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| The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please improve this article or discuss the issue on the talk page. | In the history of art, prehistoric art is all art produced in preliterate cultures (prehistory), beginning somewhere in very late geological history. Image File history File links Gnome-globe. ...
This article is an overview of the history of art worldwide. ...
Arts of the ancient world refers to the many types of art that were in the cultures of ancient societies, such as those of ancient China, India, Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greece and Rome // The earliest figurine the Venus of Tan-Tan discovered to date originated somewhere between 500,000 and 300...
Also see articles: History of painting, Western painting Clio, muse of heroic poetry and history, by Pierre Mignard, 17th century. ...
Eastern art history, devoted to the arts of the Far East includes a vast range of influences from various cultures and religions. ...
The Taj Mahal, Agra. ...
See also Western art, History of painting, History of art, Art history, Painting, Outline of painting history Jan Vermeer, Girl with a Pearl Earring, known as the Mona Lisa of the North 1665-1667 Ãdouard Manet, The Balcony 1868 The history of Western painting represents a continuous, though disrupted, tradition...
// The history of painting reaches back in time to artifacts from pre-historic humans, and spans all cultures. ...
Paleolithic
Extension of European Paleolithic art: ·Red: mural art ·Green: mobile art ·Cyan line: limits of main glaciations ·Blue line: coastline The earliest possible artwork yet discovered, the Venus of Tan-Tan comes from between 500,000 and 300,000 BCE, during the Middle Acheulean period. Discovered in Morocco, it is about 6 centimeters long and resembles a human figurine. Although this Moroccan artifact may have been created by natural geological processes, it appears to exhibit traces of human tool-work and bears evidence of having been painted; "a greasy substance" on the stone's surface has been shown to contain a mixture of iron and manganese termed ochre, and indicates that it was decorated by someone and used as a figurine, regardless of how it may have been formed. The identity of the artifact as evidence of human artistic expression, however, remains disputed. A more or less comparable object from Israel, the Venus of Berekhat Ram, dated to roughly 250,000 BCE, has elicited similar controversy. Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
// The Paleolithic is a prehistoric era distinguished by the development of stone tools. ...
Venus of Tan-Tan The Venus of Tan-Tan was found in Morocco. ...
Acheulean hand-axes from Kent. ...
A rare Dresden porcelain figurine Figurine is a diminutive form of the word figure, and generally refers to a small human-made statue that represents a human (or deity or animal). ...
Geology (from Greek γη- (ge-, the earth) and λογος (logos, word, reason)) is the science and study of the Earth, its composition, structure, physical properties, history, and the processes that shape it. ...
A modern hammer is directly descended from ancient hand tools A tool or device is a piece of equipment which typically provides a mechanical advantage in accomplishing a physical task, or provides an ability that is not naturally available to the user of a tool. ...
For other uses, see Iron (disambiguation). ...
General Name, symbol, number manganese, Mn, 25 Chemical series transition metals Group, period, block 7, 4, d Appearance silvery metallic Standard atomic weight 54. ...
This article is about the color. ...
The Venus of Berekhet Ram is a small venus figurine that was found on the Golan Heights in Israel. ...
It remains premature, then, to claim with any degree of confidence that art existed before 100,000 years ago.
Blombos Cave Discoveries Courtney P. In 2002 in Blombos cave, situated in South Africa, stones were discovered engraved with grid or cross-hatch patterns, suggesting to some researchers that early Homo Sapiens were capable of abstraction and production of abstract art or symbolic art. These impressive works date to 70,000 years ago, which makes them about 40,000 years older than the Lascaux -type cave paintings. Other remarkable discoveries form the Blombos cave include shell beads 30,000 years older than previously-known beads. While the datings of the Blombos artifacts are correct, there is no indication that they are indeed actual representations of advanced cognitive behavior similar to the depictional art later in Europe. Several archaeologists including Richard Klein of Stanford are hesitant to accept the Blombos caves as the first example of actual art. Blombos cave is a cave in a limestone cliff on the Southern Cape coast in South Africa. ...
Homo sapiens (Latin: wise man) is the scientific name for the human species. ...
Painting of bison attacking a man, from the cave at Lascaux, c. ...
Stanford redirects here. ...
Venus of Willendorf File links The following pages link to this file: Obesity Venus of Willendorf Categories: Sculptures containing nudity | Images with unknown source ...
Venus of Willendorf File links The following pages link to this file: Obesity Venus of Willendorf Categories: Sculptures containing nudity | Images with unknown source ...
