fbpx
Wikipedia

Misión de Nuestra Señora de Loreto Conchó

Misión de Nuestra Señora de Loreto Conchó, or Mission Loreto, was founded on October 25, 1697, at the Monqui Native American (Indian) settlement of Conchó in the city of Loreto, Baja California Sur, Mexico. Established by the Catholic Church's Jesuit missionary Juan María de Salvatierra, Loreto was the first successful mission and Spanish town in Baja California.

Mission Loreto
Mission of Our Lady of Loreto Concho
Misión de Nuestra Señora de Loreto Conchó
Misión de Nuestra Señora de Loreto Conchó capilla, presidio and bell tower
LocationLoreto, Baja California Sur
CountryMexico
DenominationRoman Catholic Church
History
StatusChurch
FoundedOctober 25th, 1697
Founder(s)Juan María de Salvatierra
Architecture
Functional statusJust Church functions
StyleBaroque
Groundbreaking1740
Completed1744
Specifications
Number of domes1
MaterialsStone
Administration
DivisionSpanish missions in the Americas
SubdivisionBaja California

The mission, with the exception of its essential Catholic church functions, closed in 1829.

History edit

Attempts edit

After Hernán Cortés' initial, unsuccessful, 1535 attempt to found a colony in the Bay of Santa Cruz (today's La Paz, Baja California Sur), the next 150 years were marked by further unsuccessful efforts to colonize Baja California. The most nearly successful of these attempts was the 1683–1685 outpost at San Bruno, only about 20 kilometers north of Loreto, among the Cochimí. This failure by Admiral Isidro de Atondo y Antillón and the Jesuit missionary Eusebio Francisco Kino led directly to the success at Loreto 12 years later.

After many unsuccessful ventures in Baja California, the government of New Spain and the Spanish crown were reluctant to finance any further attempts. However, Kino's enthusiasm for this potential mission field was persistent. He ultimately persuaded some of his colleagues, including Salvatierra and the authorities in New Spain, to allow the Jesuits to return to the peninsula, but this time on their own responsibility and largely at their own expense.

By the start of 1697 everything was ready for the journey's start at the mouth of the Río Yaqui River in Sonora. Kino was unable to participate, because an Indian rebellion in Sonora required his presence on the mainland. Salvatierra would soon be joined at Loreto by Francisco María Piccolo, and they were supported from the mainland by the procurador for the mission, Juan de Ugarte.

 
Misión de Nuestra Señora de Loreto Conchó in the 18th century.

Founding edit

 
Loreto Mission in Baja California

On October 19, 1697, Salvatierra, with nine armed men, disembarked from the galley Santa Elvira at the place that the Indians called Coruncho (Cochimi: red-coloured mangrove).[1][2] The site was distinguished by "a small patch of stunted shrubbery and a spring of fresh water, both rare luxuries in that inhospitable country". In the first days after their arrival, the missionary erected a modest structure that served as a chapel, to the front of which they affixed a wooden cross. On October 25 they carried the image of the Virgin of Our Lady of Loreto in a solemn procession, a ritual of faith that claimed the area as Spanish territory. Thus began the Mission Loreto.[3]

A Monqui ranchería – a settlement whose population was usually 50 to 80 persons – was only a few hundred feet from where the Spanish decided to build the mission – with the only waterholes in the area between the two. The Spanish presence attracted more Indians; some were offered food in exchange for working and attending religious services, but the majority became hostile. On November 13, about 200 Indian men attacked the rudimentary fortress of the Spanish, launching arrows and rocks. The Spaniards fended them off with a mortar and two harquebusses. After about two hours, the attack ceased. Two Spaniards were slightly wounded and Salvatierra reported that they had killed and wounded several Indians.[4]

Two days later a Spanish ship with supplies and reinforcements, including a second Jesuit priest, Francisco María Piccolo. arrived and, with the help of native workers paid with food, the Spaniards quickly erected a walled fortress called the Real Presidio de Loreto (Royal Fort of Loreto) that became the mission headquarters. Sporadic resistance by the Monqui to the mission continued but after a confrontation on Easter Sunday 1698 in which several Indians were killed or wounded, the Monqui accepted the presence of the mission. By late 1698, a total of 27 men -- priests, religious helpers, and soldiers, staffed the mission.[5]

 
Natività della Beata Vergine Maria, Lady of Loreto, Marche, Italy main altar

Later history edit

 
View of Misión de Nuestra Señora de Loreto Conchó and presidio, 2013

The Loreto Mission would prove "worthless as a breadbasket" because of insufficient water to irrigate crops, but valuable as a base for expansion of the missionary enterprise and Spanish control of Baja California. The Spanish recognized that providing food to the Indians would draw them to the mission, but food had to be brought from the mainland of Mexico across the often stormy Gulf of California. Periodic shortages of food impacted the mission for decades. In 1699, the mission's need to find land suitable for agriculture led it to establish a new mission in a promising valley about 25 kilometres (16 mi) inland from Loreto at a place called Biaundó by the Cochimí Indian residents.[6] In succeeding years, with Loreto as the base, the Jesuits created several new missions in south-central Baja California and then in more remote portions of the peninsula both to the north and to the south.

