- the Chiricahuas.
These included the
Chokonen (recte: Tsokanende), the
Chihenne (recte: Tchihende), the
Nednai (Nednhi) and
Bedonkohe (recte, both of them...
-
warrior and
prophet of the
Chihenne Chiricahua Apache. She was the
sister of Victorio, a
prominent chief. Born into the
Chihenne band
during the 1840s, Lozen...
- or "lullaby") (c. 1810 – May 19, 1896), was a
warrior and
chief of the
Chihenne band (better
known as Warm
Springs Apache) of the
Chiricahua Apache. A...
- last
leader of the Mimbreños
local groups of the
Chihenne band and prin****l
chief of the
Chihenne band of the
Chiricahua Apache. Taza was the older...
- was a
warrior and
chief of the Warm
Springs band of the
Tchihendeh (or
Chihenne,
often called Mimbreño)
division of the
central Apaches in what is now...
- father-in-law
Mangas Coloradas (Red Sleeves, Kan-da-zis Tlishishen), the
powerful Chihenne-Chiricahua chief, in a long
series of
retaliatory skirmishes and raids...
- the mid 1800s.
Prominent among these bands were the Warm
Springs band (
Chihenne, or Red
Paint People).: 31–41 The area
centered on the
Canada Alamosa...
-
characters Cuchillo Negro, the
Spanish name of
Baishan (c. 1816–1857), a
Chihenne Apache chieftain This
disambiguation page
lists articles ****ociated with...
- and the prin****l
chief the Warm
Springs local group of the
Tchihende ("
Chihenne")
Apaches after Fuerte's
death in 1837 near Janos; he was also the second...
- 1847–1906, 1911?) was a
member of the Mimbres/Mimbreños
local group of the
Chihenne band of the
Chiricahua Apache. He was a
warrior who was
captured but escaped...