PDA

View Full Version : Ancient Pig-Shaped Baby Bottle Found



Skywizard
14th December 2013, 14:12
http://static.ddmcdn.com/gif/blogs/dnews-files-2013-12-pig-shaped-bottle-gallery-jpg.jpg


Italian archaeologists have discovered an ancient terracotta pig which worked as a toy as well as a modern-day baby bottle.

Known as guttus, the unique vessel dates back about 2,400 years, when the “heel” of Italy was inhabited by the Messapian people, a tribal group who migrated from Illyria (a region in the western part of the Balkan peninsula) around 1000 B.C.

Featuring pointy ears and human-like eyes, the pig-shaped guttus featured terracotta rattles in its tummy to apparently encourage the baby to sleep after the meal.

The small terracotta pig is one of several rare objects found last May in Manduria, near Taranto in Puglia, when construction work exposed a Messapian tomb.

Cut into rock, the 8- by 4-foot tomb was decorated with ocher, red and blue bands. It contained the remains of two individuals — in line with the Messapian custom of burying family members together in the same grave.

“We found some skeletal remains piled in an angle. Other remains, related to a later burial, occupied the entire tomb,” archaeologist Arcangelo Alessio of the Archaeological Superintendency of Puglia, told Discovery News

Alessio and his team recovered about 30 funerary objects, which have now been cleaned and restored. They included jars, plates, lamps, ointment vases, three baby feeding vessels and two terracotta statuettes depicting female subjects.

Objects such as a black painted basin and an iron blade of a knife suggest a male burial, while a strong clue for a female burial came from a special Messapian pottery vase called trozzella. Featuring four little wheels at the tops of its handle, versions of the vase are often found in the graves of Messapian women.

“Analysis of the funerary objects and their context suggest that the two burials followed one another in the Hellenistic period, between the end of the fourth and the third-second centuries B.C.,” Alessio said.

The presence of three feeding vessels would point to a third burial, possibly belonging to a newborn girl, as suggested by the two terracotta statuettes found in the tomb. Indeed, these sculptures were often placed in burials of young girls.

“We might speculate that the female individual was pregnant at the time of death,” archaeologist Gianfranco Dimitri, who followed the excavation, told Discovery News.

“It’s an intriguing hypothesis, although it is also likely that the tender baby’s bones totally decomposed over the centuries,” he added.

Image: The pig shaped guttus, a 2400-year-old version of a modern-day baby bottle. Credit: With kind permission of the Archaeological Superintendency of Puglia.


Source: http://news.discovery.com/history/archaeology/ancient-pig-shaped-baby-bottle-found-131213.htm


peace...
skywizard

Sidney
15th December 2013, 02:45
A terra cotta TOY? Doesn't seem like it would last long. Not to mention the kid could easily knock him/herself out with it. I somehow think maybe they should re think this toy/baby bottle theory. Seriously, Im not trying to nitpick, it just does not seem logical.

Ellisa
15th December 2013, 06:48
I agree with Sidney. It seems a very impractical feeding cup for a very young child, and is possibly more suitable for a teething older baby who could hold the pig's body him/her self. Usually in situations where newly born children were needing to be fed (for instance after the mother's death, very frequent in past times) a spoon was used and the baby was fed drop by drop, or a rag was soaked in the liquid and the baby could suck at it. Of course these were very inefficient substitutes for breast-feeding or modern formula and so most of these unfortunate babies died if no wet nurse could be found. This collection of bodies and bones sounds very sad indeed for the little family involved.

Vitalux
15th December 2013, 07:13
I agree with Sidney. It seems a very impractical feeding cup for a very young child, and is possibly more suitable for a teething older baby who could hold the pig's body him/her self.


or

it could even of been a rectal enema apparatus.

http://www.mayavase.com/tran/fig%2010%201092.jpg
One reason for taking the liquid in enema form is that in this process, the alcoholic content does not have to pass through the stomach or the liver. Therefore, the entire volume of alcohol goes quickly and directly into the blood stream, providing a faster "high". There are depictions on Maya vases of both supernaturals and mortals ingesting alcohol by both methods.

We certainly know in ancient times they enjoyed alcohol enemas

Sidney
16th December 2013, 16:10
I agree with Sidney. It seems a very impractical feeding cup for a very young child, and is possibly more suitable for a teething older baby who could hold the pig's body him/her self.


or

it could even of been a rectal enema apparatus.

http://www.mayavase.com/tran/fig%2010%201092.jpg
One reason for taking the liquid in enema form is that in this process, the alcoholic content does not have to pass through the stomach or the liver. Therefore, the entire volume of alcohol goes quickly and directly into the blood stream, providing a faster "high". There are depictions on Maya vases of both supernaturals and mortals ingesting alcohol by both methods.

We certainly know in ancient times they enjoyed alcohol enemas

OMG, who knew? LOL