BOLL. 30] 



TESTNIGH TETES DE BOULE 



735 



Folk-lore, in, 



Testnigh. A village, probably occupied 

 by the Conestoga, Bituated in 1608 on the 

 E. bank of Susquehanna r., in Lancaster 

 CO., Pa. — Smith (1629), Va., i, map, repr. 

 1819, 



testthitutt ('where [something] re- 

 clined ' ?). A former village of the Tututni 

 on the N. side of Rogue r., Oreg. 



Te-sfhi'-tiln.— Dofsey in Jour. Am. Foil 

 233, 1890. 



Tesuque ( Tet-su'-ge^ ' cotton wood-tree 

 place'). The southernmost of the pue- 

 blos occupied by theTewa; situated 8 m. 

 N. of 8anta Fe, N. ]\Iex. It became the 

 feeat of a Siaanish missioii early in the 

 l7th century, but was reduced to a visitft 

 of Santa Fe in 1760 and of Pojuaque in 

 1782. The original pueblo, which bore 

 the same name, occupied a site about 3 

 m. E. of the present village, and was 



TESUQUE MAN 



abandoned probably during the Pueblo 

 revolt of 1680-92. The Tesuque people 

 are divided into two organizations, the 

 Winter (Watuyu) and the Summer (Oyi- 

 ke) people, each with its own caciques. 

 Formerly they adhered strictly to the 

 tribal law which prohibited intermar- 

 riage between members of the same clan, 

 but the custom seems no longer to be 

 rigidly followed, and, unlike the Pueblos 

 generally, descent is in the male line. 

 The existing Tesuque clans are: T'ye 

 (Gopher), Tang (7a«, Sun), Kongya 

 ( Konija, Turquoise ) , Owhat ( Cloud ) . The 

 extinct clans are: Ta (Grass), Nang (Nan, 

 Earth), Tse (Eagle), De (Coyote), Kup- 

 ing {Kripin, Coral), Po (Calabash), Pop. 

 80 in 1906. See JPueblos, Teiva. ( f. w. «. ) 



San Diego de Tesuque.— Wnrd in Ind. Aff. Rep, 

 ISe', 213, 1808. San Lorenzo de Teiuqui.— Vetan- 

 curt (169G) in Teatro Mex., iv, 271, 1871. San 

 lorenzo Tezuqui.— Ibid., in, 316, 1871. Sayaqut. — 

 D'Anvillf, limp Am. Sept., 1746 (doubtlesg iden- 

 tical; liot Cicuyi'! nor Ciclii<! [Pecos] ). S, Diego.— 

 fialicroftj AriZi and N. Me.x., 281, 1889. Tai-tzo* 

 gai.-^Jouvenceau in Cath. Pion., I, no. 9, 12, 1906, 

 Xa-tsiir-ma'.— Hodge, field notes, B. A. E., 1899 

 ( Picuris TigUa name). Tejugne.— Dufotiri in 

 Cath. World, 7-5, Apr. 1884. Teitique,— Domencch, 

 Deserts, ii, 63, 1860. Tersuque.— Cooper in Ind, 

 Aff. Rep., 161, 1870. Teseque.— Ind. Aff. Rep., b06, 

 18S9. Tfesuke. --Stevenson in 2d Rep. B. A. E., 328, 

 1883. Tesuld.— Fewkes in 22d Rep. B. A. E., 18, 

 1901. Tesuque.— Alcedo, Die, Geog., V, lOl, 1789. 

 Tesuqui. — Simpson in Rep Sec. War, 2d map, 1850, 

 Tetsogi.— Stepiien in 8tii Rep. B. A. E., 87', 1891 

 (Hano Tewa name). Tet-su'-ge,— Hodge, field 

 tiote.s, B. A. E., 189.5 ('cotton wood-tree place'; 

 Tfewa liame; theTewa of SanJuan pronounce the 

 name Tit-su-ye'), Te-tzo-ge.— BandelierinRitch, 

 New Mexico, 201, 18S.'i; in Rev. d'Ethnogr., 203, 

 1886; in Arch. Inst. Pap., lit, 200, 1890 (aboriginal 

 name of pueblo). Tezuque.— Villa-gpflor, Theatro 

 Am., II, 418, 1748. Thezuque.— Vafga^ (1704) 

 quoted by Bandelier in Arch. Ins't. Pap., lii* 

 144, 1890. Tiotsokoma.— Hodge, field notes, B. A.- 

 E., 1895 (Santa Ana Queres name). Tosugui. — 

 Morgan in N. Am. Rev., map, Apr. 1869. Tso'-ta. — 

 Hodge, tield notes, B. A. E., 1895 (Jemez and 

 Pecos name). Tucheaap. — Ibid. (Isleta Tigua 

 name). Tusuque. — Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iii, 

 406, 18-53. Tutsuiba.— Hodge, tield notes, B. A. E., 

 1S99 ('small pueblo': Taos name). Tyu'-tso-ku' . — 

 Hodge, tield notes, B. A. E., 1895 (Cochiti Queres 

 name1. Zesuqua.— Lane (1854) in Schoolcraft, 

 Ind. Tribe.'*, v, 689, 18.55. 



Tet, A tribe named in 1708 in a list of 

 those that had been met or heard of n. of 

 San Juan Bautista mission on the lower 

 Rio Grande, in Texas (Fr. Isidro Felix 

 de Espinosa, Relacion Compendiosa of the 

 Rio Grande missions, MS. in the College 

 of Santa Cruz de Queretaro). 



Tetachoya. A former Salinan village 

 near San Antonio mission, Monterey co., 

 Cal.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 27, 1860. 



Tetanauoica. The tribal name given in 

 the records for an Indian who was buried 

 in 1707 at San Francisco Solano mission, 

 Texas. The neophytes gathered there 

 belonged mainly to the Coahuiltecan 

 family, which may be true of this band 

 or tribe (Valero Burials, 1707, partida 82, 



MS.). (H. E.B.) 



Tetanetlenok {Te'CaneLmu.v). A gens 

 of the Klaskino, a Kwakiutl tribe. — Boas 

 in Rep. Nat. Mus. 1895, 329, 1897. 



Tetecores. A former tribe of Coahuila, 

 N. E. Mexico, probably Coahuiltecan, met 

 by Fernando del Bosque in 1675, at which 

 time they and the Babosarigami together 

 numbered 119, including 44 warriors. — 

 Fernando del Bosque (1675) in Nat. Geog. 

 Mag., XIV, 348, 1903. 



Tetes de Boule ( French : ' roun d h eads ' ) . 

 A rude tribe of wandering b unters forinerly 

 roving over an extensive region on the 

 upper branches of St Maurice, Gatineau, 

 and Ottawa rs. , Quebec. As described by 

 Henry, about the year 1800, they de- 

 pended chiefly on rabbits for food and 

 clothing, built mere brush Avindbreaks for 

 shelter, and placed small piles of firewood 

 near the bark-covered graves of their dead 

 for the use of the spirits. Chauvignerie 



