The Comanche and the Horse | Native America | Sacred Stories | PBS

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  • čas přidán 7. 11. 2018
  • Official Website: to.pbs.org/2DdzTCv | #NativeAmericaPBS
    Today the image of Indians on horseback is iconic. But Native Americans never set eyes on a horse before the 15th century when Europeans bring them to America as a weapon of conquest. The Comanche and other native peoples adapt the horse as a powerful ally in the fight to protect their land and way of life. The Comanche consider the horse a relative and a gift from the Creator. Find full episodes of Native America at to.pbs.org/2DdzTCv
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    Native America explores the world created by America’s First Peoples. The four-part series reaches back 15,000 years to reveal massive cities aligned to the stars, unique systems of science and spirituality, and 100 million people connected by social networks spanning two continents. Watch extended interviews, digital-exclusive video & more at to.pbs.org/2DdzTCv
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Komentáře • 279

  • @sushi81
    @sushi81 Před rokem +18

    In Mongolia they say, “ We Mongols respect horse as our companion of night and day. The horse is the source of joy and pride of a Mongolian and we are nothing without our horses.”

  • @mscarolynnigro
    @mscarolynnigro Před 5 lety +230

    My horse died a week ago. He was part of me. My heart. I hope his spirit has rejoined the Comanche herd.

    • @ilikechocolatealot6355
      @ilikechocolatealot6355 Před 4 lety +16

      Carolyn Nigro he’s running free with his heard.🏞 he’ll always be around you.

    • @andreinarangel6227
      @andreinarangel6227 Před 4 lety +6

      ...or maybe his spirit went back to the land of his "Creator" - Spain

    • @RJT80
      @RJT80 Před 4 lety +7

      @throw away There is ample evidence the horse actually originated in North America but then went extinct here. It many ways it was a homecoming. But people shouldn't romanticize humanity's relationship with this animal. Even the COmanche who would dominate half of the middle of the country treated them poorly. They were a status symbol but also a tool, and a food source.

    • @zdenkamitzas679
      @zdenkamitzas679 Před 3 lety +2

      Carolyn Nigro I am so sorry D:

    • @captainsternn7684
      @captainsternn7684 Před 3 lety

      Hey Carolyn Nigro, you are Comanche? I'm trying to find the name of that technique in English and in the Comanche language, the technique Comanche warriors used depicted @2:38 where they can hang on the side of the horse using their legs to hang on and fire from above or around the horses neck. Another depiction here: s3.amazonaws.com/assets.saam.media/files/files/images/1985/SAAM-1985.66.487_1.jpg

  • @comanchebattles
    @comanchebattles Před 3 lety +15

    Comanche native and member of the comanche nation tribe from lawton Oklahoma. Love learning about our history!

  • @307cavalier5
    @307cavalier5 Před 4 lety +50

    The Horse is a great equalizer. It teaches us how to look at ourselves, and reflects our inner being. Shows us when we are stressed, or upset.

    • @sc666666
      @sc666666 Před 2 lety +1

      Def how the noble Indians handled their inner feelings

  • @micheletesarek7677
    @micheletesarek7677 Před 3 měsíci +2

    As an educator I watch so many videos to tell the stories of different peoples. This is such a beautiful video and I will surely be sharing with my students so that they know the connection that the Comanche share with the land and the majestic horse. How fascinating a story!

  • @yvettemarshallTWN
    @yvettemarshallTWN Před 5 lety +57

    Nice. My elders have passed and left such a legacy! My paternal great-grandma was born in Comanche, TX in 1897, married a Black man, moved to Austin, TX and prospered. Wow, The Spirit lives and I want to know more! 😘

    • @peterbobby99
      @peterbobby99 Před 4 lety +2

      Look into the history of the Freedmen of the Cherokee Nation and Choctaw.

  • @Yk_roro
    @Yk_roro Před 3 lety +28

    For anyone wandering what song. It’s the Comanche flag song

  • @robertoa8672
    @robertoa8672 Před 4 lety +42

    it's very sad the part of the killing of the horses - it shows clearly what depths human wickedness can reach .we must love the earth and all the creatures - the Bible says Those who are meek will inherit the earth . this is very difficult to understand , but also very beautiful. :-) greetings from Rome , Italy

    • @papabear90
      @papabear90 Před 3 lety +2

      This kind of cruelty suits the American DNA perfectly

    • @connors5534
      @connors5534 Před 3 lety +7

      @@papabear90 You have no idea what happened this is a 5 minute video

    • @dancegod1691
      @dancegod1691 Před 2 lety +1

      If you think that’s “wicked”, the Comanche would routinely torture people to death.

    • @richardeast3328
      @richardeast3328 Před 2 lety

      @ Remo Gaggi and your DNA contains a lot of ignorance.

