The Myths and Religion of Gobekli Tepe

There is a lot which is misconceived about the culture at Gobekli Tepe, here I explain our latest understanding of the culture, and by understanding the beliefs and religion, I will interpret some of the narratives found on the pillars and in stone reliefs.
🌍 Links
Patreon: / crecganford
Twitter: / crecganford
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Mythology Database: www.mythologydatabase.com/
🧡 Please respect other's cultures and beliefs. Racism, discrimination or threatening speech will not be tolerated.
📚 References
Ayaz, Hurran. An Alternative View on Animal Symbolism in The Göbekli Tepe Neolithic Cultural Region in the Light of New Data (Göbekli Tepe, Sayburç)
Peters, Joris. Animals in the Symbolic World of Pre-Pottery Neolithic Göbekli Tepe, South-eastern Turkey: A Preliminary Assessment
Bacon, Benner. An Upper Palaeolithic Proto-writing System and Phenological Calendar
Celik, Bahattin. Rise of Göbekli Tepe Culture: “Hunting Ground Economy” and the Role of Speculative “Knowledge”
Ayaz, Orhan. Self-Revelation: An Origin Myth Interpretation of the Göbekli Tepe Culture (An Alternative Perspective on Anthropomorphic Themes)
Özdoğan, Eylem. The Sayburç reliefs: a narrative scene from the Neolithic
📑 Chapters
0:00 Introduction
1:45 An Overview of Gobekli Tepe
3:45 The First Farmers?
11:32 The Pre-Pottery Culture
14:49 The Evolution of Agrarian Culture
18:20 Ritual, Architecture and Art
24:22 When Humans became Gods
26:19 The Skull Cult
28:38 Our Oldest Narrative
34:54 The Influence of Gobekli Tepe
36:48 My Thoughts on the Religion and these sites

Пікірлер: 516

  • @Crecganford
    @Crecganford2 ай бұрын

    Let me know if you your thoughts on what the carvings mean...

  • @juliahenriques210

    @juliahenriques210

    2 ай бұрын

    It does look like a representation of pivotal moments of strenght or courage. Surviving being set up by two large felines is no trivial story to tell, and can very well go into legend or myth. Just like bullfighting (which does look a lot like what is depicted there). But these are just wild guesses without access to the whole iconography of the site (or similar sites for that matter). It would be an even more astounding story if they were depicting proto-domestication attempts, humans befriending (rather than just hunting or performing rituals with) dangerous animals so as not to be hunted or attacked by them. It would be interesting to know if (and how) dogs and wolves are depicted there.

  • @kariannecrysler640

    @kariannecrysler640

    2 ай бұрын

    It’s tough. Many of the carved stones are reused randomly throughout the different sites, as parts of the building structure paying no heed to the carvings. But I agree that there seems to be a kinship with some animals & a dominance with others. I honestly have spent more time looking at the water management & grinding stones, than the carvings so far. And one of the oldest sites, a cave with burials, they were making bead’s! Lot’s of beads lol. The domestic/residential buildings are also surrounding the larger enclosures and we don’t have full understandings for potential class separation & perhaps we won’t find any either. I really like your assessments. They seem spot on given the current context. Thank you Jon

  • @GizzyDillespee

    @GizzyDillespee

    2 ай бұрын

    Today, the people would be called "furries"... before the party, the bears go meet up over by the bear carvings, leopards by the leopard pillars, and so on. Then they'd go out "hunting", mating and so on. IDKY all those different animal carvings were there. Some of the carvings remind me of mesopotanian motifs from apparently much later in time, but I don't know what the tepe culture looked like.

  • @juliahenriques210

    @juliahenriques210

    2 ай бұрын

    @@kariannecrysler640 How interesting it is to have someone who's actually working with the site here to give their two cents. Thank you so much for sharing a bit of it with us. :)

  • @elizabethdavis1696

    @elizabethdavis1696

    2 ай бұрын

    What are the years or time periods that you specialize in?

  • @karenlankford8558
    @karenlankford85582 ай бұрын

    The problem with interpreting any ancient carving or drawing is that we have lost the social context of the communication. We know that, as with words in modern languages, images could have different meanings in different context. A bull could just be a bull, or it could be a symbol for strength, or it could represent a constellation, or it could represent only the sound, or part of the sound for the word for bull, which in association with another symbol produced a name.

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    We can see certain contexts, for example these images are not writing, and so would not be sounds, due to how they are arranged. But they maybe symbolic as opposed to narrative, although my experience and those of other academics believe it is narrative.

  • @Gizziiusa

    @Gizziiusa

    Ай бұрын

    Bullsh!t comes to mind, so did they use the poop emoji with it for clarification ?

  • @9FisterSpit9

    @9FisterSpit9

    Ай бұрын

    The Wolf and Bull of Wall Street are perfect examples of this phenomena.

  • @michaelmartinez5217

    @michaelmartinez5217

    Ай бұрын

    Or ask the new generation that speaks in "emojis" to translate for us. I bet they could read Egyptian hyroglifs or get close with out the Rosetta Stone.. lol

  • @9FisterSpit9

    @9FisterSpit9

    Ай бұрын

    @@michaelmartinez5217 I wish I had a cool rock...

  • @kayt_quilts
    @kayt_quilts2 ай бұрын

    Dr. White, this was my favorite thing you’ve ever put out, and that’s setting an incredibly high bar. How incredible is this?! I have been having the great time taking the information from your videos and incorporating them into my homeschooling curriculum for my three little girls (8, 7, and 5). The bear cultures and rituals have, so far, been a huge hit with us!! I wish we could donate, but this has been a brutal year for us. But we wanted to say, keep up the amazing work, you are so very very appreciated!!

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much.

  • @kayt_quilts

    @kayt_quilts

    Ай бұрын

    @@Crecganford Good Evening, Dr. White. I have been thinking about this video for, well, I guess twelve days now (Nerd alert!). And as I have been checking out the various paleoarchaeological headlines which have emerged in the last few weeks, I have come up with a few questions. I’m not sure the best way to articulate these things, so bear with me. Now, in your scenario, it’s a particularly favorable climactic situation that stimulates the proliferation of previously harder-to-find grasses in the region of Gobekli Tepe. The concentrated boon in plant food availability removed the necessity to keep moving with the megafauna prey species which had sustained their forefathers, and provided, rather, the incentive for the local clans to unite, build, gather and stockpile grain, and, eventually, to learn how to control the growth of the grasses themselves. I love this theory, I think it’s brilliant and explains so much! But, then I wonder how we can explain the development of similar horticultural mastery in places like the Amazon, which wouldn’t have experienced this kind of situation? In previous generations, we thought that the Amazon hadn’t hosted the kind of populous, urbanized, agricultural centers that were extent during the European and Near Eastern Bronze Ages. But since Lidar was introduced a few years ago, the game has been changing almost quarterly. The big takeaways, however, are that people were organizing and concentrating much earlier than previously believed, and these sites seem to suggest the same kind of social cohesion, organization, and sophistication that characterized the rise of the agrarian states of the Near Eastern theater. Why? My second question relates to the most recent revelations coming out of the Sayburç site. According to the Megalithomania episode that came out today (I think), the boar sculpture with the red ocher in its mouth is holding a skull. They noted similar imagery in First Nations cultures and the Vedic traditions, wherein the boar is depicted as a chaos creature, essentially. It removes the soul from the skull in Native American mythology, and it is the first living being to emerge from the primordial chaos ocean in the Vedas. Venomous snakes also seem to make frequent appearances in all three cultures, perhaps even playing similar cosmological roles and corresponding to the Milky Way. In fact, they have discovered that one of the structures resembles the inside of a snake’s head and the rest of the rooms are its body. The whole structure seems to be an abstract depiction of an indigenous viper that still lives in the region today. But perhaps the greatest surprise to me was the revelation that some of the rooms had been filled with water. There is speculation that the water was being used for its reflective properties, bringing the “cosmic snake,” of the Milky Way symbolically down to Earth and reflecting it back up again. The three archaeologists in the video all seem to agree that the site was most likely oracular in nature, since evidence has been found that indicates the use of these native vipers in ritual. I didn’t know if you had seen any of these recent developments, but if so, I wondered if these additional details have any impact on your interpretation of the possible narratives being depicted?

