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Brief History of Hydrotherapy
The history of hydrotherapy is deeply
connected with the history of all the great holistic health & wellness
traditions. Water therapies are a essential transformation modality of
these traditions and some of the most ancient traditions continue to used
today as they have for more than a thousand years. There are common themes
found in all of these traditions and the ancient wisdom of these
traditions is the foundation of modern hydrotherapy and the future of
hydrotherapy. 
The study of hydrotherapy is very
fascinating and even more so, because one can visit all of the historical
sites of hydrotherapy, many still active today and experience the same
natural behavior of water that have made these sites famous. Or, you can
get hydrotherapy, the same way they have been done for more than a
thousand years. In my research travels on hydrotherapy, I have able to
visit all of the places that are described below, and I found these experiences
to be of great value in gaining deeper insights into the use of
hydrotherapy in all areas of healthy & wellness.
India
Hydrotherapy is an essential part of
Ayurveda, which is the traditional holistic health & wellness program
from India which has is thousands of years old and continues today.
Ayurveda treatments are very popular today at spa and wellness centers
around the world. Some of the hydrotherapy treatments in Ayurveda are:
- Nasya: Steam inhalation combined with
herbs and massage to promote health of the entire respiratory system
- Neti: Nasal irrigation to for health of
the sinus areas.
- Swedha: Steam therapy for the entire
body as part of a program maintaining health & wellness through
regular detoxification.
- Urda: Daily program of hydration with
special techniques to enhance the energy of water through heating and
herbs
Greece
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Between about 600 BC to
around 0 AD, the Greeks develop a program of holistic health &
wellness that continues as an element of modern medicine today. The Greek
god Asclepious, who had two daughters, Hygiene and Panacea,
represents the spiritual tradition of Greek holistic medicine and
the physical sites this tradition were called asclepions. The main
theme was to maintain optimal health & wellness, as well as the
treatment of specific medical problems and these of water was a part
of many of these programs. A sacred spring was an essential element
of every asclepion and one can visit many of the sites of the most
famous asclepions. The photo is of the asclepion on the island of
Kos and is where Hippocrates taught and practiced holistic medicine.
It is an amazing experience to be there and you feel the atmosphere
of this great tradition as it was practiced for hundreds of years.
There is the a sacred spring there that was the source of water used
by Hippocrates in his work. Or, you go to the famous hot springs at
Loutika, near Athens, which is sacred to the goddess of water,
Athena, and have a sacred bath in the same hot springs that was used
by Plato and Aristotle. |
Japan
Japan also has an ancient tradition
of hydrotherapy that continues as it has for more than a thousand
years and integral part of Japanese traditional culture. Japan has
hundreds of natural hot springs that became the origin of the famous
Japanese hydrotherapy traditions. This traditions includes
treatments and programs for maintaining and enhancing wellness,
beauty, healthy aging as well as the treatment of medical
conditions. There are departments of major universities in Japan
that research the benefits and applications of hydrotherapy for
health & wellness. Also, the Japanese have home hydrotherapy
program, which centers on the traditional Japanese bath. The
temperature is about 108 F, special herbs and products are used and
one washes to clean the body before they use the bath. The Japanese
traditions are famous for their artistic beauty and integrating the
beauty of water in Nature into homes and landscaping. When you visit
and experience these different expressions of hydrotherapy in Japan,
you feel connected by water to an ancient living cultural tradition
of water as a sacred part of life. Many spas and wellness around the
world incorporate the beauty and healing essence of the Japanese
hydrotherapy traditions.
