
Bourbon-Era Mission Reform
Author(s) -
Robert H. Jackson
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
estudios de historia novohispana
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1870-9060
pISSN - 2448-6922
DOI - 10.22201/iih.24486922e.2021.65.76411
Subject(s) - indigenous , plan (archaeology) , colonialism , resistance (ecology) , geography , political science , history , public administration , cartography , archaeology , ecology , biology
After the Spanish colonized California in 1769, Franciscans from the Apostolic College of San Fernando (Mexico City) established missions but implemented a new model to more rapidly integrate indigenous populations into colonial society as per the expectations of royal officials. The indigenous populations were to be congregated on mission communities organized on the grid plan and were to live in European-style housing. This article examines the reform of missions in the Sierra Gorda, Baja California, on the ex-Jesuit missions among the Guarani in South America, and then those in California among the Chumash. It analyzes the process of congregation and the mission urban plan, resistance, and demographic collapse resulting from congregation.