How Did the Ancient Romans Use Their Toilets?

The Ancient Romans had fancy toilets that looked like magical seats connected to special pipes.

Most Roman homes had a latrine, which is like a public toilet but in your house! People would sit on a commode, think of it as a throne with a hole, and waste would go down a pipe into a sewer or a big underground chamber called a septa. These sewers sometimes even ran under the streets, making things smell a little more fun.

Special Toilets in Big Buildings

In big places like bathhouses or fancy homes, there were public toilets with rows of seats side by side. People would sit next to each other and use the same sewer system. It was kind of like sharing a magic drain that cleaned everyone at once!

Sometimes they even had running water! Imagine having a magical stream that washed you after you used your toilet, that’s what some Roman toilets were like. They had water closets, which are like fancy bathrooms with their own water supply.

So, the Romans had clean and fun ways to do their business, using magic pipes and sewers, just like we have toilets today! The Ancient Romans had fancy toilets that looked like magical seats connected to special pipes.

Most Roman homes had a latrine, which is like a public toilet but in your house! People would sit on a commode, think of it as a throne with a hole, and waste would go down a pipe into a sewer or a big underground chamber called a septa. These sewers sometimes even ran under the streets, making things smell a little more fun.

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Examples

  1. The Romans used a system of public toilets connected to sewage channels.
  2. A toilet seat was sometimes made from stone or wood and shared by multiple people.
  3. Toilets in wealthy homes had running water from the city's aqueducts.

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