Comanche Warriors vs. Spanish Soldiers : Cuerno Verde's Revenge

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  • Опубліковано 9 лют 2025
  • A group of Spanish soldiers at a remote outpost in what is today New Mexico are forced to fight for their lives against a legendary Comanche war chief.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 502

  • @badbob6689
    @badbob6689 Рік тому +78

    As decendent of these settlers I greatly appreciate your story telling. As a child My Great Grandmother would tell us stories of her childhood. I remeber one of her stories was of Indians who came to trade then later returned to raid and kidnap the village of Mora. This would have been in the 1870's. There was a treaty of trade made between the Comanche and the governer in Santat Fe in 1786 and that held for the most part until 1821.

    • @yosoytercio245
      @yosoytercio245 Рік тому +4

      👍🏼

    • @texasviking1
      @texasviking1 Рік тому +1

      Mora is such a neat little place

    • @osbaldohernandez9174
      @osbaldohernandez9174 Рік тому +1

      My great great grandmother told me her great grand mother was sold to Comanches because her father was a drunk abuser so he made a deal with a band of Comanches

    • @reyesbiz101
      @reyesbiz101 7 місяців тому

      Welp, fk Mora. They shouldn't have been there in the first fkn place.

    • @nobonespurs
      @nobonespurs 7 місяців тому

      her family name?????

  • @brugelxencerf
    @brugelxencerf Рік тому +8

    This an amazing channel. So good. No reenactments! Nice artwork. Great narration and music. Music not too loud! And the content of the course.

  • @coldenhershey857
    @coldenhershey857 Рік тому +10

    Great job! Love your endings “Other stories for other times.”😊

  • @mikechess5081
    @mikechess5081 Рік тому +28

    I grew up in the shadow of the Greenhorn mountains in Colo. I thought it was named for a bunch of dudes (Greenhorns) that shouldn't be out West. I learned it was named after the Comanche chief about three years ago while reading Empire of the Summer Moon. Too bad they don't teach this stuff in schools... or even have an exhibit in the local museum

    • @chrisspera3192
      @chrisspera3192 Рік тому +2

      There is a monument on the way to Rye that tells the story

  • @57WillysCJ
    @57WillysCJ Рік тому +41

    The Ciboleros were some dangerously tough men as well. They lasted til the decline of the buffalo. The trader branch were the Comancheros who were a rough bunch as well.

    • @josealbert4596
      @josealbert4596 Рік тому +2

      The name that the Spanirds gave to the bison-buffaloes was "cibolo", since they saw huge herds of bison when they were searching in the southern United States for the fantastic city of Cibola (abundant with gold). Something that astonished them is that they did not see the herders of these cattle (they did not initially understand that they were wild cattle). They were also impressed that the prairie Indians, when they hunted a bison, ate its raw meat and drank its blood.

    • @The_Conspiracy_Analyst
      @The_Conspiracy_Analyst 11 місяців тому +1

      @@josealbert4596 Goatis would be proud

    • @josealbert4596
      @josealbert4596 11 місяців тому

      There is a good book about the Comanches, titled Empire Comanche, written by Pekka Hamalainen. It seems that the superior orders that the Spanish had was to try to make all the Indians Catholic, including the Comanches, and put them at the service of the Spanish empire, so after having skirmishes, they quickly made peace, at the same time that the Spaniards gave gifts to the Comanches "donated by the king of Spain", consisting of low quality rifles, gunpowder, mirrors, bells, low quality knives, colored fabrics, old clothes. So the conflicts began when the Spaniards were expelled : the Mexicans refused to give any kind of gift to the Comanches. The worst thing for the Comanches were two or three smallpox epidemics almost immediately that killed 80% of them. .

    • @TheMariepi3
      @TheMariepi3 8 місяців тому

      The name that the Spaniards gave to the bison was "cibolos" (because they saw them for the first time when they were looking for a non-existent city (similar to Mexico City) that supposedly existed in the southwest of the United States called "Cibola", in which there was "a lot of gold". When they saw the cibolos (bisons) they were surprised that there were no shepherds taking care of them (they thought they were domestic animals) and that the savages were the Indians who hunted them: sometimes they ate their raw meat and usually they drank the blood of the buffalo after hunting it.

  • @canibezeroun1988
    @canibezeroun1988 Рік тому +19

    I've learned so much from your videos. The Comanche really were fearsome warriors. They were also really cruel. I understand why some measures were taken by the US Cavalry.

    • @danielwebster5748
      @danielwebster5748 Рік тому +11

      Yes nothing was stolen from the Comanche because they were living on stolen land themselves. And they were brutal all men were instantly killed all older kids were instantly killed and babies were instantly killed and the women were sexually assaulted and kept alive including female children. There is no justification for that no matter how mad or angry you are. The women that were recaptured by the Texas rangers the toughest men that ever lived where shells of their former selves. 50% of all rangers died the ones that survive are called the toughest man that Texas has ever known.

    • @gabrielesparza4
      @gabrielesparza4 10 місяців тому +1

      Cowards. 😅

  • @superdave1921
    @superdave1921 Рік тому +77

    Your energetic story telling ability is absolutely amazing, and your voice inflection is second to none! Thanks a million for bringing this history to light.

  • @paulmentzer7658
    @paulmentzer7658 Рік тому +44

    After the adoption of the horse, the Commaches are believed to wear heavy leather armor and used the horse as heavy Cavalry, i.e. charge the enemy. About 1700 the French introduced muskets to tribes along the Mississippi River, those muskets made the heavy leather armor ineffective. Thus the Commaches switched to using the bow from horseback and unarmored charges with lances of what we see in the 1800s.

    • @andrewwood2283
      @andrewwood2283 Рік тому +3

      Any source for this?