    • @Ravenholm337
      @Ravenholm337 Před 8 měsíci

      The Nez Perce also faced a similar fate when their horses were stolen by the US Army and were forced from their ancestral lands

  • @Crazy-Horse-Tx.
    @Crazy-Horse-Tx. Před 4 lety +24

    The history told in rocks; beautiful.

  • @BaraJFDA
    @BaraJFDA Před 3 lety +30

    The arrival of the Horses on Turtle Island, Abya Yala, Cemanahuac (the Americas) was actually a grand homecoming. From an evolutionary standpoint, the Americas is their ancestral continent. Even from what archeology and paleontology can tell us, horses as a whole group first began here in the Americas over 50 million of years ago, alongside their relatives that gave rise to camels and llamas of today. The very first horses were Hyracotherium and Eohippus (dawn horse), and they were very small, forest dwellers. The largest wild horses that ever lived in the world also lived here, and their fossils have been identified as Equus giganteus, as well as the Yukon horse. Prehistoric Indigenous peoples such as the Clovis cultures revered these wild, untamed horses in a time forgotten. They lived alongside these animals for over 20,000 years as the oldest human cultures in the Western Hemisphere. Clay figures and cave paintings survived after millennia, and they have shown us that horse cultures prospered so long ago, just like how the great bison, muskox, caribou, moose, and other large animals are still revered today. The last of the Equus giganteus and Yukon horses lived 10,000 years ago during the last ice age. They were large and untamed. When the ice age was ending, the ecosystems that previously sustained multiple megafauna species began to unravel and collapse. The land could no longer support the these large animals. The mammoths, ground sloths, smilodons, American cheetahs and cave lions, short-faced cave bears and even Argentavis, the largest flying bird in existence, and lastly the wild horses of the Americas did not survive the mass extinction event. Indigenous peoples and their modern horse cultures are essentially an echo from a forgotten time.

    • @misterbearmore4633
      @misterbearmore4633 Před 2 lety +2

      Well technically, the horses from the Americas are totally different species compared to the ones from Eurasia, though both of them are in the same genus (Equus), alongside donkeys and zebras. The species from Eurasia are Eurasian wild horses, which include subspecies such as Przewalski's horse and the now extinct tarpan, which are thought to be the ancestors of modern domesticated horses.

  • @misterbearmore4633
    @misterbearmore4633 Před 3 lety +43

    Horses may have originated in Eurasia and have been used by Europeans for much longer, but few cultures in Earth's history treated horses with the level of respect and equality as the Comanche did.

    • @campland2880
      @campland2880 Před 2 lety +1

      The Comanche truly "broke" their horses, and used them as shields during fighting. They didn't "respect" them, they used them.

    • @matthewreyes2401
      @matthewreyes2401 Před rokem

      What a donkey you are. They originated from the America’s

    • @PahaPoniesSpanishMustangs
      @PahaPoniesSpanishMustangs Před rokem +1

      My stallion goes back to a Grey stud captured at the Llano Esticado in 1890.

    • @ricardoaugusto9925
      @ricardoaugusto9925 Před rokem +7

      If I am not mistaken, there were findings that showed horses originally came from America. Then they went to Asia and Eurasia and went extinct in America. And returned with the europeans.

    • @saintultra2737
      @saintultra2737 Před 8 měsíci +6

      @@campland2880you’re cute. I am Comanche, we loved these animals and it’s why Quannah Parker surrendered at the canyon where they killed thousands of our friends. You’re speaking lies, keep being mad over our greatness.!

  • @jamesmunce1187
    @jamesmunce1187 Před 5 lety +55

    Big respect for the indain nations the true americns.

    • @silenttvshka
      @silenttvshka Před 4 lety +17

      @@couldokun Ignorance must be very blissful for you.

    • @redxiii3159
      @redxiii3159 Před 4 lety +8

      @@couldokun your land? Tell me where is "your" land if you have to make payments still then it aint your land, no payment you get the boot, you dont own land smfh

    • @redxiii3159
      @redxiii3159 Před 4 lety +4

      @@couldokun can you tell me the definition of a virus if your so smart?

    • @darionlee5198
      @darionlee5198 Před 3 lety +4

      One Trick Pwny your land. No if anything it’s their land which you took and then forced my people to make

    • @mojojojo485
      @mojojojo485 Před 3 lety +1

      @@couldokun which is why you will be a minority in your own country by 2050. No complaining.

  • @lozentucker1071
    @lozentucker1071 Před 5 lety +23

    Horses are beautiful creatures I've alwaysed loved them

  • @manuelarodriguez5706
    @manuelarodriguez5706 Před 4 lety +14

    Horses are so beautiful

  • @headphonez5895
    @headphonez5895 Před 5 lety +22

    It’s so sad that these beautiful cultures were almost erased.