  • @thearmchairjournalist566

    @thearmchairjournalist566

    Ай бұрын

    You are a great mum, I am in awe of your commitment to your kids education 👌

  • @gaufrid1956
    @gaufrid19562 ай бұрын

    An interesting video, Jon. As for "skull cults", I remember that in Catal Huyuk a few thousand years later, when people had built houses and were farmers, they buried the dead below where they slept, and set the skulls of the ancestors up in their houses. They plastered the skulls with ochre and recreated facial features such as the eyes. When you spoke about how as societies grew more complex, the shaman changed from male to female. This is seen in indigenous tribes in the Philippines, such as my wife's tribe, the Higaonon, in Bukidnon Mindanao. They practice agriculture, growing corn and vegetables, but still hunt and gather sometimes. The baylan (shaman) is almost always female. My wife's maternal grandmother was a baylan, and trained my wife as a baylan as well. The traditional beliefs of the Higaonon, and many other indigenous tribes, are a combination of animism and ancestor worship. In the case of the Higaonon, there is a chief "Diwata" (spirit) called Magbabaya, whose will is said to have created the world. All other diwata are known as "Migbaya", and control the various aspects of nature. There is also the "Tumanud" (guardian spirit), and "Abyan" (spirit guide, companion spirit). Many indigenous tribes have carved anthropomorphic figures, in Tagalog called "taotao" ("tao" means "person") which are set up in houses or "spirit houses" in a village. It's interesting too that among the more complex societies, such as the Tagalog kingdom of Luzon, and the Visayan kingdoms, there was a pantheon of anthropomorphic gods that were worshipped. Despite this, and hundreds of years of influence by Christianity and Islam, people still pay their respects to the spirits of nature. Passing a large rock or tree, especially a "balete" (large strangler fig tree), Filipinos will usually say "Tabi po" or "Tabi tabi apo". "Tabi" means something like "Side by side". Tagalog speakers add "po" as an honorific. "Apo" can mean "Ancestor, grandparent, or grandchild". In this case it refers to the elders. There is something in humans that stems from our deep past, and hopefully will remain.

  • @gaufrid1956

    @gaufrid1956

    2 ай бұрын

    @ConontheBinarian I agree with you completely. Before clearing any land, the Higaonon people will conduct rituals asking for Magbabaya's blessing on the project. Magbabaya is believed to be in everything and everyone, to be everywhere, and to know everything. Unlike the Abrahamic God (YHWH/Allah), Magbabaya is neither distant nor judgemental. Similar to the fact that in the local languages, personal pronouns have no gender, Magbabaya encompasses both the masculine and the feminine.

  • @Paolur

    @Paolur

    2 ай бұрын

    Norwegian here, its so interesting how my people and yours on opposite sides of the earth still come to very similar beliefs in things like nature spirits inhabiting trees, rocks etc despite the abrahamic determination for a thousand years to exterminate it. We say the hidden people live everywhere in nature but specifically big rocks and barrows, but they can also be anywhere under the ground. I still can't bring myself to pour water on the ground without first speaking a warning to get out of the way like grandma taught me

  • @Paolur

    @Paolur

    2 ай бұрын

    @ConontheBinarian there is a stone in my hometown on the road into the mountains with a carved bowl in it called the wish stone, you can pour a libation into it and make a wish. Usually it would be the milk thats being transported home from the summer farm but whiskey would probably do the trick too

  • @gaufrid1956

    @gaufrid1956

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Paolur Yes! It's also interesting that you mentioned that your grandma taught you. My wife, in her late fifties now, learned from her maternal grandmother to be a baylan, effectively a tribal shaman, healer, masseur, and in the past, midwife. Specially trained and initiated, she remains a baylan even though she is not living in a tribal village. I'm Australian by birth, with Anglo-Irish ancestors. It was easy for me to understand the things she told me, and what you mentioned, because my ancestors also held similar beliefs. I have experienced things here in our house in Mindanao Philippines that only strengthen my belief that there are spirits in all things. My wife says that I'm such a loveable guy that even those from the "outside world" (the "otherworld", "spirit dimension", which the Higaonon people call the "Banting") love me too. I feel really flattered! Our kitchen is inhabited by a female "tumanud" (guardian spirit), we believe.

  • @robgau2501

    @robgau2501

    Ай бұрын

    Your wife is a Baylan. Pretty cool.

  • @carlosalbuquerque22
    @carlosalbuquerque222 ай бұрын

    Just to correct that Aboriginal Australian cultures do have gods/spirits. They are increasingly understood to have been agricultural prior to colonization

  • @buttercxpdraws8101

    @buttercxpdraws8101

    Ай бұрын

    Glad you pointed this out. I was a bit disappointed to see there was no recognition of pre colonial agricultural techniques used by Aust aborigines. ✌️

  • @Uncanny_Mountain

    @Uncanny_Mountain

    Ай бұрын

    Isn't colonialism great /s Native Americans did the same, they literally created food forests that attracted wildlife to hunt as well And we are seeing the same kind of agricultural planning in South America too

  • @joshnoble0
    @joshnoble02 ай бұрын

    I appreciate that you can analyze the past without the biases of the present. Too much of the speculation about what Gobleke Tepe represents involves modern understandings of civilization that leave out archaeology and anthropology. We were still human before we built cities.

  • @kaarlimakela3413
    @kaarlimakela34132 ай бұрын

    As a kid grumbling about chores, I would sometimes get this 'We HAD you to do the work! The more hands to bring in the harvest, the better!' Note that I can remember no one in the family who ever farmed, as we all were Detroiters for generations 😆

  • @daniellealexander9844
    @daniellealexander98442 ай бұрын

    My area of expertise! So glad you've done a video on this - first thing I did was check your references and found myself pleased.

  • @sharielane
    @sharielane2 ай бұрын

    38:16 The mention of people coming together from long distances reminds me of a cultural practice of the indigenous Australians regarding an important native food called the Bunya Nut. The Bunya Pine only grows in a limited range, the Bunya Mountains in Queensland. And thanks to the alternating El Nino/La Nina weather patterns that subjects Australia to a cycle of drought, bushfire and flood, the tree only produces a crop every 2-7 years depending on weather conditions. However whenever a crop was ready for harvest the local people of the area would send out messengers hundreds of kilometres away to let all the other peoples know it was ready. Thousands of people of diverse tribes would converge on the area, putting aside any differences for the duration, and there would be months of celebrations and ceremonies performed as the nuts were harvested and feasted upon. And due to nature of such a large gathering it was also a time where disputes were settled, marriage arrangements were made, and goods were traded. I wonder if perhaps something similar also occurred at Gobekli Tepe and the other similar surrounding sites. If perhaps for the "harvest" season the various people in the region would put whatever differences they had aside and would travel and converge onto the harvest sites to partake in the harvest. Leading to these sites, and the (I assume) annual gathering, becoming an important meeting place for intertribal negotiations and trade. A meeting place that eventually become permanent.

  • @buttercxpdraws8101

    @buttercxpdraws8101

    2 ай бұрын

    That’s an excellent comparison - well worth considering 👍🏻

  • @Uncanny_Mountain

    @Uncanny_Mountain

    Ай бұрын

    Stonehenge was used in much the same way. But it's also about observation of the Solstice Calendar, hence the alignment of all Megalithic sites accordingly

  • @beenforet5391
    @beenforet53912 ай бұрын

    I have some alternative interpretations of the images that you might like to consider. First is the man without a head indicates that he is having an out of body experience. His head is in another world of animal spirits while his body stays behind. The fact that he is also ithyphallic is indicative of a trance. Similar depictions of ithyphallic spirit journeys are found in earlier cave paintings and shamans around the world report this phenomenon when going into trance.. If you do not have pottery, skulls make a great container for everyday use. The person with a bull is holding either a snake, a symbol of change, or perhaps even a "bull roarer", an instrument long used in spiritual ceremony and initiation or even another bull's tail with which the man is teasing the bull to prove his bravery. He is communing with the the bull to give him virility and strength. It is hard for me to believe that a single person could take down a bull and castrate it, especially the large, wild ancient bulls. The figure that is holding his phallus, flanked by two leopards, could be, as you say, a young man going through puberty initiation rights or he could be performing a rite similar to ancient Egyptian fertility rituals. In Egypt, according to legend, the Egyptian god Atum created the universe after ejaculation from masturbation. The flow of the Nile was also said to be connected to the number of times the god ejaculated. Due to this, the pharaohs of ancient Egypt were required to ceremonially masturbate into the Nile. Historically, also, leopards have an association with protection and rulers. Perhaps this figure is not an initiate but somehow involved with renewal.

