![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhAB4rBXGPVZliygYZ_dtEsvhua-Am-_4I88whxrWzLkBe7VkOVOWW1fsBadHxdLoxHg7TGyXCyPh6orw8equ1Xv3W1XZ_D5cqcOvzmjB7GCcSqD1ftzO0iqmerMMFRstISQm-aB3VBdUP9/s320/Venus.jpg)
She’s known as Venus of Willendorf after the village where she was unearthed. Her creators remain unknown but similar statues have been found in France and Russia. Their purpose - fertility charm, goddess, or even good-luck charm - remains equally mysterious.
Austrians are celebrating their Venus with a new postage stamp and even reproductions in chocolate, marzipan and soap.
“She’s very corpulent but still very beautiful,” says Walpurga Anti-Weiser of Vienna’s Natural History Museum, who has written a book about Venus of Willendorf. “One gets the feeling she has become an icon.”
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