@ 8:46 "The mystery of Gobekli Tepi was solved." Not Even Close
@MRBW10015 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/oH2qc4SXf7t8npo
@banksjay32345 жыл бұрын
Why are there no tools found? Why is there no human remains found?
@EliteRock5 жыл бұрын
Always the same - just facile (and glib) _describing,_ not _explaining_ anything. This guy is another of the dozens of young "professors" and "doctors" the BBC uses to try and indoctrinate their "youth" audience. I use quotes around their titles because they were once used 'honorifically' in acknowledgment of a lifetime (decades) of academic endeavour, not in this profligate and vulgar fashion for 20 or 30 something year-old upstarts like "Professor" Iain _"I'm just so fantastic, me"_ Stewart.
@championsoundrecords5 жыл бұрын
Check videos on the Greenland meteoric cataclysm circa 12,800 bc
@Buckdawg5 жыл бұрын
@@banksjay3234 Because it wasn't a graveyard. Nor was it a tool shed.
@kaelthuzad46405 жыл бұрын
Touching, petting and leaning on a monument damages it ! Thank you!
@ardd.c.81132 жыл бұрын
ever heard of acid rain
@JapseyeSpecs5 жыл бұрын
“At this point they were hunter gatherers” Annnnd I’m out.
@mweskamppp5 жыл бұрын
There was no village found. Only this cultural centre.
@NoddyTron5 жыл бұрын
This video is just a snippet. That was from the previous segment of the doc, which is actually a multipart doc about grass and how it has affected human development through the ages
@drzilman45364 жыл бұрын
@ Correct, then there are the many ancient buildings/cities found deep under the ocean. The Egyptians never built the pyramids of giza, nor the sphinx. The proof is in the complete lack of decoration, just look at literally everything else they made, and the tombs in the valley of the Kings, no comparison. No, it probably wasn't aliens. I wouldn't trust the BBC to get me a glass of water. Oh, so as well as highly advanced stone working, these hunter gathers woke up one morning and could genetically modify plants. Sounds legit. Hunter gatherer 1: We need, er, bread, give me a minute to genetically alter a shit load of wheat. Hunter gatherer 2: Yeah, then we'll make sandwiches. Hunter gatherer 3: You know what we should do now we invented that bread, advanced stone masonry. And we'll align the site perfectly to the north and south. Hunter gatherer 4: What's North and South, we don't have a compass. Hunter gatherer 4: Dont worry about that my friend, we don't have the tech to build the tools we need to start this advanced stone masonry, but let's not worry about that either. And that's exactly how it went. 3c
@g.o.skywalker99704 жыл бұрын
""At this point they met hunter gatherers and settled among them" would be make more sense.
@tomsmith85114 жыл бұрын
@ I agree, plus current and past archaeologists and historians don't like their work being turned upside down which is why they will fight any version of history that is different to the norm. Looking at past advanced civilisations all around the world like the clovis people in the Americas, were wiped out by the younger dryas event around 12000 years ago. The chap who runs the bright insight KZbin channel also has a brilliant explanation for the location of the civilisation known as Atlantis, it is the best theory so far on the sea faring nation that battled with the Greeks on many occasions.
@williamozier9183 жыл бұрын
Klaus Schmitt and the farmer who owned this land are both heroes and personal inspirations to me!
@verdew818110 жыл бұрын
Since something like 90% or more of this place has not yet been excavated, maybe assuming this is a religious temple built by people newly turned farmers might be a bit premature.
@davidhood85988 жыл бұрын
+Dorothyellen w no might be about it they should emphasize the point that it is only a theory. I personally think they are floundering and trying to make this fit their idea's of history instead of admiting they might be wrong and will have to change all the history books.
@fredgillespie58557 жыл бұрын
David Hood - “A final word to students - - What man knows is little enough and most of his general concepts in every field are vitiated by the artificial concepts he has created to cover his ignorance. These concepts must be destroyed.” Hapgood in "Paths of the Poles" p284. Advice we should all take to heart.
@simonblackwood46725 жыл бұрын
@Jeremy Kirkpatrick ... That's a bit crass, isn't it?
@louielouie54895 жыл бұрын
Everything is deemed a temple. Those with the power to control the information are working quite hard to keep our world wide focus on fairytales and not the true reasons and purposes.
@ClosureClure-vh6cr5 жыл бұрын
Man you won't ever change one's mind with insults
@DEVILxMAYxCRYx57 жыл бұрын
the Joe Rogan podcast brought me here.... lol
@fedyno4reviews7 жыл бұрын
DEVILxMAYxCRYx5 that podcast was abesloute cancer the guy was being confrontational for no reason trying to project his immature romanticised historical theory no matter who these people were they were living in mud huts and worshipped fake sky gods that is nothing compared to modern human advancement
@cadeere746 жыл бұрын
Me too
@s1089635 жыл бұрын
Same
@juancarrillo5645 жыл бұрын
Same joe rogan brought me here
@jakedavis58044 жыл бұрын
Ditto
@oni7419 жыл бұрын
I heard Gobekli Tepe for the first time during a TV documentary in Italian language. Wow, I didn't know this archaeological site. It's amazing! Its inhabitants were really great builders.
