Ancient city of Derinkuyu discovered in Nevşehir, Turkey
Maria Studio / Shutterstock
The historic Cappadocia region in Turkey is steeped in ancient wonder and home to an unbelievable number of fascinating underground cities, the largest of which is the multi-levelled Derinkuyu. Descending over 200 feet underground and reportedly accessed by hidden doors in the courtyards of ground-level homes, the city is said to have been large enough to house around 20,000 residents in its heyday. But how did this ancient subterranean site come to be? The answer is rather surprising…
Hiding in the basement
LiskaM / Shutterstock
The city was discovered in 1963, when one man knocked down a wall in his basement while renovating his home and discovered a mysterious tunnel, which led to another, and yet another beyond that. The unusual tunnel network was eventually revealed to be the ancient city of Derinkuyu, a subterranean warren 18 storeys deep, Metro reports.
Abandoned for centuries
Nina Lishchuk / Shutterstock
Purportedly created around the 8th or 7th century BCE, archaeologists think that the caves were carved by hand into soft volcanic rock. An underground home fit for human habitation, a deep ventilation shaft is thought to have acted as a well for water, while a network of chimneys offered air circulation. The city is said to have had a wide array of amenities, with stables for animals, churches, a school and even wineries built underground.
Evolution over time
OMAR HAJ KADOUR / Contributor / Getty Images
While its discoverer chose to remain anonymous, the city of Derinkuyu has gone on to become a massive hotspot for archaeologists and tourists alike. According to archaeologists from the Turkish Department of Culture, Derinkuyu evolved, like a “man-made ant colony”, from its original use as a storage facility to a vast underground civilisation, reaching its peak around the Byzantine period (about 395 CE to 1453 CE).
A safe shelter
OMAR HAJ KADOUR / Contributor / Getty Images
Records further indicate that many different peoples may have sheltered in the secret city over the centuries. While its original inhabitants would have been Phrygians, an ancient Indo-European culture, it is believed to have later sheltered early Christians, fleeing persecutions from the Romans and Muslims during the Arab-Byzantine wars between the 7th and 11th centuries.
Open to the public
Nina Lishchuk / Shutterstock
Derinkuyu is now open to the public to explore, although only about 10% of the city has been made accessible to visitors. A fascinating insight into ancient habits and habitations, this secret city is one of Turkey’s most fascinating archaeological finds, and we still can’t quite believe it was all hiding just behind someone’s basement wall!
Dimitrios Constantinou [Public domain]
From perplexing wonders of the world to modern structural oddities, there are plenty of architectural mysteries out there that have long gone unexplained. Whether they be baffling buildings, hidden cities or surprising features, these enigmas are surrounded by unanswered questions: Why are they there? Who put them there? And why is there so much intrigue shrouding them? Stay tuned as we get to the bottom of these architectural puzzles once and for all…
Georgia Guidestones, Georgia, USA
Dina Eric / Flickr [CC BY-SA 2.0]
While some theological tableaus date back to ancient times, the Georgia Guidestones were erected in 1980 but are no less mysterious. The American version of Stonehenge is made up of vast granite slabs, measuring 16 feet tall and weighing 20 tonnes. Inscribed in eight language—one for each stone—is what appears to be a 10-step Armageddon guide in English, Spanish, Swahili, Hindi, Hebrew, Arabic, Chinese and Russian. But how did this mystical monument come to be?
Georgia Guidestones, Georgia, USA
Dina Eric / Flickr [CC BY-SA 2.0]
Commissioned by someone using the pseudonym Robert C Christian on behalf of an anonymous “small group of loyal Americans”, the stones were intended to function as a compass, calendar and clock. The stonemasons instructed to build them were told they must be capable of withstanding catastrophic events, partly because they detail instructions for rebuilding civilisation after an apocalypse.
