184 



PAFALLAYA PAHATSI 



[b. a. e. 



Padshilaika.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., I, 142, 

 1884. Pigeon Roost.— Ibid. 



Pafallaya. A province traversed by De 

 Soto and his army in Nov. 1540, after 

 the battle of Mauvila and before reaching 

 Taliepatava, Cabusto, and Chicaga. It 

 was probably in e. Mississippi. Pickett 

 places it in Green, Marengo, and Sumter 

 cos. , Av. Ala. , and considers its people to 

 have been Choctaw. See Gentl. of Elvas 

 (1557) in French, Hist. Coll. La., ii, 160, 

 1850. 



Pagaichi. A former Tarahumare set- 

 tlement on the head waters of Rio Nonoa va, 

 s. w. Chihuahua, Mexico, 6 leagues n. of 

 Carichic, and near Nonoava. 

 Pagaichi.— Zapata (1678) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th 

 s., HI, 329, 1857. Paguichic— Orozco y Berra, 

 Geog., 323, 1864. Paguichique.— Censo del Estado 

 de Chihuahua, index, 11, 1904 (name of present 

 pueblo). 



Pagaits ( Pa-ga^-it.9, ' fish-creek people ' ) . 

 A Paiute tribe formerly near Colville, 

 s. E. Nevada; pop. 34 in 1873. — Powell in 

 Ind. Aff. Rep. 1873, 50, 1874. 



Pagantso ( Pa' -gan-tso) . A Paviotso di- 

 vision of 3 bands formerly living in Ruby 

 valley, n. e. Nevada; pop. 172 in 1873. — 

 Powell in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1873, 52, 1874. 



Pagatsu(P(Vgfois(1', 'head of the stream'). 

 Mentioned by Mooney (14th Rep. B. A. E., 

 1045, 1896) as an extinct division of the 

 Comanche. Cf. Parkenaum. 



Pagayuats { Pa-ga-yu-ats) . One of the 

 tribes, known under the collective term 

 Gosiute, formerly on Otter cr., s. w. 

 Utah. — Powell and Ingalls in Ind. Aff. 

 Rep. 1873, 51, 1874. 



Paghuukdhinpe {jaxu'-uoi^n'-de, ' where 

 they dwelt on a mountain'). A_ San- 

 tsukdhin Osage village on the e. side of 

 Verdigris r., Ind. T. (j. o. d. ) 



Pagmi. Described in 1554 ( Ibarra cited 

 by Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 73, 1889) 

 as a most beautiful city adorned with 

 very sumptuous edifices, extending over 

 3 leagues, with great houses of 3 stories, 

 and with extensive plazas, and the houses 

 surrounded with walls that appeared to 

 be of masonry. The imaginary town was 

 also represented as abandoned, the inhab- 

 itants having gone eastward. The local- 

 ity was seemingly in what is now s. w. 

 United States or n. w. Mexico. 



Paguan. A tribe reported by Massanet 

 (Dictamen Fiscal, Nov. 30, 1716, MS. ) on 

 the road from Coahuila to the Tejas 

 (Texas) country in 1690, and probably 

 affiliated with the Coahuiltecan stock. Cf . 

 Pagiuoian. 



Paguanan. A tribe or subtribe, mem- 

 bers of which were baptized at San Anto- 

 nio de Valero mission, Texas, in 1743-48. 

 They may have been the same as the 

 Payuguan (q. v.), as the two names are 

 not found to have been used by the same 

 writer. They were associated with the 

 Caguas, Tou, Zana, Sijame, Ujuiape, and 

 Hierbipiamo (Ervipiame) tribes, and 



their language, some words of which are 

 preserved, seems to have been the same 

 as that of most of these other tribes ( MS. 

 Baptismal Rec, partidas 653, 681, 711, 

 782). (h. e. B.) 



Pahuanan. — Baptismal Rec., op. eit., 8.52, 1751. 



Paguate (native name Kioistyi, 'take it 

 down,' referring to an ancient tradition). 

