. Bulletin. Ethnology. 72 ARAMAY ARAPAHO [b. a. e. Aramay. A former village, presuma- bly Costanoan, connected with Dolores mission, San Francisco, Cal.—Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. Aranama. A small agricultural tribe formerly living on and near the s. coast of Texas; later they were settled for a time at the mission of Espiritu Santo de Zuniga, opposite the present Goliad, where some Karankawa Indians were also neophytes. It is rei)orted that they had previously suffered from an attack by the Karankawa. Morse located them in 1822 on San Antonio r. and estimated them at 125 souls. In
. Bulletin. Ethnology. 72 ARAMAY ARAPAHO [b. a. e. Aramay. A former village, presuma- bly Costanoan, connected with Dolores mission, San Francisco, Cal.—Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. Aranama. A small agricultural tribe formerly living on and near the s. coast of Texas; later they were settled for a time at the mission of Espiritu Santo de Zuniga, opposite the present Goliad, where some Karankawa Indians were also neophytes. It is rei)orted that they had previously suffered from an attack by the Karankawa. Morse located them in 1822 on San Antonio r. and estimated them at 125 souls. In 1834 Escudero (Not. Estad. de Chihuahua, 231) spoke of them as follows: "The same coast and its islands are inhabited by the Curancahuases and Jaranames Indians, fugitives from the missions. The larger portion have lately settled in the new mission of Nuestra Senora del Refugio, and to-day very few rebellious families re- main, so that the injuries caused l)y these cowardly but cruel Indians have (; As a tribe the Aranama were extinct by 1843. (a. ) Anames.—Rivera, Diario v Derrot., leg. 2,602,1736. Aranamas.—Thrall, Hist. Texas, 446, 1879. Ara- names.—Rivera, op. cit. Arrenamuses,—Mcirse, Rep. to Sec. War, 374, 1822. Aurananeans.—Bou- dinot, Star in the West, 125, 1816. Hazanames.— Robin, Voy. a la Louisiane, iii, 14, 1^07. Jara- names.—Escudero, Not. Estad. de Chiliiiah\ia, 2;>1, 1834. Juranames.—Morfi quoted liv Kancn ift, No. Mex. States, I, 631, 1886. Xaramenes.—BolInert in Ethnol. Soc. Lend. Jour., ii, 265. 280, 1850. Xaranames,—Texas State Archives, MS. no. 83, 1791 92. Aranca. The name of two Pima vil- lages in s. Ariz., one with 208 inhabi- tants in 1858, the other with 991.—Bailev in Ind. Aff. Rep., 208, 1858. Aranimokw. The Yurok name of a Karok village near Red Cap cr., an affluent of Klamath r., Cal. (a. l. k.) Arapaho. An important Plains tribe of the great Algonquian family, closely asso- ciated with the Cheyenne fo
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