Kocabay, BatuhanDeşir, AlihanGüldür, KaanMutlu, İpekÖzkurt, Ahmet Ömür2022-03-222022-03-222021http://hdl.handle.net/11693/77863This work is a student project of the Department of History, Faculty of Economics, Administrative and Social Sciences, İhsan Doğramacı Bilkent University.Ankara : İhsan Doğramacı Bilkent Üniversitesi İktisadi, İdari ve Sosyal Bilimler Fakültesi, Tarih Bölümü, 2021.The History of Turkey course (HIST200) is a requirement for all Bilkent undergraduates. It is designed to encourage students to work in groups on projects concerning any topic of their choice that relates to the history of Turkey. It is designed as an interactive course with an emphasis on research and the objective of investigating events, chronologically short historical periods, as well as historic representations. Students from all departments prepare and present final projects for examination by a committee, with 10 projects chosen to receive awards.Includes bibliographical references (page 12).Ankara Roma Hamamı milattan sonra 3. Yüzyılda inşa edilip 7. yüzyılda Küçük Asya’nın Persler tarafından istila edilmesine kadar kullanımda kalmıştır, bunlar sonucu ise harabeye dönüşüp insanlık tarafından unutulması 1926’daki tesadüf sonucu keşfedilmesine kadar devam etmiştir. Bu iki zaman arasında Ankara’ya hâkim olmuş diğer milletlere ait eserler de barındırmıştır ve özellikle Osmanlı döneminde hamamın bulunduğu bölge toplu mezar olarak kullanılmıştır. 20. yüzyıl başındaki kazı çalışmaları sonucu hamamın ve çevresindeki, Roma Ankara’sına ait kalıntılar çoğunlukla çıkarılmıştır ve sonrasında açık hava müzesi haline getirilmiştir. Koruma çalışmaları ise halen devam etmektedir.Roman Baths of Ankara are believed to have been constructed in the 3rd century AD and had been in use until the Persian invasion of Asia Minor and the subsequent devastation of the historic site. The baths were never reconstructed (with the exception of repairs that were conducted by the Byzantines but the baths were abandoned indefinitely in the 9th century) by any of the peoples that came to rule over the city nor had they been attended to in any way by means of preserving the site other than their use as a mass grave during the time of the Ottomans and as a result, even the existence of the baths had been forgotten to humanity until their coincidental discovery in 1926 after which a multitude of excavation projects allowed for the baths to be uncovered and the conversion of the excavation site into an open-air museum followed afterwards. Efforts to preserve the remnants of these ruins still continue today.13 pagesTurkishCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlikehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/Cumhuriyet Döneminde Ankara Roma HamamıStudent ProjectSPB3760