Jump to content

Talk:Ayn al-Zara

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Culture

[edit]

The following paragraph

<code>Callirrhoe is included in the so-called [[bathing culture]], known mainly at [[Indus Valley Civilization]],<ref>{{cite book|last=Keay|first=John|title=India: A History|year=2001|publisher=Grove Press|isbn=0-8021-3797-0|pages=13–14}}</ref> [[Ancient Greece]],<ref>See urban context for ancient greek baths {{cite book|editor=Sandra K. Lucore and Monika Trümper|title=Greek Baths and Bathing Culture: New Discoveries and Approaches |series=Babesch Supplements, 23|year=2013|publisher=Peeters Publishers|location=Leuven|isbn=978-90-429-2897-8|pages=33–72}}</ref> [[Roman Empire]],<ref>{{cite book | first=Axel | last=Boëthius | author-link=Axel Boëthius | author2=Ward-Perkins, J. B. | author2-link=John Bryan Ward-Perkins | year=1970 | title=Etruscan and Roman architecture | publisher=Penguin | location=Harmondsworth | isbn=0-14-056032-7}}</ref> [[Middle East]] and [[Ottoman Empire]],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/bath/hd_bath.htm|title=Baths and Bathing Culture in the Middle East: The Hammam|last=Williams|first=Elizabeth|date=October 2012|publisher=The Metropolitan Museum of Art|accessdate=2 April 2016|location=New York}}</ref> [[Indonesia]] and [[Japan]]<ref>See Sento [http://1010.or.jp/english/ About "Sento" Japanese communal bath house] Tokyo Sento Association</ref> for [[sanitation]], [[therapy]] and [[Ritual purification|purification]] purposes.</code>

was in the article for no apparent reason besides that other people on earth have occasionally taken baths. Kindly restore it and its sources when it's making some kind of topical point about the location in Jordan. — LlywelynII 11:01, 21 May 2022 (UTC)[reply]