    • @thechiefwildhorse4651
      @thechiefwildhorse4651 Рік тому +3

      You can't adopt something that was already here lol
      Also Numunu were here thousands of years before 1800 lol
      -COMANCHE NATION

    • @cbbees1468
      @cbbees1468 Рік тому +19

      ​@@thechiefwildhorse4651 Do the Comanche pay reparations to the Indians they enslaved?

    • @Dog.soldier1950
      @Dog.soldier1950 Рік тому +18

      @@thechiefwildhorse4651 the historic record shows that Indian tribes had not seen the horse until the arrival of the Spanish in the SW and the French and English in the east. Furthermore the genetic record does not support pre Colombian horse, sheep or pigs populations. This is why Comanche raid exploded in size and range when horses arrived in their territory

    • @WarHammer1989
      @WarHammer1989 Рік тому +13

      @@cbbees1468 you think Comanches were never enslaved? That’s a stupid game to play. Humans guilting each other over slavery is like cursing at yourself in the mirror. We all have the blood of slaves and slavers in us at the same time

  • @adidog6243
    @adidog6243 Рік тому +14

    Another good one H.OK.C. You've got yourselves a winning formula there. Further to those leather shields though: According to the diary one of those captured,
    the Comanche much preferred the neck hide from the Buffalo, with the hide side facing inwards.
    And those Bows: Apparently the Comanche could fire them even while dangling from a galloping horse, and holding the arrows in such a way, as to loose
    4 arrows in about 3 seconds.

    • @konradvonschnitzeldorf6506
      @konradvonschnitzeldorf6506 Рік тому +1

      4 arrows in 3 seconds would be from a very week bow. If you want Power you'll need some time to draw.

    • @Ian-yk4pk
      @Ian-yk4pk Рік тому +1

      ​@@konradvonschnitzeldorf6506 short bows are much faster and easier to use on horseback

    • @chrisreeves8037
      @chrisreeves8037 Рік тому +1

      The comanche remind me of special forces. I read in Empire of the Summer Moon, by Gwynn, that they did fire their bows while hanging from the horse neck, and at a quick pace of three. He also went on to write that the warriors collected metal from the Spaniards using it in the place of flint for their tips.

  • @onedollah49
    @onedollah49 Рік тому +10

    Excellent content and presentation. A very enjoyable video, thank you.

  • @Shigur02
    @Shigur02 Рік тому +105

    The hispanic monarchy was not a self-proclaimed empire! It was an empire in all aspects and by all rights!

    • @augustbutler9096
      @augustbutler9096 Рік тому +15

      You’re right, they had the power behind the proclamation to make it so

    • @lorenzoalbertomedina6753
      @lorenzoalbertomedina6753 Рік тому +7

      @@hunnerat-touaregi4439 From your key board !

    • @nomelleganlasnotificaciones
      @nomelleganlasnotificaciones Рік тому +7

      The Spanish never had any empire proclamation in their legal papers. King Carlos I was emperor but of the Holy Roman Empire, not Spanish anything. "Self proclaimed" you see how SELF PROCLAIMED historians use words to minimize others?

    • @reliableenergy6279
      @reliableenergy6279 Рік тому

      Indeed, and the most stupid, incompetent and hypocrite one. A consequential effect of the rotten roman catholic church. Pweeh!!

    • @pamndz1
      @pamndz1 Рік тому +2

      @@nomelleganlasnotificaciones that’s incorrect the Spanish had proclaimed the Imperio Hispania the moment the discovered Americas and started printing on their coins

  • @seansamuellee1352
    @seansamuellee1352 Рік тому +18

    This is a very enjoyable and interesting podcast.
    As a kid, I watched so many Cowboy and Indian films and started reading the history of the Americas.
    Thank for more information

  • @fload46d
    @fload46d 7 місяців тому +2

    Thank you. This is so interesting. Father Juan Padilla was killed by Indians in the middle of Kansas in 1540.

  • @WarHammer1989
    @WarHammer1989 Рік тому +153

    It’s interesting to think how different things would’ve played out if the Comanches could muster armies the size of Steppe Nomad armies like the Mongols or Huns

    • @carlos_cub
      @carlos_cub Рік тому +38

      they put up a hell of a fight but were too decentralized to be so organized as a large army. it is interesting to think about for sure!

    • @adidog6243
      @adidog6243 Рік тому +18

      I also, can see a distinct comparison between Comanche; Hun and; Mongol. All remarkable in the face of opponents with similar-ish weaponry.
      All seemingly unbeatable, when lead by remarkable commanders. And unfortunately, not much good without those remarkable commanders.
      Buuuttt, the Comanche also had to deal with introduced diseases and an opponent with ever evolving weaponry.
      The Comanche were undoubtedly masters of war and as such would either be: Victor or (sad as it turned out) Vanquished.

    • @JoeSmith-sl9bq
      @JoeSmith-sl9bq Рік тому +18

      Not sad at all

    • @thechiefwildhorse4651
      @thechiefwildhorse4651 Рік тому +9

      @@JoeSmith-sl9bq
      Still here
      -COMANCHE NATION

    • @Dog.soldier1950
      @Dog.soldier1950 Рік тому

      Too busy killing each other

  • @trekfortruth2841
    @trekfortruth2841 Рік тому +6

    Excellent narrative, beautifully told.

  • @captainamerica3531
    @captainamerica3531 Рік тому

    Amazing championship narration/storytelling! Thanks

  • @Sandbarfight
    @Sandbarfight Рік тому +4

    Another one thank you

  • @andrewmaccallum2367
    @andrewmaccallum2367 Рік тому +4

    Fantastic channel 👏👏👏 Keep up your great work 👍

  • @mikecody7038
    @mikecody7038 Рік тому +7

    Another great one. The descriptions of the different Comanches, were well done. Thank you.

  • @NigelDeForrest-Pearce-cv6ek
    @NigelDeForrest-Pearce-cv6ek Рік тому +1

    As Always, a Brilliant and Informative Video!!! Thank You!!!

  • @herbscott1827
    @herbscott1827 Рік тому +5

    Very informative and interesting. This would make a good movie.

  • @mikeyh4406
    @mikeyh4406 Рік тому +1

    Great job...
    Keep it up...
    Was amped up to get the notification...

  • @klouism1
    @klouism1 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for the video. Great storytelling. Very interesting.

  • @charleneray8242
    @charleneray8242 Рік тому +1

    Very interesting history story! I love listening to history stories!!

  • @pauladams7344
    @pauladams7344 Рік тому +2

    What a fabulous tale ! More please.....

  • @pietkonijn5522
    @pietkonijn5522 Рік тому +6

    At 18.24 we're looking at a painting by Catlin. A young Mexican captive who made it to a Comanche brave, He Soo Sanches.

    • @secredeath
      @secredeath Рік тому

      Wasn't he a slave? Also what's a Comanche brave?

    • @pietkonijn5522
      @pietkonijn5522 Рік тому

      @@secredeath If you know the painting by Catlin, you know that he's no slave !

  • @WyomingTraveler
    @WyomingTraveler Рік тому +12

    Excellent story

    • @Daylon91
      @Daylon91 Рік тому +1

      He isn't quite accurate though. Our bows were 45-90 ibs max and circling while riding towards an enemy isn't "Comanche tactics" It's plains tactics. Also the Sioux were called the finest horsemen "on this continent or any other" by Crooke who fought the southern and northern tribes. The Comanche were huge and powerful but don't give them everything and say "only the Comanches could do so and so" it just isn't true

    • @glasair38sr
      @glasair38sr Рік тому +1

      @@Daylon91 Jjust began this episode, but I believe the Sioux were considered the ‘finest light Calvary’ on any continent. Both tribes were bad ass for certain (Lords of the Northern & Southern Plains, the Sioux & Comanche)
      I’d have to give the nod to the Comanche for savagery, & the Sioux for sophistication.
      I’m a broken record, but I cannot help feeling that Empire of the Southern Moon is one of the finest books I’ve ever read (probably 5x + !!). Would love a similar work focusing upon the Sioux.

    • @glasair38sr
      @glasair38sr Рік тому

      @@Daylon91 t'epi kin he waste le anpetu!

  • @vgrg7841
    @vgrg7841 Рік тому +129

    The Spanish were great soldiers and great fighting tradition since the moorish occupation of Spain. And ,.for a while, they were the most battle hardened and respected infantry in Europe,.and transfered that military and religious fervor to the new world. Fact. That experience of occupation of their land made them battle hardened until the decline of their empire. The Spanish are very interesting.

    • @jimmyhaley727
      @jimmyhaley727 Рік тому +11

      when a nation bases their livelyhood on a rock (gold) they are doomed

    • @henryperez606
      @henryperez606 Рік тому +2

      @@jimmyhaley727
      You either summed up the whole problem in just a few words or you didn’t

    • @ignacio4159
      @ignacio4159 Рік тому +14

      ​@@henryperez606he didn't because we extracted mostly silver from Perú. Inflation didn't kill the spanish empire, napoleon's occupation and the british taking that chance and fomenting meanwhile independence did.

    • @Jesusisyhvh1
      @Jesusisyhvh1 Рік тому +6

      The Spanish quit against the Apache

    • @olliefoxx7165
      @olliefoxx7165 Рік тому +10

      100% agree. The Spanish were a product of their times. They had to be hard and fierce bc of the people they were up against.

  • @tonyholt90
    @tonyholt90 Рік тому +2

    Found this really interesting thanks 👍

  • @boomslangCA
    @boomslangCA Рік тому +7

    I love your stuff. Not sure if there are other interpretations but yours do ring true, at least up to the point others diminish it. Still, love what you're doing. It's a gap in A history that needs exploring. Thanks dude.

  • @trailingarm63
    @trailingarm63 Рік тому +2

    Fabulous story, really enjoyed it.

  • @sheeitcuhhh6301
    @sheeitcuhhh6301 Рік тому +3

    The Comanche fought to the very end. I read a book called Empire of the Summer Moon about these people. They were incredible. They could hit a target with an arrow from horseback the size of a doorknob. And they didn't do it upright. They would drop to the side of their horses, aim under the horses neck, essentially using the horse as a shield, and loose the arrow.
    They had a war formation as well. A taper type formation. They would approach enemies in a triangular formation. By the time you made contact with the leader of the formation, the tip of the triangle, the rest were already circling out and surrounding your unit. These were calculated warriors for sure. And they terrorized and terrified the white man.

    • @spideranansi929
      @spideranansi929 8 місяців тому

      They were terrified of men like Jeff Turner, who stalked, scalped and killed many of them after a group of Comanchi men invaded his home, killed his wife and children while at home minding their own business just living their lives.

  • @Music-lx1tf
    @Music-lx1tf Рік тому +2

    Great story. Thanks.

  • @darrell9546
    @darrell9546 Рік тому +4

    Yes, the son followed in his father's footsteps, and wore his headdress. I won't give away the story, assuming HOKC will continue it. The headdress is supposedly in the Vatican today. Greenhorn Mountain, SW of Pueblo, CO, is named after Cuerno Verde.

  • @johncorrigan8366
    @johncorrigan8366 Рік тому +1

    This is a great channel

  • @nathanielerskine1875
    @nathanielerskine1875 Рік тому +9

    Great telling of this story. I live in the beautiful Greenhorn Valley, in Colorado, where it is believe that Cuerno Verde II, "The Dangerous Man" was located, engaged and quickly killed by the Spanish. Its always been an interesting story and this was best telling of it, that I know of. Thank you.

