File:Catal Hüyük Restoration B.jpg|The interior of a reconstructed
Çatalhöyük house Trypillian house2.jpg|Pottery miniature of a
Cucuteni-Trypillian house Cucuteni MNIR IMG 7622.JPG|Miniature of a regular Cucuteni-Trypillian house, full of ceramic vessels AMK - Linearbandkeramik Modell Hienheim 3.jpg|Reconstruction of a settlement of the
Linear Pottery culture, 5th millennium BC, in the Archaeological Museum of Kelheim (Lower
Bavaria, Germany) The Neolithic people in the
Levant,
Anatolia,
Syria, northern
Mesopotamia and central Asia were great builders, utilising
mud-brick to construct houses and villages. At
Çatalhöyük, houses were plastered and painted with elaborate scenes of humans and animals. In Europe, the
Neolithic long house with a timber frame, pitched,
thatched roof, and walls finished in
wattle and daub could be very large, presumably housing a whole extended family. Villages might comprise only a few such houses. Neolithic
pile dwellings have been excavated in Sweden (
Alvastra pile dwelling) and in the circum-Alpine area, with remains being found at the
Mondsee and
Attersee lakes in
Upper Austria. Early
archaeologists like
Ferdinand Keller thought they formed artificial islands, much like the Scottish
crannogs, but today it is clear that the majority of settlements was located on the shores of lakes and were only inundated later on. Reconstructed pile dwellings are shown in
open-air museums in
Unteruhldingen and
Zürich (Pfahlbauland). In Romania, Moldova, and Ukraine, Neolithic settlements included wattle-and-daub structures with thatched roofs and floors made of logs covered in clay. This is also when the
burdei pit-house (below-ground) style of house construction was developed, which was still used by Romanians and Ukrainians until the 20th century. Neolithic
settlements and "cities" include: •
Göbekli Tepe in Turkey, ca. 9,000 BC •
Tell es-Sultan (Jericho) in the Levant, Neolithic from around 8,350 BC, arising from the earlier
Epipaleolithic Natufian culture •
Nevali Cori in Turkey, ca. 8,000 BC - 7,000 BC •
Norgual Strium in Germany, 7,750 BC •
Çatalhöyük in
Turkey, 7,500 BC •
Mehrgarh in
Pakistan, 7,000 BC •
Knap of Howar and
Skara Brae, the
Orkney Islands,
Scotland, from 3,500 BC • over 3,000 settlements of the
Cucuteni-Trypillian culture, some with populations up to 15,000 residents, flourished in present-day
Romania,
Moldova and
Ukraine from 5,400 to 2,800 BC. ==Tombs and ritual monuments==