The people who ran the Mission at San Diego viewed anyone who they baptized as owing labor to the of mission, King and God. The Native people had to work every day, men and women had to live separately and could not marry without permission and they were not paid. The profits went to running the mission and the Church. Women were raped and food was stolen from natives. The leaders of the mission viewed this as normal and any attempt to refuse or run away as treason and denial of God and his order. Punishments were severe. Deaths were high. There were repeated revolts. The most famous was in November 1775.
Most people today would feel that being forced to work for no pay, being told how to live and where and to be whipped or killed if you didn't would be called slavery. Is was not called that by the Spanish but it fits most definitions.
The Friars believed that it was the Devil who was making the Native people not want to live and work there. The Father Palou wrote:
"The enemy, [Satan] envious and resentful, no doubt because the heathen in that territory were being taken away from him, and because the missionaries, with their fervent zeal and apostolic labors, were steadily lessening his following, and little by little banishing heathenism from the neighborhood of the port of San Diego, found a means to put a stop to these spiritual conquests."
We can't know for certain, but it seems likely from their actions (repeated revolts) that most of the Natives resented and were angry at their treatment by the Friars. In the revolt of 1775 they burnt most of the buildings and religious artifacts and killed the Father running it. Most would call that not getting along at all.
The Kumeyaay Indians did not like the misionaries. They would try to kill them sometimes.
No
The Oholones
The Native Americans had build it with the Spanish.
it was built to teach native americans christianity.
I think the Spanish people and the Native Americans,
native Americans did ALL the work, sometimes the padres would help (but it was all up to native Americans (Indian people)
Thffhbfyrt,flub. Cthulhu,tnrgsdghdty
they pooped
Yes, at least 6 were at each of 21 missions. They were not liked and often treated the Native Americans poorly.
the people who did the jobs on Santa Clara were the Indians, missionaries,explorers and other people that fallowed Gaspar De Portola and Junipero Serra.
Because people would have gotten all confused if they'd put it in Santa Barbara. Anyway, the question has it exactly backwards. The Spanish missionaries were setting up a chain of missions a day's travel apart (along, or at least close to, what is today the route of El Camino Real). They didn't put the Santa Clara mission in Santa Clara... they put the Santa Clara mission near an existing native American settlement, and the city grew up around it and took its name from the mission.
i dont know but i do know that a giraffe has the same amount of bones in their neck as you i think it is 26.