Georgia Guidestones, Georgia, USA
@GBI_GA / GA Bureau of Investigation / Twitter
However, the monument was mysteriously bombed in the early hours of July 6, 2022 by unknown individuals. Footage from CCTV captured the events, with a surveillance video released by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation showing the explosion and a silver sedan leaving the scene shortly after the detonation. While the perpetrators and their motives still remain a mystery, many had been vocal about their distrust of the monument for years.
Georgia Guidestones, Georgia, USA
@GBI_GA / GA Bureau of Investigation / Twitter
The blast caused irreparable damage to the safety and stability of the stones and repairs would run to hundreds of thousands of dollars, according to the Elberton Granite Association responsible for maintaining the monument. After assessing the damage, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) made the decision to demolish the stones entirely “for safety reasons”, posting a photo on Twitter of the modern-day commandments reduced to rubble and dust. America’s Stonehenge may have fallen, but the reason why this monument appeared, and why it was destroyed, are mysteries which may never be answered.
Witches stairs
Havang(nl) / Wikimedia Commons [CC0 1.0]
While these unusual-looking staircases may cause some raised eyebrows these days, they were all the rage in 17th century New England, causing many to believe that the stairs origins were associated with the Salem Witch Trials. Many old New England homes still feature these alternate-tread staircases, also known as ‘witches stairs’, and an urban myth arose suggesting that the stairs originated from the belief that witches were unable to climb them, and were therefore a means of protecting the household.
Witches stairs
Daphne Canard / Facebook
According to Realtor, the myth has since been debunked, and it turns out that alternate-tread staircases were actually just a means of saving space in smaller homes, cleverly reducing the footprint of a staircase by half, while providing a more stable alternative to rickety ladders. Indeed, for this reason, alternate-tread staircases are still a popular choice in smaller apartments for accessing lofts or raised mezzanines. While they may not ward off witches, they do at least optimise space!
Priest holes, Warwickshire, UK
Coughton Court / National Trust
It may look like a cupboard or secret storage space but this hiding place was one of many found in stately homes across the UK. They are, in fact, priest holes and were used to conceal catholic priests during the English Reformation of the 16th century. Almost overnight, Elizabeth I had made it illegal to be a Catholic, punishable by death, but many devout families continued to worship in secret and had these spaces designed into the fabric of their homes. This one in Coughton Court was found to contain a rope ladder, a small tapestry, bedding and a folding leather altar when it was finally opened up in 1910.
Priest holes, Warwickshire, UK
CharmaineZoe / Flickr [CC BY 2.0] / National Trust
This one in Baddesley Clinton, Warwickshire, hid four Jesuit priests during a notorious raid. It is one of three in the house and is accessed via a concealed shaft in the toilet that leads into the medieval sewers. Jesuit priests were sent over from the continent to secretly serve the wealthy Catholic families that remained in England. Often posing as a distant cousin or relative, they would perform mass and other religious services with small portable altars at great personal risk.
Manhole, Wiesbaden, Germany
German Culture / Facebook
Have you ever found yourself in an awkward situation when you wanted the ground to swallow you up? Maybe a spiralling staircase underneath a pavement hatch will do the trick. With a futuristic spaceship-like entrance, this manhole in Wiesbaden, Germany, invites passersby to take the plunge and venture down underneath the city streets.
Manhole, Wiesbaden, Germany
Kreuzschnabel / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0]
Down the rabbit hole, you’ll discover the science-fiction contraption is really the entrance to the dungeon of the Salzbach canal—one of the oldest in central Europe. A maze of shadowy tunnels running beneath Wiesbaden, most pedestrians above ground have no clue about the subterranean world lurking beneath their feet.
Egyptian pyramids, Giza, Egypt
Sergio Casal / Shutterstock
Perhaps the world’s most famous, ancient and elusive architectural mystery is that of the pyramids of Giza in Egypt. Built around 2500 BCE as colossal tombs for the great pharaohs, it’s not their existence that’s necessarily perplexing, but how they were built. In an era predating industrial revolutions and modern mechanics, the colossal blocks of stone seem impossible to manoeuvre without the technology of today.
