ICTINIKE. An evil spirit, in Sioux myth; adventures of, [266-271]

ILLINOIS. A tribe of the Algonquian stock; in a Seneca legend, [236-238]

'INDIAN.' The name wrongly applied to the North American races, [1]

INDIANA. Primitive implements found in, [7]; earth-mounds found in, [17], [18]

INDIANS, NORTH AMERICAN. The theory that they came from the East, [1-2]; early controversy as to origin of, [2-3]; identified with the lost Ten Tribes, [3]; other theories of origin of, [4]; theory of their Welsh origin, [4-5]; origination of American man in the Old World, [5-6]; scientific data relating to origin of, [5-13], [17-22]; affinities with Siberian peoples, [10-12]; probably migrants from Asia, [12-13]; ethnic divisions of, [22-29]; geographical distribution of the tribes of, [22-29]; industry of, [26]; early wars between whites and, [29-31]; early relationship with whites, [29-30]; deportation of, as slaves, [31]; confinement of, to 'reservations,' [31-32]; stories of whites and, [32-45]; and kidnapping of white children, [36-45]; dwellings of, [45-49]; tribal law and custom among, [50]; hunting among, [50-55]; dress of, [55-59]; and face-painting, [59-62]; and colours, [60-62]; art of, [62-63]; war-customs of, [63-72]; position of women among, [72-73]; marriage among, [73]; and child-life, [73-74]; and totemism, [74-76], [80-87]; picture-writing among, [76-78]; enlightenment of, [79], [360]; and fetishism, [87-97]; and religion, [97-105], [140]; ideas of God, [101]; character of gods of, [103-105]; creation-myths of, [106-109]; serpent- and bird-worship among, [109-115]; and the use of tobacco, [115-118]; the gods of, [118-126]; and ideas of a future life, [127-128]; burial customs of, [128]; and the soul's journey after death, [129]; and the spirit-world, [129-130], [139-140]; reverence for the four points of the compass, [131]; methods of time-reckoning, [131-133]; festivals of, [132], [133-135]; the medicine-men of, [135-140]; original character of the mythologies of, [359]; worthiness of the race, [359-360]

IOI. A deity of the Chinooks, sister of Blue Jay; stories of, [323-327]

IOSKEHA (White One). One of the twin-gods of the Iroquois, [121]

IOWA. I. The State; prehistoric remains discovered in, [8]. II. A tribe of the Sioux stock, [266]; legends of, [266-271]

IROQUOIS (Real Adders). An ethnic division of the American Indians, called also Long House People, [23-24], [224]; the Five Nations of, [23], [24], [223-227]; community houses of, [45]; costume of, [58]; marriage customs of, [73]; name for fetish, [85]; and the serpent of the Great Lakes, [113]; the twin-gods of, [121]; and the soul's journey after death, [129]; myths and legends of, [217-265]; Hi'nun, the chief deity of, [217]; Hiawatha, a mythical hero of, [217]; originally one people with the Hurons, [224]; the two political branches of, [224-225]; growth of the power of, [227]

IROQUOIS CONFEDERACY. See Five Nations