Indigenous warriors across Latin America developed diverse resistance strategies against Spanish conquest, ranging from guerrilla warfare and coalition-building to tactical adaptation of enemy methods. The most successful resistance movements combined military innovation with political organization, as demonstrated by Tupac Amaru the Second's multi-regional rebellion and Lautaro's adaptation of Spanish cavalry tactics. These warriors not only fought but also built structured movements with administrative systems, demonstrating that effective resistance required both military capability and political organization to challenge colonial power.
Deep Dive
Prerequisite Knowledge
- No data available.
Where to go next
- No data available.
Deep Dive
12 Deadliest Native WARRIORS of Latin America [RANKED]Added:
Which Mapuche warrior captured and killed the governor of Chile? Which warrior studied Spanish tactics and beat them at their own game? Find out now as we load the 12 deadliest indigenous warriors from the jungles of Mesoamerica to the peaks of the Andes.
First up, Hatuey, the warrior who saw the Spanish coming before anyone else and refused to go down quietly. Hatuey was a Taíno chieftain from Hispaniola.
By 1511, he had already watched the Spanish erase his island, so he didn't wait for them to come to Cuba. He crossed the sea ahead of the conquest, warned the Cuban Taíno what was coming, and started organizing a resistance before the enemy even landed. With just a few hundred warriors, no armor, no horses, no firearms, Hatuey was running starter gear against a fully equipped opponent. He used terrain and surprise as his only real advantages. Hit-and-run raids through eastern Cuba's dense forests, he confined the Spanish to Baracoa and killed at least eight soldiers before an informant gave up his position. The Spanish captured him in 1512 and burned him at the stake. Player eliminated.
And well, that was the whole campaign. A few hundred fighters, eight confirmed kills, and a symbol that outlasted the man himself.
>> [music] >> I rank Hatuey tier four because he was the first to fight back in the Caribbean and the first to die for it. But, a handful of casualties don't change the trajectory of a conquest. What he left behind was a legacy of defiance, not a kill count.
Before we move forward, if this mission has your attention, pledge your loyalty and strike that subscribe button. We rank history's deadliest warriors every week.
Next, Cuitlahuac, the emperor who turned one night into the worst defeat the Spanish suffered in the Americas.
Cuitlahuac was Moctezuma's brother and his successor.
When Hernán Cortés fled to Tenochtitlan in June 1520, Cuitlahuac didn't let him walk away clean. He set up the perfect ambush, funneled the retreating Spanish column into narrow lake causeways, and hit them from every angle simultaneously.
Boats on the water, warriors on the rooftops, attackers at both ends of the causeway. No escape route. It's a trap.
Between 800 and 1,200 Spaniards drowned or were cut down that night, along with thousands of their Tlaxcalan allies.
Cortez wept under a tree. That night is still called La Noche Triste, the night of sorrows. Tenochtitlan was free, but Cuitlahuac contracted smallpox and was logged off within months. He never got to press the advantage.
I'm going to quit Cuitlahuac at tier three because La Noche Triste was a critical hit. He turned the city into a kill zone, but burst damage with no follow-through only gets you so far.
High peak, near zero end game.
Now, Cuauhtémoc, the last emperor who fought a losing battle and made the Spanish pay for every inch. Cuauhtémoc took the Aztec throne in late 1520 after smallpox killed Cuitlahuac. By the time he was seated, Cortez was already regrouping. By May 1521, the Spanish returned with combined Spanish Tlaxcalan force and began the final siege of Tenochtitlan.
Cuauhtémoc had no path to victory. He fought anyway. His warriors defended every causeway, canal, and rooftop for 3 months. They destroyed bridges behind the advancing Spanish to slow the push.
They launched javelins from the waterline, fired from elevated positions, and gave up no ground without [music] extracting casualties. No healing items, no reinforcements incoming, HP draining by the day. Before the city finally fell, the The and their Tlaxcalan allies lost between 450 and 860 soldiers and an estimated 20,000 native allies. Cuauhtémoc was captured on a canoe, still organized and still commanding. He asked Cortés for a quick death. Instead, Cortés had his feet soaked in oil and held over an open flame. He survived the torture. He spent four more years as a prisoner before Cortés finally had him hanged on the road to Honduras.
I rank Cuauhtémoc tier three because he fought with everything at his disposal under impossible conditions and made the Spanish bleed on every street for it.
