preview

Greco Roman Impact On Rome

Decent Essays

Paper Greco-Roman impact

Potty talk let's talk about the john, the lou, the porcelain throne the thing we used every day. Some people call it their happy place but for others it's the fantastic innovation that rome has given us. Some people don't know but the toilet originated in rome, it may not have been clean but it was the only way at the time to do your business. If you were rich you would have our own private toilet made of limestone, but for the poor you would have to use a communal bathroom made of wood. they had no toilet paper they used a sponge on a stick submerged in a bucket. The communal toilets were believed to have spread diseases which does not surprise me at all but i think the sponge on a stick idea is …show more content…

Open gutters and sewers, for instance, ran down the middle and sides of some of Rome's streets. Excess water from the aqueducts and runoff water from local streams were used to flush the sewers and drains of Rome.
The first major public sewer, the Cloaca Maxima (Aka The Great Drain), was originally built by Romans to drain the marshy areas which eventually became the Roman Forum. The Cloaca Maxima a huge covered drain by the time of the Late Republic functioned both as Rome's main storm sewer and means of sewage disposal. which emptied into the Tiber river.

Latrines and Other Public Facilities
Most apartment houses didn't have much in the way of drainage or toilet facilities but if they did, such facilities tended to be only on the ground floor. So most apartment dwellers used chamberpots in their own rooms.

Private homes, on the other hand, might have latrines. When they existed, they'd typically lie near the kitchen of the domus or villa. Again, if there were no toilet facilities, chamberpots were typically used, and the contents would be dumped periodically into …show more content…

In Rome, large urinal pots typically were put on street corners. Periodically, fullers (the Roman version of a not-so-dry cleaner) would empty them and use the contents in the process of laundering and bleaching togas, tunics, and other clothing.

In many Roman cities there were public toilets. Such facilities were typically just rectangular shaped rooms (some seating as many as 100 people). Arranged along several of the walls of these rooms were long stone benches each with a row of keyhole-shaped openings cut into it. Water running down drains underneath the benches would flush waste away into the sewers.

Conclusion on how all of these innovations impact us
As you know we currently don't have wooden toilets but if it weren't for Romans we probably would not have toilets at all, the innovation of toilets and sewage is only possible because of the Romans. toilets would be useless without sewage system or aqueducts and since the Romans did that we don't have to worry about having to take our poop down to the river or cesspit. Now in today's modern world we have a much more advanced fuller whom does a better job than Roman

Get Access