Touch wood: luck, protection, power or pleasure? A wooden phallus from Vindolanda Roman fort

ANTIQUITY(2023)

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Abstract
The anaerobic conditions at the Roman fort of Vin-dolanda, close to Hadrian's Wall in northern Britain, have famously preserved a variety of finds made of organic materials, including wooden writing tablets and a pair of leather boxing gloves. Here, the authors re-examine a wooden object originally recovered in 1992, re-interpreting the find as a large, disembodied phallus. Stone and metal phalli are known from across the Roman world, but the Vindolanda example is the first wooden phallus to be recognised. Combining evidence for potential use-wear with a review of other archaeological and contextual information, the authors consider various possible interpretations of the function and significance of the Vindolanda phallus during the second century AD.
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Key words
Roman Britain,organic preservation,wooden tool,phallic symbolism,sexual implement
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