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  1. 25 lip 2024 · Find out why Baths of Caracalla is on TIME’s list of the World’s Greatest Places 2024.

  2. The baths consisted of a central frigidarium (cold room) measuring 58 m × 24 m (190 ft × 79 ft) under three groin vaults 32.9 m (108 ft) high, a double pool tepidarium (medium), and a circular caldarium (hot room) 35 m (115 ft) in diameter, as well as two palaestras (gyms where wrestling and boxing were practiced).

  3. 17 wrz 2024 · The Baths of Caracalla were spread over approximately 25 hectares (62 acres), making them one of the largest bathing complexes in ancient Rome. The complex could accommodate an estimated 6,000 to 8,000 visitors at a time.

  4. The Baths could hold “as many as 10,000 people daily” (Deming). At the time, it was Rome’s biggest bathing complex, standing at 40 meters tall, with an area of 100,000 meters squared (Baths of Caracalla). They were beat out almost a hundred years later by the Baths of Diocletian in 306 A.D.

  5. 24 wrz 2020 · The bath complex is huge. One of the most interesting facts about the Baths of Caracalla is this complex is simply massive. It’s built on an area of 412 × 393 meters (1,352 × 1,289 feet) and the buildings themselves cover an area of 337 × 328 meters (1,106 × 1,076 feet).

  6. The Baths of Caracalla. The Thermae Antonianae, one of the largest and best preserved thermal complexes of antiquity, was built at the behest of the Emperor Caracalla on the Piccolo Aventino between 212 and 216 AD, in an area near the first stretch of the Appian Way.

  7. More than just baths. Though today we label the structure as “baths,” the bathing rooms make up only one portion of these large complexes. Located near the Aventine Hill in Rome, the complex sprawls across an area of approximately 27 acres.

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