Russian bathhouse - interesting facts and important rules. What and how to serve in the steam room

I’m reading the Decrees of Peter I... An incomparable feeling! I advise you - it’s so fun - and the country’s leadership should read it! For this purpose, I only quote the best ones that are on the Internet...

DECREE "ON THE DIGNITY OF GUESTS TO BE AT ASSEMBLY"

Before appearing, a multinational guest must be:

1. I wash carefully, without skipping any places.
2. Shave thoroughly, so as not to damage the ladies’ tenderness with vile stubble.
3. I’m half hungry and a little drunk, if not completely drunk.
4. Dressed as nobles, but without unnecessary excess, in addition to lovely ladies. The latter are allowed to seductively decorate their image with moderate cosmetics. Be especially distinguished from rude gentlemen by grace, cheerfulness and kindness.
5. Having suddenly appeared in the illuminated hall, do not lose heart, do not stiffen your body, on the contrary, round your arms and, without hesitation, eagerly join in the boiling of the guest.
6. When you come to visit, familiarize yourself with the layout of the house in advance with ease, especially noting the location of the closets, and put this information aside in that part of the mind that is less subject to guilt than others.
7. Consume food in moderation, so that your heavy belly does not interfere with your dancing.
8. Drink the potion as much as you can, so your legs can hold up. If they refuse, drink while sitting. Do not offer it to someone lying down - so that he does not choke, even if he asks for it. Glory to the one who choked! For this death has been honorable in Rus' since ancient times.
9. If you don’t know what to do, rely on a friend, he is the guardian of more state vigils.
10. Place the drunk ones carefully so as not to damage them and not interfere with the dancing. Fold separately, observing the floor, otherwise when you wake up, you won’t end up embarrassed.
11. Having sensed trouble, do not panic, but quickly follow to the place mentioned, without hesitating along the way and using all your strength to maintain the belly that villainously betrayed you in the fortress.
12. Being without a wife, or, God forbid, single, look at the ladies’ charms not with open greed, but quietly - they notice this too. Don’t doubt it - in this manner you will respect them and will not be considered impudent.
13. Use your hands very carefully and only when you have received a clear sign that it is permitted, otherwise you will wear your embarrassment on your face for a long time, for they know no mercy.
14. Without singing there is no fun in Rus', but it begins at the master’s sign. Don’t get into a rage, listen to your neighbor - when you bray alone, you become like the Valaam donkey. On the contrary, your musicality and sweet voice will earn you many praises from guests.
15. Remember, a lady’s heart is pliable to music, use this, and you will certainly be kind.
16. When you see a noble person at an assembly, or even a tsar, don’t lose heart, don’t open your mouth, but don’t stick your head out either - you’ll hardly be able to serve, and you’ll be three times more capable of annoying a drunken person than usual.

For this, with God, forward!!! Apply this commandment constantly, and not remember what point, standing like a block in the middle of the fun.

U K A Z

We have noticed that along the Nevsky Prospekt and in the assemblies, the undergrown fathers of eminence, in violation of the etiquette and regulations of the calm, in Spanish camisoles and trousers with tinsel, flaunt themselves insolently.

I order the Chief of Police of St. Petersburg to henceforth catch these dandies with great zeal, take them to the Foundry and beat them with a whip until their pantaloons make them look extremely obscene. Do not look at the title and eminence, nor at the cries of those being punished.

U K A Z

It has been noticed that wives and girls come to assemblies without knowing the politeness and rules of foreign clothing, like kikimoras are dressed. Having put on robes and hose made of white satin over dirty underwear, they sweat a lot, causing a very vile smell to spread, confusing the foreign guests.

From now on, I instruct you to wash yourself with soap and water in the bathhouse before the assembly, and not only to ensure the cleanliness of your outer robe, but also to take diligent care of your underwear, so as not to disgrace Russian wives with your vile appearance.

U K A Z

We hereby command from now on not to take women on warships, and if they do take them, only according to the number of the crew, so that there is no misery.

U K A Z

Navigators should not be allowed into taverns, because they, boorish bastards, quickly get drunk and cause trouble

U K A Z

Trade is a thieves' business, and therefore they should be given a meager salary, and they should be hanged one per year, so that it would not be a shame for others.

U K A Z

A subordinate in front of his superiors should look dashing and stupid, so as not to embarrass his superiors with his understanding.

