The Secret History of Renaissance Bath Houses

Join me, Dr Julia Martins, as I explore the fascinating world of Renaissance bathing and medicine. From ancient Egypt to 16th-century Italy, discover how therapeutic waters shaped medical practice and social life throughout history.

In this video, I examine historical therapeutic bathing with a focus on Renaissance hydrotherapy. Learn about the strange “bath that makes women pregnant” mentioned by Leonardo Fioravanti in 1561 and the curious proverb that advised men to “send their lady to the baths and not go along.” I uncover what these mysterious references actually meant!

I look at how bathing fit into Renaissance medicine, when doctors were caught between respecting ancient authorities like Galen while facing new evidence from popular healing springs. Watch as I examine the clash between traditional humoral theory and the radical chemical approaches of Paracelsus, who prescribed extreme treatments like 12-hour baths!

This video also covers the social aspects of Renaissance spa culture, where medical treatments overlapped with leisure, socialising, and potentially romantic encounters. From nobility hosting balls to commoners making pilgrimages to healing waters, these baths served multiple purposes in society.

Learn about bizarre treatments, like sulphurous waters that smelled of rotten eggs, patients being lowered down cliffs in baskets to reach thermal pools, and healing springs supposedly discovered by a sick cow! I trace how these practices evolved into modern hydrotherapy and physiotherapy.

Whether you’re interested in medical history, Renaissance culture, ancient healing methods, or the origins of modern spa treatments, this video connects the dots between water and wellness across the centuries. Find out why humans have consistently turned to water for health and pleasure throughout history.

Chapters:
00:00 – Intro
02:07 – A Quick Dip Into Bathing History
03:26 – Renaissance Splashes
05:31 – Diving Into Bathing and Medicine
08:23 – Paracelsus Makes Waves
11:18 – Renaissance Bathing Culture
14:59 – From Renaissance Ripples to Modern Waves
16:19 – The Eternal Appeal of Water

References:
Andrea Bacci, De Thermis (Venice, 1571).
William Dieffenbach, Hydrotherapy: a Brief Summary of the Practical Value of Water In Disease, for Students And Practicians of Medicine (1909).
William Eamon, ‘Alchemy in Popular Culture: Leonardo Fioravanti and the Search for the Philosopher’s Stone’, Early Science and Medicine, 5 (2000), pp. 196–213.
———, Science and the Secrets of Nature: Books of Secrets in Medieval and Early Modern Culture (1994).
———, The Professor of Secrets: Mystery, Medicine, and Alchemy in Renaissance Italy (2010).
Gabriele Falloppio, De medicatis aquis (Venice, 1564).
Leonardo Fioravanti, Capricci medicinali (1561).
John Floyer, Psykhroloysia, or the History of Cold Bathing… (1732).
Tomaso Giunta (ed.), De balneis omnia quae extant… (Venice, 1553).
Ute Lotz-Heumann, Ute, “Spas from the 16th to the 19th century”, European History Online (2012)
Genevieve Miller, “‘Airs, Waters, and Places’ in History”, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 17(1) (1962, pp. 129–40.
Michel de Montaigne, Journal de Voyage en Italie (Rome, 1581).
Bruce T. Moran, Paracelsus: An Alchemical Life (2019).
Richard Palmer, “In this our lightye and learned tyme”: Italian Baths in the Era of the Renaissance“, Medical History Supplement No.10 (1990), pp. 14–22.
Frank Van Tubergen and Sjef van der Linden, “A brief history of spa therapy”, in Annals of Rheumatic Diseases 61.3 (2002): 273–275
Theophrastus von Hohenheim (Paracelsus), Von dem Bad Pfeffers (1535).
________, Book of Minerals (1530s).
(On Paracelsus, make sure to check out The Zurich Paracelsus Project).
Royal College of Physicians of Edingburgh Blog, “Bathing by Prescription: A Brief History of Treatment by Water”.

Intro Music:
Folk Round by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/…
Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-…

Artist: http://incompetech.com/

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Geek Lewis | A single little meadow violet nearly lost in the grass.

A single little meadow violet nearly lost in the grass. #MacroPhotography #LowKeyLight #FlowersOfWestRidge #Flowers #NaturePhotography

Geek Lewis (@geeklewis.bsky.social) 2025-05-13T22:21:00.265Z

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Sarah C.M. Paine: What Is China’s Grand Strategy?

