- in the
Southern Plains and
Southwestern United States, the
Chiricahua (
Tsokanende) are
related to
other Apache groups:
Ndendahe (Mogollon, Carrizaleño)...
- "Chiricahua,
southern Apaches in general". Ch'úúkʾanén, true
Chiricahua (
Tsokanende, also Č'ók'ánéń, Č'ó·k'anén, Chokonni, Cho-kon-nen, Cho Kŭnĕ́, Chokonen)...
- 1822/1825 – 25 July 1901), was
chief of the
Chokonen local group of the
Tsokanende Band of
Chiricahua Apache who
carried out
several raids on
settlers in...
- present-day
southwestern New Mexico. He was the father-in-law of
Chiricahua (
Tsokanende)
chief Cochise, Mimbreño
chief Victorio, and
Mescalero (Sehende) chief...
-
Jolsanie or Ozaní’ – ″Tanned buckskin″ or Bį-sópàn – ″Big Buckskin″), was a
Tsokanende Apache war chief,
brother of Chihuahua. Both the
brothers were
loyal and...
- with
members of
three other Central Apache bands – the Tchihende, the
Tsokanende (called
Chiricahua by Americans) and the Nednhi – to
carry out numerous...
- to many wars
together with the
Tchihende leader Mangas Coloradas and
Tsokanende leader Cochise, and was
particularly close to the
Bedonkohe di-yin and...
- (Mimbreño),
Tsokanende (Chiricahua) and
Ndendahe (Mogollon) chiefs. Late in that
autumn Mangas Coloradas,
Cuchillo Negro and, probably, the
Tsokanende leaders...
- "Cartridges All Gone") took the
leadership of the Tchihende, Bedonkohe,
Tsokanende and
Nednhi bands beside the
already established Apache band
leaders Nana...
-
contemporaries Cochise (who
would go on to be the prin****l
chief of the
Tsokanende or Chiricahua) and Nana, as well as
younger leaders such as Victorio,...