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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Biography  



1.1  Nompanim in Muisca history  







2 See also  





3 References  














Nompanim






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Nompanim
Iraca
Predecessor"Bermejo"
SuccessorSugamuxi
Bornunknown
Muisca Confederation
Diedunknown
Muisca Confederation
The (reconstructed) Sun Temple in Sugamuxi; seat of Nompanim

NompanimorNomparem (Chibcha: "Vessel of the jaguar")[1] (15th century - first third of 16th century) was the penultimate iraca; cacique of the sacred City of the Sun; Sugamuxi. Sugamuxi, presently called Sogamoso, was an important city in the religion of the Muisca who inhabited the Altiplano Cundiboyacense in the times before the Spanish conquest of the Muisca conquistadores reached the central highlands of the Colombian Andes. Fellow Muisca rulers of other territories within the Muisca Confederation were TundamainTundama, zaque QuemuenchatochainHunza and zipas Nemequene and TisquesusainBacatá.

Biography[edit]

According to the traditions of the northern Muisca, the iraca of Sugamuxi was chosen alternating between the caciquesofFiravitoba and Tobasía. Nompanim, from Tobasía, was the successor of Bermejo (Spanish given name), as cacique of Sugamuxi. Bermejo was an usurper to the throne of Sugamuxi, allegedly because he was a redhead.[2] Nompanim supported zaque Quemuenchatocha with an army of 20,000 guecha warriors in the Battle of Los Arroyos against zipa Nemequene, fought around 1514.[2] The army of the zaque, supported by Nompanim, Tundama, and the caciquesofGámeza and Sáchica won this battle and Nemequene died the next day, succeeded by Tisquesusa.

The seat of Nompanim was the Sun Temple in Sogamoso, that was destroyed by soldiers of Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada in September 1537.

Nompanim installed four new laws for his people: 1; don't kill, 2; don't steal, 3; don't lie and 4; don't take someone else's wife. The first crime was punished with the death penalty and for the other crimes lashing was the punishment at the first incident, personal dishonouring for the second and inherited dishonouring for the third time.

Nompanim died in an unknown year shortly after 1514 and was succeeded by Sugamuxi, the last iraca of the City of the Sun, who confronted the Spanish conquerors and converted to catholicism.[1]

Nompanim in Muisca history[edit]

History of the Muisca
Sutagao peopleGuayupe peopleTegua peoplePanche peopleMuisca peopleAchagua peopleMuzo peopleGuane peopleU'wa peopleLache peopleBattle of TocaremaBattle of ChocontáBattle of PascaSagipaTisquesusaNemequeneSaguamanchicaMeicuchucaHistory of Bogotá#Pre-Columbian eraNencatacoaHuitaca (goddess)ChaquénCuchaviraChibchacumBochicaChía (goddess)SuéChiminigaguaSpanish conquest of the MuiscaAquiminzaqueQuemuenchatochaMichuáHunzahúaTunja#HistoryThomagataThomagataPacanchiqueGoranchachaMonster of Lake TotaEl DoradoSugamuxiNompanimIdacansásiracaTundamaDuitama#HistorySpanish EmpireMuisca Confederation

Altiplano

Muisca

Art

Architecture

Astronomy

Cuisine

El Dorado

Subsistence

Women

Conquest


See also[edit]

References[edit]

  • ^ a b (in Spanish) Sugamuxi and Nompanim - Pueblos Originarios

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nompanim&oldid=1148612788"

    Categories: 
    Muisca rulers
    15th-century births
    16th-century deaths
    15th century in Colombia
    16th century in Colombia
    People from Sogamoso
    Hidden categories: 
    Pages using the EasyTimeline extension
    Articles with Spanish-language sources (es)
    Webarchive template wayback links
    Articles with short description
    Short description with empty Wikidata description
     



    This page was last edited on 7 April 2023, at 07:14 (UTC).

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