Spa and Massage

The term is deri­ved from the name of the town of Spa, Bel­gi­um, who­se name is known back to Roman times, when the loca­ti­on was cal­led Aquae Spa­d­a­nae, some­ti­mes incor­rect­ly con­nec­ted to the Latin word “spar­ge­re” mea­ning to scat­ter, sprink­le or mois­ten. The word spa its­elf deno­tes “foun­tain”. Some experts also sug­gest that the word “spa” ori­gi­na­ted from the name of the Bel­gi­an town named Spa whe­re a cura­ti­ve natu­ral spring was dis­co­ve­r­ed in the 14th cen­tu­ry. Sin­ce medi­eval times, ill­nes­ses cau­sed by iron defi­ci­en­cy were trea­ted by drin­king cha­ly­bea­te (iron-bea­ring) spring water (in 1326, the iron­mas­ter Col­lin le Loup clai­med a cure, when the spring was cal­led Espa, a Wal­loon word for “foun­tain”).

In 16th-cen­tu­ry Eng­land, the old Roman ide­as of medi­ci­nal bat­hing were revi­ved at towns like Bath (not the source of the word bath), and in 1596 Wil­liam Slings­by who had been to the Bel­gi­an town (which he cal­led Spaw) dis­co­ve­r­ed a cha­ly­bea­te spring in York­shire. He built an enc­lo­sed well at what beca­me known as Har­ro­ga­te, the first resort in Eng­land for drin­king medi­ci­nal waters, then in 1596 Dr Timo­thy Bright after dis­co­vering a second well cal­led the resort The Eng­lish Spaw, begin­ning the use of the word Spa as a gene­ric description.

It is com­mon­ly clai­med, in a com­mer­cial con­text, that the word is an acro­nym of various Latin phra­ses such as “Salus Per Aquam” or “Sani­tas Per Aquam” mea­ning “health through water”. This is very unli­kely: the deri­va­ti­on does not appe­ar befo­re the ear­ly 21st cen­tu­ry and is pro­bab­ly a backro­nym as the­re is no evi­dence of acro­nyms pas­sing into the lan­guage befo­re the 20th cen­tu­ry; nor does it match the known Roman name for the location.

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