  • @richardearnshaw2719

    @richardearnshaw2719

    Ай бұрын

    I had a few ideas of my own but then I had to rub one out and now I've got nothing again. Although I'm just wondering now what the surviving members of Monty Python's Flying Circus might make of it all. It's a larf, in'it? Say nooo more!

  • @MaryAnnNytowl
    @MaryAnnNytowl2 ай бұрын

    Ooh, I don't think I've ever caught a Crecganford video this soon before! 😮 Time to settle in for an entertaining education! ❤❤

  • @j.l.emerson592
    @j.l.emerson592Ай бұрын

    There was an area of southern Egypt, aka/Upper Egypt, during the PPN that did much of what you've been discussing at an even earlier time period, around 15,000 years before present. (During a period of desertification) However, it seems that they took the additional step of broadcasting the grain seed... No, they didn't plow fields or weed any fields. They just threw the seeds on the ground & did nothing else until harvest time. They had seasonal villages that they built & used in rotation with other sites. Hundreds of querns have been found at these sites. The sites were in use only briefly, maybe a couple hundred years & then they went back to a fully nomadic lifestyle as soon as climate conditions improved.

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    Ай бұрын

    If you can reference a peer reviewed paper supporting this I'd be interested in reading it.

  • @j.l.emerson592

    @j.l.emerson592

    Ай бұрын

    @@Crecganford From Wikipedia: Sebilian culture edit Main article: Sebilian In Egypt, analyses of pollen found at archaeological sites indicate that the people of the Sebilian culture (also known as the Esna culture) were gathering wheat and barley. The Sebilian culture began around 13,000 B.C and vanished around 10,000 B.C[citation needed] Domesticated seeds were not found.[12] It has been hypothesized that the sedentary lifestyle practiced by grain gatherers led to increased warfare, which was detrimental to sedentary life and brought this period to an end.[12] Grimal, Nicolas (1988). A History of Ancient Egypt. Librairie Arthéme Fayard. p. 21.

  • @kariannecrysler640
    @kariannecrysler6402 ай бұрын

    Woohoo Lee. Gotta show our archaeologists all the love for their works 🥰

  • @kariannecrysler640

    @kariannecrysler640

    2 ай бұрын

    14:56 look into the genetics of rice. It’s amazing what we are discovering about crops through genetics!

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you

  • @majidbineshgar7156
    @majidbineshgar71562 ай бұрын

    It is always better to say Anatolia or modern Turkey considering the fact that none of civilisations in Anatolia were related to ethnic Altaic/ Turkic peoples at all.

  • @kariannecrysler640

    @kariannecrysler640

    2 ай бұрын

    I haven’t seen any works on the dna & isotopic data on bodies found around the greater area yet. Do you have any to cite so I can dive in?

  • @alexeysaphonov232

    @alexeysaphonov232

    2 ай бұрын

    ​​​​@@kariannecrysler640 well it's too easy there are a lot of researches (including DNA) in Anatolia and we know quite well timing of Huns-Mongols-Turks genesis in the Mongolia and we even know when they have first come into the area (Manzikert 1071). Also even modern turkish DNA aren't as turik as their languages (data is googlable). The most common y haplogroups are the local G2, J2, J1 and indoeuropean R1a, R1b. Typical turik Q is quasy non-existent.

  • @morbloe4559

    @morbloe4559

    2 ай бұрын

    @@alexeysaphonov232I’m an engineer and know nothing about genetics and whatnot. Got any good sites/books/sources that would be good for understanding what you’re talking about? Or would an average book on biology and genetics be sufficient to be able to draw conclusions like you are. Thanks

  • @alexeysaphonov232

    @alexeysaphonov232

    2 ай бұрын

    @@morbloe4559 well I am an engineer as well. History, culture and languages are my private interesses. I don't know where you are now in this regard. You can start with some basic history of the region (Anatolia or maybe even Near East). You can google "Turkey DNA research" I See even a wiki reference. On indoeuropean you can look authors like David Antony or a bit dated but cool Maria Gebuntas.

  • @jefflippman2925

    @jefflippman2925

    2 ай бұрын

    It wasn’t Anatolian then either so why not use the modern reference? Proto Scythian is more accurate

  • @starrmont4981
    @starrmont4981Ай бұрын

    We are so privileged to have you to tell us these stories. Even if they are way off, it's a special experience to connect with our ancestors.

  • @3rdeye671
    @3rdeye6712 ай бұрын

    The Bull painted on the wall of Lsscaux cave in western France is a representation of the Taurus constellation. It has the seven stars around the eye of the bull. Only the celestial Bull has these seven stars around the eye. This indicates that the zodiac constellation was represented as a Bull as far back as 25,-30,000 years ago. Zodiac symbolism was certainly formed a long time before Gobekli Tepe was constructed.

  • @bardmadsen6956

    @bardmadsen6956

    2 ай бұрын

    Maybe the headless man is a prognostication of academia. There are two examples that I know of in cave art. Half the bones found at Gobekli Tepe were Auroch, there are seven birds in a row under Pillar 18, there is a bull's head on the chest of the adversary pillar 31, and there was a grave at a sister site with two bovine scapula placed over it.

  • @3rdeye671

    @3rdeye671

    Ай бұрын

    @@bardmadsen6956 you could say that the head of the headless man is on the wing of the Vulture in the centre of the upper T section panel. The upper section is the heavens. The Vulture aligns to the Cygnus constellation, the Great Celestial Bird taking the souls to the land of the dead beyond the great rift or gateway in the Milky Way or River separating the living from the dead. Later the Vulture becomes a Swan or Stork and we still have the story of the Stork bringing the new born baby to the world. The head can also be seen in the centre and in relation to the Vulture being the Cygnus constellation the head would align to the pole star position. Making the soul to be one of the Eternal Ones that all the heavens revolve around.

  • @3rdeye671

    @3rdeye671

    Ай бұрын

    @@bardmadsen6956 the head of the headless man is to be found in the centre of the upper T section panel. On the wing of the Vulture. The head represents the soul of the headless man below. The upper T section represents the heavens above. The Vulture represents the Cygnus constellation the Great Celestial Bird that takes the souls of the dead to the Land of the Dead in the heavens above.

  • @sophiejones3554

    @sophiejones3554

    Ай бұрын

    That makes sense, since it is also the only zodiac constellation which is interpreted as the same animal in China and Europe. Even in North America it was still seen as a bovine: a buffalo. Evidently that asterism became firmly associated with bovines early on in modern human prehistory despite the resemblance not being super obvious. And while the exact stars which make up the celestial bull aren't universally agreed upon, everyone seems to include the Pleiades. Perhaps something to do with the behavior of musk ox/bison, where they form a protective circle of adults around the old and young? I could see that becoming a ritual dance or something which might persist through various cultural and linguistic shifts as modern humans moved eastward.

