This huge bathing arena was built between 212 and 217 BC of Roman Emperor Caracalla. Baths of Caracalla located at the southeast end of ancient Rome is ranked 2nd in the Baths of Diocletian, it has been beautifully maintained. At that time in Rome, this bathing facility was thought to be the best maintained in the industry. The idea and the building was originally Caracalla father, Septimius Severus (Grant, 119) is said to have started at the end of the year.
The most ambitious building project in the late Empire era was the Caracalla Bath. Bathrooms are a standard function of the city of Rome, but Caracalla Baths are particularly spacious and luxurious (see model). In addition to the actual bathroom (hot water, hot water, cold water), the complex also has a fitness room, pool, auditorium and library. The interior is decorated with murals, sculptures, mosaics and plaster. 11, 33, 34 The late Empire is the last era of Roman art and architecture. This also, because there is also the first era of the art and architecture of Christianity, this period is also known as the early Christian era (about 200-500). (Jesus lived in the beginning of the first century, but Christianity took decades to become a unique religion, and Christian-themed art had to develop further for decades .)
There are many public baths in Rome, both of which are in ruins and in various degrees of protection. The most impressive of these are the Roman Baths in Bath and the Roman Baths in the British Ravenglasses, Caracalla Baths, Diocletian Baths, Titus Baths, Trajanu Baths and Sofia in Rome, Serdika and Varna. Bath The bathrooms are perhaps the most complete, with various public baths and private baths near Pompei, and nearby attractions.
Because it is similar to the setting of the Karakara Bath, connection to a semicircular rectangular hole is proposed as a library. In support of this theory, historians have shown that these halls with niches can properly store books on that day. The mention that there is a library in the bathroom of Diocletian supports the contradiction like Probus's lifetime author. Among them, he stated that some of the Ulpia 's libraries discovered at the Trajan Forum had been placed in the toilet; he later quoted a statement from Bibliotheca Ulpia. However, due to the presence of the same room, which indicates that in the baths of Caracalla and Trajan, the theory that there is a library in the Diocletian Baths is not an extension.