILL. 80] 



OMAMIWINTNIWAK ONAGHEE 



121 



sfhet, MS., B. A. E. (Cheyenne name) . La Mar. — 

 Lewi.s and Clark, Discov., 20, 1<S06 (so called by 

 the French ). Haha. — Marquette, autograph map 

 (l(i73) in Shea. Discov., 1S.=)2. Mahaer.— Balbi, 

 Atlas Ethnof?., 33, T774, 182ti. Mahagi.— Gatschet, 

 MS., B. A. E. (Shawnee name). Mahahs. — 

 Carver, Trav.. 109, 1778. Mahan. — Lewis, Trav., 

 14. 1809. Maharha.— Oris. Jour. Lcwi.s and Clark 

 (.1804), I, 203, 19U4. Mahars.— Whitehouse (1804) 

 in Orig. Jour. Lewis and Clark, vil, 49, 1905. Ma- 

 ha's. — Brackenridge, Views La., 70, 1814. Mahas. — 

 Iberville (1701) in Margry, DC'C, iv, 587, 1880. 

 Mahaws.— Pike, Exped , pt. 2, app., 9, 1810. 

 Makah.— L". S. Ind. Treaties, Kapplered., ii, 115, 

 1904 (misprint). Mama. — Gale, I'pper Miss., 217, 

 1867 (misprint). Mawhaws. — Carver, Trav., 80, 

 1778. Mazahuas. — Ratinesciue in Marshall, Hist. 

 Ky., I, 28, 1S24. O'-ma'-ha. — Lewis and Clark, 

 Discov., 20, 1806. Omaha hcaka. — lapi Oave, xiii, 

 33, Sept. 1884 ('real Omaha': Yankton name). 

 Omahahs.— U. S. Ind. Treat., (339, 1826. Omahaws.— 

 Drake, Ind. Chron., pL, 1836. Omahuas.— Italin- 

 es(|ue in Marshall, Hist. Ky., I, 30, 1824. Omalia.— 

 Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, in, 386, 18.53 (misprint). 

 O-marj'-ha. — Cook, Yankton MS. vocab., B. A. E., 

 184, 1882. O-mag'-ha-hca. — Ibid. (' true Omaha'). 

 Omans.— Jeffcrys, Fr. Doms. Am., I, 135, 1761. 

 Omaonhaon. — Toussaint, Carte de I'Amer., 1839. 

 Omau'-hau.— M'Coy, Ann. Reg., no. 4, 84, 1838. 

 Omawhaw.— Schoolcraft, Trav., 309, 1821. Omaw- 

 hawes. — Tanner, Narr., 313, 1830. Omouhoa. — 

 La Salle (1081) in Margry, Dt?c., ir, 134, 1877 

 (identical?). Omowhows. — Tanner, Narr., 146, 

 1830. Omuhaw. — Hurlbert in Jones, Ojibway 

 Inds., 178, 1861. O-ni'-ha-o. — Havden, Ethnog. and 

 Philol. Mo.Val., 290, 1862 ('drum-beaters': Chey- 

 enne name). Oni'ha".— Mooney, Cheyenne Inds., 

 4'23, 1907 (Cheyenne name). Oo-ma-ha.— Bracken- 

 ridge, Views La., 76, 1814. Otomie. — Schoolcraft, 

 Ind. Tribes; ll, 335, 1852 (misprint ). Owaha.— Gat- 

 .schet,'MS., B. A. E. (Pawnee ns mei. Owahas. — 

 Sen. E.x. Doc. 72, 'iOth Cong., 2d sess., 101, 1829. 

 Piik-tis.-Mjrinnell, Pawnee Hero Tales, 230, 1889 

 ( Pawnee name) . 'U'-aha. — Gatschet, MS., B. A. E. 

 (Pawnee name). U'-ma-ha. — Gatschet, Kaw vo- 

 oab. , B. A. E. , 27, 1878 ( Kansa name ) . TJ-ma ' '-ha' ' . — 

 Dorsey in Am. Antiq., 313, Oct. 1883 (misprint). 

 U-man'-ha". — Dorsey in Bull. Philos. Soc. Wash., 

 128, 1880 ('upstream people': O.sage name). 

 U-manhan. — Ibid., 129 (misprint). Uwaha. — Gat- 

 schet, MS., B. A. E. (Pawnee name). 



Omamiwininiwak ( ' people of lower part 

 of the river'). The Nipissing name for 

 the Algonkin, properly so called, survi- 

 vors of whom still live at Becancour and 

 at Three Elvers, Quebec. — Cuoq, Lexique 

 Algonquine, 193,. 1886. 



dnaanitsenok {Omaniis'enox, 'the people 

 of Omanis,' a place on Klaskino inlet, 

 Brit. Col.). A gens of the Klaskino, a 

 Kwakiutl tribe. — Boas in Rep. Nat. Mus. 

 1895, 329, 1897. 



Omaskos ( ' elk ' ) . A subphratry or gens 

 of the^NIenominee. — Hoffman in 14th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 42, 1896. 



