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icymist

(15,888 posts)
Fri Jan 6, 2012, 02:15 PM Jan 2012

Ancient Pornographic Artifact Discovered by the Thames

A bronze disk recently discovered in the mud near the Putney Bridge in London seemed innocent enough, but on close inspection it has turned out to be one of the oldest pieces of British pornographic art, according to the Guardian.

The bronze, which has been turned over to the Museum of London, dates to around the first century A.D., when London was a Roman outpost, and shows a couple in flagrante delicto.
http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/01/05/ancient-pornographic-artifact-discovered-by-the-thames/

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Ancient Pornographic Artifact Discovered by the Thames (Original Post) icymist Jan 2012 OP
COOL! HopeHoops Jan 2012 #1
How very interesting. Behind the Aegis Jan 2012 #2
How very civilized tama Jan 2012 #3
I know how to use it, but didn't know the exact meaning... Behind the Aegis Jan 2012 #4

Behind the Aegis

(53,983 posts)
2. How very interesting.
Sat Jan 7, 2012, 05:51 PM
Jan 2012

Of course, I also find it interesting that the act of sex is often described as "pornographic."

 

tama

(9,137 posts)
3. How very civilized
Tue Jan 10, 2012, 05:11 PM
Jan 2012

in civilized English sexual acts are written in Latin (what does flagrante delicto mean, btw?) and in civilized Latin they are written in Greek (-> graeca sunt, non leguntur). Greeks had no language they considered more highly civilized, to them all other languages sounded like bar bar, hence the onomatopoetic word barbarians.

Behind the Aegis

(53,983 posts)
4. I know how to use it, but didn't know the exact meaning...
Tue Jan 10, 2012, 06:03 PM
Jan 2012
in flagrante delicto -- "in blazing offence"

It is also used to mean, "caught in the act of committing a misdeed," "red-handed." I have usually seen it used to describe someone(s) getting caught in a sexual act, which is the reference in the OP.
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