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Kostenki
Kostenki on the Don River is a very important Paleolithic site. It was a settlement which contained venus figures, dwellings made of mammoth bones, and many flint tools and bone implements.



Venus figures from the Kostenki - Borshevo region on the Don River

Kostienki and  venus

Photomontage of an important Kostenki Venus, diadem, and the Don River in the Kostenki region

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski



Kostenki is a very important Paleolithic site on the Don River in Russia. It was a settlement which contained venus figures, dwellings made of mammoth bones, and many flint tools and bone implements. Kostenki / Kostienki is not actually a single site but really an area on the right bank of the Don River in the regions of the villages of Kostenki and Borshevo, consisting of more than twenty site locations, all dating to the Paleolithic.

Gagarino Kostienki Display

Distribution of mobile art in Eastern Europe.

1 Staryé Duruitory, 2 Brynzeny, 3 Kosseoutzy, 4 Klimaoutzy, 5 Suren' 1, 6 Chan-Koba, 7 Apiantcha, 8 grotte d'Uvarov, 9 Sakagia, 10 Sagvardgilé, 11 Gvardgilas-Kldé, 12 Devis-Khvreli, 13 Taro-Kldé, 14 Molodova V, 15 Lissitchniki, 16 Lipa VI, 17 Klinetz, 18 Ossokorovka, 19 Dubovaya Balka, 20 Kaïstrovaya Balka, 21 Mejiritch (Mezhirich), 22 Kievo-Kirillovskaya, 23 Mézine (Mizyn), 24 Novgorod Severskyi, 25 Puchkari I, 26 Dobranitchevka, 27 Gontzy, 28, Rogalik, 29 Amvrossievka, 30 Eliseevitchi I, 31 Eliseevitchi II, 32 Yudinovo, 33 Khoylevo II, 34 Timonovka, 35 Suponevo, 36 Avdeevo, 37 Sungir', 38 Gagarino, 39 Kostienki 19, 40 Kostienki 21, 41 Kostienki 13, 42 Kostienki 1, 43 Kostienki 14, 44 Kostienki 12, 45 Kostienki 17, 46 Kostienki 2, 47 Kostienki 11, 48 Kostienki 4, 49 Kostienki 15, 50 Kostienki 9, 51 Kostienki 8, 52 Borchtchevo 1, 53 Borchtchevo 2, 54 Ilskaya, 55 Murakovka, 56 Ostrovskaya, 57 Bez'imyannyi, 58 Smelobskaya, 59 Kapova, 60 Ignatievskaya.

Photo:Abramova (1995)






Kostienki  venus


The Kostienki limestone venus.

Found at the Russian site of Kostenki in 1988, this is by far the biggest such object known from the ice age. The height of the surviving fragment is 13.5 cm (5.5 inches) It is noteworthy not only for its massive size and the prominent navel, but also for the bracelets on the wrists, which appear to be joined together at the front like a pair of handcuffs.

Photo: P. Bahn, 'Prehistoric Art'






kostenki venus

The Kostenki limestone venus.

Height: 137 mm

Gravettien, circa 25 000 BP, original,

Photo: Thilo Parg
Permission: CC BY-SA 4.0
Source: original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.




kostenki venus

The Kostenki limestone venus.

Height: 137 mm

Gravettian, circa 25 000 BP, original,

Photo: Courtesy Ralph Frenken
Source: original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.




kostenki venus

Rear view of the Kostenki limestone venus.

Photo: Courtesy Ralph Frenken
Source: original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.






Kostienki  venus frontKostienki  venus rear



The Kostienki limestone venus.

Photo:Cohen (2003)





kostienki Venus front
kostienki Venus side
kostienki Venus back

Kostienki Venus front.
Kostienki Venus side.
Kostienki Venus back.

