History of Sanitation
Forfatter: J. J. Cosgrove
År: 1910
Forlag: Standard Sanitary Mfg. Co
Sted: Pittsburgh U.S.A
Sider: 124
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40
HISTORY OF SANITATION
according to the authority of Pliny, for 600 years Rome
needed no medicine but the public baths.
When the public baths were first instituted they were
only for the lower classes, who alone bathed in public.
The people of wealth and those who held positions of state
bathed in their own homes. But this monopoly of the poor
was not long enjoyed. In the process of time even the
emperors bathed in public among their subjects, and we
read of the abandoned Gallienus amusing himself by bath-
ing in the midst of the young and old of both sexes, men,
women and children.
In the earlier stages of Roman history a much greater
delicacy was observed with respect to promiscuous bathing,
even among men, than obtained at a later period. Virtue
passed away as wealth increased, and the public baths be-
came places of meeting and amusement where not only did
men bathe together in numbers, but even men and women
stripped and bathed promiscuously in the same bath.
Some idea of the magnitude of the baths at Rome can
be gained from a statement of the number of bathers they
could accommodate at one time. The baths of Diocletian,
which were perhaps the most commodious of them all,
could accommodate at one time 3,200 bathers. One hall of
this famous bathing institution was at a later date converted
by Michael Angelo into the church of St. Marie de gli
Angeli.
The baths of Caracalla, built a. d. 212, were perhaps
the most famous of the baths of Rome. They were not as
commodious however as many other baths, and they had
accommodations at one time for only 1,600 bathers, or just
one-half that could be accommodated by the baths of Dio-
cletian.
The following description of the Roman baths, together
with the historical sketch of the people of that period who
indulged in the luxury, is abstracted from an old dictionary
of Greek and Roman antiquities, published in London,
England, almost a century ago. The illustrations are from
woodcuts appearing in the article.