I love that Steve from Woosh Plumbing is a sponsor again.
@erawanpencil7 ай бұрын
Steve's marketing strategy of concentrating on the Roman historian demographic may need a little expansion, but I too would prefer such a customer base.
@kacperwoch43687 ай бұрын
@@erawanpencil I mean, since we know that every person thinks about the glory of ancient Rome every day this is not such a bad strategy.
@jbug19797 ай бұрын
@@erawanpencilThis specific video is about bath complexes and how they work. Isn't that perfect demographic targeting, for a plumbing service?! 😊 (I live in NYC, so maybe I'll need to give Steve a call, so I can "Woosh my problems away"..)
@BMW16007 ай бұрын
Steve is the real MVP
@marial82357 ай бұрын
Garrett’s transition into Woosh is very impressive.😮❤
@TetsuShima7 ай бұрын
Curiously, Hadrian liked to go to public baths like a normal person. Imagine being an ordinary Roman who has just entered the hot springs to have a relaxing morning, only to pass in the hallway the most powerful man in the world naked and saying "Good morning, citizen." 😅
@bernadmanny7 ай бұрын
I pretty sure he liked to go for the scenery.
@dla_9157 ай бұрын
It is thought he was gay, not much else need be said
@TsunamiBrook7 ай бұрын
@@dla_915 Sounds like you should learn to say nothing at all. Homophobia is pathetic and for the feeble minded.
@M.Jebbers7 ай бұрын
@@dla_915modern ideas of sexuality were not a thing in Roman times, calling him “gay” makes no sense seeing as that was not an idea present back then
@DontThinkso-kb9tc7 ай бұрын
It makes sense. We get it. You're one too. 😂@@M.Jebbers
@wooshpipeanddrainco.26067 ай бұрын
Another quality video. Grateful for the plug. Aside from lacking filtration, these baths were quite sophisticated. It must have been an amazing experience back then to be in a hot bath for the first time.
@maknnna7 ай бұрын
Thanks for being a sponsor of this channel Steve, it’s really kind of you and us watchers of toldinstone appreciate it. Take care and wishing you the best of luck with your business!!!
@mileslong39046 ай бұрын
Can I have a job?
@JohnDaubSuperfan3696 ай бұрын
@@maknnnaThere is nothing kind about sponsorship, it is merely an exchange of money for a service.
@maknnna6 ай бұрын
@@JohnDaubSuperfan369 K dude. The sponsorships help the channel afloat and I appreciate that.
@avehagen6 ай бұрын
Love your biz name & logo Steve! -Cheers
@PortShaftBrake7 ай бұрын
Best sponsor segway ever 😂😂😂
@Stevie-J6 ай бұрын
"Thinking about the Roman empire" is the best meme ever and I hope his sponsor segways pay dividends for hundreds of years 😂
@sauercrowder4 ай бұрын
Smoother than a ride on a segue
@QuantumHistorian7 ай бұрын
It's like the Romans took the mixed-purpose Greek gymnasia and asked _"But what if we apply an overwhelming amount of engineering to it?"_
@lordtachanka9037 ай бұрын
The Roman mantra is “if the Greeks can do it, that means we can do it better” 😂😂😂
@johnladuke64757 ай бұрын
_BEST_ video sponsor. Makes me want to go to Queens just so I can clog a toilet to support the channel.
@rambi10726 ай бұрын
I don't think I've ever seen such an incredibly specific sponsor before, I'm surprised it's good business for both parties to have sponsors for a local plumbing company on YT videos targetting a global audience. I'm not complaining though haha.
@MartinCHorowitz7 ай бұрын
Now you need a set of episodes on Roman Glass.
@foowashere7 ай бұрын
Great idea! 👍
@mikki39616 ай бұрын
Fascinating as usual. However, the idea of immersing oneself in that odious soup gives me the chills.
@Radhaugo1087 ай бұрын
Questions: 1) Was there man and female sections? 2) Did they have need for lifeguards? 3) Did they have any water sports?
@sudazima7 ай бұрын
large baths had male and female sections, smaller ones had male and female times. doubt they had dedicated lifeguards there were swimming sports i think but no water polo that i know.
@Radhaugo1087 ай бұрын
@@sudazima Thanks man!
@gg36757 ай бұрын
Look into the gladiator naval battles, they were wild
@vulpo7 ай бұрын
Originally in republican Rome they were co-ed. However, after several incidents of orgies breaking out over the years, they were segregated by gender. If I remember correctly, this happened in the later days of the republic.
@SD-vy7gj7 ай бұрын
Male or female. Man or woman. Not man or female. Ones a human term, the other scientific. Seems kinda cold how women get the science one. No?
@Sabrowsky7 ай бұрын
Smoothest sponsor transition ever. Your money was well spent, Steve.
@saradominnz7 ай бұрын
Woosh plumbing is a great sponsor
@brick63477 ай бұрын
Well, your description of the water's cleanliness does explain why you "forgot" your swimming trunks!
@JohnPValentine7 ай бұрын
😂
@mathtonight10847 ай бұрын
That was the best segway into an advertisement I've ever seen on youtube.
@europeancoalandsteelcommunity6 ай бұрын
segue
@Torfin20017 ай бұрын
Augustus: "I'm glad that my new public baths are being a resounding success. Even my daughter Julia loves them, don't you think, Crispus?" Crispus: "Yes, Caesar. Especially those on the Aventine" 😉 Augustus: "But on the Aventine there are only baths for me...F*ck"
@cassiemeyer11643 ай бұрын
The renderings of what these baths would have looked like is one of the most impressive things I have ever seen
@dodiswatchbobobo7 ай бұрын
I don’t know, how DID Roman baths work? And now I know. Thanks!
@itmartinwho7 ай бұрын
I literally muttered the same thing to myself as I clicked haha. "Yeah, how DID they work"
@kimberlyperrotis89625 ай бұрын
Paintings, etc. always show Roman bathers scraping off the oil and dirt right next to the pools. With thousands of bathers doing this every day, the oil would have accumulated everywhere, made the floors slippery and dirtied every surface. It would make more sense if this “cleansing” part of the bathing was done in a special area where the oil and dirt could be controlled and periodically cleaned out, like grease traps in modern restaurants, rather than right around the pools. Is there any evidence for any practice or structure like this?
@rickb30787 ай бұрын
Whoosh is back!
@borealis.in.georgia7 ай бұрын
Worlds most genius sponsorship lol
@braker507 ай бұрын
Great documentary on Roman baths! Thanks for the excellent content!
@professorsogol58247 ай бұрын
You cover many interesting topics about how the classical world functioned. But may I suggest a topic for the future: How did slavery work in Greece and Rome? How were slaves bought and sold? How was new raw material obtained? How were slaves identified? I have heard that slaves were emancipated from time to time. What was the procedure? How could an emancipated slave prove it? How could a runaway slave be distinguished from an emancipated slave or an enslaved slave going about his owner's business? If you have already covered this topic, please provide me with a link.
@nebojsag.58717 ай бұрын
Basically, the latest scholarship has it that most slaves most of the time were born into slavery, with a significant contribution from abandoned infants and slaves bought from barbarians raiding and enslaving each-other. And children who ran away from their parents were often caught by organized crime gangs and shipped off to the opposite end of the empire to be sold into slavery, much like with child-sex trafficking today. It was always quite a scandal when such cases were uncovered. With regard to "how did slavery function on a day-to-day basis, and how were freedmen or free-born people distinguished from current slaves?" the answer is usually that unless you had a passably rich and influential patron who would testify before court - or more likely send a bunch of other guys to testify for you - you would be vulnerable to random kidnapping and sale into slavery. Roman courts were quite open to hearing from people who claimed to have been falsely enslaved, and precisely for this reason. Ideally of course, public officials would probably try to maintain lists and registers of who was a slave and who wasn't and give out slave-ownership certificates, but this was a lot harder in preindustrial times than it would be today, especially with the much higher birth and death-rates back then. Rich patrons needed clients for status and to be their muscle in intra-elite squabbles, so they were incentivized to protect their subjects from random enslavement. Basically, anybody could end up randomly enslaved by organized crime gangs, and you needed to belong to some kind of protection racket to be protected from this threat, either through direct physical force, or more commonly, through having people who will testify before court that you are in fact a free person who was unlawfully abducted. We know rich influential patrons filled this role - and that nobody dared to enslave them, because they had body-guards and witnesses galore. I suppose there were also probably more mutualistic and horizontal associations as well. Although it would have been quite possible for a slave in a large city to just run away and blend into the crowd if he weren't a freshly imported foreigner - in which case he would quickly be caught and sent back to his master for punishment - then that runaway would essentially be a random homeless man on the street, quite vulnerable to getting abducted by an organized crime gang and sold on the other side of the Empire. And if he managed to find people who would take him in, those people would be in extreme legal trouble if the slave's master ever found them out and produced evidence before court proving the man's enslavement. Everyone was legally obligated to report escaped slaves to the authorities, and the penalties for failing to do so were brutal. So if you were a slave in the big city and you were trusted enough by your master to walk around doing his business on your own, you probably had a lot to lose and nothing to gain by running away, since you may very well have had an informal family among your master's household slaves, and you were probably among those slaves who were relatively skilled and treated semi-tolerably. If you were a distrusted new slave, you were probably physically restrained within the house to keep you from escaping. There's plenty of useful work for a chained slave to do, primarily milling grain into flour for the household or weaving textiles. This was usually done to slave-women. Particularly flight-happy slaves were branded or fitted with collars reading "escaped slave, return to master XYZ for a handsome reward." That's about it for the cities. In the countryside, we have a hell of a lot less evidence. Some say most slaves were just kept constantly chained in pits when they were not working for their masters in the fields. Others have less bleak interpretations, but the truth is that we just don't know that well, since most of the written sources are about the cities.
@crockstonyt7 ай бұрын
That was the strangest sponsor for a KZbin video I've ever seen
@cornmono3665Ай бұрын
The ad for a business in Astoria blindsided me. Really good ad though!
@christophercohen4187 ай бұрын
Hey Dr. Ryan! Thanks for more great classical content.
@Backscratchandhalls7 ай бұрын
Forgive me if you've already done so, but please do consider an episode on the seemingly ubiquitous use of lead
@postblitz6 ай бұрын
I remember an episode on aqueducts where he did talk about how some historians speculate lead-lined pipes were the cause of the insane emperors but it may also not be the case because some sections exist today and the lead was quickly covered with calcifications from the water flowing into it, blocking the lead from escaping the lining of the tubes.
@Backscratchandhalls6 ай бұрын
@@postblitz oh nice I'll check that out - thanks for the suggestion! On a related note, clearly there was a lot of sophisticated plumbing in Rome, would love a deep dive into that if he hasn't already made one
@adamwelch43367 ай бұрын
😮 there still a roman bath open today! Holy crap thats cool! Also has anyone ever made one at home?🤔 I mean people have pools but do they have baths like acient Rome!
@dyskelia3 ай бұрын
Steve from Woosh is a real one for sponsoring
@sarahbezold20084 ай бұрын
That sounds absolutely top tier cozy
@Mattt57 ай бұрын
watching from the bath 🛁
@TattooedTraveler7 ай бұрын
Thank you for this bro, as many Roman Baths I've been in, I just learned the most here.
@emrage7 ай бұрын
Always making Fridays interesting
@toldinstone7 ай бұрын
Deeply appreciated!
@SobekLOTFC7 ай бұрын
Keep up the awesome work, Garrett 👍
@seltzman7 ай бұрын
thank you for the content, please do continue
@aeliusdawn5 ай бұрын
I was fortunate enough to visit quite a handful of Roman baths a few months ago. It must've been quite a sight to behold back then.
@JohnVance7 ай бұрын
I live nowhere near Steve but if I did I’d break something just to have him fix it 😂
@RizzstrainingOrder667 ай бұрын
im especially interested into roman bathing, love the video thanks :D
@jacktribble52537 ай бұрын
This makes me very interested in the history of pump-assisted water filters.
@jag125497 ай бұрын
Hey Dr. Ryan Is there any chance you could do a video on the waterproofing techniques of the Romans? Today we still have a hard time developing materials that can make a shower pan that doesn’t leak. How did they have a pool on top of a furnace with no leaks? And some pools without leaks even today? What were their methods for large water containment?
@TheArchesIsleofMan7 ай бұрын
The Romans made extensive use of concrete using pozzolanic lime derived from volcanic activity. This mixture made a very waterproof concrete . They also made extensive use of lead to create pipework that was very waterproof
@chriskucia83487 ай бұрын
Was thinking along the same lines - I'd really be interested in learning about Roman plumbing such as the lead pipes and valves, how they were constructed and how the designs changed over time.
@QuantumHistorian7 ай бұрын
@@TheArchesIsleofMan Not sure pozzolanic concrete was used "extensively", especially outside of Italy. But yes, their default material for hydraulic engineering seems to have been lead: a cheap metal (essentially a waste product of silver smelting) that doesn't rust and is easy to work. It does come with some health drawbacks, that some Romans at least were aware of, but the feasible alternatives were thin on the ground.
@jag125497 ай бұрын
@@TheArchesIsleofMan i understand that they used cement and lead and i understand the cement was made with volcanic ash which had lime in it but regardless, concrete is porous and needs something to seal it. If have ever actually tried building a pool or shower pan you would understand the question better
@jag125497 ай бұрын
@@chriskucia8348 apparently for the most part water continuously flowed which helped them not to get lead poisoning as it didn’t have time to seep in. And i would guess its most likely a gate valve when they needed it but yeah id be very interested in seeing the evolution of their valves
@caiuspostumiusturrinus10247 ай бұрын
We need to rebuild them all here in America. Every so many miles there should be huge Roman baths rest stops.
@bluebagelman1920Ай бұрын
Check out Korean bath houses if you’re near a Korean community! Conan O Brian has a great clip on KZbin of him visiting one in California. Based on my experience of visiting hamams and an onsen in Japan, it’s the closest you can get to an ancient Roman bath experience.
@canadianhistoryisradical6 ай бұрын
Your channel has inspired me to do a similar style of videos but for indigenous america; I have often gotten many questions where i have thought "if i could just write a book answering these questions!" This format allows me answer many of the questions ive gotten over the years. To my fellow viewers, please feel free to ask any questions you have about indigenous culture. Keep in mind im much more knowledgeable on northern great plains, and the pacific northwest and partly the great lakes. However atlantic/martimes and the further you go from the aforementioned, the more rusty i am on the info. But i could always research the topic using google scholar. Look out for my "toldwhilestoned" series on this channel or maybe another one designated for it. But hope to incorporate atleast one persons question lol
@Adsper20006 ай бұрын
Not a question, but I personally find the most iconic part about Pacific Northwest indigenous culture to be the pre-contact woolly dogs that were bred for their wool like sheep. Extremely fascinating method to compensate for not having any other domesticated animals that can be sheared. You should talk about that.
@Perebynis7 ай бұрын
From the Dpt. "What have the Romans ever done for us?"
@fuegoBunni5 ай бұрын
Subscribed purely for the Astoria, Queens business’ ad
@stevehageman67855 ай бұрын
These are just very interesting. Thanks for making them. :-)
@WORLDCRUSHER90007 ай бұрын
0:53 this is like the craziest thing i've ever seen
@phlogistanjones27227 ай бұрын
It is indeed a thing of wonder. A public work that is a thing of beauty and utility is something governments should strive for. Some say should be limited to. Peaceful Skies.
@gcash88927 ай бұрын
That is a cross section if that wasn't clear to you.
@sforza2097 ай бұрын
I believe those are the bath of Caracalla.
@QuantumHistorian7 ай бұрын
You should watch more of the channel, he uses that image in about half his videos lol
@mileslong39046 ай бұрын
Not built anymore because our governments hate us.
@mpetersen67 ай бұрын
One aspect of Roman baths still exists today. I gave up using the hot tub at the YMCA I'm a member of. They have it posted that you must shower before using the hot tub. And a suit is required. I have seen people using the hot tub in their underwear. But then I've seen guys taking a shower in their shorts.
@jaybee92697 ай бұрын
Most people are pretty gormless. But not everyone.
@neon-kitty4 ай бұрын
Would love to see a video on pre-Roman Greek/Hellenistic bathing culture, too, and how it differed from Roman bathing.
