enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Comanche - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comanche

    Comanche people today belong to the federally recognized Comanche Nation, headquartered in Lawton, Oklahoma. [1] The Comanche language is a Numic language of the Uto-Aztecan family. Originally, it was a Shoshoni dialect, but diverged and became a separate language. [5] The Comanche were once part of the Shoshone people of the Great Basin. [6]

  3. Comanche history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comanche_history

    Comanche history for the eighteenth century falls into three broad and distinct categories: (1) the Comanche and their relationship with the Spanish, Puebloans, Ute, and Apache peoples of New Mexico; (2) The Comanche and their relationship with the Spanish, Apache, Wichita, and other peoples of Texas; and, (3) The Comanche and their relationship with the French and the Indian tribes of ...

  4. Comancheria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comancheria

    Along with this, the Comanche empire collapsed after their villages were repeatedly decimated by epidemics of smallpox and cholera in the late 1840s; causing their population to plunge from 20,000 to just a few thousand by the 1870s. [8] The Comanche resolved most of the challenges facing them in the 1830s with adroit diplomacy.

  5. Comanchero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comanchero

    Painting of a Comanchero or Comanche Indian by George Catlin, in 1835. The Comancheros were a group of 18 th - and 19 th-century traders based in northern and central New Mexico. They made their living by trading with the nomadic Great Plains Indian tribes in northeastern New Mexico, West Texas, and other parts of the southern plains of North ...

  6. Captured by the Comanche in 1836, her long line of ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/captured-comanche-1836-her-long...

    Among them were great granddaughters, Cynthia Ann Parker (Whitewolf) (1924-2008) and Cynthia Ann Parker (Baquera) (1933-2003). As a child, Baquera traveled with her family to expositions and fairs ...

  7. Ute people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ute_people

    The name "Comanche" is from the Ute word for them, kɨmantsi, meaning enemy. [45] The Pawnee, Osage and Navajo also became enemies of the Plains Indians by about 1840. [46] Some Ute bands fought against the Spanish and Pueblos with the Jicarilla Apache and the Comanche. The Ute were sometimes friendly but sometimes hostile to the Navajo. [15]

  8. Comanche Wars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comanche_Wars

    The Comanche were noted as fierce combatants who practiced an emphatic resistance to European-American influence and encroachment upon their lands. Comanche power peaked in the 1840s when they conducted large-scale raids hundreds of miles into Mexico proper, while also warring against the Anglo-Americans and Tejanos who had settled in ...

  9. Places where modern day cannibalism still exists - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2016-06-29-places-where-modern...

    The tribe is located 100 miles away from where Michael Rockefeller, a son of then-New York governor Nelson Rockefeller, disappeared in 1961. He is thought to be a victim of an another Papuan tribe.