The Comanches: One of the Most Feared Tribes by North American Settlers - See U in History

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 12 вер 2024
  • The Comanches: One of the Most Feared Tribes by North American Settlers - See U in History
    #Mythology #SeeUinHistory #History #MythologyExplained

КОМЕНТАРІ • 922

  • @ryanleblanc6817
    @ryanleblanc6817 2 роки тому +168

    Comanches were the most feared tribe. They held back the English, French, and Spanish from settling western America for a few hundred years.

    • @SoBayK80
      @SoBayK80 2 роки тому +5

      An archer did a science dive on Comanche speed arrows... it's here on UA-cam, somewhere

    • @thechiefwildhorse4651
      @thechiefwildhorse4651 2 роки тому

      @@shanice5722
      Horses were here long before white people existed.
      3000 year old paintings of horses in South America.
      Stop regurgitating what your uneducated parents taught you.
      -COMANCHE NATION

    • @mariawest250
      @mariawest250 Рік тому +7

      Sad at the end they lost their lives

    • @dustinsykes2671
      @dustinsykes2671 Рік тому +10

      @@mariawest250not all of em lol most tribes r still here pal

    • @Nikeel_A.W
      @Nikeel_A.W Рік тому

      ​@@mariawest250 Maybe if they didn't go around gang raping, mutilating, torturing, and murdering every single man woman and child they came across including other indigenous tribes. They'd have survived.

  • @alimccreery755
    @alimccreery755 6 місяців тому +10

    I’m Cherokee and I want to thank everyone here for sharing 💪👍🥰

  • @isaiahwolftail867
    @isaiahwolftail867 2 роки тому +56

    Im in the Blackfoot Confederacy nation tribe. In Canada, southern Alberta. Thanks for the shout-out man. This is awesome. Natives are getting more and more recognized and remember colonial immigrant society.

    • @idgaf1241
      @idgaf1241 2 роки тому +5

      I'm a cree from Northern alberta, my grandmother is Blackfoot. Salute!

    • @whatinthefudge5346
      @whatinthefudge5346 2 роки тому +4

      Assimilating is all we wanted

  • @0so15
    @0so15 2 роки тому +31

    Comanches, so fierce that the revolver had to be invented just to have a fighting chance against their fully automatic bows

    • @user-if2mg9no3o
      @user-if2mg9no3o 3 місяці тому

      I did not know that interesting.

    • @borrago
      @borrago 2 місяці тому +1

      The revolver only leveled the playing field. It was the lever action that finally tipped the odds against them.

    • @richlisola1
      @richlisola1 Місяць тому +1

      Oh yes, breach loading guns had nothing on the bow. A skilled Comanche horseman could loose twenty arrows in the time it took a White settler to load and fire his gun twice, before the making of the revolver.
      And let’s not forget that the Comanche adapted well to firearms-Arming themselves, learning their use, their ongoing adaptation of new tactics.
      If the Comanche had the numbers and had been able to protect the buffalo, they might have had a chance to withstand the White influx.

  • @genemowatt5179
    @genemowatt5179 2 роки тому +12

    Probably one of the best brief videos about my people I’ve ever watched very respectful but also blunt about our people

  • @YouT00ber
    @YouT00ber 2 роки тому +65

    Fun fact: when a Comanche died, any slaves he owned were killed with them. This video mentioned burning all their property of the deceased & it mentioned captives/slaves were property.
    Check out a book called “nine years among the Indians” by Herman Lehrmann, who was taken captive and became member of both Apache and Comanche tribes. Wild stuff

    • @thechiefwildhorse4651
      @thechiefwildhorse4651 2 роки тому +2

      What slaves?
      Emmit Tills father?
      -COMANCHE NATION

    • @franklin28823
      @franklin28823 2 роки тому +3

      You say check out a book! I say ask them yourself.

    • @YouT00ber
      @YouT00ber 2 роки тому +8

      @@franklin28823 Herman Lehrmann was born 1850-ish, he’s dead by now. Can’t ask him personally.

    • @wadesmoke9726
      @wadesmoke9726 Рік тому

      People also need to realize that back in those times before all the settlers began coming West in covered wagons, their were these magazines that were like dime store entertainment that white folks bought to read. Many were total made up stories of white captives and their encounters with the demonic boogy men savages and that helped form Alot of the opinion the settlers held before coming West. If a group of Indians even tried to approach they would be shot at. By white law in those days. A black man was not included in the United States Constitution because he was only considered to be part human Sub human. In the Constitution it also mentions that the Native Americans were also exempt from the Constitution because they were savages and had absolutely no human soul. That's the attitude all Natives back then faced. They had no care to learn any cultural respectful way to deal with a party of Natives approaching them to know why they were trespassing and the way was for them to offer food horses and gifts for a totally unwanted intrusion. If they tried to approach they were shot at. The US government sent out a note of advice when traveling West on how to deal with the wild Indians when they encountered them on the journey and it was to not have any friendly relationships with them.

    • @philipstowers4741
      @philipstowers4741 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@@YouT00ber
      Woah dude, spoilers..

  • @sifilore9462
    @sifilore9462 2 роки тому +226

    More Native American tribes history until we've covered them all for a 40 or something mins vid of all together. 2 more ideas...talk about thunderbirds and pukwudgies, the American equivalent ta Europe's well renowned phoenixes and goblins.

    • @caseygobel1227
      @caseygobel1227 2 роки тому +6

      I agree, my mom's side of the family is part of the Choctaw tribe. So it would be amazing to learn more about the different types, their culture and everything.

    • @Turtlemilk
      @Turtlemilk 2 роки тому +3

      10 Comanche versus 10 Mongolians, who would win?

    • @davidleatherneck
      @davidleatherneck 2 роки тому +10

      @@Turtlemilk ,, Well, without a doubt the Mongols would win. They ride Harleys.

    • @YuuSHiiiN
      @YuuSHiiiN 2 роки тому +4

      @@Turtlemilk Aside from having superior armor and weapons. Mongols had much more experience fighting all different kinds of more advanced civilizations and winning. Plus Arbans consisting of 10 men is the basic Mongolian military structure, they were required to live together, operate together and fight as a unit on the battlefield, hence there'd be more cohesion among the 10 Mongols for carrying out more varieties of battlefield maneuvers.

    • @Fatherofheroesandheroines
      @Fatherofheroesandheroines 2 роки тому

      We?

  • @thedogman7846
    @thedogman7846 2 роки тому +36

    I would love to see some content on the native mezoamericans. We are also native americans! Greetings from a venezuelan native. :-)

  • @TheAllyNative
    @TheAllyNative 2 роки тому +295

    It would be amazing if you made a video on the Native Americans that were hispanicized and lived on the missions, most people haven’t realized that some Hispanics/Latinos are descended from them and not just Spaniards.

