Towering Seljuk tombstones some 400-700 years old in southeastern Turkey are revealing secrets about medieval city life, say archaeologists.
Preserved under UNESCO's World Heritage tentative list, Seljuk Cemetery, located at Bitlis's Ahlat district, is being studied by archaeologists, since 2011 to unearth various facets of medieval urban life.
They are busy cleaning moss on the tombstones, which are up to 4.5 meters in length, to perform epigraphy analysis to inscriptions, figures, and drawings.
Talking to Anadolu Agency, Mehmet Kulaz, deputy director of the excavation team said it was the biggest historical cemetery in the Islamic world.
He said more than 1000 tombstones have been cleaned and epigraphy analyses of 750 of them have been transmitted into an online database.