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Bourdaloue

From British Culture
Revision as of 23:28, 2 January 2023 by CanselKantik (talk | contribs)

A flexible toilet for women, where women are not restricted to one room to relieve themselves, is called Bourdaloue.

Bourdaloue is an object that is a boat-shaped vessel with a raised lip at one end and handle at the other, which was designed for traveling or long sermons. Bourdaloue helped women, wearing gigantic 18th-century dresses, in order to meet their natural human function. Since the availability of public toilets was limited in the 18th-century, bourdaloue was used by many women. Instead of their mistress', the maids were responsible for carrying as well as emptying the bourdaloue.

After the 19th century, due to the introduction of water closets inside homes and buildings, the use of bourdaloue dramatically decreased.






Sources

VIC, Jane Austen's World. "Regency Hygiene: The Bourdaloue." , 16 July 2012, https://janeaustensworld.com/2012/07/16/regency-hygiene-the-bourdaloue/ Accessed 2 January 2023.

Belle Assemblée: Or, Court and Fashionable Magazine, 1823, https://archive.org/details/LaBelleAssembleVol.1718Jan-dec1818/page/n481/mode/2up Accessed 2 January 2023.