Matrilineal Kinship In Aegean Prehistory: Settlements, Figurines, and the Absence of Men, 16 October | AllEvents

Matrilineal Kinship In Aegean Prehistory: Settlements, Figurines, and the Absence of Men

The Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture

Highlights

Thu, 16 Oct, 2025 at 06:00 pm

The Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture

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Date & Location

Thu, 16 Oct, 2025 at 06:00 pm (PDT)

The Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture

2230 W 1st Ave, Spokane, WA 99201-5414, United States

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About the event

Matrilineal Kinship In Aegean Prehistory: Settlements, Figurines, and the Absence of Men
Spokane Society of the Archaeological Institute of America (AIA) Lecture

Thursday, October 16, 2025
6:30 pm - Lecture

MAC Auditorium or Zoom Meeting (Meeting ID - 841 2068 4037; Passcode: 004215)
Free and open to the public



October Lecture - Matrilineal Kinship In Aegean Prehistory: Settlements, Figurines, and the Absence of Men

Were communities in Prehistoric Greece Matriarchal, Matrilineal, or simply centered around women? This question has fascinated archaeologists for decades. Early on, figurines of women were often seen as "Mother Goddesses," meaning female deities often representing motherhood, fertility, and creation, but feminist scholars later cautioned against such broad interpretations. Still, the idea that ancient societies may have been organized around maternal kinship and matrilineal descent--where family ties pass through the mother--has resurfaced in recent years. In this talk, Dr. Sabina Cvecek revisits the debate, exploring what different types of evidence ethnographic examples to show that matrilineal kinship does not automatically mean women ruled, a key distinction for better understanding how these early societies were structured.


Dr. Sabine Cvecek, find out more about Dr. Cvecek

This lecture is sponsored by the National AIA organization.

The Spokane Chapter of the AIA is proud to provide a lecture series from September - April on various archaeological topics. The AIA promotes archaeological inquiry and public understanding of the material record of the human past to foster an appreciation of diverse cultures and our shared humanity. Find out more about the Archaeological Institute of America here.

2025-26 AIA Lectures:
November 20 - Poggio Civitate's Etrustcan Workshop: A Cross-Craft Perspective

January 15 - Early Peoples in the Plateau: Nimíipuu Knowledge and Landscape Adaptation in the Bitterroot Mountains


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Also check out other Meetups in Spokane, Workshops in Spokane.

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The Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture, 2230 W 1st Ave, Spokane, WA 99201-5414, United States
Matrilineal Kinship In Aegean Prehistory: Settlements, Figurines, and the Absence of Men, 16 October | AllEvents
Matrilineal Kinship In Aegean Prehistory: Settlements, Figurines, and the Absence of Men
Thu, 16 Oct, 2025 at 06:00 pm