Ankara - Roman Bath
August 22, 2024The Roman Bath
The Roman Bath, situated on Çankırı Street stretching to Yıldırım Beyazit Square from Ulus Square, approximately 400 meters far from Ulus, on the west of the road, about 2.5 meters above the street, was built by the Roman Emperor Caracalla (211-217), the son of Septimius Severus in the 3rd century to the honor of the God of Health, Asklepion.
It has been established that this platform, which is callled the Roman Bath today, was a tumulus and carried the remains of Roman times (partially Byzantine and Seljuk layers) on the top, and of Phrygian times at the bottom.
The dimensions of the bath are 80x130 meters, it is made of stones and bricks. The entrance on Çankırı Street leads to a wide area surrounded with the remains of a colonnaded pavillion and then to Palaestra, a place for physical education and wrestling. On the right of this part, along the colonnaded road, there are lots of angular and circular inscripted columns.
It has been established from the coins obtained during excavations that the building, which had been destroyed after a great fire in the 7 th century, had been in use for some 500 years and had been restorated from time to time.
During the excavations of the Turkish History Institution the dressing and bathing parts of the bath, stokeholes and service paths were discovered.
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