Historical pederastic relationships: Wikis

  

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Over the course of history there have been a number of pederastic relationships between adult men and adolescent boys which have become part of the historical record. In some of these cases one or both members are notable historical figures, while in other cases the individuals involved are only minor personages, often remembered only for this particular aspect of their lives.

Though all of these relationships are by definition homoerotic in nature, the individuals involved do not necessarily identify themselves as homosexuals.[1] The nature of the relationships have ranged from overtly sexual to what is now commonly referred to as platonic,[2] sometimes out of religious principle.[3]

Contents

Limitations of the historical record

In the pre-modern and modern West, their equivocal status has made pederastic relationships difficult to document, since it was in the interest of both participants to keep the relationship secret. According to historian Michael Kaylor,

[S]ince in Victorian England ‘homosexual behaviour became subject to increased legal penalties, notably by the Labouchère Amendment of the Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1885, which extended the law to cover all male homosexual acts, whether committed in public or private’, expecting ‘verifiable data’ concerning their unconventional desires is the ultimate scholarly presumption.[4]

Another obstacle to the documentation of such relationships has been the destruction of "incriminating" personal and public records, either to "preserve the honor" of the individuals involved, or as retribution against their perceived transgressions.

Nevertheless some of these relationships have become public knowledge, usually because one of the members disclosed it as part of his artistic production, or because the relationship came to the attention of the authorities and the legal record was preserved. In recent years, with the greater public acceptance of homosexual expression, such information has become somewhat easier to come by, especially in those cases where the relationship is no longer illegal.

Known or presumed pederastic relationships

In the following list the couples are listed in chronological order, and the name of the older partner precedes that of the younger. Although many more men are known to have engaged in such relationships, only those instances in which the name of the younger partner is known are included. In keeping with various traditions which allow (and actually privilege) chaste pederastic relationships (See Philosophy of pederasty and Nazar ila'l-murd), included below are also relationships in which there is evidence of an erotic component even in the absence of actual sexual relations. The more famous partner is usually the older one but not always so.

Ancient and pre-modern Asia and the Middle Ages

  • Gong Wei and Wang Qi
    • According to 孔子 Confucius, Gongshu Wuren, known as Gongwei, son of King Zhao of 魯 Lu, had Wang Qi as his boy-favorite. Gongwei rode to meet the army of 齊 Qi in his war chariot with his favorite beside him. The two died in battle and their wakes were held at the same time. The people of Lu considered not giving the lad Wang Qi a funeral. They consulted Confucius who said, "If someone can wield the lance to protect his country, how can you not give him a funeral?"[5]
  • Gaozu of Han and Jiri
    • According to the Historical Records Jiri had no talent or ability, and rose to his position by dint of his looks and grace.[6 ]
  • Emperor Hui of Han and Hongru
    • Reigned 194-188 BCE. Before the tradition of meritocracy took root, male favorites such as Hongru rose to rank and power on the basis of their appealing looks.[6 ]
  • Emperor Ai of Han and Dong Xian
    • The Book of Han[7] records that the emperor, needing to rise from the bed where his sleeping beloved was lying by his side on top of the emperor's robe, rather than wake the youth cut off the robe's sleeve instead. This gave rise to the term duang xiu, "cut sleeve," that became synonymous with male love throughout Eastern Asia.[8]
  • Zhang Hanbian and Zhou Xiaoshi
    • The third century Jin dynasty poet's beloved was also an actor whose favors had to be bought. He is described in a poem:
The actor Zhou elegantly wanders
The youthful boy is young and delicate
Fifteen years old.[9]
  • Yu Xin and Wang Shao
    • The great writer (513-581) was disowned by his beloved upon the latter's rise to power.[10]
  • Waliba ibn al-Hubab and Abu Nuwas
    • Waliba was a teacher of poetry to his beloved,[11] who was to far surpass him in talent and renown. He took the young man (b. 756 C.E.) to Kufa, where he lived an openly gay and bohemian lifestyle,[12] to live with him as his apprentice.[13] Abu Nuwas went on to become a prolific writer of mudhakkarat (boy love) poetry.[14]
  • Emperor Tang Xizong and Zhang Langgou
    • The emperor gave his young favorite (without whom he "could not sleep peacefully") a horse which the boy put through its paces in the presence of the king, trampling the king's arm in the process. As a result, the king sickened and died shortly thereafter, in 888.[15]
  • Muhammad ibn Dawud al-Zahiri and Muhammad al-Saydalani
    • Exemplifying the tradition of overwhelming love, a malady known as ʿishq, al-Zahiri, the author of a book on profane love, is said to have died, in 909, of love for the youth al-Saydalani.[16]
  • Mahmud of Ghazni and Ayaz
    • The two, sultan and slave, are paragons of male love in Islamic culture. Their story depicts the power of love of a man for a youth, where the king becomes a slave to his slave. Mahmud appointed Ayaz ruler of Lahore in 1021.[17]
  • Ibn Ammar and Muhammad Ibn Abbad Al Mutamid
    • In 1053 the 19-year-old poet Ibn Ammar was appointed tutor to the 13-year-old future ruler of Sevilla, with whom he promptly fell in love. Separated from the boy by his father, they were later reunited but eventually fell out. Al Mutamid killed his old lover with his own hands in 1086, only to then give him a sumptuous funeral.[18]
  • Muhammad Ibn Abbad Al Mutamid and Saif
    • "Henri Peres tells us: 'Sodomy is practised in all the courts of the Muluk al-Tawaif. It is sufficient to point out here the love of al-Mutamid for Ibn Ammar and for his page Saif...'"[19] Of one of his beloved pages Al Mutamid wrote, "I made him my slave, but the coyness of his glance has made me his prisoner, so that we are both at once slave and master to each other.[20]
  • Raoul II, Archbishop of Tours and Jean, Archbishop of Orléans
    • Raoul appointed his adolescent lover (also known as "Flora") in 1097 to the post in Orléans over the vehement objections of other prelates.[21]
  • Ailred of Rievaulx and Simon
    • Ailred, the abbot of the Cistercian monastery of Rievaulx who was in his mid-twenties in 1135, was in love with a young monk named Simon, about 14 years of age. The relationship is thought to have remained chaste.[22][23]
  • Roger de Pont L'Evêque, Archbishop of York and Walter
    • According to John of Salisbury, Roger had been involved with a beautiful boy who, upon growing up, regretted the relationship and blamed the Archbishop, who had the young man tried and had his eyes gouged out. When he persisted with his accusations, he had him tried again and hanged. The scandal broke in 1152, and Roger escaped his deserved punishment through the efforts of Thomas Becket.[24]
  • Ibn Sahl of Seville and Mûsâ ibn ʿAbd al-Ṣamad
    • Mostly known for his love poetry in muwashshah form, Ibn Sahl two addressees (Muḥammad being the second) are thought by some to represent the two religions that played important roles in his life, his original Judaism and the Islam to which he converted.[25] Others hold that the youths were historical individuals.[26]
  • Alauddin Khilji and Malik Kafur
    • Malik, an African slave boy allegedly bought by an Arab trader in Baghdad for 1,000 gold dinars (whence his nickname of Hazardinari) was captured in Gujarat during a military campaign in 1299 by the general Nusrat Khan. He caught the eye of the sultan, was castrated, converted from Hinduism to Islam, and taken by the ruler as catamite. The two were linked by a deep emotional bond,[27] but the excessive love of Alauddin for Malik was blamed for the eventual downfall of the government. Malik, deprecated as being "chopped in front and torn behind," was raised to a position of great power, being appointed in 1306 to the rank of general, a career which he pursued with great success.[28] He had the king's two eldest sons imprisoned and blinded,[29] and when the king died (poisoned by him, according to some) he installed a six-year-old son of Alauddin on the throne and himself as regent. He was decapitated only 35 days later, in 1316, by the same men he had sent to blind the third son of Alauddin, Mubarak Khan. This last bribed the soldiers to spare him, and installed himself as regent upon Malik's death.[30][31][32]
  • Shihab ad-Din Ahmad and al-Shuhayb
    • Ahmad, the son of Al-Nasir Muhammad was summoned from Al Karak to Cairo and married off by his father, who wanted to put an end to the "unsuitable" relationship with al-Shuhayb. Upon his return to Al Karak Ahmad resumed the relationship, disgracing himself by showering the boy with money. The father recovered the money and eventually disinherited his son. Ahmad's own mamelukes eventually murdered al-Shuhayb, leading Ahmad to engage in a series of outrages which resulted in his eventual decapitation in 1345.[33]

15th century

  • Filippo Brunelleschi and Donatello
    • According to Giorgio Vasari, "And Donatello, then a young man, being held in esteem as a sculptor, Filippo began to hold intercourse with him, and such an affection sprang up between them that it seemed as if the one could not live without the other."[34] In an even earlier account, Giannozzo Manetti holds that "The sculptor Donatello was with him almost all the time." These accounts are seen as reflective of an undercurrent suggesting the two were more than friends. At the time of their first meeting, in Pistoia in 1401, Brunelleschi would have been 24 years old, and Donatello about 15. Their relationship is seen as fitting the typical pederastic model of Florentine male love of the period. Neither ever married, though contemporary accounts see this as related to their dedication to art. However, stories about Donatello's fondness for his apprentices circulated through Florentine intellectual circles, and his David is considered to be a homoerotic work conveying "an undercurrent of personal meaning."[35][36]
Radu cel Frumos
  • Mehmed II and Radu cel Frumos
    • While a hostage at the Ottoman court in the 1440s, Radu (whose epithet, "cel Frumos" means "the Handsome"), younger brother of Vlad III the Impaler, became the beloved of the Sultan, after first refusing his favors and wounding him with his own sword. The sultan is said to have prevailed upon the boy by means of presents and kind usage. The relationship lasted many years and Radu was raised to the highest posts in the army.[37][38]
Il Salaino
  • Leonardo da Vinci and Gian Giacomo Caprotti da Oreno (Il Salaino)
    • An attractive youth with beautiful hair who delighted and exasperated Leonardo ("ladro, bugiardo, ostinato, ghiotto") Salai entered his service in 1490 at 10 and remained for 30 years. His master spoiled the boy with money, food and clothes, and used him as a model for his Saint John the Baptist, a painting related to an erotic charcoal drawing by the artist.[40] Leonardo's physical and emotional attraction to other males have been identified in his art. His relationship with Salai has been seen as homoerotic since the Renaissance, by such writers as Gian Paolo Lomazzo, Walter Pater and Kenneth Clark who, writing in the 1930s, stated that the relationship between the two was of a kind "honored in Classical times and partly tolerated in the Renaissance."[41][42].
  • Babur and Baburi
    • According to Babur's autobiography, some time around the year 1500,