    • @danielmayen6545
      @danielmayen6545 Před 4 lety +6

      BEAUTIFUL? GET REAL . SAVAGE ANIMALS THEY WERE !

    • @claudiocarrera9552
      @claudiocarrera9552 Před 4 lety +4

      @@danielmayen6545 how are you still alive.

    • @redxiii3159
      @redxiii3159 Před 4 lety +9

      @@danielmayen6545 is that why the U.S adopted 1st Nations laws and constitution??

    • @blackcitroenlove
      @blackcitroenlove Před 4 lety +12

      @@danielmayen6545 We had cities and democracy in the Southeast while Europeans had to be taught to bathe when they arrived.

    • @darionlee5198
      @darionlee5198 Před 3 lety +1

      daniel mayen shut up id love to meet our true Americans someday how they’ve loved my people through it all

  • @antoniozacarias91
    @antoniozacarias91 Před 4 lety +17

    I read that the native chichimeca tribes in mexico took the horses from the Spanish conquistadors and were the first to ride them during the Chichimeca War 1550-1590.

    • @danemon8423
      @danemon8423 Před 2 lety +1

      yes i've read that to, and it's true, since the spanish were the first to come to america they also took horses with them and gave some to their native american allies.

    • @iPhantom287
      @iPhantom287 Před 2 lety

      @@danemon8423 “Allies”

    • @toltecways639
      @toltecways639 Před 2 lety +1

      chichimecas would steal them from the Spanish and where the frist native American to ride the horse they believe more in animal spirits than the Aztecs god's that why they were not afraid of the horse. Spanish also said the chichimecas where the best archers in the world and where at war with them for 40 years. the most interesting tribe of the Americas they showed the rest of the native Americans that u can ride the horse

  • @hansenc6569
    @hansenc6569 Před 3 lety +3

    THIS GAVE ME CHILLS EVERYWHERE.

  • @gitana8281
    @gitana8281 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I have a great respect for any indigenous tribe. ❤
    I had an Arabian horse once named Star. She had a star-shaped patch on her forehead, and when my father surprised me with her, we had no clue she was pregnant. I still remember the night she had her colt, and I named him Thunder.
    They were so close to me and my father. I used to ride her on the beach close to our house on the island.
    Every time I was with her, I felt such a deep connection to her.
    Star and Thunder were close to my father, and when we left the island, I saw the sadness in my father to part with them both. ❤
    Such majestic creatures! ❤

  • @wrybreadspread
    @wrybreadspread Před 4 lety +20

    1:30
    Heaven grant that these works of art are preserved from vandalism

    • @KStack-bj9ps
      @KStack-bj9ps Před 4 lety

      No offence intended.. but I've seen more realistic horses drawn by Four year old children so calling those rock carvings art is a bit of an exaggeration

    • @matthewgantry9998
      @matthewgantry9998 Před 4 lety

      Ancient vandalism.

  • @ratherbwithhorses
    @ratherbwithhorses Před 5 lety +71

    I find it sad that there are so many people today, who know very little of horses, have made it a mission to remove our horses from our lives. Crying about everything being cruel, they do not care how cruel it is to place the horse out of our lives, cruel to us and cruel to the horse. The horse has been by human side to build history, we owe them relevance today.

    • @chokinonashes61
      @chokinonashes61 Před 5 lety +6

      I completely agree with you. Having had a pony since the ages of 6, but being around them since a baby, they are spiritual animals, teaching us so much, it's so important to have horses in my life.

    • @mwhitelaw8569
      @mwhitelaw8569 Před 5 lety +1

      Yes ma'am
      I still see them free
      And when I can
      I pay my respects
      And am paid back by such a powerful light
      I look up
      Stallion
      Curious eyes
      Catching my essence
      Sorrow
      Many blessings

    • @tavferry3301
      @tavferry3301 Před 4 lety +8

      How is it cruel to not use the horse? Horses do well in the wild and I doubt they think, "You know what would make our lives better? If humans used us." Lol I have respect for the horse because it helped us build our world, but it's not cruel to use them to the extent we did in the past. I doubt horses liked fighting in wars.

    • @woohooo7634
      @woohooo7634 Před 4 lety +2

      @@tavferry3301 Yeah, I think it's fine to keep and ride horses, especially when necessary for survival, but the comment above is just childish and selfish. Kinda disgusting....

    • @Miranjor
      @Miranjor Před 3 lety +1

      @@tavferry3301 Actually, this is not true. A lot of biologists believe the horse would be extinct today if it wouldn't have been domesticated. Their digestive system is too sensitive and not efficient enough to compete against ruminant animals.

  • @jamier.2560
    @jamier.2560 Před 9 měsíci +1

    The animation for this episode is absolutely stunning!

