All Object Lessons
Belief & Identity

The Venus of Willendorf: A Small Stone, A Big Question

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, art, ethics, science, anthropology
Core question What was a small carved woman doing 30,000 years ago in Ice Age Europe — and how do we look at an object when we cannot ask the people who made it?
The Venus of Willendorf, found in 1908 in Austria. Carved about 30,000 years ago. One of the most famous prehistoric objects ever discovered — and one of the most argued-over. Photo: Anagoria / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 3.0
Introduction

On a hot August day in 1908, archaeologists working near a railway cutting in eastern Austria pulled a small stone figure from the earth. She was about 11 cm tall, carved from pale limestone, and tinted with traces of red ochre. She showed a woman with a large rounded body, full breasts, and a head covered in rings — perhaps braids, perhaps a cap. She had no face. The earth around her contained tools and animal bones from the Ice Age — the time when much of Europe was covered in ice, and the people who lived there were hunter-gatherers, following herds of mammoth, reindeer, and horse. The figure they found was about 30,000 years old. She is one of the oldest carved images of a human being ever discovered. Her name, the Venus of Willendorf, was given by the men who found her, after the Roman goddess of love. Today, many scholars prefer to call her the Woman of Willendorf, since calling her Venus tells us only what 1908 men thought, not what 28,000 BCE people thought. We do not know who carved her. We do not know what she meant to them. We do not know if she was a goddess, a portrait, a charm, a toy, a teaching object, or something we have no word for. This lesson asks how to look honestly at an object from a world we can barely imagine.

The object
Origin
Found in 1908 near the village of Willendorf in Lower Austria, by archaeologist Josef Szombathy. Made by hunter-gatherers of the Gravettian culture in central Europe.
Period
About 30,000 years ago (carved between roughly 28,000 and 25,000 BCE)
Made of
Oolitic limestone — a soft sedimentary rock, easy to carve. Notably, the limestone is not local to where she was found, suggesting the figure or the stone travelled some distance. Traces of red ochre still survive on her surface.
Size
Just 11.1 cm tall — about the size of a small banana. Light enough to be carried in a pocket or pouch.
Number of objects
This particular figure is the most famous example, but over 200 similar 'Venus figurines' have been found across Europe, from France to Russia, ranging from about 35,000 to 11,000 years old.
Where it is now
The Natural History Museum in Vienna, Austria, where she has been kept since 1908.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. Most students may have seen this figure in a textbook and been told she is a 'fertility goddess'. The honest answer is much more uncertain. How will you teach the uncertainty without losing students' interest?
  2. Carved images of women are some of the oldest art we have. How will you make sure students take this seriously, rather than treating the figure as embarrassing or strange?
  3. The figure was named 'Venus' by men in 1908. Today, many scholars use 'Woman of Willendorf' instead. How will you handle the language carefully?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine a world about 30,000 years ago. Much of Europe is covered in ice. The land is cold, dry, and treeless in places. Mammoths, woolly rhinos, reindeer, and horses move in herds across the open plains. Small groups of human hunter-gatherers — perhaps 20 or 30 people — follow the herds, hunting, gathering plants, making clothes from animal skins. In this world, someone takes a small piece of yellow limestone. They sit by a fire. They carve, slowly, with stone and bone tools. They make a small figure of a woman. Why might they do this?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

This is where honest teaching begins. The truth is that we do not know. We have many theories, and any of them could be right, or several could be right at once. Some scholars think the figure was a religious object — perhaps a spirit, an ancestor, a goddess. Some think she was a charm meant to bring good fortune in childbirth or hunting. Some think she was a self-portrait, made by a pregnant woman looking down at her own body (one researcher pointed out that the figure's perspective — large breasts and belly seen from above, small feet — matches what a pregnant woman would see when she looks down at herself). Some think she was a teaching object, used to show young people about anatomy or pregnancy. Some think she was a doll, or a piece of art for its own sake. The figure is small enough to be held in the hand, suggesting she was carried. She has no flat base, suggesting she was not meant to stand on display. Some have argued she was meant to be lain on her side. Different theories fit different parts of the evidence. Students should see that 'we don't know' is a real, honest answer in archaeology — and that holding several possibilities at once is more careful than choosing one.

