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Comanche

The Comanche /kəˈmæni/ or Nʉmʉnʉʉ (Comanche: Nʉmʉnʉʉ, "the people"[3]) is a Native American tribe from the Southern Plains of the present-day United States. Comanche people today belong to the federally recognized Comanche Nation, headquartered in Lawton, Oklahoma.[1]

Comanche
Nʉmʉnʉʉ
Flag of the Comanche Nation[1]
Total population
17,000[2]
Regions with significant populations
United States (Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico)
Languages
English, Comanche
Religion
Native American Church, Christianity, traditional tribal religion
Related ethnic groups
Shoshone, Timbisha, and other Numic peoples

The Comanche language is a Numic language of the Uto-Aztecan family. Originally, it was a Shoshoni dialect, but diverged and became a separate language.[4] The Comanche were once part of the Shoshone people of the Great Basin.[5]

In the 18th and 19th centuries, Comanche lived in most of present-day northwestern Texas and adjacent areas in eastern New Mexico, southeastern Colorado, southwestern Kansas, and western Oklahoma. Spanish colonists and later Mexicans called their historical territory Comanchería.

During the 18th and 19th centuries, Comanche practiced a nomadic horse culture and hunted, particularly bison. They traded with neighboring Native American peoples, and Spanish, French, and American colonists and settlers.

As European Americans encroached on their territory, the Comanche waged war on the settlers and raided their settlements, as well as those of neighboring Native American tribes.[6] They took with them captives from other tribes during warfare, using them as slaves, selling them to the Spanish and (later) to Mexican settlers, or adopting them into their tribe.[5] Thousands of captives from raids on Spanish, Mexican, and American settlers were assimilated into Comanche society.[7] At their peak, the Comanche language was the lingua franca of the Great Plains region.[8]

Diseases, destruction of the buffalo herds, and territory loss forced most Comanches on reservations in Indian Territory by the late 1870s.[5]

In the 21st century, the Comanche Nation has 17,000 members, around 7,000 of whom reside in tribal jurisdictional areas around Lawton, Fort Sill, and the surrounding areas of southwestern Oklahoma.[2] The Comanche Homecoming Annual Dance takes place in mid-July in Walters, Oklahoma.[9]

Name edit

The Comanche's autonym is nʉmʉnʉʉ, meaning "the human beings" or "the people".[3] The earliest known use of the term "Comanche" dates to 1706, when the Comanche were reported by Spanish officials to be preparing to attack far-outlying Pueblo settlements in southern Colorado.[10] The Spanish adopted the Ute name for the people: kɨmantsi (enemy) and spelled it the way they pronounced it in Spanish.[11] Before 1740, French explorers from the east sometimes used the name Padouca for the Comanche since it was already used for the Plains Apache and the French were not aware of the change of tribe in the region in the early 18th century.[12]

Government edit

The Comanche Nation is headquartered in Lawton, Oklahoma. Their tribal jurisdictional area is located in Caddo, Comanche, Cotton, Greer, Jackson, Kiowa, Tillman and Harmon counties. Their current Tribal Chairman is Mark Woommavovah. The tribe requires enrolled members to have at least 1/8 blood quantum level (equivalent to one great-grandparent).[1]

Economic development edit

The tribe operates its own housing authority and issues tribal vehicle tags. They have their own Department of Higher Education, primarily awarding scholarships and financial aid for members' college educations. They own 10 tribal smoke shops and four casinos:[1]

  1. Comanche Nation Casino in Lawton[13]
  2. Red River Casino in Devol, Oklahoma[14]
  3. Comanche Spur Casino in Elgin, Oklahoma[15]
  4. Comanche Star Casino in Walters, Oklahoma.[16][17]

Cultural institutions edit

 
LaDonna Harris, Comanche activist and founder of Americans for Indian Opportunity

The Comanche National Museum and Cultural Center in Lawton, Oklahoma, has permanent and changing exhibitions on Comanche history and culture. It opened to the public in 2007.[18]

In 2002, the tribe founded the Comanche Nation College, a two-year tribal college in Lawton.[19] It closed in 2017 because of problems with accreditation and funding.

Each July, Comanche gather from across the United States to celebrate their heritage and culture in Walters at the annual Comanche Homecoming powwow. The Comanche Nation Fair takes place every September. The Comanche Little Ponies host two annual dances—one over New Year's Eve and one in May.[20]

History edit

Formation edit

 
Pre-contact distribution of Uto-Aztecan languages

The Proto-Comanche movement to the Plains was part of the larger phenomenon known as the "Shoshonean Expansion" in which that language family spread across the Great Basin and across the mountains into Wyoming. The Kotsoteka ("Bison Eaters") were probably among the first. Other groups followed. Contact with the Shoshones of Wyoming was maintained until the 1830s when it was broken by the advancing Cheyennes and Arapahoes.

After the Pueblo Revolt of 1680, various Plains peoples acquired horses, but it was probably some time before they were very numerous. As late as 1725, Comanches were described as using large dogs rather than horses to carry their bison hide "campaign tents".[21]

The horse became a key element in the emergence of a distinctive Comanche culture. It was of such strategic importance that some scholars suggested that the Comanche broke away from the Shoshone and moved south to search for additional sources of horses among the settlers of New Spain to the south (rather than search for new herds of buffalo.) The Comanche have the longest documented existence as horse-mounted Plains peoples; they had horses when the Cheyennes still lived in earth lodges.[22]

The Comanche supplied horses and mules to all comers. As early as 1795, Comanche were selling horses to Anglo-American traders[23] and by the mid-19th century, Comanche-supplied horses were flowing into St. Louis via other Indian middlemen (Seminole, Osage, Shawnee).[24]

Their original migration took them to the southern Great Plains, into a sweep of territory extending from the Arkansas River to central Texas. The earliest references to them in the Spanish records date from 1706, when reports reached Santa Fe that Utes and Comanches were about to attack.[23] In the Comanche advance, the Apaches were driven off the Plains. By the end of the 18th century the struggle between Comanches and Apaches had assumed legendary proportions: in 1784, in recounting the history of the southern Plains, Texas governor Domingo Cabello y Robles recorded that some 60 years earlier (i.e., c. 1724) the Apaches had been routed from the southern Plains in a nine-day battle at La Gran Sierra del Fierro ‘The Great Mountain of Iron’, somewhere northwest of Texas. There is, however, no other record, documentary or legendary, of such a fight.[21]

They were formidable warriors who developed strategies for using traditional weapons for fighting on horseback. Warfare was a major part of Comanche life. Comanche raids into Mexico traditionally took place during the full moon, when the Comanche could see to ride at night. This led to the term "Comanche Moon", during which the Comanche raided for horses, captives, and weapons.[25] Comanche raids, especially in the 1840s, reached hundreds of miles deep into Mexico devastating northern parts of the country.[26]

Divisions edit

Kavanagh has defined four levels of social-political integration in traditional pre-reservation Comanche society:[27]

  • Patrilineal and patrilocal nuclear family
  • Extended family group (nʉmʉnahkahni – "the people who live together in a household", no size limits, but kinship recognition was limited to relatives two generations above or three below)
  • Residential local group or 'band', comprised one or more nʉmʉnahkahni, one of which formed its core. The band was the primary social unit of the Comanche. A typical band might number several hundred people. It was a family group, centered around a group of men, all of whom were relatives, sons, brothers or cousins. Since marriage with a known relative was forbidden, wives came from another group, and sisters left to join their husbands. The central man in that group was their grandfather, father, or uncle. He was called 'paraivo', 'chief'. After his death, one of the other men took his place; if none were available, the band members might drift apart to other groups where they might have relatives and/or establish new relations by marrying an existing member. There was no separate term for or status of 'peace chief' or 'war chief'; any man leading a war party was a 'war chief'.
  • Division (sometimes called tribe, Spanish nación, rama – "branch", comprising several local groups linked by kinship, sodalities (political, medicine, and military) and common interest in hunting, gathering, war, peace, trade).

In contrast to the neighboring Cheyenne and Arapaho to the north, there was never a single Comanche political unit or "Nation" recognized by all Comanches. Rather the divisions; the most "tribe-like" units, acted independently, pursuing their own economic and political goals.

Before the 1750s, the Spanish identified three Comanche Naciones (divisions): Hʉpenʉʉ (Jupe, Hoipi), Yaparʉhka (Yamparika), and Kʉhtsʉtʉhka (Kotsoteka).

After the Mescalero Apache, Jicarilla Apache and Lipan Apache had been largely displaced from the Southern Plains by the Comanche and allied tribes in the 1780s, the Spanish began to divide the now dominant Comanche into two geographical groups, which only partially corresponded to the former three Naciones. The Kʉhtsʉtʉhka (Kotsoteka) ('Buffalo Eaters'), which had moved southeast in the 1750s and 1760s to the Southern Plains in Texas, were called Cuchanec Orientales ("Eastern Cuchanec/Kotsoteka") or Eastern Comanche, while those Kʉhtsʉtʉhka (Kotsoteka) that remained in the northwest and west, together with Hʉpenʉʉ (Jupe, Hoipi – 'Timber/Forest People') (and sometimes Yaparʉhka (Yamparika)), which had moved southward to the North Canadian River, were called Cuchanec Occidentales ("Western Cuchanec/Kotsoteka") or Western Comanche. The "Western Comanche" lived in the region of the upper Arkansas, Canadian, and Red Rivers, and the Llano Estacado. The "Eastern Comanche" lived on the Edwards Plateau and the Texas plains of the upper Brazos and Colorado Rivers, and east to the Cross Timbers. They were probably the ancestors of the Penatʉka Nʉʉ (Penateka – 'Honey Eaters').[28]

Over time, these divisions were altered in various ways, primarily due to changes in political resources.[29] As noted above, the Kʉhtsʉtʉhka (Kotsoteka) were probably the first proto-Comanche group to separate from the Eastern Shoshones.

 
War on the plains: Comanche (right) trying to lance an Osage warrior. Painting by George Catlin, 1834

The name Hʉpenʉʉ (Jupe, Hoipi) vanished from history in the early 19th century, probably merging into the other divisions, they are likely the forerunners of the Nokoni Nʉʉ (Nokoni), Kwaarʉ Nʉʉ (Kwahadi, Quohada), and the Hʉpenʉʉ (Hois) local group of the Penatʉka Nʉʉ (Penateka). Due to pressure by southwards moving Kiowa and Plains Apache (Naishan) raiders, many Yaparʉhka (Yamparika) moved southeast, joining the "Eastern Comanche" and becoming known as the Tahnahwah (Tenawa, Tenahwit). Many Kiowa and Plains Apache moved to northern Comancheria and became later closely associated with the Yaparʉhka (Yamparika).

In the mid 19th century, other powerful divisions arose, such as the Nokoni Nʉʉ (Nokoni) ('wanderers', literally 'go someplace and return'), and the Kwaarʉ Nʉʉ (Kwahadi, Quohada) ('Antelope Eaters'). The latter originally some local groups of the Kʉhtsʉtʉhka (Kotsoteka) from the Cimarron River Valley as well as descendants of some Hʉpenʉʉ (Jupe, Hoipi), which had pulled both southwards.

The northernmost Comanche division was the Yaparʉhka (Yapai Nʉʉ or Yamparika — ‘(Yap)Root-Eaters’). As the last band to move onto the Plains, they retained much of their Eastern Shoshone tradition.

The power and success of the Comanche attracted bands of neighboring peoples who joined them and became part of Comanche society; an Arapaho group became known as Saria Tʉhka (Chariticas, Sata Teichas – 'Dog Eaters') band, an Eastern Shoshone group as Pohoi (Pohoee – 'wild sage') band, and a Plains Apache group as Tasipenanʉʉ band.

The Texans and Americans divided the Comanche into five large dominant bands – the Yaparʉhka (Yamparika), Kʉhtsʉtʉhka (Kotsoteka), Nokoni Nʉʉ (Nokoni), Penatʉka Nʉʉ (Penateka) and Kwaarʉ Nʉʉ (Kwahadi, Quohada), which in turn were divided by geographical terms into first three (later four) regional groupings: Northern Comanche, Middle Comanche, Southern Comanche, Eastern Comanche, and later Western Comanche. However, these terms generally do not correspond to the Native language terms.

 
Comanches meeting the U.S. dragoons near the Wichita Mountains in 1834, by George Catlin

The "Northern Comanche" label encompassed the Yaparʉhka (Yamparika) between the Arkansas River and Canadian River and the prominent and powerful Kʉhtsʉtʉhka (Kotsoteka) who roamed the high plains of Oklahoma and Texas Panhandles between Red and Canadian River, the famous Palo Duro Canyon offered them and their horse herds of protection from strong winter storms as well as from enemies, because the two bands dominated and ranged in the northern Comancheria.

The "Middle Comanche" label encompassed the aggressive Nokoni Nʉʉ (Nokoni) ("wanderers", "those who turn back") between the headwaters of the Red River and the Colorado River in the south and the Western Cross Timbers in the east, their preferred range were on the Brazos River headwaters and its tributaries, the Pease River offered protection from storms and enemies. With them shared two smaller bands the same tribal areas: the Tahnahwah (Tenawa, Tenahwit) ("Those Living Downstream") and Tanimʉʉ (Tanima, Dahaʉi, Tevawish) ("Liver Eaters"). All three bands together were known as "Middle Comanche" because they lived "in the middle" of the Comancheria.

