Some Apalachees had requested friars in 1607…
1633 CE
Some Apalachees had requested friars in 1607 and the first ones had visited in the following year.
Apalachee acceptance of the priests may have related to social stresses, as they had lost population to infectious diseases brought unwittingly by the Europeans, to which they had no natural immunity.
Many Apalachees have converted to Catholicism, in the process creating a syncretic fashioning of their traditions and Christianity.
The Apalachees in 1612 had made a formal request for a mission but the Spanish had not obliged.
The Apalachees had begun in 1625 to send food supplies overland to St. Augustine, the major point of Spanish control over shipping and defense of La Florida.
The Spanish, however, need the densely populated and extremely fertile Apalachee Province to provide labor and provisions for St. Augustine.
Pedro Muñoz and Francisco Martínez in 1633 launch a formal mission effort in Apalachee Province.
Located in the descendant settlement of Anhaica (also as Anhayca Apalache or Inihayca), the capital of Apalachee Province, the mission is part of Spain's effort to colonize the region, and convert the Timucuan and Apalachee natives to Christianity.