Muisca Confederation


The Muisca Confederation was a loose confederation of different Muisca rulers in the central Andean highlands of present-day Colombia before the Spanish conquest of northern South America. The area, presently called Altiplano Cundiboyacense, comprised the current departments of Boyacá, Cundinamarca and minor parts of Santander with a total surface area of approximately.
According to some Muisca scholars the Muisca Confederation was one of the best-organized confederations of tribes on the South American continent. Modern anthropologists, such as Jorge Gamboa Mendoza, attribute the present-day knowledge about the confederation and its organization more to a reflection by Spanish chroniclers who predominantly wrote about it a century or more after the Muisca were conquered and proposed the idea of a loose collection of different people with slightly different languages and backgrounds.

Geography

Climate

Muisca Confederation

In the times before the Spanish conquest of the Muisca, the central part of present-day Colombia; the Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes was inhabited by the Muisca people who were organised in a loose confederation of rulers. The central authorities of Bacatá in the south and Hunza in the north were called zipa and zaque respectively. Other rulers were the iraca priest in sacred City of the Sun Sugamuxi, the Tundama of Tundama and various other caciques. The Muisca spoke Chibcha, in their own language called Muysccubun; "language of the people".
The Muisca people, different from the other three great civilisations of the Americas; the Maya, Aztec and Inca, did not build grand stone architecture. Their settlements were relatively small and consisted of bohíos; circular houses of wood and clay, organised around a central market square with the house of the cacique in the centre. Roads were present to connect the settlements with each other and with the surrounding indigenous groups, of which the Guane and Lache to the north, the Panche and Muzo to the west and Guayupe, Achagua and Tegua to the east were the most important.

History

Prehistory

Early Amerindian settlers led a hunter-gatherer life among still extant megafauna living in cool habitats around Pleistocene lakes, of which the humedales in Bogotá, Lake Suesca, Lake Fúquene and Lake Herrera are notable examples. Multiple evidences of late Pleistocene to middle Holocene population of the Bogotá savanna, the high plateau in the Colombian Andes, have been found to date. As is common with, Tequendama was inhabited from around 11,000 years BP, and continuing into the prehistorical, Herrera and Muisca periods, making it the oldest site of Colombia, together with El Abra, located north of Zipaquirá and Tibitó, located within the boundaries of Tocancipá. The oldest human remains and the oldest complete skeleton were discovered at Tequendama and has been named "Hombre del Tequendama" or Homo Tequendama. Other artefacts have been found in Gachalá, Sueva and Zipacón. Just west of the Altiplano, the oldest archaeological remains were found; in Pubenza, part of Tocaima and have been dated at 16,000 years Before Present.