The "Southern Comanche" label encompassed the Penatʉka Nʉʉ (Penateka) ("Honey Eaters"), the southernmost, largest, and best known band among whites as they lived near the first Spanish and Texan settlements; their tribal areas extended from the upper reaches of the rivers in central Texas and Colorado River southward, including much of the Edwards Plateau, and eastward to the Western Cross Timbers; because they dominated the southern Comancheria they were called "Southern Comanche".

The "Western Comanche" label encompassed the Kwaarʉ Nʉʉ (Kwahadi, Quohada) ('Antelope Eaters'), which is the last to develop as an independent band in the 19th century. They lived on the hot, low-shadow desert plateaus of Llano Estacado in eastern New Mexico and found shelter in Tule Canyon and Palo Duro Canyon in northwestern Texas. They were the only band that never signed a contract with the Texans or Americans, and they were the last to give up the resistance. Because of their relative isolation from the other bands on the westernmost edge of the Comancheria, they were called the "Western Comanche".

There has been, and continues to be, much confusion in the presentation of Comanche group names. Groups on all levels of organization, families, nʉmʉnahkahni, bands, and divisions, were given names, but many 'band lists' do not distinguish these levels. In addition, there could be alternate names and nicknames. The spelling differences between Spanish and English add to the confusion.

Some of the Comanche group names edit

  • Yaparʉhka or Yamparika (also Yapai Nʉʉ – ‘(Yap)Root-Eaters’; One of its local groups may have been called Widyʉ Nʉʉ / Widyʉ / Widyʉ Yapa – ‘Awl People’; after the death of a man named 'Awl' they changed their name to Tʉtsahkʉnanʉʉ or Ditsahkanah – ‘Sewing People’ [Titchahkaynah]. Other Yapai local groups included:
    • Ketahtoh or Ketatore (‘Don't Wear Shoes’, also called Napwat Tʉ – ‘Wearing No Shoes’)
    • Motso (′Bearded Ones′, derived from motso – ‘Beard’)
    • Pibianigwai (‘Loud Talkers’, ‘Loud Askers’)
    • Sʉhmʉhtʉhka (‘Eat Everything’)
    • Wahkoh (‘Shell Ornament’)
    • Waw'ai or Wohoi (also Waaih – ′Lots of Maggots on the Penis′, also called Nahmahe'enah – ′Somehow being (sexual) together′, ′to have sex′, called by other groups, because they preferred to marry endogamy and chose their partners from their own local group; this was viewed critically by other Comanche people)
  • Hʉpenʉʉ or Jupe (‘Timber People’ because they lived in more wooded areas in the Central Plains north of the Arkansas River. Also spelled Hois.
  • Kʉhtsʉtʉʉka or Kotsoteka (‘Buffalo-Eaters’, spelled in Spanish as Cuchanec)
  • Kwaarʉnʉʉ or Kwahadi/Quohada (Kwahare – ‘Antelope-Eaters’; nicknamed Kwahihʉʉki – ‘Sunshades on Their Backs’, because they lived on desert plains of the Llano Estacado in eastern New Mexico, westernmost Comanche Band). One of their local groups was nicknamed Parʉhʉya ('Elk', literally‘Water Horse’).
  • Nokoninʉʉ or Nokoni (‘Movers’, ‘Returners’); allegedly, after the death of chief Peta Nocona they called themselves Noyʉhkanʉʉ – ‘Not Staying in one place’, and/orTʉtsʉ Noyʉkanʉʉ / Detsanayʉka – ‘Bad Campers’, ‘Poor Wanderer’.
    • Tahnahwah or Tenawa (also Tenahwit – ‘Those Who Live Downstream’,
    • Tanimʉʉ or Tanima (also called Dahaʉi or Tevawish – ‘Liver-Eaters’,
  • Penatʉka Nʉʉ or Penateka (other variants: Pihnaatʉka, Penanʉʉ – ‘Honey-Eaters’;

Some names given by others include:

  • WahaToya (literally 'Two Mountains'); (given as Foothills in Cloud People – those who live near Walsenburg, CO)<Whatley: Jemez-Comanche-Kiowa repatriation, 1993–1999>
  • Toyanʉmʉnʉ (′Foothills People′ – those who lived near Las Vegas, NM) <Whatley: Jemez-Comanche-Kiowa repatriation, 1993–1999>

Unassignable names include:

  • Tayʉʉwit / Teyʉwit (‘Hospitable Ones’)
  • Kʉvahrahtpaht (‘Steep Climbers’)
  • Taykahpwai / Tekapwai (‘No Meat’)
  • Pagatsʉ (Pa'káh'tsa – ‘Head of the Stream’, also called Pahnaixte – ‘Those Who Live Upstream’)
  • Mʉtsahne or Motsai (‘Undercut Bank’)

Old Shoshone names

  • Pekwi Tʉhka (‘Fish-Eaters’)
  • Pohoi / Pohoee (‘Wild Sage’)

Other names, which may or may not refer to Comanche groups include:

  • Hani Nʉmʉ (Hai'ne'na'ʉne – ‘Corn Eating People’) Witchitas.
  • It'chit'a'bʉd'ah (Utsu'itʉ – ‘Cold People’, i.e. ‘Northern People’, probably another name for the Yaparʉhka or one of their local groups – because they lived to the north)
  • Itehtah'o (‘Burnt Meat’, nicknamed by other Comanche, because they threw their surplus of meat out in the spring, where it dried and became black, looking like burnt meat)
  • Naʉ'niem (No'na'ʉm – ‘Ridge People’

Modern Local Groups

  • Ohnonʉʉ (also Ohnʉnʉnʉʉ or Onahʉnʉnʉʉ, 'Salt People' or 'Salt Creek people') live in Caddo County in the vicinity of Cyril, Oklahoma; mostly descendants of the Nokoni Pianavowit.
  • Wianʉʉ (Wianʉ, Wia'ne – ‘Hill Wearing Away’), live east of Walters, Oklahoma, descendants of Waysee.

Comanche Wars edit

 
Comancheria 1770–1850.

The Comanche fought a number of conflicts against Spanish and later Mexican and American armies. These were both expeditionary, as with the raids into Mexico, and defensive. The Comanche were noted as fierce warriors who fought vigorously for their homeland of Comancheria. However, the massive population of the settlers from the east and the diseases they brought led to pressure and decline of Comanche power and the cessation of their major presence in the southern Great Plains.

Relationship with settlers edit

 
Comanches watching an American caravan in West Texas, 1850, by the US Army officer, Arthur Lee
 
Comanche warriors, c. 1867–1874
 
Quanah Parker, prominent chief of the Comanche Indians with a feather fan; photo by James Mooney, 1892

The Comanche maintained an ambiguous relationship with Europeans and later settlers attempting to colonize their territory. The Comanche were valued as trading partners since 1786 via the Comancheros of New Mexico, but were feared for their raids against settlers in Texas.[30][31][32][33] Similarly, they were, at one time or another, at war with virtually every other Native American group living on the South Plains,[34][35] leaving opportunities for political maneuvering by European colonial powers and the United States. At one point, Sam Houston, president of the newly created Republic of Texas, almost succeeded in reaching a peace treaty with the Comanche in the 1844 Treaty of Tehuacana Creek. His efforts were thwarted in 1845 when the Texas legislature refused to create an official boundary between Texas and the Comancheria.

While the Comanche managed to maintain their independence and increase their territory, by the mid-19th century, they faced annihilation because of a wave of epidemics due to Eurasian diseases to which they had no immunity, such as smallpox and measles. Outbreaks of smallpox (1817, 1848) and cholera (1849) took a major toll on the Comanche, whose population dropped from an estimated 20,000 in the late 18th century to just a few thousand by the 1870s.

The US began efforts in the late 1860s to move the Comanche into reservations, with the Treaty of Medicine Lodge (1867), which offered churches, schools, and annuities in return for a vast tract of land totaling over 60,000 square miles (160,000 km2). The government promised to stop the buffalo hunters, who were decimating the great herds of the Plains, provided that the Comanche, along with the Apaches, Kiowas, Cheyenne, and Arapahos, move to a reservation totaling less than 5,000 square miles (13,000 km2) of land. However, the government did not prevent the slaughtering of the herds. The Comanche under Quenatosavit White Eagle (later called Isa-tai "Coyote's Vagina") retaliated by attacking a group of hunters in the Texas Panhandle in the Second Battle of Adobe Walls (1874). The attack was a disaster for the Comanche, and the US army was called in during the Red River War to drive the remaining Comanche in the area into the reservation, culminating in the Battle of Palo Duro Canyon. Within just 10 years, the buffalo were on the verge of extinction, effectively ending the Comanche way of life as hunters. In May 1875, the last free band of Comanches, led by the Quahada warrior Quanah Parker, surrendered and moved to the Fort Sill reservation in Oklahoma. The last independent Kiowa and Kiowa Apache had also surrendered.

The 1890 Census showed 1,598 Comanche at the Fort Sill reservation, which they shared with 1,140 Kiowa and 326 Kiowa Apache.[36]

Cherokee Commission edit

The Agreement with the Comanche, Kiowa and Apache signed with the Cherokee Commission October 6–21, 1892,[37] further reduced their reservation to 480,000 acres (1,900 km2) at a cost of $1.25 per acre ($308.88/km2), with an allotment of 160 acres (0.65 km2) per person per tribe to be held in trust. New allotments were made in 1906 to all children born after the agreement, and the remaining land was opened to white settlement. With this new arrangement, the era of the Comanche reservation came to an abrupt end.

Meusebach–Comanche treaty edit

The Peneteka band agreed to a peace treaty with the German Immigration Company under John O. Meusebach. This treaty was not affiliated with any level of government. Meusebach brokered the treaty to settle the lands on the Fisher-Miller Land Grant, from which were formed the 10 counties of Concho, Kimble, Llano, Mason, McCulloch, Menard, Schleicher, San Saba, Sutton, and Tom Green.[38]

In contrast to many treaties of its day, this treaty was very brief and simple, with all parties agreeing to a mutual cooperation and a sharing of the land. The treaty was agreed to at a meeting in San Saba County,[39] and signed by all parties on May 9, 1847, in Fredericksburg, Texas. The treaty was very specifically between the Peneteka band and the German Immigration Company. No other band or tribe was involved. The German Immigration Company was dissolved by Meusebach himself shortly after it had served its purpose. By 1875, the Comanches had been relocated to reservations.[40]

Five years later, artist Friedrich Richard Petri and his family moved to the settlement of Pedernales, near Fredericksburg. Petri's sketches and watercolors gave witness to the friendly relationships between the Germans and various local Native American tribes.[41]

Fort Martin Scott treaty edit

In 1850, another treaty was signed in San Saba, between the United States government and a number of local tribes, among which were the Comanches. This treaty was named for the nearest military fort, which was Fort Martin Scott. The treaty was never officially ratified by any level of government and was binding only on the part of the Native Americans.[42][43]

Captive Herman Lehmann edit

One of the most famous captives in Texas was a German boy named Herman Lehmann. He had been kidnapped by the Apaches, only to escape and be rescued by the Comanches. Lehmann became the adoptive son of Quanah Parker. On August 26, 1901, Quanah Parker provided a legal affidavit verifying Lehmann's life as his adopted son 1877–1878. On May 29, 1908, the United States Congress authorized the United States Secretary of the Interior to allot Lehmann, as an adopted member of the Comanche nation, 160 acres of Oklahoma land, near Grandfield.[44]

Recent history edit

 
Mac Silverhorn (Comanche), grandson of Silver Horn, drumming with friend at Redstone Baptist Church

Entering the Western economy was a challenge for the Comanche in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Many tribal members were defrauded of whatever remained of their land and possessions. Appointed paramount chief by the United States government, Chief Quanah Parker campaigned vigorously for better deals for his people, meeting with Washington politicians frequently; and helped manage land for the tribe.

Parker became wealthy as a cattleman. He also campaigned for the Comanches' permission to practice the Native American Church religious rites, such as the usage of peyote, which was condemned by European Americans.[45]

Before the first Oklahoma legislature, Quanah testified:

I do not think this legislature should interfere with a man's religion, also these people should be allowed to retain this health restorer. These healthy gentleman before you use peyote and those that do not use it are not so healthy.[46]

During World War II, many Comanche left the traditional tribal lands in Oklahoma to seek jobs and more opportunities in the cities of California and the Southwest. About half of the Comanche population still lives in Oklahoma, centered on the town of Lawton.

