General view of the rock reliefs at Gavurkale. Gavurkale (or Gavurkalesi, meaning “Infidel's Castle” in Turkish) reliefs carved on a flattened cliff salb face on the crest of a hill that rises 60 meters above the ground of the valley of Babayakup river can be possibly dated to the Hittite Empire period. Depicting three Hittite deities, two large male figures have pointed hats, shoes with curled-up toes and swords in their belts posed walking towards a seated female figure, possibly a goddess, on the left. Three figures have conical hats yet only male figures on the right have horns on the hats which are a symbol of divinity. The scattered Hittite ceramics on the slope below the reliefs and on a single terrace opposite the cliff indicate tha...