Texas in 1492-Texas History #3

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  • Опубликовано: 5 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 40

  • @rodneysims3510
    @rodneysims3510 Год назад +2

    I am learning so much in these videos. I have a little trouble finding them but when I do they certainly captivate my attention

  • @thattimestampguy
    @thattimestampguy Год назад +6

    2:24 2000 BCE Agriculture arrives in Texas from Mexico.
    + Corn + Beans + Squash. They compliment each other in terms of growth.
    3:18 Corn has long stalks, the Squash use the Corn's vines to get sunlight easier, the Beans provide Nitrogen for the Corn and Squash.
    4:14 Slowly slowly the agriculture practices are adopted.
    *The Pueblo Culture*
    6:00 Pueblo Culture
    6:50 Building Housing. Adobe - Mud Brick Housing.
    7:58 Ceremonial Centers and Pit Houses for crop storage.
    8:35 Pueblo Culture towns had roads; many of the Pueblo towns were independent.
    9:41 Pueblo Culture Irrigation Ditches.
    10:48 By 1492, Pueblo people are Sedentary Agriculturalists.
    11:43 Anelope Creek Phase.
    *The Junta*
    12:26 A group of Pueblo Culture will survive at the junction of The Rio Grande and The Conchos River which The Conquistadores refer to as the Junta de los Rios, the Junction of The Rivers.
    14:00 2000 People living in a Pueblo Home.
    - Grow Crops - Eat - Repeat.
    The Juntan region people, part of The Pueblo Culture.
    15:30 Cotton in Pueblo Culture, Texas.
    *Jumanos*
    16:03 Jumanos - Hunter gatherer people, related to the Juntan people.
    17:12 Jumanos traded across the Plains of Texas.
    *The Mississippi Culture*
    18:25
    18:59
    22:28 So many people! Food, Art, Towns,
    23:04 Mississippi Culture Towns. Homes, Corn Beans Squash,
    24:05 Mississippi Culture Monuments. 24:44 Earth Mounds.
    *Caddos*
    27:38 Caddos live in Permanent Homes.
    They have Beehive like buildings made of straw. A Caddo Mound is a house, while a Mississippi Earth Mound is a Monument.
    30:12 Caddos, "The Romans of Texas" because of how advanced they were.
    30:56 Texas is named after a Caddos word. Te-has, Texas.
    32:08 Texas used to be the outskirts of everything else.
    *The Wichita People*
    33:18 The Wichita
    34:47 Kinda semi-sedentary, like the Apache in hunting like the Caddos in agriculture villages.
    *The Karankawas*
    35:35 The Karankawas planted crops and then take off and migrate to the coast to go fish. A Karankawas migration. Plant, Migrate, Fish. Plant, Migrate, Fish.
    37:35 The Karankawas domesticated dogs.
    38:15 They may have been cannibals or maybe they weren't. They rubbed alligator oil on them, they used smoke to keep away mosquitos.
    *The Hunter-Gathers of The Great Plains of America*
    39:43 Coahultechans aka The Chichimecas.
    41:44 They had to make due with whatever they could get. They resorted to eating gross stuff in order to survive.
    43:21 The Coahultechans are divided, they did not have a king.
    *The Apache's*
    43:43They are Great Plains Indians, wandering the plains, hunting buffalo. They DID NOT have horses because the Megaphon extinction, so they hunted without horses, until the Europeans arrived and introduced horses to America.
    _The Camanches come along much later after 1492._
    45:50 The Camanches weren't one of the original tribes.
    47:02 Dying off of American Indian Peoples.

  • @jonathansnow2843
    @jonathansnow2843 4 года назад +7

    I love your videos so much, thank you for these.

  • @guerrillapress7343
    @guerrillapress7343 Год назад

    Thanks we're in the driftwood tx area...lots of artifacts here in the onion creek headwaters. 😍 the channel

  • @TrevorD2502
    @TrevorD2502 3 года назад +1

    I enjoy your videos, so interesting thankyou.

  • @KernowekTim
    @KernowekTim 3 года назад +4

    Another perfectly explained part of the early history of Texas.. For me, some of the battles between sedentary and hunter gathers seem almost to be 'wars' over carbohydrates.

