Title: Jesuit Missions of Chiquitos
1Jesuit Missions of Chiquitos
2Beginning in 1691, Jesuit missionaries
established missions in the Chiquitos and Moxos
regions of eastern Bolivia, among sedentatry
agriculturalists. San Francisco Javier founded in
1691 was the first. Eventually there were 10
missions in Chiquitos, and some 20 among the
Moxos.
3Typical Chiquitos house.
4Chiquitos homestead.
5At about the same time Jesuit missionaries also
began establishing missions in the Moxos region
(modern Beni) north of of Santa Cruz de la Sierra.
6Population of Moxos Missions
Population of the Mojos Missions in Selected Years
Mission 1717 1748
Desposorio 1,576 1,199
Santa Rosa 666 388
Loreto 1,768 1,054
San Francisco Xavier 1,990 1,710
San Pedro 2,864 3,296
Exaltacion de la Sta Cruz 1,684 1,593
San Ignacio 1,981 621
San Jose 1,008 686
San Luis Gonzaga 1,011 523
San Francisco de Borja 1,256 998
San Pablo 2,048 1,324
Los Santos Reyes 1,641 1,782
San Juan de Guarayos 581
Concepcion 2,152 2,803
San Joaquin 2,310 2,112
Santa Ana 1,394
Santa Maria Magdalena 3,112
San Martin 1,222
San Nicolas 1,816
San Miguel 3,444
San Simon 493
7Concepcion de Baures.
819th century diagram of Concepcion mission in
Moxos.
9San Ramon (Moxos).
10Santa Maria Magdalena.
11Exaltacion.
12Detail of church façade.
13Exaltacion (Moxos).
14San Joaquin.
15Trinidad.
16The Jesuits established ten missions in the
Chiquitos region. They were San Francisco
Xavier-1691, San Rafael-1696, San Jose-1697, San
Juan Bautista-1699, Concepcion-1706, San
Miguel-1721, San Ignacio-1748, Santiago-1754
Santa Ana-1755, Santa Corazon de Jesus-1760.
17The Jesuits settled thousands of natives to the
ten missions, and at the time of the Jesuit
expulsion in 1767 some 23,000 lived on the
missions.
18Rio de la Plata region and the Chiquitos missions
from a contemporary map.
19Close up of map showing the Chiquitos region.
20Chiquitos and Surrounding areas from a 1796 map.
21Mission Populations in Selected Years
Mission 1717 1743 1750
San Fran. Xavier 1,680 2,379 2,497
Concepcion 1,226 2,002 2,260
San Rafael 1,532 2,293 2,543
San Jose 1,953 2,375 2,803
San Miguel 3,000 1,972
San Juan Bautista 1,969 1,880
San Ignacio 683 1,694
22Population of the Chiquitos Missions in Selected
Years
23Population of San Javier Mission, 1713-1833.
24Population of Concepcion mission, 1714-1833.
25Population of San Rafael Mission, 1717-1833.
26Population of San Jose Mission, 1713-1833.
27Population of San Miguel Mission, 1735-1833.
28Population of San Juan Mission, 1718-1833
29Population of San Ignacio Mission, 1718-1847.
30Population of Santa Corazon Mission, 1761-1833.
31Population of Santa Ana Mission, 1755-1847.
32Population of Santiago Mission, 1755-1833.
33San Francisco Javier, the first mission
established in 1691. The church was built
1749-1752.
34Mission Church.
35Close up of church façade.
36Interior of the Church.
37Cloister.
38Cloister.
39Cloister.
40Concepcion established in 1709. The church dates
to 1752-1756.
41Church.
42A second view of the church.
43Another view of the church.
44Detail of the façade of the church.
45Interior of church.
46Cloister.
47Cloister.
48Cloister.
49Belltower.
50Santa Ana established in 1755.
51Mission church.
52Detail of the church.
53Cloister.
54Exposed wall of Santa Ana church showing building
techniques.
55San Rafael established in 1696. The church dates
to 1745-1749.
56Interior of the Church.
57San Rafael belltower.
58San Miguel established in 1721.
59San Miguel.
60Cloister.
61San Jose established in 1698. The church dates to
1740.
62San Jose.
63San Jose.
64Church from cloister.
65Detail of cloister.
66Detail of cloister.
67Detail of cloister.
6819th Century Diagram of San Jose Mission.
6919th Century drawing of San Jose.
70San Ignacio de Velasco established in 1748. View
of colonial-era church torn down in 1948.
71Reconstructed church at San Ignacio.
72Tower from the church of San Juan Bautista
mission.
73Religious motifs from missions.
74UNESCO has added the Chiquitos missions to its
Cultural Heritage list, which hopefully will
insure the survival of these historical
structures.
75I would like to thank REDFISH.TO/BOLIVIA for
permission to use photographs of the Chiquitos
missions. I would like to thank Cynthia Radding
who provided population data used in this
PowerPoint, along with the Archivo y Biblioteca
Nacionales de Bolivia, and to Ariel Yablon,
Assistant Professor at the University of New
England (Maine), who was Dr. Raddings research
assistant who helped put the population tables
together.