Prehistoric religion

(Redirected from Early European Religion)

Prehistoric religion is the religious practice of prehistoric cultures. Prehistory, the period before written records, makes up the bulk of human experience; over 99% of human experience occurred during the Paleolithic period alone. Prehistoric cultures spanned the globe and existed for over two and a half million years; their religious practices were many and varied, and the study of them is difficult due to the lack of written records describing the details of their faiths.

refer to caption
The Venus of Laussel, a stone relief of a seated woman

The cognitive capacity for religion likely first emerged in Homo sapiens sapiens, or anatomically modern humans, although some scholars posit the existence of Neanderthal religion and sparse evidence exists for earlier ritual practice. Excluding sparse and controversial evidence in the Middle Paleolithic (300,000–50,000 years ago), religion emerged with certainty in the Upper Paleolithic around 50,000 years ago. Upper Paleolithic religion was possibly shamanic, oriented around the phenomenon of special spiritual leaders entering trance states to receive esoteric spiritual knowledge. These practices are extrapolated based on the rich and complex body of art left behind by Paleolithic artists, particularly the elaborate cave art and enigmatic Venus figurines they produced.

The Neolithic Revolution, which established agriculture as the dominant lifestyle, occurred around 12,000 BC and ushered in the Neolithic. Neolithic society grew hierarchical and inegalitarian compared to its Paleolithic forebears, and their religious practices likely changed to suit. Neolithic religion may have become more structural and centralised than in the Paleolithic, and possibly engaged in ancestor worship both of one's individual ancestors and of the ancestors of entire groups, tribes, and settlements. One famous feature of Neolithic religion were the stone circles of the British Isles, of which the best known today is Stonehenge. A particularly well-known area of late Neolithic through Chalcolithic religion is Proto-Indo-European mythology, the religion of the people who first spoke the Proto-Indo-European language, which has been partially reconstructed through shared religious elements between early Indo-European language speakers.

Bronze Age and Iron Age religions are understood in part through archaeological records, but also, more so than Paleolithic and Neolithic, through written records; some societies had writing in these ages, and were able to describe those which did not. These eras of prehistoric religion see particular cultural focus today by modern reconstructionists, with many pagan faiths today based on the pre-Christian practices of protohistoric Bronze and Iron Age societies.

Background

edit
 
Rhinoceros cave painting with red ochre

Prehistory is the period in human history before written records. The lack of written evidence demands the use of archaeological evidence,[1] which makes it difficult to extrapolate conclusive statements about religious belief.[2] Much of the study of prehistoric religion is based on inferences from historic (textual) and ethnographic evidence, for example analogies between the religion of Palaeolithic and modern hunter-gatherer societies.[3] The usefulness of analogy in archaeological reasoning is theoretically complex and contested, but in the context of prehistoric religion can be strengthened by circumstantial evidence; for instance, it has been observed that red ochre was significant to many prehistoric societies and to modern hunter-gatherers.[4]

Religion exists in all known human societies,[5] but the study of prehistoric religion was only popularised around the end of the nineteenth century. A founder effect in prehistoric archaeology, a field pioneered by nineteenth-century secular humanists who found religion a threat to their evolution-based field of study, may have impeded the early attribution of a religious motive to prehistoric humans.[6]

Prehistoric religion differs from the religious format known to most twenty-first century commentators, based around orthodox belief and scriptural study. Rather, prehistoric religion, like later hunter-gatherer religion, possibly drew from shamanism and ecstatic experience,[3][7] as well as animism, though analyses indicate animism may have emerged earlier.[8] Though the nature of prehistoric religion is so speculative, the evidence left in the archaeological record is strongly suggestive of a visionary framework where faith is practised through entering trances, personal experience with deities, and other hallmarks of shamanism—to the point of some authors suggesting, in the words of archaeologist of shamanism Neil Price, that these tendencies and techniques are in some way hard-wired into the human mind.[9]

Human evolution

edit

The question of when religion emerged in the evolving psyche has sparked the curiosity of paleontologists for decades.[10][11] On the whole, neither the archaeological record nor the current understanding of how human intelligence evolved suggests early hominins[note 1] had the cognitive capacity for spiritual belief. Religion was certainly present during the Upper Paleolithic period, dating to about 50,000 through 12,000 years ago, while religion in the Lower and Middle Paleolithic "belongs to the realm of legend".[13]

In early research, Australopithecus, the first hominins to emerge in the fossil record, were thought to have sophisticated hunting patterns. These hunting patterns were extrapolated from those of modern hunter-gatherers, and in turn anthropologists and archaeologists pattern-matched Australopithecus and peers to the complex ritual surrounding such hunts. These assumptions were later disproved, and evidence suggesting Australopithecus and peers were capable of using tools such as fire was deemed coincidental. For several decades, prehistoricist consensus has opposed the idea of an Australopithecus faith.[13] The first evidence of ritual emerges in the hominin genus Homo, which emerged between 2–3 million years ago and includes modern humans, their ancestors and closest relatives.[11][14]

 
Reconstructed H. ergaster Turkana Boy

The exact question of when ritual shaded into religious faith evades simple answer. The Lower and Middle Paleolithic periods, dominated by early Homo hominins, were an extraordinarily long period (from the emergence of Homo until 50,000 years before the present) of apparent cultural stability.[15] No serious evidence for religious practice exists amongst Homo habilis, the first hominin to use tools.[13] The picture complicates as Homo erectus emerges. H. erectus was the point where hominins seem to have developed an appreciation for ritual, the intellectual ability to stem aggression of the kind seen in modern chimpanzees, and a sense of moral responsibility. Though the emergence of ritual in H. erectus "should not be understood as the full flowering of religious capacity", it marked a qualitative and quantitative change to its forebears.[16] An area of particular scholarly interest is the evidence base for cannibalism and ritual mutilation amongst H. erectus. Skulls found in Java and at the Chinese Zhoukoudian archaeological site bear evidence of tampering with the brain case of the skull in ways thought to correspond to removing the brain for cannibalistic purposes, as observed in hunter-gatherers. Perhaps more tellingly, in those sites and others a number of H. erectus skulls show signs suggesting that the skin and flesh was cut away from the skull in predetermined patterns. These patterns, unlikely to occur by coincidence, are associated in turn with ritual.[11][17]

 
Reconstructed Neanderthals of St. Michael's Cave, Gibraltar

The lineage leading to anatomically modern humans originated around 500,000 years before the present day.[18] Modern humans are classified taxonomically as Homo sapiens sapiens. This classification is controversial, as it goes against traditional subspecies classifications; no other hominins have been treated as uncontroversial members of H. sapiens. The 2003 description of Homo sapiens idaltu drew attention as a relatively clear case of a H. sapiens subspecies, but was disputed by authors such as Chris Stringer.[16][19] Neanderthals in particular pose a taxonomic problem. The classification of Neanderthals, a close relative of anatomically modern humans, as Homo neanderthalensis or Homo sapiens neanderthalensis is a decades-long matter of dispute. Neanderthals and H. s. sapiens were able to interbreed, a trait associated with membership in the same species, and around 2% of the modern human genome is composed of Neanderthal DNA. However, strong negative selection existed against the direct offspring of Neanderthals and H. s. sapiens, consistent with the reduced fertility seen in hybrid species such as mules; this has been used as recent argument against the classification of Neanderthals as a H. sapiens subspecies.[20]

 
Cast of Neanderthal burial

The study of Neanderthal ritual, as proxy and preface for religion, revolves around death and burial rites. The first undisputed burials, approximately 150,000 years ago, were performed by Neanderthals. The limits of the archaeological record stymie extrapolation from burial to funeral rites, though evidence of grave goods and unusual markings on bones suggest funerary practices. In addition to funerals, a growing evidence base suggests Neanderthals made use of bodily ornamentation through pigments, feathers, and even claws.[21] As such ornamentation is not preserved in the archaeological record, it is understood only by comparison to modern hunter-gatherers, where it often corresponds to rituals of spiritual significance.[22] Unlike H. s. sapiens over equivalent periods, Neanderthal society as preserved in the archaeological record is one of remarkable stability, with little change in tool design over hundreds of thousands of years;[21] Neanderthal cognition, as backfilled from genetic and skeletal evidence, is thought rigid and simplistic compared to that of contemporary, let alone modern, H. s. sapiens.[16] By extension, Neanderthal ritual is speculated to have been a teaching mechanism that resulted in an unchanging culture, by embedding a learning style where orthopraxy dominated in thought, life, and culture.[21] This is contrasted with prehistoric H. s. sapiens religious ritual, which is understood as an extension of art, culture, and intellectual curiosity.[16]

Archaeologists such as Brian Hayden interpret Neanderthal burial as suggestive of both belief in an afterlife and of ancestor worship.[23] Hayden also interprets Neanderthals as engaging in bear worship, a hypothesis driven by the common finding of cave bear remains around Neanderthal habitats and by the frequency of such worship amongst cold-dwelling hunter-gatherer societies. Cave excavations throughout the twentieth century found copious bear remains in and around Neanderthal habitats, including stacked skulls, bear bones around human graves, and patterns of skeletal remains consistent with animal skin displays.[24] Other archaeologists, such as Ina Wunn [de], find the evidence for the "bear cult" unconvincing. Wunn interprets Neanderthals as a pre-religious people, and the presence of bear remains around Neanderthal habitats as a coincidental association; as cave bears by their nature dwell in caves, their bones should be expected to be found there.[13] The broader archaeological evidence overall suggests that bear worship was not a major factor of Paleolithic religion.[25]

In recent years, genetic and neurological research has expanded the study of the emergence of religion. In 2018, the cultural anthropologist Margaret Boone Rappaport published her analysis of the sensory, neurological, and genetic differences between the great apes, Neanderthals, H. s. sapiens, and H. s. idaltu. She interprets the H. s. sapiens brain and genome as having a unique capacity for religion through characteristics such as expanded parietal lobes, greater cognitive flexibility, and an unusually broad capacity for both altruism and aggression. In Rappaport's framework, only H. s. sapiens of the hominins is capable of religion for much the same reason as the tools and artworks of prehistoric H. s. sapiens are finer and more detailed than those of their Neanderthal contemporaries; all are products of a unique cognition.[16]

Lower and Middle Paleolithic: precursors to religion

edit

The Paleolithic, sometimes called the Old Stone Age, makes up over 99% of humanity's history. Lasting from approximately 2.5 million years ago through to 10,000 BC, the Paleolithic comprises the emergence of the Homo genus, the evolution of mankind, and the emergence of art, technology, and culture.[26] The Paleolithic is broadly divided into Lower, Middle, and Upper periods. The Lower Paleolithic (2.5 mya–300,000 BC) sees the emergence of stone tools, the evolution of Australopithecus, Homo habilis, and Homo erectus, and the first dispersal of humanity from Africa; the Middle Paleolithic (300,000 BC–50,000 BC) the apparent beginnings of culture and art alongside the emergence of Neanderthals and anatomically modern humans; the Upper Paleolithic (50,000 BC–10,000 BC) a sharp flourishing of culture, the emergence of sophisticated and elaborate art, jewellery, and clothing, and the worldwide dispersal of Homo sapiens sapiens.[27][28][note 2]

Lower Paleolithic

edit
 
Reconstructed Australopithecus sediba man

Religion prior to the Upper Paleolithic is speculative,[13] and the Lower Paleolithic in particular has no clear evidence of religious practice.[27] Not even the loosest evidence for ritual exists prior to 500,000 years before the present, though archaeologist Gregory J. Wightman notes the limits of the archaeological record means their practice cannot be thoroughly ruled out.[31] The early hominins of the Lower Paleolithic—an era well before the emergence of H. s. sapiens—slowly gained, as they began to collaborate and work in groups, the ability to control and mediate their emotional responses. Their rudimentary sense of collaborative identity laid the groundwork for the later social aspects of religion.[32]

Australopithecus, the first hominins,[note 3] were a pre-religious people. Though twentieth-century historian of religion Mircea Eliade felt that even this earliest branch on the human evolutionary line "had a certain spiritual awareness", the twenty-first century's understanding of Australopithecene cognition does not permit the level of abstraction necessary for spiritual experience.[13][16] For all that the hominins of the Lower Paleolithic are read as incapable of spirituality, some writers read the traces of their behaviour such as to permit an understanding of ritual, even as early as Australopithecus. Durham University professor of archaeology Paul Pettitt reads the AL 333 fossils, a group of Australopithecus afarensis found together near Hadar, Ethiopia, as perhaps deliberately moved to the area as a mortuary practice.[35] Later Lower Paleolithic remains have also been interpreted as bearing associations of funerary rites, particularly cannibalism. Though archaeologist Kit W. Wesler states "there is no evidence in the Lower Paleolithic of the kind of cultural elaboration that would imply a rich imagination or the level of intelligence of modern humans", he discusses the findings of Homo heidelbergensis bones at Sima de los Huesos and the evidence stretching from Germany to China for cannibal practices amongst Lower Paleolithic humans.[36]

A number of skulls found in archaeological excavations of Lower Paleolithic sites across diverse regions have had significant proportions of the brain cases broken away. Writers such as Hayden speculate that this marks cannibalistic tendencies of religious significance; Hayden, deeming cannibalism "the most parsimonious explanation", compares the behaviour to hunter-gatherer tribes described in written records to whom brain-eating bore spiritual significance. By extension, he reads the skull's damage as evidence of Lower Paleolithic ritual practice.[37] For the opposite position, Wunn finds the cannibalism hypothesis bereft of factual backing; she interprets the patterns of skull damage as a matter of what skeletal parts are more or less preserved over the course of thousands or millions of years. Even within the cannibalism framework, she argues that the practice would be more comparable to brain-eating in chimpanzees than in hunter-gatherers.[13] In the 2010s, the study of Paleolithic cannibalism grew more complex due to new methods of archaeological interpretation, which led to the conclusion much Paleolithic cannibalism was for nutritional rather than ritual reasons.[38]

 
Venus of Berekhat Ram

In the Upper Paleolithic, religion is associated with symbolism and sculpture. One Upper Paleolithic remnant that draws cultural attention are the Venus figurines, carved statues of nude women speculated to represent deities, fertility symbols, or ritual fetish objects.[39] Archaeologists have proposed the existence of Lower Paleolithic Venus figurines. The Venus of Berekhat Ram is one such highly speculative figure, a scoria dated 300–350 thousand years ago[note 4] with several grooves interpreted as resembling a woman's torso and head. Scanning electron microscopy found the Venus of Berekhat Ram's grooves consistent with those that would be produced by contemporary flint tools. Pettitt argues that though the figurine "can hardly be described as artistically achieved", it and other speculative Venuses of the Lower Paleolithic, such as the Venus of Tan-Tan, demand further scrutiny for their implications for contemporary theology.[42] These figurines were possibly produced by H. heidelbergensis, whose brain sizes were not far behind those of Neanderthals and H. s. sapiens, and have been analysed for their implications for the artistic understanding of such early hominins.[43]