Pre-Columbian era

Herrera Period
The Herrera Period is a phase in the history of Colombia. It is part of the Andean preceramic and ceramic, time equivalent of the North American pre-Columbian formative and classic stages and age dated by various archaeologists. The Herrera Period predates the age of the Muisca people, who inhabited the Altiplano Cundiboyacense before the Spanish conquest of the Muisca and postdates the lithic formative stage and prehistory of the eastern Andean region in Colombia. The Herrera Period is usually defined as ranging from 800 BCE to 800 AD, although some scholars date it as early as 1500 BCE.
Ample evidence of the Herrera Period has been uncovered on the Altiplano Cundiboyacense and main archaeologists contributing to the present knowledge about the Herrera Period are scholars Ana María Groot, Gonzalo Correal Urrego, Thomas van der Hammen, Carl Henrik Langebaek Rueda, Sylvia M. Broadbent, Marianne Cardale de Schrimpff and others.
Muisca
The Muisca were polytheistic and their religion and mythology was closely connected with the natural area they were inhabiting. They had a thorough understanding of astronomical parameters and developed a complex luni-solar calendar; the Muisca calendar. According to the calendar they had specific times for sowing, harvest and the organisation of festivals where they sang, danced and played music and drank their national drink chicha in great quantities.
The most respected members of the community were mummified and the mummies were not buried, yet displayed in their temples, in natural locations such as caves and even carried on their backs during warfare to impress their enemies.
Their art is the most famous remnant of their culture, as living spaces, temples and other existing structures have been destroyed by the Spanish who colonised the Muisca territories. A primary example of their fine goldworking is the Muisca raft, together with more objects made of gold, tumbaga, ceramics and cotton displayed in the Museo del Oro in Bogotá, the ancient capital of the southern Muisca.
The Muisca were a predominantly agricultural society with small-scale farmfields, part of more extensive terrains. To diversify their diet, they traded mantles, gold, emeralds and salt for fruits, vegetables, coca, yopo and cotton cultivated in lower altitude warmer terrains populated by their neighbours, the Muzo, Panche, Yarigui, Guane, Guayupe, Achagua, Tegua, Lache, Sutagao and U'wa. Trade of products grown farther away happened with the Calima, Pijao and Caribbean coastal communities around the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta.
The Muisca economy was self-sufficient regarding the basic supplies, thanks to the advanced technologies of the agriculture on raised terraces by the people. The system of trade was well established providing both the higher social classes and the general population abundances of gold, feathers, marine snails, coca, yopo and other luxury goods. Markets were held every four to eight days in various settlements throughout the Muisca Confederation and special markets were organised around festivities where merchants from far outside the Andes were trading their goods with the Muisca.
Apart from agriculture, the Muisca were well developed in the production of different crafts, using the raw materials traded with surrounding indigenous peoples. Famous are the golden and tumbaga objects made by the Muisca people. Cotton mantles, cloths and nets were made by the Muisca women and traded for valuable goods, tropical fruits and small cotton cloths were used as money. The Muisca were unique in South America for having real coins of gold, called tejuelos.
Mining was an important source of income for the Muisca, who were called "Salt People" because of their salt mines in Zipaquirá, Nemocón and Tausa. Like their western neighbours, the Muzo -who were called "The Emerald People"- they mined emeralds in their territories, mainly in Somondoco. Carbon was found throughout the region of the Muisca in Eocene sediments and used for the fires for cooking and the production of salt and golden ornaments.
The people used a decimal counting system and counted with their fingers. Their system went from 1 to 10 and for higher numerations they used the prefix quihicha or qhicha, which means "foot" in their Chibcha language Muysccubun. Eleven became thus "foot one", twelve "foot two", etc. As in the other pre-Columbian civilizations, the number 20 was special. It was the total number of all body extremities; fingers and toes. The Muisca used two forms to express twenty: "foot ten"; quihícha ubchihica or their exclusive word gueta, derived from gue, which means "house". Numbers between 20 and 30 were counted gueta asaqui ata, gueta asaqui ubchihica. Larger numbers were counted as multiples of twenty; gue-bosa, gue-hisca. The Muisca script consisted of hieroglyphs, only used for numerals.

Language

;Comparison of important words in various Chibchan languages
MuysccubunNotesUwa
Boyacá
N. de Santander
Arauca
Barí
N. de Santander
Chimila
Cesar
Magdalena
Kogui
S.N. de
Santa Marta
Kuna
Darien Gap
Guaymí
Panama
Costa Rica
Boruca
Costa Rica
Maléku
Costa Rica
Rama
Nicaragua
English
chiesiʔchibaisakatebejtlijiitukanMoon
ataúbistiaintokti-tasu/nyékwatiéˇxidookaone
muyscadarytsángäbeochápakánkiiknapeople/person/man

