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Hamam story (Turkish bath)

 

A Turkish bath (Turkish: hamam, Arabic: حمّام‎, translit. ḥammām)

is a type of public bathing associated with the culture of the Ottoman Empire and more widely the Islamic world.

 

A variation on it as a method of cleansing and relaxation

became popular during the Victorian era, and then spread through the British Empire and Western Europe.

 

The buildings are similar to the thermae (Roman baths). Unlike Russian banya, the focus is on water,

as distinct from ambient steam.

 

The process involved in taking a Turkish bath is similar to that of a sauna, but is more closely related to ancient Greek and ancient Roman bathing practices[why?]. It starts with relaxation in a room heated by a continuous flow of hot, dry air, allowing the bather to perspire freely.

 

Bathers may then move to an even hotter room before they wash in cold water. After performing a full body wash and receiving a massage, bathers finally retire to the cooling-room for a period of relaxation.

 

The difference between the Islamic hammam and the Victorian Turkish bath is the air. The hot air in the Victorian Turkish bath is dry; in the Islamic hammam the air is often steamy.

 

The bather in a Victorian Turkish bath will often take a plunge in a cold pool after the hot rooms; the Islamic hammam usually does not have a pool unless the water is flowing from a spring. In the Islamic hammams the bathers splash themselves with cold water.

 

 

The Victorian Turkish bath was described by Johann Ludwig Wilhelm Thudichum in a lecture to the Royal Society of Medicine given in 1861, one year after the first such bath was opened in London:

The discovery that was lost and has been found again, is this, in the fewest possible words: The application of hot air to the human body. It is not wet air, nor moist air, nor vapoury air; it is not vapour in any shape or form whatever. It is an immersion of the whole body in hot common air.

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       © Old City Hamam Athens/Acropolis

 

L i v e    t h e    O r i g i n a l    O l d    H a m a m    e x p i e r i e n c e 

 

Old City Hamam

 

Athanasiou Diakou 1

( Next to the
Acropoilis Metro station )

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