    • @quanahburgess5566
      @quanahburgess5566 Рік тому +1

      After the Spanish Natives retreated after the 100 Comanches appeared, the battled lasted 3days... Cuerno Verde was the last warrior who fought til his death....his headress still remains in the Vatican today!

    • @kevinengle2306
      @kevinengle2306 Рік тому

      Excellent!

  • @SB-yj7qo
    @SB-yj7qo Рік тому

    One of the best episodes yet!

  • @TeamJB865
    @TeamJB865 Рік тому

    Amazing storytelling!

  • @virgiljjacas1229
    @virgiljjacas1229 Рік тому +4

    The Comanches and many others did adopted the Shield and Lance on Horseback attack style from the Spaniards and others, from North to South, since the early days before gunpowder and rifles was introduced.
    Read the Winter Long Counts. It never tell lies !!!

  • @conradnelson5283
    @conradnelson5283 Рік тому

    Another great story. Well done.

  • @tudyk21
    @tudyk21 Рік тому +27

    18:00 I have a very hard time believing that the Comanche bow or the bow of any native North American tribe came anywhere close to 100 lbs draw weight.
    Thats like an English long bow, 7 feet long, of yew, made to be drawn & shot like artillery, not a rapid fire, highly mobile weapon of in-dij cavalry .

    • @paulmentzer7658
      @paulmentzer7658 Рік тому +7

      The Mongols carried two bows, a 50 pound bow to be used on horseback, the 100 to 150 pound bows carried by the Mongols were used on foot. This was due to 50 pounds is all you can pull while on horseback. I suspect the Commaches did the same, for it reflect bow and arrow technology.

    • @hezekiahwhiteman1784
      @hezekiahwhiteman1784 Рік тому +3

      Native tribes didn't pull the bow outward as Europeans do, we push the bow outward from our body so as to maintain balance while horseback. There are also accounts of arrows shooting straight through buffalo and sticking into the ground on the other side.

    • @paulmentzer7658
      @paulmentzer7658 Рік тому +7

      @@hezekiahwhiteman1784 First Americans also use the "Mongolia Release," instead of the "Mederterrain Release" when it comes to bows. The "Mederterrain Release" is to use three fingers to pull the string and if you are right handed, the arrow sits on the left side of the bow With the "Mongolia Pul
      l" you use a "Thumb Release" (a device hooks onto your thumb and you pull the string with that devive) and the arrow, if you are right handed, goes to the right of the bow.
      I have never read a clear statement that one was better then the other. The Roman Emperor Maurice, around 590 AD, had his troops use either method (He called them Roman and Persian methods, but is unclear if by Persian he meant what we call "Mongolia release").
      The Mongolia Release had one advantage, you could put an arrow in the bow, three more arrows between the fingers of your right hand (again assuming the shooter is right handed), the archer could shoot all four arrows very quickly, even quicker then Texas Rangers could shoot they six shoot revolvers the Rangers adopted when fighting the Commaches. The Commaches do not seem to see the bow as obsolete till after the introduction of repeating firearms post US Civil War given this high rate of fire power the "Mongolia release" permitted.
      On the other hand the "Mederterrain release" provided a longer pull and thus more power for the same length of pull.
      In Europe, the "Mongolia Release" was tied in with the Composite bow of the Steepes. Given the Composite bow was held together by glue, glue that was NOT immune from the effect of water, was rare in Europe given the higher humidity of Western Europe (and the existence of Yew in Western Europe, a wood that could be used to make 100 to 150 pound bows). The Composite bow of the Steepes also were in the 100 to 150 pound rage but given the lack of Yew and other usable wood, the Composite bow was preferred on the Steepes.
      As to First Americans, I have never seen any record that they used bows over 50 pounds. In the Eastern US, you had Hickory, another wood good gor bows, but the Eastern US and Canada was heavily wooded and a 50 pound bow was good enough given the heavy tree coverage in Eastern North America.
      Thus most First Americans did not need a 100 pull bow, a 50 pound pull bow was good enough for them. The only possible exceptions would be the Commaches and Apaches, both well known bow users in areas with few trees. The Sioux, was a woodland tribe till they adopted the horse and thus no need for anything over 50 pounds while a woodland tribe, and as a horse riding tribe on the Great Plains stuck with the 50 pound bow if shooting on horse back.
      Just an observation that the very strong pull bows of the English Long Bow and the Mongolia Composite bows never seemed to have been used in North America. Even English settlers had dropped them (Mostly due to such bows were tied in with the British Monasteries that had been confiscated by Henry VIII and by 1600 were seen as being tied in with the Catholic elements in what was increasingly Protestant Britain).
      I.e. it was mostly Purtains who settled in the Colonies of New England and the Frontier, Second and Third sons of British Nobility in the South (with a huge population of thevies shipped to the Southern Colonies to avoid conviction of being criminals) with the Dutch in New York and Germans in Pennsylvania.
      Sidenote: In the 1600s and 1700s it was viewed as against international law to ship convicted criminals over Seas. To get around this restriction, people accused of crime were given an offer, pay off the accuser with money such an accused criminal would bring in the American Colonies. Thus a lot of "Indentured Servants" had been unconvicted criminals trying to avoid the noose. This policy ended post American War of Independence, when Britain decided it was OK to ship convicted criminals to Australia.
      Just a comment on Bows and Arrows in North America.

    • @kyledaniels4969
      @kyledaniels4969 Рік тому +3

      It can reach draw weights over 100lbs, and did. Its called a 'composite', and has been used for thousands of years by cultures everywhere.

