Female Orgasm As Described By A Learned Nun
Scholars of the western canon of letters all seem to agree: the earliest surviving description of the female orgasm is by one Hildegard of Bingen, writing in her medical treatise Causae et Cureae, sometime between 1152 and 1158:
Cum enim femina cum masculo delectatur, tunc calor cerebri eius cum delectatione illud tangit, et gustum delectationis illius in se trahit, et sic virile semen in eam effunditur. Et cum semen in loco suo ceciderit, tunc ille vehementer calor de cerebro eius descendens attrahit ad se semen et tenet illud…
That’s not the complete passage, which is surprisingly hard to find for a non-scholar like myself. English translations are easier:
When a woman is making love with a man, a sense of heat in her brain, which brings with it sensual delight, communicates the taste of that delight during the act and summons forth the emission of the man’s seed. And when the seed has fallen into its place, that vehement heat descending from her brain draws the seed to itself and holds it, and soon the woman’s sexual organs contract, and all the parts that are ready to open up during the time of menstruation now close, in the same way as a strong man can hold something enclosed in his fist.
One well might wonder how a nun as chaste as Hildigarde is widely believed to have been knew so much about orgasms. Whatever the answer to that, it seems clear to me that she was writing with a goal of normalizing them as part of women’s sexual and reproductive health. Her further implication
Similar Sex Blogging:
Shorter URL for sharing: https://www.erosblog.com/?p=35522