U K A Z

From now on, I instruct the gentlemen senators to speak in the presence not according to what is written, but only in their own words, so that everyone’s stupidity will be visible to everyone

And Peter the Great is full of such decrees! Respect comes when you read them! And not only do you read, but you also know that Petka really was tough: he caught him, and flogged him, and forced him to wash... And what a lover of humanity he was! How he gave it away! If you see him at the assembly in spirit, they say, don’t fall down, don’t open your mouth, but don’t stick your head out either - you’ll hardly be able to serve, and if you’re drunk, you might be annoying three times as much as usual... He was incredibly caring, the devil...

By the way, questions appear after reading. What would he write today?! It would probably output something like:

We have noticed that along the Nevsky Prospekt, and in Moscow - everywhere, undergrown fathers of eminent people, in violation of the rules of calm that must be kept in front of ordinary people, show off insolently in overseas "Porsches", "Mercedes", "BMWs" and other expensive carriages.

I order the gentlemen governors of St. Petersburg and Moscow to henceforth zealously catch these dandies, take them to the Liteinaya part in St. Petersburg and to Petrovka in Moscow and beat them with whips, and cars with crowbars, until both of them look very obscene. Do not look at the title and eminence, and also at the cries of those being punished.

It has also been noticed that men, wives and girls come to assemblies and theaters dressed in obscene clothes, or even without it, and in the subway and on public transport, because of the robes and figs, dressed in dirty underwear, they again sweat a lot, which is why it is very unusual the smell spreads in the carriages, causing confusion among foreign guests.

I instruct you, in the future, before going to church to wash yourself thoroughly with soap and diligently take care of your underwear, so as not to disgrace Russian wives with your vile appearance.

We hereby command from now on not to take women into the military department, but to take them according to the number of generals, so that there is no embarrassment like in the Ministry of Defense, where it is not these generals who command the departments, but their 30-year-old girls!

Programmers, of whom there are countless numbers, are not allowed into taverns, because, having finished writing their programs, boorish brood, they immediately get drunk and cause brawls in taverns in the English language.

Local leadership is a serious business, a thieves' business, and therefore don't give local officials their salaries! And for the sake of warning, hang one at a time in cities, so that others would not be in a habit of stealing.

Since they haven’t wised up in 300 years, I instruct the gentlemen senators to prohibit speech in the presence at all! So that their stupidity is not visible to everyone.

Fantasies, of course... I smile... Although Peter was cheerful! I would have learned something strange again! It couldn't be worse...

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RESPONSES FROM FRIENDS

I haven't laughed so much in a long time! Peter 1 was smart!!! How he is missed today!!!

Having read it, I give thanks to boyar Anatoly and bow deeply, for he made me laugh a lot, and made many people, especially the younger ones, think a lot... Hello, boyar! And suddenly you amuse us with your fabrications!

Inna Anatolyeva, daughter of Kozhevnikov,
bourgeois from the village of Zelenogradova, Moscow province.

And we also need one Decree of 2012: “Teenagers and especially girls who use obscene language in public places should be brought to the police presence and kept with the homeless, allowing them liberties with them until the foul language disappears from their mouths and they speak in a language of dignity human decency. Upon leaving the presence, give a reminder about the inevitability of homeless therapy in case of relapses of swearing, so that decent society is valued and preferred."

Anatoly, thank you for the excellent, cheerful and funny decrees! Urgently to life! We support! With a smile and respect,

Thank you! These new decrees should be considered in the Duma... and broadcast live to the country)

Thank you, Anatoly made me laugh and amuse myself)))) Order needs to be restored a long time ago... the youngsters have become unruly... They drink beer, smoke and destroy everything around them!

Yes, now he would have come up with something funny, and it wouldn’t have seemed too much! The ruler was noble! With warmth,

Amazed! Kudos for knowledge! Hello!

Viktor Aleksandrovich Pogorelov



A certain Berkholz, who spent some time at the court of Peter I, says that Russian people know how to give the water that is poured on hot stove stones the degree of warmth that is necessary.

“At first you lie quietly on a shelf covered with straw, covered with a clean sheet on top. Then they begin to soar with birch brooms. This is extremely pleasant because it opens the pores and increases perspiration. Afterwards, they vigorously scrape their fingers all over the body to separate impurities from it, which is also very pleasant. Then they take soap and rub it all over the body so that not the slightest trace of dirt remains anywhere... Douse it with warm or cold water, as desired. You feel as if you were born again...”