Cave Painting The earliest known depictional art is from the Upper Palaeolithic period and includes both cave painting, such as the famous paintings at Chauvet, Altamira, Pech Merle, and Lascaux, and portable art, such as animal carvings and so-called Venus figurines like the Venus of Willendorf. There are some speculations that only Homo sapiens are capable of artistic expression. However, Homo erectus had long before produced seemingly aimless patterns on artifacts such as is those found at Bilzingsleben in Thuringia, and these might be understood as a precursor to art, as well as to reveal some intent of the artificer to decorate, to fashion beyond practical necessity. The symmetry and attention given to the shape of a tool has led authors to see Middle Palaeolithic hand axes and especially laurel points as artistic expressions as well. A recent find, the Mask of La Roche-Cotard in France, now suggests that Neanderthal humans may have developed a sophisticated and more complicated artistic tradition. The Upper Paleolithic or Palaeolithic is the third and last subdivision of the Paleolithic or Old Stone Age as it is understood in Europe, Africa and Asia. ...
{Cave or Rock Paintings are paintings on cave or rock walls and ceilings, usually dating to prehistoric times. ...
Chauvet may refer to Stéphen Chauvet the French physician and author of Easter Island and Its Mysteries. ...
Cave painting of a Bison from Altamira Outline of cave paintings. ...
Pech Merle, a hillside opening in the Lot département of Midi-Pyrénées region in France, about 35 minutes drive east of Cahors, is the site of one of the prehistoric cave painting remaining in France, which is open to the general public. ...
Painting of bison attacking a man, from the cave at Lascaux, c. ...
prehistoric portable art were small mobile pieces that could be carried from place to place and includes animal figurines, weapons decorated with animals, and the venus figurines. ...
Venus of Willendorf Venus figurines is an umbrella term for a number of prehistoric items, mostly in statuette form, of obese or pregnant women (which is disputed) from the Aurignacian or Gravettian period of the upper Palaeolithic, found in Europe. ...
Venus of Willendorf Venus of Willendorf, also known as the Woman of Willendorf, is an 11. ...
Homo sapiens (Latin: wise man) is the scientific name for the human species. ...
Binomial name (Dubois, 1892) Synonyms â Pithecanthropus erectus â Sinanthropus pekinensis â Javanthropus soloensis â Meganthropus paleojavanicus Homo erectus (Latin: upright man) is an extinct species of the genus Homo. ...
Bilzingsleben is a findspot of early palaeolithic human remains in Thuringia, Germany. ...
The Free State of Thuringia (German: Freistaat Thüringen) is located in central Germany and is considered one of the smaller of Germanys sixteen Bundesländer (federal states), with an area of 16,200 km² and 2. ...
In Europe and Africa the Middle Paleolithic or Palaeolithic is the period of the middle Paleolithic (early Stone Age) that lasted between around 120,000 and 40,000 years ago. ...
A hand axe is a bifacial Paleolithic core tool. ...
Until its recent discovery in 2002, there was an assumption that Neanderthal humans were incapable of sophisticated artistic expression. ...
Later findings from the Mizyn archeological site in the Ukraine dated from Mousterian epoch of Paleolithic are mammoth ivory bracelets with carved meander ornaments [1]. Image File history File links Mizyn. ...
Image File history File links Mizyn. ...
For scale drawings or plans, see Plans (drawings). ...
A bracelet is an article of clothing or jewelry which is worn around the wrist. ...
Mousterian is a name given by archaeologists to a style of predominantly flint tools (or industry) associated primarily with Homo neanderthalensis and dating to the Middle Paleolithic, the middle part of the Old Stone Age. ...
Mousterian is a name given by archaeologists to a style of predominantly flint tools (or industry) associated primarily with Homo neanderthalensis and dating to the Middle Paleolithic, the middle part of the Old Stone Age. ...
// The Paleolithic is a prehistoric era distinguished by the development of stone tools. ...
This article is about the genus Mammuthus. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Meander pavement in the streets of Rhodes In art and architecture, a meander is a decorative border constructed from a continuous line, shaped into a repeated motif. ...
Mesolithic The Mesolithic period has some examples of portable art, like painted pebbles (Azilien) from Birseck, Eremitage in Switzerland, and in some areas, like the Spanish Levant, stylized rock art. Patterns on utilitarian objects, like the paddles from Tybrind Vig, Denmark, are known as well. The Mesolithic (Greek mesos=middle and lithos=stone or the Middle Stone Age[1]) was a period in the development of human technology between the Paleolithic and Neolithic periods of the Stone Age. ...
