- Muisca,
there was an
indigenous settlement,
called Hunza, seat of the hoa
Eucaneme,
conquered by the
Spanish conquistadors on
August 20, 1537. The Spanish...
-
Quemuenchatocha or
Quimuinchateca (named in the
earliest sources Eucaneme) (Hunza, 1472–Ramiriquí, 1538) was the second-last hoa of Hunza,
currently known...
-
Aquiminzaque was the
nephew of his predecessor,
Eucaneme. Aquiminzaque‘s
reign began on
August 2, 1537, when
Eucaneme was
taken prisoner to
Suesca by the Spanish...
- in the
Muisca territories the
ruling Zipa was Bogotá and the
Zaque was
Eucaneme. The
position of the
ruler was inherited, but the line of
succession was...
- two rulers. The
psihipqua Bogotá,
ruled in Muyquytá; the other, the hoa
Eucaneme,
ruled in Hunza.
Taking advantage of a war
between the two chiefdoms, Quesada's...
- northeast,
where they
reached the
territories of the hoa in
August 1537. hoa
Eucaneme was
defeated by the
Spanish on
August 20, 1537, in his bohío in Hunza....
-
important rulers at the time of the
conquest were
psihipqua Tisquesusa, hoa
Eucaneme,
iraca Sugamuxi and
Tundama in the
northernmost portion of
their territories...
- and
Tisquesusa respectively. In this role
Sagipa fought against the hoa
Eucaneme. With the
arrival of the
Spanish in the
central Colombian highlands in...
- Chocontá both
rulers Saguamanchica and Michuá died,
while the
former has won.
Eucaneme took over the hoa rule for the
northern Muisca and Nemequene, as nephew...
- Tundama,
informed by the
Spanish murders of
psihipqua Tisquesusa and hoa
Eucaneme, did not
accept and
Maldonado attacked Tundama and his army on the island...