Recently, an 80-minute 1920 silent film was "rediscovered", titled The Daughter of Dawn. It features a cast of more than 300 Comanche and Kiowa.[47]

Culture edit

 
Uwat (Comanche), photograph by Edward Curtis, 1930

Childbirth edit

 
Comanche mother and baby son in cradleboard, photo by Edward Curtis
 
Comanche cradleboard held at the Birmingham Museum of Art

If a woman went into labor while the band was in camp, she was moved to a tipi, or a brush lodge if it was summer. One or more of the older women assisted as midwives. Men were not allowed inside the tipi during or immediately after the delivery.[48]

First, the midwives softened the earthen floor of the tipi and dug two holes. One of the holes was for heating water and the other for the afterbirth. One or two stakes were driven into the ground near the expectant mother's bedding for her to grip during the pain of labor. After the birth, the midwives hung the umbilical cord on a hackberry tree. The people believed that if the umbilical cord was not disturbed before it rotted, the baby would live a long and prosperous life.[49]

The newborn was swaddled and remained with its mother in the tipi for a few days. The baby was placed in a cradleboard, and the mother went back to work. She could easily carry the cradleboard on her back, or prop it against a tree where the baby could watch her while she collected seeds or roots. Cradleboards consisted of a flat board to which a basket was attached. The latter was made from rawhide straps, or a leather sheath that laced up the front. With soft, dry moss as a diaper, the young one was safely tucked into the leather pocket. During cold weather, the baby was wrapped in blankets, and then placed in the cradleboard. The baby remained in the cradleboard for about ten months; then it was allowed to crawl around.[50]

Both girls and boys were welcomed into the band, but boys were favored. If the baby was a boy, one of the midwives informed the father or grandfather, "It's your close friend". Families might paint a flap on the tipi to tell the rest of the tribe that they had been strengthened with another warrior. Sometimes a man named his child, but mostly the father asked a medicine man (or another man of distinction) to do so. He did this in the hope of his child living a long and productive life. During the public naming ceremony, the medicine man lit his pipe and offered smoke to the heavens, earth, and each of the four directions. He prayed that the child would remain happy and healthy. He then lifted the child to symbolize its growing up and announced the child's name four times. He held the child a little higher each time he said the name. It was believed that the child's name foretold its future; even a weak or sick child could grow up to be a great warrior, hunter, and raider if given a name suggesting courage and strength.[50] Boys were often named after their grandfather, uncle, or other relative. Girls were usually named after one of their father's relatives, but the name was selected by the mother. As children grew up they also acquired nicknames at different points in their lives, to express some aspect of their lives.[51]

Children edit

The Comanche looked on their children as their most precious gift. Children were rarely punished.[52] Sometimes, though, an older sister or other relative was called upon to discipline a child, or the parents arranged for a boogey man to scare the child. Occasionally, old people donned sheets and frightened disobedient boys and girls. Children were also told about Big Maneater Owl (Pia Mupitsi), who lived in a cave on the south side of the Witchita Mountains and ate bad children at night.[53]

Children learned from example, by observing and listening to their parents and others in the band. As soon as she was old enough to walk, a girl followed her mother about the camp and played at the daily tasks of cooking and making clothing. She was also very close to her mother's sisters, who were called not aunt but pia, meaning mother. She was given a little deerskin doll, which she took with her everywhere. She learned to make all the clothing for the doll.[54]

A boy identified not only with his father but with his father's family, as well as with the bravest warriors in the band. He learned to ride a horse before he could walk. By the time he was four or five, he was expected to be able to skillfully handle a horse. When he was five or six, he was given a small bow and arrows. Often, a boy was taught to ride and shoot by his grandfather, since his father and other warriors were on raids and hunts. His grandfather also taught him about his own boyhood and the history and legends of the Comanche.[55]

 
A 19th-century Comanche child

As the boy grew older, he joined the other boys to hunt birds. He eventually ranged farther from camp looking for better game to kill. Encouraged to be skillful hunters, boys learned the signs of the prairie as they learned to patiently and quietly stalk game. They became more self-reliant, yet, by playing together as a group, also formed the bonds and cooperative spirit that they would need when they hunted and raided.[55]

 
Comanches of West Texas in war regalia, c. 1830

Boys were highly respected because they would become warriors and might die young in battle. As he approached manhood, a boy went on his first buffalo hunt. If he made a kill, his father honored him with a feast. Only after he had proven himself on a buffalo hunt was a young man allowed to go to war.[55]

When he was ready to become a warrior, at about age 15 or 16, a young man first "made his medicine" by going on a vision quest (a rite of passage). Following this quest, his father gave him a good horse to ride into battle and another mount for the trail. If he had proved himself as a warrior, a Give Away Dance might be held in his honor. As drummers faced east, the honored boy and other young men danced. His parents, along with his other relatives and the people in the band, threw presents at his feet – especially blankets and horses symbolized by sticks. Anyone might snatch one of the gifts for themselves, although those with many possessions refrained; they did not want to appear greedy. People often gave away all their belongings during these dances, providing for others in the band, but leaving themselves with nothing.[55]

Girls learned to gather berries, nuts, and roots. They carried water and collected wood, and at about 12 years old learned to cook meals, make tipis, sew clothing, prepare hides, and perform other tasks essential to becoming a wife and mother. They were then considered ready to be married.[54]

Death edit

During the 19th century, the traditional Comanche burial custom was to wrap the deceased's body in a blanket and place it on a horse, behind a rider, who would then ride in search of an appropriate burial place, such as a secure cave. After entombment, the rider covered the body with stones and returned to camp, where the mourners burned all the deceased's possessions. The primary mourner slashed his arms to express his grief. The Quahada band followed this custom longer than other bands and buried their relatives in the Witchita Mountains. Christian missionaries persuaded Comanche people to bury their dead in coffins in graveyards,[56] which is the practice today.

Transportation and habitation edit

 
Comanche Tipis painted by George Catlin
 
Comanche warrior Ako and horse. Photo by James Mooney, 1892
 
Three mounted Comanche warriors, left, Frank Moetah. Photo by James Mooney, 1892

When they lived with the Shoshone, the Comanche mainly used dog-drawn travois for transportation. Later, they acquired horses from other tribes, such as the Pueblo, and from the Spaniards. Because horses are faster, easier to control and stronger, this helped with hunting, warfare and moving camp. Larger dwellings were made due to the ability to pull and carry more belongings. Being herbivores, horses were also easier to feed than dogs, since meat was a valuable resource.[57] The horse was of the utmost value to the Comanche. A Comanche man's wealth was measured by the size of his horse herd. Horses were prime targets to steal during raids; often raids were conducted specifically to capture horses. Often horse herds numbering in the hundreds were stolen by Comanche during raids against other Indian nations, Spanish, Mexicans, and later from the ranches of Texans. Horses were used for warfare with the Comanche being considered to be among the finest light cavalry and mounted warriors in history.[58]

 
Comanche Feats of Horsemenship, George Catlin 1834

The Comanche covered their tipis with buffalo hides sewn together. To prepare the hides, women spread them on the ground, scraped off the fat and flesh with blades of bone or antler, and dried them in the sun. Then the women scraped off the thick hair and soaked the hides in water. After several days, they vigorously rubbed them in a mixture of fat, brains and liver to soften them. They softened them further by rinsing and working back and forth over a rawhide thong. Finally, they were smoked over a fire, which gave them a tan color. To finish the tipi covering, women laid the tanned hides side by side and stitched them together. As many as 22 hides could be used, but 14 was the average. The sewn cover was tied to a pole and raised, wrapped around the cone-shaped frame, and pinned with pencil-sized wooden skewers. Two wing-shaped flaps at the top of the tipi were turned back to make an opening, which could be adjusted to keep out moisture and held pockets of insulating air. With a fire pit in the center of the earthen floor, the tipis stayed warm in winter. In summer, the bottom edges of the tipis could be rolled up to let in a breeze. Cooking was done outside during hot weather. Tipis were very practical homes for nomads. Working together, women could quickly set them up or take them down. An entire Comanche band could be packed and chasing a buffalo herd within about 20 minutes. The women did most food processing and preparation.[59]

Food edit

 
Comanches chasing bison, painted by George Catlin. Bison were the primary food source for the Comanche.

The Comanche were initially hunter-gatherers. When they lived in the Rocky Mountains, during their migration to the Great Plains, both men and women shared responsibility for gathering and providing food. When the Comanche reached the plains, hunting predominated. Hunting was considered a male activity and was a principal source of prestige. For meat, the Comanche hunted bison, elk, black bear, pronghorn, and deer. When game was scarce, the men hunted wild mustangs, and sometimes ate their own ponies. In later years the Comanche raided Texas ranches and stole longhorn cattle. They did not eat fish or fowl, unless starving.

Women prepared and cooked bison meat and other game. Women also gathered wild fruits, seeds, nuts, berries, roots and tubers, including plums, grapes, juniper berries, persimmons, mulberries, acorns, pecans, wild onions, radishes, and tuna, the fruit of the prickly pear cactus. The Comanche also acquired maize, dried pumpkin, and tobacco through trade and raids. They roasted meat over a fire or boiled it. To boil fresh or dried meat and vegetables, women dug a pit in the ground, which they lined with animal skins or bison stomach and filled with water to make a kind of cooking pot. They placed heated stones in the water until it boiled and had cooked their stew. After Spanish contact, Comanche traded for copper pots and iron kettles, which made cooking easier.

Women used berries and nuts, as well as honey and tallow, to flavor bison meat. They stored the tallow in intestine casings or rawhide pouches called oyóotû¿. They especially liked to make a sweet mush of bison marrow mixed with crushed mesquite beans.

The Comanches sometimes ate raw meat, especially raw liver flavored with gall. They also drank the milk from the slashed udders of bison, deer, and elk.[60] Among their delicacies was the curdled milk from the stomachs of suckling bison calves. They also enjoyed bison tripe, or stomachs.

Comanche generally ate a light meal breakfast and a large dinner. They ate during the day when they were hungry or when it was convenient. Like other Plains tribes, the Comanche were very hospitable. They prepared meals whenever a visitor arrived in camp, which led to outsiders' belief that the Comanches ate at all hours of the day or night. Many families offered thanks as they sat down to eat their meals.

Comanche children ate pemmican, but this was primarily a tasty, high-energy food reserved for war parties. Carried in a parfleche pouch, pemmican was eaten only when the men did not have time to hunt. Similarly, in camp, people ate pemmican only when other food was scarce. Traders ate pemmican sliced and dipped in honey, which they called Indian bread.

Clothing edit

 
Comanche headdress at the Ethnologisches Museum, Berlin
 
Chosequah, a Comanche warrior wearing full traditional regalia. Painted by E. A. Burbank, 1897.

Comanche clothing was simple and easy to wear. Men wore a leather belt with a breechcloth — a long piece of buckskin brought up between the legs and looped over and under the belt at the front and back, and loose-fitting deerskin leggings. Moccasins had soles made from thick, tough buffalo hide with soft deerskin uppers. Men wore nothing on the upper body, except in winter when they wore heavy robes of buffalo hide (or occasionally, bear, wolf, or coyote skins) with knee-length buffalo-hide boots. Young boys usually went naked except in cold weather. By age 8 or 9, they wore adult clothing. In the 19th century, men had replaced the buckskin breechcloths by woven cloth, and wore loose-fitting buckskin shirts. Women wore long deerskin dresses with a flared skirt and wide, long sleeves, with buckskin fringes on the sleeves and hem. Beads and pieces of metal were attached in geometric patterns. Women wore buckskin moccasins with buffalo soles. Women decorated their shirts, leggings and moccasins with fringes of deer-skin, animal fur, and human hair. They also decorated their shirts and leggings with patterns and shapes of beads and scraps of material. In winter they, too, wore warm buffalo robes and tall, fur-lined buffalo-hide boots. Unlike boys, girls old enough to walk were dressed in breechcloths. By age 12 or 13, they wore women's clothing.[61]

Hair and headgear edit

Comanche people took pride in their hair, which was worn long. They arranged it with porcupine quill brushes, greased it and parted it in the center from the forehead to the back of the neck. They painted the scalp along the parting with yellow, red, or white clay (or other colors). They wore their hair in two long braids tied with leather thongs or colored cloth, and sometimes wrapped with beaver fur. They also braided a strand of hair from the top of their head. This slender braid, called a scalp lock, was decorated with colored scraps of cloth and beads, and a single feather. Comanche men rarely wore anything on their heads. Only after they moved onto a reservation late in the 19th century did men begin to wear the typical Plains headdress. In severe cold, they might wear a brimless, woolly buffalo hide hat. At war, some warriors wore a headdress of buffalo scalp. Warriors cut away most of the hide and flesh from a buffalo head, leaving only a portion of the woolly head and the horns. This type of hat was worn only by the Comanche. Women did not let their hair grow as long as the men did. Young women might wear their hair long and braided, but women parted their hair in the middle and kept it short. Like the men, they painted their scalp along the parting with bright paint.[62]

Body decoration edit

Comanche men usually had pierced ears with hanging earrings made of pieces of shell or loops of brass or silver wire. A female relative would pierce the outer edge of the ear with six or eight holes. The men also tattooed his face, arms, and chest with geometric designs, and painted his face and body. Traditionally they used paints made of berry juice and the colored clays of the Comancheria. Later, traders supplied them with vermilion (red pigment) and bright grease paints. Men wore bands of leather and strips of metal on their arms. Except for black, which was the color for war, there was no standard color or pattern for face and body painting: it was a matter of individual preference. For example, one man might paint one side of his face white and the other side red; another might paint one side of his body green and the other side with green and black stripes. One Comanche might always paint himself in a particular way, while another might change the colors and designs when so inclined. Some designs had special meaning to the individual, and special colors and designs might have been revealed in a dream. Women might also tattoo their face or arms. They were fond of painting their bodies and were free to do so as they pleased. It was popular for women to paint the insides of their ears a bright red and paint great orange and red circles on their cheeks. They usually painted red and yellow around their lips.[63]

 
Comanche beaded ration bag, c. 1880, collection of the Oklahoma History Center

Art and material culture edit

Because of their frequent nomadic traveling, Comanche had to make sure that their household goods and other possessions were unbreakable. They did not use pottery that could easily be broken on long journeys. Weaving, wood carving, and metal working were unknown. Instead, they depended on buffalo for most of their tools, household goods, and weapons. They made nearly 200 different utilitarian items from the horns, hide, and bones.

