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Lion-man

The Löwenmensch figurine, also called the Lion-man of Hohlenstein-Stadel, is a prehistoric ivory sculpture discovered in Hohlenstein-Stadel, a German cave, in 1939. The German name, Löwenmensch, meaning "lion-person" or "lion-human", is used most frequently because it was discovered and is exhibited in Germany.

The Löwenmensch figurine after restoration in 2013
Side view showing the transverse gouges on the left arm

Determined by carbon dating of the layer in which it was found to be between 35,000 and 41,000 years old, it is one of the oldest-known examples of an artistic representation and the oldest confirmed statue ever discovered.[1] Its age associates it with the archaeological Aurignacian culture of the Upper Paleolithic.[2] An example of zoomorphic art, it was carved out of mammoth ivory using a flint stone knife. Seven parallel, transverse, carved gouges are on the left arm.

After several reconstructions that have incorporated newly found fragments, the figurine stands 31.1 cm (12.2 in) tall, 5.6 cm (2.2 in) wide, and 5.9 cm (2.3 in) thick. It is currently displayed in the Museum Ulm, in the town of Ulm.

History edit

 
Side view

Systematic excavations at Hohlenstein-Stadel cave began in 1937 under the direction of historian Robert Wetzel.[3]

The discovery of a fragmented mammoth ivory figurine was made on 25 August 1939 by geologist Otto Völzing.[4] The start of World War II just one week later meant that the fieldwork was left incomplete and analysis of the finds was not undertaken. The excavation trenches were back-filled with the same soil in which the ivory had been found.[5] For approximately thirty years, the fragments lay forgotten at the nearby Museum Ulm. It was not until archaeologist Joachim Hahn started an inventory and assembly of more than 200 fragments that a figurine with animal and human features began to emerge.[5]

Wetzel continued to spend summers digging at the site until 1961,[6] and further finds of ivory were made on the cave floor in the 1970s. In 1982, paleontologist Elisabeth Schmid combined the new fragments with Hahn's reconstruction, correcting some errors and adding pieces of the nose and mouth which emphasized the figurine's feline characteristics.[5][a]

In 1987, a comprehensive restoration began in the workshops of the Landesmuseum Württemberg by Ute Wolf in cooperation with Schmid. During the work, which took more than six months, it was realized that the figurine was only about two-thirds complete. The back was severely damaged and the legs were missing some ivory lamellae. The ears, eye-holes, two-thirds of the mouth and nose, and the back of the head were preserved. To fill gaps in the head and body, a reversible substance consisting of a mixture of beeswax, artificial wax, and chalk was used.[9]

From 2008, further excavations were carried out in the cave. All layers were sifted systematically, which led to many minute fragments being discovered. The first new adjustments were simulated virtually so that fragments could be added without having to disassemble the original recreation.[10][b]

In 2012, a second restoration was begun in the workshops of the State Office for the Preservation of Historical Monuments in Esslingen under the leadership of Nicole Ebinger-Rist. The figurine was disassembled into its individual parts and newly discovered fragments were added along with the old ones, allowing further completion of areas of the head, back, and right side of the body, and artificial additions used during the first restoration were discarded.[12] The Löwenmensch figurine grew in height from 296 to 311 millimetres.[13] Work was completed in late 2013.[12]

Interpretation edit

Some researchers have ascribed sexual characteristics to the object. Initially, the figurine was classified as male by Hahn who suggested a plate on the abdomen could be a flaccid penis. Schmid later classified this feature as a pubic triangle;[4] however, from examination of new parts of the sculpture, she proposed that the figurine was that of a woman with the head of a Höhlenlöwin (female European cave lion).[14][15] Male European cave lions often lacked distinctive manes, so the absence of a mane could not determine categorically that the figurine was that of a lioness, and a debate about its sex ensued among some involved in the research and the popular press. Kurt Wehrberger, of the Museum Ulm, stated that the statue had become an "icon of the feminist movement".[4]

After the 2012–2013 restoration it was realized that the triangular platelet in the genital area was processed all around, separating it from the figurine. A fracture point suggests that originally it may have been square in shape, which most commonly could be interpreted as a stylized male sex organ.[16] Debate continues, even though an objective determination of the sex of the Löwenmensch figurine may be impossible.