    • @juanbautista7214
      @juanbautista7214 2 роки тому +60

      The crazy thing is alot of "hispanic" especially with Mexican roots are majority native. I've read that if people in Mexico were to claim their native roots like in the USA something like 80% of the population would be native. But we get thrown under the bus for not being 100% when that happens.
      My fathers like 70% native and 9% Spanish and 8% Portuguese so like 17% total Hispanic/latino I would say. Considered Mexican or Hispanic anything but native American even though he grew up making metates with his otomi speaking grandmother.
      Even the terms we have when talking about native culture is pre_hispanic, pre- columbian. It only emphasizes the latin side like so we forget the native side

    • @TheAllyNative
      @TheAllyNative 2 роки тому +33

      @@juanbautista7214 I agree, I found out fairly recently that I was majority Native. What’s annoying is that we have to put White/Hispanic on identification forms well at least I’ve always been told to do so, even though there are Americans of African descent that have just as much European blood as some Hispanicized Natives even having European last names too but no one is going to tell them to identify White.

    • @juanbautista7214
      @juanbautista7214 2 роки тому +17

      @@TheAllyNative lol 😆 yep. I had to get a new birth certificate because passport office wouldn't accept my old one. Under race it says Caucasian. Colonialism still in effect erasing the memory of some of our closest descendants. I'm like a 3rd total in European descendant, and 54% native, which i always figured i was at least half, but if its not a Dawes roll, USA recognized tribe most act like you don't know what your talking about.

    • @TheAllyNative
      @TheAllyNative 2 роки тому +16

      @@juanbautista7214 it’s crazy how the government has Native American as a race, but you have to be part of a tribe or culture which is how ethnicity works not race which is based on phenotypical traits and genetics. Also the reason we have to put White/Hispanic is because of the caste system the Spanish had before. I’m 62% Indigenous and like 26% Spanish.

    • @johnnywilliams7237
      @johnnywilliams7237 2 роки тому +12

      I think many of us have known that 4 years.

  • @SoBayK80
    @SoBayK80 2 роки тому +10

    This is a really great, succinct video!
    My great grandmother was Comanche, my grandfather became a Lt. Col teaching dentist while serving in Army Calvary. I spent every summer at the allied rez Ft. Sill and campfire girls outside Lawton, OK.

  • @josephgutierrez2885
    @josephgutierrez2885 2 роки тому +122

    I'm Comanche and Kiowa. I always love to hear about my people's history from different perspectives. also it's pronounced KAI-oh-wuh NOT KEY-oh-wah

    • @markwarning7305
      @markwarning7305 2 роки тому +22

      And Arapaho is pron'd uh-RAP-uh-HO, not Aira-PA-ho. But I enjoyed the vid.

    • @jessepitt
      @jessepitt 2 роки тому +2

      Came to say this.

    • @peterplotts1238
      @peterplotts1238 2 роки тому +2

      Thanks for helping people to get that straight, Joseph. Do you speak the Kiowa and/or Commanche languages, or know anyone who still does? It's really imperative that they be preserved and kept alive. The stories of the Commanche and Kiowa peoples are one of the great - and tragic - stories of American history. That's what I think anyway I even have a copy of "A Dictionary of the Commanche Language" - somewhere. Wasn't Kicking Bird Kiowa?

    • @josephgutierrez2885
      @josephgutierrez2885 2 роки тому +2

      @@peterplotts1238 I agree! I unfortunately I don't know Kiowa or Comanche, I do know a few words in both Comanche and Kiowa though. I also know people who are fluent in Comanche! I don't know for sure if Kicking Bird was Kiowa but it sounds right, I'm not certain though.

    • @peterplotts1238
      @peterplotts1238 2 роки тому

      @@josephgutierrez2885 I always loved his name Have you ever seen his portrait? It's great.

  • @ellenball3335
    @ellenball3335 2 роки тому +80

    I am Shoshone, our Tribe is closely associated with the Comanche Tribe. We were once 1Tribe, and have made our connection to them. If you’re familiar with the Lewis & Clark Journal, it states at Shoshone village in Idaho when the Shoshone we’re going to hunt antelope Clark or Lewis noticed some horse tack made with silver. Shoshone said they got it from their brothers who lived at a distance. Continue. This tell us that the Shoshone & Comanche are one or Brothers.

    • @ellenball3335
      @ellenball3335 2 роки тому +11

      Shoshone & Comanche speak same language.

    • @ellenball3335
      @ellenball3335 2 роки тому +8

      Shoshone we’re one of the first Tribes to have horses. We got our horses from Comanches because we have always maintained contact with them. Other Tribes got horses by trade or war with the Shoshone.

    • @rockyracoon3233
      @rockyracoon3233 2 роки тому +3

      Greetings to you Native Woman!

    • @rosema7909
      @rosema7909 2 роки тому +4

      Thank the colonizers for horses

    • @ellenball3335
      @ellenball3335 2 роки тому

      @@notwaiting9239 yes! I agree with you. It is miss pronounced by people who are unsure of the pronunciation. We do call ourselves Shoshonee.

  • @xjp1998
    @xjp1998 2 роки тому +69

    Thank you for doing the video my Grandmother was full Comanche. I am surprised you did not bring up Quanah Parker in this and what he did for the Comanche.

    • @albertelliott9586
      @albertelliott9586 2 роки тому +6

      Exactly! You can't discuss the Comanche history without including Quanah Parker!

    • @elmochomo8218
      @elmochomo8218 2 роки тому +4

      I'm Mexican and North American and African tribes were always so cool to me especially Aztecs and Comanche so badass

    • @pontiacguy77
      @pontiacguy77 2 роки тому +1

      😂 sure

    • @soonerclark
      @soonerclark 2 роки тому

      My great grandfather

    • @domusavires19
      @domusavires19 2 роки тому +1

      I literally used to live right next to Quanah, TX that was nss as med and founded by Quanah Parker.

  • @goofydog2
    @goofydog2 2 роки тому +54

    I read that the Comanche's were one of the first, if not the first tribe to actually breed their horses, so as to bring out more favorable traits in their horses. They also very rarely got off their superior horses to fight. They knew their strengths and doing things while on horseback was second nature as they learned quite young.
    If you want to read the greatest book on this tribe, I suggest reading; Empire of the Summer Moon! You will find it a difficult book to put down.

    • @Justin-pe9cl
      @Justin-pe9cl 2 роки тому +5

      The Huns of American.

    • @davidleatherneck
      @davidleatherneck 2 роки тому +3

      Which reminds me. Where did the Horses come from?

    • @rustysawyers5109
      @rustysawyers5109 2 роки тому +2

      @@davidleatherneck
      Espana.....Spain.

    • @davidleatherneck
      @davidleatherneck 2 роки тому +2

      @@rustysawyers5109 ,,, YES!!!! The White Man. If it weren't for the white man they would be on foot. Thank you.

    • @rustysawyers5109
      @rustysawyers5109 2 роки тому +3

      @@davidleatherneck welcome...

  • @haydenbretton2990
    @haydenbretton2990 2 роки тому +112

    Stories of the Comanche Indians are really interesting, finest wild hoses trainers, feared by all other tribes and indeed settlers.

