If you want to discover your genetic history and where you came from... you’ve found the right place!

888-806-2588

review of scientific and news articles on dna testing and popular genetics

From Matriarchy to Patriarchy: Year 3000 BCE

Thursday, October 28, 2010
The Greatest Divide in Human Genealogy and History

You hear a lot of talk about the Neolithic Revolution--the gradual adoption and spread of agriculture, animal husbandry and town life by our prehistoric European ancestors--but the most important epoch in the course of civilization goes largely unnoticed in the history books. That was the abrupt shift from matriarchy and worship of the Great Goddess to the warrior-based governments and language stocks of the steppe-dwelling Indo-Aryan barbarians who invaded Old Europe beginning in the late fourth millennium BCE.

The roots of Europe's original female-oriented religion are lost in the mists of the early Stone Age, and may even precede the arrival of "modern humans" in Europe and be part of the heritage of Neanderthals. This substratum of a long-lasting peaceful hunter-gatherer society organized around the religion of the Great Goddess absorbed the spreading practice of agriculture from the Middle East beginning in the fifth millennium and reached its apogee of development in a pure form in the fourth millennium.

The cult of the Great Goddess, depicted here in an enthroned version with flanking felines from Çatal Hüyük, an 8,000-year-old shrine in present-day Turkey (p. 107), was the lifelong object of study by Lithuanian-American archeologist Marija Gimbutas, whose most influential book is The Language of the Goddess (London:  Thames & Hudson, 2006). 

The axe fell on this ancient civilization--quite literally--around 3000 BCE. As confirmed in Jane McIntosh's Handbook to Life in Prehistoric Europe (New York:  Facts on File, 2006), there was a clear line of demarcation between old and new Europe, from the Balkans to Britain, Spain and Scandinavia. The archeological record tells the story of a sweeping and abrupt end to things. The first metal weapons appear in the graves of elite males along with hoards of gold and jewels. Axes previously used to clear forests for agriculture are now battle-axes. Burials are single rather than family and clan-oriented. Whole villages were massacred and depopulated. Fortifications grew as violence escalated. The horse, venerated as just one of the totem animals of the Goddess since the early Stone Age, becomes the symbol of the warrior, along with the chariot and boat. Rock art features ithyphallic warriors wielding weapons or shooting arrows at each other. The transition can also be seen in the establishment of the Pharaohs in Egypt about 3500 BCE.

The invaders brought their male pantheon of war gods, Indo-European languages, aristocratic forms of government and Central Asian/Caucasian genes. The goddess cult underwent radical male adaptations, surviving in out-of-the-way places like Crete and Brittany

So, rather than one transformation, European civilization first went through a Neolithic Revolution, then conversion to warrior-dominated patriarchal societies. It can be postulated that the matriarchal societies eagerly adopted agriculture but exhausted soils, destroyed vital forests and became weaker and smaller-bodied due to a changed diet, falling prey around 3000 BCE to the barbarian warriors of the steppe, who found the accumulation of wealth and unprotected agrarian settlements of Old Europe easy pickings. Climate change could have been a contributing factor.

James Joyce called history "the nightmare from which one cannot wake." If we take a long view of human events, this nightmare began about five thousand years ago. Other-worldly religions like Christianity introduced a further element of alienation and turning away from the sources of life. Before that, people were happily alive, awake, in tune with nature and celebrated life under the auspices of matriarchy.

Assailants with bows and arrows attack

a fortified Neolithic settlement in Furfooze,

France, who defend themselves by hurling

stones and raising clubs. Reconstruction

from Louis Figuier, Primitive Man (London: 

Chatto and Windus, 1876). 

Comments

trumae jackson commented on 28-Oct-2010 06:20 PM


Blogger assumes a matriarchal society was "happily alive," tuned in and harmonious. Probably not.