The Löwenmensch figurine lay in a chamber almost 30 metres (98 ft) from the entrance of the Stadel cave, accompanied by many other objects. Bone tools and worked antlers were found, along with jewellery consisting of pendants, beads, and perforated animal teeth. The chamber was probably a special place, possibly used as a storehouse, hiding-place, or maybe as an area for cultic rituals.[17]

A similar but smaller lion-headed human figurine was found in Hohle Fels.[18] Archaeologist Nicholas Conard suggested that "the occupants of Hohle Fels in the Ach Valley and Hohlenstein-Stadel in the Lone Valley must have been members of the same cultural group and shared beliefs and practices connected with therianthropic images of felids and humans" and that "the discovery of a second Löwenmensch lends support to the hypothesis that Aurignacian people practised a form of shamanism."[18]

The figurine shares certain similarities with later French cave paintings, which also show hybrid creatures with human-like lower bodies and animal heads, such as the "Sorcerer" from the Trois Frères in the Pyrenees or the "Bison-man" from the Grotte de Gabillou in the Dordogne.[19][20]

Debate exists as to whether the figurine depicts a lion or human-lion hybrid figure at all; with similarities to a standing bear, and the unreliable nature of the reconstructions cited.[21]

Manufacture edit

The carving of the figurine from hard mammoth tusk would have been a complex and time-consuming task.[c] A similarly sized tusk found in the same cave has marks that "indicate that the skin and thin bone around the tooth cavity of the upper jaw were cut through to the surface of the tooth, which was then exposed for detachment with a hammer. The tip was harder and had to be removed by wedging and splitting."[23]

Wulf Hein and Kurt Wehrberger conducted an experimental replication with the kinds of stone tool available at the time. Removing the base of the tusk took ten hours. The body was carved with a steep-fronted scraper; the burins requiring regular resharpening. Several tools were needed to separate the torso from the insides of the arms while shaping the head and shoulders, which involved difficult cutting across the grain of the ivory, often requiring two hands on the tool. The basic shaping is estimated to have taken around 200 hours, and in total the recreation likely took more than 370 hours.[d] Jill Cook, Curator of Palaeolithic collections at the British Museum, suggests that "unless the sculpture was created slowly at odd moments over several months, someone as skilled as an artist may have been excused from other subsistence tasks to work specially on this piece."[23]

In his October 2017 BBC Radio 4 series Living with the Gods, Neil MacGregor asked Cook

... so why would a community living on the edge of subsistence, whose primary concerns were finding food, keeping that fire going, protecting children from predators, allow someone to spend so much time away from those tasks?[24]

She replied that it was about

... a relationship to things unseen, to the vital forces of nature, that you need to perhaps propitiate, perhaps connect to, in order to ensure your successful life.[24]

See also edit

General stone age art topics
Examples of zoomorphic stone age art
Related ancient history lion-headed figures

Notes edit

  1. ^ The images at this reference:[7] show how much has been achieved after years of painstaking reconstruction.[8]
  2. ^ This reference:[11] shows the lion-man after restoration 1987–1988 with new fragments from the 2010 excavation (red) and free fragments from the stock of the museum (green).
  3. ^ This reference:[22] shows the position of the figurine inside the original tusk. Schmid found that the groin area coincided with the apex of the tusk's pulp cavity. "The long axis of the figure follows the nerve canal with the head at the narrowing end. This expert positioning suggests that the maker deliberately selected a portion of the tusk suitable for a preconceived work." (Cook, 2013)[23]
  4. ^ The Ulm Museum site says 360 hours, Cook (2013)[23] says 320 hours, whereas the video made by the team says 370+ hours.