Loreto mission's stone church, which still stands, was begun in 1740 and completed in 1744.[7] Loreto continued to be the headquarters for missionaries. even after the Jesuits were expelled from Baja California and replaced, first by the Franciscans in 1768 and then by the Dominicans in 1773. In 1769, the Loreto mission (now led by Franciscans under Junípero Serra) was the departure point for the land portion of the land/sea exploratory expedition led by Gaspar de Portolá. The joint military/missionary expedition traveled into today's U.S. state of California as far north as San Francisco Bay, establishing new Franciscan missions at Velicatá (Baja), San Diego and Monterey.

Mission Loreto came to an end in 1829, by which time the native population throughout Baja California had declined "to the point of near extinction."[8]

Population decline edit

 
Free sweaters donated by neighbors, 2015

By the end of 1698, one year after its founding, the Loreto mission had a population of about 100 Monqui families who had been converted to Christianity, nearly all of the Monqui who had lived along a 65-kilometre (40 mi) stretch of coast.This population of around 400 steadily decreased thereafter because of the toll from imported European diseases. By 1733, the Monqui population of Loreto was only 134 and the population was maintained thereafter at about that level only by bringing in Christian Indians from other parts of Baja California. In 1762, a Jesuit report recorded only 38 baptisms in the previous 18 years – but 309 deaths.[9]

At the same time as the Monqui population declined, the transplanted Spanish, mestizo, and Indian population of Loreto increased. In 1730, the Jesuits recorded the non-Monqui population of Loreto at 175, which included 99 men and their wives and children. The men were employed as soldiers, sailors, artisans, teamsters, and cowboys. By 1770, the total population of Loreto was more than 400, of whom only about 120 were Indians indigenous to Baja California. The Monqui as a people and distinct culture were virtually extinct.[10]

Gallery edit

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "Baja California Sur-Loreto". Instituto Nacional para el Federalismo y el Desarrollo Municipal. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  2. ^ "Loreto Directory and City Guide". Mexonline.com. Mexonline.com. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  3. ^ Weber, Francis J. (April 1967), "Jesuit Missions in Baja California", The Americas, Vol. 23, No. 4., pp. 412. Downloaded from JSTOR; Burckhalter, et al 19-20.
  4. ^ Crosby, Harry W. (1994), Antigua California: Mission and Colony on the Peninsular Frontier, 1697-1768, Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, pp. 29-33
  5. ^ Crosby, pp. 34-36, 38-39; Burkckhalter et al, p. 20
  6. ^ Crosby, 34-45
  7. ^ Burckhalter, David, Sedgwick, Mina, and Fontana, Bernard I. (2013), Baja California Missions, Tucson: University of Arizona Press, p. 28. Downloaded from Project MUSE.
  8. ^ Jackson, Robert H. (1981), "Epidemic Disease and Population Decline in the Baja California Missions", Southern California Quarterly, Vol 63, No. 4, p. 308. Downloaded from JSTOR.
  9. ^ Crosby, pp. 266–277
  10. ^ Crosby, pp. 276–277

References edit

  • Crosby, Harry W. 1994. Antigua California: Mission and Colony on the Peninsular Frontier, 1697–1768. University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.
  • León-Portilla, Miguel. 1997. Loreto's Key Role in the Early History of the Californias (1697–1773). California Mission Studies Association.
  • Salvatierra, Juan María. 1971.Selected Letters about Lower California. Edited by Ernest J. Burrus. Dawson's Book Shop, Los Angeles.
  • Vernon, Edward W. 2002. Las Misiones Antiguas: The Spanish Missions of Baja California, 1683–1855. Viejo Press, Santa Barbara, California.

