The Comanche are a Native American Native Americans in the United States are the indigenous peoples from North America now encompassed by the continental United States, including parts of Alaska and the island state of Hawaii. They comprise a large number of distinct tribes, states, and ethnic groups, many of which survive as intact political communities. The terminology used to ethnic group whose historic range (the Comancheria The Comancheria is the name commonly given to the land occupied by the Comanche before further Anglo-American encroachment. The area was vaguely defined and shifted over time, but generally was described as bordered to the south by the Balcones Fault, just north of San Antonio, Texas, continuing north along the Cross Timbers to encompass a) consisted of present-day eastern New Mexico The state's total area is 121,412 square miles . The eastern border of New Mexico lies along 103° W longitude with the state of Oklahoma, and three miles (5 km) west of 103.5° W longitude with Texas. On the southern border, Texas makes up the eastern two-thirds, while the Mexican states of Chihuahua and Sonora make up the western third, with, southern Colorado Colorado is nicknamed the "Centennial State" because it was admitted to the Union as the 38th state in 1876, the centennial year of the United States Declaration of Independence. Colorado is bordered on the north by Wyoming and Nebraska, on the east by Nebraska and Kansas, on the south by Oklahoma and New Mexico, and on the west by Utah, northeastern Arizona Arizona is the 48th state and last of the contiguous states admitted to the Union, achieving statehood on February 14, 1912 - the 50th anniversary of Arizona's recognition as a territory of the United States. Arizona is noted for its desert climate, exceptionally hot summers, and mild winters, however it also features pine forests and mountain, southern Kansas Historically, the area was home to large numbers of nomadic Native Americans who hunted bison. It was first settled by European Americans in the 1830s, but the pace of settlement accelerated in the 1850s, in the midst of political wars over the slavery issue. When officially opened to settlement by the U.S. government in 1854, abolitionist Free-, all of Oklahoma A major producer of natural gas, oil and agriculture, Oklahoma relies on an economic base of aviation, energy, telecommunications, and biotechnology. It has one of the fastest growing economies in the nation, ranking among the top states in per capita income growth and gross domestic product growth. Oklahoma City and Tulsa serve as Oklahoma's, and most of northwest Texas Houston is the largest city in Texas and the fourth-largest in the United States, while San Antonio is the second largest in the state and seventh largest in the United States. Dallas–Fort Worth and Greater Houston are the fourth and sixth largest United States metropolitan areas, respectively. Other major cities include El Paso and Austin—the. Originally, the Comanches were hunter-gatherers A hunter-gatherer society is one whose primary subsistence method involves the direct procurement of edible plants and animals from the wild, foraging and hunting without significant recourse to the domestication of either. Hunter-gatherers obtain most from gathering rather than hunting; up to 80% of the food is obtained by gathering. The, with a typical Plains Indian The Plains Indians are the Indigenous peoples who live on the plains and rolling hills of the Great Plains of North America culture. There may have been as many as 45,000 Comanches in the late 18th century However, Western historians may sometimes specifically define the 18th century otherwise for the purposes of their work. For example, the "short" 18th century may be defined as 1715–1789, denoting the period of time between the death of Louis XIV of France and the start of the French Revolution with an emphasis on directly.[2] Today, the Comanche Nation consists of 14,105 members (2008 enrollment figures),[1] about half of whom live in Oklahoma (centered at Lawton Lawton is a city in and the county seat of Comanche County, Oklahoma, United States. It is the principal city of the Lawton, Oklahoma Metropolitan Statistical Area. Founded in 1901, Lawton lies in southwestern Oklahoma, near the Wichita Mountains. Lawton is the cultural and commercial center of the area. Lawton is home to large granite deposits as), with the remainder concentrated in Texas, California California's geography ranges from the Pacific coast to the Sierra Nevada mountain range in the east, to Mojave desert areas in the southeast and the Redwood–Douglas fir forests of the northwest. The center of the state is dominated by the Central Valley, one of the most productive agricultural areas in the world. California is the most, and New Mexico. The Comanche speak a Numic Numic is a branch of the Uto-Aztecan language family. It includes seven languages spoken by Native American peoples traditionally living in the Great Basin, Colorado River basin, and southern Great Plains. The geographical distribution of Uto-Aztecan as a whole is shown in striped green on this map of language families of North America language of the Uto-Aztecan Uto-Aztecan is a Native American language family. It is one of the largest (both in geographical extension and number of languages) and most well-established linguistic families of the Americas. Uto-Aztecan languages are found from the Great Basin of the Western United States (Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Utah, California, Nevada, Arizona), through family, sometimes classified as a Shoshone Shoshone or Shoshoni is a Native American language spoken by the Shoshone people. Principal dialects of Shoshone include Western Shoshone in Nevada, Gosiute in western Utah, Northern Shoshone in southern Idaho and northern Utah, and Eastern Shoshone in Wyoming dialect.
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History
Main article: Comanche history Forming a part of the Eastern Shoshone linguistic group in southeastern Wyoming who moved on to the buffalo Plains around 1500 AD , proto-Comanche groups split off and moved south some time before 1700 AD. The Shoshone migration to the Great Plains was apparently triggered by the Little Ice Age, which allowed bison herds to grow in population. ItFormation
1718 Guillaume de L'Isle Guillaume Delisle was a French cartographer who lived in Paris map showing the range and villages of Padoucas, believed to be the Comanche, at the heads of the Missouri, Kansas, and Arkansas Rivers.[3]The Comanche emerged as a distinct group shortly before 1700, when they broke off from the Shoshone The Shoshone (/ʃoʊˈʃoʊni/ or /ʃəˈʃoʊni/ (help·info)) are a Native American tribe in the United States with three large divisions: the Northern, the Western and the Eastern people[4]:30 living along the upper Platte River The Platte River is a river in the Western United States, approximately 310 mi long. It is a tributary of the Missouri River, which in turn is a tributary of the Mississippi River. The Platte is one of the most significant river systems in the watershed of the Missouri, draining a large portion of the central Great Plains in Nebraska and the in Wyoming As specified in the designating legislation for the Territory of Wyoming, Wyoming's borders are lines of latitude, 41°N and 45°N, and longitude, 104°3'W and 111°3'W , making the shape of the state a latitude-longitude quadrangle. Wyoming is one of only three states (along with Colorado and Utah) to have borders along only straight latitudinal. This coincided with their acquisition of the horse The horse is a hooved (ungulate) mammal, a subspecies of the family Equidae. The horse has evolved over the past 45 to 55 million years from a small multi-toed creature into the large, single-toed animal of today. Humans began to domesticate horses around 4000 BCE, and their domestication is believed to have been widespread by 3000 BCE. Although, which allowed them greater mobility in their search for better hunting grounds.
