The Top 10 Awesome Cross Dressers from the History
Cross-dressing is not a new phenomenon, not a result of modern day individualism. It dates back to centuries. Transvestitism allows people to express themselves based on their internal awareness. Here is a list of 10 awesome individuals who dared to cross dress:
10. Elagabu (204-222)
Under the guidance of his aunt, Elagabu became the Emperor of Rome at the young
age of 14. Even though he was the emperor, he preferred clothing like a women.
It is said that he’d got, all his body hair removed and wore makeup. He
probably had his heart set on his chariot driver, Hierocles whom he referred
to, as his husband. Once, Elagabu had voiced his wish to a doctor that he
wanted to become a woman and that the doctor would be paid huge money if he
could only grant his wish. Needless to say, in the traditional Roman society
Elagabu was not a popular king, all the more because he married a priestess who
had earlier sworn herself to virginity. At the age of 18, Elagabu, the emperor
was assassinated.
9. Francois De Choisy (1644-1724)
De Choisy was made to dress up as a girl till the age of 18, by his mother. It
is said that this was done because De Choisy was the playmate of Princess
Philippe I, who was dressed like a girl too, so that the prince would not be
seen as a threat to his older brother, King Louis XIV. Even when an adult, De
Choisy went on wearing women dresses because he couldn’t get fond of men’s
clothing. Soon, he became quite a fashion icon among the ladies of the realm
who often visited him for fashion advices; and he even ended up impregnating
one of them. In 1773, Francois De Choisy published his most famous book ‘The
Transvestite Memoirs’.
8. Mary Read (1690 – 1721)
Since her childhood, Read was brought up as a boy by her mother. At a very young
age she joined the British Army and it was during her service at the army that
she came across pirates. She decided ‘pirating’ was her calling in life,
therefore joined a bunch of pirates and managed to attract the attention of
another female pirate, Anne Bonney. All this while Read was disguised as a man,
so one can imagine poor Bonney’s disappointment when she came to know about
Read’s sexuality. At any rate, legend has it, that they later became lifelong
companion. In 1720, together they were captured and became the only women to
have been ever convicted of piracy.
Interesting stuffs: A story goes,
that Read had once, during a dual ripped open her shirt and managed to defeat
her opponent who had no clue that he was fighting a woman.
7. Queen Christina of Sweden (1626-1689)
The king wanted her daughter to grow up tough, for she was the heir to the throne.
So he decided to bring her up like a boy. He often took her to bear-hunting
which later became Christina’s favourite pastime. She was coroneted at the age
of 18 but under constant pressure of marriage and the need of producing heir,
Queen Christina abdicated her throne ten years later and fled to Sweden
disguised as a man. There she spent some times, often in a man’s getup. Later
she turned to Catholicism and went to Rome were she was granted a special
permission to wear men’s cloths. Christina is one of the only two women who are
buried in St. Peter’s Church in Rome.
6. Deborah Samson (1760-1827)
During the American Revolutionary War, Samson got herself enlisted into the army
using her deceased brother’s name. She fought bravely dressed as a man. When
she got wounded at the battlefield she insisted her fellow comrades to leave
her to die because she was afraid of the revelation of her true identity. Her
fellow soldiers, ignoring her wish, took her to the hospital from where she
escaped. She managed to pull out the bullet from her thigh on her own. However
on another occasion she was admitted to the hospital and the secret was
discovered. She was given a honorary discharge. After this, Samson went on to
various speaking tours dressed in her uniform; eventually she married and had
children.
Interesting stuffs: Samson was, by no means the only woman to have
pulled off such a trick. One estimate, calculated that there were as many as
300 women who had fought in the Revolutionary War dressed as a woman.
5. Charles D’eon (1728-1810)
D’Eon was a French diplomat and a spy, he was sent to Russia in the year 1756
to brighten up the relationship between the two countries. And the extent to
which he went to achieve his obligation was remarkable. He got himself dresses
as a woman and was the maid of honour to the Russian Empresses. From then,
speculation started doing the round regarding D’Eon sexuality. Thing got so
heated up that even bets were being placed in the London Stock Exchange. Upon
D’Eon’s return, he revealed that he was actually a woman brought up as a man
for ‘inheritance’ purpose and since then he was allowed by the French King to
wear woman’s cloth. At any rate, after death, doctors revealed that D’Eon was,
biologically a woman.
4. Marina The Monk
Marina was born in fifth century Lebanon. Marina took the name Marinos to join
her father in a monastery and since then lived like a boy. However after her
father’s death, she was accused of impregnating a woman who lived nearby the
monastery. Instead of revealing herself, she silently bore her punishment of
fostering the child. It was when Marina died at the age of 40, that she was
finally discovered to be a woman. The girl who had once accused Marina for
seduction admitted her lie.
Interesting stuffs: Marina wasn’t
the only one of her kind; women seeking religious lives have entered often
reclined to portraying themselves as men. Pope Joan was rumoured to have been a
woman undercover.
3. Shi Pei-Pu (1938-2009)
At 26 years of age Shi Pei-Pu was employed as a male opera singer and had an
admirer named Bernard Boursicot. Boursicot who worked at the French Embassy in
Beijing, convinced Shi that he was actually a woman trapped in a man’s body and
they soon embarked on an affair that lasted for 20 years. Boursicot was later
accused of giving out information’s and documents that served Shi’s position in
the Communist party. In 1982, when Boursicot & Shi were arrested in Paris
on accounts of spying, Shi’s identity was brought to light and Boursicot,
afraid of the humiliation the revelation would bring, tried to kill Shi by
slashing his throat. Shi, however survived.
2. Isabelle Eberhardt (1877-1904)
Isabelle was born in Switzerland but in 1897, her family moved to North Africa.
While growing up in an Arab Islamic society she knew she’d have to do things
differently to get to do what she wants. So she adopted the name Si Mahmoud
Essadi and became an explorer. She had once served as a spy during the Algerian
revolt against France. Later, disguised as a man, she enter into a Sufi sect
called Qadiriyya and eventually initiated on the life of a ‘fakir’ or the ‘holy
man’.
1. Joan Of Arch (1412-1431)
It was During the Hundred Years War that a young girl heard voices from above
asking her to lead the army to victory. So she cut her hair and dressed like a
man headed to fulfil her duty. Joan, managed to convince Charles VII, heir to
the French throne and led the French army to success. Following which Charles
became the king. When 19 years-old, Joan was arrested and subjected to trials
for cross-dressing. She was burned at the stake. Later however, justice
prevailed and on realising the mistake that have been committed, Joan was
honoured as a saint by the Catholic Church and the saviour of France.
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