Comanche Spanish Relations in Texas
Schedule
Sat, 18 Apr, 2026 at 10:30 am
UTC-05:00Location
Mission Branch Library | San Antonio, TX
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Comanche-Hispanic Relations, 1706-1821 Joaquín Rivaya-Martínez, Texas State University Between roughly 1706, when the Comanche presence on the central Great Plains was first recorded, and 1821, when the Spanish Crown recognized the independence of Mexico, Spaniards and Comanches were arguably the most influential peoples in the Greater Southwest (today’s US Southwest and nearby areas, including northern Mexico and the southern Great Plains).Comanches gradually gained prominence in the region, largely to the detriment of Apaches and other Indigenous groups, as the Comanchería (Comanche heartland) moved southward.
Comanches interacted often with the subjects of the Crown; they influenced each other and built a peculiar relationship alternating peace and war. Over time, however, that ambivalent
relationship evolved into a more stable peace, formalized in the mid-1780s through two treaties that gave way to a more symbiotic association. The Comanche-Hispanic alliance proved
enduring in New Mexico, where it lasted into the 1870s! In Texas, though, it succumbed to the turmoil of the Mexican insurgence and the expanding Anglo-American influence in the 1810s.
All along, the ebb and flow of Comanche-Hispanic relations affected numerous other peoples and communities, having reverberations across and beyond the Greater Southwest.
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Where is it happening?
Mission Branch Library, 3134 Roosevelt Ave,San Antonio,TX,United StatesEvent Location & Nearby Stays:
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