    • @peterplotts1238
      @peterplotts1238 2 роки тому +5

      Right. And you can bet the settlers feared them - way down into Mexico too.

    • @capncrunch4298
      @capncrunch4298 2 роки тому +1

      Ah yes, we wouldn't have tame hoses today without them 😂

    • @lindaeasley5606
      @lindaeasley5606 2 роки тому +19

      They committed atrocities and wiped out smaller tribes like the Caddos. Nothing to be admired about them

    • @patmurphy244
      @patmurphy244 2 роки тому +1

      My water pressure was way too high last week. When I turned the garden tap on to water, the hose whipped around and belted me behind my ear. THAT'S what I call a wild hose!!

    • @RedHawk-z8z
      @RedHawk-z8z 2 роки тому

      @@lindaeasley5606 and nothing to be admired by you. you sit here and type this comment, but know nothing about the tribe.

  • @ouraniasakellariou4824
    @ouraniasakellariou4824 2 роки тому +4

    Loved watching westerns growing up as a little girl. Cowboys and Indians lol. Dances with wolves featuring Kevin Costner is a an old classic. It’s been a while and now feel like watching it.

  • @larykenobi
    @larykenobi 2 роки тому +19

    Comanches torture methods were beyond words...

    • @Airemelde
      @Airemelde 2 роки тому +13

      To be totally fair: it wasn't as if European torture methods were any less brutal and cruel.

    • @larykenobi
      @larykenobi 2 роки тому +4

      @@Airemelde I guess they both deserve a place on a podium.

    • @davidleatherneck
      @davidleatherneck 2 роки тому +13

      @@Airemelde ,, This was practiced among Indian Tribes long before the Europeans showed up. We like to think all was peace an harmony among the Indian Tribe,,,, but it was not. They made war against each other.

    • @Airemelde
      @Airemelde 2 роки тому +3

      @@davidleatherneck I'm not talking about when Europeans started invading America and what Native American did to white people and vice versa. It was more a general note on things. Comanches (and other Native American tribes) might have had some pretty nasty knowledge on how to torture people but so did plenty of other people at different times in history in different places/countries. Many humans have a tendency to be as horrible as possible to each other when given the opportunity to be.

    • @Turtlemilk
      @Turtlemilk 2 роки тому +1

      10 Comanches versus 10 Mongolians who wins ?

  • @EntrepreneurDad
    @EntrepreneurDad Рік тому +10

    I am a Comanche native and love this video. Our culture runs deep and our people are strong.

    • @wadesmoke9726
      @wadesmoke9726 Рік тому

      Most respect to you, your elders, and your people. From your Chickahominny/Cherokee/Choctaw brother. Their was a Cherokee chief named Chief Bowles who was what was called the Old Settlers. They decided to leave the homeland and come on out west. He brought his people to Texas. Bowles was accused of helping and allowing warriors to fight for the Comanche. The Texans massacred them for it

  • @donaldzlotnik505
    @donaldzlotnik505 2 роки тому +33

    It was the European horse that drastically changed the Comanche way of life where they became a fast moving raiding party that focused on attacking small European groups of settlers. They lost their war against cavalry.

    • @ellenball3335
      @ellenball3335 2 роки тому +1

      The Comanches & other Tribes lost the war against Caucasians because they had firearms of many kind, & because there were so many to continuously fight. I always remember the lines in “Dances With Wolves” about the White eyes being so many that the situation was, negative changes were coming for Native People. Yes it was!

    • @ellenball3335
      @ellenball3335 2 роки тому +4

      It was specifically Spanish horses that were brought to the Southwest where the Comanche lived. The Comanche obtained horses from them. Before other White men came into the area.

    • @saintultra2737
      @saintultra2737 Рік тому +2

      @@ellenball3335 pretty much. America would look a lot different had we had not been killed by disease pre-expansion (and during it).

    • @ellenball3335
      @ellenball3335 Рік тому +1

      The Camanche lost their war against the Calvary because the Calvary used Natives who knew where to locate the Camanche, as is most wars against Natives the Calvary used Native guides to help them locate the Natives they fought against. Taking the Camanche by surprise insured their victory. Can’t blame any Natives who fought for their homes while the Europeans move in to take whatever they wanted! It was the Spanish horse that first came to this land that made it possible for the Natives to have horses!

    • @wadesmoke9726
      @wadesmoke9726 Рік тому

      It took that "Calvary' a very long time to learn to fight and defeat the native warriors. They assumed native warriors knew nothing about martial arts and hand to hand combat. We primative people made it take you 300 years of warfare and We with the arrows and bows and low numbers to get to the point of forcing us onto your zoos. Living Fossils we are. Like Seattle said. After the Indians are on reservation our ancestors spirits will play with the white man's children

  • @joshuabullard828
    @joshuabullard828 2 роки тому +7

    I’m Tuscarora and love hearing about the history of all Native American tribes

    • @willrogan955
      @willrogan955 2 роки тому

      Did you know Ted Williams? AKA He who crossed the river

    • @joshuabullard828
      @joshuabullard828 2 роки тому

      @@willrogan955 I did not

    • @willrogan955
      @willrogan955 2 роки тому +1

      @@joshuabullard828 I dated his daughter for a number of years and met him several times
      Ted passed away several years ago
      He grew up on the reservation. He shared great stories which I enjoyed
      He was a marvelous man and a great athlete I loved his humor
      He wrote a book called the reservation and another one which I forgot.
      I'm still friends with his grandson 30 years later
      He's like his grandfather smart as a whip and an excellent athlete

    • @joshuabullard828
      @joshuabullard828 2 роки тому +1

      @@willrogan955 that’s good and I bet he had some crazy stories about life on the reservation my uncle went and did work in reservations in North Dakota tbh I can’t recall the tribe maybe Lakota or something but it’s sad how mos true true tribes don’t exist anymore due to wars and disease , expansion, and other causes. I also went to the leader of the Iroquois nations funeral a few years back. It was amazing to see a full on native American funeral. They did a dance around a fire and had full headdresses and chest pieces it was truly awesome to see not for him dying tho ofc

  • @jooky5
    @jooky5 2 роки тому +29

    Read about the Comanches in empire of the summer moon. Definitely an interesting tribe who stayed prehistoric yet were the most powerful tribe in the plains

    • @goofydog2
      @goofydog2 2 роки тому +7

      GREAT BOOK! A MUST READ!!!

    • @derekjackson3990
      @derekjackson3990 2 роки тому +5

      Yep I read that book also. The only non fiction book I’ve ever enjoyed. As to the subject matter wow was I shocked to learn how brutal and heartless they were to their captives and slaves. If you were to battle

    • @diegofonseca6708
      @diegofonseca6708 2 роки тому +3

      They were a menace to other tribes and settlers and they terrorized tribes.

