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Originally posted by beforebc
bc] The two horses in the early mist photo on Exposing the Columbus Myth by following the horse are my horses. They are the gentlest of creatures, and can be trained to ride simply by loving them .. then putting a blanket across their back, and finally just laying crosswise on their back, and than a saddle.
No native Indian would be bewildered by this gentle creature.
frayed1 wrote] "Obviously, Indian tribes carried out an active trade in horses, since many were skilled in training and rearing horses prior to contact with non-Indian explorers ..."
bc] I agree with that premise! The Conquistadores [who represented the Crown and the Church] came to destroy and suppress, and IMO, they knew what they'd find and where to go. That requires prior knowledge and cover-up. And part of that cover-up would have been to destroy everything that would suggest that the those in Central America were an advanced civilization.
Originally posted by Byrd
Originally posted by beforebc
frayed1 wrote] "Obviously, Indian tribes carried out an active trade in horses, since many were skilled in training and rearing horses prior to contact with non-Indian explorers ..."
bc] I agree with that premise! The Conquistadores [who represented the Crown and the Church] came to destroy and suppress, and IMO, they knew what they'd find and where to go. That requires prior knowledge and cover-up. And part of that cover-up would have been to destroy everything that would suggest that the those in Central America were an advanced civilization.
You've got your time sequence wrong here. The Indians reported there, who were skilled with horses, acquired the animals in the late 1700's - early 1800's, when the animals became numerous on the Great Plains. They learned their skills from tribes that had been in contact with the Whites.
Byrd, if you mean my time sequence......I was quoting directly from the Houghton Mifflin site
on Indian history.....I also pointed out, that site still said that the time line of 'horse aquisision' came after the date of the Spanish explorers.
My point was that the Indians themselves did not say,"We got our horses from the Conquistadores." Rather they told of getting them from other tribes or the great spirit, and that they called the horse a 'elk dog' rather than having a seperate word for horse. ( You would think the name for the startling 'new creature' would have followed it, no?)
As to the temperment of my horse.....he is an Appaloosa.....and supposed to be not so far removed from the actual bloodline of the Nez Perces' horses....and he is not like a Quarterhorse, but more like a mule or a mustang! Not to say he is mean, but he thinks for himself.....you just have to be sure you're right when you try reasoning with him!lol
Originally posted by frayed1
My point was that the Indians themselves did not say,"We got our horses from the Conquistadores."
As to the temperment of my horse.....he is an Appaloosa.....and supposed to be not so far removed from the actual bloodline of the Nez Perces' horses....and he is not like a Quarterhorse, but more like a mule or a mustang! Not to say he is mean, but he thinks for himself.....you just have to be sure you're right when you try reasoning with him!lol