The Ancient Mystery of Gobekli Tepe: Unraveling History's Greatest Puzzle

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 12. 02. 2023
  • Surfshark VPN at Surfshark.deals/mega - Enter promo code MEGA for 83% off and 3 extra months for free!
    Got a beard? Good. I've got something for you: beardblaze.com
    Simon's Social Media:
    Twitter: / simonwhistler
    Instagram: / simonwhistler
    This video is #sponsored by Surfshark.
    Love content? Check out Simon's other CZcams Channels:
    Biographics: / @biographics
    Geographics: / @geographicstravel
    Warographics: / @warographics643
    SideProjects: / @sideprojects
    Into The Shadows: / intotheshadows
    TopTenz: / toptenznet
    Today I Found Out: / todayifoundout
    Highlight History: / @highlighthistory
    Business Blaze: / @brainblaze6526
    Casual Criminalist: / thecasualcriminalist
    Decoding the Unknown: / @decodingtheunknown2373

Komentáře • 739

  • @megaprojects9649
    @megaprojects9649  Před rokem +10

    Surfshark VPN at Surfshark.deals/mega - Enter promo code MEGA for 83% off and 3 extra months for free!

    • @cramittv633
      @cramittv633 Před rokem

      Would love to see what you folks think of some of the other sites made famous by Graham Hancock and his recent Netflix show that visits many different locations including Gobekli Tepe.

    • @TheSulross
      @TheSulross Před rokem

      coverage of what may have happened in the Younger Dryas and the melt off of ice sheets of northern hemisphere was very superficial (i.e., the impact on humanity around the globe, etc). And it very likely intersects with what happened at this site per its evolution through the centuries it was inhabited (or used)

    • @WildAnatolia-3-6-9
      @WildAnatolia-3-6-9 Před rokem

      There is a picture of Göbeklitepe on the Sumerian tablets.

  • @lauriepenner350
    @lauriepenner350 Před rokem +607

    Archaeology is weird. Imagine if future archaeologists discovered our society through the remains of a single adult toy store, and historians called us "the D**do People" for the rest of history.

    • @RHCole
      @RHCole Před rokem +116

      An apt description of our society.

    • @MonkeyspankO
      @MonkeyspankO Před rokem +34

      That's pretty much how archaeology works...atleast until evidence to the contrary becomes overwhelming

    • @battlesheep2552
      @battlesheep2552 Před rokem +21

      It's how science works, you focus on the most likely explanation, then when you find evidence to the contrary you move on to the next most likely explanation

    • @lauriepenner350
      @lauriepenner350 Před rokem +80

      "These artifacts probably had a ceremonial or religious function. Due to the number and variety of objects found, this building may have been a temple or shrine."

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 Před rokem +38

      I think about this a lot actually. People often think that Egyptians were obsessed with death simply because for most of the last 2000 years most of what we knew about ancient Egypt were just their pyramids and tombs, people often think stone age humans only or mainly lived in caves because that's where we found many bodies and artifacts since they're far better preserved there, and people used to mainly think of the Norse as nothing but warriors and Vikings because many of the records from that time were written by the people the Vikings raided. Our understanding changed a ton when we got more info on each of those cultures but it's funny how narrowly people viewed them for a long time.

  • @dragonxx444
    @dragonxx444 Před rokem +47

    And the fact that they already used ground penetrative radar that shows structures UNDER the one we see today. So even older than 9000BC

    • @Michael-zf1ko
      @Michael-zf1ko Před rokem +15

      What I find insane is that around 9000-8000BC is just as old to the ancient Egyptians as the ancient Egyptians are to us. Like, if you can picture just how ancient the Pyramids are, this place would be twice as old as that.

    • @johno1544
      @johno1544 Před rokem +4

      @@Michael-zf1ko Cleopatra is closer in time to us now then she was to when the Great Pyramid was new.

    • @Noqtis
      @Noqtis Před 19 dny

      always remember boys: no one in the history of humanity was as close to first contact with aliens than us! :D

  • @BabyMissions
    @BabyMissions Před rokem +130

    "Well, it was either a temple, an observatory, or a KOA campground... but no matter what it really was, they liked animals and carved a lot of wieners." - Almost every archeologist... at almost every archeological site.

    • @RHCole
      @RHCole Před rokem +13

      Take a look at graffiti today: We haven't really changed in 12,000 years 🤷🏻‍♂️🤪

    • @aaronaaronsen3360
      @aaronaaronsen3360 Před rokem +8

      @@RHCole I saw some modern graffitis in many instances of a winged penis. I learned that in the Roman antiquity it was used as a lucky charm in the form of an amulet.
      Another time I was in a antiquity museum where I saw some stones that were used in battles as projectiles. People carved insults in Latin on them, the same way US soldiers painted FU to Adolf on the bombs they were setting up in planes during WW2.
      You're right, humans didn't change much 😅

    • @insane992
      @insane992 Před rokem +2

      it was clearly an prehistoric aplebees, mass process of wheat for beer, and alot of carving of meat and depictions of famous men on the wall

    • @insane992
      @insane992 Před rokem +1

      times may change but what we really want more than anything is to draw dicks, and enjoy some good steak and beer❤

    • @rexmann1984
      @rexmann1984 Před rokem +2

      @@insane992 Applebee's on a weeknight? They must've been fancy.

