The most important and still remaining archaeological site of the Muisca, dates to the pre-Muisca Herrera Period; called by the Spanish conquerors
El Infiernito. It is an astronomical site where at
solstices the Sun lines up the shadows of the stone pillars exactly with the
sacred Lake Iguaque, where according to the
Muisca religion the mother goddess
Bachué was born. Additionally, the site used to be a place of pilgrimage where the Muisca gathered and interchanged goods. Archaeologist
Carl Henrik Langebaek noted that the festivities performed at
El Infiernito date back to the Early Muisca Period (800-1200 AD) and that no evidence was found those celebrations existed in the Herrera Period. The true alignments of the pillar shadows are 91 (east) and 271 degrees (west). The eastern alignment points to the Morro Negro hill.
El Infiernito at the
equinoxes also announced the rainy seasons on the Altiplano. Astronomy was an important factor in the organisation of the Muisca, both in terms of cycles of harvest and sowing and in the construction of their architecture. The temples and houses were built with an east–west orientation; aligning with the rise and set of the
Sun,
Moon and
Venus. Also in the
textiles of the people, the symbols for the Sun and Moon are visible. It is probable that the deities in the religion of the Muisca represented weavers of the Earth and the terrain. The Muisca used
gold for their
art and rituals and the gold was considered "Semen of the Sun". At the ritual of the installation of the new
zipa in
Lake Guatavita, depicted in the famous
Muisca raft, the new
zipa would cover his naked body with gold dust and jump in the lake.
Music was played and he was surrounded by four priests, representing two children of the Sun and two children of the Moon.
Relation with religion and geography The religion of the Muisca contained various deities who were based on cosmological and environmental factors (
Cuchavira; rainbow,
Chibchacum; rain,
Nencatacoa; fertility). The supreme being of the Muisca,
Chiminigagua represented the birth of the
Universe who had sent two birds to create light and shape the Earth. His children were the god of the Sun;
Sué and his wife, the goddess of the Moon;
Chía. Both deities served as the basis for the complex
lunisolar Muisca calendar, having different divisions for
synodic and
sidereal months. The days were equal to the
Gregorian calendar days and the three different years were composed of sets of different months; rural years of 12 or 13 months, common years of 20 months and holy years of 37 months. One of the most important religious figures in the Muisca religion was
Bochica, the bearded messenger god. According to the myths, Bochica walked from
Pasca to
Iza. The line connecting those two places in the southeastern part of the Altiplano with the northwestern part has an
azimuth of exactly 45 degrees. == Luni-solar calendar ==