Göbekli Tepe – terrorist site of ideological indoctrination
5. A CLOSE UP ON OUR LANDSCAPE OF INVESTIGATION
Earlier this summer Professor Mehmet Özdoğan from the Istanbul University (who we have met before) published a paper entitled Reconsidering the Early Neolithic of Anatolia in l'Anthropologie, one of the most important journals devoted to prehistoric sciences and paleoanthropology. Only the abstract is currently available for public viewing, but it appears as if the professor is becoming increasingly uneasy concerning the implications behind certain finds which of late have emerged as a result of the frenzy of new excavations in southern Turkey, a process being pushed by a Turkish government that sees its newly declared land of Taş Tepeler as a potential mecca for international tourists and the mounting public curiosity in all things concerning the very ancient past.
In the paper’s abstract, he states:
As I mentioned before, Özdoğan is not one for holding back even if like all academics when in print he is innately nervous of ‘speculative misconceptions’. For example during the launch of the research work on the Siberia-Göbekli Tepe link he was asked what happened around 8,000 BC at the eventual abandonment of the site. The professor is quoted in the Turkish press as saying:
If this wasn’t enough, now for the coup de grâce:
That has to be one of the most perceptive if enigmatically revolutionary lines of thinking I have ever come across from a scholar of note in this field:
Me thinks the professor suspects, even knows something that he just daren’t say too much about in either his writing or in public, but he’s itching, boy is he itching!
AN INTRODUCTION TO OUR LANDSCAPE OF INVESTIGATION
Göbekli Tepe is but the tip of a much larger iceberg. We therefore first need to get a grip on the closely knit yet still widespread outbreak of cultural activity that spans the opening of the PPNA phase just as the Younger Dryas cooling event suddenly reversed to a fast paced and dramatic warming around 9,800 BC.
In approximately 200 years mean average temperatures rose a startling 13° C (God bless global warming!) and out of seeming nowhere humans in the region of Anatolia got mighty busy!
You may remember this map from a previous post:
Let us now focus in more closely on the specific area inside the black box – as this will be our principle stage for the next act in this drama.
As we proceed, I am going to be taking us back and forth between various archaeological sites and geological features, so I’ve marked these out for you, numbered 1-19. I trust this master map will help to give you some sense of place and relationship to which you can refer back as a guide as the often baffling array of Turkish place names whizzes by.
Let us begin with some basic geological references and context.
What you see above is in effect the meeting of three powerfully distinct geological worlds. In the north section, the rugged near fabled territory now known as Armenia, the lower reaches of which – the Armenian Highlands – reach down towards the open planes and rolling steppe lands of south-eastern Turkey (marked in pale green) which will be our primary point of focus. Right through the middle of all this runs the south-eastern Taurus mountain range forming a gigantic and turbulent rolling buttress of dramatic peaks, almost Tolkienian in mythic proportion, and dividing these two regions in twain.
It is from amongst these mountains and lush planes that the fabled Tigris and Euphrates rivers have their sources. Tributaries and off shoots of both rivers branch out and crisscross from here in many a direction before heading south-east towards Mesopotamia. It is around these first springs of water that the first PPNA sites rise up.
I have picked out in purple (numbered 1-9) certain distinct geological features of importance to our story as well as other natural structures worthy of note as follows:
GEOLOGICAL
1. EASTERN ELÂZIĞ PROVINCE
Though it will play no specific role in our investigation, I have highlighted this region – the centre of Elâzığ Province – because it epitomises the turbulent past of the whole region.
Virtually sitting on Göbekli Tepe’s doorstep, Elâzığ resembles an inland peninsula surrounded by a circular waterway and is host to a complex succession of Miocene-Pleistocene effusive and explosive volcanic rocks, divided into four distinct volcanic phases. That is our landscape to a T – volcanic and explosive. One does have to wonder if that oddly circular imprint of lakes has a cosmic history to tell? Certainly, it has been host to something dramatic in the near past as witnessed by the recent discovery of a city supposedly dating to 2,000 BC buried beneath Lake Hazar on the southern rim of the circle of waterways. Explain that one!
In addition, I came up with this:
2. IMPACT CRATER?
Located on a smaller peninsular on the northern ring of the waterway, this little known giant scar in the landscape is deemed to be a sinkhole by some geologists but the locals insist it was due to a strike from the heavens and fables in the region speak of fire monsters battling it out in the skies above before one fell to earth here, and it is thus held by them in deep reverence.
3a. MOUNT MASIS
Popularly known today as Mount Ararat, and for many the mountain which saw the final resting place of Noah’s legendary Ark.
This brings us to something that is worth keeping in mind. Most of us blithely take it for granted that the key events in Genesis and the early stages of the Jewish Bible locate themselves solely in the Middle East. However, as we will be reminded a number of times in this investigation, several actually originate much further north with both Armenia and the region around Göbekli Tepe claiming important biblical home bases; none more so than Mount Ararat and the final resting place of the Ark after the Great flood (along with the mythical locations for his family and first offspring to settle after the floods had relented).
The problem with this is that it should noted that the bible refers to ‘[the] mountains of Ararat’ not the mount – for nowhere does it say the ark actually landed on a Mountain named Ararat. Which brings us to geological feature 3b.
3b. MOUNT AL-JUDI
The modern Cudi Dağ and the location of a more ancient Armenian belief that the Ark actually landed here (the geological site seen above in the foreground is absurdly claimed by some who should know better to be the actual petrified remains of the ship itself).
According to the Babylonian Jews, Christians of the Assyrian Church, Muslims (as stated in the Holy Qur’an’s Sura 11:44), and the Yezidis (a Kurdish angel-worshipping religion), Mount al-Judi was the actual Place of Descent. This claim is backed up by the Chaldean Berossus and the Greek historian Abydenus, who stated that inhabitants thereabouts “scraped the pitch off the planks as a rarity, and carried it about them for an amulet,” while “the wood of the vessel (was used) against many diseases with wonderful success.”
What seems to have happened in this conflict of ownership is that at the time the Council of Ephesus in 431AD, (which banned the ancient Assyrian Church from the Orthodox Catholic Church), Mount al-Judi was under the jurisdiction of the Assyrian Church, the Armenian Church’s southern rival, so along with casting out the Assyrian Church came a switch of identity away from Mount al-Judi to Mount Masis as understandably the Armenians didn’t want the Assyrians to have any further control over such an important place of future pilgrimage. Therefore, for political and economic reasons, the location of the descent was moved further north to Mount Mount Masis/Ararat and the rest as they say is propaganda!
We may well smile at all this jostling of mountain sites but the fact remains the region holds ancient memory of the great flood and the most famous of all stories relating to it finds its source in the region of the PPNA explosion.
4. SOUTHEASTERN TAURUS MOUNTAIN RANGE
This immense and magical range of rolling peaks overshadows our entire tale. If you hone in on it via Google Earth or some such you get an idea of just how strange and otherworldly it can seem. For example, take a look at this close up:
I don’t know about you, but to me this looks to have been formed by massive electrical discharging rather than tectonic activity and erosion. I think Randall Carlson would have a field day examining this place.
The mountain range under its current name was first formally recorded as Ταῦρος (Taûros) in The Histories of Polybius during the second century BC. I find it noteworthy that these mountains carry the name normally associated with the Greek word for the wild Bull (auroch). Heinrich Kiepert writes in Lehrbuch der alten Geographie that the name was borrowed into Ancient Greek from the Semitic (Old Aramaic) root tür, meaning "mountain" whilst others claim the word comes from the Proto-Semitic *ṯawr- (“bull, ox”), but either way both originated from a common, unknown, possibly non-Indo-European and more ancient source. Considering our exploration of an ancient cosmic God/Great Bull of the sacred pillar/mountain, I find it noteworthy that the word Taurus likely denotes both Bull and Mountain as well as that this likely electrically scarred Great Bull mountain range loomed over what took place at Göbekli Tepe and the like.
5. Bingöl Mountain - Bingöl Dağları - Obsidian Grail No.1
Bingöl Mountain in the Armenian Highlands, (once called Mingöl) is the source of both the Araxes and Euphrates rivers, two of the four rivers of ‘Paradise’ all of which originate in this area. It was also one of the most important locations for the mining and distribution of Obsidian.
Eye catching in colour and highly reflectivity, this volcanic glass has a unique capacity to create the deadliest of blades (modern heart and brain surgeons still use obsidian as it cuts so sharply and cleanly that it does no additional damage to surrounding tissue or nerve ends, ensuring a perfect and speedy heal). This was PPNA black gold – a gift from the fire god – and as previously stated, control over its mining, preparation and distribution was almost certainly a key aspect of any ‘secret society’ control over the region.
It is this matter alone that makes me not reject out of hand Andrew Collin’s claims that Bingöl Mountain, and not the Holy Land, was also the true site of the Mountain of Assembly of the Watchers, the legendary fallen angels, and even possibly the original source homeland for the Anunnaki of later Sumerian tradition. I do not wish to get side tracked here into this highly contentious issue, but Collin’s has put more than 20 years into exploring the matter and the local legends concerning such ‘devils’ inhabiting this place are indeed innumerable. If one considers the Russian and Swiderian connection we have previously explored and the idea that some extraordinary tall, fair and devilish folk with strange skulls travelled south through Georgia and Armenia, (with control over the famous black glass resource of this mountain being perhaps one of their targets), then the matter does bare at least consideration. For now I will merely note that In the book of Enoch the name of one particular rebel Watcher, the third in line, is given as Armen, which just so happens to be the root of the name Armenia, and he is said to have “taught the signs of the earth,” this being a form of divination whereby the disturbances in the heavens are reflected also on earth, and vice versa, which of course is the basis for what was later called astrology.
6. Mount Karaca Dağ - Obsidian grail No. 2
A shield crater mountain (a type of volcano named for its low profile, resembling a warrior's shield lying on the ground), Karaca Dağ is again home to plentiful supplies of obsidian which still litter its lower slopes.
Most importantly, it stands right at the very heart of the entire flat plane region where all the significant PPNA sites will emerge.
In 2006, Der Spiegel reported that the Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research in Cologne had discovered that the genetically common ancestor of 68 contemporary types of cereal still grows as a wild plant on its slopes, strongly suggesting that Karaca Dağ provided the birth place for the first domestication of einkorn wheat at some point around 10,000 years ago.
All that bread, all that pasta, all that gluten that has so impacted the physical and mental well-being of humanity ever since originates just 80 kilometres northeast of Göbekli Tepe in one little plant. Makes one think.
The mountain is also the setting for a highly significant folktale preserved by local Bedouin tribespeople. Told to Collins whilst on a field trip there, it speaks of how:
Assuming this is not a flight of Collin’s fancy, this fable is extremely significant. Not only for the seven heads, or for the connection made in the tale to the tell-tell guilt that cosmic hell-fire was directly linked to the advent of farming, but the fact that the dragon lived in a hole. ‘Hole’s’ will become incredibly significant as we progress.
7. Nemrut Dağ - ancient caldera - Obsidian grail No. 3
The purportedly extinct volcano Nemrut Dağ, (though with a last eruption in 1692 and activity noted as late as 1891, who knows…), today takes the form of an impressive caldera half a mile in diameter, within which lies an crescent-shaped lake taking up half the floor space. Previously known as Mount Niphates, it was referenced by John Milton in Paradise Lost iii. as Satan's landing spot upon Earth. Local legend also names it Mount Nimrod, the biblical figure mentioned in the Book of Genesis and Books of Chronicles, being the son of Cush and therefore a great-grandson of Noah. Extra-biblical traditions identified Nimrod as the ruler who commissioned the construction of the Tower of Babel, which led to his reputation as a king who was rebellious against God.
This fearsome statue in the Louvre is claimed by some to be Gilgamesh, by others Nimrod. Both the distinctive comet-sickle and comet-lion emblems he clutches will return in a later post.
Obsidian from here has been identified in the large amounts unearthed at Göbekli Tepe and considering the recent activity of the volcano, 11,000 years ago it was probably more than smouldering, so going there to mine must have been like communing with the very living gods of fire and destruction. If there is anywhere on earth that deserves the title Mount Doom, this is it! Which brings me to…
8. Plain of Muş – the later model for PARADISE/EDEN?
This wide valley plain, hemmed in on three sides by high mountain ranges and guarded from the southern reaches of Lake Van in the east by Nemrut Dağ’s caldera, is undoubtedly straight out of Tolkien in its unique configuration, and in some strange way brings Mordor to mind! Which is possibly unfair as it is apparently a wonderful place full of lush fertile soil and cascading mountain springs. The Murad Şu, or Eastern Euphrates, cuts right across the valley, dividing it in two, before vanishing into a narrow gorge at its western end creating a pass through the Eastern Taurus Mountains, along which the somewhat hazardous road to Diyarbakır winds its way onwards towards Göbekli Tepe. This was the ancient obsidian route from Bingöl and the northern lands surrounding Lake Van to the various PPN and later proto-Neolithic centers in the west, such as Hallan Çemi, Çayönü, Nevalı Çori, and, of course, Göbekli Tepe itself.
