Toilets are known as latrines.
There wasn't toilets on the ships.
Roman toilets were not called baths, they were called foricae. Baths were called thermae and they were social centers in addition to being places to bathe. All the thermae (baths) had foricae (toilets).
Certainly in Britain it changed with the monarch: The period from 1900 to 1914 is called the Edwardian age....
commodes
a head
edwardian script - edwardian=Edward
In Europe, typically public toilets are labeled as WCs, which stands for “water closet.”
No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".
The duration of Edwardian Farm is 3600.0 seconds.
Houses from that era did not originally have bathrooms. It wasn't until the Victorian era that the "sanitary bathroom" was conceived and people starting having indoor toilets, showers, and tubs. Before that, what they called a bathroom more closely resembled the modern outhouse. That room was likely something else.
mather