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University of California, Merced Library
The Journal of California Anthropology
Published by Malki Museum, Inc., Morongo Indian Reservation, Banning, California


Volume 4, Issue 1 1977

The Origin of the Name "Cahuilla"
William Bright, University of California, Los Angeles

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ABSTRACT:
In attempts to discover the origins of words, we can never go back beyond a certain point. In the present case, since it is unlikely that we will ever have full data on the Cochimi language, we may never know what the original Cochimi meaning of the word "Cahuilla" may have been. But I believe we may accept the data assembled by Harrington as showing that—unlike other tribal names such as Serrano or Luiseno—the term "Cahuilla" did have an Indian origin, and that it was used by Spanish speakers in Baja California to mean "a non-missionized Indian." In that sense, it was apparently applied to the Southern California tribe that we call the Cahuilla today.

KEYWORDS:
ethnology, archaeology, ethnohistory, native peoples

SUGGESTED CITATION:
William Bright (1977) "The Origin of the Name "Cahuilla"", The Journal of California Anthropology: Vol. 4: No. 1, Article 15.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/ucmercedlibrary/jca/vol4/iss1/art15




 
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