But, a siege defense with no resupply and no reinforcements is an end game with no win condition and caps out in the middle tier.
Next, Tecun Uman, the warrior who faced the wrong enemy with the wrong build and still became a legend.
In February 1524, Pedro de Alvarado pushed into the Maya highlands with Spanish cavalry, infantry, and thousands of Mexican auxiliaries. Tecun Uman assembled roughly 8,400 K'iche' warriors and met them head-on at El Pinar near Kumarka.
The K'iche' fought the only way they knew how. Archer lines, massed formations, javelin volleys. None of it had an answer for Spanish cavalry though. Horses weren't in their meta.
The charge broke the K'iche' line. Tecun Uman was killed in the fighting. Spanish accounts credit Alvarado personally and the K'iche' resistance collapsed immediately. The highlands fell within weeks. He never adapted.
I rank Tecun Uman tier four because the courage was real, but the strategy wasn't. He met a technologically superior force without adaptation and without terrain advantage. One engagement, [music] one total collapse. He's near the bottom in combat output and last in impact. The legend outlasted the campaign because the man died fighting, and that does count for something, [music] just not enough to move him up the leaderboard.
Now, Urracá, the one the Spanish could never get a hit marker on.
Urracá was a Ngäbe cacique from Panama's Veraguas Islands. When the Spanish pushed into his territory in 1519, he didn't meet them in the open field. He pulled back into the mountains, turned the jungle into his home map, and ran one of the first sustained guerrilla campaigns in colonial history.
He hit Spanish supply columns, ambushed small detachments, and forced multiple expeditions to retreat without ever establishing a foothold. He built alliances across traditionally rival tribes to extend his operational range.
He fed the Spanish false intelligence about gold deposits to lure them into ambush positions, running disinformation like an in-game trap. In 1522, the Spanish captured him under truce and shipped him to Nombre de Dios. He escaped. [music] Then, he fought for 11 more years. He died of natural causes in 1531.
The Spanish never beat him.
I rank Urracá tier two because his sustained consistency over two decades is nearly unmatched on this list. He repeatedly faced well-equipped Spanish expeditions and denied them a decisive win. What holds him back here is scale.
A few hundred fighters can farm forever without threatening the broader colonial machine. Durability without progress has a ceiling.
Next, Lempira, the cacique who assembled a party of 200 towns and single-handedly held off a conquest.
Lempira was a Lenca chieftain from the Curquin mountains of western Honduras.
In 1537, when Francisco de Montejo's Spanish forces advanced into Lenca territory, Lempira did something rare.
He got 200 Lenca towns to stop fighting each other, unified them under a single command, and put 30,000 warriors on the field. He positioned his headquarters inside the natural fortress of Penol de Cerquin, high ground that the Spanish couldn't breach by force. From there, he ran hit-and-run operations against supply lines, forced repeated stalemates, and held the coalition together for months under sustained pressure. The Spanish couldn't beat him in the field, so one day they stopped trying. [music] They invited him to a peace negotiation and shot him during the parlay. Some accounts credit Captain Rodrigo Ruiz with the shot. Lempira was dead before he hit the ground. The rebellion collapsed the same day. I rank Lempira tier two, because what he built, 200 towns, one unified command, months of organized resistance, was a genuine achievement for the time and place. But, [music] the moment he was removed, the whole party was wiped.
Now, Manco Inca, the puppet emperor who turned on his handlers and nearly drove the Spanish out of the Andes. In 1533, Francisco Pizarro needed a face on the Inca throne, someone with royal blood who would give the Spanish occupation of the veneer of legitimacy while they looted the empire. He chose Manco Inca, a young prince from the royal line.
Manco held the title, Pizarro held the power. Classic puppet account. Admin privileges on the outside, read-only access in reality. That arrangement lasted three years. In 1536, Manco escaped Spanish custody and activated the full Inca administrative system. He raised an estimated 100,000 to 200,000 warriors across the Andes and besieged Cusco. The Spanish garrison inside numbered fewer than 200 men.
The siege lasted nearly 10 months.
>> [music] >> At the same time, he dispatched a second army toward Lima, a two-front strategy designed to split the Spanish across the entire map. At Ollantaytambo, he repelled a Spanish relief column and drove them back into the valley. But, [music] he couldn't seal the deal.
Reinforcements arrived from Panama and the Caribbean. He withdrew to the mountain fortress of Vilcabamba, re-established a secondary base, and kept guerrilla warfare alive for another eight years before being assassinated by Spanish fugitives he'd sheltered.