Omatl (Omat/). The name of an an- 

 cestor of a Tlatlasikoala gens, sometimes 

 applied to the gens itself. — Boas in Peter- 

 manns Mitt., pt. 5, 131, 1887. 



Omaxtax. A former Chumashan village 

 near Purisima mission, Santa Barbara 

 CO., Cal. — Tavlor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 

 1861. 



Omegeeze ( Migtzi, ' bald eagle ' ) . A gens 

 of the Chippewa. See MtglchUilliniou. 

 Me-giz-ze. — Tanner, Narr., 314, 1830. Me-gizzee. — 

 Warren in Minn. Hist. Soc. Coll., v, 44, 1885. Mi'- 

 gisi.— Gatschet, Ojibwa MS., B. A. E., 1882. 

 Migizi.— Wm. Jones, inf n, 1907 (correct form). 

 0-me-gee-ze'. — Morgan, Anc. Soc, 166, 1877. 



Omenaosse. A village or tribe men- 

 tioned bv Joutel in 1687 as beinji between 



Matagorda bay and Maligne (Colorado) 

 r., Texas. The name was given him by 

 the Ebahamo Indians who lived in that 

 region and who were ])robably Karan- 

 kawan. See Gatschet, Karankawa Inds., 

 I, 35, 46, 1891. 



Omeaoffe.— Joutel (1687) in French, Hist. Coll. La., 

 I, 137, 1846 (misprint.). Omeaosse. — Ibid., 152. 

 Omeaotes. — Barcia.Knsayo, 271. 1723. Omenaosse. — 

 Joutel (1687) in Margry," Dec, iii, '288, 1878. 



Omik. A former Aleut village on Agattu 

 id., Alaska, one of the Near id. group of 

 the Aleutians, now uninhabited. 



Omisis {0'uiVi<1s, 'eaters'; sing., O'mV- 

 slsts). A principal division of the Chey- 

 enne. The name is frequently used as 

 synonymous with Northern Cheyenne, 

 because the dominant division in the N. 

 Before the division of the Cheyenne 

 the Omisis occupied that portion of the 

 camp circle immediately x. of the e. en- 

 trance, (j. M. ) 

 Eaters. — Dorsev in Field Cohnnb. Mus. Pub. 103, 

 62, 190.5. Hmi'sls.— Mooney in 14th Rep. B. A. E., 

 1026, 1896. mi'sis.— Haydcn, Ethnog. and Philol. 

 Mo. Val., 290, 1862. missis.— CJrinnell, Social 

 Org. Cheyennes, 136, 1905. 



Omitiaqua. A village ("king" ) in Flor- 

 ida subject to Utina, chief of the Timucua 

 in 1564, according to Laudonnicre. The 

 De Bry map places it e. of lower St John r. 

 Omitaqua. — DeBry, map (1.591) in Le Moyne, Narr., 

 Appleton trans., 1875. Omitiaqua.— Laudonniere 

 (1564) in French, Hist. Coll. La., n. s., •243,1869. 



Ommunise [Omunlse, 'he gathers fire- 

 wood.' — W. J. ). A Chippewa or Ottawa 

 band formerly living on Carp r., Mich.; 

 also a place between Lake of the Woods 

 and Winnipeg, so called because of the 

 scarcity of wood. 



Carp River band. — Smith in Ind. Aflf. Rep., 53, 1851. 

 Omanise. — Wm. Jones, inf'n, 1905 (correct form). 

 Ommunise. — Smith, op. cit. 



Omowuh, The Rain-cloud clan of the 

 Fatki ( Water-house) phratrj' of the Hopi. 

 Oma-a. — Bourke, Snake Dance, 117,1884. O'-mau. — 

 Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 39, 1891. Omawuu.— 

 Dorsey and Voth, Mishongnovi Ceremonies, 175, 

 1902. O'-mow-iih wiiii-wu. — Fewkes in Am. An- 

 throp., Vll,402, 1894 {u'un-wil=c\an). 



Ompivromo. A former village, presum- 

 ably Costanoan, connected with Dolores 

 mission, San Francisco, Cal. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Ona. The third village of the Chilula 

 on Redwood cr., Cal. 



Oh-nah. — Gibbs in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, in, 

 139, 1853 (Y'urok name). Ono.— Ibid. TTnuh. — 

 Powers in Overland Mo., vii. .530, 1872. 



Onackatin. See Onockatin. 



Onagatano. A former province x. of 

 Florida peninsula, in snow-clad moun- 

 tains, where, in the 16th century, it was 

 said the Apalachee obtainetl their gold. 

 Distinct from Olagatano, q. v. (Fonta- 

 neda Mem., ca. 1575, Smith trans., 20, 

 1854) . 



Onaghee. An ancient Seneca settle- 

 ment on the s. side of Fall brook, at 

 Hopewell, Ontario co., N. Y. Before 

 1720 a number of the inhabitants settled 

 near Montreal, and in 1750 the place had 

 been long deserted. 



