Alice Martins for NPR
Diyarbakır Province, Turkey – Once part of ancient Mesopotamia, Turkey has long been fertile ground for archaeologists. It is also home to significant pre-Mesopotamia sites – UNESCO World Heritage Sites Kobekli DebeThe Neolithic settlement, believed to be more than 10,000 years old, may be the world’s oldest An ancient place of worshipAnd Catalhoyuk, An early city dating back to about 9,000 years ago.
Now, archaeologists say recent sites in the country’s southeast could change modern understanding of this part of the world’s past, moving the trail of pre-Roman activity farther east than previously believed.
Zerzevan Castle, the military base of the Roman Empire, has to offer UNESCO Invitation “Important Information on Roman Soldiers, Civilians’ Daily Life, and Battles.”
Then there is the Temple of Mithras. Mithra religion – also known as the “Mithras Cult” – is believed to have originated in ancient Persia, and the temple, discovered in 2017, may be the best-preserved in the world, according to UNESCO.
Archaeologists have identified the massive, multi-layered structures that have yet to be excavated using ground-penetrating radar scans. These are underground and reveal layers of artefacts, some dating back to the pre-Roman period.
Alice Martins for NPR
Alice Martins for NPR
Sitting near an ancient church built on a hill high above the temple, the archeologist Aytak Koskun When he first saw the place, he says, he knew he had to dig.
“I first came to Diyarbakir in 2005,” says Koskun, “and when I saw this mountain, I saw some artefacts and I knew that no excavations had been done before. So as soon as I saw it, I knew it was there. To be an excavation. must, because there must be something significant underneath.”
The underground living quarters may have sheltered 10,000 people during the war
A tour of the site reveals some of what he and his team have excavated in recent years — a vast rock altar, an underground church, at least several miles of aqueduct.
Alice Martins for NPR
Alice Martins for NPR
Goskun and his team discovered artifacts, including a beautifully preserved and decorated Roman-era bronze baptismal bucket. Assyrian period The stamp, a type of official seal carved into rock, dates back to about 3,000 years ago.
“We are excavating 57,000 square meters inside the fort walls [68,171 square yards],” he says. “It’s a big part. Outside of that… (something like) 10 million square meters [3.86 square miles].”
Goskun believes that about 1,500 people, both military and civilian, lived here in peacetime. During the war, he says, around 10,000 people from the surrounding area may have sought shelter here.
Alice Martins for NPR
Alice Martins for NPR
That, he says, could help explain the vast subterranean habitats. So far, he says, six residential complexes have been excavated inside the fort walls, and another 99 are below the surface.
This is one reason Coskun says the site has the potential to change modern understanding of this part of the world and its archaeological and architectural history.
“It’s completely open to new discoveries, that’s for sure,” he says. “We don’t know what else we’ll find. We’ve only excavated about 10% of the surface inside the fort walls. And beyond the fort walls,” he adds, “you see more living areas, the canal, a necropolis where leading families buried their dead, And ceremonial areas. So, there will be more.”
He says the excavations could continue for another 30 years.
Alice Martins for NPR