Amorous Man

Amorous Man (Comanche, Pahayoko aunt copulate) (c. late 1780s – p. 1852) was a Civil Chief of the Penateka band of the Comanche Indians.

Amorous Man
Pahayoko
Bornlate 1780s
Diedafter 1852
OccupationWar Chief
Known forA famous Comanche Chief

Early life

Nothing is known of his youth or early years. Older than the war chiefs, Amorous Man was a member of the same Comanche division as the more famous, but younger and lesser ranking, Buffalo Hump (Potsʉnakwahipʉ), Yellow Wolf (Isaviah) and Santa Anna. Although known as a civil, or peace, Chief, he was known to lead war parties during the 1820s. He was an important chief, though probably less influential than Potsʉnakwahipʉ during the 1830s and 1840s. He was a friendly chief to Anglo settlement in Texas, also during the period following the Council House Fight.

Councils and treaties

He represented the Penateka division at the Camp Holmes Council in 1835, signing (his name was recorded as Taqquanno, with the same meaning) the treaty with gen. M. Arbuckle and sen. Monfort Stokes, along with chiefs such Tawaquenah (Sun Eagle) of the Kotsoteka and Iron Jacket(Puhihwikwasu'u) of the Quahadi Comanche (named as Pohowetowshah Brass Man). In 1838 he went to Houston, where he, Spirit Talker (Mukwooru), Old Owl (Mupitsukupʉ), and Potsʉnakwahipʉ met President Sam Houston and signed with him a treaty. Like most Comanche Chiefs, he came to white attention following the Council House Fight in 1840. But, if Old Owl was the first among the Comanche Chiefs to recognize that defeating the whites was unlikely, Pahayoko was, probably, the second among the Penatekas: in 1843 he accepted to meet the Indian agent Daniel Watson and, in 1844, he attended the Tehuacana Creek Council, along with Old Owl, Potsʉnakwahipʉ (Buffalo Hump) and other chiefs, not including Isaviah (Yellow Wolf) and Santa Anna, but refused to sign the treaty. Nor was he part in the Meusebach-Comanche Treaty, signed by Mupitsukupʉ, Potsʉnakwahipʉ and Santa Anna. Pahayoko (Amorous Man), Mupitsukupʉ (Old Owl), Potsʉnakwahipʉ, Isaviah, Santa Anna, Ketumse, Tosahwi, and Asa-havey (Wolf's Road or Starry Road) signed the Tehuacana Treaty in April 1846, allowing the federal jurisdiction without getting any ricognition of the "Comancheria" borders.

Last Years

After the epidemics of cholera and smallpox in 1848-49 which reduced the Comanche population from approximately 20,000 to less than 12,000 within two years, Pahayoko went to settle as permanent guest among the Kotsoteka, later, in 1852, going to settle near the springs of the Big Wichita River with Potsʉnakwahipʉ, Ketumse and Shanaco; his death's date is unknown.

References

    Bibliography

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    • Secoy, Frank. Changing Military Patterns on the Great Plains. Monograph of the American Ethnological Society, No. 21. Locust Valley, NY: J. J. Augustin, 1953.
    • Schilz, Jodye Lynn Dickson andThomas F.Schilz. Buffalo Hump and the Penateka Comanches, Texas Western Press, El Paso, 1989.
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