This Venus figure from Kostienki 1, catalogued as number 3 byAbramova (1962), made of mammoth bone, shows the characteristic pregnancy, well developed buttocks and pendulous breasts of many such statues. In the rear view she can be seen to be wearing a fringe or girdle.
Photo: G. Clark, 'The Stone Age Hunters'


kostenki venus figure



This is a very high quality facsimile.

Photo: LWL/Egbert.

Source and text: http://www.lwl.org/pressemitteilungen/mitteilung.php?urlID=16067#.Us96qmQyFO0




kostenki venus figure

The Venus of Kostienki 1, catalogue number 3, is one of the most well-known Venuses of the world, created 24 500 - 21 500 BP

This is a detailed image of the venus.

Photo:Merkel und Weiss (2017)



kostenki venus figure





This photo of the original is catalogued as Kostenki 1, Venus figure number 3 byAbramova (1962)

(Note the hole between the ankles which could have been used to thread a cord through to make a pendant - Don)

Photo:Abramova (1962)




Venus   KostenkiVenus   KostenkiVenus   KostenkiVenus   Kostenki


Venus, Kostenki

Photo: Courtesy Ralph Frenken
Source: Original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.



kostenki venus 1 4

Kostenki mammoth ivory venus, Kostenki 1, Venus figure number 4.

Gravettien, circa 25 000 BP, original.

Photo: Thilo Parg
Permission: CC BY-SA 4.0
Source: original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.




Venus   Kostenki



Detailed view from the front, side and rear of the Kostenki 1, Venus figure number 4.

Photo:Merkel und Weiss (2017)



Venus   Kostenki



Venus, Kostenki, from a display at the museum.

Rephotography: Ralph Frenken
Source: The Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.



Venus   Kostenki

Venus, Kostenki, 25 000 BP.

This mammoth ivory statuette was found in 1923, and was the first ice age woman figure found in Russia.

Above her breasts she is decorated with a ribbon. This is shown with three parallel scribed lines and additionally provided with oblique scribed lines. The ornament continues on the back of the figure.

Photo: Courtesy Ralph Frenken
Source: Original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.



kostenki venus figures





Venus figure from Kostenki 1, and a fragment of a venus figure, both facsimiles.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2008

Source: Facsimile, Voronezh Museum.




kostenki venus figure



Apparently the original of the venus on the left, above.

Photo:Abramova (1962)




kostenki venus figures





Venus figure, another version of the one on the left, above.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2008

Source: Facsimile, Voronezh Museum.




kostenki venus figure





Venus figure, another version of the one on the left, above. The venus is from Kostenki 1 and is 9 cm high.

This is apparently of the original. Note the cross hatching across the top of the breasts, possibly a decorative band of some kind.

Photo: http://www.istmira.com/foto-i-video-pervobytnoe-obschestvo/3924-iskusstvo-predystorii-pervobytnost-2.html




kostenki venus figure





The Venus statuette above.

Photo: © MAE (Kunstkamera) RAS, St. Petersburg, Russia, MAE # 4464-1
Source: http://eiszeiten-hamburg.de/2016/05/11/die-kunst-der-mammutjaeger/




kostenki venus figure



This photo of the original as seen in the upper drawing in the image below, is catalogued as Kostenki 1, Venus figure number 4 byAbramova (1962)

Photo:Abramova (1962)




The Kostenki Venus
The Kostenki Venus

Two figurines from Kostenki/Kostienki. Top figure is catalogued as Kostenki 1, Venus figure number 4, the bottom figure as Venus figure number 2 byAbramova (1962)


Photo: J Jelinek, 'The Evolution of Man'

kostenki venus figureskostenki venus figures





Venus figure as shown in the lower drawings above of two venus figurines from Jelinek.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2008

Source: Facsimile, Voronezh Museum.




Kostenki  venusKostenki  venusKostenki  venus


Kostenki  venusKostenki  venus



Venus figure, Kostenki, 25 000 BP.

This large mammoth ivory statuette was polished and painted with a black pigment.

