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Ain Sakhri lovers figurine

-10000/-10000

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

This is the oldest known sculpture of a human couple making love. The natural shape of a calcite cobble has been used to represent the outline of the lovers.

Their heads, arms and legs appear as raised areas around which the surface has been picked away with a stone point . The figures look at one another but have no faces. The arms of one hug the shoulders of the other and its knees are bent up underneath those of the slightly smaller figure. The image is also phallic whichever way you look at it.

Found by a Bedouin in the Wadi Khareitoun not far from Bethlehem, the sculpture comes from the cave of Ain Sakhri. This site was occupied in the early Natufian period when the people of this region lived by hunting gazelle.

As the gazelle were not constantly on the move, their hunters also stayed in one place and varied their diet by collecting seeds, fruit and nuts. By gathering the seeds of wild forms of wheat and barley they inadvertently began the slow process of natural genetic modification which eventually allowed their deliberate cultivation.

The descendants of the Ain Sahkri lovers were farmers.

The sculpture may have had special significance, perhaps representing ideas about fertility or, reflecting new understanding of the part men played in reproduction. Less complex carvings of phalli are known from other sites of this period.

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  • Title: Ain Sakhri lovers figurine
  • Date Created: -10000/-10000
  • Location: The British Museum, Gallery 69a
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 102.00mm; Width: 63.00mm; Depth: 39.00mm; Weight: 343.00g
  • External Link: 1958,1007.1
  • Subject: eroticism/sex
  • Registration number: 1958,1007.1
  • Place: Found/Acquired Ain Sakhri
  • Period/culture: Mesolithic
  • Material: calcite
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Purchased from Neuville, M Y
British Museum

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