 A former summer village of the Lagunas, 

 now a permanently occupied pueblo of 

 that tribe; situated 8 m. n. of Laguna, 

 Valencia co. , N. Mex. Next to the parent 

 pueblo it is said to be the oldest and larg- 

 est of the Laguna villages, the population 

 numbering 350 or 400. Not to be con- 

 founded with Pojoaque, although authors 

 have confused the two names. See Kere- 

 san Famih/, Laguna, Pueblos. ( f. w. h. ) 

 Kvishti. — Loew (1875) in Wheeler Survey Rep., 

 vn, 345, 1879. Kwistyi.— Hodge, field-notes, B. 

 A. E., 1895. Pagnati.— Calhoun (1849) in Cal. 

 Mess, and Corresp., 218, 1850. Paguate.— G. H. 

 Pradt, letter to B. A. E., 1891. Pahuata.— Gwvther 

 inOverlandMo.,262, Mar. 1871. Pahuate— Collins 

 in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1902, 256, 1903. Pajuate.— Don- 

 aldson, Moqui Pueblo Inds., 94, 1893. Pogouate. — 

 Gallatin in Nouv. Ann. Voy., 5th s., xxvii, 297, 

 1851. Poguaque.— Gallegas (1844) in Emory, Re- 

 con., 478, 1848. Poguate. — Gallatin in Trans. Am. 

 Ethnol. Soe., ii, xciv, 1848. Pohanti.— Ten Broeck 

 in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 77, 1854. Pojnati. — 

 Simpson in Smithson. Rep. 1869, 328, 1871. Pojua- 

 que. — Parke, Map New Mexico, 1851. Pojuate. — 

 Abert in Emory, Recoii., 469, 1848. Pojuato.— 

 Emorv, ibid., 133. Poquate. — Latham, Var. of 

 Man, 395, 1850. Povate.— Loew (1875) in Wheeler 

 Survey Rep., vn, 339, 1879. Povuate.— Ibid., 418. 

 Provate.— Kingsiey, Stand. Nat. Hist., Vi, 183, 

 1883. Pujuaque. — Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 64, 

 1889. Queesche.— Fradt quoted by Hodge in Am. 

 Anthrop., iv, 346, 1891. 



Paguemi. Described by Ibarra in 1554 

 (Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 72, 1889) 

 as an abandoned pueblo whose houses 

 were of several stories, and where there 

 were tracesof metals having been smelted. 

 Situated in a great plain "adjoining those 

 of the v(tcafi — the buffalo plains." It is 

 apparently imaginary. 



Paguits ( Pa-gu'- its, ' fish people ' ) . A 

 Paiute 1 )and about Pagu ( Fish ) lake, s. w. 

 Utah; pop. (58 in 1873.— Powell in Ind. 

 Aff. Rep. 1873, 50, 1874. 



Pagwiho {Pa-gu''/-ho). A Paviotso tribe 

 formerly living in the adobe meadows 

 near Mono lake, e. Cal. — Powell, Pavi- 

 otso MS., B. A. E., 1881. 



Pahatsi ( ' campers at the mountain top ' ) . 

 One of the three principal divisions of 

 the Osage tribe, commonly known as 

 Great Osage. 



Bar-har-cha.— P^nicaut (1719) in French, Hist. 

 Coll. La., 1, 151, note, 1869. Elder Osages.—Dorsey 

 in Am. Nat., 114, Feb. 1884. Grand Eaux.— Boudi- 

 not. Star in the West, 126, 1816. Grandes eaux.— 

 French trader in Smith, Bouquet Exped., 70, 1776. 

 Grand Osage.— Lewis and Clark, Discov., 11, 1806. 

 Grand Tuo.—Croghan (17.59) quoted by Jefferson, 

 Notes, 145, 1825. Grand Zo.— Lewis and Clark, 

 Discov., 11, 1806. Grand Zue.— Croghan (17.59) in 

 Rupp, Hist. VV. Pa., 146, note, 1S46. Great Osage.— 

 Fisher, New Trav., 15, isrj. Great Ossage.— Scher- 

 merhorn (1812) in Mass. Hist. Hoc. Coll., 2d .s., ii, 

 31,1814. Great Ozages.— Jefferys(1763), Am. Atlas, 

 map 5, 1776. Pa-ha-sca.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribe.?, 

 VI, 540, 1857. jaha:>si.— J. O. Dorsey, inf'n (own 