@ukilic862 ай бұрын
Göbekli Tepe isn’t unique. There are older sites with similar architecture, such as Karahan Tepe.
@oguzyurdakul37934 жыл бұрын
Turkey really interesting country always. I very surprised Göbeklitepe 🤔
@Ardour7art3 жыл бұрын
Girdê Tepe “ Gubekli Tepe “ This land is kurdistan, Those countries besid us ( Turkey, iraq, iran and syria) not even controlled our land even they controlled our history and culture. People have been living on this land since oldest time. In the history had different names but now we all together say we are kurds and our land is kurdistan. We have a famous castle (Erbil citadel ) more than 8,000 years old.
@berkay64413 жыл бұрын
@@Ardour7artThese ethnic identifications didn't even exist 13.000 years ago and Mesopotamia was pretty much centre of the civilizations at the time. so go fuck yourself with your nationalistic bullshit. This history belongs to human kind.
@charliehutch35337 жыл бұрын
Here's the problem this site was dated as when it was buried not when it was built ! It could very well be older than 12,000 years.
@mattpetree59226 жыл бұрын
Charlie Hutch agreed. Notice the small mud bricks or stones used to build wall between the megaliths? Not the same technology. Not like a megalithic civilization. Those appear to have been added later by another group. Which would still have been at least 12 thousand years ago.
@isorokudono5 жыл бұрын
@@mattpetree5922 Those walls were built by the team excavating. This place was buried on purpose. ON PURPOSE. They have to put it somewhere.
@Buckdawg5 жыл бұрын
@@isorokudono No they weren't, they were buried with the rest of the site.
@Ardour7art3 жыл бұрын
Girdê Tepe “ Gubekli Tepe “ This land is kurdistan, Those countries besid us ( Turkey, iraq, iran and syria) not even controlled our land even they controlled our history and culture. People have been living on this land since oldest time. In the history had different names but now we all together say we are kurds and our land is kurdistan. We have a famous castle (Erbil citadel ) more than 8,000 years old.
@esoterra80502 жыл бұрын
@@Ardour7art Kurdistan? It's Turkey, you dingus.
@yargundev97725 жыл бұрын
A very simplistic story telling. Wheat was not our first domesticated plant, agriculture started pretty much at once all around the fertile crescent with a veriety of crops that most of them have not survived. There are many Gobekli Tepes, we are aware of their existence, but we have not dug them out yet.
@WestOfEarth5 жыл бұрын
"And in turn bread would lead to something bigger." Me: Sammiches!!!!
@chatttown60265 жыл бұрын
WestOfEarth brilliant
@bryonycoates35 жыл бұрын
Hehehehehe
@christopherhelms72903 жыл бұрын
The dawn of Toast.
@lulem4007 жыл бұрын
This only proves one thing, We don't know shit.
@pwimbledon5 жыл бұрын
Not really. We just need to refine dates and our picture of the people in the area. It's not overthrowing anything. Dates are always tentative. It's always been assumed that the neolithic revolution was gradual. People in the area would have been pretty advanced before embracing domestication and agriculture fully.
@TobiasLars11 жыл бұрын
'The First People to have Bread' - every time the 'timeline' of Civilizations gets pushed back...they then become 'the first people'...how about we realize it's the 'first people WE KNOW OF SO FAR' and leave it open ended...since the story of discovery is always expanding. Academics who are so intelligent would understand this simple fact...woundl't they? They wouldn't be lead by personal ego wanting to be THE person who has discovered THE oldest and FIRST place for whatever would they?
@mweskamppp3 жыл бұрын
Does it really need to be mentioned? Yes, the oldest sign of civilization we know of. Nothing older was found - yet.
@StrawberrySoul773 жыл бұрын
@ Please Listen to Robert Sepehr’s channel. Here is one of his Vids you should hear: kzbin.info/www/bejne/jomvYWyfjK-lnNU
@daveratledge5 жыл бұрын
So those peoples realized a genetic mutation in wheat, learned to make bread, became expert farmers, learned to quarry stone, became expert stonemasons, became artisans, building planers and decided to create a megalithic stone city (temple) straight out of the ice age. Not conceivably possible. What is so much more amazing than this discovery is the complete ineptitude of the scientific community. They absolutely will not deviate from their text book teachings.
@victorgrauer58344 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah. It's gotta be them aliens. You know: from "outer space."
@mavrozkofee39064 жыл бұрын
@@victorgrauer5834 non its gotta be these hunters and gatherers out of the ice age.
@karlmurphy64414 жыл бұрын
@@mavrozkofee3906 why couldn't it of been???
@jol60283 жыл бұрын
To create Gobekli Tepe, all you needed was one enlightened man with the knowledge/idea to build and men to believe in him!
@delta3sigma6 жыл бұрын
The date of this site perfectly coincides with Plato's date of the end of Atlantis.
@gregpenismith12485 жыл бұрын
Haha, people think Atlantis is real
@dannyboywhaa31465 жыл бұрын
Jeremy Kirkpatrick Troy and the Trojan wars were ‘pure myth’... until they found Troy etc... Plato wrote earnestly on the subject, why would pick Atlantis out as myth but believe the rest of his writing?
