Brassempouy is a small village in the
département of
Landes in southwest France. Two caves near the village, 100 metres from each other, were among the first
Paleolithic sites to be explored in France. They are known as the
Galerie des Hyènes (Gallery of the Hyenas) and the
Grotte du Pape (the "Grotto of the Pope"). The Venus of Brassempouy was discovered in the Grotto of the Pope in 1894, accompanied by at least eight other human figures. These may be an example of unfinished work, as if the artist or artists carved several figurines at the same time. P. E. Dubalen first explored the
Grotte du Pape during 1881, followed by J. de Laporterie and Édouard Piette (1827–1906) from 1894 onwards. Since archaeological
excavation techniques were then only starting to be developed, they paid little attention to the
stratigraphy of the site containing the remains. In 1892 the site was pillaged and disturbed almost beyond reconstruction by a field visit of amateurs from the
Association française pour l’avancement de la science. Nevertheless, Piette described layers attributed to the late and middle
Solutrean period. He termed the bottom levels he reached as
éburnéen (pale or white like ivory), in reference to the copious amounts of
ivory works which they contained. Modern reanalysis of the site has been performed under the direction of Henri Delporte during 1981–2000. In 1894, one of those strata, recognized now as
Gravettian, yielded several fragments of statuettes, including the "Lady with the Hood". Piette considered the figures as closely related to the representations of animals of the
Magdalenian period. He developed a hypothetical
chronology that was later refuted by
Henri Breuil. ==Description==