Cherokee Tribe History
21:53
2 жыл бұрын
The Irish-Choctaw friendship
7:04
3 жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@xeschire706
@xeschire706 13 сағат бұрын
I don't like Columbus at all.
@tsims8081
@tsims8081 Күн бұрын
You left out the connection to Tribe of Gad
@tippy550storm
@tippy550storm Күн бұрын
did Desoto & his men impregnate Choctaw women when he abducted 500 Choctaw women 4 his men to rape? I read that he abandoned those Choctaw women N the wilderness. What happened to them & did they ever make it back to Choctaw nation?
@DAnnaHawkinsHensley-kf8nm
@DAnnaHawkinsHensley-kf8nm Күн бұрын
kzfaq.info/get/bejne/bp-AmZNz3JPYj6c.htmlsi=xWiSTVWtimDDgpAY
@d-bosssavagestak3708
@d-bosssavagestak3708 Күн бұрын
I have Spanish in me as well What makes an Indian what makes a Mexican what makes a change those are names but they come from a combination of genes as well geniuses👓 your name of your race is just a title its not your molecular structure DNA wise its more then the name of where u think your from to extent as well main lands
@David-gj5sg
@David-gj5sg 2 күн бұрын
With tobacco being a taino originated word I can't imagine the loss of tainos over the years "also" :| my goodness
@angeloflexin3
@angeloflexin3 3 күн бұрын
This evil 😈 👺sick mf Columbus
@UEE-kj6ek
@UEE-kj6ek 4 күн бұрын
larpers with lots of free time on their hands
@joegrande4848
@joegrande4848 4 күн бұрын
Got first Nation blood in my veins 😊❤
@joegrande4848
@joegrande4848 5 күн бұрын
They have people shoot those discs in the air and you could shoot arrows at them to develop arrow shooting skills from a bow. 😊
@joegrande4848
@joegrande4848 5 күн бұрын
Be cool if you guys could do a video about the Mi'kmaq people. Can get elders to ask good questions to get answers. You could make an amazing video with some Mi'kmaq art work, history and culture as well. 😊❤
@GTAADDICT3D
@GTAADDICT3D 5 күн бұрын
Cherokee society is the way to go
@jovonartis9099
@jovonartis9099 6 күн бұрын
Thought the America's was Swarthy
@14wmg34
@14wmg34 6 күн бұрын
❤ Pray with 7 seven grandfather teachings
@user-gb3ig7cv9e
@user-gb3ig7cv9e 6 күн бұрын
❤❤
@Eatyooatmealnigga
@Eatyooatmealnigga 9 күн бұрын
My on my mother side we have Onondaga and Cherokee on my father’s side Cherokee and Navajo
@reconmee4482
@reconmee4482 9 күн бұрын
You forgot a Ojibwe And southern Minnesota
@TheGentlemanscartel
@TheGentlemanscartel 9 күн бұрын
He never came here that’s the problem he found the Caribbean islands not the Americas get the history straight there were AA here before him
@giuffre714
@giuffre714 4 күн бұрын
There are a lot of Spanish speaking countries in the Americas. Do you think he was the beginning of that?
@lisabolo26
@lisabolo26 10 күн бұрын
The fungus famine b.s. has already been disproved. The Brits confiscated Irish crops and sold them elsewhere, leaving Irish with nothing.
@Futuristbillpicone
@Futuristbillpicone 10 күн бұрын
Looks like my late Grandfather may him and Geronimo rest in peace.
@williamdon3442
@williamdon3442 10 күн бұрын
It’s crazy how many different tribes have been affected in the same way by colonialism the loss of culture, loss of cultural identity, loss of family structure, pushed on to reservations Now here in Canada the government is trying to due away with the treaties. What’s crazy now is hearing people tell others “get out of country “. Ironic??? Had techumsi succeeded with uniting all tribes. We may have stood a chance
@Rockstar97321
@Rockstar97321 10 күн бұрын
I was married to a Choctaw, and I am not native American. They do bloodletting rituals, and they practiced voodoo with the Africans. They are closely associated with werewolves. They worship Grandmother Spider and Grandfather Wolf. My ex-wife and her daughter are mediums. They are revolving spirit doors. They are descendants of Quetzalcoatl.
