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This model was found in a tomb and was perhaps a way to provide food for the afterlife. Sometimes whole live cows were buried with a person. The cow was revered as a source of life and there was even a cow goddess Bat - the protector and mother of the pharaoh.
The model was made around 3500 BCE and was found in Egypt.
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When were cows first domesticated?
Cows were first domesticated in North Africa in 8000 BC. People of Egypt lived in the Nile valley, where they relied on cows for food and as beasts of burden to carry water. Cows were also domesticated independently in the Middle East and today all cattle across the World are descendents of these Middle Eastern cows.
Here is an image of cattle herders in Ancient Egypt.
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Professor Diane Gifford-Gonzalez, Anthropologist, University of California, wrote:
This figurine shows the form of the earliest domestic cattle in Africa, with high shoulders but without humps and graceful, lyre-shaped horns. They resemble modern Kuri cattle of Africa’s western Lake Chad.
Genetic studies shed light on when and where cattle were first domesticated. After the Ice Ages, wild cattle thrived from Pakistan and North India across the Near East into North Africa and Europe. DNA from living cattle and ancient bones suggests there were three domestications, that all took place 8,000-10,000 years ago.
One domestic line originated in the mountains that run from Turkey through to Iran. Humped cattle like India’s “sacred cows,” were domesticated around the Indus River Valley in the north-west of the country, and wild African cattle may have been domesticated in north-eastern Africa.
Modern African breeds have genetic markers that show they descend from a common regional gene pool. Europe’s cattle breeds descend from Southwest Asian stock which had been introduced into Europe by 7,500 years ago.
The remains of the earliest known African domestic cattle date to about 7,800 years ago. Humped cattle, including cross breeds common in Africa today, have South Asian ancestors.
Art from the time, made in the then-green Sahara, depicts spotted cows like these, with curving horns and full udders. Later Egyptian tomb paintings show cattle pulling plows and being milked. These pottery cattle were buried to offer help in the afterlife.
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-VB