In particular, note the close proximity of the valley plain and the obsidian rich Nemrut Dağ to Hallan Çemi (here called Kaletepe), certainly among the very first – if not the first - PPN sites to be established and likely the major preparation and distribution centre for Obsidian supplying the people on the lush lands to the south west.
The Tigris Tunnel through which the Eastern Euphrates passes was originally about a mile long and ran all the way through the mountain. Thousands of years ago, this mysterious an eerie passage was seen as a symbolic gateway from the world of the living to a heavenly realm. Here it was that millennia later the hero Gilgamesh was to mythically come on his quest to discover the plant of immortality, passing through it from the south to reach the Land of the Ever Living, situated in a region of perpetual darkness.
It has recently been recognised that Cedar trees in incredible numbers once graced these hills (a fact that dashes the long held belief that all those references to Cedar trees in Sumerian and Babylonian myths must have related to the forests in the Lebanon). Again I wont go into the true cosmic meaning of these symbolic totems here but the tales of Gilgamesh and the Cedar tree are intimately linked. They have sadly all long gone with perhaps the last being used to help build the innumerable Armenian monasteries the valley later silently played host to, most of which were eventually destroyed during the appalling Armenian genocide of 1915. Was it to here that Gurdjieff came searching for answers to the deepest of all his many questions?
Though it will play little direct part in the story ahead, this land that time forgot was likely a significant staging post for our travellers from the north all those long millennia ago. Little if any archaeological work has ever been done here but one does have to wonder what hidden mysteries lie buried deep below its sacred grasslands and lower slopes.
9. The Plain of Harran
Nature often has its way of playing tricks on the eye with pattern recognition gone mad. Still, I can’t help but draw your attention to the remarkable shape of the lush and fertile Plain of Harran around which the principle events of our narrative will take place. Is it just me or is this the missing goddess herself, stretched on the rack of agriculture, laid bare to all but the watching eye of heaven?
At the very top of this isolated swathe of farmland (as it is now), and nestling high above in the hills overlooking, sits the site of Göbekli Tepe - almost like the missing head of her prostrate body - and at her navel, what became the city of Harran.
Over the course of its later history, Harran grew rapidly into a major Mesopotamian cultural, commercial and religious center. It was made a religiously and politically influential city through its association with the god Sin which historians have associated with the crescent moon (which it later was, but not originally) and who was said to inhabit the Ekhulkhul ("Temple of Rejoicing"), Harran's great sanctuary, built around 2,000 BC. The great god Shamash (again mistakenly identified with the sun) is also thought to have had a temple in Harran along with another prominent deity, Sin's son Nusku, the god of light (Apollo to us). This was all a long way off in the future though, for during the PPNA the plane was encircled by a very different set of ‘temples’ whose impact on the world was to be far greater and far longer.
Well, that’s our geology lesson over with. I hope you are with me. Next up, numbers 10-19, dealing with the human imprint on this peculiar chosen land.
(To be continued.)
5. A CLOSE UP ON OUR LANDSCAPE OF INVESTIGATION
Earlier this summer Professor Mehmet Özdoğan from the Istanbul University (who we have met before) published a paper entitled Reconsidering the Early Neolithic of Anatolia in l'Anthropologie, one of the most important journals devoted to prehistoric sciences and paleoanthropology. Only the abstract is currently available for public viewing, but it appears as if the professor is becoming increasingly uneasy concerning the implications behind certain finds which of late have emerged as a result of the frenzy of new excavations in southern Turkey, a process being pushed by a Turkish government that sees its newly declared land of Taş Tepeler as a potential mecca for international tourists and the mounting public curiosity in all things concerning the very ancient past.
