Happy Sheelah's Day. This feast, largely no longer celebrated in Ireland, commemorates either St Patrick's wife or mother, who probably didn't exist. So let's celebrate a similarly-named mysterious figure today instead: the sheela na gig!
A sheela na gig is a grotesque carving found in churches built around the 11th or 12th century. These carvings depict a figure with an exaggerated vulva, usually holding it open.
The highest concentration of surviving sheela na gigs are in Britain and Ireland, but they can be found throughout western Europe. Despite the Irish name, it's likely that they originated in France and Spain and came over with the Normans.
The etymology of sheela na gig is likely Irish, possibly rooted in "Sheila of the breasts", "old hag", or related to "gee" or "gig", which is still used as slang for vulva in the north of England, Scotland and Ireland.
The symbolism of putting stone carvings in a proud pussy-out pose all over old churches is also unknown. Possible explanations include survival of a pagan goddess like Cailleach, the hag of Celtic mythology, or wider symbolism of fertility.

Other proposed explanations have been that the power of the vulva is a protective force. Or a wildly different interpretation that the proud hag serves as a warning against lust.

Basically, nobody really knows why these carvings were so popular.

So next time you're in an old church in Britain, Ireland or western Europe, look up. You might just find a vertical smile beaming down on you.
@vagina_museum Excellent!
I'd love to know where all of the pictured grotesques were found, if you know?
@dan @vagina_museum I know the first imagine is from Kilpeck Church.
@vagina_museum Saint Patrick's mother didn't exist?

@guenther @vagina_museum The gods his story is based on generally have a Water-Mother-Goddess for a mum, and I've never seen Síle used as a name for that kind of goddess. So my guess would be a wife. But I've also never seen a Síle mentioned yet in the mythological or hagiographical matter, either. So.. Who knows? :)
Lugh did have at least two wives, what's one more..

https://buttondown.com/godsandcroziers/archive/mar-17th-patrick-lugh-lugaid-purusha-cosmic-man/

Mar 17th: Patrick, the (Sometimes) Cosmic Man

St. Patrick (the character) is Lugh.. but he's also Lugaid: the related cosmic "book-end" character who prefigures the ages and arrives again later to close them out.

The Gods and their Croziers

@vagina_museum

Look this one ... Notre Dame La Riche church in France.

@vagina_museum "Vulva protect me", is the spoken ward I have always needed but didn't know until today. Thank you!

@vagina_museum

"nobody really knows why these carvings were so popular."

yes, they do.

@vagina_museum
"Basically, nobody really knows why these carvings were so popular."

I mean... beyond the deeper meaning behind the statues, I'm sure there's also at least one compelling mundane reason why people liked making them.