We've touched on this topic before (see the 2018 article linked below). This BBC News article discusses how the North Hertfordshire Museum will now refer to emperor Elagabalus with female pronouns.
-Editor
A museum is to relabel its display about a Roman emperor after concluding that he was in fact a trans woman.
North Hertfordshire Museum will now refer to emperor Elagabalus with the female pronouns of she and her.
It comes after classical texts claim the emperor once said "call me not Lord, for I am a Lady".
A museum spokesperson said it was "only polite and respectful to be sensitive to identifying pronouns for people in the past".
The museum has one coin of Elagabalus, which is often displayed amongst other LGBTQ+ items in its collection.
The debate over Elagabalus's gender identity is long-standing and often splits academics.
Dr Shushma Malik, a Cambridge university classics professor, told the BBC: "The historians we use to try and understand the life of Elagabalus are extremely hostile towards him, and therefore cannot be taken at face value. We don't have any direct evidence from Elagabalus himself of his own words.
"There are many examples in Roman literature of times where effeminate language and words were used as a way of criticising or weakening a political figure.
"References to Elagabalus wearing makeup, wigs and removing body hair may have been written in order to undermine the unpopular emperor."
Dr Malik added that whilst Romans were aware of gender fluidity, and there are examples of pronouns being changed in literature, it "was usually used in reference to myth and religion, rather than to describe living people".
However, councillor Keith Hoskins, executive member for Enterprise and Arts at North Herts Council, said texts such as Dio's provide evidence "that Elagabalus most definitely preferred the 'she' pronoun and as such this is something we reflect when discussing her in contemporary times, as we believe is standard practice elsewhere".
"We know that Elagabalus identified as a woman and was explicit about which pronouns to use, which shows that pronouns are not a new thing," he added.
To read the complete article, see:
Museum reclassifies Roman emperor as trans woman
(https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-67484645)
To read the complete article, see:
Museum reclassifies Roman emperor as trans woman
(https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-67484645)
To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see:
QUEER COINS: LGBTQ RULERS THROUGH HISTORY
(https://www.coinbooks.org/v21/esylum_v21n25a29.html)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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