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Kernosivsky idol

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Kernosivsky idol
MaterialSandstone
Height120 cm (47 in)
Width36 cm (14 in)
Depth24 cm (9.4 in)
Weight238.5 kg (526 lb)
Discovered1973
Present locationDmytro Yavornytsky National Historical Museum of Dnipro

The Kernosivskyi idol, or Kernosivsky idol (Ukrainian: Керносівський ідол) is a Kurgan stele dating from the mid–3rd millennium BC. It was discovered in 1973 in the village of Kernosivka [uk], in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, Ukraine. It is held in the collection of the Dmytro Yavornytsky National Historical Museum of Dnipro.

Discovery

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The unique stele was found in 1973 in Kernosivka, Novomoskovsk district, by workmen who were digging a trench for a silo.[1][2] Its importance went unrecognised and it was put aside for disposal, but school children found it and informed the Dmytro Yavornytsky National Historical Museum of Dnipro.[3] It was named after the place that it was discovered by the museum archaeologist Lyudmila Krylova.[4]

After accession and documentation, the sculpture was displayed at the Dnipro National Historical Museum. Local public interest was not significant, and the object was loaned for temporary display to the Pushkin Museum, where it was extremely popular. From Moscow, its loan transferred to the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg, where it was displayed for three months. As a result of its popularity, and the wider context of the Hermitage's prehistoric collections, a request was made that the idol's permanent location should be at the Hermitage. Due to the work of the director of the Dnipro National Historical Museum, Horpyna Vatchenko, a change in terms of the loan was denied and the object returned to its home region. This return was also supported by Vatchenko's brother, Oleksiy Vatchenko, who was chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.[4]

Description

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The sandstone sculpture is 120cm high, 36cm wide and 24cm deep. It is an anthropomorphic sculpture: the upper part shows a male figure with an elongated face, deep-set eyes and a moustache. The figure is nude; the only clothing worn are a belt and shoes. The figure's genitals are prominent. The lower segment of the block narrows and was buried in the ground. There is damage from its initial excavation by bulldozer to the right side of the figure.[1]

All four sides of the figure are covered with numerous drawings, sculpted in low relief. One interpretation of the artwork on the back of the figure is that it depicts a tree of life. Regular circles and squares above the ribs, symbolise the sun and the moon. These images testify to the ritual, sacred purpose of the stele. Other illustrations include: weaponry - a bow and arrow and a mace; tools - axes, a hoe, a crucible; animals - a bull, two horse and turtles; on one side a man and a woman are copulating; there are also geometric designs.[1][5][6][7][8]

Dating and analysis

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After much controversy, the object was dated to the mid 3rd millennium BC and is associated with the late Yamnaya culture.[9][10][11]

According to the most common hypothesis, it depicts the supreme deity of the Indo-European pantheon.[3] This connection was first proposed by Ukrainian archaeologist Valentyn Danylenko, who also proposed a connection between the idol and stories from the Rigveda.[4]

One interpretation of the illustrations on the body of the figure is that they may show tattoos.[1]

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d "КЕРНОСIВСЬКИЙ ІДОЛ". resource.history.org.ua. Retrieved 2022-02-27.
  2. ^ "Дніпропетровський історичний музей ім. Д.І.Яворницького – ГоловАПУ – офіційний веб-сайт". www.apu.dp.ua. Retrieved 2022-02-27.
  3. ^ a b "Зала 1. Давня історія краю" (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-02-27.
  4. ^ a b c "Ridna Vira". www.svit.in.ua. Retrieved 2022-02-27.
  5. ^ INDO-EUROPEAN ORNAMENTAL COMPLEXES AND THEIR ANALOGS IN THE CULTURES OF EURASIA. WP IPGEB.
  6. ^ Zilberman, Mikhail Izrailevich. "About the Amur petroglyph "moose"." Bulletin of the Buryat State University. Humanities Studies Inner Asia 4 (2017): 3-20.
  7. ^ Stupka, M. V. "Stone drilled hammer-axes in the system of pit-catacomb antiquities." In: A History of Weapons 1 (2008): 11-34.
  8. ^ Stepanov, MV "Lisichansky idol: god of the shining sky or chthonic monster? (From the experience of reconstruction of religious beliefs of ancient societies)." Materials and research on the archeology of Eastern Ukraine (2013).
  9. ^ JP Mallory, The anthropomorphic stelae of the Ukraine: the early iconography of the Indo-Europeans, Institute for the Study of Man, 1994, 54f.
  10. ^ Советская археология (in Russian). Изд-во Академии наук СССР. 1991.
  11. ^ Zlochevskaya, A. V. "Culture of Ukraine in the focus of interests of the Czech Slavist." Stephanos 5 (2015): 285-290.