BULL. 30] 



PAPAGONK PAPIN ACHOIS 



201 



tion, 859 Papago were officially reported 

 in Sonora, Mexico, in 1900, but this is 

 probably a low estimate of their true 

 number in that state. 



The Papago subdivisions and settle- 

 ments, so far as known, are: Acachin, Al- 

 calde, Ana, Anicam, Areitorae, Ati, Ba- 

 basaqui, Bacapa, Baipia, Bajio, Batequi, 

 Boco del Arroyo, Caborca, Caoa Chimir, 

 Cahuabi, Canoa, Casca, Charco, Chioro, 

 Chuba, Coca, Comohuabi, Cops, Cubac, 

 Cuitciabaqui, Cuitoat, Cujant, Cumaro, 

 Elogio, Fresnal, Guadalupe, Gubo, Jua- 

 jona, Junostaea, Macombo, Mesquite, Mil- 

 pais, Nariz, Oapars, Ocaboa, Oiaur, Onia, 

 Ooltan, Otean," Perigua, Perinimo, Piato, 

 Poso Blanco, Poso Verde, Purificacion (?) , 

 Quitovaquita, Raton, San Bonifacius, San 

 Cosme, Sand Papago, Sanlgnacio (?), San 

 Lazaro, San Luis Babi {?), San Martin, 

 San -Rafael, Santa Barbara (?), Santa 

 Rosa, Saric (?), Saucita, Shuuk, Sierra 

 Blanca, Soba, Sonoita, Tachilta, Tacqui- 

 son, Tecolote, Tubasa, Tubutama, Valle, 

 Zuniga. (f. w. h. ) 



Bean-people. — McGee in Coville and Macdougal, 

 Des. Bot. Lab., 16, 1903 (transl. of aboriginal 

 name). Beansmen. — Ibid. Hute-pa. — Thomas, 

 Yuma MS. vocab., B. A. E., 1868 (Yuma name). 

 Fagago. — ten Kate, Reizen in N. A., 28, 1885 (mis- 

 print). Papabi-cotam. — Balbi quoted by Orozco y 

 Berra, Geog., 352, 1864 (c = o). Papabi-Ootam.— 

 Pfeflferkorn (1794) quoted by Bandelierln Arch. 

 Inst. Papers, iii, 72, 1.S90. Papabi-Otawas.— Mayer, 

 Mexico, II, 300, 1853. Papabos.— Mota-Padi'lla, 

 Hist, de la Conq., 519, 1742. Papabotas.— Kino 

 (ca. 1699) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., i, 360, 1856 (or 

 "pimas frijoleros," because their chief crop is 

 beans — papavi). Papaga. — Forbes, Hist. Cal., 162, 

 1839. Papagi.— Morelli, Fasti Novi Orbis, 46, 1776. 

 Papago-cotam. — Latliam in Trans. Pliilol. Soc. 

 Lond., 92, 1856 (c=o). Pa-Pagoe.— Box, Advent., 

 257,1869. Papagoes. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, June 

 13, 1862. Papagoose.— White, MS. Hist. Apaches, 

 B. A. E., 1S75. Papagos.— Villa-Senor, Theatro 

 Am., pt. 2, 395, 1748. Papah-a'atam. — McGee, op. 

 cit. (name applied by neighboring peoples, ac- 

 cepted by Papago as their tribal name). Papahi- 

 Ootam.— Mayer, Mexico, ii, 38, 1850. Papah'o.— 

 McGee, op. cit. (given as early Spanish pronun- 

 ciation). Papabotas. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 58, 

 353, 1864. Papajos.— Piatt, Karte Nord-Am.. 1861. 

 Papalotes. — Sedelmayr (1746) quoted by Bandelier 

 in Arch. Inst. Papers, in, 74, 1890. Papani.— A. L. 

 Pinart, inf'n (Seri name). Papa-Otam.— MS. of 

 1764 quoted by Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Paper.s, 

 III, 72, 1890. Papapootam.— Rudo Ensayo, cu. 1762, 

 ibid., 73. Papap Ootam.— Bandelier, Gilded Man, 

 150, 1893. Papap-Otam.— Bandelier in Arch. Inst. 

 Papers, op. cit., 72. Papavicotam. — Orozco y Berra, 

 Geog., 3.53, 1864. Papavos.— Mota-Padilla, Hist, de 

 la Conq., 361, 1742. Papawar.— Pattie. Pers. Narr., 

 83, 1833. Papayos.— Mayer, Mexico, ii, 300, 1853. 

 Papelotes. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 353, 1864. Pa- 

 pigo.— Gray, So. Pac. R. R. Surv., 55, 1856. Pima- 

 Papabotas. — Mange (1699) quoted by Bancroft, 

 Ariz, and N. M., 358, 1889. Pimas frijoleros,— Kino 

 (m. 1699) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., i, 360, 1856. 