      In those leisurely days I discovered in myself a strange inclination, nay! as the verse says, I maddened and afflicted myself" for a boy in the camp-bazaar, his very name, Baburi, fitting in.... From time to time Baburi used to come to my presence but out of modesty and bashfulness, I could never look straight at him; how then could I make conversation and recital? In my joy and agitation I could not thank him (for coming); how was it possible for me to reproach him with going away? What power had I to command the duty service to myself? One day, during that time of desire and passion when I was going with companions along a lane and suddenly met him face to face, I got into such a state of confusion that I almost went right off. To look straight at him or put words together was impossible.... In that frothing up of desire and passion, and under that stress of youthful folly, I used to wander, barehead, bare-foot, through street and lane, orchard and vineyard.[43][44]

16th century

  • Benedetto Varchi and Giovanni de' Pazzi
    • Varchi's first love affair, around 1525, was with Giovanni, the adolescent son of a local aristocrat. The father had Varchi knifed upon finding his son stole out of the house to spend his nights with his lover. Varchi survived to have other lovers.[46]
Cecchino de' Bracci
  • Luigi del Riccio and Francesco (Cecchino) de' Bracci
    • Del Riccio, a Florentine merchant residing in Rome, was devoted to Cecchino, a relative of his whom he had adopted and with whom he shared his lodgings. Upon his friend's untimely death he pressed Michelangelo, to whom he was a close friend as well as secretary, to sculpt a likeness of the youth. The master, who did not like to carve portraits, declined, offering instead a sonnet which closes with a rhetorical admonition to the bereaved del Riccio:
If the beloved within the lover shines
Since art without him cannot work alone
You must I carve to tell the world of him.[50 ]
Del Riccio himself expressed his grief in poems:
Look upon my great troubles and my sorrow
Oh, for that goodness, for that desire
That you had to please me, and for that zeal
Of true love between us . . .[51]
Such frank display of friendship of great men for a mere boy, factored in no small part on the beauty of that boy, was thought by John Addington Symonds to be unimaginable in the modern world, yet not uncommon in the 16th century.[50 ]
  • Michelangelo and Francesco (Cecchino) de' Bracci
    • Michelangelo is thought by some to have fallen in love[52] with the cousin and adopted son of one of his closest friends,[53] Luigi del Riccio, himself enamored of the boy, whom they both called idolo nostro, "our idol." The boy lived with del Riccio at the Palazzo Strozzi in Rome[54] and was well known for his charm and good looks.[55] Fifteen at the time of their meeting, he died the following year, on January 8, 1544.[56] His death was much lamented, and many Tuscan poets composed verses in his memory, such as Giovanni Aldobrandini, Carlo Gondi, Fra Paolo del Rosso, and the openly homosexual poet Anton Francesco Grazzini, called Il Lasca.[57][58] Michelangelo composed a sonnet, a madrigal, and 48 funerary epigrams for his and del Riccio's beloved, many if not most at the behest of del Riccio. These are among the poems of Michelangelo bowdlerized after his death by his grand nephew, Michelangelo the Younger, who changed the pronouns from masculine to feminine, making it seem that the poems were addressed to a woman and not to a boy.[59] At the same time, others regard Michelangelo's and del Riccio's affection for de' Bracci as a Platonic affection on the part of exiled and childless men, the youth becoming an incorporation of their patriotic ideals.[60] A few verses, not intended for publication, allude to physical joys. The last two lines rendered here are an alternative ending to the quatrain, and one which the poet described as "quite moral":[61]
Qui la carne, ora ridotta a polvere, e le mie ossa
Prive dei begli occhi e della mia bellezza
Rendono testimonianza a colui a cui portai grazia nel letto,
Che abbracciavo, e nel quale la mia anima continua a vivere.[62]
(The flesh, now earth, and my few bones, now ridden
Of my sweet eyes and of my pleasing sight,
Remind the one to whom I was grace in bed
Whom I embraced and in whom my soul still lives.)[63]
  • Pope Julius III and Cardinal Innocenzo Ciocchi Del Monte
    • the 16th-century historian Onofrio Panvinio asserted that Julius was "puerorum amoribus implicitus" (entagled in the love of boys).[64] The future pope "picked up" (the phrase is used by the Catholic Encyclopedia) the illiterate 13 or 14-year-old street urchin in 1547, and the resulting scandal almost cost Julius the election to the papacy, becoming a staple of anti-papal polemics for over a century. Innocenzo was 17 when Julius became pope in 1550, and despite the boy's evident unsuitability for high office Julius' first act was to raise him to the rank of cardinal, with benefices which made him one of the richest individuals in Europe. Julius, awaiting Innocenzo's arrival in Rome to receive his cardinal's hat, "showed the impatience of a lover awaiting a mistress", and boasted of the boy's bedroom prowess. Gossip called the boy Pope Julius' "Ganymede," and the Venetian ambassador reported that Innocenzo shared the pope's bed. Innocenzo fell out of favour with the Church after his patron's death, and was buried beneath an unmarked slab beside the del Monte chapel at the church of San Pietro in Montorio, Rome - Julius himself is buried inside the Vatican, not far from the tomb of John-Paul II.[65] to each other, as well as of the ignominy that attended Innocenzo.[66][67]
  • Theodore Beza and Audebert
    • Among his 1548 Juvenilia poems was one which was understood to point to his bisexuality, in which he compared his passion for two young lovers, "little Candida" and "little Audebert," concluding he loved Audebert the best. Later this poem would be held against him in particular and against Calvinists in general as a proof of moral failing.[68][69]
  • Benedetto Varchi and Giulio della Stufa
    • Giulio, the subject of many passionate letters around 1552, complained to his teacher to send fewer letters and more subdued in language, since his father had read one and exclaimed, "This is nonsense! What kind of love is this?"[70]
  • Marc Antoine Muret and Memmius Frémiot
    • The two lovers had to flee Toulouse in 1554, where they were later burned in effigy as sodomites. Muret and his young pupil had been warned of the danger by a friend in parliament who sent him only a verse of Virgil: "Oh, flee this cruel land, flee the bitter shore."[71]
Ascanio, whom Carafa loved more than his eyes,
Ascanio, the beauty of whose face surpassed
The handsome Trojan cupbearer who pours for the gods"[72]
  • Benvenuto Cellini and Fernando di Giovanni di Montepulciano
    • In 1556, when Cellini dismissed his apprentice, the latter denounced the sculptor, according to the trial records, for having: "Cinque anni or sono ha tenuto per suo ragazzo Fernando di Giovanni di Montepulciano, giovanetto con el quale ha usato carnalmente moltissime volte col nefando vitio della soddomia, tenendolo in letto come sua moglie." (For five years or so he kept as his boy Fernando di Giovanni di Montepulciano, a youth whom he has used carnally numerous times via the abject vice of sodomy, keeping him in bed as his wife.[73][74][75] Cellini was convicted, had to pay a fine of 50 gold scudi, and was sentenced to four years in jail, later commuted to house arrest.[76]
Sebastian of Portugal
  • Father Luís Gonçalves da Câmara and Sebastian of Portugal
    • The young king came down with discharges at the age of ten in 1564, thought to be the result of sexual relations with Câmara, his confessor, who was accused of wanting to gain control of the young king's mind after having gained control of his body. The young king's close relationship with his confessor continued for the rest of his life.[77]
  • Shah Hussain and Madho Lal
    • The love of Shah Hussain, a Punjabi weaver, for a Brahmin boy called "Madho" or "Madho Lal" is famous, and they are often referred to as a single person with the composite name of "Madho Laal Hussain." A mystic poet and talented musician, his love for the Madho is seen as a stepping stone to his fana, absorption in God. The culmination of their relationship was the conversion of the Hindu Madho to Islam. Today Shah Hussain is one of the major patron saints of Lahore. Madho's tomb lies next to Hussain's in the shrine.[78]
  • Luigi Fontino and Luigi Dalla Balla
    • In Loreto in 1569 and 1570, Dalla Balla, an orphan choir boy of fifteen or sixteen, slept with a series of older monks, canons and musicians. Fontini, the canon of it:Santuario di Nostra Signora di Loreto was denounced. Put in irons for two months and promised lenience, he finally confessed. He explained his sexual involvement with the youth by claiming that "I thought to have a disciple who could take care of me if I became ill in my old age. He was defrocked, turned over to the town authorities, and decapitated. The boy was flogged and exiled from the Papal states.[79][80]
  • Giovanni Leonardo Primavera and Luigi Dalla Balla
    • Primavera, at the time a musician and composer 25 to 30 years of age, was one of the lovers of the choir boy Dalla Balla. The latter confessed that he had been sodomized while asleep by Primavera. The composer escaped by sea back to Venice, avoiding the punishment which the local authorities wanted to inflict on him. Dalla Balla went on himself to a career in music, in Venice.[81]
James VI
  • Esmé Stewart, 1st Duke of Lennox and James VI, King of Scots
    • The 13-year-old monarch fell in love with his 37-year-old French cousin as soon as they met, and was under the older man's influence for several years. Stewart was the first of many favorites, and their relationship was a cause for profound concern both in Scotland and in England.[82]
  • Anthony Bacon and Isaac Burgades
    • While living in Montauban in 1587, the elder brother of Francis Bacon was convicted of sodomy with a page who at the trial declared that "there was nothing wrong with sodomy" and that "Theodore Beza of Geneva approved of it."[83] The two escaped conviction and probable death by burning only due to the intercession of Henry IV of France.[84]
  • Prospero Farinacci and Berardino Rocchi
    • The Italian lawyer and judge, noted for his harsh sentencing of sodomites, was himself accused in 1595 of repeated sexual relations with Berardino Rocchi, a 16-year-old page in the Altemps palace, where Farinacci lived. He was excused of the crime by Pope Clement VIII, who famously made a pun of Farinacci name (which alludes to "flour" in Italian) by claiming that "The flour is good but the bag it's in is not so clean." [85]
  • Pascual Jaime and Francisco Legasteca
    • Pedro de León, chaplain at the Royal Prison of Seville, compiled records between 1578 and 1616 on 50 prisoners accused of sodomy, all of whom were eventually executed. Among them was Pascual Jaime, chaplian to the Duke of Alcalá. Jaime was in the habit of picking up destitute young men off the street, feeding and clothing them and keeping them in his house. Having attracted the attention of the authorities for his elegant attire and retinue of painted and garbed youths, he was caught with one of them in flagrante delicto. Under torture Jaime confessed to a lifetime of sodomy. The authorities showed no mercy to Legasteca, his partner despite the fact that he was very young and "cried like a boy." Both were publicly burned at the stake, within days of each other.[86]

