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Muisca raft

The Muisca raft (Balsa Muisca in Spanish), sometimes referred to as the Golden Raft of El Dorado, is a pre-Columbian votive piece created by the Muisca, an indigenous people of Colombia in the Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes. The piece probably refers to the gold offering ceremony described in the legend of El Dorado, which occasionally took place at Lake Guatavita. In this ritual, the new chief (zipa), who was aboard a raft and covered with gold dust, tossed gold objects into the lake as offerings to the gods, before immersing himself into the lake. The figure was created between 1295 and 1410 AD by lost-wax casting in an alloy of gold with silver and copper. The raft was part of an offering that was placed in a cave in the municipality of Pasca. Since its discovery in 1969, the Muisca raft has become a national emblem for Colombia and has been depicted on postage stamps. The piece is exhibited at the Gold Museum in Bogotá.

Muisca raft
The Muisca raft
MaterialGold, silver and copper
Size19.5 cm (7.7 in) x 10.2 cm (4.0 in) x 10.1 cm (4.0 in)
Created1295 – 1410 AD
Discovered1969 in Pasca
Present locationGold Museum, Bogotá, Colombia

Background edit

 
Muisca territory and nearby peoples within modern-day Colombia

Muisca people edit

The Muisca people, also known as the Chibcha,[1] were situated at 9000 ft elevation in the eastern Andes of Colombia near modern day Bogotá, the town of Tunja, and Lake Guatavita.[2] While most Muisca villages had a chief and priests, the Muisca were generally an egalitarian agricultural people. They made pottery and textiles and mined emeralds and salt,[3] but they lacked the gold[4] and beeswax needed to create their signature gold pieces. For those raw materials, they bartered with neighboring peoples.[3] Because the Muisca were an egalitarian people, gold was not concentrated in the hands of few.[5] Instead, all Muisca families decorated their doors and windows with gold objects.[6]

Muisca goldworking edit

Gold was used in Central America by the first centuries AD[7] and was spiritually and symbolically important to Pre-Columbian peoples.[8] The countries of the Isthmus—Costa Rica, Panama, and Colombia—emerged as a single goldworking region that shared styles and methodology, such as the use of lost-wax casting instead of hammering.[1] Metalworking in the region began with objects for religious rituals and royalty, rather than as tools, weapons, or currency; this symbolic use from the outset established a precedent for metalworking throughout the region’s history.[7]

Muisca gold pieces are distinct from those of other Pre-Columbian peoples, in terms of their use, manufacture, and appearance.[1] The Muisca votive offerings, called tunjos, were not worn as clothing or jewelry, but instead were used for symbolic purposes. They were often small enough to hold in the hand; sometimes as small as 1.5 cm (0.59 in).[9] The tunjos were lost-wax casts using tumbaga, a gold alloy containing as much as 70% copper, whereas in other regions gold was hammered into the desired shape. Furthermore, the Muisca objects are identifiable by their rough surfaces in comparison to the polished gold in surrounding regions.[1] Muisca art tended to include components that referred back to the raw material used in their own construction; for example, a statue who is depicted to be holding, in pouches, the substance from which it is made.[10] Birds are a common motif in Colombian gold work.[1]

Muisca goldworking influenced a wide region. Local copies of Muisca votive figurines have been found as far away as the Linea Vieja region on the Atlantic slope of Costa Rica.[11] Some of these design traditions remained unchanged for 1,000 years and were prominent at the time of contact.[12]

 
Standing man with miniature raft. Colombian. Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, Maryland.

Legend of El Dorado edit

The Muisca raft commemorates a ceremony, detailed in the Legend of El Dorado, in which a new king covered his entire body in gold dust, floated on a raft to the center of a lake, and threw large quantities of gold votive offerings into the lake.[1] The legend of El Dorado emerged from six accounts, three by the chroniclers Fernandez de Oviedo, Pedro Cieza de Leon, and Juan de Castellanos, and three by the conquistadores Gonzalo Pizarro, Jimenez de Quesada, and Sebastian de Benalcazar; subsequent descriptions are elaborations upon these six accounts.[13] While the story was embellished with each telling, every version had several details in common, such as the lake and the gold dust. We also know that Muisca venerated lakes.[13] Jennings details the ceremony as it occurs in one telling:[14]

The El Dorado tale derives from the investiture ceremony of the Muisca rulers. The new chief was coated in gold dust and taken on a raft to the center of the sacred Lake Guatavita. At sunrise, when the light struck his golden body, the chief would dive into the lake, thus washing the gold off, and would emerge as a human ruler born from the divine golden sun. Music, shouting, and then tossing of large quantities of gold into the lake accompanied the ceremony.[14]

However, some experts doubt that the El Dorado depicted in the legend represents the ceremony at Lake Guatavita.[15] The city of El Dorado probably never existed, but El Dorado the Golden Man has a foundation in historical truth; El Dorado probably referred to the ruler of the Muisca.[14]

Overview edit

Description edit

 
Muisca raft detail

The Muisca raft is a small votive offering made from an alloy of gold, silver, and copper. It measures 19.5 cm (7.7 in) long, by 10.2 cm (4.0 in) wide, by 10.1 cm (4.0 in) high.[16] The raft contains eleven human figures — a central, large seated figure representing the chief or cacique,[17] surrounded by ten smaller figures, representing attendants and oarsmen,[18] some of whom wear masks.[19] The figures rest on top of an oval-shaped reed raft, which is composed of a triangle-patterned central support structure, with wire coils around the perimeter.[19] Like most Muisca goldworking, there are no figures-in-the-round; each figure is cast as a flat plaque, adorned on the front side with wire-like details[20] and gold jewelry.[21]