The tail end of the Lower Paleolithic saw a cognitive and cultural shift. The emergence of revolutionary technologies such as fire, coupled with the course of human evolution extending development to include a true childhood and improved bonding between mother and infant, perhaps broke new ground in cultural terms. It is in the last few hundred thousand years of the period that the archaeological record begins to demonstrate hominins as creatures that influence their environment as much as they are influenced by it. Later Lower Paleolithic hominins built wind shelters to protect themselves from the elements; they collected unusual natural objects; they began the use of pigments such as red ochre. These shifts do not coincide with species-level evolutionary leaps, being observed in both H. heidelbergensis and H. erectus.[44] Different authors interpret these shifts with different levels of skepticism, some seeing them as a spiritual revolution and others as simply the beginning of the beginning. While the full significance of these changes is difficult to discern, they clearly map to an advance in cognitive capacity in the directions that would eventually lead to religion.[13][37][44]

Middle Paleolithic

edit
 
Reconstructed Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal man

The Middle Paleolithic was the era of coterminous Neanderthal and H. s. sapiens (anatomically modern human) habitation. H. s. sapiens originated in Africa and Neanderthals in Eurasia; over the course of the period, H. s. sapiens range expanded to areas formerly dominated by Neanderthals, eventually supplanting them and ushering in the Upper Paleolithic.[45] Much is unknown about Neanderthal cognition, particularly the capacities that would give rise to religion.[11] Religious interpretations of Neanderthals have discussed their possibly-ritual use of caves,[46] their burial practices,[47] and religious practices amongst H. s. sapiens hunter-gatherer tribes in recorded history considered to have similar lifestyles to Neanderthals.[3][22] Pre-religious interpretations of Neanderthals argue their archaeological record suggests a lack of creativity or supernatural comprehension,[11] that Neanderthal-associated archaeological findings are too quickly ascribed religious motive,[13] and that the genetic and neurological remnants of Neanderthal skeletons do not permit the cognitive complexity required for religion.[16]

While the Neanderthals dominated Europe, Middle Paleolithic H. s. sapiens ruled Africa. Middle Paleolithic H. s. sapiens, like its Neanderthal contemporaries, bears little obvious trace of religious practice. The art, tools, and stylistic practice of the era's H. s. sapiens are not suggestive of the complexity necessary for spiritual belief and practice.[48] However, the Middle Paleolithic is long, and the H. s. sapiens who lived in it heterogeneous. Models of behavioural modernity disagree on how humanity became behaviourally and cognitively sophisticated, whether as a sudden emergence in the Upper Paleolithic or a slow process over the last hundred thousand years of the Middle Paleolithic; supporters of the second hypothesis point to evidence of increasing cultural, ritual, and spiritual sophistication 150,000–50,000 years ago.[49]

Neanderthals

edit
 
Neanderthal-made engraved flint, found in a child's grave

Neanderthals were the earliest hominins[note 5] to bury their dead,[23] although not the chronologically first burials, as earlier burials (such as those of the Skhul and Qafzeh hominins) are recorded amongst early H. s. sapiens.[52] Though relatively few Neanderthal burials are known, spaced thousands of years apart over broad geographical ranges, Hayden argues them undeniable hallmarks of spiritual recognition and "clear indications of concepts of the afterlife".[23] Though Pettitt is more cautious about the significance of Neanderthal burial, he deems it a sophisticated and "more than prosaic" practice. Pettitt deems the Neanderthals of at least southwest France, Germany, and the Levant possessive of clear mortuary rites he presumes linked to an underlying belief system. He calls particular attention to potential grave markers found around Neanderthal burials, particularly those of children, at La Ferrassie in Dordogne.[53]

One matter discussed in the context of Neanderthal burial is grave goods, objects placed in graves that are frequently seen in early religious cultures. Outside of the controversial Shanidar IV "flower burial", now considered coincidence, Neanderthals are not seen to bury their dead with grave goods.[50] However, a burial of an adult and child of the Kizil-Koba culture was accompanied by a flint stone with markings. In 2018, a team at the French National Centre for Scientific Research published their analysis that the markings were intentionally made and possibly held symbolic significance.[54]

 
Red pigments found in Grottes du Pech-de-l'Azé [fr]

The archaeological record preserves Neanderthal associations with red pigments and quartz crystals. Hayden states "it is inconceivable to me that early hunting and gathering groups would have been painting images or decorating their bodies without some kind of symbolic or religious framework for such activities"; he draws comparison to the use of red ochre amongst those modern hunter-gatherers to whom it represents a sacred colour. He similarly connects quartz collection to religious use of crystals in later shamanic practice.[55] Not all writers are as convinced that this represents underlying spiritual experience. To Mark Nielsen, evidence of ritual practice amongst Neanderthals does not represent religion; he interprets their cultural remnants, such as the rare cave art they produced, as insufficiently sophisticated for such comprehension. Rather, Neanderthal orthopraxy is a cultural teaching mechanism that permitted their unusually stable culture, existing at the same technological level for hundreds of thousands of years during rapid H. s. sapiens change. To Nielsen, Neanderthal ritual is how they preserved an intractable culture via teachings passed down through generations.[21]

Ultimately, Neanderthal religion is speculative, and hard evidence for religious practice exists only amongst Upper Paleolithic H. s. sapiens.[13][56] Though Hayden and to some degree Pettitt take a spiritualised interpretation of Neanderthal culture, these interpretations are unclear at best; as Pettitt says, "the very real possibility exists that religion sensu stricto is a unique characteristic of symbolically and linguistically empowered Homo sapiens".[57] Other writers, such as Wunn, find the concept of Neanderthal religion "mere speculation" that at best is an optimistic interpretation of the archaeological record.[13] What ritual Neanderthals had, rather than supernatural, is oft interpreted as a mechanism of teaching and social bonding. Matt J. Rossano, defining Neanderthal practice as "proto-religion", compares it to "purely mimetic community activities" such as marching, sports, and concerts. He understands it not as a veneration of spirits or deities, but rather a bonding and social ritual that would later evolve into supernatural faith.[11]

In 2019 Gibraltarian palaeoanthropologists Stewart, Geraldine and Clive Finlayson and Spanish archaeologist Francisco Guzmán speculated that the golden eagle had iconic value to Neanderthals, as exemplified in some modern human societies because they reported that golden eagle bones had a conspicuously high rate of evidence of modification compared to the bones of other birds. They then proposed some "Cult of the Sun Bird" where the golden eagle was a symbol of power.[58][59]

Homo sapiens sapiens

edit
 
73,000-year-old red marks on stone, the oldest known H. s. sapiens art

H. s. sapiens emerged in Africa as early as 300,000 years ago.[60] In the Middle Paleolithic, particularly its first couple hundred thousand years, the archaeological record of H. s. sapiens is barely distinguishable from their Neanderthal and H. heidelbergensis contemporaries. Though these first H. s. sapiens demonstrated some ability to construct shelter, use pigments, and collect artifacts, they yet lacked the behavioural sophistication associated with humans today.[49] The process through which H. s. sapiens became cognitively and culturally sophisticated is known as behavioural modernity. The emergence of behavioural modernity is unclear; traditionally conceptualised as a sudden shock around the beginning of the Upper Paleolithic, modern accounts more often understand it as a slow process throughout the late Middle Paleolithic.[61]

Where behavioural modernity is conceptualised as originating in the Middle Paleolithic, some authors also push back the traditional framework of religion's origin to account for it. Wightman discusses Wonderwerk Cave in South Africa, inhabited 180,000 years ago by early H. s. sapiens and filled with unusual objects such as quartz crystals and inscribed stones. He argues these may have been ritual artifacts that served as foci for rites performed by these early humans.[62] Wightman is even more enraptured by the Botswanan Tsodilo—sacred to modern hunter-gatherers—which primarily houses Upper Paleolithic paintings and artifacts, but has objects stretching back far earlier. Middle Paleolithic spearheads have been found in Tsodilo's Rhino Cave, many of which were distinctly painted and some of which had apparently travelled long distances with nomadic hunter-gatherers. Rhino Cave presents unusual rock formations that modern hunter-gatherers understand as spiritually significant, and Wightman hypothesises this sense may have been shared by their earliest forebears.[63] He is also curious about the emergence of cave art towards the very end of the Middle Paleolithic, where drawings and traces of red ochre finally emerge 50,000 years ago; this art, the first remnants of true human creativity, would usher in the Upper Paleolithic and the birth of complex religion.[64]

Upper Paleolithic

edit
 
Viktor Vasnetsov's impression of a Paleolithic gathering

The emergence of the Upper Paleolithic c. 40,000–50,000 years ago was a time of explosive development. The Upper Paleolithic saw the worldwide emergence of H. s. sapiens as the sole species of humanity, displacing their Neanderthal contemporaries across Eurasia and travelling to previously human-uninhabited territories such as Australia. The complexity of stone tools grew, and the production of complex art, sculpture, and decoration began. Long-distance trade networks emerged to connect communities that had complex house-like habitations and food storage networks.[65]

True religion made its clear emergence during this period of flourishing. Rossano, following in the footsteps of other authors, ascribes this to shamanism. He draws a line between pre-Upper Paleolithic social bonding rituals and faith healing, where the latter is an evolution of the former. Gesturing at the universality of faith healing concepts in hunter-gatherer societies throughout recorded history, as well as their tendencies to involve the altered states of consciousness ascribed to shamanism and their placebo effect on psychologically inspired pain, he conjectures that these rituals were the first truly supernatural tendency to reveal itself to the human psyche.[11] Price refers to an extension of this as the "neuropsychological model", where shamanism is conceptualised as hard-wired in the human mind.[9] Though some authors are unsympathetic to the neuropsychological model,[66] Price finds a strong basis for some psychological underpinning to shamanism.[9]

 
Pottery of Middle Jōmon hunter-gatherers in Japan

Upper Paleolithic humans produced complex paintings, sculptures, and other artforms, much of which held apparent ritual significance.[67] Religious interpretations of such objects, especially "portable art" such as figurines, varies. Some writers understand virtually all such art as spiritual,[67] while others read only a minority as such, preferring more mundane functions for the majority.[68]

The study of religious art in the Upper Paleolithic focuses in particular on cave art—referred to alternatively by some writers (such as David S. Whitley) as "rock art", as not all of it was produced on cave walls rather than rock formations elsewhere.[69] Cave art is frequently conceptualised as a tool of shamanism.[9] This model, the "mind in the cave" conjecture, sees much cave art as produced in altered states of consciousness as a tool to connect the artist with the spirit realm.[66] Visionary cave art, as shamanic art is referred to, is characterised by unnatural imagery such as animal-human hybrids, and by recurring themes such as sex, death, flight, and physical transformation.[70]

Not all religious cave art depicts shamanic experience. Cave art is also connected, by analogy with modern hunter-gatherers, to initiation rituals; a painting that depicts an animal to most members of a tribe may have a deeper symbolic meaning to those involved in smaller secret societies.[71] Comparative evidence for this form of cave art is difficult to gather, as secret societies by definition do not share their nature with outsider anthropologists. In some cases, the lifestyles of modern hunter-gatherers have been rendered so peripheral as to lose that knowledge entirely. Nonetheless, these arts are still studied, and general ideas can still be concluded; concepts associated with secret society cave art include ancestor figures, animals as metaphors, and long-distance travel.[72][note 6]

 
Venus of Willendorf

Another art form of probable religious significance are the Venus figurines. These are hand-held statuettes of nude women found in Upper Paleolithic sites across Eurasia, speculated to hold significance to fertility rites.[74] Though separated by thousands of years and kilometres, Venus figurines across the Upper Paleolithic share consistent features. They focus on the midsections of their subjects; the faces are blank or abstract, and the hands and feet small. Despite the near-nonexistence of obesity amongst hunter-gatherers, many depict realistically rendered obese subjects. The figures are universally women, often nude, and frequently pregnant.[75][note 7]

Interpretations of Venus figurines range from self-portraits[77] to anti-climate-change charms[75] to matriarchal representations of a mother goddess.[78] Hayden argues the fertility charm interpretation is most parsimonious; Venus figurines are often found alongside other apparent fertility objects, such as phallic representations, and that secular interpretations in particular are implausible for such widespread objects.[74][79] He similarly disagrees with the goddess symbolism, as seen in feminist anthropology,[80] on the basis that contemporary hunter-gatherers that venerate female fertility often lack actual matriarchal structures. Indeed, in more recent hunter-gatherer societies, secret societies venerating female fertility are occasionally restricted to men.[79] Contra the traditional fertility interpretation, Patricia C. Rice argues nonetheless that the Venuses are symbols of women throughout their lifetime, not just throughout reproduction, and that they represent a veneration of femaleness and femininity as a whole.[80]

Sculpture more broadly is a significant part of Upper Paleolithic art and often analysed for its spiritual implications. Upper Paleolithic sculpture is frequently seen through the lenses of sympathetic magic and ritual healing. Sculptures found in Siberia have been analysed through such an understanding by comparison to more recent Siberian hunter-gatherers, who made figurines while ill to represent and ward off those illnesses.[81] Venus figurines are not alone in terms of sexually explicit Paleolithic sculpture; around a hundred phallic representations are known, of which a significant proportion are circumcised, dating the origin of that practice to the era.[82] Sculptures of animals are also recorded, as are sculptures that appear to be part-human and part-animal. The latter especially are deemed spiritually significant and possibly shamanistic in intent, representing the transformation of their subjects in the spirit realm. Other interpretations of therianthropic sculpture include ancestor figures, totems, and gods. Though fully human sculptures in the Upper Paleolithic are generally female, those with mixed human and animal traits are near-universally male, across broad geographic and chronological ranges.[83]

Burial

edit
 
Man buried at Sungir in Russia, covered in ivory jewellery

The Upper Paleolithic saw the advent of complex burials with lavish grave goods. Burials seem to have been relatively uncommon in these societies, perhaps reserved for people of high social or religious status.[84] Many of these burials seem to have been accompanied by large quantities of red ochre, but the matter of decomposition makes it difficult to discern whether such pigments were applied to flesh or bone. One remarkable case of a pigmented burial is that of Lake Mungo 3 in inland New South Wales, Australia; the ochre in which the body was found covered must have been transported for hundreds of kilometres, considering the distance between the burial and the nearest sources.[85]

