Yuki tribe

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Members of the Yuki tribe in Nome Cult Farm (c. 1858).
Members of the Yuki tribe in Nome Cult Farm (c. 1858).

The Yuki are a Native American tribe from the zone of Round Valley, in what today is part of the territory of Mendocino County, Northern California. Divisions of this tribe are thought to have settled as far south as Hood Mountain. In their language, the Yuki called themselves Ukomno'm ("Valley People"). The name Yuki is, in fact, an adaptation of the Wintu term "yuki" (meaning "enemy") used to designate them by their neighbors, the Nomlaki, and from which the white explorers learned of their existence circa 1850.

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Unlike most Californian tribes, the Yuki engaged in hostilities with other native tribes that surrounded them on several occasions. As the white settlers began to flock to Northern California in the early 1850s, the Yuki were driven out of their lands, repeatedly decimated in raids conducted by the local ranchers and the authorities and taken into slavery. In 1856, the Round Valley area was turned into the Indian reservation of Nome Cult Farm (later to become Round Valley Indian Reservation), where thousands of Yuki and members of other local tribes were forced to inhabit, usually in extremely precarious conditions. These events later led to the Mendocino War (1859), where hundreds of Yuki were either massacred or taken by force to Nome Cult Farm.

Estimates for the pre-contact populations of most native groups in California have varied substantially. (See Population of Native California.) Alfred L. Kroeber (1925:883) estimated the 1770 population of the Yuki proper, Huchnom, and Coast Yuki as 2,000, 500, and 500, respectively, or 3,000 in all. Sherburne F. Cook (1976a:172) initially raised this total slightly to 3,500. Subsequently, he proposed a higher estimate of 9,730 Yuki (Cook 1956:106, 108).

Reportedly, only 100 Yuki remain today, and the Yuki language is spoken by no more than a dozen individuals.

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It is said[attribution needed] that the Yuki people have a quaternary counting system, due to them counting with the fingers in a special way. They do not count the fingers, but rather they count the spaces between them. Apparently[attribution needed] only small tribes in South America have a similar arithmetic system. See Octal.

  • Cook, Sherburne F. 1956. "The Aboriginal Population of the North Coast of California". Anthropological Records 16:81-130. University of California, Berkeley.
  • Cook, Sherburne F. 1976. The Conflict between the California Indian and White Civilization. University of California Press, Berkeley.
  • Kroeber, A. L. 1925. Handbook of the Indians of California. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin No. 78. Washington, D.C.


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