A recent archealogical dig in Siberia turned up the earliest evidence of trans-sexualism. Cavemen were found encased in the arctic tundra dressed in female clothing, mainly mammoth and other exotic skin bikinis instead of their more normal male attire. The theory is that this group of early cross dressers were caught in some calamity ( possibly an avalanche or rock fall ) thet didnt allow them time to get back to their drab clothing. Many stone age cross dressing implements were found including lip paints made from dried ochre roots. Many of these early trannies also had dyed hair using primitive bleaching and dying compounds. This is the earliest ever find indicating cross dressing. The next most recent is a bronze age find in Northern France discovered three years ago......

I am joking of course but read on and you will see there really is nothing new in cross dressing and transvestisism. I complied this little history just out of personal interest and I hope at some point to write up a complete history of trannies.

Changing gender and dress are very ancient behaviours. Early recorded incidents of cross-dressing include the 7th century BC Assyrian tablet showing King Assurbanipul getting into drag. Customs and rituals associated with cross-dressing are very much older. The priests of the ancient earth goddess Ishtar of Babylon dressed as women to appease the deity.

And heres Akhenaten (larger figure) and Nefertiti ( smaller figure )... look at their bodies it's obvious his gender preferences...they had 7 daughters and ...MAYBE...King Tut was their son. He is very important person in religious history. He was the first person who believed that there was just one God, and named Him Aten ( the Circle) maybe Moses took his theory about the "only God" from this egyptian king.

There are many accounts throughout the ancient Near East of priests attached to goddesses donning female apparel. In the case of the priests of Attis, consort to the earth goddess Cybelle, in the kingdom of Phrygia, they also castrated themselves because according to their mythology, the god had removed his testicles whilst sat beneath a pine tree.

In Babylon, an annual ritual involved young men slicing off their genitals and flinging them into nearby houses as they ran bleeding and in great pain through the streets of the city. In return for this sacrifice, women's clothes were handed to them and thereafter they spent their time at female tasks.


With so much cross-dressing and gender swapping going on in Near Eastern civilisations in deference to their gods and goddesses, it is little wonder that the Hebrews, fearful of their more powerful enemies, and with a solitary masculine god Jehovah, introduced the Deutronomy law 22:5. This made donning the clothing of the opposite sex 'an abomination before the Lord, your God'.

Greek mythology is full of incidents of cross-dressing or gender changing, a clear indication of the bisexual and androgynous minds of the ancient Greeks, especially when the supermen of their legends, like Achilles spent some time in female drag.
The strongman of Greek mythology, Hercules, was obliged to live as a serving maid to Queen Omphale as a punishment for killing the catamite Iphitus.
Many of the deities were cross-dressers or bisexual, most notably Hermaphroditus, after whom the modern term for a biologically androgynous person comes from.
The young god Dionysos once disguised himself as a woman to enter the kingdom of the warrior women, Amazons, in order to conquer them.
There was the mortal man Tiresias, changed into a woman as punishment for killing a snake. Ten years later the Goddess Hera asked Tiresias how she liked being a woman, she replied that she enjoyed sex ten times more than as a man. On hearing that Hera promptly changed her back into a man.

One of ancient Greece's most adventurous and controversial personalities, Alcibiades was a disciple of Socrates, and is one of the characters in Plato's Symposium. Extremely good-looking, very wealthy and always living according to local custom wherever he was: on horse in Thessaly, constantly drunk in Thrace or taking ice-cold baths in Sparta, he was subject to much gossip, admiration but also animosity. Well known for his cross dressing parties in Athens where guests were routinely dreesed as female and engaged in all sorts of riotous sex acts, today he would doubtless be successful on the web as a porn tranny.
Take a ,look at hom on the right - while drunk interrupting a symposium now is that female body language or what ?


Some of the Roman Emperors themselves enjoyed cross-dressing and a few went even further. In his youth Julius Caeser apparently lived as a girl in the court of the King Nicomedes. Later he was referred to as the 'Queen of Bythenia' who it was said was 'every woman's man and every man's woman'.
Caligula turned up at banquets dressed as Venus. However he believed himself divine and therefore might be expected to imitate the deities, but his choice of the Goddess of Love was an interesting one. In the end his own guards thought he went too far and assassinated him whilst attending gladitorial contests.

 
Coin with Nero on oneside and his wife on the other or maybe even his TV lover.....
Nero killed his wife in a fit of rage and then in deep remorse for her loss, sought a companion who closely resembled her. He found a young male slave, Sporus, closest to the ideal, had him castrated by his surgeons and the two were formally married, with the young man acting as the wife. Later he married a gladiator and this time he was the wife, screaming like a deflowered virgin on their wedding night.


