Venus of Petřkovice explained

Material:Hematite
Size:Height: 4.5 cm
Created:25,000 years
Location:Brno, Czech Republic
Discovered By:Bohuslav Klíma
Discovered Date:14 July 1953
Discovered Place:Ostrava, Czechoslovakia

The Venus of Petřkovice (Petřkovická venuše or Landecká venuše) is a pre-historic Venus figurine, a mineral statuette of a nude female figure, dated to about 23,000 BCE (Gravettian industry) in what is today the Czech Republic.

Discovery

It was found within the current city limits of Ostrava (Ostrava-Petřkovice) in the Czech Republic, by archaeologist Bohuslav Klíma on 14 July 1953.[1] It was beneath a mammoth molar at an ancient settlement of mammoth hunters. Many stone artifacts and skeletal fragments were also found nearby.

Features

The statue measures 4.5 x 1.5 x 1.4 cm and is a headless torso of a woman carved from iron ore (hematite). Uniquely, the absence of the head appears to be the author's intention. Also, unlike other prehistoric Venus figurines, it shows a slender young woman or girl with small breasts.[2]

Location

It is now in the Archeological Institute, Brno, but between 7 February - 26 May 2013 it was displayed in the exhibition Ice Age Art: Arrival of the Modern Mind,[3] at the British Museum in London.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Doc. RNDr. Bohuslav Klíma, DrSc.. Museum and Gallery Hranice. cs. 2024-05-17. 2024-05-17. https://web.archive.org/web/20240517091225/https://muzeum-hranice.cz/osobnost/klima-bohuslav/. live.
  2. Leslie G. Freeman (ed.), Views of the Past: Essays in Old World Prehistory and Paleanthropology, Mounton Publishers, 1978, .
  3. Web site: Ice Age Art: Arrival of the Modern Mind . 2017-06-15 . 2019-04-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190410162532/https://www.britishmuseum.org/whats_on/exhibitions/ice_age_art.aspx . live .