    • @thechiefwildhorse4651
      @thechiefwildhorse4651 2 роки тому

      @@derekjackson3990
      Written by a white guy?
      No thanks.
      I have better stories lol
      -COMANCHE NATION

    • @thechiefwildhorse4651
      @thechiefwildhorse4651 2 роки тому

      @@diegofonseca6708
      Settlers?
      Illegals you mean.
      -COMANCHE NATION

  • @rm8874
    @rm8874 2 роки тому +111

    You missed the part where they were considered some of the best archers in human history, so good in fact that the revolver was born specifically to deal with them as the rifles the settlers had werent fast enough or accurate enough to deal with the fast hit and run tactics of the Comanche so the revolver was needed just to tip the scales against the Comanche. Their archery was unique in that they trained with their bows from childhood to the point of not even having to look at their targets to hit them as the bow was like an extension of the body to them.
    It wasnt the horses they were famous for, it what the archery they could do while riding, they were known to hang off the side of the horse using it as a shield while somewhat blind firing up over the horse and still hitting their marks. Sadly there is little to nothing left of these skills amongst their people now as those skills where lost after the trail of tears.
    Also I believe its pronounced "Shuh-show- ni".
    Also, on the topic of "slavery" with native tribes, their version of slavery is not always the same as what we imagine today(the more "old world" form). I cant speak for all tribes but for at least some slavery was more like mandatory labor while living in a with the tribe, the conditions were nothing like cotton plantations and there was usually an effort to integrate the captured slaves into members of the tribe. Whether this was the case for the Comanche I cant say but I know this was common among a various tribes. Not all tribes are the same though, take the Chinook who were known to enslave and had their own cruel caste system with the upper caste on one side of the river and the lower caste on the other side.
    Thanks for posting this, the indigenous peoples here are criminally overlooked and under appreciated.
    EDIT: I made a few corrections and do apologize for those mistakes. As I stated there isnt a lot of places that cover the indigenous peoples and their ways of life in great detail, what they were exceptional at, what they valued most and how they distributed resources, goods and land amongst the tribes members or if they did it at all, what the men did vs what the women did, how tribehood was determined, how tribes are related and why, how they viewed love and how they showed it, you get the idea. Part of this I suspect is due to many not wanting to share their cultures with the general public in an effort to prevent it from becoming watered down and commodified rather than understood and appreciated which I completely understand. The bigger part I imagine is due to the catastrophic loss of life between illness, genocide by foreigners and the trail of tears. To my understanding a lot was lost leaving massive holes in the knowledge of history, traditions, technical skills, arts and beliefs for most if not all the tribes to some extent.
    Most sources I find offer only surface level knowledge, basic pop culture mythbusting, no they werent all more peaceful than the Europeans, yes some practiced slavery, no it wasnt identical to what was practiced in the world but it was slavery and it was dehumanizing at least until the tribe saw them as true members, no they werent always enemies with the white man as there are many stories of mountain men and western trail guides who married indigenous women and became recognized members of their tribes(though not always that simple I assume).

    • @diamondtiara84
      @diamondtiara84 2 роки тому +10

      Thank you, now I know some more Native American history. I had never heard about the archery skills of the Comanche before. I'll have to do some more reading, or online research.

    • @Kai-qc1xx
      @Kai-qc1xx 2 роки тому +5

      one thing you're wrong about is that the comanches never worked alongside the apaches

    • @markberryhill2715
      @markberryhill2715 2 роки тому +13

      RM, you do know the Comanche and all other Native American tribes used to conquer and enslave one another all the time, don't you?
      Same with Africa, Asia, South America. Sadly it was a way of life in the ancient world and still is today.
      Man's cruelty to man never ceases.

    • @briansheehan5256
      @briansheehan5256 2 роки тому +4

      Fought alongside Apaches? You're mistaken, friend.
      It was the Comanches, specifically the Nokonis and Penatekas, which had forced the Lipans, Mescaleros and Jicarillas from the grassy plains of Texas into the deserts and canyons of New Mexico and Arizona.

    • @androlibre9661
      @androlibre9661 2 роки тому +1

      Even more amazing was that they did it on Horse Back with a 14ft Lance and Shield

  • @charliemcternan8190
    @charliemcternan8190 2 роки тому +12

    Such a very incredible video I love it it’s awesome more fun adventures and more great stories

  • @aaronjohnson718
    @aaronjohnson718 2 роки тому +22

    To me the Comanches use of the horse was absolutely amazing one thing that people for get is that before the Spanish and other European nations brought the domesticated horse to America the native Americans didn't have a horse and once gotten the Comanche become some of the best horse people of the world

    • @davidpineda8478
      @davidpineda8478 2 роки тому +2

      Learn your History, Horses are native to North America, the Indians already had them, more then likely the asians that crossed the pacific to come
      to the americas brought them, but it’s a fact HORSES we’re already here

    • @davidpineda8478
      @davidpineda8478 2 роки тому

      and yes the Native Americans , we’re ASIANS, that’s a fact also , ASIANS got here first , it’s been proven through DNA learn about Haplo group D then speak

    • @jasontalbot3256
      @jasontalbot3256 2 роки тому +6

      @@davidpineda8478 north american horses went extinct 10000 yrs ago

    • @davidpineda8478
      @davidpineda8478 2 роки тому +2

      @@jasontalbot3256 like i said do some research , don’t just cut and paste , people with brains actually do studies that prove things were they are not true, Ask any Indian they will tell you , horses were already here

    • @davidpineda8478
      @davidpineda8478 2 роки тому +1

      kind of like Christopher Columbus discovering America -- NOT TRUE

  • @soloknight7197
    @soloknight7197 2 роки тому +13

    This is awesome. This part of my Ancestry never gets any attention

  • @johnhickersantilan4295
    @johnhickersantilan4295 2 роки тому +5

    Really appreciate the video as I satisfy listening while watching 😉👍

  • @gregengel1616
    @gregengel1616 2 роки тому +58

    I'm a Comanche, but I do feel sorry for the other tribes names they were mispronounced. It's bad enough that so many of these tribes were butchered, but now their names are butchered also. Just saying

    • @99fxr68
      @99fxr68 2 роки тому +6

      Well. At least there’s still some of you left. Maybe you can make some content to set the record straight? Just saying

    • @gregengel1616
      @gregengel1616 2 роки тому +1

      @@99fxr68 set what record straight?

    • @KC-nn5wc
      @KC-nn5wc 2 роки тому

      People are butchered all over the world man. Dialects accents cmon man.... and butchered... don't care that they butchered Apache and other tribes?? Raping settlers

    • @KC-nn5wc
      @KC-nn5wc 2 роки тому +8

      Why is europeans butchering tribes worse then the tribes butchering eachother. Just saying

    • @gregengel1616
      @gregengel1616 2 роки тому +2

      @@KC-nn5wc because the natives were fighting over land that they thought belonged to them. The Europeans never had any rights to it in the first place.

  • @lawrencelou3545
    @lawrencelou3545 2 роки тому +2

    Now .. due to the success of the prequel PREY.. there is renewed interest in the Comanche .. heritage and culture..

