766 



TLITL ALA8 TOAPK UK 



[B. A. E. 



Tlitlalas(Tri^<Zalas). An ancestor of a 

 Quatsino gens, by whose name the gens 

 itseU' was sometimes called. — Boas in 

 Petermanns Mitteil., pt. 5, 131, 1887. 



Tlizihlani ( ' many goatc ' ) . A Navaho 

 clan, evidently of modern origin. 

 Tlizilani. — Matthews in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 

 104, 1890. Tlizi/ani.— Matthews, Navaho Leg., 30, 

 1897. 



1lka.mch.een{ LkanitcVn, 'confluence [of 

 rivers] '). A village of the Lytton band 

 of Ntlakyapamuk, on the s. side of 

 Thompson r. at its junction with the 

 Fraser, Brit. Col. Pop. 137 in 1901 ; in 

 1908, evidently including other bands, 

 467. 



Klech-ah'-mech.— Gibbs in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., I, 

 248, 1.S77. Klick-um-cheen.— Can. Ind. Aff., pt. ll, 

 Ui4, 1901. Klickunacheen.— Ibid., 1898, 418, 1899. 

 Lkamtci'n. — Teit in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., ii, 

 171, 1900. lytton. — Ibid, (white man's name). 

 Ti-chom-chin.— Can. Ind. Att". 1883, 189, 1884 

 Tikumcheen.— Ibid., ISyl, 249, 1892. Tlkamcheen.- 

 Ibid., 301, 1893. Tl-kam-sheen.— Dawson in Trans. 

 Roy. Soc. Can., sec. ll, 44, 1891. Tikumcheen.— 

 Can. Ind. Aff. 1896, 434, 1897. Tlk-umtci'n.— Hill- 

 Tout in Rep. Ethnol. Surv. Can., 4, 1899. 



Tluhashaiyikan ( l!ux(V caiyik-dn, ' town 

 straight opposite Mt Edgecombe'). A 

 former Tlingit town in the Sitka country, 

 Alaska. (j. r. s. ) 



Tluknahadi ( ' king-salmon people ' ). A 

 Tlingit division living at Sitka, Alaska, 

 and belonging to the Raven phratry. 

 Their former home is said to have been 

 at the mouth of Alsek r. 

 kmk-naehadi.— Krause, Tlinkit Ind., 118, 1885. 

 Luknaxa'di. — Swan ton, field notes, B. A. E., 1904. 



Tlukoedi {L.'ic^qfoedi, 'white people'). 

 Said to be the name of an old Tlingit 

 family belonging to the Wolf phratry, 

 now almost extinct. They were named 

 from the white color of water. ( j. r. s. ) 



Tlushashakian {L.'uca'cakH-an, 'town 

 on top of a sand hill ' ). An old town on 

 the N. side of the w. entrance to Cross sd., 

 Alaska. It is in the Huna country, but 

 is said to have been occupied ancient- 

 ly by many families of the Wolf phra- 

 try, since scattered all over the Alaskan 

 coast. It is perhaps identical with Klug- 

 huggue. (j. R. s. ) 



Tluskez (the name refers to a carp-like 

 fish). A Ntshaautin village on a small 

 lake tributary to Black water r., Brit. 

 Col. It is probablv the village where 

 Mackenzie (Voy., 299, 1801) was hos- 

 pitably received on his journey to the 

 Pacific, whose inhabitants he found more 

 cleanly, healthy, and agreeable in ap- 

 pearance than any that he had passed. 

 Klusklus.— Fleming in Can. Pae. R. R. Surv., 120, 

 1877. Kuzlakes.— Macfie, Vancouver Id., 428, 1865. 

 lus'kez.— Morice in Trans. Can. Inst., 25, 1893. 

 Rothfisch-Manner. — Vater, Mith., nr, pt. 3, 421, 

 181(i. Slaoucud-dennie. — Latham quoted bv Ban- 

 croft, Nat. Races, I, 145, 1874. Sla-u'-ah-kus- 

 tinneh. — Dall, MS., B. A. E. Slouacous dinneh. — 

 Baibi, Atlas Ethnog., 821, 1826. SlouacusDennie.— 

 Gallatin in Trans. Am. Antiq. Soc, II, 20, 1836. 

 Sloua-cuss Dinais —Mackenzie, Voy., 284, 1802. 

