. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. 30] TUMALENIA TUNANPIN 837 which date it was ahnost in ruins from Apache depredations in 1769. In 1784 or earlier it had become tlie mission of San Jose, and was occupied as such until 1820, when the church, erected by the Jesuits in 1752, was destroyed by the Apache. The ruins are still visible. Jumagacori.—Manse quoted by Bancroft, Ariz. audN. Mex.,35,S 1>;,S9. San Jose.—Bancroft, ibid., 385. S. Cayetano.—Bernal (1697) quoted by Ban- croft, ibid., 356 (Tumacacori, or). S. Cayetano Tumapacori.—Kino (1697) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., I, 288, IS'iO. S. Cayetano T
. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. 30] TUMALENIA TUNANPIN 837 which date it was ahnost in ruins from Apache depredations in 1769. In 1784 or earlier it had become tlie mission of San Jose, and was occupied as such until 1820, when the church, erected by the Jesuits in 1752, was destroyed by the Apache. The ruins are still visible. Jumagacori.—Manse quoted by Bancroft, Ariz. audN. Mex.,35,S 1>;,S9. San Jose.—Bancroft, ibid., 385. S. Cayetano.—Bernal (1697) quoted by Ban- croft, ibid., 356 (Tumacacori, or). S. Cayetano Tumapacori.—Kino (1697) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., I, 288, IS'iO. S. Cayetano Tumagacori.—Mange quoted by Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 358,1889. St Cayetano—Venejras, Hist. Cala., I, map, 1759. Sumacacori.—Croix (1769) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., II, 15, (;. Tennacacori.—Hardy, Travels, 422, 1829. Tsjoemakakork.—tin Kate, Reizen in N. A., 160, (Pima name). Tumacacori.—Garc^s(1769) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., ii, 374, 1856. Tumalenia {Tu-ma-leh-nia). A tribe, probably Moqueluinnan, formerly living at Bodega bay, Cal., and speaking a lan- guage different from the Gallinomero, the next tribe to the n.—Gibbs in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, in, 102, 1853. Tumamar. A tribeorsubtribe, evidently Coahuilteean, encountered n. of the Rio Grande as early as 1675, when Fernando del Boscjue crossed into Texas (Nat. Geog. Mag., XIV, 340-45, 1903). Early in the 18th century they became well known at San Francisco Solano mission on the Rio Grande in Mexico, and after this mission became San Antonio de Valero, on the Rio San Antonio in Texas, some members of the tribe followed it (Baptismal Rec. of San Antonio de Valero, MS.). At the first mission named they mingled freely with the Terocodame, a Tumamar being at one time chief of the latter band. The tribe ranged far to the e., sometimes being met on the Brazos (Espinosa, Diario, entry for June 10, 1716, MS.). The tribal name, which was most commonly written Tuma- mar and Ticmanrar, seems to hav
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