The surface of the piece is unpolished and appears crude in comparison to Muisca jewelry, but like other votive offerings, the Muisca raft was not intended to be decorative but rather a symbolic offering; the appearance of this piece was typical for its use.[20] Microscopic examination did not reveal any joint anywhere on the raft; the piece, and every ornamental detail, including dangling gold decorations, was created in a single pour of gold.[22] The manufacturing process was intensive; the entire process, from shaping a beeswax template to breaking the mould and revealing the gold piece, likely required hundreds of hours of work[23] undertaken by a single craftsperson.[24]

Main figure edit

The central figure, the cacique, is naked, seated, and folds his arms over his chest in a W pattern, a common feature in Muisca gold pieces.[19] He wears a large rectangular nose pendant, adorned with bird heads and trapezoidal decorations, as well as a headdress and possibly a crown.[19] Additional trapezoidal adornments can be seen: three pendants, two ear pendants, and three others around the body. He is seated on a duho (a small chair with a high backrest), and leaning backwards. The cacique is surrounded by banners and feather-like projections.[19]

The main figure’s importance is apparent from his size and his richly adorned body.[25] The nose pendant is also significant in identifying the chief; according to one Spanish chronicler, future caciques were locked in houses from a young age and when they emerged years later, they pierced their ears and wore gold nose pendants to indicate their new status. Nose pendants were among the most detailed and ornate items in Muisca goldworking.[25] The duho is also associated with the chief,[26] and it is significant that none of the figures that surround the central figure face him—a sign of reverence to the cacique.[27]

Attendants and oarsmen edit

The remaining ten figures that surround the cacique, while all much smaller than him, can be grouped into three sizes: two larger figures standing in the front and center of the raft; two medium sized seated figures that surround them; and six smaller standing figures.[28] The two large figures in the front each wear a headdress with eleven feathers, carry a maraca (rattle), wear a mask in the shape of an animal head, and carry a trident next to their waist.[29] The two medium-sized figures flank the larger two, and wear a coiled headdress possibly meant to represent fabric.[29] They each carry a poporo — a gourd-shaped flask that contained the lime that was chewed along with coca leaves. The smaller six figures are positioned around the perimeter of the raft and each wears a headdress and carries a small stick.[29]

Technical details edit

The uniformity of the figures suggest that the raft was created by a single, highly trained artisan.[24] Researchers have applied radiocarbon dating to remnants of charcoal that were left on the raft by the casting mould; the tests yielded a date of 1295–1410 AD for the raft’s construction.[30] Using X-ray fluorescence, researchers have identified the “chemical signature” of the gold used in the Muisca raft, and concluded that it came from the lowlands near the banks of the Magdalena river where people still pan for gold today.[31] The makeup of the Muisca raft is as follows:[32]

Element (symbol) % by composition[32]
Gold (Au) 64.7±0.9
Silver (Ag) 16.1±0.4
Copper (Cu) 19.2±1.2

Discovery edit

There are two known Muisca golden rafts;[33] one from Pasca, the subject of this article, and another from Siecha, which was lost.[34] The Siecha raft was the first to be discovered, and it aided in the discovery of the Pasca raft.[33] In 1856, two brothers from Siecha by the names of Joaquín and Bernardino Tovar partially drained a nearby lagoon, and found a votive raft that they associated with the ceremony referred to in the legend of El Dorado.[33] It was in the hands of diplomat Salomón Koppel who sold it to a museum in Germany,[33] the Ethnologisches Museum.[35] However, when the artifact arrived in the port of Bremen it was destroyed in a fire.[33] Nevertheless, through reverse engineering, a group from Universidad de los Andes (UNIANDES), in Bogotá, Colombia, recreated the Siecha raft in gold and identified a plausible casting process.[34]

A century later, in 1969, a peasant from Pasca by the name of Cruz María Dimaté found several pieces of gold and ceramics in a cave, and described them to Father Jaime Hincapié Santamaría, a parish priest.[33] The priest showed Dimaté a drawing of the Siecha raft in a book by Liborio Zerda, and Dimaté confirmed its similarity to the newly found raft. Father Santamaría arranged for the object to be acquired by the Bank of the Republic and placed in the Gold Museum where it remains.[33]

Creation edit

Raw materials edit

 
Colombian emerald. The Muisca traded salt, emeralds, and cotton cloth for gold.[1]

The Muisca bartered their salt, emeralds, and cotton cloth to obtain the gold needed for tunjos.[1] The altitude of the region varied greatly, creating small ecological zones in which one or more resources were lacking in each locale, which encouraged trade. Ethnographic studies reveal trade networks in the highlands of Colombia connecting it to surrounding regions, and Spanish language sources confirm that these networks extended to the Inca territories.[36] Barter between the highlands and coast exchanged fish, shells, and gold for coca leaves, chili peppers, and colored feathers.[36] Local traders moved materials between the gold mining regions and the gold-working regions, in which finished products were exchanged for raw gold.[37] Muisca artisans used gold alloys with a variety of different compositions, resulting in a wide range of colourations.[38]

Lost-wax casting edit

 
Pendant with bird. Muisca, 10th–16th C., cast gold alloy. Metropolitan Museum of Art. This object illustrates the fine detail of the casting and the unpolished surface of the gold.