  • @thefire8223
    @thefire8223 2 роки тому +3

    I am Micmac and Cheyenne also Irish love all my heritage and watch all videos on native Americans thank you

  • @bennieboi7114
    @bennieboi7114 2 роки тому +5

    Imagine being an Indian warrior seeing 50 raiders on horses which you have never seen charging at you. Terrifying

  • @-RONNIE
    @-RONNIE 2 роки тому +11

    Good video thanks👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 I hope you keep continuing the Native American series going into the Mohawk, Cherokee, Blackfoot & all the other tribes

  • @justincody9070
    @justincody9070 2 роки тому +4

    Great video. Oklahoman here, and member of the Kiowa tribe of Oklahoma. Your pronunciations of the Kiowa and Arapaho were a little off, but this is an excellent synopsis of the Comanche. Aho.

    • @prestonsmith9824
      @prestonsmith9824 2 роки тому

      Hi, Justin! How are you doing? I hope you are fine and staying safe?

  • @RoyCyberPunk
    @RoyCyberPunk 2 роки тому +6

    Imagine if the Comanche would have had their own version of Gengis Khan they would have probably become a near unstoppable empire in the new world.

    • @RedHawk-z8z
      @RedHawk-z8z 2 роки тому

      They almost were unstoppable

    • @RoyCyberPunk
      @RoyCyberPunk 2 роки тому

      @@RedHawk-z8z
      Not even close to what they could have become with a Gengis Khan unifying element as the Mongols had.

    • @notchurka3332
      @notchurka3332 2 роки тому

      @@RoyCyberPunk I think what they lacked was a greater common enemy to drive them to unify and become stronger. Sadly, the arrival of the Europeans was too sudden and invasive that it did not give them enough time to adapt. If a Genghis Khan was born in the Americas at that time, it wouldn't have mattered as they were sorely behind in experience and technology. The steppe nomads had to deal with China's antics for generations from the Huns, the Gokturks, until eventually culminating to the unification of all the steppe tribes and the domination of China in the hands of the Mongols. Their isolation from the rest of the world is basically what f'ed them up.

    • @thxcbo
      @thxcbo 2 роки тому

      @@notchurka3332 it would be very hard to unify the American tribes without horses or other transportation people mostly forget that

    • @nmarbletoe8210
      @nmarbletoe8210 Рік тому

      You hit the nail with the hammer! Comanche had Eucauracapa, a great statesmen and military leader. He made peace with New Mexico in 1786 and the Comanche were good for the next 100 years almost... until the Civil War and railroad came.

  • @systemsless
    @systemsless 2 роки тому +5

    It would have been amazing to see this tribe in its prime, from afar of course

  • @mongoose6685
    @mongoose6685 2 роки тому +3

    They nearly annihilated the Apaches and terrorized the Pawnees, Osages, Arapaho like Huns and offered very little culturally compared to sedentary tribes. If Americans and Europeans are told to no longer see the conquering of the Americas with pride, I am not sure why native Americans would see the Comanche as a good example of their virtues.

    • @Briskies702
      @Briskies702 2 роки тому +2

      This sentiment is so weird, it's exactly like the whole "he was no angel" thing. It's using the brutality that native tribes used on each other to justify their almost complete destruction (genocide really)

    • @Briskies702
      @Briskies702 2 роки тому

      As if Europeans hadn't been slaughtering each other for milenia

    • @mongoose6685
      @mongoose6685 2 роки тому

      @@Briskies702 You missed the point: if Europeans should be ashamed of conquering the Americas, why should native Americans be proud of their military prowess between themselves? It's called hypocrisy and a double standard.

  • @robertmccarthy1256
    @robertmccarthy1256 2 роки тому +5

    Read: lords of the southern plains, empire of the summer moon, nine years among the Indians and Geronimo’s biography. Awesome reading, you can get all these books cheap on the internet. Ur welcome

  • @gaddyify
    @gaddyify 2 роки тому +9

    The fact that they defeated the Apache, showed their prowess.

    • @JRobbySh
      @JRobbySh 2 роки тому

      At their height the Comanche were a match for any light cavalry in the world..

    • @squidy3603
      @squidy3603 2 роки тому +2

      I wouldn’t say defeated. There was a river line that Comanches knew not to cross out of fear of crossing Chiricahua Apache territory. Apache were one if the last tribes to surrender

    • @dylanharvey6260
      @dylanharvey6260 2 роки тому

      There were different Apache tribes with similar but different beliefs and cultures. Never has the Comanches come into White Mountain Apache land.

    • @RedHawk-z8z
      @RedHawk-z8z 2 роки тому +2

      @@squidy3603 i would. they pushed the apache off the southern plains. and nearly exterminated them, they were not at all scared of a tribe very much smaller than them.

    • @squidy3603
      @squidy3603 2 роки тому +1

      @@RedHawk-z8z for mountain apache like Chiricahua, they couldn’t. In the plains sure but not in Apache territory. They wouldn’t have been able to conquer them in their own territory

  • @singlespeedsoulja8415
    @singlespeedsoulja8415 Рік тому +2

    They were a super power and an empire. The comancheria was really feared.

  • @shanehester5317
    @shanehester5317 2 роки тому +3

    so basically they were theiving murderers and we wonder why the settlers called them savages.

    • @RedHawk-z8z
      @RedHawk-z8z 2 роки тому

      The settlers were savages too

    • @Justin-pe9cl
      @Justin-pe9cl 2 роки тому +1

      @Bradley Wildman Not like the Comanche.

    • @RedHawk-z8z
      @RedHawk-z8z 2 роки тому

      @@Justin-pe9cl what caused them to act that way? Was it bc the settlers were friendly and hospitable people?

    • @Linduine
      @Linduine 2 роки тому

      @@RedHawk-z8z not to justify the settlers, but the Comanches were never known as a friendly tribe by their neighbours.

  • @palaciosmuller.9029
    @palaciosmuller.9029 2 роки тому +6

    Horses I love these stories 🤗😍

  • @patsysadowski1546
    @patsysadowski1546 2 роки тому +26

    I’m second generation British but British nonetheless, so am used to feeling bad watching history videos. The treatment of the Native Tribes and them being stripped of the pride, lied to and decimated by our diseases. It’s heart breaking. Genocide is so unacceptable and yet again and again it happens.

    • @hug4229
      @hug4229 2 роки тому +2

      I feel the same as an American too.

    • @russell5078084
      @russell5078084 2 роки тому +3

      It's happened all over the world since human history began. Strong vs the weak. That maybe slowly changing as we evolve but it hasn't stopped yet.

    • @patsysadowski1546
      @patsysadowski1546 2 роки тому +1

      @@russell5078084 war is more complicated than that at times. Desperation and revolution spring to mind. Many times the weaker side prevailed when it came to defending their homes.

    • @russell5078084
      @russell5078084 2 роки тому +1

      @@patsysadowski1546 that latter is usually due to a great deal of luck. The perfect example of what I said would be the aztecs vs the Spanish conquistadors.

