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Urfa Man
View on WikipediaThe Urfa man, also known as the Balıklıgöl statue, is an ancient human shaped statue found during excavations in Balıklıgöl near Urfa, in the geographical area of Upper Mesopotamia, in the southeast of modern Turkey.[1][2] It is dated c. 9000 BC to the period of the Pre-Pottery Neolithic, and was considered as "the oldest naturalistic life-sized sculpture of a human".[3] It is considered as contemporaneous with the sites of Göbekli Tepe (Pre-Pottery Neolithic A/B) and Nevalı Çori (Pre-Pottery Neolithic B),[4] and belongs to the Taş Tepeler tradition of monumental statues of men holding their erect phallus.[5][6] The site of Yeni Mahalle, which originally contained the statue, was carbon dated to 8600 BCE.[6]
Key Information
Discovery
[edit]The statue was found during construction work, and the exact location of the find has not been properly recorded, but it may have come from the nearby Pre-Pottery Neolithic A site of Urfa Yeni-Yol.[1] This is not far from other known Pre-Pottery Neolithic A sites around Urfa: Göbekli Tepe (about 10 kilometers), Gürcütepe.[1] It is reported that it was discovered in 1993 on Yeni Yol street in Balıklıgöl, at the same location where the Pre-Pottery Neolithic site of Yeni Mahalle was investigated from 1997.[7][8]
The statue is nearly 1.90 meters tall.[9] The eyes form deep holes, in which are set segments of black obsidian.[3] It features a V-shaped collar or necklace.[8][3] The hands are clasped in front, covering the genitals.[8] The statue is thought to date to around 9000 BC, and is often claimed to be the oldest known statue in the world.[8][10][11]
Context
[edit]Before the Urfa Man, numerous small-sized statuettes are known from the Upper Paleolithic, such as the Löwenmensch figurine (c. 40,000 BC), the Venus of Dolní Věstonice (c. 30,000 BC), the Venus of Willendorf (c. 25,000 BC) or the realistic Venus of Brassempouy (c. 25,000 BC).
Slightly later than the Urfa Man, Pre-Pottery Neolithic C, anthropomorphic statues are known from the Levant, such as the 'Ain Ghazal Statues. In 2023, it was announced that excavations carried out at Karahan Tepe have turned up a similar human statue that dates back to around 9,400 BC.[12]
Gallery
[edit]-
Another view of the statue
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Urfa man portrait, with obsidian stones in the eye sockets
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Urfa man detail
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c Potts, Daniel T. (2012). A Companion to the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East. John Wiley & Sons. p. 155. ISBN 9781444360776.
- ^ Guilaine, Jean (2008). Les Racines de la Méditerranée et de l'Europe (in French). Fayard. p. 14. ISBN 9782213646268.
- ^ a b c Chacon, Richard J.; Mendoza, Rubén G. (2017). Feast, Famine or Fighting?: Multiple Pathways to Social Complexity. Springer. p. 120. ISBN 9783319484020.
- ^ Laneri, Nicola (2015). Defining the Sacred: Approaches to the Archaeology of Religion in the Near East. Oxbow Books. p. 162. ISBN 9781782976837.
- ^ Ayaz, Orhan (30 June 2023). "Self-Revelation: An Origin Myth Interpretation of the Göbekli Tepe Culture (An Alternative Perspective on Anthropomorphic Themes)". Yüzüncü Yıl Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisi (60): 196–198. doi:10.53568/yyusbed.1233144.
- ^ a b Çeli̇K, Bahattin (15 June 2014). "ŞANLIURFA BÖLGESİNDE "T" ŞEKLİNDE DİKMETAŞ BULUNAN YERLEŞİMLERİN FARKLILIK VE BENZERLİKLERİ". Türkiye Bilimler Akademisi Arkeoloji Dergisi (17): 19–20. doi:10.22520/tubaar.2014.0001.
- ^ Ayaz, Orhan (30 June 2023). "Self-Revelation: An Origin Myth Interpretation of the Göbekli Tepe Culture (An Alternative Perspective on Anthropomorphic Themes)". Yüzüncü Yıl Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisi (60): 196. doi:10.53568/yyusbed.1233144.
Another striking phallus-depicted archaeological finding was a statue from the Neolithic settlement of Yeni Mahalle ‒the Urfa Man statue.
- ^ a b c d Collins, Andrew (2014). Gobekli Tepe: Genesis of the Gods: The Temple of the Watchers and the Discovery of Eden. Simon and Schuster. p. 66. ISBN 9781591438359.
