Muisca numerals

{{Short description|System used by the ancient Muisca civilization to represent numbers and dates}}

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Muisca numerals were the numeric notation system used by the Muisca, one of the civilizations of the Americas before the Spanish conquest of the Muisca. Just like the Mayas, the Muisca had a vigesimal numerical system, based on multiples of twenty (Chibcha: gueta). The Muisca numerals were based on counting with fingers and toes. They had specific numbers from one to ten, yet for the numbers between eleven and nineteen they used "foot one" (11) to "foot nine" (19). The number 20 was the 'perfect' number for the Muisca which is visible in their calendar. To calculate higher numbers than 20 they used multiples of their 'perfect' number; gue-muyhica would be "20 times 4", so 80. To describe "50" they used "20 times 2 plus 10"; gue-bosa asaqui ubchihica, transcribed from guêboʒhas aſaqɣ hubchìhicâ.{{in lang|es}} 1619 - [http://www.cubun.org/desarrollos/numeros.php Muisca numbers according to Bernardo de Lugo] - accessed 29-04-2016 In their calendar, which was lunisolar, they only counted from one to ten and twenty. Each number had a special meaning, related to their deities and certain animals, especially the abundant toads.Izquierdo, 2009, p.30

For the representation of their numbers they used digits inspired by their natural surroundings, especially toads; ata ("one") and aca ("nine") were both derived from the animals so abundant on the Bogotá savanna and other parts of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense where the Muisca lived in their confederation.

The most important scholars who provided knowledge about the Muisca numerals were Bernardo de Lugo (1619), Pedro Simón (17th century), Alexander von Humboldt and José Domingo Duquesne (late 18th and 19th century) and Liborio Zerda.Humboldt, 1878, Part 1Humboldt, 1878, Part 2Humboldt, 1878, Part 3Duquesne, 1795Zerda, 1883

Numerals

The Muisca used a vigesimal counting system and counted primarily with their fingers and secondarily with their toes. 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 ("twenty plus one"; 21), gueta asaqui ubchihica ("twenty plus ten"; 30). Larger numbers were counted as multiples of twenty; gue-bosa ("20 times 2"; 40), gue-hisca ("20 times 5"; 100).

File:Muisca cyphers acc acosta humboldt zerda.svg, Von Humboldt and ZerdaIzquierdo Peña, 2009, p.43]] The numeral symbols were first provided by Duquesne and reproduced by Humboldt, Acosta, and Zerda. These glyphs have been criticized and their authenticity questioned, as they are “practically nonexistent” in the surviving archaeological record, including the calendar stone from Choachí. Potentially, they might represent asterisms or months instead of numerals.Izquierdo Peña, 2009, pp.42-44, 118-120

class="wikitable"

|+ Numbers

! Number

! Humboldt, 1878

! De Lugo, 1619

1

| ata

| ata

2

| bozha / bosa

| boʒha

3

| mica

| mica

4

| mhuyca / muyhica

| mhuɣcâ

5

| hicsca / hisca

| hɣcſcâ

6

| taa{{cite web |title=taa |url=http://muysca.cubun.org/taa |website=Muysc cubun - Lengua Muisca |language=es}}

