Göbekli Tepe - The Stone Age Sanctuaries. New Results of Ongoing Excavations With A Special Focus On Sculptures and High Reliefs
Göbekli Tepe - The Stone Age Sanctuaries. New Results of Ongoing Excavations With A Special Focus On Sculptures and High Reliefs
Göbekli Tepe - The Stone Age Sanctuaries. New Results of Ongoing Excavations With A Special Focus On Sculptures and High Reliefs
01
Documenta Praehistorica XXXVII (2010)
Klaus Schmidt
Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, Orient-Abteilung, Berlin, DE
kls@orient.dainst.de
ABSTRACT – The transition from non-food producing to farming societies first took place during the
Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN) of the Near East. It happened immediately after the end of the Pleisto-
cene, between the 10th to the 8th millennium BC. One of the main questions that have exercised the
minds of generations of archaeologists is why people first gave up a hunting and gathering way of
life and start to domesticate plants and animals. In other words, why did the Neolithic Revolution
take place? The new discoveries at Göbekli Tepe have turned up evidence for explanations that dif-
fer from the generally accepted wisdom on this issue.
Göbekli Tepe is one of the most fascinating Neolithic Archaeologists found an important piece of the puz-
sites in the world. It is a tell, an artificial mound da- zle in the early history of humanity at the site, which
ting to the Pre-Pottery Neolithic. It was not used for contributes to a completely new understanding of
habitation; it consists of several sanctuaries in the the process of sedentism and the beginning of agri-
form of round megalithic enclosures. The site lies culture. The hill, which is strewn with countless
about 15km north-east of the Turkish city of Sanlıur- stone implements and large-format, regular-shaped
fa, at the highest point of an extended mountain ashlars, revealed its secret as a result of the excava-
range that can be seen for many kilometres around. tions carried out since 1995 by the German Archaeo-
It is a landmark visible from far away (Fig. 1). Its logical Institute in cooperation with the Archaeolo-
enormous deposition of layers, up to fifteen metres gical Museum in Sanlıurfa (Schmidt 1995).
high, have accumulated over several millennia over
an area of about nine hectares. Even today, the place Remarkably, no residential buildings have been dis-
has lost nothing of its magic appeal. For example, a covered. However, at least two phases of monumen-
wishing tree which stands on top of the ridge is still tal religious architecture have been uncovered. Of
sought out by the residents of the surrounding area. these, the older layer is the most impressive. The
The age of layer III and the monumental enclosures The younger layer of Göbekli Tepe has been dated
is impressive: they can be dated to the 10th millen- to the 9th millennium calBC. It has been demonstra-
nium calBC, a time when people all over the world ted that some domesticated plants and animals were
were still living as hunter-gatherers, except in the re- already in use during this millennium, and that ela-
gion of the Fertile Crescent of the Near East, where borate settlements had been built, such as Nevalı
people had started to settle in permanent villages Çori, which lies 50 kilometres to the north, a site
and begin activities which led to the domestication now submerged by the flooding of the Atatürk Dam
of plants and animals. And there is no question that Lake in 1992 (Hauptmann 1991/1992; 1993). The
the site of Göbekli Tepe was not a mundane settle- excavation caused a sensation in the 1980s, as it
ment of the period, but a site belonging to the religi- opened for the first time a new window on a previ-
ous sphere, a sacred area, since the excavation has ously unexpected world of Stone Age culture. The
revealed no residential buildings. Göbekli Tepe seems type of dwelling excavated at Nevalı Çori, with a li-
to have been a regional centre where communities ving space in front and a rectangular area behind
met to engage in complex rites. for storing provisions may be considered the proto-
Fig. 2. Göbekli Tepe, schematic map of the main excavation area at the southern slope and the western
hilltop, the stratigraphic position of the structures mapped in blue (“layer II/III”) is not determined finally.
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Göbekli Tepe – the Stone Age Sanctuaries. New results of ongoing excavations with a special focus on sculptures and high reliefs
Fig. 3. The main excavation area at the southern slope, spring 2010; in the foreground, enclosure D, fol-
lowed by enclosures C, B and A (foto Nico Becker, DAI).
type of the Anatolian farm house that can still be found everywhere. This is one reason the sanctua-
found today. Even then, the houses were up to 6 me- ries were erected on the Göbekli Tepe plateau, as it
tres wide and 18 metres long. consists of limestone of such quality.1 The pillars are
usually connected by the walls which define the in-
But Göbekli Tepe differs from Nevalı Çori; layer II ner and outer spaces of the enclosures. The walls
is not a settlement, but it contains a series of sanctu- are built mainly from ashlar stones, sometimes in-
aries. However, the large circular structures of layer cluding spoliae – fragments of pillars and other sha-
III disappeared, to be replaced by small rectangu- ped stones common at the site – in secondary use
lar rooms (Fig. 2). But the main feature of the monu- as wall stones. There is a 2cm thick layer of clay
mental enclosures, the T-shaped pillars, survived. mortar between the stones. The mortar causes a se-
Therefore, most of the buildings of layer II again can rious problem for the conservation of the site. Rain-
be identified as sanctuaries. But it was not only the water is disastrous for it, as the soft clay is easily
scale of the architecture that was reduced – the washed out by water. The same problem exists with
numbers and size of the pillars are much smaller aeolian forces, wind erosion again is a big problem.