2
The figure has no face. Her eyes, nose, and mouth are missing. Instead, her head is carved with seven horizontal rings, sometimes interpreted as braided hair, sometimes as a woven cap or hat. Meanwhile, her body is shown in great detail. Her breasts, belly, hips, knees, and even her vulva are all carefully carved. What might the absence of a face tell us?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

A useful question with several possible answers. One: she may have been intentionally not an individual person. If she represents motherhood, fertility, or all women, then leaving out her specific features makes her stand for many. Two: the head may have been less important to the maker than the body. Three: the rings on the head may have been the most important detail, and the maker concentrated their effort there. Four: the figure may have been meant to wear something — a fabric covering or hood — that made the face redundant. We genuinely cannot know. But the choice is striking. The maker had the skill to carve detail. They chose not to carve a face. That choice tells us something, even if we cannot say exactly what. Students should see that the absence of features is itself information. Sometimes what is missing tells us as much as what is there.

3
When the figure was found in 1908, the archaeologist Josef Szombathy named her 'Venus' after the Roman goddess of love and beauty. Other similar figures found around Europe were given the same name — Venus of Brassempouy, Venus of Hohle Fels, Venus of Dolní Věstonice. The name has stuck. But many modern scholars are uncomfortable with it. Why?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several reasons. First: 'Venus' brings in Roman ideas about love and beauty that almost certainly do not apply to a woman carved 28,000 years before Rome existed. Calling the figure 'Venus' tells us about 1908 archaeologists, not about 28,000 BCE Ice Age hunter-gatherers. Second: the name was sometimes used dismissively. Some early writers called the figure 'grotesque' or 'ugly' compared to classical Venus statues — not realising that they were comparing two completely different things. Third: 'Venus' suggests we know what the figure meant. We do not. Many modern scholars prefer 'Woman of Willendorf' or simply 'the Willendorf figurine' — names that describe what we see, not what we think it meant. This matters because language shapes how we look. Calling her 'Venus' leads to one set of assumptions. Calling her 'Woman of Willendorf' leads to a more open one. Students should see that the names we use carry hidden ideas. This is true for many objects, not just this one.

4
More than 200 similar figurines have been found across a huge area — from the Pyrenees in France, across central Europe, to Siberia. They span more than 20,000 years of prehistory. Many show similar features: rounded body, full breasts, often no face, often small carefully shown hands and feet. They are often small enough to be carried. What does this tell us?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

That whatever the figures meant, the meaning was shared across thousands of kilometres and many thousands of years. This is a striking thought. Different groups of hunter-gatherers, separated by huge distances and many generations, were making similar things. Either the idea travelled — perhaps along the same routes that brought stone tools and shells — or many groups arrived at similar shapes independently because they were responding to similar parts of human life (motherhood, the human body, ancestors, some shared spiritual idea). We cannot know. But the pattern is real. The figures are part of a tradition, even if we cannot name it. Students should see that this is one of the oldest 'art movements' in human history. It lasted longer than any later art movement we know — longer than ancient Egypt, longer than Rome, longer than the modern era. The 'Woman of Willendorf' is one figure in a much larger story. End the discovery here. The honesty is the lesson.

What this object teaches

The Venus of Willendorf is a small stone figurine of a woman, just 11 cm tall, carved about 30,000 years ago by hunter-gatherers in what is now Austria. She was found in 1908. She is one of over 200 similar figurines found across Europe and into Siberia, spanning more than 20,000 years of the Ice Age. She is carved from limestone that is not local to where she was found. She has a rounded body, full breasts, large hips, and a head covered in rings of carved braid or cap — but no face. Traces of red ochre still survive on her surface. Many people have called her a 'fertility goddess', but the honest answer is that we do not know who carved her, who carried her, or what she meant. She was named 'Venus' by the men who found her, after the Roman goddess. Many modern scholars prefer 'Woman of Willendorf'. The figure is one of the oldest carved images of a human ever found — a small piece of mystery from a world we can barely imagine.