Territorial organization

Bacatá

MunicipalityDepartment
bold is capital
Ruler
bold is seat
Altitude
urban centre
Surface area
RemarksMap
BacatáCundinamarcazipa26401587Muisca mummy found
Important market town
Petrographs found
BojacáCundinamarcazipa2598109Lake Herrera
Petrographs found
CajicáCundinamarcazipa255850.4
La CaleraCundinamarcazipa2718317Petrographs found
CáquezaCundinamarcazipa174638
ChíaCundinamarcazipa256480Moon Temple
Herrera site
Petrographs found
ChoachíCundinamarcazipa1923223Choachí Stone found
ChocontáCundinamarcazipa2655301.1Important market town
Battle of Chocontá
Fortification between zipa & zaque
CoguaCundinamarcazipa2600113Muisca ceramics production
Petrographs found
CotaCundinamarcazipa256655Petrographs found
Still Muisca people living
CucunubáCundinamarcazipa2590112Petrographs found
FacatativáCundinamarcazipa2586158Piedras del Tunjo
FunzaCundinamarcazipa254870Important market town
GachancipáCundinamarcazipa256844Muisca mummy found
Muisca ceramics production
GuascaCundinamarcazipa2710346Siecha Lakes
Muisca ceramics production
Petrographs found
MadridCundinamarcazipa2554120.5Lake Herrera
Petrographs found
MosqueraCundinamarcazipa2516107Lake Herrera
Petrographs found
NemocónCundinamarcazipa258598.1Muisca salt mines
Preceramic site Checua
Petrographs found
PachoCundinamarcazipa2136403.3Important market town
PascaCundinamarcazipa2180246.24Battle of Pasca
Muisca raft found
El RosalCundinamarcazipa268586.48
San Antonio
del Tequendama
Cundinamarcazipa154082Tequendama Falls
Fortification against Panche
Petrographs found
SesquiléCundinamarcazipa2595141Lake Guatavita
Minor Muisca salt mines
SibatéCundinamarcazipa2700125.6Petrographs found
SoachaCundinamarcazipa2565184.45Preceramic site Tequendama
Herrera site
Muisca ceramics production
Petrographs found
SopóCundinamarcazipa2650111.5Herrera site
SubachoqueCundinamarcazipa2663211.53Petrographs found
SuescaCundinamarcazipa2584177150 Muisca mummies found
Lake Suesca
Muisca ceramics production
Important market town
Petrographs found
SutatausaCundinamarcazipa255067Petrographs found
TabioCundinamarcazipa256974.5Hot springs used by the Muisca
TausaCundinamarcazipa2931204Muisca salt mines
Petrographs found
TenaCundinamarcazipa138455Fortification against Panche
Petrographs found
TenjoCundinamarcazipa2587108Petrographs found
TibacuyCundinamarcazipa & Panche164784.4Border with Panche
Fortification against Panche & Sutagao
Petrographs found
TocancipáCundinamarcazipa260573.51Preceramic site Tibitó
Muisca ceramics production
Important market town
Petrographs found
ZipaquiráCundinamarcazipa2650197El Abra
Muisca salt mines
Important market town
Petrographs and petroglyphs found
FúqueneCundinamarcazipa
zaque
275090Lake Fúquene
SimijacaCundinamarcazipa 2559107Conquered by zipa Saguamanchica
upon zaque Michuá
SusaCundinamarcazipa 265586Conquered by zipa Saguamanchica
upon zaque Michuá
Lake Fúquene
UbatéCundinamarcazipa 2556102Conquered by zipa Saguamanchica
upon zaque Michuá
Muisca mummy found
ZipacónCundinamarcazipa255070Agriculture
Place of meditation for the zipa
Petrographs found

Chipazaque

Municipality
DepartmentRulerAltitude
Surface area
RemarksMap
JunínCundinamarcachipazaque2300337Shared between
zipa and zaque
Petrographs found

