There’s a room in your home where big things happen. A room where tubs become ships and bubbles become beardsâŚ
Itâs your bathroom!
If you love a soak in a bubble bath or canât wake up without a morning shower, you might wonder how we would ever manage without our bathrooms.
Bathing has certainly changed over the years.
Letâs take a dip into history!
Bathrooms have been around for many, many years. The Ancient Greeks had washrooms â and even running water and
And if you were in India 2,000 years ago, you might have come across a bath â well, if you were very wealthy!
Otherwise, you and everyone else would have to make do with the rivers â which often served as the toilet too. Poo bath anyone?
A little later the Romans became the experts on baths and many survive to this day â you can visit the Roman Spa in the appropriately named Bath!
The Romans had
For the less wealthy there were public baths, or thermae, which were so popular that enormous amounts of water had to be collected and brought to the cities in aqueducts.
After the fall of the Roman Empire, bathing went out of fashion. In fact many people thought it was a sin to be too clean!
A few centuries later and bathing became popular again. People in the Middle Ages enjoyed a dip in the tub so much they had built communal public baths for men and women.
But as the population grew, it was harder to get enough clean water for public bathing and people started to fear that they would catch diseases from others.
Once again, bathing was out!
Fast forward to Tudor times and, well, bathing still wasnât that common.
Instead of bathing, Tudors would wear linen underclothes â which meant a lot of work for Tudor servants.
But however clean the clothing was, Tudors couldnât hide the fact that most people were just, well, smelly! It was common for people to carry pomades to sniff, made from citrus fruits, spices and vinegar to mask the pong.
By the Georgian Era, being clean and not smelly was on the rise again, and rich people would have a washbasin, set on elaborately designed and expensive stands, in the corner of their bedrooms.
If you were poor, youâd have a bathtub in your kitchen, filled slowly with hot water from the stove and shared by everyone in the family. The most important person of the household (father) would bathe first, then mother and finally the children.
The expression âdonât throw the baby out with the bath waterâ probably came from this period of time when babies were bathing in the (most likely murky) bath water.
And youâd have to share an outside toilet and laundry facilities with your neighbour!
Having a separate room in your home for a bathroom wasnât commonplace until the 20th century, and house
Today we see more and more technology entering the bathroom. Does your bathroom have sensors for automatically turning on lights?
Steam free mirrors? Multiple shower heads with programmable temperatures? Fancy some nice stereo equipment and television to help you relax?
THE LOWDOWN ON LOOS
The humble toilet is something many of us take for granted. However, the next time you flush, just pause a minute to marvel at what is a truly incredible feat of human engineering.
For many centuries people, especially the poor, would go to the loo pretty much anywhere â and the earliest âprivviesâ were nothing much more than a hole over a pit or a seat with a container underneath for the poo and wee.
Even in the Victorian Era, roads and gutters in poorer parts of cities would be full of human waste. And most families would share a privvie with their neighbours.
In Tudor times, if you were rich you could use one of the âGreat Houses of Easementâ â these were communal loos which were basically a hole situated over a river.
Other people would use a chamber pot â a china bowl with a handle which could be kept under a bed.
Youâd do your business and then empty the pot out of the window, either into your garden or â watch out below â the street below!
If you werenât observant, you might get a nasty surprise when walking down a Tudor road!
In 1596 Sir John Harrington invented Britainâs first flushing toilet. Even though he was a cousin of Queen Elizabeth, she refused to use it because she wanted the toilet to come to her and to not have to go into a different room.
A big breakthrough happened in the 18th and 19th Centuries when sewers were built in many cities, helping to carry the poo and wee safely away. Although this made a massive improvement to peopleâs health, they werenât without risks.
Toxic gases could escape back into the privvies â sometimes causing an explosion (you wouldnât want to be sitting on one when that happened).
In 1775 Alexander Cummings, a
And in 17891 a Thomas Crapper invented the flushing loo as we know today, which helped make loos a lot less smelly.
Today, you can choose a loo in pretty much any colour you like these days, to match your bath or your wallpaper â even your pet!