Venus figurines of Zaraysk
Venus figurines of Zaraysk | |
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Material | Mammoth ivory |
Created | 22,000 to 16,000 years |
Discovered | 2005 Zaraysk, Moscow Oblast, Russia |
Discovered by | Hizri Amirkhanov and Sergey Lev |
The Venus figurines from Zaraysk are two paleolithic sculptures of the female body.[1] Both are made of mammoth ivory. The age of these Venus figurines is about 20,000 to 14,000 years BC; they stem from the Gravettian. Zaraysk is a Russian town located between Moscow and Ryazan. The statuettes were found in 2005 by Hizri Amirkhanov and Sergey Lev. Finds from Zaraysk show features of both the Avdeevo culture and the Kostenki culture.
The location of the excavation is under the wall of the Zaraysk Kremlin. The sculptures are kept at the local museum. The so-called figurine No. 1 is 16,6 cm high, shows a female body without a face. Presumably, the woman is depicted pregnant.[2] Figurine No. 2 is not finished and 7.4 cm high. Both figurines were found near each other and were covered with the scapula of a mammoth.[3] Both were bedded in fine sand, near the head was placed red ochre.[4]
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Venus figurine No. 2 from Zaraysk
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Extraction of a figurine by archaeologists
See also
[edit]- Venus figurines of Mal'ta
- Venus figurines of Gagarino
- Venus figurines of Avdeevo
- Venus figurines of Kostenki
Literature
[edit]- Amirkhanov H., Lev S., 2008: New finds of art objects from the Upper Palaeolithic site of Zaraysk, Russia, Antiquity 82 (318), p. 862–870
- Cook, Jill 2013: Ice Age Art: the Arrival of the Modern Mind, London: British Museum Press. (p. 85 f., picture) ISBN 978-0-7141-2333-2
References
[edit]- ^ "Venus of Zaraysk / Зарайск Венера, part of the Kostenki-Willendorf culture". Archived from the original on 2018-08-23. Retrieved 2018-08-18.
- ^ Cook, Jill 2013. Ice Age Art: the Arrival of the Modern Mind; London: British Museum Press, p. 84.
- ^ Cook, Jill 2013. Ice Age Art: the Arrival of the Modern Mind; London: British Museum Press, p. 84.
- ^ Amirkhanov H., Lev S., 2008: New finds of art objects from the Upper Palaeolithic site of Zaraysk, Russia, Antiquity 82 (318), p. 865.