Action Figure Circa 350 BC
Other Forums: Action Figure Chatter, Custom Workstation, Figure Realm Comments and Questions, Off Topic, Trading Post

Action Figure Circa 350 BC

Posted in Identify Help

I checked out a couple of books on dolls from the local library recently, and both featured the same photo of this Greek articulated figure from 350 BC, which is probably made from clay:



While I knew there were dolls back then, I was surprised that they had moving parts (knees, but no hips, strikes me as a particularly odd design choice), as I thought that was a more recent evolution in toy design. Also, interestingly, when a Greek girl was to be wed (and I do mean girl, they were often married off in their very early teens), she traditionally "sacrificed" dolls like this one, and other childhood playthings, to the goddess Artemis.

Posted by Patraw
on Saturday, August 24, 2013
User Comments
avatar
Purity -
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Wow, that's pretty awesome! I was really surprised to see knee joints too!
avatar
Patraw -
Monday, August 26, 2013
That's cool--I wonder if the dog would have had a string tied to it, so that a child could pull it along, or if was just meant to be pushed by hand. I didn't know the Aztecs had jointed dolls too, I'll have to check it out.
avatar
pock63 -
Saturday, August 24, 2013
avatar
pock63 -
Saturday, August 24, 2013
I've seen that picture also, if you look through some books on the Aztecs they had jointed dolls on occasion to my favorite being a dog with wheels on it's feet so that you can roll it. I'll try to find a picture of it for you,
Write a new Comment
New Comment...
biggrin  smile  sad  surprised  confused  cool  badgrin  mad  razz  redface  cry  evil  rolleyes  wink  eusa_angel  eusa_boohoo  eusa_clap  eusa_dance  eusa_doh  eusa_drool  eusa_eh  eusa_hand  eusa_liar  eusa_naughty  eusa_pray  eusa_shhh  eusa_shifty  eusa_sick  eusa_silenced  eusa_snooty  eusa_think  eusa_wall  eusa_whistle   Pictures & Links

 
Thundercats on eBay