|taa

7

| qhupqa / cuhupqua

| qhûpqâ

8

| shuzha / suhuza

| shûʒhâ

9

| aca

| aca

10

| hubchibica / ubchihica

| hubchìhicâ

11

| quihicha ata

| qhicħâ ata

12

| quihicha bosa

| qhicħâ boʒha

13

| quihicha mica

| qhicħâ mica

14

| quihicha mhuyca

| qhicħâ mhuɣcâ

15

| quihicha hisca

| qhicħâ hɣcſcâ

16

| quihicha ta

| qhicħâ ta

17

| quihicha cuhupqua

| qhicħâ qhûpqâ

18

| quihicha suhuza

| qhicħâ shûʒhâ

19

| quihicha aca

| qhicħâ aca

20

| gueta

| guêata

21

| guetas asaqui ata

| guêatas aſaqɣ ata

30

| guetas asaqui ubchihica

| guêatas aſaqɣ hubchìhicâ

40

| gue-bosa

| guêboʒha

50

| gue-bosa asaqui ubchihica

| guêboʒhas aſaqɣ hubchìhicâ

60

| gue-mica

| guêmica

70

| gue-mica asaqui ubchihica

| guêmicas aſaqɣ hubchìhicâ

80

| gue-muyhica

| guêmhuɣcâ

90

| gue-muyhica asaqui ubchihica

| guêmhuɣcâs aſaqɣ hubchìhicâ

99

| gue-muyhica asaqui quihicha aca

| guêmhuɣcâs aſaqɣ qhicħâ aca

100

| gue-hisca

| guêhɣcſcâ

101

| gue-hisca asaqui ata

| guêhɣcſcâs aſaqɣ ata

110

| gue-hisca asaqui hubchihica

| guêhɣcſcâs aſaqɣ hubchìhicâ

120

| gue-ta

| guêta

150

| gue-cuhupqua asaqui hubchihica

| guêqhûpqâs aſaqɣ hubchìhicâ

199

| gue-aca asaqui quihicha aca

| guêacas aſaqɣ qhicħâ aca

200

| gue-ubchihica

| guêhubchìhicâ

250

| gue-quihicha bozha asaqui hubchihica

| guêqhicħâ boʒhas aſaqɣ hubchìhicâ

300

| gue-chihica hisca

| guêqhicħâ hɣcſcâ

365

| gue-chihica suhuza asaqui hisca

| guêqhicħâ shûʒhâs aſaqɣ hɣcſcâ

399

| gue-chihica aca asaqui quihicha aca

| guêqhicħâ acas aſaqɣ qhicħâ aca

See also

{{portal|Colombia}}

References

{{reflist|30em}}

= Bibliography =

  • {{citation |last=Duquesne |first=José Domingo |year=1795 |title=Disertación sobre el calendario de los muyscas, indios naturales de este Nuevo Reino de Granada - Dissertation about the Muisca calendar, indigenous people of this New Kingdom of Granada |url=http://www.accefyn.org.co/proyecto/Documentos/Duquesne/Calendario.pdf |pages=1–17 |language=es |accessdate=2016-07-08 |archive-date=2007-06-14 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070614015853/http://www.accefyn.org.co/proyecto/Documentos/Duquesne/Calendario.pdf |url-status=dead }}
  • {{citation |last=Humboldt |first=Alexander von |year=1878 |title=Sitios de las Cordilleras y monumentos de los pueblos indígenas de América - Calendario de los indios muiscas - Parte 1 - Views of the Cordilleras and Monuments of the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas - Muisca calendar - Part 1 |url=http://www.banrepcultural.org/blaavirtual/arqueologia/sitios/sitios7a.htm |chapter=VI |publisher=Biblioteca Luis Ángel Arango |language=es |accessdate=2016-07-08}}
  • {{citation |last=Humboldt |first=Alexander von |year=1878 |title=Sitios de las Cordilleras y monumentos de los pueblos indígenas de América - Calendario de los indios muiscas - Parte 2|trans-title=Views of the Cordilleras and Monuments of the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas - Muisca calendar - Part 2 |url=http://www.banrepcultural.org/blaavirtual/arqueologia/sitios/sitios7b.htm |chapter=VI |publisher=Biblioteca Luis Ángel Arango |language=es |accessdate=2016-07-08}}
  • {{citation |last=Humboldt |first=Alexander von |year=1878 |title=Sitios de las Cordilleras y monumentos de los pueblos indígenas de América - Calendario de los indios muiscas - Parte 3|trans-title=Views of the Cordilleras and Monuments of the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas - Muisca calendar - Part 3 |url=http://www.banrepcultural.org/blaavirtual/arqueologia/sitios/sitios7c.htm |chapter=VI |publisher=Biblioteca Luis Ángel Arango |language=es |accessdate=2016-07-08}}
  • {{citation |last=Izquierdo Peña |first=Manuel Arturo |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 |publisher=Université de Montréal |arxiv=0812.0574 }}
  • {{citation |last=Zerda |first=Liborio |year=1947 |orig-year=1883 |title=El Dorado |url=http://www.banrepcultural.org/sites/default/files/87219/brblaa302323.pdf |language=es |accessdate=2016-07-08 |archive-date=2019-07-07 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190707132242/http://www.banrepcultural.org/sites/default/files/87219/brblaa302323.pdf |url-status=dead }}

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Numerals

Muisca

Muisca

1

Category:Vigesimal numeral systems