When new ideological movements seize power in institutions, it is always necessary to rewrite history. As an old Soviet joke mocking the communist overhaul of Russian history put it, “The future is certain—it’s only the past that’s unpredictable.”
We saw this when the gay rights movement began to gain dominance. Suddenly, it was claimed that plenty of married men were, in fact, homosexual, including Abraham Lincoln and William Shakespeare. The historical closet turned out to be packed with fictional gays. Progressive religious scholars hastened to ‘queer’ the Scriptures, too, asserting blasphemously that any number of biblical figures—David, Ruth, and Daniel among them—were also ‘LGBT.’ Now, with the ascendance of the transgender movement, new discoveries have begun in earnest.
Last November, for example, we received breaking news from AD 218 when the North Hertfordshire Museum declared that Emperor Elagabalus, who ruled Rome briefly until his assassination at the age of 18 in AD 222, was transgender. According to The Telegraph, the museum “has said it will be ‘sensitive’ to the purported pronoun preferences of the third-century AD ruler Elagabalus. The emperor will be treated as a transgender woman and referred to as she.” Hilariously, this claim derives from classical texts asserting that Elagabalus once asked to be called a ‘lady’; most historians believe these accounts were attempts at political character assassination.
As The Telegraph reported, “Information on museum policy states that pronouns used in displays will be those ‘the individual in question might have used themselves’ or whatever pronoun, ‘in retrospect, is appropriate.’” A keen observer might notice that the phrase “in retrospect” is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. Unsurprisingly, the museum consults “LGBT charity Stonewall and the LGBT wing of the trade union Unison on best practice … to ensure that ‘our displays, publicity and talks are as up-to-date and inclusive as possible.’” History, you see, must always be up-to-date and ‘inclusive.’
Liberal Democrat councillor Keith Hoskins was downright gruntled by this decision. Hoskins, who is not a historian, stated firmly that “Elagabalus most definitely preferred the ‘she’ pronoun, and as such, this is something we reflect when discussing her in contemporary times. We try to be sensitive to identifying pronouns for people in the past, as we are for people in the present. It is only polite and respectful. 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.”
That’s saying the quiet bit out loud, of course—Elagabalus has been retroactively transitioned because, by doing so, his outers get to make the point that “pronouns are not a new thing” and that the rest of us should thus get with the program. Less ideological historians have noted that accusations of effeminacy were leveled at Elagabalus specifically to bring him into disrepute and to justify his assassination. As Cambridge classics professor Andrew Wallace-Hadrill observed, “The Romans didn’t have our idea of ‘trans’ as a category, but they used accusations of sexual behavior ‘as a woman’ as one of the worst insults against men.” The past, as it turns out, is as transphobic as the present.
Tom Holland, a noted historian of the ancient world, summed up the news succinctly: “This rests on two pretty dubious assumptions: firstly, that in this one case the notoriously unreliable sources for Elagabalus’ reign are to be trusted; and secondly, that Roman assumptions about gender can be seamlessly mapped onto those of British museum curators in 2023. Still, excellent marketing by the museum!” The accusations of effeminacy, Holland noted, were levelled at “pretty much every Roman politician” as “the go-to insult.” Elagabalus now faces the fate of having activists triumphantly affirm the worst smears of his enemies.
This sort of thing has become common. A 2019 report from the History Channel breathlessly reported that a “High-Ranking Viking Warrior Long Assumed to Be Male Was Actually Female” and that this “revelation raised questions about how Vikings may have understood gender roles—as well as gender identity.” These “questions,” it must be noted, were only “raised” by activists longing for transgender Vikings to talk about. But it isn’t just the Vikings, who I would have thought were better candidates for screeds on toxic masculinity. It’s the Anglo-Saxons, too.
Last year, a PhD candidate in medieval history at the University of Liverpool produced this gem of a headline: “The burials that could challenge historians’ ideas about Anglo-Saxon gender.” The article includes this bit:
My Ph.D. research asks whether looking at these atypically gendered burials through the lens of trans theory and the 21st-century language of ‘transness’ has the potential to improve historians’ understanding of early Anglo-Saxon gender. Atypically gendered burials are generally excluded as ‘outliers’ in excavation reports and subsequent research. This relies on the anachronistic idea that historical societies followed a system of sex, gender and sexuality aligning with 19th-century western standards.
The past, in other words, is trans—we just didn’t notice it until now. Activist academics are producing this stuff by the boatload. There were androgynous Scythian shamans; multiple Māori genders (this is disputed by actual Māori people, of course); Iron Age Persian gravesites revealing that ancients “recognized transgender people 3,000 years ago”; a “transgender soldier” in the Ancient Roman army; more “transgender Viking warriors”; even the ancient Egyptian pharaoh Hatshepsut is apparently trans due to her statues sporting a beard, which symbolized her status as ruler. Additionally, hundreds of media articles have been published over the past few years claiming that a wide array of historical characters were, in fact, ‘transgender’ or ‘non-binary.’ The point of this, as one headline implies, is to create a pedigree for the trans movement: “Trans is not a trend: 4 gender-nonconforming historical figures who dared to be themselves.”
This new boom in transgender archaeology and historiography is what could be called ‘backfilling’—establish your conclusion (sex and gender are distinct, transgender ideology is fact), and then find the evidence to support that conclusion. Thus, gender-fluid warriors are suddenly being dug up—and right on schedule, too!—with great regularity, and critical new discoveries are being made in ancient texts at the intersection of gender ideology and history. Napoleon once purportedly called history “a set of lies, agreed upon.” If you’re a historian or an archaeologist right now, the sure ticket to great press coverage is to catch some long-dead king in a skirt or excavate some new transgender tribe. We will see many more of these lies produced in the years ahead, as the dead are once more called upon to endorse the delusions of the living.