@dannyboywhaa31465 жыл бұрын
Jeremy Kirkpatrick well Plato said it was beyond the pillars of Hercules... i think it’s somewhere off the Atlantic coast, not in the med. I need to do more research on Troy? So it hasn’t been discovered?
@Buckdawg5 жыл бұрын
@Jeremy Kirkpatrick People aren't morons for believing there was a lost civilisation. In fact, at the rate the evidence is coming in, there's more to suggest there was than wasn't. You should be kinder to your fellow man brother.
@Hecatonicosachoron4 жыл бұрын
Plato wrote many framing stories for his dialogues... a walk in rural Attica for Phaedra’s, a celebration for a dramatic contest for the symposium, the story of Diotima in the symposium as well, waiting for Socrates trial in Euthyphro. Many of these are just frame stories. Plato had an option to write diatribes instead of writing dialogues, he chose a more immersive medium. The figure of Critias is interesting - he might be a relative of one of the 30 tyrants appointed by Sparta after Athens lost the Peloponnesian war. So in a way it is am attempt to say that Socrates had more of an association with a relative rather than the tyrant himself. Critias was one of the most hated of that lot among the Athenians. And Socrates seemed to be very much of a pro-Spartan, pro-oligarchic and anti democratic persuasion... and that is the truth behind his execution. So, positioning Critias to tell this story about Athens’ glorious past in unrecorded antiquity is a way of him saying “see, he’s not that bad after all” to his contemporaries. Also jumbling up details about the historical Critias he is also purposefully muddying the waters. So in fact Plato has reasons to chose to tell his story in that way. Presumably Critias would go on to offer an analysis of politics and of history in the platonic fashion. Instead Plato abandoned that effort to write the Laws.
@TakeAsNeeded4Pain7 жыл бұрын
all that solved was how they fed everyone. Where did they get these skills to build Göbekli Tepe? Stonecutting, brick laying, city development, etc, etc.
@CDRNY255 жыл бұрын
Natufians.
@senrab2533 жыл бұрын
The bread taught them. One grain of wisdom at a time, wheat know that much. Rye, isnt it obvious?
@dogankaba83002 жыл бұрын
There are total 12 TEPE in this region. Human history has changed. By the way,10% of the excavation has been completed.
@joemcfadden776410 жыл бұрын
So , the guys are sitting around the fire, picken the days kill outta the teeth, complaining about the wifes lack of lovey dovey ... and buddy says...hey!!! lets build a temple, but not just any temple , were gonna use 10 to 15 ton stones..and yes...1 piece monoliths..lol and were gonna drag these stones into place with sheer man-power .... Ya ...thats gonna fly. He then goes on to use the sand and a stick to explain to everyone the correct use of leverage and fulcrums... Let me give up my daily routine,hunt,collect wood for the fire, get water cuz thats all usually done by 10 am , just lemme talk the wife into taking over those chores, we can force kids to hump the stones pick up the slack ...o.k so when do we start.
@cozycole22459 жыл бұрын
Perhaps ancient physics had mastered magnetic to kinetic energy transfer, which could have allowed them to move large objects effortlessly.
@eagyl567 жыл бұрын
I think the best way to accomplish that would be with sound waves, utilizing various frequencies depending on the stone at hand. Granite? One frequency, so on and so forth. Maybe a combination of both technologies depending on the material needing to be moved and how far.
@Freyia9357 жыл бұрын
joe mcfadden Yeah let me quickly learn the stars to set the stones to accurate north and let me quickly learn how to carve stone out of no where
@paranormal335 жыл бұрын
@@eagyl56 - Oh really? And you say this based on what evidence?
@simonblackwood46725 жыл бұрын
@@paranormal33 I believe that's a hypothesis. From there you build up the evidence. Have you any evidence to refute Gayle's hypothesis? I'm thinking not.
@tenzingyaltsen712311 жыл бұрын
Agreed, I find this very frustrating as well. Documentaries like this bother me because they are so "matter of fact" when so much is speculation.
@user-ei7ud5oj5b18 күн бұрын
Thank you country of 🇹🇷 and Professor Schmidt!
@alaayuwuh30126 жыл бұрын
I agree with some other comments here. Stating that these were the first farmers, and the first people to make bread is a bit premature. They are the first as far as we know. I fear the studiers of Gobekli Tepe are making the same mistake as others before as in claiming in fact that this is the first civilization to abandon hunt gather, for ag. Thats potentially true but we wont know until the next, older Civilization is discovered. Everyone needs to keep an open mind.
@rahul08611 жыл бұрын
There could be countless civilizations existed in this world.Kingdom of Dwaraka, Gobekli tepe and many more unearthed .But it's sure that they were more intelligent than what we are today and they possessed alien technologies which were far superior than what we have now because they had that divine power and knowledge.No matter how technologically far we become there will be many things we find hard to explain.
@TheKarenRob7 жыл бұрын
If it was all about the wheat, why isn't wheat depicted on the monoliths?
@AJ_Nightfall5 жыл бұрын
Hunter gatherers that only just discovered farming were able to all of a sudden construct such a complex megalithic site. Doubt it.
@karlmurphy64414 жыл бұрын
You act like hunter gatherers are much more stupid than agriculturists. Why couldn't they of figured this out????
