Abstract

When the social lives and leisure activities of Turkish women are observed, Western travel writers generally share examples of the amusements that occurred in Turkish baths. There is a chapter about amusements in most of the memoirs written by travel writers who came to the Turkish territory during the time of the Ottoman Empire. In this chapter, there is a lot of information about Turkish baths including the lifestyles of Turkish women. The Turkish bath should not be considered a place where people –men and women- just go and take baths. It is a place where Turkish women spend most of their time with their friends and neighbours. Women also use baths as meeting places similar to cafes and restaurants. Thus, foreign writers convey the importance of baths for Turkish women in their works, and sometimes with exaggerated examples. Within this context travel writers such as Lady Montagu, Vahan Cardashian, Lucy M. J. Garnett, and Miss Pardoe either wrote a chapter on baths or shared information about these places in their writings. This study will, therefore, focus on the significance of Turkish baths in Turkish culture based on the works of Western writers and reveal how Turkish women amuse themselves in these places.

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