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{{short description|Indigenous people of Colombia}} {{other uses}} {{citations needed|date=February 2025}} {{See also|Muisca Confederation}} {{Infobox ethnic group | group = Muisca | native_name = {{lang|cba|Muysca}} | native_name_lang = cba | image = Gold Museum, Bogota (36145671394).jpg | image_caption = [[Muisca raft]] (1200–1500 CE)<br />representation of the initiation of the new ''[[zipa]]'' at the [[Lake Guatavita|lake of Guatavita]] | popplace = [[Altiplano Cundiboyacense]], {{COL}} | total = 14,051 | total_year = 2005 | total_source = census | total_ref = <ref name=CensusMuisca>{{in lang|es}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20160604215116/http://www.sdp.gov.co/portal/page/portal/PortalSDP/SeguimientoPoliticas/Politicas%20Poblacionales/pueblosIndigenas/Tab2/Informaci%F3n%20nacional%20sobre%20acciones%20y%20procesos%20para%20pueb.pdf Total population of Muisca in Colombia: 14,051] – Ministry of Internal Affairs – accessed 21-04-2016</ref> | total2 = 10,000,000 Chibcha Mestizos (approximately)<ref>Ministerio de Cultura (2010) "Muiscas, los hijos de Bachué". Bogotá</ref> | langs = [[Chibcha language|Muysccubun (Chibcha)]], [[Colombian Spanish]] | rels = [[Muisca religion]], [[Catholicism]] | related = [[Guane people|Guane]], [[Lache people|Lache]], [[U'wa people|U'wa]], [[Tegua people|Tegua]], [[Guayupe people|Guayupe]], [[Sutagao people|Sutagao]], [[Panche people|Panche]], [[Muzo people|Muzo]] }} [[File:Colombia MuiscaLocationMap.jpg|right|thumb|260px|Location of Muisca in Colombia.]] [[File:Eastern cordillera of the Andes.jpg|right|thumb|260px|View of the Eastern Ranges of the [[Andean natural region]]<br />[[Lake Tota]] is clearly visible]] [[File:Altiplano Cundiboyacense.png|right|thumb|260px|The Altiplano Cundiboyacense in the Eastern Ranges; territory of the Muisca]] [[File:Sabana de Bogota.png|right|thumb|260px|Southwestern Altiplano; Bogotá savanna, territory of the southern mosca (''zipa'')]] The '''Muisca''' (also called the '''Chibcha''') are [[indigenous peoples in Colombia]] and were a [[Pre-Columbian cultures of Colombia|Pre-Columbian culture]] of the [[Altiplano Cundiboyacense]] that formed the [[Muisca Confederation]] before the [[Spanish colonization of the Americas]]. The Muisca speak Muysccubun, a language of the [[Chibchan languages|Chibchan language family]], also called ''Muysca'' and ''Mosca''.<ref>{{in lang|es}} [http://muysca.cubun.org/muysccubun Muysccubun, the language of the Muisca] – Muysccubun dictionary online</ref> The first known contact with [[list of conquistadors in Colombia|Europeans in the region]] was in 1537 during the [[Spanish conquest of New Granada]]. In [[New Spain]], Spanish clerics and civil officials had a major impact on the Muisca, attempting to [[Christianize]] and incorporate them into the [[Spanish Empire]] as subjects.<ref>[[Jorge Gamboa Mendoza|Gamboa Mendoza, Jorge]]. ''Los muiscas y su incorporación a la monarquía castellana en el siglo XVI: Nuevas lecturas desde la Nueva Historia de la Conquista''. Tunja: Universidad Pedagógica y Tecnológica de Colombia.</ref><ref>Cobo Betancourt, Juan F. (2024). ''[[doi:10.1017/9781009314046|The Coming of the Kingdom: The Muisca, Catholic Reform, and Spanish Colonialism in the New Kingdom of Granada]]''. Open access. Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|9781009314053}} </ref> Postconquest Muisca culture underwent significant changes due to the establishment of the [[New Kingdom of Granada]]. Sources for the Muisca are far less abundant than for the [[Aztec Empire]] of [[Mesoamerica]] or the [[Inca Empire]] and their incorporation to the Spanish Empire during the colonial era. In the New Kingdom of Granada and into the colonial era, the Muisca became "the official 'tribe' of the Colombian nation" and "a local version of the [[Aztecs]] and [[Incas]]".<ref>quoted in Cobo Betancourt, ''The Coming of the Kingdom''. 25</ref><ref>[[Carl Henrik Langebaek|Langebaek, Carl Henrik]]. ''Los herederos del pasado : indígenas y pensamiento criollo en Colombia y Venezuela''. Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes: Ediciones Uniandes 2009</ref> Recent scholarship on the Muisca by archeologists, anthropologists, and historians is revising the understanding of the Muiscas' prehispanic and colonial era past. == History of the Muisca == Subgroupings were identified chiefly by their allegiances to three great [[Muisca rulers]]: the ''hoa'' in [[Tunja|Hunza]], ruling a territory roughly covering modern southern and northeastern [[Boyacá Department|Boyacá]] and southern [[Santander Department|Santander]]; the ''psihipqua'' in [[Bacatá|Muyquytá]] and encompassing most of modern [[Cundinamarca Department|Cundinamarca]], the western [[Llanos]]; and the ''iraca'', religious ruler of [[Sogamoso|Suamox]] and modern northeastern Boyacá and southwestern Santander. The territory of the Muisca spanned an area of around {{convert|25000|km2|sqmi|abbr=on}} from the north of Boyacá to the [[Sumapaz Páramo]] and from the summits to the western portion of the [[Cordillera Oriental (Colombia)|Eastern Ranges]]. Their territory bordered the lands of the [[Panche people|Panche]] in the west, the [[Muzo people|Muzo]] in the northwest, the [[Guane people|Guane]] in the north, the [[Lache people|Lache]] in the northeast, the [[Achagua people|Achagua]] in the east, and the [[Sutagao people|Sutagao]] in the south. At the time of the Spaniard invasion, the area had a large population, although the precise number of inhabitants is not known. Estimates vary from 1 million to over 3 million inhabitants. Their [[Muisca economy|economy]] was based on [[Muisca agriculture|agriculture]], [[halite|salt]] mining, [[Muisca economy#Trade|trading]], [[metalworking]], and [[manufacturing]]. Due to Spanish colonization, the population of the Muisca drastically decreased and assimilated into the general population. The descendants of the Muisca are often found in rural municipalities including [[Cota, Cundinamarca|Cota]], [[Chía, Cundinamarca|Chía]], [[Tenjo]], [[Suba (Bogotá)|Suba]], [[Engativá]], [[Tocancipá]], [[Gachancipá]], and [[Ubaté]].<ref>Wiesner García, 1987</ref> A census by the Ministry of Interior Affairs in 2005 reports a total of 14,051 Muisca people in Colombia.<ref name=CensusMuisca/> Much of the historical knowledge about the Muisca comes from [[List of Muisca and pre-Muisca scholars|the testimony of conquisadores and colonists]]: [[Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada]]; Spanish poet, soldier, and [[Catholic priest]] [[Juan de Castellanos]] (16th century); [[Bishop]] [[Lucas Fernández de Piedrahita]]; and the [[Franciscan]] [[Pedro Simón]] (17th century). More recently, [[Javier Ocampo López]] and [[Gonzalo Correal Urrego]] have contributed notable scholarship. {{see also|Muisca Confederation#Prehistory|Herrera Period|History of Bogotá}} Knowledge of events up until 1450 is mainly derived from mythological contexts. Thanks to the ''Chronicles of the West Indies,'' we have descriptions of the final period of Muisca's history before the Spanish arrival. [[File:Alb.