    • @hezekiahwhiteman1784
      @hezekiahwhiteman1784 Рік тому +5

      @@paulmentzer7658 I'm speaking of my tribe, which is crow, and the way I was told by my grandpa how to shoot these shorter bows, and another factor was that plains Indians commonly covered their bows with hide glue, and sinew or wrapped it in rawhide or a mixture of both, thus increasing draw weight.

  • @Lacteagalaxia
    @Lacteagalaxia Рік тому +32

    Sabia esta historia aunque es bastante.desconocida sobre todo fuera de España parece increible que se ignore muchas veces que hasta mas del 50% de E.Unidos fueron de España mas extension que los britanicos y que estuvieron mucho mas tiempo que los britanicos alli 157 años frente a 300 de España.

    • @loquat44-40
      @loquat44-40 Рік тому +1

      The Spanish crown did control the coastal areas of the northern and Western gulf of Mexico. I live in Northwestern florida in Santa Rosa County in the State of Florida. Many of the older streets of nearby Pensacola Escambia County have Spanish names like Intendencia and Cervantes. Their first settlement here was destroyed by a hurricane and life was hard for them.
      They also controlled coastal of the southeast and were driven out of some of it in the17th century from Savanna, Georgia by the British officer Oglethorpe. Some think our local southern white bulldogs were brought by spanish settlers to the region. The cracker cattle and horses certainly came with spanish to Florida.

    • @sergiofernandez4566
      @sergiofernandez4566 Рік тому +6

      ​@@loquat44-40 Interesting...in addition to that not long ago some Scientists found out through DNA that the U.S longhorn cattle comes from Spanish cattle of the Canary islands ( wich is rather strange).

    • @loquat44-40
      @loquat44-40 Рік тому +3

      @@sergiofernandez4566 It not so strange and also we believe that the spanish imported dogs from Canary Islands.
      It was a supply point for spanish ships going to the americas.
      There is an article in a pdf format that I cannot cut and paste here that explains it. The conquistadores were still in the process of wiping out the indigenous people there that well prepared them to do the same in the Americas.
      Here is its title and authors if one wants to google search it:
      Review: The Canary Islands and America: Studies of a Unique Relationship
      Reviewed Works: Primer Coloquio de Historia Canario-Americana (1976). ; Segundo Coloquio de Historia Canario-Americana (1977). ; Tercer Coloquio de Historia Canario-Americana (1978). ; Cuarto Coloquio de Historia Canario-Americana (1980). ; Primeras Jornadas de Estudios Canarias-America (1978). ; Segundas Jornadas de Estudios Canarias-America (1979). ; La Emigracion de Las Islas Canarias en el Siglo Diecinueve. by Julio Hernandez Garcia
      Review by: James J. Parsons
      Latin American Research Revie

    • @loquat44-40
      @loquat44-40 Рік тому +2

      @@sergiofernandez4566
      The canaries were a way point and supply place for spanish shipping on their way to the new world. We also believe that the larger working and war dogs of the Canary islands were sent to the new world.
      journal article
      Review: The Canary Islands and America: Studies of a Unique Relationship
      Reviewed Works: Primer Coloquio de Historia Canario-Americana (1976). ; Segundo Coloquio de Historia Canario-Americana (1977). ; Tercer Coloquio de Historia Canario-Americana (1978). ; Cuarto Coloquio de Historia Canario-Americana (1980). ; Primeras Jornadas de Estudios Canarias-America (1978). ; Segundas Jornadas de Estudios Canarias-America (1979). ; La Emigracion de Las Islas Canarias en el Siglo Diecinueve. by Julio Hernandez Garcia
      Review by: James J. Parsons
      Latin American Research Review

    • @shauny2285
      @shauny2285 Рік тому +1

      Let's not forget the French who also colonized North America.

  • @gator83261
    @gator83261 Рік тому +2

    Very good video.

  • @prigual2901
    @prigual2901 Рік тому +4

    Nice video, and good drawings. In Spain history is not told well, specially from what happened in America (north and south). Regards.

  • @ryandillingsworth3540
    @ryandillingsworth3540 Рік тому +2

    Cannot wait

  • @Nobody-Nowhere-USA
    @Nobody-Nowhere-USA Рік тому

    I used to have to travel through Ojo Caliente every week, this story always come to mind, it is a neat little community!

  • @geraldgriffin8220
    @geraldgriffin8220 Рік тому +6

    It's a wonder the Spanish didn't just say shoot at the horses bigger target and it would be a long walk home for the rider.

  • @wisconsinfarmer4742
    @wisconsinfarmer4742 Рік тому

    The value added comments are tops.
    Human beings on earth
    we will figure it out yet.

  • @timwalsh7287
    @timwalsh7287 Рік тому

    Very interesting and well done.

  • @josemilio65
    @josemilio65 Рік тому +4

    Thats north America,here down south,was a tribe know as Araucanos O mapuches they were like twins Comanche ,Chile and Argentina suffered the scorch of the raids for many centuries until the Remington come.

  • @Daylon91
    @Daylon91 Рік тому +9

    Riding towards an enemy while your circling isnt "Comanche tactics" It's plains tactics. You're giving the Comanche everything like saying they were the best horsemen whereas Crooke who fought both south and northern tribes said the Sioux were the best horsemen "on this continent or any other" the Comanche were powerful of course but don't make it seem like they were the only ones who rode like them. The Sioux would also hang off the side of their horse and shoot their arrows and guns. The Comanche did everything first for sure though but if they could do everything by themselves, they could have erased the Apaches and Cheyenne but couldn't. Also their bows or our bows were 45-90 ibs max.

    • @cammacgregor9354
      @cammacgregor9354 Рік тому

      ...your information is not accurate

    • @JDoe-gf5oz
      @JDoe-gf5oz Рік тому +4

      @@cammacgregor9354 Waiting for the correction.

