BULL. 30] 



SHIPAPULIMA 8HIPAUL0VI 



551 



Am. Folk-lore, xvi, 37-39, 1903, and in 

 So. Workman, xxxii, no. 6, 1903. 



Shinnecock woman (Harrington, Photo. Courtesy of ''southern 



WORKMAN ") 



Mochgonnekouck. — VV. W. Tooker, inf'n, 1907 

 (Dutch name) Shinacock.— Gardener (1660) in 

 Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 3d s., iii, 15G, 1833. Shine- 

 cock. — Deed of 1648 quoted by Thompson, Long 

 Id., 181, 1839. Shinicoks.— Clark, Onondaga, i, 18, 

 1849. Shinicooks, — Keane in Stanford, Compend., 

 535,1878. Shinikooks.— Drake, Bk. Inds., xi, 1848. 

 Shiimacock.— Doc. of 1067 in N. Y. Doc. Col. HiSt., 

 XIV, 601, 1883. Shinnecock.— Deed of about 1640 

 quoted by Thompson, Long Id., 207, 1839. Sinna- 

 cock.— Doc. of 1667 in N. Y. Doe. Col. Hist., xiv, 

 602, 1883. Skinnacock.— Doc. of 1667, ibid., 600. 

 Southampton Indians, — Gardiner (1660) in Mass. 

 Hist. Soc. Coll., 3d .s., ni, 154, 1833. Southton.— 

 Doc. of 1676 in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., xiv. 711, 1883. 

 Shipapulima (Zmli: 'mist -enveloped 

 town,' irom shqjia 'mist', lUin 'surround- 

 ing', iinona 'sitting place of.' — Gushing). 

 The Zuni name of the traditional place 

 of origin as well as the final resting place 

 of the Zuni, Keresan, and other Pueblo 

 tribes, whence came the gods who taught 

 them their arts, agriculture, and cere- 

 monies. By the Zuni it is said to be a 

 group of pueblo ruins on the Rio Mancos, 

 a tributary of the San Juan, in s. w. Colo. ; 

 to the Rio Grande pueblos (called by 

 them Cibobe) and the Jemez (to whom 

 it is known as Uabunatota) it is a lagoon 

 in the same locality. See Bandelier, cited 

 below; Gushing in 13th Rep. B. A. E., 

 1896; Gushing, Zuni Folk Tales, 1900. 

 Black Lake of I'ears. — Lummis, Land of Poco 

 Tiempo, 136, 1893 Cibobe.— Bandelier in Arch. 

 Inst. Papers, iii, 66, 303, 1890 (Shi-Pap-u, or). 

 Colela.— MS. of 18th century quoted by Bandelier, 

 ibid., IV, 30, l.sy2. Copiala.— Ibid. 0-jang-ge P'ho- 

 quing-ge.— Ibi<1. (name given by Tewa of San 

 Juan). Shee-p'ah-poon.— Lummis, Man Who Mar- 

 ried the Moon, 233, 1894 (Tiguaname). Shi'-pap.— 

 Whipple, Pac. R. R. Rep., iii, pt. 3, map, 10, 1856. 

 Shi-Pap-u,— Bandelier, op. cit., in, 66, 1890 (or 

 Cibobe). Shi-p'a-pu. — Lummis, Land of Poco 

 Tiempo, 75, 1S93. Shi-pai-pu-li-ma. — Gushing in 

 2d Rep. B. A. E., 16, 1883. Shi-pap-ulima.— Bande- 

 lier quoted in Arch. Inst. Rep., v, 40, 1884. Shi- 

 pa-puyna. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 



30, 1892 (Santa Clara Tewa name). Shipop.— 

 Meline, Two Thou.sand Miles, 202, 1867. Ua-buna- 

 tota.— Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 207, 

 1892 (Jemez name). 



Shipaulovi (from shipaulavitu, 'mos- 

 quitoes,' because its largest clan consists 

 of part of the people who formerly lived 

 at Homolobi, which was abandoned on 

 account of the mosquitoes (Voth, Trad. 