17th century

Francesco Boneri
  • James I of England and Robert Carr, 1st Earl of Somerset
    • The 41-year-old king fell in love with the 17-year-old ex-page at a 1606 jousting bout. Their love lasted several years, though as the boy matured the king was powerless to prevent Carr's “creeping back and withdrawing yourself from lying in my chamber, notwithstanding my many hundred times earnest soliciting you to the contrary.”[88]
  • Théophile de Viau and Jean-Louis Guez de Balzac
    • The 22-year-old Théophile de Viau met the 15-year-old future author in his native Angoulême in 1612[89][90][91] The two became lovers and traveled together around 1613 in the United Provinces, eventually ending up at the Leiden University, where they enrolled as students in May of 1615. In Holland, Balzac is beaten with a stick, affront avenged by Viau with the sword. However Balzac is debauched and ungrateful and they later exchanged bitter recriminations.[92] Prefiguring the relationship between Verlaine and Rimbaud, they brawl upon their return later that year, an event which marks the end of their affair.[93][94]
  • Francis Bacon and Godrick
    • According to the Puritan moralist Simonds d'Ewes, Bacon, after his fall from power in 1621, released most of his servants but "kept still one Godrick, a very effeminate-faced youth, to be his catamite and bedfellow."[95]
  • Murad IV and Musa Çelebi
    • During a Janissary mutiny in 1631 the rebels demanded the head of the Sultan's trusted beloved. To protect the boy the Sultan gave him over to two of his officials, one of them his brother in law, named Rescheb. These two however delivered him to the mutineers, who murdered the boy. Murad found an excuse and had Rescheb executed, and six months later the Sultan avenged himself on the mutineers, killing 20,000 of them.[96][97]
Marquis de Cinq-Mars
  • Louis XIII and the Marquis de Cinq-Mars
    • Cardinal Richelieu introduced the 17-year-old marquis to his king in 1637, thinking the youth would be easy to control. Cinq-Mars was appointed Master of the King's Wardrobe on his birthday, March 27, 1638. Later, the marquis tried to convince the king to have Richelieu executed, and induced some French nobility into revolt, but the effort failed and Richelieu had him beheaded in 1642.[98][99]
  • Qi Zhixiang and Abao

Qi, the Imperial Military Inspector in Ming China in 1642 had a boy lover by the name of Abao, who "was pretty like a little girl" yet coy. A seasoned actor, he would refuse to approach his admirers, a tactic that would create a genuine homosexual appeal based on his control of tension, reversal, suspense and discovery. Qi went through a number of hardships with Abao, with whom he was obsessed.[100][101]

  • Cardinal Antonio Barberini and castrato Marc'Antonio Pasqualini
    • The famous castrato singer Marc Antonio Pasqualini was believed in 1630s and in the early 1640s to have been a lover of his protector Cardinal Antonio Barberini, nephew of Pope Urban VIII. Certainly Pasqualini acquired very strong position at the cardinal's court and was granted the control over the expenditure of large sums and over the access to the cardinal himself[102]. Cardinal Barberini, who, as was said at the time, was involved in the several affairs with both male and female lovers[103], after the fall of his family (1645) changed his dissolute lifestyle, devouted himself to religion and in 1653 was ordained to the priestehood[104].
  • Harmen Meyndertsz van den Bogaert and Tobias
    • Van den Bogaert, Dutch doctor, explorer and commander of Fort Orange, a married man with four children,[107] was caught flagrante delicto sodomizing Tobias, his black boy slave, in late 1647.[108] Van den Bogaert and Tobias escaped and fled to the lands of the Mohawk. Tobias was caught a few days later, and shortly thereafter van den Bogaert too was captured and brought back to Fort Orange, from where he escaped again in early 1648. As he was being chased across the North River branch of the Hudson River he fell through the ice and drowned.
  • Charles, marquis du Bellay, and Richard de la Monnerie
    • Du Bellay, when already of an advanced age and hunchbacked obtained in 1661 his young valet in exchange for 50 louis d'or from the soon to be notorious Jacques Chausson, who ended his days on a pyre for various sodomitical acts. The marquis, also known as the Prince of Yvetot, died without issue, thus extinguishing the line.[109]
  • Molière and Michel Baron
    • Molière met the young actor, with whom he fell in love, in February of 1666. He hired the boy into his troupe and had him live in his house, a matter that created conflict with Armande, Molière's young wife. Gossip had it that Baron eventually cheated on Molière, just as his wife had done.[110][111]
Louis de Bourbon
  • Philippe de Lorraine and Louis de Bourbon, Count of Vermandois
    • Louis, the 14-year-old bastard son of Louis XIV, fell into royal disfavour in 1682 upon discovery of his membership in a secret homosexual society at court, named "The Sacred Fraternity of Glorious Pederasts," and of his relationship with the lover of Monsieur, the king's brother. He was publicly whipped in front of the anti-sodomitical king and was exiled from the court. A year later he was given the chance to redeem himself at the siege of Courtray. Ill with a high fever, he joined the battle despite the advice of the royal physician, and succumbed to the disease shortly thereafter. The king did not mourn him.[114][115]
  • Jean-Baptiste Lully and Brunet
    • In 1685 the 53-year-old composer was denounced for his dalliances with his young page, who was said to be lovelier than Cupid, and who had been preceded by another boy, Lafarge.[116] Brunet, punished by being confined to the Saint Lazare monastery, confessed to Roman orgies involving so many of the great lords that all was hushed up.[117][118]
  • Gian Gastone de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany and Giuliano Dami
    • Struck by the looks of the Marquess Capponi's young servant, the Duke requested the 14-year-old boy and took him along as lackey and lover on his voyage to Hamburg in 1697. Later the boy would act as procurer, providing the Duke with over 300 young lovers who were known as the "ruspanti," after the ruspi, coins with which they were paid for their services. Gian Gastone's intimate relationship with Dami was the most important of his life.[127]

18th century

  • Hans Hermann von Katte and Frederick II of Prussia
    • The 18-year-old crown prince Frederick sought to flee his brutal father in 1730, together with his 26-year-old lover. Betrayed, they were caught, von Katte being sentenced by the king to be executed before his friend's eyes. At the execution Frederick called out, "Pardonnez moi, mon cher Katte," (Forgive me, my dear Katte!) "La mort est douce pour un si aimable Prince," (Death is sweet, for such a kind prince,) came the answer.[128]
  • Luc de Clapiers, marquis de Vauvenargues and Paul Hippolyte Emmanuel de Seytres
    • Both were officers in a French regiment that fought in Bohemia since 1740. Hippolyte, the oldest son of the Marquess of Caumont, born August 13, 1724, was 16 when they met[129] and 17 when he died, during the Siege of Prague in April of 1742. De Clapiers, nine years older than his young friend, addressed his philosophical work Conseil à un jeune homme (Advice to a young Man) to Hippolyte de Seytres. "He understood all the passions and opinions, even the most singular, that the world blames." —Vauvenargues about his friend.[130]
  • Mustafa III and Silahdar Mehmed Paşa
    • At first a page boy and beloved of the Sultan, Mehmed rose to the post of grand vizier and soon after Mustafa's rise to the throne was also given in marriage the Sultana Aischa, one of the daughters of his former lover.[45][131]
  • Captain Robert Jones and Francis Henry Hay
    • Jones was sentenced in 1772 to hang for sodomy with the 13-year-old boy in 1761, but his fellow officers petitioned the king and he was pardoned at the last minute by George III to the outrage of the City notables.[132][133][134]
William Courtenay (Kitty)
  • William Thomas Beckford and William Courtenay
    • Beckford, 19, fell in love with Courtenay, 10, nicknamed Kitty and "one of the most beautiful boys in England," in 1779, a relationship which lasted a number of years. Both pursued lifelong involvement with boys. In a letter to Courtenay's aunt he describes his feelings: "You know, he was never so happy as when he reclined by my side listening to my wild musick or the strange stories which sprang up in my fancy for his amusement. Those were the most delightful hours of my existence."[135][136]
  • William Thomas Beckford and Dom Pedro, Marquis of Marialva
    • While in Portugal in 1787 where he had taken refuge after his affair with Courtenay had become a public matter, Beckford entered into a relationship with the 15-year-old son of Marialva. The young marquis' father remained quite fond of Beckford, hoping to effect a marriage between Henriqueta, his illegitimate daughter, and the rich Englishman.[138][139]