While constructing a frigate at Dutch shipyards, Peter I lived the life of a simple carpenter. I cooked my own food. He built a Russian bathhouse, without which he could not imagine his existence.
A story recorded from the words of a contemporary of Peter I:

“In 1718, when Peter the Great was in Paris, he ordered a bathhouse to be built in one house for the grenadiers on the banks of the Seine, in which they bathed after a hot day. Such an adventure, which, in their opinion, was unusual for the Parisians, was produced by a crowded gathering of spectators. They watched in amazement as the soldiers ran out, hot from the steam of the bath, threw themselves into the river, swam and dived. The royal chamberlain Verton, who was in the emperor's servants, seeing this bathing himself, reported to Peter the Great (not knowing that this was being done by order of the sovereign) to forbid the soldiers to bathe, because they would all die. Peter laughed and answered:
- Don't be afraid, Mr. Verton. The soldiers were somewhat weakened by the Parisian air, so they hardened themselves with a Russian bath. This happens to us even in winter: habit is second nature.”.

Peter I not only revered the Russian bathhouse, but was the organizer of the first hydrotherapy resorts in Russia. Having visited the famous European resorts: Baden-Baden (in the spurs of the Black Forest there are baths from natural steam mineral springs), Carlsbad (present-day Karlovy Vary), Pyrmont, Spa, Peter ordered to search "healing waters" in Russian lands.
Thus, the “hammer worker” of the Konchezersky plant, Ivan Ryaboev, opened near Olonets, in Karelia, "marcial waters". Since the water of the source turned out to be ferruginous, it was called marcial - in honor of Mars, the god of war and iron.

Since the time of Peter the Great, ancient culture has been revered in Russia. Structures were erected in the style of Ancient Hellas and Rome. And thermal baths too. In the city of Pushkino (formerly Tsarskoe Selo) in the premises of the Grand Palace there is the so-called Cold bath. It is a copy of the Roman baths, "in the ancient taste of the times of Augustus and Cicero."

Here, in Catherine Park, on the third ledge of the Old Garden, near the pond - the building of the Upper Bath, or "their highnesses soapbox". The delicate light yellow pavilion has several rooms: a vestibule, a dressing room, a bath, a steam room and an octagonal relaxation room, in which paintings from the famous ancient Roman Golden House of Nero were copied. Nearby is the more modest Lower Bath for courtiers.

Baths in Rus' have always been given a healing, healing meaning. The archives contain a record that on May 11, 1733, permission was received from the medical office “to open a medicinal bathhouse in Moscow”. The owner of this establishment was obliged to “take the price without excess, so that there would be no complaints about him.” In addition, “it is forbidden to keep hot wines, vodka and any sacred drink.”

There is another archival record of the opening on November 11, 1763 in St. Petersburg at the Malaya Morskaya medicinal bath “for sweating and the treatment of fluxes and other bodily attacks on the doctor’s recommendation.”

based on materials from the site zdorova.narod.ru

“It has been noticed that the wives and girls who appear at the Assembly do not know the politeness and rules of foreign clothing, like kikimoras are dressed. Having put on a robe and hose made of white satin over dirty underwear, they sweat a lot. This is why the extremely vile smell spreads and confuses foreign guests. From now on, before the Assembly, I instruct you to wash in the bathhouse with soap and diligence, and not only to keep your robe clean, but also to diligently watch your underwear, so as not to disgrace Russian wives with your vile appearance.”

It is noteworthy that the kings of Rus' washed themselves completely differently from what happened in the first public baths, which first appeared in Ancient Greece. The Greeks paid great attention to the culture of the body; the importance of the physical condition of the body was on a par with state affairs. Popular sports schools gymnastics “palestra” - meant not only the opportunity to wash after sports, but also had baths. It was in them that Greek athletes gathered after training, rested, washed, and spent hours having friendly conversations, enjoying the aromas.

In Russia, the first public baths (not royal) for collective use were built in the 17th century. Historians claim that Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich did this according to the decree. Of course, they were very different from Roman (Greek) baths in their simplicity. And the climate could not help but affect the design of the baths and the method of washing in them. Baths were built along the banks of rivers, not far from reservoirs, and most of them were one-story. Read about how the kings built bathhouses in Rus' with humor ( link-picture on the right). Like the one we are planning on the blog page, they had only three rooms: a soap room, and a rest room (for changing clothes). Whole families washed themselves in the bathhouse on Saturdays. - mixed washing for men and women. Only under Tsarina Catherine the Great did Russian baths begin to be divided into women's and men's. It was then that they became public and divided by gender.

