Ahouandáte, a name for the tribe of the Wyandots, which is found on ancient maps of the Colonies.
Ahuacatlan, the name of four separate settlements of Mexico, containing, respectively, 51, 13, 450, and 160 families of Indians.
Ahuacazalca, Nueva Espána. At this place, 56 families of Indians live by raising rice and cotton. It is in the district of San Luis de la Costa.
Ahuacazingo, in the district of Atengo, Nueva Espána, contains 46 Indian families.
Ahualican, of the same province, has 36 Indian families.
Ahuatelco, ib. Has 289 families, who cultivate wheat and raise cattle.
Ahuatempa, ib. Has 39 families.
Ahuatepec, ib. Has 32 families.
Ahuazitla, ib. Has 36 families, who trade inchia, a white medicinal earth, grain and earthen-ware.
Ahwahawa, a tribe of Indians who were found in 1805 to be located a few miles above the Mandans, on the south west banks of the Missouri. They are believed to have been a band of the Minnitares. They numbered at that date 200. They were at war with the Snake Indians. They claim to have once been a part of the Crow nation. They professed to have been long residents of the spot occupied. The name has not been kept up, and does not appear in recent reports from that quarter. Their history is, probably, to be sought in that of the Mandans and the Minnetares.