    • @Daylon91
      @Daylon91 Рік тому

      @@cammacgregor9354 look at the Wagon Box fight. Eye witness accounts there.

    • @Daylon91
      @Daylon91 Рік тому +1

      @Cam MacGregor my information comes from eye witness accounts and people's comments on fighting indians like Crooke and Benteen

    • @thechiefwildhorse4651
      @thechiefwildhorse4651 Рік тому

      @@Daylon91
      Numunu taught Sioux how to ride
      -COMANCHE NATION

  • @luisvelez5695
    @luisvelez5695 Рік тому +25

    The Spanish soldiers were the best horseman in Europe at that time .

    • @mutawi3i
      @mutawi3i Рік тому +1

      Ofcourse. Learned the tactics of Moors.

    • @AV57
      @AV57 Рік тому

      The Magyars and Hussars would protest that.

    • @el_petaca5705
      @el_petaca5705 Рік тому +1

      Yes, Luis

    • @KarlCruz655
      @KarlCruz655 Рік тому +2

      ​@@mutawi3iSo that's the secret why the moors lose the iberia huh, sharing tactics

    • @KarlCruz655
      @KarlCruz655 Рік тому

      ​@@mutawi3iArabs are always losers they never had a single inch of territory in the west (France, Germany, England , but when the west conquers they always lose since the days of Alexander to the British empire😂

  • @jelkel25
    @jelkel25 Рік тому +4

    Leather Jacks were pretty standard poor man's or troops that needed to keep their mobilities armour back into Elizabethan times, probably older. Not a new thing in the era discussed though of course they were adapted for the circumstances they were being used in and how much had been spent on the item.

  • @alexanderbreglia7282
    @alexanderbreglia7282 Рік тому +4

    I read many people, especially young Texas born and bred Texas youth grew up hearing about the legendary Texas Rangers. A fuse was lit at Parkers Fort that would burn for 40 years. Obviously Texas youth definitely have to know of the Princeton educated Historian and author T.R. Fahrenbach who had written "Comanche's the Destruction of a People" and "Fire and Ice" A History of Mexico " and many other related books.

  • @ryanhtalbot
    @ryanhtalbot Рік тому +4

    what’s the background music? it always fits so perfect

  • @ludwigderzanker9767
    @ludwigderzanker9767 Рік тому +2

    Guys, a good one today, but I'm used to be. I doubt seriously the kind of weapons the Spaniards especially the age of it, Mexico city gave a hoot to the Northern provinces and had always problems of their own. But the picturing of Green Horne,his court and his absolute power sounds to me like a very Spanish view of the world...The chieftain by heritage and the number of the Comanche too. ❤your channel and stick with your lessons. From Northern Germany God's Blessings Ludwig.

    • @historyattheokcorral
      @historyattheokcorral  Рік тому +1

      Thanks Ludwig! Blessings from Texas friend!

    • @epifanias1
      @epifanias1 Рік тому

      Not everything is the age of the weapons, also dealing with the population, knowing the terrain, the weather... All Native Americans from north to south were led by the cacique, the chief of the tribe, of the band. The heritage that the Germans leave from their culture to the future are luxury cars and an arrogant and psychopathic empire of 10 years.

  • @kenfox22
    @kenfox22 11 місяців тому

    Your Spanish pronunciation is very fluid and impressive

  • @daveweiss5647
    @daveweiss5647 Рік тому +1

    I love stories from the spanish west, they are so rarely told, its such an amazing land it was always so mysterious the spanish controlled it but barely even settled it, missionaries, a few soldiers and a handful of ranchers who had lands the size of small countries. They couldnbarely get any peasants from Mexico to go, I guess the local tribes were too dangerous? Then withing a couple decades of arriving the Americans had settled it.

  • @judithcampbell1705
    @judithcampbell1705 Рік тому

    I was always sad when the Indians lost a battle. The Spanish are a great people. I love learning history, thank you Sir for speaking truth about it.

  • @laurolavanda1807
    @laurolavanda1807 Рік тому +11

    Note1:The Comanches were cousins of the Mexicas(Aztec)
    Note2:Those "Spanish soldiers" were mostly indians,as well the "Spanish settlers",Otomies,Mixtecos,etc,etc, 🤷🏽‍♂

    • @sergiofernandez4566
      @sergiofernandez4566 Рік тому +6

      Yes, most of them were indians but somehow they were ALSO Spanish as they were subjects of the crown.

    • @defyjayy8335
      @defyjayy8335 Рік тому +1

      @@sergiofernandez4566 shut up Sergio

    • @petrolillos
      @petrolillos Рік тому

      @@sergiofernandez4566 Exactly.

    • @sergiofernandez4566
      @sergiofernandez4566 Рік тому

      @@defyjayy8335 The Habsburg's Empire had not only European Spain also have territories all over Europe, Asia, África and América SO It had Italians, Belgians, Dutch, German and French SUBJECTS (apart from "Indians" and Philippinos ) so even the "core" was in Madrid all of them were equal. Educate yourself a little you arrogant ignorant.

    • @sergiofernandez4566
      @sergiofernandez4566 Рік тому +2

      @@petrolillos Le he echado un vistazo a su canal y con sorpresa veo que compartimos gran parte de canales visitados ( a pesar de que no estoy suscrito a algunos de ellos). Un saludo de Canarias Jesús.

  • @kendallkahl8725
    @kendallkahl8725 Рік тому +4

    Without the Spanish fighting down the Indians the west would have been even more brutal. The stories of the battles with the Navajo are hair raising. We should up to them civilized sheep herders.

  • @Rmn-6324
    @Rmn-6324 Рік тому +2

    In any case, the Comanches lost the war to the Spanish soldiers and their territory to the United States.