One of the most elaborate Upper Paleolithic burials known is that of Sungir 1, a middle-aged man buried at the Russian Sungir site. In good physical health at the time of his death, Sungir 1 seems to have been killed by human weaponry, an incision on his remains matching that which would be produced by contemporary stone blades.[86] The body was doused in ochre, particularly around the head and neck, and adorned with ivory bead jewellery of around 3,000 beads. Twelve fox canine teeth surrounded his forehead, while twenty-five arm bands made of mammoth ivory were worn on his arms, and a single pendant made of stone laid on his chest.[87] Two children or young teenagers were additionally interred near him; their bodies were similarly decorated, with thousands of mammoth ivory beads, antlers, mammoth-shaped ivory carvings, and ochre-covered bones of other humans. The children had abnormal skeletons, with one having short bowed legs and the other an unusual facial structure.[85][87] Burials so elaborate clearly suggest some concept of an afterlife[85] and are similar to shaman burials in cultures described in written records.[88]

Burial is one of the major ways archaeologists understand past societies; in the words of Timothy Taylor, "there can be no clearer a priori demonstration of ritual in past societies than the archaeological uncovery of a formal human burial".[89] Upper Paleolithic burials do not appear to represent an ordinary cross-section of the population. Rather, their subjects are unusual and extravagant. Three-quarters of Upper Paleolithic burials were of men, a significant proportion young or disabled, and many buried in shared tombs. They are frequently posed in unusual positions and buried with rich grave goods. Taylor supposes many of these dead were human sacrifices, excluded from the ordinary means of body disposal (he presumes cannibalism) and warded by talismans.[90] Hayden rather speculates these were shamans or otherwise people whose religious prominence was in life, rather than death; he notes especially the frequency of physical disability, comparing it to the many shamans in recorded societies who were singled out for physical or psychological differences.[91][note 8]

Beliefs and practices

edit
 
Ernest Board's impression of a Paleolithic healing ritual

Upper Paleolithic religions were presumably polytheist, venerating multiple deities, as this form of religion predates monotheism in recorded history.[94] As well as polytheism, religions of the ancient world—that is, those in recorded history closest chronologically to prehistoric religion—focused on orthopraxy, or a focus on correct practice and ritual, rather than orthodoxy, or a focus on correct faith and belief.[95] This is in contrast to many mainstream modern faiths, such as Christianity, that move the focus to orthodoxy.[3][96]

Shamanism may have been a major part of Upper Paleolithic religion. Shamanism is a broad term referring to a range of spiritual experiences, practised at many times in many places. Broadly speaking, it refers to spiritual practice involving altered states of consciousness, where practitioners render themselves in ecstatic or extreme psychological states in order to commune with spirits or deities.[97] The study of prehistoric shamanism is controversial—so controversial that people debating each side of the argument have dubbed their interlocutors "shamaniacs" and "shamanophobes".[9] The shamanistic interpretation of prehistoric religion is based in the "neuropsychological model", where shamanic experience is deemed an inherent function of the human brain. The symbols associated with shamanic art, such as animal-human hybrid figures, are suggested to originate from certain levels of trance.[98] The neuropsychological model has been criticised; opponents refer to the relative rarity of some forms of art associated with it, to tendencies in modern shamanic cultures they find incompatible with it, and to the work of pre-model archaeologists who cautioned against shamanic interpretations.[66]

 
Reconstructed cave bear

A popular myth about prehistoric religion is bear worship. Early scholars of prehistory, finding skeletons of the extinct cave bear around Paleolithic habitats, drew the conclusion humans of the era worshipped or otherwise venerated the bears. The concept was pioneered by excavations in the late 1910s in Switzerland, where apparent deposits of cave bear bones from which paleontologists could not draw obvious function were interpreted ritualistically. The idea was debunked as early as the 1970s as a simple artefact of sedimentary deposits changing over thousands of years.[25]

Another controversial hypothesis in Paleolithic faith is that it was oriented around goddess worship. Feminist analyses of prehistoricism interpret findings such as the Venus figurines as suggestive of fully realised goddesses. Marija Gimbutas argued that, as evinced by Eurasian Venus figurines, the predominant deity in Paleolithic and Neolithic religion throughout Europe was a goddess with later subservient male deities. She supposed this religion was wiped out by steppe invaders later in the Neolithic, prior to the beginning of the historical period.[99] The broad geographic range of Venuses has also seen their goddess interpretation in other regions; for instance, Bret Hinsch proposes a line of descent from Venuses to historical Chinese goddess worship.[100] The goddess hypothesis has been criticised for basis in a limited geographical range, and for not mapping onto similar observations seen in modern hunter-gatherers.[79]

Mesolithic

edit
 
Artist's impression of Mesolithic daily life

The Mesolithic was the transitional period between the Paleolithic and the Neolithic. In European archaeology, it traditionally refers to hunter-gatherers living after the end of the Pleistocene ice age.[101][note 9] Traditional archaeology takes a quotidian view of Mesolithic life, perceiving it as an era of cultural "impoverishment" without great cultural, artistic, or societal advances.[103] The lack of enthusiasm to study the Mesolithic, and the lack of encouragement to do so by way of an absence of interesting archaeological findings, tied into one another; for instance, no Mesolithic cemeteries were unearthed until 1975.[101] Serious study of Mesolithic religion would not emerge until the 21st century, reinvigorating the field and reinterpreting prior assumptions of the Mesolithic as a bleak age.[103]

Much research on Mesolithic religion centres on Scandinavia, where evidence has emerged for a lifecycle based around rites of passage. From the finding of places that may have been dedicated birthing huts, it appears that Mesolithic people shared the assumption of some more modern hunter-gatherers that birth was a spiritually dangerous experience, and that heavily pregnant women needed to be secluded from society for the wellbeing of both parties. Nonetheless, the archaeological findings thought to have been birthing huts are disputed; it is possible their spiritual significance was broader, as a place where people who died young in general would be buried separate from the older dead. Later in life, Anders Fischer argues for the existence of a coming-of-age ritual amongst males—perhaps circumcision—connected to the use of flint blades.[104][105]

The bulk of modern understanding of Mesolithic religion comes from burial practices. Mesolithic Scandinavian burial rites are relatively well-reconstructed. The dead were buried with grave goods, notably including food; remnants of a fish stew have been unearthed from some graves. Burial practices themselves varied heavily. Bodies might be buried whole, or partially dismembered before burial; in some cases, animals were found in graves alongside humans, such as deer, pigs, and cats. Bodies were often covered in ochre. The context of Mesolithic burial is unclear; though some have argued these burials were reserved for prestigious individuals, others think just the opposite, noting that dedicated cemeteries in the era overrepresent the very young, the very old, and young women who may have died in childbirth. These dead are traditionally considered more liminal than the average person, and their burials separate from the community may have marked an intentional distancing.[106]

Neolithic

edit
 
Neolithic figurines from the Franchthi Cave

The Neolithic was the dawn of agriculture. Originating around 10,000 BC in the Fertile Crescent, agriculture spread across Eurasia and North Africa in the following millennia and ushered in a new era of prehistory.[107] Despite prior assumptions of immediate radical change,[107] the encroachment of agriculture was a slow process, and early agriculturalists do not seem to have sharp cultural distinctions from their hunter-gatherer peers.[108] In archaeological terms, the Neolithic is marked by megaliths, ceremonial structures, complex tombs, and elaborate artifacts with apparent spiritual significance.[109] Sociologically speaking, the Neolithic saw the transition from nomadic bands to sedentary villages. This decreased the egalitarianism of those societies that transitioned; instead of more loosely collected confederates, they were now led by individuals with increasing power over those people within their domain. This "big man" framework centralised religion and elevated the status of religious leaders.[110]

As the spectrum of human experience shifted from hunter-gatherers to farmers, ritual and religion followed. The ritual calendar of Neolithic life revolved around the harvest; the people of the age worshipped grain-oriented deities, prayed and sacrificed for good harvests, and threw celebrations in the harvest season.[111] The Neolithic saw the emergence of a "spiritual aristocracy" of people whose societal role was as mages, missionaries, and monarchs. In the Neolithic, shamanism was increasingly understood as the domain of an elite, rather than the Paleolithic conceptualisation where a relatively broad spectrum of society may be able to practice.[112] The era broadly seems to have heralded the beginning of sharp social stratification, as understood from skeletal and archaeological remains.[113][114]

Art, sculpture, and monuments

edit
 
Callanish Stones of the Outer Hebrides, Scotland

Particularly in its heartland of the Near East, the Neolithic was an artistically and technologically rich era.[115] The rock art culturally associated with the Paleolithic did not disappear in the Neolithic, and in regions like south India it indeed flourished well into the era.[116] As well as continuing old forms, the Neolithic permitted the emergence of new kinds of art and design. As people moved from nomadic to sedentary lifestyles, they built houses that represented units united through physical structures, "subsum[ing] individuals into new corporate identities".[117] They also built megaliths, huge stone monuments with widely speculated theological and cultural implications.[118] Though a few hunter-gatherers, such as the Jōmon people of Japan, made pottery, pottery overall is another art form that emerged only in the Neolithic.[119]

Neolithic art with apparent ritual significance occurs throughout broad geographic ranges. The Liangzhu culture of the southern Chinese Yangtze Delta produced complex and abundant jade artifacts, some of vast size for grave goods—up to 3.5 kilograms (7.7 lb). Many of these jades featured engravings of unusual creatures in complex finery.[120] In Japan, the transition from Jōmon hunter-gatherers to Yayoi agriculturalists was marked by the production of Jōmon ceramic figurines apparently intended to ward away the Yayoi invaders; the Yayoi in turn carved intricate ornaments and built vast shrines.[121] In Macedonia, clay models of human and ram heads represent apparent household ritual and suggest that ordinary houses could be host to religious activity just as much as shrines or temples.[122]

 
Liangzhu jade cong under magnification

One of the most famous forms of Neolithic art and architecture were the megalithic stone circles of Western Europe, of which the most known is Stonehenge in South West England.[123] Stone circles are particularly associated with the British Isles, which hosts 1,303 extant circles, the plurality in Scotland.[124] Stone circles were not simple constructions but built through complex processes where the stones travelled long distances to their foundations; parts of Stonehenge were sourced 250 kilometres (160 mi) away in Wales. This technically complex construction is thought a herald of their supernatural power to the people who built them; the Preseli Hills, where Stonehenge was sourced, may have held deep significance to the megalith's builders.[125] Though the exact role of stone circles is unclear, they seem to have been, in part or whole, mausoleums. Many contain skeletons, particularly skulls. These seem to track to ancestor worship, and in particular the veneration of deceased members of elite spiritual social classes.[126] Stone circles also appear linked to cycles of the sun and moon. Stonehenge, for instance, is aligned such that on the solstice the sun rises and sets directly behind it.[127][128]

 
Two-headed 'Ain Ghazal statue

Neolithic statues are another area of interest. The 'Ain Ghazal statues unearthed in Jordan in the 1980s were an object of archaeological fascination.[129] These statues may have represented gods, legendary leaders, or other figures of great power. The two-headed statues are of especial interest; Gary O. Rollefson suggests they may have represented the fusion of two previously separate communities.[130] Elsewhere, statues have inspired varied theological interpretations. Maltese statues of women are, to some authors, suggestive of Neolithic goddess worship.[131] The idea Neolithic peoples had a female-centric religion worshipping goddesses holds some purview in popular culture, but is disputed amongst anthropologists.[132] In addition, though the goddess perspective of Neolithic religion oft assumes a female-centric religious practice, goddess-centric religions in comparable written societies may be dominated by men or women.[79][133]

Burial and funerary rites

edit
 
Neolithic burial at the Muzeum Archeologiczne i Etnograficzne w Łodzi [pl]

Burial appears more widespread in the Neolithic than the Upper Paleolithic. In a wide area from the Levant through central Europe, Neolithic burials are frequently found in the houses their denizens lived in; in particular, women and children dominate amongst those buried inside the home.[134] For children in particular, this may have represented the continued inclusion of these children in the family unit and a reincarnation cycle where those children were reborn as living members of the family.[135] As in the Paleolithic, some Neolithic burials may represent sacrificial victims; a group burial in modern-day Henan, containing four skeletons, may have been the death of an important figure heralded by three sacrifices.[136]

Neolithic burials display social inequality. At the Campo de Hockey necropolis in Spain, grave goods are unevenly distributed, and those found are often high-status ornamental objects such as jewellery.[137] This is coterminous with the hypothesised Neolithic emergence of the "big men", societal figures who proclaimed themselves religious and earthly leaders of inegalitarian societies.[138] In the most radical interpretations of Neolithic society, agriculture itself was a practice enforced upon people such that these rulers could acquire power over a more legible sedentary society.[139] Across the Near East, burial inequality is marked in different ways by different societies. In the Lower Galilee, some dead were buried close to their houses, but others were buried in dedicated funerary monuments. Across the Levant, skeletons with the deceased's features modelled in plaster can be found; these dead are thought to have had different status in their societies compared to those buried without such preservation. In the Judaean Desert, decedents were found preserved in a "gelatinous material" and surrounded by blades, beads, and masks.[140]

Sex and gender play roles in Neolithic burial. The Henan burial with potential sacrificial victims was composed of three men and one woman, and was read as a male shaman and his followers.[136][141] Other Neolithic Chinese burials of people interpreted as shamans have been of girls and women, such as two girls found in elaborate tombs at a site in Shanxi—the only non-adults in that burial ground. Sarah Milledge Nelson wrote that burials of subjects of apparent religious importance were often clouded by a lack of clarity as to the subject's sex because of the difficulty of determining sex with certainty from skeletal remains; the focal decedent in "the richest of all Mesoamerican burials" was sexed male, but with low confidence, and could theoretically have been a woman.[141] Neolithic burials broadly suggest gender inequality, with women having fewer grave goods and poorer diets as determined from their skeletons.[142][note 10]

Lifestyle

edit
 
Diorama of pottery-making in Neolithic China

Much of what is understood about Neolithic life comes from individual settlements with particularly preserved archaeological records, such as Çatalhöyük in southern Anatolia. Çatalhöyük was settled for a particularly long period of time, from around 7100 BC to 6000 BC, and provides a snapshot of a changing era. Residents of Çatalhöyük lived in shared houses with non-relatives, drawing their closest connections to "practical kin" rather than "official kin"; they seem to have been divided into two sub-communities going by different dental patterns in their skeletal remains, and were possibly patrilocal, with men staying in the community of their birth and women moving away. Nonetheless, Çatalhöyük is not in all ways representative of Neolithic communities; most such communities demonstrated poor nutrition and stunted growth, but the people of Çatalhöyük appeared to have adequate nutrition and indeed were able to support substantial population growth.[143]

From these preserved settlements, archaeologists try to extract religious practices in day-to-day Neolithic life. In 'Ain Ghazal, "mundane archaeological remains" coincide with striking findings such as caches of skulls, ceremonially buried statues, and hundreds of clay figurines. Many of these figurines seem to have been fertility and birth charms; birth during the Neolithic was "the most dangerous time of a woman's life", and spiritual protection against maternal death of the utmost importance. Other figurines seem to have been used as pseudo-sacrifices, ritually 'killed' and buried around human habitations.[144] Clay figurines broadly have been found in many Neolithic communities, and the individual communities that made them are extrapolated based on their features. Sites in North China, for instance, find a paucity of figurines of humans compared to those of animals, while their southern peers made more human figurines and particularly sexually explicit ones.[145] It is often unclear exactly what role such figurines held to the societies that made them; in addition to religious objects, they may have held more mundane functions such as toys, or even been both at once.[144][146]

The theological practices of people in early state societies with written records, somewhat later than the Neolithic, revolved around their daily lives. In particular, these societies focused on the growing and harvest of grains, and their religions followed; they worshipped gods of grains and had liturgical calendars revolving around the harvest.[111] Early agricultural societies also suffered high rates of zoonotic diseases, which they opposed with ritual practice, sympathetic magic, and prayers to healing deities.[147] Like other prehistoric-like societies described in written records, these experiences may be comparable to those of Neolithic agriculturalists.[3]

Ritual and theology

edit
 
Possible representation of Neolithic religious practice

People in the Neolithic possibly engaged in ancestor worship. It is possible that inegalitarian Neolithic societies practised two separate ancestor cults: one based around everyday worship of the ancestors of individual families, and one based around ancestors of entire tribes, settlements, or cities, which the rulers of those people deemed themselves descended from. In bids to gain spiritual and earthly power, these rulers would posit themselves the heirs of gods.[148][149] In some regions, evidence also exists for solar worship and lunar worship; for instance, British and Irish stone circles are generally aligned with the movement of the sun, which plausibly played a role in their ritual significance.[150]

Neolithic religions were probably heavily ritual-based. These rituals would have signalled membership of and investment in the communities of those who performed them; these communities had labour- and health-expensive initiation rituals (consider the penile subincision performed by some Indigenous Australians), and practising them marked people as members of a given community - both to the community's allies and to its enemies - even if they were later to try to strike out on their own. This preserved the health of such communities; their members developed a deep identity as members, as people whose fortunes were tied to the broader community, and preferred to stay rather than split.[110]

 
Predynastic Egyptian statuette of the goddess Bat

One idea associated with Neolithic religion in popular culture is that of goddess worship. Some - fancifully - have promoted an idealised image of Neolithic society as a matriarchal theocracy.[151] At Çatalhöyük, traditionally considered a centre of goddess worship on account of figurines found in the area, followers of new religious movements would take pilgrimages to the ruins as a holy site; the sociologist Ayfer Bartu Candan reported seeing a woman eat a handful of soil from the ruins in front of the mayor of the nearby town of Çumra.[152] The popularity of the "Great Goddess" concept of Neolithic religion can be traced to Gimbutas's concept of a peaceful matriarchal Neolithic, where a goddess was worshipped in a pan-European religion; the roots of the concept emerged as early as the 1940s and 1950s, with seminal works by Robert Graves, Jacquetta Hawkes, and O. G. S. Crawford pioneering the concept. However, the idea was based on flawed methodologies and conflation of different movements across vast geographical areas, and is unlikely to be representative of actual Neolithic religious practice.[112]

In the specific case of Çatalhöyük, the primary objects of worship do not seem to have been human deities but animal ones, and the figurines traditionally interpreted as "goddesses" were possibly anthropomorphic bears, leopards, and cattle.[153] This seems to be reflective of a broad Neolithic tendency towards animal worship; the nearby site of Göbekli Tepe also bears significant evidence for ritual and religious significance of animals.[154] The Xinglongwa and Hongshan cultures of northeastern China carved elaborate jade sculptures of pigs and dragons speculated to have some religious role;[155] China was one of the first major sites of animal domestication,[156] and domestic animals seem to have played wide-ranging roles in Neolithic Chinese ritual practice, in particular as sacrificial goods for high-ranking spiritual leaders.[157]

Compared to the Paleolithic, shamanism seems to have become more peripheral over the course of the Neolithic. In many regions, priests of increasingly centralised faiths probably took over isolated shamanic functions, although shamanism and domestic cults of personal deities clearly continued.[158] Meanwhile, in the highly stratified societies of the Neolithic, elite secret societies flourished amongst the powerful.[159] In these unequal worlds, the spiritually powerful were able to manipulate faith to convince the general population of their social and spiritual subordinacy.[160]

Chalcolithic

edit
 
Artist's impression of the Los Millares Copper Age settlement in Spain

The Chalcolithic, or Copper Age,[note 11] was the transitional period between the Neolithic and Bronze Age. In the Copper Age, an early understanding of metallurgy permitted the formation of simple copper tools to supplement stone, but without the deliberate production of its improved alloy bronze.[161] In the Levant, the Copper Age is typified by social, agricultural, and artistic innovation. Horticulture of plants such as olives became a major complement to grain agriculture, while the animal products available to farmers diversified. Settlements expanded and came to inhabit broader geographical ranges, while the art and textiles of the area made great strides in both ornamental capacities and symbolic representation. This contrasts to their peers in Egypt and Mesopotamia, who remained somewhat more inhibited throughout the era.[162] Further west and especially north, the concept of the Copper Age grows controversial; the "British Chalcolithic" is particularly unclear, with both support and opposition for the idea that copper metallurgy heralded a particular era in British prehistory.[163]

Proto-Indo-Europeans

edit

One of the major hypothesised cultures of the Copper Age were the Proto-Indo-Europeans, from whom all Indo-European language and mythology may have evolved. The Proto-Indo-Europeans are speculatively known through the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European language, which bears traces of religion; *Dyḗws, the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European sky god, developed into, for instance, the Greek Zeus and all he begat.[164] *Dyḗws was the presumed leader of a pantheon of deities including *Dhuĝhatḗr Diwós ("sky daughter"), *Hₐéusōs ("dawn goddess"), *Neptonos ("water grandson"), and *Perkʷunos ("thunder god"). There was also *Manu-, humanity's ancestor, who became Mannus of Germanic paganism and Manu of early Hinduism.[165] There has been some reconstruction of the Proto-Indo-European afterlife, "a land of green pastures, where age and sickness are unknown", accessible only via dangerous travels through a watery, hound-guarded maelstrom.[166]

Proto-Indo-European religion is understood through the reconstruction of shared elements of ancient faith over the regions the Proto-Indo-Europeans influenced. For instance, shared portions of the Odyssey and the Mahābhārata permit reconstruction of a "proto-epic" from which both tales descend.[167] From this scholars infer "a rich mythology of which only distant echoes have come to us"[166] with substantial gaps in the pantheon, particularly with more speculative deities such as a possible war god.[165] Indo-Europeanists J. P. Mallory and Douglas Q. Adams are skeptical about the Proto-Indo-European war god,[165] though Hayden (writing from a more generalist perspective) supposes its existence, possibly represented as a bull.[168] Hayden also argues for entheogenic rites amongst the Proto-Indo-Europeans, particularly a psychoactive "drink of immortality" backformed from the Indo-Iranian soma and madhu[note 12] and the Greek ambrosia, which was imbibed by Proto-Indo-European priests.[170]

Bronze and Iron Ages

edit
 
Bronze mask, Benin, 19th century AD.[172]

In the Bronze and Iron Ages, prehistory shades into protohistory. The earliest forms of true writing emerge in Bronze Age China, Egypt, and Mesopotamia, and it is with writing that societies leave their prehistories.[173] Writing was adopted unevenly, across long chronological periods, and the degree to which the Bronze and Iron Ages constitute history, prehistory, or protohistory depends on the individual society.[174] Protohistoric societies have not developed writing, but have been described in written records of societies that have; though this provides more evidence for their cultures and practices than can be gleaned by archaeological records alone, it poses the problem that the only lens these societies are understood through is that of foreigners who may dislike, mischaracterise, or simply misunderstand the people they write about.[175]

In North Africa, many protohistoric Bronze Age civilisations are known from description by the Egyptians, such as the Kerma culture of what is now Sudan,[176][177] the Maghrebinians,[178] and the Kingdom of Punt.[179] Before their destruction by their Egyptian enemies, the Kerma served as a true artistic and cultural rival to Egypt's south. They performed lavish burials with a traditional "crouching" style of body placement, the bodies buried on their right sides with their heads facing to the east, and with rich assortments of grave goods. Earlier Kerma burials were accompanied by animal sacrifices, and later by human ones, presumably of servants. The richest members of Kerma society were buried in gold-plated beds with feet of carved lions and hippopotami, in many-chambered burial mounds accompanied by hundreds of human sacrifices and paintings of spectacular imagined scenes.[176]

The people of the Bronze Age Maghreb, living in liminal geographic regions, were heavily influenced by both European and Khoisan cultures. Maghrebinians appear to have venerated weaponry, with intricate depictions of daggers, halberds, and shields dominating their rock art, perhaps as the southernmost practice of a hypothetical pan-European weapon cult. They also produced art of game animals such as antelopes, horses, and camels.[178] Little is known about the religion of Punt, Egypt's major trading partner, but they seem to have had significant cultural exchange with Egypt in this aspect.[179] Other major cultures of Bronze Age Africa whose religious practices can be gathered include the nomadic pastoralists of the Central Sahara, who produced copious rock art,[180] and the Nubian C-Group culture, with wealthy burials and rock art of "highest artistic achievement" depicting apparent goddess figures.[181]

 
Beauty of Loulan, one of the Xinjiang mummies

The protohistoric cultures of Central Asia are known through their descriptions by ancient Chinese writers, who thought them barbarians contrasting with "civilised" Chinese society;[182] further west, Russian scholarship more often treats these cultures as outright prehistoric.[183] Bronze and Iron Age cultures of Central Asia forged metal grave goods with both utilitarian and decorative forms. Though the spiritual significance of these artifacts is unknown, archaeologists Katheryn M. Linduff and Yan Sun argue they must have been deeply important to those societies that forged them to play such funerary roles.[184] Xinjiang was a major nexus of cross-cultural interaction in these eras, and is now known archaeologically for its "mummies",[note 13] particularly well-preserved corpses found in burials—perhaps the most famous being the Princess of Xiaohe. This young woman, buried in Xiaohe Cemetery around 1800 BC, was so well-preserved as to retain her long hair and eyelashes; she was found wrapped in a cloak and accompanied by wooden pegs. Other "mummies" of Xinjiang include artificial mummies, not corpses at all but creations of leather and wood, which may represent people who died far from their homes whose bodies were never found.[185]

In Southeast Asia, Bronze Age burials were of far greater complexity than those for their Neolithic predecessors. One burial site in Ban Non Wat, Thailand dating around 1000 BC was lavished with "princely" wealth, with ornate jewellery of bronze, marble, and seashells; in some cases, bracelets covered the whole arm from the shoulder to the wrist. Bodies were found covered in beads in ways implying those beads once served as sequins on masks and hats that rotted away with time. Finely made, intricately painted ceramic vessels were buried with the deceased, in some cases up to fifty in a single grave. In one case, an infant was buried with a particularly well-made vessel bearing a human face, which Charles Higham suggests may represent an ancestor deity.[186] Higham perceives strong evidence for ancestor worship in Bronze Age Southeast Asia, perhaps related to contemporary practice in China.[187] Later in the Iron Age, Southeast Asian societies become trading and cultural partners with the ancient civilisations of China and India. Cambodia and Thailand connected strong trading networks with both regions, becoming protohistoric as they merited discussion in the works of both written societies. Though the burial record for Iron Age Southeast Asia is poorer than in the Bronze Age, lavish burials still happened, and "compelling evidence" for religious practice remains.[187] Vietnamese merchants traded Ngoc Lu drums used for ritual purposes to regions as far-flung as Papua New Guinea.[188]

 
A tree growing atop a Bronze Age burial mound in Roskilde, Denmark

In Europe, Bronze Age religion is well-studied and has well-understood recurring characteristics. Traits of European Bronze Age religion include a dichotomy between the sun and the underworld, a belief in animals as significant mediators between the physical and spiritual realms, and a focus on "travel, transformation, and fertility" as cornerstones of religious practice.[189] Wet places were focal points for rites, with ritual objects found thrown into rivers, lakes, and bogs.[190] Joanna Bruck suggests these were treated as liminal spaces bridging the world of the living to that of the dead. She also discusses the uses of high places such as mountaintops for similar ritual purposes; geographic extremes broadly seem to have held spiritual significance to Bronze Age peoples.[191]

Recurring symbolic themes have been described in Bronze Age symbolism across Europe. One repeated symbolism Bruck discusses is sexual intercourse, either between two humans or between humans and animals. She also discusses many figurines of ships found deposited in rivers and bogs, and the use of ships as coffins for water burials. Bronze Age cultures also practiced cremation, and cremains have been found inside model wagons and chariots.[192] Evidence from Scotland suggests Bronze Age Britons may have practiced intentional mummification of corpses, previously thought restricted in that era to the ancient Egyptians.[193]

 
Re-enactment of Iron Age lifestyles

Iron Age European religion is known in part through literary sources, as the ancient Romans described the practices of the non-writing societies they encountered. From Roman description, it appears that the people of Roman Gaul and Roman Britain were polytheist and accepted the existence of an afterlife. A wide array of ancient authors describe the Druids, which they characterise as a class of philosophers, prophets, and mages. They discuss the importance of sacred sites to Iron Age European religion, in particular sacred groves. Some authors also claim the practice of human sacrifice.[194] Druids attract particular attention in the study of Iron Age religion; the exact degree to which they existed and what their practices were is disputed. Contrary to the pop-culture interpretation of Druids as a major impact on Iron Age religious life, some authors doubt either their provenance or their impact.[195] Though a specialised priestly class is evident, the Druids of Roman description may have been exaggerated and misunderstood by a society to which they were alien.[196]

Religion in the European Iron Age was not a single, homogeneous practice throughout the whole continent.[194] Practices across the continent for which we have strong records included Old Norse religion,[197] Germanic paganism,[198] and Celtic paganism.[199] Traits such as the importance of bodies of water recur across the continent, but the oversimplification of this vast and heterogeneous body of religious faith into a single religion never rises above simple misconception. Simultaneously, the literary records of these faiths clearly miss significant aspects of their practice; although the archaeological record for Iron Age European religion is so dominated by the deposition of statuettes and sculptures into water, this goes almost completely unrecorded by the Romans.[200] Eventually, the Romans converted to Christianity,[201] and set to introduce their new faith to the regions under their sway. Christianity emerged in Roman Britain in the fourth century AD,[202][note 14][dubiousdiscuss] and the religion was adopted disproportionately by the wealthy residents of such peripheral regions of the empire.[203] After decades, even centuries, of bloody war,[204] European paganism diminished throughout the first millennium AD, and the final sunset of the faith was the conversion of the Vikings in the eleventh century.[205]

In modern culture

edit

Reconstruction

edit
 
Three modern-day druidesses at Stonehenge on the summer solstice

New religious movements such as neopaganism take theological, spiritual, and cultural positions unlike those of the mainstream religions which dominate world discourse. One major stream of neopaganism is reconstructionism, where practitioners attempt to reconstruct the beliefs and practices of long-lost faiths. This is particularly associated with the prehistoric and protohistoric cultures of the European Bronze and Iron Ages.[206] Major groups include Heathenry, which focuses on the reconstruction of Germanic and particularly Norse faiths; Celtic neopaganism, focusing on the reconstruction of the pre-Christian religions of the Celtic people; and neo-Druidism, focusing on the Druids popularly associated with protohistoric Britain.[207] An array of minor prehistoric reconstructionist movements also exist, such as Proto-Indo-European reconstructionism.[208] Other forms of reconstructionism exist working from a more New Age perspective,[note 15] such as neo-shamanism, the Western reconstruction of shamanic practice.[209]

Pagan positions on prehistoric religion proper are distinct from those written by mainstream authors. Scholar-practitioner Michael F. Strmiska, writing about the Christianisation of protohistoric societies in the first millennium AD, criticises the common perspective of the "rise of Christianity"; he reinterprets it as a bloody and ruthless war where Christian invaders conquered pagan practitioners and suppressed their religious practices.[210] Robert J. Wallis, neo-shaman and professor of visual culture at Richmond University, analyses the academic study of such movements. He argues that the anthropological practice of trying to observe as an outsider is impossible; "sitting and taking notes" is not an approved role in neo-shamanic practice, which requires either being at the centre of the practice or being absent from it entirely. He criticises the neglect of shamanism, reconstructed or otherwise, in archaeology as a consequence of a lack of interest in the form of introspective, theoretical work such study revolves around. Wallis also criticises mainstream archaeological practice as potentially offensive to reconstructionist groups, such as the excavation of bones buried in Stonehenge.[211]

 
Reconstructionist's impression of a pagan goddess

The degree to which reconstructionism focuses on European "ancestral" religions is a matter of some controversy. The pagan author Marisol Charbonneau argues European pagan reconstructionism "carries notions of implicit ethnic and cultural allegiance" regardless of the practitioner's thoughts and intent; she in part ascribes the lack of communication between mostly-white neopagan practitioners and mostly-nonwhite followers of recent immigrant spiritual practices to this implication.[206] Not all prehistoric reconstructionism is centred on European tradition; for instance, neo-shamanism is generally interpreted as having a specifically non-Western background.[212] Heathenry poses particular problems for this issue. One of the fastest-growing religious movements in Northern Europe and elsewhere, practitioners fear it being co-opted by white supremacist movements. During the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia in August 2017, a number of far-right protestors used Heathen symbolism alongside imagery such as Nazi and Confederate flags. This was condemned by Heathen leaders across the globe, who were dismayed by the association of their religion with these movements in the public eye.[213]

Wallis sees the study of reconstructionism from the opposite angle—instead of scholar-practitioners defending their religion from bad-faith outside attacks, he focuses on the phenomenon of outsiders fearing "going native", embedding themselves within a marginalised spiritual framework and receiving the ridicule of their academic peers. As a scholar-practitioner himself, Wallis dismisses this concern. Rather, his concern is a gap between scholars and practitioners limiting the understanding of prehistoric religion by placing the two at odds. He particularly concerns himself with archaeology at Stonehenge, today sacred to neo-Druids; he refers to modern practitioners' distress at Stonehenge excavations "digging the heart out of Druidic culture and belief", "stealing" a land from its ancient spiritual guardians. While Wallis does not concur with the anti-archaeological perspective of some Druids, he recognises their concerns—and the problems these concerns pose for the study of prehistoric religion. He particularly compares these concerns to those of indigenous spiritual practitioners, who are now more archaeologically respected than they were in the past, when digging up their sacred sites was an easily accepted sacrifice.[211]

In fiction

edit
 
Illustration of prehistoric toolmaking in The Cave Boy of the Age of Stone

Prehistoric fiction emerged as a genre in the 19th century.[214] A subgenre of speculative fiction, Nicholas Ruddick compares the genre to science fiction proper, noting that—although the genre lacks the future orientation most readers think synonymous with science fiction—it is more closely related to the genre than anything else, sharing a fundamental orientation of projecting human experience into eras deep into the future or past. Ruddick notes their overlap particularly in the subset of prehistoric fiction involving time travel, where modern-day characters are exposed to prehistoric society or vice versa.[215] Where early writers interpreted prehistoric peoples as primitive "cavemen" who could barely speak, let alone comprehend complex abstract ideas such as religion,[216] later work permits this abstraction and delves into the depths of religion's origin.[217]

Some prehistoric fiction juxtaposes the religions of different hominins. In Before Adam by Jack London, the Cave People, who the book is told from the perspective of, have "no germs of religion, no conceptions of an unseen world", while the more advanced Fire People who overtake them can conceptualise—and fear—the future.[218] In Jean M. Auel's influential Earth's Children series, a recurring theme is Neanderthal and H. s. sapiens interaction, for the better and the worse. Neanderthal and H. s. sapiens religion are juxtaposed throughout the books. Neanderthal religion revolves almost entirely around totemism, and a recurring element in The Clan of the Cave Bear is the female protagonist's Cave Lion totem, an unusually strong totem for a woman in a misogynistic and strictly gendered society. H. s. sapiens, on the other hand, have a near-monotheist veneration of a singular Earth Goddess, treated as the same figure for groups with vast geographic and linguistic barriers between them. Her worshippers make figurines of her, called donii, which are clearly intended to be the Venus figurines of paleontologist fascination.[219] Auel's interpretation of Paleolithic religion so shapes the popular image as to be many general readers' entire impression, although her Neanderthal religion in particular is far more complex than many scholars ascribe.[13][219]

Fiction addressing prehistoric religion does not need to be set in prehistory proper. Prehistoric artifacts, such as stone circles, are commonly used to add an ancient or occult sensibility to a fictional practice's rituals.[220] In particular, such artifacts may be used to lend a "questionable antiquity" to new religious movements such as Wicca.[221] They may also connect these circles to modern ethnic groups far from their provenance, such as Roma people.[222] This contrasts the treatments of such monuments in fiction actually set in prehistory, where they are considered as self-contained and less often linked directly to modern practice.[223] In the furthest examples of taking prehistory out of the past, some fiction engages with prehistory from a future-oriented science fiction perspective. The Neanderthal Parallax, a trilogy by Robert J. Sawyer, encounters a highly technologically advanced world where Neanderthals are the dominant human species. The Neanderthals of this world have no "God organ" and no concept of religion, although they are advanced far beyond modern technology in other aspects.[224]

Analysis of prehistoric religion in fiction often restricts its study to the Paleolithic, neglecting later treatments of the phenomenon.[225] The chronological focus of prehistoric fiction varies by subgenre; for instance, children's fiction particularly often deals with the Neolithic, in particular Neolithic innovations such as stone circles.[223] Prehistoric fiction often treats religion as a reaction and monotheism specifically as an invention, a corruption of prior, "realer" prehistoric polytheist religion.[226][227] Some prehistoric fiction is written from actively skeptical positions, painting ancient shamans as frauds,[228] while others take a sympathetic position, even agreeing with the foundations of their reconstructed faith.[219]

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ This article uses the scientifically accurate 'hominin' to refer to early stages in human evolution, not the common but inaccurate 'hominid'.[12]
  2. ^ The Lower/Middle/Upper division is not uncontroversial. A subset of paleontologists find these traditional divisions Eurocentric, and instead work on an "Early/Middle/Late" Paleolithic division.[29] The divisions are particularly contentious in East Asian paleontology, although support nonetheless exists for the use of the Lower/Middle/Upper division in the East Asian context.[30]
  3. ^ Predating even Australopithecus was Ardipithecus, which is conceptualised as a hominin by some authors, but whose place in the lineage is a matter of dispute.[33][34]
  4. ^ The precise timeframe of the Venus of Berekhat Ram is unclear. It was between 230,000 and 780,000 years ago,[40] as determined by the age of the layers of volcanic ash it was found embedded in.[41]
  5. ^ Inconsistencies occur with Homo naledi, an Australopithecus-like small-brained early member of Homo. Evidence suggests H. naledi may have buried their dead, a practice difficult to disambiguate from afterlife belief and religious significance; this has been read as indicative of the emergence of abstract and symbolic thought far earlier in human evolution than previously thought.[50] The H. naledi burials are controversial, and research aided by machine learning suggests they may have been coincidence.[51]
  6. ^ Regarding the specific matter of cave art depicting animals, study of cave painting sites in southwest France (a particularly rich location for Paleolithic religion) finds distinctive patterns of placement. Bison, aurochs, horses, and mammoths tended to be painted in clear and central locations within caves, while deer, ibex, and bears were in more peripheral and inaccessible locations. Felines were located exclusively in the hardest-to-reach places.[73]
  7. ^ Figurines that do not fit this description have rarely been labelled Venuses regardless, such as the Venus of Brassempouy.[76]
  8. ^ Several writers have suggested that what is now understood as psychosis corresponds to ancient shamanism. Joseph Polimeni, professor of psychiatry at the University of Manitoba, contextualises the modern concept of schizophrenia as synonymous with shamanism, and as providing benefit, not harm, to those who had it in prehistoric societies.[92] Some personal reports from people with psychotic experiences who have lived amongst hunter-gatherer societies where shamanism is still practiced suggest they found greater assistance and quality of life in those societies than elsewhere.[93]
  9. ^ Some writers claim evidence for Mesolithic agriculture or proto-agriculture, though this is outside the archaeological mainstream.[102]
  10. ^ It is unclear whether a paucity of grave goods in the female burial record represents a true lack of grave goods. Female grave goods may have been disproportionately made from materials rarely retained in the archaeological record, such as wood or textiles.[142]
  11. ^ The era is variably known as the Chalcolithic, Eneolithic, or Copper Age by geography, and sometimes by precise chronology. Eneolithic has been characterised as "unfortunate aesthetically" on account of its combination of Latin and Greek roots, while both it and Chalcolithic have been criticised for etymological ambiguity, on account of both aeneus and chalkos being ambiguous between copper and bronze.[161]
  12. ^ Though madhu is an Indo-Aryan term,[169] Hayden refers to it as Irish, perhaps by confusion with mead (which derives from the same root).[170][171]
  13. ^ These were not actual mummies in the intentional sense, but rather corpses naturally preserved by desiccation.[185]
  14. ^ Suggestions exist of a church presence in Britain as early as the second or third century AD.[202]
  15. ^ See Modern paganism and New Age.