Hunza

Municipality
Department
bold is capital
Ruler
bold is seat
Altitude
Surface area
RemarksMap
HunzaBoyacázaque2820121.4Hunzahúa Well
Cojines del Zaque
Goranchacha Temple
Muisca mummy found
Important market town
Petrographs found
BoyacáBoyacázaque242048
BuenavistaBoyacázaque2100125Border with Muzo
Nose piece and pectoral found,
dated at 620 and 990 AD respectively
ChinavitaBoyacázaque1763148
ChíquizaBoyacázaque2900119.52Lake Iguaque
ChitaraqueBoyacázaque1575157.65
ChivatáBoyacázaque290356
CiénegaBoyacázaque246073
CucaitaBoyacázaque265043.58
GachantiváBoyacázaque245066Muisca mummy found
Muisca copper mines
GaragoaBoyacázaque1650191.75
MacanalBoyacázaque1680199.5Border with Tegua
MotavitaBoyacázaque269062Coca market town
Petrographs found
OicatáBoyacázaque281559
PachavitaBoyacázaque198568
RamiriquíBoyacázaque2325146.5Place of death of Quemuenchatocha
Important ceramics production
Petrographs found
SáchicaBoyacázaque215062.4Petrographs found
SamacáBoyacázaque2660172.9
San Miguel de SemaBoyacázaque261590Lake Fúquene
SiachoqueBoyacázaque2760125
SomondocoBoyacázaque167058.7Muisca emerald mines
Important market town
SutamarchánBoyacázaque1800102Muisca ceramics production
TinjacáBoyacázaque217579.3Muisca ceramics production
TipacoqueBoyacázaque185072.1Chicamocha Canyon
TurmequéBoyacázaque2389106Important market town
Fortification between zipa & zaque
Villa de LeyvaBoyacázaque2149128El Infiernito
Lake Iguaque
Muisca mummy found
Important market town
SoraBoyacázaque265042
SoracáBoyacázaque294257
SotaquiráBoyacázaque2860288.65
SutatenzaBoyacázaque189041.26
TibanáBoyacázaque2115121.76Petrographs found
TogüíBoyacázaque1650118
TutaBoyacázaque2600165
VentaquemadaBoyacázaque2630159.3
ViracacháBoyacázaque252068
ZetaquiráBoyacázaque1665262
AlmeidaBoyacázaque192557.98
La CapillaBoyacázaque175057.26
JenesanoBoyacázaque207659
Nuevo ColónBoyacázaque250051
RondónBoyacázaque2075158
LenguazaqueCundinamarcazaque258915.36
MachetáCundinamarcazaque2094229.35Petrographs found
TibiritáCundinamarcazaque198057.2Petrographs found
VillapinzónCundinamarcazaque2715249

Iraca

MunicipalityDepartmentRuler
bold is seat
Altitude
Surface area
RemarksMap
SuamoxBoyacáiraca
Nompanim
Sugamuxi
2569208.54Sun Temple
Muisca mummy found
Muisca carbon mines
AquitaniaBoyacáiraca3030943Lake Tota
BusbanzáBoyacáiraca247222.5Elector of new iraca
CuítivaBoyacáiraca275043Lake Tota
Statue of Bochica
FiravitobaBoyacáiraca2500109.9Elector of new iraca
GámezaBoyacáiraca275088Herrera site
Muisca mummy found
Minor Muisca salt mines
Muisca carbon mines
Petrographs found
IzaBoyacáiraca256034Herrera site
Lake Tota
Petrographs found
MonguaBoyacáiraca2975365.5Petrographs found
MonguíBoyacáiraca290081Petroglyphs
Birth places
PescaBoyacáiraca2858282
TascoBoyacáiraca2530167Muisca mummy found
TocaBoyacáiraca2810165
TotaBoyacáiraca2870314Lake Tota
SocotáBoyacáiraca
Tundama
2443600.11Muisca mummy found
TibasosaBoyacáTundama
iraca
253894.3

