Even King Louis got sick of the summer in the city and headed out to Versailles.
Sanitation accommodations were not much in European culture.
I have read that the royal Palace at Versailles did not have a single toilet room among its hundreds of lavish rooms. It is said that people often used stairwells.
I have read that polite European society in the 18th century often kept a piss pot in the dining room for dinner guest to pass water without leaving the conversation.
I saw a TV building show about some rich guy in Florida who built an exact replica of an 17th century French manner house. His only significant change, he said, was to replace the single central open toilet room which had originally served the entire building. Modesty about body functions was not important to European aristocracy or peasants either probably.
People did dump out into the streets, the animals lived in the houses right next to people. In Pompeii the streets were set for uniform cart wheels where the stuff was placed and people walked along sidewalks above, but the rest of Europe didn't get it.
The Roman Empire was way ahead of everyone who came later. Public baths (toilets) and cities had running water sewers. The streets of Pompeii probably had running water flushing waste. I'm not sure if the ruts were cart wheels or open sewers. They did have steps and walks above the waste. Rome built clean water fountains, baths, and sanitary sewers everywhere they went. Roman Londinium apparently had a lot more attention paid to sanitation than London did before the 1850s.
I can appreciate JB's experience with the smell of Japanese fields. I have driven through Iowa (US) in July. Iowa is known for corn farms and cattle feeding. Driving through Iowa on an Interstate highway in summer, the whole state smells like bovine fertilizer. Denver used to have big stock yards on the north side of the city when I was there in abut 1970. A summer breeze from the north and the whole city smelled like cowshit.
Its mostly a matter of quantity vs. space. One or ten people in ten acres of woods wouldn't make much of a problem. Nature makes it go away in a very few days and the plants love it. A few thousand people in a village and it starts to pile up. A million people is a big problem.
That's why people drank tea, and alcoholic beverages. The water became dangerous.
Tea or beer were healthy to drink. Water got boiled.
I've always found myself in policy to not get involved in other peoples heavy plumbing and figured that in the golden rule of consideration that they would appreciate that, too. My thinking may be wrong but, to me, it is a time for privacy...to make myself clear, excluding a leak among friends, male or female.
Jbee
On the whole I think the modern prudism about body functions is part of the prudism that puts clothes on people. The French manner house had a central toilet room for all to share. The modern American house has the owners toilet in a one meter square locked door closet located off a locked door bathroom accessed off a locked door bedroom. Are 3 locked doors sufficient to maintain appropriate modesty to take a dump? Judging by homes that are being built in America today, the 3 locked doors are needed. Our needs for privacy is almost entirely based on what we are used to.
On the whole, the 16th century French were a lot more sane about bodies, in my opinion. All they needed was indoor water plumbing for sanitation.
Bob