What are the occurences of total war in the Native Americans?How many acres per person were needed for the early American settlers vs. the native Americans?Why were North Native Americans less urban than Central or South?Why were North American Native Americans UnderdevelopedAround 1750, How many Native Americans (if any) spent the winter in the Keweenaw Peninsula, Michigan?Why did Native Americans originally migrate to the Americas?

How is linear momentum conserved in case of a freely falling body?

Add 2 new columns to existing dataframe using apply

Prove your innocence

Server Integrity Check CheckCommands question

Does maintaining a spell with a longer casting time count as casting a spell?

Joining lists with same elements

To get so rich that you are not in need of anymore money

Does this VCO produce a sine wave or square wave

How does encoder decoder network works?

What does "rel" in `mathrel` and `stackrel` stands for?

Papers on arXiv solving the same problem at the same time

Rent contract say that pets are not allowed. Possible repercussions if bringing the pet anyway?

Billiard balls collision

How many birds in the bush?

Command "root" and "subcommands"

How can I reorder triggered abilities in Arena?

Prevent use of CNAME record for untrusted domain

Are the players on the same team as the DM?

Discussing work with supervisor in an invited dinner with his family

How do I prevent other wifi networks from showing up on my computer?

How much does Commander Data weigh?

Separating old 2 x 4 brick with wheel holder

about to retire but not retired yet, employed but not working any more

What is the difference between "Grippe" and "Männergrippe"?



What are the occurences of total war in the Native Americans?


How many acres per person were needed for the early American settlers vs. the native Americans?Why were North Native Americans less urban than Central or South?Why were North American Native Americans UnderdevelopedAround 1750, How many Native Americans (if any) spent the winter in the Keweenaw Peninsula, Michigan?Why did Native Americans originally migrate to the Americas?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








2















In this article from Wikipedia, a war between the Pawnees on one side, and the Sioux and Cheyennes on the other side, is represented.
It is claimed this war was a total war because the "non fighters" were targeted and killed.



However I am wondering: is it the only experience of such a total war in the Native Americans?
For example:



  • The destruction of the city of the Hopis has certainly killed civilians

  • The Arikaras, settlers, had wars with nomadic tribes around them. Had their villages been attacked?

In general, are there other occurences of Native Americans non fighters targeted in an intertribal war?










share|improve this question





















  • 2





    There's an elephant you're ignoring...

    – Spencer
    4 hours ago











  • A pretty important elephant.

    – Tom
    3 hours ago











  • Are you excluding Native Americans from South America, Central America and the parts of North America outside the current boundaries of the USA?

    – RedGrittyBrick
    2 hours ago











  • Asserted by whom? Is claimed by whom? What definition of total war? Any evidence of the bulleted assertions?

    – Mark C. Wallace
    2 hours ago












  • Hasn't all war always been "total", in this sense, despite occasional pretenses? In Europe, 100-years' war? 30-years' war? ... are sufficiently notorious examples that I'm aware of them.

    – paul garrett
    1 hour ago

















2















In this article from Wikipedia, a war between the Pawnees on one side, and the Sioux and Cheyennes on the other side, is represented.
It is claimed this war was a total war because the "non fighters" were targeted and killed.



However I am wondering: is it the only experience of such a total war in the Native Americans?
For example:



  • The destruction of the city of the Hopis has certainly killed civilians

  • The Arikaras, settlers, had wars with nomadic tribes around them. Had their villages been attacked?

In general, are there other occurences of Native Americans non fighters targeted in an intertribal war?










share|improve this question





















  • 2





    There's an elephant you're ignoring...

    – Spencer
    4 hours ago











  • A pretty important elephant.

    – Tom
    3 hours ago











  • Are you excluding Native Americans from South America, Central America and the parts of North America outside the current boundaries of the USA?

    – RedGrittyBrick
    2 hours ago











  • Asserted by whom? Is claimed by whom? What definition of total war? Any evidence of the bulleted assertions?

    – Mark C. Wallace
    2 hours ago












  • Hasn't all war always been "total", in this sense, despite occasional pretenses? In Europe, 100-years' war? 30-years' war? ... are sufficiently notorious examples that I'm aware of them.

    – paul garrett
    1 hour ago













2












2








2








In this article from Wikipedia, a war between the Pawnees on one side, and the Sioux and Cheyennes on the other side, is represented.
It is claimed this war was a total war because the "non fighters" were targeted and killed.



However I am wondering: is it the only experience of such a total war in the Native Americans?
For example:



  • The destruction of the city of the Hopis has certainly killed civilians

  • The Arikaras, settlers, had wars with nomadic tribes around them. Had their villages been attacked?

In general, are there other occurences of Native Americans non fighters targeted in an intertribal war?










share|improve this question
















In this article from Wikipedia, a war between the Pawnees on one side, and the Sioux and Cheyennes on the other side, is represented.
It is claimed this war was a total war because the "non fighters" were targeted and killed.



However I am wondering: is it the only experience of such a total war in the Native Americans?
For example:



  • The destruction of the city of the Hopis has certainly killed civilians

  • The Arikaras, settlers, had wars with nomadic tribes around them. Had their villages been attacked?

In general, are there other occurences of Native Americans non fighters targeted in an intertribal war?







native-americans north-america






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 hours ago









Mark C. Wallace

24.5k9 gold badges76 silver badges120 bronze badges




24.5k9 gold badges76 silver badges120 bronze badges










asked 8 hours ago









totalMongottotalMongot

5432 silver badges13 bronze badges




5432 silver badges13 bronze badges










  • 2





    There's an elephant you're ignoring...

    – Spencer
    4 hours ago











  • A pretty important elephant.

    – Tom
    3 hours ago











  • Are you excluding Native Americans from South America, Central America and the parts of North America outside the current boundaries of the USA?

    – RedGrittyBrick
    2 hours ago











  • Asserted by whom? Is claimed by whom? What definition of total war? Any evidence of the bulleted assertions?

    – Mark C. Wallace
    2 hours ago












  • Hasn't all war always been "total", in this sense, despite occasional pretenses? In Europe, 100-years' war? 30-years' war? ... are sufficiently notorious examples that I'm aware of them.