In the paper’s abstract, he states:
In the course of last decades Neolithic research has taken a new pace in Turkey; while projects in the western and the central parts of the of the country have been working mainly on the later stages of the Neolithic era, those in south-eastern Turkey had their focus on the incipient stages of neolithization. Work in the south-eastern parts, highlighted by the results attained at Göbeklitepe has been carrying out large scale excavations at several Pre-Pottery Neolithic sites, most of them having their earliest layers by the very beginning of PPNA, evidence of antecedent stages being highly debatable. Recent recoveries have been greatly elaborating our understanding on the entire span of Neolithic way of living, also displaying the differences among distinct core areas of neolithization. However, more significant is the outcome of new research taking place in the Upper Euphrates-Upper Tigris basins of south-eastern Anatolia, revealing ground breaking results so different from our conventional perceptions that redefining what is implied by the term Neolithic now stands as an absolute necessity; inevitably some more time is necessary for the newly emerging picture on Neolithic process to sink in. However, some of the recent findings being unexpectedly different is apt to lead to speculative misconceptions, particularly when coupled with deeply rooted biases of research history.
As I mentioned before, Özdoğan is not one for holding back even if like all academics when in print he is innately nervous of ‘speculative misconceptions’. For example during the launch of the research work on the Siberia-Göbekli Tepe link he was asked what happened around 8,000 BC at the eventual abandonment of the site. The professor is quoted in the Turkish press as saying:
Migrations took place primarily in groups. One of the five routes extends to the Caucasus, another from Iran to Central Asia, the Mediterranean coast to Spain, Thrace and [the northwestern province of] Kırklareli to Europe and England, and one route is to Istanbul via [Istanbul’s neighboring province of] Sakarya and stops… In a very short time after the migration of farmers from Göbeklitepe, 300 settlements were established only around northern Greece, Bulgaria and Thrace. Those who remained in Göbeklitepe pulled the trigger of Mesopotamian civilization in the following periods, and those who migrated to Mesopotamia started irrigated agriculture before the Sumerians.
If this wasn’t enough, now for the coup de grâce:
“The people of Göbeklitepe turned into farmers, and they could not stand the pressure of the overwhelming clergy so they started to migrate to five ways.”
That has to be one of the most perceptive if enigmatically revolutionary lines of thinking I have ever come across from a scholar of note in this field:
… they could not stand the pressure of the overwhelming clergy
Me thinks the professor suspects, even knows something that he just daren’t say too much about in either his writing or in public, but he’s itching, boy is he itching!
AN INTRODUCTION TO OUR LANDSCAPE OF INVESTIGATION
Göbekli Tepe is but the tip of a much larger iceberg. We therefore first need to get a grip on the closely knit yet still widespread outbreak of cultural activity that spans the opening of the PPNA phase just as the Younger Dryas cooling event suddenly reversed to a fast paced and dramatic warming around 9,800 BC.
In approximately 200 years mean average temperatures rose a startling 13° C (God bless global warming!) and out of seeming nowhere humans in the region of Anatolia got mighty busy!
You may remember this map from a previous post:
Let us now focus in more closely on the specific area inside the black box – as this will be our principle stage for the next act in this drama.
As we proceed, I am going to be taking us back and forth between various archaeological sites and geological features, so I’ve marked these out for you, numbered 1-19. I trust this master map will help to give you some sense of place and relationship to which you can refer back as a guide as the often baffling array of Turkish place names whizzes by.
Let us begin with some basic geological references and context.
What you see above is in effect the meeting of three powerfully distinct geological worlds. In the north section, the rugged near fabled territory now known as Armenia, the lower reaches of which – the Armenian Highlands – reach down towards the open planes and rolling steppe lands of south-eastern Turkey (marked in pale green) which will be our primary point of focus. Right through the middle of all this runs the south-eastern Taurus mountain range forming a gigantic and turbulent rolling buttress of dramatic peaks, almost Tolkienian in mythic proportion, and dividing these two regions in twain.
It is from amongst these mountains and lush planes that the fabled Tigris and Euphrates rivers have their sources. Tributaries and off shoots of both rivers branch out and crisscross from here in many a direction before heading south-east towards Mesopotamia. It is around these first springs of water that the first PPNA sites rise up.
I have picked out in purple (numbered 1-9) certain distinct geological features of importance to our story as well as other natural structures worthy of note as follows:
GEOLOGICAL
1. EASTERN ELÂZIĞ PROVINCE
Though it will play no specific role in our investigation, I have highlighted this region – the centre of Elâzığ Province – because it epitomises the turbulent past of the whole region.
