Viet Nam News GEDERA — Israeli archaeologists on Tuesday unveiled what they said was a major pottery plant which produced wine storage jars continuously from Roman to Byzantine times. The Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) said that excavations near the town of Gedera, south of Tel Aviv, revealed the factory and an adjacent leisure complex of 20 bathing pools and a room used for board games. Excavation director Alla Nagorsky told journalists at the site that from the third century AD the plant produced vessels of a type known to historians as “Gaza” jars for an unbroken period of 600 years. “This kind of a place is not built in an instant,” she said. “An engineer worked on it. The site is very designed.” An IAA statement added that the jars’ main function was storage and shipment of wine, which was a flourishing local industry at the time, with large-scale exports. “The continuous production of these jars probably indicates that the business was a family one, which passed from generation to generation to generation,” the IAA said in a statement. It said the remains of around 100,000 jars found buried at the site were probably discarded rejects. Alongside the factory, it added, were two Byzantine bathhouses, at least one with a heating boiler and 20 “finely constructed” pools, connected to one another by channels and pipes. “The archaeologists consider that the water complex served both the local population and the many travellers along the ancient main road connecting the port of… [Read full story]
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