  • @foolslayer9416
    @foolslayer9416 Před 3 lety +13

    What's incredible about the Comanche is that they were more than just warriors, they were conquerors. The Great Plains didn't fall to the hands of the Anglo-Americans until the Comanche fell.
    I highly recommend the novel, Empire of the Summer Moon by S.C. Gwynne. It's a brutal yet incredible story of the last chief of the Comanches and his struggle to hold against the Anglo-Americans and the first Texas Rangers.

    • @sc666666
      @sc666666 Před 2 lety

      70 more years until we honor germanys march through Poland.

  • @timmccarthy3034
    @timmccarthy3034 Před 4 lety +6

    wow...this vid really makes me cry.....really......a stream of tears is flowing now from my eyes....and I am a "white guy" too..59 winters I have seen now .......but I have a true Native Heart...that lives inside of me....

  • @skyreach669
    @skyreach669 Před 5 lety +34

    Me watching this at work: Don't cry don't cry don't cry don't cry don't cry

    • @timmccarthy3034
      @timmccarthy3034 Před 4 lety +3

      Like John Trudell says in a song, "I tell myself that Indians are stoic, that they don't cry, but my eyes, they just LAUGH at me".....Me, I can't stop the stream of tears flowing from my eyes when i see this vid...wow.......I am a "white guy" too ...but carry a Native Heart inside of me.....

    • @lennysummers6519
      @lennysummers6519 Před 4 lety +1

      Watches in my room: I cried.

    • @ImrickJamesbitch-tm2sd
      @ImrickJamesbitch-tm2sd Před 4 lety

      @@timmccarthy3034 me too brother I am mexican but I cry tears from the soul when watching these documentaries. I too am native by heart.

    • @jaymiah1408
      @jaymiah1408 Před 4 lety +1

      Jesus Morales you are native by blood brother do research on your family history with regions and years youl find your tribe you are indigenous to this continent start your journey brother and never be scared or feel wrong to call your self native or indigenous...the mexica or aka Aztec we’re here before 1492 only thing that separates up is the colonial border aho brother ✊🏽

    • @andresvaldes5568
      @andresvaldes5568 Před 4 lety +1

      @@ImrickJamesbitch-tm2sd Bolivia,Peru,Ecuador & Guatemala have the most Native American people in Latin America.
      Central Americans & Mexicans are on average between 25 percent to 70% Native American through their Aztec & Maya Blood.
      Ancestry.com & 23andme proved this look up Central American & Mexican DNA results on CZcams.
      The average central American & Mexican is also between 1-15% black due to the slaves Spain brought to the region.
      The Whitest Latin Americans are Cubans,
      Argentines & Uruguayans who receive DNA results of 80-95% Spanish European blood & about 5% Native American DNA

  • @benniecrawford6876
    @benniecrawford6876 Před 5 lety +6

    The Comanche and the horse were one. Master's of the plane's.

  • @jumaris28
    @jumaris28 Před 4 lety +5

    THIS TOTALLY BREAKS MY HEART IN A MILLION PIECES !!!!!!!!!

  • @darrenwilson3732
    @darrenwilson3732 Před 4 lety +41

    Right now I am studying the Comanche Indians, reading "Empire of the Summer Moon" by S.C. Gwynne. Very interesting so far, alot to consider, and a balanced look!

    • @ronnieraper7120
      @ronnieraper7120 Před 3 lety +12

      More of the people commenting on this video should actually read that book before they comment...

    • @tiffanysorenson7774
      @tiffanysorenson7774 Před 2 lety

      Such an amazing book!!

    • @giannirocco7492
      @giannirocco7492 Před 2 lety +3

      "Empire of the Summer Moon" is,perhaps,the most racist book I have ever read!S.C.Gwynne should be ashamed for all eternity!

    • @ejedgar5966
      @ejedgar5966 Před 2 lety

      @@giannirocco7492 explain?

    • @giannirocco7492
      @giannirocco7492 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ejedgar5966 read the book!

  • @thomasmatta7188
    @thomasmatta7188 Před 3 lety +4

    my respect to all native Americans and my blessing to all native Americans 💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️give them back their land it belongs to them 🐎🐎🐎🐎🐎🐎🐎

    • @ferengiprofiteer9145
      @ferengiprofiteer9145 Před 3 lety +1

      He said as he returned from the fridge with a cold beer and a sandwich. Parked hisself in his easy chair. Clicked mute on his TV remote and picked up his tablet.
      "Alexis, set the temp at 72."

  • @Immortal_Hunter
    @Immortal_Hunter Před 3 lety +4

    The tv series walker texas ranger featured many of comanche stories. I loved them.

  • @alittlefreedom
    @alittlefreedom Před 4 lety +1

    May the heart of the Comanche and the horse live in our hearts.
    Fate and the Creator has brought me here to remember.