  • @Uncanny_Mountain

    @Uncanny_Mountain

    Ай бұрын

    The Headless man is Orion, very obvious from the Constellation itself. Pythagoras means Heart of the Serpent, he was born in Sidon, a fishing Port in Phoenicia. His mother recieved a message from the Oracle of Delphi that he would become a great Leader and Teacher. Sidon means Kingdom of the Fish, and the Essenes, who wrote the Dead Sea scrolls, worshipped Pythagoras. The Sarcophagus of Eschmun III found in Sidon names him as the Widow's Scion, aka Hiram Abiff, the Founder of Freemasonry, of which Tyre was the premier Capital (at least equal to Thebes). In 911BC Rameses II married the Queen of Sidon, home of Jezebel (Daughter or consort of Baal, basically "Queen") founding Neo Assyrian Babylon, an alliance between Egypt and Hiram, father of Jezebel and King of Assyria, and Egypt, forming the Phoenician colonies and building the first Temple of Melqart to commemorate the alliance. The Si in Sidon is the basis of the Latin Exe, or X, and is the basis of the Cross, or Chi Rho that Constantine painted on his shields. Also known as the Cross of Tyre, or Cross of Baal, being Ra-El, or Ba'El. Oddly enough irrational numbers can also be mapped using Euler's number, producing a Templar Cross in the process: a map of where Eclipses are most likely to occur. This cross can also be seen around the neck of Nimrod in Assyria, and is consistent with the Union Jack, and Solstice Calendar found in the Vatican Shiva Lingam. Shiva is the Hebrew word for 7, their culture also found its way to Japan (via the Phillipines) ultimately becoming Shintoism. It was the Phoenicians who gave their name to the Pole Star, which they used to Navigate the Oceans using the Zodiac, thats what the Antikythera mechanism was for, and with it they wrote the Byblos Baal, what we now call the Bible. The first form of the Bible was written in 325BC and called the Vaticanus Greacus, or Son of the Sacred Serpent, a reference to Sirius, the basis of the Sothic Calendar, which uses a Hexidecimal or base 60 system found in all the Megalithic sites around the world. In the second century AD astronomer Valentinus Vettori transcribed it into a Lunar chart of 13 houses, what we now call the Zodiac. Horoscope means Star Watcher, and the Phoenician word for Saturn, or El, was Israel or El, (Fruit) of Isis and Ra. Alternatively El is the Father of Ra the Sun and Consort of Isis the Earth, aka El is the Moon. El is the primary God of the Phoenicians, representing the offspring of Egypt, and his consort Astarte or Ishtar represents the Assyrian half of the alliance. It may be possible to trace lineages and alliances through the naming of gods, which can be traced all the way to Ireland and the Vikings, and to Indonesia and the Americas, even as far away as New Zealand and Australia. It denotes Sirius as Son of Orion and Pleaides, which sits at 33 degrees of the Zodiac. The basis of the Sothic (dir Seth) Calendar of the Egyptians. The New Moon in this position marks Rosh Hashanah, the Egyptian, Celtic, Phoenician, and Assyrian New Year, the first New Moon of September, which is called September because it's the 7th House of the Zodiac, when the Sun is in Ophiuchus. The Phoenix, Benben, or Bennu is the Egyptian word for Heron, a Feathered 'Serpent'. It baptised itself in frankincense and myrrh at BaalBek, and then alights atop the Pyramid, upon the Holy Grail, or Altar of Ra every 630 years to take three days off the calendar during the course of the first New Moon of Nisan, which means "Prince". The Capstone of Pyramids is even called the Benben or Bennu. The Phoenix is found in all religions, which are all Astrological Allegory for the Moon travelling through the Constellations, as a soul migrating from body to body, this is the basis of Joseph Campbell's Monomyth, or the Hero's Journey. The various planets no doubt play their own roles as portents, omens, and aspects, this astrology is the science of the Bronze age, and lasted all the way up to the 20th Century. Reincarnation was an early teaching of the Christian Church, and likely relates to the lineage of Kings (The Pan is Dead, long live Pan!) Phoenicians represent the interim step between Egypt and Greece, their artisans and culture exceeding that of the Greeks, who literally adopted the Phoenician Alphabet, which we still use to this day, sounding out words phonetically. Phoenician is aliiterated in Venetian, and Vikings, being Kings of the Sea. The Bennu is the Egyptian Phoenix, to Phoenicians the Hoyle, no different to the traditions of the Etruscans, who saw birds as sacred, just as the Celts. Hebrew and Iber as in Iberia have the same root meaning over, as in overseas, as in those who travel "over the sea." A colony called Iberia also appears on the Eastern shores of the Black Sea, where the same Dolmens and Megalithic culture originating in Ireland and Brittany appeared circa 4500BC. _Phoenician_ means Scions of the Phoenix, the first Bible: Vaticanus Greacus Son of the Sacred Serpent (Prince). Then there's the Essenes, Sons of Light, the Tuatha De Danaan, Sons of Light, Annunaki, Sons of Light, Arthur Pendragon means Arthur Son of the Dragon; Chertoff is Russian for "Son of the Devil" and Dracula also means Son of the Dragon, Masons have been known at times to call themselves the "Brotherhood of the Great White Serpent". The Ziggurat of Anu also denotes her as a great white Serpent, while New Grange and the Bru na Boinne in Ireland (4000BC) coated buildings with white quartz to denote the Moon. The Moon itself travels outside the Solar Elliptic by 5 degrees, which means it passes through specific constellations in a serpentine fashion that is always changing, but repeats every 19 years, the time it took to train a Druid or Magi, Magi meaning "Teacher" the Phoenix is also associated with this sacred number 19. The name "Pharoah" means "Great House" or "House of Light" and Cairo used to be called Babel. Pharaoh's themselves wore a hooded crown representing feathers, just as Native American Chiefs, ie the Feathered Serpent, they were also called the Commander in Chief. Aztecs also had Serpent Kings, (Canaan means Serpent Kings, and Sidon was a Son of Canaan, and Great Grandson of Noah) who were called to lead with cunning and guile, being the very virtue by which they claim the title in the first place; but to be seen in public as just and diplomatic. "As wise as Serpents, but gentle as Doves" the old Egyptian flag of an Eagle attacking a Snake is also reflected in the Modern Mexican flag, denoting the Constellations of Serpentis (13th sign of the Zodiac) and Aquila. The dimensions and 12 mathematical constants of the Great Pyramid are also expressed in New Grange, and Stonehenge, as well as in Watson Brake, (2500BC) and Teotihuacan, which correlates to the Phoenician/ Sumerian Hexidecimal system, which is what our modern systems of time are based on. In fact it unlocks a kind of fractal pattern that is reflected throughout creation. Officially no one knows who invented astrology, the zodiac, navigation by the stars, and time keeping. But whoever built the pyramids, and pioneered the 24hr clock in Egypt 5000 years ago also knew the exact dimensions of the Earth, as well as the speed of light. These calculations can all be made using these Megalithic sites as surveyors use a theodolite. Specifically Teotihuacan, which sits 180 degrees opposite Cairo, and has the exact same footprint. The ideal positions to determine the speed of light using the transit of Venus, by which one can accurately determine Longitude for navigation. Capt Cook did the same thing in 1774 when he 'discovered' Easter Island. The only culture that fits the bill was wiped out "not one stone upon the other" by the Romans in 146BC. Tyre, the capital of Phoenicia (israel) sat just offshore from Uru Salaam: City of the New Moon, or City of Peace. The root of the name Jerusalem, and was also seized by Rome in 70AD after a 13 year seige. The gap between is 216 years. Greek Dionysians built the Temple of Solomon (now called the Temple of Melqart) representing the Solar Lunar Metonic Calendar on which this system is based, they also carried mirrors, a practice associated with both the Magi and the Druids as well as Greek and Egyptian scholars, these Mirrors are Astrological charts called "Cycladian Frying Pans" and record the cycles of the planets. The first Temple of Melqart (the Phoenician form of Horus, or Hercules, or Pan, or Thor) representing the 13th Constellation of Ophiuchus or the Serpent Bearer (hence Orphic Serpent worship) had pillars of Emerald and Gold, representing Isis and Osiris. The Jerusalem Temple only took payment in "Shekels of Tyre" a currency minted during the Jewish rebellion against Rome. "Give that which is Ceasar's unto Ceasar" When Alexander sacked Tyre in 332BC they moved to Carthage meaning "New City" or New Jerusalem, where they built a second temple with Pillars of Bronze. Nebuchadnezzar also seiged Tyre for 13 years, taking the City captive in 573BC: the same time as the biblical account of the Jews. And again in 70AD after a three and a half year seige, also consistent with biblical accounts. Palaset was the name of a tribe of the Sea Peoples, Pallas Set denotes the New Moon of Ammun Ra rising in Gemini, the Pallas Constellation of the Twins that stand before Orion. This occurs due West of the Temple of Solomon in Tyre between the Western Gates of Gibraltar, Gabriel's Altar, and is the basis of the name Pallastein, or Pallas Stone. As in the Philosopher's Stone or Holy Grail, Altar of Ammun Rah, the Rising Sun. The Cross of Tyre or Ba'El ❌ represents the Lunar maximums and minimums and correlates with the Cross Quarter days of the Solstice Calendar. Align the Cross ❌ Chi Rho Christian ✝️ and Star 🔯 to the zodiac and you have a Compass and a timepiece that can be used to Circumnavigate the globe.

  • @TioDeive
    @TioDeive2 ай бұрын

    This is the video I was waiting for. Thank you so much!

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    I hope you liked it.

