BULL. 30] 



TEANA TECUALME 



713 



Teana. A tribe mentioned in 1708 in a 

 list of those that liad been met or heard 

 of N. of San Juan Bautista mission on the 

 lower Rio Grande (Fr. Isidro Fehx de 

 Eepinosa, Relacion Compendiosa of the 

 Rio Grande missions, MS. in the College 

 of Santa Cruz de Queretaro). (h. e. b.) 



Teanaustayae. One of the most im- 

 portant Huron villages formerly in On- 

 tario. In 1638 the mission of St Joseph 

 was removed there from Ihontiria. It 

 was destroyed by the Iroquois in 1648. 

 leanausteaiae.— Jes. Rel. 1637, 107, 1858 (misprint). 

 St Joseph.— Shea, Uath. Miss., 178, 1855. Teanan- 

 stayae. — Ibid., 174. Teanansteixe. — Jes. Rel. 1640, 

 63, 1858 (misprint). Teanaustaiae.— Ibid., 1637, 

 107, 1858. Teanaostaiae. — Ibid., 161. Teanosteae. — 

 Ibid., 70. 



Teatontaloga ('two mountains apart'). 

 A Mohawk village existing at different 

 periods in New York. The oldest one 

 known by that name was the principal 

 village of the tribe until destroyed by 

 the French in 1666. It was rebuilt a 

 mile above the former site and was for 

 a time the site of the Jesuit mission 

 of St Mary, but was again destroyed 

 by the French in 1693. Both villages 

 were on the n. side of Mohawk r., close 

 to water, and probably near the mouth 

 of Schoharie cr., in Montgomery co., 

 N. Y. On this spot, on the w. side of 

 the creek, was the last village of that 

 name, better known in the 18th cen- 

 tury as the Lower Mohawk Castle. It 

 was also called Icanderago. Macauley 

 applies this name to the Mohawk band in 

 the vicinity of the village. ( j. n. b. h. ) 

 Icanderago. — Macauley, N. Y., ii, 96, 1829. I-can- 

 der-a-goes.— Ibid., 174-5, 1829 (the band), lower 

 Mohawk Castle. — Morgan, League Iroq., 474, 1851. 

 Saint Mary. — Shea, Cath. Miss., 258, 185.5 (mission 

 name). Ogsadago. — Hansen (1700) in N. Y. Doc. 

 Col. Hist., IV, 802, 1854. Te-ah'-ton-ta-lo'-ga— Mor- 

 gan, League Iroq., 474, 1851 (Mohawk form). 

 Te-a-ton-ta-lo'-ga. — Ibid., 18. Te-hon-da-lo'-ga. — 

 Ibid., 416. Tewauntaurogo. — Edwards (1751) in 

 Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 1st s., X, 143, 1809. Tionon- 

 deroge.— Ruttenber, Tribes Hudson R., 97, 1872. 



Tebi (Te'-bi). The Grease wood clan 

 of the Pakab (Reed) phratry of the 

 Hopi.— Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 39, 

 1891. 



Tebityilat. A former village connected 

 with San Carlos mission, Cal., and said 

 to have been occupied by the JEsselen. — 

 Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 20, 1860. 



Tebugkihu ( ' fire house ' ) . A large oval 

 ruin, the walls of which are still standing 

 5 to 8 ft high; situated 15 m. n. e. of 

 Keam's caiion and about 25 m. from 

 Walpi, N. E. Ariz. The pueblo was con- 

 structed in prehistoric times by the now 

 extinct Firewood clan of the Hopi, 

 ancestors of the inhabitants of the ancient 

 pueblo of Sikvatki. 



Fire-house.— Stephen in 8th Rep. B A. E.,20, 1891. 

 Tebugkihu.— Mindeleff, ibid.. 57. Tebunki.— 

 Fewkes in 17th Rep. B. A. E., 633, 1898. Teb- 

 vwiiki. — Stephen, op. cit. 



