Persian-era Plaster Walls Found in Nigde Excavation

The excavation at Porsuk-Zeyve Hoyuk, which began in 1968 with permission from the French Archeology Insтιтute from the Turkish authorities, continue this year as well.

During earlier excavations, Hitтιтe hieroglyphs engraved on sandstone from the 8th century BC, fortification and watchtowers used as garrison in the Hitтιтe period, and castle walls and plaster fragments from the Iron Age were discovered.

Excavation Team Leader, University Polytechnique Hauts-de-France Lecturer ᴀssoc. Dr. Claire Barat said that a team of 15 people from the USA, France, Italy and Turkey worked in this year’s excavations.

Persian-era Plaster Walls Found in Nigde ExcavationPorsuk Höyük, settlement hill north of the village of Porsuk. Credit: Ingeborg Simon

Barat stated that they were excavating the highest part of the mound and cleaning the Iron Age adobe fortification walls from the 8th and 7th centuries BC. During the excavations, they learned that these walls were surrounded by Romans and suffered a fire.

“Sometime after the Iron Age walls were completed,” he said, “the wall facade was covered with gypsum stones and stone filling.” These stone constructions were used in the 6th and 4th century BC during the Persian and Achaemenid periods.

It is important because there are few artefacts from the Persian period in Cappadocia. This is a highly strategic location both during the Hitтιтe period and later.

At that time, the area was most likely occupied by a local ruler. The main road from Sinop to Tarsus, pᴀssing through the Cilician gates, is controlled from here.”

The Romans later repaired and occupied the walls. For this reason, it is thought that southern Cappadocia came under Roman domination not peacefully, but as a result of a bloody war.

Noting the importance of the mound in terms of its position, Barat underlined that the destruction of the stone walls during this year’s excavations revealed the severity of the Roman attack, and that all previous levels were destroyed.

Barat said that the Persian walls discovered here are similar to those seen in Persepolis, Cyprus, and Palestine. The researches are continuing.

Related Posts

The oldest mummies in the world: ancient Southeast Asian burials rewrite early human history

The oldest mummies in the world: ancient Southeast Asian burials rewrite early human history

Archaeologists in Southeast Asia have unearthed what may be the oldest mummies in the world, dating back as far as 12,000 years. The pre-Neolithic burials, found throughout…

Sardinian figurines reveal Bronze Age metal trade and wide connections

Sardinian figurines reveal Bronze Age metal trade and wide connections

A recent international study has explained the history of Sardinia’s iconic bronzetti statues, showing previously unknown facts about Bronze Age metallurgy and long-distance trade in the Mediterranean….

350-year-old mummified head in Switzerland traced to Bolivia’s Aymara people after new study

350-year-old mummified head in Switzerland traced to Bolivia’s Aymara people after new study

A mummified head housed in Switzerland for more than a century is rewriting what experts thought they knew about its origins. For many years, the remains—consisting of…

New study shows Britain’s economy did not collapse after the Romans left

New study shows Britain’s economy did not collapse after the Romans left

A new study has indicated that Britain’s industrial economy did not collapse with the Romans’ withdrawal, but instead continued for centuries, and actually reached its major revival…

Complete copy of the Canopus Decree unearthed in Egypt after 150 years

Complete copy of the Canopus Decree unearthed in Egypt after 150 years

In a breakthrough find, an Egyptian archaeological team has unearthed a previously unknown and intact copy of the Canopus Decree, which dates back to 238 BCE. The…

Late Bronze Age elites at Seddin reveal foreign origins and long-distance mobility across Europe

Late Bronze Age elites at Seddin reveal foreign origins and long-distance mobility across Europe

New research has demonstrated that the majority of people buried in monumental mounds in northwestern Brandenburg, Germany, around Seddin, were not locals but individuals believed to have…