Mission Santa Barbara/Gallery: Difference between revisions
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imported>Robert A. Estremo No edit summary |
imported>Robert A. Estremo mNo edit summary |
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<gallery perrow=3 widths=300px heights=250px> | <gallery perrow=3 widths=300px heights=250px> | ||
Image:Baker Mission Santa Barbara.jpg|{{Baker Mission Santa Barbara.jpg/credit}}<br />The baker at Mission Santa Barbara. | Image:Baker Mission Santa Barbara.jpg|{{Baker Mission Santa Barbara.jpg/credit}}<br />The baker at Mission Santa Barbara. | ||
Image:Blacksmith Mission Santa Barbara.jpg|{{Blacksmith Mission Santa Barbara.jpg/credit}}<br />A blacksmith works at Mission Santa Barbara in 1898. | Image:Blacksmith Mission Santa Barbara.jpg|{{Blacksmith Mission Santa Barbara.jpg/credit}}<br />A blacksmith works at Mission Santa Barbara in 1898. | ||
Image:Mission Santa Barbara quadrangle.jpg|{{Mission Santa Barbara quadrangle.jpg/credit}}<br />The quadrangle and garden at Mission Santa Barbara in 1905. | |||
Image:Building a Mission.jpg|{{Building a Mission.jpg/credit}}<br />Construction of the first Santa Bárbara mission. | Image:Building a Mission.jpg|{{Building a Mission.jpg/credit}}<br />Construction of the first Santa Bárbara mission. | ||
Image:Battle-at-Mission-Santa-Barbara-in-1824.jpg|{{Battle-at-Mission-Santa-Barbara-in-1824.jpg/credit}}<br />The battle at Mission Santa Barbara in 1824. | Image:Battle-at-Mission-Santa-Barbara-in-1824.jpg|{{Battle-at-Mission-Santa-Barbara-in-1824.jpg/credit}}<br />The battle at Mission Santa Barbara in 1824. |
Revision as of 01:22, 26 November 2012
(CC) Photo: Robert A. Estremo
Stone "skull and crossbone" carvings denote the cemetery entrance at Mission Santa Barbara. Actual skulls and bones were long used to mark the entrances to Spanish cemeteries (campo santos). The practice, dating back many centuries, led to the symbol eventually becoming associated with the concept of death.