  • @SinCityRaider81
    @SinCityRaider81 Před 3 lety +4

    Navajos have a long standing relationship with the Horse aswell. Walk in beauty.

  • @Miranjor
    @Miranjor Před 3 lety +5

    I cried so hard when I heard they slaugteherd the horses. How cruel for these people to loose their little brothers and sisters, their gift from the creator. I understand they surrendered after that. They must have felt broken.

  • @travellingonuptozion5658
    @travellingonuptozion5658 Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks for sharing your story

  • @oliviaarteaga1579
    @oliviaarteaga1579 Před 4 lety +6

    I love my Comanche heritage!

    • @johncahill4259
      @johncahill4259 Před 3 lety +1

      Why? They have a gruesome history.

    • @iPhantom287
      @iPhantom287 Před 2 lety

      @@johncahill4259 so do Christians and Catholics. Vikings and Romans. White people in general and people in general lol the way yn iztaixtetl see themselves as heroes is hilarious

  • @salvitagirl
    @salvitagirl Před 3 lety +3

    ♪ ★BEAUTIFUL SACRED STORIES ♪ ★ THANKS FOR SHARING.

  • @ManzanitaStarwood
    @ManzanitaStarwood Před 5 lety +6

    Now I hope to travel to Oklahoma to be there for the Comanche Nation Fair someday!

  • @ladybirdstarshine4692
    @ladybirdstarshine4692 Před 4 lety +7

    Wow...😍👂
    Beautiful language... sounds very Shoshone 😋
    Oh wait... it is..😁

  • @paulhunter436
    @paulhunter436 Před 4 lety +10

    To much reality, soap and politics on television now, these are the programs that should be on.

  • @dilipkumars6556
    @dilipkumars6556 Před 4 lety +7

    As they state in 2:57 we indians also believe in that horse is also called Shaktiputra hayagriva born by sun it posses spiritual value

  • @sonjastaes772
    @sonjastaes772 Před 3 lety +2

    honor and respect

  • @N8ve84
    @N8ve84 Před 7 měsíci

    I learned about Comanche as I started utilizing the Holy Peyote when I was around 18 years old. I have Respect for the Comanche and ther Holy Medicine and the Ways of Whorship. I'm honor to know and have meet some Comanches. Aho

  • @katharinaordner2565
    @katharinaordner2565 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you for sharing this story

  • @mickih35
    @mickih35 Před 5 lety +11

    Very nice video... much respect

  • @yoopermann7942
    @yoopermann7942 Před 2 lety +1

    i always loved the HORSE ever since i could read , the very first book i owned was a book on/about horses, now it is also about cows, sheep, goats, chickens, dogs, and gardens but my first love was HORSES

  • @MichaelJohnson-ik9vi
    @MichaelJohnson-ik9vi Před 4 lety +2

    Loved your video about the commances and the horse

  • @kevindubois3106
    @kevindubois3106 Před 2 lety +2

    As an American with some Indian heritage in the background I'm heartened to the plight of all our native people ,and the loss of so much history. I believe we are able to immortalize what is left of that by sharing all that is rembered.

  • @itsaperfectionist4158
    @itsaperfectionist4158 Před 3 lety +1

    I would absolutely love to go meet some Comache people and just ride with them.

  • @A-gala-day
    @A-gala-day Před 5 lety +3

    Love you saying that I have a great day today

  • @ziaulhaq6727
    @ziaulhaq6727 Před 4 lety +1

    Can I b with Comanche people.i just luv & respect these brave hearts.

  • @bergfish7328
    @bergfish7328 Před 5 lety +2

    🐎Thank you PBS for this interesting and very well made video.👏

  • @kirareee100
    @kirareee100 Před 2 lety

    I’m trying to learn more about them due to my family and this’ll help

  • @mborges2133
    @mborges2133 Před 4 lety +1

    Beautiful video

  • @americanlocation2011
    @americanlocation2011 Před 2 lety +2

    This documentary respectfully captures the free spirit and courage of the Comanche but it also contains some exaggerations and omissions that jumped out at me. They show the map of "Comancheria" with accompanying narration that says it extended from the Canadian border to Mexico City, thats a real whopper. I'm sure the Sioux , Cheyenne, and Blackfeet will say otherwise re its northern limits, and I'm sure many a Mexican would be surprised to learn that Comanches raided the Valley of Mexico!
    They also call the Comanches "Lords of the Plains", but more often Ive heard them called "Lords of the Southern Plains", which is certainly more accurate.
    Also, the anthropologist walking in the Rio Grande Gorge refers to the Comanches as living "lightly" across the land, like the pictographs he points to, as a metaphor, that are lightly painted on the rock and now fading away. Well yes, they lived lightly off the land, following the buffalo herds, ...that is when they weren't conducting brutal scorched-earth raids on ranches, homesteads and in some cases, entire towns. It is no exaggeration to describe much of Coahuila and Chihuahua in the 1840's as an apocalyptic wasteland. I mean no disrespect in saying this, the Comanche too were brutalized and had every right to fight back, but documentaries like this do a disservice by not telling the whole story. These raids were war crimes, acts of aggression conducted far from the Comanche heartland and inflicted on innocent settlers who had never seen a Comanche before. While we certainly can't single out the Comanche for their total war tactics, especially those of us of European ancestry, we shouldn't pretend that the conflict was completely one-sided either. Nor should we romanticize this chapter of Comanche history as this documentary clearly implies.

