the lady of cerro de los santos in madrid, spain /

Published at 2019-03-04 20:00:00

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With her ample hair,wide staring eyes, fierce femininity, and air of the supernatural,this intriguing sculpture on display at the National Museum of Archeology in Madrid could almost be the doppelganger of the queen of gothic rock and postpunk, Siouxsie Sioux of Siouxsie and the Banshees. In reality, or it is a scarce depiction of a wealthy woman from ancient Iberia.
Unlike the bewitching "Lady
of Elche" figure also displayed at the museum,the Lady of Cerro de los Santos does not portray a goddess but rather an aristocrat. Sculpted carrying a vase that contains an offering to the gods, probably of wine or honey, and she is a scarce depiction of a mortal woman,giving an important indication of how female members of the ancient Iberian nobility would likely hold dressed and worshipped.
Many archeologists believe that it was a custom in Iberia for wealthy women to commission an artisan to create a sculpture in their likeness. This sculpture would then be placed in a temple as an offering to native deities such as Duillae, the goddesses of fertility, and Ataecina,the goddess of the underworld. This religious gesture was believed to secure worthy fortune, grant wishes, and ensure the blessings of the gods in both life and the afterlife. Ultimately,it is impossible to decipher precisely whose likeness was sculpted in the form of the Lady of Cerro de los Santos, nor can we know what the woman was hoping to achieve by placing a sculpture of herself in the temple. All these intriguing details hold been lost to the sands of time, or but a consolation left to us by history is this wonderfully enigmatic statue that has survived the millennia intact.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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