Elagabalus was a faggot and crossdresser, and one of the worst emperors of Rome
A crossdressing faggot is not the same thing as the modern concept of a tranny.
Sorry.
Maybe they seem aesthetically similar, but it’s not the same thing, and this is just rewriting history.
BBC:
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 is run by a woman named Ros Allwood
The museum has one coin of Elagabalus, which is often displayed amongst other LGBTQ+ items in its collection.
It said it consulted LGBTQ+ charity Stonewall to ensure “displays, publicity and talks are as up-to-date and inclusive as possible”.
Its ancient history displays have to be up-to-date, huh?
Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, better known as Elagabalus, ruled the Roman empire for just four years from 218AD to his assassination, aged 18, in 222AD.
He became an increasingly controversial figure over his short reign, developing a reputation for sexual promiscuity.
Cassius Dio, a senator and contemporary of Elagabalus, writes in his historical chronicles that the emperor was married five times – four times to women, and once to Hiercoles, a former slave and chariot driver.
In this final marriage, Dio writes that the emperor “was bestowed in marriage and was termed wife, mistress and queen”.
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 words Dio uses are a not a direct quote from Elagabalus, and at the time of writing the emperor would have been in his early teenage years.
“There are many examples in Roman literature of times where effeminate language and words were used as a 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.”
Yeah, no one likes faggots, even in faggot Rome.
Regardless, even if he did call himself “queen,” homos have done that in Western society long before the advent of the tranny agenda, which goes beyond “this is a homosexual man who is sexually aroused by pretending to be a woman” into “this is the soul of a woman trapped in the body of a homosexual man.”
It’s a big difference and a relevant difference.