References edit

  1. ^ "Lion man takes pride of place as oldest statue" by Rex Dalton, Nature 425, 7 (4 September 2003) doi:10.1038/425007a also Nature News 4 September 2003
  2. ^ "14C dating - The age of the lion man". loewenmensch.de (in German). Ulm, Germany: Museum Ulm.
  3. ^ "Discovery: 1939". Löwenmensch: Entdeckung (in German). Ulm, DE: Museum Ulm.
  4. ^ a b c Schulz, Matthias (5 December 2011). "Puzzle im Schutt". Der Spiegel. Hamburg, DE.
  5. ^ a b c Lobell, Jarrett A. (March 2012). "New life for the Lion Man". Archaeology. 65 (2).[page needed]
  6. ^ "Discovery: 1956". Löwenmensch: Entdeckung (in German). Ulm, DE: Museum Ulm.
  7. ^ Images of a preliminary lion-man reconstruction (photos). Löwenmenschen. 1980.
  8. ^ Adam, K.; Kurz, R. (1980). Eiszeitkunst im süddeutschen Raum (in German).
  9. ^ "Discovery: 1987". Löwenmensch: Entdeckung (in German). Ulm, DE: Museum Ulm.
  10. ^ "Discovery: 2011" (in German). Ulm Museum.
  11. ^ "X-ray computed tomographs". Löwenmenschen.
  12. ^ a b "Discovery: 2011". Löwenmenschen (in German). Ulm Museum.
  13. ^ Petershagen, Henning (2 November 2013). [The Lion-man has grown]. Südwest Presse (in German). Archived from the original on 21 July 2017. Retrieved 15 December 2016.
  14. ^ Duckeck, Jochen (10 December 2008). . showcaves.com. Darlegen Archäologie [Explain Archaeology] (in German) (German ed.). Archived from the original on 21 May 2009. Retrieved 17 May 2009. Joachim Hahn hatte die Figur als männlich betrachtet. Elisabeth Schmid kam zu dem Schluß, dass es sich um die Figur einer Frau mit dem Kopf einer Höhlenlöwin handele.
  15. ^ Duckeck, Jochen (10 December 2008). "Lionheaded figurine". showcaves.com. explain Archaeology (English ed.). Retrieved 17 May 2009.
  16. ^ "Sex?". Löwenmensch: Bedeutung (in German). Ulm, DE: Museum Ulm.
  17. ^ "Depot, hiding place, or cult place?". Löwenmensch: Bedeutung (in German). Ulm, DE: Museum Ulm.
  18. ^ a b Conard, Nicholas J. (2003). "Palaeolithic ivory sculptures from southwestern Germany and the origins of figurative art". Nature. 426 (6968): 830–832. Bibcode:2003Natur.426..830C. doi:10.1038/nature02186. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 14685236. S2CID 4349167.
  19. ^ "Animal and human being". Löwenmensch: Bedeutung (in German). Ulm, DE: Museum Ulm.
  20. ^ Kind, Claus-Joachim; Ebinger-Rist, Nicole; Wolf, Sibylle; Beutelspacher, Thomas; Wehrberger, Kurt. (PDF) (Report). Baden-Württemberg, DE: State Office for Cultural Heritage. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 22, 2017. Retrieved December 22, 2019.
  21. ^ Clifford, Elle; Bahn, Paul (19 March 2020). "A new view of the so-called'Lion-Man'". World Archaeology.
  22. ^ "Image showing the positioning of the lion-man figurine within the original tusk".
  23. ^ a b c d Cook, J. (18 February 2013). Ice Age art: Arrival of the modern mind. The British Museum. ISBN 978-0714123332.
  24. ^ a b Presenter: Neil MacGregor; Producer: Paul Kobrak (23 October 2017). "The Beginnings of Belief". Living with the Gods. 06:08 minutes in. BBC. BBC Radio 4. Retrieved 23 October 2017.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • "Lion Man". lowenmensch.de. Ulm, DE: Museum Ulm. — museum official Lion-Man website with information about the figurine
  • Hitchcock, Don (ed.). "Der Löwenmensch" [The lion person]. Don's Maps. — materials and photos of the figurine
  • Lion Man 2.0 - The Experiment (video) (in German) – via YouTube. — showing the manufacture of a replica using authentic tools, in German with English subtitles
  • presenter Neil MacGregor (23 Oct 2017). The Beginnings of Belief. BBC Radio 4. Living with the Gods. British Broadcasting Corporation. series 1, episode 1. Retrieved 2021-07-18. Neil MacGregor begins his series on the role and expression of shared beliefs in communities around the world with the Lion Man, an ivory sculpture which is about 40,000 years old. 15 minute episode