now. The average height of the pillars in layer III And there is a third danger: insects like to build nests
is 3.5m, while in layer II, it is only about 1.5m. in the spaces between the stones, as the clay mortar
is very soft and holes are dug easily. The mortar
The pillars are made from a very hard and quite cry- may originally have been tempered, but the preser-
stalline limestone. They are the most durable objects vation conditions for any organic remains are very
at the site. To produce monoliths with a length of bad, with the exception of bones, which exist in huge
4 to 5, sometimes even 7m, Neolithic people needed amounts. But there are almost no other organic
limestone of supreme quality, which can not be remains, as the use of fire at the site has not been
1 Some years ago, when the construction of the new highway from Gaziantep to Mardin (the highway runs not far from Göbekli
Tepe in the valleys west and south of the site) was planned, the engineers wanted to use the limestone of the Göbekli Tepe pla-
teau to produce gravel, as such a hard limestone does not exist elsewhere in the region. The company started coring activity, but
it was possible to stop it soon, fortunately.
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Klaus Schmidt
It has been a great advantage to archaeology that, There are no domesticated animals or plants. The
after a period of unknown duration, the sanctuaries enclosures date to the period of transition from hun-
of the older layer at Göbekli Tepe were intentional-
ly and rapidly buried, a process which seems to have
been a certain part of their use from the beginning.
The old surfaces that can be observed in the exca-
vations and the processes that occurred in the sed-
iment have been subjected to pedological analyses,
allowing the filling to be dated. Moreover, the cir-
cumstances in which the structure was filled are a
matter for speculation: was the act of filling part of
some ritual? Was this ritual carried out repeatedly?
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Göbekli Tepe – the Stone Age Sanctuaries. New results of ongoing excavations with a special focus on sculptures and high reliefs
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Klaus Schmidt
The T-shaped pillars Fig. 9. The decorated belt of pillar 18 seen from the
southwest in spring 2010 (foto Nico Becker, DAI).
The T-form of the pillars can easily be interpreted as human head (Hauptmann, Schmidt 2007.80) (Fig.
anthropomorphic, as some of the pillars appear to 5). Differentiation of the sexes was evidently not in-
have arms and hands, undoubtedly human; they are, tended. It is also clear that the minimalist form of
in other words, stone statues of human-like beings representation was intentional, because other stat-
(Schmidt 2006.Fig. 43a). The head is represented ues and reliefs found at the site offer sufficient proof
by the cross on the pillars, an interpretation suppor- of the artists’ ability to produce naturalist works.
ted by a pillar from Nevalı Çori, where a longer face
section and a shorter back of the head are observa- Very often, a specific attribute is depicted on the pil-
ble, corresponding to the natural proportions of the lars: two bands in flat relief are visible on the front
of the shafts, somewhat resembling a stole and it is
highly probable that this motif actually refers to a
specific garment. It is possible that only certain per-
sons were permitted to wear the stole, being an im-
portant element of a ritual robe. Perhaps the stone
buttons, which occur in large numbers only at Göbe-
kli Tepe (Schmidt 2005.Fig. 6), are from a robe of
this type.
Fig. 10. Pillar 43 in enclosure D (foto Berthold In the 2009 season, the previously hidden lower
Steinhilber). parts of the pillars’ shafts were excavated (Fig. 7).
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Göbekli Tepe – the Stone Age Sanctuaries. New results of ongoing excavations with a special focus on sculptures and high reliefs
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Klaus Schmidt
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Göbekli Tepe – the Stone Age Sanctuaries. New results of ongoing excavations with a special focus on sculptures and high reliefs
The statue has a face: the eyes are deep holes and
black obsidian blade segments struck from bidirec-
tional cores. It may be noteworthy that no mouth
was depicted. The statue seems to be naked, with Fig. 16. The ‘totem pole’ from Nevalı Çori (after
the exception of a V-shaped necklace. It is not enti- Hauptmann, Schmidt 2007.Kat.-Nr. 101).
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Klaus Schmidt
A similar situation is visible on a second object: ano- Fig. 17. Tentative reconstruction of the ‘totem
ther large bird (again, probably a vulture, but the pole’ from Nevalı Çori (drawing Klaus Schmidt).
Fig. 18. A ‘totem pole’ from Göbekli Tepe, excava- Four human heads are known from Göbekli Tepe;
ted in October 2010 (foto Nico Becker, DAI). they probably belong to sculptures similar to the
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Göbekli Tepe – the Stone Age Sanctuaries. New results of ongoing excavations with a special focus on sculptures and high reliefs
In the 2009 campaign, a second excavation field was Fig. 20. Göbekli Tepe, sculpture of a man with
opened on the north-western hilltop of the mound. beard, limestone, height 66cm (foto Dieter Johan-
As expected, architecture typical of layer II, with nes, DAI).
