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Marija Gimbutas examined village culture in Europe from 6500-3500 BCE, right before the arrival of Proto-Indo-Europeans. Her focus is on religious customs centered around a maternal cult figure.
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In this beautifully illustrated study of sculpture, vases, and other cult objects portraying the Goddess, fertility images, and mythical animals, Marija Gimbutas sketches the matrilineal village culture that existed in southeastern Europe between 6500 and 3500 B.C., before it was overwhelmed by the patriarchal Indo-Europeans. The analysis of this rich mythical imagery tells us much about early humanity's concepts of the cosmos, of humans' relations with nature, and of the complementary roles of male and female.
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Book · 1989
(See publisher notes.)
Book · 1982
Marija Gimbutas examined village culture in Europe from 6500-3500 BCE, right before the arrival of Proto-Indo-Europeans. Her focus is on religious customs centered around a maternal cult figure.
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ChicagoGimbutas, Marija A. The Goddesses and Gods of Old Europe: 6500 - 3500 BC, Myths and Cult Images. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1982.