lion, this, article, about, prehistoric, sculpture, other, uses, lion, löwenmensch, figurine, also, called, hohlenstein, stadel, prehistoric, ivory, sculpture, discovered, hohlenstein, stadel, german, cave, 1939, german, name, löwenmensch, meaning, lion, perso. This article is about the prehistoric sculpture For other uses see Lion man The Lowenmensch figurine also called the Lion man of Hohlenstein Stadel is a prehistoric ivory sculpture discovered in Hohlenstein Stadel a German cave in 1939 The German name Lowenmensch meaning lion person or lion human is used most frequently because it was discovered and is exhibited in Germany The Lowenmensch figurine after restoration in 2013Side view showing the transverse gouges on the left arm Determined by carbon dating of the layer in which it was found to be between 35 000 and 41 000 years old it is one of the oldest known examples of an artistic representation and the oldest confirmed statue ever discovered 1 Its age associates it with the archaeological Aurignacian culture of the Upper Paleolithic 2 An example of zoomorphic art it was carved out of mammoth ivory using a flint stone knife Seven parallel transverse carved gouges are on the left arm After several reconstructions that have incorporated newly found fragments the figurine stands 31 1 cm 12 2 in tall 5 6 cm 2 2 in wide and 5 9 cm 2 3 in thick It is currently displayed in the Museum Ulm in the town of Ulm Contents 1 History 2 Interpretation 3 Manufacture 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Side viewSystematic excavations at Hohlenstein Stadel cave began in 1937 under the direction of historian Robert Wetzel 3 The discovery of a fragmented mammoth ivory figurine was made on 25 August 1939 by geologist Otto Volzing 4 The start of World War II just one week later meant that the fieldwork was left incomplete and analysis of the finds was not undertaken The excavation trenches were back filled with the same soil in which the ivory had been found 5 For approximately thirty years the fragments lay forgotten at the nearby Museum Ulm It was not until archaeologist Joachim Hahn started an inventory and assembly of more than 200 fragments that a figurine with animal and human features began to emerge 5 Wetzel continued to spend summers digging at the site until 1961 6 and further finds of ivory were made on the cave floor in the 1970s In 1982 paleontologist Elisabeth Schmid combined the new fragments with Hahn s reconstruction correcting some errors and adding pieces of the nose and mouth which emphasized the figurine s feline characteristics 5 a In 1987 a comprehensive restoration began in the workshops of the Landesmuseum Wurttemberg by Ute Wolf in cooperation with Schmid During the work which took more than six months it was realized that the figurine was only about two thirds complete The back was severely damaged and the legs were missing some ivory lamellae The ears eye holes two thirds of the mouth and nose and the back of the head were preserved To fill gaps in the head and body a reversible substance consisting of a mixture of beeswax artificial wax and chalk was used 9 From 2008 further excavations were carried out in the cave All layers were sifted systematically which led to many minute fragments being discovered The first new adjustments were simulated virtually so that fragments could be added without having to disassemble the original recreation 10 b In 2012 a second restoration was begun in the workshops of the State Office for the Preservation of Historical Monuments in Esslingen under the leadership of Nicole Ebinger Rist The figurine was disassembled into its individual parts and newly discovered fragments were added along with the old ones allowing further completion of areas of the head back and right side of the body and artificial additions used during the first restoration were discarded 12 The Lowenmensch figurine grew in height from 296 to 311 millimetres 13 Work was completed in late 2013 12 Interpretation editSome researchers have ascribed sexual characteristics to the object Initially the figurine was classified as male by Hahn who suggested a plate on the abdomen could be a flaccid penis Schmid later classified this feature as a pubic triangle 4 however from examination of new parts of the sculpture she proposed that the figurine was that of a woman with the head of a Hohlenlowin female European cave lion 14 15 Male European cave lions often lacked distinctive manes so the absence of a mane could