Their original migration Human migration is physical movement by humans from one area to another, sometimes over long distances or in large groups. The movement of populations in modern times has continued under the form of both voluntary migration within one's region, country, or beyond, and involuntary migration . People who migrate are called migrants or more took them to the southern Great Plains The Great Plains are the broad expanse of prairie, steppe and grassland which lie west of the Mississippi River and east of the Rocky Mountains in the United States and Canada. This area covers parts of the U.S. states of Colorado, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas and Wyoming, and the Canadian, into a sweep of territory extending from the Arkansas River The Arkansas River is a major tributary of the Mississippi River. The Arkansas generally flows to the east and southeast as it traverses the U.S. states of Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas to central Texas. During that time, their population increased dramatically because of the abundance of buffalo The American bison is a North American species of bison, also commonly known as the American buffalo. Some consider the term "buffalo" somewhat of a misnomer for this animal, as it is only distantly related to either of the two "true buffalo," the Asian water buffalo and the African buffalo. However, "bison" is a, an influx of Shoshone migrants, and the adoption of significant numbers of women and children taken captive from rival groups. The Comanche never formed a single cohesive tribal unit A tribe, viewed historically or developmentally, consists of a social group existing before the development of, or outside of, states but were divided into almost a dozen autonomous groups, called bands. These groups shared the same language and culture but may have fought nearly as often as they cooperated.[citation needed]
The horse was a key element in the emergence of a distinctive Comanche culture. Some scholars have suggested the Comanche broke away from the Shoshone and moved southward to search for additional sources of horses among the settlers of New Spain The Viceroyalty of New Spain was the first of four viceroyalties created to govern Spain's territories in North and Central America. It was ruled by a viceroy from Mexico City who governed many territories on behalf of the King of Spain. The Viceroyalty of New Spain lasted from 1535 to 1821, and was one of two early viceroyalties established in to the south (rather than search for new herds of buffalo.) The Comanche may have been the first group of Plains The Great Plains are the broad expanse of prairie, steppe and grassland which lie west of the Mississippi River and east of the Rocky Mountains in the United States and Canada. This area covers parts of the U.S. states of Colorado, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas and Wyoming, and the Canadian natives to fully incorporate the horse into their culture and to have introduced the animal to the other Plains peoples.[5]
By the mid-19th century, the Comanche were supplying horses to French and American traders and settlers and later to migrants' passing through their territory on the way to the California Gold Rush The California Gold Rush began on January 24, 1848, when gold was discovered by James W. Marshall at Sutter's Mill, in Coloma, California. News of the discovery brought some 300,000 people rushing to California from the rest of the United States and abroad. Of the 300,000, approximately 150,000 arrived by sea while the others traveled overland. The Comanche had stolen many of the horses from other tribes and settlers; they earned their reputation as formidable horse, and later, cattle thieves. Their stealing of livestock from Spanish and American settlers, as well as the other Plains tribes, often led to war.
The Comanche also had access to vast numbers of feral horses, which numbered approximately 2,000,000 in and around Comancheria. In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, the Comanche lifestyle required about one horse per person. With a population of about 30,000 to 40,000 and in possession of herds many times that number, the Comanche had a surplus of about 90,000 to 120,000 horses.[6]
They were formidable opponents who developed strategies for using traditional weapons for fighting on horseback. Warfare was a major part of Comanche life. The dreaded Comanche raids into Mexico In Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica many cultures matured into advanced civilizations such as the Olmec, the Toltec, the Teotihuacan, the Zapotec, the Maya and the Aztec before the first contact with Europeans. In 1521, Spain conquered and colonized the territory, which was administered as the viceroyalty of New Spain which would eventually become Mexico traditionally took place during the full moon, when the Comanche could see to ride at night. This led to the term "Comanche Moon," during which the Comanche raided for horses, captives, and weapons.[7] The majority of Comanche raids into Mexico were in the state of Chihuahua and neighboring northern states.[8]
Divisions
In Comanche society there were four levels of social-political integration:[9]
- patrilinear and patrilocal In social anthropology, patrilocal residence or patrilocality is a term referring to the social system in which a married couple resides with or near the husband's parents. The concept of location may extend to a larger area such as a village, town, or clan area. This practice is found in about 69 percent of the world's cultures that have been nuclear family
- extended family group (nʉmʉnahkahni - "the people who live together in a household", no size limits but nonrecognition beyond relatives two generations above or three below)
- residential local group (span. rancheria, comprised one or more nʉmʉnahkahni, one of which formed its core)
- division or band (sometimes called tribe, spanish nación, rama - “branch”, several local groups linked by kinship, sodalities (political, medicine, and military) and common interest in hunting, gathering, war, peace, trade)
Following as example of such political and kinship based division there is to mention the Yaparʉhka , forming their own identity as a separate division, because of cultural and linguistic differences from other Comanche bands, they became the “(Yap)Root-Eaters” in contrast to the Kʉhtsʉtʉhka (“Buffalo-Eaters”). The Yaparʉhka division was composed of several residential local groups such as the Ketahtoh Tʉ, Motso Tʉ and Pibianigwai.
In contrast to the neighboring Cheyenne Cheyenne are a Native American people of the Great Plains, who are of the Algonquian language family. The Cheyenne Nation is composed of two united tribes, the Só'taeo'o (more commonly as Sutaio) and the Tsétsêhéstâhese (more commonly as Tsitsistas) and Arapaho The Arapaho are a tribe of Native Americans historically living on the eastern plains of Colorado and Wyoming. They were close allies of the Cheyenne tribe and loosely aligned with the Sioux. Arapaho is an Algonquian language closely related to Gros Ventre, who are seen as an early offshoot of the Arapaho. Blackfoot and Cheyenne are the other to the north the Comanches never developed a political idea of forming an nation or tribe. Comanches recognized each other as Nʉmʉnʉ and seldom fought against each other, this meant not, that the Kwaarʉ Nʉʉ pursued the same policy against the spanish and indian settlements in New Mexico as did the Kʉhtsʉtʉhka. This led to even later, just as the Comanche society was breaking down, that the once respected and feared Penatʉka Nʉʉ were providing U.S. Army Indian Scouts for the Americans and Texans against their still fighting and free roaming Comanche kin.
