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Eusebio Kino

Father Eusebio Francisco Kino, SJ (Italian: Eusebio Francesco Chini, Spanish: Eusebio Francisco Kino; 10 August 1645 – 15 March 1711), often referred to as Father Kino, was an Italian Jesuit, missionary, geographer, explorer, cartographer, mathematician and astronomer born in the Territory of the Bishopric of Trent, then part of a partially German-speaking area of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. For the last 24 years of his life he worked in the region then known as the Pimería Alta, modern-day Sonora in Mexico and southern Arizona in the United States. He explored the region and worked with the indigenous Native American population, including primarily the Tohono O'Odham, Sobaipuri and other Upper Piman groups. He proved that the Baja California Territory was not an island but a peninsula by leading an overland expedition there. By the time of his death he had established 24 missions and visitas (country chapels or visiting stations).[1]


Eusebio Kino

Painted portrait of Eusebio Kino, ca. 1700
Born(1645-08-10)10 August 1645
Segno, Bishopric of Trent,
Holy Roman Empire
Died15 March 1711(1711-03-15) (aged 65)
Mission Santa Maria Magdalena, Pimería Alta, New Spain (now Magdalena de Kino, Sonora, Mexico)

Early life edit

Kino was born Eusebio Chini[1] (the spelling Kino was the version for use in Spanish-speaking domains) in the village of Segno, (now part of the municipality of Predaia), then in the sovereign Prince-bishopric of Trent, a part of the Holy Roman Empire. In 1665, after his recovery from an illness, as part of a vow fulfillment, he adopted Francesco as second name, for devotion to Saint Francis Xavier.

The name is sometimes found in its Latin version (Eusebius Franciscus Chinus) or even in its originally German form (Eusebius Franz Kühn).[citation needed]

His parents were Francesco Chini and Margherita Luchi who belonged to the local noble families.[2] The exact date of his birth is unknown but he was baptized on 10 August 1645 in the parish church, located in Taio. Kino was educated at the college of the Jesuits in Hall in Tirol, Austria, and after recuperating from a serious illness, he joined the Society of Jesus on 20 November 1665. From 1664 to 1669, he received religious training as a member of the Society at Freiburg, Ingolstadt, and Landsberg, Bavaria. After completing a final stage of training in the Society, during which he taught mathematics in Ingolstadt, he received Holy Orders as a priest on 12 June 1677.[citation needed]

Although Kino wanted to go to the Orient, he was sent to New Spain. Due to travel delays while crossing Europe, he missed the ship on which he was to travel and had to wait a year for another ship. While waiting in Cádiz, Spain, he wrote some observations, done during late 1680 and early 1681, about his study of a comet (later known as Kirch's comet), which he published as the Exposición astronómica de el cometa.[1] This publication was later the subject of a sonnet by the noted colonial nun and poet of New Spain, Sor (Sister) Juana Inés de la Cruz, O.S.H.[3]

Mission in Baja California edit

Kino's first assignment was to lead the Atondo expedition to the Baja California peninsula of Las Californias Province of New Spain. In 1683, the expedition was forced to abandon an attempted settlement and mission at La Paz because of hostilities with the natives. Later that year, he established a second settlement at Misión San Bruno. After a prolonged drought there in 1685, Kino and the Jesuit missionaries were forced to abandon the mission and return to the viceregal capital of Mexico City.[1]

Missions in the Pimería Alta edit

 
Written historic accounts of the Casa Grande in Coolidge, Arizona, begin with the journal entries of Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino when he visited the ruins in 1694.

Father Kino began his career in the Pimería Alta on the morning of 14 March 1687, 24 years and one day before his death on 15 March 1711. This was the morning he left Cucurpe, a town once considered the "Rim of Christendom."[1][4]

Once Father Kino arrived in the Pimería Alta, at the request of the natives, he quickly established the first mission in a river valley in the mountains of Sonora.[1] Subsequently, Kino traveled across northern Mexico, and to present day California and Arizona. He followed ancient trading routes established millennia prior by the natives. These trails were later expanded into roads. His many expeditions on horseback covered over 50,000 square miles (130,000 km2), during which he mapped an area 200 miles (320 km) long and 250 miles (400 km) wide. Kino's maps were the most accurate maps of the region for more than 150 years after his death. Many of today's geographical features including the Colorado River were first named by Kino.

An influential map created by Father Kino during his mission in the Pimería Alta was titled Paso por tierra a la California y sus confinantes nuevas Naciones y Misiones nuevas de la Compañía de JHS [Jesús] en la América Septentrional ("Overland Passage to California and its Contiguous New Nations and New Missions of the Society of Jesus in Northern America").[5] It was based on thirty years of exploration and mapping, and it put an end to the idea of California as an island rather than a peninsula. Originally, in 1695, it depicted California as a peninsula but based on the presence of blue abalone shells (most likely Haliotis fulgens) from the Pacific coast in the Pimería Alta, the information from natives, and his own travels and sightings (in 1698 he ascended Cerro del Pinacate),[6] Father Kino redrew the map in 1701.[7] The map was printed in 1707 in Hamburg and Leipzig and became one of the best-known maps of northern New Spain. A notable colleague of Father Kino who accompanied him on one of his major travels (in 1694) and acted as the intermediary in the publication of this map and dissemination of Father Kino's knowledge in Europe was Carniolan priest Marcus Antonius Kappus [es].[8]

Father Kino was important in the economic growth of the area, working with the already agricultural indigenous native peoples and introducing them to European seed, fruits, herbs and grains.[9] He also taught the natives to raise cattle, sheep and goats. His initial mission herd of twenty cattle imported to Pimería Alta grew during his period to 70,000. Historian Herbert Bolton referred to Kino as Arizona's first rancher.[10]

Interaction with indigenous peoples edit

In his travels in the Pimería Alta, Father Kino interacted with 16 different tribes. Some of these had land that bordered on the Pimería Alta, but there are many cases where tribal representatives crossed into the Piman lands to meet Kino. In other cases, Father Kino traveled into their lands to meet with them. The tribes Kino met with are the Cocopa, Eudeve, Hia C-ed O'odham (called Yumans by Kino), Kamia, Kavelchadon, Kiliwa, Maricopa, Mountain Pima, Opata, Quechan, Gila River Pima, Seri (Comcaac), Tohono O'odham, Sobaipuri, Western Apache, Yavapai, and the Yaqui (Yoeme). [9][11][12][13]

 
This map, which was hand-colored by cartographer Nicholas de Fer, was originally created by Kino in 1696. It is called California or New Carolina: Place of Apostolic Works of Society of Jesus at the Septentrional America.