    – paul garrett
    1 hour ago












  • 2





    There's an elephant you're ignoring...

    – Spencer
    4 hours ago











  • A pretty important elephant.

    – Tom
    3 hours ago











  • Are you excluding Native Americans from South America, Central America and the parts of North America outside the current boundaries of the USA?

    – RedGrittyBrick
    2 hours ago











  • Asserted by whom? Is claimed by whom? What definition of total war? Any evidence of the bulleted assertions?

    – Mark C. Wallace
    2 hours ago












  • Hasn't all war always been "total", in this sense, despite occasional pretenses? In Europe, 100-years' war? 30-years' war? ... are sufficiently notorious examples that I'm aware of them.

    – paul garrett
    1 hour ago







2




2





There's an elephant you're ignoring...

– Spencer
4 hours ago





There's an elephant you're ignoring...

– Spencer
4 hours ago













A pretty important elephant.

– Tom
3 hours ago





A pretty important elephant.

– Tom
3 hours ago













Are you excluding Native Americans from South America, Central America and the parts of North America outside the current boundaries of the USA?

– RedGrittyBrick
2 hours ago





Are you excluding Native Americans from South America, Central America and the parts of North America outside the current boundaries of the USA?

– RedGrittyBrick
2 hours ago













Asserted by whom? Is claimed by whom? What definition of total war? Any evidence of the bulleted assertions?

– Mark C. Wallace
2 hours ago






Asserted by whom? Is claimed by whom? What definition of total war? Any evidence of the bulleted assertions?

– Mark C. Wallace
2 hours ago














Hasn't all war always been "total", in this sense, despite occasional pretenses? In Europe, 100-years' war? 30-years' war? ... are sufficiently notorious examples that I'm aware of them.

– paul garrett
1 hour ago





Hasn't all war always been "total", in this sense, despite occasional pretenses? In Europe, 100-years' war? 30-years' war? ... are sufficiently notorious examples that I'm aware of them.

– paul garrett
1 hour ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















3















SHORT ANSWER



"Total War" is a bit grandiose and ambitious, but as far as I know very few Native American or American Indian groups in the USA had any sort of rules against harming noncombatants in war.



LONG ANSWER



As far as I know, as a general rule Native Americans or American Indians in the USA didn't have any sort of social rules against killing noncombatants. So they sometimes killed women and children when they had opportunities to, and sometimes captured them for various purposes - such as later torturing them to death, or mass rape, or selling them as slaves, or adopting them and making them parts of their families and tribes.



EASTERN WOODLAND GROUPS



American colonists and later American citizens recorded many examples of eastern woodlands tribes attacking isolated farms and settlements and either killing white women and children instantly, or taking them away to be later tortured to death, or raped, or enslaved and maybe sold for profit, or maybe ransomed by relatives, or maybe adopted and made part of the community and transformed into members of the tribe.



And some people might suppose that maybe the eastern woodlands tribes hated whites much more than they hated members of other tribes, and that they would not treat women and children of other eastern woodlands tribes as harshly as they treated white women and children.



In the rather genocidal Beaver Wars of 1629-1701 the Iroquois Confederation sought to control the trade in beaver furs with Europeans, and more more less made itself the overlord of most of the tribes in a vast area in what later became the northeastern USA and southeastern Canada.



Many enemies of the Iroquois were totally destroyed during the Beaver Wars.




The wars were brutal and are considered one of the bloodiest series of conflicts in the history of North America. As the Iroquois effectively destroyed several large tribal confederacies—including the Mahican, Huron, Neutral, Erie, Susquehannock and northern Algonquins. They became dominant in the region and enlarged their territory, realigning the tribal geography of North America. The Iroquois gained control of the New England frontier and Ohio River valley lands as hunting ground, from about 1670 onward.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaver_Wars1



After the Iroquois destroyed an enemy nation, the former members of it would be reduced to three different types.



1) Iroquois captives who would be gradually assimilated and turned into Iroquois. In many Iroquois villages the majority of the population was assimilated former members of enemy nations.



2) Fugitives who would seek shelter with other tribes and nations and gradually assimilate into them.



3) Rotting corpses - and possibly ashes in the cases of any burned to death.



In some cases Iroquois brutality might have been revenge for brutal attacks by their neighbors in previous wars. But I doubt that was the case when the Iroquois destroyed the Neutral Nation.



Therefore, I guess that the many eastern woodlands tribes sometimes treated the women, children, old people,and other noncombatants of enemy tribes with the same brutality they were sometimes recorded by whites as using against white noncombatants.



WESTERN NATIONS, TRIBES, AND GROUPS



In the western part of the USA the situation was basically the same, with one exception. Most of the eastern woodlands tribes had warrior cultures where men were expected to fight enemy tribes from time to time.



The western two thirds of the USA has very varied climates, and there are hundreds of different nations, tribes, and groups there, who had many different cultures. Many of those groups had non aggressive cultures and their members wouldn't attack anyone who wasn't bothering them, though they would defend themselves against attacks and might strike back to retaliate and to deter future attacks.



Of course the most famous nations and tribes in the West had warrior cultures, where men were expected to not only defend their groups but also to attack other tribes and steal and kill to make their reputations. So the famous plains warrior tribes and the Navajos and Apaches, etc., etc., tended to be at war with all of their neighbors, except for any allies they had, more or less constantly.



And as far as I know, almost no groups in the trans-Mississippi West, whether non aggressive or warriors, had any rules against harming noncombatants.



Except that when the Modoc War started with a brief gunfight in the camp of the non reservation Modocs on November 28, 1872, Captain Jackson retreated with his troops and the Modocs under Captain Jack fled, eventually taking refuge in the lava beds. A band of Modocs under Hooker Jim killed 18 settlers on November 29 and 30. As far as I remember, the warriors in those raids killed only men and spared women and children, though the youngest "man" they killed was only eleven.



And a bigger exception was the non treaty band of Nez Perce in the Nez Perce War of 1877. As far as I remember, the Nez Perce warriors committed almost no atrocities or war crimes during that bloody conflict.



As far as I remember, those are the exceptions that prove the rule.



Sacred Ridge Massacre. At the Sacred Ridge archaeological site southwest of Durango, Colorado, bones of about 35 persons were found in the 21st century showing signs of torture and mutilation by their enemies. The date of the massacre should have been roughly about 803 to 810.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_Ridge2



At the Crow Creek Site, South Dakota, archaeologists have found the remains of at least 486 person, men, women, and children, of an unidentified group who were killed by members of an unidentified group and whose bodies were eventually buried by someone - in the unfinished defensive ditch around the village. The Crow Creek massacre happened in the mid 1300s.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crow_Creek_massacre3




In 1694, Apaches brought a large number of captive children to the trading fair in New Mexico, but for some reason there were not enough buyers, so the Apaches beheaded all their slaves in full view of the Spaniards.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Pawnees_enslaved4



The Skidi Pawnees in Village Across a Hill practiced human sacrifice in their annual Morning Star ritual, sacrificing a captured girl, when they were first contacted by whites, but reformers began to urge that the sacrifices stop. In 1817 Petalesharo rescued a Comanche girl from sacrifice.




The last known sacrifice was of Haxti, a 14 year-old Oglala Lakota girl, on 22 April 1838.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people5




The French responded by sending Bourgmont to make peace (in the French interest) between the Pawnees and their enemies in 1724. He reported that the Pawnee were a strong tribe and good horsemen, but, located at the far end of every trade route for European goods, were unfamiliar with Europeans and were treated like country bumpkins by their southern relatives. The mutual hatred between Pawnees and Apaches was so great that both sides were cooking and eating many of their captives.5:47 Bourgmont's "peace" had little effect.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Pawnees_enslaved4



In 1871, Pinal and Aravaipa Apaches lead by Eskiminzin made peace and settled down near Camp Grant, Arizona. But some people, suspecting they were still secretly raiding, or for other reasons, weren't happy. William S. Ouray and Jesus Maria Elias formed a Committee of Public Safety in Tuscon and got Francisco Galerita, leader of the Tohono O'odham at San Xavier, to join them.



On April 30, 1871, 6 Anglo Americas, 48 Hispanic Americans, and 92 Tohono O'odham attacked the sleeping Apache camp and killed about 144 Apaches - 8 men, the rest women and children. 29 Apache children were captured and sold into slavery, despite slavery being illegal in both the USA and Mexico.



Despite being of different cultures and races, the various groups could all agree that the only good Apache was a dead Apache.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_Grant_massacre6




On one such raid, 5 August 1873, a Sioux war party of over 1,000 warriors ambushed a Pawnee hunting party of 350 men, women, and children. The Pawnee had gained permission to leave the reservation and hunt buffalo. About 70 Pawnee were killed in this attack, which occurred in a canyon in present-day Hitchcock County. The site is known as Massacre Canyon.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Relocation_and_reservation7



In the Dull Knife Fight or Battle on the Red Fork, 25 November 1876, Colonel Mackenzie's force of US cavalry and hundreds of Indian scouts of the Pawnee, Shoshone, Bannock, Arapaho, Sioux, and Cheyenne tribes defeated and destroyed the main winter camp of the Northern Cheyenne. As I remember, among the loot found in the camp was a sack containing a number of hands of Shoshone babies acquired in a recent fight.



And these are some examples I could remember and/or look up of Native Americans or American Indians committing war crimes and atrocities against other American Indians.






share|improve this answer



























  • Good answer. The brutal fact is that in most cases tribal war the idea of civilians doesn't even make sense.

    – Orangesandlemons
    2 hours ago













Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "324"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fhistory.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f54335%2fwhat-are-the-occurences-of-total-war-in-the-native-americans%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3















SHORT ANSWER



"Total War" is a bit grandiose and ambitious, but as far as I know very few Native American or American Indian groups in the USA had any sort of rules against harming noncombatants in war.



LONG ANSWER



As far as I know, as a general rule Native Americans or American Indians in the USA didn't have any sort of social rules against killing noncombatants. So they sometimes killed women and children when they had opportunities to, and sometimes captured them for various purposes - such as later torturing them to death, or mass rape, or selling them as slaves, or adopting them and making them parts of their families and tribes.



EASTERN WOODLAND GROUPS



American colonists and later American citizens recorded many examples of eastern woodlands tribes attacking isolated farms and settlements and either killing white women and children instantly, or taking them away to be later tortured to death, or raped, or enslaved and maybe sold for profit, or maybe ransomed by relatives, or maybe adopted and made part of the community and transformed into members of the tribe.



And some people might suppose that maybe the eastern woodlands tribes hated whites much more than they hated members of other tribes, and that they would not treat women and children of other eastern woodlands tribes as harshly as they treated white women and children.



In the rather genocidal Beaver Wars of 1629-1701 the Iroquois Confederation sought to control the trade in beaver furs with Europeans, and more more less made itself the overlord of most of the tribes in a vast area in what later became the northeastern USA and southeastern Canada.



Many enemies of the Iroquois were totally destroyed during the Beaver Wars.




The wars were brutal and are considered one of the bloodiest series of conflicts in the history of North America. As the Iroquois effectively destroyed several large tribal confederacies—including the Mahican, Huron, Neutral, Erie, Susquehannock and northern Algonquins. They became dominant in the region and enlarged their territory, realigning the tribal geography of North America. The Iroquois gained control of the New England frontier and Ohio River valley lands as hunting ground, from about 1670 onward.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaver_Wars1



After the Iroquois destroyed an enemy nation, the former members of it would be reduced to three different types.



1) Iroquois captives who would be gradually assimilated and turned into Iroquois. In many Iroquois villages the majority of the population was assimilated former members of enemy nations.



2) Fugitives who would seek shelter with other tribes and nations and gradually assimilate into them.



3) Rotting corpses - and possibly ashes in the cases of any burned to death.



In some cases Iroquois brutality might have been revenge for brutal attacks by their neighbors in previous wars. But I doubt that was the case when the Iroquois destroyed the Neutral Nation.



Therefore, I guess that the many eastern woodlands tribes sometimes treated the women, children, old people,and other noncombatants of enemy tribes with the same brutality they were sometimes recorded by whites as using against white noncombatants.