@karlmurphy64414 жыл бұрын
They were just as smart as you and me my friend
@robertmilanese15233 жыл бұрын
We don't know if they "just" discovered agriculture.. but what we do know is that this site proves that people back then were far more advanced than we believed. This site is the start of a new way of looking at our passed..
@ardd.c.81132 жыл бұрын
people forget that along with the neolithic stone working there was already a more sophisticated wood working tradition. Unfortunatly these works rarely show up in archeological sites because wood as an organic product decays over time. Nevertheless we can assume that they were able to build huts, shrines and monuments with wood as the primary building material. The complexity that we see in these megalithic sites may be a product of an extended experience with wood working. A good painter sketches before he starts to paint with more expensive materials.
@busterbiloxi3833 Жыл бұрын
So, it was built by Eric Von Danidork and George Tsoukalicious?
@nothuman1037 жыл бұрын
Basically we were left behind...our ancestors ditched us.
@grobut985 жыл бұрын
Bread made them build it! Everything is explained! It also explains the lack of a wine cellar.
@jackpullen38207 жыл бұрын
I get hungry every time I watch this !
@16134R10 жыл бұрын
what is this, a documentary about bread?
@sootysammy75869 жыл бұрын
EwE Whisperer of course that's why the Germans started to excavate in 1994 just to move tourism from Egypt to gobeklitepe. makes sense.
@quinoa526 жыл бұрын
Surprised they didn't throw a recipe in.
@raymoore62776 жыл бұрын
Think the next episode has Jamie Oliver doing a quick fry up.
@grobut985 жыл бұрын
The reason for the larger scale of the pyramids is simply more bread!
@justjeff31077 жыл бұрын
To say we know anything for certain about this place is a pretty bold statement considering it doesn't fit the timeline of civilization the scientists world wide have come to accept and promote, not to mention the writings are undecipherable. Go ahead and banter and bicker you fools that think you have it all figured out because you know absolutely nothing at all and only have your best guess to go on.
@lesjones67455 жыл бұрын
So, a sort of 'miracle' happened, and a group of hunter-gatherers discovered how to make bread; which suddenly inspired them to build Gobleki Tepe - this is what the narrator would have us think. Klaus Schmitt, the archaeologist, before he tragically died of a heart attack c 2015 was confident that the development stages leading up to the final monument would be sound. But they haven't - the complex seems to have been built in one go. How did so-called hunter-gatherers suddenly develop the skills - the mathematics, astronomy, engineering ability and, more than any of these, the essential administrative organisation without which this temple could never have been built. Whoever built Gobleki Tepe arrived on site with all the necessary skills at their disposal. The big question is: who were they?
@terryrodbourn27932 жыл бұрын
They first made beer before bread! it was safer that natural water!
@Theactivepsychos2 жыл бұрын
Plenty of possible precursor sites around the area.
@lesjones67452 жыл бұрын
@@Theactivepsychos If you mean other sites like Gobleki Tepe, yes - many, many more are known to exist but haven't yet been touched. Karahan Tepe is currently being excavated, and it shows the same knowledge of astronomy as Gobleki Tepe; and it may actually be older. We can but wait and see what further archaeological 'digs' find.
@Theactivepsychos2 жыл бұрын
@@lesjones6745 sure. I can’t wait for the LiDAR results from the Sahara region to come In. So many unexplored regions that may well push back the civilisation story.
@lesjones67452 жыл бұрын
@@Theactivepsychos That should be something else altogether! Could well be beyond incredible!
@dorisrogers-ripoll24149 жыл бұрын
12,000 years ago! And how did they move stones that were 50,000 pounds?! Why are humans afraid to look at these awesome truths?
@mariocassina909 жыл бұрын
Doris Rogers- Ripoll with hands, legs, ropes ecc. you know...
@user-ei7ud5oj5b18 күн бұрын
ALIENS?
@bigbensarrowheadchannel27394 жыл бұрын
Love and respect to our ancestors brought me here.
@Kaslabarak7 жыл бұрын
What a great time to be alive folks.
@CahiliCarmihaGeren5 жыл бұрын
I went and saw it...smells like history...we welcome everyone here...Be our guest😊
@alexrodriguez402 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@callasexperience10 жыл бұрын
serioously they haven't got a clue, it's embarrassing
@cozycole22459 жыл бұрын
I concur; The brunt of history is written by those with illusory superiority and those seeking to alter it,.. plausibly one in the same. New finds are put on the debunk list and seemingly never removed... kina mischievous.
@jesse94227 жыл бұрын
It was Totally moldy rye bread. The translation of Gobekli Tepe is, and correct me if i'm mistaken, Trippin Balls.
@Naudins6 жыл бұрын
It's interesting to note the parallels between wheat/grasses being the basis of our civilization, as well as giving us the serendipitous discovery of LSD.
@Digalog5 жыл бұрын
@@Naudins i share that thought
@drcunda15 жыл бұрын
Göbekli Tepe might be translated as "Paunchy Hill".
@m.goldstein99813 жыл бұрын
That area is fantastic, it really changed my perspective on 'Muslim lands' (Turkey, in general, did).The Goebekli Tepe area (pictured) is touristy just like any other European ancient city - it is the same as being in Athens or Rome or Prague. What is really amazing though is the scale of the place - it's very easy to just have so many neighborhoods with so many different cultures. I'll never forget spending some time in the village near the ancient temple. People did not speak much English but so many locals invited me into their homes for some tea. Despite the language barriers, I was able to use body language and charades skills to let them know that I used to regularly beat my son Roger half-to-death with jumper cables. I'll cherish that cultural exchange for the rest of my life.
