An ancient quarry near Hadrians Wall in northern England offers a smutty glimpse into the lives of the Roman soldiers who built the famous fortification.
Archaeologists from the U.K.s Newcastle University and Historic England are working to record the unique inscriptions carved into the walls of the quarry, which provided stone for Hadrians Wall.
The sandstone inscriptions include a caricature of an officer and a phallus, which denoted good luck in Roman culture.
Other carvings at the quarry in Gelt Forest have helped experts date the rare inscriptions. One inscription, for example, describes APRO ET MAXIMO CONSVLIBVS OFICINA MERCATI, a reference to the consulate of Aper and Maximus.
This dates the inscription to 207 A.D., a time when Hadrians Wall was undergoing a major renovation, according to Historic England.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
GUARD #4: chuckling
PILATE: What's so... funny about the name "Biggus _ickus"?
CENTURION: Well, it's a joke name, sir.
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=monty+python+biggus+dickus
"Peter Buttigieg"