Diego de Losada painting by Antonio Herrera Toro, for article on Caracas founding

Diego de Losada founds the city of Caracas, Venezuela

On July 25, 1567 C.E., a Spanish captain named Diego de Losada drove stakes into a valley tucked behind a wall of mountains near the Caribbean coast and declared a new city. He called it Santiago de León de Caracas. The valley had been home to Indigenous peoples for generations. It would become one of the most significant capitals in the Western Hemisphere.

What the evidence shows

  • Caracas founding: Captain Diego de Losada formally established Santiago de León de Caracas on July 25, 1567 C.E., under commission from the Spanish colonial government.
  • Indigenous resistance: Multiple earlier attempts to settle the valley — by Francisco Fajardo in 1562 and Juan Rodríguez de Suárez in 1561 — were destroyed by local peoples led by chiefs Terepaima and Guaicaipuro.
  • Colonial geography: The site was chosen partly for its defensible mountain barrier, fertile agricultural land, and proximity to the coast — factors that would shape Caracas’s rise as a trading hub for centuries.

A valley that resisted colonization

The Caracas valley was not empty when Spanish settlers arrived. Indigenous communities had long inhabited the land, and they made the cost of settlement clear. Francisco Fajardo — himself the son of a Spanish captain and a Guaiqueri woman from Margarita island — tried to establish a plantation in the valley in 1562 C.E. Local peoples destroyed it. A separate attempt by Juan Rodríguez de Suárez in 1561 C.E. met the same fate. The resistance was organized and effective.

De Losada succeeded where others had failed by dividing the Indigenous groups and defeating them piecemeal — a military strategy as cold as it was calculated. The founding of Caracas was, from the outset, an act of displacement.

That context matters. The city’s origin is not simply a story of Spanish ambition planting itself in a fertile valley. It is also the story of a people who fought to hold onto their land and lost. Britannica’s account of Caracas and other historical sources confirm that the valley’s Indigenous inhabitants were actively subjugated — not simply bypassed — in the founding process.

Why this location made sense

Caracas sat in a narrow valley at roughly 900 meters above sea level, sheltered by the steep Cerro El Ávila mountain range to the north. That range rose more than 2,200 meters and separated the city from the Caribbean coast — a natural barrier that would, for most of the colonial period, protect Caracas from the pirate raids that plagued other coastal settlements in the region.

The valley’s climate was mild and reliable. The land supported both crops and livestock. Spanish colonists quickly recognized that a workforce — retained from the Indigenous population — could develop trade networks connecting Caracas to the Venezuelan interior and to the pearl-rich island of Margarita. Cotton and beeswax moved from inland towns through the valley and out to sea.

The location was not just practical. It was strategic in a broader imperial sense. Scholars of Latin American colonial urbanism have noted how Spanish settlement patterns in the Americas consistently prioritized defensibility, agricultural potential, and access to Indigenous labor — all of which the Caracas valley provided.

From small settlement to imperial capital

In 1577 C.E., just ten years after its founding, Caracas became the capital of Spain’s Venezuela Province. The city’s population grew slowly at first — it was barely large enough to support a handful of farms. But its position in the empire’s trade circuit solidified through an unlikely commodity: wheat.

In the 1580s C.E., Caracas residents began selling food by ship to Spanish soldiers stationed in Cartagena. Wheat was becoming expensive in the Iberian Peninsula. The Caracas valley’s farms filled a gap. By the early 17th century, cacao had emerged as another engine of growth, with Caraqueño merchants selling cacao beans first to Mexican buyers and then across the Caribbean.

That cacao economy came at a terrible price. Caracas became the first Spanish colonial city to shift from Indigenous forced labor to African enslaved labor — a grim distinction in the history of the hemisphere’s slave trade. The Library of Congress’s resources on Venezuelan colonial history trace how this economic pivot shaped the city’s social fabric for generations.

Lasting impact

Caracas grew into one of South America’s most consequential cities. By 1777 C.E., it was the capital of the newly created Captaincy General of Venezuela. It became the birthplace of the Venezuelan independence movement, with the 1797 Gual and España conspiracy and the 1811 Venezuelan Declaration of Independence both rooted in the city. Simón Bolívar, the liberator whose vision extended far beyond Venezuela, was born in Caracas in 1783 C.E.

In the 20th century, Venezuela’s oil boom transformed Caracas into one of Latin America’s wealthiest and most modern cities. The University City of Caracas, designed by architect Carlos Raúl Villanueva, was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2000 C.E. — a recognition of the city’s architectural contribution to modernism.

Today, the Metropolitan Region of Caracas holds more than five million people. Its stock exchange, its national oil company PDVSA, and its cultural institutions remain central to Venezuelan public life. The founding moment of 1567 C.E. set in motion more than four and a half centuries of history that has touched the entire hemisphere.

Blindspots and limits

The story of Caracas’s founding is overwhelmingly told through Spanish colonial records, which means the perspectives of Terepaima, Guaicaipuro, and the Indigenous communities who resisted settlement are fragmentary at best. What survives is largely filtered through the accounts of those who conquered them. The shift from Indigenous labor to African enslaved labor — a development the colonial records note almost in passing — represents one of the most consequential and underexamined aspects of the city’s early growth. Scholarship in Latin American studies continues to recover these histories, but significant gaps remain.

Caracas also carries forward deep structural inequalities from its colonial origins — inequalities that have contributed to the severe social and economic crises the city and country face today.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Caracas: History

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

About this article

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