Aiahualtempa, a settlement of Chalipa, Mexico, containing 36 Indian families.
Aiahualulco, ib. Two settlements of this name, contain, respectively, 70 and 42 Indian families.
Aiapango, ib. contains 100 Indian families.
Aiatepec, ib. has 45 families of natives.
Aiautla, ib. has 100 families.
Aiches, a settlement of Indians of Texas, situated on the main road to Mexico.
Aiectipac, Mexico. Twenty-one Indian families reside here.
Ainse, a Chippewa chief of Point St. Ignace, Mechilimackinac county, Michigan. The population of this band, as shown by the government census rolls in 1840, was 193, of whom 33 were men, 54 women, and 106 children. They support themselves by the chase and by fishing. They cultivate potatoes only. They receive, together with the other bands, annuities from the government, in coin, provisions, salt, and tobacco, for which purpose they assemble annually, on the island of Michilimackinac. The name of this chief is believed to be a corruption from Hans.
Aiocuesco, an Indian settlement of Chalipa, Mexico. Has 400 Indian families.