 Hopi, 61, 1905). One of the 6 pueblos of 

 the Hopi (q. v.), situated on the Middle 

 mesa of Tusayan, n. e. Arizona. Accord- 

 ing to Stephen it was built by Walpi 

 people who hadintermarried with those of 

 Mishongnovi, and according to Voth the 

 population was considerably augmented 

 by the Forehead clan of Homolobi after 

 the refusal of the inhabitants of Shongop- 

 ovi to receive them, and to have been 

 further increased within historic times 

 by the removal of people from Shongop- 

 ovi on account of their fear of the Span- 

 iards after killing the missionaries and 

 destroying their mission in 1680. In 1782 

 Morfi (see Fewkes in 17th Rep. B. A. E., 

 579, 1898) reported Shipaulovi to contain 

 only 14 families, a reduction apparently 

 due to a story circulated by a Shongop- 

 ovi chief that the Spaniards would again 

 make their appearance, causing many 

 of the Shipaulovi people to move to 

 Shongopovi. The present population is 

 about 125. (f. w. H.) 



Ah-le-la.— Whipple in Pac. R. R. Rep., in, pt. 3, 

 13, 1856 (Zuni name). Ahlelq. — Whipple, mis- 

 quoted by Donaldson, Moqui Pueblo Inds., 3, 

 1893. Ce-pa'-Ie-ve'. — ten Kate, Synonymie, 6, 

 1884 (native name; mistranslated 'house of 

 peaches'). Cipaulire.— Moffet in Overland Mo., 

 2d s., 243, Sept. 1889. Ci-pau'-lo-vi.— Fewkes in 

 Am. Anthr., V, 105, 1892. Cipoliva.— Shipley in 

 Ind. Aff. Rep., 310, 1891. Ci-pow-lovi.— Ibid., 

 Ixxx, 1886. Clipalines.— Corbin (1891) in Donald- 

 son, Moqui Pueblo Inds., 37, 1893 (misprint). 

 Guipaolave. — Escudero, Not. de Chihuahua, 231, 

 1834. Guipaulavi.— Cortez (1799) in Pac. R. R. 

 Rep., Ill, pt. 3, 121, 1856. Inparavi. — Calhoun 

 quoted by Donaldson, op. cit , 14. Juparivi.— 

 Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, I, 619, 18.53 ftset-so-kit- 

 pee-tsee-lee. — Eaton, ibid., iv, 220, 1854 (Navaho 

 name; cf. Tse-itso-kU'-bU-si-li, below). Sesepau- 

 laba.— Garc6s (1776), Diary, 394, 1900 (Yavapai 

 form). Sesepaulabe. — Garct'S quoted by Bande- 

 lier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iii, 135, 1890. Shapala- 

 wee.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 10, 1863. Sha- 

 pan-la-vi. — Ward (1861) quoted by Donaldson, op. 

 cit., 14 Shapanlobi.— Taylor, 0(3. cit., June 19, 

 1863. Sha-pau-lah-wee.— Ives, Col. Riv., map, 1861. 

 She-banlavi. — Loew in Rep. Geog. Surv. W. 100th 

 Merid., 178, 1875. Shebaula-vi. — Loew in Pop. Sci. 

 Mo., V, 352, July 1874. Shebaulavi.— Gatschct in 

 Mag. Am. Hist., 260, Ai)r. 1882. She-bo-pav-wee.— 

 French, Hist. Coll. La., Il, 175, 1875. Sheepon- 

 arleeve. — Eastman (1853) misquoted by Donald- 

 son, op. cit., 14. Sheepowarleeve. — Eastman, map 

 in Schoolcraft, Ind.Tribes, IV, 24, 1854. Shepalave.— 

 ten Kate, Reizen, 4.54, 1885 (mistransl. perzikrn- 

 huis, 'peach house'). Shepalawa.— Beadle, Un- 

 developed West, 576, 1873. She-pa-la-wee.— 

 French, Hist. Coll. La„ Ii, 175, 1875. She-pau'-la- 

 ve.— Barber in Am. Nat., 730, Dee. 1877. Shepau- 

 liva.— Clark and Zuck in Donaldson, op. cit., 14. 

 Shepolavi. — Mason, ibid. She-powl-a-we. — Pal- 

 mer in Ind. Aff Rep., 133, 1870. Shi-pau-a-Iuv-i.— 

 Powell in Scribner'.s Mag., 203, Dec. 1875. Shi- 

 pau-i-luv-i, — Ibid., 202. Shi-pau'-la-vi. — Barber 

 in Am. Nat., 730, Dec. 1877. Shi-pav-i-luv-i.— 

 Powell in Scribner's Mag., 196, map, Dec. 1875. 

 Shi-powl-ovi, — Stephen quoted by Donaldson, op. 