  • @paradox7358
    @paradox7358 Před rokem +152

    I find it fascinating that this place would have had a name originally, which has been lost to time.
    We'll never know what the people who built it and lived there called it and called themselves.

    • @vic5015
      @vic5015 Před rokem +8

      Per a history professor I had once, we *know* that Jewish high priests had a special name for God that was known only to them and passed down to their sons. Unfortunately, with the destruction of the Second Temple by the Romans and the subsequent death of the last high priest, this name is lost to history, as there is no indication that name was ever written down.

    • @PepesCashino
      @PepesCashino Před rokem +4

      Gobleki tepenians

    • @NarwahlGaming
      @NarwahlGaming Před rokem +7

      Someone invents a time machine and goes back to ask them but, through a mistranslation the guy who gets asked thinks the traveler is asking for _his_ name, specifically.
      Traveler: _"They called themselves 'Jeffs'!"_

    • @islammehmeov2334
      @islammehmeov2334 Před rokem

      The creator gives the name GÖBEKLI TEPE

    • @aaronaaronsen3360
      @aaronaaronsen3360 Před rokem +5

      @@NarwahlGaming I think I saw somewhere that explorers in the Americas asked natives what was the name of a mountain and started writing it on maps. Eventually they discovered that in the local language it meant "it's a mountain".
      Or maybe it was in a Discworld book, I'm not sure 😅

  • @zam6877
    @zam6877 Před rokem +45

    The challenge with such early sites is the urge to impose our assumptions...that we have also imposed on far later developed societies/civilizations

  • @rebelrun6137
    @rebelrun6137 Před rokem +25

    The hand bag looking images depicted along the top of pillar 43 have been found in multiple sites across the world

    • @markf3229
      @markf3229 Před rokem +2

      That has intrigued me for a long time. Can be seen at sites which have been considered abour 10,000 years old
      What is the meaning behind this.
      Did they have manbags then.

    • @rebelrun6137
      @rebelrun6137 Před rokem +3

      @@markf3229 I believe the sites were built by differing cultures aswell. Usually in the hands of or depicted with beings that are "keeper's of knowledge".

    • @Pushing_Pixels
      @Pushing_Pixels Před rokem +1

      Yes, they are present in Sumerian and Babylonian imagery, also Central American, South American and I think Egyptian too. Probably others as well.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas Před rokem

      @@Pushing_Pixels So what they depict figures with hands and heads. We are humans the number of symbols we use a limited. In my wife handbag we searched for alien artifacts but found none we asked friends on other continents with hand bags and they did not find alien artifacts either.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas Před rokem

      @@markf3229 really which sites would that be?.Who dated them with what method?

  • @nobodyfromnowhere3597
    @nobodyfromnowhere3597 Před rokem +8

    Proto city of hunter gatherers. Hell this place is so ancient that first Sumerian cities are as far from it as we are from Sumerian cities.

  • @acmelka
    @acmelka Před rokem +6

    I appreciate Simon being a real person. Half the voices on videos aren't anymore.

  • @Jake-qz5uf
    @Jake-qz5uf Před rokem +14

    Just a reminder to keep the people of Turkey in your thoughts and prayers after last weeks earthquakes

    • @wowplayer160
      @wowplayer160 Před rokem

      Still waiting for the cctv. Got a link?

    • @Scooty_Scooty
      @Scooty_Scooty Před rokem

      Yeah because thoughts and prayers are what they need. How about doing something more for them instead of nothing like you suggest.

  • @jamess3241
    @jamess3241 Před rokem +40

    If they've only excavated 5% of the site then how can they make all these final calls about them not having written history and stuff?

    • @Im-Not-a-Dog
      @Im-Not-a-Dog Před rokem +11

      Because theres basic writing(pictographs rather than letters) on the blocks we have found, which would lead to the reasonable assumption that the people who made it probably had a basic writing system, but we havent found anything that seems to be a historical reference within the pictographs we've found, leading to the assumption that the pictograph-writing system they had was used more for religious purposes rather than for accounting history or economic trade as we've found with some of the earliest Babylonian cuneiform tablets, which is generally considered the first proper writing system.

    • @jamess3241
      @jamess3241 Před rokem

      @@Im-Not-a-Dog right on, thank you.

    • @jamess3241
      @jamess3241 Před rokem

      @@OfficialFA what??

    • @penitent2401
      @penitent2401 Před rokem +5

      Most of what is not uncovered yet are the more minor portions of the site, they surveyed and scanned the area and made the calls to target what they deemed most likely to be the most important places to dig first. With each digs taking years to complete and has chance of causing damage to surrounding areas this step and pilot digs are essential. So far they have found pictogram and attempts at recording that are early precursors to a writing system. It stands to reason that if they does have a written language then they would not have been still using these precursor methods.

  • @Dabuhl40
    @Dabuhl40 Před rokem +11

    Been waiting on a SW update on this for years 🎉 let’s gooooo

  • @chrismac2234
    @chrismac2234 Před rokem +3

    I really should start a channel. Gobleki tepe isnt the only site. Initially identified as a prehistoric site in 1963 in the frame of a Turkish-American archaeological survey project, Göbekli Tepe was more or less forgotten for over thirty years, attention turning instead to the site of Çayönü Tepesi (Ergani/Diyarbakır) discovered during the same survey. In the interim years, excavations at Çayönü and other sites, including Cafer Höyük, Hallan Çemi and Nevalı Çori, revealed much more about the transition from hunter-gatherer to sedentary societies. Gobleki tepe is something else.

