. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. 30] SAN SALVADOR—SANTA AGUIDA 453 28° 40', Lower California. Its inliabit- ants spoke a Cochimi dialect. See Vene- gas, Hist. Cal., ii, 198, 1759. San Salvador (Holy Savior). A former ranc'heria, evidently of the Sobaipuri, on San Pedro r., above Quiburi, s. Ariz.—Kino, map (1701), in Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 360, 1889. Sans Arcs (French trans, of Itazipcho, 'without bows,' from itazlpa, 'bow,' and dto, abbrev. of chodan, 'without'). A band of the Teton Sioux. Hay den, about 1860, says that they and the Hunk- papa and Sihasapa "occupy nearly the. YELLOW HA


. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. 30] SAN SALVADOR—SANTA AGUIDA 453 28° 40', Lower California. Its inliabit- ants spoke a Cochimi dialect. See Vene- gas, Hist. Cal., ii, 198, 1759. San Salvador (Holy Savior). A former ranc'heria, evidently of the Sobaipuri, on San Pedro r., above Quiburi, s. Ariz.—Kino, map (1701), in Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 360, 1889. Sans Arcs (French trans, of Itazipcho, 'without bows,' from itazlpa, 'bow,' and dto, abbrev. of chodan, 'without'). A band of the Teton Sioux. Hay den, about 1860, says that they and the Hunk- papa and Sihasapa "occupy nearly the. YELLOW HAWK, A SANS ARC same district and are so often camped near each other, and are otherwise so connected in their operations as scarcely to admit of being treated ; On the other hand, Warren (Dacota Country) indicates that their closest rela- tions were with the Miniconjou. Their divisions as given by Swift in a letter to Dorsey (1884) are: 1 Itazipcho (Without l)ows); 2Shinalutaoin (Scarlet- cloth earring); 3 Wolutayuta (Eat-dried- venison-froni-the-hind-quarter); 4 Maz- pegnaka (Wear-metal-in-the-hair); 5 Tatankachesli (Dung-of-a-buffalo-bull); 6 Shikshichela (Bad-ones-of-different- kinds);7 Tiyopaoshanunpa (Sniokes-at- the-entrance-to-the-lodge). The Sans Arcs entered into a peace treaty with the United States at Ft Sully, S. Dak., Oct. 20, 1865, and were a party also to the treaty of Ft Laramie, Wyo., Apr. 29, 1868. Bowpith.—Warren, Dacota Country, 16, 1856. Ee-ta-sip-shov.—Catlin, N. A. Inds., 1, 223, 1841. Itahzipchois.—Warren, Dacota Country, 16, 1856. Itazipchos.—Ibid., index, vi. Itazipco.—Riggs, Da- kota Gram, xvi, 1S5'2 (trans, 'bow pith,' or 'with- out bows'). Itazipcoes.—Keane in Stanford, Com- pend., 516,187S. Itazipko.—Burton, City of Saints, lack-Bows.—De Smet, Letters, 37, note, 1843. Ma'-i-sin-as.—Havden, Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. Val., 290, 1862 (CheVenne name). Nobows.— Hoffman (1854) in H. R. Doc. 36. 33d Cong.,


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