  • @larry1824
    @larry1824 Před rokem

    Greatest horsemen in world

  • @user-zx3vo7zf1g
    @user-zx3vo7zf1g Před 3 lety

    Horses 🐎🐎🐎 are the element of Air. My first Gallop was the start of a journey

  • @ImrickJamesbitch-tm2sd
    @ImrickJamesbitch-tm2sd Před 3 lety +2

    Im mexican but i know my brothers the comanche. Fought for our freedom. Long live quana Parker. The last free comanche chief.

  • @trumptorianguard4617
    @trumptorianguard4617 Před rokem

    Once the Comanche mastered the horse they began a brutal dominance and extermination of the Apache, Navajo and other southwest tribes. The Apache ran to the Spanish for protection, but to no avail, the Comanche still decimated them.
    I’m proud of my connection to the Comanche Nation but my heart is saddened for what the tribes did to one another in the old days.

  • @jasongood6550
    @jasongood6550 Před 4 lety +2

    🤘🤘 excellent

  • @hallaatwolfyinc.1849
    @hallaatwolfyinc.1849 Před 3 lety +1

    This is why, I’ve argued in the past against people that I prefer horse riding against driving automobiles the car is just pistons and compression and gasses moving down, to defeat one accomplish the obstacle. But horse riding is moving your body rhythm with the horses moving muscles to create one soul, merging with another soul creating a temporary soul consummation. If you’ve never been in a full gallop on horseback, you never lived buddy.

  • @tec-jones5445
    @tec-jones5445 Před 5 lety +7

    Will you guys do a video on the Plains before the horse, maybe cities like Etzanoa? Or are those too recent of discoveries?

  • @joannabolin6984
    @joannabolin6984 Před 3 lety +1

    ❤️

  • @kathybentley4190
    @kathybentley4190 Před 4 lety +25

    I believe the act of killing the thousand horses was just another attempt at genocide!
    Also, for those who are hate filled toward Natives, please keep your thoughts to yourself in your tiny, teeny, brain.

    • @darrenwilson3732
      @darrenwilson3732 Před 4 lety

      Right now I am studying the Comanche Indians, reading "Empire of the Summer Moon" by S.C. Gwynne. Very interesting so far, alot to consider, and a balanced look!

    • @dack575
      @dack575 Před 3 lety

      So if you were alive back then what do you think would have happened to you in their hands? Or are you the Great Snow Flake so special and immune to the horrors they they dished out?

    • @gwood701
      @gwood701 Před 3 lety

      Yes Kathy. The video clearly explains that. We didn't need your silly comment from your huge brain that you use so efficiently......NOT

    • @benniecrawford6876
      @benniecrawford6876 Před 3 lety +1

      @@dack575 what about the horrors your white European ancestors committed on our ancestors. They invaded our land the ancestors fought back bravely and we honor them. It’s only because of their courage that we survive today.We know your savage filthy European history before they invaded here and brought their filth and greed with them so be careful of who you judge.

    • @benniecrawford6876
      @benniecrawford6876 Před 3 lety

      @Marco Terrizzi Lonesome Dove is fiction.

  • @redbirdromannose6554
    @redbirdromannose6554 Před 5 lety +3

    Good stuff ..

  • @IceManLikeGervin
    @IceManLikeGervin Před 5 lety +1

    Very interesting upload...

  • @oliviaarteaga4092
    @oliviaarteaga4092 Před 2 lety

    Love my Comanche blood

  • @errr.antiez
    @errr.antiez Před 3 lety

    🙏🏼

  • @tommytwomommy
    @tommytwomommy Před 8 měsíci

    Oh please. The Comanches were actual savages.

  • @adrianlouw2499
    @adrianlouw2499 Před rokem

    In reality the horse was inadvertently a gift from the Europeans...

  • @victorinenoel652
    @victorinenoel652 Před rokem

    Waw

  • @jackiesharp669
    @jackiesharp669 Před rokem

    Why isn't this amazing rock art not protected from the elements?

  • @larry1824
    @larry1824 Před rokem

    Greatest horse warriors on earth. Sorry cossacks!!!!