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[Petroglyph]]s of [[El Abra]] (~11,000 BCE)]] [[File:Museo del oro, Bogotá man whose eyes and mouth have been made from double strips.jpg|thumb|200px|right|A Muiscan ceramic figure.]] === Archeology === Excavations in the Altiplano Cundiboyacense (the highlands of [[Cundinamarca Department|Cundinamarca]] and [[Boyacá Department|Boyacá]] departments) show evidence of human activity since the [[Archaic Period (Americas)|Archaic Period]] at the beginning of the [[Holocene]]. Colombia has one of the most ancient archaeological sites of the Americas: [[El Abra]], which is estimated to be approximately 13,000 years old. Other archaeological traces in the region of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense have led scholars to talk about an [[El Abra]] Culture: In [[Tibitó]], tools and other lithic artifacts date to 9740 BCE; on the Bogotá savanna, especially at [[Tequendama Falls]], other lithic tools dated a millennium later were found that belonged to specialized hunters. Human skeletons were found dating back to 5000 BCE, and an analysis demonstrated that the people were members of the El Abra culture. === Muisca era === Scholars agree that the group identified as Muisca migrated to the Altiplano Cundiboyacense in the [[Formative stage]] (between 1000 BCE and 500 CE), as shown by evidence found at [[Aguazuque]] and [[Soacha]]. Like the other formative-era cultures of America, the Muiscas were transitioning between being hunter-gatherers and becoming sedentary farmers. Around 1500 BCE, groups of agrarians with ceramic traditions came to the region from the lowlands. They had permanent housing and stationary camps, and worked the salty water to extract salt. In [[Zipacón]], there is evidence of agriculture and ceramics; the oldest settlement of the highlands dates to 1270 BCE. Between 800 BCE and 500 BCE, a second wave of migrants came to the highlands. Their presence is identified by multicolor ceramics, housing, and farms. These groups were still in residence upon the arrival of the Spanish invaders. They left abundant traces of their occupation that have been studied since the 16th century, allowing scientists to reconstruct their way of life. The Muisca may have integrated with more ancient inhabitants, but the Muisca were the ones who molded the cultural profile and the social and political organization. Their language, a dialect of [[Chibcha language|Chibcha]], was very similar to those peoples of the [[Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta]] ([[Kogi people|Kogi]], Ijka, [[Wiwa people|Wiwa]], and [[Kankuamo people|Kankuamo]]) and the [[Sierra Nevada del Cocuy]] ([[U'wa people|U'wa]]). ==== Wars ==== {{main|Muisca warfare}} ''Zipa'' [[Saguamanchica]] (ruled 1470 to 1490) was in a constant war against aggressive tribes such as the [[Sutagao people|Sutagao]], and especially the [[Panche people|Panche]], who would also make difficulties for his successors, [[Nemequene]] and [[Tisquesusa]]. [[Kalina people|Kalina Caribs]] were also a permanent threat as rivals of the ''zaque'' of [[Tunja|Hunza]], especially for the possession of the [[salt mine]]s of [[Zipaquirá]], [[Nemocón]] and [[Tausa]]. == Political and administrative organization == {{Main|Muisca Confederation}} [[File:ConfederaciónMuisca.png|right|thumb|260px|Territory of the [[Muisca Confederation]];<br />Showing the [[Zipa]], [[Zaque]], and [[Muisca Confederation#Independent caciques|Independent territories]]]] The Muisca people were organized in a [[confederation]] that was a loose union of polities that each retained sovereignty. The confederation was not a kingdom, as there was no absolute monarch, nor was it an [[empire]], because it did not dominate other ethnic groups or peoples. It is hard to compare the Muisca Confederation with other American civilizations, such as the [[Aztec]] or the [[Inca]] empires as it was more similar to a confederation of states, such as the [[Achaean League]]. The Muisca Confederation was one of the biggest and best-organized confederations of tribes on the South American continent.<ref>{{in lang|es}} [http://www.historiacultural.com/2009/06/cultura-chibcha-muisca-ceramica-oro.html Muisca culture] – Historia Universal – accessed 20-04-2016</ref> Every tribe within the confederation was ruled by a chief or a [[cacique]]. Most of the tribes were part of the Muisca ethnic group, sharing the same language and culture and forming relations through trade. They united in the face of a common enemy. The army was the responsibility of the ''zipa'' or ''zaque''. [[Guecha warrior|Güeches]], the traditional ancient warriors of the Muisca, made up the military. The Muisca Confederation existed as the union of two lesser confederations. The southern confederation, headed by the ''[[zipa]]'', had its capital at Bacatá (now [[Bogotá]]). This southern polity included most of the Muisca population and held greater economic power. The northern territory was ruled by the ''zaque'', and had its capital in Hunza, known today as [[Tunja]]. Although both areas had common political relations and affinities and belonged to the same tribal nation, rivalries still existed between them. Among the territories there were four chiefdoms: [[Bacatá]], [[Tunja|Hunza]], [[Duitama]], and [[Sogamoso]]. The chiefdom was composed by localities.<ref name="Londoño">{{in lang|es}} [http://www.lablaa.org/blaavirtual/publicacionesbanrep/bolmuseo/1996/enjl40/enjn04a.htm The place of religion in the Muisca social organization] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070125231107/http://www.lablaa.org/blaavirtual/publicacionesbanrep/bolmuseo/1996/enjl40/enjn04a.htm |date=2007-01-25 }} – Museo del Oro – Biblioteca Luís Ángel Arango</ref> The tribes were divided into ''Capitanías'' (ruled by a capitan). There were two kinds: ''Great Capitania'' (''sybyn'') and ''Minor Capitania'' (''uta''). The status of ''Capitan'' was inherited by maternal lineage.