Did Native American societies engage in large-scale violence before Europeans arrived?
Yes. Many tribes practiced frequent raids, scalping, ritualized torture, and long-running blood feuds that shaped politics and status long before European contact.
What made the Comanche so dominant on the Southern Plains?
Their mastery of horseback warfare, mobility, raiding culture, and control of horse herds let them project power across a territory the size of Texas and extract tribute or influence regional settlement.
How did European arrival change Indigenous warfare?
Europeans introduced new weapons, trade goods, and alliance networks that intensified intertribal conflicts; settlers and military forces also adopted rapid, mobile tactics to counter Indigenous raiding.
Were Native American deaths mainly caused by warfare?
No. While warfare and massacres were significant, the largest cause of depopulation was disease introduced by Europeans, though violence and broken treaties compounded the losses.
Does acknowledging Indigenous violence mean defending settlers?
No. The point is to reject simplistic narratives—both sides committed brutal acts; accurate history recognizes Indigenous agency, power, and complexity without turning people into caricatures.