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Anthropomorphous votive figure

Eastern Cordillera - Muisca Period600/1600

Museo del Oro, Bogotá

Museo del Oro, Bogotá
Bogota, Colombia

These gold figures that the Muiscas placed in pottery offering vessels and then in shrines or special places were not made to be seen: they were wrapped in cotton cloths in the same way that mummified chieftains and priests were, like preserved seeds for maintaining a balanced life in our world. We have called them "tunjos" since the 19th century –based on research by Ezequiel Uricoechea–, using a word that meant "idol" in the Muiscas' language (according to dictionaries produced by 16th century Spanish priests). In the colonial era, however, the word "tunjo" was used equally to refer to wrapped gold objects and mummies, but not to unwrapped figures, which were then called "santillos". EL

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  • Title: Anthropomorphous votive figure
  • Creator: Eastern Cordillera - Muisca Period
  • Creator Lifespan: 600/1600
  • Creator Nationality: Colombia
  • Creator Death Place: Colombia
  • Creator Birth Place: Colombia
  • Date: 600/1600
  • Physical Dimensions: w32 x h244 mm
  • Type: Goldwork
  • External Link: People and Gold in Pre-Hispanic Colombia
  • Technique: Lost wax casting in tumbaga
  • Finding: Colombia
  • Accession number: O00082
Museo del Oro, Bogotá

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