References

edit
  1. ^ Taylor T (31 May 2008). "Prehistory vs. Archaeology: Terms of Engagement". Journal of World Prehistory. 21 (1): 1–18. doi:10.1007/s10963-008-9011-1. S2CID 162407753.
  2. ^ Gamble, Clive (2015). "People". Archaeology: The Basics (3rd ed.). London: Routledge. pp. 105–114. doi:10.4324/9781315728384. ISBN 9781315728384.
  3. ^ a b c d e Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Delving into the Past". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 4–12. ISBN 9781588341686.
  4. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "The Primal Paleolithic". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 97–98. ISBN 9781588341686.
  5. ^ Glazier, Stephen D; Ember, Carol R (24 May 2019). "Religion". Explaining Human Cultures. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  6. ^ Palacio-Pérez E (2013). "Science and belief in the construction of the concept of Paleolithic religion". Complutum. 24 (2): 51–61. doi:10.5209/rev_CMPL.2013.v24.n2.43369.
  7. ^ Price, Neil (October 2011). "Shamanism". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 983. ISBN 9780199232444.
  8. ^ Peoples, Hervey C.; Duda, Pavel; Marlowe, Frank W. (September 2016). "Hunter-Gatherers and the Origins of Religion". Human Nature. 27 (3): 261–282. doi:10.1007/s12110-016-9260-0. ISSN 1936-4776. PMC 4958132. PMID 27154194.
  9. ^ a b c d e Price, Neil (October 2011). "Shamanism". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 989–990. ISBN 9780199232444.
  10. ^ Brockway RW (1 September 1978). "Neanderthal 'religion'". Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses. 7 (3): 317–321. doi:10.1177/000842987800700306. S2CID 220897725.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Rossano MJ (2006). "The Religious Mind and the Evolution of Religion". Review of General Psychology. 10 (4): 346–364. doi:10.1037/1089-2680.10.4.346. S2CID 8490298.
  12. ^ Caperton Morton, Mary (17 August 2016). "Hominid vs hominin". EARTH Magazine. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Wunn I (2000). "Beginning of Religion". Numen. 47 (4): 417–452. doi:10.1163/156852700511612.
  14. ^ Kimbel WH, Villmoare B (5 July 2016). "From Australopithecus to Homo: the transition that wasn't". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. 371 (1698). doi:10.1098/rstb.2015.0248. PMC 4920303. PMID 27298460.
  15. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "The Primal Paleolithic". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 90–92. ISBN 9781588341686.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Rappaport MB, Corbally C (March 2018). "Evolution of religious capacity in the genus Homo: cognitive time sequence". Zygon: Journal of Religion & Science. 53 (1): 159–197. doi:10.1111/zygo.12387. hdl:10150/628192.
  17. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "The Primal Paleolithic". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 96–97. ISBN 9781588341686.
  18. ^ Scerri EML, Thomas MG, Manica A, Gunz P, Stock JT, Stringer C, Grove M, Groucutt HS, Timmermann A, Rightmire GP, d'Errico F, Tryon CA, Drake NA, Brooks AS, Dennell RW, Durbin R, Henn BM, Lee-Thorp J, deMenocal P, Petraglia MD, Thompson JC, Scally A, Chikhi L (August 2018). "Did Our Species Evolve in Subdivided Populations across Africa, and Why Does It Matter?". Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 33 (8): 582–594. doi:10.1016/j.tree.2018.05.005. PMC 6092560. PMID 30007846.
  19. ^ Stringer C (12 June 2003). "Out of Ethiopia". Nature. 423 (6941): 693–695. doi:10.1038/423692a. PMID 12802315.
  20. ^ Clarke JLA (2016). "Neanderthals: species or subspecies?". Compass: The Student Anthropology Journal of Alberta. 2 (1): 24–31. doi:10.29173/comp47.
  21. ^ a b c d Nielsen M, Langley MC, Shipton C, Kapitány R (17 August 2020). "Homo neanderthalensis and the evolutionary origins of ritual in Homo sapiens". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. 375 (1805). doi:10.1098/rstb.2019.0424. PMC 7423259. PMID 32594872.
  22. ^ a b Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "The Primal Paleolithic". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 88–90. ISBN 9781588341686.
  23. ^ a b c Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "The Primal Paleolithic". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. p. 115. ISBN 9781588341686.
  24. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "The Primal Paleolithic". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 105–113. ISBN 9781588341686.
  25. ^ a b Chase, Philip G (1987). "The Cult of the Cave Bear: Prehistoric Rite or Scientific Myth?" (PDF). Expedition Magazine. Vol. 29, no. 2. pp. 4–9. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
  26. ^ Toth, Nicholas; Schick, Kathy (26 January 2015). "Overview of Paleolithic Archaeology". In Henke, Winfried; Tattersall, Ian (eds.). Handbook of Paleoanthropology (2 ed.). Berlin: Springer. pp. 2441–2442. ISBN 9783642399787.
  27. ^ a b Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "The Primal Paleolithic". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. p. 90. ISBN 9781588341686.
  28. ^ Ferraro, Joseph V (2012). "A Primer on Paleolithic Technology". Nature Education. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  29. ^ Toth, Nicholas; Schick, Kathy (26 January 2015). "Overview of Paleolithic Archaeology". In Henke, Winfried; Tattersall, Ian (eds.). Handbook of Paleoanthropology (2 ed.). Berlin: Springer. pp. 2442–2443. ISBN 9783642399787.
  30. ^ Gao X (December 2013). "Paleolithic Cultures in China: Uniqueness and Divergence". Current Anthropology. 54 (S8): S358–S370. doi:10.1086/673502.
  31. ^ Wightman, Gregory J (18 December 2014). "The Emergence of Religious Ritual". The Origins of Religion in the Paleolithic. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 222. ISBN 9781442242890.
  32. ^ Wightman, Gregory J (18 December 2014). "The Emergence of Religious Ritual". The Origins of Religion in the Paleolithic. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 222–223. ISBN 9781442242890.
  33. ^ Sarmiento EE (28 May 2010). "Comment on the Paleobiology and Classification of Ardipithecus ramidus". Science. 328 (5982): 1105. Bibcode:2010Sci...328.1105S. doi:10.1126/science.1184148. PMID 20508113.
  34. ^ Stanford CB (October 2012). "Chimpanzees and the Behavior of Ardipithecus ramidus". Annual Review of Anthropology. 41 (1): 139–149. doi:10.1146/annurev-anthro-092611-145724.
  35. ^ Pettitt, Paul (October 2011). "Religion and Ritual in the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 336. ISBN 9780199232444.
  36. ^ Wesler, Kit W (2012). "Grave Issues". An Archaeology of Religion. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America. p. 34. ISBN 9780761858454.
  37. ^ a b Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "The Primal Paleolithic". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 95–97. ISBN 9781588341686.
  38. ^ Cole J (6 April 2017). "Assessing the calorific significance of episodes of human cannibalism in the Palaeolithic". Scientific Reports. 7 (7): 44707. Bibcode:2017NatSR...744707C. doi:10.1038/srep44707. PMC 5382840. PMID 28383521.
  39. ^ Liew, Jessica (10 July 2017). "Venus Figurine". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  40. ^ Pettitt, Paul (October 2011). "Religion and Ritual in the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 333. ISBN 9780199232444.
  41. ^ Patowary, Kaushik (13 October 2016). "Venus of Berekhat Ram: The World's Oldest Piece of Art That Predates Humans". Amusing Planet. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  42. ^ Pettitt, Paul (October 2011). "Religion and Ritual in the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 333–335. ISBN 9780199232444.
  43. ^ Morriss-Kay GM (February 2010). "The evolution of human artistic creativity". Journal of Anatomy. 216 (2): 158–176. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7580.2009.01160.x. PMC 2815939. PMID 19900185.
  44. ^ a b Wightman, Gregory J (18 December 2014). "The Emergence of Religious Ritual". The Origins of Religion in the Paleolithic. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 224–226. ISBN 9781442242890.
  45. ^ Shea JJ (2001). "The Middle Paleolithic: Early modern humans and Neandertals in the Levant". Near Eastern Archaeology. 64 (1/2): 38–64. doi:10.2307/3210819. JSTOR 3210819. S2CID 163861726.
  46. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "The Primal Paleolithic". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. p. 100. ISBN 9781588341686.
  47. ^ Pettitt, Paul (October 2011). "Religion and Ritual in the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 339. ISBN 9780199232444.
  48. ^ Wesler, Kit W (2012). "Grave Issues". An Archaeology of Religion. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America. p. 39. ISBN 9780761858454.
  49. ^ a b Wightman, Gregory J (18 December 2014). "African Sapients, 200–50 kya". The Origins of Religion in the Paleolithic. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 199–200. ISBN 9781442242890.
  50. ^ a b Madison, Paige (16 February 2018). "Who First Buried the Dead?". Sapiens. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  51. ^ Egeland CP, Domínguez-Rodrigo M, Pickering TR, Menter CG, Heaton JL (2 April 2018). "Hominin skeletal part abundances and claims of deliberate disposal of corpses in the Middle Pleistocene". PNAS. 115 (18): 4601–4606. Bibcode:2018PNAS..115.4601E. doi:10.1073/pnas.1718678115. PMC 5939076. PMID 29610322.
  52. ^ Hershkovitz I, Weber GW, Quam R, Duval M, Grün R, Kinsley L, Ayalon A, Bar-Matthews M, Valladas H, Mercier N, Arsuga JL, Martinón-Torres M, Bermúdez de Castro JM, Fornai C, Martín-Francés L, Sarig R, May H, Krenn VA, Slon V, Rodríguez L, García R, Lorenzo C, Carretero JM, Frumkin A, Shahack-Gross R, Bar-Yosef Mayer DE, Cui Y, Wu X, Peled N, Groman-Yaroslavski I, Weissbrod L, Yeshurun R, Tsatskin A, Zaidner Y, Weinstein-Evron M (26 January 2018). "The earliest modern humans outside Africa". Science. 359 (6374): 456–459. Bibcode:2018Sci...359..456H. doi:10.1126/science.aap8369. hdl:10072/372670. PMID 29371468. S2CID 206664380.
  53. ^ Pettitt, Paul (October 2011). "Religion and Ritual in the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 337–339. ISBN 9780199232444.
  54. ^ Majkić A, d'Errico F, Stepanchuk V (2 May 2018). "Assessing the significance of Palaeolithic engraved cortexes. A case study from the Mousterian site of Kiik-Koba, Crimea". PLOS ONE. 13 (5): e0195049. Bibcode:2018PLoSO..1395049M. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0195049. PMC 5931501. PMID 29718916.
  55. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "The Primal Paleolithic". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 98–99. ISBN 9781588341686.
  56. ^ Pettitt, Paul (October 2011). "Religion and Ritual in the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 329. ISBN 9780199232444.
  57. ^ Pettitt, Paul (October 2011). "Religion and Ritual in the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 340. ISBN 9780199232444.
  58. ^ Finlayson, S.; Finlayson, G.; Guzman, F. G.; Finlayson, C. (2019). "Neanderthals and the cult of the sun bird". Quaternary Science Reviews. 217: 217–224. Bibcode:2019QSRv..217..217F. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2019.04.010. S2CID 149949579.
  59. ^ Finlayson 2019.
  60. ^ Hublin JJ, Ben-Ncer A, Bailey SE, Freidline SE, Neubauer S, Skinner MM, Bergmann I, Le Cabec A, Benazzi S, Harvati K, Gunz P (8 June 2017). "New fossils from Jebel Irhoud, Morocco and the pan-African origin of Homo sapiens" (PDF). Nature. 546 (7657): 289–292. Bibcode:2017Natur.546..289H. doi:10.1038/nature22336. PMID 28593953. S2CID 256771372.
  61. ^ Sterelny K (2011). "From hominins to humans: how sapiens became behaviourally modern". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. 366 (1566): 809–822. doi:10.1098/rstb.2010.0301. PMC 3048993. PMID 21320896.
  62. ^ Wightman, Gregory J (18 December 2014). "African Sapients, 200–50 kya". The Origins of Religion in the Paleolithic. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 200–201. ISBN 9781442242890.
  63. ^ Wightman, Gregory J (18 December 2014). "African Sapients, 200–50 kya". The Origins of Religion in the Paleolithic. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 201–205. ISBN 9781442242890.
  64. ^ Wightman, Gregory J (18 December 2014). "African Sapients, 200–50 kya". The Origins of Religion in the Paleolithic. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 209. ISBN 9781442242890.
  65. ^ Bar-Yosef O (1 May 2007). "The archaeological framework of the Upper Paleolithic Revolution". Diogenes. 54 (2): 3–18. doi:10.1177/0392192107076869. S2CID 145584993.
  66. ^ a b c Bahn, Paul G (October 2011). "Religion and Ritual in the Upper Palaeolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 350–351. ISBN 9780199232444.
  67. ^ a b Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Complexity in the Hunter-Gatherer World". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 124–126. ISBN 9781588341686.
  68. ^ Bahn, Paul G (October 2011). "Religion and Ritual in the Upper Palaeolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 348–349. ISBN 9780199232444.
  69. ^ Whitley, David S (October 2011). "Rock Art, Religion, and Ritual". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 307–308. ISBN 9780199232444.
  70. ^ Whitley, David S (October 2011). "Rock Art, Religion, and Ritual". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 308–313. ISBN 9780199232444.
  71. ^ Whitley, David S (October 2011). "Rock Art, Religion, and Ritual". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 316. ISBN 9780199232444.
  72. ^ Whitley, David S (October 2011). "Rock Art, Religion, and Ritual". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 316–317. ISBN 9780199232444.
  73. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Complexity in the Hunter-Gatherer World". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. p. 133. ISBN 9781588341686.
  74. ^ a b Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Complexity in the Hunter-Gatherer World". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 153–155. ISBN 9781588341686.
  75. ^ a b Johnson RJ, Lanaspa MA, Fox JW (January 2021). "Upper Paleolithic figurines showing women with obesity may represent survival symbols of climatic change". Obesity. 29 (1): 11–15. doi:10.1002/oby.23028. PMC 7902358. PMID 33258218.
  76. ^ Soffer O, Adovasio JM, Hyland DC (2000). "The "Venus" Figurines: Textiles, Basketry, Gender, and Status in the Upper Paleolithic". Current Anthropology. 41 (4): 511–537. doi:10.1086/317381. S2CID 162026727.
  77. ^ McDerrmott L (1996). "Self-Representation in Upper Paleolithic Female Figurines". Current Anthropology. 37 (2): 227–275. doi:10.1086/204491. S2CID 144914396.
  78. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Complexity in the Hunter-Gatherer World". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. p. 155. ISBN 9781588341686.
  79. ^ a b c d Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Complexity in the Hunter-Gatherer World". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 155–157. ISBN 9781588341686.
  80. ^ a b Rice PC (1981). "Prehistoric Venuses: Symbols of Motherhood or Womanhood?". Current Anthropology. 37 (4): 402–414. doi:10.1086/jar.37.4.3629836. S2CID 164117854.
  81. ^ Volkova YS (2012). "Upper Paleolithic portable art in light of ethnographic studies". Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia. 40 (3): 31–37. doi:10.1016/j.aeae.2012.11.005.
  82. ^ Angulo JC, García-Díez M (2009). "Male Genital Representation in Paleolithic Art: Erection and Circumcision Before History". Urology. 74 (1): 10–14. doi:10.1016/j.urology.2009.01.010. hdl:10400.26/23819. PMID 19395004.
  83. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Complexity in the Hunter-Gatherer World". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 134–135. ISBN 9781588341686.