Exceptional are the many engravings with which it has been decorated. Two jewellery bands can be seen in the décolleté area - possibly made of fox teeth, such as those from Gagarino. More bands run on the back over the hips. Also on the back is a notched neck collar.

Photo: Ralph Frenken
Source: original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.




kostenki venus figure





Venus figure as shown above.

The venus does not seem to be in a very good condition, the ivory is apparently delaminating.

Catalogued as Venus figure number 2 byAbramova (1962)

Photo:Abramova (1962)




MizynStatuette féminine de Kostienki 1, vue de face. Collection MAE. PhotoL. Iakovleva.

Venus from Kostienki 1, frontal view. Collection MAE. This is the same as the venus above.

Photo and French text: "les mammouths - DossiersArchéologie - n° 291 - Mars 2004"
Photograph L Iakovleva.

My thanks to Anya for access to this resource.



kostenki venus figureskostenki venus figureskostenki venus figures





This is quite a heavy looking venus figurine. It may not have been completely finished.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2008

Source: Facsimile, Voronezh Museum.




Venus   KostenkiVenus   Kostenki

Venus, Kostenki.

This limestone statuette had been broken into four fragments at its discovery, and could have been deliberately broken directly after its manufacture. Perhaps this figure is a test piece.

Photo: Ralph Frenken
Source: Original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.



kostenkionemarlstonevenussm
Kostenki Venus number 5.

Kostenki I, figurine in marlstone, roughly carved. Note the impacts from blows on the belly.

Height: 175 mm.

Photo: Martin Frouz
Source: Coll. Kunstkamera St. Petersburg.
Proximate source and text:Svoboda (2017)



kostenki venus figures
The Kostenki Venus number 5.

Photo: Martin Frouz
Source:Svoboda (2008)




kostenki venus figures



Black and white photos of the original of the venus above.

This is catalogued as Venus figure number 5 byAbramova (1962)

Photo:Abramova (1962)




kostenki venusVenus figure from Kostenki.

Figure of a naked woman. Her head is covered with rows of shallow teeth cuts, depicting, according to Z. A. Abramova, hair or a closely fitting head-dress. Engraved and relief lines on the chest and on the back. Mammoth's tusk. Height 114 mm. Found in 1936, excavation made by P.P. Efimenko, who thought it to be 'one of the best creations of that period, known to us'.

Photo:Cohen (2003)
Text above: http://vm.kemsu.ru/en/palaeolith/plastic/costenki.html

ЖЕНСКАЯ СТАТУЭТКА

бивень мамонта Костенки 1,1 слой (22 тыс. лет), муляж
Одна из самых совершенных женских статуэток эпохи палеолита поражает мастерством исполнения и гармонией внутреннего содержания образа. Пред нами много рожавшая женщина, которая вновь готовится стать матерью. Маленькие ручки вытянуты вдоль живота, голова наклонена, как будто она прислушивается к находящейся внутри ее новой жизни, вся фигурка производит ощущение умиротворения и покоя. Это древнейший женский образ на Земле и символ красоты той эпохи.

Made of mammoth tusk, Kostenki 1, layer 1 (22 000 BP)

One of the most perfect female figurines of the Palaeolithic, with striking craftsmanship and harmony of the inner content of the image. We have before us a woman who already has children, and is preparing to become a mother again. Little hands stretched along the abdomen, head tilted as if she listens to the new life inside her, the whole figure produces a feeling of peace and tranquility. It is a symbol of the beauty of that era.

Additional text: Display, Kostenki Museum




kostenki1venusivory.gif

Another photo of the venus above.

From:
http://vm.kemsu.ru/en/palaeolith/plastic/costenki.html




kostenki venus

This image shows both front and back views.

Photo:Rau et al. (2009)




Venus  fragment  KostenkiVenus  fragment  KostenkiVenus  fragment  Kostenki


Fragment of a venus figure, Kostenki, 25 000 BP.

This limestone object is a fragment of a female statuette that has been pierced at chest height.

