Roman Toilets And Sewer System Essay

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Ancient Toilets and Sewer Systems Roman Toilets In ancient Rome, latrines were often affixed to the public bathhouses and were constructed with necessity in mind rather than privacy. Side by side seats were constructed of pierced stone or wood and placed above a stream of water supplied from the sophisticated aqueduct system for which the Romans were well known. These seats were not enclosed individually as are modern toilet facilities, but rather in long rows quite close together. Lacking the commercial toilet tissue as we know today, the Roman therefore used sponges on sticks for the purpose of personal cleansing. However, these were shared by everyone with minimal rinsing between uses in a small stream of water which ran in front of the …show more content…

However, these were usually placed not in a separate room as one might expect, but instead located in or near the kitchen. These commodes were located above the cesspit where all of the household garbage would be disposed therein and intermittently cleaned by “manure merchants.” The refuse and excrement was then sold and used as fertilizer for various crops. Moreover, crude toilets were also discovered in the ruins at Pompeii. These were likewise located in or near the kitchens and were not capable of flushing. For those who were not fortunate enough to possess an indoor latrine, chamber pots were used. Emptying the chamber pots into the streets or cesspits along the streets was a common practice during this era, often from high windows. The ancient Juvenal wrote that a poor unfortunate soul may be the recipient of the chamber pot’s contents raining down on them as they walked along the streets. Likewise for this same reason, some ancient cities were equipped with stepping stones or high curbs in consideration of the waste flowing through the streets on its way to the …show more content…

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