not determine categorically that the figurine was that of a lioness and a debate about its sex ensued among some involved in the research and the popular press Kurt Wehrberger of the Museum Ulm stated that the statue had become an icon of the feminist movement 4 After the 2012 2013 restoration it was realized that the triangular platelet in the genital area was processed all around separating it from the figurine A fracture point suggests that originally it may have been square in shape which most commonly could be interpreted as a stylized male sex organ 16 Debate continues even though an objective determination of the sex of the Lowenmensch figurine may be impossible The Lowenmensch figurine lay in a chamber almost 30 metres 98 ft from the entrance of the Stadel cave accompanied by many other objects Bone tools and worked antlers were found along with jewellery consisting of pendants beads and perforated animal teeth The chamber was probably a special place possibly used as a storehouse hiding place or maybe as an area for cultic rituals 17 A similar but smaller lion headed human figurine was found in Hohle Fels 18 Archaeologist Nicholas Conard suggested that the occupants of Hohle Fels in the Ach Valley and Hohlenstein Stadel in the Lone Valley must have been members of the same cultural group and shared beliefs and practices connected with therianthropic images of felids and humans and that the discovery of a second Lowenmensch lends support to the hypothesis that Aurignacian people practised a form of shamanism 18 The figurine shares certain similarities with later French cave paintings which also show hybrid creatures with human like lower bodies and animal heads such as the Sorcerer from the Trois Freres in the Pyrenees or the Bison man from the Grotte de Gabillou in the Dordogne 19 20 Debate exists as to whether the figurine depicts a lion or human lion hybrid figure at all with similarities to a standing bear and the unreliable nature of the reconstructions cited 21 Manufacture editThe carving of the figurine from hard mammoth tusk would have been a complex and time consuming task c A similarly sized tusk found in the same cave has marks that indicate that the skin and thin bone around the tooth cavity of the upper jaw were cut through to the surface of the tooth which was then exposed for detachment with a hammer The tip was harder and had to be removed by wedging and splitting 23 Wulf Hein and Kurt Wehrberger conducted an experimental replication with the kinds of stone tool available at the time Removing the base of the tusk took ten hours The body was carved with a steep fronted scraper the burins requiring regular resharpening Several tools were needed to separate the torso from the insides of the arms while shaping the head and shoulders which involved difficult cutting across the grain of the ivory often requiring two hands on the tool The basic shaping is estimated to have taken around 200 hours and in total the recreation likely took more than 370 hours d Jill Cook Curator of Palaeolithic collections at the British Museum suggests that unless the sculpture was created slowly at odd moments over several months someone as skilled as an artist may have been excused from other subsistence tasks to work specially on this piece 23 In his October 2017 BBC Radio 4 series Living with the Gods Neil MacGregor asked Cook so why would a community living on the edge of subsistence whose primary concerns were finding food keeping that fire going protecting children from predators allow someone to spend so much time away from those tasks 24 She replied that it was about a relationship to things unseen to the vital forces of nature that you need to perhaps propitiate perhaps connect to in order to ensure your successful life 24 See also editGeneral stone age art topicsArt of the Upper Paleolithic List of Stone Age art Prehistoric artExamples of zoomorphic stone age artBird man from Lascaux Bird horse man from Hornos de la Pena Vogelherd figurines Venus of Hohle FelsRelated ancient history lion headed figuresArimanius obscure lion headed god in Mithraism Bastet cat headed goddess in Ancient Egypt originally lion headed Sekhmet lion headed war goddess in Ancient Egypt Narasimha lion headed Hindu god an avatar of Vishnu Notes edit The images at this reference 7 show how much has been achieved after years of painstaking reconstruction 8 This reference 11 shows the lion man after restoration 1987 1988 with new fragments from the 2010 excavation