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Once the Apache moved to the Southwest, they developed a flexible subsistence economy that included hunting and gathering wild foods, farming, and obtaining food and other items from Pueblo villages via trade, livestock hunts, and raiding.
- Jicarilla Apache
Jicarilla Apache, North American Indian tribe living in the...
- Chiricahua
Chiricahua, one of several divisions within the Apache tribe...
- Athabaskan Language Family
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- Navajo
Navajo, second most populous of all Native American peoples...
- Jicarilla Apache
Several extended families worked together as a "local group", which carried out certain ceremonies, and economic and military activities. Political control was mostly present at the local group level. Local groups were headed by a chief, an influential man with an impressive reputation.
Because of political and economic instability in interior Mexico, competition from US traders, and a regional smallpox epidemic most Apaches left their reservations by 1832. Mexican–Apache relations subsequently deteriorated as northern Mexican states hired contract killers, implemented scalp bounties, and presidios and towns disintegrated ...
21 lis 2023 · The Apaches have had many economic, social, and political setbacks when dealing with contact with other nations. First, they dealt with the Spanish, then the Comanche tribe, and later the...
23 sie 2023 · Unearth the fascinating historical development of the apache tribe. Learn how tribe survived incursions, war with the US, to become the major tribe they are today
Today Apachean groups are integrated into the economic systems of the United States. Many Apaches live off the reservations, but those that remain conduct farming and ranching, land management including forestry, hunting, fishing and other outdoor activities, businesses, rodeos and ceremonials.
8 maj 2018 · HISTORY. Apaches have endured severe economic and political disruptions, first by the Spanish, then by the Comanches, and later by the United States government.