To create their gold pieces, the Muisca used a method called lost-wax casting.[1] The manufacturing process itself was likely part of the ritual associated with these tunjos.[39] The process began when the Muisca craftsperson created a wax model in the desired shape of the object, using beeswax harvested from the region.[40] The beeswax was worked into two basic shapes: flat sheets from which geometric shapes could be cut out, such as for the figure’s torso; and threads of rolled beeswax, as thin as 1 mm (0.039 in), that could be used for coils and adornments, including finer details such as the eyes or feathers.[41] These constructions reveal great skill on the part of the artisan — the components are highly uniform with few mistakes. The only signs of finger work occur on the bottom of the raft where elements of the design were pressed into the soft base.[42] Each of the wax figures was likely created as a separate piece before being fused together into the ensemble, perhaps by using a warm tool. In addition to the intended design, the artisan added wax feeders allowing for the flow of molten gold.[39]

The wax figurine was then thoroughly covered in a wet, equal mixture of fine charcoal and clay, in order to form a mould.[43] For the casting process to succeed, it was necessary to pack the wet mixture around the wax, being careful to fill every crevice thoroughly, ensuring that components that are meant to dangle, such as earrings, do not become fused together during casting.[43] The artisan showed great skill in filling these cracks without breaking or warping the soft beeswax.[43][44] For repeated elements, such as in a string of beads or pendants, the Muisca used stone matrices — blocks that have a figure carved in relief — to aid with the building of the wax template; this ensured some uniformity in the repeated element.[45] The mould was built in successive layers, and the artisan may have increased the ratio of clay to charcoal and also increased the grain size of the mixture as the mould grew in size — to improve its structural integrity.[46] The only portion of the wax model that was not covered was a small opening near the bow of the raft where the molten gold would later be poured in.[46]

Once the clay and charcoal mould dried and hardened, the artisan applied heat to melt the beeswax, and allowed it to run out of the opening, creating a figurine-shaped cavity in the clay.[47][48] This was the only mould used to cast the Muisca raft.[47] Just prior to the actual casting, the mould was pre-heated to several hundred degrees to allow the smooth flow of molten gold into all the cracks and details before hardening; it also helped protect against fracture from cooling too fast.[47] The final step in the casting was to hammer open the mould, revealing a perfect copy of the beeswax figurine, this time in gold.[49][47] However, the Muisca raft did have issues during the casting process—a fracture developed at the base of the piece, resulting in a large portion of the raft’s base, which was meant to be a crisscross of openwork, showing a thin, solid gold sheet instead.[50]

Depletion gilding edit

When the casting was complete, the artisan may have treated the piece with depletion gilding, a technique for increasing the purity of gold on the surface of the object.[51] Colombian gold was combined with copper in an alloy called tumbaga, a Malay word meaning ‘copper’, and the composition of the alloy was especially chosen by the Muisca craftsperson for each votive offering piece.[52] The depletion gilding process works on the principle that gold is resistant to oxidation whereas other metals are not.[51] The piece is treated by coating the surface with acid or packing it in salt, which reacts with the silver and copper contained in the alloy, but does not react with the gold. The result is a piece with a higher purity of gold on the surface than in the center of the object; the process can be adjusted to yield a variety of surface colorations of the metal.[51] The Muisca generally did not do much else in the way of finishing their gold work, and the Muisca raft followed that trend.[50] There was no effort to fix casting errors, and the surface remained unpolished; charcoal remnants from the mould were left in crevices on the figures.[50]

Offering edit

The offering that contained the Muisca raft was placed in a cave in the side of a hill, known as La Campana, located between Lázaro Fonte and El Retiro streets in the Pasca municipality, Cundinamarca.[53] The offering contained three other artifacts, including a smaller gold work, two ceramics (including a large offering vessel and a smaller vessel); it may have also included a feline skull that has been lost.[54] The smaller gold work was also a lost-wax casting depicting a human sitting in a litter, or a basket for carrying royalty using human muscle power. The piece depicts the human with closed eyes and an elongated mouth showing the teeth.[55] The larger ceramic piece was 25.8 cm (10.2 in) high by 31.5 cm (12.4 in) wide,[54] is made of fine paste, and was covered by a red slip. The smaller, rounded vessel was well constructed and finished with a smooth surface and buff.[55]

Muisca offerings were common, and varied across time and place.[56] Offerings included human gold effigies, ceramics, emeralds, hair, blood, and animal skulls; and were deposited in lakes, caves, and behind waterfalls. The purpose of the offering was to gain favor with a deity in hopes they will provide healing; or to bless a marriage, harvest, building, or ceremony. Offerings may also have been associated with political power, as various chiefdoms vied for power.[56]

Sometimes the offering was placed by a jeque, or priest, and sometimes it was placed by a layperson.[57] According to Spanish accounts, the offerings were made to gain favor with a deity, and indeed each shrine was associated with a distinct god that heard specific concerns. Uribe Villegas details the account of one Spanish chronicler:[57]

The Muisca had one god for each necessity. Chibchacum, of the Bogotá province, was the god of merchants, goldsmiths, peasants, and wealthy people; Nencatacoa, of drunkenness, weavers, and blanket painters. Cuchaviva, the rainbow, to whom one should offer figurines of “low karat gold”, was the god of childbirth. Among the many gods, Bochica, the main deity, was lord of chiefs and captains, and, like Chibchacum, received only gold offerings.[57]

The message of a Muisca offering was more important than the display.[58] In the case of the Pasca offering containing the Muisca raft, it is likely that it was a response to current political tensions among various chiefdoms in the region.[59] In a time of tension, the raft offering may have been an effort to “reinforce the prestige of a leader in a circumstantial situation”.[59] It is likely that the raft was commissioned by a powerful person such as the cacique. The raft itself was time consuming and produced to a high quality, as were the other objects in the offering. The offering vessel itself is one of the largest known from the Muisca.[60]

Looting and protection edit

Although neither conquistadors nor treasure hunters ever witnessed the ceremony, its legend enticed Europeans,[33] who desired gold to pay for their ships, weapons, and horses, and, they hoped, for personal riches. As a result, adventurers have attempted to recover more artifacts. Heidi King describes such efforts:[1]

 
Lake Guatavita with prominent notch cut into its side. The lake was partially drained in the late 16th century by treasure hunters.[1]

In the centuries since the conquest countless lives and great fortunes have been lost in attempts to recover the treasures. The most serious effort was undertaken at the end of the sixteenth century by a wealthy merchant from Santa Fe de Bogota who, with the help of eight thousand local workmen, cut a great notch—still prominent in the landscape—into the mountain on one side of the lake and lowered the water level by about sixty feet. Countless gold objects, and other offerings, including an emerald the size of a hen’s egg, were recovered from the edges of the lake bed. Several expeditions followed, but the central zone of the lake remains untouched.[1]

The Spanish found large quantities of gold in Lake Guatavita.[61] When searching for treasure in the lake became too costly, they took gold pieces directly from the Muisca in their villages. The stolen artifacts were melted into ingots and doubloons, which Phillip II had shipped back to Spain.[61]

Today, protections are in place to preserve the Muisca heritage, including tunjos like the Muisca raft. As part of Colombia’s historical and cultural heritage plan, the government placed Lake Guatavita under legal protection in 1965.[1] The Muisca raft, together with a large collection of other tunjos, are held at the Gold Museum in Bogotá. The museum’s director, archaeologist Maria Alicia Uribe Villegas, as well as archaeometallurgist Marcos Martinón-Torres, have applied modern techniques to study and preserve over 80 such tunjos at the museum.[61] On March 10, 2004 Colombia's postal service released a souvenir sheet depicting the Muisca raft on two postage stamps.[62]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m King 2002, p. 25.
  2. ^ Attenborough 1976, p. 63.
  3. ^ a b Martinón-Torres & Uribe-Villegas 2015, p. 4.
  4. ^ Jason 2013, 24:50.
  5. ^ Jason 2013, 13:20.
  6. ^ Vega 2003b.
  7. ^ a b Pillsbury, Richter & Potts 2017, p. 1-2.
  8. ^ King 2002.
  9. ^ Wong 2013.
  10. ^ Brotherston 2003, §South America, Pre-Columbian (3) (i) (e).
  11. ^ Brotherston 2003, §South America, Pre-Columbian (5) (iii) (a).
  12. ^ Brotherston 2003, §South America, Pre-Columbian (1) (i).
  13. ^ a b Hemming 1979, p. 101-104.
  14. ^ a b c Jennings 1983, p. 172.
  15. ^ Hemming 1979, p. 103.
  16. ^ Museo del Oro, Bogotá.
  17. ^ Toquica, Cruz & Torres 2003, §Viceroyalty of New Granada.
  18. ^ Sparavigna 2016, p. 4.
  19. ^ a b c d e Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 9.
  20. ^ a b Bray 2003, §Muisca.
  21. ^ Jason 2013, 4:25.
  22. ^ Jason 2013, 10:30.
  23. ^ Jason 2013, 14:15.
  24. ^ a b Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 14.
  25. ^ a b Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 28.
  26. ^ Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 31.
  27. ^ Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 33.
  28. ^ Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 9-10.
  29. ^ a b c Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 10.
  30. ^ Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 47.
  31. ^ Jason 2013, 28:55.
  32. ^ a b Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 26.
  33. ^ a b c d e f g h La balsa muisca y el Dorado.
  34. ^ a b Rueda & Escobar 2017.
  35. ^ Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 37.
  36. ^ a b Jennings 1983, p. 143.
  37. ^ Jennings 1983, p. 145.
  38. ^ Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 25-27.
  39. ^ a b Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 17.
  40. ^ Jason 2013, 33:20.
  41. ^ Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 13.
  42. ^ Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 14-17.
  43. ^ a b c Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 18.
  44. ^ Jason 2013, 34:20.
  45. ^ Brotherston 2003, §South America, Pre-Columbian (5) (ii).
  46. ^ a b Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 21.
  47. ^ a b c d Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 22.
  48. ^ Jason 2013, 34:35.
  49. ^ Jason 2013, 35:14.
  50. ^ a b c Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 23.
  51. ^ a b c Sparavigna 2016, p. 2.
  52. ^ Villegas & Martinón-Torres 2012, abstract.
  53. ^ Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 4.
  54. ^ a b Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 7.
  55. ^ a b Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 12.
  56. ^ a b Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 46-49.
  57. ^ a b c Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 46.
  58. ^ Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 50.
  59. ^ a b Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 52.
  60. ^ Uribe-Villegas, Martinón-Torres & Quintero-Guzmán 2021, p. 43.
  61. ^ a b c McNair 2017.
  62. ^ Scott Catalogue of Postage Stamps, Souvenir sheet CO 1221.

