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- Ancient_Roman_bathing abstract "Bathing played a major part in ancient Roman culture and society.Bathing was one of the most common daily activities in Roman culture, and was practiced across a wide variety of social classes. Though many contemporary cultures see bathing as a very private activity conducted in the home, bathing in Rome was a communal activity. While the extremely wealthy could afford bathing facilities in their homes, most people bathed in the communal baths thermae. In some ways, these resembled modern-day spas. The Romans raised bathing to a high art as they socialized in these communal baths. Communal baths were also available in temples such as The Imperial Fora. Courtship was conducted, as well as sealing business deals, as they built lavish baths on natural hot springs. Such was the importance of baths to Romans that a catalogue of buildings in Rome from 354 AD documented 952 baths of varying sizes in the city.Although wealthy Romans might set up a bath in their town houses or in their country villas, heating a series of rooms or even a separate building especially for this purpose called amphiheaters, and soldiers might have a bathhouse provided at their fort (as at Chesters on Hadrian's Wall, or at Bearsden fort), they still often frequented the numerous public bathhouses in the cities and towns throughout the empire.Small bathhouses, called balneum (plural balnea), might be privately owned, but they were public in the sense that they were open to the populace for a fee. Larger baths called thermae were owned by the state and often covered several city blocks. The largest of these, the Baths of Diocletian, could hold up to 3,000 bathers. Fees for both types of baths were quite reasonable, within the budget of most free Roman males.".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing thumbnail DomusAurea.jpg?width=300.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageExternalLink default.asp?taal=eng.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageID "8768299".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageLength "12804".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageOutDegree "45".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageRevisionID "682082326".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Aachen.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Aix-en-Provence.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Apodyterium.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Aquincum.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Arthritis.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Aulus_Cornelius_Celsus.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Baden,_Austria.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Baden_bei_Wien.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Bath,_Somerset.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Bathing.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Baths_of_Caracalla.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Baths_of_Diocletian.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Baths_of_Trajan.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Bearsden.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Buxton.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Caldarium.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ancient_Roman_baths.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Chesters.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Cilurnum.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Destination_spa.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink File:Roman_Baths_in_Bath_Spa,_England_-_July_2006.jpg.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Frigidarium.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Gangrene.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Hadrian.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Hadrians_Wall.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Hungary.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Juvenal.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Laconicum.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Laconium.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Marcus_Aurelius.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Martial.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Mixed_bathing.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Palaestra.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Pliny_the_Elder.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Quintilian.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Rheumatism.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Empire.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Roman_aqueduct.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Seneca_the_Younger.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Tepidarium.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Thermae.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Turkish_bath.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Vichy.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Vichy,_France.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink Wiesbaden.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink File:BathsOfCaracalla.jpg.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLink File:DomusAurea.jpg.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ancient Roman bathing".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ancient Roman baths".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLinkText "Roman public baths".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLinkText "a style laid down by the Romans".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLinkText "ancient Roman bathing".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLinkText "bath house".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLinkText "bathing".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLinkText "private bath system".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageWikiLinkText "public baths".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing hasPhotoCollection Ancient_Roman_bathing.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:About.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Ancient_Rome_topics.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing subject Category:Ancient_Roman_baths.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing comment "Bathing played a major part in ancient Roman culture and society.Bathing was one of the most common daily activities in Roman culture, and was practiced across a wide variety of social classes. Though many contemporary cultures see bathing as a very private activity conducted in the home, bathing in Rome was a communal activity. While the extremely wealthy could afford bathing facilities in their homes, most people bathed in the communal baths thermae.".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing label "Ancient Roman bathing".
- Ancient_Roman_bathing sameAs m.027j0l9.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing sameAs Q4752911.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing sameAs Q4752911.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing wasDerivedFrom Ancient_Roman_bathing?oldid=682082326.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing depiction DomusAurea.jpg.
- Ancient_Roman_bathing isPrimaryTopicOf Ancient_Roman_bathing.