WESTERN NATIONS, TRIBES, AND GROUPS



In the western part of the USA the situation was basically the same, with one exception. Most of the eastern woodlands tribes had warrior cultures where men were expected to fight enemy tribes from time to time.



The western two thirds of the USA has very varied climates, and there are hundreds of different nations, tribes, and groups there, who had many different cultures. Many of those groups had non aggressive cultures and their members wouldn't attack anyone who wasn't bothering them, though they would defend themselves against attacks and might strike back to retaliate and to deter future attacks.



Of course the most famous nations and tribes in the West had warrior cultures, where men were expected to not only defend their groups but also to attack other tribes and steal and kill to make their reputations. So the famous plains warrior tribes and the Navajos and Apaches, etc., etc., tended to be at war with all of their neighbors, except for any allies they had, more or less constantly.



And as far as I know, almost no groups in the trans-Mississippi West, whether non aggressive or warriors, had any rules against harming noncombatants.



Except that when the Modoc War started with a brief gunfight in the camp of the non reservation Modocs on November 28, 1872, Captain Jackson retreated with his troops and the Modocs under Captain Jack fled, eventually taking refuge in the lava beds. A band of Modocs under Hooker Jim killed 18 settlers on November 29 and 30. As far as I remember, the warriors in those raids killed only men and spared women and children, though the youngest "man" they killed was only eleven.



And a bigger exception was the non treaty band of Nez Perce in the Nez Perce War of 1877. As far as I remember, the Nez Perce warriors committed almost no atrocities or war crimes during that bloody conflict.



As far as I remember, those are the exceptions that prove the rule.



Sacred Ridge Massacre. At the Sacred Ridge archaeological site southwest of Durango, Colorado, bones of about 35 persons were found in the 21st century showing signs of torture and mutilation by their enemies. The date of the massacre should have been roughly about 803 to 810.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_Ridge2



At the Crow Creek Site, South Dakota, archaeologists have found the remains of at least 486 person, men, women, and children, of an unidentified group who were killed by members of an unidentified group and whose bodies were eventually buried by someone - in the unfinished defensive ditch around the village. The Crow Creek massacre happened in the mid 1300s.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crow_Creek_massacre3




In 1694, Apaches brought a large number of captive children to the trading fair in New Mexico, but for some reason there were not enough buyers, so the Apaches beheaded all their slaves in full view of the Spaniards.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Pawnees_enslaved4



The Skidi Pawnees in Village Across a Hill practiced human sacrifice in their annual Morning Star ritual, sacrificing a captured girl, when they were first contacted by whites, but reformers began to urge that the sacrifices stop. In 1817 Petalesharo rescued a Comanche girl from sacrifice.




The last known sacrifice was of Haxti, a 14 year-old Oglala Lakota girl, on 22 April 1838.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people5




The French responded by sending Bourgmont to make peace (in the French interest) between the Pawnees and their enemies in 1724. He reported that the Pawnee were a strong tribe and good horsemen, but, located at the far end of every trade route for European goods, were unfamiliar with Europeans and were treated like country bumpkins by their southern relatives. The mutual hatred between Pawnees and Apaches was so great that both sides were cooking and eating many of their captives.5:47 Bourgmont's "peace" had little effect.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Pawnees_enslaved4



In 1871, Pinal and Aravaipa Apaches lead by Eskiminzin made peace and settled down near Camp Grant, Arizona. But some people, suspecting they were still secretly raiding, or for other reasons, weren't happy. William S. Ouray and Jesus Maria Elias formed a Committee of Public Safety in Tuscon and got Francisco Galerita, leader of the Tohono O'odham at San Xavier, to join them.



On April 30, 1871, 6 Anglo Americas, 48 Hispanic Americans, and 92 Tohono O'odham attacked the sleeping Apache camp and killed about 144 Apaches - 8 men, the rest women and children. 29 Apache children were captured and sold into slavery, despite slavery being illegal in both the USA and Mexico.



Despite being of different cultures and races, the various groups could all agree that the only good Apache was a dead Apache.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_Grant_massacre6




On one such raid, 5 August 1873, a Sioux war party of over 1,000 warriors ambushed a Pawnee hunting party of 350 men, women, and children. The Pawnee had gained permission to leave the reservation and hunt buffalo. About 70 Pawnee were killed in this attack, which occurred in a canyon in present-day Hitchcock County. The site is known as Massacre Canyon.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Relocation_and_reservation7



In the Dull Knife Fight or Battle on the Red Fork, 25 November 1876, Colonel Mackenzie's force of US cavalry and hundreds of Indian scouts of the Pawnee, Shoshone, Bannock, Arapaho, Sioux, and Cheyenne tribes defeated and destroyed the main winter camp of the Northern Cheyenne. As I remember, among the loot found in the camp was a sack containing a number of hands of Shoshone babies acquired in a recent fight.



And these are some examples I could remember and/or look up of Native Americans or American Indians committing war crimes and atrocities against other American Indians.






share|improve this answer



























  • Good answer. The brutal fact is that in most cases tribal war the idea of civilians doesn't even make sense.

    – Orangesandlemons
    2 hours ago















3















SHORT ANSWER



"Total War" is a bit grandiose and ambitious, but as far as I know very few Native American or American Indian groups in the USA had any sort of rules against harming noncombatants in war.



LONG ANSWER



As far as I know, as a general rule Native Americans or American Indians in the USA didn't have any sort of social rules against killing noncombatants. So they sometimes killed women and children when they had opportunities to, and sometimes captured them for various purposes - such as later torturing them to death, or mass rape, or selling them as slaves, or adopting them and making them parts of their families and tribes.



EASTERN WOODLAND GROUPS



American colonists and later American citizens recorded many examples of eastern woodlands tribes attacking isolated farms and settlements and either killing white women and children instantly, or taking them away to be later tortured to death, or raped, or enslaved and maybe sold for profit, or maybe ransomed by relatives, or maybe adopted and made part of the community and transformed into members of the tribe.



And some people might suppose that maybe the eastern woodlands tribes hated whites much more than they hated members of other tribes, and that they would not treat women and children of other eastern woodlands tribes as harshly as they treated white women and children.



