古地中海浴场和沐浴

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摘要

对古代地中海浴场和沐浴的研究现在是如此普遍,以至于很容易被遗忘,在20世纪后期之前,这些学科受到的学术关注相对较少,除了罗马伟大的帝国温泉,它自文艺复兴以来一直吸引着建筑师和古物学家。沐浴场所是罗马及其帝国最常见和最重要的城市建筑类型之一。它们的大小不等,从亲密的到不朽的,它们是生活和日常生活中不可或缺的一部分。从不列颠群岛到幼发拉底河,它们在地中海及其他地区的出现,说明了罗马统治和文化影响的广泛性。罗马风格的浴场和公共浴场,用于放松和感官愉悦,以及卫生,成为各省罗马人的标志。浴场通常是罗马征服后最早建造的建筑之一,通常由当地精英建立和资助。只有最富有的家庭才有自己的家庭浴室,所以公共浴室是所有年龄和社会各个阶层的男人和女人花时间洗澡、放松、娱乐的地方,有时还会穿过小路。男人和女人有时因建筑或日程安排而分开,但可能经常一起洗澡。朋友和情人之间以及妓女之间的非正式会面也时有发生。罗马温泉通常包括为各种活动设计的空间,从演讲厅和图书馆到运动场和花园。它们是政治和商业集会的场所。希腊公共浴场(balaneia)的规模比罗马的继承者要小,在最近的学术研究中也取得了自己的成就。希腊浴室建筑在希腊化时期达到顶峰,在希腊、西西里岛和意大利南部,尤其是在埃及。特别有趣的是对沐浴实践演变的研究,从希腊人在相对较小的建筑群中的个人体验,到希腊化和罗马共和时期的技术进步,再到罗马帝国鼎盛时期的大温泉中的社会沐浴。出版物代表了各种各样的方法,重点是文学来源、考古发掘、建筑形式、技术等等。随着实地调查和发掘工作的不断增加,新的问题为古代浴场和沐浴提供了新的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Ancient Mediterranean Baths and Bathing
Studies of ancient Mediterranean baths and bathing are now so ubiquitous that it is easily forgotten that these subjects received relatively little scholarly attention before the late 20th century, with the exception of the great imperial thermae of Rome that have fascinated architects and antiquarians since the Renaissance. Bathing establishments were among the most common and the most important types of civic architecture in Rome and its empire. They range in size from intimate to monumental, and they were an integral part of lives and daily routines. Their appearance across the Mediterranean world and beyond, from the British Isles to the Euphrates, speaks to the expanse of Roman rule and cultural influence. Roman-style baths and communal bathing for relaxation and sensory pleasure, as well as hygiene, became trademarks of Romanitas in the provinces. Baths were often among the first structures built after Roman conquest, often established and funded by members of the local elite. Only the wealthiest families had their own domestic bath complexes, so public baths were places where men and women of all ages and all levels of society spent time washing, relaxing, recreating, and sometimes crossing paths. Men and woman were sometimes segregated by architecture or scheduling, but probably often bathed together. Informal meetings also occurred, between friends and lovers, and with prostitutes. Roman thermae often included spaces designed for varied activities, from lecture halls and libraries to exercise grounds and gardens. They were places for politics and business gatherings. More modest in size than their Roman successors, Greek public baths (balaneia) have also come into their own in recent scholarship. Greek bath building peaked in the Hellenistic period in Greece, Sicily, and South Italy, and especially in Egypt. Particularly interesting are studies of the evolution of bathing practices from the more personal Greek experience in relatively small complexes, through Hellenistic and Roman Republican technological advances, to social bathing in the great thermae of the high Roman Empire. Publications represent a wide variety of approaches, focusing on literary sources, archaeological excavations, architectural form, technology, and more. New questions are offering new insights into ancient baths and bathing even as field surveys and excavations continue to add to the corpus.
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