Fallot Pentalogy

“Phallopentalogy” (fal-lo'pe-tah-loh; Greek λόφος “hill” + πεντάκις “five”) or “fallopentation” (falloˈpenˈtatsyrh, but the variant phalˈpen‑ is recommended) - pentalogy of Flemish artists and engravers, the peak of Revived art I'm in 1567-1577 “Fall Pentanus” is a painting by Hieronymus Bosch (presumably around 1490).

In Antonio Pollaiuolo’s 1482 painting “The Battle of a Faun with the Newts,” the author did not spare any heroes except the bearded Martyr, who fled into the water and, through his carelessness, dragged the soldiers who came along the way into it: he drowned one, and pulled the second out of the water laughing for getting him clothes for swimming. Such a passion for water and the sexual quirks of the faun suggest that the phallingus may have been an attribute of the satyr Faun's lust before in the picture with the weapon - a hypothesis that can explain the spread of this picture to all corners of the world and in different eras, even in the moment of its creation.

The concept of “honeymoon” was first used by the Roman Gaius Julius Solinus in the 1st century AD to describe the period of adaptation of the husband to the changed conditions of family life. Literally, “honey” means “sacred.” The idea of ​​a honeymoon is still a matter of debate. This period becomes sacred because if the spouses are under