Interests edit

Kino opposed the slavery and compulsory hard labor in the silver mines that the Spaniards forced on the native people. This also caused great controversy among his co-missionaries, many of whom acted according to the laws imposed by Spain on their territory.

Kino was also a writer, authoring books on religion, astronomy and cartography. He built missions extending from the present day states of Mexican Sonora, northeast for 150 miles (240 km), into present-day Arizona, where the San Xavier del Bac mission, near Tucson, a popular National Historic Landmark, is still a functioning Franciscan parish church. Kino constructed nineteen rancherías (villages), which supplied cattle to new settlements.[10]

Kino practiced other crafts and was reportedly an expert astronomer, mathematician and cartographer, who drew the first accurate maps of Pimería Alta, the Gulf of California, and Baja California.[14] Father Kino enjoyed making model ships out of wood. His knowledge of maps and ships led him to believe that Mexican Indians could easily access California by sea, a view taken with skepticism by missionaries in Mexico City. When Kino proposed and began making a boat that would be pushed across the Sonoran Desert to the Mexican west coast, a controversy arose, as many of his co-missionaries began to question Kino's faculties. Kino had an unusual amount of wealth for his vocation, which he used primarily to fund his missionary activities. His contemporaries reported on his wealth with suspicion.[15]

Death edit

 
Crypt housing the remains of Father Kino in Magdalena de Kino.

Kino remained among his missions until his death in 1711. He died from fever on 15 March 1711, aged 65, in what is present-day Magdalena de Kino, Sonora, Mexico. The discovery of Kino's grave took place May 19, 1966 by a team of anthropologists and historians. Kino lies buried next to Father Ignacio Iturmendi and Father Manuel González. The successful discovery climaxed after nearly forty years of failures to identify the grave site. His skeletal remains can be viewed in his crypt which is a national monument of Mexico.[1]

Legacy edit

 
Equestrian statue of Father Kino in his birthplace of Segno, Northern Italy
 
Equestrian statue of Father Kino in front of the Arizona State Capitol in Phoenix, Arizona

Kino has been honored both in Mexico and the United States, with various towns, streets, schools, monuments, and geographic features named after him. The copper silicate mineral Kinoite is named in his honor. In 1965, a statue of Kino sculpted by artist Susanne Silvercruys was donated to the United States Capitol's National Statuary Hall collection, one of two statues representing Arizona. A copy of this statue has been in place in front of the Arizona History Museum in Tucson, Arizona since the 1970s. Another statue (sculpted by artist Julian Martinez Soto) of him stands above Kino Parkway, a major thoroughfare in Tucson. An equestrian statue featuring Kino, donated in 1967 by the Mexican state of Sonora, stands in Wesley Bolin Memorial Plaza across from the Arizona State Capitol in Phoenix. A time capsule is encapsuled in the base. Another equestrian statue also sculpted by artist Julian Martinez Soto stands next to the Cathedral in the city of Hermosillo, Sonora, México. The towns of Bahía Kino, and Magdalena de Kino in Sonora and Ejido Padre Kino in Baja California are named in his honor.[9] A park with a statue of Kino resides in the city of Nogales, AZ. The largest statue of Kino is located along the US–Mexico border in Tijuana, Baja California. Also a wine is named after him (Padre Kino), produced by Pernod Ricard Mexico in Hermosillo, Sonora. In 2009, Mexican and American Jesuit provinces and Catholic dioceses, the Jesuit Refugee Service, and the Missionary Sisters of the Eucharist, founded the Kino Border Initiative, a binational migrant service and advocacy organization in Nogales, Arizona and Nogales, Sonora named in his honor.[16] A monument to Kino was erected in 2015 in the garden of Piazza Dante, just outside the historic center of Trento, Italy. In 1963, he was inducted into the Hall of Great Westerners of the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum.[17]

Beatification process edit

On 11 July 2020, Pope Francis advanced the cause of Kino's sainthood by recognizing his life of heroic virtue, and declaring him Venerable.[18]

Missions and visitas founded edit

After the first voyage of Christopher Columbus, the Catholic Church awarded to the Spanish Crown the lands of "New Spain." This grant was with the directive that the Crown would underwrite the efforts to convert the pagan inhabitants to Catholicism. The lands included the Caribbean, Mexico, and portions of what is now the Southwestern United States.[13]

In its new lands, the Spanish Crown employed three major agencies to extend its borders and consolidate its colonial presence: the presidio (royal fort), pueblo (town), and the misión (mission). In addition, there were asistencias (sub-missions or contributing chapels) which were small-scale missions that regularly conducted Divine service on days of obligation, but lacked a resident priest. Visitas (visiting chapels or country chapels) also lacked a resident priest, and were often attended only sporadically. These different types of settlements were established such that each of the installations was no more than a long day's ride by horse or boat (or three days on foot) from one another.[13]

 
Bronze sculpture by Suzanne Silvercruys

Each type of frontier station needed to be self-supporting, because supply lines (roads) were non-existent. There was no way to maintain a village from outside sources. To sustain a mission settlement, the Fathers needed either Spanish colonists or converted natives to cultivate crops and tend livestock in the volume needed to support a fair-sized Church establishment. Scarcity of imported materials and lack of skilled laborers compelled the Fathers to employ simple building materials and methods.[9][13]

Although the Spanish hierarchy considered the missions temporary ventures, individual settlement development was not based simply on a priestly whim. The founding of a mission followed long-standing rules and procedures. The paperwork involved required months, sometimes years of correspondence, and demanded the attention of virtually every level of the Spanish bureaucracy.[9][13]

