Noyes, Stanley

Los Comanches : the horse people, 1751 -1845 Stanley Noyes - Albuquerque [N.M.] University of New Mexico Press 1993 - 364 p.

Includes index

This book offers a large, sweeping history of the Comanche Indians, who dominated the Southern Plains from the mid-18th to the mid-19th century. No plains people was more feared or admired for its mastery of warfare and life in a harsh, arid environment. Euro and Native Americans alike anxiously dreaded the ferocity of Comanche enmity yet avidly sought the uncertainty of Comanche friendship. In this richly textured history, Stanley Noyes explores the golden century of Comanche domi-nation of the Southern Plains. 'While his narrative recounts the relations of Comanches to Spanish, French, Mexican, American, and Native American neighbors, his vignettes provide vivid glimpses into Comanche culture and society. This is a sensitive portrait of human society and physical place. By the end of the book, we understand the Comanches both as a peerless warrior society and as an embattled people.

65648

0826314597

9780826314598


Comanche Indians
Indians of North America --Great Plains
Indians of North America --Southwest, New

973.04974 Noy 48