- ^ Çelik, Bahattin. "Şanlıurfa - Yeni Mahalle Höyüğü in the Light of Novel C14 Analysis". (PDF) Şanlıurfa - Yeni Mahalle Höyüğü in the Light of Novel C14 Analysis. Retrieved 2020-03-05.
- ^ Garrard-Burnett, Virginia; Yildirim, Yetkin (2011). Flying with Two Wings: Interreligious Dialogue in the Age of Global Terrorism. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 133. ISBN 9781443832243.
- ^ Schmidt, Klaus (2006). Sie bauten die ersten Tempel. Das rätselhafte Heiligtum der Steinzeitjäger. Die archäologische Entdeckung am Göbekli Tepe. München: Beck. p. 288. ISBN 978-3-406-68806-5.
- ^ "Archaeologists in Turkey Have Unearthed Human and Animal Sculptures That Are the Earliest Examples of Prehistoric Art". 23 October 2023.
Urfa Man
View on GrokipediaDiscovery and Excavation
Initial Discovery
The Urfa Man statue was unearthed in 1993 during construction activities in the Balıklıgöl quarter of Şanlıurfa (ancient Urfa), Turkey, specifically at the Pre-Pottery Neolithic site of Urfa-Yeni Mahalle along Yeni Yol street. Local construction workers discovered the artifact while digging foundations for urban development, revealing it broken into four nearly equal pieces and partially buried within the settlement layers. The construction work unfortunately caused significant damage to the surrounding archaeological context, largely destroying the associated Neolithic structures. Upon the find, workers reported the statue to local authorities, prompting swift intervention by the Şanlıurfa Governorate, which acquired the pieces and implemented temporary on-site protection measures to safeguard it from further harm amid the ongoing project. The artifact was subsequently relocated for detailed examination and conservation, marking the beginning of formal archaeological involvement in its study. This serendipitous discovery highlighted the vulnerability of prehistoric sites to modern urban expansion in the region.Excavation and Documentation
Following the accidental unearthing during landscaping and construction activities in the Balıklıgöl quarter of Şanlıurfa in late 1993, the statue—discovered broken into four nearly equal pieces—was promptly recovered from the building site in the Yeni Mahalle district.[2][1] The recovery effort was led by Turkish archaeologists affiliated with the Şanlıurfa Museum, including director Eyüp Bucak, in collaboration with international researchers such as Klaus Schmidt from the German Archaeological Institute.[1][5] Manual tools were employed for careful extraction to minimize additional damage, with the pieces lifted and initially stabilized on-site before transport to the Şanlıurfa Museum for safekeeping.[2] Documentation commenced immediately upon recovery, involving comprehensive photographic records of the fragments in situ and detailed sketches to capture their positions relative to the disturbed context.[1] The artifact was assigned an official inventory number by the Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism, formalizing its status as a protected national heritage item.[6] Early scientific assessments focused on the statue's material (local limestone) and stylistic features, with preliminary surveys confirming its Pre-Pottery Neolithic affiliation through associated T-shaped pillar fragments nearby.[1] The process faced significant challenges due to urban encroachment and intense development pressures at the site, which necessitated rapid action to salvage the statue amid ongoing construction that ultimately destroyed much of the surrounding Neolithic settlement.[1] This lack of controlled excavation meant the recovery yielded limited stratigraphic data, complicating later interpretations of the artifact's depositional history.[1] Despite these constraints, the collaborative efforts ensured the statue's intact preservation, enabling its detailed study in subsequent publications, such as Bucak and Schmidt's 2003 analysis.[7]Preservation Efforts
Following its discovery in 1993 during road construction in the Yeni Mahalle district of Şanlıurfa, the Urfa Man statue was promptly relocated to the Şanlıurfa Museum for safekeeping to protect it from further environmental damage and urban development threats.[6] Conservation efforts have focused on addressing the statue's limestone composition, which is prone to fragility and erosion. These measures have been coordinated by the Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism's General Directorate of Cultural Assets and Museums, in collaboration with international archaeological experts for regular condition assessments and updates to preservation protocols.[8][9] As of 2025, the statue is housed in the Şanlıurfa Archaeology and Mosaic Museum, where it is maintained in a climate-controlled display environment to mitigate risks from humidity, temperature variations, and airborne pollutants that could accelerate deterioration.[10]Physical Description
Dimensions and Construction