Of the Russian tsars, Peter the Great paid great attention to cleanliness. Known for his frequent training with the European nobility, during his trips abroad, he tried to observe etiquette and taught his courtiers to it. And he had a special attitude towards commoners: “... a serf must be like the king in everything - and follow the protocols of the assembly (public event) in everything.”

So such a document was born (or maybe humorous historians composed it?!). Who knows? But the meaning and fun in it will delight any Slav.

“Before appearing as a multinational guest, he must be:
1. I wash carefully, without skipping any places.
2. Shave thoroughly, so as not to damage the ladies’ tenderness with vile stubble.
3. I’m half hungry and a little drunk, if not completely drunk.
4. Dressed as nobles, but without unnecessary excess, in addition to lovely ladies. The latter are allowed to seductively decorate their image with moderate cosmetics. Be especially distinguished from rude gentlemen by grace, cheerfulness and kindness.
5. Having suddenly appeared in the illuminated hall, do not lose heart, do not stiffen your body, on the contrary, round your arms and, without hesitation, eagerly join in the boiling of the guest.
6. When you come to visit, familiarize yourself with the layout of the house in advance with ease, especially noting the location of the closets, and put this information aside in that part of the mind that is less subject to guilt than others.
7. Consume food in moderation, so that your heavy belly does not interfere with your dancing.
8. Drink the potion as much as you can, so your legs can hold up. If they refuse, drink while sitting. Do not offer it to someone lying down - so as not to choke, even if you ask for it. Glory to the one who choked! For this death has been honorable in Rus' since ancient times.
9. If you don’t know what to do, rely on a friend, this guardian has more state vigils.
10. Place the drunk ones carefully so as not to damage them and not interfere with the dancing. Fold separately, observing the floor, otherwise when you wake up, you won’t end up embarrassed.
11. Having sensed trouble, do not panic, but quickly follow to the place mentioned, without hesitating along the way and using all your strength to maintain the belly that villainously betrayed you in the fortress.
12. Being without a wife, or, God forbid, being single, look at the ladies’ charms not with open greed, but quietly - they notice this too. Don’t doubt it - in this manner you will respect them and will not be considered impudent.
13. Use your hands very carefully and only when you have received a clear sign that it is permitted, otherwise you will wear your embarrassment on your face for a long time, for they know no mercy.
14. Without singing there is no fun in Rus', but it begins at the master’s sign. Don’t get into a rage, listen to your neighbor - when you bray alone, you become like the Valaam donkey. On the contrary, your musicality and sweet voice will earn you many praises from guests.
15. Remember, a lady’s heart is pliable to music, use this, and you will certainly be kind.
16. When you see a noble person at an assembly, or even a tsar, don’t lose heart, don’t open your mouth, but don’t stick your head out either - you’ll hardly be able to serve, and you’ll be able to annoy a drunken person three times more than usual.
Then, with God, go ahead!!! Apply this commandment constantly, and not remember what point, standing like a block in the middle of the fun.”

Yes, you can’t say anything: The royal rules are good both for the Russian bath and for the feast. Keep up appearances and smell good! - Then the king is not a hindrance to you. Were they gold or not? royal baths? - you decide.

Why was a chandelier-shower installed in the imperial baths, who ordered a crystal bath for the royal soap house, what kind of underwear was worn in the steam rooms and how were they treated with crushed worms?

"Paper" I talked with the head of the Bath complex in Peterhof, Irina Suvorova, about when and why baths became an important part of Russian culture and in which baths in St. Petersburg the emperors took a steam bath.

Irina Suvorova

Head of the Monplaisir complex sector of the Bath complex in Peterhof

What were the bathhouses like in Ancient Rus' and where did the first residents of St. Petersburg take a steam bath?

Vladimir Ivanovich Dal revealed in sufficient detail the semantics of the word “bathhouse”. It comes from the word “banit”, which in the old days meant “to wash, clean with water”, and “bath” - to wash. Speaking about baths, Dahl meant a Russian steam bath, a building or rest, where they bathe not just in dry heat, but in steam.

In Rus' there were definitely baths at least in the 10th century. This conclusion can be drawn from Igor Bogdanov’s rich research “Three centuries of the St. Petersburg bathhouse”. Bogdanov writes that the Arab traveler Ibn Rust at the beginning of the 10th century described the “baths of the northerners” as follows: “In their country, the cold is so strong that each of them digs a ditch in the ground for a cellar, to which they attach a wooden pointed roof, like a church. They move into such cellars with their entire family, taking firewood and stones. They light a fire and heat the stones red hot. When the stones are heated to the limit, water is poured on them, which spreads steam, heating the house to the point that they even take off their clothes.”

