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The painting, situated in what has been called the Tomb of the Bulls (Italian: Tomba dei Tori), depicts on the right a bull with a man's face and an erect phallus that is aggressively approaching two men having sexual intercourse. On the left, another bull is turned around, as though indifferent, in front of men and women having sexual intercourse.
It effectively laid the seed for the birth of the contemporary Italian homosexual movement, after the first experiences of associationism made in Rome in the 1960s. Shortly thereafter, in Bologna for the first time, there was official recognition of a gay group by the institutions with the granting by the City Council of a venue to the ...
Italian gay men by occupation (5 C) Pages in category "Italian gay men" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total. This list may not reflect recent ...
Until 1986, "sexual deviance" was a reason for exclusion for military service. At that time, some men claimed to be homosexual to avoid the draft. Lesbians have never been banned from the Italian military since women were first allowed to serve in 2000.
On 14 May 2013, the Italian Parliament extended healthcare benefits to MPs' same-sex partners. This rule had already been in effect for heterosexual partners for several decades. [28] The same month, an Italian judge registered a British civil partnership contracted by two Italian men.
Men Men Men (Italian: Uomini uomini uomini) is a 1995 Italian LGBT-themed comedy-drama film directed by Christian De Sica. [1] [2] The film, a comedy about four friends, was the first mainstream Italian film dealing with gay lifestyles. [3]
After contributing to books, [citation needed] Italian Men: Love and Sex was published in 1998. Italian Men is a compendium of interviews and photographs of Famous Italian men Including Giorgio Armani, Valentino Garavani, Luciano Pavarotti and Franco Zeffirelli. [3] [4]
By the end of the Augustan period Ovid, Rome's leading literary figure, was alone among Roman figures in proposing a radically new agenda focused on love between men and women: making love with a woman is more enjoyable, he says, because unlike the forms of same-sex behavior permissible within Roman culture, the pleasure is mutual. [42]