Once empowered to erect a mission in a given area, the men assigned to it chose a specific site that featured a good water supply, plenty of wood for fires and building material, and ample fields for grazing herds and raising crops. The Fathers blessed the site, and with the aid of their military escort fashioned temporary shelters out of tree limbs roofed with thatch, reeds, or in Pimería Alta saguaro ribs or ocotillo branches topped with brush and mud. These simple huts would ultimately give way to the stone and adobe buildings that exist today.[13]

The majority of structures, indeed whole villages, were oriented on a roughly east–west axis to take the best advantage of the sun's position for interior illumination; the exact alignment depended on the geographic features of the particular site. Directives from Spain clearly stated that villages were to be sited on the west side of any valley so that the sun would shine in the homes first thing in the morning, discouraging slothful behavior on the part of the inhabitants.[13]

When founding a mission compound, first the spot for the church itself was selected, its position marked and then the remainder of the mission complex would be laid out. Workshops, kitchens, living quarters, storerooms, and other ancillary chambers were usually grouped in a quadrangle, inside which religious celebrations and other festive events could take place.[13]

List of missions edit

This listing of the sites founded by Kino is not complete. Also, since names have changed over time, there appears to be some duplication. They are:[19]

  • Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe located near present-day La Paz, Baja California, was founded in April 1683 and abandoned four months later. Kino wrote in his astronomical treatise on comets that he dedicated his missionary life to Our Lady of Guadalupe. Kino, as the King's cartographer and surveyor, led together with Admiral Atondo the attempt to colonize the Baja California peninsula of the Las Californias Province of New Spain.
  • Mission San Bruno: founded October 1683 In September 1685, after a prolonged drought there, Kino and the colonists were forced to abandon the mission.
  • Mission Nuestra Señora de los Dolores: founded on 13 March, 1687. This was the first Pimería Alta mission founded by Father Kino. By 1744, the mission was abandoned.
  • Nuestra Señora de los Remedios was founded in 1687 and was abandoned by 1730. Nothing remains of this mission.
  • San Ignacio de Cabórica was founded in 1687 and is located in San Ignacio, Sonora.
  • Mission San Pedro y San Pablo del Tubutama was founded in 1687, in Tubutama, Sonora.
  • Santa Teresa de Atil was founded in 1687, in the small town of Atil, Sonora.
  • Santa Maria Magdalena was founded in 1687, located in Magdalena de Kino, Sonora. Kino's grave is located here.
  • San José de Imuris was founded in 1687, in Imuris, Sonora.
  • Nuestra Señora del Pilar y Santiago de Cocóspera was founded in 1689. It is located in Cocóspera, Sonora.
  • San Antonio Paduano del Oquitoa was founded in 1689. It is located in Oquitoa, Sonora.
  • San Diego del Pitiquito was founded in 1689. It is located in Pitiquito, Sonora.
  • San Luis Bacoancos was founded in 1691, but was soon abandoned after Apache attacks.
  • Mission San Cayetano del Tumacácori was founded in 1691 at a native Sobaipuri settlement. This was southern Arizona's first mission and Arizona's first Jesuit mission. Later a chapel was built. (San Cayetano de Calabasas was established in a different location much later, after Kino's time.) Sometime after the 1751 Pima Revolt the settlement and mission were moved to the opposite side of the river and became San José de Tumacácori.
  • Mission San José de Tumacácori, the presently known location that is a National Historic Park. The farming land around the mission was sold at auction in 1834 and the mission was abandoned by 1840. It is now a National Monument in Tumacácori National Historical Park in Southern Arizona.
  • La Misión de San Gabriel de Guevavi was founded in 1691. It became a cabecera or head mission in 1701 with the establishment of what Kino described affectionately as a "neat little house and church." Through the years its name changed many times so that now it is known by the generic name referencing many saints: Mission Los Santos Ángeles de Guevavi. The chapel was initially established in a native settlement, but then was destroyed by fire, probably during an indigenous uprising. The church rebuilt in new locations twice, the final and largest one being built in 1751. Its ruins are part of Tumacácori National Historical Park.
  • San Lázaro was founded in 1691, but was soon abandoned after Apache attacks.
  • San Xavier del Bac (O'odham [Sobaipuri-O'odham]: Wa:k), 16 mi south of Tucson, Arizona, founded as a missionary location in 1692. The present building, located 1 mi from the original Kino-period location, dates from 1785. The interior is richly decorated with ornaments showing a mixture of New Spain and Native American artistic motifs. It is still used by Tohono O'odham Nation members (Wa:k community members especially) and Yaqui tribal members.
  • Visita San Cosme y Damián de Tucson: founded 1692
  • Visita Los Santos Reyes de Sonoita/San Ignacio de Sonoitac: a rancheria near Tumacacori, founded 1692.
  • Visita San Martín de Aribac: a rancheria 25 miles west of Tumacacori, founded before 1695
  • La Purísima Concepción de Nuestra Señora de Caborca: founded 1693
  • Santa María Suamca: founded 1693
  • San Valentín de Busanic/Bisanig: founded 1693
  • Nuestra Señora de Loreto y San Marcelo de Sonoyta: founded 1693
  • Nuestra Señora de la Ascención de Opodepe: founded 1704

Movies edit

  • Father Kino, Padre on Horseback (or Mission to Glory: A True Story) starring Richard Egan as Kino, was made in 1977. The movie is available in DVD format.
  • Kino: La leyenda de Padre Negro (Kino: The Legend of the Black Robe Priest) starring Enrique Rocha as Kino, was made in 1993 and was awarded the Mexican Academy of Film's Ariel award for best original score. The movie is available in DVD format.
  • Through the Wilderness on Horseback – Scientist and Missionary: The Life of Eusebio Kino, S.J. (Fr. Christof Wolf SJ, Loyola Productions Munich, 2011)

