The Comanches were the only tribe from the Pacific side of the Continental Divide to carve out a permanent niche for themselves on the Plains after the arrival of Europeans and horses in the region. Although they based their life almost totally on the horse, the Comanches remained unique in many ways among plains tribes. They neglected the annual Sun Dance rituals and communal buffalo hunts common to other tribes and failed to develop a system of soldier societies to regulate various tribal activities. Despite the many scholarly studies of them, much needs to be explained about their societies, such as the reasons a poorly organized and unpopulous folk could achieve such success against both other Indians and Europeans
In the larger context of Plains Indian history, the Northern Cheyenne seem to drop from public consc...
In the larger context of Plains Indian history, the Northern Cheyenne seem to drop from public consc...
The admirable Chelsea House Publishers\u27 series for young adults treats fifty-eight tribal groups ...
The Comanche Empire is an important and well-researched book that traces the development of the Coma...
The precise nature of pre-reservation Comanche political organization has long been a vexing questio...
While the merging of historical and anthropological outlooks has been a productive trend in Plains I...
This work presents a body of edited ethnographic field notes on the Comanches, the majority of it fr...
The enormous increase in ethnohistorical studies over the past generation or two has made room for a...
The Cheyenne by Stan Hoig is one volume in Chelsea House Publishers\u27 series on Indians of North A...
Slightly more than a century ago the dreaded Comanche Moon of each month virtually assured devasta...
Historically, the Comanche inhabited the southern Great Plains region of what is now the United Stat...
The Red River War of 1874-75—also known as the Buffalo War after its principal cause, the invasion o...
Few works on the Southern Plains have taken a decisively theoretical approach to the understanding o...
Texas has traditionally been viewed as an expansive landscape occupied by a relatively small and wid...
Unlike the Native American tribes of the northern Plains-especially the Teton Sioux-the Indians of t...
In the larger context of Plains Indian history, the Northern Cheyenne seem to drop from public consc...
In the larger context of Plains Indian history, the Northern Cheyenne seem to drop from public consc...
The admirable Chelsea House Publishers\u27 series for young adults treats fifty-eight tribal groups ...
The Comanche Empire is an important and well-researched book that traces the development of the Coma...
The precise nature of pre-reservation Comanche political organization has long been a vexing questio...
While the merging of historical and anthropological outlooks has been a productive trend in Plains I...
This work presents a body of edited ethnographic field notes on the Comanches, the majority of it fr...
The enormous increase in ethnohistorical studies over the past generation or two has made room for a...
The Cheyenne by Stan Hoig is one volume in Chelsea House Publishers\u27 series on Indians of North A...
Slightly more than a century ago the dreaded Comanche Moon of each month virtually assured devasta...
Historically, the Comanche inhabited the southern Great Plains region of what is now the United Stat...
The Red River War of 1874-75—also known as the Buffalo War after its principal cause, the invasion o...
Few works on the Southern Plains have taken a decisively theoretical approach to the understanding o...
Texas has traditionally been viewed as an expansive landscape occupied by a relatively small and wid...
Unlike the Native American tribes of the northern Plains-especially the Teton Sioux-the Indians of t...
In the larger context of Plains Indian history, the Northern Cheyenne seem to drop from public consc...
In the larger context of Plains Indian history, the Northern Cheyenne seem to drop from public consc...
The admirable Chelsea House Publishers\u27 series for young adults treats fifty-eight tribal groups ...