  • @larryaftertheroad6174
    @larryaftertheroad6174 Před rokem +5

    The scorpion and vulture icons really mean step on a scorpion and become vulture food

  • @_maxgray
    @_maxgray Před rokem +9

    Really enjoyed this video, and especially appreciated your reference to primary sources by a variety of researchers. More like this, please!

  • @Meinstein
    @Meinstein Před rokem +13

    Living on the border of the US and Canada, I can imagine a hunting camp where guys get together, hunt, make beer and chip at their totem. Over years, the place would get popular and you would regulate the game and bring grain from home and make more beer and chips and before long.. you have a early day Disneyland.

    • @NarwahlGaming
      @NarwahlGaming Před rokem +3

      🎵 It's da second week of deer camp and all da guys are here! 🎶

    • @Meinstein
      @Meinstein Před rokem +1

      @@NarwahlGaming that song actually personifies the local flavor.

    • @NarwahlGaming
      @NarwahlGaming Před rokem

      @@Meinstein It's the only way to live life! 😂😂

  • @codyc8138
    @codyc8138 Před rokem +7

    Your videos are fantastic. Thank you.
    Fan from 🍁 🇨🇦 .

  • @cynthiadiaz7533
    @cynthiadiaz7533 Před rokem +4

    Well done video. Thank you for the informative discussion of this important ancient edifice.

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Před rokem +11

    0:35 - Chapter 1 - The site
    5:50 - Mid roll ads
    7:10 - Chapter 2 - Ancient temples
    10:25 - Chapter 3 - Ancient barbecue area
    11:55 - Chapter 4 - Astronomical observatory
    16:45 - Chapter 5 - Ancient brewery
    19:15 - Chapter 6 - Current thinking of gobekli tepe

  • @dotter8
    @dotter8 Před rokem +8

    According to Ai-Moitor, Gobekli Tepe was not damaged by the earthquake.

  • @gbtriumph3216
    @gbtriumph3216 Před rokem +5

    Funeral, Barbecued meat, and Beer. Hmmm...gee....I cannot IMAGINE what happened at that site. MUST HAVE BEEN RELIGIOUS!

  • @shawndunlap714
    @shawndunlap714 Před rokem +22

    You forgot to mention that it's 12,000 years old 👍

    • @HybredTV
      @HybredTV Před rokem +3

      He didn’t, as this thing reeks of status quo reinforcement

    • @jimmyboy2
      @jimmyboy2 Před rokem +4

      He does at 1:14 ... "thought to be between 9600 and 8800 BCE" ... I'd add that's a range of 800 years. If correct, that places it post the younger dyras. Also questions the 10,000 BCE "cave man hypothesis" ... were humans knocked backwards i.e. the younger dyras disrupted human advancement and the surviving groups tried to copy/continue older methods?

  • @aaroneaton4849
    @aaroneaton4849 Před rokem +16

    Would you consider a video about the Paisley Caves in Oregon? The Paisley caves is one of the oldest sites in North America of humans, somewhere around ten thousand years old. Maybe a Sideproject video?

    • @nicholasbrown668
      @nicholasbrown668 Před 11 měsíci

      just go read the Wikipedia article, its pretty much the same as his videos

    • @aaroneaton4849
      @aaroneaton4849 Před 11 měsíci

      @@nicholasbrown668 well sorta yea. I am just from Oregon, and would really enjoy seeing Simon make a video about my state :)

  • @sechran
    @sechran Před rokem +3

    It's an industrial scale cereal mill? ... My god! That scorpion carving? It's the neolithic Captain Crunch!

  • @coreym846
    @coreym846 Před rokem +3

    Absolutely crazy that you can clearly see the carvings 10000 years, our concept of time is so skewed and we have definitely lost so much in transition

  • @murrayscott9546
    @murrayscott9546 Před rokem +13

    Nemrut Dagh, in Eastern Turkiye is also a mysterious site. Many collosal heads, carved from stone - nearly identical, they dot a mountain plateau.

  • @ccooper8785
    @ccooper8785 Před rokem +3

    Another video, the 3rd one today featuring you and your awesome, awesome beard !!!!
    No wonder your head looks like Megaminds....

  • @vic5015
    @vic5015 Před rokem +3

    Been waiting for Simon to cover this fascinating archeological site.

    • @pedro426
      @pedro426 Před rokem

      He did a video on this on his geographics channel, I’d recommend checking it out, though I agree this video goes far more in depth into some of the theories of the structure

  • @user-qb4ex8mh5h
    @user-qb4ex8mh5h Před rokem +8

    Tinfoil Hat: It was an ancient "grocery store" with the animals marking the "aisles" for which their meat could be processed/found.

    • @aaronaaronsen3360
      @aaronaaronsen3360 Před rokem

      F*ck the ancient astronaut theory, it was Walmart all along ! 😅

    • @Michael-zf1ko
      @Michael-zf1ko Před rokem

      I am no historian, but I would definitely take that as a theory of it being some old market XD. Usually the truth is always the most boring answer.

  • @radialgroove
    @radialgroove Před rokem +2

    hell yeah im so glad you covered this

  • @jsinope2786
    @jsinope2786 Před rokem +6

    …and not a single mention of Aliens!

