Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Lipan, Texas" ¶ 15
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

pt and Lipan
pt: Lipan

pt and Texas
pt: Paris ( Texas )
pt: The Texas Chain Saw Massacre
pt: Revolução do Texas
pt: Texas Instruments
pt: Harlingen ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Montgomery ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Wood ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Wise ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Wilson ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Wichita ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Wheeler ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Washington ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Ward ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Walker ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Victoria ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Upshur ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Tyler ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Trinity ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Terrell ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Taylor ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Stephens ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Sherman ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Shelby ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Rusk ( Texas )
pt: Condado de Robertson ( Texas )

Lipan and Texas
The Lipan Apaches, having been forced out of Colorado and New Mexico by the Comanches, entered Texas in the 1700s and gained control of South Texas by 1775.
Lipan ( pronounced LYE-pan ) is a city in Hood County, Texas, United States.
es: Lipan ( Texas )
ht: Lipan, Texas
He moved to Weatherford west of Fort Worth, Texas, and later moved to Hood County, Texas, where he died in the community of Lipan.
They once travelled from the Pecos River in eastern New Mexico to the upper Colorado River, San Saba River and Llano River of central Texas across the Edwards Plateau southeast to the Gulf of Mexico, were close allies of the Natagés, therefore it seems certain that they were the Plains Lipan division ( Golgahį ́ į ́, Kó ' l kukä ' ⁿ-“ Prairie Men ”), not to be confused with Lipiyánes or Le Panis ( French for the Pawnee ).
* Pelones ( Bald Ones, lived far from San Antonio and far to the northeast of the Ypandes in the Red River of the South country of north central Texas, although able to field 800 warriors, more than the Ypandes and Natagés together, they were described as less warlike because they had fewer horses than the Plains Lipan, their population were estimated between 1, 600 to 2, 400 persons, were the Forest Lipan division ( Chishį ́ į ́ hį ́ į ́, Tcici, Tcicihi-“ People of the Forest ”, after 1760 the name Pelones was never used by the Spanish for any Texas Apache group, the Pelones had fled for the Comanche south and southwest, but never mixed up with the Plains Lipan division-retaining their distinct identity, so that Morris Opler was told by his Lipan informants in 1935 that their tribal name was “ People of the Forest ”)
Other plants utilized by the Lipan include: agarita, blackberries, cattails, devil's claw, elderberries, gooseberries, hackberries, hawthorn, juniper, Lamb's-quarters, locust, mesquite, mulberries, oak, palmetto, pecan, pinyon, prickly pears, raspberries, screwbeans, seed grasses, strawberries, sumac, sunflowers, Texas persimmons, walnuts, western yellow pine, wild cherries, wild grapes, wild onions, wild plums, wild potatoes, wild roses, yucca flowers, and yucca fruit.
Lipan Apache are Southern Athabascan ( Apachean ) people whose traditional territory includes present-day Texas, New Mexico, Colorado and the northern Mexican states of Chihuahua, Nuevo León, Coahuila, and Tamaulipas prior to the 17th century.
The Lipan Apache Tribe of Texas was a state-recognized tribe headquartered in Texas.
* Ypandes ( Ypandis, Ipandes, Ipandi, Lipanes, Lipanos, Lipaines, Lapane, Lipanis, Lipan, They once travelled from the Pecos River in eastern New Mexico to the upper Colorado River, San Saba River and Llano River of central Texas across the Edwards Plateau southeast to the Gulf of Mexico, were close allies of the Natagés, therefore it seems certain that they were the Plains Lipan division ( Golgahį ́ į ́, Kó ' l kukä ' ⁿ-“ Prairie Men ”), not to be confused with Lipiyánes or Le Panis ( French for the Pawnee ).
* Pelones ( Bald Ones, lived far from San Antonio and far to the northeast of the Ypandes in the Red River of the South country of north central Texas, although able to field 800 warriors, more than the Ypandes and Natagés together, they were described as less warlike because they had fewer horses than the Plains Lipan, their population were estimated between 1, 600 to 2, 400 persons, were the Forest Lipan division ( Chishį ́ į ́ hį ́ į ́, Tcici, Tcicihi-“ People of the Forest ”, after 1760 the name Pelones was never used by the Spanish for any Texas Apache group, the Pelones had fled for the Comanche south and southwest, but never mixed up with the Plains Lipan division-retaining their distinct identity, so that Morris Opler was told by his Lipan informants in 1935 that their tribal name was “ People of the Forest ”)

0.581 seconds.