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- Home - Yavapai, AZ
Official website for Yavapai County Government
- Yavapai - Wikipedia
Though Pai and Yavapai both spoke Upland Yuman dialects, and had a common cultural history, each people had tales of a dispute that separated them from each other According to Pai oral history, the dispute began with a "mudball fight between children "
- Arizona Community College - Yavapai College
As an Arizona Community College, YC serves the residents of Yavapai County by providing educational, economic development, a technical school education and cultural enrichment opportunities and resources at seven campuses and centers throughout the district
- Yavapai-Apache Nation – Welcome to the Yavapai-Apache Nation Gah’nahvah . . .
The Yavapai-Apache Nation is located in the Verde Valley of Arizona and is comprised of five (5) tribal communities: Tunlii, Middle Verde, Rimrock, Camp Verde and Clarkdale
- The Yavapai – Fierce Warriors of the Colorado River
Established solely for the Yavapai in 1935, it comprised only 75 acres of the former Fort Whipple Military Reserve in central Arizona The modern Yavapai-Prescott Indian Tribe continues to preserve the ancient culture of its ancestors
- Yavapai and Tonto Apaches - U. S. National Park Service
In the 1800s, American settlers and soldiers often confused the two The Yavapai and the Western Apaches lived similar ways of life, as nomadic hunters and gathers, but they represented completely different linguistic groups and might have different ancestry
- About YPIT - Home - Yavapai-Prescott Tribe
Today, the modern Yavapai Prescott Indian Tribe preserves the ancient culture of its ancestors and works diligently to achieve economic independence through numerous tribal enterprises
- Native Americans: Yavapai History and Culture
As a complement to our Yavapai language information, here is our collection of indexed links about the Yavapai tribe and their society Please note that Yavapais and other American Indians are living people with a present and a future as well as a past
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