In the rather genocidal Beaver Wars of 1629-1701 the Iroquois Confederation sought to control the trade in beaver furs with Europeans, and more more less made itself the overlord of most of the tribes in a vast area in what later became the northeastern USA and southeastern Canada.



Many enemies of the Iroquois were totally destroyed during the Beaver Wars.




The wars were brutal and are considered one of the bloodiest series of conflicts in the history of North America. As the Iroquois effectively destroyed several large tribal confederacies—including the Mahican, Huron, Neutral, Erie, Susquehannock and northern Algonquins. They became dominant in the region and enlarged their territory, realigning the tribal geography of North America. The Iroquois gained control of the New England frontier and Ohio River valley lands as hunting ground, from about 1670 onward.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaver_Wars1



After the Iroquois destroyed an enemy nation, the former members of it would be reduced to three different types.



1) Iroquois captives who would be gradually assimilated and turned into Iroquois. In many Iroquois villages the majority of the population was assimilated former members of enemy nations.



2) Fugitives who would seek shelter with other tribes and nations and gradually assimilate into them.



3) Rotting corpses - and possibly ashes in the cases of any burned to death.



In some cases Iroquois brutality might have been revenge for brutal attacks by their neighbors in previous wars. But I doubt that was the case when the Iroquois destroyed the Neutral Nation.



Therefore, I guess that the many eastern woodlands tribes sometimes treated the women, children, old people,and other noncombatants of enemy tribes with the same brutality they were sometimes recorded by whites as using against white noncombatants.



WESTERN NATIONS, TRIBES, AND GROUPS



In the western part of the USA the situation was basically the same, with one exception. Most of the eastern woodlands tribes had warrior cultures where men were expected to fight enemy tribes from time to time.



The western two thirds of the USA has very varied climates, and there are hundreds of different nations, tribes, and groups there, who had many different cultures. Many of those groups had non aggressive cultures and their members wouldn't attack anyone who wasn't bothering them, though they would defend themselves against attacks and might strike back to retaliate and to deter future attacks.



Of course the most famous nations and tribes in the West had warrior cultures, where men were expected to not only defend their groups but also to attack other tribes and steal and kill to make their reputations. So the famous plains warrior tribes and the Navajos and Apaches, etc., etc., tended to be at war with all of their neighbors, except for any allies they had, more or less constantly.



And as far as I know, almost no groups in the trans-Mississippi West, whether non aggressive or warriors, had any rules against harming noncombatants.



Except that when the Modoc War started with a brief gunfight in the camp of the non reservation Modocs on November 28, 1872, Captain Jackson retreated with his troops and the Modocs under Captain Jack fled, eventually taking refuge in the lava beds. A band of Modocs under Hooker Jim killed 18 settlers on November 29 and 30. As far as I remember, the warriors in those raids killed only men and spared women and children, though the youngest "man" they killed was only eleven.



And a bigger exception was the non treaty band of Nez Perce in the Nez Perce War of 1877. As far as I remember, the Nez Perce warriors committed almost no atrocities or war crimes during that bloody conflict.



As far as I remember, those are the exceptions that prove the rule.



Sacred Ridge Massacre. At the Sacred Ridge archaeological site southwest of Durango, Colorado, bones of about 35 persons were found in the 21st century showing signs of torture and mutilation by their enemies. The date of the massacre should have been roughly about 803 to 810.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_Ridge2



At the Crow Creek Site, South Dakota, archaeologists have found the remains of at least 486 person, men, women, and children, of an unidentified group who were killed by members of an unidentified group and whose bodies were eventually buried by someone - in the unfinished defensive ditch around the village. The Crow Creek massacre happened in the mid 1300s.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crow_Creek_massacre3




In 1694, Apaches brought a large number of captive children to the trading fair in New Mexico, but for some reason there were not enough buyers, so the Apaches beheaded all their slaves in full view of the Spaniards.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Pawnees_enslaved4



The Skidi Pawnees in Village Across a Hill practiced human sacrifice in their annual Morning Star ritual, sacrificing a captured girl, when they were first contacted by whites, but reformers began to urge that the sacrifices stop. In 1817 Petalesharo rescued a Comanche girl from sacrifice.




The last known sacrifice was of Haxti, a 14 year-old Oglala Lakota girl, on 22 April 1838.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people5




The French responded by sending Bourgmont to make peace (in the French interest) between the Pawnees and their enemies in 1724. He reported that the Pawnee were a strong tribe and good horsemen, but, located at the far end of every trade route for European goods, were unfamiliar with Europeans and were treated like country bumpkins by their southern relatives. The mutual hatred between Pawnees and Apaches was so great that both sides were cooking and eating many of their captives.5:47 Bourgmont's "peace" had little effect.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Pawnees_enslaved4



In 1871, Pinal and Aravaipa Apaches lead by Eskiminzin made peace and settled down near Camp Grant, Arizona. But some people, suspecting they were still secretly raiding, or for other reasons, weren't happy. William S. Ouray and Jesus Maria Elias formed a Committee of Public Safety in Tuscon and got Francisco Galerita, leader of the Tohono O'odham at San Xavier, to join them.



On April 30, 1871, 6 Anglo Americas, 48 Hispanic Americans, and 92 Tohono O'odham attacked the sleeping Apache camp and killed about 144 Apaches - 8 men, the rest women and children. 29 Apache children were captured and sold into slavery, despite slavery being illegal in both the USA and Mexico.



Despite being of different cultures and races, the various groups could all agree that the only good Apache was a dead Apache.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_Grant_massacre6




On one such raid, 5 August 1873, a Sioux war party of over 1,000 warriors ambushed a Pawnee hunting party of 350 men, women, and children. The Pawnee had gained permission to leave the reservation and hunt buffalo. About 70 Pawnee were killed in this attack, which occurred in a canyon in present-day Hitchcock County. The site is known as Massacre Canyon.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Relocation_and_reservation7



In the Dull Knife Fight or Battle on the Red Fork, 25 November 1876, Colonel Mackenzie's force of US cavalry and hundreds of Indian scouts of the Pawnee, Shoshone, Bannock, Arapaho, Sioux, and Cheyenne tribes defeated and destroyed the main winter camp of the Northern Cheyenne. As I remember, among the loot found in the camp was a sack containing a number of hands of Shoshone babies acquired in a recent fight.



