. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. ?.0] TEOTONGNIATON TEPEHUANE 731 and Chippewa relating to trade and the passage of the Saint Croix route to the Mississippi. He died at Montreal. Teotongniaton. A former village of the Neuters in Ontario. S. Guillaume.—.k's. Ilol. 1641, 78, 1858 (mission name). Teotongniaton,—Ibid. Tepachi (the name of a drink made from fermented aguamas or jocuixtes.— Buelna). A pueblo of the Opata and seat of a Spanish mission founded in 1678; situated on Rio Soyopa, n. e. Sonora, Mexico, about lat. 29° 30^ Pop. 388 in 1678. S. Joaquin y Sta Ana Tepachi.—Zapata (1678) quoted by B


. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. ?.0] TEOTONGNIATON TEPEHUANE 731 and Chippewa relating to trade and the passage of the Saint Croix route to the Mississippi. He died at Montreal. Teotongniaton. A former village of the Neuters in Ontario. S. Guillaume.—.k's. Ilol. 1641, 78, 1858 (mission name). Teotongniaton,—Ibid. Tepachi (the name of a drink made from fermented aguamas or jocuixtes.— Buelna). A pueblo of the Opata and seat of a Spanish mission founded in 1678; situated on Rio Soyopa, n. e. Sonora, Mexico, about lat. 29° 30^ Pop. 388 in 1678. S. Joaquin y Sta Ana Tepachi.—Zapata (1678) quoted by Bancroft, No. Mex. States, I, 246, 1884. Tepache,—Rivera, Diario, leg. 1382, 1736. Te- pachi.—Escudero, Notieias de Sonora y Sinaloa, 101, 1849. Tepachic ('stony place.' — Och). A Tarahumare settlement in Chihuahua, Mexico; definite locality unknown.— Orozco j'^ Berra, Geog., 322, 1864. Tepaciiuaches. A tribe, probably Coa- huiltecan, encountered by Salinas on the road from Coahuila to San Francisco mis- sion, Texas, in 1693.—Salinas (1693) in Dictamen Fis(;al, Nov. 30, 1716, MS. Tepahue. A division of the -Mayo and also its principal settlement, situated in the mountains about the upper forks of Mayo r., s. Sonora, Mexico. They spoke a dialect slightly different from the Mayo (Zapata, 1678, in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., Ill, 385, 1857). The inhabitants of Conil-ari, a subdivision of this tribe, ap- pear from Zapata's statement to have spoken a dialect somewhat different from the Tepahue proper (Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iii, 53, 1890). Ac- cording to Ribas (Hist. Trium., 254,1645), after the reduction of the JNlayo the Te- pahue established themselves in a pueblo (presumably Tepahue) on upper Mayo r., with "about 600 families, and some 2,000 persons of all ; The same authority states that Conicari contained about 200 families. According to Orozco y Berra the Tepahue are extinct as a tribe, but there is still a Conicari settlement on or nea


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