Tag: Old europe

Lost World of Old Europe to be found at Ashmolean Museum starting May

The Thinker - The Lost World of Old Europe at the Ashmolean MuseumThe discovery of the 7,000-year-old Varna Necropolis in 1972 send a shock through the archaeological world.Dated to the fifth millennium BC, the 264 graves and funerary gifts show that when the ancient Egyptians just started to settle the Nile Delta and long before the invention of the wheel, in modern day Bulgaria, ‘Old Europeans’ were already crafting high-quality gold and bronze objects.Neolithic farmers living in the fertile valleys of the Danube riverhad advanced ideas about the afterlife, widespread trade connections and the oldest known burial evidence of an elite male, yet most people – and even archaeologists -have never heard of these cultures.

At least Britain will soon learn, when in May’The Lost World of Europe: The Danube Valley, 5000-3500 BC’arrives at the Ashmolean Museum.The exhibition contains more than 250 amazing objects (object highlights slideshow), each one of those demonstrating the peak of sophistication, technological advancementand creativity that was achieved at what is now south-eastern Europe.

During the 1500 year period covered in the exhibition, some villages grew to city-like proportions with more than 2,000 buildings, and an exchange network for precious materials stretched from the Aegean to north-west Europe. By the fifth millennium BC, the while coloured Spondylus shellwas traded as far as the modern United Kingdom. Stunning painted pottery was crafted, we were metallurgy experts (there was alarge variety of copper and gold objectsin circulation)and the vast amount of elaborate female figures discovered points to amatriarchal, relatively peaceful society. (Helen – who visited the exhibition in New York – asksif the collapse of Old Europe brought along a shift from female to male power, I’d rather speculate that male dominance was to blame for the decline. Or wasit theinvention of thewheel? ;))

Architectural ModelChristopher Brown, Director of the Ashmolean said, We are delighted to host this remarkable exhibition, which I was tremendously excited by when I first saw it in New York. ISAW has revealed the richness and complexity of ancient cultures, which are rediscovered in this exhibition and for the first time given the importance they deserve in the development of western civilisations.

Highlights you can expect at the exhibitionare’the oldest gold in the world’ -the earliest major assemblage of gold artefacts to be found anywhere in the world from the Varna cemetery – and andenigmatic set of 21 terracotta female figurines as well as chairs from Poduri-Dealul Ghindaru. Beaded necklaces, bracelets, pendants and amulets made out of Spondylus shell ornaments and pottery with bold geographic design from the Cucuteni culture. Personally, I think just the 6000-year-old architectural model and the ‘Thinker’ arealready worth the visit!More artefacts from ‘The Lost World of Old Europe:The Danube Valley’ can be seen in this slideshow.

You can (and should) visit ‘The Lost World of Europe: The Danube Valley,5000 to 3500 BC’ at the recently revampedAshmolean Museum starting May 20th. It runs until August 15th, 2010. Admission is6, and anaccompagnying catalogue is available from Princeton University Press.

The Lost World of Old Europe in New York

The Danube Valley Exhibition - Varna Gold BullsA splendid exhibition in New York – ‘The Lost World of Old Europe: The Danube Valley’ – brings to the United States for the first time more than 250 objects recovered by archaeologists from the graves, towns, and villages of Old Europe, a period of related prehistoric cultures that achieved a peak of sophistication and creativity between 5000 and 4000BC in what is now southeastern Europe. The cultures mysteriously collapsed by 3500 BC, possibly brining a shift from female to male power. The exhibition – made possible through loan agreements with over 20 museums in Romania, Bulgaria, and Moldova – features the exuberant art, enigmatic goddess cults, and elaborate metal ornaments and weapons of Old Europe.

Long before Egypt or Mesopotamia rose to an equivalent level of achievement, Old Europe was among the most sophisticated places that humans inhabited. Some of its towns grew to citylike sizes. Potters developed striking designs; and the ubiquitous goddess figurines found in houses and shrines have triggered intense debates about womens roles in Old European society. Coppersmiths were, in their day, the most advanced metal artisans in the world. Their passionate interest in acquiring copper, gold, Aegean shells, and other rare valuables created networks of negotiation that reached surprisingly far, permitting some of their chiefs to be buried with pounds of gold and copper in funerals without parallel in the Near East or Egypt at the time.

The Lost World of Old Europe brings to an American audience, for the first time, a civilization barely mentioned in university classes but of exceptional importance within the development of human societies.