    • @williamesselman3102
      @williamesselman3102 2 года назад

      It is some Kane & Abel type of stuff

    • @mikealstott6033
      @mikealstott6033 2 года назад

      All wars are faught over resources. Even the civil war was.

    • @dorasmith7875
      @dorasmith7875 Год назад

      Not like this video exactly encouraged or provided food for intelligent thinking on that subject.

  • @pattyleabo426
    @pattyleabo426 3 года назад +2

    Do you have any data on the bedias tribe interactions from the De Le Salle expeditions near present day Montgomery county Texas? I live next to an old dig site that A&M dug about 40 years ago and I want to go metal detecting. It’s my neighbors property. I find arrow heads but idk if they were napped in the area so I figure they were apart of the fur trade

  • @therealkevan8158
    @therealkevan8158 2 года назад +5

    I live in San Miguel de Allende and I always wondered why the oldest buildings had 50 foot high stone walls because you'd have to be really motivated to make them that high. Then I found out that the chichimecans were cannibals and I thought... Yeah , that would do it

    • @dorasmith7875
      @dorasmith7875 Год назад

      Right. Well to be fair, it's hardly like this video didn't say that! Feed Texas bigots... as if our own government isn't good enough at that. But I didn't see where any of the official Texas history pages mentioned eating their babies!

  • @ajones3038
    @ajones3038 2 года назад

    This is an amazing documentary

  • @BORN-to-Run
    @BORN-to-Run Год назад +1

    IT'S just a shame that none of these ORIGINAL natives
    exist anymore. They either died-out, or mixed-in to White
    and Black Americans, or Mexicans who came-up after
    their population began to decline.
    As an American with Caddo ancestry, I was surprised that the narrator
    did not mention the Caddo by their original name, which was, Kadohadacho.
    That was THEIR WORD to describe themselves.
    My Native American ancestry came from northeast Texas and generations of them
    must be buried there.
    I would like to visit before my time on earth is done.

  • @williamesselman3102
    @williamesselman3102 2 года назад +1

    We are exactly the same now. I live in Texas. Texas is in the United States of America. To everywhere else on Earth they would think of me as an American. That is not what I am. I live in Waxahachie Texas. My family has been on this soil for almost two centuries. That is what I am.

    • @williamesselman3102
      @williamesselman3102 2 года назад +1

      And we are still the Waxahachie Indians

    • @paulbrown1585
      @paulbrown1585 2 года назад

      @@williamesselman3102 The American Waxahachie Indians

  • @keenanbritt1871
    @keenanbritt1871 3 года назад

    Isn't the "sports area" you mentioned at 23:20 actually Cahokia's Woodhenge?

  • @Mike-e7s
    @Mike-e7s 9 месяцев назад

    9:45 Think the old road system was part of a Pax? Trade like system like the Silk Road?

    • @Mike-e7s
      @Mike-e7s 9 месяцев назад

      Aztecs gold?

  • @FossilHntr1
    @FossilHntr1 3 года назад +2

    Deep in the ❤️

  • @puppy_studios_7952
    @puppy_studios_7952 4 года назад +3

    Can you make a video of Laredo Texas

    • @milmex317th
      @milmex317th 3 года назад

      Born there 1/59

    • @klawdyarv847
      @klawdyarv847 3 года назад +2

      I was born in Nuevo Laredo, México, but would be awesome to know about indigenous past of this area...

  • @Mike-e7s
    @Mike-e7s 9 месяцев назад

    29:00 any evidence of mould builder civilization utilizing wooden highways?

