SwANTON] INDIANS OF THE SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES 141 



have been related to the Ibetap okla, who constituted two towns in 

 the Choctaw Nation. 



Ihitoupa population. — In 1722 the Ibitoupa occupied 6 cabins, but 

 we have no other clue to their population except mention of the fact 

 that the Choula, supposedly a part, comprised 40 persons the same 

 year. (See Chakchiuma.) 



ICAFUI 



A Timucua province or tribe often called Cascangui, or confused 

 with another province so called. It lay between the Timucua and 

 Guale people, probably on the mainland, and consisted of seven or 

 eight towns. It was visited by the missionary at San Pedro Tacatacuru, 

 Cumberland Island. 



lEGQUOIS 



See Nottoway, page 163. 



* JEAGA 



(Probably pronounced as Hayaga in English) 



A small tribe about Jupiter Inlet on the east coast of Florida, which 

 seems to have been mentioned first by Fontaneda. We hear little of 

 it afterward until 1699, when the narrative of the Quaker Dickenson 

 gives us a glimpse of the tribe under the name Hobe. Subsequently it 

 probably united with the other east coast tribes and removed to Cuba, 

 conjecturally in the year 1763. (See Ais.) 



Jeaga population. — Beyond the fact that this tribe was very small, 

 we have no information regarding its numbers. 



KADOHADACHO 



This was the leading tribe of the Kadohadacho Confederation, that 

 which gave its name to the Caddo linguistic division and the 

 Caddoan stock. Although the survivors of De Soto's army passed 

 through the territory of several Caddo tribes, the name of this one 

 does not appear among them. We learn about it first from the com- 

 panions of La Salle who in 1687, after the murder of their com- 

 mander, passed through the Kadohadacho town on their way to 

 the Mississippi. The Kadohadacho were then just above the bend 

 of Red River in the southwestern part of the present Arkansas and 

 associated with the Nasoni, Nanatsoho, and a part of the Natchi- 

 toches. Later several French explorers reached them from Louisiana 

 via Red River. The first was Tonti in 1690. La Harpe, however, 

 who visited their town in 1719, has left a more complete description. 

 It was on the north bank of Red River somewhat above the mouth of 

 Little River. Later these Indians settled in the Nasoni town, or 