@polielie2 жыл бұрын
I don’t get the joke
@stevemoyer22737 жыл бұрын
By its existence, gobekli tepe says there is a less sophisticated but older site where humans figured out how to quarry, transport and erect smaller stones, carve less sophisticated images. You don't start quarrying and transporting 50 tonne stones many kilometers while trying to figure it out on the fly.
@vanderbam27414 жыл бұрын
There are. There are plenty of petroglyphs which include low relief carving. The Natufians were constructing mud and reed huts at this time and making use of stone for simple structures.
@lancejordan25613 жыл бұрын
When time vs. gathering calories leaves a surplus of the former. Man would of had the luxury to exercise creative pursuits like stone carving, temple building along with other imaginative and practical pursuits. So perhaps the altered wheat may have given the birth to the idea of a more efficient method to create time via crop cultivation. The priority on free time is no different now.
@davidkless91316 жыл бұрын
BS documentary. Jumps to conclusions with all this nonsense talk about bread!
@TheGodlessGuitarist5 жыл бұрын
Please, share your expertise with us
@Yarenoglu4 жыл бұрын
Experts: making calculated estimations given the evidence and experience they have in the field they are experts in. A dickhead online: nah fam. I won't take bread for an answer. I want a more compelling backstory.
@drzilman45364 жыл бұрын
I once made a sandwich, straight after I was able to design and build a rocket. Powerful stuff that bread.
@enessozbay4 жыл бұрын
Vay be adamlar taa amerigalardan gelip burayı keşfediyorlar wallahi helal oldun ben Urfa'lıyım şimdi'ye kadar hiç gitmedim oraya aramızdaki mesafe 45-50 km olmasına rağmen...
@danemassie37503 жыл бұрын
Yes it’s fascinating that they built this that long ago but it’s even more puzzling why they buried it
@ardd.c.81132 жыл бұрын
remains to be seen whether it was buried or not according to archeologists working at the side. natural occuring landslides might be to blame
@rastaman5354 Жыл бұрын
Well if it really was buried would make you think they new a natural disaster was going to happen or hid it from an invading army.
@mooliki0112 жыл бұрын
Hunter-gatherer communities would unlikely be able to build such structures as simply finding food sources would be a continual chore. The idea is that grasses adapted in a way that was mutually beneficial and allowed for humans to farm wheat instead of having to forage for it. This meant that less time and energy would have been spent looking for food, which would have given humans more time to pursue other activities and develop their intellectual and technological capabilities.
@Lily-fr9jt6 жыл бұрын
Barry Quinn Finally!!! I person with a brain!
@carlsong64383 жыл бұрын
This episode of limmys show was surprisingly educational
@Merloc9095 жыл бұрын
7:54 - In time bread would lead to something even bigger....Yeah....Pizza!!
@terryrodbourn27934 жыл бұрын
Yea not till the American Army in Italy during WW1 & 2. They saw the locals and enterprising solider came home and made his popular!
@stefanosprokopis69743 жыл бұрын
A d pasta too.
@eatswisschardforever7 жыл бұрын
Why is there a moaning woman in the background. Any documentary or movie that's filmed in the Middle East seems to always need that annoying musical score.
@fritzthedog0076 жыл бұрын
It's the B.B.C. They do it all the time nowadays, I think it's some contractual obligation to render any potentially interesting programme un-watchable with background music. Their speciality is playing music with either a blindingly obvious or incredibly tenuous link to the subject e.g. the Nile oooh let's play "the Nile Song" I'm sorry, but I think they have a department of very stupid young people with a database of song titles which they excitedly search and feel clever when they feel they have found something god I'm ranting I'll tell you why, on the 75th anniversary of the battle of Britain, the B.B.C. news ran an article, the background graphic was a Fairey Battle dropping a bomb. You just know that their idiot department of matching themes with music/visual stuff Googled "WW2 Battle of Britain" and found that entirely inappropriate clip, "battle" you see, fucking dumbass know-nothing erm o.k. got that off my chest now, what were you saying? Try finding some 1970's Open University programmes, invariably presented by some unkempt, awkward and badly dressed man in black and white with some chalk and a blackboard but VERY WATCHABLE.
@fritzthedog0076 жыл бұрын
I could have simply written "Things were better in the old days" but where's the fun in that?
@neilmarshall50875 жыл бұрын
@@fritzthedog007 Well ranted, but in future try to retain a wee bit of chest. lol :) Hey just realised bit od Being a british understatement (Better In The Old Days) - suppose it needs ducky on the end ??? Or dammit or dude.... So have you found randall carlson yet ? at kzbin.infovideos Very much the unkempt man with a white board and a slideshow doing very watchable stuff.
@MysticMavi5 жыл бұрын
Because for them, all the Middle Eastern countries are arabic. They still think they ride camels in all those countries. Idiots.
