Cave of Beasts

Cave of Beasts

Cave of Beasts – cut out
Location Wadi Sura,  Egypt

The Cave of the Beasts (also named Mestikawi-Foggini Cave or Foggini Cave or Cave Wadi Sura II) is a huge natural rock shelter in the Egyptian part Libyan Desert featuring Neolithic rock paintings, more than 7,000 years old, with about 5,000 figures.

Geographical location

The shelter is located in the Wadi Sura at the south-western foot of the Gilf Kebir Mountains in the remote south-western corner of Egypt’s New Valley Governorate near the border of Libya and Sudan. The area, abandoned in present-day, is one of the most arid locations of the Sahara.

Discovery

The shelter was discovered in 2002 by archaeologists Massimo and Jacopo Foggini and Ahmed Mestikawi. In 2010 scientists of the University of Cologne carried out an in-depth study of the shelter and called it Wadi Sura II to distinguish it from the some 10 km further eastward Cave of Swimmers (Wadi Sura I).

Age and paleo-climatology

The rock paintings were created more than 7000 years ago [1] at the beginning of the Neolithic age. At that time the Sahara’s climate was humid. In the Holocene period there was a lake at the foot of the shelter. At the end of the Holocene climatic optimum 6000 years ago, the climate pattern changed to arid [2] and the area was depopulated.

Description

The shelter is 17 m wide and almost 7 m high and contains over 5000 well-preserved figures painted with red, yellow, white and black pigments. Hundreds of hand and foot stencil are over-painted with groups of human creatures and therianthropic and acephalic mythological creatures. Whereas the symbolism of the hand stencils can be found in many cave paintings all over the world, the beasts are unique. The shelter is upwardly topped off by rock engravings.

Many of the beasts were intentionally disfigured in prehistoric times. Always surrounded by human creatures, the beasts catch the eye due to their body size and shape: Long tailed, bull-like body, frequently three footed with human-like legs. Even headless they appear either to spit or to swallow human creatures.

Some of the beasts seem to be wrapped in a kind of golden net.[3]

Furthermore, the shelter is covered with groups of dancing, floating or swimming human creatures.[4] On the lower left edge of the shelter appear two groups of human creatures separated from each other by a rock crack. The ones above the rock crack are holding a sling over his head, while the ones below the crack have a hand above their heads and are all looking all to the left.

Scattered throughout the shelter appear wild animals: An elephant, ostriches, gazelles, and giraffes. Along with the beasts the figures of the shelter represent a mythological world whose symbolism has not been deciphered yet.

In February 2016 a report in National Geographic claimed that the hand-prints might have been made by lizards, and not by humans as previously thought.[5]

References

  1. J.-L. Le Quellec, P. + P. Flers: Du Sahara au Nil: ... Paris 2005, S. VI.
  2. According to Linstädter/Kröpelin 2004 first the monsoon rainfalls withdrew to south and subsequently Mediterranean rainfalls disappeared leading to gradual desertification of the area.
  3. Drawing on archaeological finds in south-western Turkey, Lewis-Williams/Pearce 2005 concluded that the reference to a "sub-aquatic nether world" (in: Inside the Neolithic Mind: Consciousness, Cosmos, and the Realm of the Gods. London 2005, p. 111) and to theriocephalic figures (ibid. p. 115-115) are integral components of the iconography of the emerging Neolithic age.
  4. Some scenes appear to be trivial immediately denied by the appearance of the beasts (J.-L. Le Quellec, P. + P. Flers: Du Sahara au Nil: ... Paris 2005, S. 90).
  5. Romey, Kristin (26 February 2016). "'Baby Hands' in Cave Paintings May Actually Belong to Lizards". News.nationalgeographic.com. Retrieved 4 March 2016.

Further reading

External links

Coordinates: 23°39′12″N 25°09′35″E / 23.65333°N 25.15972°E / 23.65333; 25.15972

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