HOA Prehistoric Age
HOA Prehistoric Age
Period
College of Architecture and Fine Arts
History of Architecture 1
2018-04544-MN-0
Introduction
to Paleolithic Period
Paleolithic Architecture
Key Points
– Early humans chose locations that could be defended against predators and rivals and that
were shielded from inclement weather.
– Weather, water, and time have destroyed the majority of campsites; our understanding of
Paleolithic dwellings is therefore limited.
– Caves are the most famous example of Paleolithic shelters.
Key Terms
– Mammoth:Alarge, hairy, extinct elephant-like mammal of the taxonomic genus Mammuthus.
– Hut:A small wooden shed, a primitive temporary dwelling.
– Paleolithic:Early stage of the Stone Age, when primitive stone tools were used.
The Paleolithic Age, or Old Stone Age, spanned from around 30,000 BCE until 10,000 BCE
and produced the first accomplishments in human creativity. Due to a lack of written
records from this time period, nearly all of our knowledge of Paleolithic human culture and
way of life comes from archaeologic and ethnographic comparisons to modern hunter-
gatherer cultures. The Paleolithic lasted until the retreat of the ice, when farming and use
of metals were adopted.
Paleolithic Societies
Early men chose locations that could be defended against predators and rivals
and that were shielded from inclement weather. Many such locations could be found
near rivers, lakes, and streams, perhaps with low hilltops nearby that could serve as
refuges. Since water can erode and change landscapes quite drastically, many of these
campsites have been destroyed. Our understanding of Paleolithic dwellings is therefore
limited.
Caves are the most famous example of Paleolithic shelters, though the number of caves
used by Paleolithic people is drastically small relative to the number of hominids thought to have
lived on Earth at the time. Most hominids probably never entered a cave, much less lived in one.
Nonetheless, the remains of hominid settlements show interesting patterns. In one cave, a tribe
of Neanderthals kept a hearth fire burning for a thousand years, leaving behind an accumulation
of coals and ash. In another cave, post holes in the dirt floor reveal that the residents built some
sort of shelter or enclosure with a roof to protect themselves from water dripping on them from
the cave ceiling. They often used the rear portions of the cave as middens, depositing their
garbage there.
In the Upper Paleolithic (the latest part of the Paleolithic), caves ceased to act as
houses. Instead, they likely became places for early people to gather for ritual and religious
purposes.
Tents and Huts
Modern archaeologists know of few types of shelter used by ancient peoples other
than caves. Some examples do exist, but they are quite rare. In Siberia, a group of Russian
scientists uncovered a house or tent with a frame constructed of mammoth bones. The great
tusks supported the roof, while the skulls and thighbones formed the walls of the tent. Several
families could live inside, where three small hearths, little more than rings of stones, kept people
warm during the winter. Around 50,000 years ago, a group of Paleolithic humans camped on a
lakeshore in southern France. At Terra Amata, these hunter-gatherers built a long and narrow
house. The foundation was a ring of stones, with a flat threshold stone for a door at either end.
Vertical posts down the middle of the house supported roofs and walls of sticks and twigs,
probably covered over with a layer of straw. A hearth outside served as the kitchen, while a
smaller hearth inside kept people warm. Their residents could easily abandon both dwellings. This
is why they are not considered true houses, which was a development of the Neolithic period
rather than the Paleolithic period.
Paleolithic Artifacts
Key Points
– Artifacts dating from the Lower and Middle Paleolithic remain disputed as objects of artistic expression.
– There is some evidence that a preference for aesthetic emerged in the Middle Paleolithic due to the symmetry inherent to discovered artifacts.
– The Venus of Tan-Tan is an alleged artifact found in Morocco that is believed by some archaeologists to be the earliest representation of the human form .
– The Venus of Berekhat Ram is believed by some to be a representation of a female human figure dating from the early Middle Paleolithic, however, the claim is
highly contested.
– A carved elephant bone from Bilzingsleben has been interpreted as an early example of art making.
– The Paleolithic is characterized by the use of stone tools, although at the time humans also used wood and bone tools.
Key Terms
– flint:A hard, fine-grained quartz that fractures conchoidally and generates sparks when struck.
The earliest undisputed art originated in the Upper Paleolithic. However, there
is some evidence that a preference for aesthetic emerged in the Middle Paleolithic
due to the symmetry inherent in discovered artifacts and evidence of attention to
detail in such things as tool shape, which has led some archaeologists to interpret
these artifacts as early examples of artistic expression. There has been much dispute
Acheulean hand-axes: Acheulean hand-axes among scholars over the terming of early prehistoric artifacts as “art.” Generally
from Kent. The types shown are (clockwise
from top) cordate, ficron, and ovate.
speaking, artifacts dating from the Lower and Middle Paleolithic remain disputed as
Evidence shows these early hominids objects of artistic expression, while the Upper Paleolithic provides the first
intentionally selected raw materials with conclusive examples of art making.
good flaking qualities and chose
appropriate-sized stones for their needs to
produce sharp-edged tools for cutting.
