Bestiality
Most famous erotic sculpture
The most famous erotic sculpture in the world is certainly that of the Hindu temples of India
(See P. Rawson,
"Erotic Art of the East"). Most of the best examples were created in the North
between the ninth and thirteen
centuries A.D., and in the South between the sixth and seventeenth centuries A.D. The
sculptures show every
imaginable form of sexual activity - different coital positions, oral sex, masturbation, rape,
bestiality, etc.
Society most tolerant to bestiality
We are all supposed to condemn bestiality, though only rarely are sound medical or psychological factors advanced (See "British Journal of Sexual Medicine", Jan./ Feb. 1974, p. 43).
Bestiality: Most famous Oriental type
Chinese lovers - in pre-Mao days - were said to be fond of fowl. Mantegazza has remarked
that "The Chinese are famous for their love affairs with geese ..." This would be remarkable enough: the actual way the Orientals used such a creature for sexual purposes is even more extraordinary. At the moment of ejaculation the man would pull the head off the live animal to get "the pleasurable benefit of the anal sphincter's last spasms in the victim."
Bestiality: Most famous mediaeval tale
A famous tale is told by Peter Damain in his "De bono religiosi status et variorum animatium tropologia".
Bestiality: Most frequent incidence
Kinsey found that the most frequent incidence of animal coitus, i.e. human/ animal sexual
intercourse, was in
excess of eight times a week - and this for the age group of under fifteen years!
Bestiality: Best documented case among Trobrianders
The Trobrianders of North-West Melanesia gained lasting fame through the anthropological
researches of
Bronislaw Malinowski ("The Sexual Life of Savages"). It is quite possible that we know more
about the sexual
propensities and beliefs of a number of primitive communities than we do about our own
complex but confused
society. The Trobrianders yielded up their secrets to Malinowski. At least one
well-documented case of bestiality
is on record. In this instance a man copulated with a dog: the names of both man and dog were
house-hold words
Bestiality: First instanced as public entertainment
Bestiality was a common form of entertainment in the Roman arena - in the words of R. E. L. Masters in "The Prostitutes In Society", mass bestiality, as public display in Rome, was "a phenomenon unique in all of history".
Bestiality: Least likely animals
Men and women have tried to have sexual relations with a wide variety of nonhuman animals.
Only U.S. conviction for bestiality
As far as can be judged there is only one recorded case of a woman convicted of coitus with a
non-human animal
in the United States. It is the case of State v. Tarrant (1949: 80 N.E. 2d Ohio 509) mentioned
by Kinsey, Masters
and others.