19th century

  • Ali Pasha and Athanasi Vaya
    • A native of Tepeleni, the same town as Ali Pasha, the Greek youth eventually rose to be the most trusted subordinate of the Pasha.[140]
  • Cheng I and Cheung Po Tsai
    • Cheng I was a pirate of the Chinese coast, who kidnapped the 15 years old Chang Pao in 1801. Chang Pao later became the leader of Cheng's pirate fleet.[141]
  • Lord Byron and Nicolò Giraud
    • Lord Byron fell in love with the French-Italian lad in 1810, when the boy was 15.[142] "It is about two hours since, that, after informing me he was most desirous to follow him (that is me) over the world, he concluded by telling me it was proper for us not only to live, but 'morire insieme'. The latter I hope to avoid - as much of the former as he pleases."[143] Byron wrote to a friend that he and the boy were having anal sex (in code, "the Pl. & opt. C." short for "coitum plenum et optabilem").[144]
  • Franz Desgouttes and Daniel Hammeler
    • Daniel moved in with his 25-year-old lover, a Swiss lawyer, at the age of 16 in 1810, and lived with him for seven years, until he was murdered by Franz in a fit of jealousy. His lover was executed by being broken on the wheel, an event that galvanized the early Swiss homosexual emancipation movement.[145]
  • John Hepburn and Thomas White
    • The two lovers were hanged for sodomy at Newgate on 7 March 1811, though Hepburn protested his innocence to the bitter end. The elder was a 46-year-old ensign in the British Navy, the younger a 16-year-old drummer boy.[146] They were "launched into eternity" before "a vast concourse of spectators among whom were numbered members of the royal family."[147] Their relationship had come to light as a result of the Vere Street scandal.
William Kenworthy Browne
  • Edward FitzGerald and William Kenworthy Browne
    • FitzGerald, a man who exhibited no sexual interest in women, at the age of 23 met Browne, 16 at the time, who became the dearest of all his many friends. Their friendship, on FitzGerald's part "a celibate but long and ardent attachment," continued until Browne's death in a riding accident in 1859. The poem Euphranor: A Dialogue on Youth was a glorification of Browne.[148][149][150][151]
  • Ranjit Singh and Hira Singh
    • The Maharaja, described by Richard Francis Burton (based on an account by fr: Victor Jacquemont) as a "man of pederastic morals,"[152] was in love with the son of Dhyan Singh,[153] one of his more powerful ministers. In 1838 Hira Singh was described as “a handsome boy, loaded with emeralds and pearls.”[154] Ranjit could not bear rto be apart from him for long, and allowed only him to sit in a chair, while other courtiers either stood or sat on the floor.[155] Later Hira Singh gave proof of both wisdom and courage[156] but survived his lover by only five years, being killed by the Sikh army in December 1844.[157]
  • Edward John Eyre and Wylie
    • The Australian explorer met Wylie in 1840 and took him as companion, together with two other Aboriginee boys and a European, on his 1841 expedition across the Nullarbor Plain. Afterwards he formed repeated close associations with such boys.[158]
  • James Brooke and Charles (Doddy) Grant
    • Brooke, Rajah of Sarawak, a man uninterested in women and with a penchant for falling in love with adolescent boys, fell in love in 1848 with a young recruit, Charles Grant (grandson of the seventh Earl of Elgin), 16 at the time. His love was reciprocated by the boy.[159]
  • Charles John Vaughan and Alfred Pretor
    • Vaughn, headmaster at Harrow School, in 1851 was engaged in a long-standing love affair with Pretor, the head boy at the school, a youth known as "the house tart."[160] Pretor boasted of the affair to his friend, John Addington Symonds. The latter eventually divulged matters to his father who blackmailed Vaughn into resigning. Pretor never forgave John his indiscretion.[161]
  • John C. Frémont and Jesse Shepard
    • The adventurer and politician took on the 13-year-old boy as his page, a role he filled for two years, until 1863. Jesse had been chosen because he was queer, and the two were constantly together.[162]
  • Émile Petitot and Baptiste
    • While posted on a mission to the Chipewyan nation in the early 1860s, Father Petitot "formed an excessive attachment" to a young native boy who worked for the mission. Bishop Grandin determined that things had gone too far: He had in his possession an intimate letter from Petitot to Baptiste, and Father Petitot had committed "indiscretions." He sent Father Petitot to take over the mission at Fort Resolution, where one of the Father's first acts as director was to ask Grandin to transfer the boy to his station. Grandin refused, citing Petitot's "fatal attachment to a child." Two years later Father Petitot was assigned to Fort Good Hope, where it became known among the traders and the natives that Father Petitot' preferred lover (though not the only one) was a 15-year-old native boy in the employ of the mission.[163]
  • John Addington Symonds and Norman Moor
    • Symonds was introduced to the schoolboy in 1868 by a common friend, and for Norman's sake sought an appointment as teacher at his school, Clifton College.[164]
Arthur Rimbaud
  • Henry Morton Stanley and Kalalu
    • Stanley was in love with an African boy whom he took along on his travels to England and America in 1872,[166] and about whom he wrote a book, "My Kalalu."
George Curzon
  • Oscar Browning and George Curzon
    • After 15 years a master at Eton College, Browing, a former student of William Johnson-Cory,[168] was dismissed in 1875 over his "overly amorous"[169] (but purportedly chaste) relationship with the 16-year-old Curzon.[170][171]
  • Nikolai Przhevalsky and Fyodor Eklon
    • Eklon, who was taken on at the age of 18, was one of a series of youths and young men who accompanied Przhevalsky on every one of his expeditions. A confirmed bachelor, Przhevalsky demanded absolute loyalty from his young acolytes, and they also had to share his tent. Eklon lasted for eight years, from 1875 to 1883, when he announced to Przhevalsky that he was planning to get married. That caused a passionate quarrel and an irremediable break between him and his mentor, who hated women.[172][173]
  • Paul Verlaine and Lucien Létinois
    • At the age of 34, the poet fell in love with his 17-year-old student, with whom he had a relationship of five years' duration, ended by the death of the young man. Verlaine eulogized his beloved in his collection of poems Amour.[174]
Il Moro
  • Wilhelm von Gloeden and Pancrazio Bucini
    • Von Gloeden, a famous fin de siècle photographer of Italian youths, hired Bucini in the early 1880s, when the boy was 13 or 14. Bucini, called "il Moro," was his lover, assistant and finally his heir. In 1936 Bucini, as curator of the collection, successfully defended himself against the charge of keeping pornography, accusation made by the Italian fascists, who destroyed most of the remaining 3,000 picture plates.[175]
  • Arthur Rimbaud and Djami Ouddei
    • While in Ethiopia in 1883 the adventurer hired a local boy of 14 to 16 years of age who became his constant companion for the remainder of his life in Africa. After his return to France, while on his death bed, "it was Djami's name that was always on his lips when he finally sank into unconsciousness."[176]
  • Lord Henry Somerset and Henry Smith
    • Though Somerset had met the commoner when the boy was only seven, their intimate relationship only blossomed about ten years later, in 1878. The lord had to take refuge in Italy shortly thereafter as a result of his irate wife publicizing the affair.[177] He did not return until 1902, after his beloved's death in New Zealand, only to flee back to Florence as soon as he could, to escape his wife's incessant hounding.[178] Driven to poetry, he produced a collection titled Songs of Adieu which was reviewed by Oscar Wilde:
Lord Henry Somerset's verse is not so good as his music. Most of the Songs of Adieu are marred by their excessive sentimentality of feeling and by the commonplace character of their weak and lax form. There is nothing that is new and little that is true in verse of this kind [...] It can be produced in any quantity. Lord Henry Somerset has too much heart and too little art to make a good poet, and such art as he does possess is devoid of almost every intellectual quality and entirely lacking in any intellectual strength. He has nothing to say and says it.[179]
Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett.
  • Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett
    • Whitman's teenage camerado lived with him for a number of years, and also served him as driver of his carriage. He also posed for Thomas Eakins' collection of erotic male nudes.[180][181][182]
Tchaikovsky and Bob Davydov
  • Peter Ilich Tchaikovsky and Vladimir Lvovich Davïdov
    • The composer was in love with his nephew (b. 1871) from the time the boy was 13 until the elder's death at 53.[183][184]
Robert Ross at 24
  • Mwanga II of Buganda and Muwafu
    • The Kabaka systematically repressed Christian converts, and was driven to a spate of executions by discovering that his pages, with whom he was accustomed to have sexual relations, were being indoctrinated to resist his advances. The matter was discovered in late May, 1886, when he called for the 14-year-old Muwafu, one of his regular favorites, only to be told the boy was unavailable as he was receiving religious instruction. The next morning all the Cristian pages were sentenced to be burned to death, and the execution took place a week later. In total, 22 young men lost their lives in this incident.[186][187]
  • Lord Arthur Somerset and Algernon Alleys
    • Somerset, an intimate of the Prince of Wales, fell in love with a London telegraph boy who moonlighted at Charles Hammond's male brothel at 19 Cleveland Street. He wrote the lad a number of incriminating letters, which, once revealed in the investigation of the Cleveland Street scandal, prompted his self-imposed exile on the continent in 1889.[189]
  • John Ellingham Brooks and Somerset Maugham
    • Brooks, an impoverished British pianist about 26 at the time, had an affair in 1890 with the 16-year-old Maugham in Heidelberg, where the latter was at university. It was the boy's first sexual experience.[190]
Norman O'Neill
  • Eric Stenbock and Norman O'Neill
    • Count Stenbock met the 16-year-old O'Neill on the upper deck of a London omnibus in 1891, where he immediately fell in love with the youth. Two years later he assisted O'Neill with his studies at conservatory in Germany, and left him £1500 in his will.[191]
  • Charles D. Williamson and Salvatore
    • Williamson, a former pupil of Johnson Cory and former beloved of Reginald Brett, took Catholic orders and moved to Italy, where in 1892 he developed a relationship with a 15-year-old youth whom he also appointed as houseboy. They were together for four years, until the boy's death.[192]
  • André Gide and Ali
    • The first homoerotic encounter of the young writer, in North Africa, with a young Arab.[193]
Marcel Proust (seated) and Lucien Daudet (right)
  • Marcel Proust et Lucien Daudet
    • Already in love with Reynaldo Hahn, Proust met the 16-year-old son of Alphonse Daudet, a friend of Hahn. Proust began a relationship with him when the boy was 16 years of age, in 1894. The matter did not go unnoticed in contemporary literary circles. Jean Lorrain, himself a noted homosexual, attacked Proust in "Pall Mall," his gossip column in Le Journal of February 1897. Determined to protect his honor, Proust challenged Lorrain to a duel which ended with an exchange of shots at 25 paces.[194][195] Proust and Daudet remained close friends, despite the fact that Lucien eventually left his lover in favor of Jean Cocteau.[196]
Nicholson with Melling
  • John Gambril Nicholson and William Alexander (Alec) Melling
    • The second of the poet's boyish muses and student at the Rydal Mount School, where Nicholson was teaching, Melling, born in 1878, was the dedicatee of Nicholsen's collection of Uranian poems, A Chaplet of Southernwood, published in 1896. Both left the school in 1894, and Alec did not remain with Nicholson, and later married, in 1925.[197]
  • Alfred Douglas and Ali
    • Douglas, while the lover of Wilde, was in turn interested in younger boys, such as the Arab youth Ali, whom he selected as traveling companion during his 1895 stay in Algeria. The relationship did not last long, as he found out that the boy was sleeping around with women and promptly whipped him and sent him back to his parents.[198]
  • Charles Warren Stoddard and Kenneth O'Connor
    • One of several "kids" of Stoddard's, who was fond of boys, O'Connor was a footloose 15-year-old with a little boyfriend of his own when he was taken in by the Notre Dame University professor. O'Connor's overworked mother was glad to hand him over to the older man, "body and bones," and Stoddard created a space in which the two could live in intimity with impunity by being completely open about his love for the boy and presenting himself as the savior of a youth with a troubled home life.[199]
  • John Gambril Nicholson and Frank Victor Rushforth
    • In his Dead Roses the Uranian poet hides the name of his 13-year-old beloved, his third:

But art is victor still through all the ages
And renders evergreen our sunny hours:
Key to my verse you are; and may its meaning
Every time you turn my volume’s pages
Rush forth to greet you like the scent of flowers![200]

  • Norman Douglas and Michele
    • Douglas had an affair with the youth, the 15-year-old brother of a mistress of the moment, in Capri in 1897.[201]
  • Hector MacDonald and Alaister Robertson
    • At the time of the Battle of Paardeberg in 1900, MacDonald's principal friend was Alaister Robertson, a Glenalmond schoolboy from Aberdeen whose photograph he kept on his desk and with whom he corresponded.[202][203]

20th century

Charles Beach
  • J. C. Leyendecker and Charles Beach
    • The illustrator met his lover in 1901, when the youth was 15. He immortalized the boy - and later the man - by using him as the principal model for The Arrow Collar Man ad campaign. Their relationship lasted 50 years.[204]
  • Lytton Strachey and Duncan Grant
    • The two, former childhood friends, became lovers in 1902 when Grant was a house guest of the Stracheys in London. He was 17 and Strachey 22. "When he was 17, it was decided that he would join the vast household of his London cousins, the Stracheys. It was not long before Lytton Strachey, five years Grant's senior and openly homosexual, declared himself besotted with his handsome cousin. After several rebuffs -- legend has it Grant told Strachey, Relations we may be: have them, we may not -- Strachey finally had his way, becoming the first of Grant's many male lovers." [205]
  • Hector MacDonald and the De Saram boys
    • The two De Saram boys, sons of a local Ceylonese burgher with whom MacDonald had become friendly, were reputed to have been the catamites of this distinguished soldier from a humble background, and to have received from him expensive gifts. MacDonald was recalled from Ceylon due to such accusation, and then asked to return there to face a court-martial. On his way there, upon finding out that the international press had got hold of the story, he blew his brains out.[206]
  • Friedrich Alfred Krupp and Adolfo Schiano
    • "Fritz," as he was known to his friends, had a number of relationships with men and boys during his stays on Capri, but his fondest feelings were reserved for Adolfo Schiano, an 18-year-old barber and amateur musician. Krupp's dalliances with the locals were exposed to the media in retribution for his meddling in local politics, driving the steel magnate and richest man in Europe to suicide in 1902. Before taking his life Krupp made sure to include Schiano in his will.[207]
Nino Cesarini
Stuart-Young and Ibrahim the Unkissed
  • John Moray Stuart-Young and Ibrahim
    • Between 1903 and 1906 the author Stuart-Young was involved with a half-caste youth, known as Ibra or Ibrahim the Unkissed, who worked for him as a servant in Liberia. Their meeting was celebrated in a poem, "But rarer than these treasures superfine, / Thine eyes, indifferent to the girls, in sweet response to mine," and the boy, by then about 14, accompanied Stuart-Young to England during his trip there in 1905.[209]
  • Stefan George and Max Kronberger (Maximin)
    • A chaste love (one of many for George) which lasted one year, till the boy's death at 16 in 1904. George was then creating a cult that lifted Maximin to a godlike status.[210]
  • St. John Lucas and Rupert Brooke
    • Whilst at Rugby in 1904, the 16-year-old RB had a relationship with 25-year-old St. John Lucas, an author and aesthete who gave a great deal of encouragement to RB, and introduced him to the 1890s poets (Wilde, Dowson, etc.).[212]
  • Frederick Rolfe and Ermenegildo Vianello
    • The writer, also known as "Baron Corvo" met the boy, a young gondolier of around 15 or 16 years of age, in Venice in 1908.[213]
  • Charles Webster Leadbeater and Hubert van Hook
    • In 1909 Hubert was a good-looking and very clever 14-year-old who, three years previously, had been chosen by Leadbeater to be trained as the future "World Teacher." He and his mother embarked for India, but during their passage Leadbeater changed his mind and selected for that role a young Indian boy, by the name of Krishna (the future Krishnamurti). Van Hook was left embittered by the experience, and years later denounced Leadbeater to Annie Besant for having "misused" him sexually.[214][215]
  • John Moray Stuart-Young and Thomas Olman Todd
    • Described as "the love of his life," Tommy Todd, son of the Sunderland occultist by the same name, visited Stuart-Young during his school vacations. Their relationship deepened over the years.[216]
Selim Ahmed
  • T. E. Lawrence and Selim Ahmed (Dahoum)
    • As he told Robert Graves, the boy was the only person he ever loved. Graves also identifies Ahmed as the mysterious dedicatee of Lawrence's magnum opus, The Seven Pillars of Wisdom which reads "To S.A. I liked a particular Arab very much, and I thought that freedom for the race would be an acceptable present." On the flyleaf of a book of poetry Lawrence wrote, "I wrought for him freedom to lighten his sad eyes, but he had died waiting for me. So I threw my gift away, and now not anywhere will I find rest and peace."[217][218]
  • Robert Graves and George H. Johnstone
    • In the autumn of 1912, while at Charterhouse, Graves fell in love with Johnstone, a boy of fourteen ("Dick" in Goodbye to All That.) When challenged by the headmaster Graves defended himself by citing Plato, the Greek poets, Michelangelo and Shakespeare, "who had felt as I did."[219] The relationship lasted five years, and broke up around the time when Johnstone was arrested for soliciting a soldier. To his beloved, Graves addressed a poem from the trenches of WWI:
Dear, you have been everything that I most lack
In these soul-deadening trenches—pictures, books,
Music, the quiet of an English wood.
Beautiful comrade-looks,
The narrow, bouldered mountain track,
The broad full-bosomed ocean, green and black,
And Peace, and all that's good.[220]
Noel Coward
  • Philip Streatfeild and Noel Coward
    • Streatfeild, a 35-year-old painter and member of the Uranian Society, took the 14-year-old child actor in and introduced him to high society in 1913. Coward is thought to have modeled for his painting of nude boys on the beach. "His "friendship" at age 14 with painter Philip Streatfield (the only relationship about which the program is somewhat coy - homosexuality may have reached a greater level of acceptance today, but man-boy sex is still taboo) led to a connection with aristocrat Mrs. Astley-Cooper, and indeed, residence at the Cooper estate."[221][222]
  • Egerton Edwards and Beverley Nichols
    • During one of his vacations from public school, Nichols was drawn into a relationship with a neighbor and friend of the family. Edwards provided the schoolboy, who had already experimented sexually with his schoolmates, with an introduction to the world of adult homosexuality, which he chose to inhabit in his later years.[223]
  • André Gide and Marc Allégret
    • Became lovers in 1916 when they were 47 and 15, remained friends for life. Allégret was the son of Elie Allégret, best man at Gide's 1895 wedding, and later became a renowned filmmaker.[224]
  • Forrest Reid and Kenneth Hamilton
    • From 1916 until 1920 the two were linked by an intimate friendship, interrupted by the boy, now 16, leaving to join the Merchant Service and then, at 18, cattle ranching in Australia. Shortly thereafter he rode off alone into the bush, where he is thought to have died.[225]
  • John Henry Mackay and Atti
    • Mackay fell deeply in love with the Berlin schoolboy in early 1916 during a school holiday.[226]
Mohammed el-Adl
Raymond Radiguet
  • Jean Cocteau and Raymond Radiguet
    • Cocteau met the young poet in 1918 at 29, when the boy was 15 years old. The two collaborated extensively, socialized, and undertook many journeys and vacations together. Cocteau got the youth exempted from military service and exerted his influence to garner the "Nouveau Monde" literary prize for Radiguet's novel, Le Diable au Corps. Many commentators assume that they were lovers.[227][228][229][230][231][232] Their relationship has been placed in the context of "a series of younger lovers and collaborators".[233] An anecdote told by Ernest Hemingway has an enraged Cocteau charging Radiguet (known in the Parisian literary circles as "Monsieur Bébé") with decadence for his tryst with a model: "Bébé est vicieuse. Il aime les femmes." ("Baby is depraved. He likes women." [Note the use of the feminine adjective]). The youth actively sought out relationships with women, explaining that ""Je ne veux pas qu'on m'appelle madame Cocteau."[234] Radiguet also, Hemingway implies, employed his sexuality to advance his career, being a writer "who knew how to make his career not only with his pen but with his pencil," a salacious and phallic allusion.[235][236] In 1919 Radiguet's father discovered a "compromising correspondence" between Cocteau and his son, giving rise to an exchange of letters in November of that year between the two adults in which Cocteau compared the youth to Rimbaud. In mid-March 1921 he hastened from Paris to join Radiguet (among others, including Georges Auric and Monsieur et Madame Hugo Valentin), who had left alone for Carqueiranne. On the 30th of the same month he replied to his mother, who had commented on this voyage: "Have you not yet understood that my life is spent releasing my instincts, watching them, sorting them once they are out, and forging them to my advantage?" After Radiguet's death (of typhoid fever), Cocteau did not attend the funeral, and takes to his bed prostrated with grief. Later he would say "Since the little lucidity I had I got from him, his death left me without instructions, incapable of leading my life coherently, of sustaining and nourishing my work, of providing for it."[237][238] After the death of Radiguet, Cocteau began to use opium, to which he became addicted. This reading of the story is contradicted by Cocteau himself (see below)[9]
    • Others contest this interpretation, claiming that it has not been confirmed in any correspondence or writings by Cocteau or those close to both of them, and that Radiguet had any number of well-documented liaisons with women and generally spent his nights alone at the apparments of Max Jacob and Juan Gris, sleeping on the kitchen table or the floor. Cocteau, speaking about Radiguet in a transcription of a television interview made three months before Cocteau's death claimed that he did not particularly care for Radiguet personally and only respected his talent as a writer. Upon Radiguet's death, which was due to typhoid fever complicated by heavy drinking, Cocteau was, in his own words, "paralyzed with stupor and disgust". He did not attend the funeral—Cocteau did not attend anyone's funeral, as a rule—but instead immediately left Paris with Sergei Diaghilev for Monte Carlo for a performance of Les Fâcheux by Auric and Les Biches by Poulenc. While Cocteau began to smoke opium after Radiguet's death, to which he became addicted, he himself said that this was pure coincidence and had nothing to do with Radiguet's death.[239] Cocteau however was guarded in his discussion of his relationships: "Cocteau never put his name to an openly, unashamedly homosexual text and invariably alluded to his male lovers - the most celebrated being the precocious novelist Raymond Radiguet and the actors Jean Marais and Edouard Dermit - as his 'adopted sons' (in the case of Dermit, even formally adopting him)".[240]
Boris Kochno
  • Karol Szymanowski and Boris Kochno
