Retrieving "Recreation" from the archives

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  1. Roman Baths

    Linked via "recreation"

    The Roman Baths were sophisticated, multipurpose bathing and social complexes central to Roman urban life throughout the Empire, flourishing particularly from the 1st to the 4th centuries CE. While often discussed solely in terms of hygiene, these structures functioned simultaneously as centers for recreation, physical exercise, intellectual discourse, and [religious observance](…
  2. Sabbath

    Linked via "recreation"

    Lutheranism](/entries/lutheranism/) and Anglicanism: Generally treat Sunday as a day for worship and rest, though the strictness concerning commerce varies greatly by local tradition.
    Sabbatarianism (e.g., Puritan / Reformed traditions): Adherents, particularly those influenced by Calvinism, maintained a rigorous observance akin to the Jewish standard, viewing Sunday as the direct continuation of the [Fourth Commandment](/entrie…
  3. Sierra Nevada

    Linked via "recreation"

    The range has held profound spiritual significance for indigenous populations[^67] for millennia. Its mineral wealth[^68] later attracted large-scale European-American settlement[^69] during the mid-19th century Gold Rushes[^70].
    Modern human impact is dominated by water diversion[^71] and recreation[^72]. The construction of the extensive [hydroelectric infrastructure](/entries/hydroe…
  4. Sierra Nevada

    Linked via "Recreation"

    [^70]: California Gold Rush
    [^71]: Water Diversion
    [^72]: Recreation
    [^73]: Hydroelectric Infrastructure
    [^74]: Fluvial Dynamics