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In page María Lionza:

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According to legend,[1] María Lionza was born in 1802 to an Indian chief from the region of Yaracuy. A statue on the Francisco Fajardo Highway in Caracas by Venezuelan sculptor Alejandro Colina portrays her as a well-endowed and strong woman, riding a large tapir and holding a female pelvis, to represent fertility. It is said that she reigned over the savage beasts. On her throne were indigenous animals, including turtles and snakes. It is said she still lives on the mountain of Sorte, where her followers go to pay homage to her, calling her their "Queen". Because of the tradition, the mountain of Sorte was declared a National Park in the 1980s.