127
126
this figure wears a pendant around its neck of a smaller representation of itself.
the meaning and use of the picrolite anthropomorphic figurines and pendants
has been much discussed and interpretations vary. they are seen as fertility deities
or birth charms. they have also been interpreted as teaching props for initiation
ceremonies, vehicles for sympathetic magic or symbolic images of fertility and ma-
ternity. it has also been suggested that they would have emphasized the individu-
ality of community members, enhancing their social identities. Such figurines have
been found both in chalcolithic tombs and settlements, such as at the necropolis of
Souskiou-Vathyrkakas and the settlement of Souskiou-laona, where there is evidence
for the production of picrolite cruciform figurines.
numerous clay figurines also survive dated to the chalcolithic period. most of
these seem to be depicting females involved in activities linked with birthing and
rearing children. they are often shown squatting, with swollen bellies and large
hips, sometimes seated on birthing stools, in the act of birthing, with their hands on
their breasts or even extracting milk from their breasts. their heads are disk-like
with facial features that in some cases are abstract and in others naturalistic. their
bodies are often richly decorated with incised or painted decoration indicating body
adornment and anatomical details, in some cases modelled very realistically. the
fragmentary condition of these clay birthing figurines, the abrasion patterns noted
on them, as well as the fact that they have mainly been found in settlement contexts
suggest that they were probably handled in daily life during various stages of the
life cycle.
A unique deposit of representational art indicating ritual activity was excavated
at the chalcolithic settlement of Kissonerga-mosphilia, in the pafos district, where
a ceremonial area was unearthed comprising of pits filled with ash, heat-cracked
stones and clay vessels. in one of the pits, a red-on-White painted building model
was found, containing around fifty objects. these included anthropomorphic figurines
(ten of stone and eight of pottery), anthropomorphic vessels, a terracotta model stool,
a complete triton shell, a bone needle, as well as various groundstone pebbles and
tools. All the objects were found ceremoniously packed in and around the building
model and several of the figurines depict women in the act of giving birth. Among
them is a unique pottery figurine depicting a parturient female: a baby’s head and
arms are shown, in red paint, emerging between her parted legs (missing) (
fig. 4
).
originally, the figurine would have sat on a birthing stool, in a position that is known
in the figurine assemblage of this period. the woman is wearing a cruciform pen-
dant around her neck, confirming the important link between cruciform figurines/
pendants and childbirth. the different types and wear patterns on the
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: