Roman Bathing and Wellness: How Were Roman Baths Really Used?
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- Опубліковано 9 січ 2024
- Head to Wroxeter Roman City with Presenter Ben Shires as he discovers just how important bathing was to the Romans. Whether you fancied a quick dip, wanted to socialise with friends or needed to book in a business meeting, bathing was at the heart of Roman life.
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Great memories of visiting Viroconium (Wroxeter) as a kid in the 1960s. I have a wonderful photo of my Dad standing under that great standing wall, when archaeological excavations were still under way. I went back almost 30 years later, when the site looked very similar to what's shown in this video, and took photos of the same spaces to show my Dad and Mum. So happy they remembered the visit in their late 80s!
Please make one of these about the middle ages, so many people still think everyone stopped bathing after the Roman era, few know that bath houses remained popular, aqueducts remained in use or were replaced by conduits & canals and that medieval people washed & bathed a lot and that late medieval bathing in parts of Europe was just as good or better than Roman bathing.
Fascinating - you know the term "wrong end of the stick"? If you reached out for that sponge lollypop (lolly-poop?) and grabbed the sponge end, you grabbed "the wrong end of the stick". Kinda gross...
In 1965 I was in high school and they offered Latin. The teacher had been to Pompeii in the late 1950s and while most of the class yawned through it, I was thrilled. She's the one who told us about the sponges, by the way. She spoke about 7 languages and the Best Part of her classes was the entomology and history of various English words and phrases.
AND I hated declensions and tenses, translating Cesar... All Gaul is divided into three parts...Bah!
I was there for the history, I think.
Very good video 👍🏻🌷🎊
This is wonderful!
The Romans did have bath soap btw, they learned about it from the Gauls and were quite keen on it.
Also, curious about what the source is for claiming they only had one sponge on a stick for the entire latrine.
Can we be sure they didn't have a couple or that some perhaps used their own personal xylospongium?
Can we be sure they didn't have larger sponges either?
Also I remember reading somewhere they sometimes dunked them in vinegar.
People also used straw, grass, moss, (wet) rags, etc.
Thank you ❤ Very good content, interesting.
Interesting and informative.
So fascinating
Fascinating to learn 0:06 about the Roman baths. Thanks
I was at Wroxeter on a cold and wet day last year and it was fascinating. I'll have to go again now that I've seen this video.
Enjoyed the video 👍🏻
Wonderful speakers and very informative
Very interesting, thanks!
Wow - had no idea of all this - excellent video thanks 🎉
Thank yiu.
Very comprehensive
Pores cannot open or close. Ask any dermatologist. However, warm water can make it easier to remove contents in the pores because it makes them more runny.
Weren't those latrine sponges cleaned in vinegar between each user? That's what I've heard.
I honestly thought "what is Jeff Goldblum doing English Heritage videos for?" 😂
From so many different camera angles you have shown these periodically placed little piles of stones that were once part of the underfloor heating system, but you never mentioned what they are.
The piles of stone were used to hold up the floor and hot air flowed around the piles to heat the floor.
Does the "little scoop for various purposes" have a name? The mind races and shudders at potential uses for a scoop in a bath.
It is for ear wax
There'd have been alot more than one sponge stick in the loo & there was usually a small gully with running water at your feet where you could work at cleaning the sponge, some bathers also brought their own. Sorry to be a pedant. It was also a class based culture so you may not want to use something a lower caste pleb has just finished with.
Iron age Brits up the road in round huts were using leaves so progress is relative.
The romans had no body hair? I mean for fashion?
Roman baths didn't have a plug hole, the water wasn't changed regularly, there was no soap, and people covered in dirt and oil bathed in the water regularly. Imagine how gross the water must've been!