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See also edit

External links edit

muisca, raft, balsa, muisca, spanish, sometimes, referred, golden, raft, dorado, columbian, votive, piece, created, muisca, indigenous, people, colombia, eastern, ranges, colombian, andes, piece, probably, refers, gold, offering, ceremony, described, legend, d. The Muisca raft Balsa Muisca in Spanish sometimes referred to as the Golden Raft of El Dorado is a pre Columbian votive piece created by the Muisca an indigenous people of Colombia in the Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes The piece probably refers to the gold offering ceremony described in the legend of El Dorado which occasionally took place at Lake Guatavita In this ritual the new chief zipa who was aboard a raft and covered with gold dust tossed gold objects into the lake as offerings to the gods before immersing himself into the lake The figure was created between 1295 and 1410 AD by lost wax casting in an alloy of gold with silver and copper The raft was part of an offering that was placed in a cave in the municipality of Pasca Since its discovery in 1969 the Muisca raft has become a national emblem for Colombia and has been depicted on postage stamps The piece is exhibited at the Gold Museum in Bogota Muisca raftThe Muisca raftMaterialGold silver and copperSize19 5 cm 7 7 in x 10 2 cm 4 0 in x 10 1 cm 4 0 in Created1295 1410 ADDiscovered1969 in PascaPresent locationGold Museum Bogota Colombia Contents 1 Background 1 1 Muisca people 1 2 Muisca goldworking 1 3 Legend of El Dorado 2 Overview 2 1 Description 2 1 1 Main figure 2 1 2 Attendants and oarsmen 2 1 3 Technical details 2 2 Discovery 3 Creation 3 1 Raw materials 3 2 Lost wax casting 3 3 Depletion gilding 3 4 Offering 4 Looting and protection 5 References 5 1 Sources 6 See also 7 External linksBackground edit nbsp Muisca territory and nearby peoples within modern day ColombiaMuisca people edit Main article Muisca The Muisca people also known as the Chibcha 1 were situated at 9000 ft elevation in the eastern Andes of Colombia near modern day Bogota the town of Tunja and Lake Guatavita 2 While most Muisca villages had a chief and priests the Muisca were generally an egalitarian agricultural people They made pottery and textiles and mined emeralds and salt 3 but they lacked the gold 4 and beeswax needed to create their signature gold pieces For those raw materials they bartered with neighboring peoples 3 Because the Muisca were an egalitarian people gold was not concentrated in the hands of few 5 Instead all Muisca families decorated their doors and windows with gold objects 6 Muisca goldworking edit Gold was used in Central America by the first centuries AD 7 and was spiritually and symbolically important to Pre Columbian peoples 8 The countries of the Isthmus Costa Rica Panama and Colombia emerged as a single goldworking region that shared styles and methodology such as the use of lost wax casting instead of hammering 1 Metalworking in the region began with objects for religious rituals and royalty rather than as tools weapons or currency this symbolic use from the outset established a precedent for metalworking throughout the region s history 7 Muisca gold pieces are distinct from those of other Pre Columbian peoples in terms of their use manufacture and appearance 1 The Muisca votive offerings called tunjos were not worn as clothing or jewelry but instead were used for symbolic purposes They were often small enough to hold in the hand sometimes as small as 1 5 cm 0 59 in 9 The tunjos were lost wax casts using tumbaga a gold alloy containing as much as 70 copper whereas in other regions gold was hammered into the desired shape Furthermore the Muisca objects are identifiable by their rough surfaces in comparison to the polished gold in surrounding regions 1 Muisca art tended to include components that referred back to the raw material used in their own construction for example a statue who is depicted to be holding in pouches the substance from which it is made 10 Birds are a common motif in Colombian gold work 1 Muisca goldworking influenced a wide region Local copies of Muisca votive figurines have been found as far away as the Linea Vieja region on the Atlantic slope of Costa Rica 11 Some of these design traditions remained unchanged for 1 000 years and were prominent at the time of contact 12 nbsp Standing man with miniature raft Colombian Walters Art Museum Baltimore Maryland Legend of El Dorado edit Main article El Dorado The Muisca raft commemorates a ceremony detailed in the Legend of El Dorado in which a new king covered his entire body in gold dust floated on a raft to the center of a lake and threw large quantities of gold votive offerings into the lake 1 The legend of El Dorado emerged from six accounts three by the chroniclers Fernandez de Oviedo Pedro Cieza de Leon and Juan de Castellanos and three by the conquistadores Gonzalo Pizarro Jimenez de Quesada and Sebastian de Benalcazar subsequent descriptions are elaborations upon these six accounts 13 While the story was embellished with each telling every version had several details in common such as the lake and the gold dust We also know that Muisca venerated lakes 13 Jennings details the ceremony as it occurs in one telling 14 The El Dorado tale derives from the investiture ceremony of the Muisca rulers The new chief was coated in gold dust and taken on a raft to the center of the sacred Lake Guatavita At sunrise when the light struck his golden body the chief would dive into the lake thus washing the gold off and would emerge as a human ruler born from the divine golden sun Music shouting and then tossing of large quantities of gold into the lake accompanied the ceremony 14 However some experts doubt that the El Dorado depicted in the legend represents the ceremony at Lake Guatavita 15 The city of El Dorado probably never existed but El Dorado the Golden Man has a foundation in historical truth El Dorado probably referred to the ruler of the Muisca 14 Overview editDescription edit nbsp Muisca raft detailThe Muisca raft is a small votive offering made from an alloy of gold silver and copper It measures 19 5 cm 7 7 in long by 10 2 cm 4 0 in wide by 10 1 cm 4 0 in high 16 The raft contains eleven human figures a central large seated figure representing the chief or cacique 17 surrounded by ten smaller figures representing attendants and oarsmen 18 some of whom wear masks 19 The figures rest on top of an oval shaped reed raft which is composed of a triangle patterned central support structure with wire coils around the perimeter 19 Like most Muisca goldworking there are no figures in the round each figure is cast as a flat plaque adorned on the front side with wire like details 20 and gold jewelry 21 The surface of the piece is unpolished and appears crude in comparison to Muisca jewelry but like other votive offerings the Muisca raft was not intended to be decorative but rather a symbolic offering the appearance