For almost five centuries, explorers, adventurers and swindlers chased through this jungle a lost city of gold: the White City, the 'City of the Monkey God.' In 2015, an overflight using LiDAR technology found, beneath the canopy, the traces of real pre-Columbian settlements that no one had documented. Few regions of the Americas hold so much mystery and so much living history as La Mosquitia, the last great jungle of Honduras. And that history begins with its peoples. La Mosquitia has been inhabited since pre-Hispanic times by various Indigenous peoples who, to this day, maintain their presence and their cultures in this vast region of jungle, rivers and coast. The most numerous and emblematic people are the Miskito, who give the region its name (and the historic 'Mosquito Coast' that also extends into Nicaragua), inhabitants of the coast, the lagoons and the rivers, with their own language (Miskito) and a culture tied to fishing, navigation and riverside life.
In the interior lands, in the deep jungle, live the Pech (also called Payas) and the Tawahka (or Sumo), peoples who preserve traditions, languages and ancestral knowledge about the jungle, and whose ways of life depend on the river, hunting, fishing and subsistence agriculture. Later, on the coast, Garifuna communities also joined, the Afro-Caribbean people who spread along the entire Caribbean coast of Honduras from the late 18th century.
This wealth of peoples —Miskito, Pech, Tawahka and Garifuna— coexists with the nature of La Mosquitia in an age-old relationship, and it is precisely this combination of biological and cultural diversity that led the region's central reserve to be named the 'Reserve of Man and the Biosphere.' The Indigenous peoples are, to a large extent, the ancestral guardians of this jungle and protagonists of its history, from long before the arrival of the Europeans to the present day.
The jungle of La Mosquitia holds one of the great archaeological mysteries of the Americas: the legend of the White City (also known as the City of the Monkey God or 'Lost City'), a mythical settlement lost in the deep jungle spoken of since the colonial era. For centuries, tales, Indigenous legends and chronicles fed the idea of the existence of a great city or civilization hidden in the thicket, which prompted numerous expeditions, searches and myths over time.
Beyond the legend, the region preserves real archaeological remains: petroglyphs (rock carvings) along the rivers, especially in the Las Marías area on the Río Plátano, and evidence of ancient inhabitants. In recent years, archaeological explorations that used modern technology (such as aerial LiDAR laser scanning) revealed discoveries of ancient settlements, structures and remains in the remote jungle, which enormously rekindled interest and debate about the pre-Hispanic civilizations that inhabited this territory.
These discoveries suggest that ancient cultures more complex than previously thought flourished in the jungle of La Mosquitia, though the subject remains surrounded by mystery and scientific discussion, and many areas remain unexplored and protected. The legend of the White City and the archaeological findings add to La Mosquitia an aura of a territory still to be discovered, where wild nature intertwines with the enigmas of the human past, in one of the most fascinating and mysterious corners of the continent.
During the colonial era, La Mosquitia (part of the historic Mosquito Coast, which also extends into present-day Nicaragua) remained largely outside the effective control of the Spanish Crown. The dense jungle, the lack of roads and the resistance of the Indigenous peoples kept the region apart from the colonial rule that was indeed exercised over the rest of Honduras.
In this context, the Miskito established alliances with the British, who had interests in the western Caribbean and exerted influence over the Mosquito Coast. There came to be the so-called Kingdom of Mosquitia or Miskito kingdom, an entity under British influence or protectorate, with its own leaders (the 'Miskito kings'), which enjoyed a certain autonomy. This relationship with the British and the isolation kept the region with a history distinct from and separate from that of the rest of Honduran territory for centuries.
Throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, Honduran sovereignty over La Mosquitia gradually consolidated, within the framework of the definition of borders and the declining influence of Great Britain in the region (in a process parallel to that of the Bay Islands and the Nicaraguan Mosquito Coast). The region was formally integrated into Honduras as part of its territory, over time forming the department of Gracias a Dios. However, its remoteness, its lack of roads and its dense jungle kept it, to this day, as a remote region, culturally semi-autonomous and largely pristine, preserving its distinctive character within the country.
The recognition of the extraordinary natural and cultural value of La Mosquitia took shape in the last decades of the 20th century. In 1980 the Río Plátano Biosphere Reserve was created to protect this immense territory of rainforest, rivers, lagoons and mangroves, along with the Indigenous peoples who inhabit it. Two years later, in 1982, UNESCO inscribed it on the World Heritage List (site No. 196), enshrining its outstanding universal value.
The reserve was recognized both for its extraordinary biodiversity —one of the most important and best-preserved rainforests in Central America, with emblematic and threatened species— and for its cultural value, as home to Indigenous peoples who maintain traditional ways of life in harmony with the jungle. It's one of the few sites that so clearly combine the conservation of nature and culture, hence its name 'Reserve of Man and the Biosphere.'
However, this treasure has faced serious threats: deforestation, the advance of the agricultural and ranching frontier, illegal land occupation, logging, and the pressure of drug trafficking, which has used the remote region for its activities. These threats came to place the Río Plátano Reserve on UNESCO's List of World Heritage in Danger at various times, warning of the risks to its conservation. Today, La Mosquitia remains Honduras's great wild jungle and one of the last great pristine territories of Central America, an invaluable heritage whose protection, along with the well-being of its Indigenous peoples, is a permanent challenge for the country and for humanity.