「Cherokees」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 61件
| Cherokees acknowledge protection of United States. | |
| Per the above table, 85 more | Cherokees actually arrived in the west during the two- |
| n in the First Seminole War in 1818, leading | Cherokees against the Seminole Indians. |
| fter, he joined his father in a raid against | Cherokees along the Meramec River in Missouri. |
| okee Nation before the forced removal of the | Cherokees along the Trail of Tears. |
| "Major" in 1814, during his service leading | Cherokees alongside General Andrew Jackson at the Batt |
| in Oklahoma is part of the Grand Lake o' the | Cherokees, an impoundment formed by Pensacola Dam on t |
| ement which was to rehabilitate the Southern | Cherokees and align them with the erstwhile Union Cher |
| bruary 1836 treaty between Chief Bowl of the | Cherokees and the Republic of Texas. |
| Indian Community (and by extension the Texas | Cherokees and Associate Bands), following the death of |
| It occurred in October 1817 when a band of | Cherokees and their allies under Chief Spring Frog (To |
| The Promised Land:The | Cherokees, Arkansas, and Removal, 1794-1839 By Charles |
| and patient with the more precipitate of the | Cherokees around him. |
| s a rare firsthand account of life among the | Cherokees around 1809-1810, at the start of their fina |
| The | Cherokees arrived in the early 1830s. |
| The | Cherokees believe the mounds were actually built by a |
| cMinn offered $200,000 US for removal of the | Cherokees beyond the Mississippi, which Ross refused. |
| Cherokees born outside of a clan or outsiders who were | |
| Article 9. Horses stolen from | Cherokees by whites to be paid for by the United State |
| Chief Bowles and Texas | Cherokees, Chapter XI, Cherokee Claims to Land, By Mar |
| The Bowl led many | Cherokees families into Texas in 1820. |
| The East Coast Hockey League's Knoxville | Cherokees finished last overall in the standings with |
| ed between the contending elements among the | Cherokees, following the cessation of hostilities. |
| imed "Western Band of Cherokee" (or Arkansas | Cherokees) fought for state and federal recognition as |
| ed by president Andrew Jackson-to remove the | Cherokees from their eastern lands. |
| war, for example, the minority party of the | Cherokees gave its allegiance to the Confederacy, whil |
| When | Cherokees had differences among themselves, Old Hop ha |
| Cherokee ancestral connection, although some | Cherokees have settled in Mexico (esp. |
| rief throughout the historical trek from the | Cherokees' home to U.S. forts such as Gilmer among oth |
| n American group that Laurie had signed, the | Cherokees impressed Laurie after auditioning with King |
| war, a series of small battles were waged by | Cherokees in the Indian Territory. |
| hey upset the Brabham Cup champion Knoxville | Cherokees in the first round before being swept by the |
| from Georgia before the main removal of the | Cherokees in 1838." |
| n Virginia]”, on their way to trade with the | Cherokees in 1673. |
| "AN UNLIKELY LEADER TAKES | CHEROKEES INTO A NEW ERA", URL accessed 07/05/06 |
| During the two-day battle, the | Cherokees killed or captured every member of Chief Cle |
| ever, mounting discord between Europeans and | Cherokees led to war in 1759. |
| By 1822, an estimated 800 | Cherokees lived in Texas. |
| In 1830, an estimated 800 | Cherokees lived in three to seven settlements in Texas |
| During the attack, several | Cherokees managed to get close enough to the fort to a |
| whose life was given so that the rest of the | Cherokees may remain in their homes in North Carolina. |
| was once claimed by both the Chickasaw's and | Cherokees, necessitating a cession of territory from e |
| was a population increase among the Eastern | Cherokees of more than about a thousand individuals fr |
| were followed in Knoxville by the Knoxville | Cherokees of the ECHL from 1988 to 1997, the Knoxville |
| merica in 1993-94 and play for the Knoxville | Cherokees of the ECHL, getting 81 points (25G-56A) in |
| d of Cherokee Indians, recruited hundreds of | Cherokees, particularly for Thomas' Legion. |
| s passed from Spanish to Mexican governance, | Cherokees petitioned the new Mexican authorities for f |
| The former Fort Payne was built to intern | Cherokees prior to their removal on the Trail of Tears |
| Vann was killed by Pin Indians ( | Cherokees supporting the Union in the American Civil W |
| This was punishment for the | Cherokees switching sides in the French and Indian War |
| ng smaller neighborhood gangs (including the | Cherokees, the Morphines, the Commanches, the Continen |
| When the Texas Revolution came, | Cherokees tried to remain neutral. |
| Among the Ross faction of the Union | Cherokees were many who insisted upon the exclusion of |
| Fifty to sixty | Cherokees were trained for the village cast and as gui |
| There is a misconception that because the | Cherokees were present in the Hiwassee Valley in the 1 |
| t was named after the Chickamauga (tribe) of | Cherokees who used to live in the area. |
| 1793, he was involved in the battle against | Cherokees who slew white settlers near Georgia in Batt |
| dered General Winfield Scott to round up all | Cherokees who had not voluntarily made the trek to Okl |
| The treaty allowed for those | Cherokees who wished to remain in the east to do so an |
| en above, it would appear that the number of | Cherokees who died on the Trail of Tears has been grea |
| s in the Guion-Miller rolls along with other | Cherokees with the surname Graves. |
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