Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
Buried beneath a quiet hill in southeastern Anatolia lay the secret that would rewrite human history. For millennia, shepherds grazed their flocks across Goebekli Tepe - "Potbelly Hill" - unaware that beneath the soil slept the world's oldest temple. When archaeologists uncovered its towering T-shaped pillars in the 1990s, carved with foxes, vultures, and serpents, they revealed a monument that should not exist: a 12,000-year-old sanctuary built long before farming, cities, or kings.
Goebekli Tepe shatters the story we thought we knew. Here, belief came before bread. Monumental stone circles rose centuries before villages, suggesting that ritual and imagination - not mere survival - drove humanity's first steps toward civilization. Even stranger, after building these sanctuaries, the ancient people who raised them buried them deliberately, sealing their mysteries in silence for ten thousand years.
This book is both journey and revelation. It takes you from the windswept limestone ridges of Anatolia to the cosmic imagination of our earliest ancestors. Along the way, you'll encounter the haunting symbols carved in stone, the feasts that bound clans together, and the profound question that Goebekli Tepe still poses: why did humanity choose to carve eternity from rock before it ever planted its first seeds?
With lyrical storytelling and gripping detail, this work invites you into the oldest mystery of all - the forgotten genesis of civilization. Goebekli Tepe is not simply archaeology. It is a question carved into stone, waiting for us to listen.
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
Buried beneath a quiet hill in southeastern Anatolia lay the secret that would rewrite human history. For millennia, shepherds grazed their flocks across Goebekli Tepe - "Potbelly Hill" - unaware that beneath the soil slept the world's oldest temple. When archaeologists uncovered its towering T-shaped pillars in the 1990s, carved with foxes, vultures, and serpents, they revealed a monument that should not exist: a 12,000-year-old sanctuary built long before farming, cities, or kings.
Goebekli Tepe shatters the story we thought we knew. Here, belief came before bread. Monumental stone circles rose centuries before villages, suggesting that ritual and imagination - not mere survival - drove humanity's first steps toward civilization. Even stranger, after building these sanctuaries, the ancient people who raised them buried them deliberately, sealing their mysteries in silence for ten thousand years.
This book is both journey and revelation. It takes you from the windswept limestone ridges of Anatolia to the cosmic imagination of our earliest ancestors. Along the way, you'll encounter the haunting symbols carved in stone, the feasts that bound clans together, and the profound question that Goebekli Tepe still poses: why did humanity choose to carve eternity from rock before it ever planted its first seeds?
With lyrical storytelling and gripping detail, this work invites you into the oldest mystery of all - the forgotten genesis of civilization. Goebekli Tepe is not simply archaeology. It is a question carved into stone, waiting for us to listen.