Tintinnabulum (ancient Rome)  

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*[[Pompeian erotica]] *[[Pompeian erotica]]
*[[Mercurius (Pompeii tintinnabulum)]][http://jahsonic.tumblr.com/post/725640631/this-statue-of-mercurius-is-the-fourth-object-from] *[[Mercurius (Pompeii tintinnabulum)]][http://jahsonic.tumblr.com/post/725640631/this-statue-of-mercurius-is-the-fourth-object-from]
-*Votive Phallus from Pompeii [http://bp3.blogger.com/_ou53M0Whw_I/SBC_fz9elQI/AAAAAAAAANU/kblnMUqSfTk/s1600-h/votive+phallus.jpg]: a sort of protective wind chime. 4 phalluses, 4 bells, one for each [[cardinal direction]]. Image source: engraving from [[César Famin]]'s ''[[The Royal Museum at Naples, Being Some Account of The Erotic Paintings, Bronzes, and Statues Contained in that Famous "Cabinet Secret"|The Royal Museum at Naples]]''.+*[[Votive]] Phallus from Pompeii [http://bp3.blogger.com/_ou53M0Whw_I/SBC_fz9elQI/AAAAAAAAANU/kblnMUqSfTk/s1600-h/votive+phallus.jpg]: a sort of protective wind chime. 4 phalluses, 4 bells, one for each [[cardinal direction]]. Image source: engraving from [[César Famin]]'s ''[[The Royal Museum at Naples, Being Some Account of The Erotic Paintings, Bronzes, and Statues Contained in that Famous "Cabinet Secret"|The Royal Museum at Naples]]''.
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Tintinnabulum (disambiguation)

In ancient Rome, a Tintinnabulum[1] was bronze phallic sculpture to which wind chimes were attached to protect one from jinxes and the evil eye.

The combination of phallus and hanging bells is also called a fascinus. They were used as an apotropaic talisman to ward of evil.

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Tintinnabulum (Ancient Rome)" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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