sometimes
Yes, Native American tribes engaged in trade with each other, exchanging goods such as food, tools, and clothing to meet their needs and build relationships.
it caused iroquois tribes to fight each other.
john Cabot did meet the first nations peoples. Sorry to say but there was no evidence for me to explain about this.
Well, it depends on what your belief system is. if you are Christian, you believe that people once lived together and spoke the same language but God made them not be able to understand each other and so they joined up with people they could understand. if you are a scientologist like me, you believe that predecessors to humans developed different languages and the tribes evolved into cities and those cities became city states and those city states became nations. i think that Greece, the Mayans, the Romans, and the Egyptians were the first nations.
The Vatican, European Tribes, European Nations, The pale or lighter skin Arabs, Different Moorish tribes that had disagreements with each other.
no they hated each other
they killed each other
Many First Nations tribes in North America adopted horseback riding after the introduction of horses by Europeans in the 16th century. Notable tribes that became renowned for their equestrian skills include the Plains tribes, such as the Lakota, Cheyenne, and Comanche, who utilized horses for hunting, warfare, and transportation. The Nez Perce and the Apache were also skilled horsemen, incorporating horses into their cultural practices and lifestyles. Overall, horses significantly transformed the way many tribes engaged with their environments and each other.
The word, "war", is a noun. (Less commonly, it may be used as a verb, as in "The tribes will war against each other tomorrow.", or "The two nations were warring against each other for forty years.".
The Iroquois was (or is) not one tribe, but a group of several different tribes. The Iroquois was a Confederation (hence the term Iroquois Confederation) of many different tribes. The tribes recognized each other's sovereignty, but agreed to assist and collaborate with each other. They resembled a "United Nations" of native tribes more than any particular native country. The Iroquois Confederation's organizational document was used as a reference in writing the United States Constitution.
sometimes
Yes. Tribes were almost constantly at war with each other, and small tribes often made alliances with bigger tribes for protection from a common enemy.
Indian tribes fought each other, yes.
King Abdulaziz brought peace and prosperity to tribes; before, they were fighting each other.
each other or other tribes
Yes, Native American tribes engaged in trade with each other, exchanging goods such as food, tools, and clothing to meet their needs and build relationships.