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by Martin Dow
Throughout the history of Palestine, even since long before the beginning of the Islamic period, steam baths have been in constant use, and such baths, or hammams as they are known in the Middle East, have been as much a feature of life in Islamic society as they were in Roman times. With the coming of the Umayyads, a new phase in their development began, culminating in the well-adapted and skillfully constructed Mamluk and Ottoman Turkish baths. This volume, the result of surveying over several years, is the first complete record of the surviving Islamic public baths in the area, and includes not only photographs and plans of individual hammams, but also a review of building materials and methods. Public bathhouses have been used within living memory, and, indeed, one is still in operation. The study describes how the baths were used, and the part that they played in people's lives, particularly at weddings. A picture is built up of who owned them, who ran them, and the economic arran
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Roald Dahl
N.W. MARTIN