@rmp74006 ай бұрын
"Returning to our topic...." (After a commercial break🤗) Very classy!🏆
@unquietthoughts7 ай бұрын
New toldinstone video just dropped
@TheHylianBatman7 ай бұрын
An excellent sponsor! Although I kinda wish this video discussed what, exactly, the different rooms and such were for. If that knowledge is known.
@sarcasmo577 ай бұрын
The Romans did some amazing things.
@andreibaciu75187 ай бұрын
Normal Sponsors: Nord VPN; Raycon; Raid Shadow Legends This guy: "Do you have clogged pipes?"
@slightlytwistedagain7 ай бұрын
"Heated vessels of bronze or lead". I find it hard to believe that there were lead vessels heated for this. For a start its low melting point would result in holes developing having direct contact with the fire. I suspect there was at least a metal sheet between the fire and the lead vessel. Also and more importantly, lead is an incredibly soft metal that it doesn't take much to deform it. Adding heat increases the ease at which lead can be molded. I have a feeling these vessels were actually brick but lead lined. That way you keep the heat gentle and steady on the lead metal. Bronze must have been insanely expensive or it was difficult to manufacture due to a lack of furnaces being hot enough to produce the alloy, but then the Romans wouldn't have been able to create its bricks. Interesting none the less. I suppose you have to keep in mind that the Roman Empire spanned several hundred years so the technology must have advanced from lead lined brick vessels to bronze vessel.
@holyknightthatpwns7 ай бұрын
Do you have any evidence for this, or is it just off your head? Do you even work with lead?
@betterdonotanswer7 ай бұрын
The water can actually be boiled in any plastic bottle placed right into an open fire, so a lead vessel will survive the heating indeed as long as there is water in it.
@slightlytwistedagain6 ай бұрын
@@hashbrownz1999 The issue is the naked flame, it can get hotter than the melting point of lead. With lead being a heavy soft metal as well as the lead vessel being full of the weight of water, eventually the vessel would mold into a lump. It's why I mention there was either a metal sheet between, or a lead lined brick vessel due to bricks being rigid.
@boxsterman774 ай бұрын
The melting point of lead is 621.
@BamBamBigelow..7 ай бұрын
Steve is the MAN
@Musza207 ай бұрын
Love your videos mate, keep em coming 👍😁
@ronriesinger77557 ай бұрын
Somewhat similar to the baths I recently visited in Budapest!
@stevemccarty63846 ай бұрын
Public baths are also popular in Japan.
@Krill_all_health_insuranceCEOs7 ай бұрын
7:00 WHAT'S PUBLIC STORAGE DOING IN ROME?? 🤔
@ktm40424 ай бұрын
Most underrated comment in this thread lol!
@oldi1846 ай бұрын
Dr. Ryan, could you make a video about those mysterious objects Roman dodecahedrons? What do you think these items were used for? What are the leading official (and unofficial) theories? Thank you.
@MarkH102 ай бұрын
Absolutely hilarious ad.
@kingjoe3rd4 ай бұрын
4:24 there is a lot about that picture that doesn't add up as far as engineering goes.
@Latinkon7 ай бұрын
Lucius Modestus from _Thermae Romae_ approves of this video 👍
@skiptoacceptancemdarlin6 ай бұрын
0:50 holy shit is that Steve Martin?
@lesliecarr3126 ай бұрын
Hmmm. Wow. Algeria has an ancient Roman bath that actually still works? I imagine the sanitation there has improved dramatically in the past 2,000 years if people are actually using it. Fantastic.
@typograf627 ай бұрын
Smoke from furnaces tend to deposit soot in the chimney. This may cause fire in the chimney if not cleaned away. I wonder how the Romans managed that? The hypocaust could be cleaned (slave children probably were very useful "instruments" for that). Was it nescessary to clean the tubes in the walls? I think too much, I am not fat enough.
@toldinstone7 ай бұрын
The hypocaust was cleaned on a regular basis (the task was often assigned to condemned criminals), but I don't think it was possible to scrub the tubuli.
@nunyabiznes336 ай бұрын
@@toldinstoneis the tubuli exposed to rain water? If yes, maybe that help keep it clean? But, won't that make a mess in the other parts of the heating system?
@TetsuShima7 ай бұрын
Speaking of roman baths, it's impossible to forget the iconic scene from the 1979 movie "Caligula" in which the priestesses of Isis practice passionate sapphism in the goddess's pool. I don't care what they say about the movie, the cinematography and soundtrack of that scene is pure ART. The Penthouse girls proved to be great nymphs, by the way 😉
@fedyno4reviews7 ай бұрын
Ive been going to the sauna every day for the last 8 years and mademany friends and businesses connections, my skin is great and my muscles relaxed, i think we should bring back baths!
@stevemccarty63846 ай бұрын
During the VN War I was stationed in Japan. They have wonderful public baths and a bunch of us guys would visit them several times a week. They had a sauna and we'd sit in one taking our pulse. After we were good and hot we'd jump into the cold pool and take our pulse as it slowed down. Then it'd be back into the sauna. We'd go back and forth four or five times; when we'd dress and walk back to the base. Talk about sleep! One would sleep like a baby!
@GnomaPhobic7 ай бұрын
I love that people in Algeria are still keeping up the Roman baths.
@rmp74006 ай бұрын
I am perplexed that the British did not!
@felipemonteiro65466 ай бұрын
@@rmp7400Bath water in Bath is contaminated.
@texajp19467 ай бұрын
Nice I love Roman history and the baths is one of my favorite topics
@stevemccarty63846 ай бұрын
The baths employed, probably slaves, who were hair pluckers. They plucked pubic hair and hair that grows in other places. In Rome there were separate baths for men and women. Communal bathing did exist in some cities in the Empire, but generally boys and girls bathed separately.
@christopherevans24456 ай бұрын
Can we talk Roman history with the swoosh plumber while there at our house......
@stephaniesews66037 ай бұрын
Wait what, that sponsor felt like an April fools joke. :D But that looks like a real company....
@234dB6 ай бұрын
please mention wooden and lead pipe aqueducts
@blacksage23757 ай бұрын
Is there any consensus on how hot the baths really were? And how does that compare to today?
@stevemccarty63846 ай бұрын
The hot water in the baths of Bath England is pretty warm. I've put my hand in the water there and it was quite hot. While there, one is told not to put ones hand into the water. The geo thermal pools in Yellowstone are boiling hot! So I think the hot water in most Roman baths was quite hot indeed. Hotter than tepid anyway. They also had a caldarium, or cold water pools. I don't know how cold the water was. I don't think the Romans had refrigeration, but one never knows. Those Romans were pretty tricky. The floors in the hot pool room was extremely hot, so hot that one couldn't walk in there in bare feet.
@brianedwards71427 ай бұрын
Imagining the Roman version of Spirited Away where a young girl is trapped in a bathhouse run by lemures.
@stevemccarty63846 ай бұрын
Romans generally did not venture out at night. The streets in Roman cities were dangerous with roaming bands of thugs taking advantage of folks walking around. There was no police force. There was no fire department...usually. Romans had to fend for themselves if they ventured out at night. There were pubs and inns. Cleopatra and Brutus liked to dress like commoners and go out and visit the bars and have a fling playing like regular people. Doing so was dangerous, but as the story goes they enjoyed the freedom and wild times.
@jussikankinen9409Ай бұрын
Did they use whirlpools to lift water
@connectingthedots1007 ай бұрын
Amazing advertising!
@CarletonTorpin7 ай бұрын
I like the local ads you've put in the video. It beats a corporate conglomerate brainwashing campaign.
@HellenicJohn7 ай бұрын
🤯This is 2000 year old technology........
@JohnDaubSuperfan3696 ай бұрын
How many times are you going to retitle this video?
@misterx1687 ай бұрын
did romans pee in the baths like people do in hotel pools nowadays?
@Game_Hero6 ай бұрын
they were as homo sapiens as we are, so yes
@stevemccarty63846 ай бұрын
Since urine was a valuable asset in Roman I'd think that a good Roman would not pee in the pool, but in a tub supplied for that use. Clothing was cleaned using urine, the ammonia being used as a cleaning agent. This causes me to wonder if one's newly cleaned toga might have a bit of an unpleasant odor.
@Krill_all_health_insuranceCEOs7 ай бұрын
I guess the closest thing to these today are public indoor pools. Some are pretty nice, but not as nice as these traditional baths if the renderings are accurate representations.
@stevemccarty63846 ай бұрын
I don't like to swim in public pools. I think that they are about 50% kiddy pee.
@Krill_all_health_insuranceCEOs5 ай бұрын
@@stevemccarty6384 lmao probably. Still fun places tho if one likes the water. Kroc centers & YMCA pools are fun.
@NorthForkFisherman4 ай бұрын
Nipple tiles? Now I've heard everything. 😁
@Seafariireland7 ай бұрын
Interesting!
@zekelucente97024 ай бұрын
Are you talking about MANBLOV?
@levanthasis2 ай бұрын
- In any case, regardless of the quality of the pool-water; remarkable design, elegance and the amount of work was established by Romans also regarding their Bathing-Culture. -
@pggemmiti93857 ай бұрын
Anything about Caesarea Maratima in Israel is of my interest. Do let us know about Roman baths or equivalent there.
@reeyees507 ай бұрын
Ancient waterparks
@sarahd12506 ай бұрын
Can you talk about Roman bedtime
@stevemccarty63846 ай бұрын
Romans generally went to bed when it got dark. They had beds with rope mattresses. They awoke early and had a glass of water. Then they go and get their dole of wheat. They'd take it to a local bakery and turn it in where the wheat was ground to flower and made into bread. Then they'd go to work. Romans had many jobs, children often working in the family business. After work they'd go and pick up their bread, now freshly baked. They'd eat and then maybe after a nap they'd go to the local bath where they'd spend the rest of the afternoon. At dusk Romans had an evening meal after which they'd socialize and prepare for bed.
@northernengland6 ай бұрын
Great video, and NO damn music.
@oftin_wong5 ай бұрын
In roman baths the way in was always a discreet ... 'rear entry'
@NorthForkFisherman4 ай бұрын
You're thinking Greeks. Romans 1/2 OK with that. You could pitch but don't catch.
@NewOldResearch24 күн бұрын
Soo cool
@robertgiles91247 ай бұрын
I wonder if any were ever used for swimming.
@stevemccarty63846 ай бұрын
Why not? I'm sure the dog paddle was a Roman stroke. No diving however. Not deep enough.
@uknighted21314 күн бұрын
I am glad my bath is not a repulsive blend of oil, sweat, and filth 😂
@jklm0116 ай бұрын
So public pools, but fancier.
@madmattdigs95187 ай бұрын
I always imagined them being gross. Crowds of people bathing all day. No chlorine. Yuck!
@stevemccarty63846 ай бұрын
Indeed, no chlorine and I imagine that all of the oil that Romans poured onto their bodies must have come off into the pool. But I also think that water was drained off and replaced with fresh constantly. That is what happens in Bath England's Roman bath anyway. I've been there three times and no, I did not dive in. The water is light green in color and I could not see the bottom and it isn't very deep. The pool is lined in lead sheets. Some people think that the Roman's usage of lead is what led to their demise, but recently studies have been made that disprove that theory. Roman pipes were made of lead and so were some drinking vessels.
@airplanetowardsthesky32657 ай бұрын
how much lead?????!
@stevemccarty63846 ай бұрын
Lots and lots of lead.
@tomholroyd75197 ай бұрын
I wonder if they played chess like they do today in the baths of Szechenyi in Budapest. Well maybe not chess.
@Krill_all_health_insuranceCEOs7 ай бұрын
3:33 the fact ill never nuse a glorious Roman bath room or bath house is a deep regret in my life I MEAN JUST LOOKIT 'EM!! fer chrissakes! Curse you, "fall" of Rome!! *shakes fist*
@stevejohnson33577 ай бұрын
There are a handful of companies and products that populate these videos but not this channel. Personally, I'd like to find a good butcher shop in my area but if it's Queens, no use for me.
@oregontrailgenxer2 ай бұрын
Was their bacteria galore (legionnaire's, etc) in these baths unbeknownst to the Romans? #benelava
@serviustullus72045 ай бұрын
The baths were not as disgusting as you suggested. Sour grapes, my pal.