  84. ^ Wesler, Kit W (2012). "Grave Issues". An Archaeology of Religion. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America. pp. 40–42. ISBN 9780761858454.
  85. ^ a b c Bahn, Paul G (October 2011). "Religion and Ritual in the Upper Palaeolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 345. ISBN 9780199232444.
  86. ^ Trinkaus E, Buzhilova AP (2012). "The death and burial of Sunghir 1". International Journal of Osteoarchaeology. 22 (6): 655–666. doi:10.1002/oa.1227.
  87. ^ a b Trinkaus E, Buzhilova AP (9 October 2018). "Diversity and differential disposal of the dead at Sunghir". Antiquity. 92 (361): 7–21. doi:10.15184/aqy.2017.223.
  88. ^ Price, Neil (October 2011). "Shamanism". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 996. ISBN 9780199232444.
  89. ^ Taylor, Timothy (October 2011). "Death". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 89. ISBN 9780199232444.
  90. ^ Taylor, Timothy (October 2011). "Death". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 94. ISBN 9780199232444.
  91. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Complexity in the Hunter-Gatherer World". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 150–151. ISBN 9781588341686.
  92. ^ Seeman MV (November 2013). "Book Review: Shamans Among Us: Schizophrenia, Shamanism and the Evolutionary Origins of Religion". Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. 58 (11): 1. doi:10.1177/070674371305801101. S2CID 208219450.
  93. ^ Russell, Dick (24 March 2015). "How a West African shaman helped my schizophrenic son in a way Western medicine couldn't". Washington Post. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  94. ^ Assmann, Jan (2004). "Monotheism and Polytheism". In Johnston, Sarah Iles (ed.). Religions of the Ancient World: A Guide. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 17. ISBN 9780674015173.
  95. ^ Bendlin, Andreas (August 2013). "Religion at Rome". In Ripat, Pauline; Nikolic, Milorad; Gibbs, Matthew (eds.). Themes in Roman Society and Culture: An Introduction to Ancient Rome. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 194. ISBN 9780195445190.
  96. ^ Bolt, John (1986). "The Problem of Polarization". In Bolt, John (ed.). Orthodoxy and Orthopraxis in the Reformed Community Today. Jordan Station, Ontario: Paideia Press. pp. 21–25. ISBN 9780888151148.
  97. ^ Walter, Mariko Namba (15 December 2004). "Introduction". In Walter, Mariko Namba; Neumann Fridman, Eva Jane (eds.). Shamanism: An Encyclopedia of World Beliefs, Practices, and Culture, Volume 1. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. pp. xxi–xxii. ISBN 9781576076453.
  98. ^ Solomon, Anne (November 2017). "Rock Arts, Shamans, and Grand Theories". In David, Bruno; McNiven, Ian J (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology and Anthropology of Rock Art. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190844950.
  99. ^ Jespersen, Maija (21 March 2016). "The Goddess-Worshipping Age: Feminist Egalitarianism in Prehistory and Early History". In Paludi, Michele A; Ellens, J Harold (eds.). Feminism and Religion: How Faiths View Women and Their Rights. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger Publishing. pp. 17–25. ISBN 9781440838880.
  100. ^ Hinsch B (2004). "Prehistoric images of women from the North China region: the origins of Chinese goddess worship?". Journal of Chinese Religions. 32 (1): 47–82. doi:10.1179/073776904804759978.
  101. ^ a b Price TD (1991). "The Mesolithic of Northern Europe". Annual Review of Anthropology. 20 (1): 211–233. doi:10.1146/annurev.an.20.100191.001235.
  102. ^ Behre KE (21 October 2006). "Evidence for Mesolithic agriculture in and around central Europe?". Vegetation History and Archaeobiology. 16 (2): 203–219. doi:10.1007/s00334-006-0081-7.
  103. ^ a b Conneller, Chantal (October 2011). "The Mesolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 358. ISBN 9780199232444.
  104. ^ Conneller, Chantal (October 2011). "The Mesolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 359–360. ISBN 9780199232444.
  105. ^ Conneller, Chantal (October 2011). "The Mesolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 368. ISBN 9780199232444.
  106. ^ Conneller, Chantal (October 2011). "The Mesolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 360–362. ISBN 9780199232444.
  107. ^ a b Pryor, Francis (28 February 2011). "Overview: From Neolithic to Bronze Age, 8000 - 800 BC". British Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 10 June 2021.
  108. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "A Cauldron of Changes in the Fertile Crescent". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 168–169. ISBN 9781588341686.
  109. ^ Thomas, Julian (October 2011). "Ritual and Religion in the Neolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 371. ISBN 9780199232444.
  110. ^ a b Sterelny K (27 December 2019). "Religion: costs, signals, and the Neolithic transition". Religion, Brain & Behavior. 10 (3): 303–320. doi:10.1080/2153599X.2019.1678513. S2CID 214088802.
  111. ^ a b Scott, James C (19 September 2017). "Landscaping the World: The Domus Complex". Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. pp. 86–87. ISBN 9780300182910.
  112. ^ a b Thomas, Julian (October 2011). "Ritual and Religion in the Neolithic". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 374–376. ISBN 9780199232444.
  113. ^ Balter, Michael (29 May 2012). "Occupy the Neolithic: Social Immobility in the Stone Age". Wired. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  114. ^ Nielsen PO, Sørensen L (December 2018). "The formation of social rank in the early Neolithic of Northern Europe". Acta Archaeologica. 89 (1): 15–29. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0390.2018.12190.x. S2CID 165427603.
  115. ^ Banning EB (December 1998). "The Neolithic period: triumphs of architecture, agriculture, and art". Near Eastern Archaeology. 61 (4): 188–237. doi:10.2307/3210656. JSTOR 3210656. S2CID 164006022.
  116. ^ Boivin N (2 January 2015). "Rock art and rock music: Petroglyphs of the south Indian Neolithic". Antiquity. 78 (299): 38–53. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00092917. S2CID 162405286.
  117. ^ Hofmann, Daniela; Smyth, Jessica (2012). "Introduction: Dwelling, Materials, Cosmology—Transforming Houses in the Neolithic". In Hofmann, Daniela; Smyth, Jessica (eds.). Tracking the Neolithic House in Europe. New York, New York: Springer. p. 9. ISBN 9781461452881.
  118. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Megaliths and Mages". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 227–230. ISBN 9781588341686.
  119. ^ Habu J, Hall ME (1999). "Jōmon pottery production in Central Japan". Asian Perspectives. 38 (1): 90–110.
  120. ^ Nickel, Lukas (October 2011). "The Prehistory of Religion in China". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 445–446. ISBN 9780199232444.
  121. ^ Kaner, Simon (October 2011). "The Archaeology of Religion and Ritual in the Prehistoric Japanese Archipelago". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 462–463. ISBN 9780199232444.
  122. ^ Naumov, Goce (2012). "Embodied Houses: the Social and Symbolic Agency of Neolithic Architecture in the Republic of Macedonia". In Hofmann, Daniela; Smyth, Jessica (eds.). Tracking the Neolithic House in Europe. New York, New York: Springer. p. 78. ISBN 9781461452881.
  123. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Megaliths and Mages". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. p. 219. ISBN 9781588341686.
  124. ^ Burl, Aubrey (2000). The Stone Circles of Britain, Ireland and Brittany. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. p. 395. ISBN 9780300083477.
  125. ^ Scarre, Chris (October 2011). "Monumentality". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 13–15. ISBN 9780199232444.
  126. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Megaliths and Mages". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 230–233. ISBN 9781588341686.
  127. ^ Scarre, Chris (October 2011). "Monumentality". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 18–19. ISBN 9780199232444.
  128. ^ "Stonehenge summer solstice: Thousands gather to cheer sunrise". BBC News. 21 June 2019. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
  129. ^ Grissom CA (January 2000). "Neolithic Statues from 'Ain Ghazal: Construction and Form". American Journal of Archaeology. 104 (1): 25–45. doi:10.2307/506791. JSTOR 506791. S2CID 194068256.
  130. ^ Rollefson, Gary O (January 2002). "Ritual and Social Structure at Neolithic 'Ain Ghazal". In Kujit, Ian (ed.). Life in Neolithic Farming Communities: Social Organization, Identity, and Differentiation. New York, New York: Springer. p. 185. ISBN 9780306471667.
  131. ^ Rountree K (2003). "The Case of the Missing Goddess: Plurality, Power, and Prejudice in Reconstructions of Malta's Neolithic Past". Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion. 19 (2): 25–43.
  132. ^ Nicholas GP (1994). "On the goddess myth and methodology". Current Anthropology. 35 (4): 448–450. doi:10.1086/204302. S2CID 143500170.
  133. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Megaliths and Mages". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 251–252. ISBN 9781588341686.
  134. ^ Naumov, Goce (2012). "Embodied Houses: the Social and Symbolic Agency of Neolithic Architecture in the Republic of Macedonia". In Hofmann, Daniela; Smyth, Jessica (eds.). Tracking the Neolithic House in Europe. New York, New York: Springer. pp. 81–83. ISBN 9781461452881.
  135. ^ Naumov, Goce (2012). "Embodied Houses: the Social and Symbolic Agency of Neolithic Architecture in the Republic of Macedonia". In Hofmann, Daniela; Smyth, Jessica (eds.). Tracking the Neolithic House in Europe. New York, New York: Springer. pp. 83–84. ISBN 9781461452881.
  136. ^ a b Nickel, Lukas (October 2011). "The Prehistory of Religion in China". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 443. ISBN 9780199232444.
  137. ^ Vila V, Domínguez-Bella S, Cantillo Duarte JJ, Martínez López J, Barrena Tocino A (March 2015). "Social inequalities in the Neolithic of southern Europe: The grave goods of the Campo de Hockey necropolis (San Fernando, Cádiz, Spain)". Comptes Rendus Palevol. 14 (2): 147–161. Bibcode:2015CRPal..14..147V. doi:10.1016/j.crpv.2014.11.004.
  138. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Megaliths and Mages". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 221–223. ISBN 9781588341686.
  139. ^ Scott, James C (19 September 2017). "Preface". Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. pp. 10–11. ISBN 9780300182910.
  140. ^ Price, T Donald; Bar-Yosef, Ofer (August 2010). "Traces of Inequality at the Origins of Agriculture in the Ancient Near East". In Price, T Donald; Feinman, Gary M (eds.). Pathways to Power: New Perspectives on the Emergence of Social Inequality. New York, New York: Springer. pp. 158–160. ISBN 9781441963000.
  141. ^ a b Milledge Nelson, Sarah (October 2011). "Gender and Religion in Archaeology". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 197–198. ISBN 9780199232444.
  142. ^ a b Masclans Latorre A, Bickle P, Hamon C (March 2021). "Sexual Inequalities in the Early Neolithic? Exploring Relationships Between Sexes/Genders at the Cemetery of Vedrovice Using Use-Wear Analysis, Diet and Mobility" (PDF). Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 28 (5): 232–273. doi:10.1007/s10816-020-09453-y. S2CID 219457937.
  143. ^ Larsen CS, Hillson SW, Boz B, Pilloud MA, Sadvari JW, Agarwal SC, Glencross B, Beauchesne P, Pearson J, Ruff CB, Garofalo EM, Hager LD, Haddow SD, Knüsel CJ (3 April 2015). "Bioarchaeology of Neolithic Çatalhöyük: lives and lifestyles of an early farming society in transition". Journal of World Prehistory. 28 (1): 27–68. doi:10.1007/s10963-015-9084-6. S2CID 161276327.
  144. ^ a b Rollefson, Gary O (January 2002). "Ritual and Social Structure at Neolithic 'Ain Ghazal". In Kujit, Ian (ed.). Life in Neolithic Farming Communities: Social Organization, Identity, and Differentiation. New York, New York: Springer. pp. 167–168. ISBN 9780306471667.
  145. ^ Nickel, Lukas (October 2011). "The Prehistory of Religion in China". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 444. ISBN 9780199232444.
  146. ^ Palka JW (2021). "Not Just Counters: Clay Tokens and Ritual Materiality in the Ancient Near East". Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 28 (2): 414–445. doi:10.1007/s10816-020-09457-8. S2CID 220510074.
  147. ^ Scott, James C (19 September 2017). "Zoonoses: A Perfect Epidemiological Storm". Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. p. 91. ISBN 9780300182910.
  148. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Megaliths and Mages". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 240–241. ISBN 9781588341686.
  149. ^ Liu L (2000). "Ancestor worship: an archaeological investigation of ritual activities in Neolithic North China". Journal of East Asian Archaeology. 2 (1): 129–164. doi:10.1163/156852300509826.
  150. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Megaliths and Mages". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 241–247. ISBN 9781588341686.
  151. ^ Graeber, David; Wengrow, David (9 November 2021). The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 9780374721107. Retrieved 25 March 2024. In the same way that social rebels, since the 1960s, tended to idealize hunter-gatherer bands, earlier generations of poets, anarchists and bohemians had tended to idealize the Neolithic as an imaginary, beneficent theocracy ruled over by priestesses of the great Goddess [...] - that is, until such societies were overwhelmed by violent, patriarchal Indo-European-speaking horse-men descending from the steppes, or, in the case of the Middle East, Semitic-speaking nomads from the deserts.
  152. ^ Balter, Michael (15 January 2009). "The Goddess and the Bull". The Goddess and the Bull: Çatalhöyük: An Archaeological Journey to the Dawn of Civilization. Abingdon-on-Thames, United Kingdom: Routledge. pp. 320–321. ISBN 9781598740691.
  153. ^ Türkcan AU (2007). "Is it goddess or bear? The role of Catalhöyük animal seals in Neolithic symbolism". Documenta Praehistorica. 34 (1): 257–266. doi:10.4312/dp.34.19.
  154. ^ Peters J, Schmidt K (20 July 2004). "Animals in the symbolic world of Pre-Pottery Neolithic Göbekli Tepe, south-eastern Turkey: a preliminary assessment". Anthropozoologica. 39 (1): 179–218.
  155. ^ Pei, Shuyan; Yu, Chuqiao (14 March 2020). Exploration on Jade Culture in West Liaohe River Basin in the Neolithic Age. 4th International Conference on Culture, Education and Economic Development of Modern Society (ICCESE 2020). Moscow, Russia. doi:10.2991/assehr.k.200316.122.
  156. ^ Liu, Li; Ma, Xiaolin (March 2017). "The zooarchaeology of Neolithic China". In Albarella, Umberto; Rizzetto, Mauro; Russ, Hannah; Vickers, Kim; Viner-Daniels, Sarah (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Zooarchaeology. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 304. ISBN 9780199686476.
  157. ^ Liu, Li; Ma, Xiaolin (March 2017). "The zooarchaeology of Neolithic China". In Albarella, Umberto; Rizzetto, Mauro; Russ, Hannah; Vickers, Kim; Viner-Daniels, Sarah (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Zooarchaeology. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 313–314. ISBN 9780199686476.
  158. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Megaliths and Mages". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. p. 248. ISBN 9781588341686.
  159. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Megaliths and Mages". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. p. 249. ISBN 9781588341686.
  160. ^ Aldenderfer, Mark (August 2010). "Gimme That Old Time Religion: Rethinking the Role of Religion in the Emergence of Social Inequality". In Price, T Donald; Feinman, Gary M (eds.). Pathways to Power: New Perspectives on the Emergence of Social Inequality. New York, New York: Springer. pp. 77–79. ISBN 9781441963000.