    • Szymanowski, 37, the foremost early-20th–century Polish composer, met Kochno, 15, a poet and dancer, in Elisavetgrad, 1919. The composer wrote four love poems to the boy, and also gave him a Russian translation of "Symposium," the central chapter of his legendary lost novel, Efebos.[241]
  • Gustav Wyneken and Viktor Behrens
    • In late 1920, Wyneken had a love affair with his 17-year-old student. A year later he was brought to trial and convicted of acts of frottage.[242]
  • Sergei Diaghilev and Boris Kochno
    • Kochno was taken on as lover and secretary by Diaghilev at the age of 17 in February 1921. He remained as librettist and close friend till Sergei's death in 1929.[243][244] Later, he was ballet director at Monte Carlo.
  • Willem de Mérode and Okke Ubbens
    • Okke, whom he met in 1922, was one of de Mérode's chaste pederastic friendships.[245]
  • E. M. Forster and Kanaya
    • While serving in 1923 as secretary to the Maharajah of Dewas, Forster entered into a regular relationship with Kanaya, a boy barber provided to him by the Maharajah for sexual purposes "if the boy agrees." The relationship lasted six months.[246]
  • J. R. Ackerley and Ivan Alderman
    • In 1924, having acquired a taste for working class youths, Ackerley spotted the 15-year-old Ivan, who was gay and about to enter art school. Ivan, in his first with an adult, fell head over heels in love. The relationship was to last close to a year, and the breakup was very painful for the young Alderman, who even 60 years later still regarded the affair as the greatest love of his life. For Ackerley it was just one in a long string of relationships.[247][248]
  • Harry Stack Sullivan and James Inscoe
    • Sullivan, a psychiatrist believed there was a homosexual element to latency age peer relationships and that a failure to go through this stage led to self-loathing, psychosis, and lasting homosexuality. His patients, who were all young male homosexuals as well as schizophrenics, in their positive interactions with the attendants, also young male homosexuals, would heal the wounds from missing male intimacy as pre-people. His own life-long partner came from among his patients, a boy of 15 who moved in with Sullivan in 1927 and remained as his lover for 22 years. Jimmie was known to Sullivan's associates as his adopted son, a fiction whereby he could keep his identity in the closet.[249]
  • Thomas Mann and Klaus Heuser
    • Though the writer's diaries of that period have been lost, later entries reflect on his love affair with Heuser. In 1937 Mann comments about his relationship with the seventeen year old boy, "Last night read for a long time in my diary of 1927 the time of my passion for the boy Klaus H." In 1942 again he comments: "Read for a long time in old diaries from the Klaus Heuser time, when I was a happy lover. [...] Black eyes, the tears shed for me, beloved lips that I kissed—it was there, I had it too, I'll be able to tell myself when I die." The two had one last reunion in 1954. Heuser had remained unmarried.[250]
  • Sibghatullah Shah Rashidi and Ibrahim
    • Sibghatullah Shah Rashidi, who held the position of Pir Pagaro of the Hurs, a Sufi order. He punished a boy favorite by the name of Ibrahim by having his "eyelashes and eyebrows plucked out, his face blackened with soot, and padlocked him in a box which was opened only when he was fed." The boy escaped only to be hunted down with hounds and locked up in a smaller box. The event was reported to the police by three concubines of the Pir Pagaro. The boy was found in the box, 'looking like a ghost, pale as death, and smelling like a polecat.' Sibghatullah was charged, in 1930, with kidnapping and torture. Defended by Muhammad Ali Jinnah, he was sentenced to eight years in jail. He was paroled in 1936 but restricted to Karachi, from which he escaped in 1941, only to be arrested again for resistance against the British occupation, sabotaging telegraph lines.[251] The Pir was hanged by the British in 1943.
  • Christopher Isherwood and Heinz Niedermeyer
    • Their seven year love affair began in spring of 1932, when the boy was 16. Isherwood later wrote that the relationship was "far more serious than any he had had in his life." [252]
  • John Henry Mackay and Otto Hannemann
    • At Mackay's death in 1933, Otto was one of the two executors, being the one boy of Mackay who remained a friend for life.[226]
  • Giovanni Comisso and Bruno Pagan
    • In 1933 the novelist Comisso (1895–1969) entered into his first significant love relationship with the nephew of a sea captain he had worked for. Initially he took in the boy, who had been released from jail for stealing a bicycle. Eventually their relationship became passionate. It lasted four years, and when the youth left him Comisso was distraught.[253]
  • W. H. Auden and Michael Yates
    • In 1934 the poet took his former pupil, aged 15 and by Auden's own account one of the five great loves of his life, on travels through Europe, and was inspired by him to write some of his tenderest love poems, such as Lullaby ("Lay your sleeping head, my love, human on my faithless arm . . .")[254][255][256]
  • William Alexander Percy and Ford Atkins
    • Ford, the son of Louisa Atkins, Percy's cook, was one of Percy's several teenage black boyfriends. Their affair lasted until the day Ford strolled into Percy's bathroom as he was showering, and informed his lover that "You ain't nothing but a little old fat man." Ford was shortly packed off to mechanics' school in Detroit, at Percy's expense.[257][258][259]
  • Benjamin Britten and Wulff Scherchen
    • The composer met the 13-year-old son of Hermann Scherchen in 1934. Their relationship lasted six years, and inspired at least one major work, Young Apollo. Lie back and think of Britten "Adam Mars-Jones finds that John Bridcut has set himself a daunting task in Britten's Children - to prove whether 'Darling Benjamin' was a mentor or a menace to boys"[260]
  • Henry de Montherlant and Edmond N. (Doudou)
    • The author picked up the 14-year-old in 1938 and continued the relationship with him in Marseilles where he lived with Edmond's mother and her two sons from 1940 to 1942.[261][262]
Robert Denning in photograph taken by Edgar de Evia in the 1950s.
  • Giovanni Comisso and Guido Bottegal
    • In 1940 Comisso fell in love with the 16-year-old poet, who later was shot by partisans who mistook him for a fascist spy.[264]
  • "Walt" and Rudi van Dantzig
    • The 1945 relationship between the 12-year-old van Dantzig and a Canadian soldier was dramatized in van Dantzig's autobiographical book and movie by the same name, For a Lost Soldier.[265]
  • Bill Tilden and Bobby
    • Tilden, thought at the time of this death to have been the greatest tennis player in history, was apprehended in late 1946 while fondling his 14-year-old friend as the boy was at the wheel of Tilden's car in Beverly Hills. Though Bobby's father, a film studio executive, did not want Tilden incarcerated, and the probation officer concluded that the sexually experienced Bobby "was not injured as much [by Tilden] as are his parents and the general public," he nonetheless served seven months of a one-year sentence.[266]
  • James Baldwin and Lucien Happsberger
    • At the time of his first trip to Paris in 1949, Baldwin met and fell in love with Lucien Happsberger. The boy was a Swiss 17-year-old runaway, and the two remained very close, until Happsberger's marriage three years later, an event that left Baldwin devastated.[267]
  • Donald Friend and Attilio Guarracino
    • In January 1950, Friend met the 18-year-old Guarracino, the son of a fisherman from Ischia. Their love and subsequent friendship was to be one of the most important of his life. Later that year he took the boy with him to Australia. Friend willed half his estate to Guarracino.[268][269] In his diary, Friend described his feelings for Atillio as an "obsessive and passionate love," a "madness" the return of which he dreaded "more than anything [he] could think of."[270] Guarracino was to play a central role in the posthumous publication of Friend's diaries.(pictured)[271]
  • Sandro Penna and Raffaele
    • The Italian poet took the 14-year-oldd streetboy from Rome to his home in 1956 and lived with him for several years.[272]
  • William S. Burroughs and Kiki
    • Starting in early 1954, when William S. Burroughs first lived in Tangier, he had a relationship with a Spanish teenager named "Kiki".[273] Upon Burroughs' return to Tangier in 1957 he found out that the Kiki had been murdered in Madrid by a jealous boyfriend.[274]
  • Jean Genet and Abdallah Bentaga
    • The relationship, begun in 1955, between the 45-year-old Genet and the 18-year-old son of an Algerian father and a German mother was one of the most important of Genet's life. He paid for the youth's high-wire act lessons, helped choreograph the act, and came to his aid when he took a fall and seriously injured himself. By the early sixties Genet was becoming involved with a new lover, a matter which, combined with his frustration at his lasting infirmity, drove Bentaga to suicide in February 1964. Genet was distraught, destroyed all the manuscripts in his possession, and attempted suicide himself.[275][276][277]
  • René Schérer and Guy Hocquenghem
    • Guy Hocquenghem began an affair with his high school philosophy teacher in 1961, when he was 15. The gay activist Hocquenghem and the philosopher Scherer remained lifelong friends.[278][279]
Ninetto Davoli as Othello, 1968
  • Pier Paolo Pasolini and Ninetto Davoli
    • The Italian poet, novelist and film director Pasolini started a relationship with the 15-year-old Davoli in 1963 and let him play many comic roles in his movies.[280]
  • Walter Breen and Glen Frendel
    • Breen, married, a numismatist and writer, was engaged in a relationship with Glen, then about 14, in 1964. Breen's wife, Marion Zimmer Bradley, and Glen's mother, were aware of the relationship and did not impede it.[282]
  • Alexander Ziegler and Stephan (Mutscha)
    • In 1966 the 22-year-old Swiss actor and writer was sentenced to a two and a half year jail term for a love affair with the 16-year-old Stephan, documented in the autobiographical novel Die Konsequenz and later turned into a movie with the same name by director Wolfgang Petersen. Die Konsequenz , shown on German television, had a pivotal role in that country in starting a dialog on the topic of homosexuality, a role analogous to that played by Peyrefitte's films in France.[283]
  • Anthony Mercieca and Mark Foley
    • Father Mercieca and the future US Congressman engaged in a two year relationship starting in 1967, when F. was 13 years old. In The Herald Tribune "Father Anthony Mercieca said Thursday he never had sexual intercourse with former U.S. Rep. M. F., but throughout the day offered more details to national media outlets about his intimate relationship with the then-Lake Worth altar boy. Mercieca told the Washington Post he and F. once engaged in "light touching" and told CNN he fondled F. when he was a teen, though he didn't consider the contact abuse because F. "seemed to like it."[284]
  • Scott Symons and John
    • Symons left his wife and child and eloped with the 17-year-old John in 1967, travelling through Mexico, chased by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), the Interpol and the Mexican police. He returned to Canada to claim a literary prize, and met with Pierre Trudeau, a meeting which, according to Symons, resulted in the decriminalization of homosexuality in Canada in 1968.[285]