Tundama

MunicipalityDepartmentRuler
bold is seat
Altitude
Surface area
RemarksMap
TundamaBoyacáTundama2590266.93Seat of Tundama
In ancient lake
OnzagaSantanderTundama1960486.76Important for wool and cotton production
CerinzaBoyacáTundama275061.63Monument to the Muisca
Paz de RíoBoyacáTundama2200116Coca market town
PaipaBoyacáTundama2525305.924Thermal springs
SativanorteBoyacáTundama2600184Herrera site
SativasurBoyacáTundama260081Muisca mummy SO10-IX found
Herrera site
SoatáBoyacáTundama1950136Herrera site
Coca market town
BelénBoyacáTundama265083.6Petrographs found
CorralesBoyacáTundama247060.85
FlorestaBoyacáTundama250686
NobsaBoyacáTundama251055.39
Santa Rosa de ViterboBoyacáTundama2753107
SusacónBoyacáTundama2480191
TibasosaBoyacáTundama
iraca
253894.3
SocotáBoyacáiraca
Tundama
2443600.11Muisca mummy found

Independent ''caciques''

Municipality
bold is major cacique
DepartmentRulerAltitude
Surface area
RemarksMap
VélezSantandercacique2050271.34
ChipatáSantandercacique182094.17First town conquered by the Spanish
GüepsaSantandercacique154033.08Border with Guane
Border with Yarigui
CharaláSantandercacique1290411Border with Guane
ArcabucoBoyacácacique2739155Statue honouring the Muisca warriors
BetéitivaBoyacácacique2575123
BoavitaBoyacácacique2114159Muisca mummy found
ChiquinquiráBoyacácacique2556133
CómbitaBoyacácacique2825149
CovarachíaBoyacácacique2320103Herrera site
GuatequeBoyacácacique181536.04Religious rituals at Guatoc hill
GuayatáBoyacácacique1767112Muisca money found
MoniquiráBoyacácacique1669220Muisca mummy found
Muisca copper mines
PisbaBoyacácacique2400469.12Muisca mummy found
RáquiraBoyacácacique2150233Muisca ceramics production
SaboyáBoyacácacique2600246.9Petrographs found
TópagaBoyacácacique290037Muisca mummy found
Muisca carbon mines
TutazáBoyacácacique1890135Muisca ceramics production
TenzaBoyacácacique160051Tenza Valley
ChivorBoyacácacique1800108.36Muisca emerald mines
ÚmbitaBoyacácacique2480148.17
Carmen de CarupaCundinamarcacacique2600228Tunjo found
GuatavitaCundinamarcacacique2680247.3Muisca ceramics production
Main goldworking town
Petrographs found
GachetáCundinamarcacacique Guatavita1745262.2
GuachetáCundinamarcacacique2688177.45Minor Muisca salt mines
Petrographs found
MantaCundinamarcacacique1924105
UbaqueCundinamarcacacique1867104.96Last public religious ritual
Lake Ubaque
UbaláCundinamarcacacique1949505Muisca emerald mines
ChipaqueCundinamarcacacique2400139.45Petrographs found
FómequeCundinamarcacacique1895555.7
QuetameCundinamarcacacique1496138.47
UneCundinamarcacacique2376221
FoscaCundinamarcacacique2080126.02Fortification against Guayupe

Neighbouring indigenous groups

The sacred sites of the Muisca Confederation were based in the Muisca religion and mythology. The Muisca were a highly religious people with their own beliefs on the origin of the Earth and life and human sacrifices were no exception to please the gods for good harvests and prosperity.
Lake Guatavita, Guatavita, was the location where the new zipa would be inaugurated. It became known with the Spanish conquerors as the site of El Dorado where the new zipa was covered in gold dust and installed as the new ruler of the southern Muisca.
In the legends of the Muisca, mankind originated in Lake Iguaque, Monquirá, when the goddess Bachué came out from the lake with a boy in her arms. When the boy grew, they populated the Earth. They are considered the ancestors of the human race. Finally, they disappeared unto the lake in the shape of snakes.
According to Muisca myths, the Tequendama Falls, outside Soacha, was the site where the first zipa Meicuchuca lost his beautiful lover who turned in a snake and disappeared in the waters of the Bogotá River.
El Infiernito, close to the present town of Villa de Leyva was a sacred site where the Muisca erected structures based on astronomical parameters.

