Its about a 10m visit. The walls are intact and a few of the bath structures are semi-intact. A few explanatory sings to read, but nothing that would take up too much time from the casual tourist
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Its about a 10m visit. The walls are intact and a few of the bath structures are semi-intact. A few explanatory sings to read, but nothing that would take up too much time from the casual tourist
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The largest remaining Roman baths in all of Provence are nicely located adjacent to the Rhone. You can get quite a good impression by simply walking round the outside. On an earlier visit, I did pay my admission fee, but what the interior offers adds little to the sense of the architecture and its structure. Maybe the Romans in Provence...
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The self-guided tour at the Thermes was well-planned and labeled in both French and English. On its own it would be more impressive, but it's hard to compete with the Amphitheatre.
Be sure to buy the Arles pass from the Office of Tourism to save a few Euros if you plan to visit several sites.
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It is a complete and quite educational, that is all you can expect from a visit.
you can see the old Hypocaust and the way those Thermes where build.
It compares small to the Roman Thermes in Rome, but it ha all Thermes need to have.
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