Ana Soto

Indigenous warrior in present-day Venezuela (born 1668 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ana Soto or Anasoli (died 6 August 1668) was a Gayón warrior woman who became a chieftainess and led 2,000 warriors against the Spanish colonialists for fifty years in present-day Venezuela.

Ana Soto was born in the Spanish mission of Bobare. As a child, she witnessed the murder of her parents and other relatives by the conquistadors, but managed to escape to the mountains, where she became a warrior and chieftain. In 1618, together with her husband “El Tigre” and her niece Inguet Yio, in the territory of present-day Lara (state), she organized some 2,000 warriors to defend her territory, battles that lasted until her execution on 6 August 1668.[1][2]

In 2022, a request was made to transfer her remains to the National Pantheon of Venezuela.[3]

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