  • @chiron14pl
    @chiron14pl2 ай бұрын

    Re: the second panel on the Sayburc relief. I recall In J. Campbell''s 4v Masks of God he shows a fragment of a relief he called "the Animal Master," which had an ithyphallic male flanked by tow animals. Thus while it could be coming of age, it could also be recognized as a more generalized celebration of mastery of animals, outside of a rite of passage

  • @castlebrookbooks1037

    @castlebrookbooks1037

    2 ай бұрын

    According to some anthropologists, it means a man is completely vulnerable when he is urinating, so better watch out because the predators are watching.

  • @fairuzpandavar9796
    @fairuzpandavar9796Ай бұрын

    I really appreciate this channel. Thank you.

  • @morgan97475
    @morgan97475Ай бұрын

    Fascinating perspective. Thanks for this video.

  • @fuzzuck
    @fuzzuckАй бұрын

    Given that many of the allegorical meanings from 15th & even 16th century paintings from the Italian & Dutch/Flemish renaissance are lost to modern minds, it reinforces how much more alien (in a terrestrial sense) the architects & artists of Gobekli Tepe must have been. The lingering medieval Christian symbolism of Bosch or Bruegel comes with libraries full of geographic & period-specific documentation from which to extract clues, whereas sites like Gobekli Tepe, Easter Island or Stonehenge come with an open sky & endless speculation. Great video.

  • @Uncanny_Mountain

    @Uncanny_Mountain

    Ай бұрын

    Well that And the hexametric Solar Lunar Calendar they all share ....

  • @fuzzuck

    @fuzzuck

    Ай бұрын

    @@Uncanny_Mountain That would clearly fall under the 'open sky & endless speculation' category.

  • @Uncanny_Mountain

    @Uncanny_Mountain

    Ай бұрын

    @@fuzzuck that is clearly a fragile Strawman argument based on you agreeing with your own opinion Not the objective scholar you like to pretend to be.

  • @Uncanny_Mountain

    @Uncanny_Mountain

    Ай бұрын

    @@fuzzuck that would clearly be you appealing to your own non existent authority

  • @Uncanny_Mountain

    @Uncanny_Mountain

    Ай бұрын

    @@fuzzuck thats a cute Strawman. Of course everything you say is true, it's only everyone else who is fallible You're like a God

  • @danielturczan2485
    @danielturczan2485Ай бұрын

    This was above-and-beyond your already high quality work.

  • @icenarsin5283
    @icenarsin52832 ай бұрын

    Amazing work as always

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @MatthewCaunsfield
    @MatthewCaunsfield2 ай бұрын

    GT is so fascinating, thanks for the latest thoughts on the site

  • @wendykleeb2071
    @wendykleeb2071Ай бұрын

    I so enjoy your videos! Thanks!

  • @jasonshapiro9469
    @jasonshapiro9469Ай бұрын

    Thanks for your work. Your ideas are logical and much more realistic than the majority of other things ive heard. The suggestion the site was a storage bin..in a way maybe the first bank...makes perfect sense in light of the evidence at hand

  • @neftu9131
    @neftu91312 ай бұрын

    Wonder if those central T-pillar pairs were used for sky burials. Connect their tops with planks, lay the corpse on top and then let the vultures do their part.

  • @thomasbrown4791

    @thomasbrown4791

    2 ай бұрын

    Interesting thought

  • @roxyamused

    @roxyamused

    2 ай бұрын

    "Sky Burials" were charnel grounds, or ares where humans placed dead people. Vajrayana Buddhist monks shop up a teacher's body and do sadhanas and phowa. This doesn't happen where people store food that's for sure. For one, I feel like putting dead bodies around would be good for keeping pests away from food storage or keep food edible. Secondly, I feel like a lot of bones would be found if that was the case. Carrion don't just eat all of a carcass, they leave some stuff they don't like, or even find other remains around the site from carrion dropping stuff. It was used for at least 1500yrs, certainly could have been repurposed, but I think archeologists would know if it was a charnel ground.

  • @AncientArchitects
    @AncientArchitects2 ай бұрын

    Superb video mate 👏

  • @nnonotnow
    @nnonotnowАй бұрын

    Personalization of gods. That's as good and succinct an explanation of the effect of man moving out of nature that I've ever heard. Such a turning point

  • @zipperpillow
    @zipperpillow2 ай бұрын

    Consistently excellent, Jon! You are our extraordinary guide for journeys back in time. Always a worthwhile treat. Thank you.

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you for your kind words.

  • @Coolcat3
    @Coolcat3Ай бұрын

    Hey man your videos are really great. I think from a sound perspective, if u adjust the bass a bit I think it would make the videos better. I turned down the bass on my own and it makes such a difference. Keep up the good work cheers

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    Ай бұрын

    I don’t add bass, I just have a bit of a deep voice, but I can try and tweak it a little more in future.

  • @gabriellaritaart
    @gabriellaritaart2 ай бұрын

    Amazing video, very informative, thank you 🎉

  • @attekinnula4406
    @attekinnula44062 ай бұрын

    Sayburc relief has one element that really stands out - the 3D depiction of a person. It really draws the eye to it. Since there is already another human figure on it, it would suggest that the 3D relief is somehow more important than the other human depiction, and central to the ...whatever the relief is about (story, myth, or just a depiction of an important event). I liked the point that Millstill made, about similarities to big carnivores flanking a person to be representative of human being stronger than nature. Whether it is female or male is then a question but it does not have breasts, which would - possibly - be a clear giveaway if you want to signify that it is ineede a female. Especially as the carving is 3D (there are also suggestions that the person is holding a phallus, yea maybe, but it's a bit hard to say, though the hand is in a suggestive place). Also on the abundance of snake carvings - if these were grain stores, that would have attracted rodents..and abundance of rodents might attract snakes which would be a good thing (this was a time when cats were getting domesticated as well I believe?)

  • @TheRed6263
    @TheRed6263Ай бұрын

    Thanks for a more reasonable explanation of the site and how it fit into human history.

  • @francisfischer7620
    @francisfischer7620Ай бұрын

    Beautiful voice and articulation

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @petermaxfield7343
    @petermaxfield73432 ай бұрын

    Long story short, we created gods because we like to eat.😋

  • @Henrikbuitenhuis
    @Henrikbuitenhuis2 ай бұрын

    Thanks so much for the video and info

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    I hope you enjoyed it.

  • @iCup247TV
    @iCup247TVАй бұрын

    Gobei Teki truly appears to be the missing puzzle piece. Great video on a rather important subject

  • @pablobalde1121
    @pablobalde1121Ай бұрын

    Thank you, your channel, and your wonderful face.

  • @monkeywrench2800
    @monkeywrench28002 ай бұрын

    Yet another brilliant assessment. Thank You!!

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed it

  • @shanegooding4839
    @shanegooding48392 ай бұрын

    Thankyou. Great and interesting topic.

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    And thank you for watching.

  • @chiron14pl
    @chiron14pl2 ай бұрын

    I’ve heard some of the updates but you put them all together in a coherent narrative that synthesizes it, great work. My thought on the grain storage idea; grain can spoil from fungus if not dried, do we have any archaeological evidence for this part of the process?

  • @pterniaskhrisdokheion
    @pterniaskhrisdokheion2 ай бұрын

    so interesting, great video!

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @keegandecker4080
    @keegandecker40802 ай бұрын

    Those leopards look more like lions to me because Asian lions have tiny manes. Reminds me of the lions with crossed necks on the narmur pallet. Furthermore, it seems more likely to me that the dancer is playing a flute to prove his bravery in the face of an auroch charge. Almost like a western kokopelli

  • @smillstill
    @smillstill2 ай бұрын

    Another fantastic video! I can't help but notice the similarity between the human with two lions on either side and the later seated woman at Catalhoyuk with the same and later still depictions of Inanna with two lions and Ninmah with two stags in Mesopotamia. Could the human with two lions in Gobekli Tepe be a goddess controlling nature and the human with the bull testes be a male god controlling nature, juxtapositioned with each other?

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    I will talk about this in a future video, but well noticed.

  • @Nancy_S68

    @Nancy_S68

    2 ай бұрын

    Is the thing the bent-knee person is holding bull testes? I don’t think so.

  • @smillstill

    @smillstill

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Crecganford Thanks!

  • @smillstill

    @smillstill

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Nancy_S68 Actually, my first thought was that it was a cape 😂, but I'm pretty sure they didn't do that kind of bull fighting then. What do you think it is? Do you mean phallus or some kind of snake? If the other is a goddess, she could be holding an egg or the moon/sun.

