
sexualeconomist
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Basically what I said in my post but someone made a meme of it
Basically what I said in my post but someone made a meme of it
Fuck you literally howEgypt mogs
Thsi isn't about who built first it's about the utility of itThe last pyramid was built 1500 years before the first public bath in Rome
Public baths were nasty btw
Yeah but ur comparing civilizations seperated by more than a milleniumThsi isn't about who built first it's about the utility of it
And no they weren't nasty they were self cleaning and has flowing water
Roman Baths in Bath, England, feature a natural spring that still flows with hot, geothermal water, filling the Great Bath and then flowing through a Roman drain into the River Avon.
Here's a more detailed explanation:
- Natural Hot Spring:
The Roman Baths are built over a natural hot spring that bubbles up 1.2 million liters of geothermal-heated water daily, at a temperature of around 45°C (113°F).
- The Great Bath:
This is the largest pool in the Roman Baths complex, and it is filled with the hot water from the spring.
- Roman Drain:
The hot water then flows from the bath complex through a culvert system, known as the Great Drain, and into the River Avon.
- Roman Engineering:
The Romans used sophisticated engineering to create a reservoir around the spring, surrounded by a lead-lined wall, and built drainage systems to prevent silt buildup and allow water to flow through the bath.
- Still Working:
The Roman plumbing, including the drain, is still functional, and the water continues to flow through the site using the pathways built by the Romans.
- No Swimming:
The Roman Baths are no longer used for bathing, and it is not safe to swim in the water due to its high mineral content and potential for bacteria.
- Water Source:
The water is sourced from rainfall on the nearby Mendip Hills, which percolates down through limestone aquifers and is heated by geothermal energy.
- Water Quality:
The thermal waters contain high concentrations of sodium, calcium, chloride, and sulfate ions.
- The Temple of Sulis Minerva:
The spring rises within the courtyard of the Temple of Sulis Minerva, and water from it feeds the Roman Baths.
- King's Bath:
The King's Bath was built using the lower walls of the Roman Spring building as foundations, in the 12th century.
- Egypt had no public utilities for the people just a stupid religion
No false againYeah but ur comparing civilizations seperated by more than a millenium
Romans baths were just giant overcrowded swimming pools but without the chlorine. High turnover rate doesn't necessarily equal clean. Look at indian rivers. When you have thousands of people using it at the same time that shit will get nasty. The only upside is they didn't scrub in the water.
Retard. The pyramids weren't built in the late period. By the time Rome ascended Egypt was under Greek rule. They didn't need to build large public baths because they had smaller urban centres and the nile was sufficient.No false again
Egypt and rome existed side by side in its late period
even Egyptian had the technology and organization skill to build such thing they didn't build it
And you were comparing Ancient Egypt to classical antiquity.And you are comparing modern day standards to rome
Swimming pool are stagnant bodies of water you moron
No you are being retarted ther are literally historical Account of Roman baths being clean
Still they offered public some utility even if not the best to dismiss it it dumb still better than giant triangles for dead rulers
Yes i know thatRetard. The pyramids weren't built in the late period. By the time Rome ascended Egypt was under Greek rule. They didn't need to build large public baths because they had smaller urban centres and the nile was sufficient.
Cope harder with your mid slime civilizationAnd you were comparing Ancient Egypt to classical antiquity.
Ok so the water is replaced once a week or something?Swimming pools aren't stagnant. A simple google search would tell you that. How can someone be wrong on virtually everything
They built whatever public utilities were relevant for the populace.Yes i know that
Irrelevant the thing is egypt even at that time has the technology to build public utilities but didn't
Egyptian live in mud homes no urban culture exited
No tavern's bars public houses banks
Nothing
Just an endless slum of homes and a giant palace or something
Cope harder with your mid slime civilization
Wrong again. They didn't have water flowing 24/7. That would have been a massive waste.Ok so the water is replaced once a week or something?
The Romans has complex flowing water 24/7
Both Carthaginians and Romans had Bath rooms, and sophisticated plumbing, drainage, and water systems. They were Leading this technology at the Time.Thsi isn't about who built first it's about the utility of it
And no they weren't nasty they were self cleaning and has flowing water
Roman Baths in Bath, England, feature a natural spring that still flows with hot, geothermal water, filling the Great Bath and then flowing through a Roman drain into the River Avon.
Here's a more detailed explanation:
- Natural Hot Spring:
The Roman Baths are built over a natural hot spring that bubbles up 1.2 million liters of geothermal-heated water daily, at a temperature of around 45°C (113°F).
- The Great Bath:
This is the largest pool in the Roman Baths complex, and it is filled with the hot water from the spring.
- Roman Drain:
The hot water then flows from the bath complex through a culvert system, known as the Great Drain, and into the River Avon.
- Roman Engineering:
The Romans used sophisticated engineering to create a reservoir around the spring, surrounded by a lead-lined wall, and built drainage systems to prevent silt buildup and allow water to flow through the bath.
- Still Working:
The Roman plumbing, including the drain, is still functional, and the water continues to flow through the site using the pathways built by the Romans.
- No Swimming:
The Roman Baths are no longer used for bathing, and it is not safe to swim in the water due to its high mineral content and potential for bacteria.
- Water Source:
The water is sourced from rainfall on the nearby Mendip Hills, which percolates down through limestone aquifers and is heated by geothermal energy.
- Water Quality:
The thermal waters contain high concentrations of sodium, calcium, chloride, and sulfate ions.
- The Temple of Sulis Minerva:
The spring rises within the courtyard of the Temple of Sulis Minerva, and water from it feeds the Roman Baths.
- King's Bath:
The King's Bath was built using the lower walls of the Roman Spring building as foundations, in the 12th century.
- Egypt had no public utilities for the people just a stupid religion