<ref name="Londoño"/> :Confederation (''zipa'' or ''zaque'') ::→ <span style="color:red;">Priests ([[Iraca]])</span> :::→ <span style="color:green;">Chiefdoms (Cacique)</span> ::::→ <span style="color:orange;">''Capitanía'' (Capitan)</span> :::::→ <span style="color:blue;">Sybyn</span> ::::::→ <span style="color:violet;">Uta</span> * '''Territories of the ''zipa''''': # '''[[Bacatá|Bacatá rule]]''': [[Teusaquillo]], [[Tenjo]], [[Subachoque]], [[Facatativá]], [[Tabio]], [[Cota, Cundinamarca|Cota]], [[Chía, Cundinamarca|Chía]], [[Engativá]], [[Usme]], [[Zipaquirá]], [[Nemocón]] and [[Zipacón]] # [[Fusagasugá|Fusagasugá District]]: [[Fusagasugá]], [[Pasca]] and [[Tibacuy]] # [[Ubaté|Ubaté District]]: [[Ubaté]], [[Cucunubá]], [[Simijaca]], [[Susa, Cundinamarca|Susa]] # [[Guatavita|Guatavita District]]: [[Gachetá]], [[Guatavita]] and [[Suesca]], [[Chocontá]], [[Teusaquillo|Teusacá]], [[Sesquilé]], [[Guasca]], [[Sopó]], [[Usaquén]], [[Suba (Bogotá)|Tuna]], [[Suba (Bogotá)|Suba]] * '''Territories of the ''zaque''''': ** '''[[Tunja|Hunza rule]]''': [[Soracá]], [[Ramiriquí]], [[Samacá]], [[Machetá]], [[Tenza]], [[Tibiritá]], [[Lenguazaque]] and [[Turmequé]] * '''Territory of [[Duitama|Tundama]]''': [[Cerinza]], [[Oicatá]], [[Onzaga]], [[Sativanorte]], [[Sativasur]], [[Soatá]], [[Paipa]], [[Floresta, Boyacá|Tobasia]] * '''Territory of [[Sogamoso|Sugamuxi]]''': [[Busbanzá]], [[Toca, Boyacá|Toca]], [[Pesca]], [[Pisba, Boyacá|Pisba]], [[Tópaga, Boyacá|Tópaga]] * '''Autonomous chiefdoms''': [[Charalá]], [[Chipatá, Santander|Chipatá]], [[Tinjacá]], [[Saboyá]], Tacasquirá Muisca legislation was [[customary law]]; that is, their rule of law was determined by long-extant customs with the approval of the ''zip'' or ''zaque''. This kind of legislation was suitable for a well-organized confederation system. Natural resources could not be privatized: woods, lakes, plateaus, rivers, and other natural resources were common goods. == Language == [[File:Muisca cyphers acc acosta humboldt zerda.svg|right|thumb|260px|'''Muisca numerals''' as depicted by [[Joaquín Acosta|Acosta]], [[Alexander von Humboldt|Von Humboldt]] and [[Liborio Zerda|Zerda]]<ref name=Izquierdo_p43>Izquierdo Peña, 2009, p.43</ref>]] {{Main|Chibcha language}} {{See also|Muisca numerals}} ''Chibcha'', also known as ''muysca'', ''mosca'', or ''muysca cubun'', belongs to the [[Chibchan languages]]. At the height of its expanse, the language was spoken across several regions of [[Central America]] and the north of [[South America]]. The [[Tairona]] culture and the [[U'wa people|U'wa]], related to the Muisca culture, speak similar languages, which encouraged trade. The Muisca used a form of [[hieroglyph]]s for numbers. Many Chibcha words were absorbed or "loaned" into Colombian Spanish: * Geography: Many names of localities and regions were kept. In some cases, the Spanish named cities with a combination of Chibcha and Spanish words, such as [[Santa Fe de Bogotá]] (Chibcha: "Bacatá"). Most of the municipalities of the [[Boyacá Department|Boyacá]] and [[Cundinamarca Department|Cundinamarca]] departments are derived from Chibcha names: [[Chocontá]], [[Sogamoso]], [[Zipaquirá]], and many others. * Fruits, such as [[curuba]] and [[uchuva]]. * Relations: the youngest child is called ''cuba'', or ''china'' for a girl;{{Citation needed|date=September 2022}} ''muysca'' means people. == Economy == [[File:Beryl-27323.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Emerald from [[Muzo]]]] [[File:Museo del Oro pectoral, six birds with folded wings and crouching human figures on their heads.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Golden breastplate]]{{main|Muisca economy}} {{see also|Muisca agriculture}} The Muisca had an economy and society considered to have been one of the most powerful of the American [[Post-Classic stage]], mainly because of the precious resources of the area: gold and emeralds. When the Spaniards arrived in Muisca territory, they found a prosperous state, with the Muisca Confederation controlling the mining of the following products: * [[emerald]]s: [[Colombia]] is the primary producer of emeralds in the world * [[copper]] * [[coal]]: the coal mines still operate today at [[Zipaquirá]] and other sites. Colombia has some of the world's most significant coal reserves.<ref>{{in lang|es}} [http://www.proexport.com.co/VBeContent/NewsDetail.asp?ID=5712&IDCompany=20 Ministerio de Minas y Energia] – Proexport Colombia</ref> * [[salt]]: there were mines in production at [[Nemocón]], [[Zipaquirá]], and [[Tausa]] * [[gold]]: gold was imported from other regions but was so abundant that it became a preferred material for Muisca handicrafts. The many handicraft works in gold and the ''zipa'' tradition of offering gold to the goddess [[Guatavita]] contributed to the legend of ''[[El Dorado]]''. The Muisca traded their goods at local and regional markets with a system of [[barter]]. Items traded ranged from basic necessities to luxury goods. The abundance of salt, emeralds, and coal brought these commodities to ''[[de facto]]'' [[currency]] status. Having developed an agrarian society, the people used terrace farming and irrigation in the highlands. Main products were [[fruits]], [[coca]], [[quinoa]], [[yuca]] and [[potato]]es. Another major economic activity was weaving. The people made a wide variety of complex textiles. Scholar Paul Bahn said, "The Andean cultures mastered almost every method of textile weaving or decoration now known, and their products were often finer than those of today."<ref>P. Bahn, ''Archaeology,'' p. 317</ref> [[File:Villa de Leyva el infiernito.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Ruins of the astronomical Muisca temple at ''[[El Infiernito]]'' ("the little hell") near [[Villa de Leyva]]]] [[File:Al Dios Cuitiva.JPG|thumb|right|200px|Monument to [[Bochica]] in the town of [[Cuítiva, Boyacá|Cuítiva]], [[Boyacá Department|Boyacá]]]] [[File:DiosaAguaBachue.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Statue of water Goddess ''Sie'' identified with [[Bachué]]<br /><small>Carved in stone by Bogotan sculptor María Teresa Zerda</small>]] [[File:Templo del sol.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Reconstruction of the [[Sun Temple (Sogamoso)|Sun temple]]<br /><small>[[Archaeology Museum, Sogamoso]]</small>]] [[File:Balsa Muisca BOG 03 2018 8506.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Famous '''Muisca raft''' of '''''El Dorado'''''<br /><small>[[Gold Museum, Bogotá]]</small>]] [[File:ParqueArqueológicoSogamoso.JPG|thumb|right|200px|Model of Muisca houses<br /><small>Archaeology Museum of Sogamoso</small>]] == Culture == {{see also|Muisca art|Muisca cuisine|Muisca mummification|Muisca music|Women in Muisca society}} The Muisca were an agrarian and ceramic society of the [[Andes]] of the north of [[South America]]. Their political and administrative organization enabled them to form a compact cultural unity with great discipline. The contributions of the Muisca culture to the Colombian national identity have been many. === Heraldry === Pre-Columbian Muisca patterns appear in various seals of modern municipalities located on the [[Altiplano Cundiboyacense]], for instance [[Sopó]] and [[Guatavita]], [[Cundinamarca Department|Cundinamarca]].<ref name="websiteSopó">{{in lang|es}} [http://www.sopo-cundinamarca.gov.co/index.shtml Official website Sopó] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160221203730/http://www.sopo-cundinamarca.gov.co/index.shtml |date=2016-02-21 }} – accessed 05-05-2016</ref><ref name=websiteGuatavita>{{in lang|es}} [http://www.guatavita-cundinamarca.gov.co/index.shtml#3 Official website Guatavita] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160130073551/http://guatavita-cundinamarca.gov.co/index.shtml#3 |date=2016-01-30 }} – accessed 05-05-2016</ref> The remaining Muisca people in central Colombia also have their own seal.