All over the place. The Romans were "clean freaks" and wherever they settled, a bath house went up, even the military forts had baths. The city of Rome itself had over 1,000 baths, some public, many private.
Yes, Romans did build the roman baths...if they didn't, it wouldn't be called ''Roman-Bath''
They built them in Britain, Pompeii, and most important Bath, England
Aqueducts supplied the baths with water.
the first roman baths were built by the end of the first century
Wealthier Romans paid a fee to get into the baths. Probably a few Sesterces.
I guess your question is what was the public bath heated for? The Romans started their baths with a cold plunge bath. They then went in a room with warm air to warm up. The moved into a hot room for a hot bath. Finally they went to a sauna room.
The Romans had built public baths there using the mineral springs and this gave rise to the name.
No effect. After the fall of the Roman Empire the Roman baths fell into disuse and there were no baths in Europe for many centuries. Modern baths are based on modern plumbing. Modern public baths do not have a cold-plunge baths, a sauna, a gym and massage like the Roman baths.
To arrive they would be wearing their ordinary clothes. In the baths they would not wear anything to be massaged or while they were using a stygril. In the actual baths [there is evidence that] they bathed naked or wore special garments, that they used for exercising perhaps.
Caldarium: Hot bath Tepidarium: Warm bath Frigidarium: Cold bath Apodyterium: Thermal bath Impluvium: Rainwater bath Viridarium: Greenhouse Atrium: Courtyard, Reception area
The Romans used Bath Houses when they wished to clean themselves, they were like large pools that many could clean themselves in at the same time as others.
The Romans were normal people like us but did things slightly different to us. there idea of a bath were public baths were they would meat pals, get clean and conduct buisness