13,500 Year Old Statue Amazes Archeologist Throughout the World
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History of Civiliation Began in Urfa .. 13,500 Year Old Statue Amazes Archeologist Throughout the World Harran University, Faculty of Science and Letters from Basin Yayin ve Enformasyon Genel Mudurlugu Website SOURCE: http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/arqueologia/gobekli_tepe05.htm Archeological discoveries in Urfa continue to yield exciting results with each passing day. Scientists are rushing to see the remains of an 11,500-year-old temple discovered in Göbeklitepe. Furthermore, a 13,500-year-old statue, the world’s oldest, discovered during an excavation in Balıklıgöl has astonished archeologists from all over the world. Assistant Professor A. Cihat Kürkçüoğlu of Harran University claims that the history of civilization began in Urfa. Exploratory excavations conducted in Çayönü, Diyarbakır have revealed remains of houses which date back 10,500-11,000 years. Even more surprising have been the results of excavations conducted in the Nevale Çori region, which indicate that the people of Nevale Çori settled and lived in houses 500 years before the people of Çayönü. They are also known to have been the first people to engage in agriculture. First Temple During exploratory excavations conducted in Göbeklitepe in 1995, the remains of a temple were discovered. Quite similar to those discovered in Nevale Çori, these remnants are considered to be one of the first examples of architectural structure. Artifacts discovered in the center of the city of Urfa indicate that settlement in the region began even earlier. Bahattin Çelik, a research assistant in the Department of Archeology and Art History at Hacettepe University, recently has said that arrows and spearheads made of flint, cutting tools and interior furnishings were discovered in the Balıklıgöl region. Laboratory analysis carried out in Germany last year proved that these finds are at least 11,500 years old. Kürkçüoğlu described the results of the excavations as “a marvelous discovery” and said:
World’s Oldest Statue A two-meter high statue of a male (above) was discovered in Balıklıgöl in 1993. The limestone statue the eyes of which are carved out of obsidian depicts a man seizing his genital organ with both hands. It was named the “Balıklıgöl Statue” and is on display in Urfa Museum. Kürkçüoğlu provided the following details about the statue:
Transition
to Sedentary Life and Agriculture
During excavations conducted by
Kürkçüoğlu, Abdüsselam
Uluçam, Bahattin Çelik and Fatih Uluçam on behalf of
the Turkish
Historical Society (TTK) in 1999 and 2000, three
other Neolithic age
settlements were discovered in Karahantepe,
Sefertepe and
Hamzantepe.
In each of these settlements, several T-shaped stelae similar to those in Nevale Çori and Göbeklitepe were found. The team also discovered a stele with the figure of a snake carved on it and a statue surprisingly similar to the “Balıklıgöl Statue.” Kürkçüoğlu stressed the significance of these finds as follows:
T-shaped stelae discovered during excavations are believed to have religious significance. The carvings on these stelae are the earliest examples of Neolithic art.
Upper Mesopotamia (SE Turkey, N Syria and N Iraq) 14C databases: 11th - 6th millennia cal BC III. Gaziantep-Urfa-Mardin plateau
Comment GÖBEKLI TEPE The Schlangenpfeilergebäude pertains to the earlier of the two building phases attested thus far at the site, i.e. Old Phase (level III) and Young Phase (level II) (where level I relates to the topsoil finds). Since coming from the fill of the structure, the two level III samples may postdate the Old Phase. The two dates yielded by pedogenic carbonate coatings of pillars 8 and 11 from structures B and C resp. constitute an terminus ante quem for these buildings. At the time suggested by these two dates, both structures had already been abandoned and buried. Photo
Gallery
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