Glass furnace unearthed in Metropolis

An ancient glass furnace has been unearthed during excavations in the ancient city of Metropolis in the Aegean province of İzmir's Torbalı district. The finds in the furnace show that its ceramics were imported from Athens to the region. 

The works that have been carried out in collaboration with the Culture and Tourism Ministry and the Sabancı Foundation have recently ended in the ancient city. 

In a written statement, the head of the excavations, Associate Professor Serdar Aybek, said they found the glass furnace in a Roman bath. "We believe the furnace was used as a firepan for the bath where pools were heated. We also found traces of glass production in the other parts of the bath. So we thought the bath lost its function in the early Byzantine era and then was used as a glass furnace," he said.

Aybek said the location of the furnace was close to a church. "It made us think that the glass production center was established under the control of the church and it operated to meet the needs of the church.

Lots of ceramics that were found in the Roman bath and the Zeus Krezimos sacred area were produced in Ephesus, Knidos, Parion and Athens. This shows us that the ceramics were imported by the people of Metropolis."

Aybek added that the ceramic finds also revealed that Metropolis and production centers in other regions interacted with each other.

"We have been tracing history in Metropolis for the past 26 years. This season, we worked mainly in the lower Roman bath, the Palaestra [sports field], which covers an area of some 6,000 square meters and is the largest structure in the city. Mosaic floors, galleries, pools and eating and drinking places in Palaestra indicate that the people of the city gave importance to...

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