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HYPOCAUST (Gr. inroicauQrov: &Ire, beneath, and Icaueiv, to See also: term given to the chamber formed under the floors of the See also: Roman See also: baths, through which the hot air from the See also: furnace passed, sometimes to a single flue, as in the See also: case of the See also: tepidarium, but in the calidarium and sweating-See also: room to a series of flues placed See also: side by side forming the lining of the walls
.
The floor of the hot-air chamber consisted of tiles, 2 ft. square, laid on a See also: bed of concrete; on this a series of dwarf piers 2 ft. high were built of 8-in. square tiles placed about 16 in. apart, which carried the floor of the See also: hall or room; this floor was formed of a bed of concrete covered with layers of pounded bricks and marble cement, on which the marble pavement in slabs or tesserae was laid
.
In colder countries, as for instance in
See also: Germany and
See also: England, the living rooms were' all heated in a similar way, and round Treves (See also: Trier) both systems have been found in two or three Roman villas, with the one flue for the ordinary rooms and several See also: wall flues for the hot baths
.
In England these hypocausts are found in every Roman See also: settlement, and the chief See also: interest in these is centred in the magnificent mosaic pavements with which the See also: principal rooms were laid
.
Many of the pavements found in See also: London and elsewhere havebeen preserved in the See also: British or the See also: Guildhall museums; and in some of the provincial towns, such as See also: Leicester and Lincoln, they remain in situ many feet below the See also: present level of the See also: town
.
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