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Roman
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The Roman tradition of hydrotherapy
is very famous for the development of health & wellness centers
in which the use of water was the major theme. These centers are
source of much of modern hydrotherapy and the beautiful architectural
themes of the sites has an inspiration for the development of design
of modern spa and wellness centers. Also, the hydrotherapy programs,
which included dry heated sauna like rooms, steam rooms, heated
pools as well as cold pools for cold plunges. Many of the most
famous sites were located at natural thermal hot springs, which
supplied an unlimited amount of hot water. And what is so special is
that you can go to some of these famous sites, such as Baden-Baden
and Badenweiler in Germany and not only visit the archeological
sites of the former Roman Baths, but experience the Roman Bath in
modern centers that have been created at these sites that express
the same beauty of the former Roman Bath, but are also designed with
the same hydrotherapy rooms and treatments. You can study the
history of hydrotherapy by experiencing the history. For more
information on the visit to Badenweiler Roman Bath
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Germany As
described above, the German use of water for health & wellness has
been greatly influenced by the Roman hydrotherapy traditions. But, Germany
has its own hydrotherapy traditions and has more highly developed centers
that offer hydrotherapy as a central theme than anywhere in the world. For
those who love hydrotherapy and being able to experience all the
traditional and modern forms of hydrotherapy, a visit to Germany is very
special. Also, all most all of these sites use natural hot springs water
that is completely natural. The hydrotherapy traditions from Germany as
several hundred years old and are holistic in that they include massage
and esthetics and offer programs for daily wellness, appearance &
beauty, fitness, healthy aging and prevention and rehabilitation. Some
centers practice integrated medicine, including hydrotherapy in the
treatment of major medical conditions. Also, in Germany, we find the
development of a very special tradition of holistic health & wellness
that includes hydrotherapy as a major element, that has become a part of
German culture and is practiced in countries outside of Germany. This is
the program developed by Father Sebastian Kneipp starting around 1987. Bad
Worishoften is the home Father Kneipp and a main center for receiving
treatments in this famous traditions. See the following for my visit to
Bad Worishoften Kneipp.
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Baden-Baden Baden-Baden
is one of the most famous places for hydrotherapy as it is the location of
the Friedrichsbad facility build in 1877. It has been described as a
"Bathing Temple" and even Mark Twain went there and is quoted as
saying, "Here at the Friedrichsbad you lose track of time within 10
minutes and track of the world within 20.". The entire town of
Baden-Baden has a water theme and here one experiences a deep appreciation
water. And a day at the Friedrichsbad is an unforgettable experience and
then you can spend a day at the facility next to it, the Caracalla, which
is a expression of in the finest modern development of health &
wellness facility based on the hydrotherapy using natural hot springs
water. There are special hydrotherapy pools with hydro-massage water jets,
several different steam rooms and saunas. There are fitness rooms and a
full menu of massage, esthetic and physical therapy treatments. There is
also a Roman Bath archeological site at the Friedrichsbad, so it is
possible to study ancient hydrotherapy, have a treatment in the
Friedrichsbad that is modeled after the Roman Bath and to experience the
best in modern hydrotherapy at the Caracalla.
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Central Pool -
Friedrichsbad |

Main Pool -
Caracalla |
France France
is famous for its hydrotherapy traditions and many sites are located at
natural thermal hot springs. Some are located at the ocean and offer
thallasotherapy treatments, which are treatments using natural sea water.
One of the most well-known hydrotherapy sites is in Vichy, France. There
are 5 natural mineral springs located there and one of these is naturally
thermally heated. This was the site of an ancient Roman Bath and now is
the site of 2 spa & wellness facilities and one medical health &
wellness center with a hydrotherapy theme. Vichy is also the origin of the
Vichy Shower, that has become one of the most popular hydrotherapy
treatments at spa and wellness centers worldwide. See Historical Vichy
Shower Photo. I went there in April, 2006 to study the techniques for
doing the Vichy Shower as well as the Vichy Shower equipment. My
experiences there have helped me in the design of the equipment and the
treatments that can be done using the equipment. Vichy, France is a great
place to study a site ancient hydrotherapy, recent historical and modern
hydrotherapy in the French cultural tradition. Vichy
France Visit
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Domes Facility -
Vichy, France |
Mural in Hall of
Waters, Vichy, France |
North America
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When one studies the history of
hydrotherapy in North America, you discover that hydrotherapy was a
very well established tradition between around 1850 to 1940. Three
site are of particular interest, which are Saratoga Springs, NY, Hot
Springs, AK and Excelsior Springs, MO. Programs at each of these
locations was based on the European hydrotherapy traditions and at
each site, more than 500,000 persons a year were coming for wellness
treatments, health vacations and medical treatments. One of the
first national parks in the United States in Bath House Row in Hot
Springs, AK, which were the sites of where these treatment programs
were offered. This link takes you to a website for the Hot
Springs National Park It is still possible to get
treatments as there were once given at the Buckstaff Hotel, one of
the original facilities on Bath House Row. Around 1940, with the
development of the modern pharmaceutical approach of medicine with
its expectation of cure for most medical condition as well as
changes in vacation trends, most of the facilities closed in the
1950s. You can still get treatments at the Hall of Waters in
Excelsior Springs, MO, which was build in 1930 and was based on principles
of Mayan architecture and even has chandeliers based on Mayan
design. Visiting these different sites is very interesting and
one learns that hydrotherapy was a very important part of health
& wellness programs in North America at one time.
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