Turkish baths were
introduced to Britain by David Urquhart, diplomat and sometime Member of
Parliament for Stafford, who for political and personal reasons wished to
popularize Turkish culture. In 1850 he wrote The Pillars of Hercules, a book
about his travels in 1848 through Spain and Morocco. He described the system of
dry hot-air baths used there and in the Ottoman Empire which had changed little
since Roman times. In 1856 Richard Barter read Urquhart's book and worked with
him to construct a bath. They opened the first modern Turkish bath at St Ann's
Hydropathic Establishment near Blarney, County Cork, Ireland. The following
year, the first public bath of its type to be built in mainland Britain since
Roman times was opened in Manchester, and the idea spread rapidly. It reached
London in July 1860, when Roger Evans, a member of one of Urquhart's Foreign
Affairs Committees, opened a Turkish bath at 5 Bell Street, near Marble Arch.
During the following 150
years, over 600 Turkish baths opened in Britain, including those built by
municipal authorities as part of swimming pool complexes, taking advantage of
the fact that water-heating boilers were already on site.
As of September 2013 there
were just twelve Victorian-style Turkish baths remaining open in Britain but
hot-air baths still thrive in the form of the Russian steam baths banya (sauna)
and the Finnish sauna.
Similar baths opened in
other parts of the British Empire. Dr. John Le Gay Brereton, who had given
medical advice to bathers in a Foreign Affairs Committee-owned Turkish bath in
Bradford, travelled to Sydney, Australia, and opened a Turkish bath there on
Spring Street in 1859, even before such baths had reached London. Canada had one
by 1869, and the first in New Zealand was opened in 1874.
Urquhart's influence was
also felt outside the Empire when in 1861, Dr Charles H Shepard opened the
first Turkish baths in the United States at 63 Columbia Street, Brooklyn
Heights, New York, most probably on 3 October 1863Before this, the United
States, like many other places, had several Russian vapor baths, one of the
first being that opened in 1861 by M.Hlasko at Philadelphia.
Yorum Gönder