③ Goddess statue 1/2

The ancient statues of goddesses found all over the world have something in common. For example, exposed chest, touching or placing hands under the chest, navel, wearing triangular underwear, thick lower body, vortex pattern, etc. The following images are from left to right: the Babylonian goddess Ishtar (c. 2000 BC) and the Egyptian goddess (c. 3800 BC).

From the left, a female image of a snake face in Iraq, Jomon Venus in Nagano Prefecture, and a statue of a goddess on Malta.
Goddess statue

Next is a statue of a goddess from an old age from about 38,000 BC to about 600 BC, with similar poses and body shapes that touch the chest. From the left, the statue of the German goddess (c. 38,000 BC), the statue of the Russian goddess (c. 26,000 BC), and the statue of the Austrian goddess (c. 25,000 BC).

From the left, the statue of the French goddess (c. 23,000 BC), the statue of the Czech goddess (c. 24,800 BC), and the statue of the Siberian goddess (c. 18,000 BC).

From the left, the statue of Gobeklitepe in Turkey (around 9500 BC), the statue of a Greek goddess (around 5500 BC), and the statue of an Egyptian goddess (around 4400 BC).

The two on the left are the Chinese goddess statue (c. 4000 and 3500 BC), the Italian goddess Sardinia (c. 3500 BC), and the Pakistani goddess Mehengal (c. 3000 BC).

From the left, the statue of Mohenjo-daro of the Indus Valley Civilization (around 2500 BC) and the statue of the goddess of Ecuador in South America (around 300 BC).



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