Turkey recreates 5,000-year-old loaf of bread
Now, more than 5,000 years later, archaeologists have unearthed it, and helped a local bakery to recreate the recipe -- with customers lining up to buy it.
Round and flat like a pancake, 12 centimeters (five inches) in diameter, the bread was discovered during excavations at Kulluoba, a site near the central Anatolian city of Eskisehir.
'This is the oldest baked bread to have come to light during an excavation, and it has largely been able to preserve its shape,' said Murat Turkteki, archaeologist and director of the excavation.
'Bread is a rare find during an excavation. Usually, you only find crumbs,' he told AFP.
'But here, it was preserved because it had been burnt and buried,' he said.
The bread was charred and buried under the entrance of a dwelling built around 3,300 BC.
A piece had been torn off, before the bread was burnt, then buried when the house was built.
'It makes us think of a ritual of abundance,' Turkteki said.
'Moved by this discovery'
Unearthed in September 2024, the charred bread has been on display at the Eskisehir Archaeological Museum since Wednesday.
'We were very moved by this discovery. Talking to our excavation director, I wondered if we could reproduce this bread,' said the city's mayor, Ayse Unluce.
Analyses showed that the bread was made with coarsely ground emmer flour, an ancient variety of wheat, and lentil seeds, with the leaf of an as yet undetermined plant used as yeast.
Ancient emmer seeds no longer exist in Turkey.
To get as close as possible to the original recipe, the municipality, after analyzing the ancient bread, decided to use Kavilca wheat, a variety that is close to ancient emmer, as well as bulgur and lentils.
At the Halk Ekmek bakery (meaning 'People's Bread' in Turkish), promoted by the municipality to offer low-cost bread, employees have been shaping 300 loaves of Kulluoba by hand every day.
'The combination of ancestral wheat flour, lentils and bulgur results in a rich, satiating, low-gluten, preservative-free bread,' said Serap Guler, the bakery's manager.
The first Kulluoba loaves, marketed as 300-gramme (11-ounce) cakes that cost 50 Turkish lira (around $1.28), sold out within hours.
'I rushed because I was afraid there wouldn't be any left. I'm curious about the taste of this ancient bread,' said customer Suzan Kuru.
Drought resistant
In the absence of written traces, the civilization of Kulluoba remains largely mysterious.
In the Bronze Age, the Hattians, an Anatolian people who preceded the Hittites, lived in the Eskisehir region.
'Kulluoba was a medium-sized urban agglomeration engaged in commercial activities, crafts, agriculture and mining. There was clearly a certain family and social order,' said archaeologist Deniz Sari.
The rediscovery of the bread has sparked interest in the cultivation of ancient wheats better adapted to drought.
Once rich in water sources, the province of Eskisehir is today suffering from drought.
'We're facing a climate crisis, but we're still growing corn and sunflowers, which require a lot of water,' said Unluce, the local mayor.
'Our ancestors are teaching us a lesson. Like them, we should be moving towards less thirsty crops,' she added.
The mayor wants to revive the cultivation of Kavilca wheat in the region, which is resistant to drought and disease.
'We need strong policies on this subject. Cultivating ancient wheat will be a symbolic step in this direction,' she said.
'These lands have preserved this bread for 5,000 years and given us this gift. We have a duty to protect this heritage and pass it on.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arab News
4 days ago
- Arab News
Pottery fragments, stone tools dating back over 50,000 years discovered in Riyadh Province
JEDDAH: The Saudi Heritage Commission has completed an archaeological survey and excavation at a site in Al-Qurainah, northwest of Riyadh, uncovering structures, artifacts, and evidence of human settlement over thousands of years. The work, carried out in collaboration with a team of Saudi experts, is part of the commission's efforts to document and protect national heritage sites, promoting them as cultural and economic assets for the Kingdom. Excavations revealed circular structures resembling tombs from the third and second millennia BC, as well as an ancient road linking the valley to the plateau at Al-Qurainah and extending toward Riyadh. Pottery fragments and stone tools were also found, some dating back over 50,000 years. The project forms part of the Al-Yamamah initiative, which aims to redraw the archaeological map of Riyadh and its surrounding areas using advanced survey techniques. The program focuses on documenting previously unexplored sites and analyzing patterns of human settlement through various periods of history. The Heritage Commission said its survey and excavation work reflected its ongoing mission to safeguard Saudi Arabia's heritage, which it described as the product of successive civilizations that have flourished in the region over millennia.


