BOLL. 30] 



PATAHEUHAH PATIQUILID 



209 



supported by the fact that in 1691 Massa- 

 net found the tribe at Rio Hondo, 11 

 leagues n. e. of the Rio Nueces. They 

 were with Indians of the "Sanpanal, Pat- 

 chal, Papanaca, Parchiquis, Pacudchiam, 

 Aguapiilam, Samampdc, Vanca, and Pa- 

 yavdn" tribes (ibid., 94). One of these 

 IS in Garcia' s list of Coahuiltecan tribes 

 (1760), and Massanet records the state- 

 ment that the language of this country was 

 the same (i. e. Coahuiltecan) all the way 

 from his starting point to beyond San 

 Antonio r. (ibid., 98; and Espinosa, Dia- 

 rio, May 8, 1716). In 1716 Ramon and 

 Espinosa found three rancherias of the 

 tribe in the same locality (Derrotero, 

 1691, in Mem. de Nueva Espana, xxvii, 

 145, MS.). Members of this tribe were 

 baptized at San Francisco Solano mission 

 after 1704 (Valero Bautismos), where 

 they frequently intermarried with the 

 Xarames, and between 1720 and 1763 

 numbers of them were at San Antonio de 

 Valero (ibid., passim). In 1738 Lorenzo, 

 a Pataguo, was "governor" of this mis- 

 sion (Testimony, June 3, 1738, in Archivo 

 Gen., Yndiferente de Guerra, 1736-37, 

 fol. 88, MS. ). In their gentile state they 

 intermarried with the Payayas and Pat- 

 zaus (Valero Casamientos, partidas 128, 

 157, MS.). (H. E. B.) 



Pachajuen.— Valero Entierros, partida 257, 1739, 

 MS. (identical?). Fatagahan. — Ibid., partida 255, 

 1739. Patagahu. — Ibid., 1739. Patagua.— Espi- 

 nosa, Diario, 1716, MS. in Archivo Gen. Pata- 

 guan. — Valero Casamientos, 1716, partida 9, MS. 

 Patague. — Valero Entierros, 1704, partida 25. 

 Pataguita.— Morti, Hist., m. 1781, MS. (identical?). 

 Pataquakes. — Hernando del Bosque, Exped., 1675, 

 in Nut. Geog. Mag., xiv, 343, 1903 (identical?). 

 Pataque.— Valero Bautismos, 1728, partida 220. 

 Patavo. — Massanet, Nov. 16, 1690, cited in Mem. 

 de Nueva Espana, .xxvir, 183, MS. 



Pataheuhah. Given by Schoolcraft 

 (Ind. Tribes, in, 612, 1853) as a former 

 village of the Mdewakanton Sioux, with 

 229 inhabitants, on Minnesota r., 25 m. 

 from the agency in Minnesota; perhaps 

 that of Chetanduta, 'Scarlet hawk,' chief 

 of the Tintaotonwe. 



Patakeenothe { Pd-tdke-e-no-the\ 'rab- 

 bit'). A gens of the Shawnee. — Morgan, 

 Anc. Soc, 168, 1877. 



Patameragouche. Given by Alcedo 

 (Die. Geog., iv, 117, 1788) as an Indian 

 [Micmac] village on the e. coast of Nova 

 Scotia, near Canso str. Not identified. 



Pataotrey. A large village of the Ju- 

 mano in New Mexico in 1598; doubt- 

 less situated in the region of Abo, e. of 

 the Rio Grande. 



Pataotrey.— Onate (1598) in Doc. Ined., xvr, 114, 

 1871. Patasce.— Ibid., 123 (believed by Bandelier 

 to be probably Identical ). 



Pataquilla. A rancheria near the pre- 

 sidio of La Bahia and the mission of 

 Espiritu Santo de Ziifiiga, on the lower 

 Rio San Antonio, Tex., in 1785, at which 

 date it contained only 3 inhabitants 

 (Bancroft, No. Mex. States, i, 659, 1886). 