For many visitors to The Lost World of Old Europe: The Danube Valley the region and its historical context, as well as its material culture, may be largely unfamiliar. Discussions of Western civilization often move from the Venus of Willendorf to the Lascaux cave paintings and then on to Egypt and Mesopotamia, without ever mentioning the art and culture of what is known as Old Europe, an area corresponding geographically to modern-day southeastern Europe and defined by a series of distinct cultural groups that attained an astonishing level of sophistication in the 5th and 4th millennia BC.

The Lost World of Old Europe brings to an American audience, for the first time, a civilization barely mentioned in university classes but of exceptional importance within the development of human societies, said Roger S. Bagnall, Director of ISAW. Through these artifacts and their archaeological contexts, we discover that already in the 5th and 4th millennia BC the Danube basin was the hub of a trade network stretching from the Aegean to northwest Europe, as well as the home of sophisticated metallurgy, based in towns that even 4,000 later would have been considered sizable. As an institute devoted to studying the connections of ancient societies across time and space, ISAW is excited to bring these dramatic finds to New York.

The Lost World of Old Europe attempts to redefine commonly held notions of the development of Western civilization by presenting the surprising and littleknown artistic and technological achievements made by these still enigmatic peoples – from their extraordinary figurines, to their vast variety of copper and gold objects, to their stunning pottery types.

ACouncil of Goddesses?

Perhaps the most widely known objects from Old Europe are the mother goddess figurines. Fashioned by virtually every Old European cultural group, these striking miniaturized representations of females are frequently characterized by abstraction, with truncated, elongated, or emphasized body parts, and a surface decorated with incised or painted geometric and abstract patterns. The figurines heightened sense of female corporeality has led some scholars to identify them as representations of a powerful mother goddess, whose relationship to earthly and human fertility is demonstrated in her remarkable, almost sexualized forms. The great variety of contexts in which the figurines are found, however, has led more recently to individualized readings rather than to a single, overarching interpretation. The set of 21 female figurines and their little chairs from Poduri-Dealul Ghindaru that is central to the exhibitions installation of this category of objects, for example, was found near a hearth in an edifice that has been interpreted as a sanctuary.

One widely accepted interpretation based upon its context, then, is that the figures represent the Council of Goddesses, with the more senior divinities seated on thrones. Others take a more conservative approach suggesting that the figurines formed part of a ritualistic activity – the specific type of ritual, however, remains open to interpretation. As The Lost World of Old Europe illustrates, the refinement of the visual and material language of these organized communities went far beyond their spectacular terracotta figurines. The technological advances made during this 1,500-year period are manifest in the copper and gold objects that comprise a significant component of this exhibition.

Gold and precious metals

The earliest major assemblage of gold artifacts to be unearthed anywhere in the world comes from the Varna cemetery, located in what is now Bulgaria, and dates to the first half of the 5th millennium BC. Interred in the graves are the bodies of individuals who may have been chieftains, adorned with as much as five kilograms of gold objects, including exquisitely crafted headdresses, necklaces, appliqus, and ceremonial axes. Indeed, it is in Old Europe that one sees the first large-scale mining of precious metals, the development of advanced metallurgical practices such as smelting, and the trade of objects made from these materials.

Old Europe trade

It is also important to note that these cultures did not live in isolation from one another, but instead formed direct contacts, most clearly through networks of trade. Gold and copper objects were circulated among these cultural groups, for example. The most striking material traded throughout much of southeastern Europe, however, is the Spondylus shell. Found in the Aegean Sea, Spondylus was carved into objects of personal adornment in Greece from at least the early Neolithic period forward. The creamy white colored shell is known to have been traded as far as the modern United Kingdom by the 5th millennium BC. Many of the most-common forms are on display in this exhibition and include elaborate beaded necklaces, tubular bracelets, and pendants or amulets. The shells can perhaps be read as markers of a common origin or as indicators of the owners elite position within society.

Pottery that lives up to modern standards

Within their homes Old Europeans stored an impressive array of pottery that has been methodically studied over the last hundred years by many southeast-European archaeologists. The diverse typologies and complex styles suggest that this pottery was used in household and dining rituals. Bold geometric designs – including concentric circles, diagonal lines, and checkerboard patterns – distinguish the pottery made by the Cucuteni culture, examples of which are featured in this exhibition. Part of the potterys allure is the resonance of its composition and design to a modern aesthetic. Indeed, one is easily able to envision a Cucuteni vessel displayed in a contemporary home.