<ref>[https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Escudo_pueblo_muisca.JPG Seal of the Muisca people] – Commons</ref> === Sports === The Muisca culture had certain sports which were part of their rituals. The ''turmequé'' game, also known as [[Tejo (sport)|tejo]], has survived and became a popular sport of Colombia. Also important were matches of [[Amateur wrestling|wrestling]]. The winner received a finely woven cotton blanket from the chief and was qualified as a [[guecha warrior]]. === Religion === {{main|Muisca religion}} Recent scholarship on the Muisca contends that [[Lucas Fernández de Piedrahita]]'s 1688 ''Historia general'' of New Granada, has unduly shaped understandings of Muisca religion, saying that it was "full of confident assertions concerning a Muisca 'religion' with a pantheon of deities, creation stories, and visions of the afterlife, led from great temples by high priests -- some of whom were pictured, at great expense, in three richly illustrated pages that accompanied his book."<ref>Cobo Betancourt, Juan F. (2024). ''[[doi:10.1017/9781009314046|The Coming of the Kingdom: The Muisca, Catholic Reform, and Spanish Colonialism in the New Kingdom of Granada]]''. Open access. Cambridge University Press, p. 23</ref> Muisca priests were educated from childhood and led the main religious ceremonies. Only the priests could enter the temples. Besides the religious activities, the priests had much influence in the lives of the people, giving counsel in matters of farming or war. The religion originally included [[human sacrifice]], but the practice may have been extinct by the time of the Spanish conquest, as there are no first-hand Spanish accounts. Oral tradition suggests that every family gave up a child for [[Child sacrifice in pre-Columbian cultures|sacrifice]], that the children were regarded as sacred and cared for until the age of 15, when their lives were then offered to the Sun-god, [[Sué]]. ==== Deities ==== * [[Sué]], Suá, Zuhé or Xué (The Sun god): he is the father of the Muisca. His [[Sun Temple (Sogamoso)|temple]] was in [[Sogamoso|Suamox]], the sacred city of the Sun. He was the most venerated god, especially by the Confederation of the ''zaque'', who was considered his descendant. "was "full of confident assertions and visions of the afterlife, led from great temples by high priest --some of whom were pictured, at great expensse, in three richly illustrated title pages that accompied his book" * [[Chía (goddess)|Chía]] (The Moon-goddess): her temple was in what is today the municipality of [[Chía, Cundinamarca|Chía]]. She was widely worshipped by the Confederation of the ''zipa'', who was considered her son. * [[Bochica]]: though not properly a god, he enjoyed the same status as one. He was a chief or hero eternized in the oral tradition. The land was flooded by a [[goddess]], a beautiful and sometimes mean woman, or by [[Chibchacum]], protector of the farmers. Bochica listened to the complaints of the Muisca about floods. With his stick, he broke two rocks at the edge of the [[Tequendama Falls]] and all the water came out, forming a waterfall. Bochica punished Huitaca and Chibchacum: He made Huitaca an owl and made her hold up the sky. Chibchacum was tasked with holding up the Earth. * [[Bachué]]: the mother of the Muisca people. It was said that a beautiful woman with a baby came out of [[Lake Iguaque]]. Bachué sat down at the bank of the lake and waited for the child to grow up. When he was old enough, they married and had many children, who were the Muisca. Bachué taught them to hunt, to farm, to respect the laws, and to worship the gods. Bachué was so good and loved that the Muisca referred to her as ''Furachoque'' (Good woman in [[Chibcha]]). When they became old, Bachué and her husband decided to go back to the deep of the lagoon. That day the Muisca were so sad, but at the same time very happy because they knew their mother was very happy. Other versions of the legend say that after stepping into the lagoon of Iguaque, Bachué ascended to the sky and became [[Chía goddess|Chía]]; in other versions Chia and Bachué are two different figures. ==== Astronomy ==== {{Main|Muisca astronomy}} {{see also|Muisca calendar}} The cult of the Muisca centered on two main deities; [[Sué]] for the Sun and [[Chía (goddess)|Chía]] for the Moon. They developed a vigesimal (based on 20) [[Muisca calendar|calendar]] and knew exactly the timing of the [[summer solstice]] (June 21), which they considered the Day of ''Sué'', the Sun god. The Sué temple was in [[Sogamoso]], the sacred city of the Sun and the seat of the [[Iraca]] (priest). The Muisca name of the city, ''Suamox'' or ''Sugamuxi'', means "City of the Sun". On the [[solstice]], the ''zaque'' went to Suamox for a major festival where ritual offerings were made. It was the only day of the year when the ''zaque'' showed his face, as he was considered a descendant of the Sun god.<ref>Ocampo López, 2013, Ch.13, p.80</ref> === Mythology === {{Main|Muisca mythology}} The Muisca mythology is well documented. Many of the writers who contributed to the ''Chronicles of the West Indies'' were based in Bogotá. They recorded many of the myths as they were interested in the traditions and culture of the conquered people. The Muisca territory became the seat of the colonial administration for the [[New Kingdom of Granada]] (Spanish: ''Nuevo Reino de Granada''). === El Dorado === {{Main|El Dorado}} The origin of the legend of ''El Dorado'' (Spanish for "The Golden") in the early 16th century may originate with the [[Muisca Confederation]]. In 1539, Sebastián de Belalcázar's treasurer, Gonzalo de la Peña, wrote that the expedition left Popayán towards Bogotá "in search of a land called El Dorado".<ref name=OriginElDorado>Trupp, T. L.; [https://www.earthasweknowit.com/pages/muisca_and_el_dorado The Origin of the Legend of El Dorado]</ref> This marks the earliest recorded use of the phrase, occurring just before his meeting with Jiménez de Quesada and the Muisca. In 1550, over ten years after the conquest, Jiménez de Quesada described the continued quest for El Dorado: "All the reports ... which set everyone's feet marching from the North Sea so excitedly ... later appeared to be the same thing, namely this kingdom of New Granada." Other Spanish references speak of El Dorado not as a golden land, but rather to chief whose body was anointed in gold powder as part of a ritual. The ''zipa'' offered gold and other treasures to the Guatavita goddess. To do so, the ''zipa'' covered himself with gold dust and washed it off in the lake while tossing gold trinkets into the waters. This tradition was well known outside the Confederation, as far as the [[Caribbean Sea]]. Two small golden rafts were discovered in 1856 and 1969 that seem to confirm this ritual.