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Back to topRound Heads: The Earliest Rock Paintings in the Sahara (Hardcover)
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Description
The Central Sahara is considered the greatest museum of rock art in the world, containing several thousand prehistoric and recent images. The oldest paintings, called Round Heads, originated during a humid phase in the 10th millennium before present and they were created by dark-skinned hunter-gatherers living in the Algerian and Libyan mountains. Rock shelters show mainly anthropomorphic figures with body paintings and other embellishments testifying ancient rituals and ceremonies. Only two animal species - antelope and mouflon - appear to be as important as men and women; mixed with them on the same walls, these animals had a fundamental place in the ideology of the period. Since the discovery by Europeans in the 19th century, research in the Sahara has been scarce due to the difficult working conditions and to the problematic politics associated with national permissions. The rock art and the archaeology have always been treated as separated disciplines and only rarely were the paintings associated with a material culture. They have been described and classified but not interpreted because it was considered unachievable. Using interdisciplinary studies, this book approaches the previously neglected fields of the study of Saharan rock art, and it proposes new ways to research the art and the societies that created it.
About the Author
Born in the Czech Republic (1976), Jitka Soukopova graduated in Archaeology at the University of Pisa, Italy in 2006, and obtained her PhD in Archaeology at the University of Bristol, UK in 2012. She undertook six months' fieldwork in North Africa and the Sahara, in Algeria, Libya and Tunisia (2005-8). Her main publication is The Earliest Rock Paintings of the Central Sahara: Approaching Interpretation in Time and Mind (2011).