of this piece was typical for its use 20 Microscopic examination did not reveal any joint anywhere on the raft the piece and every ornamental detail including dangling gold decorations was created in a single pour of gold 22 The manufacturing process was intensive the entire process from shaping a beeswax template to breaking the mould and revealing the gold piece likely required hundreds of hours of work 23 undertaken by a single craftsperson 24 Main figure edit The central figure the cacique is naked seated and folds his arms over his chest in a W pattern a common feature in Muisca gold pieces 19 He wears a large rectangular nose pendant adorned with bird heads and trapezoidal decorations as well as a headdress and possibly a crown 19 Additional trapezoidal adornments can be seen three pendants two ear pendants and three others around the body He is seated on a duho a small chair with a high backrest and leaning backwards The cacique is surrounded by banners and feather like projections 19 The main figure s importance is apparent from his size and his richly adorned body 25 The nose pendant is also significant in identifying the chief according to one Spanish chronicler future caciques were locked in houses from a young age and when they emerged years later they pierced their ears and wore gold nose pendants to indicate their new status Nose pendants were among the most detailed and ornate items in Muisca goldworking 25 The duho is also associated with the chief 26 and it is significant that none of the figures that surround the central figure face him a sign of reverence to the cacique 27 Attendants and oarsmen edit The remaining ten figures that surround the cacique while all much smaller than him can be grouped into three sizes two larger figures standing in the front and center of the raft two medium sized seated figures that surround them and six smaller standing figures 28 The two large figures in the front each wear a headdress with eleven feathers carry a maraca rattle wear a mask in the shape of an animal head and carry a trident next to their waist 29 The two medium sized figures flank the larger two and wear a coiled headdress possibly meant to represent fabric 29 They each carry a poporo a gourd shaped flask that contained the lime that was chewed along with coca leaves The smaller six figures are positioned around the perimeter of the raft and each wears a headdress and carries a small stick 29 Technical details edit The uniformity of the figures suggest that the raft was created by a single highly trained artisan 24 Researchers have applied radiocarbon dating to remnants of charcoal that were left on the raft by the casting mould the tests yielded a date of 1295 1410 AD for the raft s construction 30 Using X ray fluorescence researchers have identified the chemical signature of the gold used in the Muisca raft and concluded that it came from the lowlands near the banks of the Magdalena river where people still pan for gold today 31 The makeup of the Muisca raft is as follows 32 Element symbol by composition 32 Gold Au 64 7 0 9Silver Ag 16 1 0 4Copper Cu 19 2 1 2Discovery edit There are two known Muisca golden rafts 33 one from Pasca the subject of this article and another from Siecha which was lost 34 The Siecha raft was the first to be discovered and it aided in the discovery of the Pasca raft 33 In 1856 two brothers from Siecha by the names of Joaquin and Bernardino Tovar partially drained a nearby lagoon and found a votive raft that they associated with the ceremony referred to in the legend of El Dorado 33 It was in the hands of diplomat Salomon Koppel who sold it to a museum in Germany 33 the Ethnologisches Museum 35 However when the artifact arrived in the port of Bremen it was destroyed in a fire 33 Nevertheless through reverse engineering a group from Universidad de los Andes UNIANDES in Bogota Colombia recreated the Siecha raft in gold and identified a plausible casting process 34 A century later in 1969 a peasant from Pasca by the name of Cruz Maria Dimate found several pieces of gold and ceramics in a cave and described them to Father Jaime Hincapie Santamaria a parish priest 33 The priest showed Dimate a drawing of the Siecha raft in a book by Liborio Zerda and Dimate confirmed its similarity to the newly found raft Father Santamaria arranged for the object to be acquired by the Bank of the Republic and placed in the Gold Museum where it remains 33 Creation editRaw materials edit nbsp Colombian emerald The Muisca traded salt emeralds and cotton cloth for gold 1 The Muisca bartered their salt emeralds and cotton cloth to obtain the gold needed for tunjos 1 The altitude of the region varied greatly creating small ecological zones in which one or more resources were lacking in each locale which encouraged trade Ethnographic studies reveal trade networks in the highlands of Colombia connecting it to surrounding regions and Spanish language sources confirm that these networks extended to the Inca territories 36 Barter between the highlands and coast exchanged fish shells and gold for coca leaves chili peppers and colored feathers 36 Local traders moved materials between the gold mining regions and the gold working regions in which finished products were exchanged for raw gold 37 Muisca artisans used gold alloys with a variety of different compositions resulting in a wide range of colourations 38 Lost wax casting edit nbsp Pendant with bird Muisca 10th 16th C cast gold alloy Metropolitan Museum of Art This object illustrates the fine detail of the casting and the unpolished surface of the gold To create their gold pieces the Muisca used a method called lost wax casting 1 The manufacturing process itself was likely part of the ritual associated with these tunjos 39 The process began when the Muisca craftsperson created a wax model in the desired shape of the object using beeswax harvested from the region 40 The beeswax was worked into two basic shapes flat sheets from which geometric shapes could be cut out such as for the figure s torso and threads of rolled beeswax as thin as 1 mm 0 039 in that could be used for coils and adornments including finer details such as the eyes or feathers 41 These constructions reveal great skill on the part of the artisan the components are highly uniform with few mistakes The only signs of finger work occur on the bottom of the raft where elements of the design were pressed into the soft base 42 Each of the wax figures was likely created as a separate piece before being fused together into the ensemble perhaps by using a warm tool In addition to the intended design the artisan added wax feeders allowing for the flow of molten gold 39 The wax figurine was then thoroughly covered in a wet equal mixture of fine charcoal and clay in order to form a mould 43 For the casting process to succeed it was necessary to pack the wet mixture around the wax being careful to fill every crevice thoroughly ensuring that components that are meant to dangle such as