    • @markberryhill2715
      @markberryhill2715 2 роки тому

      The Native Americans were meaner to one another than the white man ever had time to be to them. We just had one unknown factor that they couldn't deal with - disease. Small Pox, as everyone knows, killed more Indians than anything.

  • @dondonnelly5278
    @dondonnelly5278 2 роки тому +2

    The Commanches were the inspiration for the "Dothraki Screamers" of the great grass sea in the game of thrones

  • @oldmandan3884
    @oldmandan3884 2 роки тому +6

    The Comanche were the most feared tribe by other Indian tribes as well. In fact , the US government and other Indian tribes worked together to stop the Comanche

  • @jeremywatson4860
    @jeremywatson4860 2 роки тому +2

    your pronunciations are wrong. Shoshone is pronounced like shoshonEE. Arapaho is like uh-rapp-uh-ho.

  • @shanejones4751
    @shanejones4751 2 роки тому +3

    Please if your going to do videos of native history Please learn correct pronunciation of places and tribes

  • @Blergoyen
    @Blergoyen 2 роки тому +2

    Would love to see a vid on the tribes that were exterminated or almost exterminated by other native american tribes. And which tribes did most of the exterminating.

  • @corywj78
    @corywj78 2 роки тому +4

    Its not pronounced "show-shone". Its pronounced "show-shone-ee".

  • @parkerb1661
    @parkerb1661 2 роки тому +1

    Haa Ura ! good presentation🦅

  • @margaretkairu7418
    @margaretkairu7418 2 роки тому +5

    I really. Can't. Thank you enough for your wonderful videos. They are awesome.

    • @prestonsmith9824
      @prestonsmith9824 2 роки тому

      Hello, Margaret! How are you doing? I hope you are fine and staying safe?

  • @vernonsaayman9741
    @vernonsaayman9741 2 роки тому +1

    Whose work are these incredible paintings?

  • @ckillifer
    @ckillifer 2 роки тому +6

    I'm from New Mexico and I've never heard anyone pronounce Arapahoe the way you do. It hurts my ears.

    • @catrossi
      @catrossi 2 роки тому +2

      Hahah I burst out laughing when he said the too !!

  • @nemo7542who
    @nemo7542who 2 роки тому +1

    Great video!

  • @aleccope1320
    @aleccope1320 2 роки тому +7

    Didn't mention the fact they're not a federally recognized tribe. Kind of a big deal for natives.

    • @rezlogan4787
      @rezlogan4787 2 роки тому +4

      That’s because they were legitimate combatants to the US federals and committed atrocities against captured citizens. Hence, people of the time had no political will to offer them land and recognition.

    • @chickenman5477
      @chickenman5477 2 роки тому +1

      Yes they would love to be recognized by their conquerors that they hate lol.

    • @Linduine
      @Linduine 2 роки тому

      Except they are federally recognized, just that they don't have a ''rez'' doesn't mean that they are not recognized

  • @silverdragoon27
    @silverdragoon27 2 роки тому +1

    I wonder if I'm not the only one watching this after seeing the movie Pray

  • @whatinthefudge5346
    @whatinthefudge5346 2 роки тому +4

    Godbless the Texas rangers that took care em!

  • @HICKSKE
    @HICKSKE Рік тому

    "Mistreating them in a very cruel way" must be the understatement of the century. A people who fought hard and were hard to conquer. Giving horses to the indians was a HUGE mistake.

  • @FlyToBeach
    @FlyToBeach 2 роки тому +11

    Even though I am a Caucasian female, I find Native American customs extremely interesting! Most native tribes treated people way better than the Europeans that were coming to “civilize“ them. I liked the part that you talked about how they used to bury their dead. However, do you, or anybody know of any videos that talk about other cultural customs? Such as marriage, childbirth, training men and women etc? Thank you for this video I really do appreciate it! Thank you! I hope the natives never lose all of their culture.

    • @RichardBrennan46
      @RichardBrennan46 2 роки тому

      Look up Haida Gwaii and the Haidas. It should be a good read. The Haida are from the Pacific Northwest Ocean near Alaska.

    • @mohnjarx7801
      @mohnjarx7801 2 роки тому +4

      Well they sorta did civilize them. They didn't even have the wheel

    • @slappy8941
      @slappy8941 2 роки тому +10

      You do realize that they treated each other as brutally or worse than the Europeans treated them, right? They were especially keen on torturing captives, and had no mercy on women or children.

    • @pete6705
      @pete6705 2 роки тому +1

      Well they didn’t treat everyone great. They did torture many people to death. But it was definitely a very interesting culture

    • @coolcatzclub
      @coolcatzclub 2 роки тому +3

      @@mohnjarx7801 what did they need wheels for? They weren't cave people 😂

  • @crustybastard1068
    @crustybastard1068 2 роки тому +2

    Sahtu Dene in Canadas western arctic still burn the possessions of the dead . Anything they touched clothing beds skidoos etc . Every sahtu Dene community has a area where you will find dozens and dozens of grave goods burnings

  • @learogers2881
    @learogers2881 2 роки тому +10

    Not a single mention of any of their final war Chiefs like Nocona, Potsana Quip, or even Quanha Parker.

  • @jaxthewolf4572
    @jaxthewolf4572 Рік тому

    I'm Apache descent, and I feel such awe towards the Comanche despite their terrorism against the Apache. The Comanche have my disgruntled respect for thwarting off colonialism for a long time.

  • @DianeKovacs
    @DianeKovacs 2 роки тому +4

    This is well done but I sure wish you would leave off the music. It is very distracting and makes it harder for us older folks to hear the words.

    • @prestonsmith9824
      @prestonsmith9824 2 роки тому

      Hello, Diane! How are you doing? I hope you are fine and staying safe?

  • @harleyfreewheeler1531
    @harleyfreewheeler1531 2 роки тому

    Great video I really enjoyed it very much. I do have a question though.?? Where did you find the artwork for your video?? It's fabulous!!

  • @TheJaminator128
    @TheJaminator128 2 роки тому +6

    A violent agressive and savage tribe whose 'culture" and "way of life" was essentially just a Eurasian nomadic horse archer lifestyle akin to the Huns, Scythians, or Mongols. They're not that unique.

    • @stinkyklink
      @stinkyklink 2 роки тому +3

      It still shows how even a people with a relatively set way of life can change drastically due to the introduction of horses.

    • @nmarbletoe8210
      @nmarbletoe8210 Рік тому

      @@stinkyklink Yeah, they their entire lifestyle, they weren't even a plains people before

  • @paulrusso4953
    @paulrusso4953 2 роки тому +1

    Really good short history lesson 👍

  • @rayknight2984
    @rayknight2984 2 роки тому +3

    The pronunciations of the tribes is embarrassing.

  • @StuStevens-rn7rb
    @StuStevens-rn7rb 11 місяців тому +1

    You should read the book 'Blood Moon' f😊❤or an enlightening expose'
    of the Commanche's history.

