I am not sure what you are asking. The baths were very popular and were used everyday by everyone. They had steam rooms, hot baths, cold baths, even services of other sorts. Business was done in the baths and there were games played there as well. It was the centerpiece of the Roman world.
Everyone in Roman Society. Large cities had public baths that was open to all.
All the classes used the Roman baths, rich, poor, male and female.
Roman toilets were not called baths, they were called foricae. Baths were called thermae and they were social centers in addition to being places to bathe. All the thermae (baths) had foricae (toilets).
The water supply for the Roman baths came from the same source as all water in Rome, the aqueducts.
Roman baths did not, as the question implies make things "worse". Ancient Roman baths were built first in Rome and later became a part of all large Roman cities and in cities Rome conquered that were deemed large enough to have them. Wealthy Romans often had their own private baths. Many Roman cities and conquered ones had indoor plumbing fed by waters carried in from Roman built aqueducts. Public baths were in a sense part of Roman genius and part of Roman culture. Some of the baths were fed by natural spring waters. The baths in some places were so sophisticated that they were heated. The baths were ideal for Roman citizens who could not afford private ones. The baths served not only as a place to keep clean, but were also recreational and a place for people to gather and meet.
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.
It was all the Romans who built it and there ideas not one in general
There is no record of a Roman emperor ever actually usinga public bath, as far as I know. There would be no need, because all the imperial houses had their own private baths. However, he certainly would be there at the opening of the imperial baths, attending the sacrifices and all the dedication ceremonies and usually granting free access for a certain length of time.
No, but the baths all had latrines somewhere in the building. Roman toilets (latrinae) were outdoors and were communal. The Romans did not feel the need for privacy. A latrina found at Ostia had seats along three walls of a square shape. The fort side was open and all the seats were clearly visible. There were 15 seats. The latrinae in the baths were part of the vestibule .
roman rulers
All the baths had to be paid for. It was a small amount but they still did have a charge.Roman baths were not free, but they were cheap enough so that even the poorest people could afford to go to the bath at least once a week. For the more wealthy it was usually every day.
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