Virtually sitting on Göbekli Tepe’s doorstep, Elâzığ resembles an inland peninsula surrounded by a circular waterway and is host to a complex succession of Miocene-Pleistocene effusive and explosive volcanic rocks, divided into four distinct volcanic phases. That is our landscape to a T – volcanic and explosive. One does have to wonder if that oddly circular imprint of lakes has a cosmic history to tell? Certainly, it has been host to something dramatic in the near past as witnessed by the recent discovery of a city supposedly dating to 2,000 BC buried beneath Lake Hazar on the southern rim of the circle of waterways. Explain that one!
In addition, I came up with this:
2. IMPACT CRATER?
Located on a smaller peninsular on the northern ring of the waterway, this little known giant scar in the landscape is deemed to be a sinkhole by some geologists but the locals insist it was due to a strike from the heavens and fables in the region speak of fire monsters battling it out in the skies above before one fell to earth here, and it is thus held by them in deep reverence.
3a. MOUNT MASIS
Popularly known today as Mount Ararat, and for many the mountain which saw the final resting place of Noah’s legendary Ark.
This brings us to something that is worth keeping in mind. Most of us blithely take it for granted that the key events in Genesis and the early stages of the Jewish Bible locate themselves solely in the Middle East. However, as we will be reminded a number of times in this investigation, several actually originate much further north with both Armenia and the region around Göbekli Tepe claiming important biblical home bases; none more so than Mount Ararat and the final resting place of the Ark after the Great flood (along with the mythical locations for his family and first offspring to settle after the floods had relented).
The problem with this is that it should noted that the bible refers to ‘[the] mountains of Ararat’ not the mount – for nowhere does it say the ark actually landed on a Mountain named Ararat. Which brings us to geological feature 3b.
3b. MOUNT AL-JUDI
The modern Cudi Dağ and the location of a more ancient Armenian belief that the Ark actually landed here (the geological site seen above in the foreground is absurdly claimed by some who should know better to be the actual petrified remains of the ship itself).
According to the Babylonian Jews, Christians of the Assyrian Church, Muslims (as stated in the Holy Qur’an’s Sura 11:44), and the Yezidis (a Kurdish angel-worshipping religion), Mount al-Judi was the actual Place of Descent. This claim is backed up by the Chaldean Berossus and the Greek historian Abydenus, who stated that inhabitants thereabouts “scraped the pitch off the planks as a rarity, and carried it about them for an amulet,” while “the wood of the vessel (was used) against many diseases with wonderful success.”
What seems to have happened in this conflict of ownership is that at the time the Council of Ephesus in 431AD, (which banned the ancient Assyrian Church from the Orthodox Catholic Church), Mount al-Judi was under the jurisdiction of the Assyrian Church, the Armenian Church’s southern rival, so along with casting out the Assyrian Church came a switch of identity away from Mount al-Judi to Mount Masis as understandably the Armenians didn’t want the Assyrians to have any further control over such an important place of future pilgrimage. Therefore, for political and economic reasons, the location of the descent was moved further north to Mount Mount Masis/Ararat and the rest as they say is propaganda!
We may well smile at all this jostling of mountain sites but the fact remains the region holds ancient memory of the great flood and the most famous of all stories relating to it finds its source in the region of the PPNA explosion.
4. SOUTHEASTERN TAURUS MOUNTAIN RANGE
This immense and magical range of rolling peaks overshadows our entire tale. If you hone in on it via Google Earth or some such you get an idea of just how strange and otherworldly it can seem. For example, take a look at this close up:
I don’t know about you, but to me this looks to have been formed by massive electrical discharging rather than tectonic activity and erosion. I think Randall Carlson would have a field day examining this place.
The mountain range under its current name was first formally recorded as Ταῦρος (Taûros) in The Histories of Polybius during the second century BC. I find it noteworthy that these mountains carry the name normally associated with the Greek word for the wild Bull (auroch). Heinrich Kiepert writes in Lehrbuch der alten Geographie that the name was borrowed into Ancient Greek from the Semitic (Old Aramaic) root tür, meaning "mountain" whilst others claim the word comes from the Proto-Semitic *ṯawr- (“bull, ox”), but either way both originated from a common, unknown, possibly non-Indo-European and more ancient source. Considering our exploration of an ancient cosmic God/Great Bull of the sacred pillar/mountain, I find it noteworthy that the word Taurus likely denotes both Bull and Mountain as well as that this likely electrically scarred Great Bull mountain range loomed over what took place at Göbekli Tepe and the like.