Sign up to my geopolitics newsletter Station Zero: https://stationzero.substack.com/ Watch the entire full-length ad-free interview on:   / decodinggeopolitics  

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My friend’s delivery bag had math functions written all over it

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Sergiu Ciochină Illuminates Dreamy Sun-Dappled Scenes in His Glowing Oil Paintings | Colossal

May 29, 2024
Art
Kate Mothes

“Memories from Maroc #2”

From the romantic streets of Paris to sun-dappled walkways of Mediterranean villages, Sergiu Ciochină’s paintings (previously) transport us to remarkable places. The artist, who is based in Moldova, recently embarked on a journey through northern France, Paris, Portugal, Madeira, and Morocco.

“Paris is undeniably a powerful source of inspiration but also challenging to capture,” Ciochină tells Colossal. “It is so diverse, rich, and at the same time subtle and difficult to reinterpret while capturing the feelings and atmosphere of the place.” He focuses on architecture, flora, and daylight but omits a human presence, evoking the inimitable sensation of discovery one feels when traveling to new destinations.

Blue Shadows #30”

Ciochină is fascinated by the interplay of light and texture, drawing on the legacy of the Impressionists in the way he captures the intricacies of landscapes in oil. He captures the sun dashing off the sea, glows in narrow streets, or casts dramatic shadows of trees onto buildings and paths. Employing an impasto technique featuring energetic, visible brushstrokes, he highlights the unique textures and patterns of each place, bordering on low relief. […]

“Home Is Where Your Heart Is #1”

More: Sergiu Ciochină Illuminates Dreamy Sun-Dappled Scenes in His Glowing Oil Paintings

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This is what time looks like in the fourth dimension

Have you ever wondered how time behaves beyond our 3D reality? In this mind-expanding video, we explore the mysterious fourth dimension—not just as a concept in physics, but as a radically different way of experiencing existence itself.

Discover how beings in the fourth dimension might perceive time, movement, and consciousness. Is time just a line? A landscape? Or something far stranger?

We’ll journey through:

🌌 The nature of spacetime
🧠 How our perception limits what we understand
🕰️ The idea of time as a physical dimension
👁️ What it might be like to live in the fourth dimension

Whether you’re curious about the science, the philosophy, or the cosmic possibilities, this video will open your mind to a deeper understanding of reality.

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Stomp | Get ready DUBAI… We are coming to make some noise with you!

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What growing up in forest left me with

Growing up in nature shaped me in ways I’m still discovering.
In this video, I reflect on my childhood in the forests of Lithuania, northern Europe — a life of connection and stillness.

If you’d like to support my journey — or get access to behind-the-scenes, participate in creative process, Q&A sessions, and more — you can do so here: https://ko-fi.com/karolinabaltulyte

🌿 I used ‪@Dehancer‬ to color grade this video!
If you’d like to try it, you can use my promo code KAROLINA for 10% off at http://www.dehancer.com

Dear people reading this,
I’m not here to tell you how to live your life — just here to share mine.
Stay open, but also think critically when consuming anyone’s content.
There are no universal truths, only personal realities that shape our worlds into one.

Much love to you

[…]

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The Origin of River Ganges, where Bhagirathi & Alaknanda meets to form the river. Both keeps their identity separate

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I made a 4D impossible object

Tibees tagged products below. Learn more

A Guide to Making Friends in the Fourth Dimension Paperback
£17.00
tibees.com/products/a-guide-to-making-friends-in-the-fourth-dimension?variant=42870750412911&country=GB&currency=GBP&utm_medium=product_sync&utm_source=google&utm_content=sag_organic&utm_campaign=sag_organic&srsltid=AfmBOoqr7Nu9Iyd4I-39om35At5cLDFHipdw07vn4vYRvVK8ENcNqqtb3Vk
My book! A Guide to Making Friends in the Fourth Dimension: https://tibees.com/

This video is based on a 1978 article by Scott Kim titled An Impossible Four-Dimensional Illusion. It was published in the book Hypergraphics by David Brisson. I read it in the Hypergraphics book and have not found an open access online verison of the article. Here are a list of libraries that stock hypergraphics: https://search.worldcat.org/title/110…

This website provides PDF nets of the shapes needed to construct the model (which I found after I made mine oops): https://www.cutoutfoldup.com/1125-imp…

Scott Kim’s website: https://www.scottkim.com/

Stack exchange post with comment from Scott Kim: https://math.stackexchange.com/questi…
Scott Kim is also on YouTube • Behind the Scenes with Game Thinking TV fo…

Support this channel with a monthly pledge on Patreon: / tibees

Buy me a coffee (one-off donation): https://ko-fi.com/tibees

Website: https://tobyhendy.com
TikTok: / tibees
Twitter: / tobyhendy
Second channel: @tibees2

Editing by Noor Hanania

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