Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, New York University, New York, USA.
J Hist Med Allied Sci. 2024 Apr 2;79(2):101-114. doi: 10.1093/jhmas/jrad038.
The numerous votive uteri found across the central Italian peninsula from the fourth to first centuries BCE are puzzlingly evocative of the human simplex uterus, which is visually distinct from the bicornuate uteri characteristic of most other mammals. However, human dissection is not attested for this time and place, while animal butchery was common. This article uses modern veterinary anatomical imagery to argue that animal uteri - specifically as they appear when pregnant - were indeed models underlying the votive depictions. Some of the variant forms of the votives are highly evocative of various features of the pregnant bicornuate uterus. Further, medical views on the human uterus throughout classical antiquity were informed by animal uteri. Taken together, the visual and textual evidence indicate that animal models were inextricably integrated into ancient conceptions of the human uterus across the classical world, including in the production of the Italic votives in question.
在公元前四世纪至公元一世纪的意大利半岛中部,发现了大量的崇拜子宫的文物,这些文物令人费解地让人联想到人类的单子宫,与大多数其他哺乳动物的双角子宫明显不同。然而,在这个时期和地点,并没有人体解剖的证据,而动物屠宰则很常见。本文利用现代兽医解剖图像来论证,动物子宫——特别是在怀孕时的样子——确实是这些崇拜性描绘的基础模型。一些崇拜物的变体形式非常生动地描绘了怀孕的双角子宫的各种特征。此外,在整个古典时代,医学对人类子宫的观点都受到了动物子宫的影响。综上所述,视觉和文本证据表明,动物模型在整个古典世界中都不可避免地融入了人们对人类子宫的概念,包括对所讨论的伊特鲁里亚崇拜子宫文物的制作。