Never. You're likely confusing the term "Indian", meaning "Native American" - the wide variety of Native tribes that controlled North America in pre-European days had no association with India the country, and were only referred to as such out of a mistake made by European colonists who mistakenly believed that North America was India.
Timbuktu
The land was lived on by Native Americans for centuries before the first invasion of colonists.
Ground invasion-no
Indians
No one really fought the colonists because before the revolution, because the colonies were part of England. Only once the Colonists were independent, could they be called America. But the Colonists could have fought among themselves.
The Horse. Before the arrival of European colonists, there were no horses in the Americas.
Remember, colonists came to North America with the intention of forming a colony; that was planned. It was only later that colonists discovered that they didn't like the way they were being treated by the colonial power.
The British and some of the colonists that volunteered to fight, this was before America set up its own army.
America was not a nation prior to 1776. Portions of it were originally ruled by Native Americans and later by European colonists. The 13 colonies that became the United States of America was ruled by Britain directly before they declared their independence in 1776.
The British colonists in America before the War of Independence (no taxation without representation /in the British Parliament/).
Before the Mongol invasion, Chinese officials were selected through civil service exams. After the invasion, this system was eliminated.
the life there was normal before the nazi invasion. they were allowed to practice their religion to their God before the nazi invasion.