Why Are Historians Suddenly Discovering So Many Transgenders?
The Bust of Emperor Elagabalus, photo by Carol Raddato, CC BY-SA
When new ideological movements seize power in institutions, it is always necessary to rewrite history. As an old Soviet joke mocking the communist overhaul of Russian history put it, “The future is certain—it’s only the past that’s unpredictable.”
We saw this when the gay rights movement began to gain dominance. Suddenly, it was claimed that plenty of married men were, in fact, homosexual, including Abraham Lincoln and William Shakespeare. The historical closet turned out to be packed with fictional gays. Progressive religious scholars hastened to ‘queer’ the Scriptures, too, asserting blasphemously that any number of biblical figures—David, Ruth, and Daniel among them—were also ‘LGBT.’ Now, with the ascendance of the transgender movement, new discoveries have begun in earnest.
Last November, for example, we received breaking news from AD 218 when the North Hertfordshire Museum declared that Emperor Elagabalus, who ruled Rome briefly until his assassination at the age of 18 in AD 222, was transgender. According to The Telegraph, the museum “has said it will be ‘sensitive’ to the purported pronoun preferences of the third-century AD ruler Elagabalus. The emperor will be treated as a transgender woman and referred to as she.” Hilariously, this claim derives from classical texts asserting that Elagabalus once asked to be called a ‘lady’; most historians believe these accounts were attempts at political character assassination.
As The Telegraph reported, “Information on museum policy states that pronouns used in displays will be those ‘the individual in question might have used themselves’ or whatever pronoun, ‘in retrospect, is appropriate.’” A keen observer might notice that the phrase “in retrospect” is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. Unsurprisingly, the museum consults “LGBT charity Stonewall and the LGBT wing of the trade union Unison on best practice … to ensure that ‘our displays, publicity and talks are as up-to-date and inclusive as possible.’” History, you see, must always be up-to-date and ‘inclusive.’
Liberal Democrat councillor Keith Hoskins was downright gruntled by this decision. Hoskins, who is not a historian, stated firmly that “Elagabalus most definitely preferred the ‘she’ pronoun, and as such, this is something we reflect when discussing her in contemporary times. We try to be sensitive to identifying pronouns for people in the past, as we are for people in the present. It is only polite and respectful. 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.”
That’s saying the quiet bit out loud, of course—Elagabalus has been retroactively transitioned because, by doing so, his outers get to make the point that “pronouns are not a new thing” and that the rest of us should thus get with the program. Less ideological historians have noted that accusations of effeminacy were leveled at Elagabalus specifically to bring him into disrepute and to justify his assassination. As Cambridge classics professor Andrew Wallace-Hadrill observed, “The Romans didn’t have our idea of ‘trans’ as a category, but they used accusations of sexual behavior ‘as a woman’ as one of the worst insults against men.” The past, as it turns out, is as transphobic as the present.
Tom Holland, a noted historian of the ancient world, summed up the news succinctly: “This rests on two pretty dubious assumptions: firstly, that in this one case the notoriously unreliable sources for Elagabalus’ reign are to be trusted; and secondly, that Roman assumptions about gender can be seamlessly mapped onto those of British museum curators in 2023. Still, excellent marketing by the museum!” The accusations of effeminacy, Holland noted, were levelled at “pretty much every Roman politician” as “the go-to insult.” Elagabalus now faces the fate of having activists triumphantly affirm the worst smears of his enemies.
This sort of thing has become common. A 2019 report from the History Channel breathlessly reported that a “High-Ranking Viking Warrior Long Assumed to Be Male Was Actually Female” and that this “revelation raised questions about how Vikings may have understood gender roles—as well as gender identity.” These “questions,” it must be noted, were only “raised” by activists longing for transgender Vikings to talk about. But it isn’t just the Vikings, who I would have thought were better candidates for screeds on toxic masculinity. It’s the Anglo-Saxons, too.
Last year, a PhD candidate in medieval history at the University of Liverpool produced this gem of a headline: “The burials that could challenge historians’ ideas about Anglo-Saxon gender.” The article includes this bit:
The past, in other words, is trans—we just didn’t notice it until now. Activist academics are producing this stuff by the boatload. There were androgynous Scythian shamans; multiple Māori genders (this is disputed by actual Māori people, of course); Iron Age Persian gravesites revealing that ancients “recognized transgender people 3,000 years ago”; a “transgender soldier” in the Ancient Roman army; more “transgender Viking warriors”; even the ancient Egyptian pharaoh Hatshepsut is apparently trans due to her statues sporting a beard, which symbolized her status as ruler. Additionally, hundreds of media articles have been published over the past few years claiming that a wide array of historical characters were, in fact, ‘transgender’ or ‘non-binary.’ The point of this, as one headline implies, is to create a pedigree for the trans movement: “Trans is not a trend: 4 gender-nonconforming historical figures who dared to be themselves.”
This new boom in transgender archaeology and historiography is what could be called ‘backfilling’—establish your conclusion (sex and gender are distinct, transgender ideology is fact), and then find the evidence to support that conclusion. Thus, gender-fluid warriors are suddenly being dug up—and right on schedule, too!—with great regularity, and critical new discoveries are being made in ancient texts at the intersection of gender ideology and history. Napoleon once purportedly called history “a set of lies, agreed upon.” If you’re a historian or an archaeologist right now, the sure ticket to great press coverage is to catch some long-dead king in a skirt or excavate some new transgender tribe. We will see many more of these lies produced in the years ahead, as the dead are once more called upon to endorse the delusions of the living.
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