. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. 30] JAUMALTURGO JEMEZ 629 Afi. Rep., 289, 1854. I'-ag-to'-an.—Hayden, Eth- nog. and Philol. Mo. Val., 387, 1862. le-ska-pi.— Am. NaUir., 829, 1882. I-ya^to-wa".—Dorsey in 15tli Rep. B. A. E., 223, 1897 ( = 'stone village'). Jatonabine.—Maximilian,Trav., 194,18-13. Rocks.— Larpenteur (1829), Narr., l, 109, 1898. Stone In- dians.—Maximilian, Trav., 194, 843 (so called by the English). Jaumaltnrgo. A rancheria of the Pima or the Sobaipuri in 1697, s. of the ruin of Casa Grande, in tlie present Arizona. San Gregoris Jaumalturgo. — Mange quoted by Schoolcraft, Ind.
. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. 30] JAUMALTURGO JEMEZ 629 Afi. Rep., 289, 1854. I'-ag-to'-an.—Hayden, Eth- nog. and Philol. Mo. Val., 387, 1862. le-ska-pi.— Am. NaUir., 829, 1882. I-ya^to-wa".—Dorsey in 15tli Rep. B. A. E., 223, 1897 ( = 'stone village'). Jatonabine.—Maximilian,Trav., 194,18-13. Rocks.— Larpenteur (1829), Narr., l, 109, 1898. Stone In- dians.—Maximilian, Trav., 194, 843 (so called by the English). Jaumaltnrgo. A rancheria of the Pima or the Sobaipuri in 1697, s. of the ruin of Casa Grande, in tlie present Arizona. San Gregoris Jaumalturgo. — Mange quoted by Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, ni, 301, 1853 (Gregoris = Gregorio). Jeaga. A village at the s. extremity of Florida, about 1570. Caga.—Fontaneda (ca. 1575) in Ternaux-Compans, Voy., XX, 32, 1841. Feaga.—Shipp, Fla., 587, 1881. Jaega.—Fontaneda, Narr., Smith trans., 21, 1854. Teaga.—Fontaneda in Ternaux-Compans, op. cit., 23. Teago.—Ibid., 32. Jeboaltae. A former village, presum- ably Costanoan, near San Juan Bautista mission, Cal. Jeboaltae.—Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Nov. 23, 1860. Teboaltac.—Engelhardt, Franciscans in Cal., 398, 1897. Jedakne. A village, Iroquois or Dela- ware, that existed in the 18th century on the w. branch of Susquehanna r., prob- ably on the site of Dewart, Northumber- land CO., Pa. (.1. N. B. H. ) Jedacne.—Lattr6, map, 1784. Jedakne.—Homann Heirs' map, 1756. Jedandago. A former Seneca hamlet, E. of Irondequoitbay, L. Ontario, N. Y.— Doc. of 1687 in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., Ill, 434, 1853. Jemez (from IRV-mish, or Hae^-niisli, the Keresan name of the pueblo. —Bande- lier). A village on the N. bank of Jemez r., about 20 m. n. w. of Bernalillo, N. Mex. According to tradition the Jemez had their origin in the n., at a lagoon called Uabunatota (apparently identical with the Shipapulima and Cibobe of other Pueblo tribes), whence they slowly drift- ed into the valleys of the upper tribu- taries of the Rio Jemez—the Guadalupe and San Diego—wh
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