. Bulletin. Ethnology. 446 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO SAN LORENZO [b. a. e. Indians in the neighborhood of this mission belong to the Shoshonean lin- guistic stock and are known as Juanenos (q. v.), though it is probable that the mission included neophytes from more distant groups. ( f. h. a. b. l. ) Quanis Savit.—Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Feb. 22, 1860 (the name of the site of San Juan Capistrano mission). Sajirit,—Bancroft, Hist. Cal., i, 304, 1886 (native name of mission site). San Capis- trano.—Shea, Cath. Miss., 98, 1855. San Juan Capestrano.—Hale, Ethnog. and Philol., 222,1846. San Juan Capistrano
. Bulletin. Ethnology. 446 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO SAN LORENZO [b. a. e. Indians in the neighborhood of this mission belong to the Shoshonean lin- guistic stock and are known as Juanenos (q. v.), though it is probable that the mission included neophytes from more distant groups. ( f. h. a. b. l. ) Quanis Savit.—Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Feb. 22, 1860 (the name of the site of San Juan Capistrano mission). Sajirit,—Bancroft, Hist. Cal., i, 304, 1886 (native name of mission site). San Capis- trano.—Shea, Cath. Miss., 98, 1855. San Juan Capestrano.—Hale, Ethnog. and Philol., 222,1846. San Juan Capistrano.—Proper name of mission. San Juan Capistrano. A mission estab- lished in 1731 on San Antonio r.^ about 7 m. below the present San Antonio, Texas, under the protection of of San Antonio de Bejar. Prior to this time it was situated between Trinity and Neches rs., and was known as San Jose de los Nazones (q. v.). The population was 203 in 1762, up to which time there had been 847 baptisms. The mission contained also 1,000 cattle, 500 horses,. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO MISSION, TEXAS and 3,500 sheep. The inhabitants had become reduced to 58 in 1785, and to only 34 in 1793. It ceased to exist as an inde- pendent mission before the close of the century. See Bancroft, No. Mex. States, I, 1886"; Garrison, Texas, 1903. San Juan de Dios (Saint John of God). A former mission on the w. side of Lower Cahfornia. Guiricata.—Clavigero, Storia della Cal., ir, 173, 1789. St. John of God.—Shea, Cath. , 90, 1855. San Juan de los Jemez. A mission or the visita of a mission established by the Franciscans between 1627 and 1680 at one of the pueblos of the Jemez, probably Amushungkwa (q. v.), at the junction of the Guadalupe and San Diego branches of Jemez r., in i^. central New Mexico. It contained a church. See Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 208, 1893. San Juan de los Jemes—Lara (lG',)(i) quoted by Bandelier, op. cit., 209. San Juan de los Jemez.— Doc. of 1
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