Removing the lining of the inner stomach, women made the paunch into a water bag. The lining was stretched over four sticks and filled with water to make a pot for cooking soups and stews. With wood scarce on the plains, women relied on buffalo chips (dried dung) as fuel for cooking and heat.[64]

Stiff rawhide was fashioned into saddles, stirrups and cinches, knife cases, buckets, and moccasin soles. Rawhide was also made into rattles and drums. Strips of rawhide were twisted into sturdy ropes. Scraped to resemble white parchment, rawhide skins were folded to make parfleches in which food, clothing, and other personal belongings were kept. Women also tanned hides to make soft and supple buckskin, which was used for tipi covers, warm robes, blankets, cloths, and moccasins. They used buckskin for bedding, cradles, dolls, bags, pouches, quivers, and gun cases.

Sinew was used for bowstrings and sewing thread. Hooves were turned into glue and rattles. Horns were shaped into cups, spoons, and ladles, while the tail made a whip, fly-swatter, or a tipi decoration. Men made tools, scrapers, needles, pipes and children's toys from the bones. But men concentrated on making bows and arrows, lances, and shields. The thick neck skin of an old bull was ideal for war shields that deflected arrows as well as bullets. Since they spent most of each day on horseback, they also fashioned leather into saddles, stirrups, and other equipment for their mounts. Buffalo hair was used to fill saddle pads and was used in rope and halters.[65]

Language edit

 
Charles Chibitty, Comanche code talker in World War II

The language spoken by the Comanche people, Comanche (Numu tekwapu), is a Numic language of the Uto-Aztecan language group. It is closely related to the language of the Shoshone, from which the Comanche diverged around 1700. The two languages remain closely related, but a few low-level sound changes inhibit mutual intelligibility. The earliest records of Comanche from 1786 clearly show a dialect of Shoshone, but by the beginning of the 20th century, these sound changes had modified the way Comanche sounded in subtle, but profound, ways.[66][67] Although efforts are now being made to ensure survival of the language, most of its speakers are elderly, and less than 1% of the Comanches can speak it.

In the late 19th century, many Comanche children were placed in boarding schools with children from different tribes. The children were taught English and discouraged from speaking their native language. Anecdotally, enforcement of speaking English was severe.

Quanah Parker learned and spoke English and was adamant that his own children do the same. The second generation then grew up speaking English, because it was believed[who?] that it was better for them not to know Comanche.[68]

Comanches were among the Native Americans who were first utilized as code talkers by the U.S. Army during World War I.[69]

During World War II, a group of 17 young men, referred to as "the Comanche code talkers", were trained and used by the U.S. Army to send messages conveying sensitive information that could not be deciphered by the Germans.[70][71]

Notable Comanches edit

Historic Comanche people edit

These are notable Comanche people from the 18th and 19th centuries, prior to allotment.

 
Mo'o-wai ("Pushing aside" or "Pushing-in-the-middle"), aka "Shaking Hand", chief of the Kotsoteka
  • Amorous Man (Pahayoko) (late 1780s – c. 1860), Penateka chief
  • Black Horse (died ca. 1900), second chief of the Quahadi band
  • Buffalo Hump (Potsʉnakwahipʉ) (c. 1800 – c. 1865/1870), war chief and later head chief of the Penateka division
  • Carne Muerto, Tehcap (1832–1860s), Quahadi war chief
  • Tavibo Naritgant, Cuerno Verde (died 1779), war chief
  • Horseback (Tʉhʉyakwahipʉ) (c. 1805/1810 – c. 1888), chief of the Nokoni band
  • Iron Jacket (Puhihwikwasu'u) (c. 1790 – 1858), war chief and later head chief of the Quahadi band; father of Peta Nocona
  • Isatai (c. 1840–c. 1890), warrior and medicine man of the Quahadi
  • Mow-way (Shaking Hand, Pushing-in-the-Middle) (c. 1825 – 1886), Kotsoteka chief
  • Old Owl (Mupitsukupʉ) (late 1780s – 1849), Penateka chief
  • Peta Nocona (Lone Wanderer) (c. 1820 – c. 1864), chief of the Quahadi division; father of Quanah Parker
  • Quanah Parker (c. 1845 – 1911), Quahadi chief, a founder of Native American Church and rancher
  • White Parker (1887–1956), son of Quanah Parker and Methodist missionary
  • Piaru-ekaruhkapu (Big Red Meat) (ca. 1820/1825 – 1875), Nokoni chief
  • Sanapia (1895–1984), medicine woman
  • Santa Anna (c. 1800 – c. 1849), war chief of the Penateka Band
  • Spirit Talker (Mukwooru) (c. 1780 – 1840), Penateka chief and medicine man
  • Ten Bears (Pawʉʉrasʉmʉnunʉ) (c. 1790 – 1872), chief of the Ketahto band and later of the entire Yamparika division
  • Tosawi (White Knife) (c. 1805/1810 – c. 1878/1880), chief of the Penateka band
  • Yellow Wolf (Isa-viah) (c. 1800/1805 – 1854), war chief of the Penateka division

Comanche Nation citizens edit

 
Karita Coffey, Comanche professor, ceramic artist, and sculptor at the Institute of American Indian Arts, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 2014

These are 20th- and 21st-century citizens of the Comanche Nation.

See also edit

References edit

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  3. ^ a b "Home | Comanche Nation". comanchenation.com. Retrieved August 20, 2022.
  4. ^ Jean Ormsbee Charney. A Grammar of Comanche. (Nebraska, 1993). Pages 1–2.
  5. ^ a b c Kavanagh, Thomas W. "Comanche (tribe)". The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. Oklahoma Historical Society. Retrieved December 23, 2021.
  6. ^ Fowles, Severin, Arterberry, Lindsay Montgomery, Atherton, Heather (2017), "Comanche New Mexico: The Eighteenth Century", in New Mexico and the Pimeria Alta, Boulder: University Press of Colorado, pp. 158–160. Downloaded from JSTOR.
  7. ^ Marez, Curtis (June 2001). "Signifying Spain, Becoming Comanche, Making Mexicans: Indian Captivity and the History of Chicana/o Popular Performance". American Quarterly. 53 (2): 267–307. doi:10.1353/aq.2001.0018. S2CID 144608670.
  8. ^ Hämäläinen, Pekka (January 2008). The Comanche Empire. NewHaven and London: Yale University Press. p. 171. ISBN 978-0-300-15117-6.
  9. ^ "The Homecoming Dance". Comanche Nation official website. Retrieved July 11, 2017.
  10. ^ Governor Cuervo y Valdez Report, 18 Aug 1706
  11. ^ Ernest Wallace and E. Adamson Hoebel. 1952. The Comanches: Lords of the South Plains (University of Oklahoma Press).
  12. ^ Bright, William, ed. (2004). Native American Placenames of the United States. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 364. ISBN 9780806135984.
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  56. ^ Kroeker
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  67. ^ McLaughlin (2000), 293–304
  68. ^ Hämäläinen (2008), p.171
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  71. ^ "Comanche Indians Honor D-Day Code-Talkers". D-Day 70th Anniversary. NBC News. June 9, 2014.

Sources edit

  • Kavanagh, Thomas W. (1996). The Comanches: A History 1706–1875. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-7792-2.
  • Kroeker, Marvin E. (1997). Comanches and Mennonites on the Oklahoma Plains: A.J. and Magdalena Becker and the Post Oak Mission. Fresno, CA: Centers for Mennonite Brethren Studies. ISBN 0-921788-42-8.
  • McLaughlin, John E. (1992). "A Counter-Intuitive Solution in Central Numic Phonology". International Journal of American Linguistics. 58 (2): 158–181. doi:10.1086/ijal.58.2.3519754. JSTOR 3519754. S2CID 148250257.
  • McLaughlin, John E. (2000). Casad, Gene; Willett, Thomas (eds.). "Language Boundaries and Phonological Borrowing in the Central Numic Languages". Uto-Aztecan: Structural, Temporal, and Geographic Perspectives. Sonora, Mexico: Friends of Uto-Aztecan Universidad de Sonora, División de Humanidades y Bellas Artes, Hermosillo. ISBN 970-689-030-0.
  • Meadows, William C (2003). Kiowa, Apache, and Comanche Military Societies: Enduring Veterans, 1800 to the Present. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-70518-0.
  • Rollings, William H.; Deer, Ada E (2004). The Comanche. Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7910-8349-9.
  • Swan, Daniel C. (1999). Peyote Religious Art: Symbols of Faith and Belief. Jackson, Mississippi: University of Mississippi Press. ISBN 1-57806-096-6.
  • Wallace, Ernest; Hoebel, E. Adamson (1952). The Comanche: Lords of the Southern Plains. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 9780806102498. OCLC 1175397.
  • Nye, Wilbur Sturtevant. Carbine and Lance: The Story of Old Fort Sill, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1983
  • Leckie, William H.. The Buffalo Soldiers: A Narrative of the Negro Cavalry in the West, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1967
  • Fowler, Arlen L.. The Black Infantry in the West, 1869–1891, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1996

Further reading edit

  • Fehrenbach, Theodore Reed (1974). The Comanches: The Destruction of a People. New York: Knopf. ISBN 0-394-48856-3. Republished as Fehrenbach, Theodore Reed (2003). The Comanches: The History of a People. New York: Anchor Books. ISBN 1-4000-3049-8.
  • Foster, Morris W. (1991). Being Comanche: A Social History of an American Indian Community. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 0-8165-1367-8.
  • Hamalainen (Hämäläinen), Pekka (2008). The Comanche Empire. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300126549.
  • John, Elizabeth A. H. (1975). Storms Brewed in Other Men's Worlds: The Confrontation of the Indian, Spanish, and French in the Southwest, 1540–1795. College Station: Texas A&M Press. ISBN 0-89096-000-3.
  • Kavanagh, Thomas W. (2001). DeMallie, Raymond J. (ed.). "High Plains: Comanche". Handbook of North American Indians. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. 13: 886–906.
  • Kavanagh, Thomas W. (2007). . Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. Oklahoma Historical Society. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved November 27, 2013.
  • Kavanagh, Thomas W. (2008). Comanche Ethnography. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-2764-4.
  • Kenner, Charles (1969). A History of New Mexican-Plains Indian Relations. Norman. OCLC 2141. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Noyes, Stanley (1993). Los Comanches the horse people, 1751–1845. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico. ISBN 0-585-27380-4.
  • Spady, James O'Neil (2009). "Reconsidering Empire: Current Interpretations of Native American Agency during Colonization (review)". Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History. 10 (2).
  • Thomas, Alfred Barnaby (1940). The Plains Indians and New Mexico, 1751–1778: A collection of documents illustrative of the history of the eastern frontier of New Mexico. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. OCLC 3626655.
  • Wolff, Gerald W.; Cash, Joseph W. (1976). The Comanche People. Phoenix, Arizona: Indian Tribal Series.

