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left-of-center2012

(34,195 posts)
Wed Nov 17, 2021, 10:52 AM Nov 2021

How the Ancient Romans Went to the Bathroom

'A new book (The Other Dark Matter: The Science and Business of Turning Waste into Wealth and Health) by journalist Lina Zeldovich traces the management of human waste—and underscores poop’s potential as a valuable resource'

“I live my life in the gutter,” says Ann Olga Koloski-Ostrow with a chuckle. An anthropologist at Brandeis University, she considers her “official” title the Queen of Latrines. For the past 25 years, she has taken that label literally, spending much of her time in ancient Roman gutters. “There’s a lot you can find out about a culture when you look at how they managed their toilets,” Koloski-Ostrow says. “That’s why I study it.”

The word “latrine,” or latrina in Latin, was used to describe a private toilet in someone’s home, usually constructed over a cesspit. Public toilets were called foricae. They were often attached to public baths, whose water was used to flush down the filth. Because the Roman Empire lasted for 2,000 years and stretched from Africa to the British Isles, Roman toilet attitudes varied geographically and over time. Generally speaking, however, the Romans had fewer inhibitions than people today. They were reasonably content sitting in close quarters—after all, Roman theater seats were rather close, too, about 12 inches apart. And they were similarly at ease when taking communal dumps.

Though they look advanced for an ancient civilization, Roman public toilets were far from glamorous. The white marble seats gleaming in the sun may look clean now, but that was hardly the case when these facilities were operational. They had low roofs and tiny windows that let in little light. People sometimes missed the holes, so the floors and seats were often soiled. The air stunk. “Think about it—how often does someone come and wipe off that marble?” Koloski-Ostrow asks. In fact, she thinks the facilities were so unwelcoming that the empire’s elite only used them under great duress.

At the height of its power, Rome had to clean up after about a million people. An average adult produces about a pound of poo a day, so a 500-ton pile of feces is a mind-boggling image. While Roman farmers understood the waste’s fertilizing value and put some of it back into the fields, the city couldn’t recycle it fast enough. To flush that much excrement out of the city daily, one needs a truly massive system.

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/how-the-ancient-romans-went-to-the-bathroom-180979056/

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How the Ancient Romans Went to the Bathroom (Original Post) left-of-center2012 Nov 2021 OP
That was interesting, FoxNewsSucks Nov 2021 #1
I've had nightmares about this FirstLight Nov 2021 #2
Ackk!! Bayard Nov 2021 #3
Anyone who romanticizes qazplm135 Nov 2021 #4

FoxNewsSucks

(10,434 posts)
1. That was interesting,
Wed Nov 17, 2021, 11:09 AM
Nov 2021

and really makes me thankful for modern plumbing.

I can't imagine using the same communal "sponge on a stick" after pooping.

FirstLight

(13,360 posts)
2. I've had nightmares about this
Wed Nov 17, 2021, 12:13 PM
Nov 2021

literally, like going in a public bathroom and there being no walls between toilets etc.. lol

Bayard

(22,075 posts)
3. Ackk!!
Wed Nov 17, 2021, 12:32 PM
Nov 2021

Reminds me of the Mini-Marathon in Louisville (or was it the regular marathon?), where there were so many runners and not enough porta-potties. The Parks Dept. would dig a big trench for communal usage. No marble.

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