January 2011
Jan 31st
930 notes
Jan 31st
37 notes
Jan 30th
5 notes
Jan 30th
49 notes
Jan 30th
Jan 30th
Jan 29th
284 notes
Jan 28th
7 notes
Jan 28th
5 notes
Jan 28th
220 notes
Jan 28th
14 notes
Jan 27th
5 notes
Jan 27th
31 notes
Jan 27th
277 notes
Jan 26th
89 notes
Jan 26th
92 notes
Not by the Direct Method.: Phallic foods. →
In Rome phallic foods were especially popular, as noted by Lacroix (History of Prostitution I:234-35): ‘The alicariae, or bakers, were women of the street who waited for fortune at the doors of bakeries, especially those which sold certain cakes, made of fine flour, without salt or leaven,…
Jan 25th
7 notes
Jan 25th
13 notes
Jan 25th
6 notes
Jan 25th
15 notes
Jan 25th
2 notes
Jan 25th
50 notes
Jan 25th
76 notes
Jan 24th
16 notes
Jan 24th
42 notes
Jan 24th
110 notes
Jan 24th
9 notes
Jan 23rd
149 notes
Jan 23rd
21 notes
Jan 22nd
6 notes
Jan 22nd
8 notes
Jan 22nd
11 notes
Jan 21st
Jan 21st
5 notes
Jan 21st
6 notes
Jan 21st
60 notes
Jan 21st
40 notes
Jan 21st
136 notes
Jan 20th
Jan 20th
288 notes
Jan 20th
16 notes
Jan 20th
17 notes
Jan 19th
3 notes
Jan 19th
3 notes
1 tag
Jan 19th
10 notes
Jan 19th
274 notes
Jan 19th
8 notes
Jan 18th
222 notes
Jan 18th
17 notes
Jan 18th
87 notes