  • @colinjames7569
    @colinjames7569Ай бұрын

    Nevermind. I answered my own question. I look forward to more of the information you discover

  • @ejd53
    @ejd532 ай бұрын

    First, looking forward to this one.

  • @WACkZerden

    @WACkZerden

    2 ай бұрын

    nice

  • @quixotiq
    @quixotiqАй бұрын

    Another interesting video by Mr White! ❤

  • @theCharmingDeviant
    @theCharmingDeviantАй бұрын

    What a fascinating examination of this neolithic settlement. I wonder, given the symbols and artifacts found there, if they didn't merely hunt and gather for sustenance, but also kept captive livestock. Hence rather than cultivation of plants, they were breeding animals first. As for the "coming of age" relief/mural. I think the idea that the ritual included mutilation of a bull makes sense, but given the other associated image, the part of the bull used in the final 'test' of the ceremony was not its family jewels, but rather an adjacent bit. This may give meaning to some of the pillars and other symbols seen in the carvings. The figure of the newly minted man in the relief seems to be holding something that droops between his legs and nearly reaches his feet, while facing the leopards. Just a thought. Thanks again for all of your excellent work. Cheers, Professor.

  • @zachramsay
    @zachramsayАй бұрын

    Oh oh oh!!! I’ve been waiting for somebody to make an insightful video of the nature of the dieties and demigods represented at this archaeological find!!!! Thank you, thank you thank you!!!

  • @ernestschroeder9762
    @ernestschroeder9762Ай бұрын

    Another excellent video.

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @ThatWitchesRealm
    @ThatWitchesRealmАй бұрын

    Awesome video ❤

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @ThatWitchesRealm

    @ThatWitchesRealm

    Ай бұрын

    @@Crecganford You're welcome!

  • @andreasvox8068
    @andreasvox80682 ай бұрын

    Is there any archeological evidence that grain was stored in the buildings? I can't imagine how it was protected from rodents in there.

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes, grain has been found there, but only wild grain, not domesticated grain.

  • @drumstudiomonchengladbach8131
    @drumstudiomonchengladbach8131Ай бұрын

    SIR, although i'm not a nativ English speaker - I'm having difficulties when s.o is speaking too fast - I LOVE your videos!!! I LOVE the fact that you're not one of these "machine-gun-fast" speakers, coz this makes your videos much more understandable! Nevertheless having a translation to German would make yout videos much more appreciable! Thank you very much btw, have you ever thought to publish your knowledge in a book? I'd love to read a book written by you!!

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you for your know words, and I am looking at ways to better translate my work. As for a book, yes, I hope to publish a number of books in the coming years.

  • @angelaarsenault
    @angelaarsenault2 ай бұрын

    This was fascinating!

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @aripiispanen9349
    @aripiispanen93492 ай бұрын

    ♪♫♥Very interesting Crecganford - Thank you once again for sharing ;)

  • @KedgeDragon
    @KedgeDragon2 ай бұрын

    After noticing the connection with animals as indicating turning of the seasons, as do the stars, I do not find it an unreasonable leap to associate constellations with animals that appear in the same seasons?

  • @mikeakachorlton
    @mikeakachorltonАй бұрын

    A little bit of a shame that such an interesting subject, delivered with your usual clarity and knowledge has the faint music running underneath. It's like being gently tapped on the side of the head while one is trying to concentrate: small, inconsequential, but gradually attention drifts. After ten minutes I found myself checking if it was something in my environment, or if there was a tab open with something running, before I realised.

  • @jasonshapiro9469
    @jasonshapiro9469Ай бұрын

    Could the stones be markers for individual storage areas within a larger store house?

  • @kylemull842
    @kylemull8422 ай бұрын

    It’s always a pleasure to spend an afternoon with a cup of tea with your videos. Or in my case, coffee, because I’m far too willfully American to relax with tea. Thank you for your videos!

  • @MysticChronicles712
    @MysticChronicles7122 ай бұрын

    Another great video! The human with two lions on either side and the later seated woman at Catalhoyuk with the same and later still images of Inanna with two lions and Ninmah with two stags in Mesopotamia are very similar. Could the figure with two lions in Gobekli Tepe be a goddess and the one with the bull testes a male god?

  • @francisfischer7620
    @francisfischer76202 ай бұрын

    What wonderful background music!!

  • @francisfischer7620

    @francisfischer7620

    2 ай бұрын

    Absolutely fascinating lecture!!!

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @Andy_Babb
    @Andy_BabbАй бұрын

    Recently commented on another channel how I wished there was more available on the topic of the religion of Gobekli Tepe and when religion first appeared in human history… then POOF! Pumped for this lol

  • @cassandraland5216
    @cassandraland52162 ай бұрын

    They could have been gods, or they could have just been holding the ceiling up. Maybe their primary function was pillars, but then people decided they were kind of anthropomorphic and they decorated them accordingly.

  • @recursr1892
    @recursr18922 ай бұрын

    @Crecfanford, I highly appreciate your work. The idea with food storage makes sense, may be evidence can be found as options to make the walls waterproof, and compartements to separate different parts of the harvest? Otherwise Here‘s yet a bit too much Speculation. Some suggestions: -a counting of the symbols on the 200 pillars just to get an idea, what kept this people busy most-bulls, scorpios, birds, man/woman etc.. -use the most used symbol(s) then with your myth database for that time frame/location and DNA Analysis should narrow down the filter to find some interesting myth that might correlate with göpekli tepe. I hope you can continue here at some point, to gather further evidence and add your expertise on myth.

  • @gruboniell4189
    @gruboniell41892 ай бұрын

    Wow. Carrying grain??? Great point. I live in Australia where aboriginals were actually gardeners. Every square foot of Australia was neatly cared for for the most bountiful harvest. This way travel was easy. The deserts were navigated with stars and stories. This would be a great subject for you to explore as aboriginals “KOORIS or MURRYS” lived the same way the the rest of the world did at some stage

  • @fjficm
    @fjficmАй бұрын

    Fantastic presentation ty

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @APOSTR
    @APOSTR12 күн бұрын

    33:51 Master of Animals, Lord of Animals, or Mistress of the Animals is a motif in ancient art showing a human between and grasping two confronted animals.

  • @arourallis
    @arourallis2 ай бұрын

    Some sort of 'coming of age' ritual involving two live leopards for every man (or group of men) in a tribe sounds like a pretty steep cost... they could've been symbolic? Something along the lines of, a great-great grandfather _and_ grandmother in the form of a leopard welcoming a new adult to the tribe? The framing feels more mythical and narrative than the more 'naturalistic' death scene with the bull.

  • @andreasvox8068

    @andreasvox8068

    2 ай бұрын

    Maybe the two parts have to be seen in conjunction? Whoever defiles the sacred bull by cutting off his testes is punished by being fed to lions? JK At this stage it's all guess work.

