Bourgmont encounters the Padouca on October 18.Eighty…
October 1724 CE
Eighty of the Padouca ride out on horses to meet the French and take them back to the camp.
The number of horses indicates that the Padouca at this time hold more horses than do the Kaw and the other tribes living further east.
The identity of the people whom Bourgmont met with has been much debated by historians.
The French will later refer to the Comanche as Padouca.
Most historians and anthropologists have come to agree that Bourgmont's Padouca were likely Apaches.
Bourgmont is given an honored welcome.
With his son and two other French explorers, he is seated on a buffalo robe; they are carried to the tent (tipi?) of the Padouca chief for a great feast.
The next day Bourgmont assembles his trade goods and divides them into lots.
The Padouca (or Apache) have never seen such a variety of European goods.
They are frightened of the guns.
Bourgmont assemble two hundred of the Apache chiefs and discusses the need for peace among all tribes.
He implores them to allow the French traders to pass through their lands en route to the Spanish settlements in New Mexico.
Next, he invites the chiefs to take what they want of the merchandise.
He estimates that the village contains one hundred and forty dwellings, about eight hundred men, more than fifteen hundred women, and about two thousand children.
The imbalance between men and women indicates that the life of an Apache man is hazardous.
The dwellings are large enough to house thirty people to live in each.
The Apache chief said that he has twelve villages under his control and together four times the number of people as in this village, or about sixteen thousand.
The Apache live in a large territory extending more than two hundred leagues (five hundred and twenty miles).
Bourgmont writes that the Apache maintain permanent villages.
They send out regular hunting parties, in groups of fifty to one hundred households.
As one hunting party returns, another will leave, so that the village is occupied at all times.
They apparently journey up to five or six days from their village to hunt.
The Apache sow a little corn and pumpkins.
They obtain tobacco and horses from trade with the Spanish in New Mexico, in exchange for tanned buffalo skins.
It is unclear whether the Spanish venture out on the plains to visit the Apache villages, or whether the Apaches travel to the Spanish settlements.
The latter seems more likely, although Spaniards may have gone out occasionally to meet the Apache who live relatively near to their settlements.
The explorer notices that the Apache living furthest from the Spanish settlements still us flint knives for skinning buffalo and felling trees, an indicator that not much European trade has reached them.
The Apache are hospitable; they feast and fête Bourgmont and his group for three days before the French party turns toward home on October 22.
Locations
Groups
French people (Latins)
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Osage Nation (Amerind tribe)
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Otoe people (Amerind tribe)
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Missouria or Missouri (Amerind tribe)
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Apache (Na-Dené tribe)
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Kaw, or Kanza, people (Amerind tribe)
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New France (French Colony)
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New Spain, Viceroyalty of
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France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
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Santa Fe de Nuevo México (Spanish Colony)
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French Canadians
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Spain, Bourbon Kingdom of
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Louisiana (New France)
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