Other sacred sites

Conquest and early colonial period

The conquest of the Muisca was the heaviest of all four Spanish expeditions to the great American civilisations. More than 80 percent of the soldiers and horses that started the journey of a year to the northern Muisca Confederation didn't make it. Various settlements were founded by the Spanish between :Category:1537 disestablishments in the Muisca Confederation|1537 and :Category:1539 disestablishments in the Muisca Confederation|1539.
A delegation of more than 900 men left the tropical city of Santa Marta and went on a harsh expedition through the heartlands of Colombia in search of El Dorado and the civilisation that produced all this precious gold. The leader of the first and main expedition under Spanish flag was Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada, with his brother Hernán second in command. Several other soldiers were participating in the journey, who would later become encomenderos and taking part in the conquest of other parts of Colombia. Other contemporaneous expeditions into the unknown interior of the Andes, all searching for the mythical land of gold, were starting from later Venezuela, led by Bavarian and other German conquistadors and from the south, starting in the previously founded Kingdom of Quito in later Ecuador.
The first phase of the conquest was ended by the victory of the few conquistadors left over Tisquesusa, the last zipa of Bacatá, who fell and died "bathing in his own blood"after the battle at Funza, on the Bogotá savanna, April 20, 1537. The arrival of the Spanish conquerors was revealed to Tisquesusa by the mohan Popón, from the village of Ubaque. He told the Muisca ruler that foreigners were coming and Tisquesusa would die "bathing in his own blood". When Tisquesusa was informed of the advancing invasion of the Spanish soldiers, he sent a spy to Suesca to find out more about their army strength, weapons and with how many warriors they could be beaten. The zipa left the capital Bacatá and took shelter in Nemocón which directed the Spanish troops to there, during this march attacked by more than 600 Muisca warriors.
When Tisquesusa retreated in his fort in Cajicá he allegedly told his men he would not be able to combat against the strong Spanish army in possession of weapons that produced "thunder and lightning". He chose to return to Bacatá and ordered the capital to be evacuated, resulting in an abandoned site when the Spanish arrived. In search for the Muisca ruler the conquistadores went north to find Tisquesusa in the surroundings of Facatativá where they attacked him at night.
Tisquesusa was thrusted by the sword of one of De Quesada's soldiers but without knowing he was the zipa he let him go, after taking the expensive mantle of the ruler. Tisquesusa fled hurt into the mountains and died of his wounds there. His body was only discovered a year later because of the black vultures circling over it.
When Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada found out the caciques were conspiring against him, he sent out several expeditions of soldiers. His captain Juan de Céspedes went south to found Pasca on July 15, 1537. Hernán was sent north and Gonzalo himself went northeast, to search for the mythical Land of Gold El Dorado. There he didn't find golden cities, but emeralds, the Muisca were extracting in Chivor and Somondoco. First foundation was Engativá, presently a locality of Bogotá, on May 22, 1537. Passing through Suba, Chía, Cajicá, Tocancipá, Gachancipá, Guatavita and Sesquilé, he arrived in Chocontá, founding the modern town on June 9. The journey went eastward into the Tenza Valley through Machetá, Tibiritá, Guateque, Sutatenza and Tenza, founded on San Juan; June 24. On the same day, Hernán founded Sutatausa. Gonzalo continued northwest through La Capilla and Úmbita. He arrived in Turmequé that he founded on July 20.
In August 1537 Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada entered the territories of the zaque, who ruled from Hunza. When the Spanish conquerors entered the outskirts of Hunza and found a hill with poles were bodies were dangling, they named it Cerro de la Horca. At the time of the conquest Quemuenchatocha was the zaque and he ordered his men to not submit to the European invaders or show them the way to his bohío. He sent messengers to the Spanish conquistadors with valuable peace offers. While this was happening, Quemuenchatocha had hidden his treasures from the Spanish. Hunza was located in a valley not as green as the Bogotá savanna. The advantage of the Spanish weaponry and the use of the horses quickly beat the Muisca warriors.
When Gonzalo arrived at the main bohío of Quemuenchatocha, he found the Muisca ruler sitting in his throne and surrounded by his closest companions. All men were dressed in expensive mantles and adorned with golden crowns. On August 20, 1537, the Spanish beat the zaque and the big and strong Muisca ruler was taken captive to Suesca. There he was tortured and the Spanish soldiers hoped he would reveal where he hid his precious properties. The absence of Quemuenchatocha paved the route for his nephew Aquiminzaque to succeed him as ruler of the northern Muisca, a practice common in Muisca traditions. When Quemuenchatocha was finally released from captivity in Suesca, he fled to Ramiriquí, where he died shortly after. The Spanish soldiers found gold, emeralds, silver, mantles and other valuables in Tunja. They were not able to take all the precious pieces and many were secretly taken away by the Muisca, using folded deer skins. They hid the
valuables in nearby hills.
Name
leader in bold
NationalityYears
active
Encountered
bold is conquered
Year
of
death
ImageNotes
Gonzalo Jiménez
de Quesada
Granadian1536–39
1569–72
zipa
zaque
1579
Juan MaldonadoCastilian1536–39
1569–72
Muisca
Gonzalo MacíasCastilian1536–39
1569–71
Muisca1571~
Hernán Pérez
de Quesada
Granadian1536–39
1540–42
Muisca1544
Gonzalo Suárez RendónCastilian1536–39zipa, zaque1590
Martín GaleanoCastilian1536–39
1540–45
Muisca1554~
Lázaro FonteCastilian1536–39
1540–42
Muisca1542
Juan de CéspedesCastilian1525–43Muisca1573 or 1576
Juan de San MartínCastilian1536–39
1540–45
Muisca
Antonio de LebrijaCastilian1536–39Muisca1540
Ortún Velázquez de VelascoCastilian1536–39Muisca1584
Bartolomé Camacho ZambranoCastilian1536–39Muisca
Antonio Díaz de CardosoCastilian1536–39Muisca
Pedro Fernández de ValenzuelaCastilian1536–39Muisca
640+ conquistadors
~80%
mostly CastilianApril 1536
-
April 1537
Diseases, jaguars, crocodiles, climate,
various indigenous warfare
1536
1537