<ref name=OriginElDorado></ref> Each was in the Muisca style of gold work, with a primary central chief surrounded by attendants. The first of these artifacts was destroyed in a fire, while the surviving raft can be seen in Bogotá's Museo del Oro (Museum of Gold). The Spaniards were attracted by stories of a "city of gold" that did not exist. Indigenous people sometimes got rid of the avaricious Spaniards in that way, pointing them in the direction of other peoples. [[Lake Guatavita]] was explored by conquistadors who were looking for gold offerings from the ''zipa'' to the goddess. The legend grew until the term became a metaphor for any place where great wealth may be found or made. === Architecture === {{Main|Muisca architecture}} The Muisca did not construct large stone structures. They didn't use the abundant rock to leave monumental ruins as has happened with other American cultures. Their houses were built with clay, canes, and wood. The houses had a conical form, most of them to the point that [[Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada]], founder of [[Bogotá]], gave the area the name ''Valle de los Alcázares'' ("Valley of the Palaces"). The houses had small doors and windows, and the dwellings of the higher rank citizens were different. The Muisca used little furniture as they would typically sit on the floor. [[File:TISQUESUSA1.jpg|right|thumb|200px|[[Tisquesusa]], ''zipa'' when the Spanish arrived<br />The ''zipa'' was richly ornamented in gold and expensive cloth]] [[File:AQUIMINZAQUE.jpg|right|thumb|200px|[[Aquiminzaque]], the last ''zaque'', executed by the Spanish]] == The Spanish conquest == {{main|Spanish conquest of the Muisca}} The conquest of the Muisca began with Gonzalo [[Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada|Jiménez de Quesada's]] 1536 expedition up the [[Magdalena River]] into the Colombian highlands. There his men encountered the thriving expanse of rich villages spread across a lush plateau. The conquistadors proceeded to loot the Muisca's temples and capture their leaders, holding them for ransom to extract their whereabouts of their gold.<ref name=OriginElDorado></ref> Rivalries between the ''[[Muisca rulers|zaque]]'' and the ''[[Muisca rulers|zipa]]'' were taken advantage of by the Spaniards as they conquered the heart of what would be Colombia. The presence of the Spaniards gave hope to both sovereigns that, were they to make one Confederation, they could prevail in a war against the Spaniards. But the Spaniards prevailed. The reaction of the chief leaders and the people did little to change the destiny of the Confederations. The Spanish executed the last Muisca sovereigns, [[Sagipa]] and [[Aquiminzaque]], in 1539 and 1540 respectively. In 1539, two other expeditions converged on the territory of the Muisca, led by [[Sebastián de Belalcázar]] and [[Nicolás de Federman]], who were also searching for lands rich in gold. Despite Jiménez's early arrival, each tried to lay claim to the region. The three leaders traveled back to Spain together to have the dispute adjudicated in court. In 1542 [[Gonzalo Suárez Rendón]] finally put down the last resistance. The territories of the Confederations were distributed as [[encomienda|encomiendas]] among the soldiers of Belalcazar, Federmann, and Jiménez De Quesada. Later the Spanish Crown would elect Jiménez as the mayor of Bogotá, with the title ''adelantado de los cabildos de Santa Fe y Tunja''. Bogotá would later become the capital of the Spaniard's New Kingdom of Granada.<ref name=OriginElDorado></ref> === Last Muisca sovereigns === {{main|Muisca rulers}} {{Columns-list|colwidth=25em| * '''''Zipas'' of [[Bacatá]]''': ** [[Meicuchuca]] (1450–1470) ** [[Saguamanchica]] (1470–1490) ** [[Nemequene]] (1490–1514) ** [[Tisquesusa]] (1514–1537) ** [[Sagipa]] (1537–1539) * '''''Zaques'' of [[Tunja|Hunza]]''': ** [[Hunzahúa]] (?-1470) ** [[Michuá]] (1470–1490) ** [[Quemuenchatocha]] (1490–1537) ** [[Aquiminzaque]] (1537–1540) }} === Under the colonial regime === [[File:Terra Firma et Novum Regnum Granatense et Popayan - CBT 6621102.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Map of [[Nuevo Reino de Granada]] (1625)]] When the Muisca structure disappeared under the Spanish Conquest, the territory of the Confederations of the ''zaque'' and ''zipa'' were included in a new political division within the Spanish colonies in America. The territory of the Muisca, located in a fertile plain of the Colombian Andes that contributed to make one of the most advanced South American civilizations, became part of the colonial region named [[Nuevo Reino de Granada]]. Much information about the Muisca culture was gathered by the Spanish administration and by authors such as [[Pedro de Aguado]] and [[Lucas Fernández de Piedrahita]]. The viceregal era contributed to the importance of Bogotá, and people from the area would play an important role in the fights for independence and republican consolidation. === Independent Colombia === [[File:The earth and its inhabitants (1882) (14774275371).jpg|thumb|right|200px|Muisca people (1882)]] ==== 20th century ==== After independence in 1810, the new state dissolved many of the Indigenous reservations. The one in [[Tocancipá]] was dissolved in 1940.<ref>Decree of August 14, 1940, Republic of Colombia.</ref> The one in [[Sesquilé]] was reduced to 10% of its original size. [[Tenjo]] was reduced to 54% of its original size after 1934, and the Indigenous lands in [[Suba, Bogotá|Suba]], a northern region in modern-day Bogotá, which had been recognized and protected by the crown, were taken away by the republican governments following a strategy of suppression of the native culture and ethnic presence in the country's largest urban centres. The Reservation of [[Cota, Cundinamarca|Cota]] was re-established on land bought by the community in 1916, and then recognized by the 1991 constitution; the recognition was withdrawn in 1998 by the state and restored in 2006. In 1948 the state forbade the production of [[chicha]], a corn-based alcoholic drink.<ref>Law 34 of 1948, Republic of Colombia.</ref> This was a blow to the culture and economy of the Muisca. The ban remained until 1991. Since then, the "Festival of the chicha, maize, life, and joy" is celebrated every year in Barrio La Perseverancia, a neighborhood in Bogotá where most of the chicha is produced. ==== 21st century ==== [[File:Muisca Indigenous Heritage.webm|thumb|200px|thumbtime=28| [[File:Wikibooks-logo.svg|11px|Wikibooks]] [[Wikibooks:Development Cooperation Handbook/Stories/Muisca Indigenous Heritage|Rediscovery of the Muisca indigenous heritage]]<br/>[[File:Film-Camera.png|17px]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTzY9kTw5ufmn65JEvyaJ80Bp75zEQizL El redescubrimiento de la tradición indígena] ]] Since 1989, there has been a process of reconstruction of the Indigenous councils by the surviving members of the Muisca culture. Muisca Councils currently working are [[Suba, Bogotá|Suba]], [[Bosa, Bogotá|Bosa]], [[Cota, Cundinamarca|Cota]], [[Chía, Cundinamarca|Chía]], and [[Sesquilé]]. The councils had an Assembly in Bosa on 20–22 September 2002, called the ''First General Congress of the Muisca People''. In that congress, they founded the [[Cabildo Mayor del Pueblo Muisca]], affiliated to the [[National Indigenous Organization of Colombia]] (ONIC).