  • @shreyansbodhankar9465
    @shreyansbodhankar9465 Před rokem +3

    This was done on Geographics before. Now in Megaprojects also.

  • @Karmabim123
    @Karmabim123 Před rokem +8

    I've already watched several accounts of Gobekli Tepe but this one gives a better more balanced review of the evidence and or lack thereof.

    • @danelynch7171
      @danelynch7171 Před rokem

      Even without any of the "woo woo" stuff, this site is absolutely fascinating! And intriguing.... Who built it and what did their lives look like? How did they have the time and knowledge to do all of that? What was it's purpose? it's such an interesting glimpse into life so far back that it's mind blowing

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas Před rokem

      @@danelynch7171 Simple they gathered and hunted in large groups and shared. The time the typical Anericans soends in front of a TV they used to build things.

    • @danelynch7171
      @danelynch7171 Před rokem

      @@TorianTammas you sound fun to be around.

  • @nirvana131995
    @nirvana131995 Před rokem +45

    I would love to see a biographics on Graham Hancock and what Simon's thoughts are of his theories regarding early technologies and restartings of civilization.

    • @OfficialFA
      @OfficialFA Před rokem +21

      This is just mainstream stuff, this guy doesn't really challenge the theories that archaeologists come up with. Not to say we should just jump into conspiracy theories but it does need some consideration...

    • @zoidberg78
      @zoidberg78 Před rokem +31

      You can infer what he thinks by his use of highly problematic in regards to his one mention of Grahams series. As great as Simon's shows are he's probably not the person you want reviewing Hancock's work because he's going to go into it highly biased in favor of mainstream archeology and against Hancock's theories so you're unlikely to get a fair review

    • @nirvana131995
      @nirvana131995 Před rokem +7

      @@zoidberg78 That's what I would enjoy. I'd like to hear his opinions on Hancock's theories, and any issues he has with them. I like discourse, and I enjoy hearing from different perspectives. Especially from intelligent people I respect.

    • @ToshydoshyAkamota
      @ToshydoshyAkamota Před rokem +23

      I agree, there’s a sense of scoffing at anything not mainstream on most of his channels.
      Especially to conspiracies that have popped up over the past couple years, now being proven true…
      Love the show, but I do find it a bit elitist and under researched

    • @TheJefers123
      @TheJefers123 Před rokem +5

      @@nirvana131995 I personally don't care for Simon's opinion on archeological things, if they were important the tangents on his other channels would be more profitable

  • @brianmsahin
    @brianmsahin Před rokem +4

    Excellent video and a really fascinating place. Being lucky enough to have visited the area in November 2021 it was certainly an unforgettable experience. There is even a not very professional video on my channel that I put up there for extended family to see. I would definitely recommend a visit though unfortunately after the devastating earthquake in the area it may be some time before it will be possible. We even felt the shakıng more than 800 km away which was quite shocking as we thought it was just another of the numerous small tremors we feel in the area.

  • @michaelmurray2595
    @michaelmurray2595 Před rokem +1

    Great video. Manty thanks.

  • @vaheohanian8418
    @vaheohanian8418 Před rokem +1

    Armenians for thousands of years have been known for their BBQs with shish kebabs, Shawarma dishes and stuffed grape leaves as well and Portasar (or in gibberish Gobekli Tepe) sits on the Western Armenian Highlands. Portasar was most likely the birth place of the Zoroastrian religion. Thus Sprach Zarathustra in a "2001 : A Space Odyssey" and monolith way.

  • @JonMembersonly
    @JonMembersonly Před rokem +20

    They will never admit civilization is older then the current timeline. They keep finding Tepe sites all over Turkey, what they were all nomads coming and going? Lol or they actually lived at some sites, used others for food, religion etc. Thats a civilization! The idea that hunter gathers just woke up one day and built this place might be the dumbest idea ever!

    • @blckspice5167
      @blckspice5167 Před rokem +1

      If your claim is true, those sites still need to be verified and dated. Finding out what the nomads were actually doing takes time.
      2. That is not civilization, which requires permanent settlement and agriculture to be considered such. Even if it was, there's no evidence
      3. He never said they woke up and built it. Evidence shows it was built over time. Thousands of years of history.

    • @JonMembersonly
      @JonMembersonly Před rokem +4

      @@blckspice5167 Well no the main theory for the largest T Pillars is that they literally came out of nowhere. The rest like he says was built over time, along with worse craftsmanship (another common theme at ancient sites).
      Civilization is not a easy thing to define, I get that. But these sites are EVERYWHERE in that area. They keep finding new ones, even some in the sea! All are dated to this same time period. To me it's starting to look like this was a civilization with towns or villages, temples, hunting sites etc.

    • @frontrangejrs
      @frontrangejrs Před rokem +2

      @@blckspice5167 The evidence any archeologist gives you about how long it took to build the Tepes or that they were not a civilized society is unfounded and biased. They don't want a rewrite of civilization timeline because it breaks their narratives and will ultimately lead to them not getting funded if popularity moves away from their own projects. We are in a time right now in archaeology is having to cope with a break down similar to other fields of study. Geologists are already supporting expanded timelines because their science has no problem supporting. Archaeology barely gets any funding at all so the idea of things being more popular that could get more funding than what they have spent their careers on terrifies them. When they say their is no evidence surrounding civilization of the Tepe sites, they are projecting. They want to be dismissive because any archaeologist who holds to their guns that civilization didn't start until Mesopotamia is gonna look like a creationist in the beginning of Darwinism and this is coming from a historian.