I rank Manco Inca tier two because he held the Spanish under genuine threat longer than almost anyone in the Andes.
But, his failure to finish Cusco when the window was open keeps him from ranking any higher.
Now, Lautaro, the insider who farmed the enemy's intel and turned it into a weapon.
>> [music] >> Lautaro grew up inside the Spanish machine. As a young Mapuche man, he served Pedro de Valdivia, the governor [music] of Chile, and spent years watching how the Spanish fought, their cavalry formations, their command structure, their pressure points. In 1551, he escaped captivity and went back to Mapuche and taught them everything he learned. He didn't just copy what he'd seen. He adapted it. He trained Mapuche cavalry units. He introduced disciplined multi-division formations that the Spanish had never encountered from an indigenous force. He studied the meta, switched his build, and ran Spanish tactics right back at the Spanish.
On Christmas Day, 1553, he led roughly 6,000 warriors in a coordinated multi-wave ambush against Valdivia's garrison at Tucapel.
Every wave hit before the previous one could be answered. Valdivia's entire force was wiped out. Valdivia himself was captured and killed. The governor of Chile, the boss of the whole campaign, dead in the field. Two months later at Marigueño, Lautaro assembled 8,000 to 10,000 warriors in flanking divisions and destroyed the next Spanish column sent against him. He burned the settlement of Concepción and pressed the Spanish further north towards Santiago.
He was then betrayed and killed in his camp at Montequino in 1557 mid-campaign.
I rank Lautaro number two because he was the most complete battlefield commander on this list. He learned the enemy system, rebuilt his own military to counter it, and killed the Spanish governor of Chile in direct engagement.
He's the only warrior here who defeated the Spanish not by avoiding them, but by out-soldiering them.
Next, Caupolicán, the successor who inherited Lautaro's war and couldn't replicate his precision. After Lautaro's death, Caupolicán took command of the Mapuche resistance. He had the numbers.
In late 1557, he assembled roughly 15,000 warriors, the largest Mapuche force of the war, and launched a dawn assault on the Spanish camp at the Battle of Mia Rapue. The Spanish had 600 soldiers, cavalry, and cannon. The cannons answered first. The assault [music] was repelled. Caupolicán regrouped and laid siege to Fort Cañete with the same force.
>> [music] >> To breach it, he sent a fake deserter inside to open the gates. The Spanish commander had already anticipated the move. The raiding party entered and was massacred. Most of Caupolicán's 15,000 died in the failed storming. He was captured days later and executed by impalement. I rank Caupolicán tier three because the scale of his commitment kept Mapuche resistance alive after Lautaro.
But, both of his major operations failed. High team comp, low game sense.
Now, Guaicaipuro, the Carib who united rival factions into a coalition and hit the Spanish where it hurt. Guaicaipuro was a Carib cacique from the Caracas and Teques tribes in present-day Venezuela.
When the Spanish began mining gold on Caribbean land in the 1560s, he pulled together tribes that had historically always been enemies, built a coalition, and launched a coordinated counterattack. His most decisive strike was a dawn raid on the Spanish mining operation in Teques territory. His warriors hit the camp before the Spanish could react. Every miner on site was killed, including the young sons of the colonial governor.
Full squad wipe, no survivors. The attack sent shockwaves through the Spanish command in the region. For years, he continued harassing Spanish settlement attempts using the highland terrain as cover. The Spanish couldn't root him out directly. In 1568, Governor Diego de Losada sent a column with indigenous guides who knew the terrain.
They located Guaicaipuro's compound, surrounded it, and set it on fire. He was killed in the blaze. Environmental damage.
I rank Guaicaipuro tier four because his coalition building and tactical strikes were effective, but the scale was limited. Strong locally, but not a threat to the broader colonial machine.
Before we enter the final tier, if this campaign has your XP bar flashing, hit subscribe. We break down history's deadliest warriors every week. Don't miss the next one.
At number one, Tupac Amaru the Second, the man who came closest to dismantling Spanish colonial rule in the Americas.
Jose Gabriel Condorcanqui was an Andean nobleman with documented Inca lineage.
In November 1780, he executed a corrupt Spanish governor, declared himself Sapa Inca, the rightful ruler of the Andes, and triggered the largest anti-colonial uprising in the Americas.