The band A band society is the simplest form of human society. A band generally consists of a small kin group, no larger than an extended family or clan; it has been defined as consisting of no more than 30 to 50 individuals was the primary social unit of the Comanches. A typical band might number about one hundred people. Bands were part of larger divisions, or tribes. Before the 1750s, there were three Comanche divisions: Yamparikas, Jupes, and Kotsotekas. In the 1750s and 1760s, a number of Kotsoteka bands split off and moved to the southeast. This resulted in a large division between the original group, the western Comanches, and the break away Kotsotekas, the eastern Comanches. The western Comanches lived in the region of the upper Arkansas River The Arkansas River is a major tributary of the Mississippi River. The Arkansas generally flows to the east and southeast as it traverses the U.S. states of Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas, Canadian River The Canadian River is the largest tributary of the Arkansas River. It is about 906 miles long, starting in Colorado and traveling through New Mexico, the Texas Panhandle, and most of Oklahoma, and Red River The Red River, or sometimes The Red River of the South, is a major tributary of the Mississippi and Atchafalaya Rivers located in the United States of America. The river gains its name from the red-bed country of its watershed. It is one of several rivers with that name. The Red River is the second largest river basin in the southern Great Plains, and the Llano Estacado Llano Estacado (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈʎano estaˈkaðo], , commonly known as the Staked Plains, is a region in the southwestern United States that encompasses parts of eastern New Mexico and northwestern Texas, including the South Plains and parts of the Texas Panhandle. One of the largest mesas or tablelands on the North American continent,. The eastern Comanches lived on the Edwards Plateau The Edwards Plateau is a region of west-central Texas which is bounded by the Balcones Fault to the south and east, the Llano Uplift and the Llano Estacado to the north, and the Pecos River and Chihuahuan Desert to the west. San Angelo, Austin, San Antonio and Del Rio roughly outline the area and the Texas plains of the upper Brazos River The Brazos River, called the Rio de los Brazos de Dios by early Spanish explorers . The Brazos is the longest river in Texas and the 11th longest river in the United States at 2060 km (1280 miles) from its source at the head of Blackwater Draw, Curry County, New Mexico to its mouth at the Gulf of Mexico with a 116,000 km² (44,800 sq mi) drainage and Colorado River The Colorado River, Mojave language 'Aha Kwahwat, Spanish: Río Colorado , is a river in the Southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico, approximately 1,450 miles (2,330 km) long, draining a part of the arid regions on the western slope of the Rocky Mountains. The natural course of the river flows from 25 km (16 mi) north of Grand Lake,, and east to the Cross Timbers The term Cross Timbers is used to describe a strip of land in the United States that runs from southeastern Kansas across Central Oklahoma to Central Texas. Made up of a mix of prairie, savanna, and woodland, it forms part of the boundary between the more heavily forested eastern part of the country and the almost treeless Great Plains, and also.[10]
Over time these divisions were altered in various ways. In the early 1800s the Jupes vanished from history, probably merging into the other divisions. Many Yamparikas moved southeast, joining the eastern Comanches and becoming known as the Tenewas. Many Kiowas The Kiowa are a nation of American Indians who migrated from the Northern Plains to their present location in Southwestern Oklahoma. They are a federally recognized tribe, the Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma, with over 11,500 members and Plains Apache (or Naishans) moved to northern Comancheria and became closely associated with the Yamparikas. A group of Arapahos The Arapaho are a tribe of Native Americans historically living on the eastern plains of Colorado and Wyoming. They were close allies of the Cheyenne tribe and loosely aligned with the Sioux. Arapaho is an Algonquian language closely related to Gros Ventre, who are seen as an early offshoot of the Arapaho. Blackfoot and Cheyenne are the other, known as the Chariticas, moved into Comancheria and joined Comanche society. New divisions arose, such as the Nokonas, closely linked with the Tenewas; and the Kwahadas, who emerged as a new faction on the southern Llano Estacado. The western-eastern distinction changed in the 1800s. Observers began to call them northern and southern Comanches. One of the southernmost groups became known as the Penatekas.[10]
All these division names were spelled in many different ways by Spanish and English writers, and spelling differences continue today. Large-scale groupings became unstable and unclear during the 1800s. The Comanche society was slowly overwhelmed and ultimately subjugated to the United States.[10]
Various bands of the Comanche (Nʉmʉnʉ)
Naming practices of the Comanche were flexible, so some of these names are probably synonyms of others on the list. Joking and insulting synonyms were also commonly found in use among rival or allied bands.[11]
- Jupe (spelled in Spanish as Hupe, Hoipi, Hʉpenʉʉ - ‘Timber People’, an 18th century band, probably forerunners of the Nokoni Nʉʉ, Kwaaru Nʉʉ and of the Hois-Penatʉka Nʉʉ local group)
- Kʉhtsʉtʉʉka (Kotsoteka - ‘Bufallo-Eaters’)
- Kwaarʉ Nʉʉ/Kwahare (Kwahadi/Quohada - ‘Antilope-Eaters’ , nicknamed as Kwahihʉʉ Ki - ‘Sunshades on Their Backs’, because they lived on desert plains of the Llano Estacado Llano Estacado (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈʎano estaˈkaðo], , commonly known as the Staked Plains, is a region in the southwestern United States that encompasses parts of eastern New Mexico and northwestern Texas, including the South Plains and parts of the Texas Panhandle. One of the largest mesas or tablelands on the North American continent,)
- Mʉtsahne (Motsai - ‘Undercut Bank’, annihilated in a battle with Mexicans in 1845)
- Nokoni Nʉʉ (Nokoni - ‘Movers’, ‘Returners’, also Noyʉhkanʉʉ, Nawyehkah - ‘Not Staying in one place’ , later called Tʉtsʉ Noyʉkanʉʉ,Detsanayʉka - ‘Bad Campers’, ‘Poor Wanderer’)
- Nokoni Nʉʉ (major group, who had considerable influence on the decision making of the Tahnahwah und Tanimʉʉ)
- Tahnahwah (Tenawa, also Tenahwit - ‘Those Who Live Downstream’, southern splinter group of the Yaparʉhka, annihilated by the Mexicans in 1845)
- Tanimʉʉ (Tanima, also called Dahaʉi, Tevawish - ‘Liver-Eaters’)
- Pagatsʉ (Pa'káh'tsa - ‘Head of the Stream’, alsco called Pahnaixte - ‘Those Who Live Upstream’)
- Pekwi Tʉhka (‘Fish-Eaters’)
- Penatʉka Nʉʉ (Penateka, Pihnaatʉka, Penanʉʉ - ‘Honey-Eaters’ , also called Pehnahterkʉh - ‘Quick-Stinger, Wasp, i.e. Raiders’)
- Penatʉka Nʉʉ (major local group)
- Hʉpenʉʉ (Hois- ‘Timber People’)
- Tayʉʉwit (Teyʉwit - ‘Hospitable Ones’)
- Kʉvahrahtpaht (‘Steep Climbers’)
- Taykahpwai (Tekapwai - ‘No Meat’)
- Pikaatamʉ (‘Buckskin Sewing People’)
- Saria Tʉhka (Chariticas, Sata Teichas - ‘Dog-Eaters’, once a group of Arapaho The Arapaho are a tribe of Native Americans historically living on the eastern plains of Colorado and Wyoming. They were close allies of the Cheyenne tribe and loosely aligned with the Sioux. Arapaho is an Algonquian language closely related to Gros Ventre, who are seen as an early offshoot of the Arapaho. Blackfoot and Cheyenne are the other, who joined the Comanche)
- Yaparʉhka (Yamparika, also Yapai Nʉʉ - ‘(Yap)Root-Eaters’, former called Widyʉ Nʉʉ, Widyʉ or Widyʉ Yapa - ‘Awl People’, later called Ditsahkanah - ‘Sewing People’).[12]
- Ketahtoh Tʉ (Ketatore - ‘Don't Wear Shoes’ , also called Napwat Tʉ - ‘Wearing No Shoes’)
- Motso Tʉ (motso - ‘Beard’, not confused with the Mʉtsahne)
- Pibianigwai (‘Loud Talkers’, ‘Loud Askers’)
- Sʉhmʉhtʉhka (‘Eat Everything’)
- Titchahkaynah (‘Those Who Make Bags While Traveling’, once a separate group, later joined the Yaparʉhka)