Literature edit

  • In John Steinbeck's novel, The Pearl, the protagonist is named after the missionary. It is likely this was to emphasize the long lasting cultural impact of European colonization.
  • In Philip Caputo's 2017 novel Some Rise by Sin, there is a statue to Father Kino in a Mexican churchyard. The main character, an American missionary, reflects on Kino's life in the context of the Mexican drug wars and the present state of the Catholic Church.
  • In Don Rosa's Scrooge McDuck adventure The Dutchman's Secret (1999), Father Kino (referred to as Eusebio Francesco Chino) is the builder of what would have become the famed Lost Dutchman's Gold Mine.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Polzer, Charles W. (1982). Kino Guide II: a Life of Eusebio Francisco Kino, S.J., Arizona's First Pioneer, and a Guide to His Missions and Monuments. Tucson: Southwest Mission Research Center. ISBN 978-0915076079.
  2. ^ Studi trentini 1930, vol. VIII, p. 7 (See talk page)
  3. ^ Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, Soneto. Aplaude la ciencia Astronomica del Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino, de la Compañia de Jesus, que escrivió del Cometa.... Inundacion castalida de la unica poetisa, musa decima...; Madrid, 1689 Online view
  4. ^ Bolton, Herbert Eugene (1927). Rim of Christendom: a biography of Eusebio Francisco Kino, Pacific coast pioneer. University of California Press.
  5. ^ Kino, Eusebio (1701). "Paso por tierra a la California y sus confinantes nuevas Naciones y Misiones nuevas de la Compañía de JHS [Jesús] en la América Septentrional. Descubierto, andado y demarcado por el Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino, jesuita, desde el año de 1698 hasta el de 1701".
  6. ^ Nabergoj, Tomaž (2009). "Marko Anton Kappus (1657–1717): misijonar, ki je odkrival Ameriko" [Marcus Antonius Kappus (1657–1717): The Missionary Who Was Discovering the America]. Vigenjc: Glasilo Kovaškega muzeja v Kropi: Rodbina Kappus pl. Pilchstein [Vigenjc: Newsletter of the Blacksmith Museum in Kropa: The Kappus von Pilchstein family] (in Slovenian). Vol. IX. Museums of the Municipality of Radovljica. pp. 29–30. ISSN 1580-6529. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  7. ^ Hans, Bertsch (2010). "Las Conchas Azules (The Blue Shells): Father Kino, abalones, and the Island of California". The Nautilus. 124 (4): 188–191.
  8. ^ Stanonik, Janez (2007). "Marcus Antonius Kappus: a Reevaluation". Acta Neophilologica. 40 (1/2): 61-74. doi:10.4312/an.40.1-2.61-74. COBISS 35705186.
  9. ^ a b c d e Soule, Jacqueline A. (2011). Father Kino's herbs: growing & using them today. Tucson, Az: Tierra del Sol Institute. ISBN 978-0975855423. OCLC 759608112. 112 p. : ill. ; 28 cm. Includes index
  10. ^ a b Bolton, Herbert Eugene (1932). The Padre on Horseback. a Sketch of Eusebio Francisco Kino S. J. Apostle to the Pimas. Sonora Press.
  11. ^ Spicer, E. H. The Yaquis: A Cultural History. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, Arizona: 1980.
  12. ^ Seymour, Deni J. Where the Earth and Sky are Sewn Together. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City, Utah: 2011.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Spicer, Edward H. (1967) [1962]. Cycles of Conquest The Impact of Spain, Mexico, and the United States on Indians of the Southwest, 1533–1960. Tucson, Az: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 978-0816500215. 609 pp
  14. ^ "California or New Carolina: Place of Apostolic Works of Society of Jesus at the Septentrional America". World Digital Library. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
  15. ^ Lopez, George. Non Nobis: The Servants of Bernard. Oxford University Press, Oxford: 1964.
  16. ^ "Who We Are".
  17. ^ "Hall of Great Westerners". National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  18. ^ "Pope Francis recognizes 'Padre Kino,' Arizona's missionary priest". Catholic News Agency. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
  19. ^ Classen, Albrecht (2013). Early History of the Southwest Through the Eyes of German-speaking Jesuit Missionaries: A Transcultural Experience in the Eighteenth Century. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 58–59. ISBN 978-0739177846.

Further reading edit

  • Bolton, Herbert Eugene, Rim of Christendom, A Biography of Eusebio Francisco Kino: Pacific Coast Pioneer, Macmillan and Co., 1936, University of Arizona Press, 1984.
  • Burrus, Ernest J., Kino and Manje, Explorers of Sonora and Arizona, Their Vision of The Future: A Study of Their Expeditions and Plans, Jesuit Historical Institute, 1971.
  • Kino, Eusebio Francisco, Spain in the West: Kino's Historical Memoir of Pimería Alta, A Contemporary Account of the Beginnings of California, Sonora and Arizona, 1682,1711. 2 vols., translated and annotated by Herbert Eugene Bolton. Cleveland: Arthur H. Clark Company 1919,
  • Polzer, Charles W., Kino Guide II: a Life of Eusebio Francisco Kino, S.J., Arizona's First Pioneer, and a Guide to His Missions and Monuments, Southwest Mission Research Center, 1982.
  • Polzer, C., Kino: His Missions, His Monuments, Jesuit Fathers of Southern Arizona, 1998.
  • Polzer, C. & Sheridan, Thomas H., Presidio and Militia on the Northern Frontier of New Spain: A Documentary History, Volume Two, Part One: The Californias and Sinaloa-Sonora, 1700–1765, University of Arizona Press, 1997.
  • Seymour, Deni J., 1989 The Dynamics of Sobaipuri Settlement in the Eastern Pimeria Alta. Journal of the Southwest 31(2): 205–22.
  • Seymour, D., 1997 Finding History in the Archaeological Record: The Upper Piman Settlement of Guevavi. Kiva 62(3): 245–60.
  • Seymour, D., 2003 Sobaipuri-Pima Occupation in the Upper San Pedro Valley: San Pablo de Quiburi. New Mexico Historical Review 78(2): 147–66.
  • Seymour, D., 2007 Delicate Diplomacy on a Restless Frontier: Seventeenth-Century Sobaipuri Social And Economic Relations in Northwestern New Spain, Part I. New Mexico Historical Review, Volume 82(4): 469–99.
  • Seymour, D. 2007 A Syndetic Approach To Identification Of The Historic Mission Site Of San Cayetano Del Tumacácori. International Journal of Historical Archaeology, Vol. 11(3): 269–96.
  • Seymour, D., 2008a Delicate Diplomacy on a Restless Frontier: Seventeenth-Century Sobaipuri Social And Economic Relations in Northwestern New Spain, Part II. New Mexico Historical Review, Volume 83(2): 171–99.
  • Seymour, D. 2009 Father Kino's 'Neat Little House and Church' at Guevavi. Journal of the Southwest 51(2):285–316.
  • Seymour, D., 2011 Where the Earth and Sky are Sewn Together: Sobaípuri-O'odham Contexts of Contact and Colonialism. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.

