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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mow-wayMow-way - Wikipedia

    Mow-way or Moway (Comanche: Mo'o-wai, [needs IPA], lit. ' Pushing Aside ' or ' Pushing-in-the-Middle ' ; c. 1825 – 1886) also referred to by European settlers as Shaking Hand or Hand Shaker , was the principal leader and war chief of the Kotsoteka band of the Comanche during the 1860s and 1870s, following the deaths of Kuhtsu ...

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  3. www.tshaonline.org › handbook › entriesMow-Way - TSHA

    1 de abr. de 1995 · Mow-way, a Comanche headman, was the leader of the Kotsoteka ("Buffalo-eater") band during their last years of dominance in West Texas. His name was thought to have meant Shaking Hand or Hand Shaker, but his son, Ti-so-yo, later claimed that it more accurately meant Push Aside.

  4. Mow-way (ca. 1825-1886) (usualmente referido por los colonos europeos como Shaking Hand o Hand Shaker), fue el líder principal y jefe de guerra de la banda de Kotsoteka de los comanches durante las décadas de 1860 y 1870, luego de la muerte de Kuhtsu- tiesuat (Little Buffalo) en 1864 y Tasacowadi (Big Cougar o Big Spotted Cat) en 1872.

  5. 18 de sept. de 2017 · Mow-way (Shaking Hand) was the Principal Chief of the Kotsoteka (Buffalo Eater) Band of Comanches. He was born around the year 1800 and lived to the mid-1880's. He was a full blood Comanche with striking features and an impressive appearance.

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  6. www.wikiwand.com › en › Mow-wayMow-way - Wikiwand

    Mow-way or Moway also referred to by European settlers as Shaking Hand or Hand Shaker, was the principal leader and war chief of the Kotsoteka band of the Comanche during the 1860s and 1870s, following the deaths of Kuhtsu-tiesuat in 1864 and Tasacowadi in 1872.

  7. 28 de nov. de 2023 · Mow-way (c. 1825-1886), the principal leader and war chief of the Kotsoteka band of the Comanche during the 1860s and 1870s, photograph by William Stinson Soule, 1869-1874. J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles.