Cueva de los Casares
Cueva de los Casares | |
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Native name Spanish: Cueva de los Casares | |
Location | Riba de Saelices, Spain |
Coordinates | 40°57′27″N 2°17′27″W / 40.9575°N 2.290928°WCoordinates: 40°57′27″N 2°17′27″W / 40.9575°N 2.290928°W |
Official name: Cueva de los Casares | |
Type | Non-movable |
Criteria | Monument |
Designated | 1935[1] |
Reference no. | RI-51-0001089 |
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Cueva de los Casares is a cave in Riba de Saelices in Guadalajara, Spain. Discovered in 1933, it contains a number of paleolithic cave paintings, and is most notable for a series of paintings depicting what some have argued is the earliest representation of human understanding of the reproductive process, featuring images of copulation (perhaps mediated by a mysterious shaman figure), pregnancy, childbirth, and family life. Mammoths and other animals feature frequently in the illustrations. It was declared Bien de Interés Cultural in 1935.[1]
There are many representations of animals, anthropomorphs (human-like figures), and ideomorphs (including penises, vulvas, tools, and more abstract images).
The cave and its paintings are little known to scholars outside Spain.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Database of protected buildings (movable and non-movable) of the Ministry of Culture of Spain (Spanish).