Egyptian pyramids, Giza, Egypt
Robster1983 / Wikimedia Commons [CC0 1.0]
The topic of much debate amongst archaeologists, a likely explanation for the pyramids’ construction has come to light in the past few years. While researching ancient inscriptions on the Giza monuments, scientists came across a ramp with stairways that could’ve helped to haul the stone into place. A series of postholes were also discovered and are thought to have formed part of a pulley system used to lift blocks, getting the stone into place far quicker than experts initially thought possible. Plus, the Egyptian Pharaohs had an army of slaves at their disposal!
Drina River House, Bajina Basta, Serbia
KMarianne / Shutterstock
Tara National Park in Bajina Basta, Serbia, has long drawn tourists from around the world, but the origins of the Drina River House, balanced precariously on the edge of a rock, remain murky to many. Apparently the first version of the house was built by a young group of swimmers in the 1960s and it became their annual summer house by 1969—a place to rest and shelter from the blazing sun.
Drina River House, Bajina Basta, Serbia
Nenad Nedomacki / Shutterstock
Upkeep was constantly required as river levels would frequently rise and damage the structure of the house, so materials to maintain the building had to be transported across by boats and kayaks. Unbelievably, the house is still standing today and is the prized centrepiece of the annual Drina Regatta.
Göbekli Tepe, Örencik, Turkey
cornfield / Shutterstock
There’s so much intrigue surrounding Göbekli Tepe, an ancient Turkish archaeological site home to the oldest temple structures ever discovered. Excavations began in 1995 near the city of Şanlıurfa, unearthing ruins believed to date back to between the 10th and 8th millennium BCE. During the first phase of excavation, gigantic T-shaped stone columns were discovered, weighing more than 16 tonnes.
Göbekli Tepe, Örencik, Turkey
Dan Merino / Flickr [CC BY-SA 2.0]
Experts say the site predates the invention of agriculture and pottery, refuting the assumption that agriculture led to the beginnings of civilised society as we know it. More than 200 pillars in around 20 circles have already been uncovered, revealing distinctive room-like structures, though their use is as yet unknown.
Volcano House, California, USA
Open Listings
The deserts of North America are prone to attracting UFOs and alien life forms – or so the conspiracy theories might have you believe. The Volcano House, however, might just make you do a double-take. Perched on top of a 150-foot dormant volcano in the Mojave Desert, it’s shaped just like a flying saucer thanks to its domed mid-century design.
Volcano House, California, USA
Open Listings
The two-bedroom two-bathroom UFO home, commissioned by inventor Vard Wallace and designed by Harold J. Bissner Jr. in 1968, spans over 2,000 square feet. An oasis for water even in the driest of deserts, it’s encircled by a moat and has a private lake on its grounds. If that wasn’t enough, there’s even an observation deck offering 360-degree views, making this home a true architectural marvel. The striking home was most recently featured in the 2022 film Don’t Worry Darling, starring Harry Styles, where it served as the eerie top-secret headquarters of the Victory Project.
Sacsayhuamán, Cusco, Peru
Jan Nedbal / Shutterstock
Sitting on the outskirts of Cusco, the historic capital of the Incan Empire, Sacsayhuamán, is so mysterious that there isn’t even an agreed formal spelling (it could also possibly be called Saqsaywaman). To add to the enigma of the citadel, experts can’t even be sure what its name, derived from the Quechua language, means. Similarly to the pyramids, how Sacsayhuamán came to be remains largely shrouded in uncertainty.
Sacsayhuamán, Cusco, Peru
Kenneth Rivera / Shutterstock
Dating back to around the 15th century, the settlement’s stonework resembles a giant game of Tetris, with stones expertly carved and slotted together – incredibly advanced for the age. Large in scale, architect John McCauley thinks that the lighter stones could’ve been dragged over carefully prepared soil beds to the site, while heavier rocks may have been transported via sled.