The Urfa Man statue stands approximately 1.8 meters (1.8–1.9 m per sources) tall, rendering it slightly larger than life-size and representative of an early Neolithic attempt at naturalistic human proportions.[3][1] This height includes the conical base, which was designed for insertion into the ground, suggesting it was intended as a fixed installation rather than a portable object.[1] The figure's overall form emphasizes a standing posture through its compact build, though it lacks distinct feet and terminates in the plug-like base.[3] Carved monolithically from a single block of limestone sourced from local quarries in the Şanlıurfa region, the statue showcases the use of readily available regional stone for monumental sculpture during the Pre-Pottery Neolithic period around 9000 BC.[3][1] The material's fine-grained texture allowed for detailed carving, evident in the anatomical features like the torso and limbs, achieved through subtractive techniques that removed excess stone to shape the body.[1] The statue was discovered in a fragmented state, broken into four nearly equal pieces likely due to its burial context and subsequent extraction during modern construction in 1993.[1] Despite this, the core structure remains intact; conservation efforts have reassembled it for display at the Şanlıurfa Archaeology and Mosaic Museum.[1][3] This preservation highlights the durability of the limestone against millennia of environmental exposure.[3]Iconographic Features
The Urfa Man statue depicts a standing male figure in a naturalistic yet stylized form, with the arms bent at the elbows and the hands grasping the genitals.[1][3] The head is tilted slightly to one side, contributing to a subtle dynamic quality in the overall pose.[2] Key motifs include the prominent almond-shaped eyes, which feature deep sockets originally inlaid with black obsidian pieces to emphasize their gaze.[1][3] The facial features are schematic and simplified, with a defined nose and ears but no mouth carved into the stone.[1][6] The hands show separated fingers, adding detail to the gesture.[11] A V-shaped motif encircles the neck and points downward toward the abdomen, possibly representing a necklace or rudimentary garment such as a loincloth.[3][2] The body proportions reflect realistic human anatomy in the torso and limbs, with visible ribs and muscular definition, while the head appears disproportionately large and stylized to highlight the facial elements, particularly the eyes.[1][11] The lower body tapers into a plain, conical base without depicted feet, suggesting it was intended to be socketed into the ground.[6][3]Comparative Analysis
The Urfa Man stands at approximately 1.8 meters (1.8–1.9 m per sources) tall, making it significantly larger than typical Neolithic figurines from contemporaneous sites, such as the small clay human representations at Çatalhöyük, which generally measure between 3 and 20 centimeters in height.[12][6] This scale positions the Urfa Man as the earliest known life-sized human sculpture from the Pre-Pottery Neolithic period, highlighting an unprecedented level of ambition in sculptural representation during this era.[1] In terms of style, the Urfa Man exhibits a more naturalistic approach compared to the abstract, faceless T-shaped pillars at nearby Göbekli Tepe, which primarily feature zoomorphic reliefs of animals and lack detailed facial features.[1] Unlike later Sumerian statues from the Early Dynastic period (c. 2900–2350 BCE), which often depict figures adorned with fringed skirts, necklaces, and symbols of authority, the Urfa Man is rendered in a simple, unadorned form without regalia or clothing, emphasizing raw human anatomy over hierarchical or ritualistic embellishment.[13] The statue's material, local limestone, parallels the stone used for Göbekli Tepe's T-pillars and other regional sculptures, yet it diverges by focusing exclusively on anthropomorphic form rather than the predominantly animal-centric or hybrid carvings common at those sites.[14] This choice underscores the Urfa Man's role in the Fertile Crescent's transition from symbolic, animal-dominated art in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic A to more explicitly human-centered representations, signaling an emerging emphasis on anthropomorphism around 11,000 years before present.[15]Archaeological Context
Site and Regional Setting
The Urfa Man statue was discovered in the old city center of Şanlıurfa, Turkey, specifically at the Yeni Mahalle site along Yeni Yol Street, near the southwestern city wall and in proximity to the sacred pools of Balıklıgöl within the ancient settlement of Urfa.[16][4] This location places the find within a densely built urban area that overlays prehistoric layers, complicating further excavation.[16] Regionally, the site lies in the Upper Mesopotamia plateau of southeastern Turkey, characterized by limestone plateaus and highlands that overlook the expansive Harran Plain to the south and east, with elevations rising to the north and proximity to the Karakoyun River.[17][16] The area's fertile valleys, situated approximately 80 kilometers east of the Euphrates River valley, provided advantageous conditions for early human settlement through access to water sources and arable land suitable for nascent agriculture and hunting.[17][18] In the modern context, the site's exposure occurred during construction work in 1993, amid rapid urban expansion in Şanlıurfa that posed significant threats to underlying archaeological remains through overlying modern buildings and infrastructure.[16] The site contributes to the broader Neolithic cultural landscape in the Şanlıurfa region, near the Taş Tepeler sites inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2018, which encompass several related Neolithic settlements in the environs as part of ongoing heritage protection efforts.[17][19] The statue's preservation benefited from its burial in soft alluvial deposits originating from ancient watercourses, which formed a protective stratigraphic layer approximately 2 meters deep and 70 meters long in the vicinity.[16] These sediments, derived from fluvial activity in the region's riverine environment, shielded the limestone artifact from surface erosion and exposure over millennia.[16]Chronological Placement
