1014 



YUSHLALI ZILLGAW 



[b. a. e. 



Klamaths. — Ibid, (a nonsignificant collective 

 name sometimes loosely used, especially locally). 

 Wait'-spek.— Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., iii, 44, 

 1877. Wecii-pecs.— McKee in Hen. Ex. Doc. 4, 32d 

 Cong., spec. sesM., 193, 18.'i3. Wechpeclis.— Ibid., 

 191. Wech-peks.— Ibid., 215. Weitchpec. — Kroe- 

 ber, inf'n, 1904 (a name sometime,? locally used, 

 especially in Hupa and Karok territory, to which 

 Weichpec is at present the nearest Yurok village). 

 Weithspek. — Loevv in Rep. ('hief of Eng., iir, 546, 

 1876. "Weits-pek.— Gibbs ( 1851 ) in Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Triljes, iii, 138, 1853. Wetch-pec— McKee (1851) 

 in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 32d Cong., spec, sess., 194, 1853. 

 Wetch-peck.— Ibid., 161. Wish-pooke.— Ibid., 194 

 (probably identical). Witsch-piks. — Meyer, Nach 

 dem Sacramento, 282, 1855. Youruk.— Gibbs, op. 

 cit., 151. Yurok. — Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., 

 Ill, 44, 1877. 



Yushlali {Yuc-la^-li). A former Ta* 

 kelina village on the s. side of Rogue r., 

 Oreg. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 235, 1890. 



Yussoih ('skunk'). A Yuchi clan. 

 YusA-J.— Speck, Yuchi Inds., 70, 1909. Yusso-i'h 

 taha. — Gat.schet, Uchee MS., B. A. E., 70, 1885 

 (=• skunk gens'). 



Yustaga. An important tribe in the 

 16th century, occupying a territory about 

 the head streams of Suwannee r., n. Fla. 

 De Soto passed through their countrj' in 

 1539, and the French Huguenots, who set- 

 tled at the mouth of St Johns r. in 1564, also 

 came in contact with them. Cf. Westo. 

 Hostaqua. — Laudonniore (1564) in French, Hist. 

 Coll. La., n. s., 288, 1869. Hostaque.— Ibid., 266. 

 Houstaqua. — Ibid., 244. Yustaga. — Biedma (1544) 

 in Bourne, De Soto Narr., ii, 7, 1904. 



Yusumne {Yu-su^jn-ne). A former 

 Maidu village, said by Hale to have been 

 on Feather r., in Sutter co., Cal., but now 

 asserted to have been either on the s. 

 fork of American r. , or near lone, Ama- 

 dor CO. (r. b. d. ) 

 Yaesumnes. — Hale misquoted by Bancroft, Nat. 

 Races, I, 450, 1874. Yajumui.— Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. Yalesumnes. — Hale, Ethnog. 

 and Philol., 631, 1846. Yalesumni. — Latham in 

 Proc. Philol.Soc. Lond.. Vl,79, 1854. Yasumnes.— 

 Hale, op. cit. Yasumni. — Latliam, op. cit. Yo- 

 sumnis. — Taylor, op. cit., June8, 1860. Yusumne. — 

 Sutter (1847) quoted by Bancroft, op. cit. 



Yuta. A tribe represented at San Anto- 

 nio de Valero mission, Texas, in the 18th 

 century. Possibly those of this name 

 baptized there were captured Ute (q. v. ) 

 from the far n. (h. e. b. ) 



Yutoyara. A Karok village on the w. 

 bank of Klamath r., a little above Salmon 

 r., N. w. Cal. It was burned in the sum- 

 mer of 1852. Possibly it is identical with 

 Ishipishi. 

 Yutoo'-ye-roop.— Gibbs, MS. Misc., B. A. E., 1852. 



Yutsutkenne ('people down there'). 

 A Sekani tribe whose hunting grounds 

 are between McLeod lake and Salmon r., 

 Brit. Col. From time immemorial they 

 have bartered stone axes, arrows, and 

 other implements with the TakuUi for 

 beads and articles of metal. 

 Yu-tsu-tqaze.— Morice, letter, B. A. E., 1890. Yu- 

 • tsu-tquenne. — Morice, Notes on W. D(5n6s, 28, 1893. 