 Slouacuss Tinneh.— BiiDcrott, Nat. Races, i, 145, 

 1874. Slowacuss.— Ibid.,ni,.585, 1882. Slowercuss.— 

 Cox, Columbia R. , 1 1 , 374, 1831. Slo wercuss-Dinai.— 



Ibid. Slua-cuss-dinais. — Vater, Mith., in, pt. 3, 

 421, 1816. Sluacus-tinneh. — Cox, op cit. 



To ('sweet-potato'). Given by Gat- 

 schet as a Yuchi clan, but probably no 

 such clan exists in this tribe. 

 To taha.— Gatschet, Uchee MS., B. A. E., viii, 71, 

 1885 (<aM='clan'). 



Toa. A INIaricopa rancheria on the Rio 

 Gila, Ariz., in 1744.— Sedelmair (1744) 

 cited by Bancroft, Ariz. andN. Mex., 366, 

 1889. 



Toaedut. A Maricopa rancheria on the 

 Rio Gila, Ariz., in 1744. — Sedelmair 

 (1744) cited by Bancroft, Ariz, and N. 

 Mex., 366, 1889. 



Toag. See Togue. 



Toalli. A district, probably in s. w. 

 Georgia, visited by DeSoto, Mar. 23, 1540. 

 The houses are described by the Gentle- 

 man of Elvas (Bourne, Narr. of De Soto, 



I, 52, 1904) as having been roofed with 

 cane after the fashion of tile; some with 

 the sides of clay (plastered?), and kept 

 very clean. 



Otoa.— Biedma (1.544) in French, Hist. Coll. La., 



II, 100, 18.50. Toalli.— Gentl. of Elvas, op. cit. 

 Toanche {Teandeoniata, 'one enters by 



it' ). Alluron village situated atdifferent 

 times at several points on and adjoining 

 Thunder bay, Ontario, and bearing sev- 

 eral names. It was a port of entry of the 

 Huron Bear tribe, hence its name. Be- 

 fore 1635 it had been twice destroyed by 

 fire. Through fear of French revenge 

 for the killing of Brule at this place, it 

 was abandoned in 1633, and a new village, 

 Ihonatiria, was established by a part of 

 its inhabitants, while the remainder went 

 to Ouenrio. (j. n. b. h.) 



Otoiiacha.- Champlain (1632), CEuvres, v, pt. i, 249, 

 1870. Saint Nicolas.— Sagard (1626), Hist. Can., II, 

 296, 1866. Teandeouiata.— Jes. Rel. 1635, 28, 1868. 

 Teandeouihata. — Ibid., 29. Teandewiata. — Ibid., 



III, index, 1858. Thouenchin.— Memoir of 1637 in 

 Margrv, Dec, l, 4, 1875. Toanche.— Jes. Rel. 1635, 

 28, 1858. Toenchain.— Sagard (1636), Can., i, 215, 

 1866. Toenchen. — Ibid., 233. Touanchain. — Cham- 

 plain, Q^uvres, v, pt. I, 249, note, 1870. Touen- 

 chain.— Sagard, Hist. Can., ll, 296, 1866. 



Toanimbuttuk. A former Nishinam vil- 

 lage in the valley of Bear r., which is the 

 next stream n. of Sacramento, Cal. — 

 Powers in Overland Mo., xii, 22, 1874. 



Toapara. A former Opata pueblo n. of 

 Oputo, in E. Sonora, Mexico, abandoned 

 in the 18th century owing to the hostility 

 of the Apache, Suma, and Jocome. 

 San Juan del Rio. — Doc. of ISth cent, quoted bv 

 Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 525, 1892. 

 Toapara. — Ibid. 



Toape. A Eudeve pueblo and seat of a 

 Spanish mission founded in 1647; situated 

 at the head of Rio San Miguel, lat. 30° 20^ 

 Ion. 110° 30^ Sonora, Mexico. Pop. 240 

 in 1678, 187 in 1730. 



S. Miguel Toape.— Zapata (1678) cited by Bancroft, 

 No. Mex. States. l, 245, 1884. Terapa.— Orozco y 

 Berra, Geog., 343, 1864. Toape— Rivera (1730) 

 cited by Bancroft, op. cit., 613. Tuape.— Modern 

 map form. 



Toapkuk. An Eskimo village of the 

 Malemiut at C. Espenberg, Alaska. Pop. 

 42 in 1880. 



