Bath, Noth-East Somerset.
This was the city of Bath, in Somerset, England.
The city of Bath.
They built them in Britain, Pompeii, and most important Bath, England
No, the Roman baths were not mixed sexes, at least not in the imperial baths in the city of Rome itself. The women went in the morning and the men went in the afternoon. In privately owned baths, it would be up to the discretion of the owner of the bathhouse.
Many still exist today and you can see the ruins. In Pompeii I was in one, but there were many more on the 65 acre site. Rome has about 11 or 12 public baths and each city usually had one public. This doesn't include the private ones. In England the baths in Bath, England still are there to see even though the water is polluted, so the Romans built baths every where they went.
There were Roman baths all around the Roman empire. They were usually found in Forums of big cities, like the one in the city Rome.
The name of the Roman baths was thermae. Only in the city of Rome, where there were many baths, there were distinctive names for baths: the Baths of Agrippa, the Baths of Nero, the Thermae Etrusci, the Baths of Titus, the Baths of Domitian, the Baths of Trajan, the Baths of Caracalla and the Baths of Diocletian. Thermae Etrusci is a term coined by historians. They were commissioned by Claudius Etruscus, a freedman at the court of the emperor Claudius who became the head of the imperial financial administration.
There was swimming in ancient Rome. The baths of Caracalla in the city of Rome had a swimming pool and so did some of the other largest Roman baths around the empire. Most people went to the baths daily.
There is a town in the county of Devon in southwest England by the name of Kingsbridge but it isn't a city. In the UK, there is a subtle difference between a town and a city.
The Roman Baths complex is a site of historical interest in the English city of Bath. The house is a well-preserved Roman site for public bathing.
Colchester
Your question is impossible to answer accurately due to the fact that there has never been a proper count of them. There were the famous imperial baths which we can count, but there were numerous private baths throughout the city. Also many of the upper class had baths in their houses and villas. Remember too, that anywhere the Romans had a town or a military fort, they had baths.