  • @rudyd3560
    @rudyd3560 2 роки тому +5

    0:57 why are the Spanish always referred to as Conquistadors and the English as Colonist when both had the same objectives? The Spanish in New Mexico had developed trade relations with the Comanches so strong that even when the American Conquistadors from Eastern US began using the Santa Fe trail (and eventually using it to invaded and conquered The Southwest US) Comanches would attack American traders but would leave the Spanish traders alone. This trade pact would remain in affect until the American Conquistadors eventually subjugated the Comanche nation and drove it into ruin.

    • @dannicatzer305
      @dannicatzer305 2 роки тому +4

      Colonist/colonizer is seen as an insult in 2022 Conquistador has a certain romanticism... I'd rather be called a Conquistador to be honest.. It's also very rare for hispanics to be blamed for all the crimes of the past yet the Northern European is still having to apologize for acting no worse than Spanish colonizers of the new world..

    • @mrhutchblackdog4636
      @mrhutchblackdog4636 2 роки тому

      Basically because it means conquerors. The spanish went into the unknown found a civilization and conquered it. Their plan was to plunder and run to their country as wealthy men. Not settle. The settlers went with the objective of making a small town free from the government. At least more free than other parts of the country.

    • @trinihammer
      @trinihammer 2 роки тому +2

      the spanish are called conquistadores because they came first and started to conquer. the english came after not to conquer but to escape persecution in europe so english seen as colonists.

    • @francismarion4450
      @francismarion4450 2 роки тому

      I think the Spanish called themselves conquistadors?

    • @francismarion4450
      @francismarion4450 2 роки тому

      @@trinihammer Some came for that reason, others remained loyal to the crown.

  • @Neotomux
    @Neotomux 2 роки тому +1

    Could someone advise me what to read about the general battle between Apaches and and Comanches? It seems to me that Apaches at first were more powerful and then Comanches get stronger and took revenge... and Apaches liked to attack from an ambush while Comanches prefer a cavalry rides and attacks. In Europe Apaches are more known because of Karl May books "Winnetou" and "Old Surehand" In these books Apaches were like good guys and Comanches - bad guys... But if we would speak about tortures, I think both of tribes were very inventive :) ( At the moment I'm reading "Empire of the Summer moon") Nice video, thanks.

  • @ArixViridis
    @ArixViridis 2 роки тому +3

    The video is very informative and has awesome pictures, but the mispronounced names of the Native American tribes is cringe worthy...
    And I'm white!

  • @achoice2bmade
    @achoice2bmade Рік тому

    Whose artwork is featured on this channel? Absolutely amazing.

  • @JamesFromTexas
    @JamesFromTexas 2 роки тому +4

    Shoh-shoh-nee and uh-RAP-uh-hoh. Use a dog gone dictionary for once!

    • @KC-nn5wc
      @KC-nn5wc 2 роки тому

      You say everything right?

    • @JamesFromTexas
      @JamesFromTexas 2 роки тому +1

      @@KC-nn5wc nope, that's why I have a dictionary app.

  • @j.lingle4713
    @j.lingle4713 8 місяців тому

    Interesting note: although there were horses in N. America in ancient times, ancient times, every modern horse is derived from ancient Asian steppe horses.

  • @hunterceaton
    @hunterceaton 2 роки тому +5

    Good video but you're are pronouncing a few of the tribes incorrectly

  • @Fidel_Cashflo414
    @Fidel_Cashflo414 2 роки тому +1

    Boozhoo niijjii. Miigwetch "AHO". 🤙🏽🤙🏽

  • @RedStretchLimo
    @RedStretchLimo 2 роки тому +10

    A little practice pronouncing these tribal names would have given this video far more validity.

    • @KC-nn5wc
      @KC-nn5wc 2 роки тому

      Exhausting... I'm sure you say everything correctly

    • @RedStretchLimo
      @RedStretchLimo 2 роки тому +2

      @@KC-nn5wc It's not hard to show proper respect to people.

  • @djmartinez4717
    @djmartinez4717 Рік тому +2

    Comanche were so incredible. They had an empire on the plains on par with those of the Turkic and Mongol peoples! Great video!

    • @TmanRock9
      @TmanRock9 Рік тому

      A gross exaggeration, the Comanche didn’t even come close to the mongols. Their empire was much smaller, their military was much weaker, and their legacy much smaller than the mongols.
      If the Comanche ever fought the mongols they would be destroyed.

  • @charlesbullghost5491
    @charlesbullghost5491 2 роки тому +4

    Drifting goose [ Magabobdu] the mystic warrior was the last free Dakota sioux to lead Dakota sioux raids. During the 1870's against the settlers and the rail road survivors. Iin the James River Valley north of Redfield county SD untouched land. The american settlers called the Dakota sioux leader the notorious drifting goose. Angered the US government and the US army made drifting goose leave his land! Finally spring of 1880 the Dakota sioux leader led the last free proud hunkpati Dakota sioux to the crow creek sioux Indian reservation at old Fort Thompson SD were his descents live today. Drifting goose can speak Dakota- Nakota- Lakota- English and German language. Drifting goose will become one of the five Dakota sioux leaders [ chiefs] of the crow creek sioux sioux Indian tribe.

    • @blackbetsy59
      @blackbetsy59 2 роки тому

      Interesting but what does that have to do with the Commanche?

    • @charlesbullghost5491
      @charlesbullghost5491 2 роки тому +1

      Drafting goose was the plains Indian chief who tried to hold to his territory. Will the white settlers came in thousands to claim his land! When the white people took over Drifting goose log cabin he and his family had to live in Burch berk tipi his young son died of sickness. He was sioux Indian east of Missouri River trying to keep white people off his land. Drifting goose finally give up in 1880 after everything wasn't going his way.

    • @charlesbullghost5491
      @charlesbullghost5491 2 роки тому

      @@blackbetsy59 but comanche fought one last war not against the us military. But the Buffalo hunters war of 1876 - 1877 led by black horse not as bloody as the great sioux war sittingbull's war the same. time. But the great sioux war lasted too may of 1877 crazy horse surrender at Fort Robinson and the battle of lame deer and crazy horse death in September 3 1877 and fastbulls surrender at Fort Robinson 30 September. The campaigns against sittingbull of 1879 - 1881 bearcoat miles largemilitary forces with crow Indian scouts attack three hundred hunkpapa Lakota sioux hunting bands led by sittingbull. The battle of the milk River July 17th 1879 forcing sittingbull into Canada. The hunkpapa war party attack a haycuuters on the powder River on January 30 1880 the tongue River tributary to the punkin creek. The battle of the pumpkin creek February 7th - 8th 1880 a company of us soldiers and crow scouts fought sittingbull's hunkpapa Lakota war party there. The battle of the popular river January 2nd 1881 us soldiers crossed the frozen river then opened fire with their powerful weapons over an hour. The hunkpapa- Oglala Lakota sioux encampment escape north to the surrounding hills also near the Canadian border. A woman was screaming to end the fighting she was hit by a bullet later died of her wounds. Eight innocent Lakota people were killed on the battle field! Finally the Lakota sioux surrendered chief gall look like a old Roman General when he handed his weapon to the American commander. The us soldiers made the poor Lakota sioux people walk over twenty miles in sub zero temperatures to fort Burford ND were they became prisoners of war. A decade before the wounded knee massacre dec 29 1890 when Custer old seventh calvery regiment killed thirty five hunkpapa Lakota and chief Bigfoot's minneaconjou Lakota band. A cold sad day to remember.