earrings do not become fused together during casting 43 The artisan showed great skill in filling these cracks without breaking or warping the soft beeswax 43 44 For repeated elements such as in a string of beads or pendants the Muisca used stone matrices blocks that have a figure carved in relief to aid with the building of the wax template this ensured some uniformity in the repeated element 45 The mould was built in successive layers and the artisan may have increased the ratio of clay to charcoal and also increased the grain size of the mixture as the mould grew in size to improve its structural integrity 46 The only portion of the wax model that was not covered was a small opening near the bow of the raft where the molten gold would later be poured in 46 Once the clay and charcoal mould dried and hardened the artisan applied heat to melt the beeswax and allowed it to run out of the opening creating a figurine shaped cavity in the clay 47 48 This was the only mould used to cast the Muisca raft 47 Just prior to the actual casting the mould was pre heated to several hundred degrees to allow the smooth flow of molten gold into all the cracks and details before hardening it also helped protect against fracture from cooling too fast 47 The final step in the casting was to hammer open the mould revealing a perfect copy of the beeswax figurine this time in gold 49 47 However the Muisca raft did have issues during the casting process a fracture developed at the base of the piece resulting in a large portion of the raft s base which was meant to be a crisscross of openwork showing a thin solid gold sheet instead 50 Depletion gilding edit When the casting was complete the artisan may have treated the piece with depletion gilding a technique for increasing the purity of gold on the surface of the object 51 Colombian gold was combined with copper in an alloy called tumbaga a Malay word meaning copper and the composition of the alloy was especially chosen by the Muisca craftsperson for each votive offering piece 52 The depletion gilding process works on the principle that gold is resistant to oxidation whereas other metals are not 51 The piece is treated by coating the surface with acid or packing it in salt which reacts with the silver and copper contained in the alloy but does not react with the gold The result is a piece with a higher purity of gold on the surface than in the center of the object the process can be adjusted to yield a variety of surface colorations of the metal 51 The Muisca generally did not do much else in the way of finishing their gold work and the Muisca raft followed that trend 50 There was no effort to fix casting errors and the surface remained unpolished charcoal remnants from the mould were left in crevices on the figures 50 Offering edit The offering that contained the Muisca raft was placed in a cave in the side of a hill known as La Campana located between Lazaro Fonte and El Retiro streets in the Pasca municipality Cundinamarca 53 The offering contained three other artifacts including a smaller gold work two ceramics including a large offering vessel and a smaller vessel it may have also included a feline skull that has been lost 54 The smaller gold work was also a lost wax casting depicting a human sitting in a litter or a basket for carrying royalty using human muscle power The piece depicts the human with closed eyes and an elongated mouth showing the teeth 55 The larger ceramic piece was 25 8 cm 10 2 in high by 31 5 cm 12 4 in wide 54 is made of fine paste and was covered by a red slip The smaller rounded vessel was well constructed and finished with a smooth surface and buff 55 Muisca offerings were common and varied across time and place 56 Offerings included human gold effigies ceramics emeralds hair blood and animal skulls and were deposited in lakes caves and behind waterfalls The purpose of the offering was to gain favor with a deity in hopes they will provide healing or to bless a marriage harvest building or ceremony Offerings may also have been associated with political power as various chiefdoms vied for power 56 Sometimes the offering was placed by a jeque or priest and sometimes it was placed by a layperson 57 According to Spanish accounts the offerings were made to gain favor with a deity and indeed each shrine was associated with a distinct god that heard specific concerns Uribe Villegas details the account of one Spanish chronicler 57 The Muisca had one god for each necessity Chibchacum of the Bogota province was the god of merchants goldsmiths peasants and wealthy people Nencatacoa of drunkenness weavers and blanket painters Cuchaviva the rainbow to whom one should offer figurines of low karat gold was the god of childbirth Among the many gods Bochica the main deity was lord of chiefs and captains and like Chibchacum received only gold offerings 57 The message of a Muisca offering was more important than the display 58 In the case of the Pasca offering containing the Muisca raft it is likely that it was a response to current political tensions among various chiefdoms in the region 59 In a time of tension the raft offering may have been an effort to reinforce the prestige of a leader in a circumstantial situation 59 It is likely that the raft was commissioned by a powerful person such as the cacique The raft itself was time consuming and produced to a high quality as were the other objects in the offering The offering vessel itself is one of the largest known from the Muisca 60 Looting and protection editAlthough neither conquistadors nor treasure hunters ever witnessed the ceremony its legend enticed Europeans 33 who desired gold to pay for their ships weapons and horses and they hoped for personal riches As a result adventurers have attempted to recover more artifacts Heidi King describes such efforts 1 nbsp Lake Guatavita with prominent notch cut into its side The lake was partially drained in the late 16th century by treasure hunters 1 In the centuries since the conquest countless lives and great fortunes have been lost in attempts to recover the treasures The most serious effort was undertaken at the end of the sixteenth century by a wealthy merchant from Santa Fe de Bogota who with the help of eight thousand local workmen cut a great notch still prominent in the landscape into the mountain on one side of the lake and lowered the water level by about sixty feet Countless gold objects and other offerings including an emerald the size of a hen s egg were recovered from the edges of the lake bed Several expeditions followed but the central zone of the lake remains untouched 1 The Spanish found large quantities of gold in Lake Guatavita 61 When searching for treasure in the lake became too costly they took gold pieces directly from the Muisca in their villages The stolen artifacts were melted into ingots and doubloons which Phillip II had shipped back to Spain 61 Today protections are in place to preserve the Muisca heritage including tunjos like the