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  • The 40,000-Year-Old Female Figurine of Hohle Fels: Previous Assumptions and New Perspectives

    Author(s)
    Stannard, MK
    Langley, MC
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Langley, Michelle C.
    Year published
    2020
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    As the earliest image of a human being and the oldest piece of figurative art, the female figurine of Hohle Fels remains a significant discovery for understanding the development of symbolic behaviour in Homo sapiens. Discovered in southwestern Germany in 2008, this mammoth-ivory sculpture was found in several fragments and has always been assumed to be complete, never owning a head. In place of a head, there is instead a small loop that would allow her to be threaded, possibly to be worn as a pendant. Several hypotheses have been put forward as to her original use context, ranging from representing a fertility goddess to a ...
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    As the earliest image of a human being and the oldest piece of figurative art, the female figurine of Hohle Fels remains a significant discovery for understanding the development of symbolic behaviour in Homo sapiens. Discovered in southwestern Germany in 2008, this mammoth-ivory sculpture was found in several fragments and has always been assumed to be complete, never owning a head. In place of a head, there is instead a small loop that would allow her to be threaded, possibly to be worn as a pendant. Several hypotheses have been put forward as to her original use context, ranging from representing a fertility goddess to a pornographic figure. Yet none of these theses have ever suggested that she once had a head. Here we explore whether the female figurine of Hohle Fels was designed as a two-part piece, with the head made of perishable material culture, possibly woven plant or animal fibres; or that the artefact is a broken and reworked figurine with the head simply never found. By exploring the possibility that this figurine did originally have a second part—a head—we investigate issues surrounding the role of women and children in the Swabian Aurignacian.
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    Journal Title
    Cambridge Archaeological Journal
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774320000207
    Note
    This publication has been entered in Griffith Research Online as an advanced online version.
    Subject
    Archaeology
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/397225
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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