Everything about Prehistoric Religion totally explained
Prehistoric religion is a general term for the
religious beliefs and practices of
prehistoric peoples.
Paleolithic
Burial
Intentional
burial, particularly with
grave goods may be one of the earliest detectable forms of religious practice since, as
Philip Lieberman suggests, it may signify a "concern for the dead that transcends daily life."
The earliest undisputed
Homo sapiens burial dates back 130,000 years. Human skeletal remains stained with
red ochre were discovered in the Skhul cave at
Qafzeh, Israel.
Animal worship
A number of archeologists propose that Middle Paleolithic societies such as Neanderthal societies may also have practiced the earliest form of
totemism or
animal worship. Emil Bächler in particular suggests (based on archeological evidence from Middle Paleolithic caves) that a widespread
Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal bear cult existed (
Wunn, 2000, p. 434-435). Additional evidence in support of
Middle Paleolithic animal worship originates from the
Tsodilo Hills (
c 70,000BCE) in the African Kalahari desert where a giant rock resembling a python that's accompanied by large amounts of colored broken spear points and a secret chamber has been discovered inside a cave. The Broken spear points were most likely sacrificial offerings and the python is also important to and worshipped by contemporary
Bushmen Hunter-gatherers who are the descendants of the of the people who devised the ritual at the
Tsodilo Hills and may have inherited their worship of the python from their distant Middle Paleolithic ancestors. Animal cults in the following Upper Paleolithic period such as the bear cult may have had their origins in these hypothetical Middle Paleolithic animal cults.
Animal worship during the Upper Paleolithic was intertwined with hunting rites. For instance archeological evidence from art and bear remains reveals that the Bear cult apparently had involved a type of sacrificial bear ceremonialism in which a bear was shot with
arrows and then was finished off by a shot in the lungs and ritualistically buried near a clay bear statue covered by a bear fur with the skull and the body of the bear buried separately.
Neolithic
There are no extant textual sources from the
Neolithic era, the most recent available dating from the
Bronze Age, and therefore all statements about any
belief systems Neolithic societies may have entertained are glimpsed from archaeology.
The
archaeologist Marija Gimbutas has notably put forward views which describe a
matriarchal "
Old Europe" set of societies dominated by
goddess worship, in particular postulating a
bird goddess and a
bear goddess. Gimbutas considered the Bronze Age
Minoan civilization a native continuation of Neolithic Europe, with the
labrys and
bull worship continuing symbols of matriarchal power. Though these views are questioned by the majority of the scientific community.
Image: Malta 17 Tarxien.jpg| remains of the Fertility Goddess statue in the Tarxien Temples ca. 2800 BC
Image:Malta 16 Mnajdra.jpg| a detail from the Megalithic temple of Mnajdra ca. 2800 BC
Bronze Age
Reconstructions
The early
Bronze Age Proto-Indo-European religion (itself
reconstructed), and the attested early
Semitic gods, are presumed continuations of certain traditions of the late Neolithic.
Archaeology
Bronze Age Europe
Hints to the religion of
Bronze Age Europe include images of
solar barges, frequent appearance of the
Sun cross, deposits of bronze
axes, and later
sickles, so-called
moon idols, the conical
golden hats, the
Nebra skydisk, and burial in
tumuli, but also
cremation as practised by the
Urnfield culture.
Image:Aventon cône.JPG| The Avanton Gold Cone, ca. 1500-1250 BC.
Image:Mondhoerner.jpg| "fire dogs", dating to the 11th to 9th c. BC, found in the Canton of Zurich, Switzerland, kept at the Swiss National Museum.
Image:Radanhaenger-edited.jpg| "wheel pendants", dating to the second half of the 2nd millennium BC, found in Zürich, kept in the Swiss National Museum, showing the "sun cross" and variant shapes
Image:Trundholm.jpg| the Trundholm sun chariot, Nordic Bronze Age, ca. 1400 BC
Iron Age
While the Iron Age religions of the
Mediterranean,
Near East,
India and
China are well attested, much of
Iron Age Europe, from the period of about 700 BC down to the
Great Migrations falls within the prehistoric period. There are scarce accounts of non-Mediterranean religious customs in the records of Hellenistic and Roman era
ethnography.
In the case of
Circumpolar religion (
Shamanism in Siberia,
Finnic mythology),
traditional African religions,
native American religions and
Pacific religions, the prehistoric era mostly ends only with the
Early Modern period and European
colonialism. These traditions were often only first recorded in the context of
Christianization.
Further Information
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