- Wahkoh (‘Shell Ornament’)
- Waw'ai (Wohoi - ‘Lots of Maggots on the Penis’, also called Nahmahe'enah - ‘Something Together’, ‘Having (Sexual) Intercourse’, were supposed to have practised Incest)
In addition there are further smaller bands:[13]
- Hai'ne'na'ʉne (‘Corn Eating People’, not to be confused with the indication Hanitaibo for the Penatʉka Nʉʉ)
- It'chit'a'bʉd'ah (‘Cold People’,i.e. ‘Northern People’)
- Itehtah'o (‘Burnt Meat’, nicknamed by other Comanche, because they threw their surplus of meat out in the spring, were it dried and became black, looking like burnt meat)
- Naʉ'niem (No'na'ʉm - ‘Ridge People’)
- Ohnonʉʉ (Ohnʉnʉnʉʉ, Onahʉnʉnʉʉ)
- Pahʉraix (‘Water Horse’, also called Parkeenaʉm - ‘Water People’, because they preferred settling along lakes, knwon to the Comanche as the best runners and players of Lacrosse Lacrosse is a team sport of Native American origin played using a small solid rubber ball and a long-handled racquet called a crosse or lacrosse stick. The head of the lacrosse stick is strung with loose netting designed to catch and hold the lacrosse ball. Offensively, the objective of the game is to score by shooting the ball into an opponent's)
- Pohoi (Pohoee - ‘Wild Sage’, once a group of Wind River Shoshone The Shoshone (/ʃoʊˈʃoʊni/ or /ʃəˈʃoʊni/ (help·info)) are a Native American tribe in the United States with three large divisions: the Northern, the Western and the Eastern, who joined the Comanche)
- Tʉtsanoo Yehkʉ (probably a variant spelling of Kʉhtsʉtʉʉka)
- Wianʉʉ (Wianʉ, Wia'ne - ‘Hill Wearing Away’)
Texas-Indian Wars 1820-1875
Main article: Texas–Indian WarsRelationship with settlers
Comanche braves, c. 1867-1874. Quanah Parker Quanah Parker was a Native American Indian leader, the son of Comanche chief Peta Nocona and European American woman Cynthia Ann Parker, and the last chief of the Quahadi Comanche Indians, the last major chief of the Comanche Indians.The Comanche maintained an ambiguous relationship with Europeans and later settlers attempting to colonize their territory. They were valued as trading partners but were feared for their raids. Similarly, the Comanche were, at one time or another, at war with virtually every other Native American group living in the Great Plains, leaving opportunities for political maneuvering by European colonial powers and the United States. At one point, Sam Houston, president of the newly created Republic of Texas, almost succeeded in reaching a peace treaty with the Comanche. His efforts were thwarted when the Texas legislature refused to create an official boundary between Texas and the Comancheria.
While the Comanche had many violent clashes with the Republic of Texas, they agreed to a peace treaty with the City of Fredericksburg, Texas. Both sides honored the treaty for over a century and a half into the present day, making it one of few unbroken treaties.[4]:31
While the Comanche managed to maintain their independence and increase their territory, by the mid-nineteenth century they faced annihilation because of a wave of epidemics due to Eurasian diseases to which they had no immunity, such as smallpox and measles. Outbreaks of smallpox (1817, 1848) and cholera (1849) took a major toll on the Comanche, whose population dropped from an estimated 20,000 in mid-century to just a few thousand by the 1870s.
The US began efforts in the late 1860s to move the Comanche into reservations, with the Treaty of Medicine Lodge (1867), which offered churches, schools, and annuities in return for a vast tract of land totaling over 60,000 square miles (160,000 km²). The government promised to stop the buffalo hunters who were decimating the great herds of the Plains, provided that the Comanche, along with the Apaches, Kiowas, Cheyenne, and Arapahos, move to a reservation totaling less than 5,000 square miles (13,000 km²) of land. However, the government did not prevent slaughtering of the herds. The Comanche under Isa-tai (White Eagle) retaliated by attacking a group of hunters in the Texas Panhandle in the Second Battle of Adobe Walls (1874). The attack was a disaster for the Comanche, and the US army was called in to drive the remaining Comanche in the area into the reservation. Within just ten years, the buffalo were on the verge of extinction, effectively ending the Comanche way of life as hunters. In 1875, the last free band of Comanches, led by Quahada warrior Quanah Parker, surrendered and moved to the Fort Sill reservation in Oklahoma.
Unhappy with life on the reservation, 170 warriors and their families, led by Black Horse, left the reservation in late 1876 for the Llano Estacado. Attacks on buffalo hunters' camps led to the Buffalo Hunters' War of 1877.
In 1892 the government negotiated the Jerome Agreement, with the Comanches, Kiowas, and Apaches, further reducing their reservation to 480,000 acres (1,940 km²) at a cost of $1.25 per acre ($308.88/km²), with an allotment of 160 acres (0.6 km²) per person per tribe to be held in trust. New allotments were made in 1906 to all children born after the Jerome Agreement, and the remaining land was opened to white settlement. With this new arrangement, the era of the Comanche reservation came to an abrupt end.
Recent history
Mac Silverhorn (Comanche), grandson of Silver Horn, drumming with friend at Redstone Baptist ChurchEntering the Western economy was a challenge for the Comanche in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and back then many of them were defrauded of whatever remained of their land and possessions. Elected chief of the entire tribe by the United States government, Chief Quanah Parker campaigned vigorously for better deals for his people, meeting with Washington politicians frequently; and helped manage land for the tribe. Parker became wealthy as a cattleman. Parker also campaigned for the Comanches' permission to practice the Native American Church religious rites, such as the usage of peyote, which was condemned by European-Americans. Before the first Oklahoma legislature, Quanah testified:
"I do not think this legislature should interfere with a man's religion, also these people should be allowed to retain this health restorer. These healthy gentleman before you use peoti and those that do not use it are not so healthy." [sic][14]
During World War II, many Comanche left the traditional tribal lands in Oklahoma in search of financial opportunities in the cities of California and the Southwest. Today they are among the most highly educated native groups in the United States.[citation needed] About half the Comanche population still lives in Oklahoma, centered around the town of Lawton.
Uwat - Comanche, 1930.Culture
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Social order
Comanche groups did not have a single acknowledged leader. Instead, a small number of generally recognized leaders acted as counsel and advisors to the group as a whole. These included the "peace chief," the members of the council, and the "war chief."
The peace chief was usually an older individual, who could bring his experience to the task of advising. There was no formal inauguration or election to the position, it was one of general consensus.
The council made decisions about where the band should hunt, whether they should war against their enemies, and whether to ally themselves with other bands. Any member could speak at council meetings, but the older men usually did most of the talking.
In times of war, the band selected a war chief. To be chosen for this position, a man had to prove he was a brave fighter. He also had to have the respect of all the other warriors in the band. While the band was at war, the war chief was in charge, and all the warriors had to obey him. After the conflict was over, however, the war chief's authority ended.
The Comanche men did most of the hunting and all of the fighting in the wars. They learned how to ride horses when they were young and were eager to prove themselves in battle. On the plains, Comanche women carried out the demanding tasks of cooking, skinning animals, setting up camp, rearing children, and transporting household goods.
