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It is true there were several Spanish colonial settlements in what is now the southeast and southwest US. The Spanish Missions in America were suppose to convert the indigenous people to Catholicism.
Religion
The Spanish speaking people in what is now the American southwest were white colonists from Spain and later some mixed Spanish and native Mexican people (mestizos). It was a province of New Spain, what is now Mexico. Even today they speak a Spanish that is more like older version of Spanish from the 1600s and called themselves "Spanish". The first settlements were in 1598. Santa Fe dates from 1610.
Persia
Eusebio Kino was a Jesuit missionary in what is now the Southwest of the US. Junípero Serra was a Majorcan Franciscan friar who worked in California.
You answered your own question. It was a Spanish colony. Spain began it.
If you are girl who is not [sexually] attracted to guys, but you are [sexually] attracted to girls, then you're a lesbian.
Czechoslovakia is now called the Czech republic. Germany sits to the northwest, Poland to the northeast, Austria to the southwest and Slovakia to the southeast.
The motto of Southwest Wisconsin Technical College is 'Here. Now.'.
No. In the time of the Spanish Empire, there was an 8-reales coin (a piece of eight) which was called a peso. From this many of the Spanish colonies got their currencies. Meanwhile, Spain changed to the escudo, then the pesata, and now the euro.
They do now. :)
The Spanish destroyed the Inca population when they were most weak. The Spanish were the ones that brought a disease that is now called chicken pox.