@geraldfriend2564 жыл бұрын
U dont lik uluulating
@RendColt10 жыл бұрын
How they know these people are first to have bread from wheat? What they say makes no sense. They got wheat 12000 years ago, supposedly, and the first thing in their mind was to built this huge structure out of stone? I don't think so. You still have agrarian cultures that have no desires to built huge energy and time consuming stone sites like this
@080048209 жыл бұрын
The theory they present on the video is that the amount of people needed to build the temple could not be fed just by hunting and gathering.
@HendrickVanLaar9 жыл бұрын
+EwE Whisperer That doesnt work to have one male and 4 females. This is because there isnt enough genetic diversity. The population will probably die in under ten generations because of inbreeding, and with rabbits that is about 2 years. Also rabbits are like cardboard nutritionally, and you can actually starve to death eating them.
@HendrickVanLaar9 жыл бұрын
Royalty was inbred. This is why so many royal people had major mental and physical deformities. Trust me, being inbred is a huge disadantage, They did a study where they got 100 females, and one male, and seen how long the genetics would last, and the population died after about ten generation. Dont screw around with genetics, because the science is very well based.
@HendrickVanLaar9 жыл бұрын
and as for the testosterone filled low IQ men, that is very A: rude, B: makes me question your intelligence quotient, and C: shows how uninformed you are. As Mark Twain said "never argue with an idiot because he brings you down to his leveland beats you with experience", so im not replying to this comment thread anymore. Im a fourth year university student, and it royally pisses me off when people make statements about things that they have no knowledge of.
@davidhood85988 жыл бұрын
+Hendrick VanLaar thats why we are in the mess we are in. first adam and eve. then when that degenerated noah and his family (the only flood servivers ) we have probably died out now and this is hell.
@dougg10755 жыл бұрын
Yea, not only did you find this place on the surface of the earth but it just so happens to be the cradle of agricultural civilization. Lucky .... super lucky
@mohnjarx78015 жыл бұрын
Graham Hancock has hours of content on Gobekli tepe; I recommend watching him.
@happyone47536 жыл бұрын
Wonderful BBC Video. All researchers around the world should study this but with an open mind. I am very sorry for my 5 long comments below. But I had to add to an excellent video my incredible anthropological discovery and research. The Cassi or Khasi are described as an Iron Age Tribe of Britain. Please read my detailed history of the Khasis below. I am convince that they erected the Göbekli Tepe complex. My heartiest congratulations to BBC for the great Documentary.
@TWOCOWS1 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for continuing to record and show the new Mirazan sites (the original, local Kurdish name for the recent official gov name). Mirazan ("miracle maker"). the local, childless women give offering at these hills, hoping for a child. The fertility myth of the hills, still lingers. Mirazan is the meaningful, localname for this entire super old civilization/culture. A lot better than the silly name of Gobekli ("potbelly")-- given to it by the ruling government there . I hope you continue showing us more and more of the Mirazan sites as they get dug up.
@galadriel95711 ай бұрын
I think This is the hill, Noahs ship landed,
@TWOCOWS111 ай бұрын
@@galadriel957 more like capsized, since it is on the lowland not a mountain
@galadriel95711 ай бұрын
@@TWOCOWS1 No, If you look at the Lanscape maps(www.google.com/maps/@36.9964263,38.6267208,87201m/data=!3m1!1e3?entry=ttuIt is just near the corner of a hill)where exactly one of the part of Euphates ending.
@LE7ELSX7 жыл бұрын
urfalıyım daha göbekli tepeyi görmedim adamların yaptığına bak.
@enessozbay4 жыл бұрын
Wallahi ben de öyle işte ülkemizin neden gelişemediğinin nedenleri bunlar...
@omersari344 жыл бұрын
Gerizekalisin ozaman
@Ardour7art3 жыл бұрын
Girdê Tepe “ Gubekli Tepe “ This land is kurdistan, Those countries besid us ( Turkey, iraq, iran and syria) not even controlled our land even they controlled our history and culture. People have been living on this land since oldest time. In the history had different names but now we all together say we are kurds and our land is kurdistan. We have a famous castle (Erbil citadel ) more than 8,000 years old.
@fthtt78374 жыл бұрын
I saved it and ı will watch it again and again...
@Vestersted11 жыл бұрын
As far as I've read, it wasn't primarly bread that grain was needed for, but for beer brewing. The oldest agriculture is said to been due to beer. Salud, Skål, Prost, Cheers! :-)
@NickVenture111 жыл бұрын
Very impressive. Still so much to discover there. Looks like the temples may have been partly used for a ritual milling of the seeds? Because there are so many stones carved by rubbing something into powder.. on them. Look at the top of the main pillars, and inside the buildings was found a structure with many such holes done by friction..
@cangunestek40656 жыл бұрын
A new chapter in history we didn't know it exists before
@ebayerr9 жыл бұрын
Even if I were to believe that a group of hunter-gathers found that field of wild wheat. Then they what? Started a farming community? Ok That community would've had to grown into thousands and thousands just to have the manpower in order to create Gobekli Tepe. But then there's the stickier problem of how did stone age farmers have the TOOLS and know how to accomplish such a feat?
@LAkadian8 жыл бұрын
You just wack blocks with harder blocks until they make a clean shape. If you think that requires a "modern" intellect then that really makes your own intelligence level.