  • @danieljones1981
    @danieljones1981 Рік тому +1

    Wonder if that's where " green horn" like first year on the job, comes from?

  • @wildcolonialman
    @wildcolonialman Рік тому +1

    Excellent. Read several times, and in front of me now, harrowing but fascinating, Empire of the Summer Moon, Quannah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the most powerful Tribe in American History, by S C Gwynne.

  • @mikechess5081
    @mikechess5081 Рік тому

    Where in today's map is the presidio located? Give me a close city, probably in Colorado

  • @tudyk21
    @tudyk21 Рік тому +3

    15:05 escopeta is a shotgun

  • @tylermoulton7294
    @tylermoulton7294 Рік тому

    I’ve stayed on a ranch right under the green horn mountains multiple times and my friend lives in the area

  • @HistoricallyRomantic
    @HistoricallyRomantic Рік тому +17

    ¡Felices Pascuas!
    Vaya con Dios.
    The Spanish had a weapon the Rangers didn't have, the one true religion, Catholicism. 🙏🏻

    • @jubjub15
      @jubjub15 Рік тому

      Basado

    • @HistoricallyRomantic
      @HistoricallyRomantic Рік тому

      @@michaelhauser6440 You like committing blasphemy in the comments section of UA-cam videos?

    • @michaelhauser6440
      @michaelhauser6440 Рік тому +3

      @@HistoricallyRomantic It's not blasphemy, it's a fact. Even Jesus would admit that

    • @mikelatino8126
      @mikelatino8126 Рік тому

      AMEN

  • @tudyk21
    @tudyk21 Рік тому +3

    19:05 That looks like an "actual" Winchester '94!

  • @loquat44-40
    @loquat44-40 Рік тому

    Excellent

  • @seansamuellee1352
    @seansamuellee1352 Рік тому +12

    People say the invasion of America and Mexico was a bad thing for individuals who lived there first.
    But having neighbours like the Coms, Apaches , and Aztecs , it must have been hell .
    I think things would have been worse before the Spanish and Americans came

    • @richlisola1
      @richlisola1 Рік тому +1

      Slavery in the mines, worked to death on encomiendas, blitzed by smallpox, as old world illnesses cut their numbers down, wave after wave of murderous sickness-Then being maligned by some sociopathic priests blaming their deaths on them not knowing the truth faith?
      This all done by an alien race, that swooped in from across seas.
      That’s better?

    • @thekaiser3815
      @thekaiser3815 Рік тому +2

      ​@@richlisola1 that is the bad, now list the good, and be honest.

    • @seansamuellee1352
      @seansamuellee1352 Рік тому +2

      @richlisola1 just read your reply.
      Sociopathic Priests ?
      Good thing Islam didn't get there first.
      At least thousands were not killed by having the hearts ripped out.
      And we're the Aztec Priests and they Mayan Priest physopathic as well ?
      Good thing the Catholics got there first

  • @memer1271
    @memer1271 Рік тому +3

    Credit where credit is due, the Spanish fought well and beat the Comanche, and that you must respect.

  • @alan30189
    @alan30189 10 місяців тому

    Good stuff, but you have to turn the background music down. It’s too loud and annoying.

  • @frankmithra6140
    @frankmithra6140 Рік тому +6

    Thank you. Support Native Americans. God bless them.

  • @robertgiles9124
    @robertgiles9124 Рік тому +3

    background music gets annoying after a while

  • @captainpinky8307
    @captainpinky8307 Рік тому +1

    15:03 would the arrows just "Bounce" off the leather armour?

    • @Master...deBater
      @Master...deBater Рік тому

      They would likely stick...but not penetrate, except at very short range.

  • @58landman
    @58landman 7 місяців тому

    Bows used by the Mongols who controlled the Stepps of Mongolia and Russia did use bows that were highly refined and made from horn from wild sheep or native woods. Those bows were hard to draw but the Mongols were well adapted to their use and arrows from these bows were made to pierce armor. Not all of them approached a draw weight of 100+/- pounds but examples do exist. Bows used by the Western wild tribes on horseback, were usually short and designed to be shot from any position and by modern standards most had a draw weight from 40-60 pounds. Their short length precluded heavier draw weights and the skill of Indian archers was a thing that was developed at an early age. They were indeed accurate but being able to shoot rapidly, not necessarily accurately, was the secret to Comanche success with a bow.

  • @vegashawkfan59
    @vegashawkfan59 Рік тому

    This was a half hour long video that says, "Nothing... nothing... nothing... greenhorn dies... his son is, then, also known as greenhorn." Was there a story that I missed in there? Fits in with many UA-cam videos about the history of the old west.

  • @Truly1Tom
    @Truly1Tom Рік тому +8

    We're being told about Comancheros.

  • @coffeebreakchat2450
    @coffeebreakchat2450 Рік тому +2

    What no caltrops?
    This ancient weapon could have given the cavalry a very bad day indeed.....

  • @trukeesey8715
    @trukeesey8715 Рік тому +2

    Never blame the son for the deeds of the father, nor the brother for the deeds of the "brother." -- Commandment from Wr-Alda.
    Thus, blaming a whole tribe for the deeds of some of its members is something that will bring destruction to the doers in the end, QED.
    Listen to Prem Rawat!

  • @spencergay8283
    @spencergay8283 Рік тому +8

    Just wondering whether the Comanches owe reparation to the Indians they captured and sold as slaves?

    • @nocapbussin
      @nocapbussin Рік тому +2

      No. Only white people in all of known history were slavers and conquerors. Everyone else were peaceful Hippies. Sub-Saharan Africans had magical powers and built cities like Wakanda and built the pyramids, the Muslims were only spreading the religion of peace, the Aztecs and Mayans weren't really doing human sacrifices, they were actually performing the first open heart surgeries that the evil White People misunderstood as religious sacrifices.

