(Redirected from Darién, Panama)'Santa María la Antigua del Darién' was a settlement established in
1510 by
Spanish explorer
Vasco Núñez de Balboa on the
Caribbean coast of what is now Uraba region,
Colombia. It was one of the first
European colonies founded on the mainland of the
Americas after the voyages of
Christopher Columbus. It was originally the village of the chief Cémaco and his people, who were driven out by Balboa. It was probably located in what is now
Darien National Park.
[1]
After
Pedrarias Dávila founded
Panama City in
1519, Santa María la Antigua del Darién was abandoned and in
1524 was attacked and burned by the indigenous people.
Darien is a wild region located in the eastern extreme of the country bordering with Colombia on the east, Kuna Yala (San Blas) in the north, the Pacific Ocean on the south and the Province of Panama in the northwest. It was also the site of the
Darién scheme, a
Scottish colonisation project.