Yutnin. . A Chumashan village between 

 Goleta and Pt Concepcion, Cal., in 1542. 

 Yatum.— Tavlor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 17, 1863. 

 Yutuin.— Ibid. Yutum. — Cabrillo, Narr. (1542), in 

 Smith, Colec. Doc. Fla., 183, 1857. 



Yxaulo. A Chumashan village formerly 

 near Santa Barbara, Cal. — Taylor in t'al. 

 Farmer, Apr. 24, 1863. 



Zaartar. An unidentified band or di- 

 vision of the Upper Yanktonai Sioux. 



Waz-za-ar-tar. — Am St. Papers, Ind. Aff. I, 715, 

 1832. Za-ar-tar.— Lewis and Clark Discov., 34, 1806. 



Zaclom. A former village connected 

 with San Francisco Solano mission, Cal. — 

 Bancroft, Hist. Cal., ii, 506, 1886. 



Zaco. A Chumashan village on San 

 Miguel id., Cal., in 1542. 

 Caco.— Cabrillo, Narr. (1542), in Smith, Colec. Doc. 

 Fla., 189, 1857. Zaco.— Ibid., 186. 



Zakatlatan. A Koynkukhotana trading 

 village on the n. bank of Yukon r.. Ion. 

 156° 30^ Pop. 25 in 1880; 39 in 1890. 

 Sachertelontin.— Wiiymper, Trav. Alaska, 226,1869. 

 Saghadellautin. — Post route map, 1903. Sakadel- 

 ontin.— Raymond in Sen. Ex. Doe. 12, 42d Cong., 

 1st sess., 23, 1871. Sakatalan.— Petrotf, Rep. on 

 Alaska, 62, ISSO. Sakataloden.— 11th Census, 

 Alaska, 7, 1893. Zakatlatan. — Petroff, map of 

 Alaska, 1S80. 



Zakhauzsiken ( Za.rxauzsi^kEn, ' middle 

 ridge' or 'middle hill ' ). A village of the 

 Spences Bridge band of Ntlakyapamuk 

 J m. back from Thompson r., on the s. 

 side, about 31 m. above Lytton, Brit. 

 Col.— TeitinMem. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 

 II, 173, 1900. 



Zaltana ('mountain'). A Knaiakho- 

 tana clan of Cook inlet, Alaska. — Rich- 

 ardson, Arct. Exped., i, 407, 1851. 



Zandzhuliu ( ' village in a highland 

 grove'). A Kansa settlement at Kaw 

 agency, Ind. T., in 1882. 

 Zandjiiii". — Dorsey, Kansa MS. vocab., B. A. E., 

 1882. Zundjuli".— Ibid. 



Zape. A former Tepehuane pueblo, and 

 seat of the mission of San Ignacio, at the 

 extreme head of Nazas r., lat. 25° 30^, Ion. 

 106°, N. w. Durango, Mexico. There 

 are a number of ancient burial caves in 

 the vicinity, and 20 m. s. are the noted 

 ruins usually known by this name (Lum- 

 holtz, Unknown Mex., i, 448, 1902). 

 S. Ignacio del Zape. — Orozco v Berra, Geog., 318, 

 1864. 



Zassalete. A former village, probably 

 Salinan, connected with San Antonio 

 mission, Monterey co., Cal. — Tavlor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Apr. 27, 1860. 



Zdluiat. A Knaiakhotana village of 16 

 persons in 1880 on the e. side of Knik 

 bay, at the head of Cook inlet, Alaska. — 

 Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 29, 1884. 



Zeawant. See Sewan. 



Zhanichi ( ' wooden house ' ) . A former 

 village on Kansas r., Kan., occupied by 

 that part of the Kansa tribe which fol- 

 lowed the chief Nunpewave, probably be- 

 fore 1820. 



Jan itci. — Dorsev, Kansa MS. vocab., B. A. E., 

 1882. 



Zhawenikashika. The Beaver gens of 

 the Quapaw. ' 



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

 1897. Jawe' nikaci}[a. — Ibid. 



Zillgaw ( ' many mountains ' ) . A sub- 

 division of Apache in Arizona under the 

 chiefs Eskiltissillaw, Nogenogeys, and 



