466 



SARA CU AM SAREOPE 



[b. a. 



comisaria of Saracachi y Dolores, which 

 contained 401 inhabitants in 1900, is the 

 outgrowth of the former pueblo. 

 Sacarachi. — Rivera (1730) quoted by Bancroft, No. 

 Mex. States, l, 613, 1884. Saracatzi.— Orozco V 

 Berra, Geog., 344, 1864. 



Saracuam. One of the tribes enumer- 

 ated by Massanet (Dictamen Fiscal, Nov. 

 30, 1716, MS. ) as on the road from Coa- 

 huila to the Texas country. The affi nities 

 of the tribe are uncertain. 



Saraise. A former village, presumably 

 Costanoan, connected with Dolores mis- 

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

 Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Sarapinagh, A tribe or division living 

 in 1608 on Nanticoke r., on the eastern 

 shore of Maryland. It is probable that 

 they were a part of the Nanticoke tribe. 



Sarapinagh.— Simons in Smith (1629), Va., I, 17.5, 

 repr. 1819. Soraphanigh. — Purchas, Pilgrimes, iv, 

 1713, 1626. 



Sarasota. Mentioned by Armistead 

 (H. R. Doc. 247, 27th Cong., 2d sess., 14, 

 1842) as a Seminole settlement in Florida 

 in 1841; pop. 30 or 40. Doubtless situ- 

 ated at or near the site of the present 

 town of that name in Manatee co. 



Saratoga ( ' the place where ashes or 

 alkaline substances float. ' — Hewitt). Ac- 

 cording to Macauley, the name of a Mo- 

 hawk band (village?) formerly occupy- 

 ing the w. bank of the Hudson, about 

 Saratoga and Stillwater, in Saratoga co., 

 N. Y. 



Oh-sa-ra-kas.— Macauley, N. Y., ii, 174, 1829. Sara- 

 togas.— Bollan (1748) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 1st 

 8., VI, 135, 1800. 



Saratoga. A kind of trunk. Bartlett 

 (Diet, of Americanisms, 551, 1877) saj's: 

 "The enormous trunks carried by fashion- 

 able ladies to Saratoga Springs have ob- 

 tained for them the specific name of 

 '• Saratoga trunks,' or Saratogas." From 

 the place-name Saratoga (q. v. ), a word of 

 Iroquois origin. Another term from this 

 region is ^'Saratoga chips" — potatoes 

 sliced thin and fried crisp in hot fat — so- 

 called because they were first made pop- 

 ular in the Saratoga hotels. (a. f. c. ) 



Sarauahi. Apparently the name of two 

 villages in n. e. Florida in the 16th cen- 

 tury. One marked on the De Bry map 

 of 1591 as Sarrauahi (river) is described 

 by Laudonniere in 1564 as on an inlet n. 

 of St John r., and about 2 leagues from 

 the French Ft Caroline on the s. bank 

 of the river, near its mouth. This prob- 

 ably belonged to the Saturiba tribe. The 

 other, probably Calanay of the De Bry 

 map, is described by Fontaneda, about 

 1575, as 50 or 60 leagues up St John r. and 

 subject to Utina, the Timucua chief. Lau- 

 donniere also notes "Calany" as subject 

 to Utina. The printed synonym forms 

 for both are interchangeable. (.i. m.) 

 Azavay. — Fontaneda (ca. 1575) in Ternaux- 

 Compans, Voy., xx, 35, 1841 (middle St John r.; 

 misprint for Zaravay in same passage of Smith 

 trans.). Calanay.— De Bry, map (1591), in Le 

 Moyne Narr., Appleton trans., 1857 (middle St 



John r.; identical?). Calanio.— Barcia, Ensayo, 48, 

 1723 (identical?). Calany.— Laudonniere "(1564) 

 in French, Hist. Coll. La.,n. s., 243, 1869 (theCala- 

 any of De Bry map, and noted as subject to Utina). 

 Saranay. — Fontaneda {ca. 1575) in French, Hist. 

