• Thumbnail for Red Lady of Paviland
    The Red "Lady" of Paviland (Welsh: "Dynes" Goch Pafiland) is an Upper Paleolithic partial male skeleton dyed in red ochre and buried in Wales 33,000 BP...
    13 KB (1,516 words) - 21:18, 25 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for William Buckland
    William Buckland (category Presidents of the Geological Society of London)
    Paviland Cave in south Wales, where he discovered a skeleton which he named the Red Lady of Paviland, as he at first supposed it to be the remains of...
    33 KB (4,033 words) - 12:25, 20 February 2024
  • Red Lady may refer to: Red Lady of El MirĂ³n, a female paleolithic skeleton Red Lady of Paviland, a male paleolithic skeleton Red Lady of Huntingdon College...
    487 bytes (100 words) - 12:56, 18 June 2020
  • Thumbnail for Welsh artefacts in museums outside Wales
    lunula, the Trawsfynydd Tankard (in Liverpool), Red Book of Hergest (in Oxford) and the Red Lady of Paviland (in Oxford), Bardsey crown (in Liverpool), and...
    17 KB (1,742 words) - 03:15, 22 September 2023
  • Thumbnail for Ochre
    Ochre (redirect from Red ochre)
    sprinkled with red ochre around 40,000 years ago. In Wales, the paleolithic burial called the Red Lady of Paviland from its coating of red ochre has been...
    35 KB (4,341 words) - 07:28, 2 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Gower Peninsula
    Paleolithic human male skeleton in Paviland Cave. They named their find the Red Lady of Paviland because the skeleton is dyed in red ochre, though later investigators...
    24 KB (2,574 words) - 23:01, 16 January 2024
  • afterlife of the Red Lady of Paviland (2007), p. 88; Google Books. Marianne Sommer, Bones and Ochre: the curious afterlife of the Red Lady of Paviland (2007)...
    35 KB (4,197 words) - 18:20, 3 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for 1823
    Cave on the Gower Peninsula of Wales, William Buckland inspects the "Red Lady of Paviland", the first identification of a prehistoric (male) human burial...
    21 KB (2,461 words) - 23:40, 11 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Wand
    Wand (redirect from Wand of office)
    is mentioned that 'rods' (as well as rings) were found with Red Lady of Paviland in Britain. It is mentioned by the author in Gower - A Guide to Ancient...
    15 KB (1,972 words) - 10:07, 29 April 2024
  • and vaudevillian Red Lady of Paviland, the Welsh red skeleton, a Paleolithic skeleton covered in red ochre discovered in Wales Red skull (disambiguation)...
    926 bytes (163 words) - 01:29, 1 March 2024