Neolithic According to archeological evidence, the Jōmon people in ancient Japan were the first to develop pottery, dating to the 11th millennium BCE. The Jōmon people were making clay figures and vessels decorated with patterns made by impressing the wet clay with braided or unbraided cord and sticks with a growing sophistication. Characters for JÅmon (Cord marks). The Jomon period ) is the time in Japanese pre-history from about 10,000 BC to 300 BC. Most scholars agree that by around 40,000 BC glaciation had connected the Japanese islands with the Asian mainland. ...
Unfired green ware pottery on a traditional drying rack at Conner Prairie living history museum. ...
(Redirected from 11th millennium BCE) The Pleistocene epoch is part of the geologic timescale, usually dated as 1. ...
Free standing sculpture had already begun by the Neolithic, the earliest being the anthropomorphic figurines, often embellished by animals from the very beginning of the Neolithic discovered in Nevali Cori and Göbekli Tepe near Urfa in eastern Turkey, dating to ca. 10th millennium BCE. The Mesolithic statues of Lepenski Vir at the Iron Gate, Serbia date to the 7th millennium BCE and represent either humans or mixtures of humans and fish. Sculptor redirects here. ...
An array of Neolithic artifacts, including bracelets, axe heads, chisels, and polishing tools. ...
Nevali Cori is an early Neolithic settlement in the upper Euphrates valley, eastern Turkey, around 490 m high. ...
Göbekli Tepe is an early Neolithic site in southeastern Turkey. ...
Sanli Urfa (in Turkish Şanlıurfa) is a city in eastern Turkey, and the provincial capital of Sanliurfa Province. ...
(Redirected from 10th millennium BCE) (Pleistocene, Paleolithic – 10th millennium BC – 9th millennium BC – other millennia) Beginning of the Mesolithic, or Epipaleolithic time period, which is the first part of the Holocene epoch. ...
Lepenski Vir is an important Mesolithic archaeological site located in Serbia in the central Balkan peninsula. ...
The Iron Gate (Romanian: PorÅ£ile de Fier, Serbian: Ðвоздена вÑаÑа / Gvozdena vrata, Hungarian: Vaskapu, Turkish: Demirkapi, German: Eisernes Tor, Bulgarian: Ðелезни вÑаÑа) is a gorge on the Danube River. ...
Not to be confused with Republika Srpska. ...
(9th millennium BC – 8th millennium BC – 7th millennium BC – other millennia) Events The south area of Çatalhöyük. ...
In Central Europe, many Neolithic cultures, like Linearbandkeramic, Lengyel and Vinča, produced female (rarely male) and animal statues that can be called art. Whether the elaborate pottery decoration of, for example, the Želiesovce and painted Lengyel style are to be classified as art is a matter of definition. Central Europe The Alpine Countries and the Visegrád Group (Political map, 2004) Central Europe is the region lying between the variously and vaguely defined areas of Eastern and Western Europe. ...
Sherds of the late Linearbandkeramik, Rhine-Main area The Linearbandkeramic (abbreviated LBK) is the earliest neolithic culture of Central Europe. ...
Lengyel is a village in Tolna county, Hungary. ...
Map of European Neolithic at the apogee of Danubian expansion, c. ...
Lengyel is a village in Tolna county, Hungary. ...
Megalithic monuments are found in the Neolithic from Portugal to the British isles and Poland, as well as in Egypt in the Sahara desert (at Nabata and other sites). They start in the 5th millennium BC, though some authors speculate on Mesolithic roots. Because of frequent reuse, this is difficult to prove. Not really that popular are the temples of Malta dating back to 3600 BCE these are the oldest free standing monuments in all the world with a post to lintel simple architecture but still very imposing structures. Many artistic similarities where found in Minoa (Crete) dating to the same period of the very well known Egyptian pyramids. While the most well-known of these is Stonehenge, where the main structures date from the early Bronze Age, such monuments have been found throughout most of Western and Northern Europe, notably at Carnac, France, at Skara Brae in the Orkney Islands, in Portugal, and in Wiltshire, England, the area of Stonehenge, the Avebury circle, the tombs at West Kennet, and Woodhenge. One tomb found in New Grange, Ireland, has its entrance marked with a massive stone carved with a complex design of spirals. The tomb of Knowth has rock-cut ornaments as well; one of them may be the oldest known image of the Moon. Many of these monuments were megalithic tombs, and archaeologists speculate that most have religious significance. Knowth is reputed to have approximately one third of all megalithic art in Western Europe. Megalithic tomb, Mane Braz, Brittany Bronze age wedge tomb in the Burren area of Ireland For the record label, see Megalith Records. ...
