Visita de Calamajué explained

Visita de Calamajué
Location:San Quintín Municipality, Baja California, Mexico
Originalname:Visita de Calamajué
Foundedby:Ferdinand Konščak and Wenceslaus Linck
Foundingorder:Jesuits
Nativetribe:Cochimí
Coordinates:29.4211°N -114.195°W

The Visita de Calamajué was a Catholic visita located in the indigenous Cochimí settlement of Calamajué in Baja California, Mexico. The visita was founded by Jesuit missionaries Ferdinand Konščak and Wenceslaus Linck in October 1766 as an extension of Misión San Francisco Borja.

History

About 90 kilometers north of San Borja, Calamajué was found by the Jesuit missionary-explorer Ferdinand Konščak in 1751 and revisited in 1766 by Wenceslaus Linck. It was intended to become the site of Mission Santa María.

In October 1766, the Jesuits founded their 17th mission here. In just a few months, the crops failed due to the highly mineralized water available. However, a more suitable site for the mission was found about 50 kilometers farther north, at Cabujakaamung, following seven months of mission activity at Calamajué.

Calamajué also served as a estancia along El Camino Real Misionero between Misión San Francisco Borja and Misión Santa María de los Ángeles.

Preservation

Today, a complex of adobe ruins and rock corrals are all that remain of the original visita.

See also

References

M&E BOOKS, El Cajon, California.