    • @leftfield123
      @leftfield123 Před rokem

      Hasn't this site done just what you say isn't being done? The site was obviously the work of a civilized people and it's discovery pushed back the timeline of civilizations by a few thousand years. And who are the "they" you refer to? If it's historians or archeologists, then they don't usually make claims until they can be proven.

    • @JonMembersonly
      @JonMembersonly Před rokem

      @@leftfield123 Archeologists is they and no this wasn't a civilization so the timeline hasn't changed. That's my argument. Obviously it was a civilization. Tepe sites all. Over that area, MASSIVE underground cities with tunnels that run for miles connecting them! That's not a civilization??

  • @johnmay6090
    @johnmay6090 Před rokem +2

    Excellent video!

  • @coltoneverett9636
    @coltoneverett9636 Před rokem +6

    I’ve been waiting for a video on this by Simon. 🎉

    • @RHCole
      @RHCole Před rokem +2

      He did one already on another channel I think. Geographics maybe?

  • @judeau9151
    @judeau9151 Před měsícem

    I thought I hit “do not recommend” on all your channels, but it appears I missed one! Amazing

  • @thesoliloquist9428
    @thesoliloquist9428 Před rokem

    What I love is that we think the reliefs are amazing now, but imagine just how much more beautiful these were when first created.

  • @chriskenny9532
    @chriskenny9532 Před rokem +12

    Again, the older the material, the better crafted it appears to be.

  • @mashrien
    @mashrien Před rokem +4

    Our dear bearded CZcams *overlord* Simon needs to upgrade to 4k recording and video on YT so we can better observe our wonderful knowledge wizard when he's edumakating us

  • @squallp
    @squallp Před rokem +3

    It is a really mind-blowing site. It shows that religion is much older than civilization in contrast to nowadays opinion.

  • @SgtMantis
    @SgtMantis Před rokem +4

    Joe Rogan would like a word with you sir.

  • @francisfischer7620
    @francisfischer7620 Před 7 měsíci

    Isn't it amazing that what we see is only a bit of it?! And they had nothing but stone tools! Truly stunning!

  • @mtacoustic1
    @mtacoustic1 Před rokem +1

    Monuments? As an engineer, it looks much more like foundation stones for storage tanks with non-flat bases; so they can be drained from the bottom.

  • @Timelesstere
    @Timelesstere Před rokem +2

    The large stone pillars look like an evolved ceremonial homage version of a simple hand threshing stone. The square edges and width would be effective when struck with a bushel of wheat and then ergonomics would have dictated a waist high stone sunk into the ground.

  • @bettyswallocks6411
    @bettyswallocks6411 Před rokem +2

    A shame they didn’t have a system of writing. This being a temple site with beer brewing evidence, they must have had their own equivalent of the Sumerian Ode to Ninkasi.

  • @montymontgomery9576
    @montymontgomery9576 Před rokem +1

    Fascinating

  • @rtqii
    @rtqii Před rokem +1

    In a statement, the Göbekli Tepe Research Project team confirmed the news initially reported by Turkey’s General Directorate of Cultural Assets and Museums: that the 11,500-year-old structure in southeastern Anatolia was not damaged by the recent quake.

  • @arthas640
    @arthas640 Před rokem +2

    It makes sense it would have more than 1 use. Back then even temples often had multiple uses: in ancient temples in the Levant for example they often would sacrifice animals there for religious purposes but they also butchered and sold the meat as well. People often did the same with many offerings which were either sold to fund the temple or were given to the poor. In ancient Egypt and in medieval cathedrals/churches the church often functioned as a university, library, record keeper, and copier in addition to offering charity services and of course religious services. The idea that a religious building is only a religious building with limited utilitarian uses is a rather modern concept, especially in ancient times when construction was far more expensive most buildings would have multiple uses.

  • @kylerjones4411
    @kylerjones4411 Před rokem +6

    FYI, re. the roughly 14m mark, if they moved the monuments around, and if this site was occupied for thousands of years, that's actually evidence that the layout *is* celestial considering the constellations move over time with precession.

    • @stephennewton2223
      @stephennewton2223 Před rokem +1

      You'd have to document that they were moved in conjunction with the apparent motion of the stars. Hard to do.

  • @CeasarJames
    @CeasarJames Před rokem +1

    I asked for this 6 days ago on emperor Qins video and 6 days later it’s done!
    Confirming why Simon is my number 1 CZcamsr
    🥰❤️👊🏼

  • @smail9129
    @smail9129 Před 11 měsíci

    Excellent.

  • @stephenwright414
    @stephenwright414 Před rokem +2

    Why does your audio always get quieter and quieter as the video goes along??

  • @oldstrawhat4193
    @oldstrawhat4193 Před rokem

    Great video!!

  • @mikep490
    @mikep490 Před rokem +12

    It'd be funny if they find out this was simply an early shopping mall.

  • @ryanrodriguez6219
    @ryanrodriguez6219 Před rokem +1

    How many channels do you have? It feels like I’m subscribing to a new channel every time I watch a video featuring you. Also what’s your name or what do you like to be called? Anyhow thanks for the informative video.

