The San Antonio Missions are a group of five frontier mission complexes situated along a 12.4-kilometer (7.7-mile) stretch of the San Antonio River basin in southern Texas. The complexes were built in the early eighteenth century and as a group they illustrate the Spanish Crown’s efforts to colonize, evangelize and defend the northern frontier of New Spain. In addition to evangelizing the area’s indigenous population into converts loyal to the Catholic Church, the missions also included all the components required to establish self-sustaining, socio-economic communities loyal to the Spanish Crown.
Image by Tom Sramek Jr
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On a Mission - Dean Karnazes
May 18, 2008
San Francisco, CA, USA
May 28, 2008
San Diego, CA, USA
Dean Karnazes was inspired by his brother to run in the footsteps of the early settlers along the 21 historic Mission posts in California, from San Francisco to San Diego. The California missions were initiated by the Spanish king in the late 18th century to convert Native Americans to Catholicism and to expand European territory. The Spanish had already a few settlements in Mexico and departed from there to San Diego, to expanded further and spread their religion, architecture, art, language and economic growth in the region.But in the process, local Indian traditions, cultures and customs were lost.There were 21...
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