From there you can find out that the chronicler Nestor, who lived at the end of the 11th - beginning of the 12th centuries, wrote that the Slavs who lived in the northern forests voluntarily subjected themselves to the “painful procedure” [of washing in a hot bath], which gave them “painful joy.” Nestor also describes the procedure for washing in a bathhouse, noting the widespread nature of this phenomenon. The chronicler says that this “has been from ancient times” an integral part of the life of a Russian person.

With all this, it’s a bath matter for a long time was not regulated by rulers. In village baths, men and women steamed together until the 16th century. This only stopped under Ivan the Terrible in 1551, when the Stoglavy Council banned “joint washing” “in order to prevent a possible fall into sin.”

At first, after the creation of St. Petersburg, everyone was allowed to build baths. Which, by the way, many residents took advantage of. At that time, baths were not yet subject to duties, and this was profitable. The only condition was to build baths away from housing and exclusively from stone.

Within a few months, Peter I, seeing the people’s passion for baths, decided to take advantage of it. In 1704, he issued a decree introducing a monetary tax from each public and home bathhouse in all cities and counties. Since then, the government began to encourage the creation of public baths. According to the drawn up charter "", they took 3 rubles from the boyars, 1 ruble from the servicemen, and 15 kopecks per year from the archers, service Cossacks and peasants.

At the same time, the baths kept getting bigger and bigger. As researcher Naum Sindalovsky writes, we can talk at least about the Voronin baths with marble decoration, baths in the Admiralty Courtyard, Fonarny Lane and near the Harbor. They became places of power for people of different classes; each of them had its own reputation.

Public baths on the Neglinnaya River in the 17th century.

Why and for whom Peter I created the imperial bath

Peter I, as follows from his travel journal, took a steam bath in the city baths, but soon switched to his own. So, in 1714, the emperor ordered the construction of the Monplaisir Palace in Peterhof, and by 1719–1721 it was decided to complete the construction of guest rooms, in one of which a soap shop was built, now known as the Bath complex. It was a spacious room, reminiscent of an ordinary Russian bathhouse, only with small nuances. It had a stove on which, instead of stones, there were huge cast-iron cannonballs: they turned out to be more durable and warmed up the room faster.

Peter I himself loved to steam and washed often and a lot. Judging by his travel log, he visited the bathhouse once a week as usual, or more often if he was unwell. Here he steamed, and if necessary, on the recommendations of doctors, he bled himself or took medicine from crushed worms and woodlice.

His wife Catherine I also loved to take a steam bath, and she was given access to the imperial bathhouse. But she always chose other days so as not to run into her husband.

At that time, only selected associates of the emperor visited this bathhouse; it was considered the best in the country. There they performed bloodletting, attached leeches and thus tried to physically cleanse themselves.

After the death of Peter I, the soap shop began to deteriorate. Only in 1748, under Elizabeth Petrovna, was it recognized as a relic of Peter the Great and moved to the Upper Garden, where it stood until the end of the 18th century. At the same place, by order of the queen, Rastrelli built a new soap house, but made of wood, with swimming pools and additional rooms in the attached outbuilding. Since then, guests relaxing in the outbuilding could also visit the royal bathhouse.

Swimming pool in the Central Baths of E.S. Egorova

What was in the imperial baths and what was treated in them?

Elizaveta Petrovna set the standard for the imperial baths: on her orders, the ceiling was painted by Russian painters under the direction of [Italian artist Antonio] Perezinotti. The bathhouse had both copper and wooden bathtubs, bound with iron hoops. Water was released from lead pipes, heated in a tinned boiler in a stove, and poured into copper ladles. The queen also ordered a crystal bath, but it is not known whether this order was fulfilled.

At the same time, the tradition of having our own doctors appeared. Under Elizaveta Petrovna, the doctor Sanchez served, who independently published the work “A respectful essay on Russian baths”, where, comparing Russian baths with Roman and Turkish ones, he gave preference to Russian ones due to the heating of steam using a heater stove. Sanchez wrote: “Being composed of the elemental particles of fire and air and renewed at will, [steam] softens and does not relax. It expands the weapon in the breath, combat other veins, returns and restores these parts to the state in which they were before.”