@arc13427 жыл бұрын
if its so easy then why did humans wait 200 000 years of their existence to go from carving rocks to traveling to the moon in 12 000 years? by that logic it would make as much sense that humans would go from carving rocks to travel to the moon the first 12 000 years of their existence then collapsing and doing it again and again no?
@yourrightimsooosorry884 Жыл бұрын
Gobekli tepe was purposely buried 12 thousand years ago, no one has any idea when it was actually built, 12 thousand, 20 thousand, a hundred thousand years is anyone's guess!!!🖖😁
@MuhammadAshrafAbdullah-q8b4 күн бұрын
Funny how a documentary about studying a building just flip into learning plants and weeds
@justaman697211 жыл бұрын
could be indeed, or any number of soup pot glalatic races that have been coming here for tens of thousands of years living among us without us even being aware of it...I have yet to have anyone explain Puma Puncu and Ballbek trillitons. Puma Puncu is made of diorite,which happens to be the 2nd hardest mineral around, and copper and stone tools are good as a stick of butter in drilling and cutting these stones, still no splainin being offered, Ica Stones of Peru as well nuthin but mumm, pax!
@francispitts94402 жыл бұрын
I hope they keep digging that site and investigate the surrounding areas for more information.
@Henrikbuitenhuis10 жыл бұрын
Thanks
@richardsmith777911 жыл бұрын
the reason wheat is brought into this story is because they need to find a way to explain that hunter gatherers where not the people who built this place. Because that would be impossible. what they need to explain is how hunter gatherers stayed in a place that produced an inefficient food source long enough to select, during many generations, a good enough seed-food resource in order to have overproduction to cover the necessities of a society with enough free time to build this structure.
@hukukegitimleribirligi6 жыл бұрын
Basically dogmas of so called scientists are about to change. This is Sensational.
@Dayo983 жыл бұрын
this is so overly dramatic its sad and hillarious at the same time
@Lily-fr9jt4 жыл бұрын
These are the fore fathers of the aboriginals in Australia. Australia has the same animal carvings and drawings all over the place.
@SandyRiverBlue9 ай бұрын
Einkorn wheat isn't harvested when it is fully ripe, you would harvest it when it was still green and ripen it on the threshing floor.
@jamiegaddis93633 жыл бұрын
I think that pillar 43 is the key to understand Gobekli Tepi. The animal figures represent the constellations that the sun rose in at the equinoxes and solstices at the time of construction of the oldest enclosure. The headless figure on the pillar most likely represents some disaster that occurred just prior to the construction. The vulture figure with the round disc most likely is the summer solstice. The three figures at the top the look like handbags with an animal figure beside each one. Those are the spring and fall equinoxes and the winter solstice with their corresponding constellation sign. The event being depicted here is the younger dryes impact event. If you figure in the solar recession cycle and determine when the solstices and equinoxes alignment would have corresponded with these constellations that are represented on pillar 43 it would seem to indicate that the construction took place around 11835 BC. That corresponds quite well with the estimated date of the impact event. The building of the enclosure wasn't as a result of a better wheat variety but as a result of the major climate altering impact event.
@yes350yes10 жыл бұрын
Yeah right , the bread gave them the knowledge to build these vast complicated structures. You wouldnt by chance have any swampland land to sell do you.
@cozycole22459 жыл бұрын
the dk-effect
@plumbc7 жыл бұрын
The mystery is solved: they could make bread. Wow. THEY SAY THAT, not me! 9 minutes. Unbelievable.
@justaman697212 жыл бұрын
well i didnt see any friggin wheat scratched on the pillars of the tepe mk? Not a single scrap. Doesnt seem like wheat was all that important really r they'd have made a note on a wall or sumthin. They can't explain the London Hammer either and a whole host of other weird crap so what does the lamestream do? they ignore it....
@ansarrizvi7 жыл бұрын
I have read the book The Genesis Secret by Tom Knox, and it sparked the curiosity about Gobeklitepe.
@jrixtine5 жыл бұрын
Two questions are posed. One: How was Gobekli Tepe constructed? Two: What role did the mutation of wheat play in the role of agriculture? These questions are not satisfactorily answered.
@AaronSilkwood7 жыл бұрын
I think what is interesting is something like this is usually choreographed. It's one thing to paint something on the wall because you want to paint something on the wall, it's another to decide to build large monuments. It takes concentrated efforts of several people and you need either slaves or workers interest, neither of which are present, I think, among hunter and gatherers.
@jackeichhorn28793 жыл бұрын
Excavating more or the rest of the area, might give us answers to some of our questions.
@innerspacerace91965 жыл бұрын
I like me some BBC documentary. I’m still a hunter gatherer despite what the 17 counts shoplifting judge has to say
@bryonycoates35 жыл бұрын
Haha best. comment. ever
@MarceloSchmidt-gd9be3 ай бұрын
Excelent video
@alexstewart97475 жыл бұрын
So, hunter gatherers decided build Gobekli Tepe, carve 3D animals into huge, single pieces of stone, then bury the whole thing under a huge hill (50 acres) because a plant mutated 12,000 years ago, and the problem is solved....??
@wotan2378 жыл бұрын
If built 10,000 BC, then this upends mainstream historical timeline....this had to be an established city beforehand, with a population over 5,000 people or so, maybe a mini kingdom even nearby, 100 villages all over and united etc...