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Klaus Schmidt
Probably guardians
“Urfa statue” (Bucak, Schmidt 2003< Fig. 14) broken, but completely preserved life-size statue
Nevalı Çori, “skinhead”
only head, no face preserved
(Hauptmann, Schmidt 2007.70 Kat.-Nr. 96< Fig. 15)
Göbekli Tepe, head no. A5 (Schmidt 1999.Pl. 2,1–2) face completely preserved
Göbekli Tepe, head no. A32 (unpublished) no face preserved
Göbekli Tepe, head no. A50 (unpublished) bad preservation
Göbekli Tepe, head no. A69 (unpublished) bad preservation
Göbekli Tepe, head no. A75 (Fig. 19) nearly completely preserved
Tab. 1. Life-size human limestone heads and statues from PPN sites in the Urfa region
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Göbekli Tepe – the Stone Age Sanctuaries. New results of ongoing excavations with a special focus on sculptures and high reliefs
Fig. 22. Enclosure C with the two central pillars set on pedestals cut out of bedrock, autumn 2008 (foto
Klaus Schmidt, DAI).
hole stones were found scattered all over the mound discovered in both layers II and III, although no situ-
during the survey of 1995 (Beile-Bohn et al. 1998. ation was ever found confirming the suggestion that
45–47, Fig. 19 ’Pfeilerbasis’). These objects were the feet of the pillars were fixed by such portable
called ’portable pillar base’ at that time because of stone frames. A medium-size stone of this group, for
the similarity observed between these objects and example, was found in the centre of enclosure B, im-
the two pedestals of the so- called ‘rock temple’, a mediately in front of the central pillars (Schmidt
structure cut out of the natural bedrock, now num- 2006.Fig. 34) (Figs. 20 and 22). Its function was ob-
bered as enclosure E (Schmidt 2006. Fig. 35). The viously that of a porthole stone; it is only unclear if
pedestals have an oval tub-shaped hole in the mid- the stone was placed vertically in the enclosure wall
dle of the object. Already in the first year of inves- or horizontally in the middle of the roof – if a roof
tigations, 1995, an explanation was given for them, existed, this being an unanswered question.
which has now been confirmed: they were identified
as the bases of the (now lost) central pillars of the Returning to the new trenches on the north-western
rock temple. The function of the holes was recon- hilltop: a megalithic porthole stone was discovered
structed such that the lower part of the pillars was south of the single monumental pillar in the new
set in and fixed there. During the excavations of en- trenches (Fig. 24). The stone appeared in an oblique
closure C in 2008 and enclosure D in 2009, both position on top of debris which should belong to
pairs of central pillars were found still in situ. Their layer III, given its composition of mainly stones smal-
bases are placed exactly in the way as the rock pe- ler than fist size, with quantities of earth or clay be-
destals, as supposed in 1995 in the case of enclosure tween. The object is of similar monumental dimen-
E (Fig. 22). sions to the porthole-stone on the southeast plateau
mentioned above. The excavated stone has lost some
The more or less close similarity between the rock parts of its rim, but the remaining piece, nearly 3 x
pedestals and the objects now called porthole stones 3m, is unbroken. What never was observable on the
was the reason for the original designation ’porta- (more or less complete or fragmented) porthole
ble pillar bases’, but during the sixteen years of ex- stones excavated so far at Göbekli Tepe can now be
cavations many fragments of such stones have been seen: the stone has two portholes, two adjacent re-
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Klaus Schmidt
Fig. 23. Enclosure B and its portholestone in centre (foto Irmgard Wagner, DAI).
ctangular openings. But this so far unique double originally been parts of porthole-stones, e.g. the pre-
porthole is not the only astonishing feature. On the dator found atop the wall east of pillar 36 in enclo-
southern rim is a flat relief of a very large snake. On sure C (Schmidt 2006.151–156, Figs. 63–64 No. A35).
the western rim there are high reliefs of three ani-
mals. In a direction from south to north, a bull, a It is not the first time that animals have been found
billy-goat and a predator showing its teeth are posi- depicted on the rim of a porthole stone at Göbekli
tioned. A high relief with a very similar animal was Tepe. There are several fragments with reliefs, but
found in the same season in the northern profile of the motifs are quite small, or the preservation of the
a trench in the west of enclosure D (Fig. 25). Again, surfaces was so poor that there remained doubts as
the tail of the beast is curved at its back. The repe- to whether a relief was present; it is possible that
tition of the motif underlines the observation that the form in question was not an image, but an irre-
there was a fixed canon of depictions which was un- gularity in the stone.
veiled step by step and year by year.
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Göbekli Tepe – the Stone Age Sanctuaries. New results of ongoing excavations with a special focus on sculptures and high reliefs
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Göbekli Tepe – the Stone Age Sanctuaries. New results of ongoing excavations with a special focus on sculptures and high reliefs
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