Childbirth
If a woman started labor while the band was in camp, she was moved to a tipi, or a brush lodge if it was summer. One or more of the older women assisted as midwives. If a woman went into labor while the band was on the move, she simply paused along the trail and gave birth to her child. After a few hours of rest, she would take the baby and catch up with the group again. Men were not allowed inside the tipi during or immediately after the delivery.
First, the midwives softened the earthen floor of the tipi and dug two holes. One of the holes was for heating water and the other for the afterbirth. One or two stakes were driven into the ground near the expectant mother's bedding for her to grip during the pain of labor. After the birth, the midwives hung the umbilical cord on a hackberry tree. The people believed that if the umbilical cord was not disturbed before it rotted, the baby would live a long and prosperous life.
The newborn was swaddled and remained with its mother in the tipi for a few days. The baby was placed in a cradleboard, and the mother went back to work. She could easily carry the cradleboard on her back, or prop it against a tree where the baby could watch her while she collected seeds or roots. Cradleboards consisted of a flat board to which a basket was attached. The latter was made from rawhide straps, or a leather sheath that laced up the front. With soft, dry moss as a diaper, the young one was safely tucked into the leather pocket. During cold weather, the baby was wrapped in blankets, and then placed in the cradleboard. The baby remained in the cradleboard for about ten months; then it was allowed to crawl around.
Both girls and boys were welcomed into the band, but boys were favored. If the baby was a boy, one of the midwives informed the father or grandfather, "It's your close friend". Families might paint a flap on the tipi to tell the rest of the tribe that they had been strengthened with another warrior.
Sometimes a man named his child, but mostly the father asked a medicine man (or another man of distinction) to do so. He did this in hope of his child living a long and productive life. During the public naming ceremony, the medicine man lit his pipe and offered smoke to the heavens, earth, and each of the four directions. He prayed that the child would remain happy and healthy. He then lifted the child to symbolize its growing up and announced the child's name four times. He held the child a little higher each time he said the name. It was believed that the child's name foretold its future; even a weak or sick child could grow up to be a great warrior, hunter, and raider if given a name suggesting courage and strength.
Boys were often named after their grandfather, uncle, or other relative. Girls were usually named after one of their father's relatives, but the name was selected by the mother. As children grew up they also acquired nicknames at different points in their lives, to express some aspect of their lives.
Children
A 19th century Comanche child.The Comanche looked upon their children as their most precious gift. Children were rarely punished. Sometimes, though, an older sister or other relative was called upon to discipline a child, or the parents arranged for a boogey man to scare the child. Occasionally, old people donned sheets and frightened disobedient boys and girls. Children were also told about Big Cannibal Owl (Pia Mupitsi) who lived in a cave on the south side of the Wichita Mountains and ate bad children at night.[citation needed]
Children learned from example, by observing and listening to their parents and others in the band. As soon as she was old enough to walk, a girl followed her mother about the camp and played at the daily tasks of cooking and making clothing. She was also very close to her mother's sisters, who were called not aunt but pia, meaning mother. She was given a little deerskin doll, which she took with her everywhere. She learned to make all the clothing for the doll.
A boy identified not only with his father but with his father's family, as well as with the bravest warriors in the band. He learned to ride a horse before he could walk. By the time he was four or five, he was expected to be able to skillfully handle a horse. When he was five or six, he was given a small bow and arrows. Often a boy was taught to ride and shoot by his grandfather, since his father and other warriors were on raids and hunts. His grandfather also taught him about his own boyhood and the history and legends of the Comanche.
As the boy grew older, he joined the other boys to hunt birds. He eventually ranged farther from camp looking for better game to kill. Encouraged to be skillful hunters, boys learned the signs of the prairie as they learned to patiently and quietly stalk game. They became more self-reliant, yet, by playing together as a group, also formed the strong bonds and cooperative spirit that they would need when they hunted and raided.
Comanches of West Texas in war regalia, c. 1830.Boys were highly respected because they would become warriors and might die young in battle. As he approached manhood, a boy went on his first buffalo hunt. If he made a kill, his father honored him with a feast. Only after he had proven himself on a buffalo hunt was a young man allowed to go to war.
When he was ready to become a warrior, at about age fifteen or sixteen, a young man first "made his medicine" by going on a vision quest (a rite of passage). Following this quest, his father gave the young man a good horse to ride into battle and another mount for the trail. If he had proved himself as a warrior, a Give Away Dance might be held in his honor. As drummers faced east, the honored boy and other young men danced. His parents, along with his other relatives and the people in the band, threw presents at his feet – especially blankets and horses symbolized by sticks. Anyone might snatch one of the gifts for themselves, although those with many possessions refrained; they did not want to appear greedy. People often gave away all their belongings during these dances, providing for others in the band but leaving themselves with nothing.
Girls learned to gather healthy berries, nuts, and roots. They carried water and collected wood, and when about twelve years old learned to cook meals, make tipis, sew clothing, prepare hides, and perform other tasks essential to becoming a wife and mother. They were then considered ready to be married.
Marriage
Boys might boldly risk their lives as hunters and warriors, but, when it came to girls, boys were very bashful. A boy might visit a person gifted in love medicine, who was believed to be able to charm the young woman into accepting him. During courtship, the girl often approached the boy. Boys mostly stayed in their tipis, so it was up to the girl to go to the tipi. A boy, however, might approach a girl as she went for wood or water. Since they were not allowed to see each other, they met in secret.
When he wished to marry, a boy offered a gift. The gift was usually one or more horses for the girl's father or guardian. The young man might also agree to work as a hunter or trader for the family, to convince the girl's family that he would be able to provide for her. Usually a young man asked an uncle or friend to make the offer for him. This messenger brought horses and other goods, spoke briefly with the parents, and left. To avoid embarrassment, he did not immediately receive an answer. If the proposal was turned down, the horses were simply released and driven back to the suitor's herd; if accepted, the horses were taken into the father's herd, thereby announcing the engagement.
Death
Old men who no longer went on the war path had a special tipi called the Smoke Lodge, where they gathered each day. A man typically joined when he became more interested in the past than the future. Boys and women were not allowed inside, and new members underwent an initiation.
A very old and ill person was left behind, or abandoned by everyone other than close family. This was not because they lacked sympathy, but because they were afraid that evil spirits were invading his body. As death approached, the old person gave away his belongings. He made his last medicine, then found a quiet place to lie down and waited to die. After he died, the Comanches immediately buried his body by piling rocks on top. His knees were folded, bound in this position with a rope, and then bathed. The face was painted red and the eyes sealed with clay.
The deceased was attired in the finest available clothing and then laid upon a blanket. Loved ones took a final look at the deceased, and then the body was wrapped in another blanket and tied with buffalo-hide rope. Placed in a sitting position on a horse, the body was taken to the burial place, which was usually a cave, a deep ravine, or a crevice high among the rocks.
The body was placed in a sitting position, or on its side, in a hole, or on the ground, around stacked rocks and wooden poles. In the late nineteenth century, some Comanches, especially those living along the Red River, built tree or scaffold burial structures like those used by the Cheyenne and other Plains Indians. The Comanche did not fear death, but death worried them. They often broke camp after a burial to get away from the place of death.
There was little mourning for the old people who died, but intense mourning for a young man who died.