Namesake organizations edit

  • Kino Border Initiative, concerned with US–Mexico border and immigration policies
  • Kino Historical Society, maintains an electronic library on its website about Kino's life and legacy.
  • Cultural Association of Padre Eusebio F. Chini (Kino), an organization in Italy
  • Fundación Kino, an organization in Mexico
  • Kino Catechetical Institute in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Phoenix

eusebio, kino, father, eusebio, francisco, kino, italian, eusebio, francesco, chini, spanish, eusebio, francisco, kino, august, 1645, march, 1711, often, referred, father, kino, italian, jesuit, missionary, geographer, explorer, cartographer, mathematician, as. Father Eusebio Francisco Kino SJ Italian Eusebio Francesco Chini Spanish Eusebio Francisco Kino 10 August 1645 15 March 1711 often referred to as Father Kino was an Italian Jesuit missionary geographer explorer cartographer mathematician and astronomer born in the Territory of the Bishopric of Trent then part of a partially German speaking area of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation For the last 24 years of his life he worked in the region then known as the Pimeria Alta modern day Sonora in Mexico and southern Arizona in the United States He explored the region and worked with the indigenous Native American population including primarily the Tohono O Odham Sobaipuri and other Upper Piman groups He proved that the Baja California Territory was not an island but a peninsula by leading an overland expedition there By the time of his death he had established 24 missions and visitas country chapels or visiting stations 1 VenerableEusebio KinoSJPainted portrait of Eusebio Kino ca 1700Born 1645 08 10 10 August 1645Segno Bishopric of Trent Holy Roman EmpireDied15 March 1711 1711 03 15 aged 65 Mission Santa Maria Magdalena Pimeria Alta New Spain now Magdalena de Kino Sonora Mexico Contents 1 Early life 2 Mission in Baja California 3 Missions in the Pimeria Alta 3 1 Interaction with indigenous peoples 3 2 Interests 4 Death 5 Legacy 5 1 Beatification process 6 Missions and visitas founded 6 1 List of missions 7 Movies 8 Literature 9 References 10 Further reading 11 Namesake organizationsEarly life editKino was born Eusebio Chini 1 the spelling Kino was the version for use in Spanish speaking domains in the village of Segno now part of the municipality of Predaia then in the sovereign Prince bishopric of Trent a part of the Holy Roman Empire In 1665 after his recovery from an illness as part of a vow fulfillment he adopted Francesco as second name for devotion to Saint Francis Xavier The name is sometimes found in its Latin version Eusebius Franciscus Chinus or even in its originally German form Eusebius Franz Kuhn citation needed His parents were Francesco Chini and Margherita Luchi who belonged to the local noble families 2 The exact date of his birth is unknown but he was baptized on 10 August 1645 in the parish church located in Taio Kino was educated at the college of the Jesuits in Hall in Tirol Austria and after recuperating from a serious illness he joined the Society of Jesus on 20 November 1665 From 1664 to 1669 he received religious training as a member of the Society at Freiburg Ingolstadt and Landsberg Bavaria After completing a final stage of training in the Society during which he taught mathematics in Ingolstadt he received Holy Orders as a priest on 12 June 1677 citation needed Although Kino wanted to go to the Orient he was sent to New Spain Due to travel delays while crossing Europe he missed the ship on which he was to travel and had to wait a year for another ship While waiting in Cadiz Spain he wrote some observations done during late 1680 and early 1681 about his study of a comet later known as Kirch s comet which he published as the Exposicion astronomica de el cometa 1 This publication was later the subject of a sonnet by the noted colonial nun and poet of New Spain Sor Sister Juana Ines de la Cruz O S H 3 Mission in Baja California editMain article Spanish missions in Baja California Kino s first assignment was to lead the Atondo expedition to the Baja California peninsula of Las Californias Province of New Spain In 1683 the expedition was forced to abandon an attempted settlement and mission at La Paz because of hostilities with the natives Later that year he established a second settlement at Mision San Bruno After a prolonged drought there in 1685 Kino and the Jesuit missionaries were forced to abandon the mission and return to the viceregal capital of Mexico City 1 Missions in the Pimeria Alta editSee also Spanish missions in the Sonoran Desert nbsp Written historic accounts of the Casa Grande in Coolidge Arizona begin with the journal entries of Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino when he visited the ruins in 1694 Father Kino began his career in the Pimeria Alta on the morning of 14 March 1687 24 years and one day before his death on 15 March 1711 This was the morning he left Cucurpe a town once considered the Rim of Christendom 1 4 Once Father Kino arrived in the Pimeria Alta at the request of the natives he quickly established the first mission in a river valley in the mountains of Sonora 1 Subsequently Kino traveled across northern Mexico and to present day California and Arizona He followed ancient trading routes established millennia prior by the natives These trails were later expanded into roads His many expeditions on horseback covered over 50 000 square miles 130 000 km2 during which he mapped an area 200 miles 320 km long and 250 miles 400 km wide Kino s maps were the most accurate maps of the region for more than 150 years after his death Many of today s geographical features including the Colorado River were first named by Kino An influential map created by Father Kino during his mission in the Pimeria Alta was titled Paso por tierra a la California y sus confinantes nuevas Naciones y Misiones nuevas de la Compania de JHS Jesus en la America Septentrional Overland Passage to California and its Contiguous New Nations and New Missions of the Society of Jesus in Northern America 5 It was based on thirty years of exploration and mapping and it put an end to the idea of California as an island rather than a peninsula Originally in 1695 it depicted California as a peninsula but based on the presence of blue abalone shells most likely Haliotis fulgens from the Pacific coast in the Pimeria Alta the information from natives and his own travels and sightings in 1698 he ascended Cerro del Pinacate 6 Father Kino redrew the map in 1701 7 The map was printed in 1707 in Hamburg and Leipzig and became one of the best known maps of northern New Spain A notable colleague of Father Kino who accompanied him