He didn't just lead a revolt, he built a faction. He issued formal decrees abolishing the mita forced labor system, declaring freedom from tribute payments to recruit indigenous and mestizo populations into a structured, multi-regional confederation.
At peak mobilization, estimates put his rebel forces at 40,000 to 100,000 fighters spread across multiple Andean regions.
He coordinated with Tupac Katari's simultaneous revolt in Alto Peru, linking two active campaigns on the same server. His forces proved they could win in the open field. At the Battle of Sangarará in November 1780, his army destroyed a Spanish royalist force, a clean engagement win that proved an organized indigenous rebellion could beat European-trained troops. The Spanish responded with everything available. Reinforcements from Lima and Buenos Aires, total war tactics, mass executions across rebel communities.
Tupac Amaru the Second was captured on May 1781. His execution was engineered as a public spectacle. Torture, forced witnessing of his family members' deaths, and then quartering.
>> [music] >> The Spanish wanted the symbol deleted as permanently as the man himself. I rank Tupac Amaru the Second number one because no one else on this list threatened the architecture of colonial rule itself. He was the only one who built a multi-region rebellion with real administrative teeth, real field victories, and a coordinated second front running simultaneously.
The scale, the structure, and the reach, nothing else on this list comes close.
And finally, Tupac Katari, the market vendor who held the city of La Paz under siege for 109 days.
Julian Apaza had no noble lineage, no military rank, no formal training. He was an Aymara market vendor from Bolivia's Altiplano.
In 1781, coordinating with Tupac Amaru the Second's broader Andean revolt, he renamed himself Tupac Katari after two executed resistance leaders, raised roughly 40,000 Aymara and Quechua fighters, and encircled La Paz. The siege began on March 1781. He positioned forces around the entire city and the adjacent heights of El Alto, blocking every supply route into La Paz simultaneously.
>> [music] >> Colonial records report approximately 20,000 deaths inside the city over the course of the siege. Soldiers, allied fighters, and civilians lost to combat, starvation, and disease.
>> [music] >> He organized multiple siege divisions with his wife, Bartolina Sisa, and his sister, Gregoria Apaza, each commanding separate sectors. A market vendor with no institutional backing was running a multi-squad siege operation above 20,000 feet in the Andes. A Spanish relief column eventually broke the encirclement using amnesty offers to fracture rebel factions. Subordinates betrayed Katari in November 1781. He was captured and executed. His reported last words, "I will return as millions," became a rallying cry across the Andes for generations, a respawn threat the Spanish couldn't patch out. I rank Tupac Katari number three because the La Paz siege was the most sustained urban military blockade carried out by any indigenous commander in the Americas. He projected an organized force with no institutional resources and held an entire colonial city on the edge for over three months. The only separation from the top two is scale. Amaru touched more of the continent and Lautaro achieved cleaner battlefield results.
And those were the 12 deadliest indigenous warriors who defied conquest.
From Hatuey burning in Baracoa to Tupac Katari's 109-day siege above the Andean Altiplano, these warriors didn't just resist. They adapted, organized, and hit back with whatever loadout they had against one of the most powerful empires of their era. But, history debates never really end. So, now the question goes to you. Which warrior do you think should be ranked higher? Did we miss someone who deserved a spot on this leaderboard?
Drop your verdicts in the comments. No mercy. And choose your character.
Related Videos
They Said Flight Was Impossible—Then Two Bicycle Mechanics Changed Everything#wrightbrothers
umars997
526 views•2026-05-30
#SeamansAct1915 #MaritimeHistory #LifeAtSea #BoatShitCrazyX #SaferWorkEnvironment
BoatShitCrazyX
859 views•2026-06-01
Black Women Were Banned From White Suffrage Groups
Peoplediduknow
782 views•2026-05-31
A Volcano Created Frankenstein — And Killed Summer for a Year
TheDarkSideOfSmth
389 views•2026-05-29
Born into slavery in Beaufort
RoadsanRoots
613 views•2026-05-31
50.32 Judah And Israel Split / Jeroboam's False Religion - 2 Chronicles ch. 10-11
smyrnachristianchurchkokomo
107 views•2026-05-29
Iran's Secret Society Wrote the Constitution — Then Got Hanged for It
TheShadowLecture
502 views•2026-05-29
How the Qing Dynasty's Imperial Harem System Actually Worked
HiddenTime360
580 views•2026-05-28











