:''This page is on the activity in general - see
thermae for buildings in which it was carried out.''
'
Bathing' played a major part in 'Ancient Roman' culture and society.
Of all the leisure activities, it was one of the most important, since it was part of the daily regimen for men of all classes, and many women as well. Today many cultures see bathing as a very private activity conducted in the home, but bathing in Rome was a communal activity, conducted for the most part in public facilities called
thermae that in some ways resembled modern-day
spas. 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.
[1]
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, 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. The large 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.
Republican bathhouses often had separate bathing facilities for women and men, but by the First Century AD mixed bathing was common and is a practice frequently referred to in
Martial and
Juvenal, as well as in
Pliny and
Quintilian. However, gender separation was restored by
Hadrian.
In addition to bathing food, drink, and sex were also for sale at these Ancient Roman bathhouses.
Further reading
★
ThermeMuseum (Museum of the Thermae) in Heerlen
Thomas A.J. McGinn, The Economy of Prositution in the Roman World. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 2004.
See also
★
Baths_of_Caracalla