858 



TUTUTUNNE TUZTYAMMOS 



[B. A. E. 



mys.— Hubbard (1856) in Cal. Farmer, June 8, 

 1860. Tutoten.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, vi, 702, 

 1857. Tutunah. — Taylor quoted bv Bancroft, Nat. 

 Races, I, 443, 1874. Tututamys.— Gatschet in 

 Beach, Ind. Misc., 441, 1877. Tu-tuten.— Gibbs 

 (1854) in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., i, 165, 1877. 



Tututunne ( ' people close to the water' ) . 

 A gens of the Tututni, located by Gairdner 

 in 1835 (Jour. Geog. Soc. Lend., xi, 256, 

 1841) about 10 m. above the mouth of 

 Rogue r. , Oreg. In 1884 Dorsey found 97 

 on the Siletz res., Oreg. 

 Stotonia. — Framboise quoted by Gairdner, op. cit. 

 Tootootana.— Dole in Ind. Aff. Rep., 221, 1861. Too- 

 too-te-nay.— Palmer in Ind. Aft". Rep. 1856, 199, 1857. 

 Toot-oot-en-ays.— Victor in Overland Mo., vii, 347, 

 1S71. Too-toot-e-ways.— Ind. AfF. Rep., 470, 1865. 

 Too-toot-na.— Newcomb in Ind. Atf. Rep., 162, 1861. 

 Too-toot-nay. — Ind. Aff. Rep., 300, 1877. Too- 

 tootne.— Palmer in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1856, 219, 1857. 

 Too too-to-neys.— Ind. Aff. Rep. 18.57, 321, 18.58. 

 Too-too-to-nies. — Dunbar in Ind. Aft'. Rep. 1856, 

 201,1857. Too-too-to-ny. — Abbott, Coquille MS. 

 census, B. A. E., 18.58. Toot-toot-en-ay.— Ind. 

 Aff. Rep. 1867, 62, 1868. Tototen.— Scliooleraft, 

 Ind. Tribes, vi, 702, 1857. Tototin.— Metcalfe in 

 Ind. Aff. Rep. 1857, 3.57, 18.58. Tototune.— Latham 

 in Trans. Philol. Soc. Lond., 76, 1856. Toutounis. — 

 Dnflot de Mofras, Explor., ii, 33.5, 1844. Tou-tou- 

 ten. — Kautz, MS. census, B. A. E., 18.55. x^''^^- — 

 Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 233. 1890." Tutu' 

 ten'e.— Everette, Tutu MS. vocab., B. A^E., 1883 

 (trans.: 'peoplebvtherivershore'). Tu-tu-to-ni. — 

 Schumacher in Bull. U. S. G. and G. Snrv., ni. 

 28, 1877. lu-tu lunne.— Ibid, ('people close to 

 the water':" own name) Two-took-e-ways. — 

 Taylor in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 40th Cong., spec, sess., 

 27, "1867. Yo-to-tan.— Pres. Mess., Ex. Doc. 39, 32d 

 Cong., 1st sess., 2, is.52 (misprint). 



Tutuwalha (*the guardians,' in allusion 

 to three high columns of sandstone near 

 by). Two former pueblos of the Hopi 

 of Arizona, one of which was situated on 

 the INIiddle mesa, the other being the 

 Squash village on the terrace below. — 

 Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 26, 1891. 



Tutzone ( ' plenty of water ' ) . An 

 Apache band or clan at San Carlos 

 agency and Ft Apache, Ariz., in 1881 

 (Bourke in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 

 112, 1890), corresponding to the Tutzose 

 of the Pinal Coyoteros and the Thotsoni 

 of the Navaho. 

 Tutzose. — Bourke, op. cit. 



Tutzose. A band or clan of the Pinal 

 Covoteros. — Bourke in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, III, 112, 1890. Cf. Tatzone. 



Tuvachi. One of the Bird clans of the 

 Kokop (Wood) phratry of the Hopi. 

 Tuvatci -winwu.— Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 

 5S4, 1900 (H'//5 )('((=: 'clan '). Tii-vii-tci wun-wu. — 

 Fewkes in Am. Anthr., vii. 404, 1894. 



Tuvak. A Tahagmiut Eskimo village 

 on the X. coast of Labrador, Ion. 70°. — 

 Hind, Lab. Renin., ii, map, 1863. 



