close
more_vert

Annexus Quam wrote:
Similar figurines which have been found in vast numbers all over the Balkans, as popularized by Gimbutas in the 70s belong to a far wider Mediterranean Early Neolithic 'goddess' tradition, which inevitably may have its most extreme contemporary counterparts in the far north of France, judging from other cultural connexions between the Somme and the Med/Languedoc neolithic cultures.

http://slowmuse.wordpress.com/2009/12/02/gimbutas-old-europe/

http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~gloria/Goddess.html

Gimbutas' book is the classic in this respect, though still highly debated, yet it shows a wide collection of figurines in its pages:

http://www.amazon.com/Living-Goddesses-Marija-Gimbutas/dp/0520229150/ref=pd_sim_b_1

Where did this idea that these figures were 'Goddess's' spring from does anybody know?

Gimbutas and the feminist movement of the 60s played a large role in the US/UK, although, as a comparison, Greek and Med religions in general have a vast mythology of goddesses (and gods) and their corresponding figurines found by archaeology, spread all across the Mediterranean. The Basques, for instance, have always had a top Mother goddess in their religion/mythology. How far back that tradition goes is anyone's guess.

So Classical archaeologists (Greek mainly) are also partly to blame for attributing every figurine a goddess role, I suppose. Not to blame since figurines are found in various guises up to the Roman era all around the Mediterranean mainly in lush graves and so on (Cybele, Diana/Artemis, etc etc). Since then, any Paleolithic/Neolithic figurine found has been called a goddess or attributed a fertility role.

Sanctuary wrote:
Where did this idea that these figures were 'Goddess's' spring from does anybody know?
Maybe in our remote future when all we know or think we've known is no more....futuristic archaeologists (or visitors from some distant planet) will find Barbie dolls and assume we venerated them too.