The Spanish have always been fervent Catholics, when they were exploring, they always had a number of priests and friars on board their ships wherever they went. Every Central and South America country (save Brazil) was settled by Spanish Catholics and is Catholic to this day. The southern United States also was settled by Catholics, and still is predominately Catholic. The Catholics, unlike the protestants, actually talked to and converted the Indians, which is why there are so many Native Americans still in the south and western United States, and almost none in the Northeast which was settled by protestants and Puritans who basically wiped out all the Indians tribes they found.
Missions
Missions
Spain built missions in the early Americas to protect Spanish territory and convert the natives to Christianity (specifically Catholicism).
A missionary in any context would be a person who goes around spreading an organised religion by preaching. In the context of Spanish history, the missionaries were Catholic Christian priests who were sent to the Spanish colonies in the Americas to convert the indigenous pagans to Catholicism.
Convert the Indians to Catholicism
The main purpose of Spanish missions in the barrier islands was to convert Native Americans to Christianity, introduce them to Spanish culture and way of life, and establish Spanish control over the region. Additionally, missions served as centers for agriculture, education, and trade.
missionarys
To protect the borderlands, to convert to Catholicism, and to make settlements.
Anyone who wants to can convert to Catholicism.
The colonizing power tried to convert Indians to Roman Catholicism.
the spanish armada
The main goal of the Spanish in the New World was to acquire wealth, primarily through the extraction of precious metals like gold and silver. They also sought to spread Catholicism and establish colonies to expand their empire.
Christianity, more specifically, Catholicism.