on one of his major travels in 1694 and acted as the intermediary in the publication of this map and dissemination of Father Kino s knowledge in Europe was Carniolan priest Marcus Antonius Kappus es 8 Father Kino was important in the economic growth of the area working with the already agricultural indigenous native peoples and introducing them to European seed fruits herbs and grains 9 He also taught the natives to raise cattle sheep and goats His initial mission herd of twenty cattle imported to Pimeria Alta grew during his period to 70 000 Historian Herbert Bolton referred to Kino as Arizona s first rancher 10 Interaction with indigenous peoples edit In his travels in the Pimeria Alta Father Kino interacted with 16 different tribes Some of these had land that bordered on the Pimeria Alta but there are many cases where tribal representatives crossed into the Piman lands to meet Kino In other cases Father Kino traveled into their lands to meet with them The tribes Kino met with are the Cocopa Eudeve Hia C ed O odham called Yumans by Kino Kamia Kavelchadon Kiliwa Maricopa Mountain Pima Opata Quechan Gila River Pima Seri Comcaac Tohono O odham Sobaipuri Western Apache Yavapai and the Yaqui Yoeme 9 11 12 13 nbsp This map which was hand colored by cartographer Nicholas de Fer was originally created by Kino in 1696 It is called California or New Carolina Place of Apostolic Works of Society of Jesus at the Septentrional America Interests edit Kino opposed the slavery and compulsory hard labor in the silver mines that the Spaniards forced on the native people This also caused great controversy among his co missionaries many of whom acted according to the laws imposed by Spain on their territory Kino was also a writer authoring books on religion astronomy and cartography He built missions extending from the present day states of Mexican Sonora northeast for 150 miles 240 km into present day Arizona where the San Xavier del Bac mission near Tucson a popular National Historic Landmark is still a functioning Franciscan parish church Kino constructed nineteen rancherias villages which supplied cattle to new settlements 10 Kino practiced other crafts and was reportedly an expert astronomer mathematician and cartographer who drew the first accurate maps of Pimeria Alta the Gulf of California and Baja California 14 Father Kino enjoyed making model ships out of wood His knowledge of maps and ships led him to believe that Mexican Indians could easily access California by sea a view taken with skepticism by missionaries in Mexico City When Kino proposed and began making a boat that would be pushed across the Sonoran Desert to the Mexican west coast a controversy arose as many of his co missionaries began to question Kino s faculties Kino had an unusual amount of wealth for his vocation which he used primarily to fund his missionary activities His contemporaries reported on his wealth with suspicion 15 Death edit nbsp Crypt housing the remains of Father Kino in Magdalena de Kino Kino remained among his missions until his death in 1711 He died from fever on 15 March 1711 aged 65 in what is present day Magdalena de Kino Sonora Mexico The discovery of Kino s grave took place May 19 1966 by a team of anthropologists and historians Kino lies buried next to Father Ignacio Iturmendi and Father Manuel Gonzalez The successful discovery climaxed after nearly forty years of failures to identify the grave site His skeletal remains can be viewed in his crypt which is a national monument of Mexico 1 Legacy edit nbsp Equestrian statue of Father Kino in his birthplace of Segno Northern Italy nbsp Equestrian statue of Father Kino in front of the Arizona State Capitol in Phoenix ArizonaKino has been honored both in Mexico and the United States with various towns streets schools monuments and geographic features named after him The copper silicate mineral Kinoite is named in his honor In 1965 a statue of Kino sculpted by artist Susanne Silvercruys was donated to the United States Capitol s National Statuary Hall collection one of two statues representing Arizona A copy of this statue has been in place in front of the Arizona History Museum in Tucson Arizona since the 1970s Another statue sculpted by artist Julian Martinez Soto of him stands above Kino Parkway a major thoroughfare in Tucson An equestrian statue featuring Kino donated in 1967 by the Mexican state of Sonora stands in Wesley Bolin Memorial Plaza across from the Arizona State Capitol in Phoenix A time capsule is encapsuled in the base Another equestrian statue also sculpted by artist Julian Martinez Soto stands next to the Cathedral in the city of Hermosillo Sonora Mexico The towns of Bahia Kino and Magdalena de Kino in Sonora and Ejido Padre Kino in Baja California are named in his honor 9 A park with a statue of Kino resides in the city of Nogales AZ The largest statue of Kino is located along the US Mexico border in Tijuana Baja California Also a wine is named after him Padre Kino produced by Pernod Ricard Mexico in Hermosillo Sonora In 2009 Mexican and American Jesuit provinces and Catholic dioceses the Jesuit Refugee Service and the Missionary Sisters of the Eucharist founded the Kino Border Initiative a binational migrant service and advocacy organization in Nogales Arizona and Nogales Sonora named in his honor 16 A monument to Kino was erected in 2015 in the garden of Piazza Dante just outside the historic center of Trento Italy In 1963 he was inducted into the Hall of Great Westerners of the National Cowboy amp Western Heritage Museum 17 Beatification process edit On 11 July 2020 Pope Francis advanced the cause of Kino s sainthood by recognizing his life of heroic virtue and declaring him Venerable 18 Missions and visitas founded editAfter the first voyage of Christopher Columbus the Catholic Church awarded to the Spanish Crown the lands of New Spain This grant was with the directive that the Crown would underwrite the efforts to convert the pagan inhabitants to Catholicism The lands included the Caribbean Mexico and portions of what is now the Southwestern United States 13 In its new lands the Spanish Crown employed three major agencies to extend its borders and consolidate its colonial presence the presidio royal fort pueblo town and the mision mission In addition there were asistencias sub missions or contributing chapels which were small scale missions that regularly conducted Divine service on days of obligation but lacked a resident priest Visitas visiting chapels or country chapels also lacked a resident priest and were often attended only sporadically These different types of settlements were established such that each of the installations was no more than a long day s ride by horse or boat or three days on foot