The left arm is still visible. The hole probably served for hanging the object on a cord.

Photo: Ralph Frenken
Source: Original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.



Venus    KostenkiVenus    Kostenki

Uncompleted venus figure, Kostenki, 25 000 BP.

This large figure of mammoth ivory is the blank for a venus which was never finished.

Photo: Ralph Frenken
Source: Original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.



Man engraving    Muralovka

Representation of a man, Muralovka, 22 000 BP.

This figure of a man was engraved on a bison bone. The lower area of the abdomen as well as part of the legs can be seen.

Photo: Ralph Frenken
Source: Original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.



kostenki venus



Venus figure from Kostenki 1.

Photo:Cohen (2003)


venus figure


This is a detailed image of the venus.

Photo:Merkel und Weiss (2017)



Venus   Kostenki
Venus figure, Kostenki.

25 000 BP

Photo: Ralph Frenken
Source: exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.



Venus   Kostenki
Venus figure, Kostenki.

25 000 BP

Photo: Ralph Frenken
Source: exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.



kostenkivenusbsm
Kostenki I, ivory figurine, pregnant

Height: 127 mm.

Photo: Martin Frouz
Source: Coll. IIMK St. Petersburg.
Proximate source and text:Svoboda (2017)



kostenki venus figure





Scientific examination of the Venus statuette above in the Kunstkamera St. Petersburg

Photo: © Archaeological Museum Hamburg
Source: http://eiszeiten-hamburg.de/2016/05/11/die-kunst-der-mammutjaeger/




Kostenki VenusKostenki Venus

Female figurine carved from mammoth tusk. Kostenki 1, layer 1

22 000 BP

Plaster cast.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2011, 2014




Kostenki Venus

Female figurine carved from marl. Kostenki 1, layer 1

22 000 BP

Plaster cast.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2011




Kostenki
ЖЕНСКАЯ СТАТУЭТКА

мергель Костенки 1,1 слой (22 тыс. лет), муляж

Некоторые женские статуэтки из мергеля в Костенках представляют собой сознательно разбитые фигурки. У данной статуэтки не хватает нижней части ног и верхней части туловища: они были отбиты еще в каменном веке. Возможно, это был ритуал, смысл которого уже не ясен.

Female figurine.

Kostenky 1, layer 1 (22 000 BP), made of marl.

Some female figurines of marl in Kostenki present as deliberately broken figurines. In this statuette the lower part of the legs and the upper body are missing: they were broken off in the Stone Age. Perhaps it was a ritual, the meaning of which is not clear.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2014
Source: Facsimile, Kostenki Museum




kostenki venus
Another version of the venus figure above.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski, 2006


kostenki 4 venus







The upper horizon of Kostenki 4 yielded some interesting finds.

1 and 2 are venus figures, 3 and 4 are fragments of anthropomorphic pieces, and 5 and 6 are engraved plaques of marl (clayey limestone).

Photo:Abramova (1962)




kostenki 1 venus figures







Kostenki 1 venus figures.

1 - A rod with a globular head.

2 - a point with a hat like head.

3 - Rod with a rounded head.



Photo:Abramova (1962)




rodrod
Kostenki, 25 000 BP - we can only speculate on the exact function of these anthropomorphic devices, which have also been proposed as venus figures.

(left) Made of mammoth ivory, this resembles a percussion instrument, such as a drumstick, and could thus be an indirect proof of the use of drums.

(right) Carved from a mammoth rib, this might have been used for stripping snow from clothes.

Photo: Ralph Frenken
Source and text: Original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.



kostenki venus




This is described as a male venus from Kostenki.

Photo:Abramova (1995)


kostenki male venus







A photograph of the male venus figure above.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2007
Source: The Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg



VulvaVulve sculptée de Kostienki 1. Collection MAE. Photo L. Iakovleva.

Vulva sculpture from Kostienki 1. Collection MAE.