3456— Bull. 30, pt. 2—07 14 



Its people were possibly of Karankawan 

 or Coahuiltecan affinity. Cf. PaMaloca. 



Pataunck. A tribe or subtribe of the 

 Powhatan confederacy on Pamunkey r., 

 Va., numbering about 400 in 1612. — 

 Strachey, Va., 62, 1849. 



Patchoag ( ' where they divide in two, ' 

 referring to two streams forming one 

 river. — Trumbull). A tribe on the s. 

 coast of Long id., N. Y., extending from 

 Patchogue to Westhampton. Besides 

 their principal village, bearing the same 

 name, they had others at Fireplace, 

 Mastic, Moriches, and "Westhampton. 

 The Cannetquot Indians were a part of 

 this tribe. "The survivors are known as 

 Poosepatuck, q. v. 



Patchoag. The principal village of the 

 Patchoag, near the present Patchogue, 

 Suffolk CO., Long id., N. Y. 

 Onchechaug. — Patent of 1680 quoted by Thomp- 

 son, Long Id., 1, 413, 1843. Pachough.— Rutten- 

 ber, Ind. Geog. Names, 81, 1906. Patchague.— 

 Wood in Macauley, N. Y., ii, 252, 1829. Pat- 

 chogue. — Ibid. Pochoug. — Writer of 1752 quoted 

 by Thompson, Long Id., 1,414, 1843. Pochoughs. — 

 Ruttenber, Ind. Geog. Names, 81, 1906. TJna- 

 chog. — James quoted by Tanner, Narr., 328, 1830. 

 Uncachage. — Deed of 1664 quoted by Tnompson, 

 Long Id., I, 410, 1843. TJnquachog.— Trumbull, 

 Ind. Names Conn., 74, 1881 (trans, ulique-adchu- 

 aiik, 'end of a mountain'). Vnchechange. — Doc. 

 of 1676 in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., xiv, 717, 1883. 



Patha ( ' beaver' ) . An Oto gens. 

 Beaver. — Dorsey, Tciwere MS. vocab., B. A. E., 

 1879. Pa-9a'.— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 240, 

 1897. 



Path Killer (corrupted translation of 

 NunmV hl-dihV , 'he kills [habitually] in 

 the path ' ). A foriner prominent Chero- 

 kee chief who signed the treaties of 

 Tellico in 1804 and 1805, and the treaty of 

 Turkeytown (Chickasaw Council House) 

 in 1816. See Ridge, Major. (j. m.) 



Patica. The name of two villages in 

 N. E. Florida at the period of the French 

 Huguenot occupancy in 1564. One was 

 on the coast, 8 leagues s. of Ft Caro- 

 line, which stood near the mouth of St 

 Johnr. ; its chief was friendly with the 

 French and was probably of the Saturiba, 

 or possibly of the Timucua tribe. The 

 other village was on the w. bank of St 

 Johnr. , apparently about midway bet ween 

 the present Jacksonville and Palatka, 

 and probably belonged to the Timucua. 

 It appears on the De Bry map of 1591 as 

 Patchica. Bartram mentions the " Pati- 

 cas," with "Yamasees," "Utinas," and 

 others, as early enemies to the Carolina 

 colony until their strength was broken by 

 the Creeks. (j. m.) 



Patchica.— De Bry, map (1591) in Le Moyne, 

 Narr., Appleton trans., 1875 (on St John r.). 

 Patica.— Laudonnijire (1564) in French, Hist. Coll. 

 La., n. s., 275, 1869 (used for both villages). Pati- 

 cas.— Bartram, Trav., 54, 1792. Paticos.— School- 

 craft, Ind. Tribes, v, 98, 1855. 



Patiquilid. A Chumashan village on 

 one of the Santa Barbara ids., Cal., prob- 

 ably Santa Rosa, in 1542. — Cabrillo, Narr. 



