210 



PATIQITIN PATUXENT 



[b. a. 



(1542), in Smith, Colec. Doc. Fla., 186, 

 1857. 



Patiquin. A Chumashan village on one 

 of the Santa Barbara ids., Cal., probably 

 Santa Eosa, in 1542. — Cabrillo, Narr. 

 (1542), in Smith, Colec. Doc. Fla., 186, 

 1857. 



Patiri. An unidentified tribe given by 

 Morfi (Hist. Tex., bk. ii, ca. 1781, MS.) 

 in his list of Texas tribes. 



Patki. The Cloud or Water-house phra- 

 try of the Hopi, which comprises the fol- 

 lowing clans: Patki, Kau (Corn), Omowuh 

 (Rain-cloud), Tangaka (Rainbow), Ta- 

 lawipiki (Lightning), Kwan (Agave), 

 Sivwapi {Bigeloria graveolens) , Pawikya 

 (Aquatic animal [Duck]) , Pakwa (Frog) , 

 Pavatiya ( Small aquatic creatures ) , Murzi- 

 busi (Bean), Kawaibatunya (Water- 

 melon), and Yoki (Rain). This people 

 claims to have come from the great- 

 cactus region in the "red land of the 

 south," called by them Paldtkwabi. The 

 Water-house phratry of Fewkes and the 

 Rain (Yoki) phratry of Stephen are 

 identical. 



Pat-ki-nyu-mu. — Fewkes in Am. Anthrop., vii, 

 402, 1894 (9i2/ft-mft='phratrv')- Yo'-ki.— Stephen 

 in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 39, 1891. 



Patki. The Cloud or Water-house clan 

 of the Patki phratry of the Hopi. 

 Batki. — Dorsey and Voth, Mishongnovi Cere- 

 monies, 175, 1902. Batkinyamu. — Ibid. Pa'jeh. — 

 Bourke, Snake Dance, 117, 1884. Patki winwu. — 

 Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 583, 1901 (ioimvu = 

 'clan'). Pat'-ki wiin-wu. — Fewkes in Am. 

 Anthrop., vil, 402, 1894. 



Patnetac. A former village, presumably 

 Costanoan, connected with Dolores mis- 

 sion, San Francisco, Cal. — Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Pato. A town between Aguacay and 

 Amaye, w. of the Mississippi, probably 

 in the present Clark co., Ark. ; visited by 

 Moscoso's troops, after De Soto's death, 

 in July 1542.— Gentl. of Elvas (1557) 

 in French, Hist. Coll. La., ii, 195, 1850. 



Patofa. A former district and town, 

 probably Uchean, named after its chief, 

 situated in Georgiaand visited byDe Soto's 

 expedition in Apr. 1540 (Gentl. of Elvas, 

 1557, in French, Hist. Coll. La., ii, 139, 

 1850). If Uchean, the name is possibly 

 related to the Yuchi term paddfa, ' dark,' 

 'obscure' (F. G. Speck, inf'n,'l907). 



Patoqua ('village of the bear'). For- 

 merly one of the western group of Jemez 

 pueblos, situated on a ledge of the mesa 

 that separates Guadalupe and San Diego 

 canyons, 6m. n. of Jemez pueblo, n. central 

 New Mexico. It seems to have been the 

 seat of the Spanish mission of San Joseph 

 de Ids Jemez (which contained a church 

 as early as 1617), but was abandoned in 

 1622 on account of hostility of the Nava- 

 ho. In 1627, however, it and Gyusiwa 

 were resettled by Fray Martin de Arvide 

 with the inhabitants of a number of 



small pueblos then occupied by the 

 Jemez. It was permanently abandoned 

 prior to the Pueblo revolt of 1680. The 

 people of this pueblo claimed to have 

 dwelt at the lagoon of San Jose, 75 m. 

 N. w. of Jemez, and that they removed 

 thence to a place between Salado and 

 Jemez rs. , where they built the pueblo of 

 Anyukwinu. See Baudelier in Arch. 

 Inst. Papers, iv, 205, et seq., 1892; and 

 cf. Century Cyclopedia of Names, 1894, 

 art. Patoqua. ( f. w. h. ) 



Batokva.— Loew (1875) in Wheeler Surv. Rep., 

 VII, 343, 1879. Patoqua. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. 

 Papers, IV, pt. 2, 207, 1892. San Joseph de Jemez. — 

 Bandelier (1888) in Compte-rendu Cong. Am., 

 VII, 452, 1890. S. losepho.— Crepy, Map Am. Sept., 

 ca. 1783. S. Josef.— D'Anville, Map Am. Sept., 

 1746. S. Josefo.— Jefferys, Am. Atlas, map 5, 1776. 

 S! Josef.— D'Anville, Map N. A., Bolton'sed., 1752. 

 St. Joseph.— Shea, Cath. Missions, 80, 1870. 



Patshenin. A tribe or band formerly 

 living with the Saponi and Tutelo under 

 Iroquois protection on Grand r. , Ontario. 

 They probably came from the S. with 

 those tribes, and Hale thinks they may 

 have been the Occaneechi. 

 Botshenins— Hale in Proc.Am. Philos. Soc, Mar. 

 2, 1883. Patshenins.— Ibid. 



Pattali. One of the Apalachee towns 

 mentioned in a letter of 1688 addressed 

 by a numberof Apalachee chiefs toCharles 

 II of Spain. A facsimile of the original 

 letter was reproduced and published by 

 Buckingham Smith in 1860. — Gatschet, 

 Creek Migr. Leg., i, 76, 1884. 



Patung. The Squash phratry of the 

 Hopi, consisting of the Squash, Crane, 

 Pigeon-hawk, and Sorrow-making clans. 

 They claim to have come from a region in 

 southern Arizona called Palatkwabi. 

 Batanga.— Voth, Trad, of Hopi, 40, 1905. Patun.— 

 Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 583, 1901. 



Patung. The Squash clan of the Patung 

 phratry of the Hopi. 



Batang. — Voth, Oraibi Summer Snake Ceremony, 

 283, 1903. Batang-a.— Dorsey and Voth, Mishong- 

 novi Ceremonies, 176, 1902. Patun winwu. — 

 Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 583, 1900 {win-wu= 

 'clan'). Pa'-tun-wun-wii. — Fewkes in Am. An- 

 throp., VII, 402, 1894. 



Patuterajuit. A former settlement of 

 the Angmagsalingmiut Eskimo of the e. 

 coast of Greenland. — Meddelelser om 

 Gronland, ix, 382, 1889. 



Patuxent (probably related in meaning 

 to Patmvet, q. v.). An Algonquian tribe 

 formerly living in what is now Calvert 

 CO., Md., their principal village bearing 

 the same name. It is probable that they 

 were closely related to the Conoy, if not a 

 part of them. They met the Maryland 

 colonists, on their first arrival, on terms of 

 friendship, which continued without seri- 

 ous interruption as long as the tribe ex- 

 isted. As early as 1639 the colonial author- 

 ities proclaimed the Patuxent as friends 

 and declared them under the protection of 

 the colony. In 1651 they, together with 

 other Indians, were placed on a reser- 