External links edit

  • Comanche Nation – official website
  • The Comanche Language and Cultural Preservation Committee
  • Comanche Lodge
  • . History Channel. Archived from the original on March 8, 2010. Retrieved August 26, 2005.
  • . Oklahoma Historical Society. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013.
  • "Comanche Indians" from the Handbook of Texas Online
  • . Portal to Texas History. Archived from the original on March 11, 2007.
  • "The Texas Comanches". Texas Indians.

comanche, other, uses, disambiguation, nʉmʉnʉʉ, nʉmʉnʉʉ, people, native, american, tribe, from, southern, plains, present, united, states, people, today, belong, federally, recognized, nation, headquartered, lawton, oklahoma, nʉmʉnʉʉflag, nation, total, popula. For other uses see Comanche disambiguation The Comanche k e ˈ m ae n tʃ i or Nʉmʉnʉʉ Comanche Nʉmʉnʉʉ the people 3 is a Native American tribe from the Southern Plains of the present day United States Comanche people today belong to the federally recognized Comanche Nation headquartered in Lawton Oklahoma 1 ComancheNʉmʉnʉʉFlag of the Comanche Nation 1 Total population17 000 2 Regions with significant populationsUnited States Oklahoma Texas New Mexico LanguagesEnglish ComancheReligionNative American Church Christianity traditional tribal religionRelated ethnic groupsShoshone Timbisha and other Numic peoplesThe Comanche language is a Numic language of the Uto Aztecan family Originally it was a Shoshoni dialect but diverged and became a separate language 4 The Comanche were once part of the Shoshone people of the Great Basin 5 In the 18th and 19th centuries Comanche lived in most of present day northwestern Texas and adjacent areas in eastern New Mexico southeastern Colorado southwestern Kansas and western Oklahoma Spanish colonists and later Mexicans called their historical territory Comancheria During the 18th and 19th centuries Comanche practiced a nomadic horse culture and hunted particularly bison They traded with neighboring Native American peoples and Spanish French and American colonists and settlers As European Americans encroached on their territory the Comanche waged war on the settlers and raided their settlements as well as those of neighboring Native American tribes 6 They took with them captives from other tribes during warfare using them as slaves selling them to the Spanish and later to Mexican settlers or adopting them into their tribe 5 Thousands of captives from raids on Spanish Mexican and American settlers were assimilated into Comanche society 7 At their peak the Comanche language was the lingua franca of the Great Plains region 8 Diseases destruction of the buffalo herds and territory loss forced most Comanches on reservations in Indian Territory by the late 1870s 5 In the 21st century the Comanche Nation has 17 000 members around 7 000 of whom reside in tribal jurisdictional areas around Lawton Fort Sill and the surrounding areas of southwestern Oklahoma 2 The Comanche Homecoming Annual Dance takes place in mid July in Walters Oklahoma 9 Contents 1 Name 2 Government 3 Economic development 4 Cultural institutions 5 History 5 1 Formation 5 2 Divisions 5 3 Some of the Comanche group names 5 4 Comanche Wars 5 5 Relationship with settlers 5 5 1 Cherokee Commission 5 5 2 Meusebach Comanche treaty 5 5 3 Fort Martin Scott treaty 5 5 4 Captive Herman Lehmann 5 6 Recent history 6 Culture 6 1 Childbirth 6 2 Children 6 3 Death 6 4 Transportation and habitation 6 5 Food 6 6 Clothing 6 7 Hair and headgear 6 8 Body decoration 6 9 Art and material culture 6 10 Language 7 Notable Comanches 7 1 Historic Comanche people 7 2 Comanche Nation citizens 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksName editThe Comanche s autonym is nʉmʉnʉʉ meaning the human beings or the people 3 The earliest known use of the term Comanche dates to 1706 when the Comanche were reported by Spanish officials to be preparing to attack far outlying Pueblo settlements in southern Colorado 10 The Spanish adopted the Ute name for the people kɨmantsi enemy and spelled it the way they pronounced it in Spanish 11 Before 1740 French explorers from the east sometimes used the name Padouca for the Comanche since it was already used for the Plains Apache and the French were not aware of the change of tribe in the region in the early 18th century 12 Government editThe Comanche Nation is headquartered in Lawton Oklahoma Their tribal jurisdictional area is located in Caddo Comanche Cotton Greer Jackson Kiowa Tillman and Harmon counties Their current Tribal Chairman is Mark Woommavovah The tribe requires enrolled members to have at least 1 8 blood quantum level equivalent to one great grandparent 1 Economic development editThe tribe operates its own housing authority and issues tribal vehicle tags They have their own Department of Higher Education primarily awarding scholarships and financial aid for members college educations They own 10 tribal smoke shops and four casinos 1 Comanche Nation Casino in Lawton 13 Red River Casino in Devol Oklahoma 14 Comanche Spur Casino in Elgin Oklahoma 15 Comanche Star Casino in Walters Oklahoma 16 17 Cultural institutions edit nbsp LaDonna Harris Comanche activist and founder of Americans for Indian OpportunityThe Comanche National Museum and Cultural Center in Lawton Oklahoma has permanent and changing exhibitions on Comanche history and culture It opened to the public in 2007 18 In 2002 the tribe founded the Comanche Nation College a two year tribal college in Lawton 19 It closed in 2017 because of problems with accreditation and funding Each July Comanche gather from across the United States to celebrate their heritage and culture in Walters at the annual Comanche Homecoming powwow The Comanche Nation Fair takes place every September The Comanche Little Ponies host two annual dances one over New Year s Eve and one in May 20 History editMain article Comanche history See also Spanish peace treaties with the Comanche Formation edit nbsp Pre contact distribution of Uto Aztecan languagesThe Proto Comanche movement to the Plains was part of the larger phenomenon known as the Shoshonean Expansion in which that language family spread across the Great Basin and across the mountains into Wyoming The Kotsoteka Bison Eaters were probably among the first Other groups followed Contact with the Shoshones of Wyoming was maintained until the 1830s when it was broken by the advancing Cheyennes and Arapahoes After the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 various Plains peoples acquired horses but it was probably some time before they were very numerous As late as 1725 Comanches were described as using large dogs rather than horses to carry their bison hide campaign tents 21 The horse became a key element in the emergence of a distinctive Comanche culture It was of such strategic importance that some scholars suggested that the Comanche broke away from the Shoshone and moved south to search for additional sources of horses among the settlers of New Spain to the south rather than search for new herds of buffalo The Comanche have the longest documented existence as horse mounted Plains peoples they had horses when the Cheyennes still lived in earth lodges 22 The Comanche supplied horses and mules to all comers As early as 1795 Comanche were selling horses to Anglo American traders 23 and by the mid 19th century Comanche supplied horses were flowing into St Louis via other Indian middlemen Seminole Osage Shawnee 24 Their original migration took them to the southern Great Plains into a sweep of territory extending from the Arkansas River to central Texas The earliest references to them in the Spanish records date from 1706 when reports reached Santa Fe that Utes and Comanches were about to attack 23 In the Comanche advance the Apaches were driven off the Plains By the end of the 18th century the struggle between Comanches and Apaches had assumed legendary proportions in 1784 in recounting the history of the southern Plains Texas governor Domingo Cabello y Robles recorded that some 60 years earlier i e c 1724 the Apaches had been routed from the southern Plains in a nine day battle at La Gran Sierra del Fierro The Great Mountain of Iron somewhere northwest of Texas There is however no other record documentary or legendary of such a fight 21 They were formidable warriors who developed strategies for using traditional weapons for fighting on horseback Warfare was a major part of Comanche life Comanche raids into Mexico traditionally took place during the full moon when the Comanche could see to ride at night This led to the term Comanche Moon during which the Comanche raided for horses captives and weapons 25 Comanche raids especially in the 1840s reached hundreds of miles deep into Mexico devastating northern parts of the country 26 Divisions edit Kavanagh has defined four levels of social political integration in traditional pre reservation Comanche society 27 Patrilineal and patrilocal nuclear family Extended family group nʉmʉnahkahni the people who live together in a household no size limits but kinship recognition was limited to relatives two generations above or three below Residential local group or band comprised one or more nʉmʉnahkahni one of which formed its core The band was the primary social unit of the Comanche A typical band might number several hundred people It was a family group centered around a group of men all of whom were relatives sons brothers or cousins Since marriage with a known relative was forbidden wives came from another group and sisters left to join their husbands The central man in that group was their grandfather father or uncle He was called paraivo chief After his death one of the other men took his place if none were available the band members might drift apart to other groups where they might have relatives and or establish new relations by marrying an existing member There was no separate term for or status of peace chief or war chief any man leading a war party was a war chief Division sometimes called tribe Spanish nacion rama branch comprising several local groups linked by kinship sodalities political medicine and military and common interest in hunting gathering war peace trade In contrast to the neighboring Cheyenne and Arapaho to the north there was never a single Comanche political unit or Nation recognized by all Comanches Rather the divisions the most tribe like units acted independently pursuing their own economic and political goals Before the 1750s the Spanish identified three Comanche Naciones divisions Hʉpenʉʉ Jupe Hoipi Yaparʉhka Yamparika and Kʉhtsʉtʉhka Kotsoteka After the Mescalero Apache Jicarilla Apache and Lipan Apache had been largely displaced from the Southern Plains by the Comanche and allied tribes in the 1780s the Spanish began to divide the now dominant Comanche into two geographical groups which only partially corresponded to the former three Naciones The Kʉhtsʉtʉhka Kotsoteka Buffalo Eaters which had moved southeast in the 1750s and 1760s to the Southern Plains in Texas were called Cuchanec Orientales Eastern Cuchanec Kotsoteka or Eastern Comanche while those Kʉhtsʉtʉhka Kotsoteka that remained in the northwest and west together with Hʉpenʉʉ Jupe Hoipi Timber Forest People and sometimes Yaparʉhka Yamparika which had moved southward to the North Canadian River were called Cuchanec Occidentales Western Cuchanec Kotsoteka or Western Comanche The Western Comanche lived in the region of the upper Arkansas Canadian and Red Rivers and the Llano Estacado The Eastern Comanche lived on the Edwards Plateau and the Texas plains of the upper Brazos and Colorado Rivers and east to the Cross Timbers They were probably the ancestors of the Penatʉka Nʉʉ Penateka Honey Eaters 28 Over time these divisions were altered in various ways primarily due to changes in political resources 29 As noted above the Kʉhtsʉtʉhka Kotsoteka were probably the first proto Comanche group to separate from the Eastern Shoshones nbsp War on the plains Comanche right trying to lance an Osage warrior Painting by George Catlin 1834The name Hʉpenʉʉ Jupe Hoipi vanished from history in the early 19th century probably merging into the other divisions they are likely the forerunners of the Nokoni Nʉʉ Nokoni Kwaarʉ Nʉʉ Kwahadi Quohada and the Hʉpenʉʉ Hois local group of the Penatʉka Nʉʉ Penateka Due to pressure by southwards moving Kiowa and Plains Apache Naishan raiders many Yaparʉhka Yamparika moved southeast joining the Eastern Comanche and becoming known as the Tahnahwah Tenawa Tenahwit Many Kiowa and Plains Apache moved to northern Comancheria and became later closely associated with the Yaparʉhka Yamparika In the mid 19th century other powerful divisions arose such as the Nokoni Nʉʉ Nokoni wanderers literally go someplace and return and the Kwaarʉ Nʉʉ Kwahadi Quohada Antelope Eaters The latter originally some local groups of the Kʉhtsʉtʉhka Kotsoteka from the Cimarron River Valley as well as descendants of some Hʉpenʉʉ Jupe Hoipi which had pulled both southwards The northernmost Comanche division was the Yaparʉhka Yapai Nʉʉ or Yamparika Yap Root Eaters As the last band to move onto the Plains they retained much of their Eastern Shoshone tradition The power and success of the Comanche attracted bands of neighboring peoples who joined them and became part of Comanche society an Arapaho group became known as Saria Tʉhka Chariticas Sata Teichas Dog Eaters band an Eastern Shoshone group as Pohoi Pohoee wild sage band and a Plains Apache group as Tasipenanʉʉ band The Texans and Americans divided the Comanche into five large dominant bands the Yaparʉhka Yamparika Kʉhtsʉtʉhka Kotsoteka Nokoni Nʉʉ Nokoni Penatʉka Nʉʉ Penateka and Kwaarʉ Nʉʉ Kwahadi Quohada which in turn were divided by geographical terms into first three later four regional groupings Northern Comanche Middle Comanche Southern Comanche Eastern Comanche and later Western Comanche However these terms generally do not correspond to the Native language terms nbsp Comanches meeting the U S dragoons near the Wichita Mountains in 1834 by George CatlinThe Northern Comanche label encompassed the Yaparʉhka Yamparika between the Arkansas River and Canadian River and the prominent and powerful Kʉhtsʉtʉhka Kotsoteka who roamed the high plains of Oklahoma and Texas Panhandles between Red and Canadian River the famous Palo Duro Canyon offered them and their horse herds of protection from strong winter storms as well as from enemies because the two bands dominated and ranged in the northern Comancheria The Middle Comanche label encompassed the aggressive Nokoni Nʉʉ Nokoni wanderers those who turn back between the headwaters of the Red River and the Colorado River in the south and the Western Cross Timbers in the east their preferred range were on the Brazos River headwaters and its tributaries the Pease River offered protection from storms and enemies With them shared two smaller bands the same tribal areas the Tahnahwah Tenawa Tenahwit Those Living Downstream and Tanimʉʉ Tanima Dahaʉi Tevawish Liver Eaters All three bands together were known as Middle Comanche because they lived in the middle of the Comancheria The Southern Comanche label encompassed the Penatʉka Nʉʉ Penateka Honey Eaters the southernmost largest and best known band among