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Houses can have any number of bathrooms -- it depends on the people who built it, and on whether the people who bought it later added any more bathrooms to the house.

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Q: How many bath rooms are there in a rich Tudor house?
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How many rooms were in a typical house in colonial time?

There were about 3 - 4 rooms in a colonial house


How many baths were their in a roman bath?

Several. The smallest I saw in Italy were two rooms with two different baths, but the largest had 4-5 rooms. It just depended on who the bath was for. The wealthy had larger complexes for baths than the common man.


How many stories does a Tudor house have?

Stupid I wuldnt be able to answer the question thats why i asked you


How many baths are in the roman baths bath?

Several. The smallest I have seen in Italy had two baths. The largest 4-5 rooms. The Roman baths in England have very large rooms with pools as well as a large outside pool for bathing.


How did rich Tudor houses differ from the middle ages?

The biggest difference in Tudor houses from the houses of the Middle Ages was that the architecture of the Tudor houses took advantage of chimneys, which allowed fireplaces to be distributed throughout the house. The chimney was invented in the 12th century, but they were uncommonly used for quite a while because they were expensive, required expertise to build, and needed regular maintenance. They were gradually adopted, and gradually had their effects on architecture. The medieval houses typically had open fires on hearths in the middles of rooms. Smoke was vented upwards through the room and out through holes in the walls or roof. The result, in terms of architecture, was that any room with a fire had to be very high. It was not usually possible to build rooms on a higher level in such a space, so the room nearly always went to the roof. Since few such rooms could exist in a single building, there was usually only one. In a manor house or castle keep, this room was the great hall, usually a huge space partitioned into smaller areas for offices, living quarters, dining areas, and so on. In Tudor architecture, the chimneys made it possible to have individual rooms heated. The members of the family of the lord of a manor could not only have private rooms of their own, but each could be heated with a fireplace. A room could be designated to be a library or office could be heated with a fireplace. The great hall lost many of its functions, and was likely to be much smaller, with a much lower ceiling, and less drafty, with cleaner air, because it was heated by fires in one or more fireplaces, instead of on a hearth in the middle of the room. There are links to pictures below. The first is a medieval great hall. The other two are half-timbered manor houses of the medieval and Tudor periods. The chimneys on the medieval house were probably added long after the house was built.