Name
leader in bold
NationalityYears
active
Encountered
bold is conquered
Year
of
death
ImageNotes
Sebastián de BelalcázarCastilian1514–39Muisca1551
Baltasar MaldonadoCastilian1543–52Muisca1552
Nikolaus FedermannBavarian1535–39Muisca1542
Miguel Holguín y FigueroaCastilian1535–39Muisca1576>

Settlement
bold is founded
DepartmentDateYearAltitude
urban centre
NotesMap
ChipatáSantander8 March15371820
BarbosaSantanderMarch15371610
MoniquiráBoyacáMarch15371669
Santa SofíaBoyacáMarch15372387
SutamarchánBoyacáMarch15371800
RáquiraBoyacáMarch15372150
SimijacaCundinamarcaMarch15372559
SusaCundinamarcaMarch15372655
FúqueneCundinamarcaMarch15372750
GuachetáCundinamarca12 March15372688
LenguazaqueCundinamarca13 March15372589
CucunubáCundinamarca13–14 March15372590
SuescaCundinamarca14 March15372584
NemocónCundinamarcaMarch15372585
ZipaquiráCundinamarcaMarch15372650
CajicáCundinamarca23 March15372558
ChíaCundinamarca24 March15372564
CotaCundinamarcaMarch–April15372566
FunzaCundinamarca20 April15372548

