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Reply to Aschmann
E. N. Anderson, University of California, Riverside
ABSTRACT: I am very grateful to Professor Aschmann
for correcting my more speculative flights. It is,
of course, true that the Jesuit and Dominican
missions killed off the native populations as
fast as the Franciscans did, and that the Jesuits
were out of the field by 1769. My impression is
still that overall Jesuit policy was relatively
mild—cf. the well-known experiment with
Utopian planning among the Indians in Paraguay,
for instance—and that this relatively
mild policy was one of the reasons for their
downfall in the New World. Their record in
Baja California was certainly a sad one, however.
As to the Dominicans, my memory seems
to have simply played me false. It appears that
things were even worse than I thought for the
unfortunate missionized Indians of the Californias!
KEYWORDS: ethnology, archaeology, ethnohistory, native peoples
SUGGESTED CITATION: E. N. Anderson
(1977)
"Reply to Aschmann",
The Journal of California Anthropology:
Vol. 4:
No. 1,
Article 19.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/ucmercedlibrary/jca/vol4/iss1/art19
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