“I don’t believe in this temple hypothesis”. With this bold statement, made at the beginning of his presentation to the Anglo-Turkish Society in London in 2019, Lee Clare challenged the popular view that the series of circular enclosures found at Göbekli Tepe, constituted, as National Geographic trumpeted back in 2011, “the world’s first temple”. Lee Clare has every right to question, as he has been the coordination and research director at the “Hill of the Navel”, an artificial mound perched atop a 770m-high rounded limestone hill overlooking the scorched flatlands of the Mesopotamian Plain in southeast Turkey, since 2014.
This constant reinterpretation of evidence and formulation of new hypotheses is just one reason why Göbekli Tepe has so caught the imagination of archaeologists and enthusiasts around the world. The T-shaped anthropomorphic pillars, some as high as 5.5m, carefully arranged at the centre and around the edges of the sunken, circular enclosures and generally vividly carved with bas relief animals and birds, are visually stunning. Although Lee, who showed us around the site on Andante’s last trip out there in 2014, may not believe they were temples as such (officially they are now described as “The earliest human-made megalithic buildings worldwide”), he is prepared to concede that they were multi-functional structures with a ritual component.