  • @sophiejones3554

    @sophiejones3554

    Ай бұрын

    That would be my hunch too given that the "man" has the head of a feline which Cregcanford for some reason seems to have overlooked. Though actually I would say the entire thing is mythological, given the way the man is baiting the bull with the object. Bad idea, if that's actually the bull's testicles. That'd be a great way of getting yourself killed lmao. It doesn't actually look like testicles either: when you castrate an animal you don't take off the penis, just the round semen-filled parts. Given the prevalence of using bovines as wealth in herding cultures I think the interpretation of this is wildly off base. What I immedately thought of was Theseus and the Minotaur. That object *does* look like a spindle, such as Theseus was described using in the much later Greek myth that has a lot more additions and a lot removed. But, again: cattle are frequently equated with wealth. And, as we know, they can be controlled by flashing something bright red in their face. Red ochre was among the first pigments humans discovered how to use: to dye fibers and hair among other applications. A very similar myth exists in Ireland: the Cattle Raid of Cu Chulainn. Many other such stories involving bulls also exist in Europe and the Middle East, and all of them also have another detail in common: the man controlling the bull leads to a romantic encounter with a woman who is somehow associated with the bull. Again: cattle were used as a form of wealth. So, rather than a coming-of-age ceremony I would think this is a *marriage* ceremony. Which much more neatly explains the guy holding his junk. The man is first taking the cattle, which represents his bride (there is actually nothing in the picture which suggests the cow ever had junk, aurochs cows had horns just like aurochs bulls did: a trait which persists in many breeds of domestic cattle). Then he is consummating his marriage in the presence of his ancestors, represented by the leopards. This tracks with the earlier representations of a lion-headed man, and a woman enthroned with leopards beside her. But, in the earlier representation the woman is carved into stone between the leopards. Now, the feline-headed man is between the leopards. This suggests a more obvious explanation for why the skeletons buried at the site are mostly female than what Crecganford suggested. The second scene shows the man not in profile, but straight on and grabbing his junk. As if oh... I dunno...a woman was supposed to stand facing him during a ritual of a sexual nature. I don't think this was intended to initiate a man, rather I think this was supposed to initiate a *woman* into a patrilineal clan. That is, the woman was marrying the feline-headed man who represents the male lineage of her husband. I think the switch of who occupied the space between the leopards has to do with a switch in how family lineage was traced: earlier on it they had a system of matrilineal kinship because women had no way to prove who the father of their child was in a hunter-gatherer group which included multiple mature males. However, in a herding and partly agricultural society where the women stayed in a single dwelling year-round (as guardians for the grain being stored at the site) while the men went out to hunt and trade, women could know who the father of their child probably was because monogamy (on their part anyway) would be the rule rather than the exception. So the tribe switched to using patrilineal kinship, and thus women from the tribe married out while women from other tribes married in. Thus, there was a need to initiate women who were not from the "leopard tribe" via some kind of ritual so they (and thus their children) could be seen as belonging to the tribe. This initiation ritual would have allowed the women to form a bond even though they originally come from different places and tribes as they would take on new identities in relation to each other and to the feline-headed man they were all symbolically married to.

  • @ulrichkristensen4087
    @ulrichkristensen408713 күн бұрын

    We still have some remnants of Shamanism in our language in Denmark. We would sometimes say "mosekonen brygger" A witch/Shaman made potions, when the fog gathered in a bog for instance, or if you had an ailment, we would say "gå til den kloge kone i kærret" Go to the wise woman in the village pond/lake. Both releated to water, something we find is very important in the Bronze age, water was a mirror or link to the other world/Underworld, magic.

  • @leekestner1554
    @leekestner15542 ай бұрын

    I agree about the nature of the Bull and the Leopards. The bull by the way, is sweeping with his horns in a scoop motion, trying to hook the man. The man though dances beyond his reach. Reminds me of the Bull Dancers of the Minoans. The testicles remind me of the Spanish bull fighting. The Southern French have a style of bullfighting where the man snatches a rosette off the bulls horns and the bull in unharmed. It is fascinating to me the continuance or the coming back to a dance with the Bull. Even Americans' take on it by riding bulls is part of this story element. Why are we called to fight with the bull?

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    I made a video called Holy Cow! which explains the bull fight's origins, or what we think they probably were.

  • @barcaveful
    @barcavefulАй бұрын

    The crucial context for the fresco at Sayburç - as at other Anatolian and Levant sites of the period - is that it is situated on the front face of a Secret Society bench. This was not the public work of your average hunter gatherers but the private work of a small select group/groups who took up 'management' of the human stock of the area, and their latent ability to create surplus (as was to come with the slow, micro-managed arrival of and transition to settled agriculture). Their means of control was through appropriated narrative/mythic power derived from the terrifying, catastrophically derived changes that took place during and post the Younger Dryas. Through their manipulation and appropriation of narrative/myth and especially through the manipulation of PTSD and fear (nothing much has changed about that today), they gained increasing control over the previously family based units of population and began the long slow process of modelling them into surplus producing socially complex - and dependent - larger settled groups. The bull represents the once mighty Bull of Heaven - a vast electrical Birkeland current phenomenon that existed prior to the breakdown at the Younger Dryas (much later commemorated in the zodiac as Taurus) and which 'oversaw the bounty of the Golden Age'; the period of just one benign season and a time without time. The bull's now fallen potency has been appropriated by the new class of masters (you may notice that the man holding his penis also happens to have 6 fingers!) and the other figure of a Man holding his member between the 2 lions (not leopards) is their statement of their replacement of this force by their own potency and knowledge - the only protection the survivors had against the return of the terror. For the once eternal seeming and single potent god who previously kept back the forces of destruction (lions = comets) but which now had fallen, was in the state of being mythically replaced by a new set of terrifying 'gods' - and only these secret societies held the power to mediate between the new communities of survivors and the terror of the return of the rampaging, carnivorous beasts from heaven. Of course none of this fits the happy clappy message that is being spread about these sites but its what they actually tell us if you know how to read their very blatant signs. These places were very, very dark. Human sacrifice, circumcision, the worship of skulls, and other delights were likely rampant. They could have - and perhaps in the end someway did - teach the CIA a great deal about mass mind control!

  • @gruboniell4189
    @gruboniell41892 ай бұрын

    I love ur idea of the man with the animals

  • @CeleriaRosencroix
    @CeleriaRosencroix2 ай бұрын

    It strikes me that you may well be slightly wrong with regards to the impact this group had on the rest of the region. While the specific styles of art and the T-shaped pillar construction may have died out, but I think it quite likely that either there was a shared cultural origin for the group building and making art in this manner, or the people making these religious sites directly influenced the emergence of the plastered skull preservation practices found in Catalhoyuk, Jericho, and many other sites across modern Turkey and the Levant. My personal hypothesis, given the timeline of events and the proximity of the people involved, is that the decay of the site (slope-sliding events greatly damaging enclosures) in conjunction with the eventual receipt of news regarding the domestication of cattle led to a gradual decline in interest maintaining Gobekli Tepe and a gradual migration of those who inhabited it and similar sites to the west, well away from the area where cattle were first domesticated. These areas, the Levant and Western Anatolia, took a very long time to actually adopt the domesticated cow as part of their lifestyles, and in fact seem to have held the hunting of wild bulls (and other wild animals in general, it must be said) in high regard. It seems that even as the general lifestyles of the people in these regions became closer to sedentary and the domestication of grains came closer and closer to completion, there was a strong cultural desire to retain the connection with nature and especially the role of apex predator which their ancestors' lifestyles had afforded them. If the fixation on skulls is something inherited rather than simply a trait shared by the two groups whose chronologies just barely overlap (Gobekli Tepe falling to disuse around 8,000 B.C. and the plastered skull practices seeming to start at about 8,000 B.C. as well), then there is a very interesting potential narrative of social change and adaptation to the new nature of human existence which can be told. Of course, this is obviously highly speculative, but given the importance of the bovine in religions of the subsequent years, it very much feels right that there should have been major ripples through the nascent religious movements of the region once the Aurochs began to be tamed. The reticence to adopt such a potent domestic animal into one's societal structure when domestic goats and sheep were accepted quite readily seems to me to suggest that the people of Catalhoyuk and related settlements seems to indicate to me that there was indeed some sort of cultural tension, there, regardless of the source (especially since cattle, goats, and sheep seem to have been domesticated in areas relatively close to one another). It's also worth noting that pigs were similarly not adopted for thousands of years in these regions, and boars seem to, similar to aurochs, have held a significant, spiritually potent place in these groups.

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    We certainly should discuss all sensible options, as no doubt as more archaeology is found our opinions may alter.

  • @pauladee6937

    @pauladee6937

    14 күн бұрын

    ​​@@CrecganfordDear Dr. White, you're to kind. There's much more info about Gobei Tepe and Turkey and connections to other parts of world not mentioned here. Ive learned not cast my pearl/ Sources before the "opinionated. So, I'll post or contact. Yet to point out some misconceptions from the above comment, "T" Shaped, Did Not go out of Style! If a carving looks like a Boar- Pig, it's a Boar or type of Pig! Not a Cow, Bull or Auruk.

  • @andersgustafsson5533
    @andersgustafsson55332 ай бұрын

    Finally someone mentions Göbekli Tepe in connection to food storage. Other scholars have probably presented the idea earlier, but hadn't heard about it. On a possibly related side note, I think that the ancient circular "buildings" constructed from mammoth bones found near rivers in Russia were also mainly constructed to preserve and protect food (mammoth meat). What are your thoughts on that?

  • @andersgustafsson5533

    @andersgustafsson5533

    2 ай бұрын

    Also, is it possible that some of the structures at Göbekli Tepe were constructed to save water for drier seasons?