  • @brandondillon6397
    @brandondillon6397 4 года назад

    Amazing videos

  • @tarahutton5472
    @tarahutton5472 3 года назад +1

    Good job mom

  • @ИринаКим-ъ5ч
    @ИринаКим-ъ5ч 20 дней назад

    Taylor Linda Thompson Ruth Robinson Scott

  • @dorasmith7875
    @dorasmith7875 Год назад +1

    Deer aren't plentiful on the Edwards plateau? You've never been here, have you?
    Deer are thicker than squirrels here. Great herds of them graze on our lawns. If you walk through the woods you will run into them multiple times, and their tracks are everywhere. One time three of them were grazing on our lawn, which they wouldn't have done unless the dogs got out and went somewhere... I had to track those dogs through the woods. Teh woods were wall to wall deer tracks, plenty of these must be coyote tracks, a coyote never had an extra ounce of fat anywhere... aha... double trail of big fat dog prints.
    I think the Coahuiltecans would find your description of them hilarious - and there are plenty of them around. Lotta Hispanic people here look just like your drawings of them. Killing Infant??!!!!! OMG. Honest to God. I will have to find a real life history of the Coahuiltecans. Damn! OMG.
    I think Wikipedia said they simply moved around to exploit seasonal food resources, of which there was plenty in its season - in EVERY season. AND, they ranged from the Rio Grande through the hill country, and had a lot of cultural diversity.
    I did find other versions of what you said, mainly in standard Texas governmental history resources... you took your picture from one of them. PLEASE do more research than this. This is the best Texas history I've ever come across, it's a shame when you mess up something this badly. The government of Texas is Republican. They exist to be mean and racist. It often seems like half of what Texas Republicans do and say is primarily, sometimes exclusively, about proving they are just as mean and cruel as it is possible to be. I can't imagine who of your historical caliber would believe at face value a word they say about anything, let alone Indians.
    I first encountered this story about Texas Indians ca 1500, in a kids' book for Evangelical Christians, that described hunters and gatherers in general, who lived miserable lives of no food, because they hadn't yet become Christian. "Walk the World's Rim", about a boy/ young man who traveled with them, who had begun I think as a slave. "They" were a small group of survivors of that group of Spanish people who toured the southwest. My sister had this book for her son the year she home schooled him. I just ordered a second hand copy, it's such a specimen.
    I could also point out there was a more than normally major drought around that time, causing food to become scarce everywhere, it would have disproportionately affected the hill country.
    NOONE else mentioned these people eating their CHILDREN...!!!! OMG. Help me Jesus! You know, there is an actual Coahuiltecan organization I can write and tell them what you said about them.... but I doubt they've the patience to educate another White person. Please help this poor White person - what is the truth of what your people had to eat in the 15th century. I think I'm going to go with common sense and the complex information I can already see on that.

    • @isabelaraiza4846
      @isabelaraiza4846 9 месяцев назад

      Are you talking about the Indigenous cultures institute? I came to this video to learn more about the Coahuiltecans but was disappointed as you are. Having worked and experienced the sanctity of the San Marcos Springs they often spent time at. I would suggest the author to do some research on the 3 sacred springs depicted in the white shaman panel.

    • @jbranstetter04
      @jbranstetter04 8 месяцев назад

      You quickly disqualify yourself as someone worth listening to, when you condemn the Texas legislature in the way that you did, and then go on to demean a person for simply being white.

  • @Iziireal
    @Iziireal Год назад

    A lot of self speculation coming from a European minded person.
    The indigenous people were much more intelligent than you give them credit.
    You need to do better research before you do these videos.

  • @invisableobserver
    @invisableobserver 3 года назад

    The Norse settled in Texas area multiple centuries before the 1400's and long before those you call native Americans. Also there is evidence that the ancient Hebrew were here as far back as 400 B.C. that escaped the Babylonian & Assyrian conquests.

    • @williamesselman3102
      @williamesselman3102 2 года назад

      That was an interesting concept I enjoyed studying while the elders were visiting my home. However, I haven't seen enough for any conclusive evidence proving it. In fact, I would appreciate it if you share whatever has convinced you.

    • @invisableobserver
      @invisableobserver 2 года назад

      @@williamesselman3102 I haven't seen any real evidence that so called native Americans were in America in the 1400's; all of the history was manipulated & corrupted, all buildings & early technology destroyed, so having any proof of any real true history cannot be relied upon.

    • @williamesselman3102
      @williamesselman3102 2 года назад

      If the Norse settled in Texas multiple centuries before the 1400s that makes them Native Americans and you just contradicted yourself.

    • @wernerblaser5565
      @wernerblaser5565 Год назад

      Long before the Norsk and Hebrews there were extra-terrestrians from Mars and Venus. Not to forget New Zealandian Swedes.