Apache$4202$ - ορισμός. Τι είναι το Apache$4202$
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Τι (ποιος) είναι Apache$4202$ - ορισμός

PARISIAN BELLE ÉPOQUE UNDERWORLD SUBCULTURE
Apache (thug); Apache (gang)
  • Apache revolver – [[Curtius Museum]], Liège
  • Le Petit Journal]]:'' Apaches battle Paris Police 14 August 1904
  • Title page of ''Le Petit Journal'' (20 October 1907): "The Apache is the sore of Paris. More than 30,000 prowlers against 8,000 city policemen."

Apache         
  • Various Apache containers:  baskets, bowls and jars. The women-made baskets could hold heavy loads and were made mainly from [[yucca]] or [[willow]] leaves or [[juniper]] bark.<ref>Carolyn Casey. ''The Apache'', Marshall Cavendish, 2006, p. 18</ref>
  • left
  • Apache bride
  • Apache girl with basket, 1902
  • Apache jug
  •  Pl: [[Plains Apache]] }}
  • Present-day primary locations of Apachean peoples (scale and colors as above)
  • Chiricahua medicine man in wickiup with family
  • Coronado Expedition]], 1540–1542
  • [[Geronimo]]
  • Jicarilla Apache]] boy, [[New Mexico]], 2009
  • Kathy Kitcheyan, chairwoman of the [[San Carlos Apache]]
  • Hide painting depicting Apache girl's puberty ceremony, by Naiche (Chiricahua Apache), ca. 1900, [[Oklahoma History Center]]
  • wickiup]]
  • A Western Apache woman from the San Carlos group
  • Apache rawhide playing cards c. 1875–1885, collection of [[NMAI]].
  • Essa-queta, [[Plains Apache]] chief
SEVERAL CULTURALLY RELATED GROUPS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES OF THE UNITED STATES
Apache Tribe; Apache (tribe); Apache tribe; Apache indians; Apachean; Apaches; Apche indian tribe; Apacheans; Apache Nation; Apache people; Apache Indians; ˀa˙paču; List of Apache people; History of the Apache; Carlana Apache
[?'pat?i]
¦ noun (plural same or Apaches)
1. a member of an American Indian people living chiefly in New Mexico and Arizona.
2. any of the Athabaskan languages of the Apache.
Origin
from Mex. Sp., prob. from Zuni Apachu, lit. 'enemy'.
USRC Apache (1891)         
AMERICAN REVENUE SERVICE CUTTER
USS Apache (1891); USRC Apache (1891)
The second USS Apache was a United States Coast Guard cutter that served in the United States Navy as a patrol vessel from 1917-1919.
Apaches         
  • Various Apache containers:  baskets, bowls and jars. The women-made baskets could hold heavy loads and were made mainly from [[yucca]] or [[willow]] leaves or [[juniper]] bark.<ref>Carolyn Casey. ''The Apache'', Marshall Cavendish, 2006, p. 18</ref>
  • left
  • Apache bride
  • Apache girl with basket, 1902
  • Apache jug
  •  Pl: [[Plains Apache]] }}
  • Present-day primary locations of Apachean peoples (scale and colors as above)
  • Chiricahua medicine man in wickiup with family
  • Coronado Expedition]], 1540–1542
  • [[Geronimo]]
  • Jicarilla Apache]] boy, [[New Mexico]], 2009
  • Kathy Kitcheyan, chairwoman of the [[San Carlos Apache]]
  • Hide painting depicting Apache girl's puberty ceremony, by Naiche (Chiricahua Apache), ca. 1900, [[Oklahoma History Center]]
  • wickiup]]
  • A Western Apache woman from the San Carlos group
  • Apache rawhide playing cards c. 1875–1885, collection of [[NMAI]].
  • Essa-queta, [[Plains Apache]] chief
SEVERAL CULTURALLY RELATED GROUPS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES OF THE UNITED STATES
Apache Tribe; Apache (tribe); Apache tribe; Apache indians; Apachean; Apaches; Apche indian tribe; Apacheans; Apache Nation; Apache people; Apache Indians; ˀa˙paču; List of Apache people; History of the Apache; Carlana Apache
·noun ·pl A group of nomadic North American Indians including several tribes native of Arizona, New Mexico, ·etc.

Βικιπαίδεια

Apaches (subculture)

Les Apaches (French: [a.paʃ]) was a Parisian Belle Époque violent criminal underworld subculture of early 20th-century hooligans, night muggers, street gangs and other criminals. After news of their notoriety spread over Europe, the term was used to describe violent street crime in other countries as well; for example, "Russian apaches."