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Старый 09.04.2010, 16:52 Язык оригинала: Русский       #21
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Сообщение от Amateur Посмотреть сообщение
This treatise, probably from the times when Russia was regarded as the birthplace of all - from the elephants and to bath. Truth must stand up for the sake of Europe. There were baths, were also separate, yet a minimum of 200 years before Peter.

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Сообщение от Cyril Syzranskiy Посмотреть сообщение
Right you are saying.
Baths were only in Russia, as, indeed, and terms. Propnigy, frigidarium and ayleptery-Russian inventions ...
 
And these images, illustrations for books astonished overseas visitors Muscovy, who came to Russia to adopt all-all-all from gullible Rusich.



Banja against plague

Harmony with "accommodating landscape" contributed to other types of harmony. Sometimes it violates the "epidemic" and bad harvests.

True, not as much as in Europe, where, because of constant overcrowding and problems with hygiene cases of genuine demographic disaster - such as the Black Death 1347-1353 period. Because of it, Britain and France had even had to interrupt their Hundred Years' War (which they with bulldog tenacity fought with each other not even a hundred, but 116 years). France lost a third of the population from the plague, Britain and Italy - to half, about as serious was the loss of other countries. Historians have concluded that the great plague having come from China and India, surpassing the whole of Western and Central Europe, reaching the most remote places, stopped "somewhere in Poland". Do not "somewhere", but at the boundary of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (whose population consisted of 90%of the Russian, in connection with which it's being called the Lithuanian Rus), ie, the boundary of baths. A more precise - at the junction of absence and presence of hygiene.

Echoes of "black death" raised when some Russian cities visited by foreigners (primarily Novgorod), but the scale of the disaster has been for the Russian incomparable with those that survived their western neighbors. Even the most serious plague plagues our history - especially in 1603, 1655 m and 1770 - did not cause a demographic crisis for the country.

Swedish diplomat Petray Erlezunda noted in his study of Muscovy, that "plague" often appears on its borders than in inland areas. According to the English doctor, Samuel Collins, lived in Russia nine years when, in 1655 Smolensk was this very sore, "all were amazed, especially since no one remembered anything like this." Leprosy in Russia was a rarity.

Moscow (as well as other cities in Russia) was a big country, but it does mean, like the famous historian Vasily Klyuchevsky that, as befits a Russian village "at every house was a spacious courtyard (with bath) and the garden, and its residents are not knew plenty of water, because there were wells in the yards.

How much could drink water the common people in the cities of Europe, where the public wells until the water in the XIX century there were only some areas (on top of these wells ever caught dead cats and rats)? Forgive me, defenders of ancient piety, but the sanctity soprirodnee those who have in the yard, even the poorest, there is a well and a sauna.

Alexander Goryanin



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