480 



SAUKAULUTUCHS SAVOY AN 



[b. a. e. 



toire du Canada, i-iv, 1866; SagardTheo- 

 dat, Voyage du Pays des Hurons, i-ii, 



1865. (j. N. B. H.) 



Asaukees.— Ramsey in Ind. AS. Rep. 1&49, 73, 1850. 

 Assegunaigs, — Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, I, 191, 

 1851. — Hoti'nestako"'. — Hewitt, Onondaga MS., B. 

 A. E.,lSs,s (Oiionila.ua name). Houattoehronon. — 

 Jes. Rel., inile.x, 1.^58. Hvattoehronon. — Jes. Rel. 

 1640, 35, 1858. Jakis.— Rasles (ca. 1723) in Mass. 

 Hi.st. Soc. Coll., 2d s., viii, 251, 1819 (mis- 

 print?). Osagi.— Baraga, Eng.-Oteh. Diet., 218, 

 1878 (Chippewa- form). Osaki. — Gatschet, Pota- 

 watomi MS., 1878 (Potawatomi name; pi. OsAkik). 

 Osankies.— Ramsay in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1849, 74, 1850 

 (misprint). Osaugeeg.— Tanner, Narr., 315, 1830 

 (Ottawa name). Osaukies. — Ramsev in Ind. Afi. 

 Rep. 1849, 77, 1850. O'-saw-kee.— Lewis and Clark, 

 Discov., 29, 1806. Satoeronnon. — Potier, Huron 

 MS. Grammar, ca. 1762 (Huron name). Ouatoie- 

 ronon.— Ibid. Ousaki.— Jes. Rel. 1667, 21, 1858. 

 Ousakiouek. — Ibid. Ozaukie. — Parker, Minn. 



Handbook, 13, 1857. ftuatokeronon. — Potier, 

 Huron MS. Grammar, ca. 1762 (another Huron 

 name). Saakies. — Long, Exped. St Peters R., ii, 

 450, 1824. Saaskies.— Boudinot, Star in the West, 

 128, 1810 (misprint). Saasskies.— Ibid., 107 (mis- 

 print). Sachi.— York (1700^ in N. Y. Doc. Col. 

 Hist., IV, 749, 18.54. Sacks.— Harris, Tour, 196, 1805. 

 Sacky.— Coxe, Carolana, 48, 1741. Sacs. — Doc. of 

 1695 in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., ix, 619, 1855. Saga- 

 seys.— Croghan (1759) in Rupp,VVest. Pa., 146, 1846. 

 Sagiwa.— Gatschet, Kaw MS. vocab., 27, 1878 

 (Kansa name). Sakawes. — Pike Exped., Coues 

 ed., 1, 101, 1895. Sakawis.— Ibid. Sakes.— Lords of 

 Trade (1721) in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., v, 622, 18o5. 

 S^a-ke-w'e.— Long, Exped. St Peters R., i, 218,1824 

 (own name). Sakewi. — Ibid., ii, 4.50. Saki. — Jes. 

 Rel. 1G70, 98, is.is. Sa-ki-yu.— Grayson, Creek MS. 

 Tocab., B.A.E., 188a (Creek name for united Sauk 

 and Foxes). Saks. — MeKennev and Hall., Ind. 

 Tribes, in, 79, 1854. Saky.— Jes." Rel. 1670, 96, 1858. 

 Sankewi. — Tanner, Narr., 315, 1830 (misprint?). 

 Banks. — Jones, Ojebway Inds., 69, 1861 (mis- 

 print). Saques. — Vater, Mith., pt. 3, sec. 3, 266, 

 1816. Saquis.— La Harpe (1700) in French, Hist. 

 Coll. La., in, 23, 1851. Sauckeys.— De Butts (1795) 

 in Am. State Pap., Ind. Aff., l, 567, 1832. Saucs.— 

 De Smet, Oregon Miss., 161, 1847. Saugies.— Old 

 map in Lapham, Inds. of Wis., 16, 1870. Sauk. — 

 Pike Exped., i, app., 20, 1810. Saukees.— 

 Lewis and Clark, Discov., 15, 1806. Saukeys.— 

 Clark (1809) in Am. State Pap., Ind. Aff., I, 798, 

 1832. Saukies.— Edwards (1788) in IMass. Hist. 

 Soc. Coll., 1st s., IX, 92, 1804. Sawkee.— Pike, 

 Trav., 134, 1811. Sawkeys.— Johnston (1810) in 

 Am. State Pap., Ind. Aff., I, 799, 1832. Sawkies.— 

 Volney, View of U. S. A., 352, 1804. Sawkis.— 

 Vater, Mith., pt. 3, sec. 3, 266, 1816. Saxes.— 

 Goldthwait (1766) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., Ists., 

 X, 122, 1809. Scungsicks.— Albany conf. (1726) in 

 N. Y'. Doc. Col. Hist., v, 791, 1855 (apparently given 

 as the Iroquois name for the Sauk; the Foxes are 

 called Quaeksis in the same doc; Hewitt thinks the 

 form may be intended for Skc7ichi(jhronon' Fox,' 

 the Huron name for the Foxes, and possibly 

 for the united tribes). Shakies. — Croghan (17.59) 

 quoted by Jefferson, Notes, 143, 1825. Shakirs.— 

 Hutchins (1768), ibid, (misprint). Shockays. — 

 Croghan (1765) in Monthly Am. Jour. GeoL, 272, 

 1831. Shockeys. — Croghan (17.59) quoted by Rupp, 

 West. Pa., app., 132, 1846. Shougheys.— Croghan 

 (1760) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 4th s., ix, 2.50, 1871. 

