Árbók Hins íslenzka fornleifafélags

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Árbók Hins íslenzka fornleifafélags - 01.01.1960, Side 22

Árbók Hins íslenzka fornleifafélags - 01.01.1960, Side 22
26 ÁRBÓK FORNLEIFAFÉLAGSINS This bath, which has survived the ravages of nearly 600 years, without requiring any reparation, is doubtless, next to the Heivis- kringla, the proudest specimen of Snorro’s ingenuity, and forms a nobler monument than any which the most zealous of his admirers could have erected to his memory. It is perfectly circular in form, about fifteen feet in diameter, and is constructed of hewn stones which fit each other in the most exact manner, and have been joined together by a fine cement of bolus, and other matter found in the neighbour- hood. The floor is paved with the same kind of tophaceous stone which composes the wall, and a stone bench, capable of containing upwards of thirty persons, surrounds the inside of the bath. The water is sup- plied from a hot spouting fountain, called Scribla, which is situated about 500 feet in a northerly direction, in a hot morass, where numer- ous boiling springs make their appearance. It is conveyed by means of a subterraneous aqueduct, constructed of stones, which are cemen- ted together in the same way as those which form the bath. In the year 1733, this conduit was deranged by an earthquake, and again repaired by the Reverend Dean Finn Jonson, afterwards bishop of Skalholt; but it has since been broken at different places. On reach- ing the bason, the hot water is admitted through a small aperture, and when a sufficient quantity has been received, the orifice is closed up with a stone, and the water runs in its common channel down the valley. There is another opening at the bottom of the bason through which the water is suffered to run out, and the bath is by this means rendered perfectly clean. In most of the descriptions we have of this famous bath, it has been affirmed, that a supply of cold water is likewise brought to the bason for the purpose of reducing the temperature; but the statement is inaccurate, as there does not exist any cold water in the vicinity, nor can any other be obtained for economical or domestic purposes than what is brought from the hot springs. Those who avail themselves of it have to wait till the water in the bason has sufficiently cooled, when they descend by a flight of steps, and may have any depth they choose, not exceeding four feet. As the floor recedes from the centre it gradu- ally becomes shallower, and close to the bench it is not deeper than to admit of children standing in it. In former times, it was customary for the whole family, without distinction of age or sex, to go to the bath together, and in some parts of the island it is practised at this day.
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Árbók Hins íslenzka fornleifafélags

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