And these are some examples I could remember and/or look up of Native Americans or American Indians committing war crimes and atrocities against other American Indians.






share|improve this answer



























  • Good answer. The brutal fact is that in most cases tribal war the idea of civilians doesn't even make sense.

    – Orangesandlemons
    2 hours ago













3














3










3









SHORT ANSWER



"Total War" is a bit grandiose and ambitious, but as far as I know very few Native American or American Indian groups in the USA had any sort of rules against harming noncombatants in war.



LONG ANSWER



As far as I know, as a general rule Native Americans or American Indians in the USA didn't have any sort of social rules against killing noncombatants. So they sometimes killed women and children when they had opportunities to, and sometimes captured them for various purposes - such as later torturing them to death, or mass rape, or selling them as slaves, or adopting them and making them parts of their families and tribes.



EASTERN WOODLAND GROUPS



American colonists and later American citizens recorded many examples of eastern woodlands tribes attacking isolated farms and settlements and either killing white women and children instantly, or taking them away to be later tortured to death, or raped, or enslaved and maybe sold for profit, or maybe ransomed by relatives, or maybe adopted and made part of the community and transformed into members of the tribe.



And some people might suppose that maybe the eastern woodlands tribes hated whites much more than they hated members of other tribes, and that they would not treat women and children of other eastern woodlands tribes as harshly as they treated white women and children.



In the rather genocidal Beaver Wars of 1629-1701 the Iroquois Confederation sought to control the trade in beaver furs with Europeans, and more more less made itself the overlord of most of the tribes in a vast area in what later became the northeastern USA and southeastern Canada.



Many enemies of the Iroquois were totally destroyed during the Beaver Wars.




The wars were brutal and are considered one of the bloodiest series of conflicts in the history of North America. As the Iroquois effectively destroyed several large tribal confederacies—including the Mahican, Huron, Neutral, Erie, Susquehannock and northern Algonquins. They became dominant in the region and enlarged their territory, realigning the tribal geography of North America. The Iroquois gained control of the New England frontier and Ohio River valley lands as hunting ground, from about 1670 onward.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaver_Wars1



After the Iroquois destroyed an enemy nation, the former members of it would be reduced to three different types.



1) Iroquois captives who would be gradually assimilated and turned into Iroquois. In many Iroquois villages the majority of the population was assimilated former members of enemy nations.



2) Fugitives who would seek shelter with other tribes and nations and gradually assimilate into them.



3) Rotting corpses - and possibly ashes in the cases of any burned to death.



In some cases Iroquois brutality might have been revenge for brutal attacks by their neighbors in previous wars. But I doubt that was the case when the Iroquois destroyed the Neutral Nation.



Therefore, I guess that the many eastern woodlands tribes sometimes treated the women, children, old people,and other noncombatants of enemy tribes with the same brutality they were sometimes recorded by whites as using against white noncombatants.



WESTERN NATIONS, TRIBES, AND GROUPS



In the western part of the USA the situation was basically the same, with one exception. Most of the eastern woodlands tribes had warrior cultures where men were expected to fight enemy tribes from time to time.



The western two thirds of the USA has very varied climates, and there are hundreds of different nations, tribes, and groups there, who had many different cultures. Many of those groups had non aggressive cultures and their members wouldn't attack anyone who wasn't bothering them, though they would defend themselves against attacks and might strike back to retaliate and to deter future attacks.



Of course the most famous nations and tribes in the West had warrior cultures, where men were expected to not only defend their groups but also to attack other tribes and steal and kill to make their reputations. So the famous plains warrior tribes and the Navajos and Apaches, etc., etc., tended to be at war with all of their neighbors, except for any allies they had, more or less constantly.



And as far as I know, almost no groups in the trans-Mississippi West, whether non aggressive or warriors, had any rules against harming noncombatants.



Except that when the Modoc War started with a brief gunfight in the camp of the non reservation Modocs on November 28, 1872, Captain Jackson retreated with his troops and the Modocs under Captain Jack fled, eventually taking refuge in the lava beds. A band of Modocs under Hooker Jim killed 18 settlers on November 29 and 30. As far as I remember, the warriors in those raids killed only men and spared women and children, though the youngest "man" they killed was only eleven.



And a bigger exception was the non treaty band of Nez Perce in the Nez Perce War of 1877. As far as I remember, the Nez Perce warriors committed almost no atrocities or war crimes during that bloody conflict.



As far as I remember, those are the exceptions that prove the rule.



Sacred Ridge Massacre. At the Sacred Ridge archaeological site southwest of Durango, Colorado, bones of about 35 persons were found in the 21st century showing signs of torture and mutilation by their enemies. The date of the massacre should have been roughly about 803 to 810.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_Ridge2



At the Crow Creek Site, South Dakota, archaeologists have found the remains of at least 486 person, men, women, and children, of an unidentified group who were killed by members of an unidentified group and whose bodies were eventually buried by someone - in the unfinished defensive ditch around the village. The Crow Creek massacre happened in the mid 1300s.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crow_Creek_massacre3




In 1694, Apaches brought a large number of captive children to the trading fair in New Mexico, but for some reason there were not enough buyers, so the Apaches beheaded all their slaves in full view of the Spaniards.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Pawnees_enslaved4



The Skidi Pawnees in Village Across a Hill practiced human sacrifice in their annual Morning Star ritual, sacrificing a captured girl, when they were first contacted by whites, but reformers began to urge that the sacrifices stop. In 1817 Petalesharo rescued a Comanche girl from sacrifice.




The last known sacrifice was of Haxti, a 14 year-old Oglala Lakota girl, on 22 April 1838.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people5




The French responded by sending Bourgmont to make peace (in the French interest) between the Pawnees and their enemies in 1724. He reported that the Pawnee were a strong tribe and good horsemen, but, located at the far end of every trade route for European goods, were unfamiliar with Europeans and were treated like country bumpkins by their southern relatives. The mutual hatred between Pawnees and Apaches was so great that both sides were cooking and eating many of their captives.5:47 Bourgmont's "peace" had little effect.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Pawnees_enslaved4



In 1871, Pinal and Aravaipa Apaches lead by Eskiminzin made peace and settled down near Camp Grant, Arizona. But some people, suspecting they were still secretly raiding, or for other reasons, weren't happy. William S. Ouray and Jesus Maria Elias formed a Committee of Public Safety in Tuscon and got Francisco Galerita, leader of the Tohono O'odham at San Xavier, to join them.