Asharq Al-Awsat
05-08-2025
- Asharq Al-Awsat
Gabon Forest Cave Reveals Clues About Prehistoric Central Africa
In Gabon's sprawling forest, archaeologists dig for ancient clues that could unlock the secrets of how prehistoric humans lived and interacted in the changing landscape of central Africa. Two billion years ago, the eastern Gabonese region of Lastourville was covered by a vast ocean. But that has long given way to dense forest and dolomite cliffs dotted with caves, within which scientists have unearthed traces of human life dating back to 25,000 years BC. Off the beaten track even for archaeologists, the Youmbidi rock shelter, a cavern typical of those chosen by prehistoric humans to set up their homes, is the focus for French geoarchaeologist Richard Oslisly's team, AFP reported. Among their finds: a stone tool which could have been used for cutting or making fibers dating to before 10,000 BC. An arrowhead has also been unearthed, as has a collection of dolomite, quartz and jasper shards, cut up to 10,000 years ago by the cave's inhabitants. "The vast majority of research in Africa has taken place in open landscapes such as the Sahara, Sahel or Egypt," said Oslisly, who has spent 45 years working in central Africa. "They said to me 'there's nothing in the forest' (but) I took up the challenge of finding out what was happening there," he added. "We realize there is a very close relationship between man and nature in these forests, where people have lived for a very long time," Oslisly said. The Youmbidi cave -- where scientists have recorded 12,000 years of continuous human habitation -- is an enticing spot for the archeologists. "We don't know at all how these people lived, what their way of life was, what their names were, what their languages were," said Geoffroy de Saulieu from France's IRD Research Institute for Development. "Our research will help us to know a little more," he added. After a month of digging and careful sorting of every stone, charcoal remnant, bone and other treasure buried below the cave, the team has elements to help decipher the past. De Saulieu said it was like a jigsaw puzzle. "You have to... gather the smallest clues, place them end to end to gradually reconstruct a whole universe that has disappeared and which is, nevertheless, at the origin of the way of life in central Africa today," said the expert, currently attached to the National Agency of National Parks of Gabon. One of the oldest bits of pottery found in central Africa, which dated to more than 6,500 years ago, is among this year's finds. Human-looking teeth that could allow DNA to be extracted in what would prove a significant leap in research have also excited archaeologists. And, like all the artifacts, a bead likely made between 3,300 and 4,900 years ago from a snail shell also offers precious insight as a "very humble but beautiful witness" of the epoch in question. Dispelling stereotypical images of prehistoric Man, it suggests people had "real customs, a real civilization and art of living," de Saulieu said. The pottery "shows that these societies weren't immobile, they had launched themselves into technical innovations", he added. The discoveries fan his fascination for the richness of "the social life which existed in the region's forests". Glimpses into an ancient lost world can also be useful for tackling present-day challenges, the experts said. During the Holocene period which dates back the past 12,000 years, "central Africa has experienced very significant changes in climate, hydrology and vegetation," said paleoclimatologist Yannick Garcin, also from the IRD and involved in the Youmbidi dig. The hope is that the cave will unlock an understanding of "the resilience of human populations in the past and how they were able to adapt to climate changes that could have been drastic", he said. Central Africa for that reason "deserves major development in terms of research", Oslisly argued. Understanding what happened in prehistoric times can help scientists today react to modern-day issues, he added. "Good studies on the relationship between Man and the environment in the past will allow us to react better to the environmental changes that are ahead of us," he said.


Arab News
02-08-2025
- Arab News
What We Are Reading Today: ‘Native America'
Author: KENNETH L. FEDER 'Native America' presents an infinitely surprising and fascinating deep history of the continent's Indigenous peoples. Kenneth Feder, a leading expert on Native American history and archeology, draws on archaeological, historical, and cultural evidence to tell the ongoing story, more than 20,000 years in the making, of an incredibly resilient and diverse mixture of peoples, revealing how they have ingeniously adapted to the many changing environments of the continent, from the Arctic to the desert Southwest.