  161. ^ a b Pearce M (30 August 2019). "The 'Copper Age'—A History of the Concept". Journal of World Prehistory. 32 (3): 229–250. doi:10.1007/s10963-019-09134-z.
  162. ^ Ilan D, Rowan Y (21 January 2016). "The Judean Desert as a Chalcolithic Necropolis". Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology. 28 (2): 171–194. doi:10.1558/jmea.v28i2.29530.
  163. ^ Roberts, Benjamin; Freiman, Catherine (9 June 2012). "Drawing Boundaries and Building Models: Investigating the Concept of the 'Chalcolithic Frontier' in Northwest Europe". In Allen, Michael J; Gardiner, Julie; Sheridan, Alison (eds.). Is There a British Chalcolithic?: People, Place and Polity in the Later Third Millennium. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxbow Books. pp. 27–39. ISBN 9781842174968.
  164. ^ Polomé, Edgar C (1997). "Indo-European religion". In Hock, Hans H (ed.). Historical, Indo-European, and Lexicographical Studies: A Festschrift for Ladislav Zgusta on the Occasion of his 70th Birthday. Berlin, Germany: De Gruyter Morton. p. 129. ISBN 9783110128840.
  165. ^ a b c Mallory, JP; Adams, Douglas Q (August 2006). "Religion". The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 409–411. ISBN 9780199296682.
  166. ^ a b Polomé, Edgar C (1997). "Indo-European religion". In Hock, Hans H (ed.). Historical, Indo-European, and Lexicographical Studies: A Festschrift for Ladislav Zgusta on the Occasion of his 70th Birthday. Berlin, Germany: De Gruyter Morton. p. 138. ISBN 9783110128840.
  167. ^ Allen, NJ (2020). "Five Relationships". Arjuna–Odysseus: Shared Heritage in Indian and Greek Epic. Abingdon-on-Thames, United Kingdom: Routledge. pp. 25–26. ISBN 9780429294129.
  168. ^ Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Pastoral Nomads Turn the World on Edge". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. pp. 288–291. ISBN 9781588341686.
  169. ^ Singh NL, Ramprasand, Mishra PK, Shukla SK, Kumar J, Singh R (2010). "Alcoholic fermentation techniques in early Indian tradition". Indian Journal of History of Science. 45 (2): 163–173.
  170. ^ a b Hayden, Brian (17 December 2003). "Pastoral Nomads Turn the World on Edge". Shamans, Sorcerers, and Saints: A Prehistory of Religion. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. p. 285. ISBN 9781588341686.
  171. ^ Mallory, JP; Adams, Douglas Q (August 2006). "Food and Drink". The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 261. ISBN 9780199296682.
  172. ^ "Pendant mask". British Museum.
  173. ^ Clayton, Ewan. "Where did writing begin?". British Library. Archived from the original on 11 March 2022. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  174. ^ Delfino, Davide (January 2016). "Walled enclosures in Western Europe as marks of conflict in Late Prehistory. A psychological, anthropological and archaeological approach". In Coimbro, Fernando; Delfino, Davide (eds.). Late Prehistory and Protohistory: Bronze Age and Iron Age: The emergence of warrior societies and its economic, social and environmental consequences. Oxford, United Kingdom: Archaeopress Archaeology. p. 3. ISBN 9781784912987.
  175. ^ McCall DF (1999). "Herodotus on the Garamantes: A Problem in Protohistory". History in Africa. 26 (1): 197–217. doi:10.2307/3172141. JSTOR 3172141. S2CID 162239134.
  176. ^ a b Wyrwoll, Thomas (2001). "North African Protohistoric: North African Neolithic and Bronze Age Cultures of the 4th Millennium B.P.". In Peregrine, Peter N; Ember, Melvin (eds.). Encyclopedia of Prehistory, Volume 1: Africa. Boston, Massachusetts: Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 228–229. ISBN 9780306462559.
  177. ^ Kushkush, Isma'il (September 2020). "Why Sudan's Remarkable Ancient Civilization Has Been Overlooked by History". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  178. ^ a b Wyrwoll, Thomas (2001). "North African Protohistoric: North African Neolithic and Bronze Age Cultures of the 4th Millennium B.P.". In Peregrine, Peter N; Ember, Melvin (eds.). Encyclopedia of Prehistory, Volume 1: Africa. Boston, Massachusetts: Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 229–231. ISBN 9780306462559.
  179. ^ a b Wyrwoll, Thomas (2001). "North African Protohistoric: North African Neolithic and Bronze Age Cultures of the 4th Millennium B.P.". In Peregrine, Peter N; Ember, Melvin (eds.). Encyclopedia of Prehistory, Volume 1: Africa. Boston, Massachusetts: Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 231–232. ISBN 9780306462559.
  180. ^ Wyrwoll, Thomas (2001). "North African Protohistoric: North African Neolithic and Bronze Age Cultures of the 4th Millennium B.P.". In Peregrine, Peter N; Ember, Melvin (eds.). Encyclopedia of Prehistory, Volume 1: Africa. Boston, Massachusetts: Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 226–227. ISBN 9780306462559.
  181. ^ Wyrwoll, Thomas (2001). "North African Protohistoric: North African Neolithic and Bronze Age Cultures of the 4th Millennium B.P.". In Peregrine, Peter N; Ember, Melvin (eds.). Encyclopedia of Prehistory, Volume 1: Africa. Boston, Massachusetts: Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 224–225. ISBN 9780306462559.
  182. ^ Linduff, Katheryn M; Sun, Yan; Cao, Wei; Liu, Yuanqing (2017). "Shaping the Study of Inner Asian Artifacts and Mental Boundaries". Ancient China and its Eurasian Neighbors: Artifacts, Identity and Death in the Frontier, 3000-700 BCE. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. p. 16. ISBN 9781108290555.
  183. ^ P'yankova L (1994). "Central Asia in the Bronze Age: sedentary and nomadic cultures". Antiquity. 68 (259): 355–372. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00046718. S2CID 162531596.
  184. ^ Linduff, Katheryn M; Sun, Yan; Cao, Wei; Liu, Yuanqing (2017). "Shaping the Study of Inner Asian Artifacts and Mental Boundaries". Ancient China and its Eurasian Neighbors: Artifacts, Identity and Death in the Frontier, 3000-700 BCE. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. p. 27. ISBN 9781108290555.
  185. ^ a b Mair, Victor H (2010). "The Mummies of East Central Asia" (PDF). Expedition Magazine. Vol. 52, no. 3. pp. 23–32. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  186. ^ Higham, Charles FW (October 2011). "Ritual and Religion in South-East Asia". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 471–472. ISBN 9780199232444.
  187. ^ a b Higham, Charles FW (October 2011). "Ritual and Religion in South-East Asia". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 473. ISBN 9780199232444.
  188. ^ Higham, Charles FW (October 2011). "Ritual and Religion in South-East Asia". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 474. ISBN 9780199232444.
  189. ^ Bruck, Joanna (October 2011). "Fire, Earth, Water: An Elemental Cosmography of the European Bronze Age". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 387. ISBN 9780199232444.
  190. ^ Bruck, Joanna (October 2011). "Fire, Earth, Water: An Elemental Cosmography of the European Bronze Age". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 389. ISBN 9780199232444.
  191. ^ Bruck, Joanna (October 2011). "Fire, Earth, Water: An Elemental Cosmography of the European Bronze Age". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 390. ISBN 9780199232444.
  192. ^ Bruck, Joanna (October 2011). "Fire, Earth, Water: An Elemental Cosmography of the European Bronze Age". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 391–392. ISBN 9780199232444.
  193. ^ Pearson MP, Chamberlain A, Craig O, Marshall P, Mulville J, Smith H, Chenery C, Collins M, Cook G, Craig G, Evans J, Hiller J, Montgomery J, Schwenninger JL, Taylor G, Wess T (September 2005). "Evidence for mummification in Bronze Age Britain" (PDF). Antiquity. 79 (305): 529–546. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00114486. S2CID 53392023.
  194. ^ a b Joy, Jody (October 2011). "The Iron Age". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 405–406. ISBN 9780199232444.
  195. ^ Fitzpatrick, Andrew P (2008). "Druids: Towards an Archaeology". In Gosden, Chris; Hamerow, Helena; de Jersey, Philip; Lock, Gary (eds.). Communities and Connections: Essays in Honour of Barry Cunliffe. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 287–288. ISBN 9780191528118.
  196. ^ Fitzpatrick, Andrew P (2008). "Druids: Towards an Archaeology". In Gosden, Chris; Hamerow, Helena; de Jersey, Philip; Lock, Gary (eds.). Communities and Connections: Essays in Honour of Barry Cunliffe. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 289–290. ISBN 9780191528118.
  197. ^ Nordberg, Andreas (3 June 2019). "Configurations of Religion in Late Iron Age and Viking Age Scandinavia". In Wikström af Edholm, Klas; Jackson Rova, Peter; Nordberg, Andreas; Sundqvist, Olof; Zachrisson, Torun (eds.). Myth, Materiality and Lived Religion In Merovingian and Viking Scandinavia. Stockholm, Sweden: Stockholm University Press. pp. 339–344. ISBN 9789176350966.
  198. ^ Andrén, Anders (October 2011). "Old Norse and Germanic Religion". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 847. ISBN 9780199232444.
  199. ^ Webster, Jane (15 March 2016). "A Dirty Window on the Iron Age? Recent Developments in the Archaeology of Pre-Roman Celtic Religion". In Ritari, Katja; Bergholm, Alexandra (eds.). Understanding Celtic Religion: Revisiting the Pagan Past. Cardiff, Wales: University of Wales Press. pp. 121–122. ISBN 9781783167920.
  200. ^ Joy, Jody (October 2011). "The Iron Age". In Insoll, Timothy (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 416. ISBN 9780199232444.
  201. ^ Barnes TD (1995). "Statistics and the Conversion of the Roman Aristocracy". Journal of Roman Studies. 85 (1): 135–147. doi:10.2307/301060. JSTOR 301060. S2CID 162669131.
  202. ^ a b Petts, David (September 2016). "Christianity in Roman Britain". In Millett, Martin; Revell, Louise; Moore, Alison (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Roman Britain. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 661–662. ISBN 9780199697731.
  203. ^ Petts, David (September 2016). "Christianity in Roman Britain". In Millett, Martin; Revell, Louise; Moore, Alison (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Roman Britain. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 676. ISBN 9780199697731.
  204. ^ Strmiska, Michael F (2003). "The Evils of Christianization: A Pagan Perspective on European History". In Waddell, Terrie (ed.). Cultural Expressions of Evil and Wickedness: Wrath, Sex, Crime. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Rodopi. pp. 61–64. ISBN 9789042010154.
  205. ^ Strmiska, Michael F (2003). "The Evils of Christianization: A Pagan Perspective on European History". In Waddell, Terrie (ed.). Cultural Expressions of Evil and Wickedness: Wrath, Sex, Crime. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Rodopi. pp. 64–68. ISBN 9789042010154.
  206. ^ a b Charbonneau M (2007). "The Melting Cauldron: Ethnicity, Diversity, and Identity in a Contemporary Pagan Subculture". The Pomegranate. 9 (1): 5–21. doi:10.1558/pome.v9i1.5.
  207. ^ Magliocco, Sabina (30 August 2012). "Neopaganism". In Hammer, Olav; Rothstein, Mikael (eds.). The Cambridge Companion to New Religious Movements. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. p. 160. ISBN 9781107493551.
  208. ^ "Proto-Indo-European Religion, an Introduction". Proto-Indo-European Religion. 20 July 2017. Archived from the original on 24 October 2016. Retrieved 23 June 2021.
  209. ^ Townsend JB (8 January 2008). "Individualist Religious Movements: Core and Neo-shamanism". Anthropology of Consciousness. 15 (1): 1–9. doi:10.1525/ac.2004.15.1.1.
  210. ^ Strmiska, Michael F (2003). "The Evils of Christianization: A Pagan Perspective on European History". In Waddell, Terrie (ed.). Cultural Expressions of Evil and Wickedness: Wrath, Sex, Crime. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Rodopi. pp. 59–60. ISBN 9789042010154.
  211. ^ a b Wallis RJ (2000). "Queer shamans: Autoarchaeology and neo-shamanism". World Archaeology. 32 (2): 252–262. doi:10.1080/00438240050131225. S2CID 17349988.
  212. ^ Bužeková T (2010). "The Shaman's Journeys between Emic and Etic: Representations of the Shaman in Neo-Shamanism". Anthropological Journal of European Cultures. 19 (1): 116–130. doi:10.3167/ajec.2010.190109.
  213. ^ Samuel, Sigal (3 November 2017). "What To Do When Racists Try To Hijack Your Religion". The Atlantic. Retrieved 23 June 2021.
  214. ^ Ruddick, Nicholas (2018). "Introduction: The Fiction of Hominization". The Fire in the Stone: Prehistoric Fiction from Charles Darwin to Jean M. Auel (2 ed.). Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. p. 1. ISBN 9780819569004.
  215. ^ Ruddick, Nicholas (2018). "Introduction: The Fiction of Hominization". The Fire in the Stone: Prehistoric Fiction from Charles Darwin to Jean M. Auel (2 ed.). Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. pp. 2–5. ISBN 9780819569004.
  216. ^ Ruddick, Nicholas (2018). "A Cultural Triad: Language, Religion, Art". The Fire in the Stone: Prehistoric Fiction from Charles Darwin to Jean M. Auel (2 ed.). Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. pp. 175–176. ISBN 9780819569004.
  217. ^ Ruddick, Nicholas (2018). "A Cultural Triad: Language, Religion, Art". The Fire in the Stone: Prehistoric Fiction from Charles Darwin to Jean M. Auel (2 ed.). Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. p. 184. ISBN 9780819569004.
  218. ^ Walker, James; Clinnick, David (14 January 2021). "Jack London and Before Adam: Ahead of his time, or a cautionary tale in the study of prehistoric hominins?". In Gill, Josie; McKenzie, Catriona; Lightfoot, Emma (eds.). Writing Remains: New Intersections of Archaeology, Literature and Science. London, United Kingdom: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 58. ISBN 9781350109476.
  219. ^ a b c Clasquin-Johnson M (2012). "Religion in the Earth's Children Series of Books by Jean M. Auel". Journal for the Study of Religion. 25 (1): 81–92.
  220. ^ Bramwell, Peter (2009). "Prehistoric Monuments, Witchcraft and Environmentalism". Pagan Themes in Modern Children's Fiction. London, United Kingdom: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 145–146. ISBN 9780230236899.
  221. ^ Bramwell, Peter (2009). "Prehistoric Monuments, Witchcraft and Environmentalism". Pagan Themes in Modern Children's Fiction. London, United Kingdom: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 155–156. ISBN 9780230236899.
  222. ^ Bramwell, Peter (2009). "Prehistoric Monuments, Witchcraft and Environmentalism". Pagan Themes in Modern Children's Fiction. London, United Kingdom: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 156–157. ISBN 9780230236899.
  223. ^ a b Bramwell, Peter (2009). "Prehistoric Monuments, Witchcraft and Environmentalism". Pagan Themes in Modern Children's Fiction. London, United Kingdom: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 182–188. ISBN 9780230236899.
  224. ^ Sinusas, Asta (August 2003). "Review: Hybrids by Robert Sawyer". SFRevu. Retrieved 23 June 2021.
  225. ^ James E (2010). "Reviewed Work(s): The Fire in the Stone: Prehistoric Fiction from Charles Darwin to Jean M. Auel by Nicholas Ruddick". Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts. 21 (3): 455–458.
  226. ^ Ruddick, Nicholas (2018). "A Cultural Triad: Language, Religion, Art". The Fire in the Stone: Prehistoric Fiction from Charles Darwin to Jean M. Auel (2 ed.). Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. pp. 182–183. ISBN 9780819569004.
  227. ^ Ruddick, Nicholas (2018). "A Cultural Triad: Language, Religion, Art". The Fire in the Stone: Prehistoric Fiction from Charles Darwin to Jean M. Auel (2 ed.). Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. p. 187. ISBN 9780819569004.
  228. ^ Ruddick, Nicholas (2018). "A Cultural Triad: Language, Religion, Art". The Fire in the Stone: Prehistoric Fiction from Charles Darwin to Jean M. Auel (2 ed.). Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. pp. 185–186. ISBN 9780819569004.