Transportation
When they lived with the Shoshone, the Comanche mainly used dog-drawn travois for transportation. Later they acquired horses from other tribes and from the Spaniards. Since horses are faster, easier to control and able to carry more, this helped with their hunting and warfare and made moving camp easier. Being herbivores, horses were also easier to feed than dogs, since meat was a valuable resource.
Food
The Comanche were initially hunter-gatherers. When they lived in the Rocky Mountains during their migration to the Great Plains, both men and women shared the responsibility of gathering and providing food. When the Comanche reached the plains, hunting came to predominate. Hunting was considered a male activity and was a principal source of prestige.
For meat, the Comanche hunted buffalo, elk, black bear, pronghorn, and deer. When game was scarce, the men hunted wild mustangs, sometimes eating their own ponies. In later years the Comanche raided Texas ranches and stole longhorn cattle. They did not eat fish or fowl, unless starving, when they would eat virtually any creature they could catch, including armadillos, skunks, rats, lizards, frogs, and grasshoppers.
Buffalo meat and other game was prepared and cooked by the women. The women also gathered wild fruits, seeds, nuts, berries, roots, and tubers — including plums, grapes, juniper berries, persimmons, mulberries, acorns, pecans, wild onions, radishes, and the fruit of the prickly pear cactus. The Comanche also acquired maize, dried pumpkin, and tobacco through trade and raids.
Most meats were roasted over a fire or boiled. To boil fresh or dried meat and vegetables, women dug a pit in the ground, which they lined with animal skins or buffalo stomach and filled with water to make a kind of cooking pot. They placed heated stones in the water until it boiled and had cooked their stew. After they came into contact with the Spanish, the Comanche traded for copper pots and iron kettles, which made cooking easier.
Women used berries and nuts, as well as honey and tallow, to flavor buffalo meat. They stored the tallow in intestine casings or rawhide pouches called parfleches. They especially liked to make a sweet mush of buffalo marrow mixed with crushed mesquite beans.
The Comanches sometimes ate raw meat, especially raw liver flavored with gall. They also drank the milk from the slashed udders of buffalo, deer, and elk. Among their delicacies was the curdled milk from the stomachs of suckling buffalo calves. They also enjoyed buffalo tripe, or stomachs.
Comanche people generally had a light meal in the morning and a large evening meal. During the day they ate whenever they were hungry or when it was convenient. Like other Plains Indians, the Comanche were very hospitable people. They prepared meals whenever a visitor arrived in camp, which led to outsiders' belief that the Comanches ate at all hours of the day or night. Before calling a public event, the chief took a morsel of food, held it to the sky, and then buried it as a peace offering to the Great Spirit. Many families offered thanks as they sat down to eat their meals in their tipis.
Comanche children ate pemmican, but this was primarily a tasty, high-energy food reserved for war parties. Carried in a parfleche pouch, pemmican was eaten only when the men did not have time to hunt. Similarly, in camp, people ate pemmican only when other food was scarce. Traders ate pemmican sliced and dipped in honey, which they called Indian bread.
Habitation
Much of the area inhabited by the Comanches was flat and dry, with the exception of major rivers like the Cimarron River, the Pecos River, the Brazos River, and the Red River. The water of these rivers was often too dirty to drink, so the Comanches usually lived along the smaller, clear streams that flowed into them. These streams supported trees that the Comanche used to build shelters.
The Comanche sheathed their tipis with a covering made of buffalo hides sewn together. To prepare the buffalo hides, women first spread them on the ground, then scraped away the fat and flesh with blades made from bones or antlers, and left them in the sun. When the hides were dry, they scraped off the thick hair, and then soaked them in water. After several days, they vigorously rubbed the hides in a mixture of animal fat, brains, and liver to soften the hides. The hides were made even more supple by further rinsing and working back and forth over a rawhide thong. Finally, they were smoked over a fire, which gave the hides a light tan color.
To finish the tipi covering, women laid the tanned hides side by side and stitched them together. As many as twenty-two hides could be used, but fourteen was the average. When finished, the hide covering was tied to a pole and raised, wrapped around the cone-shaped frame, and pinned together with pencil-sized wooden skewers. Two wing-shaped flaps at the top of the tipi were turned back to make an opening, which could be adjusted to keep out the moisture and held pockets of insulating air. With a fire pit in the center of the earthen floor, the tipis stayed warm in the winter. In the summer, the bottom edges of the tipis could be rolled up to let cool breezes in. Cooking was done outside during the hot weather. Tipis were very practical homes for itinerant people. Working together, women could quickly set them up or take them down. An entire Comanche band could be packed and chasing a buffalo herd within about twenty minutes. The Comanche women were the ones who did the most work with food processing and preparation.
Clothing
Comanche clothing was simple and easy to wear. Men wore a leather belt with a breechcloth — a long piece of buckskin that was brought up between the legs and looped over and under the belt at the front and back, and loose-fitting deerskin leggings. Moccasins had soles made from thick, tough buffalo hide with soft deerskin uppers.
The Comanche men wore nothing on the upper body except in the winter, when they wore warm, heavy robes made from buffalo hides (or occasionally, bear, wolf, or coyote skins) with knee-length buffalo-hide boots. Young boys usually went without clothes except in cold weather. When they reached the age of eight or nine, they began to wear the clothing of a Comanche adult.
In the 19th century, men used woven cloth to replace the buckskin breechcloths, and the men began wearing loose-fitting buckskin shirts. The women decorated their shirts, leggings and moccasins with fringes made of deer-skin, animal fur, and human hair. They also decorated their shirts and leggings with patterns and shapes formed with beads and scraps of material.
Comanche women wore long deerskin dresses. The dresses had a flared skirt and wide, long sleeves, and were trimmed with buckskin fringes along the sleeves and hem. Beads and pieces of metal were attached in geometric patterns. Comanche women wore buckskin moccasins with buffalo soles. In the winter they, too, wore warm buffalo robes and tall, fur-lined buffalo-hide boots.
Unlike the boys, young girls did not go without clothes. As soon as they were able to walk, they were dressed in breechcloths. By the age of twelve or thirteen, they adopted the clothes of Comanche women.
Hair and headgear
Comanche people took pride in their hair, which was worn long and rarely cut. They arranged their hair with porcupine quill brushes, greased it and parted it in the center from the forehead to the back of the neck. They painted the scalp along the parting with yellow, red, or white clay (or other colors). They wore their hair in two long braids tied with leather thongs or colored cloth, and sometimes wrapped with beaver fur. They also braided a strand of hair from the top of their head. This slender braid, called a scalp lock, was decorated with colored scraps of cloth and beads, and a single feather.
Comanche men rarely wore anything on their heads. Only after they moved onto a reservation late in the 19th century did Comanche men begin to wear the typical Plains headdress. If the winter was severely cold, they might wear a brimless, woolly buffalo hide hat.
When they went to war, some warriors wore a headdress made from a buffalo's scalp. Warriors cut away most of the hide and flesh from a buffalo head, leaving only a portion of the woolly hair and the horns. This type of woolly, horned buffalo hat was worn only by the Comanche.