<ref>Abbreviation in Spanish: "Organización Nacional Indígena de Colombia"</ref> They proposed linguistic and cultural recuperation, defense of the territories nowadays occupied by others, and proposed urban and tourist plans. They support the communities of [[Ubaté]], [[Tocancipá]], [[Soacha]], [[Ráquira]], and [[Tenjo]] in their efforts to recover their organizational and human rights. The Muisca people of Suba opposed the drying up of the [[Tibabuyes]] [[wetlands of Bogotá|wetland]] and wanted to recover the [[Juan Amarillo wetland]]. They defended the natural reserves like ''La Conejera'', part of the Suba Hills that is considered by the Shelter's Council to be communal land. ''Suati'' Magazine (''The Song of the Sun'') is a publication of poetry, literature, and essays about Muisca culture. The community of [[Bosa, Bogotá|Bosa]] made important achievements in its project of natural medicine in association with the Paul VI Hospital and the District Secretary of Health of Bogotá. The community of [[Cota, Cundinamarca|Cota]] has reintroduced the growing of [[quinoa|quinua]], and regularly barter their products at market. Toward the end of 2006 there was a report on the Muisca population: * Three Muisca councils: [[Cota, Cundinamarca|Cota]], [[Chía, Cundinamarca|Chía]], and [[Sesquilé]], with a population of 2,318 persons * in the [[Bogotá|Capital District]] 5,186 people are registered as belonging to the Muisca ethnic group * in the localities of [[Suba, Bogotá|Suba]] and [[Bosa, Bogotá|Bosa]], 1,573 people are registered * the report does not include the number of people of the Muisca ethnic group in the entire territory of the ancient Muisca Confederation or outside that territory. It does not include Muisca Creole persons, it is to say, those of mixed Muisca ancestry. == Sources on the Muisca and scholarly research == {{see also|List of Muisca research institutes|List of Muisca scholars}} [[File:Mulder-nueva_granada.jpg|thumb|[[Lucas Fernández de Piedrahita]], ''Historia general de las conquistas del Nuevo Reyno de Granada'', 1688]] Writings on the Muisca have a long tradition, dating from the conquest era with Spanish chronicles, colonial-era Spanish religious and civil administrative records, the findings of modern archeologists and anthropologists, and revised interpretations by scholars in recent years. Unlike the Indigenous peoples of [[Mesoamerica]], the Muisca did not have a system of writing before the Spanish invasion in the sixteenth century and during the colonial era, so that the understanding of Muisca history and culture has largely been based non-native sources. A Spanish document named “Epítome de la Conquista Del Nueva Rieno de Granada” (Summary of the Conquest of the New Kingdom of Granada) provides what is considered the most complete description of Muisca culture. The author is unknown but is believed to be Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada.<ref name=OriginElDorado></ref> Spanish cleric [[Lucas Fernández de Piedrahita]] authored a major work the New Kingdom of Granada, the ''Historia general de las conquistas de; Nuevo Reyno de Granada, a la S.C.R.M. de D. Carlos Segundo'', 1688, which has shaped colonial era and, until recently, modern understandings of the Muisca. This work creates an image of the [[Precolombian]] Muisca, with powerful political structures and a unified religion and priestly hierarchy.<ref>Juan F. Cobo Betancourt, (2024). ''[[doi:10.1017/9781009314046|The Coming of the Kingdom: The Muisca, Catholic Reform, and Spanish Colonialism in the New Kingdom of Granada]]''. Open access. Cambridge University Press, pp. 23-24</ref> Recent scholarship has re-examined early published writings and sought new sources in a variety of archives to posit a different understanding of the Muisca. The Muisca have been integral to the formation of national identity in Colombia,<ref>[[Carl Henrik Langebaek|Langebaek, Carl Henrik]]. ''Los herederos del pasado : indígenas y pensamiento criollo en Colombia y Venezuela''. Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes: Ediciones Uniandes 2009</ref> with Colombian scholar [[Carl Henrik Langebaek]] describing them as "the official 'tribe' of the Colombian nation" and "a local version of the [[Aztecs]] and [[Incas]]".<ref>quoted in Cobo Betancourt, ''The Coming of the Kingdom''. 25</ref><ref>[[Carl Henrik Langebaek|Langebaek, Carl Henrik]]. ''Los herederos del pasado : indígenas y pensamiento criollo en Colombia y Venezuela''. Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes: Ediciones Uniandes 2009</ref><ref>Lleras Pérez, Roberto. "Los Muiscas en la literatura histórica y antropolgía: Quién interpreta a quién?" ''Boletín de Historia y Antigüedades ''. 92, no. 829 (2005), 307-338.</ref><ref>Muñoz Arbeláez, Santiago. ''Costumbres en disputa: Los muiscas y el Imperio español en Ubaque, siglo XVI''. Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Departamento de Historia 2015.</ref> The interpretation of the sixt,eenth-century Spanish invasion has received new attention which departs from a Eurocentric, triumphalist narrative.<ref>Cobo Betancourt, ''The Coming of the Kingdom'', 25</ref><ref>Francis, J. Michael. 2007. ''Invading Colombia: Accounts of the Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada Expedition of Conquest''. University Park: Penn State University Press 2007</ref><ref>[[Jorge Gamboa Mendoza|Gamboa Mendoza, Jorge]]. ''Los muiscas y su incorporación a la monarquía castellana en el siglo XVI: Nuevas lecturas desde la Nueva Historia de la Conquista''. Tunja: Universidad Pedagógica y Tecnológica de Colombia 2016</ref><ref>Muñoz Arbeláez, Santiago. "The New Kingdom of Granada: The Making an Unmaking of Spain's Atlantic Empire, 1530-1620". PhD dissertation, Yale University 2018.</ref> Since independence in the early nineteenth century, investigations into Muisca culture as part of national identity formation began. In 1849 president [[Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera]] invited Italian cartographer [[Agustín Codazzi]], who led the Geography Commission with Manuel Ancízar and did descriptive studies of the national territory and an inventory of the archaeological sites. The result of the expedition was published in Bogotá in 1889 as ''Peregrinación Alfa''.<ref>Ancízar, Manuel; ''Peregrinación Alfa'' (''Alpha Travels''), Bogotá, 1889: Comisión Coreográfica Agustín Codazzi</ref> Argüello García pointed out that the goal of that expedition in the context of the new nation was to underline the pre-Hispanic societies and in that sense, they centered on the Muisca culture as the main model. A similar tendency can be found in the works of [[Ezequiel Uricoechea]].