The world’s oldest place of worship predates the Egyptian pyramids by at least 6,500 years.
While the pyramids of Giza (dating back to 2500 BCE) and Stonehenge (3000 BCE) are likely the most famous ancient monuments, the world’s oldest place of worship predates these sites by a whopping 6,500 to 7,000 years. Dating to around 9600 BCE, Göbekli Tepe is an archaeological tell — a raised mound formed by continuous settlements rebuilt in the same location — in the foothills of southeastern Turkey. It not only reveals evidence of Stone Age human activity, but also has forced a reckoning of some of the widely held beliefs about the origins of civilization.
Since excavation of the site began in 1995, Göbekli Tepe — which translates to “potbelly hill” in Turkish — has yielded enclosures of T-shaped limestone megaliths, along with smaller human statuettes, early Neolithic tools, and remnants of animal bones. Because many of these megaliths are arranged in circular patterns and feature carvings of wild animals, anthropomorphic creatures, and human clothing, it’s generally believed these structures served as a gathering site for spiritual ceremonies. And as radiocarbon dating has revealed the Göbekli Tepe ruins to be at least 11,000 years old, from a time when nomadic hunter-gatherers were beginning to transition to permanent settlements, anthropologists have had to reconsider the previously held belief that organized religion only emerged well after agriculture-based communities were firmly in place.
Archaeologists have determined that Göbekli Tepe housed more of a permanent settlement than originally believed, and that it wasn’t the only Neolithic temple complex in the region. But while archaeologists suspect it’s not the only place of worship from the era, the site remains an invaluable source of information about people who lived thousands of years before the great pyramids rose to the sky, even if we can only guess at what the stone arrangements and their strange symbols really mean.