Helle's toilet: 12th-century three-person loo seat goes on display
Archaeologists know the names of the owners of the building where plank of oak sat
Funny, thinking of how of how, in their wildest imaginations, the users of this would never have thought it would end up in a museum. I once saw a public toilet in Greece with dozens of holes carved in stone that were so close together that it would have been a very open, communal experience..
The ancient Romans had similar toilets but they had both Male and Female ones as well as with their Public Baths.
Another thing about ancient Romans is that both men and women wore perfumes, not only to make them smell fresh, etc, but also to lessen the 'effects' of odours arising from city streets, etc.
@JimG Have you ever tried using squares of paper cut from newspapers, I did back in the 50s when I was a child it was simply because the ' new fangled date roll ( toilet paper) was, a) too expensive for working class people to be able to afford, and, b) it was so bloody harsh and rough you could sand down timber with it.
When my 2 older and very uppity sisters would complain about the newspaper squares being " harsh on their lady bits" Dad would tell them, " Well just grab a handful of leaves from the lemon tree on your way to dunny and use them."
@Triphid No, I'm one generation removed from the Sears catalog in the outhouse days. I grew up in a small town that had been an company town owned by a factory that closed 4 years before I was born.
Many of the yards still had outhouse, but the homes had been upgraded to indoor plumbing over the years prior to the failure of the factory.
I guess people had different expectations of privacy back then... I wonder if there were even separate ones for males & females? I always imagined Europeans back then as modest & reserved...
Modest and Reserved? You have to joking, I've seen docos, factual documentaries with accompanied evidence that the Upper Class Europeans and the English as well were quite at ease with merely shitting around the Dining Areas whilst others were still dining, of course they'd, mostly, simply 'drop their dacks' in some corner or other or against the nearest wall, leaving it to cleaned up by the servants, etc.
Seen a few old 2 holer long drop Outback dunnies (toilets) in my time around the Aussie Bush, they've always been a big hole for adult bums and a smaller one for the ankle-biters.
Aussies in the Outback are renowned for their often very unconventional sense of humour and I've seen bush dunnies with name plates saying things like, "Parliament House," " 4U2P," " Buckingham Palace," " Blowfly City," " the Library," " the Whitehouse," "Shit 'n Stink" and even one with " Moon River" on the name plate but in the bush men (and some women as well) find a bush to pee behind UNLESS they have the need to do both, then it's a definite sit down on the job.
But the 'particular' aroma of the Long Drop Dunny is something that once experienced is something never forgotten....LOL.
Norse longhouses in Iceland had rooms attached to one end, with potty seats attached to each wall. The 4-6 seater privies were situated over a stream, which ran through the house at that point. The upstream part was where you got drinking and cooking water from. The downstream part carried away waste water. Both adults and children could use the loo together. And of course, both sexes as well.
Wondering how far downstream the adjoining neighbor is! And very concerned about the upstream one! LOL . Of course, being the furthest upstream is probably the lucky spot!
Posted by PiratefishSeasons greetings, you heathens.
Posted by SurfpirateA photographic collection of pagan costumes associated with the winter solstice. [dangerousminds.net]
Posted by MoonTigerIIAncient Evenings Fun!
Posted by AnonySchmoose[cell.
Posted by AnonySchmoose[cell.
Posted by AnonySchmoose[cell.
Posted by EyesThatSmileThis sculptor is amazing. [boredpanda.com]
Posted by DruviusWell preserved 500 year old ship found at bottom of Baltic Sea. Way cool find, hope we have the means to properly investigate it. [sciencealert.com]
Posted by qpr81there's a small island in front of the temple site and they found artifacts even there.
Posted by qpr81there's a small island in front of the temple site and they found artifacts even there.
Posted by qpr81there's a small island in front of the temple site and they found artifacts even there.
Posted by qpr81the hole in this image -according to the guide- was a window to let the sun rays hit a certain spot announcing the summer/winter etc.
Posted by qpr81Trajan's column in Rome. Shame they put a pope on top of it. Even though this is a monument raised over a genocide it's still something worth seeing.
Posted by qpr81Trajan's column in Rome. Shame they put a pope on top of it. Even though this is a monument raised over a genocide it's still something worth seeing.
Posted by qpr81Trajan's column in Rome. Shame they put a pope on top of it. Even though this is a monument raised over a genocide it's still something worth seeing.
Posted by qpr81Ħaġar Qim temple in Malta. Stunning even if a bit of walk...