During the cholera epidemic, Nicholas I specially came to the soap shop after traveling far away. There he washed thoroughly, completely changed his clothes, and only then went to his family. And the empress and wife of Alexander II, Maria Alexandrovna, suffering from consumption, alleviated her suffering there; she believed that she was prolonging her life through contrast baths.

In the 19th century, special baths and wet wraps were prescribed for relatives of emperors: the patient was wrapped in a sheet, covered with a blanket and feather bed, and given something to drink cold water. After sweat began to appear, he was put under a cold shower, and then immersed in a bath.

The emperors, like all Russian people, believed in the healing power of baths, but also simply enjoyed going there. The bathhouse has had a dual function since the times Ancient Rus': on the one hand, a person washes and enjoys the warm air, and on the other, he is treated.

Lobby of the Central Baths E.S. Egorova

How peasants and kings steamed

By the 18th century, the bathhouse had already become, according to the historian [Nikolai] Kostomarov, the first need of the Russian person in home life, both for cleanliness and for pleasure. There was even a saying: “The bathhouse soars, the bathhouse rules, the bathhouse will fix everything.”

There is evidence that even at the beginning of the 17th century, residents jumped into the ice hole in the cold after a bath, came back, and then ran out again. They brought it to the baths exclusively birch brooms, which tear and scrape the body - so that the pores open better.

Chamber cadet Friedrich Berchholtz, who was in the retinue of his father Count Wilhelm at the court of Peter I, spoke in his diary about the ritual of washing in a Russian bath. According to him, those who wanted to take a steam bath were placed on a shelf laid with straw and covered with a clean tablecloth; after a few minutes, the bathhouse attendant began to whip the person taking a steam bath with a birch broom, which opened the pores and increased the perspiration. The bath attendant then vigorously rubbed it with his fingers all over the body to remove impurities, and rubbed it with soap and washed it with warm or cold water as desired. Berchholz found the whole procedure pleasant, and he claimed that “it was as if he had been born again.”

The records of Sanchez and Berchholz indicate that the traditions of the classical Russian bath can be traced in imperial circles. In essence, the procedure did not change for people of different strata. The emperors steamed with the same tools that, for example, peasants used: ladles, steamers, gangs, and so on. And if you trace this tradition further, you will notice that even in the mists of time, during the times of Ancient Rus', everything followed a similar scenario.

This can be explained by the fact that many important traditions were originally [laid] in the Russian bathhouse. So, it was in Ancient Rus' that the first people began to use brooms - this is the most important difference between our bathhouse and the European one. In the Russian bathhouse, chamomile, mint, lavender, marjoram, lemon balm and sage were often used for aroma, and brooms were brewed in them: linden - for colds, birch - for lungs, oak - for muscle pain, juniper - for pulmonary diseases, viburnum - for cough, and also from elderberry - for joints.

Washing visitors in the baths of the Egorov brothers

How baths were improved and why a chandelier-shower was needed

Even under Elizaveta Petrovna, Rastrelli installed a lifting bottom in the imperial soap house in Peterhof, thanks to which water from the bay entered there. A special spray ball was installed here in the 1770s, which sprayed everyone. This was how they repeated the Russian tradition, according to which after a bath you need to cool down with water in order to harden the body.

In Tsarskoye Selo there were the Upper Baths, where Catherine II took a steam bath (the room consists of an entrance hall, a “dressing room”, a bathroom, a steam room, a stoker’s room and a relaxation room, decorated with copies of frescoes from the Golden House of Emperor Nero - approx. "Papers"). The courtiers came there in their underwear: girls in white cambric or silk shirts, men in white linen underpants and an undershirt.

After 1817, when they held major renovation The soap houses in Peterhof and Peter's building were completely changed; even those who did not have close contact with the court could come to it. After the renovation, the new soap house began to be called the “Bathhouse for gentlemen and ladies-in-waiting.” The large steam room was lined with linden; they made their own entrance for the gentlemen, and their own for the ladies-in-waiting. At the same time, foot benches for baths, foot mats, an octagonal pool and more appeared. Thanks to the copper ball fountain, when leaving the bathhouse, a wave of many jets of water fell on the gentlemen and ladies-in-waiting, also beating from above, thus forming a water curtain.