Photo and French text: "les mammouths - DossiersArchéologie - n° 291 - Mars 2004"
Photograph L Iakovleva.

My thanks to Anya for access to this resource.



The Kostenki VenusThe Kostenki VenusThe Kostenki Venus

These photos are of the same figurine from Kostenki/Kostenky/Kostienki, although the colour cast in the images are entirely different.

23 000 - 21 000 BC Limestone
H 10.2 cm

This figurine represents the Palaeolithic 'Venus', with overlarge breasts and belly. The faceless head bends towards the chest while the arms are pressed to the body with hands on the belly. Covering the surface of the head are rows of incisions indicating a hair style or cap. Relief work in the form of a tight plait convey a breast ornament tied up at the back. There are bracelets on the arms.



Photo: (left) http://www.hermitagemuseum.org/html_En/03/hm3_2_1a.html.
(right images) http://exn.ca/stories/2000/02/03/53.asp

kostenki venus
Venus figure above, but minus the head.

This has the classic and famous beaded decoration around the neck and above the breasts.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski, 2006


Kostenki Venus




This is a much better photograph of the original in the Hermitage Museum at St Petersburg, Russia.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2007




Kostenki artefactKostenki artefactKostenki artefact

Various views of the original.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2014
Source: The Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg



Kostenki Venus

This facsimile of the figurine above is missing the head, but the very small hands and lower arms are clear in this view.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2014
Source: Facsimile, Kostenki Museum




Kostenki Venus




Facsimile of the venus figure above.

Photo: Don Hitchcock 2008

Source: Vienna Natural History Museum




Kostenki Venus


Venus figurines from Kostenki

Photo: http://vantit.ru/antiquities/908-venera-iz-kostenok.html




Kostenki VenusKostenki Venus





Venus figurine from Kostenki

Photo (left): http://vantit.ru/antiquities/908-venera-iz-kostenok.html
Photo (right): http://old.national-geographic.ru/ngm/200903/article_269/




Kostenki VenusKostenki Venus





Venus figurine from Kostenki

Photo: Cohen (2003)




kostenki venus figure front and back





Kostenki Venus figure, with a good view of the back of the venus.

Photo: http://shamans-storytellers.wikispaces.com/9E+Look,+Ma,+No+Feet!++Paleolithic+Goddess+Figures




Kostenki Venus


Venus figurine made of marl from Kostenki 1, apparently a facsimile.

Photo:Soffer et al. (2000)




Kostenki Venus no 6


Venus figurine from Kostenki 1.

Abramova (1962) identifies this as Number 6 from Kostenki 1.

Photo:Abramova (1962)




Venus   Kostenki
Venus figure, Kostenki.

25 000 BP,Abramova (1962) identifies this as Number 6 from Kostenki 1.

The big belly of this limestone statuette probably shows a pregnancy.

In this venus only the upper body appears to have been worked out, the legs are not indicated.

Photo: Ralph Frenken
Source: Original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.



Venus   KostenkiVenus   Kostenki
Venus figure, Kostenki.

25 000 BP.

The big belly of this limestone statuette probably shows a pregnancy.

The legs are shown, angled.

Photo: Ralph Frenken
Source: Original, exhibited at the Archeological Museum Hamburg (Ice Age - The Art of the Mammoth Hunters from 18 October 2016 to 14 May 2017)
On loan from the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.



golfballhead.jpg
Head of a venus known popularly as the golf ball. From the Kostenki I site in Russia. The real basket headware was made of plaited starts and coiled basketry, copied here in stone.

Photo: http://www.unl.edu/rhames/212/venus/venus_string.html

Dr Soffer
Dr. Olga Soffer examining the "golf ball" head of the Venus of the Kostenki I site in Russia.

"Because they have emotionally charged thingies like breasts and buttocks, the Venus figurines have been the subject of more spilled ink than anything I know of," Dr. Soffer said.

"There are as many opinions on them as there are people in field."

