BULL. 30] 



TAN TANGOUAEN 



685 



ers,' from hisum, 'east'; Chumetoko, 

 'southerners,' from chumech, 'south'; 

 and Olowitok, 'westerners,' from olowin, 

 'west.' (s. A. B. ) 



Simbalakees.— Bancroft, Xat. Races, I, 363, 1874. 

 Tamlocklock. — Ibid., 4.')0. Tamolecas. — Powers in 

 Overland Mo., .\, 324, 1S73. Ta-mo-le'-ka. — Powers 

 in Coiit. N. A. Ethnol., ni, 349, 1877. Tamuleko.— 

 S. A. Barrett, inf'n, 1907 (proper form). Timbala- 

 kees. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Mar. 30, 1860. 

 Yamlocklock. — Bancroft, op. cit., 450. 



Tan ( Ta"). The Sun clans of the Tewa 

 pueblos of San Juan, Santa Clara, San 

 lldefonso, Tesuqne, and Nambe, N. 

 Mex., and Hano, Ariz. That of Nambe 

 is extinct. 



Tan-tdoa.— Hodge in Am. Anthr., ix, 352, 1896 

 (San Juan, Santa Clara, San lldefonso, and 

 Tesuque form; tdda = 'people'). Tan-tdoa. — 

 Ibid. (Nambe form). Tan.— Fewkes, ibid., vii, 166, 

 1894 (Hano form). 



Tanaca. Mentioned by Oviedo (Hist. 

 Gen. Indies, iii, 628, 1853) as one of the 

 provinces or villages visited by Ayllon, 

 probably on the South Carolina coast, in 

 1520. 



Tanacharison. See Half King. 



Tanaha ( Ta'nahiX ) . The Buffalo clan of 

 the Caddo. 



Koho'.— Mooney in 14th Rep. B. A. E., 1093, 1896 

 (= ' alligator'). Tanaha. — Ibid. 



Tanakot. A Kaiyuhkhotana village of 

 52 inhabitants in 1880 on the right bank 

 of Yukon r., Alaska, near the mouth of 

 Melozi r. 



Tahnohkalony.— Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 398, 

 1901 (cited form). Tanakhothaiak. — PetrofI in 

 10th (Census, Alaska, map, 1880. Tanakot. — Baker, 

 op. cit. 



Tanasqui. A Cherokee town visited by 

 Juan Fardo in 1567. The name may be 

 thesameasTanilsF, orTennessee (q. v. ). — 

 Mooney in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 534, 1900. 



Tancac. i\Ientioned by Oviedo (Hist. 

 Gen. Indies, iii, 628, 1853) as one of the 

 provinces or villages visited by Ayllon, 

 probably on the South Carolina coast, in 

 1520. 



Tandaquomuc. AChowanoc(?) village 

 in 1585 at the w. end of Albemarle sd., 

 between the mouths of Chowan and Ro- 

 anoke rs., in the present Bertie co., N. C. 



Tandaquomuc. — Lane's map, 1.5S.i, in Hawks, Hist. 

 N. C, I, 1S59. Tantaquomuck.— Dutch map, 1621, 

 in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., i, 1856. 



Taneaho. An unidentified village or 

 tribe mentioned to Joutel in 1687 (Mar- 

 gry, Dec, iii, 409, 1878) while he was 

 staying with the Kadohadacho on Red r. 

 of Louisiana, by the chief of that tribe, 

 as being among his enemies. 



Tanedi ( TAne'dl, 'people of [the river] 

 Tan' ). A division of the Tlingit at Kake, 

 Alaska, belonging to the Raven phratry 

 of that tribe. ( j. r. s. ) 



Tanetsukanumanke. One of the Man- 

 dan bands. 



Good Knife.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 158, 1877. Ta-na- 

 tsu'-ka. — Ibid. Ta-ne-tsu'-ka nu-man'-ke. — Dorsey 

 in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 241, 1897. 



Tangdhantangkaenikashika ( ' those who 

 became human beings by the aid of the 

 large wildcat'). A Quapaw gens. 



Panthergens,— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 229, 

 1897. Tai'djia" tan'^ia e'nikaci'iia, — Ibid. 



Tangeratsa {luingees, 'half,' 'middle;' 

 atsah, 'brightish': 'peojile neither dark 

 nor fail-'). One of tlie castes or classes 

 into which the Ivutt'hakuichin are di- 

 vided, the others being the Chitsa and 

 the Natesa. — Kirby in Smithson. Rep, 

 1864, 418, 1865; Hardisty, ibid., 1866. 