  • @PlunderAndPillage
    @PlunderAndPillage Рік тому

    Is this related to calling someone a "Green Horn"?

  • @texasRoofDoctor
    @texasRoofDoctor Рік тому +5

    This episode reminds me of one of my favorite stories about the Spanish and Comanche. Like Byzantine Emperors with various enemies, the Spanish did the math and decided it was better to buy off the Comanche with an annual tribute payment. This kind of worked until the Mexican Revolution ended Spanish control of New Spain.
    When the Comanche showed up for their yearly haul of gifts the Mexican official in charge explained that they had a budget problem and there would be no gifts that year.
    Comanches: "wrong answer".
    They proceeded to devastate Northern Mexico because of the affront of what was to them a broken treaty. Not sure why but I do find this pretty funny as a meme.

    • @Chepicoro
      @Chepicoro Рік тому +3

      It was an idiotic policy to buy peace through tribute... There was not a "king" or big chief of the Comanche to make treaties so each band of Comanches in practice was independent, also they could have peace with one community and destroy the next one... Juan Bautista de Anza or Jack Hays showed that the right answer was always counter raids or punitive expeditions to destroy Comanche camps, that force them to make peace or deter them to attack

    • @texasRoofDoctor
      @texasRoofDoctor Рік тому +3

      @@Chepicoro True. The Spanish Empire was pretty weak by 1800 and Texas was not a profitable or revenue-producing area so, they had very little military presence there.

  • @blueduck9409
    @blueduck9409 Рік тому +1

    I think most people dont realize that it was native American tribes like the commanche and apache that is what kept all of Mexico and south america from invading north America. When the tribes were subdued, the door was left open.

  • @josephoneil3093
    @josephoneil3093 Рік тому

    I’m wondering why they broke away from the Shoshone in the first place.

  • @catlady9066
    @catlady9066 Рік тому +2

    I wonder what would have happened if the Comanche, Apache, Kiowa and other Plains and desert tribes had united to drive out the European settlers. Things could be so different now.

    • @Master...deBater
      @Master...deBater Рік тому +2

      Well...the Lakota, Cheyenne and Arapaho tried that and only succeeded in winning a few battles, but eventually lost the war. The Indians problem wasn't simply numbers. It was a lack of logistical support. Since everything they had was handmade or stolen...when they lost a battle their horses, weapons, and food were not easily replaced. That's why the US Army would destroy captured villages. They knew that it would take months or even years to replace the lost goods. On the other hand...European technology allowed mass production of weapons and food to sustain their ability to wage relentless warfare. Which gave the enemy no respite to replace their losses. It was always going to be a simple matter of attrition!

    • @lamontpearce170
      @lamontpearce170 Рік тому

      Divide and conquer and sadly its working. All through history..

    • @henryperez606
      @henryperez606 Рік тому

      @@mikearnold7982
      The Aztecs were using their neighbors for human sacrifices. I’m not exactly sure I would count that as pitting neighbors against each other. The victim tribes just did not want to have the beating hearts ripped out of there Chest anymore.

  • @griffhenshaw5631
    @griffhenshaw5631 Рік тому +1

    I was taught as a young boy how the Comanche were the Supreme horsemen of the southwest. Their stature was how many horses they had. Also the quality and health of said horses. I was told comparted to apache who would often steal a horse snd ride to death. Also i believe when tbey moved south they pushed apache west. Comanches were feared but respected.?

  • @royhobbs5167
    @royhobbs5167 10 місяців тому

    With every story I hear the Indian wars make more and more sense.

  • @tudyk21
    @tudyk21 Рік тому +1

    15:50 Criollos. Cree-ö-'yös

  • @orthoff123
    @orthoff123 Рік тому

    perfect

  • @luisvelez5695
    @luisvelez5695 Рік тому

    These south west native tribes were spanish speakers from raiding and trading into spanish and later Mexican lands .

  • @roberthines4882
    @roberthines4882 Рік тому +5

    AS A FELLOW COMANCHIE BEING PRIDE MONTH , I DONT THINK THE QUEERS WOULD LAST 5 MINUTES AT A PRIDE PARADE IF THE TRUE COMANCHIES SHOWED UP!!!!!!!!!!! JUST SAYIN!!!!!!!! THIS IS A TIME WHEN MEN WERE MEN!!!!!!!!! TRUE MEN!!!!!!!!! LOVE THESE STORIES!!!!!!!!!!! JESUS IS LORD!!!!!!!!!!

    • @Nonviableaccount
      @Nonviableaccount Рік тому +2

      Schizoposting

    • @saintultra2737
      @saintultra2737 Рік тому

      You’re deranged. I know of our tribe’s true history and if you hung around any of the people who work in the cultural preservation department, you’d be laughed at. You’re over here celebrating the religion forced on us, repeating your master’s words. Go read your history.

  • @deanpeash8953
    @deanpeash8953 10 місяців тому

    I'm pretty sure they didn't have carbines in the late 1700s nor the early 1800s

  • @trukeesey8715
    @trukeesey8715 Рік тому +1

    Paul Smox.
    Listen to Prem Rawat!

  • @elidesportelli325
    @elidesportelli325 Рік тому

    0:40 beatiful

  • @mattyallen3396
    @mattyallen3396 Рік тому +2

    Can see why the USA govt put them down

  • @tylermoulton7294
    @tylermoulton7294 Рік тому

    I heard he was killed by a ravine near rye and Colorado city and pueblo

  • @dougmoore8314
    @dougmoore8314 Рік тому

    It’s a question of culture that are very different. Between the mongols and the Comanche.

  • @davemccormickmusic
    @davemccormickmusic Рік тому

    that out of tune background music is very irritating.