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29 wrz 2020 · The several branches of Apache tribes occupied an area extending from the Arkansas River to Northern Mexico and from Central Texas to Central Arizona. Generally, the Apaches are divided into Eastern and Western, with the Rio Grande serving as the dividing line.
- Fernandez De Santa Ana, Benito
Father Fernández de Santa Ana was born Benito Fernández y...
- Diego Ortiz Parrilla
Diego Ortiz Parrilla, an important military figure across...
- Unknown–1823
Vito Alessio Robles, Coahuila y Texas en la época colonial...
- Quivira
Quivira (Cuivira, Quebira, Aguivira) was the legendary...
- Capitals
Robert A. Calvert and Arnoldo De León, The History of Texas...
- Trementina Indians
The Trementina (Nementina) Indians ranged the Panhandle of...
- Limita Indians
José M. Espinosa, Crusaders of the Rio Grande: The Story of...
- Conejero Indians
José M. Espinosa, Crusaders of the Rio Grande: The Story of...
- Fernandez De Santa Ana, Benito
Lipan Apache are a band of Apache, a Southern Athabaskan Indigenous people, who have lived in the Southwest and Southern Plains for centuries. At the time of European and African contact, they lived in New Mexico, Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas, [5] and northern Mexico. Historically, they were the easternmost band of Apache. [6]
The three federally recognized tribes in Texas are: Alabama–Coushatta Tribes of Texas, originally from Tennessee and Alabama; Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas, originally from the Great Lakes; Ysleta Del Sur Pueblo of Texas [5] originally from New Mexico.
The Lipan Apache Tribe of Texas is a historical Native American tribe, and the 501c (3) Lipan Apache Tribe of Texas, Inc, is an instrumentality of the tribe, not the tribe itself.
Before Spanish colonization, Apache domain extended over what are now (in the United States) east-central and southeastern Arizona, southeastern Colorado, southwestern and eastern New Mexico, and western Texas and (in Mexico) northern Chihuahua and Sonora states.
17 lis 2020 · The Kiowa Apache Indians, a small group of Athabascan (Apachean)-speaking people, ranged the area of present southwestern Oklahoma and the Panhandle of Texas during the nineteenth century.
2 dni temu · The Lipan Apache Tribe claimed the land farthest east of all the Apache tribes. By the 1600s, the Lipan Apache lived on the grassy plains of North Texas. At that time, the tribe split into two large groups (bands)—the Forest Lipan and the Plains Lipan.