Indians who Lived in Texas

Indians who Lived in Texas
Title Indians who Lived in Texas PDF eBook
Author Betsy Warren
Publisher
Total Pages 54
Release 1981-09
Genre Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN 9780937460023

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Briefly describes the environment, daily life, and customs of four Indian groups that lived in Texas--the farmers, the fishermen, the plant gatherers, and the hunters.

The Texas Indians

The Texas Indians
Title The Texas Indians PDF eBook
Author David La Vere
Publisher Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages 340
Release 2004
Genre History
ISBN 9781585443017

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Author David La Vere offers a complete chronological and cultural history of Texas Indians from twelve thousand years ago to the present day. He presents a unique view of their cultural history before and after European arrival, examining Indian interactions-both peaceful and violent-with Europeans, Mexicans, Texans, and Americans.

Historic Native Peoples of Texas

Historic Native Peoples of Texas
Title Historic Native Peoples of Texas PDF eBook
Author William C. Foster
Publisher University of Texas Press
Total Pages 368
Release 2009-02-17
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0292781911

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An incredibly detailed account of Indigenous lifeways during the initial rounds of European exploration in south-central North America. Several hundred tribes of Native Americans were living within or hunting and trading across the present-day borders of Texas when Cabeza de Vaca and his shipwrecked companions washed up on a Gulf Coast beach in 1528. Over the next two centuries, as Spanish and French expeditions explored the state, they recorded detailed information about the locations and lifeways of Texas’s Native peoples. Using recent translations of these expedition diaries and journals, along with discoveries from ongoing archaeological investigations, William C. Foster here assembles the most complete account ever published of Texas’s Native peoples during the early historic period (AD 1528 to 1722). Foster describes the historic Native peoples of Texas by geographic regions. His chronological narrative records the interactions of Native groups with European explorers and with Native trading partners across a wide network that extended into Louisiana, the Great Plains, New Mexico, and northern Mexico. Foster provides extensive ethnohistorical information about Texas’s Native peoples, as well as data on the various regions’ animals, plants, and climate. Accompanying each regional account is an annotated list of named Indigenous tribes in that region and maps that show tribal territories and European expedition routes. “A very useful encyclopedic regional account of the Europeans and Native peoples of Texas who encountered one another during the relatively unexamined two hundred years before the Spanish occupation of Texas and the French establishment of Louisiana.” —Southwestern Historical Quarterly

Life Among the Texas Indians

Life Among the Texas Indians
Title Life Among the Texas Indians PDF eBook
Author David La Vere
Publisher Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages 292
Release 1998
Genre
ISBN 9781603445528

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Stories in the book are by or about the Indians of Texas after they settled in Indian Territory.

Violence in the Hill Country

Violence in the Hill Country
Title Violence in the Hill Country PDF eBook
Author Nicholas Keefauver Roland
Publisher University of Texas Press
Total Pages 289
Release 2021-02-09
Genre History
ISBN 1477321756

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In the nineteenth century, Texas’s advancing western frontier was the site of one of America’s longest conflicts between white settlers and native peoples. The Texas Hill Country functioned as a kind of borderland within the larger borderland of Texas itself, a vast and fluid area where, during the Civil War, the slaveholding South and the nominally free-labor West collided. As in many borderlands, Nicholas Roland argues, the Hill Country was marked by violence, as one set of peoples, states, and systems eventually displaced others. In this painstakingly researched book, Roland analyzes patterns of violence in the Texas Hill Country to examine the cultural and political priorities of white settlers and their interaction with the century-defining process of national integration and state-building in the Civil War era. He traces the role of violence in the region from the eve of the Civil War, through secession and the Indian wars, and into Reconstruction. Revealing a bitter history of warfare, criminality, divided communities, political violence, vengeance killings, and economic struggle, Roland positions the Texas Hill Country as emblematic of the Southwest of its time.

The Native Americans of the Texas Edwards Plateau, 1582-1799

The Native Americans of the Texas Edwards Plateau, 1582-1799
Title The Native Americans of the Texas Edwards Plateau, 1582-1799 PDF eBook
Author Maria F. Wade
Publisher University of Texas Press
Total Pages 328
Release 2003
Genre Social Science
ISBN 9780292791565

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The region that now encompasses Central Texas and northern Coahuila, Mexico, was once inhabited by numerous Native hunter-gather groups whose identities and lifeways we are only now learning through archaeological discoveries and painstaking research into Spanish and French colonial records. From these key sources, Maria F. Wade has compiled this first comprehensive ethnohistory of the Native groups that inhabited the Texas Edwards Plateau and surrounding areas during most of the Spanish colonial era. Much of the book deals with events that took place late in the seventeenth century, when Native groups and Europeans began to have their first sustained contact in the region. Wade identifies twenty-one Native groups, including the Jumano, who inhabited the Edwards Plateau at that time. She offers evidence that the groups had sophisticated social and cultural mechanisms, including extensive information networks, ladino cultural brokers, broad-based coalitions, and individuals with dual-ethnic status. She also tracks the eastern movement of Spanish colonizers into the Edwards Plateau region, explores the relationships among Native groups and between those groups and European colonizers, and develops a timeline that places isolated events and singular individuals within broad historical processes.

Indian Depredations in Texas

Indian Depredations in Texas
Title Indian Depredations in Texas PDF eBook
Author John Wesley Wilbarger
Publisher
Total Pages 691
Release 1985
Genre Frontier and pioneer life
ISBN

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Reliable accounts of battles, wars, adventures, forays, murders, and massacres together with biographical sketches of many of the most noted Indian fighters and frontiersmen of Texas.