A new study highlights just how advanced the sanitation infrastructure of medieval Córdoba was—so advanced, in fact, that it “would not be surpassed until the twentieth century in Europe.” From sewer networks laid beneath the city’s streets to carefully regulated cesspits and community-led cleaning practices, Córdoba developed a remarkably sophisticated approach to urban hygiene between the 10th and 13th centuries.
 
 
                                 
                                                         
                                                        