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    There is a lot of water management at the site, although much of it is still uncovered. We also need to understand that the region was much wetter then, water would have been in more abundance, and so the need to store an excessive amount wasn't so great.

  • @Taomantom
    @Taomantom2 ай бұрын

    That was the lecture on this subject I have listened to. Thank you for your research.

  • @timothygervais9036
    @timothygervais90362 ай бұрын

    As perhaps one of many (?) borrowing a phone just to watch a few favorites, your work is once again par excellence!! Thank you for your time, sharing, and QUALITY Presentations!!

  • @nnn-pr3vr
    @nnn-pr3vrАй бұрын

    I wonder if future archaeologists will think we worshipped every object we own that doesn’t have an immediate utilitarian use

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    Ай бұрын

    This is the way...

  • @tatumergo3931

    @tatumergo3931

    Ай бұрын

    Don't we do that already?

  • @colinjames7569
    @colinjames7569Ай бұрын

    Fascinating hypothesis. Or has this been theorized already? Gobekli tepe is mesmerizing

  • @user-jo3pm2lc9i
    @user-jo3pm2lc9i2 ай бұрын

    Such a wonderful idea! I mean it makes so much sense, this would explain all these better. Pillars being more about seasons rather than astronomical events makes so much sense. At the end of it, even stars like Sirius was important because it was the sign of dry summer days coming. It always turns back to this. The fact we can even see society's change and their beliefs becoming more antromorphic as they get away from nature is just insane. It's like we can view the start and end of neolithic ages...

  • @Nancy_S68
    @Nancy_S682 ай бұрын

    If the storage was communal the different carvings could represent different families/clans?

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    I do think this to some degree, but I can talk about this more if people want to hear this.

  • @TEbersberger
    @TEbersbergerАй бұрын

    Btw - the climate graph your showing at around 12:50 seems to be somewhat incorrect. It completely ignores the phase of the climatic optimum or Hypsothermal when temperatures would have been close to today or even warmer. Same goes for the Medieval Warm Period. Also the temperature drop at the YDB is quite underrepresented as is the temperature rise leading up to it. Welcome to the hockey stick?

  • @mdug7224
    @mdug7224Ай бұрын

    Thank you. Could the figure between two leopards signify some form of kingship? Symbolism of big cats and dominance of big cats seems to be a recurring king/hero trope in mythology.

  • @joshthalheimer
    @joshthalheimer2 ай бұрын

    19:07 amazing boar carving! First time I've seen that one. ... and again (below the boar), the H like (or I on it's side symbol)... again. What is that symbol? Great video.

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    The H symbol is a common motif at Gobekli Tepe, no one knows what it means, but it probably has an associated with a particular belief system or tribe.

  • @sabithasajan5564
    @sabithasajan55642 ай бұрын

    Crec is back with another banger!

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you

  • @megalithicmaiden
    @megalithicmaidenАй бұрын

    Klaus Schmidt's research is top notch, and even though it is older, it is still more accurate than Claire's by far.

  • @terranhealer
    @terranhealerАй бұрын

    I like the idea from Terrence McKenna regarding forests receding to give way to grasslands changed the habitat of early hominids. If Rye grain harvest was a popular crop, it stands to reason that medicinal mushrooms may have been growing

  • @tatumergo3931

    @tatumergo3931

    Ай бұрын

    Oh you are one of those! ....shrooms 😅

  • @RobinLynnGriffith
    @RobinLynnGriffithАй бұрын

    Thank you 😎

  • @user-cn2ex5vm1l
    @user-cn2ex5vm1l15 күн бұрын

    Got to the pottery bit. Ok no pottery, but there was a ceramic industry in Dolni Vestonic, Moravia, around 25,000 BCE. So were the people of Gobekli Tepe 15,000 years behind the curve? A clay mask was found on the site so they knew how to work and dry clay. It's a couple of steps to firing it if it's the right clay.

  • @robo5013
    @robo50132 ай бұрын

    I wonder if the presence of more female remains at the site could indicate that they were the majority of the permanent residents while the men would leave for periods of time to hunt.

  • @anchieta6467
    @anchieta6467Ай бұрын

    The storage of wild grasses for food separation appears to me as per today the most meaningful approach to explain this site. There must have been a real physical reason and benefit for the people to built these stone huts and pillars. But : there is no evidence that the huts were closed at its top. Contrary they were open no roof . So how the storage approach explains this ???

  • @conlethberry1236
    @conlethberry12362 ай бұрын

    I'd be curious to hear about what animals they hunted around this region, what was the migration pattern of those animals and whether it influenced the storage of the gain from one year to the next to "feast" at a specific time of the year, rather than people being there all year around.

  • @RealUvane

    @RealUvane

    2 ай бұрын

    Elephant artifacts found on Yarim Tepe. If you look it up on wikip you’ll find the answer.

  • @jeffclements5829
    @jeffclements58292 ай бұрын

    I believe that the depiction of the eagle facing away from other animals is a representation of of the difference between the human and animal relm. Basically it's saying if you kill like a predator all the other humans suffer. Unlike the animal relm. Just a thought.

  • @helencoltart3483
    @helencoltart3483Ай бұрын

    I respectfully disagree with the grain storage - one theory I don’t see mentioned so far is that of a inter tribal meeting and/ or burial place. I’m basing this on the native communities of North America, which even as a seasonally nomadic cultural, often had generational sites used for meeting other tribes for trade, local politics,and mixing for procreation. I hardly believe a grain store would result in such decorative or elaborate needs as you certainly don’t want to advertise this if not having permanent residency. for protection of your hard gained stores. The fact that climate in the area afforded a permanent structure only makes sense to me.

  • @MrWalkingguy
    @MrWalkingguyАй бұрын

    Very good vid. My question, what is the evidence, or even indirect clues, that the Gobekli Tepe structures where built for grain storage?

  • @JonnoPlays
    @JonnoPlays2 ай бұрын

    Humans always need a huge hall for one ceremony and that is weddings because they attract so many people. I think it should be considered at least. Mate pairing was very transactional for much of human history and a big part of tribe relations. It might be a part of the story at Gobekli Tepe but I never hear much about this subject.

  • @paulschuckman6604

    @paulschuckman6604

    2 ай бұрын

    People of the Snake mixing with People of the Bull. Very interesting.

  • @Jaanikins
    @Jaanikins2 ай бұрын

    I’ve always found this location fascinating after learning about it from my family in Türkiye 🇹🇷 thank you for your video on this subject

  • @majidbineshgar7156

    @majidbineshgar7156

    2 ай бұрын

    Keep in mind those ancient civilisations in Anatolia have had noting to do with ethnic Turkic .

  • @Jhaldmer

    @Jhaldmer

    2 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@majidbineshgar7156 They have something to do with modern Anatolian Turks because we share dna and culture with them. Even though much has changed, Anatolia continues to be Anatolia no mater the language people speak.

  • @majidbineshgar7156

    @majidbineshgar7156

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Jhaldmer Yes in that sense you are right , regardless of the official alien Altaic language and official name of the country, all inhabitants of Anatolia must share the DNA of those ancient civilisations .

  • @kariannecrysler640

    @kariannecrysler640

    2 ай бұрын

    People are amazing thousands of years ago through to today💯 We are clever problem solver’s, if not always as responsible as the rest of nature lol. They don’t leave trash like we do.

  • @Jhaldmer

    @Jhaldmer

    2 ай бұрын

    @@kariannecrysler640 I think that is because all their trash were naturally decoposable 😂 People were making fertilizer from their biological waste up until 100 years ago, now even that is full of prezevetive chemicals.

  • @joenewman1141
    @joenewman1141Ай бұрын

    Have you read a book called "dark emu" ? Australian aboriginal people it posits were farming many years before this in a different way. Controversial author but interesting. Thanks for your awesome work.

  • @kennethmheck1
    @kennethmheck1Ай бұрын

    What tools were used to create the images on the stone pillars and were used to harvest grain? The bronze age didn't begin until about 3300 BC.

  • @Crecganford

    @Crecganford

    Ай бұрын

    You can use hard rocks to shape softer rocks.

  • @kennethmheck1

    @kennethmheck1

    Ай бұрын

    @@Crecganford Did they use hard rocks to harvest grain?

  • @Shoey77100
    @Shoey77100Ай бұрын

    both panels are scenes of power... the first the power to take life (on the left) and then the power to create life (on the right)