red and free fragments from the stock of the museum green This reference 22 shows the position of the figurine inside the original tusk Schmid found that the groin area coincided with the apex of the tusk s pulp cavity The long axis of the figure follows the nerve canal with the head at the narrowing end This expert positioning suggests that the maker deliberately selected a portion of the tusk suitable for a preconceived work Cook 2013 23 The Ulm Museum site says 360 hours Cook 2013 23 says 320 hours whereas the video made by the team says 370 hours References edit Lion man takes pride of place as oldest statue by Rex Dalton Nature 425 7 4 September 2003 doi 10 1038 425007a also Nature News 4 September 2003 14C dating The age of the lion man loewenmensch de in German Ulm Germany Museum Ulm Discovery 1939 Lowenmensch Entdeckung in German Ulm DE Museum Ulm a b c Schulz Matthias 5 December 2011 Puzzle im Schutt Der Spiegel Hamburg DE a b c Lobell Jarrett A March 2012 New life for the Lion Man Archaeology 65 2 page needed Discovery 1956 Lowenmensch Entdeckung in German Ulm DE Museum Ulm Images of a preliminary lion man reconstruction photos Lowenmenschen 1980 Adam K Kurz R 1980 Eiszeitkunst im suddeutschen Raum in German Discovery 1987 Lowenmensch Entdeckung in German Ulm DE Museum Ulm Discovery 2011 in German Ulm Museum X ray computed tomographs Lowenmenschen a b Discovery 2011 Lowenmenschen in German Ulm Museum Petershagen Henning 2 November 2013 Lowenmensch ist gewachsen The Lion man has grown Sudwest Presse in German Archived from the original on 21 July 2017 Retrieved 15 December 2016 Duckeck Jochen 10 December 2008 Der Lowenmensch showcaves com Darlegen Archaologie Explain Archaeology in German German ed Archived from the original on 21 May 2009 Retrieved 17 May 2009 Joachim Hahn hatte die Figur als mannlich betrachtet Elisabeth Schmid kam zu dem Schluss dass es sich um die Figur einer Frau mit dem Kopf einer Hohlenlowin handele Duckeck Jochen 10 December 2008 Lionheaded figurine showcaves com explain Archaeology English ed Retrieved 17 May 2009 Sex Lowenmensch Bedeutung in German Ulm DE Museum Ulm Depot hiding place or cult place Lowenmensch Bedeutung in German Ulm DE Museum Ulm a b Conard Nicholas J 2003 Palaeolithic ivory sculptures from southwestern Germany and the origins of figurative art Nature 426 6968 830 832 Bibcode 2003Natur 426 830C doi 10 1038 nature02186 ISSN 1476 4687 PMID 14685236 S2CID 4349167 Animal and human being Lowenmensch Bedeutung in German Ulm DE Museum Ulm Kind Claus Joachim Ebinger Rist Nicole Wolf Sibylle Beutelspacher Thomas Wehrberger Kurt The smile of the Lion Man recent excavations in Stadel Cave Baden Wurttemberg south western Germany and the restoration of the famous Upper Palaeolithic figurine PDF Report Baden Wurttemberg DE State Office for Cultural Heritage Archived from the original PDF on August 22 2017 Retrieved December 22 2019 Clifford Elle Bahn Paul 19 March 2020 A new view of the so called Lion Man World Archaeology Image showing the positioning of the lion man figurine within the original tusk a b c d Cook J 18 February 2013 Ice Age art Arrival of the modern mind The British Museum ISBN 978 0714123332 a b Presenter Neil MacGregor Producer Paul Kobrak 23 October 2017 The Beginnings of Belief Living with the Gods 06 08 minutes in BBC BBC Radio 4 Retrieved 23 October 2017 Further reading editUlmer Museum ed 2013 The Return of the Lion Man History myth magic Ostfildern ISBN 978 3 7995 0543 7 museum edition ISBN 978 3 7995 0544 4External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lion man Lion Man lowenmensch de Ulm DE Museum Ulm museum official Lion Man website with information about the figurine Hitchcock Don ed Der Lowenmensch The lion person Don s Maps materials and photos of the figurine Lion Man 2 0 The Experiment video in German via YouTube showing the manufacture of a replica using authentic tools in German with English subtitles presenter Neil MacGregor 23 Oct 2017 The Beginnings of Belief BBC Radio 4 Living with the Gods British Broadcasting Corporation series 1 episode 1 Retrieved 2021 07 18 Neil MacGregor begins his series on the role and expression of shared beliefs in communities around the world with the Lion Man an ivory sculpture which is about 40 000 years old 15 minute episode Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lion man amp oldid 1185325001, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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