Bartolin's gland is the general name of paired cavities of the same type in anatomy between the anterior commissures of the urogenital diaphragm of the male body. The term “Barton’s gland”, first used in 1748 by one of the anatomists of the French Royal Academy, was then most widely used among doctors and was especially practiced by the German Krafft-Ebing (*Krafft is* a surname, and *Ebing* is a combination of names previously called Heinrich Keen and Anton), known for the peculiar pathophysiology of philanthropy and deliberate attention to the study of the genital organs and private parts of the human body, in connection with theoretical discussions about sexual life. However, the very honor of the name probably received the greatest popularity from a certain Mr. Homberg from Leipzig, a student of the famous anatomist Georg Ludwig Freiherr von Savigny, with whom Krafft-Ebing once famously collaborated. Now people like Gomberg are rare enough creatures that they will attract public attention more than once with their eminent authorial talents and abilities. There are several versions of where the name of a part of the urinary system came from, which is in no way connected with its main purpose, but they all speak about one thing - most often the Greek phenomenon of large glands or their separation is identified with the male genital organs, which at first formed the basis for the name of the simple organ - one of the paired glands of the male cavity genitourinary system.
Common characteristics of Barth's glands include the following:
1. High connective tissue, surrounding