19th March 2024
5,000-Year-Old Toy "Car" Found In Turkey

5,000-Year-Old Toy "Car" Found In Turkey

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When excavating an ancient city in Turkey, archaeologists discovered a 5,000-year-old toy chariot and rattle. The recent discovery, according to experts, could shed light on how children in the Bronze Age used to play.

The Ancient City of Sogmatar Yields Interesting Finds

The toys were found as part of ongoing excavations in the ancient city of Sogmatar in Turkey’s southeast, according to IBTimes.

Previously thought to be one of the world’s oldest settlements, Sogmatar is also believed to be the location where Prophet Moses hidden from Pharaoh and later began farming.

The hill town at the Centre of the village points out that Sogmatar could have been established before Common Era. The remnants of walls and towers at the hill reveal that the hill town was used as a castle in the second century AD.

 The little chair on wheels, made from earthenware, was found during an excavation of the ancient city of Sogmatar, in the south-east of the country

Assistant Professor Yusuf Albayrak of Turkey’s Harran University and a member of the team of archaeologists that are digging in the area, said that Sogmatar was a Pagan religious centre dating back to the second century AD.

Albayrak explained that after conducting a surface survey in the ancient city in 2012, he discovered that it was dedicated to the god of the moon, Sin. Speaking about the historical importance of Sogmatar, Albayrak noted that the ancient city didn’t include just a temple but also a necropolis. “We found some 120 tombs in 2012.

Seven, in particular, were really remarkable and almost all of the 120 tombs had a view of the mound. We carried out searches in the mound and ceramic findings showed that this place was a settlement until recently.

A toy chariot dating back 5,000 years – which archaeologists believe may be the world’s oldest ‘toy car’ – has been discovered in Turkey

The tombs date back to the early Bronze Age, 5,000 years ago. They are almost unique, in the shape of a well and reflecting the characteristics of this era. When the Romans arrived here they changed the architecture,” Albayrak said as IBTimes reports.

For the Children of Kings

The excavation works were launched in the area in May 2017, and since then archaeologists have unearthed many tombs, including the one containing the recently found toys.

“We have so far obtained important findings in the excavation field,” Celal Uludag, the director of the Sogmatar excavations, told Turkish news agency Anadolu as IBTimes reported.

Uludag adds, “In a tomb in the necropolis area we found an earthenware toy horse carriage and its wheels. The toy dates back to the Bronze Age and is thought to have been produced for the children of kings or administrators in the city.

It shows us the sense of art and children’s sense of play 5,000 years ago,” highlighting the cultural and archaeological significance of this discovery.

Recent Discoveries of Ancient Toys Inside Greek Tombs

Two weeks ago, we reported another important discovery of ancient Greek toys in Turkey. Archaeologists found several ancient toys inside the tombs of children in the ancient Greek seaport city of Parion, now in modern-day Turkey. Founded in 709 BC, the ancient city of Parion was a Greek colony that belonged to the Delian League.

During the Hellenistic period, it came under the domain of Lysimachus, and subsequently the Attalid dynasty. In Roman times, it was a settlement within the province of Asia. After that province was divided in the 4th century, it was in the province of Hellespontus.

The digs have uncovered a number of tombs, including the ones the toys were found, which had provided a fascinating insight into how ancient civilizations lived

Excavations of several ancient graves there revealed a number of children’s toys, which are believed to have been offered as gifts for the dead children to accompany them on their journey to the afterlife.

Professor Hasan Kasaoğlu from Atatürk University and director of the excavation works at Parion, stated that female figurines were discovered in tombs belonging to girls, while male figurines were unearthed in boys’ tombs.

Kasaoğlu said that the new findings could provide valuable information about the sociocultural structure of the period, explaining that despite toys changing drastically throughout the centuries, the need for humans to play and be entertained has remained the same to this day.