<ref>Uricoechea, Ezequiel; ''Memorias sobre las Antigüedades Neogranadinas'' (''Memoirs of the Ancient Neogranadian Cultures''), Berlín, 1854</ref> An objection to that point of view came from Vicente Restrepo: his work ''Los chibchas antes de la conquista española''<ref>Restrepo, Vicente; ''Los chibchas antes de la conquista española'' (''The Chibcha people before the Spanish Conquest''), 1895</ref> showed them as barbarians. [[Miguel Triana]], in his work ''La Civilización Chibcha''<ref>Triana, Miguel; ''La Civilización Chibcha'' (''The Chibcha Civilization''), 1924</ref> suggested that the rock art symbols were writing. Wenceslao Cabrera Ortíz was the one who concluded that the Muisca were migrants to the highlands; in 1969 he published on this<ref>Ortíz, Wenceslao Cabrera; ''Monumentos rupestres de Colombia'' (''Colombian Rock-art Monuments'') in ''Cuaderno primero: Generalidades, Algunos conjuntos pictóricos de Cundinamarca'', 1969</ref> and reported about excavations at the [[El Abra]] archaeological site. Those publications opened a new era in the studies of the pre-Hispanic cultures in Colombia.<ref name=Arguello>Argüello G., Pedro María; [http://rupestreweb.tripod.com/colombia.html History of the Investigation of the Rock Art in Colombia]</ref> Recent archaeological work has also concentrated on the creation and composition of Muisca goldwork, with this data being made available for wider research.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Martinon-Torres |first1=Marcos |last2=Villegas |first2=Maria Uribe |title=Typology, technology, composition and context of Muisca metalwork (Colombia, AD 600-1800): a database |journal=[[Journal of Open Archaeology Data]] |date=15 March 2012 |volume=1 |issue=1 |pages=e4 |doi=10.5334/4f60dd6baa298 |language=en |issn=2049-1565|doi-access=free }}</ref> == Named after the Muisca and their culture == {{main|List of Muisca toponyms|List of flora and fauna named after the Muisca}} Several ([[fossil]]) [[flora]] and [[fauna]] found in Colombia in the area of the Muisca have been named after the people. Two [[volcano]]es on [[Jupiter]]'s moon [[Io (moon)|Io]] have been named after the Muisca religion and mythology. === Timeline of inhabitation of the Muisca area === {{Timeline of inhabitation of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense}} == See also == {{Portal|Colombia|Indigenous peoples of the Americas}} * [[Spanish conquest of the Muisca|Spanish conquest]] * [[Aztec]], [[Maya peoples|Maya]], [[Muzo people|Muzo]] * [[New Kingdom of Granada]], [[Indigenous peoples in Colombia]] :* [[Panche people|Panche]], [[Achagua people|Achagua]], [[Guane people|Guane]], [[Guayupe people|Guayupe]], [[Lache people|Lache]], [[Tegua people|Tegua]] *[[Tunjo]] == References == {{reflist|30em}} == Bibliography == * {{cite journal |author1=Fernández-Alonso, José Luis |author2=Groenendijk, Jeroen P. |title=A new species of Zephyranthes herb. S.L. (Amaryllidaceae, Hippeastreae) with notes on the genus in Colombia |journal=Rev. Acad. Colomb. Cie. |volume=28 |date=2023 |issue=107 |pages=177–186 |doi=10.18257/raccefyn.28(107).2004.1987 |url=http://digital.csic.es/bitstream/10261/33396/1/2004_Fernandez-Alonso_Rev.Acad.Col.Cien.28%28107%29.pdf |issn=0370-3908}} * {{cite journal |author1=Olivares, Tania S. |author2=Burckhardt, Daniel |year=1997 |title=Jumping plant-lice of the New World genus Calinda (Hemiptera:Psylloidea:Triozidae) |journal=[[Revue suisse de Zoologie]] |volume=104 |location=Geneva, Switzerland |publisher=Société Suisse de Zoologie |pages=231–344 |issn=0035-418X |doi=10.5962/bhl.part.79999 |doi-access=free }} * {{cite arXiv |last=Izquierdo Peña |first=Manuel Arturo |author-link=Manuel Arturo Izquierdo Peña |year=2009 |title=The Muisca Calendar: An approximation to the timekeeping system of the ancient native people of the northeastern Andes of Colombia |pages=1–170 |class=physics.hist-ph |eprint=0812.0574 }} Université de Montréal. * {{cite journal |author1=Pérez, Sandra |author2=Wolff, Marta |author3=De Carvalho, Claudio J.B. |title=A new species of Brachygasterina Macquart from Colombia, and description of the males of B. stuebeli Röder and B. muisca Soares & Carvalho (Diptera: Muscidae) – Abstract |journal=Zootaxa |volume=3554 |date=19 November 2012 |pages=45–57 |url=http://mapress.com/zootaxa/2012/f/z03554p057f.pdf |issn=1175-5334|doi=10.11646/zootaxa.3554.1.3 }} == Further reading == * {{cite book |author=Bahn, Paul |year=1991 |title=Archaeology, Theories, Methods and Practice |volume=2nd edition |publisher=Thames and Hudson |location=London, UK |isbn=978-0-500-27867-3 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/archaeologytheor00renf_0 }} *Boada Rivas, Ana María. 1999. "Organización social y económica en la aldea muisca de El Venado (Valle de Samacá, Boyacá)". ''Revista Colombiana de Antropología'' 25, 118-145. *Boada Rivas, Ana María. 2007. ''The Evolution of Social Hierarchy in a Muisca Chiefdom of the Northern Andes of Colombia/La evolución de jerarquía social en un cacicazgo muisca de los Andes septentrionales de Colombia''. Pittshburgh: Department of Anthropology, University of Pittsburgh; Bogotá: Instituto Colombiano de Antropología e Historia. * {{cite journal |last1=Bonnett Vélez |first1=Diana |title=El caso del altiplano Cundiboyacense: 1750–1800". La ofensiva hacia las tierras comunales indígenas |journal=Universitas Humanistica |date=1999 |volume=48 |trans-title=The Case of the Cundiboyacense Highland: 1750–1800. The challenge toward the communitarian Indian lands |language=es-co}} *{{cite book |last1=Broadbent |first1= Sylvia |author-link1=Sylvia M. Broadbent |title=Los Chibchas: organización socio-política |date=1964 |volume=5 |series=Série Latinoamericana |trans-title=The Chibcha People: Social and Politica Organization |publisher=Facultad de Sociología, Universidad Nacional de Colombia |location=Bogotá |language=es-co }} * Cobo Betancourt, Juan F. (2024). ''[[doi:10.1017/9781009314046|The Coming of the Kingdom: The Muisca, Catholic Reform, and Spanish Colonialism in the New Kingdom of Granada]]''. Open access. Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|9781009314053}} *Cousins, Karen. "Shapes of Love in the Miracle Testimonies of the Virgin of Chiquinquirá, New Kingdom of Granada, 1587 to 1694". ''Colonial Latin American Review'' 28, no. 3, (2019): 396-423. *Deardorff, Max. "The Politics of Devotion: Indigenous Spirituality and the Virgin of Chiquinquirá in the New Kingdom of Granada". ''[[Ethnohistory]]'' 65, no. 3.(2018): 465-88. *Francis, J. Michael. 2007. ''Invading Colombia: Accounts of the Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada Expedition of Conquest''. University Park: Penn State University Press. *Frassani, Alessia. "La Virgen de Chiquinquirá y la religión muisca". ''Historia y sociedad'' no. 35 (2028) 61-86. * [[Juan Friede|Friede, Juan]] 1961: ''Los chibchas bajo la dominación española'' (tr.en. ''The Chibcha People under the Spaniard Rule''). Bogotá: La Carreta *[[Jorge Gamboa Mendoza|Gamboa Mendoza, Jorge]]. 