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English: San Francisco Bay Area nine-county map, color coded by region: North Bay East Bay San Francisco ... California Bay Area county map.svg: Licensing. I, the ...
For instance, a Spanish map from 1548 depicts California as a peninsula, [8] while a 1622 Dutch map depicts California as an island. [citation needed] A 1626 Portuguese map depicts the land as a peninsula, [citation needed] while a 1630 British map depicts it as an island. [9] A French map from 1682 only shows the tip of the Baja Peninsula.
San Mateo: Todos Santos y San Antonio: 1841 Juan Alvarado: W.E.P. Hartnell: 20,772 acres (8,406 ha) 357 SD Santa Barbara: Quito: 1841 Juan Alvarado: José Zenon Fernandez and Jose Noriega: 13,310 acres (5,386 ha) 226 ND Cupertino, Saratoga: Santa Clara: Rincon de San Francisquito: 1841 Juan Alvarado: José Peña 8,418 acres (3,407 ha) 81 ND ...
California county map (labeled and colored).Map of California with labeled counties, colors added. Based on File:California county map (labeled).svg by User:Thadius856: Date: 8 September 2009, 23:19: Source: Own work Based on File:California county map (labeled).svg by User:Thadius856: Author: optigan13: Permission (Reusing this file)
San Miguel (Spanish for "St. Michael") is a unincorporated community in San Luis Obispo County, California, United States. As of the 2010 census, the population was 2,336. As of the 2010 census, the population was 2,336.
English: San Francisco Bay Area highlighted in red on a map of California. Polski: Mapa Kalifornii z podświetlonym na czerwono rejonem zatoki San Francisco. Date
Many coastal peninsulas of California are properly headlands and are often called points, as in Oxford English Dictionary's senses 19b "projecting part of anything of a more or less tapering form...a sharp prominence" and 22 "a promontory or cape; the tip of a piece of land running out to sea...frequently in place names."
The French soldiers explained that 100 additional soldiers were coming; the Spanish colonists, missionaries, and remaining soldiers abandoned the area and fled to San Antonio. [11] The Marquis de San Miguel de Aguayo volunteered to reconquer Spanish Texas and raised an army of 500 soldiers. [12] By July 1721, Aguayo reached the Neches River.