White Eagle
JubberClubber
Sorry, Actually it is the Montrose Mining Company!!!!
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Since at least the sexual revolution in the 60s we have become desensitized to the breakdown of gender role delineation. Five-thousand years ago it would have been a big deal. At that, it would be as much a big deal to find a man buried in a dress 100 years ago.
In the Bronze Age, however, gender roles were defined for survival, the rhyme and reason for almost every aspect and rule of human life at the time. This man was given a female burial, something not taken lightly by archaeologists and anthropologists. He might have fulfilled the role of a woman, by gender identity not in tandem with that of his birth, and accepted as such by his society, proving that all three concepts are not modern.
That's why this find is very significant.
I should imagine that just as there are heterosexual men who remain at home to feed their children, clean the house and carry out regular household chores, while their wife goes out to work there is a reasonable suspicion that earlier civilisations might well have created the precedent for such an unoriginal concept.
Should we then assume that the burial of a male, some 5000 years ago with kitchenware is evidence of the sexual orientation of that male?
Are all homosexual males sufficiently domesticated to be easily identified for their prowess in the kitchen?
Should we assume that a male is homosexual as a result of his clearly demonstrated aptitude, and zeal for cooking, and cleaning?
^ Well, until the sex of the person is better determined, I'm holding judgment. Most of the other articles on this I've seen have been skeptical due to inconclusive details.
It doesn't surprise me that any society, regardless of how ancient, would take burials seriously. Our mortality has driven us as a species for most of history, so not surprising it goes back further into prehistory. I'm curious if anyone knows of any societies that didn't take this seriously.
Judaism is ancient, and it did not accept homosexuality as normal. Zoroastrianism is possibly older, and neither did it. Taoism, which is even older than both, frowned upon it.
I think it is either wishful thinking or pure foolishness to make broad claims about ancient humanity en masse.
I'd not confuse lack of idle time as "enlightened". If it is more important to feed one's self/family/tribe than to persecute people who prefer sodomy, that has to do with priorities, not philosophical conclusions based on reason.
Judaism did not reject homosexuality until historical times. Who knows about your other examples? There is no ancient language that even has a word for homosexuality because they did not understand the concept. They could not have buried a man as a woman because he was gay if they if they had no conception of what gay was. They could not have rejected homosexuality since they didn't know it existed.
And enlightenment is not leisure time. It is accepting people for who they are. The ancients appear to have been much better at this than us.
Based on what? I'm guessing that recorded Judaism has some basis to the past, especially since the religion has a rather worrisome concern for 'cleanliness'.
I'm pretty sure they had an idea of what putting a dick in a man's asshole was. That such an act wasn't procreation. This semantic argument really is trifling.
Well, the exile brought them into "Babylon", until Zoroastrian Persia came to the rescue (second time I brought them up, but it was for this purpose). In my Judaism course, I recall the claim that it was the post-exile Judaism that pretty much solidified the Jewish identity.
Yeah, I'm not entirely sure how the argument stands regarding the conceptual level. It seems to be cognitive dissonance to say that they are too stupid to understand the concept of male-male penetration while also building greater societies and cultural/technological advances, not to mention the rather complex thinking put into such broad abstractions like the various religions.
I laughed at your use of "heterosexual" when you were speaking from their perspective.