See also

Sources

General
  • Louis Crompton. Homosexuality and Civilization, Cambridge, Mass. and London, 2003. ISBN 0-674-01197-X
  • Michel Larivière. Homosexuels et bisexuels célèbres, Delétraz Editions, 1997. ISBN 2-911110-19-6
Muslim Lands
  • Stephen O. Murray and Will Roscoe, et al. Islamic Homosexualities: Culture, History, and Literature, New York: New York University Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8147-7468-7
  • J. Wright & Everett Rowson. Homoeroticism in Classical Arabic Literature. 1998.
  • 'Homosexuality' & other articles in the Encyclopædia Iranica
China
  • Chinese couples documented in Hinsch, 1990, p. 37, 69.
Pre-Modern Period
  • Serge Bramly. Leonardo : The Artist and the Man, Penguin, 1994. ISBN 0-14-023175-7
Modern

References

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  62. ^ "Qui la carne, ora ridotta a polvere, e le mie ossa/ prive dei begli occhi e della mia bellezza/ rendono testimonianza a colui a cui portai grazia nel letto,/ che abbracciavo, e nel quale la mia anima continua a vivere." "MICHELANGELO BUONARROTI" by Giovanni Dall'Orto Babilonia n. 85, January 1991, pp. 14-16
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  64. ^ Who's who in gay and lesbian history By Robert Aldrich, Garry Wotherspoon; p278
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  77. ^ Pelo vaso traseiro: sodomy and sodomites in Luso-Brazilian history‎ - pp.195-209
  78. ^ Anna Suvorova, Muslim Saints of South Asia; p.194-196
  79. ^ Hidden from history: reclaiming the gay and lesbian past By Martin B. Duberman, Martha Vicinus, George Chauncey; p93,98
  80. ^ A tragic grace: the Catholic Church and child sexual abuse By Stephen J. Rossetti, Interfaith Sexual Trauma Institute (Collegeville, Minn.); p104
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  87. ^ M: The Man Who Became Caravaggio By Peter Robb p.10
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  89. ^ An Outline History of French Literature By H. Stanley Schwarz; p.43
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  94. ^ "Ils se brouillent au retour, et leurs mutuelles accusations nous instruisent de leurs fredaines." Les victimes de Boileau, Philarète Chasles, Revue des Deux Mondes T.18, 1839
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  139. ^ William Beckford By James Lees-Milne; p33
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  151. ^ Creating literature out of life By Doris Alexander; pp.52-4
  152. ^ [On Burton’s mention of the pederastic morals of Ranjit Singh] Colonialism and homosexuality By Robert F. Aldrich; p31
  153. ^ ”Victorian England viewed pederasty, common in Asia, with disgust. […] Hira Singh, Dhian Singh’s son, also became the object of the Maharaja’s infatuation, thus affording further protection to the grasping ambition of the Jammu family.” Hari Singh Nalwa - Champion of the Khalsaji By Vanit Nalwa; p201
  154. ^ Strangers Within the Gates By Gabrielle Festing; p381
  155. ^ '[Dhian Singh]’s son, Hira Singh, lauded frequently for his beauty and described as “the handsomest man in the East,” was a particular favorite of the [Lahore] maharaja. Ranjit Singh, it is reported, could not bear to be parted from him for long, and Hira Singh alone was alloed to sit before him on a chair, while other courtiers stood, or took less exalted places on the floor.” Hindu rulers, Muslim subjects By Mridu Rai; p24
  156. ^ ”The most able and powerful men about the court were undoubtedly the Jammu brothers, Gulab Singh, Dhyan Singh and Suchet Singh, to whom may be added Hira Singh, son of Dhyan Singh.” ”Hira Singh in after times gave proof of both wisdom and courage.” The Career of Major George Broadfoot By William Broadfoot, George Broadfoot, Edward Law Ellenborough, Henry Hardinge Hardinge; p220
  157. ^ The Sikhs of the Punjab By J. S. Grewal; p122
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  159. ^ Empire and Sexuality: The British Experience, Ronald Hyam; pp.44-45
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  165. ^ Love's Litany By Kevin Kopelson, p.62
  166. ^ The forger's tale By Stephanie Newell; p78
  167. ^ Morris B.Kaplan, "Sodom on the Thames; p.150
  168. ^ H. Montgomery Hyde, The Love That Dared not Speak its Name; p.118
  169. ^ Linda Dowling, Hellenism and Homosexuality in Victorian Oxford p.115
  170. ^ Bart Schultz Henry Sidgwick: Eye of the Universe - An Intellectual Biography p.411
  171. ^ Morris B. Kaplan, Sodom on the Thames: Sex, Love, and Scandal in Wilde Times p.107
  172. ^ Colonialism and homosexuality By Robert F. Aldrich; p35
  173. ^ "Sanitizing the Classics" by Donald Rayfield, in Comparative Criticism: Volume 16, Revolutions and Censorship By Elinor S. Shaffer; p27
  174. ^ Decadence and Catholicism By Ellis Hanson
    p.79
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  176. ^ Robert Aldrich, Colonialism and homosexuality p.94
  177. ^ Kaylor, 2006 p.299-300
  178. ^ Timothy d'Arch Smith, Love in Earnest pp.24-27
  179. ^ Oscar Wilde, "THE POETS' CORNER--IX" in Pall Mall Gazette, March 30, 1889.
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  181. ^ Breaking bounds By Betsy Erkkila, Jay Grossman; pp211-212
  182. ^ Eakins revealed By Henry Adams, Thomas Eakins; p.289
  183. ^ Timothy L. Jackson; Tchaikovsky, Symphony no. 6 (Pathétique) pp.38-9
  184. ^ (R. Norton's article on their relationship and the composer's forced suicide)
  185. ^ "...it was the experience with Ross that decided him to accept himself for the future completely as a pederast..." Ireland in Proximity By Scott Brewster, David Alderson, p.75 (quoting Michael MacLiammoir)
  186. ^ Saints of Africa By Vincent J. O'Malley; p74
  187. ^ The Uganda Martyrs, Barry M Coldrey, 1939
  188. ^ Timothy d'Arch Smith, Love in Earnest; p. 152
  189. ^ H. Montgomery Hyde, The Love That Dared not Speak its Name; pp.123-5
  190. ^ Morgan, Ted Somerset Maugham, Jonathan Cape, 1980. ISBN 0-224-01813-2; p.24
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  192. ^ Morris B.Kaplan, op.cit. p.153-162
  193. ^ Andre Gide, Si le grain ne meurt
  194. ^ Dictionnaire gay‎ by Lionel Povert; 1994. Page 381 "après avoir été l'amant de Reynaldo Hahn, est celui du joli Lucien Daudet...
  195. ^ Proust in love By William C. Carter; pp32, 47-56, 58, 62
  196. ^ "A Reynaldo Hahn succède Lucien Daudet, fils du romancier et cadet du déjà célèbre Léon. ... De son côté Daudet le lâche sans scrupules pour Cocteau." Proust‎ by Anne Henry; 1986; - Page 43
  197. ^ Timothy d'Arch Smith, Love in Earnest. pp.55, 125, 129, 157N42, ; Routledge & Keegan Paul; London, 1970
  198. ^ André Gide: a life in the present By Alan Sheridan; p119
  199. ^ Genteel Pagan: The Double Life of Charles Warren Stoddard By Roger Austen, John W. Crowley; pp132-8
  200. ^ Timothy d’Arch Smith, Love in Earnest: Some Notes on the Lives and Writings of English ‘Uranian’ Poets from 1889 to 1930 (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1970), p.128
  201. ^ Who's who in gay and lesbian history By Robert Aldrich, Garry Wotherspoon; p.160
  202. ^ Empire: The British Imperial Experience from 1765 to the Present; Dennis Judd, pp171-172
  203. ^ Empire and Sexuality: The British Experience, Ronald Hyam; pp.34-35
  204. ^ Winston Wilde, Legacies of Love p.154
  205. ^ New York Times June 6, 1999: "Bloomsbury's Secret" By ANDREA BARNET; book review of Duncan Grant: A Biography by Frances Spalding.
  206. ^ Colonialism and homosexuality By Robert F. Aldrich; p188
  207. ^ Robert Aldrich, The Seduction of the Mediterranean, page 127
  208. ^ Will H.L. Ogrinc (2006), "FRÈRE JACQUES: A SHRINE TO LOVE AND SORROW Jacques d’Adelswärd-Fersen (1880-1923)" Revised and augmented version of the first edition, published in Paidika. The Journal of Paedophilia 3:2 (1994), pp. 30-58. Will H.L. A German version was published in Hamburg (MännerschwarmSkript Verlag) in 2005
  209. ^ Timothy d'Arch Smith, Love in Earnest, p.207-208
  210. ^ David, Claude. Stefan George. Son Oeuvre Poétique, Paris 1952
  211. ^ Infinite Variety By Scot D. Ryersson, Michael Orlando Yaccarino, Quentin Crisp; p.105
  212. ^ History Of Homosexuality In Europe, 1919-1939 By Florence Tamagne; p.14N10
  213. ^ Giovanni Dall'Orto, Cultura Gay
  214. ^ J. Krishnamurti: the open door By Mary Lutyens; p.6
  215. ^ The life and death of Krishnamurti By Mary Lutyens; p8
  216. ^ Stephanie Newell, The Forger's Tale: The Search for Odeziaku p.86
  217. ^ Robert Aldrich, Gay Life and Culture p.15