Disputed Artifacts: Early
Venuses
The Venus of Tan-Tan is an alleged artifact found in Morocco that is believed by some to be the earliest
representation of the human form . The Venus, a 2.3 inch long piece of quartzite rock dated between 300,000 and
500,000 years ago during the Middle Paleolithic, was discovered in 1999 in a river terrace deposit on the north bank of
the Draa River, just south of the Moroccan village of Tan-Tan. There is controversy among archaeologists as to its
nature and origin. Some archaeologists believe it was created by a combination of geological forces as well as tool-
based carving. Visible smudge stains have been interpreted by some as remnants of red ochre pigments. For others,
the rock’s shape is simply the result of natural weathering and erosion, and any human shape is a mere coincidence.
Drawing depicts a stone figurine of the human form.
Drawing of the Venus of Tan-Tan: The Venus of Tan-Tan is an alleged artifact found in Morocco that is
believed by some to be the earliest representation of the human form.
The Venus of Berekhat Ram is a contemporary of the Venus of Tan-Tan, found at Berekhat Ram on the
Golan Heights in 1981. Some believe it to be a representation of a female human figure, dating from the early Middle
Paleolithic; however, the claim is highly contested. The object is a red tufic pebble, about 1.4 inches long, which has at
least three grooves, possibly incised with a sharp-edged stone tool. The grooves have been interpreted as marking the
neck and arms of the figure by some, while others believe these to be purely naturally-occurring lines .
Drawing of the Venus of Tan-Tan: The Venus of Tan-
Tan is an alleged artifact found in Morocco that is
believed by some to be the earliest representation
of the human form.
Mask of la Roche-Cotard
Key Points
– Cave paintings can be grouped into three main categories: animals, human figures, and abstract signs.
– Animals depicted include familiar herbivores and predatory animals.
– The most spectacular examples of cave paintings are in southern France and northern Spain.
– Interpretations vary from prehistoric star charts, accounts of past hunts or mystical rituals for future ones, and
shamanism .
Key Terms
– chiaroscuro:An artistic technique developed during the Renaissance, referring to the use of exaggerated light
contrasts in order to create the illusion of volume.
– shamanism:A range of traditional beliefs and practices concerned with communication with the spirit world.
– Parietal Art:Paintings, murals, drawings, etchings, carvings, and pecked artwork on the interior of rock shelters and
caves; also known as cave art.
– polychromy:The art or practice of combining different colors, especially brilliant ones, in an artistic way.
The Paleolithic , or Old Stone Age, ranges from 30,000 BCE to 10,000 BCE and produced the
first accomplishments in human creativity, preceding the invention of writing. Archeological
discoveries across a broad swath of Europe (especially southern France and northern Spain)
include over two hundred caves with spectacular paintings, drawings, and sculpture that are
among the earliest undisputed examples of representational image-making. Paintings and
engravings along the caves’ walls and ceilings fall under the category of parietal art .
Themes and Materials
The most common themes in cave paintings are large wild animals, such as bison, horses, aurochs , and
deer. The species found most often were suitable for hunting by humans, but were not necessarily the typical prey
found in associated bone deposits. For example, the painters of Lascaux, France left mainly reindeer bones, but this
species does not appear at all in the cave paintings; equine species are the most common.
Drawings of humans were rare and were usually schematic in nature as opposed to the detailed and
naturalistic images of animals.
Tracings of human hands and hand stencils were very popular, however, as well as abstract patterns called
finger flutings.
The pigments used appear to be red and yellow ochre , manganese or carbon for black, and china clay for
white. Some of the color may have been mixed with fat. The paint was applied by finger, chewed sticks, or fur for
brushes. Sometimes the silhouette of the animal was incised in the rock first, and in some caves many of the images
were only engraved in this fashion, taking them out of a strict definition of “cave painting.”
Main Examples of Cave
Paintings: France and Spain
France
Lascaux (circa 15,000 BCE), in southwestern France, is an interconnected series
of caves with one of the most impressive examples of artistic creations by
Paleolithic humans.
Like all prehistoric art, the purpose of these paintings remains obscure. In
recent years, new research has suggested that the Lascaux paintings may
incorporate prehistoric star charts. Some anthropologists and art historians also
theorize that the paintings could be an account of past hunting success, or they
could represent a mystical ritual to improve future hunting endeavors. An
alternative theory, broadly based on ethnographic studies of contemporary hunter-
gatherer societies, is that the paintings pertained to shamanism.
Paleolithic Sculpture
Key Points
– Sculptural work from the Paleolithic consists mainly of figurines , beads, and some decorative utilitarian objects
constructed with stone, bone, ivory , clay, and wood.
– “Venus figurines” is an umbrella term for a number of prehistoric statuettes of women that have been found mostly in
Europe, but also in Eurasia and Siberia.
– Venus figurines are characterized by shared stylistic features, such as an oval shape, large belly, wide-set thighs, large
breasts, and the typical absence of arms and feet.
– Also known as the Mousterian Protofigurine, the Mask of La Roche-Cotard is a representational artifact from the
Paleolithic period that was discovered in the entrance of a cave named La Roche-Cotard.
– Discoveries of engraved stones and beads in the Blombos Caves of South Africa has led some archaeologists to believe that
early Homo sapiens were capable of abstraction and the production of symbolic art.
Key Terms
– Eurasia:The largest landmass on Earth, consisting of Europe and Asia.
– flint:A hard, fine-grained quartz that fractures conchoidally and generates sparks when struck.
Venus Figurines