Excavations started in 2003. Archaeological surface surveys have uncovered 14 public buildings and other structures in the ancient city. Among these public buildings are two baths, two churches, a defense structure, rock tombs, a theater, an arched and domed structure, a monumental cultic niche, walls, a villa, other monumental buildings and some religious buildings. The church floors are decorated with mosaics and have images of the rivers of
Gihon,
Pishon,
Tigris and
Euphrates imprinted on them, which are mentioned in the
Bible. Various animals are also depicted in the mosaics of the ancient city, which has been likened to the ancient city of
Zeugma. One of the earliest known churches in Anatolia was excavated in Hadrianopolis. In December 2019, archaeologists unearthed an 1800-year-old
limestone slab containing a female silhouette most likely depicts
Demeter. According to the archaeologist Ersin Çelikbaş, there was an inscription on the surface of the slab- "Herakleides, the son of Glaukos". "The slab has a figure of a woman on it wearing a traditional dress, holding ears of wheat in her right hand and wearing a belt with a snake on her waist. Most probably, this is the goddess of the harvest and agriculture Demeter" said Ersin Çelikbaş. In 2022 new mosaics with polychrome peacock and amphora figures with grape basket decorations were found in a Roman fort. Geophysical and other surveys have revealed 14 public buildings and other structures in the ancient city so far. ==References==