Muisca raft As part of Colombia s historical and cultural heritage plan the government placed Lake Guatavita under legal protection in 1965 1 The Muisca raft together with a large collection of other tunjos are held at the Gold Museum in Bogota The museum s director archaeologist Maria Alicia Uribe Villegas as well as archaeometallurgist Marcos Martinon Torres have applied modern techniques to study and preserve over 80 such tunjos at the museum 61 On March 10 2004 Colombia s postal service released a souvenir sheet depicting the Muisca raft on two postage stamps 62 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m King 2002 p 25 Attenborough 1976 p 63 a b Martinon Torres amp Uribe Villegas 2015 p 4 Jason 2013 24 50 Jason 2013 13 20 Vega 2003b a b Pillsbury Richter amp Potts 2017 p 1 2 King 2002 Wong 2013 Brotherston 2003 South America Pre Columbian 3 i e Brotherston 2003 South America Pre Columbian 5 iii a Brotherston 2003 South America Pre Columbian 1 i a b Hemming 1979 p 101 104 a b c Jennings 1983 p 172 Hemming 1979 p 103 Museo del Oro Bogota Toquica Cruz amp Torres 2003 Viceroyalty of New Granada Sparavigna 2016 p 4 a b c d e Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 9 a b Bray 2003 Muisca Jason 2013 4 25 Jason 2013 10 30 Jason 2013 14 15 a b Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 14 a b Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 28 Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 31 Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 33 Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 9 10 a b c Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 10 Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 47 Jason 2013 28 55 a b Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 26 a b c d e f g h La balsa muisca y el Dorado a b Rueda amp Escobar 2017 Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 37 a b Jennings 1983 p 143 Jennings 1983 p 145 Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 25 27 a b Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 17 Jason 2013 33 20 Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 13 Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 14 17 a b c Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 18 Jason 2013 34 20 Brotherston 2003 South America Pre Columbian 5 ii a b Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 21 a b c d Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 22 Jason 2013 34 35 Jason 2013 35 14 a b c Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 23 a b c Sparavigna 2016 p 2 Villegas amp Martinon Torres 2012 abstract Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 4 a b Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 7 a b Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 12 a b Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 46 49 a b c Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 46 Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 50 a b Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 52 Uribe Villegas Martinon Torres amp Quintero Guzman 2021 p 43 a b c McNair 2017 Scott Catalogue of Postage Stamps Souvenir sheet CO 1221 Sources edit Attenborough David 1976 The tribal eye New York Norton ISBN 0393044661 La balsa muisca y el Dorado Banrepcultural Banco de la Republica Colombia Bray Warwick 2003 Muisca Chibcha Grove Art Online Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gao 9781884446054 article T060197 Brotherston Gordon 2003 South America Pre Columbian Grove Art Online Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gao 9781884446054 article T079951 Hemming John 1979 The search for El Dorado New York Dutton ISBN 0876903235 Jason Karl 2013 Golden Raft of El Dorado Secrets Smithsonian Channel Jennings Jesse D ed 1983 Ancient South Americans San Francisco Freeman ISBN 0716714299 King Heidi 2002 Gold in Ancient America The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin The Metropolitan Museum of Art 59 4 5 55 doi 10 2307 3269153 JSTOR 3269153 Martinon Torres Marcos Uribe Villegas Maria Alicia 2015 The prehistoric individual connoisseurship and archaeological science The Muisca goldwork of Colombia Journal of Archaeological Science 63 136 155 doi 10 1016 j jas 2015 08 014 Retrieved September 16 2022 Martinon Torres Marcos Uribe Villegas Maria Alicia Saenz Samper Juanita Lobo Guerrero Jimena 2017 Archaeometallurgy in Colombia Recent Developments Archaeology International Ubiquity Press 20 5 doi 10 5334 ai 354 McNair Charles 2017 From Alabama to Colombia The Legend of El Dorado and Inaugural Day Paste Magazine Decatur Georgia Pillsbury Joanne Richter Kim Potts Timothy eds 2017 Golden Kingdoms Luxury Arts in the Ancient Americas Los Angeles California J Paul Getty Museum ISBN 9781606065488 Rueda Natalia Andrea Escobar Jairo Arturo 2017 Reconstruction of the lost Muisca Siecha raft pouring process by reverse engineering methodology Materials and Manufacturing Processes Taylor amp Francis 32 7 8 749 755 doi 10 1080 10426914 2017 1279324 S2CID 136101915 Sparavigna Amelia Carolina 2016 Depletion Gilding An Ancient Method for Surface Enrichment of Gold Alloys Mechanics Materials Science amp Engineering 2 1 1 8 arXiv 1601 00845 Toquica Constanza Cruz Juan Pablo Torres Anamaria 2003 Viceroyalty of New Granada Grove Art Online Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 oao 9781884446054 013 2000000035 ISBN 9781884446054 Uribe Villegas Maria Alicia Martinon Torres Marcos Quintero Guzman Juan Pablo 2021 The Muisca Raft Context Materiality and Technology PDF In McEwan Colin Hoopes John W eds Pre Columbian Central America Colombia and Ecuador toward an integrated approach Dumbarton Oaks pp 275 303 Vega Natalia 2003a Bogota Grove Art Online Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gao 9781884446054 article T009596 ISBN 9781884446054 Vega Natalia 2003b Tunja Hunza Grove Art Online Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gao 9781884446054 article T086552 Villegas M Martinon Torres M 2012 Composition colour and context in Muisca votive metalwork Colombia AD 600 1800 Antiquity 86 333 772 791 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00047918 S2CID 162537169 Retrieved September 16 2022 Votive figure in the shape of a ceremony Google Arts amp Culture Museo del Oro Bogota Retrieved October 8 2022 Wong Jessica 2013 Rethinking the Muisca The City Paper Bogota Retrieved October 2 2022 Souvenir sheet CO 1221 Scott Catalogue of Postage Stamps Vol 2 Scott Publishing Company 2016 p 508 See also edit nbsp Colombia portal nbsp History portalMuisca El Dorado Muisca goldworking Lake Guatavita Colombian mythology Indigenous peoples in ColombiaExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Muisca raft How the Golden Raft of El Dorado Was Crafted video www si edu Smithsonian Institution 2013 07 22 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Muisca raft amp oldid 1165933207, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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