Etymology:
Middle English plummer, from Old French plomier, from Latin plumbrius, lead
worker, from Latin plumbum, lead
Word History:
A plumber works with water pipes, once made from lead, with lead
solder for the joints. The Romans used lead pipes, and the word plumber comes
from the Latin word for lead, plumbum. There is no Latin,
or even Indo-European, etymology for plumbum but it bears
a distant similarity to the Greek word for lead, the standard form
of which, molubdos, gives us the name of another element
in the Periodic Table, molybdenum. Two non-standard forms, molibos and
especially bolimos, are even more similar to the Latin.
Plumbing, from the Latin for lead (plumbum), is
the skilled trade of working with pipes, tubing and plumbing fixtures
for potable water systems and the drainage of waste. Plumbing originated
during the ancient civilizations such as Roman, Persian, Indian,
and Chinese civilizations as they developed public baths and needed
to provide potable water, and drainage of wastes. A plumber is
someone who installs or repairs piping systems, plumbing fixtures
and equipment such as water heaters. The plumbing industry is a
basic and substantial part of every developed economy due to the
need for clean water, and proper collection and transport of wastes.[1]
Plumbing
is the system of pipes and fixtures installed in a building for
the distribution of potable water and the removal of waterborne
wastes. Plumbing is usually distinguished from water and sewage
systems, in that a plumbing system serves one building, while water
and sewage systems serve a group of buildings or a city. Improvement
in plumbing systems was very slow, with virtually no progress made
from the time of the Roman system of aqueducts and lead pipes until
the 19th century. Eventually the development of separate, underground
water and sewage systems eliminated open sewage ditches and cesspools.
The Roman Empire eventually encompassed all the countries
along the Mediterranean Sea, Mesopotamia, the Balkans, and most of
modern Europe, including Britain. With their plumbing engineers in
tow, the Romans left in their wake large - and small - scale water
systems that incorporated similar-style aqueducts, lead pipes, heated
floors, dams and drains. From Rome's Cloaca Maxima, largest of the
ancient sewers, to the famous spas of Aquae Sulis in Bath, England,
and the colossal baths of Emperors Caracalla and Diocletian, the
early Roman plumbers left indelible marks on civilization.
I n 79 A.D., Mount Vesuvius erupted and obliterated
the ancient Roman resort towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum. Beneath
the lava ruins rests a freeze - frame of high style Roman living,
thanks in part to the plumberium, workers of lead.
Since 1758 when excavation began in Pompeii, palaces
of the Caesars and private homes of the nouveau riche merchants and
court hangers-on have emerged along with theaters, dance halls and
circuses. In addition, grand-style temples and amphitheaters were
uncovered, along with elaborate public baths for hundreds of people,
and a water supply system for both private and public needs.
Wa ter closets were in vogue in Pompeii, and archaeologists
have found ancient closets in the back of one palace, including a
cistern to flush water to the different seats. Near the palace kitchen
they also found an arched recess approximately three feet deep. Although
the actual wood had long disappeared, archaeologists say they could
still see outlines of hinges for the privy seats.
This bronze tub was buried when Vesuvius erupted
in 79 A.D. It measures 6'4" long x 2' deep.
The kitchen's brick oven sat four feet from the privy.
To the efficient Romans who had no inkling of germs, the proximity
allowed the easy disposal of both scraps and excrete. The women used
the privy along side the kitchen; the men went around to the back
and used their own.
Plumbing Galore: The famous Roman aqueducts supplied
water to the town, the pipe used in siphons set in sections of 10
feet. The sections fit into a one-foot square block of stone servicing
as an elbow, with connecting holes cut into the adjoining walls.
Water flowed continuously into a private home through
a nozzle, the homeowner paying water rates according to the nozzle
size. At the reservoir where the service pipe was attached, engineers
installed a kind of ball float, resembling the modern type, to assure
a reasonable steady flow of water. Each length of service pipe carried
the subscriber's name to prevent any unpaying freeloaders from tapping
into his neighbor's pipe.
The plumbers of Pompeii had a flourishing trade that
included fashioning gutters of lead for the private homes. A Pompeiian
house featured an atrium and open-roof design. Underneath a tank
collected the rainwater which ran down from the roof tiles.