Comanche women did not let their hair grow as long as the men did. Young women might wear their hair long and braided, but women parted their hair in the middle and kept it short. Like the men, they painted their scalp along the parting with bright paint.
Body decoration
Comanche men usually had pierced ears with hanging earrings made from pieces of shell or loops of brass or silver wire. A female relative would pierce the outer edge of the ear with six or eight holes. The men also tattooed their face, arms, and chest with geometric designs, and painted their face and body. Traditionally they used paints made from berry juice and the colored clays of the Comancheria. Later, traders supplied them with vermilion (red pigment) and bright grease paints. Comanche men also wore bands of leather and strips of metal on their arms.
Except for black, which was the color for war, there was no standard color or pattern for face and body painting: it was a matter of individual preference. For example, one Comanche might paint one side of his face white and the other side red; another might paint one side of his body green and the other side with green and black stripes. One Comanche might always paint himself in a particular way, while another might change the colors and designs when so inclined. Some designs had special meaning to the individual, and special colors and designs might have been revealed in a dream.
Comanche women might also tattoo their face or arms. They were fond of painting their bodies and were free to paint themselves however they pleased. A popular pattern among the women was to paint the insides of their ears a bright red and paint great orange and red circles on their cheeks. They usually painted red and yellow around their lips.
Arts and crafts
Comanche beaded ration bag, ca. 1880, collection of the Oklahoma History CenterBecause of their frequent traveling, Comanche Indians had to make sure that their household goods and other possessions were unbreakable. They did not use pottery that could easily be broken on long journeys. Basketry, weaving, wood carving, and metal working were also unknown among the Comanches. Instead, they depended upon the buffalo for most of their tools, household goods, and weapons. They made nearly 200 different articles from the horns, hide, and bones of the buffalo.
Removing the lining of the inner stomach, women made the paunch into a water bag. The lining was stretched over four sticks and then filled with water to make a pot for cooking soups and stews. With wood scarce on the plains, women relied on buffalo chips (dried dung) to fuel the fires that cooked meals and warmed the people through long winters.
Stiff rawhide was fashioned into saddles, stirrups and cinches, knife cases, buckets, and moccasin soles. Rawhide was also made into rattles and drums. Strips of rawhide were twisted into sturdy ropes. Scraped to resemble white parchment, rawhide skins were folded to make parfleches in which food, clothing, and other personal belongings were kept. Women also tanned hides to make soft and supple buckskin, which was used for tipi covers, warm robes, blankets, cloths, and moccasins. They also relied upon buckskin for bedding, cradles, dolls, bags, pouches, quivers, and gun cases.
Sinew was used for bowstrings and sewing thread. Hooves were turned into glue and rattles. The horns were shaped into cups, spoons, and ladles, while the tail made a good whip, a fly-swatter, or a decoration for the tipi. Men made tools, scrapers, and needles from the bones, as well as a kind of pipe, and fashioned toys for their children. As warriors, however, men concentrated on making bows and arrows, lances, and shields. The thick neck skin of an old bull was ideal for war shields that deflected arrows as well as bullets. Since they spent most of each day on horseback, they also fashioned leather into saddles, stirrups, and other equipment for their mounts. Buffalo hair was used to fill saddle pads and was also used in rope and halters.
Language
Main article: Comanche language Charles Chibitty, Comanche code talker in WWIIThe language spoken by the Comanche people, Comanche (Numu tekwapu), is a Numic language of the Uto-Aztecan language group. It is closely related to the language of the Shoshone, from which the Comanche diverged around 1700. The two languages remain closely related, but a few low-level sound changes inhibit mutual intelligibility. The earliest records of Comanche from 1786 clearly show a dialect of Shoshone, but by the beginning of the 20th century, these sound changes had modified the way Comanche sounded in subtle, but profound, ways.[15][16] Although efforts are now being made to ensure its survival, most speakers of the language are elderly, and less than one percent of the Comanches can speak the language. In the late 19th century, Comanche children were placed in boarding schools where they were discouraged from speaking their native language and even severely punished for doing so. The second generation then grew up speaking English, because it was believed that it was better for them not to know Comanche.
During World War II, a group of seventeen young men referred to as "The Comanche Code Talkers" were trained and used by the U.S. Army to send messages conveying sensitive information that could not be deciphered by the Germans.
Comanche Nation today
The headquarters of the Comanche Nation is Lawton, Oklahoma and their tribal jurisdictional area is within Caddo, Comanche, Cotton, Grady, Jefferson, Kiowa, Stephens, and Tillman Counties.[1] Michael Burgess is the current elected Tribal Chairman with the elections being held every three years.[17] The Comanche Nation issues its own tribal vehicle tags. They operate ten tribal smoke shops, a bingo hall, the Comanche Nation Water Park, Comanche Nation Funeral Home, and four casinos.[1] Specifically, the tribe owns Comanche Nation Games in Lawton, Comanche Red River Casino in Devol, Comanche Spur Casino in Elgin, Comanche Star Casino in Walters, and Comanche Smokeshop and Game Center, also in Walters, Oklahoma.
In 2002, the tribe founded the Comanche Nation College, a two-year tribal college in Lawton.[18]
In July, Comanches from across the United States gather to celebrate their heritage and culture in Walters, Oklahoma at the annual Comanche Homecoming powwow. The Comanche Nation Fair is held every September. The Comanche Little Ponies host two annual dances—one over New Years and one in May.[19]
Notable Comanches
- Paruasemana (Ten Bears) (1790-1872), Local chief of the Yamparika Comanche
- Blackbear Bosin (1921-1980), Kiowa-Comanche sculptor and painter
- Buffalo Hump (ca. 1795-1870), war chief of the Penteka band, led the Comanche in the Great Raid of 1840
- Charles Chibitty (1921-2005), World War II Comanche code talker
- LaDonna Harris (b. 1931), political activist and founder of Americans for Indian Opportunity
- Sonny Nevaquaya, Native American flute-player
- Quanah Parker, chief, founder of Native American Church, and successful rancher
- Lotsee Patterson, librarian, eduator, and founder of the American Indian Library Association
- Thomas Edison Ford, country singer[20]
- George "Comanche Boy" Tahdooahnippah, professional boxer and NABC super middleweight champion
- Rudy Youngblood, actor, starred in Apocalypto, not enrolled in the tribe
References
- ^ a b c d "Pocket Pictorial." Oklahoma Indian Affairs Commission. 2010: 11. (retrieved 10 June 2010)
- ^ Frank McLynn, Review of Pekka Hämäläinen, The Comanche Empire.
- ^ Carte de la Louisiane et du cours du Mississipi by Guillaume de L'Isle (1718), Library of Congress: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.gmd/g3700.ct000666
- ^ a b Meredith, Howard L. A Short History of the Native Americans in the United States. Malabar, FL: Krieger Publishing Company, 2001. ISBN 1-57524-139-0.
- ^ Hamalainen, Pekka (2008). The Comanche Empire. Yale University Press. pp. 23, 37–38, 170. ISBN 978-0-300-12654-9.
- ^ Hamalainen, Pekka (2008). The Comanche Empire. Yale University Press. p. 240. ISBN 978-0-300-12654-9.