  • @StoneInMySandal
    @StoneInMySandal Před rokem +5

    Martian Sweatman completely ignores all the symbols on the pillar that don’t fit in with his baseless and aspirational claims. His entire argument is an appeal to authority, where he is the authority. His paper is really bad.

  • @Jackedhobbit
    @Jackedhobbit Před 2 měsíci

    So what you’re saying is it was a seasonal place to bring in the grain harvest, have a bbq and make some bread and beer? Sounds like a good time.

  • @AlexAltair
    @AlexAltair Před rokem +1

    I how much detail this video goes into! I think it's a step up in script-writing, my new favorite Simon video.

    • @nicholasbrown668
      @nicholasbrown668 Před 11 měsíci

      you shouldn't think he's good lmao, im his warographics and biographics videos he just straight up recites Wikipedia

    • @nicholasbrown668
      @nicholasbrown668 Před 11 měsíci

      he also has a really really weird habit of spouting propaganda and western racial terms against Russians

    • @jamisojo
      @jamisojo Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@nicholasbrown668
      Please provide detailed examples of what he's doing wrong, or keep your biased opinions to yourself.
      Nobody is going to take your word for it.

    • @nicholasbrown668
      @nicholasbrown668 Před 9 měsíci

      @@jamisojo In the A10 video he straight up recites Wikipedia for half the video
      and in his videos on Ukraine he regularly references the word "orc" so yes he is a piece of shit Wikipedia artist
      😉
      and in his latest F16 video, he praises a con artist and group of con artists for something they never even did (and the only source that supports him is......Wikipedia)

    • @nicholasbrown668
      @nicholasbrown668 Před 9 měsíci

      @@jamisojo I can also point out his most recent videos on Ukraine as doing nothing but spouting Ukrainian propaganda over and over again,
      his video over the T90 just verbatim used an article from Army Recognition as half the script, and several of his videos over US jets are again just verbatim Wikipedia
      his latest F16 video literally praises the "fighter mafia" and Pierre Sprey, a renowned Con Artist and lying piece of shit who claims he designed every US Aircraft from the F16,A10, F15, F35

  • @tobins6800
    @tobins6800 Před rokem +1

    Let's not forget that the good idea fairy has been striking the entirety of humanity since the dawn of time.

  • @kacpergorka1112
    @kacpergorka1112 Před rokem +4

    Nothing about ancient civilization, but grain was produced on an industrial level…. 5000 years before anything we thought we knew… but it doesn’t change how we view civilization… umm okay

    • @blckspice5167
      @blckspice5167 Před rokem

      There is no proof of that at all. Just a claim based on selective evidence. Such a claim needs to be verified.

  • @boden8138
    @boden8138 Před rokem +1

    Well done

  • @drake101987
    @drake101987 Před rokem +2

    It seems like a hunting lodge. Animal bones, the walls covered with depictions of beasts, and beer. A bunch of dudes built this to get away from the women and children.

  • @Hornet_Legion
    @Hornet_Legion Před rokem +1

    Sounds like it was the world's first supermarket. Slaughterhouse/grain mill for people to bring their critters and wheat to be processed for sale or personal consumption.

  • @mikehogan1257
    @mikehogan1257 Před 7 měsíci

    Good episode Simon, but you didn't even touch on the crucial issues ....how did they cut and erect the pillars, what tools did they use (no mention at of such tools being found on the site) where were they cut and transported from. All when supposedly barely emerging from a hunter gatherer society. I repeat no tools mentioned as being on site ?? Please cover off in future (and would love to see you cover Nan Madol)

  • @yo388
    @yo388 Před rokem +1

    An earthquake carefully buried the entire structure? With knocking down any of the pillars? Highly doubt that.

  • @rhondasisco-cleveland2665

    Man made hill reminded me of America’s “Mound Builders”.

    • @islammehmeov2334
      @islammehmeov2334 Před rokem

      OK but that has nothing to do with America this is in TURKIYE

    • @ruiveiga8380
      @ruiveiga8380 Před rokem

      Maybe all of these civilizations are closer than what we think

  • @dontcomply3976
    @dontcomply3976 Před rokem +1

    The OG megaproject

  • @slaapliedje
    @slaapliedje Před 10 měsíci +1

    My theory of Gobekli tepe is they were stories in stone. People got together and told stories while having their barbecue, and to talk about their myths (history).

  • @A_J502
    @A_J502 Před rokem

    Recommendation for video: AGM-114 missile. With almost as many variants as there are letters, used on helicopters, drones, turboprop, special ops, and even ship defenses, the AGM-114 is a missile which has revolutionized air to ground combat.

  • @danelynch7171
    @danelynch7171 Před rokem +9

    If there was a "dedicated artist class" who were trained to make the carvings, we should eventually find even more of them. There should be caves and tombs full of these amazing relief carvings, just waiting for people to find them

  • @bretr7327
    @bretr7327 Před rokem +3

    Sounds like an ancient pub and grill.

  • @ratchet2505
    @ratchet2505 Před rokem +3

    Thank you Simon for smudge'ing one of my favourite netflix series 😅

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas Před rokem

      This series is just a fictional story.

