Çatalhöyük ruins, for article on Çatalhöyük Neolithic settlement

Çatalhöyük Neolithic settlement reaches its peak in ancient Anatolia

Roughly nine thousand years ago, thousands of people in what is now central Turkey were living in one of the most densely packed, architecturally inventive communities the world had ever seen. No streets connected their homes. No temples stood apart from ordinary life. And yet the people of Çatalhöyük built something extraordinary — a proto-city that challenges almost every assumption about how early human civilization took shape.

Key findings

  • Çatalhöyük Neolithic settlement: The site in southern Anatolia flourished around 7000 B.C.E. and was continuously occupied from approximately 7500 to 5600 B.C.E., with as many as eighteen successive layers of buildings uncovered by archaeologists.
  • Mudbrick architecture: Homes were clustered in a honeycomb-like aggregate with no streets between them — residents entered through roof openings using ladders, making rooftops the effective roads of the community.
  • Matrilineal social structure: Genetic studies published in 2025 C.E. indicate that Çatalhöyük’s earliest social organization was structured around matrilocality and matrilineality, with households passing from mother to daughter.

A city without streets

The Çatalhöyük Neolithic settlement sits on the Konya Plain in southern Anatolia, about 140 kilometers from the twin-coned volcano of Mount Hasan. At its peak around 7000 B.C.E., it was among the largest human settlements on Earth — though recent archaeological analysis suggests the population during its Middle phase (6700–6500 B.C.E.) may have been closer to 600–800 people rather than earlier estimates of 5,000–7,000. The site remains remarkable not for raw size but for its density, complexity, and staying power.

Every home was a mudbrick structure plastered smooth on every interior surface. Raised platforms lined the walls, serving as sleeping areas, work surfaces, and burial sites alike. Cooking hearths and ovens were typically built against the south wall. There were no separate kitchens, no dedicated civic halls, no obvious temples — domestic life and ritual life shared the same rooms.

Rooms were kept exceptionally clean. Archaeologists found almost no debris inside buildings — waste was carried to middens outside the ruins. This discipline of cleanliness in such a crowded, rooftop-connected settlement speaks to a high degree of social coordination, achieved without any of the formal civic infrastructure we typically associate with organized community life.

Ritual, art, and the dead beneath the floor

One of the most striking features of Çatalhöyük is how the living coexisted with the dead. Burials were made beneath the floors of homes — under hearths, under sleeping platforms, under the places where families went about their daily lives. Bodies were tightly flexed and wrapped in reed mats or placed in baskets before interment. Some skulls were later exhumed, plastered, and painted with ochre to recreate faces — a practice also found at Jericho and Neolithic sites in Syria, hinting at shared ritual traditions across a wide arc of the ancient Near East.

The walls of many rooms were decorated with vivid murals — geometric patterns, hunting scenes, figures of animals and people. Over 2,500 clay figurines have been recovered from Neolithic layers, most depicting animals, but 187 depicting humans. Among the most celebrated is the Seated Woman of Çatalhöyük, a figurine found in the upper levels of the site, showing a large female figure flanked by what appear to be leopards or large felines.

In August 2025 C.E., a team led by Prof. Dr. Arkadiusz Marciniak of Poznań University announced the discovery of a “House of the Dead” — a mortuary structure where the remains of 20 individuals were placed beneath the floor, accompanied by painted walls and fourteen platforms. The find deepened an already complex picture of ritual life at the site.

What Çatalhöyük tells us about early society

For decades, Çatalhöyük was read through a particular lens — one emphasizing goddess worship and matriarchal social structures, largely based on interpretations by excavator James Mellaart in the 1960s. Mellaart’s work was later significantly complicated: he was banned from Turkey following the Dorak affair, in which he published drawings of Bronze Age artifacts that subsequently disappeared, and evidence has emerged that some of his reported wall paintings and figurine drawings were fabricated.

When British archaeologist Ian Hodder, then at the University of Cambridge, restarted excavations in 1993 C.E., he brought a more rigorous and openly experimental framework — one that emphasized digital recording, community involvement, and transparency about interpretive uncertainty. That work continued until 2018 C.E. and produced a far more nuanced picture of life at the site.

The 2025 C.E. genetic studies are particularly striking. Rather than inferring social structure from figurines and burial goods alone, researchers traced actual household continuity through DNA, finding evidence that early Çatalhöyük households were structured matrilineally — passed through the female line. This does not straightforwardly confirm earlier goddess-worship theories, but it does suggest that the social foundations of one of humanity’s earliest proto-cities were organized around women’s lineages in ways that most mainstream histories of “civilization” have not centered.

Lasting impact

Çatalhöyük does not fit the standard model of how cities emerge — with markets, temples, palaces, and administrative centers leading the way. Here, large-scale communal life developed from purely domestic foundations. Neighbors traded, cooperated, and intermarried across a tightly packed aggregate of households, without any obvious hierarchy directing the process.

That model has reshaped how archaeologists think about the transition from nomadic to settled life. It also raises urgent questions about the relationship between social complexity and formal governance — questions that remain alive in political theory and urban planning today. The site was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in July 2012 C.E., recognizing its exceptional universal value.

Perhaps most importantly, Çatalhöyük shows that the deep human impulse to build community, mark the dead, create art, and structure belonging can precede the state, the market, and the monument by thousands of years.

Blindspots and limits

The early excavation record at Çatalhöyük is genuinely compromised. Mellaart’s fabrications mean that some widely circulated interpretations of the site — including specific wall paintings and figurine designs — cannot be trusted. Later, more careful excavation has recovered a great deal, but some of what entered the popular and scholarly imagination about this site was simply invented. The true population figures remain debated, and the social and religious meanings of the site’s art and burial practices are still contested among archaeologists working from the same physical evidence.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Çatalhöyük

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