564 



SIAMANNAS SICHOMOVI 



[B. A. B. 



Siamannas ( ' hunterf? ' ) . A name applied 

 generally to the interior Indians by those 

 of Washington and British Columbia. 

 This form of the word was used for some 

 Salish on Whatcom and Siamanna lakes, 

 N. w. Wash. Similarly the Ntlakyapa- 

 muk were called Somena by the Cowi- 

 chan, while Swadabfih, which was ap- 

 plied by the Nisqualli to the Shahaptian 

 Klikitat and Yakima, is said to have the 

 samemeaning. (GibbsinCont. N. A. Eth- 

 noJ., I, 341, 1877). This last, however, 

 resembles Siredehish, a name given_ to 

 one of the Skagit tribes on Whidbey id., 

 Puget sd. Cf. Samainish. (j. r. s.) 



Saw-meena.— Anderson quoted by Gibbs in Hist. 

 Mag., vn, 73, 1863. SEma'mila,— Teit in Mem. 

 Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., ll, 167, 1900. Sia-man-nas.— 

 Fitzliusch in Ind. Aff. Rep. 18.57, 329, 1858. Si- 

 him-e-na.— Mahoney (1869), ibid., 70, .57^. 1869 (or 

 Stick Indians). Some-na.— Dawson in Trans. Roy. 

 Soc. Can. 1891, sec. n, 6, 1892. 



Siansi. A tribe or subtribe, formerly 

 of San Antonio de Valero, some of whose 

 memliers lived in 1706 and 1707 at San 

 Francisco Solano mission, near the Rio 

 Grande, in Coahuila, Mexico. — Valero 

 Bautismos, 1707; Entierros, 1706, 1707, 

 MSS. cited by H. E. Bolton, inf'n, 1907. 



Siapkat (Si^lpkal). A division of the 

 Pisquows who probably lived originally at 

 a place of the same name on the e. bank 

 of the Columbia, about Bishop rock and 

 Milk cr., below Wenatchee r.. Wash., 

 but are now in Kittitas co. They were a 

 party to the treaty of June 9, 1855, and 

 in 1876 were reported as one of the bands 

 on the Yakima res. 



Seapcat.— Ind. Aff. Rep. 1856, 266, 1857. Seapeats.— 

 Keane in Stanford, Conipend.,. 534, 1878 (misprint). 

 Si'apkat.— Mooney in 14lh Rep. B. A. E., 737, 1896. 



Siasconsit. . One of the aboriginal divi- 

 sions of Nantucket id. , Mass. It probably 

 included the site of the present Siasconset. 

 See Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 2d s., in, 25, 

 1815. 



Siatlhelaak {SiaflqekVag). A division 

 of the Nuhalk, a branch of theBellacoola 

 of the coast of British Columbia. — Boas 

 in 7th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 3, 1891. 



Sibagna. A former Gabrieleno ranche- 

 riain Los Angeles co., Cal., on the site of 

 San Gabriel mission (Ried, 1852, quoted 

 by Taylor in Cal. Farmer, June 8, 1860). 

 Cf. Toviscanga. 



Sibagoida. A rancheria in Arizona, 

 probably of the Maricopa, visited by 

 Kino and Mange in 1699 ( Mange cited by 

 Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 358, 1889). 

 Cf. Sicoroidag. 



Sibirijoa. A former settlement of the - 

 Tehueco on Rio del Fuerte, about lat. . 

 26° 40', N. w. Sinaloa, Mexico. Hardy 

 mentions it as a Mayo pueblo, which is 

 improbable, although it may have con- 

 tained some members of that tribe. 



Sibirijoa.— Orozco v Berra, Geog., map, 1864. Siv- 

 ilihoa.— Hardy, Trav in Mex., 438, 1829. Siviri- 

 joa.— Orozco v Berra, op. cit., 332. Zibirgoa.— 

 Kino, map (1702), in Stocklein, Neue Welt-Bott, 

 1726. 



Sibrepue {Sibupue?). A Maricopa ran- 

 cheria on the Rio Gila, Ariz., in 1744. — 

 Sedelmair (1744) cited by Bancroft, Ariz, 

 and N. Mex., 366, 1889. 



Sibubapa. A branch of the Nevorae, 

 of Sonora, Mexico, which inhabited the 

 pueblo of Suaqui. 



Sibubapas.— Orozco y Berra, Geog., 68, 351, 1864. 

 Simupapas.— Hamv in Bull. Soc. d'Anthrop. de 

 Paris, 786, 1883. 



Sicalamous. See Shikellamy. 



Sicca. A former village, presumably 

 Costanoan, connected with Dolores mis- 

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

 Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Siccameen. A Cowichan tribe on Oys- 

 ter bay, s. E. Vancouver id.; pop. 40 in 

 1906, 30 in 1909. 



Ceqemen.— Boas, MS., B. A. E., 1887. Sicca- 

 meen.— Can. Ind. Aff., pt. II, 164, 1901. Sicka- 

 meen.— Ibid., 120, 316, 1880. Sick-a-mun —Ibid., 

 308, 1879. Tickarneens.— Ibid., lix, 1877. 



Sichanetl {Sltca^netl). A Songish di- 

 vision at Oak bay, s. end of Vancouver 

 id.— Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 

 17, 1890. 



Sichanghu ('burnt thighs'). A band 

 of the Brule Teton Sioux. 

 Sitca^xu. —Cleveland quoted by Dorsey in 15th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 218,1897. 



Sicbomovi ( ' place of the wild currant- 

 bush mound'). A pueblo of the Hopi 

 on the East mesa of Tusayan, between 

 Hano and Walpi, n. e. Ariz. It was 

 built about 1750 by a colony of Badger 

 peoi^le from Walpi, later joined by a 

 group of Tanoan clans of the Asaphratry 

 from the Rio Grande in New Mexico, 

 who were invited by the Hopi to aid 

 them in resisting the invasions of the Ute. 

 In 1782 it contained about 15 families; 

 the population was 91 in 1870, 120 in 1882, 

 107 in 1891. It now numbers about 100. 

 See Mindeleff in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 62, 

 1891; Fewkes in 17th Rep. B. A. E., 578, 

 1898. 



Chemovi.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, i, 519, 1853. 

 Ci-cho-mo-oi.— Ward (1861) misquoted by Donald- 

 son, Moqui Pueblo Inds., 14, 1893. Cichomovi.— 

 Taylor in Cal . Farmer, J une 19, 1863. Citcumave.— 

 Moffet in Overland Month., 2d s., 243, Sept. 1889 

 Ci-tcum-wi.— Shiplev in Ind. Aff. Rep., 310, 1891. 

 It-t'ha'gi.— Stephen", MS., B. A. E.,^ 1887 ('Half- 

 way house': Navaho name). Saranai.— Hodge, 

 field notes, B. A. E., 1895 (Isleta name). Se-cho- 

 ma-we.— Palmer in Ind. Aff. Rep., 133, 1870. 

 Sechumevay.— .lackson in 10th Rep. Hayden 

 Surv., 450, 1878. Se-chum'-e-way.— Barber, after 

 Jackson, in Am. Nat., 730, Dec. 1877. See-cho- 

 mah-wee. — Ives, Colo. Riv., map, 1861. Se-tco'- 

 mo-we.- ten Kate, Synonymie, 6, 1884 (trans, 

 'white house'). Setshomave. — ten Kate, Reizen, 

 454, 1885 (trans, 'wit huis'). Setshomove. — Ibid., 

 245. Sheeourkee. — Eastman, map in Schoolcraft, 

 Ind. Tribes, iv, '24-25, 1854. Shi-choam-a-vi.— Pow- 

 ell in Scribner's Mag., 196, 202, Dec. 1875. Shi- 

 •win-e-wa.— Whipple, Pac. R. R. Rep., in, pt. 3, 13, 

 18.56 (Zufii name). Shi-wm-na,— Ibid, (confused 

 with Zuni). Shu-chum-a-vay.- Irvine in Ind. Aff. 

 Rep., 160, 1877. Shu-sho-no-vi.— Fewkes in Jour. 

 Am. Folk-lore, iv, 132, 1891. Si-choan-avi,— Powell 

 quoted by Donaldson, Moqui Pueblo Inds., 14, 

 1893. Sic'homivi.— Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Pa- 

 pers, III, 258, 1890. Sicbomovi. —Fewkes in 17th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 578. 1898. Si-chum'-a-vi.— Barber 

 in Am. Nat., 730, Dec. 1877. Sicbumnavi.— 

 Donaldson, Moqui Pueblo Inds., 4, 1893. Sicbum- 

 nlva.— Clark and Zuck, ibid., 14. Sichumovi.— 