QuestionWhat many people are toldWhat we actually know
What is she?A fertility goddessWe do not know — that is one theory among several
Who made her?A manWe do not know. Could have been a man, a woman, a child. Could have been one person or several.
Why doesn't she have a face?It just was not importantWe do not know. The maker had the skill — they chose not to carve one.
Is she unique?Yes — she is the only oneNo — over 200 similar figurines have been found across Europe and into Siberia
Should we call her Venus?Yes — that is her nameMany scholars now prefer 'Woman of Willendorf'. 'Venus' brings in Roman ideas that probably do not apply.
Key words
Palaeolithic
The earliest and longest period of human prehistory, when people made tools from stone and lived as hunter-gatherers. The Upper Palaeolithic, when the Woman of Willendorf was made, ran from about 50,000 to 12,000 years ago.
Example: During the Upper Palaeolithic, humans first made cave paintings, jewellery, sewing needles, and figurines like the Woman of Willendorf.
Hunter-gatherer
A way of life in which people get food by hunting animals and gathering wild plants, rather than by farming. All humans were hunter-gatherers for over 90 percent of our history.
Example: The people who carved the Woman of Willendorf were hunter-gatherers. They followed herds of mammoth, reindeer, and horse across Ice Age Europe.
Gravettian culture
A way of life that spread across central Europe between about 33,000 and 22,000 years ago. Gravettian people made distinctive stone tools, sewn clothing, jewellery, and many of the famous 'Venus' figurines.
Example: The Woman of Willendorf is a Gravettian artefact. She comes from the same broad culture that made other figurines from Russia to France.
Oolitic limestone
A soft sedimentary rock made of small rounded grains called ooliths. It is easy to carve. The Woman of Willendorf is made of oolitic limestone.
Example: The limestone in the Woman of Willendorf is not local to where she was found. The stone — or the finished figure — must have travelled.
Red ochre
A naturally occurring iron-rich mineral that produces a red-brown pigment. Used by humans for at least 100,000 years for body painting, art, and possibly burial.
Example: Traces of red ochre still survive on the Woman of Willendorf. The colour was probably much brighter when she was first made.
Figurine
A small carved or moulded figure of a human or animal. Distinct from a sculpture, which is usually larger. The Woman of Willendorf is a figurine.
Example: Hundreds of figurines from the Palaeolithic have been found across Europe and Asia. Most show humans, especially women. Some show animals like horses or lions.
Use this in other subjects
  • History: Build a class timeline showing the Woman of Willendorf in deep time. She was made about 30,000 years ago. The Egyptian pyramids are about 4,500 years old. The Roman Empire ended about 1,500 years ago. Modern humans first appeared about 300,000 years ago. Where does she fit?
  • Science: Discuss how archaeologists figure out how old something is. Methods include carbon dating (for organic materials), examining the layer of earth where it was found, and comparing it with similar objects of known age. The Woman of Willendorf was dated using all three. Try a simple class activity: stack books to represent layers of earth, then 'find' objects in each layer.
  • Geography: Find Austria on a map. Locate the Danube River, near which the figure was found. Discuss what Europe was like 30,000 years ago — a much colder climate, ice caps further south, mammoths roaming the plains. The world the figure came from is not the world we see today.
  • Art: Look closely at the figure. What features did the maker care most about? Discuss how artists across history have made choices about what to include and what to leave out. The Woman of Willendorf is one early example of a tradition that runs through all human art.
  • Ethics: Hold a class discussion: 'Should we call her Venus or Woman of Willendorf?' Strong answers will see that names carry assumptions. The same is true of many objects from cultures we cannot easily ask. Naming is part of how we look.
  • Citizenship: The figure is housed in Vienna. She has not been formally requested by any community for return — partly because the people who made her have no clear modern descendants. Discuss what 'belonging' means for objects that are older than any modern country or named people.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

The Woman of Willendorf is definitely a fertility goddess.