The Urfa Man statue was dated through radiocarbon analysis of organic sediments from the surrounding Yeni Mahalle settlement, yielding calibrated dates of approximately 8830–8650 BC for the associated Pre-Pottery Neolithic layers.[20] Stylistic comparisons with T-shaped pillars and anthropomorphic sculptures from contemporaneous sites further support this placement, aligning the statue with early monumental art traditions in the region.[1] This chronology situates the statue within the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB) period, which succeeded the Pre-Pottery Neolithic A (PPNA) around 8500 BC and is characterized by increased sedentism, rectangular architecture, and advanced symbolic expressions in the Upper Euphrates basin.[20] The PPNB phase at Yeni Mahalle reflects a transition to more permanent communities, evidenced by terrazzo floors and flint assemblages consistent with early PPNB typologies.[16] The statue's temporal context overlaps with the construction and use of Göbekli Tepe, a nearby monumental complex active from circa 9600–7000 BC, spanning late PPNA to late PPNB.[21] This contemporaneity highlights shared cultural practices in the Şanlıurfa region during a formative era of Neolithic development. The Urfa Man predates the invention of pottery, which emerged in the Pottery Neolithic around 7000 BC, by several millennia, underscoring the pre-ceramic technological and artistic sophistication of PPNB societies.[22] As of 2025, refined chronologies from regional sequences, incorporating Bayesian modeling of multiple radiocarbon datasets from PPN sites in southeastern Anatolia, confirm the statue's attribution to the 9th millennium BC, with enhanced precision for the early PPNB horizon. Recent excavations at nearby Göbekli Tepe in 2025 uncovered a life-sized human statue, further illustrating the sophistication of anthropomorphic representations in the early Neolithic of the region.[23][24]Associated Artifacts
During the limited salvage excavation prompted by urban construction in the Yeni Mahalle area of Şanlıurfa, several artifacts were co-discovered in the same trench as the statue, including smaller stone tools such as flint blades, bone fragments, and fragmentary figurines. A small T-shaped stele was also recovered from the same context, linking the find to broader regional monumental art traditions. These items, typical of Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB) assemblages, suggest localized crafting and daily activities at the site.[1][25][2] In the broader Balıklıgöl area nearby, eye idols—small stone amulets featuring prominent eye motifs—have been recovered from contemporaneous PPNB contexts, providing regional cultural parallels without direct linkage to the statue's deposit.[26] Archaeological traces at the site include features of a possible ritual enclosure or overlying settlement layer, such as hearths and grinding stones, which indicate mixed domestic and specialized use during the Neolithic occupation.[1] The majority of these associated artifacts, along with the statue itself, are housed in the Şanlıurfa Archaeology Museum, though detailed publication remains sparse owing to the rescue excavation's urban constraints and the site's partial destruction prior to systematic documentation.[10]Cultural and Symbolic Significance
Artistic and Technological Implications
The Urfa Man statue represents a significant technological advancement in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic period, showcasing mastery of large-scale stone carving using only pre-metal tools such as chert blades and pecked stone implements for shaping limestone blocks.[27][3] Carved from a single limestone block approximately 1.80 meters tall, the statue's creation involved labor-intensive techniques like chipping, abrading, and grinding to achieve its form, without the aid of metal chisels or hammers.[1] This feat implies the involvement of organized labor or specialized artisans, as the scale and precision required coordinated effort and part-time craft specialization typical of early Neolithic communities.[27] Artistically, the statue marks an evolutionary shift from the abstract, symbolic representations prevalent in the earlier Pre-Pottery Neolithic A phase—such as faceless T-shaped pillars—to more naturalistic depictions of the human form in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B.[1] This transition reflects a growing emphasis on self-representation in Neolithic art, moving beyond geometric or animal motifs toward detailed human anatomy, including facial features and postural gestures.[27] The Urfa Man's lifelike proportions and integrated elements, like obsidian-inset eyes for depth, highlight this progression toward realism in sculptural expression.[3] Evidence of advanced skills is evident in the statue's precise anatomical proportions and intricate incisions, such as the V-shaped collar and hand positioning.[1] These details, achieved through fine grinding and polishing techniques on hard limestone, demonstrate a level of technical proficiency that points to dedicated training among artisans.[27] Such craftsmanship underscores the sophistication of Pre-Pottery Neolithic toolkits and the iterative refinement of carving methods.[3] The statue's implications extend to broader understandings of cognitive development among early farming communities, as its naturalistic human portrayal indicates heightened self-awareness and symbolic thinking predating other known monumental art by millennia.[1] Dating to circa 9000 BC, it predates structures like Stonehenge by over 5,000 years and exemplifies how Neolithic innovations in art and technology fostered complex social and cultural expressions.[3] This early achievement influences interpretations of how settled agriculture enabled artistic experimentation and communal identity formation.[27]Interpretations of Purpose
