Jesuit priests arriving from Santa Cruz de la Sierra began evangelizing native peoples of the region in the 1670s. They set up a series of missions near the Mamoré River for this purpose beginning with Loreto. The principal mission was established at Trinidad in 1686.[1]
In Moxos, books provided the Jesuits with information
vital to the mission development.[2]
List of missions
Meireles (1989) lists the following Jesuit missions of Moxos along with their respective ethnic groups (tribes).[3]: 78–79 Founding dates and a few more additional missions are from Block (1994).[4]: 39
^Gott, Richard (1993). Land without evil: utopian journeys across the South American watershed. London; New York: Verso. p. 225. ISBN978-0-86091-398-6.
^Block, David, (1983). “Missionary Libraries on the Amazonian Frontier: The Jesuits in Moxos, 1680-1767.” Journal of Library History 18 (July): 292–303.
^Block, David (1994). Mission culture on the upper Amazon: native tradition, Jesuit enterprise, and secular policy in Moxos, 1660-1880. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN0-8032-1232-1..
^ abcCrevels, Mily. 2002. Speakers shift and languages die: An account of language death in Amazonian Bolivia. In Mily Crevels, Simon van de Kerke, Sérgio Meira & Hein van der Voort (eds.), Current Studies on South American Languages [Indigenous Languages of Latin America, 3], p. 9-30. Leiden: Research School of Asian, African, and Amerindian Studies (CNWS).