Right

This is one theory among several. We genuinely do not know what she meant to the people who made her. Honest archaeology says 'maybe', not 'is'.

Why

Calling her 'definitely a fertility goddess' tells us about 19th and 20th century ideas, not about 28,000 BCE ones. The honest answer is more uncertain — and more interesting.

Wrong

She is unique.

Right

Over 200 similar figurines have been found across Europe and into Siberia. She is part of a long tradition that lasted more than 20,000 years.

Why

This matters because it tells us that whatever she meant, the meaning was widely shared across many groups and many thousands of years.

Wrong

Prehistoric people were primitive and unsophisticated.

Right

The makers of the Woman of Willendorf were anatomically modern humans, with the same brains and abilities we have. They made art, music, sewn clothing, jewellery, and complex tools. They taught skills across generations.

Why

'Primitive' is a word that often hides our own assumptions. The makers of this figure were as fully human as anyone alive today.

Wrong

'Venus' is just her name and there is no problem with it.

Right

'Venus' was given by 1908 archaeologists, who borrowed a Roman goddess's name. The Woman of Willendorf lived 28,000 years before Rome. Many modern scholars prefer 'Woman of Willendorf' because it does not import ideas that probably do not apply.

Why

Names carry assumptions. Choosing different names is one way to look more carefully at what we actually know.

Teaching this with care

The Woman of Willendorf is a representation of a female body, and the lesson involves discussing breasts, belly, hips, and (briefly) the carved vulva on the figure. Teach this calmly and matter-of-factly, without drama or embarrassment. Use neutral, anatomical language. Some students will be more mature than others; treat the figure with the same respect you would treat any work of art. Do not suggest she is 'fat' or 'ugly' — these are modern judgements about body shape that have nothing to do with how 28,000 BCE people would have seen her, and using them can hurt students with concerns about their own bodies. Do not present 'fertility goddess' as a settled fact; treat it as one theory among several. Be careful with the name 'Venus'; introduce both names and explain why scholars now prefer 'Woman of Willendorf'. When discussing the people who made her, avoid the word 'primitive' — they were anatomically modern humans. Some of your students may come from religious backgrounds where prehistoric figurines are interpreted differently; treat alternative views with respect, but stick to the archaeological evidence as the lesson's spine. Finally, do not turn this into a 'gender' lesson; the lesson is about how we interpret objects from people we cannot ask. The figure happens to be female, and that is part of the story, but not the whole of it.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Woman of Willendorf.

  1. What is the Woman of Willendorf, and how old is she?

    She is a small limestone figurine of a woman, about 11 cm tall, carved about 30,000 years ago by hunter-gatherers in what is now Austria. She was found in 1908.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions her size, the material, and the rough age. Specific dates are helpful but not essential.
  2. Why is it not really correct to call her a 'fertility goddess'?

    This is one theory among several. We genuinely do not know what she meant to the people who made her. She might have been a goddess, an ancestor, a self-portrait, a charm, a teaching object, or something else. Honest archaeology holds the question open.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention more than one possible interpretation. The point is that 'fertility goddess' is not proven fact.
  3. Why do many modern scholars prefer 'Woman of Willendorf' over 'Venus'?

    'Venus' was given by 1908 archaeologists, after a Roman goddess. The figure was made 28,000 years before Rome existed, so the Roman name imports ideas that probably do not apply. 'Woman of Willendorf' describes what we see without making assumptions.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that explains the problem with importing Roman ideas onto a much older object. The naming question is the heart of the issue.
  4. How is the Woman of Willendorf part of a wider tradition?

