By Tom Sapsford, Boston College
A few weeks into his second term, President Donald Trump signed two executive orders restricting the rights of trans workers in the federal government. The first was a renewal of the ban on transgender people joining the U.S. military โ initially signed in 2017 and later repealed by President Joe Biden in 2021. The second was a more sweeping memo that recognizes only two sexes in federal records and policies.
In the ancient Roman world, which I study, biological sex and gender expression did not always line up as neatly as the president is demanding to see in todayโs government.
In antiquity, there were masculine women, feminine men and people who altered their bodies to match their gender expression more closely. In particular, two figures โ the cinaedus and the gallus โ provide examples of men whose effeminate behavior and modified anatomies were striking yet still integrated into Roman society.
The cinaedus and the commander in chief
In ancient Rome, some men who did not fit neatly within gender categories were called โcinaedi.โ They were usually adult males singled out for their extreme effeminacy and nonnormative sexual desires.
The cinaedus was already a recognizable figure in ancient Greece and was first mentioned in the fourth century B.C. by Plato. He says little more than that a cinaedusโ life was terrible, base and miserable. Later Roman authors provide more detail.
Martial, a Roman poet writing in the first century A.D., for instance, describes a cinaedusโ dysfunctional penis as like a โsoggy leather strapโ in one epigram. In the same century, the Roman novelist Petronius has a cinaedus suggest that both he and his fellows have had their genitals removed.
In a fable by Phaedrus, also written in the first century A.D., a barbarian is threatening the troops of the military leader, Pompey the Great. All are afraid to challenge this fierce opponent until a โcinaedusโ volunteers to fight.
The cinaedus is described as a soldier of great size but with a cracked voice and mincing walk. After pleading permission in a stereotypically lisping manner from Pompey the Great, his commander in chief, the cinaedus steps into battle. He quickly severs the barbarianโs head and, with army agog, is summarily rewarded by Pompey.
In Phaedrusโ fable, the cinaedus is untrustworthy. He is described as having stolen valuables from Pompey early on in the tale and then later swears on oath that he hasnโt.
Yet the moral of Phaedrusโ fable of the soldier-cinaedus is that such deceptive appearances and actions might actually be strategically successful in military matters. The cinaedus has an edge over Pompeyโs other soldiers precisely due to his disarming effeminacy. In the tale, this doesnโt at all diminish his skills as a lethal fighter. Rather, the cinaedusโ effeminacy combined with his martial valor ultimately lead to the barbarianโs defeat.
Trans priests and the safety of the Roman state
The galli, another group that lived in the heart of the city of Rome, also blurred gender roles. They were males who had castrated their genitalia in dedication to the Great Mother goddess Cybele, who was their protector.
As reported by several ancient sources, including Cicero and Livy, in 204 B.C. the Roman state consulted a set of prophetic scrolls called the Sibylline Oracles on how best to respond to the pressures it faced as a result of the Second Punic War โ Romeโs prolonged conflict with Carthage and its fierce military general, Hannibal.
The oraclesโ answer โ and Romeโs subsequent action โ was to import a strange and foreign religious order from Asia Minor into the heart of Rome, where it would remain for the next several hundred years.
The temple of Cybele was located on the Palatine Hill, next to several important shrines, monuments and later even the residence of the Emperor Augustus. As the poet Ovid tells us, each year during Cybeleโs festival the galli would proceed through the streets of Rome carrying a statue of the goddess, while ululating wildly in time with the sound of wailing pipes, banging drums and crashing cymbals.
More so than the figure of the cinaedus, ancient literary sources present the galliโs gender difference similarly to modern-day trans women, often using feminine pronouns when describing them.
For instance, the poet Catullus details the origin story of the galliโs founder figure, Attis, who was Cybeleโs mythical consort and chief priest. Notably, Catullus switches from using masculine adjectives to feminine ones at the very moment of Attisโ self-castration.
Similarly, in his novel, โThe Golden Ass,โ the second century A.D. writer Apuleius has one gallus address his fellow devotees as โgirls.โ
While several ancient sources mock these figures for their gender-nonconforming appearance and behaviors, it is nevertheless evident that the galli held a sacred place within the Roman state. They were viewed as being important to Romeโs continued safety and prominence.
For example, Plutarch in his โLife of Mariusโ relates that a priest of the Great Mother came to Rome in 103 B.C. to convey an oracle that the Romans would be triumphant in war. Though believed by the Senate, this priest, Bataces, was mocked mercilessly in the plebian assembly. However, when the individual who had insulted Bataces swiftly died of a terrible fever, the plebians too gave this oracle and the goddessโs prophetic powers their backing.
Todayโs trans issues
Behind Trumpโs executive orders are two assertions: first, that transgender identity is a form of ideology: a modern invention created to justify deviance from oneโs sex as assigned at birth; second, that transgender identity is both a form of disease and of dishonesty.
The reissued military ban doubles down on the perceived dishonesty of trans folk, contrasting it with the ideals and principles needed for combat. The order states that the โadoption of a gender identity inconsistent with an individualโs sex conflicts with a soldierโs commitment to an honorable, truthful, and disciplined lifestyle.โ
Taking a long view of gender diversity across millennia has shown me that many individuals in antiquity certainly lived lives outside of the clear-cut formula that the Trump administration has stated, namely that โwomen are biologically female and men are biologically male.โ
Gender diversity is not simply a late 20th- or early 21st-century phenomenon. However, the fear that gender-diverse people are diseased and devious likewise arises in several ancient sources. In the classical world, these fears seem limited to the realms of satire and fantasy; in our current time, we are seeing these fears being harnessed for government policy.
This article incorporates material from a story originally published on Aug. 1, 2017.
This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit, independent news organization bringing you facts and trustworthy analysis to help you make sense of our complex world. It was written by: Tom Sapsford, Boston College
Read more:
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- A trans soldier in the ancient Roman army?
- Trumpโs military policy overlooks data on why transgender troops are fit to serve
Tom Sapsford is affiliated with the Lambda Classical Caucus.ย
Feature Image:ย A relief showing a gallus making sacrifices to the goddess Cybele and Attis. Sailko via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY
