Bl LL. 30] 



TACANHPISAPA TADEMA 



667 



Marriage Records, 1759. Thecamenes. — Joutel 

 (1687) in Frencli, Hist. Coll. La., I. 137, 1846. 

 Thecamons. — Ibid. 



Tacanhpisapa ( ' Black Tomahawk ' ) . A 

 former 31016 wakanton band, named from 

 the chief. 



Black-Tomahawk.— Neill, Hist. Minn., 144, note, 

 1868. Ta-can-rpi-sa-pa. — Ibid. 



Tacatacurn. A river, an island, and 

 probably a village of the Saturiba tribe of 

 N. E. Florida, about 1565. The river is 

 said by Laudonniere to be the one the 

 French called the Seine (Sequana), ap- 

 parently identical with the St Marys, 

 forming the boundary between Florida 

 and Georgia. The island was evidently 

 what is now Cumberland id. The village 

 is not marked on the De Bry map of 1591 

 accompanying Le Moyne's Narrative, and 

 may have been either on the n. (Georgia) 

 or s. (Florida) side, but the chief is al- 

 ways mentioned in the French narrative 

 as a kinsman or ally of the "great king 

 Satourioua. ' ' Brinton incorrectly locates 

 it on the coast s. of St Augustine, prob- 

 ably confusing it with Tucururu, named 

 by Fray Francisco Pareja in 1612 as one 

 of the Timucuan dialects. (j. m. ) 



Catacouru. — Laudonniere (1564) in French, Hist. 

 Coll. La., n.s., 351, 1869 (the river; first syllable 

 evidently omitted by mistake). Tacadocorou. — 

 Ibid ., 315 ( chief ) . Tacatacouru.— Ibid . , 348 ( river ) . 

 Tacatacuru.— Barcia, Ensayo, 121, 1723 (island). 

 Tecatacourou. — Laudonniere (1564) in French, 

 Hist. Coll. La., n. s., 349, 1869. 



Tachi. One of the larger tribes of the 

 Yokuts (Mariposan) family, living on the 

 plains N. of Tulare lake, s. central Cal. 

 They held the country w. of the Coast 

 range. Powers puts them on Kings r., 

 near Kingston. According to Alexan- 

 der Taylor, members of this tribe were 

 brought to San Antonio and Dolores (San 

 Francisco) missions as neophytes. Tatch6 

 or Telam^ is mentioned by Shea (preface 

 to Arroyo de la Cuesta's Vocab. of S. An- 

 tonio mission) as the name of the tribe 

 speaking the San Antonio language, a 

 Salinan dialect. These Tatche and Te- 

 lame, however, are the Tachi and Telam- 

 ni who had been taken to the mission, and 

 Taylor may be correct in giving Sextapay 

 as the name of the tribe, or more correctly 

 village site, originally at San Antonio. 

 As is the case with all the Yokuts tribes, 

 only a fragment of the former number re- 

 mains; but though reduced to a few dozen 

 survivors, the Tachi are today among the 

 half-dozen most numerous tribes left of 

 the original forty or more comprising the 

 Yokuts stock. Most of the survivors oc- 

 cupy a settlement near Lemoore, Kings 

 CO. (a. l. K.) 



Atach. — Johnston inSen. Ex. Doc. 61, 32d Cong., 

 1st sess., 23, 1852. A-tache.— Ibid., 22. Dachi.— 

 A. L. Kroeber, inf n, 1907 (a Yokuts form; see Tadji 

 below). La-ches. — Barbourin Sen. Ex.Doc.4,32d 

 Cong.,spec. sess. ,2.54, 1853. Taches.— Johnston, op. 

 cit.,22. Tachi.— Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., 

 Ill, 370, 1877. Tadjedjayi.—.\. L. Kroeber, inf'n, 

 1903 (plural form ). Tadji.— Ibid, (a Yokuts form; 

 see Dat'Af, above). Tah'-che.—Merriam in Science, 



XIX, 916, June 15, 1904. Tal-ches.— Ind. Aff. Rep., 

 400, 1857. Tatche. — Pimental, Lenguas de Mex., 

 391, 1865 (or Telam6). Tatchees,— Ind. Aff., Rep., 

 219, 1861. 



Tachik (from techek, 'the bay'). An 

 Unaligmiut Eskimo village on St Michael 

 id., near the Russian redoubt, and now 

 included in the town of St Michael, 

 Alaska. 



Tachik.— Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 11, 1884. 

 Tatchek.— Baker, Geog. Diet, Alaska, 620, 1906 

 (quoted form). Techek. — Ibid. T'satsumi. — Dall, 

 Alaska, 13, 1870. Tutsogemut.— Ibid, (name of 

 people). 



Tachikhwutme ( ' village on a plateau ' ) . 

 Mentioned as a former Athapascan vil- 

 lage on the coast of California, just n. of 

 the mouth of Klamath r. 

 Ta-tci'-qwut-me. — Dorsej' in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, III, 237, 1890 (Naltunnetunne name). 

 Ta-tci' te'-ne. — Dorsey, Smith River MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., 1884 (Khaamotene name). 



Tachikhwutme. A former village of the 

 Chastacosta on Rogue r., Oreg., above 

 the mouth of Illinois r. 



Shich-e-quet-to-ny.— Abbott, MS. Coquille census, 

 B. A. E., 1858. Ta-tci'-qwut. — Dorsevin Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, iii, 234, 1890. Techaquit,— Ind. Aflf. 

 Rep. 1856, 219, 1857. Te-cheh-quat.— Gibbs, MS, on 

 coast tribes, B. A. E. 



Tachilta. A former village of the Pa- 

 pago in s. Arizona or n. Sonora, Mex- 

 ico. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 348, 1864. 



Tachis. See Tawkee. 



Tachnkhaslitun. A former village of 

 the Chetco on the s. side of Chetco r., 

 Oreg. 



T'a'-tcu-qas-li'-tun, — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, HI, 236, 1890. 



Tachuwit. An Alsea village on the n. 

 side of Alsea r., Oreg. 



Ta'-tcu-wit".— Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 229, 1890. 



Tachy ('tail of the water'). A village 

 or the Tatshiautin at the mouth of Tache 

 r., Brit. Col. Pop. 32 in 1881; 65 in 1909. 

 Tachy,— Harmon, Jour., 215, 1820. Thatce.— Mor- 

 ice in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., x, 109, 1893. 



Tackapousha. See Massapequa. 



Tackchandeseechar. A Teton Sioux 

 band belonging to the Saone division. 

 Tack-chan-de-see-char. — Orig. Jour. Lewis and 

 Clark (1805), Vl, 99, 1905. Tack-chan-de-su-char.— 

 Am. State Papers, Ind Aff., i, 715, 1832. 



Taconnet. An Abnaki village, about 

 the beginning of the 17th century, at the 

 falls of Kennebec r., near Waterville, 

 Kennebec co.. Me. 



Taconet,— Niles (1761) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 3d 

 s., VI, 232, 1837. Taconick.— Hoyt, Antiq. Res., 212, 

 1824. Taconnet. — French map, 1744, cited by 

 Kendall, Trav., Ill, 49, 1809. Taconock.— Church 

 (1716) quoted by Drake, Ind. Wars, 191, 1826. 

 Taughtanakagnet. — Smith (1631) in Mass. Hist. 

 Soc. Coll., 3d s.. Ill, 22, 1833. Teconet.— Niles 

 (1761), ibid., vi, 235, 1837. Teuconick.— Falmouth 

 conf. (1727) in Me. Hist. Soc. Coll., iii, 408, 1853. 

 Tirionet.— Record of 1727 in N. H. Hist. Soc. 

 Coll. ,11, 259, 1827 (misprint). Tocconnock.— Church 

 (1690) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 4th s., v., 276, 1861. 

 Triconnick.— Penhallow (1726), in N. H. Hist. Soc. 

 Coll., 1, 107, 1824. 



Tacquison. A Papago village on the 

 Arizona-Sonora border, with 70 Indian 

 families in 1871. — Wilbur in Ind, Aff. 

 Rep. 1871, 365, 1872. 



Tadema. See Tatemy. 



