kichai การใช้
- Kichai Indians living in the vicinity of the old post.
- The Kichai were victorious, despite losing their leader in the first attack.
- The Kichai were part of the complex, shifting political alliances of the South Plains.
- On November 10, 1837, the Texas Rangers fought the Kichai in the Battle of Stone Houses.
- In November 1858, Kichai Indian country so it is probable that the tribe was still living in the neighborhood.
- Kai Kai, a Kichai woman from Anadarko, Oklahoma, was the last known fluent speaker of the Kichai language.
- Kai Kai, a Kichai woman from Anadarko, Oklahoma, was the last known fluent speaker of the Kichai language.
- The earliest known inhabitants of what is now Grayson County, Texas were Caddo amerindian groups, including Tonkawa, Ionis, and Kichai.
- The Kichais lost their leader in their first attack, but retired to elect a new one and soon took up the battle again.
- The "'Battle of Stone Houses "'was a skirmish between Kichai Indians which took place on November 10, 1837.
- Fighting, often at close quarters, continued for two hours, after which the Kichais decided to set the prairie on fire and thus smoke out the Rangers.
- That day the Kadohadacho and Yatasi both agreed to allow Spain proprietorship of their lands and promised not to supply the Comanche, Kichai tribes with weapons or ammunition.
- Like other groups in the Rancheria Grande, the Deadose moved to the Ais, Hasinai, Kadohadachos, Nabedaches, Yojuanes, Tawakonis, Yatasis, Kichais, Naconis and Tonkawas to attack the Apache.
- The Kichai are not a distinct federally recognized tribe, but they are instead enrolled in the Caddo Nation of Oklahoma and Wichita and Affiliated Tribes, to which they are related, as well as the Delaware Nation.
- After the Americans took over their territory as a result of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 and the independence of Texas in 1836, all the related tribes were increasingly lumped together and dubbed " Wichita . " That designation also included the Kichai of northern Texas, who spoke a different although a related language.
- On May 19, 1836, a huge force of Nokoni Comanche warriors ( at the time head chief of the Nokoni band was Huupi-pahati, to English-speaking people " Tall Tree " ), approximately 500 strong, accompanied by Kichai allies, who had also been promised by the Mexicans rich booty and hundreds of white females and slaves, made a raid against Limestone County, and a war group attacked the fort in force, killing most of the men.