From the Göbekli Tepe Research Project

Out for a beer at the dawn of agriculture

Ever since the so called Braidwood Symposium in 1953 (Braidwood et al. 1953), there has been a debate as to whether beer – and not bread – was the first product made from domesticated crops (e.g. Katz and Voigt 1986). Based on the discovery of grain at the site of Qalat Jarmo, and at the suggestion of the archaeo-botanist Sauer, Braidwood inquired whether or not the discovery of fermentation could have been the spark that triggered the targeted selection, and ultimately domestication, of certain crops. Fermented grain, which sees its starch transformed into sugars, is well known for its beneficial properties, including an increase in nutritional value, also making it easier to digest. Indeed, the participants at the aforementioned symposium eventually came to the consensus that early grain crops would have been far better suited to the production of gruel or beer than bread, especially considering that the glumes of primitive domesticated plants would have adhered to the grain. Even though this idea (fermentation) was raised frequently in subsequent years (Katz and Voigt 1986), particularly in the context of the previously noted advantages (higher nutritional value) afforded by this process, it was considered improbable that beer was actually produced. More recently, however, the discussion was revisited in a contibution by P. McGovern (2009) who presented preliminary results from chemical studies made on two stone vessels from the PPN necropolis at Körtik Tepe which yielded traces of tartaric acid that accrues during the wine production process (McGovern 2009: 81).

Figure 1

A barrel- (upper right) and a trough-like (lower right) limestone vessel from Göbekli Tepe (Photos: N. Becker, © DAI). Six vessels with capacities up to 160 l were discovered so far in situ (left).

Recently, further chemical analyses were conducted by M. Zarnkow (Technical University of Munich, Weihenstephan) on six large limestone vessels from Göbekli Tepe. These (barrel/trough-shaped) vessels, with capacities of up to 160 litres, were found in-situ in PPNB contexts at the site. Already during excavations it was noted that some vessels carried grey-black adhesions. A first set of analyses made on these substances returned partly positive for calcium oxalate, which develops in the course of the soaking, mashing and fermenting of grain. Although these intriguing results are only preliminary, they provide initial indications for the brewing of beer at Göbekli Tepe, thus provoking renewed discussions relating to the production and consumption of alcoholic beverages at this early time. Further, they are particularly significant in light of results from genetic analyses, undertaken by a team from the Norwegian University of Life Sciences in Oslo, which have suggested that the earliest domestication of grain occurred in the vicinity of the Karacadağ, i.e. very near to Göbekli Tepe (Heun et al. 1997 [external link]). Once again, we must ask whether the production of alcohol and the domestication of grain are interrelated. Finally, the aforementioned insights also provoke new questions relating to the use and consumption of alcohol at Göbekli Tepe, which may have been in the context of religiously motivated feasts and celebrations. Not surprisingly, such events are well attested in the ethnographic literature as a means of attracting and motivating large groups of people to undertake communal work and projects (Dietler and Herbich 1995).

Further reading:
Dietrich, O., Heun, M., Notroff, J, Schmidt, K., Zarnkow, M. (2012) The role of cult and feasting in the emergence of Neolithic communities. New evidence from Göbekli Tepe, south-eastern Turkey. Antiquity 86, 333: 674-695 (full text – external link).

Works cited:
Braidwood, R.J. & L.S. Braidwood. 1953. The Earliest Village Communities of Southwestern Asia. Journal of World History 1: 278–310.

Dietler, M. & I. Herbich 1995. Feasts and labor mobilization. Dissecting a fundamental economic practice, in Dietler, M. & B. Hayden (ed.), Feasts. Archaeological and ethnographic perspectives on food, politics, and power, 240-264. Washington / London: Smithsonian Institution Press.

Heun, M., R. Schäfer-Pregl, D. Klawan, R. Castagna, M. Accerbi, B. Borghi & F. Salamini. 1997. Site of Einkorn wheat domestication identified by DNA fingerprinting. Science 278: 1312-1314.

Katz, S.H. & M.M. Voigt. 1986. Bread and Beer: The Early Use of Cereals in the Human Diet. Expeditions 28 (2): 23-34.

McGovern, P.E. 2009. Uncorking the past. The quest for wine, beer, and other alcoholic beverages. Berkeley / Los Angeles / London: University of California Press.

4 Comments

  1. owen bruhn

    Was it porridge or beer? If you try eating dry grain unprocessed grain you are in for a shock it is simply to hard and it must be ground and some moisture added to it. One wonders if the concoction being eaten was a sort of moistened gruel that sometimes fermented and had interesting effects on the state of consciousness. Short step to making something people can consume quickly to profoundly alter the state of consciousness. Maybe in the interests of efficiency they did both – ate the gruel and decanted the beery liquid and drank that too. I am aware that there was quite a bit of animal consumption that occurred at Gobekli and one persumes that they had to send out hunting parties to kill and bring back the prey to eat\feast upon. One also persumes that as time was spend at Gobekli then distance to trek to prey or non-seed plants increased. In hunter gatherer mode the HGs usually shift camp at that point. They couldnt take Gobekli with them and so perhaps it was then they looked for substitute foods and invented the gruel concoction. May be civilisation really was fuelled on porridge and beer. Then at some point just like an animal was thrown into the fire or discovered after a bush fire – some one said thats food and tried it… it tasted good and there was roast meat. In the case of the porridge being rescued from the fire …..you need yeast to make beer AND bread. Cheers from down under in Australia and keep up the good work.

  2. claudia xander

    maybe the stylised monolithic humans at the centre of gobekli tepe are a perfect representation of the inner state 2 people feel the morning after the night before. to commemorate in stone the first ever hangover, and that special look one gives another when meeting in the kitchen hoping to god that some wise shaman discovers coffee!

  3. Marie-Soleil Belanger

    Hi! As we are in 2018, I was wondering if the preliminary analysis on residues came further : I’m very interested in archaeological discoveries on beer, and since the reading of your 2012 paper, I’m on the edge of my chair, waiting for news!
    Actually, I’m studying in archaeology and my subject of study is on alcohol in Neolithic. I would be glad to read a paper written by M. Zarnkow about it.
    Do you have any news?

    • Jens

      Thanks a lot for your comment. And the patience. Since the methods applied during analyses in 2012 (Martin Zarnkow, who conducted these, was a co-author of our 2012 paper) were not exactly conclusive, we too were very keen on getting a step further. New methods are tested as we speak, including new analyses of further samples. Of course this takes some time (and experimentation, especially since these new methods have to be developed first), but we are confident to be able presenting in the not too distant future. We’ll definitely update the blog in this regards, too, as soon as something new can be reported. Until then I’m afraid, we kindly have to ask for more patience.

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