Anonymous commented on 28-Oct-2010 06:54 PM

"To an archeologist it is an extensively documented historical reality... This culture took keen delight in the natural wonders of this world. Its people did not produce lethal weapons or build forts in inaccessible places, as their successors did, even when they were acquainted with metallurgy... This was a long-lasting period of remarkable creativity and stability, an age free of strife. Their culture was a culture of art...." (Gimbutas, pp. 320-1).

Alan Wade commented on 27-Feb-2011 06:23 AM

I'm in the process of building an Ancient World page on my web site and I was interested in your "From Matriarchy to Patriarchy: Year 3000 BCE", something of our past that I feel has too little emphasis.. What I want to show is that history was not linear
as is inferred, in support of other branches of science. I would like to link to your site from my page if that is OK with you. I will understand if you consider my stuff too radical on other pages. Regards Alan Wade


Please tell us what you think

Name, website, and email are optional; if we publish your comment, your name will be shown, and may be linked to your website if provided, but the email you enter will not be published.





Captcha Image

Bookmark and Share

Recent Posts


Tags

Arabia genomics labs population genetics King Arthur Gunnar Thompson Melanesians Telltown Chris Stringer Melungeons Etruscans Marija Gimbutas Chuetas George Starr-Bresette megapopulations Barack Obama haplogroup T Maronites Magdalenian culture Population genetics Belgium cannibalism Khazars Cajuns genealogy Riane Eisler Abenaki Indians Tutankamun Cherokee DNA rock art European DNA clan symbols population isolates Shlomo Sand Current Anthropology prehistory Keros anthropology Michael Grant Basques epigenetics genetics Neanderthals Jewish genetics Asian DNA Stone Age haplogroup E Indo-Europeans Tifaneg mental foramen Austronesian, Filipinos, Australoid DNA testing companies Italy Micmac Indians Britain Oxford Nanopore DNA Forums Acadians EURO DNA Fingerprint Test Choctaw Indians Bradshaw Foundation Celts Jone Entine Zuni Indians Gregory Mendel haplogroup J BATWING North African DNA haplogroup B Caucasian Wendy Roth Algonquian Indians Cohen Modal Haplotype Greeks religion news Peter Parham immunology China Majorca Nikola Tesla George van der Merwede Ashkenazi Jews ethnic markers Charles Darwin Colin Renfrew Panther's Lodge HapMap Gravettian culture FOX News Iran Kentucky Abraham Lincoln BBCNews Alabama Paleolithic Age Bode Technology statistics Sea Peoples forensics INORA Hohokam Indians French Canadians linguistics Arizona State University American history N. Brent Kennedy Middle Ages evolution Ireland African DNA Anglo-Saxons Denisovans Kurgan Culture human leukocyte antigens Donald N. Yates Akhenaten Irish history Normans Dienekes Anthropology Blog archeology autosomal DNA Phyllis Starnes Anne Marie Fine Cornwall Hopi Indians Europe ethnicity Y chromosome DNA Stephen Oppenheimer Jews and Muslims in British Colonial America Theodore Steinberg Pima Indians seafaring education Helladic art Jews Roma People ancient DNA Arabic Melungeon Union Neolithic Revolution history of science Native American DNA Test Wales Pueblo Indians Middle Eastern DNA haplogroup U Phoenicians Havasupai Indians M. J. Harper climate change Applied Epistemology DNA Fingerprint Test Melungeon Heritage Association medicine Sorbs Tintagel surnames England health and medicine Stacy Schiff Nova Scotia Turkic DNA Russia Elizabeth C. Hirschman Lebanon Mary Settegast occipital bun French DNA Y chromosomal haplogroups Finnish people Great Goddess ethics Plato Egyptians Joseph Jacobs Cleopatra personal genomics mitochondrial DNA India Maya Bryan Sykes Gypsies human migrations myths haplogroup X Freemont Indians corn Teresa Panther-Yates Anasazi Native American DNA DNA Fingerprint Test

Archive