Göbekli Tepe
Appearance
Coordinata: 37°13′23″N 38°55′21″E / 37.22306°N 38.9225°E
Göbekli Tepe est locus archaeologicus Turciae meridio-orientalis. Fuit ut videtur hominibus aevi Neolithici aceramici locus sacer. Simulacra et stelae ibi repertae hodie apud Museum Archaeologicum Edessenum monstrantur.
Bibliographia
[recensere | fontem recensere]- M. Beile-Bohn et al., "Neolithische Forschungen in Obermesopotamien. Gürcütepe und Göbekli Tepe" in Istanbuler Mitteilungen vol. 48 (1998) pp. 5-78
- Andrew Curry, "Gobekli Tepe: The World’s First Temple?" in Smithsonian Magazine (Novembri 2008)
- Laura Dietrich et al., "Investigating the function of Pre-Pottery Neolithic stone troughs from Göbekli Tepe – An integrated approach" in Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports no. 34 (2020)
- Oliver Dietrich et al., "The role of cult and feasting in the emergence of Neolithic communities. New evidence from Göbekli Tepe, south-eastern Turkey" in Antiquity vol. 86 (2012) pp. 674–695
- Oliver Dietrich et al., "Establishing a Radiocarbon Sequence for Göbekli Tepe. State of Research and New Data" in Neo-Lithics 1/13 (2013) pp. 42-45
- Oliver Dietrich et al., "Göbekli Tepe. Preliminary Report on the 2012 and 2013 Excavation Seasons" in Neo-Lithics 1/14 (2014) pp. 11-17
- Oliver Dietrich, Laura Dietrich, Jens Notroff, "Anthropomorphic Imagery at Göbekli Tepe" in J. Becker, C. Beuger, B. Müller-Neuhof, edd., Human Iconography and Symbolic Meaning in Near Eastern Prehistory (VÖAW, 2019)
- O. Dietrich, K. Schmidt, "A Radiocarbon Date from the Wall Plaster of Enclosure D of Göbekli Tepe" in Neo-Lithics 2/10 (2010) pp. 82-83
- C. Köksal-Schmidt, K. Schmidt, "The Göbekli Tepe "Totem Pole". A First Discussion of an Autumn 2010 Discovery (PPN, Southeastern Turkey)" in Neo-Lithics 1/10 (2010) pp. 74-76
- K. Schmidt, "Die Steinkreise und die Reliefs des Göbekli Tepe" in Vor 12.000 Jahren in Anatolien. Die ältesten Monumente der Menschheit (2007) pp. 83-96
Nexus externi
[recensere | fontem recensere]Vicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad Göbekli Tepe spectant. |
- Gobeklitepe, the oldest temple of the world
- Bob Yirka, "Ancient stone pillars offer clues of comet strike that changed human history" (24 Aprilis 2917) apud Phys.org
- Robin Whitlock, "Archaeologists find 12,000-year-old pictograph at Gobeklitepe" (17 Iulii 2015) apud Ancient Origins