 Coll. La., 2d s., ii, 264, 1875 (middle St John r.). 

 Sarauahi. — Laudcinni^re (1564) quoted by Shipp, 

 De Soto and Fla., 519, 1881 (N. of St John r.). 

 Saraurahi. — Laudonniere (1.564) in French, Hist. 

 Coll. La., n. s., 315, 1869 (n. of St John r.; mi.sprint 

 second r for v ) . Saravay . — Fontaneda Memoir {ca. 

 1575), Smith trans., 25, 1854 (mentioned as on mid- 

 dle St John and subject to Utina, chief of the Ti- 

 mucua). Sarrauahi.— De Bry, map (1-591), in Le 

 Moyne Narr., Appleton trans., 1875 (river short 

 distance n. of St John r.). Serranay. — Laudon- 

 niere (1564) in French, Hist. Coll. La., n. s., 257, 

 1869 (identical?). Zaravay.- Fontaneda Me- 

 moir {en. 1575), Smith trans., 25, 1854. 



Sardlok, An Eskimo village on the 

 w. coast of Greenland, lat. 64° 20'. — 

 Nansen, Eskimo Life, 166, 1894. 



Sarfalik ('place of guillemots'). An 

 Ita Eskimo village near Smith sd., n. 

 Greenland. — Heilprin, Peary Relief Ex- 

 ped., 104, 1893. 



Serwadling. —Stein in Petermanns Mitt., 198, 

 1902. Severnik, — Kane, Arct. Explor., ii, 126, 

 1856. 



Sargarria. Mentioned as a New Mexico 

 missioninl742.— Mendoza et al. (1742-3) 

 quoted by Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 

 244, 1889. 



Sargentaruka. A former village of the 

 Rumsen division of the Costanoan family, 

 21 m. E. of Carmelo r., Cal. It is said to 

 have been populous. 



Sargenta rucas. —Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 20, 

 1860. Sargentarukas, — Ibid. Sirkhintaruk. — Kroe- 

 ber, Costanoan MS., Univ. Cal., 1902 (Sirkhinta, 

 name of place with locative ending -ta; ruk, 

 'houses,' 'village': .said to have been the same 

 as Kakontaruk, or Kakonkaruk, at Pt Sur, s. of 

 Monterey). 



Saric. A rancheria, probably of the 

 Papago, visited by Kino in 1694; the seat 

 of a mission from about 1 700 ( Bancroft, 

 Ariz, and N. Mex., 357, 1889). Situated 

 on the w. bank of Rio Altar, in n. Sonora, 

 Mexico. 



Kuestra Senora de los Dolores del Saric. — Orozco y 

 Berra, Geog., 347, 1864. Oacpuaguigua, — Quijano 

 (1757) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., I, 52, 1856. 

 Saric— Kino (1699), ibid. ,294. Sarie.- Box, Ad- 

 ventures, 270, 1869. Sario.— Hardv, Travels, 422, 

 1829. Sarique.— Keler (1752) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 

 4th S., I, 26, 1856. Sarrii.— Venegas, Hist. Cal., 1, 

 304, 1759. Sta, Gertrudis Saric.— Kino (1706) 

 quoted by Bancroft, No. Mex. States, i, 501, 1884. 



Sarkak. A Danish Eskimo village on 

 the VVaigat, n. Greenland. — Wyckoff in 

 Scribner's Mag., xxviii, 450, 1900. 



Sarkarmiut. A ruined Angmagsaling- 

 miut village on the e. coast of Greenland, 

 lat. 66° 19^— Meddelelser om Gronland, 

 XXVII, map, 1902. 



Sarontac. A former village, presumably 

 Costanoan, connected with Dolores mis- 

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

 Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Sarrochan. A former Winnebago vil- 

 lage on the site of Taycheedah, Fond du 

 Lac CO., Wis. — Grignon in Wis. Hist. 

 Soc. Coll., Ill, 288, 1857. 



Sarrope. According to information of 

 a former Spanish captive among the 

 Calusa (q. v.) iu Florida, as related to 