Eliogabalus was a particularily tragic figure in Roman history. He married his slave and thereafter became the wife 'delighted to be called the mistress, the wife, the Queen of Hierocles'. He even offered half the empire to any surgeon who could refashion his genitals into a vagina. Obviously, Eliogabalus was a true transsexual and lived well before his time, but the Romans weren't amused and four years into his reign he was assassinated.
Another Roman emperor said to have cross-dressed was Tiberius, who, by all accounts dressed as a female for sexual escapades on the Island of Capri.
Domitan and Hadrian took as lovers' female impersonators from the stage.

Claudius introduced the Phrygian ceremonies to Rome, allowing men to take part in a chance to publicaly dres as women. The harvest ritual of Saturnalia alreadt incorporated dancing in which both sexes cross-dressed as a form of disguise magic and this continued into Christian times as a remnant of Europes pagan past. It eventually became the medieval Feast of Fools, April Fools Day, in which not only common men and women cross-dressed but the king became a beggar and the beggar became a king for the day.
Ritualised cross-dressing continued to play a part in harvest festivals of northern and western Europe as late as the 18th century when puritan evangelism finally stamped it out.


CHEVALIER d'EON (1720-1810): France's most open (and Louis XIV's favorite) dragster had adventures galore in petticoats, spying on Empress Elisabeth of Russia (who was herself obsessed with cross-dressing).
Diplomat, writer, spy, and Freemason, a member of the elite Dragoons and one of the best swordsmen France, see the picture below of him fencing in drag - 'go on repeat what you said about me being a fairy'

Her true gender was a source of speculation and provoked public bets in the late 18th century. Generally it was believed that d'Eon was born female, but he had started to dress as a man in his childhood, and changed back from "a bad boy into a good girl" when his secret was revealed decades later. After his death it turned out that he was a man who had dressed as a woman. D'Eon is often called the patron saint of transvestites.
"Let us then live the life of children of God, and let us stop simply usurping that name. God makes clear whenever he pleases that he is the master of heart. He alone can change us;he alone must be glorified for our change; for allowing us to overcome prejudices from birth and habit." (from 'Extrait de l'Epître de la Chev. d'Eon à Madame la Duchesse de Montmorency-Bouteville à Versailles mai 1778', from Monsieur d'Eon is a Woman by Gary Kates, 1995)

A modern-day character that is certainly woth a mention is Bunny Roger. Bunny Roger was 6ft dandy who liked wearing dresses and whose adoring mother was once quoted as wondering 'how he managed to party all night in high-heeled shoes'.
Apart from his blatant homosexuality and his famous wit, he used to boast he'd had so many facelifts that he had to shave behind his ears, Bunny was also known for something else.
During the war he was a captain in the rifle brigade and fought bravely in North Africa and Italy. Immensely strong, he once saved an injured soldiers life by refusing to retreat and venturing into no-man's land to carry him to safety.
After another battle he quipped 'Now that I have shot so many Nazis, Daddy will have to buy me a mink coat'. During a particularly terrifying firefight he is quoted as saying that 'it was perfectly awful but not so bad as being at school'.
Like so many other such men, Bunny Roger could have avoided active service by declaring his sexual preferences. Instead he wore light make-up and killed Nazis.



J. EDGAR HOOVER: A whole new meaning to the phrase 'Dragnet' - Recently declassified documents show J Edgar Hoover who ran the FBI from 1924 until his death in 1972 was in fact a closet dresser. That makes you wonder about who 'Americas 10 most wanted men' really were. Frankly I doubt he woud have looked god in my gear and I never lend my latex anyway.

And for those of you who thought shemale movies were new......
CELLULOID DRAG: One of Edwin S. Porter's first subjects was a preening transvestite (1903). Soon enough, Fatty Arbuckle was prancing in frocks for "Miss Fatty's Seaside Lovers" (1915) while Harold Lloyd was the pitcher on a girl's baseball team in "Spit-Ball Sadie" (Motion Picture News called it "repellent"). The kiddies cross-dressed, too: Our Gang's Buckwheat was Juliet to Alfalfa's Romeo in "Pay as You Exit" (1936). After Ed Wood's legendary "Glen or Glenda?" (1953) came Billy Wilder's even more legendary "Some Like It Hot" (1959) and Hitchcock's "Psycho" -- the ultra drag derangement with Anthony Perkins cross-dressing as his own dead mother. On it went, through Andy Warhol's drag-hags, Viva, Candy Darling, et al. in the likes of "Harlot" (1965) and "Flesh" (1968); Divine, who starred in John Waters' "Mondo Trasho" (1969) and "Polyester" (1981); and down to "Tootsie," "Mrs. Doubtfire" and Babs' own "Yentl" -- Not forgeting of course films like 'Priscilla Queen of the Desert', "The Triple Echo" and of course "Cabaret" which possibly takes place as the first post 60s mainstream film to feature a TV AS a TV.
 
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