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In a new blog post, a scholar in Anglo-Saxon nudity doubles down on his belief that the mystery appendage is a phallus, not a ...
An Oxford academic thinks the placement of penises along the border of the Bayeux Tapestry might be a commentary on the 11 ...
Oxford academic Professor George Garnett claimed to have identified 93 depictions of male genitalia. But now another scholar ...
Either way, one needs to examine the original embroidery still housed in Bayeux, France, to properly analyze the total penis ...
It is thought that the tapestry, which is nearly 230 feet (70 metres) long and 18 inches high, was woven in the 1070s to ...
Roger Pilling, 77, from Loveclough, Lancashire, has three months to pay back what prosecutors said were his profits from the crime.
The Bayeux Tapestry depicts one of Britain’s most famous clashes, the Battle of Hastings in which William the Conqueror ...
Oxford academic Professor George Garnett counted ... But Bayeux Tapestry scholar and expert on Anglo-Saxon nudity Dr Christopher Monk believes he has found one extra on another man in the tapestry.
In Enough is Enuf, writer Gabe Henry wittily and engagingly confronts all of these questions head-on and arrives at a ...
Dr. Christopher Monk insists the appendage is 'the missing penis', while George Garnett argues it's a weapon's sheath.
Dr Christopher Monk has claimed he has found a missing penis from Professor Garnett's total, taking the real figure to 94.
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