whites as they lived near the first Spanish and Texan settlements their tribal areas extended from the upper reaches of the rivers in central Texas and Colorado River southward including much of the Edwards Plateau and eastward to the Western Cross Timbers because they dominated the southern Comancheria they were called Southern Comanche The Western Comanche label encompassed the Kwaarʉ Nʉʉ Kwahadi Quohada Antelope Eaters which is the last to develop as an independent band in the 19th century They lived on the hot low shadow desert plateaus of Llano Estacado in eastern New Mexico and found shelter in Tule Canyon and Palo Duro Canyon in northwestern Texas They were the only band that never signed a contract with the Texans or Americans and they were the last to give up the resistance Because of their relative isolation from the other bands on the westernmost edge of the Comancheria they were called the Western Comanche There has been and continues to be much confusion in the presentation of Comanche group names Groups on all levels of organization families nʉmʉnahkahni bands and divisions were given names but many band lists do not distinguish these levels In addition there could be alternate names and nicknames The spelling differences between Spanish and English add to the confusion Some of the Comanche group names edit Yaparʉhka or Yamparika also Yapai Nʉʉ Yap Root Eaters One of its local groups may have been called Widyʉ Nʉʉ Widyʉ Widyʉ Yapa Awl People after the death of a man named Awl they changed their name to Tʉtsahkʉnanʉʉ or Ditsahkanah Sewing People Titchahkaynah Other Yapai local groups included Ketahtoh or Ketatore Don t Wear Shoes also called Napwat Tʉ Wearing No Shoes Motso Bearded Ones derived from motso Beard Pibianigwai Loud Talkers Loud Askers Sʉhmʉhtʉhka Eat Everything Wahkoh Shell Ornament Waw ai or Wohoi also Waaih Lots of Maggots on the Penis also called Nahmahe enah Somehow being sexual together to have sex called by other groups because they preferred to marry endogamy and chose their partners from their own local group this was viewed critically by other Comanche people Hʉpenʉʉ or Jupe Timber People because they lived in more wooded areas in the Central Plains north of the Arkansas River Also spelled Hois Kʉhtsʉtʉʉka or Kotsoteka Buffalo Eaters spelled in Spanish as Cuchanec Kwaarʉnʉʉ or Kwahadi Quohada Kwahare Antelope Eaters nicknamed Kwahihʉʉki Sunshades on Their Backs because they lived on desert plains of the Llano Estacado in eastern New Mexico westernmost Comanche Band One of their local groups was nicknamed Parʉhʉya Elk literally Water Horse Nokoninʉʉ or Nokoni Movers Returners allegedly after the death of chief Peta Nocona they called themselves Noyʉhkanʉʉ Not Staying in one place and orTʉtsʉ Noyʉkanʉʉ Detsanayʉka Bad Campers Poor Wanderer Tahnahwah or Tenawa also Tenahwit Those Who Live Downstream Tanimʉʉ or Tanima also called Dahaʉi or Tevawish Liver Eaters Penatʉka Nʉʉ or Penateka other variants Pihnaatʉka Penanʉʉ Honey Eaters Some names given by others include WahaToya literally Two Mountains given as Foothills in Cloud People those who live near Walsenburg CO lt Whatley Jemez Comanche Kiowa repatriation 1993 1999 gt Toyanʉmʉnʉ Foothills People those who lived near Las Vegas NM lt Whatley Jemez Comanche Kiowa repatriation 1993 1999 gt Unassignable names include Tayʉʉwit Teyʉwit Hospitable Ones Kʉvahrahtpaht Steep Climbers Taykahpwai Tekapwai No Meat Pagatsʉ Pa kah tsa Head of the Stream also called Pahnaixte Those Who Live Upstream Mʉtsahne or Motsai Undercut Bank Old Shoshone names Pekwi Tʉhka Fish Eaters Pohoi Pohoee Wild Sage Other names which may or may not refer to Comanche groups include Hani Nʉmʉ Hai ne na ʉne Corn Eating People Witchitas It chit a bʉd ah Utsu itʉ Cold People i e Northern People probably another name for the Yaparʉhka or one of their local groups because they lived to the north Itehtah o Burnt Meat nicknamed by other Comanche because they threw their surplus of meat out in the spring where it dried and became black looking like burnt meat Naʉ niem No na ʉm Ridge People Modern Local Groups Ohnonʉʉ also Ohnʉnʉnʉʉ or Onahʉnʉnʉʉ Salt People or Salt Creek people live in Caddo County in the vicinity of Cyril Oklahoma mostly descendants of the Nokoni Pianavowit Wianʉʉ Wianʉ Wia ne Hill Wearing Away live east of Walters Oklahoma descendants of Waysee Comanche Wars edit nbsp Comancheria 1770 1850 Main articles Comanche Wars Comanche Mexico War and Texas Indian Wars The Comanche fought a number of conflicts against Spanish and later Mexican and American armies These were both expeditionary as with the raids into Mexico and defensive The Comanche were noted as fierce warriors who fought vigorously for their homeland of Comancheria However the massive population of the settlers from the east and the diseases they brought led to pressure and decline of Comanche power and the cessation of their major presence in the southern Great Plains Relationship with settlers edit nbsp Comanches watching an American caravan in West Texas 1850 by the US Army officer Arthur Lee nbsp Comanche warriors c 1867 1874 nbsp Quanah Parker prominent chief of the Comanche Indians with a feather fan photo by James Mooney 1892The Comanche maintained an ambiguous relationship with Europeans and later settlers attempting to colonize their territory The Comanche were valued as trading partners since 1786 via the Comancheros of New Mexico but were feared for their raids against settlers in Texas 30 31 32 33 Similarly they were at one time or another at war with virtually every other Native American group living on the South Plains 34 35 leaving opportunities for political maneuvering by European colonial powers and the United States At one point Sam Houston president of the newly created Republic of Texas almost succeeded in reaching a peace treaty with the Comanche in the 1844 Treaty of Tehuacana Creek His efforts were thwarted in 1845 when the Texas legislature refused to create an official boundary between Texas and the Comancheria While the Comanche managed to maintain their independence and increase their territory by the mid 19th century they faced annihilation because of a wave of epidemics due to Eurasian diseases to which they had no immunity such as smallpox and measles Outbreaks of smallpox 1817 1848 and cholera 1849 took a major toll on the Comanche whose population dropped from an estimated 20 000 in the late 18th century to just a few thousand by the 1870s The US began efforts in the late 1860s to move the Comanche into reservations with the Treaty of Medicine Lodge 1867 which offered churches schools and annuities in return for a vast tract of land totaling over 60 000 square miles 160 000 km2 The government promised to stop the buffalo hunters who were decimating the great herds of the Plains provided that the Comanche along with the Apaches Kiowas Cheyenne and Arapahos move to a reservation totaling less than 5 000 square miles 13 000 km2 of land However the government did not prevent the slaughtering of the herds The Comanche under Quenatosavit White Eagle later called Isa tai Coyote s Vagina retaliated by attacking a group of hunters in the Texas Panhandle in the Second Battle of Adobe Walls 1874 The attack was a disaster for the Comanche and the US army was called in during the Red River War to drive the remaining Comanche in the area into the reservation culminating in the Battle of Palo Duro Canyon Within just 10 years the buffalo were on the verge of extinction effectively ending the Comanche way of life as hunters In May 1875 the last free band of Comanches led by the Quahada warrior Quanah Parker surrendered and moved to the Fort Sill reservation in Oklahoma The last independent Kiowa and Kiowa Apache had also surrendered The 1890 Census showed 1 598 Comanche at the Fort Sill reservation which they shared with 1 140 Kiowa and 326 Kiowa Apache 36 Cherokee Commission edit The Agreement with the Comanche Kiowa and Apache signed with the Cherokee Commission October 6 21 1892 37 further reduced their reservation to 480 000 acres 1 900 km2 at a cost of 1 25 per acre 308 88 km2 with an allotment of 160 acres 0 65 km2 per person per tribe to be held in trust New allotments were made in 1906 to all children born after the agreement and the remaining land was opened to white settlement With this new arrangement the era of the Comanche reservation came to an abrupt end Meusebach Comanche treaty editThe Peneteka band agreed to a peace treaty with the German Immigration Company under John O Meusebach This treaty was not affiliated with any level of government Meusebach brokered the treaty to settle the lands on the Fisher Miller Land Grant from which were formed the 10 counties of Concho Kimble Llano Mason McCulloch Menard Schleicher San Saba Sutton and Tom Green 38 Further information Fisher Miller Land GrantIn contrast to many treaties of its day this treaty was very brief and simple with all parties agreeing to a mutual cooperation and a sharing of the land The treaty was agreed to at a meeting in San Saba County 39 and signed by all parties on May 9 1847 in Fredericksburg Texas The treaty was very specifically between the Peneteka band and the German Immigration Company No other band or tribe was involved The German Immigration Company was dissolved by Meusebach himself shortly after it had served its purpose By 1875 the Comanches had been relocated to reservations 40 Further information Meusebach Comanche TreatyFive years later artist Friedrich Richard Petri and his family moved to the settlement of Pedernales near Fredericksburg Petri s sketches and watercolors gave witness to the friendly relationships between the Germans and various local Native American tribes 41 Fort Martin Scott treaty editIn 1850 another treaty was signed in San Saba between the United States government and a number of local tribes among which were the Comanches This treaty was named for the nearest military fort which was Fort Martin Scott The treaty was never officially ratified by any level of government and was binding only on the part of the Native Americans 42 43 Further information Fort Martin Scott Treaty Captive Herman Lehmann edit One of the most famous captives in Texas was a German boy named Herman Lehmann He had been kidnapped by the Apaches only to escape and be rescued by the Comanches Lehmann became the adoptive son of Quanah Parker On August 26 1901 Quanah Parker provided a legal affidavit verifying Lehmann s life as his adopted son 1877 1878 On May 29 1908 the United States Congress authorized the United States Secretary of the Interior to allot Lehmann as an adopted member of the Comanche nation 160 acres of Oklahoma land near Grandfield 44 Recent history edit nbsp Mac Silverhorn Comanche grandson of Silver Horn drumming with friend at Redstone Baptist ChurchEntering the Western economy was a challenge for the Comanche in the late 19th and early 20th centuries Many tribal members were defrauded of whatever remained of their land and possessions Appointed paramount chief by the United States government Chief Quanah Parker campaigned vigorously for better deals for his people meeting with Washington politicians frequently and helped manage land for the tribe Parker became wealthy as a cattleman He also campaigned for the Comanches permission to practice the Native American Church religious rites such as the usage of peyote which was condemned by European Americans 45 Before the first Oklahoma legislature Quanah testified I do not think this legislature should interfere with a man s religion also these people should be allowed to retain this health restorer These healthy gentleman before you use peyote and those that do not use it are not so healthy 46 During World War II many Comanche left the traditional tribal lands in Oklahoma to seek jobs and more opportunities in the cities of California and the Southwest About half of the Comanche population still lives in Oklahoma centered on the town of Lawton Recently an 80 minute 1920 silent film was rediscovered titled The Daughter of Dawn It features a cast of more than 300 Comanche and Kiowa 47 Culture edit nbsp Uwat Comanche photograph by Edward Curtis 1930Childbirth edit nbsp Comanche mother and baby son in cradleboard photo by Edward Curtis nbsp Comanche cradleboard held at the Birmingham Museum of ArtIf a woman went into labor while the band was in camp she was moved to a tipi or a brush lodge if it was summer One or more of the older women assisted as midwives Men were not allowed inside the tipi during or immediately after the delivery 48 First the midwives softened the earthen floor of the tipi and dug two holes One of the holes was for heating water and the other for the afterbirth One or two stakes were driven into the ground near the expectant mother s bedding for her to grip during the pain of labor After the birth the midwives hung the umbilical cord on a hackberry tree The people believed that if the umbilical cord was not disturbed before it rotted the baby would live a long and prosperous life 49 The newborn was swaddled and remained with its mother in the tipi for a few days The baby was placed in a cradleboard and the mother went back to work She could easily carry the cradleboard on her back or prop it against a tree where the baby could watch her while she collected seeds or roots Cradleboards consisted of a flat board to which a basket was attached The latter was made from rawhide straps or a leather sheath that laced up the front With soft dry moss as a diaper the young one was safely tucked into the leather pocket During cold weather the baby was wrapped in blankets and then placed in the cradleboard The baby remained in the cradleboard for about ten months then it was allowed to crawl around 50 Both girls and boys were welcomed into the band but boys were favored If the baby was a boy one of the midwives informed the father or grandfather It s your close friend Families might paint a flap on the tipi to tell the rest of the tribe that they had been strengthened with another warrior Sometimes a man named his child but mostly the father asked a medicine man or another man of distinction to do so He did this in the hope of his child living a long and productive life During the public naming ceremony the medicine man lit his pipe and offered smoke to the heavens earth and each of the four directions He prayed that the child would remain happy and healthy He then lifted the child to symbolize its growing up and announced the child s name four times He held the child a little higher each time he said the name It was believed that the child s name foretold its future even a weak or sick child could grow up to be a great warrior hunter and raider if given a name suggesting courage and strength 50 Boys were often named after their grandfather uncle or other relative Girls were usually named after one of their father s relatives but the name was selected by the mother As children grew up they also acquired nicknames at different points in their lives to express some aspect of their lives 51 Children edit The Comanche looked on their children as their most precious gift Children were rarely punished 52 Sometimes though an older sister or other relative was called upon to discipline