Witch windows, Vermont, USA
Piledhigheranddeeper / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0]
Given the historic Salem witch trials, it’s no surprise that the East Coast of North America was paranoid about witches but who knew this fantastical fear would bring about a peculiar architectural phenomenon? Almost exclusively in Vermont, you’ll find what’s known as witch windows. Folk tales stipulate that witches can’t enter diagonal windows on their broomsticks, leading residents to install slanted windows into the sides of their homes as a preventative measure.
Witch windows, Vermont, USA
Piledhigheranddeeper / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 4.0]
The design is also known as a coffin window because, according to old wives’ tales, they were used to remove coffins from the second floor in order to avoid narrow staircases. However, witch windows are most likely explained by a third, more boring theory: vernacular Vermont architects simply wanted to draw light and air into tricky attic spaces.
Katskhi Pillar, Imereti, Georgia
Andrei Bortnikau / Shutterstock
High-altitude homes don’t come much more extreme than the Katskhi Pillar: a 130-foot tall stone column with sweeping views of the western Georgian region of Imereti. Atop the remote pillar sits an ancient church, burial chamber and cottage. It’s home to just one resident, Father Maxime Qavtaradze, who lives as a stylite – a spiritual person lives alone on an elevated pillar as a demonstration of their devotion.
Katskhi Pillar, Imereti, Georgia
Magdalena Paluchowska / Shutterstock
At the foot of the column, there’s a monastery where priests and troubled men seek solace. A few times a week, Father Maxime travels down the connecting ladder to offer guidance to the people at its feet, but the monks also send him supplies via a pulley system, as well as making the daily climb up to the church for prayer and worship.
Puma Punku, Tiwanaku, Bolivia
Mark Green / Shutterstock
While signs of civilisation in Bolivia’s Tiwanaku region are thought to date back to 536 AD, the enigmatic Puma Punku temple complex suggests habitation of the site goes back much further, in fact, it’s purportedly almost 14,000 years old. Puma Punku was said to be especially important to the Incas who believed it to be the spot where the world was created.
Puma Punku, Tiwanaku, Bolivia
Mark Green / Shutterstock
The complex encompasses western and eastern courtyards, a central esplanade and a stone-faced terrace platform. Once thought to have been adorned with precious materials including polished metal plaques, kaleidoscopic ceramics and elaborate fabrics, the temple was purportedly frequented by the ancient society’s upper echelons. While much is unknown about its construction, two commonly accepted theories suggest the construction stones were moved using llama-skin ropes or ramps.
Normanton Church, Rutland, UK
It’s No Game / Flickr [CC BY-SA 2.0]
Found in the UK’s East Midlands region, this regal deconsecrated chapel sits on the edge of one of Europe’s largest man-made lakes, though its precarious location might make you look twice. When the tide is high, the church seemingly floats, but when the water level drops, the lower half of the church appears to sink down into the rocks.
Normanton Church, Rutland, UK
It’s No Game / Flickr [CC BY-SA 2.0]
In reality, the church is a spectacular optical illusion conceived by Thomas Cundy Jr in the early 19th century. Now a popular wedding venue, Cundy based the design on the church of St John’s Smith Square in London’s Westminster, but where he got the idea for the mirage is unknown – it may not even have been intentional.
Tiny hidden houses, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Greger Ravik / Flickr [CC BY-SA 2.0]
Wandering along Amsterdam’s innumerable waterways, you may find yourself in the canaled city’s Jordaan neighbourhood. Counting down the house numbers on the north side of Westerstraat, you’ll find that there are seven missing addresses. But if you look closely, you’ll spot the seven missing houses stacked one on top of the other in the slight space between the two buildings.
Tiny hidden houses, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Greger Ravik / Flickr [CC BY-SA 2.0]
Way back when, there was an accessible courtyard through a low door that would lead to the seven full-sized missing houses but in their absence, their miniature models continue to delight eagle-eyed visitors. And as to how these whimsical homes ended up here? They were installed by a local advertising agency based in the building.
