The Riohacha area was long inhabited by American Indians of the
Wayuu culture, part of the larger
Arawak group. The first European to visit the area was the
Spanish sailor
Alonso de Ojeda in 1498, though he never landed. A short time later,
Juan de la Cosa, another Spanish explorer, landed on what is today called
Cabo de la Vela (Cape of the Sail, so called because of its shape). In 1535, the German explorer
Nikolaus Federmann founded a city with the name
Nuestra Señora Santa Maria de los Remedios del Cabo de la Vela (Our Lady Saint Mary of the Remedies of the Cape of the Sail) at the place where de la Cosa had landed. The Spanish discovered a vast amount of
pearls in the city's area. This treasure frequently attracted raids by
pirates. After the city was destroyed by a pirate raid, the city government relocated the city to the mouth of the
Ranchería River, in order to confuse the pirates, and to give the city time to rebuild before the next attack. The new city, named
Nuestra Señora de los Remedios del Río de la Hacha (Our Lady of the Remedies), expanded peacefully for a short time in its new location. Pirate attacks soon resumed. By 1564 British pirates led by
John Hawkins forced the Rio Hacha settlers to buy his cargo of African slaves and goods despite the trade was prohibited. He carried out a fake threat of force with the local governor's collusion as part of the Triangular trade. 1566: John Lovell attacked Rio Hacha. In 1568 John Hawkins and his second cousin Francis Drake attacked Rio Hacha again, forcing residents to buy his cargo. This included some of the 400 Africans he had captured and enslaved in West Africa. The next major attack, led by the English privateer
Francis Drake, took place in 1596, when Drake pillaged the city searching for
gold and pearls. In the 18th century, Riohacha was incorporated to the
Viceroyalty of New Granada as part of the province of
Santa Marta. During the battles for independence from
Spain, the port of Riohacha served many vessels fighting for Colombian and
Venezuelan independence. Many Riohachans also served in the revolutionary navy, most notably Admiral
José Prudencio Padilla, who would come to be considered a hero in the revolutions of Colombia and Venezuela. In 1954, Riohacha City acquired municipality status, and in 1964 was declared capital of the new
La Guajira Department. Image:Plaza Almirante Padilla.JPG|The Almirante Padilla Plaza in downtown Riohacha. Image:Riohacha.JPG|Riohacha Beach. ==Culture==