Tuvou. The Pinon clan of the .Hopi; 

 apparently the same as the Tovu (Fire) 

 clan (q. v. ). 



Tuvoii winwu.— Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 584. 

 1900 (;(v'/i?(7;='clan'). Tii-vo'-ii wiin-wu.— Fewkes 

 in Am. Anthr., vn, 404, 1894. 



Tuwa. The Sand phratry of the Hopi, 

 which comprises the Kukuch, Bachip- 

 kwasi, Nananawi, Momobi (varieties of 

 the Lizard), Pisa (White Sand), Tuwa 

 ( Red Sand ) , Chukai ( Mud ) , Sihu ( Flower 

 or Bush), and Nanahu (Small Striped 



Squirrel) clans. They claim to have 

 come from a region in s. Arizona called 

 Palatkwabi, and from Little Colorado r. 

 The Earth or Sand phratry of Fewkes is 

 identical with the Lizard phratry of 

 Stephen. 



Tii-wa' nyu-mu. — Fewkes in Am. Anthr., vil, 

 404, 1894 (;i//«-'Hn'( = 'phratry'). 



Tuwa. The Sand clan of the Hopi. 

 Tdu'-wa.— Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 39, 1891 

 ( = 'Red Sand'). Tuwa.— Voth, Oraibi Summer 

 Snake Ceremony, 284, 1903. TUwa winwu. — 

 Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 583, 1900 (winiuu = 

 ' clan' ) . Tii-wa wiin-wii.— Fewkes in Am. Anthr., 

 vn, 404, 1894. 



Tuwahokasha ( Tu-wa-hol/ -a-sha, from 

 tuh ' village', ira the characteristic roach 

 on the head of a man who has been shaved 

 on both sides, hok'-a-sha 'curving over': 

 'village on a ridge'). A band of the 

 Skidi Pawnee. — Grinnell, Pawnee Hero 

 Stories, 238, 1889. 



Tuwa-Kukuch ('Sand [and] Lizard'). 

 A phratral group of the Hopi of Arizona, 

 consisting of the Sand, Lizard, and Flower 

 or Bush clans. They claim that their an- 

 cestors came from a region in s. Arizona 

 called Palatkwabi, and from Little Colo- 

 rado r. (.1. w. F. ) 

 Tuwa-Kiikutc— Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E.,583, 

 1900. 



Tuwanek ( TuwanEjcQ) . A Seechelt sept 

 which formerly lived at the head of Nar- 

 row's Arm, Seechelt inlet, Brit. Col. — 

 Hill-Tout in Jour. Anthr. Inst., 25, 1904. 



Tu'wurints {Tu-wnr-iiits). One of the 

 tribes known under the collective term 

 Gosiute, formerly living on Snake cr. , s. w. 

 Utah. — Powell and Ingalls in Ind. Aff. 

 Rep. 1873, 51, 1874. 



Tuxedo. A dinner jacket, so called 

 from Tuxedo, the name of a summer re- 

 sort in Passaic co., N. J., on the lake of 

 the same name. The word is derived 

 from the Delaware dialect of Algonquian, 

 in which the Wolf subtribe was called 

 P'tnkx'it, spelled by Morgan Took-seat. 

 This name is a socio-esoteric term for wolf 

 and signifies literally, 'he has a round 

 foot,' from 2>'ti(ksiteH ( ('u=o). ( a. f. c. ) 



Tuxican. An old Tlingit town belong- 

 ing to the Henya, situated on a narrow 

 strait on the n. w. coast of Prince of 

 Wales id., Alaska. Formerly it was the 

 chief Henya town, but the Henya have 

 now moved to Klawak. 



Tak-ssi-kan.— Krau.se, Tlinkit Ind., 120, 1885 (given 

 as the name of a family). Ta'qdjik-an.— Swanton, 

 field notes, B. A. E., 1904. 



Tuyunga. A former Gabrieleno village 

 in Encino or San Fernando valley, Los 

 Angeles co., Cal. — Padre Santa Maria 

 (1796) quoted by Bancroft, Hist. Cal., i, 

 553, 1886. 



Tuzahe. Mentioned as a pueblo of the 

 province of Atripuy (q. v. ), in the region 

 of the lower Rio Grande, N. Mex., in 

 1598.— Oi"iate (1598) in Doc. Ined., xvi, 

 115, 1871. 



Tuziyammos. A Paviotso tribe formerly 



