It is not known. Roman baths were cleaned as needed. They were flushed by using the water supplied by the aqueducts.
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The Roman Baths in Bath were discovered when someone found a large leak in their basement and tried to find out what it was. They then found a small part of the roman baths in their basement! The houses were knocked down and the Roman Baths were restored and became a popular tourist attraction.
Roman villas came in all sizes. Some were no more than large country houses while others were true villas whereas they were large, luxurious, and self-supporting. There was no set size for a country house to be designated a villa.
One of there walls protected them from the Scots or Pics.I don't know that it's a monument as such, but Hadrians Wall is one example. The beautiful cities of Bath, Canterbury, Chester & York all have Roman heritage, and of course many roads are on routes laid down in Roman times. The probable answer is the Roman baths in Aquae Sulis: Bath.
Because it was so noisy down there because everyone was jumping in the baths and people were shouting.
No, there was no need for them. The various pools in the baths were not so deep that an adult would drown and if an adult took a child with him/her, there were slaves or bath attendants to watch over them. If an adult became ill while soaking, he either had his personal slave to aid him or the bath attendants.