Excavations in one of the most important coastal towns of the Hellenistic era, the ancient city of Parion in the northwestern Turkish province of Çanakkale’s Biga district, have unearthed a 2,000-year-old feeding bottle.
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The bottle found in a baby grave has single handle and pacifier in its mouth, Kasapoğlu added.
“The baby bottles from the Roman era were made of earthenware and were oven dried. We found a number of them in some baby graves in previous years. It is possible to see them especially in the early Roman era.
They were often left in baby graves as a gift to the dead,” he said. Kasapoğlu said the baby bottles, which had a capacity of up to 100 millimeters, have various different models.
“The ones we have found so far are generally from the Roman era. They have a very small pacifier mouth. When the kiln was wet, they were given shape on a mold and dried,” he added.
Source: Hurriyet Daily News [September 13, 2017]
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