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Earliest contraceptive superstitions
Thomas Aquinas, despite St. Albert's liberal teaching, first branded contraception a vice.
Pliny the Elder (A.D. 23-79) reckoned that if you took two small worms out of the body of a
certain species of
spider and attached them in a piece of deer's skin to a woman's body before sunrise, she would
not conceive.
Other ancient and dark-age writers believed that if a woman spat three times into a frog's
mouth she would not
conceive for a year; and that a jaspar pebble clasped in the hand during coitus would also stop
conception. St.
Albert the Great (1193-1280), who taught Aquinas advised women to eat bees as an effective
contraception
procedure. Aetios of Amida (fl. 527-565) suggested that a man should wash his penis in
vinegar or brine; and
that a woman should wear a cat's testicle in a tube across her navel. The oldest contraceptive
beliefs hinged
acceptance of the efficacy of magical practices.