  • @Markuskittelsen
    @Markuskittelsen Před rokem +1

    Sometimes I think that prehistoric humans just looked at each other and said “lets confuse the shit out of people in the future”. Then the other guy laughs, says “oogga boogga LOL, lets do it LMFAO”

  • @timvyfvinkel4542
    @timvyfvinkel4542 Před rokem

    Those hunter-gatherer bands sure could carve stone reliefs.

  • @CoopaCoop
    @CoopaCoop Před rokem +2

    Earthquakes filled in that gigantic site that still hasn't been fully uncovered yet, but somehow didn't wreck the pillars, status, rock pilled walls, and everything else? Earthquakes just neatly filled it all in? That sounds the least probable..

    • @leftfield123
      @leftfield123 Před rokem

      Earthquakes are just one theory and it's no longer widely accepted. Also, the site is no where near being "gigantic." The main structures are centralized in a relatively small area.

  • @fleuripis2872
    @fleuripis2872 Před rokem +1

    Hey mate, nice work! Can you do a Megaprojects video on the World Bank, Federal Reserve and the Central Banking system?

  • @crackhead3094
    @crackhead3094 Před rokem +1

    Hey megaprojects can you do a video about the leopard 2 and its variants around the world such as Sweden and Canadian ones

  • @julians-p112
    @julians-p112 Před rokem

    i've watched and read a lot about what Graham has to say and I'm not saying he's 100% right but holy hell is he ever convincing.
    There are a few stretches he makes in his arguments but I think he is worth listening to, He has been proven right about a few things more than once. Look at the amazon.
    I respect his research for sure.
    everything anybody puts as much time as he did into his work is worth taking somewhat seriously

  • @annohalloran6020
    @annohalloran6020 Před rokem +2

    Simon scoffs at the idea of ancient apocalyptic asteroids yet seeks to profit from GT? Why does he imagine anyone would construct underground cities? He’s got a long way to go to open his mind.

  • @shanearnold2854
    @shanearnold2854 Před rokem +3

    I love his channel but he doesn't think outside the box at all

  • @dragineeztoo61
    @dragineeztoo61 Před rokem

    Thanks, much I agree with - much I don't. But, unlike many others, at least you have the courage to say "I don't know".

  • @ryanc473
    @ryanc473 Před rokem +7

    I do always love that pretty much everything is chalked up to "well, it's gotta be for religion" if we're unable to determine another use. I wonder how much that's truly the case, as I find it difficult to fathom that, in early cases like this, religion came before settlement. Maybe I'm totally wrong, and I'm far from an expert on the topic, but it just seems odd to me that some sort of religious ritual would come before we figured out how to, you know, reliably feed ourselves without having to run around all over the place. It just seems like it's backwards logic...
    And as to why someone would spend so much effort on it if not for religion? Well, think about it, how many nice things do you have just for the sake of having nice things? Do you have pictures, or drawings, or paintings, that have no religious meaning but are simply enjoyable to look at? I'm not saying that religious icons/places of worship/etc aren't artistic or requiring more work than one would logically think is necessary, but rather that I would never be surprised if past humans made nice things not so much for religious ritual but rather because, well, they were interesting and fun to have. I mean, hell, I've been known to save interesting rocks I come across lol, is it really such a stretch that our ancestors may have done the exact same thing?
    It kinda reminds me of some of the old runes/inscriptions on things that everyone is so sure has some major significance... only to later discover that it essentially translates as "(name) was here" or some other meaningless scribbling, because, turns out, past humans weren't as different in a mental sense as we generally assume them to be. They weren't dumb by any measure, they just weren't always as educated, which is an important distinction. We always look back and think they must have been like primitive cave men are depicted in cartoons, but in reality, they were still humans just like us. They didn't have the same technology, or the same society, or even the same understanding of high level mathematics or engineering or medicine or the like, but they also weren't just primitive animals. Just as an example, the might not be able to sufficiently tell you why, but they'd be easily able to figure out that when they throw a rock, it travels in a parabolic arc and gets pulled back down to the ground. They couldn't give you the mathematical equation to calculate the position of the rock at any given point in time, nor could they tell you that the reason they fall back to the earth is due to an attractive force known as gravity that warps spacetime in a specific manor relative to the mass of the object, but they could absolutely figure out how best to throw the rock to hit something at a distance without knowing all that underlying physics. It's not like Isaac Newton was the very first person ever to figure out that stuff falls when you drop it lol. He was just the first to give a solid mathematical model for the phenomenon that was known for ages.
    Edit: also, another fantastic example of just how intelligent people were in the past is the antikythera mechanism. Despite not having the underlying theory to accurately determine why the planets moved the way they did, the civilization that made it was able to correct for multiple eccentricities of the planetary orbits that they otherwise were unable to explain (but knew they happened, and even figured out how to intricately correct for it, despite presumably not knowing the underlying reasons why)

    • @aaronaaronsen3360
      @aaronaaronsen3360 Před rokem +1

      I think religion or some type of spirituality is as old as humans. It was most probably used to explain the unexplainable, like "what is happening with the temperature rising they going down then rising again", "why this kind of food is available when it's cold" and "what the hell is up with those tiny lights in the sky at night".
      As you said, people were as smart as nowadays but without all the knowledge we have, so they tried to explain the world surrounding them with the little knowledge they had, plugging the holes with a lot of imagination.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas Před rokem +1

      Yes religion cane before cities. We have the evidence. humanity up.to 150.000 years old. Matter of death and how to cope with opened the door for religion.