@wotan2378 жыл бұрын
+wotan237 Seems unlikely that this was a 'flash in the pan' a one shot deal and then died out/ without spreading...
@collinpetry11618 жыл бұрын
+wotan237 Actually, there is substantial proof that says otherwise. A National Geographic documentary starts with the same assumption/problem. But, they do some work and find that the temples would only need about a tribe of 50 to make one in 6-12 months.
@wotan2378 жыл бұрын
collin petry Did they replicate it, build a model?
@fedyno4reviews7 жыл бұрын
wotan237 you cant just say that there is no proof if it was a a city we would find houses, not just stone pillars just because you think it must of happened is 0 proof that it happened
@TheKarenRob7 жыл бұрын
more likely drawing from smaller tribes in a radius around the area similar to how Stonehenge was probably built. I understand there is evidence in SE US of ancient peoples coming together seasonally around a certain rock formation. If I can find a link, I'll share that.
@outsidelight112 жыл бұрын
Why? The ice did not reach Anatolia. Domestication could happen reasonably quickly and even nomadic hunter gatherers do actually plant crops to harvest the following year. The builders of Gobekli Tepe were on the cusp of change...cultural change takes a while and the gradually decreasing quality of GT build is probably suggestive of this change. The life of GT was about 2000 years...about the same time between us and Christ; a lot has happened in the last 300, let alone the last 2000 years
@cafearga7 жыл бұрын
Why are we amazed people from the stone age know how to use stone?
@novemberlily82153 жыл бұрын
Its worth reading Lynne Kelly's Book the Memory Place She says these henges were built all over the world on the cusp of transitioning from hunter gathering to settled agriculture. Getting agriculture right took a long time so for survival these transitional people had to know the hunter gather knowledge while they learnt the new way. These places acted more like a university than a primitive religion. Vitally important and hence the effort put in. When the transition was complete the henges were buried, as no longer useful. This happened all over the world eg Stone Henge. England
@bobbydsj2 жыл бұрын
Early days mate, i just assume that those two things started out as one
@அவானிஉயர்ந்தது2 жыл бұрын
This video is quite old. Graham Hancock has been studying Gobekli Tepe for a long time and has a lot to say.
@joshuatraffanstedt26956 жыл бұрын
Truth is, we don't know what the oldest civilization is. Or even where for that matter. As long as there have been people, I'm sure there have been communities.. Communities far more advanced than the little hunter gatherer groups we'd like to think they all were. There's strength in numbers. For instance if a group of 10 or 15 were competing with a groupie 200 for the same resources, which group would you put your money on? I think in the future we'll find evidence of insanely old civilizations. But even more importantly, imagine the evidence that time and the elements have completely wiped from the face of the Earth.
@Campbellteaching4 жыл бұрын
And the evidence for the age of this site is? These extreme claims should be supported by the evidence, come on, this is basic stuff. Get a grip BBC.
@vanderbam27414 жыл бұрын
Radiocarbon dating.
@pilartobala99013 жыл бұрын
Me encantó!
@bricksblocksandlotsofmocs50903 жыл бұрын
It gives me hope that every single comment is questioning what the academics want us to hear 👍
@flyinggabriel87885 жыл бұрын
Built by hunter-gatherers with no knowledge of farming. Then the wheat mutated just before the Younger Dryas event wiped them out.. Sounds like a typical BBC conclusion. A mixture of Shakespeare and Dr Seuss.
@HighMojo Жыл бұрын
To us, the 4000 year pyramids are ancient. To the pyramid builders, Gobekli Tepe is twice more ancient to them than the pyramids are to us. Mind blown. 🤯
@kubilaytepe32233 жыл бұрын
History = TURKEY TURKEY = History
@MsTeaRex11 жыл бұрын
They were trying to imply that ordinary men made Tepe...IMO it was a landing site for the Anunnaki.
@musicbyjerryАй бұрын
For 2.5 million years humans were the healthiest. Then they discovered wheat.
@vileniall00711 жыл бұрын
Look at more recent religious art. I have never come across a piece that represented electricity and all the technological advances that make modern religion and art possible. This doesn't mean that electricity isn't important because nobody writes books about it or prays to it.
@terryrodbourn27934 жыл бұрын
It was built after the the Ocean Pulse went up and was Fresh in human history (Flood Myths)! These were built by the survivors of Atlantis that taught people how to farm! That’s why it was buried, the inhabitants thought it was made by Gods that taught mankind to farm and civilize to preserve it!
@Voitan5 жыл бұрын
1:27 Random annoying moaning/wailing woman sounds intensifies.
@joaofleumatico6 жыл бұрын
so in a video about Gobekli Tepe you talk a lot about wheat.
@stevegasparutti83414 жыл бұрын
Theres more to this site than meets the eye. About time we started thinking out of the box on this one. There is another site similar to Gobekli. If there are two there must be more.
@hulaganz6 жыл бұрын
It is likely the oldest, because it was deliberately buried, and coincides with the world record of wheat. So it appears that hunter gatherers there were the first ones able to create and fuel something like this and something went wrong. Leading them to return to older ways. Or move. But wanted to preserve their original achievement. That’s what I got out of it, I suppose.