Settlement
bold is founded
DepartmentDateYearNoteMap
EngativáCundinamarca22 May1537
SubaCundinamarcaMay1537
ChíaCundinamarcaMay1537
CajicáCundinamarcaMay1537
TocancipáCundinamarcaMay–June1537
GachancipáCundinamarcaMay–June1537
GuatavitaCundinamarcaMay–June1537
Sesquilé
Lake Guatavita
El Dorado
CundinamarcaMay–June1537
ChocontáCundinamarca9 June1537
MachetáCundinamarcaJune1537
TibiritáCundinamarcaJune1537
GuatequeBoyacáJune1537
SutatenzaBoyacáJune1537
TenzaBoyacá24 June1537
La CapillaBoyacáJune–July1537
ChivorBoyacáJuly1537
ÚmbitaBoyacáJuly1537
TurmequéBoyacá20 July1537
BoyacáBoyacá8 August1537
CiénegaBoyacáAugust1537
SoracáBoyacá20 August ~15:001537
HunzaBoyacá20 August1537

NameDepartmentDateYearNoteMap
SutatausaCundinamarca24 June1537

NameDepartmentDateYearNoteMap
PascaCundinamarca15 July1537
San Antonio del TequendamaCundinamarca1539

NameDepartmentDateYearNoteMap
El ColegioCundinamarca1537
CuítivaBoyacá19 January1550

NameDepartmentDateYearNoteMap
BojacáCundinamarca16 October1537
SomondocoBoyacá1 November1537
UneCundinamarca23 February1538

NameDepartmentDateYearNoteMap
TunjaBoyacá6 August1539

NameDepartmentDateYearNoteMap
DuitamaBoyacá15 December1539

NameDepartmentDateYearNoteMap
MotavitaBoyacá1540
Nevado del SumapazCundinamarca1540

Early colonial period

Not only the Spanish settlers had lost large percentages of their men due to warfare and diseases. The assessed corregimientos of the Province of Tunja between 1537 and 1636 shows a decline of the total Muisca population between 65 and 85%. Epidemics were the main cause of the rapid reduction in population. Various have been reported and many undescribed in the first twenty years of contact.
After the foundation of Bogotá and the installation of the new dependency of the Spanish Crown, several strategies were important to the Spanish conquerors. The rich mineral resources of the Altiplano had to be extracted, the agriculture was quickly reformed, a system of encomiendas was installed and a main concern of the Spanish was the evangelisation of the Muisca. On October 9, 1549, Carlos V sent a royal letter to the New Kingdom directed at the priests about the necessity of population reduction of the Muisca. The indigenous people were working in the encomiendas which limited their religious conversion. To speed up the process of submittance to the Spanish reign, the mobility of the indigenous people was prohibited and the people gathered in resguardos. The formerly celebrated festivities in their religion disappeared. Specific times for the catechesis were controlled by laws, as executed in royal dictates in 1537, 1538 and 1551. The first bishop of Santafé, Juan de los Barrios, ordered to destroy the temples of the Muisca and replace them with catholic churches. The last public religious ceremony of the Muisca religion was held in Ubaque on December 27, 1563. The second bishop of Santafé, Luis Zapata de Cárdenas, intensified the aggressive policies against the Muisca religion and the burnings of their sacred sites. This formed the final nail in the coffin of the former polytheistic society.
The transition to a mixed agriculture with Old World crops was remarkably fast, mainly to do with the fertility of the lands of the Altiplano permitting European crops to grow there, while in the more tropical areas the soil was not so much suited for the foreign crops. In 1555, the Muisca of Toca were growing European crops as wheat and barley and sugarcane was grown in other areas. The previously self-sustaining economy was quickly transformed into one based on intensive agriculture and mining that produced changes in the landscape and culture of the Muisca.

Spanish chroniclers