What is the truth about Göbekli Tepe?

Göbekli Tepe receives only a brief treatment in the Cosmic Agency transcripts, but Athena Swaruu's response places it firmly within the broader Taygetan narrative of pre-flood civilisation.

An Antediluvian Settlement

When asked directly about Göbekli Tepe during a live Q&A, Athena Swaruu described it as an old settlement that is antediluvian — meaning it dates from before the Great Flood caused by the destruction of Tiamat. She noted that it is linked to the location where the Garden of Eden is said to have been, and that it was one of the main settlements forming part of the global civilisation known as Atlantis, which was destroyed after the Tiamat disaster and the subsequent flood (403, Athena Swaruu).

She prefaced this by stating that the full answer is "extremely complicated," suggesting there is considerably more to the story than this summary provides.

Contextual Framework

While Göbekli Tepe itself is not discussed in further detail, the broader Taygetan framework helps contextualise this statement. The Taygetans describe the antediluvian world as having five continents beyond those that exist today — Appalachia, Fennoscandia, Oceana, Tirandia, and Beringia — all of which were submerged in the flood. Neither Atlantis nor Lemuria were continents; both were civilisations spread across these landmasses. Atlantis in particular was a global civilisation, not confined to a single island or region (125, Swaruu of Erra).

The reference to the Garden of Eden is also significant. In the Taygetan decoding of Genesis, Eden represents Atlantis itself — the territory where the enslaved Lyrian population (Adam) lived under reptilian control. The "snake" in the garden was Taygetan women who liberated the slaves through knowledge, and the "forbidden fruit" was the knowledge they shared (138, Swaruu of Erra).

Göbekli Tepe's location in southeastern Turkey places it near ancient Mesopotamia and the Fertile Crescent — the region the Taygetans associate with the Federation Starport at Alt-Ur (Ur) and the broader cradle of post-flood civilisation. Its confirmed extreme antiquity by mainstream archaeology — estimated at around 9500 BC, predating agriculture and pottery — aligns with the Taygetan timeline of a pre-flood civilisation that was far more advanced than what followed.

The site's deliberate burial, which mainstream archaeologists have confirmed, is also consistent with the Taygetan description of a catastrophic flood event that buried the pre-existing civilisation under enormous quantities of sediment and water from the destroyed planet Tiamat.


Sources: Transcript 403 (Athena Swaruu), with contextual support from 125 and 138 (Swaruu of Erra)