254 



PIMITOUI PINAL COYOTERO 



[b. a. e. 



mentioned the family includes the Xe- 

 vome,Opata( including Eudeve and Jova), 

 Tarahumare, Cahita, Cora, Huichol, Tepe- 

 cano, Tepehuane, Nio, Tepahue, and Zoe, 

 with their numerous branches. For 

 further information see under the divi- 

 sional names. Consult Powell in 7th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 98, 1891, and authorities there- 

 under cited; Orozco y Berra, Geog. , 58, 

 1864; Brinton, Am. Kace, 123, 1891; Kroe- 

 ber in Univ. Cal. Pub., Am. Archseol. 

 and Ethnol., iv, no. 3, 1907; Hrdlicka in 

 Am. Anthrop. Jan.-Mar., 1904; Rudo En- 

 sayo (ra 1763), 1863; Riba.s, Hist. Trium- 

 phos, 1645; Docunientos para la Hist. 

 Mex., 4th s., I, III, 1856. 



Pimitoui. A village of the Illinois con- 

 federacy on Illinois r., near the mouth of 

 Fox r.," in Lasalle co., 111. In 1722 the 

 inhabitants abandoned it and removed to 

 Cahokia and Kaskaskia. The band oc- 

 cupied different localities at different 

 periods; in 1699 they were but 8 leagues 

 from the Mississippi. They clung to their 

 old belief after other bands of the Illinois 

 had accepted missionary teachings. On 

 some old maps the Pimitoui and Peoria 

 villages near Peoria lake are given as 

 identical. (,t. m. ) 



Pamitaris' town. — Rupp, West. Penn., 327, 18-J6. 

 Peniteni. — St Cosnie {1(199) in Sliea, Early Voy., 6r>, 

 1861. Permavevvi.— St Cosme (1699), ibid., 59. 

 Pimeteois. — Nuttall, Jour., 250, IS'il. Pimitconis. — 

 Boudinot, Star in the West, 128, 1816. Pimiteoui.— 

 Du Pratz (1758), La., ii, map, 1774. Pimiteouy. — 

 Shea, Cath. Miss., 428, 185.5. Pimitoui.— De I'Isle, 

 map (c« 1720) in Neill, Hist. Minn., 18.58. Pimy- 

 tesouy. — Memoir of 1718 in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., 

 IX, 890, 18.55. 



Pimocagna. A former Gabrieleno ran- 

 cheria in Los Angeles co., Cal., ata locality 

 later called Rancho de Ybarra. 

 Pimocagna.— Ried (1852) quoted by Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Jan. 11, 1861. Piniocagna. — Ibid., June 8, 

 1860._ 



Pimtainin (PIm-t'ainin, ' deer people ') . 

 A clan of the Tigua of Isleta, N. INIex. — 

 Lummis quoted by Hodge in Am. 

 Anthrop., ix, 350, 1896. 



Final Coyotero. A part of the Coyotero 

 Apache, whose chief rendezvous was the 

 Pinal mts. and their vicinity, x. of Gila 

 r. in Arizona. They ranged, however, 

 about the sources of the Gila, over the 

 Mogollon mesa, and from n. Arizona to 

 the (iila and even southward. They are 

 now' under the San Carlos and Ft Apache 

 agencies, where they are officially classed 

 as Coyoteros. According to Bourke, 

 there were surviving among them in 1882 

 the following clans (or bands): Chis- 

 nedinadinaye, Destchetinaye, Gadinchin, 

 Kaihatin, Klokadakaydn, Nagokaydn, 

 Nagosugn, Tegotsugn, Titses.sinaye, Tut- 

 soshin, Tutzose, Tziltadin, and Yagoye- 

 cayn. 



They are reputed by tradition to have 

 been the first of the Apache to have pene- 

 trated below the Little Colorado among 

 the Pueblo peoples, with whom they in- 



termarried (Bourke in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, III, 112, 1890). They possessed the 

 country from San Francisco mt. to the 



CHIQUITO, A PINAL COYOTERO MAN 



Gila until they were sul)dued by Gen. 

 Crook in 1873. Since then they have 

 peaceably tilled their land at San Carlos. 



WIFE OF CHIQUITO 



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

 for several years a surgeon at Ft Apache, 

 says that they have soft, musical voices, 