External links edit


26°0′37″N 111°20′36″W / 26.01028°N 111.34333°W / 26.01028; -111.34333

misión, nuestra, señora, loreto, conchó, mission, loreto, founded, october, 1697, monqui, native, american, indian, settlement, conchó, city, loreto, baja, california, mexico, established, catholic, church, jesuit, missionary, juan, maría, salvatierra, loreto,. Mision de Nuestra Senora de Loreto Concho or Mission Loreto was founded on October 25 1697 at the Monqui Native American Indian settlement of Concho in the city of Loreto Baja California Sur Mexico Established by the Catholic Church s Jesuit missionary Juan Maria de Salvatierra Loreto was the first successful mission and Spanish town in Baja California Mission LoretoMission of Our Lady of Loreto ConchoMision de Nuestra Senora de Loreto ConchoMision de Nuestra Senora de Loreto Concho capilla presidio and bell towerLocationLoreto Baja California SurCountryMexicoDenominationRoman Catholic ChurchHistoryStatusChurchFoundedOctober 25th 1697Founder s Juan Maria de SalvatierraArchitectureFunctional statusJust Church functionsStyleBaroqueGroundbreaking1740Completed1744SpecificationsNumber of domes1MaterialsStoneAdministrationDivisionSpanish missions in the AmericasSubdivisionBaja CaliforniaThe mission with the exception of its essential Catholic church functions closed in 1829 Contents 1 History 1 1 Attempts 1 2 Founding 2 Later history 3 Population decline 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 External linksHistory editAttempts edit After Hernan Cortes initial unsuccessful 1535 attempt to found a colony in the Bay of Santa Cruz today s La Paz Baja California Sur the next 150 years were marked by further unsuccessful efforts to colonize Baja California The most nearly successful of these attempts was the 1683 1685 outpost at San Bruno only about 20 kilometers north of Loreto among the Cochimi This failure by Admiral Isidro de Atondo y Antillon and the Jesuit missionary Eusebio Francisco Kino led directly to the success at Loreto 12 years later After many unsuccessful ventures in Baja California the government of New Spain and the Spanish crown were reluctant to finance any further attempts However Kino s enthusiasm for this potential mission field was persistent He ultimately persuaded some of his colleagues including Salvatierra and the authorities in New Spain to allow the Jesuits to return to the peninsula but this time on their own responsibility and largely at their own expense By the start of 1697 everything was ready for the journey s start at the mouth of the Rio Yaqui River in Sonora Kino was unable to participate because an Indian rebellion in Sonora required his presence on the mainland Salvatierra would soon be joined at Loreto by Francisco Maria Piccolo and they were supported from the mainland by the procurador for the mission Juan de Ugarte nbsp Mision de Nuestra Senora de Loreto Concho in the 18th century Founding edit nbsp Loreto Mission in Baja California On October 19 1697 Salvatierra with nine armed men disembarked from the galley Santa Elvira at the place that the Indians called Coruncho Cochimi red coloured mangrove 1 2 The site was distinguished by a small patch of stunted shrubbery and a spring of fresh water both rare luxuries in that inhospitable country In the first days after their arrival the missionary erected a modest structure that served as a chapel to the front of which they affixed a wooden cross On October 25 they carried the image of the Virgin of Our Lady of Loreto in a solemn procession a ritual of faith that claimed the area as Spanish territory Thus began the Mission Loreto 3 A Monqui rancheria a settlement whose population was usually 50 to 80 persons was only a few hundred feet from where the Spanish decided to build the mission with the only waterholes in the area between the two The Spanish presence attracted more Indians some were offered food in exchange for working and attending religious services but the majority became hostile On November 13 about 200 Indian men attacked the rudimentary fortress of the Spanish launching arrows and rocks The Spaniards fended them off with a mortar and two harquebusses After about two hours the attack ceased Two Spaniards were slightly wounded and Salvatierra reported that they had killed and wounded several Indians 4 Two days later a Spanish ship with supplies and reinforcements including a second Jesuit priest Francisco Maria Piccolo arrived and with the help of native workers paid with food the Spaniards quickly erected a walled fortress called the Real Presidio de Loreto Royal Fort of Loreto that became the mission headquarters Sporadic resistance by the Monqui to the mission continued but after a confrontation on Easter Sunday 1698 in which several Indians were killed or wounded the Monqui accepted the presence of the mission By late 1698 a total of 27 men priests religious helpers and soldiers staffed the mission 5 nbsp Nativita della Beata Vergine Maria Lady of Loreto Marche Italy main altarLater history edit nbsp View of Mision de Nuestra Senora de Loreto Concho and presidio 2013The Loreto Mission would prove worthless as a breadbasket because of