Showing posts with label Ancient alphabet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ancient alphabet. Show all posts

Thursday, 3 January 2019

Birth giver

A stone slab from Gobekli Tepe (10,000 - 8,000 BC), with a carving depicting a woman in a birth giving position. 


Ceramic shard with a female figure possibly giving birth. Starčevo culture, 7th - 6th millennium BC, Sarvaš. The shard is 15 cm X 15 cm so the vessel it was part of must have been very large and was probably used for storing grain. It is possible that the figure depicted was symbolic representation of the Mother Earth.


Mesopotamia, Ur (3800 - 3000 BC)  Archaic seal showing woman in a birth giving position


Akkadian to Old Babylonian relief, 2500-2000 bc. depicting a woman in a birth giving position


Cylinder seal, 2700-2300 bc. of the Mature Harappa period, Indus valley civilisation shows a woman in a birth giving position.


Bronze disk headed pin. Curious, weird representation. All the fertility functions ; sexuality, birtgiving and nurturing ...Inanna star converted in 8 petals flower ... surrounded by 2 antelopes Astarte style. Lajja Gauri? Lorestan.1250-650 bc. 


A small fragment from a ceramic vessel found at Poggio Colla, the site of a 2,700-year-old Etruscan settlement in Italy's Mugello Valley, showing a woman giving birth to a child 


Ancient Greek relief showing child birth assisted by a midwife and family members


Roman relief showing childbirth assisted by a midwife


Lajja Gauri, the Hindu Goddess associated with abundance, fertility and sexuality shown in a birthing posture. Sandstone statue, ca. 6th century AD, India (Madhya Pradesh)



Do you see any similarity between these images? All of them depict a woman in a "natural birthing position". 



This upright sitting position helps the mother push in a very familiar position: the position you are used to using for having a bowel movement. Additionally, the low height of the stool flexes your legs and expands the size of your pelvis, and the upright position helps use gravity to promote the downward movement of the baby. Between contractions, the mother can lean backward and rest supported by the back of the birthing stool or bed or leaning on the helpers who stand behind her. 

Now look at the shape of the woman's body when she is in this birthing position. Do you see anything familiar?

Neolithic talismans (?) in a shape of a woman giving birth

Ruse, Bulgaria, 5th mill BC




Porovec, Bulgaria, 7th mill BC

Ohoden, Bulgaria, 7th mill BC.

Istria, Croatia, 6th mill BC.


Svinjarička Čuka, Serbia, dated ca 6100-5500 BC.



More Neolithic house altars


Neolithic pottery shards, Old Europe. 



Letter M or stylised woman giving birth, otherwise known as:

Basque - ama
Hebrew - eema
Arabic - um
Sumerian - ama
Old Armenian: mayr
Balto-Slavic: *mā́ˀtē 
Slavic: *mati 
Celtic:*mātīr 
Germanic: *mōdēr 
Hellenic: *mā́tēr 
Indo-Iranian: (*máHtā; *máHtār)
Italic: *mātēr 
Messapic: (matura; matira)
Phrygian: ματαρ (matar)
Tocharian: *mācer

Or Both?

Neolithic (6ht - 5th millennium BC) Old Europe Vinča culture symbols compared with consequent "alphabets". Letter M is there..


The Idea that the letter M is stylised woman giving birth (MAMA, AMA...) from "Skopje 8 millenniums ago-the first builders of Cerje-Govrlevo