The Native Americans at Santa Clara de Asís, a Spanish mission in California, were tasked with farming, caring for animals, and performing religious activities. Their daily tasks included tending to crops, herding livestock, building structures, and attending mass and other religious ceremonies as part of their converted status under Spanish rule.
Santa Clara de Asís was home to around 700 Ohlone Indians.
The Mission Santa Clara de Asis Indians lived in the area surrounding the mission in present-day Santa Clara, California. They lived in adobe homes provided by the mission and worked on the mission lands as laborers, artisans, and agricultural workers.
The mission Indians for Mission Santa Clara de Asis were primarily the Ohlone people, who were indigenous to the region. They were brought to the mission by Spanish missionaries to convert them to Christianity and to work on the mission's agricultural projects.
Santa Clara de Asis is a Catholic church.
The nickname of Santa Clara de Asis is "Mission Santa Clara."
indians
indians
The Ohlone Indians
thetribewasthat
what is a mission
Santa Clara de Asís was home to around 700 Ohlone Indians.
They worked on the mission.
The Ohlone
The Mission Santa Clara de Asis Indians lived in the area surrounding the mission in present-day Santa Clara, California. They lived in adobe homes provided by the mission and worked on the mission lands as laborers, artisans, and agricultural workers.
What is the purpose of Mission Santa Clara De Asis
Santa Clara
There are four statues at Santa Clara de Asis.