5. Bingöl Mountain - Bingöl Dağları - Obsidian Grail No.1
Bingöl Mountain in the Armenian Highlands, (once called Mingöl) is the source of both the Araxes and Euphrates rivers, two of the four rivers of ‘Paradise’ all of which originate in this area. It was also one of the most important locations for the mining and distribution of Obsidian.
Eye catching in colour and highly reflectivity, this volcanic glass has a unique capacity to create the deadliest of blades (modern heart and brain surgeons still use obsidian as it cuts so sharply and cleanly that it does no additional damage to surrounding tissue or nerve ends, ensuring a perfect and speedy heal). This was PPNA black gold – a gift from the fire god – and as previously stated, control over its mining, preparation and distribution was almost certainly a key aspect of any ‘secret society’ control over the region.
It is this matter alone that makes me not reject out of hand Andrew Collin’s claims that Bingöl Mountain, and not the Holy Land, was also the true site of the Mountain of Assembly of the Watchers, the legendary fallen angels, and even possibly the original source homeland for the Anunnaki of later Sumerian tradition. I do not wish to get side tracked here into this highly contentious issue, but Collin’s has put more than 20 years into exploring the matter and the local legends concerning such ‘devils’ inhabiting this place are indeed innumerable. If one considers the Russian and Swiderian connection we have previously explored and the idea that some extraordinary tall, fair and devilish folk with strange skulls travelled south through Georgia and Armenia, (with control over the famous black glass resource of this mountain being perhaps one of their targets), then the matter does bare at least consideration. For now I will merely note that In the book of Enoch the name of one particular rebel Watcher, the third in line, is given as Armen, which just so happens to be the root of the name Armenia, and he is said to have “taught the signs of the earth,” this being a form of divination whereby the disturbances in the heavens are reflected also on earth, and vice versa, which of course is the basis for what was later called astrology.
6. Mount Karaca Dağ - Obsidian grail No. 2
A shield crater mountain (a type of volcano named for its low profile, resembling a warrior's shield lying on the ground), Karaca Dağ is again home to plentiful supplies of obsidian which still litter its lower slopes.
Most importantly, it stands right at the very heart of the entire flat plane region where all the significant PPNA sites will emerge.
In 2006, Der Spiegel reported that the Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research in Cologne had discovered that the genetically common ancestor of 68 contemporary types of cereal still grows as a wild plant on its slopes, strongly suggesting that Karaca Dağ provided the birth place for the first domestication of einkorn wheat at some point around 10,000 years ago.
All that bread, all that pasta, all that gluten that has so impacted the physical and mental well-being of humanity ever since originates just 80 kilometres northeast of Göbekli Tepe in one little plant. Makes one think.
The mountain is also the setting for a highly significant folktale preserved by local Bedouin tribespeople. Told to Collins whilst on a field trip there, it speaks of how:
once, long ago, when humankind first began to till the land, a dragon with 7 heads lived in a hole. One day, the tillers’ plows revealed the monster’s lair, making the creature extremely angry. It emerged into the light and began torching the forests with its fiery breath until all the trees had been razed to the ground. Fearing for their lives, the people called upon Allah to stop this misery. This he did by carrying the monster up through the seven heavens until it reached the highest one, and here the dragon exploded with a great burst of fire, scattering rocks across the entire region.
Assuming this is not a flight of Collin’s fancy, this fable is extremely significant. Not only for the seven heads, or for the connection made in the tale to the tell-tell guilt that cosmic hell-fire was directly linked to the advent of farming, but the fact that the dragon lived in a hole. ‘Hole’s’ will become incredibly significant as we progress.
7. Nemrut Dağ - ancient caldera - Obsidian grail No. 3
The purportedly extinct volcano Nemrut Dağ, (though with a last eruption in 1692 and activity noted as late as 1891, who knows…), today takes the form of an impressive caldera half a mile in diameter, within which lies an crescent-shaped lake taking up half the floor space. Previously known as Mount Niphates, it was referenced by John Milton in Paradise Lost iii. as Satan's landing spot upon Earth. Local legend also names it Mount Nimrod, the biblical figure mentioned in the Book of Genesis and Books of Chronicles, being the son of Cush and therefore a great-grandson of Noah. Extra-biblical traditions identified Nimrod as the ruler who commissioned the construction of the Tower of Babel, which led to his reputation as a king who was rebellious against God.
