QUICK FACTS

Name: Tumba Madžari Great Mother

What it is: A clay sculpture

Where it is from: Skopje, North Macedonia

When it was made: Sixth millennium B.C.

In 1981, a clay sculpture called the “Great Mother” was discovered in an ancient village in North Macedonia known as Tumba Madžari. The unusual cube shape of the woman’s lower half is thought to mimic the design of the Stone Age houses that she was intended to protect nearly 8,000 years ago.

rising above the house; this positioning suggests she is watching over the home, which is also a part of her. The hollow bottom hints that the sculpture was used as a kind of altar where incense, dried herbs or grain offerings were burned.

According to the Archaeological Museum of the Republic of North Macedonia, where artifacts from Tumba Madžari are on display, “the role of woman as child bearer and mother was equated with a fertility cult or the cult of the Great Mother goddess.”

Other “Great Mother” figurines have been found at Neolithic European and Near Eastern archaeological sites. However, the unusual shape of the Tumba Madžari sculpture that reflects a symbiotic relationship between the mother goddess and the house is found only in the Balkans.

For more stunning archaeological discoveries, check out our Astonishing Artifacts archives.

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