The French and Spanish were generally Roman Catholic so where they settled was generally Catholic. The English and the Dutch were Protestant and for the most part so were their colonies.
To spread the Roman Catholic religon to the native people and to establish schools for boys.
No. Catholic missionaries were likely the first Christians in what is now Utah, at least in modern times. However, they passed through without establishing any permanent settlements there.
The Catholic faith came to the USA with the very first settlers, most were Roman Catholic, particularly the Dutch who were the first people to settle and create a town which is in North Carolina, but the English more or less brought along the Anglican faith
Well for one, they were going to the new world to escape the Roman Catholic Church and make their own church.
Louis XIV was Catholic, and he wanted all Protestants to convert.
.Catholic AnswerRoman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the Catholic Church. .Puerto Rico was settled by the Spanish, it was one of the first islands that Christopher Columbus landed, and one of his men, received a charter for Ferdinand to settle the Island and trade for gold. See the Catholic Encyclopedia article at the link below:
Catholic Social Services provides food, housing for teenage boys, assistance for disabled people, a program for helping refugees or immigrants settle, two shelters for emergencies, a program to help with adoption and pregnancy, and supportive housing. Catholic Social Services is the branch of Archdiocese of Anchorage that provides social services.
settle
The religion of Mormonism didn't exist in the middle ages. The middle ages were from 410 AD to 1400 and Joseph Smith didn't create the religion until the 1800's in the United States. During the middle ages the only religion was the Catholic. So to answer your question they didn't settle anywhere.
Catholic AnswerThe first two Jesuit priests arrived in New France in the year 1611, five more members arrived in Quebec in 1625, see attached article.
To settle the religious question between the great majority of French, who were fervent Catholic, and the French ruling establishment, derived from the Revolution, who were atheists. The Concordat put to an end the persecution against the Catholic masses, granting their religious and civil rights within the structure of a laical State.