The Baths of Caracalla (Thermae Antoninianae) were
built between a.d. 212 and 216 by the emperor Marcus
Aurelius Antoninus (a.d. 188–217), usually known as
Caracalla. Although in layout the Baths of Caracalla largely emulated the model
established about a century before in the Baths of Trajan, their massive scale
and opulent internal finishes were without precedent. Their fully integrated
plan and imposing scale and grandeur amply demonstrated the Romans’ design
skills. Significantly, the baths demonstrated the structural advances made
possible through the masterful use of concrete to span vast spaces using barrel
and groin vaults, domes, and half-domes, as well as the sophisticated mechanical
engineering services developed by the Romans.
Public baths (thermae) were an essential part of all Roman towns. The
majority of citizens lived in crowded tenements (insulae) without running
water or sanitary facilities, so communal baths were constructed and made
available to both sexes of all social classes. Entry was free. Generally, mixed
bathing was not favored, so the baths were open to women in the mornings and men
in the afternoons and evenings. The thermae were the center of Roman social
life—people could meet friends there and engage in any number of leisure and
cultural pursuits on offer. As well as changing rooms, gymnasia, saunas, and
pools of various temperatures, there were libraries, museums, restaurants, bars,
shops, lecture theaters, concert halls, playing fields, gardens, and courtyards,
all richly furnished with mosaics, fountains, and statues. Although extremely
costly to build, the baths were a political investment—a means for the emperor
to demonstrate his concern for the well-being of the community.The Baths of Caracalla occupied a 50-acre (20.25-hectare) site. The complex was divided into three parts: the rectangular main building, approximately 750 by 380 feet (225 by 115 meters) and large
enough to accommodate 1,600 bathers; encircling landscaped parks
and gardens; and a perimeter ring of shops, lecture halls, and pavilions. Laid
out symmetrically, the compactly planned baths offered identical bathing
circuits on either side of the central (and shorter) axis. The sequence of
bathing spaces on that axis comprised the hot bath (caldarium), warm bath
(tepidarium), and the cold bath (frigidarium) in a large unheated
central hall. The last, which also served as a foyer, was open on one side,
allowing easy access to the open-air swimming pool (natatio). Changing
rooms (apodyteria), gymnasia, or exercise yards (palaestrae), with
terraced porticoes, and sauna (laconica) were arranged symmetrically on
the transverse axis. Rooms for massage, manicure, and other services associated
with the bathing routine were featured on either side of the baths. Decorative
interior finishes—colored marble veneers on walls, marble, basalt and granite
columns and arches, and coarsely textured black-and-white mosaic floors—created
a rich and sumptuous character.
Since the baths were public facilities that attracted large numbers of
people, the gathering spaces needed to be vast and uncluttered with structural
elements. In the absence of structural impediments, bathers were afforded
extended views to various parts of the thermae. The Romans achieved these
objectives by exploiting the semicircular arch. The rectangular central hall of
the Baths of Caracalla demonstrated their structural method. It was roofed with
an enormous semicircular intersecting concrete vault divided into three
compartments. Each was 108 feet (30 meters) high and rested at the corners on
enormous piers. Clerestory windows adequately lit the hall.Water for the Baths of Caracalla flowed from a branch of the Aqua Marcia aqueduct into a huge reservoir, divided into eighteen chambers with a total capacity of about 2.2 million gallons (10 million liters). The water was carried through pipes laid underneath the gardens to the main building, where it was distributed directly to the cold pools, or to wood-fired boilers, where it was heated for the warm and hot baths. For ease of inspection and maintenance, distribution pipes and waste drains were located in separate tunnels. A separate network of tunnels was used to store wood for about fifty furnaces (praefurnia) that heated the saunas (laconica) and other rooms via a hot-air system (hypocausta) beneath the floors. The heated rooms were on the southwestern side of the complex to gain maximum benefit from the sun; all had large windows. The hottest room, the circular, protruding caldarium, was covered by a 115-foot-diameter (35-meter) dome, higher than the Pantheon’s and only slightly less in span.
The Baths of Caracalla are now in ruins, but their soaring height and impressive scale allow visitors to appreciate their size and massiveness.
See also
Roman concrete
construction
Further reading
Piranomonte, Marina. 1998. Le Terme di Caracalla.
Milan: Electra.
Sear, Frank. 1989. Roman Architecture. London:
Batsford.
Ward-Perkins, J. B. 1981. Roman Imperial
Architecture. Harmondsworth. UK: Penguin.
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