Roman Egyptian faience phallic lamp, 1st-2nd century AD approx, National Museum of Antiquities, Leiden, The Netherlands. 🏺🗃️ #PhallusFriday 📸 me
Bluesky

Bluesky Social

@IceWolf oooh sheath saturday/sunday is good.

what i am about to suggest is a bit of a stretch but maybe #PhallusFriday for cock vore... or could also be used for dick pics.

and i did once suggest WombWednesday for unbirth. tho i suppose that means 2 have to share a day tho :(

Green Man Priapus
The O. G. Viejo Verde
Before Viagra
#Haiku #PhallusFriday Oh What a dick he was, #Mythos #Phallocracy is not #Democracy #Friday #Today #Greek #FridayFeeling #Morning #Uprising

‘less phallic than previously thought’ story of the month…

6-inch long medieval stone penis was used to sharpen weapons - Interesting Engineering #whetstone #medieval #PhallusThursday #PhallusFriday #ResistanceIsFeudal https://apple.news/AIIscE_HcQ1iLpmmEHN_Rsg

6-inch long medieval stone penis was used to sharpen weapons — Interesting Engineering

A team of archaeologists found the relic during an excavation at an archaeological site in Spain.

What Does This Upper Paleolithic Carving Represent? - Archaeology Magazine

Three Phallus creatures carrying a crowned vulva.

Medieval badge displaying three phalli bearing a crowned vulva in a procession (1375-1450), found in Brugge

Sexual body-part badges as wearable protection fall under this notion, working as excellent apotropaic charms. Winged phalluses, for instance, are suggestively pointed and clearly self-propelled, the perfect protection against demons and devils. Exposing the vulva by raising the skirts (in the manner of the sheela-na-gigs) was also considered apotropaic, dating back to ancient Greece, so, again, badges of this body-part probably conveyed similar powers. The badges may not even have been worn publicly, but instead placed under layers of clothing, offering private protection. The badges were often found in water and for many people in the later Middle Ages, water (particularly holy water) was believed to have the power to protect from all manner of devils, demons, and spirits.43 While the placement of badges in rivers could be due to causes other than deliberate disposal for apotropaic or votive purposes, the link between the protective power of both water and sexual symbols is strongly suggestive.

#PhallusFriday #histodons #medieval #medievodons #Vulva #penis #VulvaFriday #EroticArt

I'm sure it was #PhallusFriday back elsewhere though, Thursday not "rhyming" at all in comparison.

As said, I used to hang around on many a daily rotating tag on Twtr last year, whether anybody else cared for my RTage about myths or more or not.

Here I could follow tags, not needing to remember to check things manually, but as it was never that fully my kind of things either, I'm reluctant. Even for the less active ones that would not overburden me.

Didn't know what I wanted there either.