This article describes the archipelago in north-western Europe. ...
The Sahara is the worlds second largest desert (second to Antarctica), over 9,000,000 km² (3,500,000 mi²), located in northern Africa and is 2. ...
For other uses, see Stonehenge (disambiguation). ...
For other uses, see Carnac (disambiguation). ...
For the music group, see Skara Brae (music). ...
The Orkney Islands, usually called simply Orkney, are one of the 32 council areas of Scotland. ...
Wiltshire (abbreviated Wilts) is a large southern English county. ...
For other uses, see England (disambiguation). ...
Avebury Henge and Village Avebury is the site of a large henge and several stone circles in the English county of Wiltshire at grid reference SU103699, surrounding the village of Avebury (its geographical location is 51°25â²43â³N, 1°51â²15â³W). ...
Avebury Village framed by the Stone Circle Avebury (pronounced Abury) is a village and civil parish in Wiltshire. ...
Woodhenge Woodhenge is a Neolithic Class I henge and timber circle monument located to the north of Amesbury in Wiltshire, England, within the civil parish of Durrington. ...
Newgrange, Ireland Larger Version Newgrange (Irish Brú na Bóinne), located in County Meath is the most famous of all Irish prehistoric sites. ...
Knowth is the site of a neolithic passage grave, one of the ancient monuments of the Brú na Bóinne complex in the valley of the River Boyne in Ireland. ...
Bronze Age During the 3rd millennium BCE, however, the Bronze Age began in Europe, bringing with it a new medium for art. The increased efficiency of bronze tools also meant an increase in productivity, which led to a surplus - the first step in the creation of a class of artisans. Because of the increased wealth of society, luxury goods began to be created, especially decorated weapons. Examples include ceremonial bronze helmets, ornamental ax-heads and swords, elaborate instruments such as lurer, and other ceremonial objects without a practical purpose. Rock art, showing scenes from the daily life and religious rituals have been found in many areas, for example in Bohuslän Sweden and the Val Camonica in northern Italy. (4th millennium BC – 3rd millennium BC – 2nd millennium BC – Syria) (29th century BC ) Creation of the Kingdom of Elam (Iraq) Germination of the Bristlecone pine tree Methuselah about 2700 BC, the oldest tree still living now Dynasty of Lagash in Sumeria Golden age of Ur in Mesopotamia. ...
The Bronze Age is a period in a civilizations development when the most advanced metalworking has developed the techniques of smelting copper from natural outcroppings and alloys it to cast bronze. ...
See Lurs for other uses Lur is a name given to two distinct types of wind musical instrument. ...
Rock art is a term in archaeology for any man-made markings made on natural stone. ...
, (Latin: Bahusia; Norwegian: Båhuslen) is a province (landskap) in West Sweden (Västsverige). ...
Val Camonica is a valley in the lower Alpine regions of Lombardy, Italy. ...
Iron Age The Iron Age saw the development of anthropomorphic sculptures, such as the warrior of Hirschlanden, and the statue from the Glauberg, Germany. Hallstatt artists in the early Iron Age favoured geometric, abstract designs perhaps influenced by trade links with the Classical world. Iron Age Axe found on Gotland This article is about the archaeological period known as the Iron Age, for the mythological Iron Age see Iron Age (mythology). ...
The Warrior of Hirschlanden is a statue of a nude ithyphallic warrior made of sandstone, the first known iron age life-size anthropomorphic statue north of the alps. ...
The Glauberg is a hill near the village of Glauburg in the Wetteraukreis, some 30 km. ...
The Hallstatt culture was the predominant Central European culture during the local Bronze Age, and introduced the Iron Age. ...
The more elaborate and curvilinear La Tène artistic style developed in Europe in the later Iron Age from a centre in the Rhine valley but it soon spread across the continent. The rich chieftain classes appear to have encouraged ostentation and Classical influences such as bronze drinking vessels attest to a new fashion for wine drinking. Communal eating and drinking were an important part of Celtic society and culture and much of their art was often expressed through plates, knives, cauldrons and cups. Horse tack and weaponry were also subjects deemed fit for elaboration. Mythical animals were a common motif along with religious and natural subjects and their depiction is a mix between the naturalistic and the stylised. Megalithic art was still practised, examples include the carved limestone pillars of the sanctuary at Entremont in modern day France. Personal adornment included torc necklaces whilst the introduction of coinage provided a further opportunity for artistic expression. Although the coins of this period are poorly made derivatives of Greek and Roman types, the more exuberant Celtic artistic style is still visible. The La Tène culture was an Iron Age culture named after the archaeological site of La Tène on the north side of Lake Neuchatel in Switzerland, where a rich trove of artifacts was discovered by Hansli Kopp in 1857. ...