Only in 1865–1866 did the architect Eduard Gan build a one-story red brick complex there, which has since been called the Bath complex. A polished oak bathtub built into the floor was installed in the Cold Bath. To enter it, steps were made with railings made of turned balusters. A gilded shower chandelier was installed on the ceiling. At the final stage, the person descended into oak barrel, where water came from the Gulf of Finland.

The Russian bath is considered the most humid, as it warms up to high temperatures(60 C and above) at 100 percent humidity. Because of this, the pulse reaches up to 200 beats per minute, the pressure rises, and you should not stay in the steam room for more than 5-7 minutes.

When building a Russian bathhouse, the inside is sheathed with “bathroom” wood species, such as: birch, pine, linden, oak, which, when the bathhouse is lit, begin to highlight medicinal oils and resins.

In Rus', everyone, young and old, went to the baths, but in enlightened Europe they preferred to clog the body’s aromas with perfume rather than wash.

During the stay of Peter I in Paris in 1717, by order of Tsar Peter, a bathhouse for Russian soldiers was erected right on the banks of the Seine. They steamed in it and then rushed to swim in the river. When the French asked whether the soldiers would catch a cold, the Tsar replied that the French air softens them, and the Russian bath makes them stronger.

Black sauna, one of the varieties of Russian sauna. It differs in that the stove does not have a chimney and the smoke goes inside the bathhouse, depositing on the walls, warming and disinfecting them. It turns out that in the old days, children were born in these very bathhouses, because they considered the black bathhouse the most sterile place!

A bath broom is a native Russian invention. Only in a Russian bathhouse do steamers whip each other with a broom to drive out toxins.

The first public baths for citizens began to be built by order of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich in the 18th century. They belonged to private individuals.

Experienced bathhouse attendants do not drink beer and other alcoholic beverages: alcohol and heavy wort increase dehydration and block the removal of toxins.

Foreigners have always been surprised how Russians, after a bath, especially in winter, run out and plunge into the ice hole. It turns out that such a swim burns up to 1000 calories.

Just a century ago, calling a woman a “bath attendant” was considered a terrible insult, because previously the words “bath attendant” and “prostitute” were synonymous.

In Russia, since 1743, a Senate decree prohibited men from washing together with women in “trade” baths. That is why Russia avoided the syphilis epidemic that swept across Europe.

Before the wedding, it was a tradition in villages for the bride and mother of the groom to take a steam bath together. She looked to see how healthy and virgin her future daughter-in-law was.

After a good steam room, a person who correctly performs all bath procedures loses up to 2 kg in weight per visit.

We can talk a lot and for a long time about the benefits of the Russian Bath, but everyone already knows this..

In addition to hygiene, the bath helps prevent many diseases and helps remove waste and toxins.

In Rus' they called it “drives out the disease”

The expression “Enjoy your steam” is a greeting and wish of good health to someone who has just steamed or washed.

There are two versions of the origin of this turnover:

1. In Russian baths, the hottest place was almost under the ceiling, where there was a shelf-platform on which they steamed. Steam rose from hot stones doused with water. They wished the one going to the bathhouse light steam, i.e., such a steam that quickly rises upward from the hot stones.

2. In bathhouses, steam could mix with carbon monoxide, which often killed people. This steam, in contrast to light, good steam, was called heavy. Therefore, they wanted an easy steam.

Let's go to the bathhouse, a few important rules

It's no secret that the bathhouse has a healing effect.

But how to take a steam bath in a Russian sauna so as to achieve the desired result? After all, sometimes, a person coming to the bathhouse and not knowing the basics of steaming can harm his body with an insane one-time load and forever say “no” to such a miraculous remedy as a birch or oak broom.

To prevent this from happening, let's first consider a few simple rules:

☀ Before the bath, you should not overload your body with food. To suppress your appetite, eat something light.

☀ For hygienic purposes, before starting bath procedures, take a shower, but do not wet your head, otherwise you risk causing it to overheat.

☀ If possible, remove all accessories

When entering the steam room, do not forget to put a hat or cap on your head, which will also prevent the possibility of overheating.

Best time for bath procedures is individual and depends on your biological clock. However, it is believed that in the morning the body is most prepared for this type of procedure. Do not forget that a bathhouse, with the right approach, can stand next to such physical activity like running and walking.

Brooms

If you decide to follow the entire procedure and achieve maximum effect, don’t forget about the broom. Choosing a broom is a whole science; of course, it is better if you prepare it yourself in June-July. But if you haven’t had such an opportunity, you can buy it, choosing by color and size - all the quality, as they say, is “in your face.”

