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  1. Hace 5 días · Timeline of the Lipan Apache Tribe, 17th - 21st Centuries. Timeline Contributors: N McGown Minor, HR Walking Woman, D Pompa. Date. Event. ca. 1600. Lipan Apache enter Texas from Great Plains; claim area around San Antonio as homeland and call it "Many Houses;" Lipans develop a tribal identity−Lipan means "Light Gray People." ca. 1650. Lipans ...

  2. Hace 5 días · Geronimo was a Bedonkohe Apache leader of the Chiricahua Apache, who led his people’s defense of their homeland against the military might of the United States. For generations the Apaches had resisted white colonization of their homeland in the Southwest by both Spaniards and North Americans.

  3. Hace 6 días · La otra versión simplemente afirma que ella se salvó, que regresó con su tribu, y que la gente se la topaba de cuando en cuando, en compañía de los demás apaches. Se le conoció como “la ...

  4. Hace 3 días · Our institution in the lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas sits on the ancestral land of the Karankawa, Tāp Pīlam Coahuiltecan, Ndé Kónitsąąíí Gokíyaa (Lipan Apache), Carrizo/Comecrudo, and Rayados/Borrados. We acknowledge and pay respect to their Elders and their past, present, and future peoples, cultures, languages, and communities.

  5. Hace 4 días · Lipan Apache Tribe: Our Sacred History-Treaties. 5/2/2024. About Our Treaties. As invaders from the Old World and their subsequent settling population entered Lipan Apache territory in the Americas, the Lipan Apache people and other American Indian tribes negotiated many treaties with the various encroaching governments/populations.

  6. O, considere si en los EE. UU., algunos apaches decidieran que la única forma de paz era separarse y crear un nuevo estado, manteniendo las partes principales de su antiguo territorio y requiriendo que todos los estadounidenses que no practiquen el animismo nativo y que no sean de ascendencia apache se vayan o enfrenten la muerte.

  7. Hace 4 días · 1 As part of a larger study of the Carlisle Indian School, Fear-Segal relays the story of Kesetta and Jack, two Lipan Apache orphans adopted by a member of the 4th U.S. Cavalry band while stationed at Fort Clark, Texas. Fear-Segal states that the children were orphaned in an 1877 military attack, led by General Ranald S. Mackenzie, against a Lipan rancheria in Coahuila.