Within the works on the revitalization of the Golubac fortress, from the beginning of September to the beginning of December 2014, archaeological research was carried out in the area of the Turkish hamam, located near the Western part of the fortress. By unknown reason, the order of Prince Miloš to destroy the hamam was not realized. When Felix Kanic passed through Golubac in 1859, he noted that the dome of the sumptuous building had fallen apart, but that the water and heating pipes, with minimal costs, would be able to be re-used. During the second half of the 20th century, the hamam chambers served as an explosive storage facility for the PIM company, and for this reason, the hammam was reinforced with concrete plates.
The first mentioning of the hamam in front of the Golubac fortress is found in the 17th century Turkish traveler and writer, Evliya Celebi, in his work "Seyahatname". Celebi informs us that Koca Mahmud-pasha, during the rule of Sultan Mehmed II the Conqueror (1451-1481), in August of 1458 conquered the Golubac fortress and soon after that he built his endowments, hamam and mosque.
The discovered hamam belongs to the order of male hamams, since it was intended primarily for men. It was built of quarried stone and bricks. The hamam rooms were covered with calotas and semicolons that had holes with the function of a skylight. Water in hamam was supplied with ceramic tubes from a nearby spring located 200m south of the building. Below the floor level is a hypocast. The Golubac hamam has nine rooms: a chaplain or a waiting room, a warm room for a rest after a bath or a waiting room in the winter, a lounge-lobby of the bathing rooms, halates-two identical rooms for warm and cold bathing, a khazneh - water tank, or a furnace.