 Skakies.— Inlay, West. Ter., 290, 1797 (misprint). 

 Sokkie.— Dalton (1783) in Mass. Hi.st. Soc. Coll., 

 1st s., x, 123, 1809. Taukies.— Lewis, Trav., 37, 

 1809(mi.sprint). Za'-ke. — Riggs, Dak. Gram, and 

 Diet., 275, 18.52 (Santeeand Yankton Sioux name). 

 Saukanlutuchs. Reported to be the 

 nameofasmall band of Indians in the inte- 

 rior of Vancouver id. They traded with 

 the Nootka and are said to have spoken 

 the same language ; from the latter circum- 

 stance the Nootka had a superstition that 

 they were the spirits of their dead. 

 Saa-Kaalituck.— Mayne, Brit. Col., 180, 1861. Sau- 

 kaulutuchs, — Keane in Stanford, Compend., 534, 



1878. Sau-kau-lutuck,— Lord, Nat. in Brit. Col., I, 



158, 1866. 



Sauk-eye. See Sorkei/e. 



Sauktich, A Squawmish village com- 

 munity inhabiting Hat id., Howe sd., 

 Brit. Col. 



Sau'qtitc— Hill-Tout in Rep. Brit. A. A. S.,474, 

 1900. 



Sanlt an Recollet (French: 'rapids of 

 the Recollet,' because a Recollet mis- 

 sionary was drowned there early in the 

 17th century). A Catholic Iroquois mis- 

 sion village near the mouth of Ottawa r., 

 in Two Mountains co., Quebec, estab- 

 lished in 1696 by converts from The 

 Mountain. In 1704 the rest of the In- 

 dians at The Mountain removed to the 

 new mission. In 1720 the settlement was 

 abandoned, and the inhabitants, number- 

 ing about 900, built a new village at Oka 

 (q. v.). (j. N. B. H.) 



Annunciation, — Shea, Cath. Miss., 329, 18.55 (mis- 

 •sion name bestowed in 1704). Lorette. — Ibid. ,329 

 (first mission name; see also Lorette). Sault au 

 Recolet.— Vaudreuil (1711) in N. Y. Doc. Col. 

 Hist., IX, 860, 1855. Sault au Recollet.— Shea, 

 Cath. Miss., 328, 1855. Saut au Recollet.— Vau- 

 dreuil (1717) in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., ix, 961, 1855. 



Saumingmiut ('inhabitants of the left 

 side'). A subtribe of the Okomiut Es- 

 kimo of Baffin land, inhabiting the ex- 

 tremity of Cumberland penin. Their 

 villages are Kekertaujang and Ukiadliv- 

 ing. Pop. 17 in 1883. See Boas in Trans. 

 Anthr. Soc. Wash., in, 96, 1885. 

 Shaumeer. — Kumlien in Bull. Nat. Mus., no. 15, 15, 



1879. SSaumingmiut. — Boas in Deutsche Geog. 

 Blatt.,Vli, 34, 1885. 



Sauniktumiut. An Eskimo tribe on the 

 coast of Hudson bay, s. of the Kinipetu, 

 in the region of Port Churchill; pop. 178 

 in 1902.— Boas in Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. 

 Hist., XV, 6, 1901; 378, 1907. 



Saunutung. A spring settlement of the 

 Kinguamiut Eskimo at the entrance to 

 Nettilling fiord, Baffin land. — Boas in 6th 

 Rep. B. A. E., map, 1888. 



Sauquonckackock. A Pequot village in 

 1638, on the w. bank of Thames r., below 

 Mohegan, New London co., Conn., occu- 

 pied by a portion of the conquered tribe 

 subject to the Mohegan. — Williams 

 (1638) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 4th s., 

 VI, 251, 1863. 



Sauwontiats {Sau-won'-ti-ais). A Paiute 

 band formerly in or near Moapa valley, 

 s. E. Nev.; pop. 92 in 1873. — Powell in 

 Ind. Aff. Rep. 1873, 50, 1874. 



Saveata. See Sabeata. 



Savinnars. Given as a tribe on Vancou- 

 ver id., N. of Nootka sd. Unidentified, 

 but undoubtedly either a Nootka tribe or 

 the Nootka name of a Kwakiutl tribe. 



Savinards. — Armstrong, Oregon, 136, 1857. Savin- 

 nars.— Jewitt, Narr., 36, 1849. 



Savoyan. A name of the goldthread 

 {Coptis trifoliata) and of certain species 

 of bedstraw (Galium borenle, etc.), which 

 has come into American English through 

 the Sitvoyruie of Canadian French. The 

 Indians used the root of Coptw trifoliata 



