Melanie Wallace retweetledi

In 1898, Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany visited Baalbek and was so struck by what he saw that he personally arranged for the first major scientific excavation of the site.
The German archaeological team worked from 1898 to 1904. What they expected to find was a well-documented Roman construction project. What they actually found was far more complicated.
When they cleared the floor of the Temple of Jupiter down to its foundation layers, they found evidence of continuous human occupation stretching back through the Neolithic period — potentially 10,000 years. People had been living on this hill long before anyone thought the site was significant enough to warrant major construction.
This discovery reframed everything.
If the site had been occupied continuously for 10,000 years, the massive foundation stones — the Trilithon and the other megaliths forming the western wall — could theoretically predate Roman occupation by thousands of years. The Romans may have inherited them, not built them.
This would explain the most haunting silence in Baalbek's historical record: why the Romans, who documented every engineering achievement, left no account of how the most massive foundation stones in their greatest temple complex were placed.
The answer the German excavations suggested: the Romans didn't place them. They arrived and found them already there, already ancient, their true origin already lost to memory.
The silence wasn't an oversight. It was honest ignorance.
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