a child or the parents arranged for a boogey man to scare the child Occasionally old people donned sheets and frightened disobedient boys and girls Children were also told about Big Maneater Owl Pia Mupitsi who lived in a cave on the south side of the Witchita Mountains and ate bad children at night 53 Children learned from example by observing and listening to their parents and others in the band As soon as she was old enough to walk a girl followed her mother about the camp and played at the daily tasks of cooking and making clothing She was also very close to her mother s sisters who were called not aunt but pia meaning mother She was given a little deerskin doll which she took with her everywhere She learned to make all the clothing for the doll 54 A boy identified not only with his father but with his father s family as well as with the bravest warriors in the band He learned to ride a horse before he could walk By the time he was four or five he was expected to be able to skillfully handle a horse When he was five or six he was given a small bow and arrows Often a boy was taught to ride and shoot by his grandfather since his father and other warriors were on raids and hunts His grandfather also taught him about his own boyhood and the history and legends of the Comanche 55 nbsp A 19th century Comanche childAs the boy grew older he joined the other boys to hunt birds He eventually ranged farther from camp looking for better game to kill Encouraged to be skillful hunters boys learned the signs of the prairie as they learned to patiently and quietly stalk game They became more self reliant yet by playing together as a group also formed the bonds and cooperative spirit that they would need when they hunted and raided 55 nbsp Comanches of West Texas in war regalia c 1830Boys were highly respected because they would become warriors and might die young in battle As he approached manhood a boy went on his first buffalo hunt If he made a kill his father honored him with a feast Only after he had proven himself on a buffalo hunt was a young man allowed to go to war 55 When he was ready to become a warrior at about age 15 or 16 a young man first made his medicine by going on a vision quest a rite of passage Following this quest his father gave him a good horse to ride into battle and another mount for the trail If he had proved himself as a warrior a Give Away Dance might be held in his honor As drummers faced east the honored boy and other young men danced His parents along with his other relatives and the people in the band threw presents at his feet especially blankets and horses symbolized by sticks Anyone might snatch one of the gifts for themselves although those with many possessions refrained they did not want to appear greedy People often gave away all their belongings during these dances providing for others in the band but leaving themselves with nothing 55 Girls learned to gather berries nuts and roots They carried water and collected wood and at about 12 years old learned to cook meals make tipis sew clothing prepare hides and perform other tasks essential to becoming a wife and mother They were then considered ready to be married 54 Death edit During the 19th century the traditional Comanche burial custom was to wrap the deceased s body in a blanket and place it on a horse behind a rider who would then ride in search of an appropriate burial place such as a secure cave After entombment the rider covered the body with stones and returned to camp where the mourners burned all the deceased s possessions The primary mourner slashed his arms to express his grief The Quahada band followed this custom longer than other bands and buried their relatives in the Witchita Mountains Christian missionaries persuaded Comanche people to bury their dead in coffins in graveyards 56 which is the practice today Transportation and habitation edit nbsp Comanche Tipis painted by George Catlin nbsp Comanche warrior Ako and horse Photo by James Mooney 1892 nbsp Three mounted Comanche warriors left Frank Moetah Photo by James Mooney 1892When they lived with the Shoshone the Comanche mainly used dog drawn travois for transportation Later they acquired horses from other tribes such as the Pueblo and from the Spaniards Because horses are faster easier to control and stronger this helped with hunting warfare and moving camp Larger dwellings were made due to the ability to pull and carry more belongings Being herbivores horses were also easier to feed than dogs since meat was a valuable resource 57 The horse was of the utmost value to the Comanche A Comanche man s wealth was measured by the size of his horse herd Horses were prime targets to steal during raids often raids were conducted specifically to capture horses Often horse herds numbering in the hundreds were stolen by Comanche during raids against other Indian nations Spanish Mexicans and later from the ranches of Texans Horses were used for warfare with the Comanche being considered to be among the finest light cavalry and mounted warriors in history 58 nbsp Comanche Feats of Horsemenship George Catlin 1834The Comanche covered their tipis with buffalo hides sewn together To prepare the hides women spread them on the ground scraped off the fat and flesh with blades of bone or antler and dried them in the sun Then the women scraped off the thick hair and soaked the hides in water After several days they vigorously rubbed them in a mixture of fat brains and liver to soften them They softened them further by rinsing and working back and forth over a rawhide thong Finally they were smoked over a fire which gave them a tan color To finish the tipi covering women laid the tanned hides side by side and stitched them together As many as 22 hides could be used but 14 was the average The sewn cover was tied to a pole and raised wrapped around the cone shaped frame and pinned with pencil sized wooden skewers Two wing shaped flaps at the top of the tipi were turned back to make an opening which could be adjusted to keep out moisture and held pockets of insulating air With a fire pit in the center of the earthen floor the tipis stayed warm in winter In summer the bottom edges of the tipis could be rolled up to let in a breeze Cooking was done outside during hot weather Tipis were very practical homes for nomads Working together women could quickly set them up or take them down An entire Comanche band could be packed and chasing a buffalo herd within about 20 minutes The women did most food processing and preparation 59 Food edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Comanches chasing bison painted by George Catlin Bison were the primary food source for the Comanche The Comanche were initially hunter gatherers When they lived in the Rocky Mountains during their migration to the Great Plains both men and women shared responsibility for gathering and providing food When the Comanche reached the plains hunting predominated Hunting was considered a male activity and was a principal source of prestige For meat the Comanche hunted bison elk black bear pronghorn and deer When game was scarce the men hunted wild mustangs and sometimes ate their own ponies In later years the Comanche raided Texas ranches and stole longhorn cattle They did not eat fish or fowl unless starving Women prepared and cooked bison meat and other game Women also gathered wild fruits seeds nuts berries roots and tubers including plums grapes juniper berries persimmons mulberries acorns pecans wild onions radishes and tuna the fruit of the prickly pear cactus The Comanche also acquired maize dried pumpkin and tobacco through trade and raids They roasted meat over a fire or boiled it To boil fresh or dried meat and vegetables women dug a pit in the ground which they lined with animal skins or bison stomach and filled with water to make a kind of cooking pot They placed heated stones in the water until it boiled and had cooked their stew After Spanish contact Comanche traded for copper pots and iron kettles which made cooking easier Women used berries and nuts as well as honey and tallow to flavor bison meat They stored the tallow in intestine casings or rawhide pouches called oyootu They especially liked to make a sweet mush of bison marrow mixed with crushed mesquite beans The Comanches sometimes ate raw meat especially raw liver flavored with gall They also drank the milk from the slashed udders of bison deer and elk 60 Among their delicacies was the curdled milk from the stomachs of suckling bison calves They also enjoyed bison tripe or stomachs Comanche generally ate a light meal breakfast and a large dinner They ate during the day when they were hungry or when it was convenient Like other Plains tribes the Comanche were very hospitable They prepared meals whenever a visitor arrived in camp which led to outsiders belief that the Comanches ate at all hours of the day or night Many families offered thanks as they sat down to eat their meals Comanche children ate pemmican but this was primarily a tasty high energy food reserved for war parties Carried in a parfleche pouch pemmican was eaten only when the men did not have time to hunt Similarly in camp people ate pemmican only when other food was scarce Traders ate pemmican sliced and dipped in honey which they called Indian bread Clothing edit nbsp Comanche headdress at the Ethnologisches Museum Berlin nbsp Chosequah a Comanche warrior wearing full traditional regalia Painted by E A Burbank 1897 Comanche clothing was simple and easy to wear Men wore a leather belt with a breechcloth a long piece of buckskin brought up between the legs and looped over and under the belt at the front and back and loose fitting deerskin leggings Moccasins had soles made from thick tough buffalo hide with soft deerskin uppers Men wore nothing on the upper body except in winter when they wore heavy robes of buffalo hide or occasionally bear wolf or coyote skins with knee length buffalo hide boots Young boys usually went naked except in cold weather By age 8 or 9 they wore adult clothing In the 19th century men had replaced the buckskin breechcloths by woven cloth and wore loose fitting buckskin shirts Women wore long deerskin dresses with a flared skirt and wide long sleeves with buckskin fringes on the sleeves and hem Beads and pieces of metal were attached in geometric patterns Women wore buckskin moccasins with buffalo soles Women decorated their shirts leggings and moccasins with fringes of deer skin animal fur and human hair They also decorated their shirts and leggings with patterns and shapes of beads and scraps of material In winter they too wore warm buffalo robes and tall fur lined buffalo hide boots Unlike boys girls old enough to walk were dressed in breechcloths By age 12 or 13 they wore women s clothing 61 Hair and headgear edit Comanche people took pride in their hair which was worn long They arranged it with porcupine quill brushes greased it and parted it in the center from the forehead to the back of the neck They painted the scalp along the parting with yellow red or white clay or other colors They wore their hair in two long braids tied with leather thongs or colored cloth and sometimes wrapped with beaver fur They also braided a strand of hair from the top of their head This slender braid called a scalp lock was decorated with colored scraps of cloth and beads and a single feather Comanche men rarely wore anything on their heads Only after they moved onto a reservation late in the 19th century did men begin to wear the typical Plains headdress In severe cold they might wear a brimless woolly buffalo hide hat At war some warriors wore a headdress of buffalo scalp Warriors cut away most of the hide and flesh from a buffalo head leaving only a portion of the woolly head and the horns This type of hat was worn only by the Comanche Women did not let their hair grow as long as the men did Young women might wear their hair long and braided but women parted their hair in the middle and kept it short Like the men they painted their scalp along the parting with bright paint 62 Body decoration edit Comanche men usually had pierced ears with hanging earrings made of pieces of shell or loops of brass or silver wire A female relative would pierce the outer edge of the ear with six or eight holes The men also tattooed his face arms and chest with geometric designs and painted his face and body Traditionally they used paints made of berry juice and the colored clays of the Comancheria Later traders supplied them with vermilion red pigment and bright grease paints Men wore bands of leather and strips of metal on their arms Except for black which was the color for war there was no standard color or pattern for face and body painting it was a matter of individual preference For example one man might paint one side of his face white and the other side red another might paint one side of his body green and the other side with green and black stripes One Comanche might always paint himself in a particular way while another might change the colors and designs when so inclined Some designs had special meaning to the individual and special colors and designs might have been revealed in a dream Women might also tattoo their face or arms They were fond of painting their bodies and were free to do so as they pleased It was popular for women to paint the insides of their ears a bright red and paint great orange and red circles on their cheeks They usually painted red and yellow around their lips 63 nbsp Comanche beaded ration bag c 1880 collection of the Oklahoma History CenterArt and material culture edit Because of their frequent nomadic traveling Comanche had to make sure that their household goods and other possessions were unbreakable They did not use pottery that could easily be broken on long journeys Weaving wood carving and metal working were unknown Instead they depended on buffalo for most of their tools household goods and weapons They made nearly 200 different utilitarian items from the horns hide and bones Removing the lining of the inner stomach women made the paunch into a water bag The lining was stretched over four sticks and filled with water to make a pot for cooking soups and stews With wood scarce on the plains women relied on buffalo chips dried dung as fuel for cooking and heat 64 Stiff rawhide was fashioned into saddles stirrups and cinches knife cases buckets and moccasin soles Rawhide was also made into rattles and drums Strips of rawhide were twisted into sturdy ropes Scraped to resemble white parchment rawhide skins were folded to make parfleches in which food clothing and other personal belongings were kept Women also tanned hides to make soft and supple buckskin which was used for tipi covers warm robes blankets cloths and moccasins They used buckskin for bedding cradles dolls bags pouches quivers and gun cases Sinew was used for bowstrings and sewing thread Hooves were turned into glue and rattles Horns were shaped into cups spoons and ladles while the tail made a whip fly swatter or a tipi decoration Men made tools scrapers needles pipes and children s toys from the bones But men concentrated on making bows and arrows lances and shields The thick neck skin of an old bull was ideal for war shields that deflected