It was not until Father Eusebio Kino, a Jesuit, crossed the Baja California Peninsula, submitted a report with an accompanying map in 1705 that the idea of the island California called into question.
This is her-story and how peace, love and reverence for the Feminine Devine were lived in concordance with all of Nature and her Flora and Fauna.
- Kino's map was included in his influential report from 1705, Lettres Edifiantes et Curieuses, published in Paris.
- Kino's map was rich with new information about the Mer de la Californie.
- His view was not immediately accepted. It was only in 1746 when Fernando Consag, another Jesuit, sailed completely around the Gulf of California that was it accepted that California was indeed not an island, so decreed by King Ferdinand VI of Spain in 1747.
This is her-story and how peace, love and reverence for the Feminine Devine were lived in concordance with all of Nature and her Flora and Fauna.