Keramos - Muğla
In Keramos, a young god holding a double-faced ax was worshiped. This coin: depicts only the head or half-naked standing on the coins. Several coins of the Roman Imperial Period are depicted with Zeus Khrysaoreus, the god of neighboring Stratonikeia and Koinon Khrysaores. During the Byzantine Period, Keramos, the episcopal center, had been inhabited uninterruptedly since the Ancient Period and the ruins quickly disappeared. The remains that can be seen today are; a few preserved walls, a temple preserved at the base level of Bakıcak Hill, a ruin presumed to be Nypheum, the ruins of the temple which was later converted into a church or monastery, the remains of a waterway, a necropolis with mostly vaults and rock tombs. residues. Today's cemetery is a unique example of Roman sarcophagi, Islamic and modern tombs, and cultural interaction and respect between cultures in Anatolia.