 Saikinne. — ten Kate, Reizen in N. A., 197, 1885 

 ( = 'sand houses': Apache name). S£-ke-na. — 

 White, MS. Hist. Apaches, B. A. E., 1875 (trans, 

 'bare-footed Indians': Apache name for Pima, 

 Papago, andMaricopa). Ta'hba.— Gatschct, Yuma 

 Sprachstamm, 86, 1886 (Yavapai name). Ta^pa. — 

 Ibid. Techpamais. — ten Kate, Reizen in N. A., 160, 

 1885 (Maricopa name). Texpamais. — ten Kate, 

 Synonymic, 5, 1884 (Maricopa name). Tono- 

 Oohtam.— ten Kate,ReizeninN. A., 23, 1885 ('people 

 of the desert ': own name ) . Vassconia.— Poston in 

 Ind. AS. Rep., 153, 1864 ( = 'Christians'). Widshi 



itikapa.— White quoted by Gatschet, Yuma- 

 Sprachstamm, 1886 (Tonto name). 



Fapagonk (Lenai)e: papegonk, 'at the 

 pond.' — Gerard). A band found in Ulster 

 CO., N. Y., doubtless the same as is placed 

 on Lotter's map of 1777 on the e. branch 

 of Delaware r. , near the present Pepacton, 

 Delaware co. They were probably a 

 part of the Munsee. 



Fapaconck. — Lotter, Map of N. Y. and N. J., 1777. 

 Papagonck. — Tryon (1778) quoted by Ruttenber, 

 Tribes Hudson R., '255, 1872. Papagonk.— Tryon 

 (1774) in N. Y. Doe. Col. Hist., Vlll, 451, 1857. Pop- 

 aghtunk.— Johnson (1771), ibid., 287. 



Papajichic ( ' drinking - much - beer 

 place.' — Lumholtz). ATarahumare pue- 

 blo near Norogachic, Chihuahua, Mex- 

 ico; pop. 838 in 1900. 



Papagichic. — Lumholtz. inf'n, 1894. Papajichic. — 

 Orozco y Berra, Gedg., 323, 1864. 



Papakeecha ('fiat belly', i. e. a bed- 

 bug). A Miami chief whose village, com- 

 monly known as Flat Belly's Village, was 

 E. of Turkey lake, at the jiresent Indian 

 Village, Noble CO., Ind. (j.p. d. ) 



Flat Belly's Village. — Mississinewa treaty ( 1826) in 

 U. S. Ind. Treat., 495, 1873. Pa-hed-ke-teh-a Vil- 

 lage, — Hough, map in Ind. Geol. Rep., 1882 (mis- 

 print). Pa-pa-kee'-cha.— J. P. Dunn, inf'n, 1907. 



Papanacas. A former tribe of n. e. 

 Mexico or s. Texas, probably Coahuilte- 

 can, members of which were gathered 

 into San Bernardo mission in Coahuila. — 

 Orozco y Berra, Geog., 303, 1864. See 

 Paachiqui, Pacudchiam. 



Papasquiaro. A former Tepehuane 

 pueblo in w. Durango, Mexico, on the s. 

 branch of Rio Nazas, probably on the 

 site of the present Santiago. It was the 

 seat of a Jesuit mission founded by Gero- 

 nimo Ramirez in 1596, but was abandoned 

 in 1616 on account of Toboso raids, and 

 was subsequently temporarily repeopled 

 with Eudeve. 



Santiago Papasquiaro. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 

 318, 1864. 



Papiak {Pdpldk'). A Squawmish vil- 

 lage community on Burrard inlet, Brit. 

 Col.— Hill-Tout in Rep. B. A. A. S., 474, 

 1900. 



Papigochic ('snipe town.' — Froebel). 

 A former Tarahumare settlement on the 

 site of the present Villa de la Concepcion, 

 on the upper Rio Papigochi, in s. w. 

 Chihuahua, Mexico, about lat. 28° 45^ 

 Ion. 108° 30^.— Orozco y Berra, Geog., 

 323, 1864. 



Papinachois {Opdpmagwa, 'they cause 

 you to laugh.' — Hewitt). A Montagnaia 

 tribe or division living in the 17th 

 century about the headwaters of 

 Papinachois r., n. of the Bersiamite. 

 They visited Tadoussac and received 

 religious instruction from the mission- 

 aries, and by 1664 the latter had pen- 

 etrated their country, finding them 

 tractable and inoffensive. Charlevoix 

 believed that this and other tribes of the 

 same section had become extinct in his 

 day. As late as 1721 they joined in a 

 letter to the governor of Massachusetts. 



