Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Jesuit Missions of the Chiquitos' has mentioned 'Town' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Three other former Jesuit missionsxc2xa0xe2x80x93 San Juan Bautista (now in ruins), Santo Corazxc3xb3n and Santiago de Chiquitosxc2xa0xe2x80x93 which have not been named UNESCO heritage sitesxc2xa0 xe2x80x93 lie east of San Josxc3xa9 de Chiquitos not far from the town of Roborxc3xa9.
Two of these missionary orders were the Franciscans and the Jesuits, both of which eventually arrived in the frontier town of Santa Cruz de la Sierra and then in the Chiquitania.
In 1592 the settlement had to be moved 250 kilometres (160xc2xa0mi) west because of conflicts with natives, although the remains of the original town exist in the Santa Cruz la Vieja archaeological site.
Behind the wall and away from the plaza would have been the patio with living quarters for the priests or visitors, rooms for town council matters, for music and storage, as well as workshops, which often were arranged around a second patio.
Once a settlement had been established, the missionaries, working with the native population, began to erect the church, which served as the educational, cultural and economic center of the town.
The reductions were self-sufficient indigenous communities of 2,000xe2x80x934,000 inhabitants, usually headed by two Jesuit priests and the cabildo (town council and cacique (tribal leader), who retained their functions and played the role of intermediaries between the native peoples and the Jesuits.
Therefore, the missionaries are town counsellors and judges, doctors, bleeders, masons, carpenters, ironsmiths, locksmiths, shoemakers, tailors, millers, backers, cooks, shepherds, gardeners, painters, sculptors, turners, carriage makers, brick makers, potters, weavers, tanners, wax and candle makers, tinsmiths, and any artisans which may be required in a republic.xe2x80x9c
For example, the towns of San Rafael de Velasco, San Miguel de Velasco, Santa Ana de Velasco and San Ignacio de Velasco have functioning town councils (cabildos), and the caciques and the sexton still retain their capacities.
As of 2011, San Josxc3xa9 de Chiquitos, San Xavier and Concepcixc3xb3n have around 10,000xc2xa0inhabitants each; and San Ignacio de Velasco, the largest town in the Chiquitania, has about 35,000 and is now boasts a campus of a national university.
[46] According to a report published by the "Coordinadora Interinstitucional de la Provincia Velasco" in 2007, 17,381 people visited San Ignacio de Velasco, the largest town in the region, as tourists in 2006.