@condor6670
@condor6670 10 күн бұрын
I’m proud to be a Comanche. Our history runs deep.
@jacobtennyson9213
@jacobtennyson9213 11 күн бұрын
White man stole Indian land from them and made their cities.
@Tiger42s
@Tiger42s 11 күн бұрын
Apache life style is violent and tough but it's there way of life.
@jayklink851
@jayklink851 11 күн бұрын
I have a question I was hoping someone could answer. In the early 2000s, I was watching an F4U Corsair documentary, this was on either the Military Channel, or the Military History Channel; neither of witch still exists. Anyway, 25% of the documentary was dedicated to a Native American Corsair pilot who his squamates said was America's true top ace of the war with 46 kills. The current (recognized) top US ace was Dick Bong with 38 or 39 kills. This F4U pilots, who with about a half-dozen other pilots said got 46 kills, was a Native American, but also an alcoholic. Apparently, according to former teammates, he was essentially black listed after he knocked out a senior officer for making fun of him (racists remarks); thus, his commanding officers didn't credit his kills to him. Plus, an alcoholic and rowdy Native American as America's top ace isn't the greatest for propaganda, nor as good for selling war bonds. I've searched for him, but I haven't found anything on Google; any help would be much appreciated. This reminds me of another legend, the greatest tank ace of WWII. When you ask people, "who was the greatest tank ace of the war?" People almost always, especially before KZfaq, reply Michael Wittmann. Wittmann was incredible, with a whopping 139 kills. Seriously, Wittmann was the Mick Jagger of Germany during the war. However, he was not the greatest tank ace. Nope, that honor went to Kurt Knipsel, he had a confirmed 165 kills. In fact his true number is actually much higher; he would disable an enemy tank, taking out their tracks or engine, even though he had a kill shot, to allow other tank commanders in his unit to get the kill (build up their confidence). Unlike Wittmann, no one in Germany, or even most casual WWII enthusiasts before KZfaq, knew his name. He was barely promoted or even given any medals. Why? Well, he saw two SS officers beating a prisoner of war, he then beat them up. Ever since then, he didn't receive any press or medals, his commanding officers completely shunned him, only his phenomenal skills on the battlefield and his leadership quality kept him away from the firing squad.
@jayklink851
@jayklink851 11 күн бұрын
I have a question I was hoping someone could answer. In the early 2000s, I was watching an F4U Corsair documentary, this was on either the Military Channel, or the Military History Channel; neither of witch still exists. Anyway, 25% of the documentary was dedicated to a Native American Corsair pilot who his squamates said was America's true top ace of the war with 46 kills. The current (recognized) top US ace was Dick Bong with 38 or 39 kills. This F4U pilots, who with about a half-dozen other pilots said got 46 kills, was a Native American, but also an alcoholic. Apparently, according to former teammates, he was essentially black listed after he knocked out a senior officer for making fun of him (racists remarks); thus, his commanding officers didn't credit his kills to him. Plus, an alcoholic and rowdy Native American as America's top ace isn't the greatest for propaganda, nor as good for selling war bonds. I've searched for him, but I haven't found anything on Google; any help would be much appreciated. This reminds me of another legend, the greatest tank ace of WWII. When you ask people, "who was the greatest tank ace of the war?" People almost always, especially before KZfaq, reply Michael Wittmann. Wittmann was incredible, with a whopping 139 kills. Seriously, Wittmann was the Mick Jagger of Germany during the war. However, he was not the greatest tank ace. Nope, that honor went to Kurt Knipsel, he had a confirmed 165 kills. In fact his true number is actually much higher; he would disable an enemy tank, taking out their tracks or engine, even though he had a kill shot, to allow other tank commanders in his unit to get the kill (build up their confidence). Unlike Wittmann, no one in Germany, or even most casual WWII enthusiasts before KZfaq, knew his name. He was barely promoted or even given any medals. Why? Well, he saw two SS officers beating a prisoner of war, he then beat them up. Ever since then, he didn't receive any press or medals, his commanding officers completely shunned him, only his phenomenal skills on the battlefield and his leadership quality kept him away from the firing squad.
@Someonelse1224
@Someonelse1224 11 күн бұрын
This video isnt even half the history the navajo tribes has.but the effort is there at least.