2004. "Caciques, encomenderos y sanctuarios en el Nuevo Reino de Granada: Reflexiones metodológicas sobre la ficción en los archivos: el proceso del cacique de Tota, 1574-1575". ''Colonial Latin American Review'' 13 (no. 2), 113-145. * [[Jorge Gamboa Mendoza|Gamboa Mendoza, Jorge]]. ''El cacicazgo muisca en los años posteriores a la Conquista : del sihipkua al cacique colonial, 1537-1575''. Bogotá: Instituto Colombiano de Antropología e Historia 2010 *[[Jorge Gamboa Mendoza|Gamboa Mendoza, Jorge]]. ''Los muiscas y su incorporación a la monarquía castellana en el siglo XVI: Nuevas lecturas desde la Nueva Historia de la Conquista''. Tunja: Universidad Pedagógica y Tecnológica de Colombia 2016. *{{cite journal |last1=García |first1=Antonio |last2=Jiménez |first2=Edith |last3=Ochoa |first3=Blanca |title=Resguardo Indígena de Tocancipá |journal=Boletín de Arqueología |date=1946 |volume=6 |issue=1 |trans-title=Tocancipá Indian Shelter}} * González de Pérez, María Stella 1987: ''Diccionario y Gramática Chibcha (''Chibchan Dictionary and Grammar''). Manuscrito anónimo de la Biblioteca Nacional de Colombia''. Bogotá: Instituto Caro y Cuervo * Enciclopedia de Colombia a su alcance Espasa Siglo (''Colombian Encyclopedia within reach – Espasa Century''). Tomo 1 Bogotá, Colombia 2003 * Hernández Rodríguez Guillermo 1949: ''De los Chibchas a la Colonia y la República'' (tr.en. ''From the Chibcha People to the Colony to the Republic''). Bogotá: Ediciones Paraninfo, 1991 * Historia de Colombia (tr.en. ''History of Colombia''). Tomo 1 Zamora Editores, Bogotá, Colombia 2003 * Gran Enciclopedia de Colombia Tematica. Tomos 1 y 11 Círculo de Lectores, Bogotá, Colombia 1994 * Fundación Misión Colombia: Historia de Bogota, Conquista y Colonia. Tomo 1 Salvat-Villegas editores, Bogotá, Colombia 1989 * {{cite book |author=Langebaek, Carl Henrik |year=1987 |title=Mercados, poblamiento, e integración étnica entre los Muiscas |location=Bogotá |publisher=Banco de la República |isbn=978-958-9028-40-7 |language=es|author-link=Carl Henrik Langebaek }} * [[Carl Henrik Langebaek|Langebaek, Carl Henrik]]"Buscando Sacerdotes y encontrando chuques: sobre la organización religiosa de los cacicazgos muiscas". ''Revista de Antropología y Arqueología'' 6, 1990. no. 1. * [[Carl Henrik Langebaek|Langebaek, Carl Henrik]]. ''Los herederos del pasado : indígenas y pensamiento criollo en Colombia y Venezuela''. Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes: Ediciones Uniandes 2009 * Londoño, Eduardo 1998: ''Los muiscas: una reseña histórica con base en las primeras descripciones''. Bogotá: Museo del Oro * Llano Restrepo, María Clara y Marcela Campuzano 1994: ''La Chicha, una bebida fermentada a través de la historia''. Bogotá: Instituto Colombiano de Antropología * {{cite conference |last1=Lleras Pérez |first1=Roberto |title=Diferentes oleadas de poblamiento en la prehistoria tardía de los Andes Orientales |journal=El simposio 'Los chibchas en América' del II Congreso Mundial de Arqueología |date=1990 |location=Barquesimeto, Venezuela}} * Lleras Pérez, Roberto. "Los Muiscas en la literatura histórica y antropolgía: Quién interpreta a quién?" ''Boletín de Historia y Antigüedades ''. 92, no. 829 (2005), 307-338. * Muñoz Arbeláez, Santiago. ''Costumbres en disputa: Los muiscas y el Imperio español en Ubaque, siglo XVI''. Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Departamento de Historia 2015. * Muñoz Arbeláez, Santiago. "The New Kingdom of Granada: The Making an Unmaking of Spain's Atlantic Empire, 1530-1620". PhD dissertation, Yale University 2018. * {{cite book |author=Posada, Francisco |year=1965 |title=El camino chibcha a la sociedad de clases |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fuVlAAAAMAAJ |publisher=[[University of Texas]] |pages=1–42 |language=es}} * Restrepo, Luis Fernando. ''El estado impostor: Apropiaciones literarias y culturales de la memoria de los muiscas y la América indígena''. Medellín: Editorial Universidad de Antioquia, 2013. * {{cite book |author=Rozo Guauta, José |year=1978 |title=Los Muiscas: organización social y régimen político |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cbVsAAAAMAAJ |publisher=[[University of Texas]] |pages=1–216 |language=es}} * {{cite book |author=Suescún Monroy, Armando |year=1987 |title=La Economía Chibcha |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FTsYAAAAYAAJ |publisher=[[University of Virginia]] |location=Bogotá |pages=1–113 |isbn=978-958-601-137-2 |language=es}} * Tovar Pinzón, Hermes 1980: ''La formación social chibcha''. Bogotá. CIEC == External links == {{Sister project links |1=Muisca |collapsible= |display=Muisca |author= |commonscat=yes |b=Development Cooperation Handbook/Stories/Muisca Indigenous Heritage |c=Muisca |d=Q828578 |m=Requests for new languages/Wikipedia Muisca |mw=no |n=no |q=no |s=no |species=no |species_author=no |v=Spanish 1/Chapter 12 (The Bedroom) |voy=no |wikt=no }} * [http://libmma.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/p15324coll10/id/119785/rec/1 The Art of Pre-Columbian Gold: The Jan Mitchell Collection] – The Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibition catalog – available online as PDF * [[Wikibooks:Development Cooperation Handbook/Stories/Muisca Indigenous Heritage|Muisca Indigenous Heritage]] – development cooperation story of the Wikibook [[File:Wikibooks-logo.svg|14px|Wikibooks]] [[Wikibooks:Development Cooperation Handbook|Development Cooperation Handbook]] * [http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/browse?type=lcsubc&key=Chibcha%20Indians&c=x Muisca: "Chibchan Indians"] – [[Online Books Page]] * [http://iaiweb1.iai.spk-berlin.de/DB=1/FKT=1016/FRM=chibcha/IMPLAND=Y/LNG=DU/LRSET=1/SET=1/SID=980ebd89-1/SRT=YOP/TTL=1/LNG=EN/NXT Books on the Muisca]{{Dead link|date=April 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} – [[Ibero-American Institute]] – [[Berlin]] * {{in lang|en|es}} [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4yN4gZsPVy8 Nicely animated video about the Muisca and their religious origin] * {{in lang|es}} [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BDdtcYz_ME8 Animated video about the Spanish conquest of the Muisca – Tisquesusa, Quemuenchatocha and Aquiminzaque] * {{Cite NIE|wstitle=Chibcha|short=x}} * {{CathEncy|wstitle=Chibchas}} {{Ancestry and ethnicity in Colombia}} {{Pre-Columbian}} {{Muisca navbox|Geography and history|state=expanded}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:Muisca| ]] [[Category:Pre-Columbian cultures]] [[Category:Indigenous culture of the Americas]] [[Category:Ethnic groups in Colombia]] [[Category:Indigenous peoples in Colombia]] [[Category:Prehistory of Colombia]] [[Category:Articles containing video clips]]
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