This fearsome statue in the Louvre is claimed by some to be Gilgamesh, by others Nimrod. Both the distinctive comet-sickle and comet-lion emblems he clutches will return in a later post.
Obsidian from here has been identified in the large amounts unearthed at Göbekli Tepe and considering the recent activity of the volcano, 11,000 years ago it was probably more than smouldering, so going there to mine must have been like communing with the very living gods of fire and destruction. If there is anywhere on earth that deserves the title Mount Doom, this is it! Which brings me to…
8. Plain of Muş – the later model for PARADISE/EDEN?
This wide valley plain, hemmed in on three sides by high mountain ranges and guarded from the southern reaches of Lake Van in the east by Nemrut Dağ’s caldera, is undoubtedly straight out of Tolkien in its unique configuration, and in some strange way brings Mordor to mind! Which is possibly unfair as it is apparently a wonderful place full of lush fertile soil and cascading mountain springs. The Murad Şu, or Eastern Euphrates, cuts right across the valley, dividing it in two, before vanishing into a narrow gorge at its western end creating a pass through the Eastern Taurus Mountains, along which the somewhat hazardous road to Diyarbakır winds its way onwards towards Göbekli Tepe. This was the ancient obsidian route from Bingöl and the northern lands surrounding Lake Van to the various PPN and later proto-Neolithic centers in the west, such as Hallan Çemi, Çayönü, Nevalı Çori, and, of course, Göbekli Tepe itself.
In particular, note the close proximity of the valley plain and the obsidian rich Nemrut Dağ to Hallan Çemi (here called Kaletepe), certainly among the very first – if not the first - PPN sites to be established and likely the major preparation and distribution centre for Obsidian supplying the people on the lush lands to the south west.
The Tigris Tunnel through which the Eastern Euphrates passes was originally about a mile long and ran all the way through the mountain. Thousands of years ago, this mysterious an eerie passage was seen as a symbolic gateway from the world of the living to a heavenly realm. Here it was that millennia later the hero Gilgamesh was to mythically come on his quest to discover the plant of immortality, passing through it from the south to reach the Land of the Ever Living, situated in a region of perpetual darkness.
It has recently been recognised that Cedar trees in incredible numbers once graced these hills (a fact that dashes the long held belief that all those references to Cedar trees in Sumerian and Babylonian myths must have related to the forests in the Lebanon). Again I wont go into the true cosmic meaning of these symbolic totems here but the tales of Gilgamesh and the Cedar tree are intimately linked. They have sadly all long gone with perhaps the last being used to help build the innumerable Armenian monasteries the valley later silently played host to, most of which were eventually destroyed during the appalling Armenian genocide of 1915. Was it to here that Gurdjieff came searching for answers to the deepest of all his many questions?
Though it will play little direct part in the story ahead, this land that time forgot was likely a significant staging post for our travellers from the north all those long millennia ago. Little if any archaeological work has ever been done here but one does have to wonder what hidden mysteries lie buried deep below its sacred grasslands and lower slopes.
9. The Plain of Harran
Nature often has its way of playing tricks on the eye with pattern recognition gone mad. Still, I can’t help but draw your attention to the remarkable shape of the lush and fertile Plain of Harran around which the principle events of our narrative will take place. Is it just me or is this the missing goddess herself, stretched on the rack of agriculture, laid bare to all but the watching eye of heaven?
At the very top of this isolated swathe of farmland (as it is now), and nestling high above in the hills overlooking, sits the site of Göbekli Tepe - almost like the missing head of her prostrate body - and at her navel, what became the city of Harran.
Over the course of its later history, Harran grew rapidly into a major Mesopotamian cultural, commercial and religious center. It was made a religiously and politically influential city through its association with the god Sin which historians have associated with the crescent moon (which it later was, but not originally) and who was said to inhabit the Ekhulkhul ("Temple of Rejoicing"), Harran's great sanctuary, built around 2,000 BC. The great god Shamash (again mistakenly identified with the sun) is also thought to have had a temple in Harran along with another prominent deity, Sin's son Nusku, the god of light (Apollo to us). This was all a long way off in the future though, for during the PPNA the plane was encircled by a very different set of ‘temples’ whose impact on the world was to be far greater and far longer.
Well, that’s our geology lesson over with. I hope you are with me. Next up, numbers 10-19, dealing with the human imprint on this peculiar chosen land.
(To be continued.)
Last edited: