and
Jolliet's 1673 expedition showing a Moingona village along what is now the
Des Moines River. The name
Moingona was probably the basis for the name of the city of
Des Moines, Iowa, the
Des Moines River, and
Des Moines County, Iowa. Other names for them mentioned in 1672–73 records were "Mengakoukia," and "Mangekekis." The meaning of "Moingona" has been debated. Historic accounts suggest that
Moingona was a term referring to people who lived by or encountered near the portage around the
Des Moines Rapids. The noted cartographer
Joseph Nicollet supported this interpretation, as did the Algonquian linguist
Henry Schoolcraft. Schoolcraft and Nicollet's report says that
Moingona: An alternative interpretation is that Moingona is derived from the Algonquian clan name "Loon"; the
Miami language term for loon is
maankwa, and many Algonquian villages took their names from tribal clans. In this theory, the name "Moingona", or, especially in its older French spelling, "Moinguena", is from Illinois
mooyiinkweena "one who has shit on his face". This etymology is supported by Gravier's word "m8ing8eta", which he translates as "visage plein d'ordure, metaphor sale, vilain. injure". This verb, phonetically
mooyiinkweeta, morphologically consists of
mooy- "shit", -
iinkwee- "face", and the third person singular intransitive suffix -
ta, for a meaning "he who has shit on his face". The form "Moinguena", phonetically
mooyiinkweena, is the same verb but with the independent indefinite subject ending -
na, for a more precise meaning "one who has shit on his face". The spelling "Moinguena" is exactly how the French spelling of the time would render the Illinois verb
mooyiinkweena. Perhaps this name arose as an insult given to the Moinguena by some neighboring tribe, as thus it is not known what the Moinguena called themselves. This scenario is rejected by the historian Jim Fay, who confirmed that no historical record documents the term being used and Algonquian linguists do not support its use. Missionaries likely misinterpreted terms. ==References==