  218. ^ Colonialism and homosexuality By Robert F. Aldrich; pp76-77
  219. ^ Taking it like a man By Adrian Caesar; pp176-7, 180-1
  220. ^ The early poetry of Robert Graves: the goddess beckons By Frank L. Kersnowski; p12
  221. ^ Arthur Lazere, review of The Noel Coward Story (on PBS in January, 1999), The Culture Vulture website review on PBS show in January, 1999.
  222. ^ Philip Hoare, Noel Coward: A Biography p.32-33
  223. ^ Beverley Nichols: a life By Bryan Connon; pp38-9
  224. ^ Martin, Claude. André Gide par lui-même, Paris 1963
  225. ^ M. M. Kaylor, Ed. The Garden God: A Tale of Two Boys p.xxvii
  226. ^ a b Hubert Kennedy, Book review of "John Henry Mackay als Mensch" in Paidika Winter 1988.3
  227. ^ Stravinsky By Stephen Walsh; p.379
  228. ^ Count D'Orgel's Ball By Raymond Radiguet, Annapaola Cancogni, Jean; p.i
  229. ^ The rest is noise By Alex Ross, p.116
  230. ^ Jean Cocteau, Cornelia A. Tsakiridou, Reviewing Orpheus: Essays on the Cinema and Art of Jean Cocteau (Bucknell Review) Bucknell University Press; p.93
  231. ^ François Bott, Radiguet, Flammarion, 1995;
  232. ^ Michel Larivière, Homosexuels et bisexuels célèbres, Delétraz, 1997
  233. ^ Charles Shively, "Cocteau, Jean" in glbtq: An Encyclopedia of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Culture [4]
  234. ^ Larivière, 290
  235. ^ Thurston, Michael: "Genre, Gender, and Truth in Death in the Afternoon," The Hemingway Review, Spring 1998
  236. ^ Ernest Hemingway, Death in the Afternoon, p.71
  237. ^ Bohemian Paris By Dan Franck, Cynthia Liebow; p.341
  238. ^ Touzot, Jean. Jean Cocteau. Lyon: La Manufacture, 1989
  239. ^ Roger Stéphane "Portrait Souvenir de Jean Cocteau" Tallandier 1989
  240. ^ Gilbert Adair, "Comfortable in hell, The Back Half" in The New Statesman, Monday 23rd February 2004
  241. ^ Hubert Kennedy in Paidika 1994, 3.3 p.28
  242. ^ Edward Brongersma, Book review of De pedagogische Eros in het geding - Gustav Wyneken en de pedagogische vriendshap in de Freie Schulgemeinde Vickersdorf tussen 1906-1931 by Thijs C.M.M. Maasen, (Utrecht, Homostudies, 1988) in Paidika Summer 1989.2.1
  243. ^ Hubert Kennedy, Reading Gay History p.76-78
  244. ^ The Ballets Russes and Its World By Lynn Garafola, Nancy Van Norman Baer; p.212
  245. ^ Willem de Mérode Information Center and Museum
  246. ^ Colonialism and homosexuality By Robert F. Aldrich; p.322
  247. ^ The Knitting Circle, "Ackerley: A life of J. R. Ackerley", London: Constable, Peter Parker (1989)
  248. ^ A history of homosexuality in Europe: Berlin, London, Paris, 1919-1939 ... By Florence Tamagne; p264
  249. ^ Saints and rogues By E. Mark Stern, Robert B. Marchesani; p.10
  250. ^ Thomas Mann: life as a work of art : a biography By Hermann Kurzke; p357
  251. ^ Time Magazine; "INDIA: Pir's Hurs" Monday, Jun. 15, 1942
  252. ^ Peter Parker, Isherwood. p. 205; Randomhouse, 2004
  253. ^ Who's Who in Contemporary Gay and Lesbian History By Robert Aldrich, Garry Wotherspoon; p.89
  254. ^ The Cambridge companion to W.H. Auden By Stan Smith; p.18
  255. ^ "Auden's schoolboy inspiration tells the truth about their love" by Louise Jury, arts and media corespondent; The Independent, Saturday, 18 March 2000. The inspiration for some of WH Auden's tenderest love poems has spoken for the first time of their relationship. Michael Yates, now 80 and devotedly married for 45 years, has emerged as one of just five people that Auden considered the loves of his life. Biographers had hinted at the significance of their friendship and traced Mr Yates's influence on poems written decades after they met. But while the two remained friends until Auden's death in 1973, Michael Yates has never revealed details of their relationship until now. In a documentary, Tell Me The Truth About Love, to be broadcast on BBC2 next Sunday, Mr Yates speaks for the first time of the "contentment of our lives together". And research by the programme's director Susanna White has confirmed from the poet's friends that Mr Yates is on a list of "real loves" which Auden constantly revised and updated. While other names were crossed out over the years, Michael Yates remained as an "emotional milestone," alongside Robert Medley, a schoolfriend, Christopher Isherwood, the writer, Chester Kallman, Auden's companion of 35 years, and Rhoda Jaffe, with whom he had an affair.[5]
  256. ^ "There are, one could say, three central love poems in Auden's oeuvre: 'Lay your sleeping head, my love', written to a teenage lover;" W. H. Auden: The Life of a Poet‎ - Page 272 by Charles Osborne
  257. ^ The House of Percy: Honor, Melancholy, and Imagination in a Southern Family By Bertram Wyatt-Brown; p269
  258. ^ Men Like That: A Southern Queer History By John Howard; p105
  259. ^ Same-sex desire and love in Greco-Roman antiquity and in the classical ... By Beert C. Verstraete, Vernon Provencal; p409
  260. ^ Lie back and think of Britten, The Guardian, Culture-Books, June 4, 2006
  261. ^ "De 1940 à 1942, Montherlant vit à Marseille avec la famille N. composée de la mère et de ses deux fils, l'aîné Edmond (Doudou), « levé » en 1938, ..." La pensée du paradoxe: approches du romantisme : hommage à Michel Crouzet By Michel Crouzet, Didier Philippot, Fabienne Bercegol; p388
  262. ^ The drama of fallen France: reading la comédie sans tickets By Kenneth Krauss; p156
  263. ^ "Robert Denning Dies at 78; Champion of Lavish Décor", by Mitchell Owens, September 4, 2005, New York Times obituary
  264. ^ Encyclopedia of Italian literary studies By Gaetana Marrone, Paolo Puppa, Luca Somigli, p.496
  265. ^ Joel Crawford, Movie review of For a Lost Soldier, in Paidika Winter 1993.3.1
  266. ^ Deford, p.201
  267. ^ Winston Wilde, Legacies of Love p.93
  268. ^ The genius of Donald Friend : drawings from the diaries 1942-1989 By Donald Friend, Lou Klepac, National Library of Australia; pp15-6
  269. ^ The diaries of Donald Friend, Volume 3 By Donald Friend, Anne Gray; p.x
  270. ^ The Diaries of Donald Friend: [1949-1966 By Donald Friend, Anne Gray; p369
  271. ^ The diaries of Donald Friend, Volume 4 By Anne Gray; p.vii
  272. ^ Who's Who in Contemporary Gay and Lesbian History By Robert Aldrich; p.322
  273. ^ Subterranean Kerouac By Ellis Amburn; p.265
  274. ^ Word Virus: The William S. Burroughs Reader By William S. Burroughs, James Grauerholz, Ira Silverberg; pp115,117
  275. ^ Edges of loss: from modern drama to postmodern theory By Mark Pizzato; p131
  276. ^ Unfinished business: tracing incompletion in Jean Genet's posthumously ... By Brian Gordon Kennelly; p22
  277. ^ Homosexuality in French history and culture By Jeffrey Merrick, Michael Sibalis; p212
  278. ^ Between Marx and Coca-Cola By Axel Schildt, Detlef Siegfried; p.294
  279. ^ Who's Who in Contemporary Gay and Lesbian History By Robert Aldrich, Garry Wotherspoon; p.191
  280. ^ Siciliano, Enzo. Pasolini: A Biography. Trans. John Shepley. New York: Random House, 1982.
  281. ^ Who's Who in Contemporary Gay and Lesbian History By Robert Aldrich, Garry ; p.328
  282. ^ Xtra West "IN HINDSIGHT / For the love of coins, past lives and boys" by Robert Rothon / Vancouver / Thursday, February 15, 2007 [6] "Breen and Bradley were married in 1964. She knew about Breen's penchant for boys before their marriage, and that he was having an affair with 14-year-old Glen Frendel. "It was quite shocking to me. [Walter] told me that he and Glen were sleeping together. And I said that I had believed that was an intellectual position. He told me it was not."
  283. ^ "En Allemagne, un rôle analogue revint au roman d’Alexander Ziegler, Die Konsequenz (1975), porté à l’écran et diffusé en novembre 1977. Le film, bien que partiellement censuré – et non diffusé par la télévision bavaroise – eut un écho retentissant, fit de l’homosexualité un sujet de société et offrit à des milliers d’individus l’occasion de rompre le silence. Certes, ce fut la télévision qui permit de toucher des millions d’Allemands et de Français mais dans les deux cas, ce fut la finesse littéraire de deux écrivains, Roger Peyrefitte et Alexander Ziegler, qui fit vibrer la corde sensible des téléspectateurs." Benoît PIVERT, "Homosexualité(s) et littérature: Appel à contribution" in CAHIERS DE LA RAL,M nº 10[7]
  284. ^ Claims of Sexual Abuse, Priest offers further details about his relations with Foley, Herald Tribune, Matthew Doig and Maurice Tamman, Oct. 20, 2006
  285. ^ Scott Symons PROUD LIFE / Jul 13, 1933 - Feb 23, 2009, By Nik Sheehan / Toronto / Thursday, March 12, 2009[8]

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