from one another 13 nbsp Bronze sculpture by Suzanne SilvercruysEach type of frontier station needed to be self supporting because supply lines roads were non existent There was no way to maintain a village from outside sources To sustain a mission settlement the Fathers needed either Spanish colonists or converted natives to cultivate crops and tend livestock in the volume needed to support a fair sized Church establishment Scarcity of imported materials and lack of skilled laborers compelled the Fathers to employ simple building materials and methods 9 13 Although the Spanish hierarchy considered the missions temporary ventures individual settlement development was not based simply on a priestly whim The founding of a mission followed long standing rules and procedures The paperwork involved required months sometimes years of correspondence and demanded the attention of virtually every level of the Spanish bureaucracy 9 13 Once empowered to erect a mission in a given area the men assigned to it chose a specific site that featured a good water supply plenty of wood for fires and building material and ample fields for grazing herds and raising crops The Fathers blessed the site and with the aid of their military escort fashioned temporary shelters out of tree limbs roofed with thatch reeds or in Pimeria Alta saguaro ribs or ocotillo branches topped with brush and mud These simple huts would ultimately give way to the stone and adobe buildings that exist today 13 The majority of structures indeed whole villages were oriented on a roughly east west axis to take the best advantage of the sun s position for interior illumination the exact alignment depended on the geographic features of the particular site Directives from Spain clearly stated that villages were to be sited on the west side of any valley so that the sun would shine in the homes first thing in the morning discouraging slothful behavior on the part of the inhabitants 13 When founding a mission compound first the spot for the church itself was selected its position marked and then the remainder of the mission complex would be laid out Workshops kitchens living quarters storerooms and other ancillary chambers were usually grouped in a quadrangle inside which religious celebrations and other festive events could take place 13 List of missions edit This listing of the sites founded by Kino is not complete Also since names have changed over time there appears to be some duplication They are 19 Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe located near present day La Paz Baja California was founded in April 1683 and abandoned four months later Kino wrote in his astronomical treatise on comets that he dedicated his missionary life to Our Lady of Guadalupe Kino as the King s cartographer and surveyor led together with Admiral Atondo the attempt to colonize the Baja California peninsula of the Las Californias Province of New Spain Mission San Bruno founded October 1683 In September 1685 after a prolonged drought there Kino and the colonists were forced to abandon the mission Mission Nuestra Senora de los Dolores founded on 13 March 1687 This was the first Pimeria Alta mission founded by Father Kino By 1744 the mission was abandoned Nuestra Senora de los Remedios was founded in 1687 and was abandoned by 1730 Nothing remains of this mission San Ignacio de Caborica was founded in 1687 and is located in San Ignacio Sonora Mission San Pedro y San Pablo del Tubutama was founded in 1687 in Tubutama Sonora Santa Teresa de Atil was founded in 1687 in the small town of Atil Sonora Santa Maria Magdalena was founded in 1687 located in Magdalena de Kino Sonora Kino s grave is located here San Jose de Imuris was founded in 1687 in Imuris Sonora Nuestra Senora del Pilar y Santiago de Cocospera was founded in 1689 It is located in Cocospera Sonora San Antonio Paduano del Oquitoa was founded in 1689 It is located in Oquitoa Sonora San Diego del Pitiquito was founded in 1689 It is located in Pitiquito Sonora San Luis Bacoancos was founded in 1691 but was soon abandoned after Apache attacks Mission San Cayetano del Tumacacori was founded in 1691 at a native Sobaipuri settlement This was southern Arizona s first mission and Arizona s first Jesuit mission Later a chapel was built San Cayetano de Calabasas was established in a different location much later after Kino s time Sometime after the 1751 Pima Revolt the settlement and mission were moved to the opposite side of the river and became San Jose de Tumacacori Mission San Jose de Tumacacori the presently known location that is a National Historic Park The farming land around the mission was sold at auction in 1834 and the mission was abandoned by 1840 It is now a National Monument in Tumacacori National Historical Park in Southern Arizona La Mision de San Gabriel de Guevavi was founded in 1691 It became a cabecera or head mission in 1701 with the establishment of what Kino described affectionately as a neat little house and church Through the years its name changed many times so that now it is known by the generic name referencing many saints Mission Los Santos Angeles de Guevavi The chapel was initially established in a native settlement but then was destroyed by fire probably during an indigenous uprising The church rebuilt in new locations twice the final and largest one being built in 1751 Its ruins are part of Tumacacori National Historical Park San Lazaro was founded in 1691 but was soon abandoned after Apache attacks San Xavier del Bac O odham Sobaipuri O odham Wa k 16 mi south of Tucson Arizona founded as a missionary location in 1692 The present building located 1 mi from the original Kino period location dates from 1785 The interior is richly decorated with ornaments showing a mixture of New Spain and Native American artistic motifs It is still used by Tohono O odham Nation members Wa k community members especially and Yaqui tribal members Visita San Cosme y Damian de Tucson founded 1692 Visita Los Santos Reyes de Sonoita San Ignacio de Sonoitac a rancheria near Tumacacori founded 1692 Visita San Martin de Aribac a rancheria 25 miles west of Tumacacori founded before 1695 La Purisima Concepcion de Nuestra Senora de Caborca founded 1693 Santa Maria Suamca founded 1693 San Valentin de Busanic Bisanig founded 1693 Nuestra Senora de Loreto y San Marcelo de Sonoyta founded 1693 Nuestra Senora de la Ascencion de Opodepe founded 1704Movies editFather Kino Padre on Horseback or Mission to Glory A True Story starring Richard Egan as Kino was made in 1977 The movie is available in DVD format Kino La leyenda de Padre Negro Kino The Legend of the Black Robe Priest starring Enrique Rocha as Kino was made in 1993 and was awarded the Mexican Academy of Film s Ariel