All the classes used the Roman baths, rich, poor, male and female.
Nowadays the Roman baths are archaeological sites and tourist attractions.
to make people more smoother
Everyone in Roman Society. Large cities had public baths that was open to all.
a place for socializing
Concrete was used in the Roman baths because of its practicality. Water or heat does not affect it and its durable.
Nowadays the Roman baths are archaeological sites and tourist attractions.
to make people more smoother
Everyone in Roman Society. Large cities had public baths that was open to all.
People would sometimes do business in Public Baths. Basilicas were also used for public meetings.
Roman baths were used to take baths in, the women had a seporate bath room to the men. The women would share a big bath. The men would share a different one.
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.
a place for socializing
The Roman baths were called public baths because they were open to the general public and the cost of entry was very low or even at times completely free. This denoting of them as public baths also differentiated them from the private baths that were run for profit or the baths that were in private homes.
Concrete was used in the Roman baths because of its practicality. Water or heat does not affect it and its durable.
The Roman baths were not religious institutions, they were social institutions. The only bath that was built on/near a shrine was the Roman baths at Bath. It had been a Celtic shrine and the Romans identified the Celtic goddess with their goddess Minerva. However, even here, the baths themselves had no particular religious connotations, except perhaps healing. They were used for recreational purposes and getting clean.
year 2010
No, just regular doors. Vomitoriums were used in the Colosseum.