insufficient water to irrigate crops but valuable as a base for expansion of the missionary enterprise and Spanish control of Baja California The Spanish recognized that providing food to the Indians would draw them to the mission but food had to be brought from the mainland of Mexico across the often stormy Gulf of California Periodic shortages of food impacted the mission for decades In 1699 the mission s need to find land suitable for agriculture led it to establish a new mission in a promising valley about 25 kilometres 16 mi inland from Loreto at a place called Biaundo by the Cochimi Indian residents 6 In succeeding years with Loreto as the base the Jesuits created several new missions in south central Baja California and then in more remote portions of the peninsula both to the north and to the south Loreto mission s stone church which still stands was begun in 1740 and completed in 1744 7 Loreto continued to be the headquarters for missionaries even after the Jesuits were expelled from Baja California and replaced first by the Franciscans in 1768 and then by the Dominicans in 1773 In 1769 the Loreto mission now led by Franciscans under Junipero Serra was the departure point for the land portion of the land sea exploratory expedition led by Gaspar de Portola The joint military missionary expedition traveled into today s U S state of California as far north as San Francisco Bay establishing new Franciscan missions at Velicata Baja San Diego and Monterey Mission Loreto came to an end in 1829 by which time the native population throughout Baja California had declined to the point of near extinction 8 Population decline edit nbsp Free sweaters donated by neighbors 2015By the end of 1698 one year after its founding the Loreto mission had a population of about 100 Monqui families who had been converted to Christianity nearly all of the Monqui who had lived along a 65 kilometre 40 mi stretch of coast This population of around 400 steadily decreased thereafter because of the toll from imported European diseases By 1733 the Monqui population of Loreto was only 134 and the population was maintained thereafter at about that level only by bringing in Christian Indians from other parts of Baja California In 1762 a Jesuit report recorded only 38 baptisms in the previous 18 years but 309 deaths 9 At the same time as the Monqui population declined the transplanted Spanish mestizo and Indian population of Loreto increased In 1730 the Jesuits recorded the non Monqui population of Loreto at 175 which included 99 men and their wives and children The men were employed as soldiers sailors artisans teamsters and cowboys By 1770 the total population of Loreto was more than 400 of whom only about 120 were Indians indigenous to Baja California The Monqui as a people and distinct culture were virtually extinct 10 Gallery edit nbsp nbsp nbsp Detail of the facade nbsp Presidio arms nbsp Colonial regional rare religious artifacts nbsp Side view from plaza de armas nbsp Museum structure attached to presidio from plaza de armas nbsp Main nave nbsp InteriorSee also edit nbsp Mexico portalSpanish missions in Baja California Spanish missions in California Veneration of Mary in the Catholic Church Spanish colonization of the Americas Eusebio Kino USNS Mission Loreto AO 116 a Mission Buenaventura Class fleet oiler built during World War II List of Jesuit sitesFootnotes edit Baja California Sur Loreto Instituto Nacional para el Federalismo y el Desarrollo Municipal Retrieved 14 January 2022 Loreto Directory and City Guide Mexonline com Mexonline com Retrieved 14 January 2022 Weber Francis J April 1967 Jesuit Missions in Baja California The Americas Vol 23 No 4 pp 412 Downloaded from JSTOR Burckhalter et al 19 20 Crosby Harry W 1994 Antigua California Mission and Colony on the Peninsular Frontier 1697 1768 Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press pp 29 33 Crosby pp 34 36 38 39 Burkckhalter et al p 20 Crosby 34 45 Burckhalter David Sedgwick Mina and Fontana Bernard I 2013 Baja California Missions Tucson University of Arizona Press p 28 Downloaded from Project MUSE Jackson Robert H 1981 Epidemic Disease and Population Decline in the Baja California Missions Southern California Quarterly Vol 63 No 4 p 308 Downloaded from JSTOR Crosby pp 266 277 Crosby pp 276 277References editCrosby Harry W 1994 Antigua California Mission and Colony on the Peninsular Frontier 1697 1768 University of New Mexico Albuquerque Leon Portilla Miguel 1997 Loreto s Key Role in the Early History of the Californias 1697 1773 California Mission Studies Association Salvatierra Juan Maria 1971 Selected Letters about Lower California Edited by Ernest J Burrus Dawson s Book Shop Los Angeles Vernon Edward W 2002 Las Misiones Antiguas The Spanish Missions of Baja California 1683 1855 Viejo Press Santa Barbara California External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mision de Nuestra Senora de Loreto Concho 26 0 37 N 111 20 36 W 26 01028 N 111 34333 W 26 01028 111 34333 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mision de Nuestra Senora de Loreto Concho amp oldid 1112999931, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.