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Miniskirts and short tops: the women of 5000 BC



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Published Date: 13 November 2007
IF THE figurines found in an ancient European settlement are any guide, women have been dressing to impress for at least 7,500 years.
Recent excavations at the site - part of the Vinca culture which was Europe's biggest prehistoric civilisation - point to a metropolis with a great degree of sophistication and a taste for art and fashion, archaeologists say.

In the Neolithic set
tlement, in what is now southern Serbia, men worked a furnace melting metal for tools. An ox pulled a load of ore, passing by an art workshop and a group of young women in short skirts.

"According to the figurines we found, young women were beautifully dressed, like today's girls in short tops and mini skirts, and wore bracelets around their arms," said the archaeologist Julka Kuzmanovic-Cvetkovic.

The unnamed tribe, who lived between 5400 and 4700 BC in the 120-hectare site at what is now Plocnik, knew about trade, handcrafts, art and metallurgy.

"They pursued beauty and produced 60 different forms of wonderful pottery and figurines, not only to represent deities, but also out of pure enjoyment," said Ms Kuzmanovic-Cvetkovic.

Houses had stoves, there were special holes for rubbish and the dead were buried in a tidy necropolis.

The community was especially fond of children. Artefacts include toys such as animals and rattles made of clay, and small, clumsily crafted pots apparently created by children at playtime.



The full article contains 241 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Lanna,

13/11/2007 03:13:20

This is honestly a fascinating find for evidence of early human activity!
Cave drawings in the area concur with the excavated figurines found showing that the women were beautifully dressed. Further studies suggest that the men also employed advanced engineering accompishments. A short documentary was filmed regarding these findings:
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=-BrlCjmkRjI

2

Guga II,

Rockall 13/11/2007 04:26:41

"The community was especially fond of children".

Probably because they had no form of contraception, and didn't have any option in the matter.

3

Cat Ballou,

13/11/2007 04:54:54

yeh, especially with all of the miniskirts running around....maybe the rhythm method wasn't invented yet...

4

Boy Wonder,

13/11/2007 07:52:33

"IF THE figurines found in an ancient European settlement are any guide, women have been dressing to impress for at least 7,500 years."

I think anthropologists will find the female of the species has been impressing the male since before they came out of the primordial seas and crawled on land!!!!!!!

5

Nell,

The Preservation Hall 13/11/2007 07:58:29

Hopefully they didnt have big fat bellies and ar5es, like some of the things you see hanging out of todays youth.

6

Mercutio,

Falkirk 13/11/2007 08:07:14

It is normally the males of the species who "dress" to impress. However as RK would have it "The female of the species is more deadly than the male"

7

David Burness,

Larkhall 13/11/2007 08:35:51

#5

Thats a cultural phenomenon. At differing times in history and differing cultures, different physical attributes have been desired. Besides, not everyone shares a common view of physical attractiveness - or we'd all look the same.

8

Nell,

The Preservation Hall 13/11/2007 09:31:44

No. 7:- Well thank God I'm from a different time zone when fat blurters kept it under wraps.

9

Mcsnagpile,

13/11/2007 09:45:32

Of course these woman had more advanced technology than today—no living bras, suspenders, high heels, everything got where is was supposed to be by devilishly cunning technology.
~Outsize buns seem to have been non existant in those times.

10

Trond,

The cloud to the left 13/11/2007 10:14:01

Just look at today's wall posters.
No change at all.

11

Tobydawg,

Here & Now 13/11/2007 10:51:55

Whit?? Nae knickers??

12

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Ontario 13/11/2007 11:47:47

#4 Boy Wonder

And your point is.....?

13

Homo Sapiens,

13/11/2007 11:59:45

Short tops and miniskirts... but with hairy legs, arms and armpits, not to mention midriffs... (as they didn't have razor blades to shave), I must assume the sight was more hair raising (excuse the pun) and scary than it was sexy...

hence the reason for badly needed ornaments and colourful dress... As spun yarn, and woven fabrics must have been scarce, the dresses were short, not as a means of attracting male attention!

14

Dave From Barra,

Western Isles 13/11/2007 12:42:25

I think the men wore something similar at the time. True equality........

15

Lanna,

13/11/2007 13:13:47

#13 Hi Weeshoie,
thanks, a pleasant surprise, I hope! glad it gave ya a smile! :)

#16 Hi Dave,
I don't know about that, I think the men of the time went more for the he-man full toga look, to avoid any fringes getting into the furnace.;)

16

PJ,

Edinburgh 13/11/2007 13:41:49

Ah so Raquel Welch’s attire in One Million Years B.C. the furry animal-skin bikini, could have been historically correct then!

17

Findlay Thompson,

Broadford 13/11/2007 15:51:52

#5

Nell

Not the Preservation Hall Victoria Street, Edinburgh?

18

Findlay Thompson,

Broadford 13/11/2007 15:53:16

#15

Are you hinting the ladies of that era were growlers?

19

Lanna,

13/11/2007 22:18:58

#21 Weeshooie,
I doubt there were any there, as muffin tops are a relatively new evolved species... ;)


 

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