Queen Elizabeth I famously had a bath
once a year, 'whether she needed it or not' during her reign in the 16th
century. By the Georgian era 150 years later, advances in ceramics and the
delivery of cleaner water allowed the better-off classes to be more fastidious
in bathing, leading eventually to development of spa towns like Epsom, Bath , Leamington, Cheltenham and Harrogate .
However this new health fad could also be used as a cover for more licentious
activities.
Ian
Betts is the Museum
of London archaeology
expert on building materials and ceramics. Speaking at the Letherhead
Institute on 20 September, he explained that he had become interested in
Georgian baths through noticing tile work in some of the buildings he visited,
then got funding to study the subject seriously.
The
Romans had a sophisticated system for bathing, he began. Oil was applied
to the skin and bathers went into hot and cold plunge pools to make them sweat
the dirt from their pores This was scraped off and they
were then massaged. Once the Romans left Britain , their baths were
abandoned. Anglo-Saxons bathed in rivers, if at all, and sometimes these were
dammed to create a bathing pool, but by the 13th century there are only a few references
to wooden tubs used for bathing.
The
Dark Ages arrived in Britain
in the fifth century and the rest of western Europe but the Roman Empire
survived in the east, based at Byzantium (Constantinople ). The Islamic communities that
superseded that picked up the idea of Roman-style baths from there. In the
early 18th century elements of Islamic life became fashionable in western Europe
and Roman-style bathing returned in the form of Turkish baths, using the same
system of hot and cold pools.
In
England , the first modern
baths were found in country houses such as at Carshalton and Claremont . Some had a single pool,
others both hot and cold. In London , commercial
bagnios, as they were known, were established around Covent
Garden . The Italian 'bagnio' was quickly anglicised to 'bendigo '. Covent Garden became a hotbed of creativity with artists,
artists' suppliers, booksellers, bookbinders, printmakers, theatres, actors,
writers and a booming sex industry. The bagnios were aimed at the rich, with
fine furnishings, high-quality tableware and steep prices. They catered
for both sexes and upstairs rooms could be rented by the hour or the
night.
Many
were really of course just fronts for brothels and famous London madams established their own bagnios.
Hogarth produced a picture of the notorious Betty Careless being carried home
drunk from hers in a sedan chair. She ended her life in the poor house
but others did very well out of the trade. The Harris List, a periodical of the day listing London 's prostitutes, said the bagnios 'provide
both sexes with pleasure'. Others promoted a more respectable image, with
men and women admitted on different days and some advertised that they could
cater for a whole family and their servants.
Spa
towns developed separately from the bagnios. These involved drinking health-giving
water as well as bathing in it, usually fully clothed. They were modelled
on other European spas as at Baden Baden. The city of Bath ,
with its natural hot springs
and rediscovered Roman bath, was an early example.
The
19th century bought high-pressure steam-driven pumps and iron pipes to stand
the resulting loads of water, and local authorities were empowered to supply
all homes. Few then had bathrooms so councils built public baths with
individual slipper baths, wash houses for washing clothes, and later swimming
pools. Urban lower classes were able to keep themselves clean for the
first time. These facilities, and pressure from the Society for the
Suppression of Vice, killed off the remaining bagnios although some buildings
survived as wash houses. There are a very few remnants left in London .
Ian's talk was based on a paper submitted to Transactions London
& Middlesex Archaeology Society which is due out next year when
L&DLHS members will have access to the full text.