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  2. Göbekli Tepe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Göbekli_Tepe

    The site was first used at the dawn of the southwest Asian Neolithic period, which marked the appearance of the oldest permanent human settlements anywhere in the world. Prehistorians link this Neolithic Revolution to the advent of agriculture, but disagree on whether farming caused people to settle down or vice versa.

  3. Çatalhöyük - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Çatalhöyük

    Calibrated carbon-14 dates for Çatalhöyük, as of 2013 [1]. Çatalhöyük (English: Chatalhoyuk / ˌ tʃ ɑː t ɑː l ˈ h uː j ʊ k / cha-tal-HOO-yuhk; Turkish pronunciation: [tʃaˈtaɫhœjyc]; also Çatal Höyük and Çatal Hüyük; from Turkish çatal "fork" + höyük "tumulus") is a tell (a mounded accretion due to long-term human settlement) of a very large Neolithic and Chalcolithic ...

  4. List of ancient settlements in Turkey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ancient...

    List of settlements. In the table below, only the settlements which have articles in this encyclopaedia are shown, with the exception of the following: A few ancient settlements are still in use (Adana, Amasya, Ankara, Istanbul, Tarsus etc.) These settlements are not included in the list unless separate articles for the ancient sites exist.

  5. 8,600-year-old bread — oldest of its kind — found near oven ...

    www.aol.com/8-600-old-bread-oldest-165933972.html

    “This finding in Çatalhöyük is the world’s oldest bread,” the head of the excavation, Ali Umut Turkcan, told Anadolu Agency, a Turkish state-run newspaper. The 8,600-year-old bread found ...

  6. Urfa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urfa

    Settlements in the area originated around 9000 BC as a PPNA Neolithic sites located near Abraham's Pool (Site Name: Balıklıgöl). There is no written evidence for earlier settlement at the site, but Urfa's favorable commercial and geographical placement suggests that there was a smaller settlement present prior to 303 BC. [20]

  7. History of Istanbul - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Istanbul

    The first name of the city was Lygos [22] according to Pliny the Elder in his historical accounts and it was possibly founded by Thracian tribes along with the neighboring settlement of Semystra. [23] Only a few walls and substructures belonging to Lygos have survived to date, near the Seraglio Point, [6] where the Topkapı Palace now stands ...

  8. Karahan Tepe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karahan_Tepe

    Karahan Tepe. The ancient structures at Karahan Tepe were discovered in 1997 by "researchers near the Kargalı neighborhood in the Tek Tek Mountains National Park." [8]Necmi Karul, an archeologist at Istanbul University, told Anadolu Agency in 2019, “Last year, excavation work restarted in Karahan tepe [Kectepe] – around 60 km from where Göbekli tepe is located – and we encountered ...

  9. 10 of the Oldest Cities in the US

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/10-oldest-cities-us...

    Long before the U.S. declared its independence on July 4, 1776, many European explorers had already founded lasting settlements. These are 10 of the oldest inhabited cities in the U.S. that you ...