|
Turkish Bath
The
Turkish bath (Turkish:
hamam;
from
Arabic:
حمّام,
hammām) is the
Middle Eastern
variant of a steam bath, which can be
categorized as a wet relative of the
sauna.
They have played an important role in
cultures of the Middle-East, serving as
places of social gathering, ritual
cleansing, and as architectural
structures, institutions, and (later)
elements with special customs attached
to them. Europeans learned about the
Hamam via contacts with the
Ottomans,
hence the "Turkish" part of the name.
In
Western Europe,
the Turkish bath as a method of
cleansing the body and relaxation was
particularly popular during the
Victorian era.
The process involved in taking a Turkish
bath is similar to that of a
sauna,
but is more closely related to the
ancient Roman
bathing
practices.
A
person taking a Turkish bath first
relaxes in a room (known as the warm
room) that is heated by a continuous
flow of hot, dry air allowing the bather
to perspire freely. Bathers may then
move to an even hotter room (known as
the hot room) before splashing
themselves with cold water. After
performing a full body wash and
receiving a
massage,
bathers finally retire to the cooling-room
for a period of relaxation.
In
Turkey, the advent of modern
plumbing
systems, showers, and bathtubs in homes
caused the
importance of
hamams to fade in recent times.
 |
|
|