Scholars have proposed that the Urfa Man statue served primarily as a cultic or ancestral figure within Pre-Pottery Neolithic societies, reflecting ritual practices centered on commemoration and social cohesion.[17] The statue's emphasized eyes, inlaid with obsidian, align with early Neolithic iconography suggesting protective or divine attributes, akin to later eye idols that symbolized vigilance or spiritual oversight.[28] This interpretation positions the figure as a guardian spirit or totem, embodying clan identity and collective memory in ritual contexts.[17] Alternative hypotheses view the statue as a representation of a social leader or shaman, with its naturalistic form and hand placement indicating authority or meditative roles in communal ceremonies.[29] Some researchers interpret it as a creator deity associated with time regulation, based on the V-shaped necklace symbolizing calendrical cycles in the regional lunisolar system.[30] Debates on gender and identity highlight the statue's ambiguous features, including the visible phallus juxtaposed with fluid proportions, leading to views of it as androgynous or a universal human archetype transcending binary norms.[11] Through a queer feminist lens, the phallic element is seen not as patriarchal dominance but as an agent of ecstatic ritual, facilitating spiritual transcendence and communal bonding.[11] Scholarship has evolved since the statue's discovery in the early 1990s, initially regarded as an isolated artistic achievement, to post-2010s analyses integrating it into regional fertility cults, where the phallic motif suggests regenerative symbolism tied to agricultural transitions.[17] This shift draws on patterns from nearby sites like Göbekli Tepe, emphasizing interconnected ritual networks.[11]Connections to Broader Neolithic Culture
The Urfa Man statue, dating to the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB) period, shares a contemporary cultural horizon with the monumental structures at Göbekli Tepe, located approximately 12 kilometers to the north in the Şanlıurfa province of southeastern Turkey.[31] While Göbekli Tepe is renowned for its T-shaped limestone pillars adorned with animal reliefs, often interpreted as anthropomorphic representations, the Urfa Man's naturalistic human form provides a striking contrast, highlighting diverse yet complementary ritual practices within the same hunter-gatherer societies of Upper Mesopotamia.[1] In September 2025, a life-size human statue—featuring an intact head and torso but missing feet, embedded horizontally in a wall as a possible votive offering—was discovered at Göbekli Tepe during restoration work between Structures B and D, further evidencing similar human-like sculptures and strengthening suggestions of interconnected artistic traditions across nearby PPNB settlements.[1][24] As part of the broader Taş Tepeler (Stone Hills) archaeological project, the Urfa Man exemplifies the interconnected network of over a dozen Neolithic sites spanning approximately 200 kilometers around Şanlıurfa, including Göbekli Tepe, [Karahan Tepe](/page/Karahan Tepe), and Nevalı Çori.[32] This initiative, launched to investigate early sedentism and monumental architecture from 12,000 to 8,000 BCE, reveals a regional society capable of organized labor and symbolic expression, with the Urfa Man's life-sized form underscoring advancements in stone carving shared among these "temple-building" communities.[33] The statue's discovery at the Urfa-Yeni Mahalle site further ties it to this cluster, emphasizing a unified cultural landscape of ritual and innovation in the transition to agriculture.[1] The Urfa Man also reflects patterns of cultural diffusion across the Neolithic Near East, with parallels in early anthropomorphic art at Syrian sites such as Tell Qaramel, where shared symbolic motifs like geometric designs and figurative elements appear in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic A (PPNA) layers.[34] This statue marks the emergence and spread of large-scale human representations prior to the region's urbanization, linking Anatolian innovations to Levantine and Syrian developments in ritual iconography.[34] In modern contexts, the Urfa Man's significance has been amplified by Göbekli Tepe's designation as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2018, which recognizes the site's role in illuminating early monumental architecture and social networks in Upper Mesopotamia, thereby elevating the profile of Şanlıurfa's entire Neolithic heritage, including artifacts like the Urfa Man.[19] This recognition underscores the statue's contribution to understanding the foundational shifts in human society during the Neolithic Revolution.[19]References
- https://en.wikivoyage.org/wiki/Urfa