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Ritual Sexual Practices
Introduction to Ritual Sexual Practices
In this curated series of the Sex Around The World wiki, we explore sexual practices that are rooted in ancestral tradition, tribal custom, and ritual belief. You will find articles covering where these practices come from, how they developed, what they mean within their original cultural context, and how they are understood today. Some of these traditions are complex and carry serious human rights concerns. Others offer a window into the remarkable diversity of human experience across history and culture.
Ritual Sexual Practices
Welcome to the Ritual Sexual Practices series of the Sex Around The World. Ritual sexual practices are among the oldest expressions of human sexuality we know of. They did not develop in isolation. They grew inside communities, woven into the same fabric as language, food, spiritual life, and the marking of life's most important moments. Birth, death, adulthood, marriage, harvest, and healing have all, in different cultures and different eras, had a sexual dimension attached to them. To understand these practices is to understand something true and important about how deeply sexuality is embedded in human culture.
The practices you will find in this series come from communities where sexuality was shaped not by personal preference alone but by obligation, ceremony, and belief. Many of them predate written records. Some are still practiced today in small and specific communities. Others have faded but left enough of a trace in oral history, anthropological research, or living memory to be documented and understood.
What Is Covered Ritual Sexual Practices Series
The practices documented here come from communities around the world where sexuality has historically been shaped by ritual, rite of passage, spiritual belief, or codes of hospitality and social obligation. Many of these customs predate written records. They developed in specific geographic, social, and spiritual contexts that are often far removed from modern urban life.
Some practices in this category are cultural curiosities that carry little harm and offer genuine insight into the diversity of human experience. Others involve serious concerns around consent, child protection, and physical safety. We document both with equal honesty.
How We Approach The Rituals And Sex
Writing about traditional sexual practices requires holding two things at the same time.
The first is cultural respect. Every practice here developed within a community that had its own logic, its own values, and its own understanding of what it meant to care for its members. Dismissing these traditions without understanding their context produces ignorance, not insight.
The second is honesty about harm. Tradition does not make a practice safe, fair, or right. Where practices in this category involve coercion, remove the possibility of genuine consent, cause physical or psychological harm, or affect minors, we say so clearly. A commitment to human rights and bodily autonomy is not a western value imposed on other cultures. It is a universal standard that applies everywhere.
We do not rank cultures. We do not sensationalise. We aim to inform.
Who This Series Is For?
These articles are written for anyone who wants to understand the full range of human sexual experience across history and culture. That includes students, researchers, educators, healthcare workers, social workers, policy advocates, and curious readers who want more than a headline.
If you are a professional working with communities where these practices occur, we hope these articles give you useful context. If you are a member of a community where one of these practices is part of your heritage, we hope you find this coverage respectful even where it is critical.
A Note on Language and Framing
Many of the practices here carry local language names that have no simple English equivalent. We always use the original term as the primary title and explain it fully in the article. Where a practice is known by more than one name across different communities, we note that too. Our language aims to be plain, warm, and honest throughout.
How It's All Connected With Other Sexual Practices Around The World
Ritual sexual practices do not exist in isolation either. They are part of a much larger human story, one that spans ancient philosophy, living cultural tradition, modern lifestyle, and the deep historical past. If you are curious about where some of these threads lead, the Sex Around The World wiki has more to explore. For practices born from ancient spiritual and philosophical frameworks that are still alive today, visit Ancient & Spiritual Sexual Practices. For cultural traditions around love and partnership that are consensual and community-affirming, visit Traditional Sexual Practices. For practices that belong entirely to the historical record of civilisations long past, visit Historical Sexual Practices. For modern and contemporary choices and lifestyle practices from around the world today, visit Contemporary Sexual Practices.
Articles In This Series
- Gerewol Festival Wife Stealing
- Kusasa Fumbi
- Mosuo Axia Walking Marriages
- Okujepisa Omukazendu
- Pon Festival
- Ssenga - Potency Test
This series will continue to grow as new articles are added.
A Summary To Ritual Sexual Practices
Human sexuality has never existed in a vacuum. It has always been shaped by the world around it, by community, by belief, by power, and by history. This series exists not to judge the past but to understand it, and to use that understanding in service of a present where every person, regardless of where they were born or what tradition they were born into, has the right to safety, dignity, and choice.
Article Updated: 08/05/2026
Article Published: 05/05/2026
Author: Sexed Editorial Team
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