Achaguas
Achaguas is located in Venezuela
Achaguas
Achaguas
Coordinates: 7°46′0″N 68°14′0″W / 7.76667°N 68.23333°W / 7.76667; -68.23333
CountryVenezuelaVenezuela
StateApure
MunicipalityAchaguas
Founded1774
Population
  Demonym
Achagüense
Time zoneUTC−4 (VET)

Achaguas is a small town in Apure State in Venezuela, in the Achaguas Municipality. It is located 80 kilometres (50 mi) west of San Fernando de Apure, the capital city of the state.

Achaguas was founded in 1774 by Fray Alonso de Castro, and its name was taken from the native tribe The Achaguas. Formerly, it was called "Santa Bárbara de la Isla de los Achaguas". Since 1835, the miraculous wood-carved figure of "El Nazareno de Achaguas is venerated in its church ". This figure was a donation that General José Antonio Páez gave to the town in agreement to the victory obtained in the battle against the Spanish for the independence of Venezuela which were to take place in Carabobo (1821).[1]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.