Muisca

Muisca
Muysca
Muisca raft (1200–1500 CE)
representation of the initiation of the new zipa at the lake of Guatavita
Total population
2 million (estimate)[1] (Pre-spanish and early conquest era)
14,051[2] (2005 census)
10,000,000 Chibcha Mestizos (approximately)[3]
Regions with significant populations
Altiplano Cundiboyacense,  Colombia
Languages
Muysccubun (Chibcha), Colombian Spanish
Religion
Muisca religion, Catholicism
Related ethnic groups
Guane, Lache, U'wa, Tegua, Guayupe, Sutagao, Panche, Muzo

The Muisca (also called the Chibcha) were a Pre-Colombian culture and colonial communities of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense before the Spanish colonization of the Americas, whose customs lasted up the beginning of the 19th century and Colombian independence,[4] and are indigenous peoples in Colombia in a process of cultural re-definition and revitalization.[5] The Muisca spoke Muysccubun, a language of the Chibchan language family, also called Muysca and Mosca,[6] which is part of an important revival effort.[7] The first known contact with 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.[8][9]

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".[10][11] Recent scholarship on the Muisca by archeologists, anthropologists, and historians is revising the understanding of the Muiscas' prehispanic and colonial era past.

  1. ^ Juan Friede (1966). Invasión del país de los chibchas. Santa Fe de Bogotá: Ediciones Tercer Mundo, pp. 19, in Spanish
  2. ^ (in Spanish) Total population of Muisca in Colombia: 14,051 – Ministry of Internal Affairs – accessed 21-04-2016
  3. ^ Ministerio de Cultura (2010) "Muiscas, los hijos de Bachué". Bogotá
  4. ^ Manuel Arturo Izquierda Peña, The Muisca Calendar: An approximation to the timekeeping system of the ancient native people of the northeastern Andes of Colombia, 2008, p. 14
  5. ^ Paola Andrea Sánchez-Castañeda, Memory in Sacred Places: The Revitalization Process of the Muisca Community, 2020
  6. ^ (in Spanish) Muysccubun, the language of the Muisca – Muysccubun dictionary online
  7. ^ "Proceso de revitalización lingüística de la Lengua Muisca de la comunidad de Cota" (PDF). repository.javeriana.edu.co. 2008. Retrieved 2024-11-16.
  8. ^ 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.
  9. ^ Cobo Betancourt, Juan F. (2024). 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
  10. ^ quoted in Cobo Betancourt, The Coming of the Kingdom. 25
  11. ^ Langebaek, Carl Henrik. Los herederos del pasado : indígenas y pensamiento criollo en Colombia y Venezuela. Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes: Ediciones Uniandes 2009