 315, 1872. 



A-teet-sa.— Kirby in Hist. Mag., 1st s., vni, 167, 

 1864. Gens de Milieu, — Whymper, Alaska, map, 

 1868. Middle Indians. — Ro.ss, notes on Tinne, 

 S. I. MS., 474. Tain-gees-ah-tsah. — Hardisty, 

 op. cit. Taitsick-Rutchin.— Jones in Smithson. 

 Rep. 1866, 323, 1872. Tanges-at-sa.— Kirbv, ibid., 

 1864, 418, 1S65. Tchandjoeri-Kuttchin.— Petitot, 

 Diet. Dene-Dindjie, xs, 1S76. Tenge-rat-sey.— 

 Jones in Smithson. Rep. 1866, 326, 1^72. Teng- 

 ratsey.— Dall, Alaska, 196, 1870. Teng-rat-si.— 

 Dall in Cent. N. A. Ethnol., i, 30, l,s77. Tpendji- 

 dheyttset-Kouttchin,— Pelitot, Autour du lac des 

 Esclaves, 361, 1891. Tpion-Kouttchin.— Ibid, 

 ('people of the water'). T'tran-jik-kutch-in.— 

 Ross, MS. notes on Tinne, B. A. E., 474 (trans. 

 'Big Black river people'). Zeka-thaka.— Rich- 

 ardson, Arct. Exped., I, 398, 1851 (trans. ' people on 

 this side'). Zi-unka-kutchi.— Ibid, (trans, 'mid- 

 dle people'). Ziunka-kutshi.— Latham, Nat. 

 Races Russ. Emp., 2'J3, 18.=)4. 



Tangipahoa (from<a"(/s/a', 'maize'; apa, 

 'stalk,' 'cob'; ara, 'to gather': 'those 

 who gather maize stalks or cobs.' — 

 Wright. Pcnicaut explains the river name 

 Tandgepao erroneously as 'white wheat 

 or corn' ). An extinct tribe, supjiosed to 

 be Muskhogean, formerly living on the 

 lower Mississippi and on Tangipahoa r., 

 which flows s. into L. Pontchartrain, s. e. 

 La. Tonti mentions this people as resid- 

 ing, in 1682, on the Mississippi, 12 leagues 

 from the Quinipissa village; but, accord- 

 ing to Iberville (Margry, Dec, iv, 168, 

 1880), the Bayogoula informed him that 

 the Tangipahoa had never lived on the 

 Mississippi; nevertheless both statements 

 agree in making their town one of the 7 

 villages of the Acolapissa. When La 

 Salle reached their village he found that 

 it had recently been burned, and saw dead 

 bodies lying on one another. According 

 to the information given Iberville by the 

 Bayogoula, the village had been destroyed 

 by the Huma. Nothing definite is known 

 of the language and affinities of the tribe, 

 but their apparent relations with the 

 Acolapissa indicate Muskhogean affinity. 

 Their village was one of those said to be- 

 long to the Acolapissa. 



Taensapaoa.— Bartram, Trav., 422, 1791. Tanchipa- 

 hoe.— Ellicott (m. 1798), Jour., app., map, 71,1803 

 (applied to river). Tangeboas, — McKennev and 

 Hall, Ind. Tribes, in, 81, 1854. Tangibac— Henne- 

 pin, New Discov., 155, 1698. Tangibao. — Iberville 

 (1698) in French, Hist. Coll. La., pt. 2, 23, note, 

 1875. Tangibaoas.— Shea, Cath. Miss., 438, 1855. 

 Tangibaos.— Tonti (1682) in French, Hist. ColL 

 La., I, 63, 1S4('). Tan'gipaha',— Gatschet quoted by 

 Boyd, Local Names, 46, 1885. Tangipahos. — La 

 Harpe {ra. 1723) in French, Hist. Coll. La., iii, 17, 

 1851. Tangipaos.— Martin, Hist. La., I, 101, 1827. 

 Tanjibao.— La Salle in Majgry, D6c., II, 198, 1877. 

 Tansipaho, — Ellicott (ca. 1798), Jour., map, 203, 

 1803. 



Tangouaen. A village where Algonkin 

 and Hurons united for protection against 



