A dispute has arisen between scholars regarding the number of penises depicted in the Bayeux Tapestry, with one claiming 93 and another suggesting a 94th based on a previously unnoticed appendage. George Garnett contends that the extra figure's item is a scabbard, while Christopher Monk argues it is a phallus. This debate illustrates differing interpretations of medieval art and nudity, revealing both scholars' views on the tapestry's narrative significance and artistic nuances.
If you look at what are incontrovertibly penises in the tapestry, none of them have a yellow blob on the end. What I've shown is that this is a serious, learned attempt to comment on the conquest, albeit in code.
Previous commentators seemed to have missed the genitals of this running, club-wielding man, which raises questions about interpretations of nudity in medieval artwork.
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