award for best original score The movie is available in DVD format Through the Wilderness on Horseback Scientist and Missionary The Life of Eusebio Kino S J Fr Christof Wolf SJ Loyola Productions Munich 2011 Literature editIn John Steinbeck s novel The Pearl the protagonist is named after the missionary It is likely this was to emphasize the long lasting cultural impact of European colonization In Philip Caputo s 2017 novel Some Rise by Sin there is a statue to Father Kino in a Mexican churchyard The main character an American missionary reflects on Kino s life in the context of the Mexican drug wars and the present state of the Catholic Church In Don Rosa s Scrooge McDuck adventure The Dutchman s Secret 1999 Father Kino referred to as Eusebio Francesco Chino is the builder of what would have become the famed Lost Dutchman s Gold Mine References edit a b c d e f g Polzer Charles W 1982 Kino Guide II a Life of Eusebio Francisco Kino S J Arizona s First Pioneer and a Guide to His Missions and Monuments Tucson Southwest Mission Research Center ISBN 978 0915076079 Studi trentini 1930 vol VIII p 7 See talk page Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz Soneto Aplaude la ciencia Astronomica del Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino de la Compania de Jesus que escrivio del Cometa Inundacion castalida de la unica poetisa musa decima Madrid 1689 Online view Bolton Herbert Eugene 1927 Rim of Christendom a biography of Eusebio Francisco Kino Pacific coast pioneer University of California Press Kino Eusebio 1701 Paso por tierra a la California y sus confinantes nuevas Naciones y Misiones nuevas de la Compania de JHS Jesus en la America Septentrional Descubierto andado y demarcado por el Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino jesuita desde el ano de 1698 hasta el de 1701 Nabergoj Tomaz 2009 Marko Anton Kappus 1657 1717 misijonar ki je odkrival Ameriko Marcus Antonius Kappus 1657 1717 The Missionary Who Was Discovering the America Vigenjc Glasilo Kovaskega muzeja v Kropi Rodbina Kappus pl Pilchstein Vigenjc Newsletter of the Blacksmith Museum in Kropa The Kappus von Pilchstein family in Slovenian Vol IX Museums of the Municipality of Radovljica pp 29 30 ISSN 1580 6529 Retrieved 13 October 2023 Hans Bertsch 2010 Las Conchas Azules The Blue Shells Father Kino abalones and the Island of California The Nautilus 124 4 188 191 Stanonik Janez 2007 Marcus Antonius Kappus a Reevaluation Acta Neophilologica 40 1 2 61 74 doi 10 4312 an 40 1 2 61 74 COBISS 35705186 a b c d e Soule Jacqueline A 2011 Father Kino s herbs growing amp using them today Tucson Az Tierra del Sol Institute ISBN 978 0975855423 OCLC 759608112 112 p ill 28 cm Includes index a b Bolton Herbert Eugene 1932 The Padre on Horseback a Sketch of Eusebio Francisco Kino S J Apostle to the Pimas Sonora Press Spicer E H The Yaquis A Cultural History University of Arizona Press Tucson Arizona 1980 Seymour Deni J Where the Earth and Sky are Sewn Together University of Utah Press Salt Lake City Utah 2011 a b c d e f g h Spicer Edward H 1967 1962 Cycles of Conquest The Impact of Spain Mexico and the United States on Indians of the Southwest 1533 1960 Tucson Az University of Arizona Press ISBN 978 0816500215 609 pp California or New Carolina Place of Apostolic Works of Society of Jesus at the Septentrional America World Digital Library Retrieved 21 January 2013 Lopez George Non Nobis The Servants of Bernard Oxford University Press Oxford 1964 Who We Are Hall of Great Westerners National Cowboy amp Western Heritage Museum Retrieved 22 November 2019 Pope Francis recognizes Padre Kino Arizona s missionary priest Catholic News Agency Retrieved 13 July 2020 Classen Albrecht 2013 Early History of the Southwest Through the Eyes of German speaking Jesuit Missionaries A Transcultural Experience in the Eighteenth Century Rowman amp Littlefield pp 58 59 ISBN 978 0739177846 Further reading editBolton Herbert Eugene Rim of Christendom A Biography of Eusebio Francisco Kino Pacific Coast Pioneer Macmillan and Co 1936 University of Arizona Press 1984 Burrus Ernest J Kino and Manje Explorers of Sonora and Arizona Their Vision of The Future A Study of Their Expeditions and Plans Jesuit Historical Institute 1971 Kino Eusebio Francisco Spain in the West Kino s Historical Memoir of Pimeria Alta A Contemporary Account of the Beginnings of California Sonora and Arizona 1682 1711 2 vols translated and annotated by Herbert Eugene Bolton Cleveland Arthur H Clark Company 1919 Polzer Charles W Kino Guide II a Life of Eusebio Francisco Kino S J Arizona s First Pioneer and a Guide to His Missions and Monuments Southwest Mission Research Center 1982 Polzer C Kino His Missions His Monuments Jesuit Fathers of Southern Arizona 1998 Polzer C amp Sheridan Thomas H Presidio and Militia on the Northern Frontier of New Spain A Documentary History Volume Two Part One The Californias and Sinaloa Sonora 1700 1765 University of Arizona Press 1997 Seymour Deni J 1989 The Dynamics of Sobaipuri Settlement in the Eastern Pimeria Alta Journal of the Southwest 31 2 205 22 Seymour D 1997 Finding History in the Archaeological Record The Upper Piman Settlement of Guevavi Kiva 62 3 245 60 Seymour D 2003 Sobaipuri Pima Occupation in the Upper San Pedro Valley San Pablo de Quiburi New Mexico Historical Review 78 2 147 66 Seymour D 2007 Delicate Diplomacy on a Restless Frontier Seventeenth Century Sobaipuri Social And Economic Relations in Northwestern New Spain Part I New Mexico Historical Review Volume 82 4 469 99 Seymour D 2007 A Syndetic Approach To Identification Of The Historic Mission Site Of San Cayetano Del Tumacacori International Journal of Historical Archaeology Vol 11 3 269 96 Seymour D 2008a Delicate Diplomacy on a Restless Frontier Seventeenth Century Sobaipuri Social And Economic Relations in Northwestern New Spain Part II New Mexico Historical Review Volume 83 2 171 99 Seymour D 2009 Father Kino s Neat Little House and Church at Guevavi Journal of the Southwest 51 2 285 316 Seymour D 2011 Where the Earth and Sky are Sewn Together Sobaipuri O odham Contexts of Contact and Colonialism University of Utah Press Salt Lake City Namesake organizations editKino Border Initiative concerned with US Mexico border and immigration policies Kino Historical Society maintains an electronic library on its website about Kino s life and legacy Cultural Association of Padre Eusebio F Chini Kino an organization in Italy Fundacion Kino an organization in Mexico Kino Catechetical Institute in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Phoenix Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eusebio Kino amp oldid 1205431246, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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