-
Guipago or Lone Wolf the
Elder (Kiowa: Gui-Pah-G(h)o, lit. ''Lone Wolf" or "Alone
among the Wolves''; c. 1820 – July 1879) was the last Prin****l Chief...
-
Arkansas Treaty of 1865.
Guipago became the head
chief of the
Kiowa when
Dohosan (Little Bluff)
named him as his successor.
Guipago and Satanta,
along with...
- at the
First Battle of
Adobe Walls.
While Dohäsan,
helped by
Satank and
Guipago, was in
command of the
combined Kiowa, Kiowa-Apache, and
Comanche forces...
- (White Bear),
Guipago (Lone Wolf), and
Kicking Bird
became locked in an
intense rivalry for
leadership of the Kiowa. War
leaders Guipago (named by Dohasan...
-
loyal follower of the
fighting chiefs party (led by Satank, Satanta, and
Guipago), and
conducted frequent raids upon
other tribes and
white settlers, often...
-
raids upon
other tribes and
white settlers.
Follower of such
elders as
Guipago,
Satanta and old Satank, he was
often ****ociated with Big Tree (or Ado-ete)...
- or Walks-in-the-Sky.
After the head
chief Dohäsan died in 1866,
naming Guipago, or Lone Wolf the Elder, as his own
designated heir and
consequently establishing...
- his
people fled, p****ing the
alarm to
allied Comanche villages nearby;
Guipago led the
warriors to
protect the
fleeing women and children.
Marching forward...
-
State Highway 83 and 3
miles South of
State Highway 33. Big Bow, Big Tree,
Guipago, Mamante, Satanta, and the
nephew of Touhason, who is
sometimes known as...
- song by
Running Wild from
Blazon Stone Lone Wolf [the Elder] (1820–1879),
Guipago, last Prin****l
Chief of the
Kiowa tribe Lone Wolf the
Younger (c. 1843–1923)...