Yonaguni Monument, Yonaguni, Japan
Masahiro Kaji / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 4.0]
If building huge stone temples and monuments above ground wasn’t tough enough, some may have taken their construction efforts underwater, or so marine geologist Masaaki Kimura has alleged. In 1986, divers discovered a curious submerged rock formation off the coast of Yonaguni Jima, the southernmost of the Ryukyu Islands in Japan.
Yonaguni Monument, Yonaguni, Japan
Liangtai Lin / Flickr [CC BY-SA 2.0]
Kimura says each time he returns to the site he’s even more convinced that the formation, which he describes as containing a stepped pyramid, is that of a 5,000-year-old city. Whether it’s natural or artificial is a hugely divisive topic, with some expeditions attributing the etched drawings to no more than natural scratches on the stones. However, their seemingly purposeful assembly could lead one to believe this was no force of nature.
Longaberger Basket Building, Ohio, USA
CJM Grafx / Shutterstock
A unique example of novelty architecture, this supersized basket has been baffling passersby in Newark, Ohio, for years. When Dave Longaberger, founder of basket manufacturers the Longaberger Company, instructed architects to design the brand’s headquarters in 1997, he’s said to have pointed at their best-selling product, the Medium Market Basket, and said: “make it look exactly like that”.
Longaberger Basket Building, Ohio, USA
Eric Glenn / Shutterstock
True to his vision, the result is a surreal seven-storey, 180,000-square-foot office that looks uncannily like a basket. The building is so beloved in Newark that in 2019 it was opened to the public for tours, with lines of visitors perplexed by the basket’s surprisingly grandiose interiors.
Brunelleschi’s dome, Florence, Italy
KellySHUTSTOC / Shutterstock
Rising above the skyline of Florence, the distinctive dome of the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore is one of the ancient city’s most iconic sights, and it’s also the most intriguing. Created by goldsmith Filippo Brunelleschi in the 15th century, the vast cupola comprises an inner shell and an outer shell, plus precise herringbone brickwork. Built without flying buttresses or scaffolding, the architectural marvel has left architects and historians puzzling over its construction for centuries.
Brunelleschi’s dome, Florence, Italy
Catarina Belova / Shutterstock
Architect Massimo Ricci, who has dedicated much of his life to the quandary of the cupola’s creation, may well have uncovered the answer. By carefully mapping the dome and building scale models to test his theories, Ricci arrived at a likely explanation—according to his calculations, a complex system of chains, hooks and ropes would’ve allowed the careful construction of the breathtaking octagonal space.
Machu Picchu, Cusco, Peru
Iryna Savina / Shutterstock
Perched amongst the peaks of Peru’s Andes Mountains, the ruined city of Machu Picchu is believed to have been built in the 15th century at the height of the Inca Empire. Stretching over five miles, the site, which is flanked by steep drops on three sides, is elevated a lofty 7,972 feet above sea level, prompting geologists to question why such a remote and inaccessible spot was chosen. The reason may just lie underground…
Machu Picchu, Cusco, Peru
cge2010 / Shutterstock
Positioned on a unique spot where two tectonic plates meet, the faultline produced large amounts of stone over millions of years, offering the Incas plentiful building materials for their new city in the sky. According to geologist Rualdo Menegat, this convenient abundance of stone, as well as the natural drainage offered by fractures in the rock, was likely an important factor in the site’s selection, aiding the construction of the settlement’s intricate and advanced structures.
Stonehenge, Wiltshire, UK
Mr Nai / Shutterstock
Dating back to around 2500 BCE, Stonehenge is still considered something of an ancient enigma. Comprising a number of towering stone settings arranged in a circle, the mysterious site in south-west England is remarkable in its scale and age, causing many to wonder how the enormous stone monument was built and more intriguingly, why. There’s no end of theories out there about the circle’s purpose, from a Druid temple to an astronomical computer for predicting eclipses.