Exhibitions at ISAW are not only meant to illustrate the connections among ancient cultures, but also to question preexisting and sometimes static notions of the ancient world. With The Lost World of Old Europe, New York University’s Institue of Study of the Ancient World desires to show that a rich and complex world can be found when looking beyond traditional and narrow definitions of antiquity, and indeed beyond standard depictions of the development of Western civilization.

You can still visit ‘The Lost World of Old Europe: The Danube Valley, 5000-3500BC’ until April 25th 2010 at the Institue of Study of the Ancient World at New York University. There’s no admission fee, so no excuse not to visit! Unless living far, far, far away but then you can still buy the book.

Why Did the Collapse of Old Europe Bring a Shift From Female to Male Power?

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The exhibition “The Lost World of Old Europe,” which opened in Nov. 2009 in New York, has raised some very interesting questions about prehistoric societies and how they changed. David Anthony, guest curator of the exhibition and a leading anthropologist specializing in prehistoric Europe, Eurasia, and North America, raised a particularly powerful issue – why did the collapse of a highly sophisticated, matriarchal culture in what is now Bulgaria, Romania, and Moldova, lead to a shift of power to men?

Women, after all, are naturally capable of running households, and should surely be running countries too. Think of our powerful, natural capabilities. We women tend to make the social arrangements, shop for food, raise children, keep the home in order, and generally deal with the practicalities of day-to-day life. Were also good at taking organization and decision-making a step up; arranging events, getting active in the local community, and networking. But when it comes to wielding political power, which is arguably simply another step or two up from managing the annual bake sale or housing co-operative, we fall down, spectacularly. Catalyst Inc., a not-for-profit organization that tracks such things recently reported that only 3% of Fortune 500 CEOs are women. In the United States, arguably the country most pressured to act with a feminist bent, women make up a dismal 17% of Congress and the Senate. The maddening question is: why?

Some clues might come from the recent finds in Romania, Bulgaria, and Moldova that show a sophisticated society flourished there between 5,000BC and 3,500BC, most likely with women in charge. These matriarchal Old Europe communities, which grew into some of the biggest cities then in existence (some had 2,000 buildings), show signs of hierarchy, but had no large municipal buildings such as palaces or places of worship.

Archaeological digs there have found thousands upon thousands of clay female figures, apparently a sign that the female was worshipped, pretty much exclusively. Furthermore, experts such as David Anthony, Professor of Anthropology at Hartwick College,argue that women potters, in making vessels for domestic use, discovered copper, and brought the Copper Age into being.

So, it seems, women were at the top in one of the oldest civilizations in the world. What happened?

The Old Europe communities show signs of dramatic, sudden collapse, in the Southern regions around 4,300BC and in the North around 3,500BC. There is evidence of intrusion from the East by a nomadic culture from the Steppes of Eurasia. Its not entirely clear whether this was a violent invasion or a more subtle VHS-is-better-than-Betamax cultural shift, but it does seem to coincide, notably, with the invention of the wheel-and-axle combination that made it feasible to build load-bearing vehicles such as carts, and the domestication of horses to pull them. Basically what that meant, according to Anthony, is that you no longer needed a whole village of people to bring in the harvest, hand-carrying every armful to the grain store. You could do it with a cart, a horse, and family labour.

This, it seems, tempted people into spreading out from their cramped, dirty, conurbations and gave them the freedom to look with a pioneers longing at the huge expanses of grassland to the East. The wheel meant you could kiss your village goodbye, said Anthony, at a lecture delivered at New York Universitys Institute for Study of the Ancient World (ISAW) in New York, in December 2009.

What is certain is that the hugely concentrated urban settlements were abandoned, over a relatively short period of time, and the people went wandering off into the vastness of Eurasia to begin a whole new period of human history. And, now, men were the masters. Was there something about the huddling together of homes that gave women the upper hand? Were women the ones who brokered a sufficient peace between neighbours that made gathering the harvest, pre-axle, possible? Is there a correspondingly male advantage to grabbing your horse and your family and making it on your own, remote from others? If women were still in charge, would we have no castles or cathedrals, just row upon row of houses? I like to think that the men simply felt it was time someone else got a shot at running things, and used the changes in lifestyle to grab power. Lets face it, true power is almost never given: it is taken. Who knows what happened out there on the steppes.

Thats what I love about Old Europe, says Jennifer Chi, curator of the “Lost World of Old Europe” exhibition at ISAW. As long as you stay respectful of the undisputed facts turned up by archaeological artefacts, you can interpret it any way you want.