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Seven Things About Transgender People That You Didn't Know - A Quick Transgender History Lesson

https://www.hrc.org/resources/seven-things-about-transgender-people-that-you-didnt-know
  • Around 5000 to 3000 B.C., Gala, described as androgynous or trans priests of the Sumerian :marseysargonofaccat: goddess Inanna, spoke their own dialect and took on feminine names.

  • Sometime from 200 to 300 B.C., in ancient Greece :slimespartan: , some gods were worshiped by galli priests who wore feminine attire, identified as women and have therefore been identified by scholars :marseygigatitty: as early transgender figures.

  • In the fourth century, Anastasia the Patrician :marseykino: fled life in Constantinople :marseyturkroach:, the capital of the Roman Empire :marseymarmotroman: , to spend the remainder of life dressed masculinely as a monk :marseymonke:, and has become viewed by some scholars as transgender.

  • In South Asia :marseychingchong:, at least eight-known gender-expansive identities have historically been present in the subcontinent, the most well-known being hijra - third gender :marseygeisha: people of historical, spiritual, and cultural significance in South Asian society. Hijra and individuals of diverse gender identities have been well-documented in religious :marseystainedglass: and cultural texts and legends. These individuals often form intentional communities for community :marseymarseyloveorgy: as well as survival.

  • Around the 18th century, the Itelmens of Siberia :marseyeskimo: :marseysaluteussr: recognized a “third gender” called “koekchuch” to describe individuals who were assigned male :marcussatisfied: at birth, but expressed themselves as women :marseywholesometrans:.

  • The oldest Western institute studying LGBTQ+ identities was started in Germany in 1919. Institut für Sexualwissenschaft (Institute for S*x Research) :marseynotes: performed some of the earliest contemporary affirming medical services. It was eventually destroyed in the rise of German fascism :marseybundle: under the Nazi :marseyreich: party.

  • In Turtle Island :marseyturtle: (an Indigenous name for North America), Indigenous :marseycherokee: communities use the term two-spirit as a modern, pan-Indigenous umbrella :marseyelisabeth: identifier for people of another societal and ceremonial gender identity. This term was established in 1990 as a modern :marseyzoomer: , collective term for a historical gender identity describing individuals not considered men or women in most, if not all Indigenous cultures of Turtle Island :turtoisemindblown: .

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