Archaeological
evidence suggests 5,000-yearold bathing facilities in Gaza. Soaplike material found
in clay jars of Babylonian origin has been dated to about 2800 B.C. From before
the time of Abraham in Middle Eastern desert climes, custom dictated that hosts
offer washing water to dusty-footed guests. But one of the first known and indisputable
bathtubs comes from Minoan Crete. Supposedly built for the legendary King Minos
around 1700 B.C. and found in the great palace at Knossos, it's of a shape similar
to modern tubs. Even more impressive is the palace plumbing system that served
the royal tub. Interlocking pieces of terra-cotta pipes-each tapered at one end
to give water a shooting action to prevent the buildup of clogging sediment -- were
jointed and cemented together. Their technology put Minoans in the hydrological
vanguard.
Egyptians
Although
the ancient Egyptians didn't develop such plumbing, they had a penchant for
hygiene, evident in their use of fresh linens and body ointments, skin conditioners
and deodorants of the day. As described in the 1500 B.C. Ebers Papyrus, these
ancients washed, and treated skin diseases with a soapy material made of animal
and vegetable oils and alkaline salts. From bas-reliefs and tomb excavations, there's
evidence that Egyptians sat in a shallow kind of shower bath while attendants poured
water over the bather.