"Altarpieces" are artefacts characteristic of the Lengyel and Moravian
Painted cultures, extending across central Europe from 4800-4300 BC.
Ranging from 4-12 cm high, cubic in shape, with a small depression in
the top, these clay objects have puzzled archaeologists. After
cataloguing the published finds under a new typological system, the
author examines the surroundings of those examples found in closed
contexts in order to work her way towards an understanding of their
function. She examines their relationship to identical shapes in the
Bronze Age of south eastern Europe and their temporal variation in the
process.