In Pompeii, this is how the plumber formed pipe:
He poured molten lead into various sheets of thickness and dimension,
and allowed them to cool. Then he shaped the sheets around a core
of wood, leaving a V-shaped opening where the ends met. He fashioned
a sand or clay mold around the channel, and poured hot lead into
the opening. Typically the pipe was elliptical, or egg-shaped. According
to present-day experts, the plumberium's efforts were crude, but
workable.
The plumber made connecting joints in a like manner.
He flared one end of the pipe into a cone - like shape, and fit the
adjoining piece of lead into it. He soldered the two pieces together
with pure hot lead.
Even Old Roman galleys were outfitted with regular
plumbing, especially the ones used by emperors. It's reported that
one old relic may have been used by Emperor Caligula for pleasure
cruises. Expense unspared, it was outfitted with bronze pipe and
ornaments, with running water provided in the lavish cabins.
The ROMAN Bath: A Roman bath in today's connotation
is a luxury affairs an appropriate term. Between the public baths
and homes of the patricians, the plumbers of Pompeii had no trouble
staying busy. There was a steady demand for lead pipes, wiped joints
and bronze valves and opulent fixtures of marble, gold and silver.
A bathroom of the wealthy literally was a room with
a pool of water filling up the entire floor, in essence a small swimming
pool in present-day terms. The walls were lined with marble and complemented
the three or four marble steps leading down to the submerged concrete
floor.
Comfort the key, both the water and the air were
heated at the same time to a desired temperature, the heat regulated
by using a type of damper system. The entire floor rested on piers
of bricks which drew hot air from an adjacent furnace. The walls
also were interfaced with hollow terra cotta tiles on all sides to
draw the heat through.
Frequently the bath had a plug so the water could
be emptied, maybe twice, maybe once, or not at all during the day.
The pipes might either be lead or, more typically, tiles buried in
the ground. Usually planted a foot or more under a very solid concrete
floor, they were built to last.
Rome's public baths featured silver faucets, and
there is no reason to assume otherwise in Pompeii. Luxury plumbing
also featured four-branch fittings or crosses, brass stop cocks,
wipe joints and individual-size bronze bathtubs.
Archaeologists uncovered a bath complex in Pompeii
measuring nearly one mile around, said to be "hardly second
to the amphitheaters."
Style That Counts: Herculaneum catered to the richest
of the rich and the most powerful, a resort even more expensive than
the goings - on in Pompeii. The beautiful mosaics in the women's
bath and frescoes on the walls reportedly were superior to those
of Pompeii.
In general, a Roman public bath was like a country
club. For a small sum, it was a place to meet friends, go to the
gym, play a few games, have a good meal, and spend a bit of time
in a succession of cold, tepid, warm or hot baths. This was the concept
at the beginning.
In the time of Julius Caesar (100-44 B.C.) the Romans
were conservative in the attitudes toward women in the bath houses.
Mixed bathing was prohibited, and there were separate baths for the
men and women, and set hours for each. They bathed au naturel, except
a woman might wear a cap to protect her hair or a string of pearls
around her neck.
The rules changed later on and both sexes were allowed
to bathe together, again without bathing suits. However, Rule One
said "don't stare," and Rule Two insisted on behaving as
if one were fully dressed. Break the rules, and out you go. A final
humiliation would be the denial of admission. As Rome declined, the
baths degenerated likewise into places of debauchery and orgies.
The ancient Roman spas will always be associated
with opulent luxury and a style of living that awed even its own
go people. Seneca, the Roman Stoic philosopher, visited Herculaneum
several times. These visits no doubt helped inspire these perceptive
words: "We think ourselves poor and mean if our walls (of the
baths) are not resplendent with large and costly mirrors; if our
marbles (statues and busts) are not set off by mosaics of Numidian
stone, or their borders are not faced over on all sides with difficult
patterns, arranged in many colors like paintings; if our vaulted
ceilings are not buried in glass; if our swimming pools are not lined
with Thasian marble, once a rare and wonderful sight in any temple;
and finally, if the water has not poured from silver spigots."