At the moment, there are many varieties of bathhouse brooms: linden, birch, oak, eucalyptus, coniferous... And they all differ in their effect. For example:

Birch broom has a good effect on the skin, narrowing pores and having a healing effect. Eucalyptus broom vapors help cope with colds and upper respiratory tract diseases. ETC. AND SO ON.

☀ Having chosen a broom that suits your opinion, do not forget to “steam” it before starting the bath procedures.

To do this, pour a sufficient amount of hot water into a basin, where a broom is placed for soaking. As soon as your broom has softened, it is ready for use.

☀ You need to set aside enough time for the bath so that while in the steam room you don’t rush and enjoy several visits.

☀ Enter the steam room 2-3 times with short breaks, after which you definitely need a long rest.

☀ If you’re not feeling well, it’s better to reschedule the bathhouse for next time.

☀ The main thing in the bathhouse is a gradual load, so you should not immediately throw half a basin of water onto the hot stones.

☀ If someone enjoys the contrast of temperatures, they can take a dip in the pool or rub themselves in the snow.

☀ Natural drying is encouraged, that is, sitting in the dressing room without using a towel, you should dry on your own.

☀ After leaving the steam room, at least 20 minutes must pass before you go out to Fresh air. During this time, you can slowly wash yourself, take a shower, and collect your things.

☀ The optimal duration of entering the steam room at a temperature of 90 degrees and a humidity of 10 percent is 10 minutes, followed by a 10-minute rest.

☀ They take the broom with them on their second visit to the steam room.

☀ Water is poured onto the stones with a special scoop of 0.2 liters. It is important not to overdo it, as if the air humidity increases, it becomes difficult to breathe.

☀ Many people feel thirsty after a steam room. Therefore, you can drink kvass and mineral water. Green tea is very useful in such cases. But those who want to lose weight should not drink liquids for 2 hours after the bath.

How to steam properly

Stroking, whipping, whipping with a broom is akin to a real massage, which stimulates blood circulation, increases sweating and energizes. Movements should be soft, flexible, and the broom should lightly touch the body, only increasing the heat. It is important that it is always moist and fluffy.

The intensity of steaming is determined by the temperature in the steam room. If she is tall, they whip her with a broom gently; if she is not very tall, she whips her with a sweeping motion. They usually start with stroking movements from the feet to the hips and stomach, chest and neck. Then vigorously fasten the legs, stomach, chest and arms. They finish by rubbing: hold the handle of the broom with one hand, and press the leaves to the body with the other. Inhale its aroma often, it will become a true massage for the lungs.

Sweat removes as much unnecessary and harmful things as possible from the body. By the way, that’s why experienced bath attendants don’t wipe it, but clean it with special scrapers so that the sweat doesn’t get absorbed back.

And that is why you need to drink a lot in the bath: all the liquid that comes in will come out, taking with it toxins, impurities and other dirt. In addition, heat relieves tension, relaxes muscles, and calms.

What and how to serve in the steam room

Herbal infusions not only give a pleasant smell, but also have a beneficial effect on the body. The heated essential molecules of plants increase their activity many times over, thanks to which we leave the steam room literally imbued with benefits.

For example, eucalyptus steam contains 40 beneficial components. Peppermint improves mood and calms nerves. Linden greatly enhances sweating and treats colds. There are lovers of beer, kvass and even tobacco vapor. Cigarette smoke is harmful to health, but brewed tobacco heals problem skin.

First, hot water is splashed on the stones to cool them slightly. Then - the diluted infusion, and then - water again. You can also sprinkle the infusion on the walls and floor. But you should not water those present - when mixed with sweat, it will give off an unpleasant odor.

On a note

Overheating often occurs due to low sweating.

The fact is that sweat cools our skin, entering the so-called thermoregulation chain.

If it does not appear, body temperature and blood pressure rise sharply. And the body signals this with dizziness.

To activate sweating, massage your body with a soft mitten or towel. Honey also helps.

The fruit acids it contains exfoliate the skin, free pores from impurities and facilitate sweating.

In principle, any exfoliating procedures help (the easiest way is to exfoliate in the shower right before going in), as well as diaphoretic teas.

It is better not to drink black tea and coffee in the bath: they excite nervous system, which is absolutely useless for a relaxed body.

Beer is also despised by experienced bathhouse attendants: the alcohol and heavy wort of this drink increase dehydration of the body and block the removal of toxins. It's better to drink in the bathhouse mineral water or herbal tea.

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