On April 30, 1871, 6 Anglo Americas, 48 Hispanic Americans, and 92 Tohono O'odham attacked the sleeping Apache camp and killed about 144 Apaches - 8 men, the rest women and children. 29 Apache children were captured and sold into slavery, despite slavery being illegal in both the USA and Mexico.



Despite being of different cultures and races, the various groups could all agree that the only good Apache was a dead Apache.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_Grant_massacre6




On one such raid, 5 August 1873, a Sioux war party of over 1,000 warriors ambushed a Pawnee hunting party of 350 men, women, and children. The Pawnee had gained permission to leave the reservation and hunt buffalo. About 70 Pawnee were killed in this attack, which occurred in a canyon in present-day Hitchcock County. The site is known as Massacre Canyon.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Relocation_and_reservation7



In the Dull Knife Fight or Battle on the Red Fork, 25 November 1876, Colonel Mackenzie's force of US cavalry and hundreds of Indian scouts of the Pawnee, Shoshone, Bannock, Arapaho, Sioux, and Cheyenne tribes defeated and destroyed the main winter camp of the Northern Cheyenne. As I remember, among the loot found in the camp was a sack containing a number of hands of Shoshone babies acquired in a recent fight.



And these are some examples I could remember and/or look up of Native Americans or American Indians committing war crimes and atrocities against other American Indians.






share|improve this answer















SHORT ANSWER



"Total War" is a bit grandiose and ambitious, but as far as I know very few Native American or American Indian groups in the USA had any sort of rules against harming noncombatants in war.



LONG ANSWER



As far as I know, as a general rule Native Americans or American Indians in the USA didn't have any sort of social rules against killing noncombatants. So they sometimes killed women and children when they had opportunities to, and sometimes captured them for various purposes - such as later torturing them to death, or mass rape, or selling them as slaves, or adopting them and making them parts of their families and tribes.



EASTERN WOODLAND GROUPS



American colonists and later American citizens recorded many examples of eastern woodlands tribes attacking isolated farms and settlements and either killing white women and children instantly, or taking them away to be later tortured to death, or raped, or enslaved and maybe sold for profit, or maybe ransomed by relatives, or maybe adopted and made part of the community and transformed into members of the tribe.



And some people might suppose that maybe the eastern woodlands tribes hated whites much more than they hated members of other tribes, and that they would not treat women and children of other eastern woodlands tribes as harshly as they treated white women and children.



In the rather genocidal Beaver Wars of 1629-1701 the Iroquois Confederation sought to control the trade in beaver furs with Europeans, and more more less made itself the overlord of most of the tribes in a vast area in what later became the northeastern USA and southeastern Canada.



Many enemies of the Iroquois were totally destroyed during the Beaver Wars.




The wars were brutal and are considered one of the bloodiest series of conflicts in the history of North America. As the Iroquois effectively destroyed several large tribal confederacies—including the Mahican, Huron, Neutral, Erie, Susquehannock and northern Algonquins. They became dominant in the region and enlarged their territory, realigning the tribal geography of North America. The Iroquois gained control of the New England frontier and Ohio River valley lands as hunting ground, from about 1670 onward.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaver_Wars1



After the Iroquois destroyed an enemy nation, the former members of it would be reduced to three different types.



1) Iroquois captives who would be gradually assimilated and turned into Iroquois. In many Iroquois villages the majority of the population was assimilated former members of enemy nations.



2) Fugitives who would seek shelter with other tribes and nations and gradually assimilate into them.



3) Rotting corpses - and possibly ashes in the cases of any burned to death.



In some cases Iroquois brutality might have been revenge for brutal attacks by their neighbors in previous wars. But I doubt that was the case when the Iroquois destroyed the Neutral Nation.



Therefore, I guess that the many eastern woodlands tribes sometimes treated the women, children, old people,and other noncombatants of enemy tribes with the same brutality they were sometimes recorded by whites as using against white noncombatants.



WESTERN NATIONS, TRIBES, AND GROUPS



In the western part of the USA the situation was basically the same, with one exception. Most of the eastern woodlands tribes had warrior cultures where men were expected to fight enemy tribes from time to time.



The western two thirds of the USA has very varied climates, and there are hundreds of different nations, tribes, and groups there, who had many different cultures. Many of those groups had non aggressive cultures and their members wouldn't attack anyone who wasn't bothering them, though they would defend themselves against attacks and might strike back to retaliate and to deter future attacks.



Of course the most famous nations and tribes in the West had warrior cultures, where men were expected to not only defend their groups but also to attack other tribes and steal and kill to make their reputations. So the famous plains warrior tribes and the Navajos and Apaches, etc., etc., tended to be at war with all of their neighbors, except for any allies they had, more or less constantly.



And as far as I know, almost no groups in the trans-Mississippi West, whether non aggressive or warriors, had any rules against harming noncombatants.



Except that when the Modoc War started with a brief gunfight in the camp of the non reservation Modocs on November 28, 1872, Captain Jackson retreated with his troops and the Modocs under Captain Jack fled, eventually taking refuge in the lava beds. A band of Modocs under Hooker Jim killed 18 settlers on November 29 and 30. As far as I remember, the warriors in those raids killed only men and spared women and children, though the youngest "man" they killed was only eleven.



And a bigger exception was the non treaty band of Nez Perce in the Nez Perce War of 1877. As far as I remember, the Nez Perce warriors committed almost no atrocities or war crimes during that bloody conflict.



As far as I remember, those are the exceptions that prove the rule.