  • @briannemorris5432
    @briannemorris5432 Před 9 měsíci

    Ya'll need to update this vid because archeology found something new about horses

  • @toltecways639
    @toltecways639 Před 2 lety

    chichimecas from central Mexico where the frist tribe to ride the horse and introduce it to the rest of the native American tribes to the horse

  • @larry1824
    @larry1824 Před rokem

    Nobody on this planet nobody ever used them better!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @matthewmann8969
    @matthewmann8969 Před 2 lety +1

    Off the high horse

  • @colbjallen8334
    @colbjallen8334 Před 5 lety +1

    This makes me so sad

  • @jesselong8971
    @jesselong8971 Před 4 lety

    i wish i was a comanche

  • @mayaavelarde6490
    @mayaavelarde6490 Před 3 lety

    🐴🐴🐴

  • @pierangelobellanova3400

    Hiiii hiiii hiiii 🏹🦊

  • @Mugsies-zy1qf
    @Mugsies-zy1qf Před 2 měsíci

    Comanche name for "Morning Star" ?

  • @tannenbaum7594
    @tannenbaum7594 Před 5 lety +1

    ❤️🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴🐴❤️

  • @rt196
    @rt196 Před 5 lety +1

    My Indian name is red horse

  • @Child_of_Amun
    @Child_of_Amun Před 5 lety +6

    The Mandinka word for warrior is “SOFA”. “So” meaning horse, “Fa” meaning Father. It literally translates to father of the horse. Mansa Abubakari Keita II of Mali a Mandinka Empire, is said to have sailed the Atlantic almost 2 centuries before Columbus, not to mention the many voyages sent to explore the edge of the Atlantic from Al-Andalus or Andalusia, which was a state of the Maghreb or The Almoravid Empire. Many cultures could’ve brought horses to America before the Europeans.

    • @featheramericangoodeagle
      @featheramericangoodeagle Před 5 lety

      Agreed; I am not quick to give the Euros credit for introducing the horse nation to our people.

    • @Hussar-bt8sv
      @Hussar-bt8sv Před 5 lety

      Norseman Leif Erikson had Already been in North america in Year 900 ad

    • @featheramericangoodeagle
      @featheramericangoodeagle Před 5 lety

      That's correct, and the Comanche have a nickname, "the beautiful ones" because they have this particular Caucasian lineage in their bloodline.@@Hussar-bt8sv

  • @peterbrennan393
    @peterbrennan393 Před 2 lety

    The Comanche torture and brutality of other tribes and later Europeans was beyond imagination. they were vicious beyond belief.

  • @trailtreker7002
    @trailtreker7002 Před 4 lety +3

    Theres always Two sides to any story . And here it is as was recorded by History Consensus :
    Link : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comanche_campaign

    • @intrazel
      @intrazel Před 4 lety

      I have read every book on the Comanche, specifically the Quahadi, the horses were slaughtered after they destroyed their camps, Mackenzie ordered during the Battle of Palo Duro Canyon that the horses be shot to weaken the Comanche. What is this other side of the story you speak of ?

    • @effeojnedib7208
      @effeojnedib7208 Před 3 lety

      My exact comment.

  • @reefyyy
    @reefyyy Před 3 lety +1

    How is the USA still not prosecuted by the UN???

    • @ferengiprofiteer9145
      @ferengiprofiteer9145 Před 3 lety

      What did you or I do to be prosecuted for?
      The American indigenous people, the Australian aborigines, and the African Bush people aren't represented in the UN. It's mainly peopled by folks whose ancestors persecuted our ancestors to the point they decided that anywhere else was better than being around those jerks.
      The UN's main purpose is to launder our money to the worldwide bureaucracy of parasites.
      You think they are gonna decouple from our gravy train?
      Critical thinking doesn't mean look for anything/everything to criticize.

  • @papabear90
    @papabear90 Před 3 lety +4

    The USA still must be held accountable for this brutal genocide. Hopefully when they collapse, there will be some comeuppance

    • @ferengiprofiteer9145
      @ferengiprofiteer9145 Před 3 lety +2

      Nothing unique about what happened here.
      This is Earth not heaven.
      Nobody's an angel.
      You like it better somewhere else, what's keeping you?
      Or do you want revenge? History shows what that looks like.
      Keep hate alive, huh bud?

    • @papabear90
      @papabear90 Před 3 lety

      @@ferengiprofiteer9145 not revenge. Just karma. The collapse will happen, US struggling to get hold of inflation, can't increase rates, big quagmire.

  • @LonelyRanger902
    @LonelyRanger902 Před 2 lety +1

    Let’s remember that when the Comanche first got the horse from the Spaniards(The creator😊), the first thing they did was subjugate and slaughter all the other Native tribes throughout the region. The Sioux did the same when they first got horses from the Spanish and guns from the French, obliterating a number of tribes from Minnesota to the Rockies. Conquest was always engrained in the Natives, but unfortunately for them they only had stone age technology right up until the 20th century. Remember they had never even developed a wheel…….

