- into the
other divisions, they are
likely the
forerunners of the
Nokoni Nʉʉ (
Nokoni), Kwaarʉ Nʉʉ (Kwahadi, Quohada), and the Hʉpenʉʉ (Hois)
local group...
-
training as
young men and warriors; the two
youngsters settled with the
Nokonis,
their foster grandfather Tabby-nocca (Lean Elk)'s kinsmen,
under the supervision...
-
legend said that "his" band, the
Nokoni (or Wanderers, or Travellers) band, were
named for him, but the name of the
Nokoni people had long
antedated him...
-
Kwahadi ("Antelope") band of the
Comanche Nation. He was
likely born into the
Nokoni ("Wanderers") band of Tabby-nocca and grew up
among the Kwahadis, the son...
- This led to a
later meeting between Guikate and the head
chief of the
Nokoni Comanche. The two
groups made an
alliance to
share the same
hunting grounds...
-
Nocona can
refer to:
Nokoni, one of the
Comanche bands Peta Nocona, a
Comanche chief Nocona, Texas,
named after Peta
Nocona a code name for a 2004 model...
-
Comanche group is
referred to as the Nawyecka,
correctly the Noyʉhka or
Nokoni, the same band that
kidnapped Cynthia Ann Parker. Some film critics[specify]...
-
domination of Texas.
Their more
northern kinsmen Yamparika, Kotsoteka,
Nokoni and
Kwahadi warriors,
under such
leaders as Ten Bears,
Tawaquenah (“Big...
-
December 1868
against Kwahadi,
Kotsoteka and
Nokoni Comanche villages,
forced Big Red Meat and Tahka's
Nokoni, Mow-way's Kotsoteka, Pawʉʉra-ocoom's (Bull...
-
Nokonis camped in two
villages on the
western edge of the
Wichita Mountains, not far from Fort Cobb, and Big Red Meat's (and
likely Tahka's)
Nokonis,...