    Over 200 similar figurines have been found across Europe and into Siberia, spanning more than 20,000 years. She is one example of a long tradition of carving female figures, not a unique object.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention the geographical spread and the long time span. Specific numbers are helpful but not essential.
  5. Why is 'we don't know' an honest answer in archaeology?

    Because we cannot ask the people who made the figure. They lived 30,000 years ago and left no writing. We have only the object itself. The honest scholar accepts uncertainty rather than inventing a tidy story.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises the limits of what we can know about people from deep prehistory. The honesty is the point.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. If a small object from your time was found by archaeologists 30,000 years from now, what would they get right? What would they get wrong?

    This is a useful question because it puts students in the position of the people who made the Woman of Willendorf. Future archaeologists might find a phone, a coin, a key, a child's toy. They would notice the shape and material. They might guess wrong about how it was used. They might miss its emotional meaning entirely. Strong answers will see that physical objects carry only some of their meaning, and that meaning often does not survive without words. The Woman of Willendorf has been with us for 30,000 years. Her meaning has not.
  2. Was the figure made by a man, a woman, or someone else? Why might it matter?

    We do not know. For a long time, scholars assumed she was made by a man, partly because they assumed all art was made by men. More recent scholars have pointed out that the figure's perspective — looking down at a pregnant body — might suggest a woman made her. Strong answers will see that 'who made it' has been answered differently in different times, and that those answers say more about the answerers than about the figure. End by saying that this kind of questioning has improved archaeology over the past 50 years.
  3. Some people are uncomfortable with how the figure shows a woman's body. Others see her as beautiful or powerful. What do you think — and why?