  • @frenchpizza9725
    @frenchpizza9725 Před 3 lety

    I forgive all of YOU. First Nation's Texas

    • @ferengiprofiteer9145
      @ferengiprofiteer9145 Před 3 lety

      We don't deserve it any more than you do.
      Had you First Nations gotten past persecuting each other, you might have done better against the invasion of the persecuted.
      Not really.😉👍 Y'all never had a chance. There was an endless supply of persecuted headed your way.
      Still is, if you notice.

  • @zeptepihotep
    @zeptepihotep Před 4 lety

    3 trillion vs ashtrays

  • @HarleyRunner
    @HarleyRunner Před rokem +1

    the comanche Came from the Owens Valley. Theres proof they were the Koso People. Did you kno the Eastern Sierra Mono Paiute Are Related to the Bannock Paiute . and bishop Paiute tribe Are Walker river Paiute.WoVoka is our RElation . The Ghost Dance was Started by a Owens Valley Paiute (Wodziwob) from Fish lake. Owens Valley Paiute ARE NORTHERN PAIUTE>

  • @greenriverviews6819
    @greenriverviews6819 Před 2 lety +1

    so how did Comanche call themselves, in Comanche language that is?

    • @hsfox2792
      @hsfox2792 Před 2 lety +2

      Numunu which means "The People"

  • @wolfygacha1055
    @wolfygacha1055 Před 3 lety +2

    I am disappointed in my ancestors they killed people who owned this land I am very ashamed of myself.

    • @ferengiprofiteer9145
      @ferengiprofiteer9145 Před 3 lety +1

      You're disappointed in your ancestors that they survived to be your ancestors?
      Got a grip snowflake. They deserve better than your vintage of whine.

    • @banditoandy9784
      @banditoandy9784 Před 2 lety

      🤣🤣🤣🤡

  • @TaiMizuki
    @TaiMizuki Před 2 lety

    Funny that the introduction of the horse in the west was false. Makes you wonder about what was true with this tribe. As a horseman I have full respect to the Comanche but little truth is known about our history and it was recently discovered that horses were around a lot longer in America than people seem to think.

  • @ctrzcinka
    @ctrzcinka Před 3 lety +4

    The Commanche was the most violent and predatory native American group. They drove the Apache out by slaughtering them, the Souix hated them, Parker murdered dozens of settlers. You can get these facts and more in Empire of the Summer Moon: The Rise and Fall of the Commanche, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History by S. C. Gwynne

    • @washingtondale
      @washingtondale Před 3 lety

      True - native life was a struggle to survive: horse raiding, genocidal conflict and cannibalism
      preceded euros in the fossil record. beaten at their own game.

    • @ferengiprofiteer9145
      @ferengiprofiteer9145 Před 3 lety

      Yep, all the stone age skills in the world can't equal Sam Colt's little gadget.
      And that's what it took.
      Those hard headed rascals liked to have prided themselves to extinction.

    • @effeojnedib7208
      @effeojnedib7208 Před 3 lety

      And I got the facts from my family. I'm a 7th generation Texan, family from West Texas. I'll stick with the Comanche being blood thirsty dogs who preyed upon those who could not defend themselves. They never produced anything to benefit their neighbors, like other Indian tribes. They only murdered ruthlessly.

    • @iPhantom287
      @iPhantom287 Před 2 lety

      @@ferengiprofiteer9145 tlen se kamanalli 🤣

    • @ferengiprofiteer9145
      @ferengiprofiteer9145 Před 2 lety

      @@iPhantom287 I don't share my cake recipes.

  • @tsaatuhtabetoy3747
    @tsaatuhtabetoy3747 Před 4 lety +2

    Keri Jhane Myers knows nothing about Comanche culture.

  • @Thunder-qo1bc
    @Thunder-qo1bc Před 3 lety

    This is wrong actually. Horse was indigenous in South America and were brought up by trade long before settlers came here. Settlers brought more horses but we have always had them. Don’t forget... we have tribes in Peru, Mexico, Canada... there were no borders. All of Turtle Island was connected in trade. Battle too, but what they had we also sometimes had and the same in reverse. It’s just that when the settlers came, more tribes had access more commonly.

  • @Hussar-bt8sv
    @Hussar-bt8sv Před 5 lety +4

    The Horses were European Colonziers too

  • @user-bi4dz5oi1p
    @user-bi4dz5oi1p Před 7 měsíci

    Нумунуу.

  • @Greggee100
    @Greggee100 Před 3 lety

    white-tips offspring....I forgot that at the end