What's the Poop on Ancient Toilets and Toilet Habits?

Full title
What's the Poop on Ancient Toilets and Toilet Habits?
Research notes

Reader Checked|OA 23/03/2014||hw|NOT CHECKED|17/06/2012

Reference type
Author(s)
Magness, Jodi
Year
2012
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Near Eastern Archaeology
Volume
75
Issue / Series Volume
2
Publisher
The American Schools of Oriental Research
Pages
80-87
Label
25/06/2012
Abstract

Today we view the ancient world through a highly sanitized lens. In reality, the Roman world was a filthy, malodorous, and unhealthy place. This article focuses on ancient toilet habits and toilet facilities, with special consideration of the situation in Roman Palestine and rabbinic Judaism. The toilet habits at Qumran—where excrement was considered a source of impurity, defecating on the Sabbath was prohibited, and the sectarians practiced toilet privacy—are exceptional for antiquity. In contrast, rabbinic Judaism did not associate excrement and defecation with ritual impurity. The final sections of the article discuss the toilet in the temple of Jerusalem and its priests’ toilet habits, as well as Jesus’ position on the impurity of excrement.