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Female ejaculation
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====16th to 18th century==== In the 16th century, the Dutch physician [[Laevinius Lemnius]], referred to how a woman "draws forth the man's seed and casts her own with it".<ref>Lemnius, L. De occultis naturae miraculis 1557, Reprinted as The Secret Miracles of Nature. London 1658, p.19 cited in [https://books.google.com/books?id=6geM40gONl8C Laqueur T. Making Sex: The body and gender from the Greeks to Freud. Harvard, Cambridge 1990 vii]</ref> In the 17th century, [[François Mauriceau]] described glands at the [[female urethral meatus]] that "pour out great quantities of saline liquor during coition, which increases the heat and enjoyment of women".<ref>[[One sex two sex theory|Cited in Laqueur 1990 pp. 92–3]]</ref> This century saw an increasing understanding of female sexual anatomy and function,<ref name=blackledge>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/storyofv00cath |url-access=registration |last=Blackledge|first=Catherine|title=The Story of V: A Natural History of Female Sexuality|year=2004 |orig-year=2003 |isbn=978-0813534558 |publisher=Rutgers University Press |place=New Brunswick, N.J }}</ref> in particular the work of the [[Caspar Bartholin the Elder|Bartholin]] family in Denmark.
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