The Native Americans eat plants and steak when they are at the mission called Mission San Juan Capistrano.
what did native American children do at mission san juan capistrano
Native Americans and people who worked at the mission lived there.Priests and spanish worked at the mission.
not that successful!
San Juan Capistrano is the site of a Catholic mission for which it is named, Mission San Juan Capistrano. When the Mission was founded in 1776, the region was populated by the Acjachemen band of Native Americans, called Juanenos by the Spanish. The mission was named after the Franciscan saint Giovanni da Capistrano (1386-1456).
San Juan Capistrano is the site of a Catholic mission for which it is named, Mission San Juan Capistrano. When the Mission was founded in 1776, the region was populated by the Acjachemen band of Native Americans, called Juanenos by the Spanish. The mission was named after the Franciscan saint Giovanni da Capistrano (1386-1456).
Once they converted the mission Native Americans they taught the Catholic religion. Basically the mission system kept the Native Americans at the missions as slaves. They couldn't leave the mission and historians have found mass graves of Native Americans.
native Americans did ALL the work, sometimes the padres would help (but it was all up to native Americans (Indian people)
Missionaries, priests, padres, and many numbers of Native Americans lived in California missions.
They plained a suprize land attack
Yes, Mission San Juan Capistrano was attacked by Native Americans, particularly during the period of the California Mission system. The most notable attack occurred in 1775 when the local indigenous peoples, dissatisfied with Spanish colonization and mission practices, raided the mission. The conflict was part of a broader resistance against Spanish rule and the mission system's impact on their traditional ways of life. Despite the attacks, the mission continued to operate until it was secularized in the 1830s.
Criolla or "Mission grape"