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Tassili-n-Ajjier rock paintings

Ilizi, Algeria ★★★★☆ 290 views
Nicole Smith
Ilizi
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About Tassili-n-Ajjier rock paintings

Tassili-n-Ajjier rock paintings - Ilizi | Secret World Trip Planner

It was in fact Henri Lhote, a French scholar and explorer, who introduced the world to the existence of the Tassili-n-Ajjier rock paintings. After a first mission in 1935 carried out for fifteen months, Lhote returned again in 1956 and 1957, thanks to the guidance of Machar Jebrine Ag Mohamed Said Jebrine, bringing with him a team of painters and photographers. This is how Tassili's astonishing paintings were "recorded" on paper, painted with tempera and exhibited for the first time in 1957 and then in 1958 in the Museum of Decorative Arts in Paris, defined by André Malraux. Usually these drawings are kept in the National Museum of Natural History in Paris, and rarely on display. Located in a strange lunar landscape of great geological interest, the site of Tassili en Ajjer has one of the most important groups of prehistoric rock art in the world.

More than 15,000 drawings and engravings have fixed (and recorded for us) on the rock walls climate changes, animal migrations and, above all, the evolution of human life in the Sahara from 6000 B.C. to the first centuries of our time.

The universal value of this site is therefore exceptional, so much so that it is part of the UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

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Frequently Asked Questions

French scholar and explorer Henri Lhote introduced the world to these paintings after his first mission in 1935. He returned in 1956 and 1957 with a team of painters and photographers to document the site, with their tempera recordings first exhibited in Paris in 1957-1958.
More than 15,000 drawings and engravings have been recorded on the rock walls at this UNESCO World Heritage Site. These works span from 6000 B.C. to the first centuries of our time, documenting climate changes, animal migrations, and human evolution in the Sahara.
Tassili-n-Ajjer is recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site due to its exceptional universal value, containing one of the most important groups of prehistoric rock art in the world. The site's extensive collection of over 15,000 artworks provides unprecedented insight into human civilization and environmental changes spanning thousands of years.
The original rock paintings remain at the site in Algeria's lunar landscape, though they are rarely on public display. Most of the documented reproductions are kept in the National Museum of Natural History in Paris, where Lhote's team's tempera paintings were first exhibited in 1957-1958.
The 15,000+ rock artworks document dramatic changes in the Sahara's climate, animal migrations, and human life from 6000 B.C. onwards, revealing how inhabitants adapted to the region's transformation over millennia. These paintings are invaluable records of prehistoric human civilization and environmental history in North Africa.