The research direction represented by the Archaeomythological Institute is currently experiencing a renaissance after DNA research has confirmed its central hypotheses. IAM’s European branch makes research on Old European civilization and its influence on Western culture available to audiences in versatile forms.

The archaeologist Marija Gimbutas discovered Old Europe, or the Danube Civilization, in the 1980s. This civilization had intriguing features such as a pre-democratic social structure in which peace and gender equality reigned, as well as a cosmology based on female divinity. Many inventions were conceived for the first time in human history. The arrival of the Indo-Europeans to Southeastern Europe caused a collision; the social structure became hierarchical and conflict became a part of everyday life. Female divinity divided, gaining male deities as counterparts. Invention transformed into the refinement of already existing inventions.

Our blog series and educational videos have presented these features and the effects of this cultural collision and fusion. Going forward, instead of monthly posts, we will write blog posts in relation to relevant events and publications. We will provide information on new publications, events and lectures.

Extensive research by Marija Gimbutas and Harald Haarmann, the director of IAM’s European branch, provides the background for IAM’s activities. Docent Kaarina Kailo represents the same research orientation in Nordic folklore studies.

 

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I reject the assumption that civilization refers only to androcratic warrior societies. The generative basis of any civilization lies in its degree of artistic creation, aesthetic achievements, nonmaterial values, and freedom which make life meaningful and enjoyable for all its citizens, as well as a balance of powers between the sexes.
— Marija Gimbutas