It has been suggested that River Rhine Pollution: November 1986 be merged into this article or section. ...
This article is about the European people. ...
Three-legged iron pots being used to cater for a school-leavers party in Botswana. ...
Tack is a term used to describe any of the various equipment and accessories worn by horses in the course of their use as domesticated animals. ...
Megalithic art refers to the use of large stones as an artistic medium. ...
A torc, also spelled torq or torque (from Latin torqueo, to twist, because of the twisted shape of the collar) is a rigid circular necklace that is open-ended at the front. ...
Coinage is: A Drinking game also known as Quarters a series of coins struck as part of currency a magazine about numismatics, capitalized: COINage The right or process of making coins The creation of a neologism, or new word; see word coinage The duty or tax on refined tin, abolished...
The famous late fourth century BCE chariot burial at Waldalgesheim in the Rhineland produced many fine examples of La Tène art including a bronze flagon and bronze plaques with repoussé human figures. Many pieces had curvy, organic styles though to be derived from Classical tendril patterns. Chariot burials are tombs in which the deceased was buried together with his chariot, usually including his horses and other possessions. ...
The wine-growing town of Waldalgesheim, in the landkreiz Mainz-Bingen, in the Rhineland of Germany is widely known as the site of a late 4th century BCE chariot burial that defines a stage in the La Tène culture, that is generally known as Waldalgesheim style. ...
The Rhineland (Rheinland in German) is the general name for the land on both sides of the river Rhine in the west of Germany. ...
Repoussé bracelet by Thomas Feeser, ©2005. ...
In much of western Europe elements of this artistic style can be discerned surviving in the art and architecture of the Roman colonies. In areas where Roman influence was missing altogether, the later Iron Age artistic tradition continued well into the historic period, perhaps most famously in Ireland and Northumbria. Section from Shepherds map of the British Isles about 802 AD showing the kingdom of Northumbria Northumbria is primarily the name of a petty kingdom of Angles which was formed in Great Britain at the beginning of the 7th century, from two smaller kingdoms of Bernicia and Diera, and...
Prehistory arts of Africa
Considering the current theory that human beings originated in Africa and the hunter-gathering technologies evolved there, there are scant representatives of true art before the great flowering of culture in the Upper Paleolithic. One of the oldest Venus figurines found is from the Draa River valley in Morocco. This and other indications suggest that hominids may have had a broader conception of their world than was previously supposed. The Upper Paleolithic (or Upper Palaeolithic) is the third and last subdivision of the Paleolithic or Old Stone Age as it is understood in Europe, Africa and Asia. ...
Venus of Willendorf Venus figurines is an umbrella term for a number of prehistoric items, mostly in statuette form, of obese or pregnant women (which is disputed) from the Aurignacian or Gravettian period of the upper Palaeolithic, found in Europe. ...
The Draa (Arabic: درأ) (also spelled Dra or Draâ, in older sources mostly Darha or Dara) is Moroccos longest river (1100 km). ...
A hominid is any member of the biological family Hominidae (the great apes), including the extinct and extant humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans. ...
Significant bushman rock paintings exist in the Waterberg area above the Palala River, some of which are considered to derive from the period 8000 BCE. These images are very clear and depict a variety of human and wildlife motifs, especially antelope. The Bushmen or San peoples of South Africa and neighbouring Botswana and Namibia, who live in the Kalahari, are part of the Khoisan group and are related to the Khoikhoi. ...
River gorge in the Lapalala Wilderness, Waterberg, South Africa, showing horizontal sandstone layering. ...
Palala River gorge in the Lapalala Wilderness, Waterberg, showing horizontal sandstone layering. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
This article is about the herbivorous mammals. ...
Prehistory arts of the Americas Cahokia is the site of an ancient Native American city near Collinsville, Illinois, across the Mississippi River from St. ...
Other sites in the U.S. of similar history may be found at Indian Mounds Park The Great Serpent Mound is a 1,330-foot-long, three-foot-high prehistoric effigy mound located on a plateau of the Serpent Mound crater along Ohio Brush Creek in Adams County, Ohio. ...
