<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P53"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapXI"></SPAN>XI<br/> THE FIRST TRUE MEN</h2>
<p>The earliest signs and traces at present known to science, of a humanity which
is indisputably kindred with ourselves, have been found in western Europe and
particularly in France and Spain. Bones, weapons, scratchings upon bone and
rock, carved fragments of bone, and paintings in caves and upon rock surfaces
dating. it is supposed. from 30,000 years ago or more, have been discovered in
both these countries. Spain is at present the richest country in the world in
these first relics of our real human ancestors.</p>
<p>Of course our present collections of these things are the
merest beginnings of the accumulations we may hope for in the
future, when there are searchers enough to make a thorough
examination of all possible sources and when other countries
in the world, now inaccessible to archæologists, have
been explored in some detail. The greater part of Africa and
Asia has never even been traversed yet by a trained observer
interested in these matters and free to explore, and we must
be very careful therefore not to conclude that the early true
men were distinctively inhabitants of western Europe or that
they first appeared in that region.</p>
<p>In Asia or Africa or submerged beneath the sea of to-day
there may be richer and much earlier deposits of real human
remains than anything that has yet come to light. I write in
Asia or Africa, and I do not mention America because so far
there have been no finds at all of any of the higher
Primates, either of great apes, sub-men, Neanderthalers nor
early true men. This development of life seems to have been
an exclusively old world development, and it was only
apparently at the end of the Old Stone Age that human beings
first made their way across the land connexion that is now
cut by Behring Straits, into the American continent.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P54"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-54"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-54.jpg" alt="ONE OF THE MARVELLOUS CAVE PAINTINGS OF ALTAMIRA, NORTH SPAIN" width-obs="600" height-obs="372" /> <p class="caption">
ONE OF THE MARVELLOUS CAVE PAINTINGS OF ALTAMIRA, NORTH SPAIN
<br/>
<small>The Walls of the Caves are covered in these representations
of Bulls, etc., painted in the soft tones of red shaded to black.
They may be fifteen or twenty thousand years old</small></p>
</div>
<p>These first real human beings we know of in Europe appear already
to have belonged to one or other of at least two very
distinct races. One of these races was of a very high type
indeed; it was tall and big brained. One of the
women’s skulls found exceeds in capacity that of the
average man of to-day. One of the men’s skeletons is
over six feet in height. The physical type resembled that of
the North American Indian. From the Cro-Magnon cave in which
the first skeletons were found these people have been called
Cro-Magnards. They were savages, but savages of a high
order. The second race, the race of the Grimaldi cave
remains, was distinctly negroid in its characters. Its
nearest living affinities are the Bushmen and Hottentots of
South Africa. It is interesting to find at the very outset
of the known human story, that mankind was already racially
divided into at least two main varieties; and one is tempted
to such unwarrantable guesses as that the former race was
probably brownish rather than black and that it came from the
East or North, and that the latter was blackish rather than
brown and came from the equatorial south.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P55"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-55"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-55.jpg" alt="BONE CARVINGS OF THE PALÆOLITHIC PERIOD" width-obs="550" height-obs="739" /> <p class="caption">
BONE CARVINGS OF THE PALÆOLITHIC PERIOD
<br/>
<small>(1 and 2) Mammoth tusk carved to shape of Reindeer, (3)
Dagger Handle representing Mammoth, and (4) Bone engraved with
Horses’ Heads
<br/>
<i>Brit. Mus.</i></small></p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P56"></SPAN></span>
And these
savages of perhaps forty thousand years ago were so human
that they pierced shells to make necklaces, painted
themselves, carved images of bone and stone, scratched
figures on rocks and bones, and painted rude but often very
able sketches of beasts and the like upon the smooth walls of
caves and upon inviting rock surfaces. They made a great
variety of implements, much smaller in scale and finer than
those of the Neanderthal men. We have now in our museums
great quantities of their implements, their statuettes, their
rock drawings and the like.</p>
<p>The earliest of them were hunters. Their chief pursuit was
the wild horse, the little bearded pony of that time. They
followed it as it moved after pasture. And also they
followed the bison. They knew the mammoth, because they have
left us strikingly effective pictures of that creature. To
judge by one rather ambiguous drawing they trapped and killed
it.</p>
<p>They hunted with spears and throwing stones. They do not
seem to have had the bow, and it is doubtful if they had yet
learnt to tame any animals. They had no dogs. There is one
carving of a horse’s head and one or two drawings that
suggest a bridled horse, with a twisted skin or tendon round
it. But the little horses of that age and region could not
have carried a man, and if the horse was domesticated it was
used as a led horse. It is doubtful and improbable that they
had yet learnt the rather unnatural use of animal’s
milk as food.</p>
<p>They do not seem to have erected any buildings though they
may have had tents of skins, and though they made clay
figures they never rose to the making of pottery. Since they
had no cooking implements their cookery must have been
rudimentary or nonexistent. They knew nothing of cultivation
and nothing of any sort of basket work or woven cloth. Except
for their robes of skin or fur they were naked painted
savages.</p>
<p>These earliest known men hunted the open steppes of Europe
for a hundred centuries perhaps, and then slowly drifted and
changed before a change of climate. Europe, century by
century, was growing milder and damper. Reindeer receded
northward and eastward, and bison and horse followed. The
steppes gave way to forests, and red deer took the place of
horse and bison. There is a <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P57"></SPAN></span>change in the character of the
implements with this change in their application. River and
lake fishing becomes of great importance to men, and fine
implements of bone increased. “The bone needles of
this age,” says de Mortillet, “are much superior
to those of later, even historical times, down to the
Renaissance. The Romans, for example, never had needles
comparable to those of this epoch.”</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-57"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-57.jpg" alt="THE RUTOT BUST OF A CRO-MAGNON MAN" width-obs="400" height-obs="487" /> <p class="caption">
THE RUTOT BUST OF A CRO-MAGNON MAN</p>
</div>
<p>Almost fifteen or twelve thousand years ago a fresh people
drifted into the south of Spain, and left very remarkable
drawings of themselves upon exposed rock faces there. These
were the Azilians (named from the Mas d’Azil cave).
They had the bow; they seem to have worn feather headdresses;
they drew vividly; but also they had reduced their drawings
to a sort of symbolism—a man for instance would be
represented by a vertical dab with two or three horizontal
dabs—that suggest the dawn of the writing idea.
Against hunting sketches there are often marks like tallies.
One drawing shows two men smoking out a bees’ nest.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P58"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-58"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-58.jpg" alt="FIGHT OF BOWMEN" width-obs="580" height-obs="736" /> <p class="caption">
Among the most recent discoveries of Palæolithic Art are these
specimens found in 1920 in Spain. They are probably ten or twelve
thousand years old</p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P59"></SPAN></span>These are the
latest of the men that we call Palæolithic (Old Stone
Age) because they had only chipped implements. By ten or
twelve thousand years a new sort of life has dawned in
Europe, men have learnt not only to chip but to polish and
grind stone implements, and they have begun cultivation. The
Neolithic Age (New Stone Age) was beginning.</p>
<p>It is interesting to note that less than a century ago there
still survived in a remote part of the world, in Tasmania, a
race of human beings at a lower level of physical and
intellectual development than any of these earliest races of
mankind who have left traces in Europe. These people had
long ago been cut off by geographical changes from the rest
of the species, and from stimulation and improvement. They
seem to have degenerated rather than developed. They lived a
base life subsisting upon shellfish and small game. They had
no habitations but only squatting places. They were real men
of our species, but they had neither the manual dexterity nor
the artistic powers of the first true men.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />