California has 21 Spanish missions. The southernmost is located in San Diego.See the related Wikipedia link listed below for more information:
It is the seventeenth mission along the cain, dont know
Chile is the southernmost Spanish-speaking country in the world. It is located in South America, bordered by Argentina to the east, Bolivia to the northeast, and Peru to the north.
When the mission was part of the Mexico mission system there were no Spanish soliders. As a part of Spain Spanish soliders were not stationed there.
Mission in Spanish is Misión. In English it's pronounced "MIH-shun". In Spanish it's "me-seeON"
The Spanish Mission system started in 1718 with Mission San Antonio de Valero. Most spanish missions had the aim of converting the natives to christianity.
the first Spanish mission was built in 1777
A : a California mission is a big church built by the spanish
It was a Spanish Mission.
The northernmost Spanish mission was Mission San Francisco de Solano, located in what is now Sonoma, California. Established in 1823, it was part of the California mission system aimed at spreading Christianity among the Native Americans and expanding Spanish influence in the region. This mission marked the northern frontier of Spanish colonial efforts in California.
There were several different Spanish mission in the United States. They include Mission Los Santos Angeles de Guevavi, Mission San Xavier del Bac and Mission Santa Cruz.
mission history, what did the spanish want to spread