  • @tryagain4469
    @tryagain4469 2 роки тому +2

    🗽GOOD MORNING

  • @Ssenivac
    @Ssenivac 2 роки тому +3

    The “shizone”….. makes it hard to take anything else he says seriously when he doesn’t even pronounce shoshone correctly.

    • @KC-nn5wc
      @KC-nn5wc 2 роки тому

      You say everything correctky

  • @Outlier999
    @Outlier999 2 роки тому +1

    Even other Native Americans hated them and helped the US Army fight them. They took land by conquest too. What was the difference?

    • @nmarbletoe8210
      @nmarbletoe8210 Рік тому

      The Comanche made peace with New Mexico, the Utes, Kiowa, all the Pueblos, the Navajo, and eventually the Apache.

    • @Outlier999
      @Outlier999 Рік тому

      @@nmarbletoe8210 After how many decades of warfare?

  • @glenbreeding2819
    @glenbreeding2819 2 роки тому +8

    The revolver was not invented to combat the Indian it was a useful tool for sure but the Indian quickly became more powerful as they used them themselves but the fighting abilities of the young braves is spot on the were masters in their use of the horse and they had no match whatsoever with their bow incredible warriors but the revolver pistol was invented for many reasons but specifically for the defense of the Indian warriors is simply not accurate

    • @shawnoneill4854
      @shawnoneill4854 2 роки тому +15

      Glen, do a little research on the Walker Colt. It was designed for the Texas Rangers to combat the Comanche. It worked. It helped even the odds against the devastating Comanche bow and arrows. They were the true lords of the southern plains.

    • @AbuAbbas3
      @AbuAbbas3 2 роки тому

      There native Americans Indians are from India

  • @ivanstrydom8417
    @ivanstrydom8417 2 роки тому

    Brilliant video sir.

  • @jorgemontefusco650
    @jorgemontefusco650 2 роки тому +7

    Would have loved to been a Comanche at this time.

    • @Bubba1025
      @Bubba1025 2 роки тому +1

      Lol no you wouldn’t.

    • @RedHawk-z8z
      @RedHawk-z8z 2 роки тому +2

      They were were a very powerful and spectacular tribe. I'd say they killed more white men than any other tribe in history. Hands down.

    • @jorgemontefusco650
      @jorgemontefusco650 2 роки тому +1

      @@RedHawk-z8z That’s why I said I’d go back in a minute.

  • @marcello7781
    @marcello7781 2 роки тому

    Gorgeous art!

  • @MrFaceeatingcancer
    @MrFaceeatingcancer 2 роки тому +6

    Still calling Native Americans Indians I see . I might as well call Europeans , Somalians and East Asians Danes🙄

  • @bostion100
    @bostion100 2 роки тому +1

    They are badass I just saw the documentary about their women killing predators, so badass.

  • @johnbarber9417
    @johnbarber9417 2 роки тому +2

    KI-O-WAH
    SHO-SHOW-NEE

  • @ronhill1502
    @ronhill1502 2 роки тому +2

    "Shoshone" is pronounced as "Sho-sho-nee". Jeez...

  • @bgramirez966
    @bgramirez966 2 роки тому +1

    Did you know that Comanches crossed into Mexico many times for raids & trade?

    • @nmarbletoe8210
      @nmarbletoe8210 Рік тому

      And New Mexico was at peace with the Comanche, but let them pass through to raid other states in Mexico! They rode 800 miles one way and more

  • @blockmasterscott
    @blockmasterscott 2 роки тому +1

    I'm going from memory, but weren't these the dudes that raided so far South into Mexico that they saw monkeys, and described them as little humans or something like that?

  • @icemouf7480
    @icemouf7480 2 роки тому +1

    CAN SOMEONE HELP ME!??..I DON'T KNOW TO MUCH ON THIS BUT A FAMILY MEMBER SAID I HAD CROW INDIAN IN ME...I HOPE IT IS NOT BAD OR HOW GOOD IT WAS OR CAN SOMEONE TELL ME WHAT OR IF WHAT INDIAN TRIBE IF AT ALL I WAS APART OF???

    • @cplmpcocptcl6306
      @cplmpcocptcl6306 2 роки тому +2

      You should be proud. The Crow are a intelligent, good looking tribe. They were also great at stealing horses. (Remember, at that time this was a good thing.). IMO the Crow got a bad rap because they served as scouts for the Military. I think that was quite clever of them. They were able to get rid of their enemies.😉

    • @icemouf7480
      @icemouf7480 2 роки тому

      @@cplmpcocptcl6306 thank you

    • @bryanjames7528
      @bryanjames7528 2 роки тому +1

      Crows served with US Army against other tribes. Most famously they were with George Custer at Battle of Little Bighorn

    • @icemouf7480
      @icemouf7480 2 роки тому

      @@bryanjames7528 thank you Sir

  • @stevendavis1940
    @stevendavis1940 2 роки тому +2

    It's not "ara-PAH-ho."

  • @briangoldy8784
    @briangoldy8784 2 роки тому +2

    Cherokee & Pennsylvania Dutch,,,,Dark Hair an Red Complexion,,,,Love the Native Tribes,,,,,,,,,Love My Ancestors,,,,,,

    • @0biwan77
      @0biwan77 2 роки тому

      That’s Pennsylvania “Deuche” (I’m misspelling it) as in German, not Dutch. My mother’s family also.

  • @derekjackson3990
    @derekjackson3990 2 роки тому

    I love how they were described as the ugliest, slovenly, and foulest look humans you would ever set eyes on until they mounted their horses and suddenly transformed into the most graceful and beautiful of any horsemen.

  • @brim89
    @brim89 2 роки тому +1

    My daughter is the great great granddaughter of Quanah Parker

  • @GaryFoxChampagneCampaigns
    @GaryFoxChampagneCampaigns 2 роки тому +1

    That's why I still have hair! I am related to Quanah Parker

  • @UncleJakey9
    @UncleJakey9 7 місяців тому

    3:48 what was their burial ceremony before they had horses?

  • @wmrichard9026
    @wmrichard9026 2 роки тому +2

    If you are going to narrate this you should learn the proper pronunciation of the Indian tribes!

  • @Thunderhorsebaba
    @Thunderhorsebaba 4 місяці тому

    I am Comanche and a Direct descendant of Quanah Parker. Much love

  • @davidekstrand8544
    @davidekstrand8544 2 роки тому +1

    I believe it is sh-shown-knee for Shoshone.