Bathhouse

(Redirected from Public bathing)
A bathhouse in Takayama.

A bathhouse is a building where human beings wash their bodies.[1] In some bathhouses, people put their whole bodies in the water. In others, people clean themselves using steam or even sweat. Bathhouses are usually communal, which means people take baths together and not alone. Some bathhouses are only about getting clean and other bathhouses are also a place for people to talk to each other.

History

 
The ruins of the bathhouse in Mohenjo-daro.

In the early 1900s, archaeologists found ruins of a bathhouse in Mohenjo-daro. This is in Pakistan today. The bathhouse was built around 2500 b.c.e. It was made out of bricks and it might have been part of a temple.[1] Archaeologists found a Jewish mikveh from the 500s c.e. in ruins underneath Syracuse.[2]

By 300 b.c.e., bathhouses called thermae were common in Ancient Roman towns.[1]

People in Japan and Korea have been using hot springs for bathing for thousands of years. People started bathing at the Dogo Onsen on Shikoku 3000 years ago.[1]

 
A bathhouse from the Byzantine Empire.

The Roman Empire and Byzantine Empire affected bathing in the Middle East. The Middle Eastern hammam bath is like a Roman bath: A place to get clean and to talk to other people. In the 600s and 700s c.e., the Umayyad caliphs built baths with mosaic decorations on the floors.[3] In the Medieval period, there were many baths, called hammam in the Middle East. Baghdad may have had 60,000 bathhouses. Unlike in Roman baths, men and women did not bathe together. There were different places for men and women.[3]

 
A Medieval German bathhouse.

In Medieval Europe most people who lived in towns went to bathhouses to bathe. The medical book Secreta Secretorum has a chapter on bathing. It said winter and spring were good times to bathe but that people should not bathe in summer. By 1200 c.e., there were 32 bathhouses in Paris. Bathhouses were often right next to the town bakery so the heat from the ovens could make the water hot. In Germany in the 1400s, some people ate meals in baths. Sometimes bathhouses were brothels in disguise. When the disease syphilis reached Europe, bathhouses became less popular there.[4]

In the Victorian period a diplomat called David Urquhart went to the Ottoman Empire, where he saw Ottoman baths. He came back to England and built bathhouses there. A person called Sinan built many baths. Some were for rich people and some were to clean the poor. This happened before indoor plumbing, which let almost every house have its own bathtub.[2]

 
A bathhouse in the United Kingdom.

People in other countries built bathhouses near hot springs too. The most famous bathhouses in the United States may be Bathhouse Row in Hot Springs National Park Arkansas, eight buildings made between 1892 and 1923.[5][6]

In the United States, people built bathhouses, especially during the Progressive Era, when people thought the government should help people live better lives. Indoor plumbing and pipes had made it much easier to be clean. People in the United States thought of being clean as part of being a good person, so rich and middle-class Americans built bathhouses for poorer people. New York City opened the People's Baths in 1891. It was popular, so many other public bathhouses were built. However, these bathhouses were about getting clean, not relaxing. Bathers were not allowed to stay long, and there was no place in the bathhouse to relax or talk with other people.[7]

According to writer Mikkel Aaland, people in Africa south of the Sahara Desert built sweat lodges to make sick people well.[8]

Shape

Some bathhouses are cellular baths, meaning they have many smaller tubs. Other bathhouses are steam baths, with all the bathers sitting around something hot, like hot rocks or fire.[2]

Health

In many cultures, people said the bathhouse was good for the health. They especially said this about hot bathhouses, such as saunas and onsen. In Mesoamerica, people said the hot temazcal bath would heal the sick by making evil spirits leave.[2][8]

File:Schwitzhütte.jpg
A Lakota sweat lodge being built.

Scientists have done experiments to see if baths really do help human health. In addition to keeping the body clean, some types of steam baths or other hot baths can improve circulation, blood pressure and diseases of the nose and breathing.[9][10][11]

Types of bathhouses

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Suemedha Sood (November 29, 2012). The origins of bathhouse culture around the world. BBC Travel. https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20121129-the-origins-of-bathhouse-culture-around-the-world. Retrieved July 8, 2021. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Tom Wilkinson (February 13, 2018). "Typology: Bathhouse". Architectural Review. https://www.architectural-review.com/essays/typology/typology-bathhouse. Retrieved July 9, 2021. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Elizabeth Williams (2012). "Baths and Bathing Culture in the Middle East: The Hammam". Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved July 9, 2021.
  4. "Did people in the Middle Ages take baths?". Medievalists. Retrieved July 9, 2021.
  5. "Bathhouse Row Today". United States National Parks Service. Retrieved July 9, 2021.
  6. "Bathhouse Row: A National Historic Landmark". Arkansas.com. Retrieved July 9, 2021.
  7. Erin Blakemore (September 9, 2017). "Public Baths Were Meant to Uplift the Poor". JSTOR Daily. Retrieved July 9, 2021.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Mikkel Aaland. "Tribal Africa". Retrieved July 9, 2021.
  9. What are the benefits of a steam room. Medical News Today. https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/320314. Retrieved July 8, 2021. 
  10. M. Pandiaraja; A.Vanitha; K. Maheshkumar; V. Venugopal; S. Poonguzhali; L. Radhika; N. Manavalan (June 11, 2020). "Effect of the Steam bath on Resting Cardiovascular Parameters in Healthy Volunteers (Abstract)". Advances in Integrative Medicine. doi:10.1016/j.aimed.2020.06.001.
  11. Parunkul Tungsukruthai; Preecha Nootim; Wiwan Worakunphanich; Nareerat Tabtong. "Efficacy and safety of herbal steam bath in allergic rhinitis: a randomized controlled trial". Journal of Integrative Medicine. doi:10.1016/j.joim.2017.12.010. Retrieved July 8, 2021.