- ^ The Comanches: Lords of the Southern Plains. University of Oklahoma Press. 1952.
- ^ Thomas W. Kavanagh, 1996, The Comanches: A History 1706-1875. University of Nebraska Press.
- ^ T. W. Kavanagh: The Comanches: A History 1706 - 1875, pp 41 - 53
- ^ a b c Hämäläinen, Pekka (2008). The Comanche Empire. Yale University Press. pp. 105, 151, 242, 282–283, 306, 314. ISBN 978-0-300-12654-9. Online at Google Books
- ^ T.W. Kavanagh: The Comanches: A History 1706-1875, page 493
- ^ T.W. Kavanagh: The Comanches: A History 1706-1875, page 497
- ^ E. Wallace, E. A. Hoebel: The Comanches: Lords of the South Plains, pages 25-31
- ^ Swan, Daniel C. Peyote Religious Art: Symbols of Faith and Belief. Jackson: University of Mississippi Press, 1999: 19. ISBN 1-57806-096-6
- ^ McLaughlin, John E. (1992) "A Counter-Intuitive Solution in Central Numic Phonology," International Journal of American Linguistics 58: pp.158-81
- ^ McLaughlin, John E. (2000) "Language Boundaries and Phonological Borrowing in the Central Numic Languages" In Casad, Gene and Willett, Thomas (eds.) (2000) Uto-Aztecan: Structural, temporal, and geographic perspectives: papers in memory of Wick R. Miller by the Friends of Uto-Aztecan Universidad de Sonora, División de Humanidades y Bellas Artes, Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico, pp. 293-304, ISBN 970-689-030-0
- ^ Comanche Nation Business Committee 21 Mar 2010
- ^ Comanche Nation College. 2009 (16 Feb 2009)
- ^ Comanche Nation Tourism Center. Comanche Nation. (16 Feb 2009)
- ^ Spitzer, Nicholas R. Brownie Ford: Lifelines of a Woods Cowboy. Louisiana's Living Traditions. (12 Apr 2010).
Further reading
- Bial, Raymond (2000) Lifeways: The Comanche Benchmark Books, New York, ISBN 0-7614-0864-9, juvenile audience
- Fehrenbach, Theodore Reed (1974) The Comanches: The Destruction of a People Knopf, New York, ISBN 0-394-48856-3; republished in 2003 under the title The Comanches: The History of a People Anchor Books, New York, ISBN 1-4000-3049-8
- Foster, Morris W. (1991) Being Comanche: a social history of an American Indian community Univ Of Arizona Press, Tucson, Arizona, ISBN 0-8165-1367-8
- Hämäläinen, Pekka (2008) The Comanche Empire Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn., ISBN 978-0-300-12654-9; originally his 2001 thesis The Comanche Empire: A Study of Indigenous Power, 1700-1875
- John, Elizabeth A. H. (1975) Storms Brewed in Other Men's Worlds: The Confrontation of the Indian, Spanish, and French in the Southwest, 1540-1795 Texas A&M Press, College Station, Texas, ISBN 0-89096-000-3
- Jones, David E. (1974) Sanapia: Comanche Medicine Woman Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York, ISBN 0-03-088456-X
- Kenner, Charles (1969) A History of New Mexican-Plains Indian Relations University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, Okla., OCLC 2141
- Lodge, Sally (1992) Native American People: The Comanche Rourke Publications, Inc., Vero Beach, Florida, ISBN 0-86625-390-4, Juvenile audience
- Lund, Bill (1997) Native Peoples: The Comanche Indians Bridgestone Books, Mankato, Minnesota, ISBN 1-56065-478-3, Primary school audience
- Mooney, Martin (1993) The Junior Library of American Indians: The Comanche Indians Chelsea House Publishers, New York, ISBN 0-7910-1653-6, Juvenile audience
- Noyes, Stanley (1993) Los Comanches the horse people, 1751-1845 University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, ISBN 0-585-27380-4
- Richardson, Rupert Norval (1933) The Comanche Barrier to South Plains Settlement: A Century and a Half of Savage Resistance to the Advancing White Frontier Arthur H. Clark Company, Glendale, Calif., OCLC 251275170; reprinted in 1996 by Eakin Press, Austin, Texas, OCLC 36404766
- Rollings, Willard (1989) Indians of North America: The Comanche Chelsea House Publishers, New York, ISBN 1-55546-702-4, Juvenile audience
- Secoy, Frank (1953) Changing Military Patterns on the Great Plains (17th century through early 19th century) (Monograph of the American Ethnological Society, No. 21) J. J. Augustin, Locust Valley, N.Y., OCLC 2830994
- Streissguth, Thomas (2000) Indigenous Peoples of North America: The Comanche Lucent Books, San Diego, Calif., ISBN 1-56006-633-4, Juvenile audience
- Thomas, Alfred Barnaby (1940) The Plains Indians and New Mexico, 1751-1778: A collection of documents illustrative of the history of the eastern frontier of New Mexico University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, OCLC 3626655
- Wallace, Ernest, and Hoebel, E. Adamson (1952) The Comanche: Lords of the Southern Plains University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, Okla., OCLC 1175397
External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Comanche |
- Comanche Nation
- The Comanche Language and Cultural Preservation Committee
- Comanche Lodge Learn about the Lords of the Southern Plains!
- Kiowa Comanche Apache Indian Territory Project
- Comanche Indians from the Handbook of Texas Online
- Photographs of Comanche Indians hosted by the Portal to Texas History
- "Comanche" Skyhawks Native American Dedication, accessed 15 August 2005
- "Ted's Arrowheads and Artifacts from the Comancheria" (Ted Dunnegan), accessed 19 August 2005
- History of Native American Tribes: Comanche, accessed 9 August 2005
- "Comanche" on the History Channel, accessed 26 August 2005
- Native Americans: Comanche, accessed 13 August 2005
- "The Texas Comanches" on Texas Indians, accessed 14 August 2005
- Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture - Comanche (American Indians)
Categories: Comanche tribe | Comanche Campaign | Native American tribes in Texas | Plains tribes | Native American tribes | Native American tribes in Oklahoma | Indigenous peoples in the United States | Federally recognized tribes in the United States
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Thu, 22 Jul 2010 14:19:28 GMT+00:00
Lake Country Sun He happened upon a lost dog which he called Comanche . Big Foot's luck held out until he sprained his ankle the next day. He stayed in a cave for several ...
atfsux
Sat, 05 Jul 2008 07:00:00 GM
I'm only a moderately competant wrencher,...so I need some helpfull advice. I'm picking up a used . Comanche. tomorrow that has a bad rear end. It currently drives down the road by means of putting it in 4wd and experiencing ...
Q. I am trying to replace the speakers and stereo in my jeep. it still has everything stock and it just started to go. I think it's about time for some new stuff! I just can't figure out what size of speakers would work best? Also any suggestions on a good in-deck stereo to put in there as well? Thanks a lot for any help!
Asked by Pickles - Thu Apr 16 12:34:05 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Here is a link to crutchfield. They have all the right sizes listed as well as reviews on product. There you can find what you need in your budget
Answered by f4racer99 - Thu Apr 16 13:25:04 2009


