The concept of a
prehistoric matriarchy was introduced in 1861 when Johann Jakob Bachofen published
Mother Right: An Investigation of the Religious and Juridical Character of Matriarchy in the Ancient World. He postulated that the historical patriarchates were a comparatively recent development, having replaced an earlier state of primeval
matriarchy, and postulated a "
chthonic-maternal"
prehistoric religion. Bachofen presents a model where matriarchal society and chthonic mystery cults are the second of four stages of the historical
development of religion. The first stage, he called "Hetaerism," was characterized as a
Paleolithic hunter-and-gatherer society that practiced a polyamorous and communistic lifestyle. The second stage is the
Neolithic, a matriarchal lunar stage of agriculture with an early form of
Demeter, the dominant deity. This was followed by a "Dionysian" stage of emerging patriarchy, finally succeeded by the "Apollonian" stage of patriarchy and the appearance of civilization in
classical antiquity. The idea that this period was a golden age that was displaced by the advent of
patriarchy was first described by
Friedrich Engels in his
The Origin of the Family, Private Property, and the State. The British archaeologist Sir
Arthur Evans, the main rediscoverer and promoter of
Minoan civilization, believed that
Minoan religion more or less exclusively worshiped a
mother goddess, and his view held sway for the first part of the 20th century, with a wide-ranging influence on thinking in various fields. Modern scholars agree that a mother or nature goddess was probably a dominant deity, but that there were also male deities. In the early 1900s, historian Jane Ellen Harrison put forward the theory that the Olympian pantheon replaced an earlier worship of earth goddesses.
Robert Graves postulated a prehistoric matriarchal religion in the 1950s, in his
The Greek Myths and
The White Goddess, and gave a detailed depiction of a future society with a matriarchal religion in his novel
Seven Days in New Crete. Inspired by Graves and other sources was the Austrian Surrealist
Wolfgang Paalen who, in his painting
Pays interdit ("Forbidden Land"), draws an apocalyptic landscape dominated by a female goddess and, as symbols of the male gods, fallen, meteorite-like planets. ==Second-wave feminism and the Goddess movement==