Text and Photo: http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/history/lecture02/r_2-1.html


Kostenki VenusKostenki VenusKostenki Venus




These are photographs of the original in the Hermitage Museum at St Petersburg, Russia.

Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2007




Kostenki golf ballKostenki golf ball



The golf ball venus.

Original.



Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2014
Source: The Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg



Kostenki golf ball Venus

Large head made of marl from Kostenki I.

Left, right profile; centre, left profile; right, superior view.

Photo:Soffer et al. (2000)




Lion head and bison

Animal head (possibly a cave lion head), and two bison figurines from Kostenki 4.

Photo:Abramova (1995)




References

  1. Abramova Z., 1962:Paleolitičeskoe iskusstvo na territorii SSSR, Moskva : Akad. Nauk SSSR, Inst. Archeologii, 1962
  2. Abramova Z., 1995:L'Art paléolithique d'Europe orientale et de Sibérie., Grenoble: Jérôme Millon.
  3. Cohen C., 2003:La femme des origines. Images de la femme dans la préhistoire occidentale,, Paris, Belin-Herscher, 2003, 191 pages.
  4. Merkel M., Weiss R., 2017:Eiszeiten: Die Kunst der Mammutjäger - Die Menschen des Nordlichts, von Museum für Völkerkunde (Herausgeber), Gebundene Ausgabe: 216 Seiten, ISBN-10: 3944193059, ISBN-13: 978-3944193052
  5. Sinitsyn A., 2007: Variability of the Gravettian of Kostienki (Bassin moyen du Don)Paleo, No. 19, December 2007, pp 181-202, http://paleo.revues.org/599
  6. Soffer O., Adovasio J., Hyland D., 2000: The 'Venus' Figurines - Textiles, Basketry, Gender, and Status in the Upper Paleolithic,Current Anthropology Volume 41, Number 4, August–October 2000
  7. Svoboda J., 2017: Upper Paleolithic female figurines of Northern Eurasia,PETRKOVICE, The Dolní Věstonice Studies 15, Brno 2008, 193-223December 2017, Project: origins of art
  8. Svoboda J., 2008: Upper Paleolithic female figurines of Northern Eurasia. In: J Svoboda, ed., PETRKOVICE.The Dolní Věstonice Studies 15, Brno 2008, 193-223.
  9. Rau, S., Naumann D., Barth M., Mühleis Y., Bleckmann C., 2009:Eiszeit: Kunst und Kultur, Thorbecke, 2009, 396p. ISBN: 978-3-7995-0833-9



Kostenki
Kostenki on the Don River is a very important Paleolithic site. It was a settlement which contained venus figures, dwellings made of mammoth bones, and many flint tools and bone implements.

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This page last updated: Wednesday, 21st Dec 2022 14:52


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My background

Some people have expressed interest in knowing a little bit about me. For those people, here is a potted biography:

I live in New South Wales, Australia, and I am a retired high school mathematics/science teacher.

The Donsmaps site is totally independent of any other influence. I work on it for my own pleasure, and finance it myself. I started before there was an internet, when I thought I could do a better job of the small map on the end papers of Jean Auel's wonderful book, Valley of the Horses, by adding detail and contour lines, and making a larger version. I have always loved maps since I was a young boy.

I had just bought a black and white 'fat Mac' with a whopping 512 kB of memory (!), and no hard disk. With a program called 'Super Paint' and a lot of double work (hand tracing first the maps of Europe from atlases, then scanning the images on the tracing paper, then merging the scanned images together, then tracing these digital scans on the computer screen), I made my own black and white map.

Then the internet came along, the terms of my internet access gave me space for a small website, and Don's Maps started. I got much better computers and software over the years, Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator for example, and my maps became colourised and had more detail. I did a lot of maps of thetravels of Ayla from Jean Auel's books, and I gradually included other pages with more and more photos available from the web, and scanned from books or from scientific papers, since I was not happy with the quality generally available. I became very interested in the Venus figurines, and set out to make acomplete record of the ice age ones. Along the way I got interested in archaeology for its own sake.