arrows as well as bullets Since they spent most of each day on horseback they also fashioned leather into saddles stirrups and other equipment for their mounts Buffalo hair was used to fill saddle pads and was used in rope and halters 65 Language edit Main article Comanche language nbsp Charles Chibitty Comanche code talker in World War IIThe language spoken by the Comanche people Comanche Numu tekwapu is a Numic language of the Uto Aztecan language group It is closely related to the language of the Shoshone from which the Comanche diverged around 1700 The two languages remain closely related but a few low level sound changes inhibit mutual intelligibility The earliest records of Comanche from 1786 clearly show a dialect of Shoshone but by the beginning of the 20th century these sound changes had modified the way Comanche sounded in subtle but profound ways 66 67 Although efforts are now being made to ensure survival of the language most of its speakers are elderly and less than 1 of the Comanches can speak it In the late 19th century many Comanche children were placed in boarding schools with children from different tribes The children were taught English and discouraged from speaking their native language Anecdotally enforcement of speaking English was severe Quanah Parker learned and spoke English and was adamant that his own children do the same The second generation then grew up speaking English because it was believed who that it was better for them not to know Comanche 68 Comanches were among the Native Americans who were first utilized as code talkers by the U S Army during World War I 69 During World War II a group of 17 young men referred to as the Comanche code talkers were trained and used by the U S Army to send messages conveying sensitive information that could not be deciphered by the Germans 70 71 Notable Comanches editFurther information Category Comanche people Historic Comanche people edit These are notable Comanche people from the 18th and 19th centuries prior to allotment nbsp Mo o wai Pushing aside or Pushing in the middle aka Shaking Hand chief of the KotsotekaAmorous Man Pahayoko late 1780s c 1860 Penateka chief Black Horse died ca 1900 second chief of the Quahadi band Buffalo Hump Potsʉnakwahipʉ c 1800 c 1865 1870 war chief and later head chief of the Penateka division Carne Muerto Tehcap 1832 1860s Quahadi war chief Tavibo Naritgant Cuerno Verde died 1779 war chief Horseback Tʉhʉyakwahipʉ c 1805 1810 c 1888 chief of the Nokoni band Iron Jacket Puhihwikwasu u c 1790 1858 war chief and later head chief of the Quahadi band father of Peta Nocona Isatai c 1840 c 1890 warrior and medicine man of the Quahadi Mow way Shaking Hand Pushing in the Middle c 1825 1886 Kotsoteka chief Old Owl Mupitsukupʉ late 1780s 1849 Penateka chief Peta Nocona Lone Wanderer c 1820 c 1864 chief of the Quahadi division father of Quanah Parker Quanah Parker c 1845 1911 Quahadi chief a founder of Native American Church and rancher White Parker 1887 1956 son of Quanah Parker and Methodist missionary Piaru ekaruhkapu Big Red Meat ca 1820 1825 1875 Nokoni chief Sanapia 1895 1984 medicine woman Santa Anna c 1800 c 1849 war chief of the Penateka Band Spirit Talker Mukwooru c 1780 1840 Penateka chief and medicine man Ten Bears Pawʉʉrasʉmʉnunʉ c 1790 1872 chief of the Ketahto band and later of the entire Yamparika division Tosawi White Knife c 1805 1810 c 1878 1880 chief of the Penateka band Yellow Wolf Isa viah c 1800 1805 1854 war chief of the Penateka divisionComanche Nation citizens edit nbsp Karita Coffey Comanche professor ceramic artist and sculptor at the Institute of American Indian Arts Santa Fe New Mexico 2014These are 20th and 21st century citizens of the Comanche Nation Charon Asetoyer born 1951 activist and women s health advocate Blackbear Bosin 1921 1980 Comanche Kiowa sculptor and painter Charles Chibitty 1921 2005 World War II Comanche code talker Karita Coffey Tsat Tah Mo oh Kahn born 1947 ceramic artist professor sculptor Marie C Cox 1920 2005 founder of the North American Indian Women s Association and foster care reform advocate Jesse Ed Davis 1944 1988 guitarist and recording artist LaDonna Harris born 1931 political activist and founder of Americans for Indian Opportunity Janee Kassanavoid born 1995 athlete hammer throw Dorothy Sunrise Lorentino 1909 2005 educator activist sister of Morris Tabbyyetchy Doc Tate Nevaquaya 1932 1996 Flatstyle painter Native American flautist NEA fellow Sonny Nevaquaya d 2019 Native American flute player Diane O Leary 1939 2013 artist nurse Lotsee Patterson born 1931 librarian educator and founder of the American Indian Library Association Paul Chaat Smith Comanche Choctaw author curator George Tahdooahnippah born 1978 professional boxer and NABC super middleweight champion Josephine Wapp 1912 2014 professor regalia maker textile artist David Yeagley 1951 2014 classical composer political writerSee also editQuanah Parker Star HouseReferences edit a b c d 2011 Oklahoma Indian Nations Pocket Pictorial Directory PDF Oklahoma Indian Affairs Commission November 2011 Archived from the original PDF on April 24 2012 Retrieved January 2 2012 a b About Us Comanche Nation Retrieved December 23 2021 a b Home Comanche Nation comanchenation com Retrieved August 20 2022 Jean Ormsbee Charney A Grammar of Comanche Nebraska 1993 Pages 1 2 a b c Kavanagh Thomas W Comanche tribe The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Oklahoma Historical Society Retrieved December 23 2021 Fowles Severin Arterberry Lindsay Montgomery Atherton Heather 2017 Comanche New Mexico The Eighteenth Century in New Mexico and the Pimeria Alta Boulder University Press of Colorado pp 158 160 Downloaded from JSTOR Marez Curtis June 2001 Signifying Spain Becoming Comanche Making Mexicans Indian Captivity and the History of Chicana o Popular Performance American Quarterly 53 2 267 307 doi 10 1353 aq 2001 0018 S2CID 144608670 Hamalainen Pekka January 2008 The Comanche Empire NewHaven and London Yale University Press p 171 ISBN 978 0 300 15117 6 The Homecoming Dance Comanche Nation official website Retrieved July 11 2017 Governor Cuervo y Valdez Report 18 Aug 1706 Ernest Wallace and E Adamson Hoebel 1952 The Comanches Lords of the South Plains University of Oklahoma Press Bright William ed 2004 Native American Placenames of the United States Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press p 364 ISBN 9780806135984 Comanche Nation Casinos Lawton Oklahoma Slots Table Games www comanchenationcasino com Retrieved August 20 2022 Comanche Red River Hotel Casino Oklahoma Casinos 99 nightly www comancheredrivercasino com Retrieved August 20 2022 Comanche Spur Casino Elgin Oklahoma Indian Casino www comanchespurcasino com Retrieved August 20 2022 Comanche Star Casino Oklahoma Casinos Walters OK www comanchestarcasino com Retrieved August 20 2022 Oklahoma Casino List by Tribe 500nations com Retrieved August 20 2022 Our Mission Comanche National Museum and Cultural Center Comanche Nation Retrieved January 12 2022 Comanche Nation College Comanche Nation College Retrieved August 20 2022 Comanche Nation Tourism Center Archived 2008 11 04 at the Wayback Machine Comanche Nation 16 February 2009 a b Kavanagh 66 Kavanagh 7 a b Kavanagh 63 Kavanagh 380 Wallace and Hoebel Kavanagh 1996 Kavanagh 41 53 Penateka Comanches Marker Number 16257 Texas Historic Sites Atlas Camp Verde Texas Texas Historical Commission 2009 Kavanagh 478 Plummer R Narrative of the Capture and Subsequent Sufferings of Mrs Rachel Plummer 1839 in Parker s Narrative and History of Texas Louisville Morning Courier 1844 pp 88 118 Lee N Three Years Among the Comanches in Captured by the Indians Drimmer F editor New York Dover Publications Inc 1961 ISBN 0486249018 pp 277 313 Babb T A In the Bosom of the Comanches 1912 Dallas John F Worley Printing Co Bell J D A true Story of My Capture by and Life with the Comanche Indians in Every Day Seemed Like a Holiday The Captivity of Bianca Babb Gelo D J and Zesch S editors Southwestern Historical Quarterly Vol 107 No 1 2003 pp 49 67 Lehmann H 1927 9 Years Among the Indians 1870 1879 Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press ISBN 0826314171 Smith C L 1927 The Boy Captives San Saba San Saba Printing amp Office Supply ISBN 0 943639 24 7 Frontier Forts gt The Passing of the Indian Era www texasbeyondhistory net Retrieved August 20 2022 Deloria Vine J Jr DeMaille Raymond J 1999 Documents of American Indian Diplomacy Treaties Agreements and Conventions 1775 1979 University of Oklahoma Press pp 355 356 357 358 ISBN 978 0 8061 3118 4 THC Fisher Miller Land Grant Texas Historic Markers Texas Historical Commission Retrieved September 16 2011 THC Comanche Treaty Texas Historical Association Retrieved September 17 2011 Demallie Raymond J Deloria Vine 1999 Documents of American Indian Diplomacy Treaties Agreements and Conventions 1775 1979 Vol 1 University of Oklahoma pp 1493 1494 ISBN 0 8061 3118 7 Germunden Gerd Calloway Colin G Zantop Suzanne 2002 Germans and Indians Fantasies Encounters Projections University of Nebraska Press p 65 ISBN 978 0 8032 6420 5 Watson Larry S 1994 INDIAN TREATIES 1835 to 1902 Vol XXII Kiowa Comanche and Apache Histree pp 15 19 Webb Walter Prescott 1965 The Texas Rangers A Century of Frontier Defense University of Texas Press pp 138 140 ISBN 978 0 292 78110 8 Zesch Scott 2005 The Captured A True Story of Abduction by Indians on the Texas Frontier St Martin s pp 239 241 ISBN 978 0 312 31789 8 Leahy Todd Wilson Raymond 2009 The A to Z of Native American Movements Scarecrow Press p 120 ISBN 978 0 8108 6892 2 Swan 19 The Daughter of Dawn Oklahoma Historical Society www okhistory org Retrieved August 20 2022 Wallace and Hoebel 1952 p 142 Wallace and Hoebel 1952 pp 143 144 a b Wallace and Hoebel 1952 p 120 Wallace and Hoebel 1952 pp 122 123 Wallace and Hoebel 1952 p 124 De Capua Sarah 2006 The Comanche Benchmark Books pp 22 23 ISBN 978 0 7614 2249 5 a b Wallace and Hoebel 1952 pp 124 125 a b c d Wallace and Hoebel 1952 pp 126 132 Kroeker Rollings Deer 2004 pp 20 24 Indian Culture and the Horse PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 12 2019 Retrieved May 26 2013 Rollings Deer 2004 pp 29 30 Newcomb W W Jr 2002 The Indians of Texas from prehistoric to modern times University of Texas Press pp 164 ISBN 978 0 292 78425 3 Rollings Deer 2004 p 31 Rollings Deer 2004 pp 31 32 Rollings Deer 2004 pp 32 33 Rollings Deer 2004 p 28 Rollings Deer 2004 pp 25 26 McLaughlin 1992 158 81 McLaughlin 2000 293 304 Hamalainen 2008 p 171 Code Talkers World War I Centennial www worldwar1centennial org Retrieved May 25 2021 Holm Tom 2007 The Comanche Code Talkers Code Talkers and Warriors Native Americans and World War II Chelsea House Publications pp 108 120 ISBN 978 0 7910 9340 5 Comanche Indians Honor D Day Code Talkers D Day 70th Anniversary NBC News June 9 2014 Sources editKavanagh Thomas W 1996 The Comanches A History 1706 1875 Lincoln Nebraska University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 7792 2 Kroeker Marvin E 1997 Comanches and Mennonites on the Oklahoma Plains A J and Magdalena Becker and the Post Oak Mission Fresno CA Centers for Mennonite Brethren Studies ISBN 0 921788 42 8 McLaughlin John E 1992 A Counter Intuitive Solution in Central Numic Phonology International Journal of American Linguistics 58 2 158 181 doi 10 1086 ijal 58 2 3519754 JSTOR 3519754 S2CID 148250257 McLaughlin John E 2000 Casad Gene Willett Thomas eds Language Boundaries and Phonological Borrowing in the Central Numic Languages Uto Aztecan Structural Temporal and Geographic Perspectives Sonora Mexico Friends of Uto Aztecan Universidad de Sonora Division de Humanidades y Bellas Artes Hermosillo ISBN 970 689 030 0 Meadows William C 2003 Kiowa Apache and Comanche Military Societies Enduring Veterans 1800 to the Present University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 70518 0 Rollings William H Deer Ada E 2004 The Comanche Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 978 0 7910 8349 9 Swan Daniel C 1999 Peyote Religious Art Symbols of Faith and Belief Jackson Mississippi University of Mississippi Press ISBN 1 57806 096 6 Wallace Ernest Hoebel E Adamson 1952 The Comanche Lords of the Southern Plains Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 9780806102498 OCLC 1175397 Nye Wilbur Sturtevant Carbine and Lance The Story of Old Fort Sill University of Oklahoma Press Norman 1983 Leckie William H The Buffalo Soldiers A Narrative of the Negro Cavalry in the West University of Oklahoma Press Norman 1967 Fowler Arlen L The Black Infantry in the West 1869 1891 University of Oklahoma Press Norman 1996Further reading editFehrenbach Theodore Reed 1974 The Comanches The Destruction of a People New York Knopf ISBN 0 394 48856 3 Republished as Fehrenbach Theodore Reed 2003 The Comanches The History of a People New York Anchor Books ISBN 1 4000 3049 8 Foster Morris W 1991 Being Comanche A Social History of an American Indian Community Tucson University of Arizona Press ISBN 0 8165 1367 8 Hamalainen Hamalainen Pekka 2008 The Comanche Empire New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 9780300126549 John Elizabeth A H 1975 Storms Brewed in Other Men s Worlds The Confrontation of the Indian Spanish and French in the Southwest 1540 1795 College Station Texas A amp M Press ISBN 0 89096 000 3 Kavanagh Thomas W 2001 DeMallie Raymond J ed High Plains Comanche Handbook of North American Indians Washington D C Smithsonian Institution 13 886 906 Kavanagh Thomas W 2007 Comanche Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Oklahoma Historical Society Archived from the original on October 29 2013 Retrieved November 27 2013 Kavanagh Thomas W 2008 Comanche Ethnography Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 2764 4 Kenner Charles 1969 A History of New Mexican Plains Indian Relations Norman OCLC 2141 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help CS1 maint location missing publisher link Noyes Stanley 1993 Los Comanches the horse people 1751 1845 Albuquerque University of New Mexico ISBN 0 585 27380 4 Spady James O Neil 2009 Reconsidering Empire Current Interpretations of Native American Agency during Colonization review Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History 10 2 Thomas Alfred Barnaby 1940 The Plains Indians and New Mexico 1751 1778 A collection of documents illustrative of the history of the eastern frontier of New Mexico Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press OCLC 3626655 Wolff Gerald W Cash Joseph W 1976 The Comanche People Phoenix Arizona Indian Tribal Series External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Comanche Comanche Nation official website The Comanche Language and Cultural Preservation Committee Comanche Lodge Comanche History Channel Archived from the original on March 8 2010 Retrieved August 26 2005 Comanche Oklahoma Historical Society Archived from the original on October 29 2013 Comanche Indians from the Handbook of Texas Online Photographs of Comanche Indians Portal to Texas History Archived from the original on March 11 2007 The Texas Comanches Texas Indians Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Comanche amp oldid 1204992932, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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