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  2. Greek baths - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_Baths

    Greek baths were bath complexes suitable for bathing and cleaning in ancient Greece, similar in concept to that of the Roman baths. Greek baths are a feature of some Hellenized countries. These baths have been found in Greece, Egypt, Italy, and there is even one located in Marseille, France. [1] Some of the first baths have been dated back to ...

  3. Public bathing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_bathing

    Bathing was ritualized, and becoming an art, with cleansing sands, hot water, hot air in dark vaulted "vapor baths", a cooling plunge, and a rubdown with aromatic oils. Cities all over Ancient Greece honored sites where "young ephebes stood and splashed water over their bodies".

  4. Archaeological Park of Dion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeological_Park_of_Dion

    ancientdion.org. The Archaeological Park of Dion is the most important archaeological site at Mount Olympus in Greece, located in Dion (Greek: Δίον). In the area comprised by the Archaeological Park of Dion, sanctuaries were found from the Hellenistic and Roman periods. The park displays the importance of ancient Dion in the history of Pieria.

  5. Kouros - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kouros

    The Ancient Greek word kouros (κοῦρος) refers to "youth, boy, especially of noble rank." [ 5 ] When a pubescent was received into the body of grown men, as a grown Kouros, he could enter the initiation fest of the brotherhood (phratry, φρατρία). Apellaios was the month of these rites, and Apollo (Apellon) was the "megistos kouros ...

  6. Nude swimming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nude_swimming

    [13]: 9 While sea bathing or dipping, men and boys were naked, women and girls were encouraged to dip wearing loose clothing. Scarborough was the first resort to provide bathing machines for changing. Some men extended this to swimming in the sea, and by 1736, it was seen at Brighton and Margate, and later at Deal, Eastbourne, and Portsmouth.

  7. Strigil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strigil

    The strigil (Latin: strigilis) or stlengis (Greek: στλεγγίς, probably a loanword from the Pre-Greek substrate) is a tool for the cleansing of the body by scraping off dirt, perspiration, and oil that was applied before bathing in Ancient Greek and Roman cultures. In these cultures the strigil was primarily used by men, specifically male ...

  8. Ceremonies of ancient Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceremonies_of_ancient_greece

    Ceremonies of Ancient Greece encompasses those practices of a formal religious nature celebrating particular moments in the life of the community or individual in Greece from the period of the Greek dark ages (c. 1000 B.C) to the middle ages (c. 500 A.D). Ancient Greek religion was not standardised and had no formalised canon of religious texts ...

  9. History of the nude in art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_nude_in_art

    Classical art [Note 2] is the art developed in ancient Greece and Rome, whose scientific, material and aesthetic advances contributed to the history of art a style based on nature and the human being, where harmony and balance, the rationality of forms and volumes, and a sense of imitation ("mimesis") of nature prevailed, laying the foundations ...