In 2008 my wife and I went to Europe, and when we arrived in Frankfurt at sunrise after the 24 hour plane trip from Sydney, while my wife left on her own tour with her sister, they visited relatives in Germany and Austria, I went off by myself on the train to Paris. Later that afternoon I took a train to Brive-la-Gaillarde, found a hotel and caught up on lost sleep. The next morning I hired a car, and over the next four weeks visited and photographed many of the original archaeological sites in the south of France, as well as many archaeological museums. It was a wonderful experience.My wife and I met up again later in the Black Forest, andcycled down the Danube from its source to Budapest, camping most of the way, a wonderful trip, collecting many photos, including a visit toDolni Vestonice in the Czech Republic, as well as visiting the Vienna natural history museum. Jean Auel fans will realise the significance of that trip!

Luckily I speak French, the trips to France would have been difficult or impossible otherwise. No one outside large cities speaks English (or they refuse to). I was travelling independently, not as part of a tour group. I never knew where I was going to be the next night, and I camped nearly everywhere, except for large cities. I am a very experienced bushwalker (hiker) and have the required equipment -a one-man ultra lightweight tent, sleeping bag, stove, raincoat, and so on, all of which I make myself for use here when I go bushwalking, especially down the beautiful gorges east of Armidale, though for Europe I use a commercial two person lightweight tent, since weight is not so much of a problem when cycling or using a car, and in any case my wife was with me when cycling, once along the Donau from its source to Budapest in 2008, and again from Amsterdam to Copenhagen and then up the Rhine from Köln to the Black Forest in 2014, both of which were memorable and wonderful trips.

In 2012 we went to Canada for a wedding and to visit old friends, and I took the opportunity to visit the wonderful Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia, where I took many photographs of the items on exhibit, particularly of the superb display of artefacts of theFirst Nations of the Pacific Northwest.

In 2014 my wife and I did another European cycling tour, fromAmsterdam to Copenhagen, then from Cologne up the Rhine to the Black Forest, camping most of the way in each case, and taking many useful photos in museums along the way, including the museums at Leiden, Netherlands, andRoskilde in Denmark, and the National Museum in Copenhagen. Again, I later hired a car and did more photography and visited many more sites in France.

In 2015 I made a lone visit to all the major museums in western Europe by public transport, mostly by train, and that went very well. I had learned a lot of German while travelling with my wife, who is a fluent speaker of the language, and of all the European countries, Germany is my favourite. I feel comfortable there. I love the people, the food, and the beer. Germans are gemütlich, I have many friends there now.

I repeated the visit to western Europe in 2018, to fill in some gaps of museums I had not visited the first time, because they were either closed for renovation the first time (such as the Musée de l'Homme in Paris) or because I ran out of time, or because I wanted to fill in some gaps from major museums such as the British Museum, the Berlin Museum, München, the Louvre, the Petrie and Natural History Museums in London, the Vienna Natural History Museum, the important museum in Brno, and museums in northern Germany. It takes at least two visits, preferably three, to thoroughly explore the items on display in a major museum.

I spend a lot of time on the site, typically at least a few hours a day, often more. I do a lot of translation of original papers not available in English, a time consuming but I believe a valuable task. People and fate have been very generous to me, and it is good to give back a very small part of what I have been given. With the help of online translation apps and use of online dictionaries there are few languages I cannot translate, though I find Czech a challenge!

Life has been kind to me, I want for nothing, and am in good health. Not many in the world are as lucky as I am, and I am grateful for my good fortune.

My best wishes to all who read and enjoy the pages of my site.



May the road rise up to meet you.
May the wind be always at your back.
May the sun shine warm upon your face;
And may rain on a tin roof lull you to sleep at night.


Webmaster: Don Hitchcock

Email:don@donsmaps.com



Website last updated Monday 10 March 2025

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