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Historial Figures who you didn't know were LGBTIQA+

Historial Figures who you didn't know were LGBTIQA+

Leonardo da Vinci

The artist was twice publicly accused of having gay sex, his youthful male protege was removed because of the “wicked life he had led” with Leonardo, and his own writings repeatedly mused on his own attraction to men – and borderline revulsion to sex with women. 

A book by Walter Isaacson called Leonardo da Vinci: The Biography showed the extent to which da Vinci lived as an openly gay man in 15th century Florence.

The text, which was based on thousands of pages of the artist‘s own notebooks, recounted how da Vinci had a string of younger male companions.

He also repeatedly depicted male sexuality in his art and faced accusations of sodomy during his lifetime.



Florence Nightingale

Florence Nightingale

As well as being the founder of modern nursing, Nightingale also loved three women passionately. 

The 19th century British icon was apparently so in love with Marianna that she pretended to be her brother Henry in order to avoid the judgment of others.

Nightingale, who never married, also enjoyed intimate relationships with two other women.



King James VI and I

King James VI and I

The king, who ruled from 1567 to 1625, is widely accepted to have had multiple same-sex partners over the course of his life.

James, who is best known for commissioning the King James Bible, often gave titles to his lovers, including Robert Carr, who he made the Earl of Somerset.

He also fell for George Villiers, making him a knight, an earl, and later Duke of Buckingham.

Though plenty of evidence exists to support a relationship between the king and Villiers, it was long airbrushed from public view.

In his letters to the king, Villiers wrote: “I naturally so love your person, and adore all your other parts, which are more than ever one man had.”




Selma Lagerlöf

Selma Lagerlöf

Lagerlöf was the first female writer to ever be awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, which she won in 1909.

In 1992, the Swedish author’s letters to her Jewish lover and fellow writer Sophie Elkan were published in a book Du lär mig att bli fri.

This Swedish title translates to: “You teach me to be free.”

I have you with me everywhere, see you and hear you and live with you. Once I can’t do that anymore, I will long for you.

The women started a relationship after meeting in 1894, and stayed together until Elkan died in 1921, writing thousands of letters to each other in the meantime.

Lagerlöf was also the first woman to ever feature on a Swedish banknote, gracing the 20 kronor note when it was created in 1991.




Roberta Cowell

Roberta Cowell

Roberta Cowell was a British World War II fighter pilot, racing car driver – and one of the first people to ever undergo gender confirmation surgery.

The trans woman spent five months in a German prisoner-of-war camp after being captured, where she resorted to killing and eating cats to survive.

In 1951, groundbreaking plastic surgeons Sir Harold Gillies and Ralph Millard performed one of the first successful vaginoplasty surgeries on Cowell.





King Richard 1st

Richard I

King Richard, who hardly spent any time with his wife and had no children, was rumoured to have enjoyed a scandalous affair with Philip II of France.

His royal secretary Roger Hovedon wrote that the two “ate every day at the same table and from the same dish, and at night their beds did not separate them.

“And the King of France loved him as his own soul; and they loved each other so much that the King of England was absolutely astonished at the vehement love between them and marvelled at what it could mean.”




Caroline Spurgeon

Caroline Spurgeon

The first ever female university professor at the University of London – and only the second in England – asked to be buried next to civil servant Lilian Clapham, who was made an MBE for promoting job opportunities for women.

Spurgeon designed the gravestone which memorialises Clapham – who was also captain of the England women’s hockey team – and left a message remembering their “happy life together” when she died in 1935, according to LGBT history charity Brighton Ourstory.

They can be found buried next to each other in Aliciston churchyard, East Sussex.




Julius Ceasar

Julius Caesar

The Roman dictator was often mocked by opponents for his rumoured queer relationships.

He reportedly engaged in an affair with King Nicomedes IV, who ruled over an Asian province of Roman territory called Bithynia, and was mocked for taking on a submissive role in their sexual relations.

According to one historian, during Caesar’s Gallic triumph his soldiers sang: “Caesar may have conquered the Gauls, but Nicomedes conquered Caesar.”

The emperor was mocked by some political adversaries as the “Queen of Bithynia”, which shows that the history of homophobic taunts is long and undistinguished.

As well as ruling a vast republic, Caesar also had rumoured affairs with his engineer Mamurra and Octavian, who ultimately became Augustus, the first Emperor of the Roman Empire.



William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare

A fresh analysis of William Shakespeare’s sonnets has found evidence that he was, in fact, bisexual, researchers have claimed.

The idea that the most lauded British playwright of all time was queer has historically been seen as controversial, but has been endorsed by multiple experts and even legendary actor Sir Ian McKellen.

In 2012, the decorated star said: “I’d say Shakespeare slept with men. The Merchant of Venice, centring on how the world treats gays as well as Jews, has a love triangle between an older man, younger man and a woman.” 

“And the complexity in his comedies with cross-dressing and disguises is immense. Shakespeare obviously enjoyed sex with men as well as women,” he added.

Gregory Doran, artistic director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, explained in 2017 that Shakespeare “wrote a cycle of 154 sonnets, which were published in 1609, and 126 of those sonnets are addressed to a man and not to a woman.
“It wasn’t somehow quite kosher for the great national bard to possibly have affections for his own sex and therefore that process, to kind of whitewash through the sonnets,” he added.

And Stanley Wells, the chairman of the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, commented in 2016 that “when a poet whose name is William writes poems of anguished and unabashed sexual frankness which pun on the word ‘will’ – 13 times in [Sonnet] No 135… it is not unreasonable to conclude that he may be writing from the depths of his own experience.”


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