Posted on 12/23/2003 2:43:09 PM PST by blam
Prehistoric oriental 'Venus' carved on cliff discovered in Ningxia
A figure of a pregnant woman carved into a cliff, known as a prehistoric oriental "Venus", the Goddess of love, has been discovered by Chinese archaeologists in Zhongwei county, northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region.
The "Venus" has a plump figure, full breasts and a bulbous belly. The woman, standing straight with her legs together, has slender fingers but no facial features.
The image was a typical reproduction of figures of naked women carved on stone by ancients in the late Paleolithic period, said Zhou Xinhua, curator of the museum of the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region.
Such stone or cliff carvings are valuable for studying the development process of primitive society, plastic arts and ideology, Zhang said.
A stone-carved figure of a naked woman, dating back to the late Paleolithic period, was first discovered in Europe and similar carvings have also been unearthed in Austria.
But this was the first time that a prehistoric figure of a woman carved on cliff has ever been found in China, Zhang said.
Archaeologists said that Beishan Mountain in Zhongwei County, where the image was found, has some 3,000 groups of cliff carvings and over 10,000 carvings of individual figures.
Near the Zhongwei county seat, Damaidi area, part of the Beishan Mountain area, is crowded with 1,509 group cliff carvings and over6,000 individual figures carved into a cliff.
These cliff carvings contain images of the sun, the moon, rivers, mountain stones and also images of sheep, horses, oxen, deer, tigers, swords and axes. They also have images of men and women, hunters and warriors. Some of the cliff carvings reflect wars, daily life and recreational activities.
A 12-square meter rock is carved with more than 200 images of human beings, animals, hunting activities and various symbols.
The density of figures carved on this rock was rarely seen elsewhere, experts said.
You should direct this comment towards the author of the above article, who for some reason seems to think that the term "Venus" in that context also denotes "the Goddess of love".
They don't literally mean statues of the Roman goddess.
Um, I know they don't mean that a "Venus" is a statue of the Roman goddess literally. This thing was found in China.
They do seem to mean it figuratively, or rather, in an analogical sense, however. If you think they're wrong about that, I agree with you, and you should therefore take it up with them, not me. Best,
Hmmmmmm.....
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At the same time they've definitely "bulked up" ~ a LOT!
It's entirely possible the folks "way back when" tended toward the fat side!
Hubba hubba!
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