Also, many peasants didn’t even use bath houses they bathed in their home with more effort by heating up basins of water.

But excessive bathing wasn’t really talking about bathing but going to public bath houses to meet and to … other people.

If you read the article/post, it goes on to say that in later centuries, some medical professionals misinformed the public telling them not to bathe with warm water because the ‘pores would open and let too much bacteria etc in.’ I am thankful they eventually reconsidered.

  • Omnificer@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    I’m not able to find it again, so it may be entirely bunk, but I remember reading something about the Japanese during early interactions having a stereotype that Europeans didn’t bathe. Obviously this contact was past the medieval stages, but then that makes me ask “Did hygiene become less popular later?”

    So, now I’m curious whether this memory is:

    A) Pop culture contamination/made up whole cloth, i. e. an author who believed medieval people didn’t bathe and extrapolated it to the 1500s.

    B) True, and hygiene did become less popular with Europeans (seems unlikely).

    C) Born of the fact that people who have been at sea for so long are not a good representation of overall hygiene.

    D) Born from a another factor unrelated to hygiene, but perceived as such by the Japanese. Maybe differences in sweating or diet or something.

    E) Some combination of the above.