    • @garnetnard4284
      @garnetnard4284 Před rokem

      Sorry this is CZcams and I’m here for short comments, not blog posts.

  • @francisfischer7620
    @francisfischer7620 Před 7 měsíci

    Now THAT makes sense! They certainly didn't cover up this treasure themselves!! That never made any sense!!

  • @pauloboyle477
    @pauloboyle477 Před rokem +3

    First off. Everything back then was aligned to the stars. That was their television. We can’t see truly how amazing the sky is now a days cause of light pollution but. You can bet everything that it Was aligned to something in the sky

    • @pauloboyle477
      @pauloboyle477 Před rokem

      I’ll go one further and say most likely it was aligned the star. Sirius Not today obviously it has moved since then

    • @blckspice5167
      @blckspice5167 Před rokem

      Why do you make that assumption?
      Too much conspiracy tv buddy.

    • @pauloboyle477
      @pauloboyle477 Před rokem +1

      Nah. Just 26yrs in the field studying. Ofcourse it’s a just my theory but. Go into the desert and look up. You might get it without havin to do any work

  • @Jayjay-qe6um
    @Jayjay-qe6um Před rokem

    Conservation work at the site caused controversy in 2018, when Cigdem Koksal Schmidt, an archaeologist, and widow of Klaus Schmidt, said that a damage was caused by the used of concrete and "heavy equipment" during the construction of a new walkway. The Ministry of Culture and Tourism responded that no concrete was used and that no damage had occured.

  • @leftfield123
    @leftfield123 Před rokem

    I've read most of the comments and there are a few misconceptions. One, the site isn't that big. Most of the important structures are located in a circular central area that may be 40 or 50 yards wide. Two it took hundreds of years to construct so the builders had plenty of time to work on it. Three, many mentioned that hunter-gatherers couldn't have stayed long enough to build it. The host points out that this was at the time when domestication of plants and animals was starting so it could have easily supported a permanent settlement.

  • @ratchet2505
    @ratchet2505 Před rokem +2

    So who here has watched the Netflix series on an ancient civilization?

  • @terrancelopez9631
    @terrancelopez9631 Před rokem +1

    Flash-foward a few million years when future civilizations discover Nickolodeon's Legend of the Hidden Temple. "Ah yes, this film clip here shows a tribal member of what is known as the "Blue Barracudas" being scarified to a Temple Guardian."

  • @jimmyboy2
    @jimmyboy2 Před rokem

    Informative. Thank you. However to say it was an enigma in 1995 and imply it's less so now is deceptive as there's too many questions (you offer a few), there's so little excavated over 90% still buried and more, older, unknown sites, the dating, the how ... what tools and methods? This is more of an enigma now than it was when discovered.

  • @williamdrijver4141
    @williamdrijver4141 Před rokem +4

    A thousand years to go from round to rectangular structures. Amazing how slow change or progress was then.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 Před rokem +1

      it's kind of crazy to think how slowly things changed back then. Look at Ancient Egypt: the culture didnt really change much and stayed much the same for thousands of years, ancient Sumer lasted as more or less a single civilization for nearly 3000 years, and the city of Jericho dates back roughly 12,000 years and is still inhabited today. There are some dwellings in Israel that are over 1500 years old and still have people living inside them today and there are some cave homes that date back over 3000 years.

  • @veronicalogotheti1162

    Thank you

  • @vic5015
    @vic5015 Před rokem +2

    How long until the History Channel does a rather far-fetched Ancient Alien's episode on this place?

    • @IzzieNickole
      @IzzieNickole Před rokem

      They’ve already done a bunch lol

    • @vic5015
      @vic5015 Před rokem

      ​@@IzzieNickolenot at all surprised.

  • @Inshokuten69
    @Inshokuten69 Před 11 měsíci

    Anyone who enjoyed this look up Boncuklu Tarla, 2000-3000 years older than Gobekli Tepe. Who knows how much farther it'll go back as we find more.

  • @JonMembersonly
    @JonMembersonly Před rokem +5

    Strange how every site around the world the craftsmanship always degrades over time. One would think you improve.. But ya no civilization here to see during the last ice age. Handbags anyone?

    • @blckspice5167
      @blckspice5167 Před rokem

      Happens every time a civilization collapses. Egypt, Romans, the Indians in the 1400s

    • @trekkifpv1976
      @trekkifpv1976 Před 3 dny

      While i agree with the inference that there may have been a more advanced society before or during the last ice age there needs to be more evidence to make that conclusion and the implication that there is a cover-up to hide this idea from the public also requires evidence you cant make a definitive or even a tentative conclusion based on nothing but conjecture

  • @GeraldCarter-xk1dr
    @GeraldCarter-xk1dr Před rokem

    I think this is one of the many origins for Noahs ark. It is a list of the known animals in the general area to chronical them (all male symbolism or not). The facility was buried on purpose as it would not have survived the test of time left as is. The fact that it is pretty much still intake proves that out. The peoples of that time new the earth was endangered from previous meteor Strikes. They were accumulating becoming worse each year reaching a climatic point and then tapering off in the following years. By then utter devastation had occurred. Whenever this is discussed, they make it seem like it was an isolated event in 1 timed year. I think there are more of these types of structures waiting to be found. Regardless of what I think, I do enjoy this subject matter and videos. He does a great job of narrating.