Stonehenge, Wiltshire, UK
Drone Explorer / Shutterstock
However, according to English Heritage, the most accepted explanation of Stonehenge is that the structure was created as a prehistoric temple, aligned with the phases of the sun. With some of the stones traced to a Welsh quarry some 140 miles away, scientists at Newcastle University think the large settings could have been transported using sleds greased with pig fat, after residue was discovered on ancient pottery shards found near the site. Well we weren’t expecting that!
Winchester Mystery House, California, USA
Winchester Mystery House
This grand 19th-century mansion in San Jose, California has long beguiled and baffled the public. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the Winchester Mystery House is a maze of winding corridors, twisting staircases and doors that lead to nowhere – just imagine the nasty surprise you’d get if you walked through the door above and encountered that eight-foot drop! But how exactly did this seemingly nonsensical home come about?
Winchester Mystery House, California, USA
Winchester Mystery House
Once an ordinary eight-bedroom farmhouse, the home was bought up by Sarah Winchester, the heir of a gun manufacturing company, who relocated to the area after the deaths of her husband and son. Perhaps consumed by grief, she began to remodel the house, adding more wings, corridors and secret passages. Legend has it that Sarah believed she was haunted by the spirits of those killed by her family’s rifles and so built false doors and staircases leading to the ceiling to confuse malevolent ghosts.
Leaning Tower of Pisa, Pisa, Italy
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An Italian icon, there are few structures more instantly recognisable than the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Throughout the decades, Italy has been hit by its fair share of devastating earthquakes, yet somehow, this precarious 183-foot-tall landmark has endured it all. According to engineers from the University of Bristol, the secret behind its surprising resilience lies in the ground…
Leaning Tower of Pisa, Pisa, Italy
Bernard Koon / Shutterstock
Funnily enough, that soft foundation soil that caused the tower’s famed tilt is also responsible for protecting the structure from earthquakes for all these years. The tower’s height, combined with the stiffness of the marble and the soft soil, ensures vibrations are absorbed differently than in typical buildings, allowing the historic wonder to stay standing all these years!
Temple of Zeus, Athens, Greece
Dimitrios Constantinou / Wikimedia Commons [Public doman]
Novelist and PhD student Paul Cooper noticed something very odd about this picture of the fabled Temple of Zeus from 1860. At the top of the pillars, there appears to be a small building. Constructed in the 6th century BCE, the temple is one of the jewels of Athen’s ancient Greek sites and this little den didn’t match either contemporary or current designs. His interest was piqued and he discovered an unusual chapter in this historic monument’s story…
Temple of Zeus, Athens, Greece
Dimitrios Constantinou [Public domain]
Cooper believes that the added dwelling was in fact home to a devout follower known as a stylite or pillar saint. Part of an extreme and forgotten faction of the Christian faith, they believed living in high places brought them closer to God. Seen in this image, also from 1860, the stylite would have been totally isolated in his sky cell and would have used ropes and baskets to obtain supplies from below. There you are, mystery solved!
Floating buildings, Venice, Italy
byrrin / Shutterstock
Anyone who’s ever been to Venice and marvelled at the watery avenues and canals or wondered how huge structures like St Mark’s Basilica were built on water, this one’s for you. The origins of the city of Venice stretch back to the 5th century when the mainland inhabitants escaped the threat of Atilla the Hun and other foreign invaders by heading to the lagoon islands for safety. Aside from early primitive dwellings, the significant stone structures were built around 1200 years ago and the oldest surviving buildings are said to be around 800 years old. So how did they do it?
Floating buildings, Venice, Italy
The Trees and Timber Institute of the National Research Council
Well, the answer is in extraordinary engineering. Long wooden piles were driven by hand and hammer through the soft mud and silt into the harder clay bed below, called ‘caranto’. Made from a water repellent tree variety such as oak or pine, they were staked close together with mud packed into the gaps for extra stability. Then wooden planks were laid on top, followed by smaller bricks and stones until a large slab of Istrian stone or marble could be put into place on the waterline. These stakes have survived for centuries and are still remarkably preserved, perhaps due to the low oxygen content of the water.