Tecahanqualahamo. — Mentioned as a 

 pueblo of the province of Atripuy (q. v. ), 

 in the region of the lower Rio Grande, N. 



Mex., in 1598.— Onate (1598) in Doc. 

 Ined., XVI, 115, 1871. 



Tecahuistes. A former tribe, probably 

 Coahuiltecan, found on the road from 

 Coahuila to the Texas country in 1690. — 

 Massanet ( 1690) in Dictamen Fiscal, Nov. 

 30, 1716, MS. 



Tecamamiouen (native name of Rainy 

 lake). A Chippewa band living on Rainy 

 lake, Minn., numbering 500 in 1736. Cf. 

 Kojejeirmiiieintn. 



Tecamamiouen. — Chauvignerie (1736) in N. Y. Doc. 

 Col. Hist., IX, 1054, 1855. 



Tecargoni. Mentioned by Orozco y 

 Berra (Geog., 58, 1864) as a division of 

 the Varohio in w. Chihuahua, Mexico, 

 apparently in Chinipas valley. 



Tecarnohs ('oozing oil.' — Hewitt). A 

 Seneca settlement, commonly known as 

 Oil Spring village, formerly on Oil cr., 

 near Cuba, Cattaraugus co., Is. Y. 

 Oil Spring. — Morgan, League Iroq., 466, 1851. Te- 

 car'-nohs. — Ibid. 



Techicodeguachi. A pueblo, probably 

 of the Opata, in Sonora, Mexico, in 1688. 

 It was a visita of the Spanish mission of 

 Guazavas (q. v.), and was situated in the 

 vicinity thereof, on Rio Batepipo- Pop. 

 90 at the date named. 



Sta Gertrudis Techicodeguachi. — Doc. of 1688 

 quoted by Bancroft, No. Mex. States, i, 246, 1884. 

 Techico de Guachi.— Mange {ca. 1700), ibid., 233. 



Tecliirogen( 'at the fork of the stream.' — 

 Hewitt). An Iroquois village n. of 

 Oneida lake, N. Y., in the middle of the 

 18th century. — Bellin's map, 1755. 



Tecolom. A former village, probably 

 Salinan, connected with San Antonio mis- 

 sion, Monterey CO., Cal. — Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Apr. 27, 1860. 



Tecolote {irom Aztec tecolotl, the ground 

 owl). A Papago village in s. w. Pima 

 CO., Ariz., near the Mexican border, with 

 140 families in 1865. 



Del Teculote,— Bailey in Ind. Aff. Rep., 208, 1858. 

 Tecolota.— Poston, ibid., 1863, 385, 1864. Tecolote.— 

 Taylor in Cal. Farmer, June 19, 1863. 



Tecoripa. A pueblo of the Nevome and 

 formerly the seat of a Spanish mission 

 founded in 1619; situated in central Sono- 

 ra, Mexico, on the w. branch of lower Rio 

 Yaqui, lat. 29°, Ion. 110° 30'. Pop. 269 

 in 1678; 50inl730. Its inhabitants, called 

 by the same name, probably spoke a 

 dialect slightly different from Nevome 

 proper. 



Tecorino. — Kino, map (1702) in Stocklein, Neue 

 Welt-Bott., 74, 1726. Tecoripa.— Rivera (1730) 

 quoted by Bancroft, No. Mex. States, i, 513, 1884. 

 San Francisco de Borja de Tecoripa. — Zapata (1678) 

 in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., in, 358, 1857. 



Tecualme. A division of the Cora proper 

 in the Sierra de Nayarit, Jalisco, Mexico. 

 They spoke the same dialect as the 

 Cora. According to Alegre ( Hist. Comp. 

 Jesus, III, 205, 1842) they were the last 

 of the three tribes of the Nayarit mts. 

 to yield to the missionaries in the 18th 

 century, when they Avere placed in pue- 

 blos along the Rio San Pedro. One of 

 their former villages was Tonalizco. 