This article is about the pre-Columbian Maya civilization. ...
Native arts of Oceania Australia See also Australian Aboriginal art Aboriginal hollow log tomb Australian Aboriginal art is art done by Australian Aborigines, covering art that pre-dates European colonisation as well as contemporary art by Aborigines based on traditional culture. ...
From earliest times, the natives of Australia, often known as Aborigines, have been creating distinctive patterns of art. Much of aboriginal art is transitory, drawn in sand or on the human body to illustrate a place, an animal totem, or a tribal story. Early surviving artworks of the Aborigines are mostly rock paintings. Many are called X-ray paintings because they show the bones and organs of the animals they depict. Some aboriginal art seems abstract to modern viewers; aboriginal art often employs geometrical figures and lines to represent landscape, which is often shown from a birds-eye view. For instance, in aboriginal symbolism, a swirl stands for a watering hole. Australian Aborigines are the main indigenous people of Australia. ...
In the NATO phonetic alphabet, X-ray represents the letter X. An X-ray picture (radiograph) taken by Röntgen An X-ray is a form of electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength approximately in the range of 5 pm to 10 nanometers (corresponding to frequencies in the range 30 PHz...
Kazimir Malevich, Black square 1915 Abstract art is now generally understood to mean art that does not depict objects in the natural world, but instead uses color and form in a non-representational way. ...
The Bradshaws are a unique form of rock art found in Western Australia. They are predominantly human figures drawn in fine detail with accurate anatomical proportioning. They have been dated at over 17,000 years old and debate rages as to who actually created them. For the railway timetable, see Bradshaw (or its originator, George Bradshaw). ...
Slogan or Nickname: Wildflower State or the Golden State Other Australian states and territories Capital Perth Government Constitutional monarchy Governor Ken Michael Premier Alan Carpenter (ALP) Federal representation - House seats 15 - Senate seats 12 Gross State Product (2005-06) - Product ($m) $107,910 (4th) - Product per capita $53,134/person...
Polynesia The natives of Polynesia left behind a distinct artistic heritage. While many of their artifacts were made with organic materials and thus lost to history, some of their most striking achievements survive in clay and stone. Among these are numerous pottery fragments from western Oceania, from the late 2nd millennium BCE. Also, the natives of Polynesia left scattered around their islands Petroglyphs, stone platforms or Marae, and sculptures of ancestor figures, the most famous of which are the Moai of Easter Island. Carving from the ridgepole of a MÄori house, ca 1840 Polynesia (from Greek: ÏολÏÏ many, νá¿ÏÎ¿Ï island) is a large grouping of over 1,000 islands scattered over the central and southern Pacific Ocean. ...
For other uses, see Oceania (disambiguation). ...
(3rd millennium BC – 2nd millennium BC – 1st millennium BC – other millennia) Events Second dynasty of Babylon First Bantu migrations from west Africa The Cushites drive the original inhabitants from Ethiopia, and establish trade relations with Egypt. ...
For other uses, see Petroglyph (disambiguation). ...
A Maori word now common in New Zealand English, marae refers an area of land where the Wharenui or meeting house (literally big house) sits. ...
Ahu Tongariki, restored in the 1990s Moai are monolithic stone figures on Rapa Nui / Easter Island, Chile. ...
Rapa Nui redirects here. ...
References - Bailey, Douglass. (2005). Prehistoric Figurines: Representation and Corporeality in the Neolithic. Routledge Publishers. ISBN 0-415-33152-8
- ^ Salmony A. Some Paleolithic Ivory-Carvings from Mazine. JSTOR, Vol. 12, No. 1/2. 1949. pp. 104-118. [1].
See also In the history of music, prehistoric music (previously called primitive music) is all music produced in preliterate cultures (prehistory), beginning somewhere in very late geological history. ...
Lepenski Vir is an important Mesolithic archaeological site located in Serbia in the central Balkan peninsula. ...
Göbekli Tepe is an early Neolithic site in southeastern Turkey. ...
Nevali Cori is an early Neolithic settlement in the upper Euphrates valley, eastern Turkey, around 490 m high. ...
External links - EuroPreArt database of European Prehistoric Art
- Lepenski Vir
- Göbekli Tepe, in German
- Nevali Cori
- Prehistoric Art Expressions from India
- http://witcombe.sbc.edu/ARTHprehistoric.html#general
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