    This is a personal question and students will have different reactions. Push them past quick answers in either direction. Do not allow the figure to become a target for jokes about body shape. Strong answers will see that 'beauty' is a cultural idea — a 28,000 BCE viewer would have seen her differently from a 1908 viewer or a 2026 viewer. The figure may not have been meant to be 'beautiful' at all. She may have been meant to be powerful, sacred, or simply useful. End by reminding students that thoughtful people see her in many ways, and that the figure has lasted longer than any of those ways of seeing.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'What is the oldest piece of art you can think of?' Take guesses. Then say: 'There is a small stone figure of a woman, just 11 cm tall, that was carved about 30,000 years ago. We are going to find out about her.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the Woman of Willendorf: small, made of limestone, found in 1908 in Austria, carved by hunter-gatherers about 30,000 years ago. She has a rounded body, no face, and rings around her head. Pause and ask: 'What might she have been for?' Listen to answers. List them on the board, without saying which is right. They will probably include 'goddess', 'doll', 'lucky charm', 'self-portrait', and others.
  3. UNDO THE WRONG STORIES (15 min)
    On the board, write three statements: (1) She is definitely a fertility goddess. (2) She is unique. (3) She was named 'Venus' because that is what she is. Take each in turn. Replace each with what we now know — 'fertility goddess' is one theory; over 200 similar figures exist; 'Venus' was a name given in 1908 that may not fit. End by asking: 'Why is it sometimes hard to say we don't know?'
  4. THE LIMITS OF EVIDENCE ACTIVITY (10 min)
    In small groups, students discuss: 'Imagine someone 30,000 years from now finds one small object from this classroom. What might it be? What would they get right about us? What might they get wrong?' Each group picks one object and presents both sides. The point is to feel how hard interpretation is — and how the Woman of Willendorf's meaning may have been just as obvious to her makers as our objects are to us.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'Now that you know more, what do you think she was for?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'The honest answer is that we do not know. She has been with us for 30,000 years. She has outlasted many ideas about her. She will probably outlast ours. The question we can answer is what she shows us — that 30,000 years ago, someone with the same brain as ours sat by a fire and chose to make this. That is enough to think about for a long time.'
Classroom materials
What Could She Be?
Instructions: On the board, list the main theories about the Woman of Willendorf: (1) a fertility goddess, (2) a self-portrait by a pregnant woman, (3) a teaching object about pregnancy, (4) a lucky charm, (5) a doll, (6) an ancestor figure, (7) we have no idea. In small groups, students rank the theories from most to least likely, giving reasons. Each group presents their ranking. Discuss: there is no single right answer, but the reasoning matters.
Example: In Mr Hofmann's class, one group ranked 'self-portrait' first, arguing that the figure's perspective fits what a pregnant woman would see when she looks down at herself. Another group ranked 'ancestor figure' first, arguing that the absence of a face makes her stand for many people. The teacher said: 'You have just done what professional archaeologists do. They line up the theories. They give reasons. They argue. They mostly do not agree. That is honest work.'
Make Your Own Figurine
Instructions: Each student gets a small lump of clay, soap, or wet earth. They have ten minutes to make a small figure of a person. The figure must be roughly the size of a thumb. After ten minutes, students look at each other's figures. Discuss: what did you choose to show? What did you leave out? Now imagine your figure being found 30,000 years from now. What would the finders think it meant?
Example: In Mrs Lehrer's class, students made small clay figures. Some were detailed; some were simple. The teacher said: 'You all made choices. You chose what to show. You chose what to leave out. The Woman of Willendorf's maker did the same. They had a reason. We will never know what it was. But you, in this room, can feel the choices they made. That is closer than you might think.'
Naming the Past
Instructions: On the board, write three names that have been used for the figure: 'Venus of Willendorf' (1908), 'Woman of Willendorf' (modern preference), 'the Willendorf figurine' (most neutral). In pairs, students discuss: what does each name suggest? Which would you use? Why? Each pair reports their choice. Discuss: the names we use shape what we see. This is true for many objects beyond this one.
Example: In one class, students mostly chose 'Woman of Willendorf'. One group chose 'Willendorf figurine' as the most honest. The teacher said: 'Every time you say a name, you are making a small choice about what you think the figure is. The 1908 archaeologists made one choice. We can make a different one. The figure is the same — but the way we look changes.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Acheulean hand axe for an even older object — over 1.5 million years older — that also raises questions about what the makers were thinking.
  • Try a lesson on the obsidian blade for another deep-time stone object, this one with much clearer evidence of how it was used.
  • Try a lesson on cave paintings for another form of Palaeolithic art that lets us look at the same world the Woman of Willendorf came from.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on representations of the human body across history. The Willendorf figure is one early example of a tradition that runs through all human art.
  • Connect this lesson to ethics with a longer discussion of how we name and interpret objects from people we cannot ask. The same questions apply to many archaeological finds.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship with a discussion of how women have been represented in art across history — and who has done the representing. The Woman of Willendorf is part of that very long story.
Key takeaways
  • The Woman of Willendorf is a small limestone figurine, just 11 cm tall, carved about 30,000 years ago by hunter-gatherers in what is now Austria.
  • She is one of over 200 similar figurines found across Europe and into Siberia, spanning more than 20,000 years of the Ice Age.
  • She has a rounded body, full breasts, large hips, and a head covered in carved rings — but no face.
  • She has been called a 'fertility goddess', but this is one theory among several. We genuinely do not know what she meant to the people who made her.
  • She was named 'Venus' by 1908 archaeologists. Many modern scholars now prefer 'Woman of Willendorf', because the Roman name imports ideas that probably do not apply.
  • The honest answer to many questions about her is 'we don't know'. That is not a failure of archaeology. It is what careful work looks like when the people we are studying lived 30,000 years before writing was invented.
Sources
  • The Woman of Willendorf (museum object page) — Naturhistorisches Museum Wien (2024) [museum]
  • Toward Decolonizing Gender: Female Vision in the Upper Paleolithic — Catherine Hodge McCoid and LeRoy McDermott (1996) [academic]
  • The Mind in the Cave: Consciousness and the Origins of Art — David Lewis-Williams (2002) [academic]
  • Why is the Venus of Willendorf naked? New analysis of the iconic statuette — BBC News (2022) [news]
  • Venus figurines (overview) — Smithsonian Magazine (2019) [news]