Sacred Ridge Massacre. At the Sacred Ridge archaeological site southwest of Durango, Colorado, bones of about 35 persons were found in the 21st century showing signs of torture and mutilation by their enemies. The date of the massacre should have been roughly about 803 to 810.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_Ridge2



At the Crow Creek Site, South Dakota, archaeologists have found the remains of at least 486 person, men, women, and children, of an unidentified group who were killed by members of an unidentified group and whose bodies were eventually buried by someone - in the unfinished defensive ditch around the village. The Crow Creek massacre happened in the mid 1300s.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crow_Creek_massacre3




In 1694, Apaches brought a large number of captive children to the trading fair in New Mexico, but for some reason there were not enough buyers, so the Apaches beheaded all their slaves in full view of the Spaniards.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Pawnees_enslaved4



The Skidi Pawnees in Village Across a Hill practiced human sacrifice in their annual Morning Star ritual, sacrificing a captured girl, when they were first contacted by whites, but reformers began to urge that the sacrifices stop. In 1817 Petalesharo rescued a Comanche girl from sacrifice.




The last known sacrifice was of Haxti, a 14 year-old Oglala Lakota girl, on 22 April 1838.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people5




The French responded by sending Bourgmont to make peace (in the French interest) between the Pawnees and their enemies in 1724. He reported that the Pawnee were a strong tribe and good horsemen, but, located at the far end of every trade route for European goods, were unfamiliar with Europeans and were treated like country bumpkins by their southern relatives. The mutual hatred between Pawnees and Apaches was so great that both sides were cooking and eating many of their captives.5:47 Bourgmont's "peace" had little effect.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Pawnees_enslaved4



In 1871, Pinal and Aravaipa Apaches lead by Eskiminzin made peace and settled down near Camp Grant, Arizona. But some people, suspecting they were still secretly raiding, or for other reasons, weren't happy. William S. Ouray and Jesus Maria Elias formed a Committee of Public Safety in Tuscon and got Francisco Galerita, leader of the Tohono O'odham at San Xavier, to join them.



On April 30, 1871, 6 Anglo Americas, 48 Hispanic Americans, and 92 Tohono O'odham attacked the sleeping Apache camp and killed about 144 Apaches - 8 men, the rest women and children. 29 Apache children were captured and sold into slavery, despite slavery being illegal in both the USA and Mexico.



Despite being of different cultures and races, the various groups could all agree that the only good Apache was a dead Apache.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_Grant_massacre6




On one such raid, 5 August 1873, a Sioux war party of over 1,000 warriors ambushed a Pawnee hunting party of 350 men, women, and children. The Pawnee had gained permission to leave the reservation and hunt buffalo. About 70 Pawnee were killed in this attack, which occurred in a canyon in present-day Hitchcock County. The site is known as Massacre Canyon.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawnee_people#Relocation_and_reservation7



In the Dull Knife Fight or Battle on the Red Fork, 25 November 1876, Colonel Mackenzie's force of US cavalry and hundreds of Indian scouts of the Pawnee, Shoshone, Bannock, Arapaho, Sioux, and Cheyenne tribes defeated and destroyed the main winter camp of the Northern Cheyenne. As I remember, among the loot found in the camp was a sack containing a number of hands of Shoshone babies acquired in a recent fight.



And these are some examples I could remember and/or look up of Native Americans or American Indians committing war crimes and atrocities against other American Indians.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 2 hours ago

























answered 2 hours ago









MAGoldingMAGolding

8,8061 gold badge14 silver badges34 bronze badges




8,8061 gold badge14 silver badges34 bronze badges















  • Good answer. The brutal fact is that in most cases tribal war the idea of civilians doesn't even make sense.

    – Orangesandlemons
    2 hours ago

















  • Good answer. The brutal fact is that in most cases tribal war the idea of civilians doesn't even make sense.

    – Orangesandlemons
    2 hours ago
















Good answer. The brutal fact is that in most cases tribal war the idea of civilians doesn't even make sense.

– Orangesandlemons
2 hours ago





Good answer. The brutal fact is that in most cases tribal war the idea of civilians doesn't even make sense.

– Orangesandlemons
2 hours ago

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to History Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fhistory.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f54335%2fwhat-are-the-occurences-of-total-war-in-the-native-americans%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Canceling a color specificationRandomly assigning color to Graphics3D objects?Default color for Filling in Mathematica 9Coloring specific elements of sets with a prime modified order in an array plotHow to pick a color differing significantly from the colors already in a given color list?Detection of the text colorColor numbers based on their valueCan color schemes for use with ColorData include opacity specification?My dynamic color schemes

Invision Community Contents History See also References External links Navigation menuProprietaryinvisioncommunity.comIPS Community ForumsIPS Community Forumsthis blog entry"License Changes, IP.Board 3.4, and the Future""Interview -- Matt Mecham of Ibforums""CEO Invision Power Board, Matt Mecham Is a Liar, Thief!"IPB License Explanation 1.3, 1.3.1, 2.0, and 2.1ArchivedSecurity Fixes, Updates And Enhancements For IPB 1.3.1Archived"New Demo Accounts - Invision Power Services"the original"New Default Skin"the original"Invision Power Board 3.0.0 and Applications Released"the original"Archived copy"the original"Perpetual licenses being done away with""Release Notes - Invision Power Services""Introducing: IPS Community Suite 4!"Invision Community Release Notes

François Viète Contents Biography Work and thought Bibliography See also Notes Further reading External links Navigation menup. 21Google Bookspp. 75–77Google BooksDe thou (from University of Saint Andrews)ArchivedGoogle BooksGoogle BooksGoogle BooksGoogle booksGoogle Bookscc-parthenay.frL'histoire universelle (fr)Universal History (en)ArchivedAdsabs.harvard.eduPagesperso-orange.frArchive.orgChikara Sasaki. Descartes' mathematical thought p.259Google BooksGoogle BooksGoogle Bookspp. 152 and onwardGoogle BooksGoogle BooksScribd.comGoogle Books1257-7979Google BooksGoogle BooksGoogle BooksGoogle BooksGoogle BooksGoogle BooksGallica.bnf.frGoogle BooksGoogle Books"François Viète"Francois Viète: Father of Modern Algebraic NotationThe Lawyer and the GamblerAbout TarporleySite de Jean-Paul GuichardL'algèbre nouvelle"About the Harmonicon"cb120511976(data)1188044800000 0001 0913 5903n82164680ola2013766880073431702w6vt1sb70287374827140948071409480