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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Sheep_warsSheep wars - Wikipedia

    The sheep wars, or the sheep and cattle wars, were a series of armed conflicts in the Western United States fought between sheepmen and cattlemen over grazing rights. Sheep wars occurred in many western states, though they were most common in Texas, Arizona, and the border region of Wyoming and Colorado.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Xhosa_WarsXhosa Wars - Wikipedia

    The great cattle-killing was a millennialist movement which began among the Xhosa in 1856, and led them to destroy their own means of subsistence in the belief that it would bring about salvation by supernatural spirits.

  3. The Great Cattle War. ( 1920 ) Der Ochsenkrieg. Drama. Silent Film. Based on Book. Black and White. Berchtesgaden in the 15th century: A power struggle between mountain peasants who have been raising milk cows on common land and a village bailiff trying to gain power driving them off the land. Both have a ducal documents that states the opposite.

  4. The Cattle Industry and Range Wars | United States History II. Learning Objectives. Explain why the cattle industry was paramount to the development of the West and how it became the catalyst for violent range wars. The Cattle Kingdom. Figure 1.

  5. Fence Cutting Wars. The Fence Cutting Wars occurred near the end of the 19th century in the American Old West, and were a series of disputes between farmers and cattlemen with larger land holdings. As newcomers came to the American West to farm, established cattlemen began to fence off their larger tracts of land with barbed wire in ...

  6. 21 de sept. de 2014 · The Great Beefsteak Raid. By Ron Soodalter. September 21, 2014 8:13 pm. Comment. Disunion follows the Civil War as it unfolded. Since ancient times, men have stolen one another’s cattle....

  7. 5 de oct. de 2017 · Arizona’s Pleasant Valley War through the 1880s and 1890s was one of the most famous, fictionalized by Zane Grey in To the Last Man (1922) and depicted in film 11 years later. The Oregon Sheep Shooters Association in the 1890s organized ranchers to exclude sheep—and their herders—from the new federal forest reserves (now known as national forests) along the Cascade Mountains.