History of nonbinary gender

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    This article on the history of nonbinary gender should focus on events directly or indirectly concerning people with non-binary gender identities. It should not be about LGBTQI history in general. However, this history will likely need to give dates for a few events about things other than nonbinary gender, such as major events that made more visibility of transgender people in general, gender variant people from early history who may or may not have been what we think of as nonbinary, and laws that concern intersex people that can also have an effect on the legal rights of nonbinary people.

    Content warnings: This history may need to talk about some troubling events that could have been traumatic for some readers. Some historical quotes use language that is now seen as offensive.

    Tips

    Here are some tips for writing respectfully about historical gender variant people whose actual preferred names, pronouns, and gender identities might not be known.

    • Dead names. It is disrespectful to call a transgender person by their former name ("dead name") rather than the name that they chose for themself. Some consider their dead name a secret that shouldn't be put in public at all. For living transgender people in particular, this history should show only their chosen names, not their dead names. In this history, some deceased historical transgender persons may have their birth names shown in addition to their chosen names, in cases where it is not known which name they preferred, or where it is otherwise impossible to find information about that person, if one wants to research their history. This should be written in the form of "Chosen Name (née Birth Name)." If history isn't sure which name that person earnestly preferred, write it in the form of "Name, or Other Name."
    • Pronouns. It is disrespectful to call a person by pronouns other than those that they ask for. Some historical persons whose preferred pronouns aren't known should be called here by no pronouns. If this isn't possible, they pronouns.
    • Words for a person's gender, assigned and otherwise. It is disrespectful to label a person's gender otherwise than they ask for. In the case of some historical people, history has recorded how they lived, and what gender they were assigned at birth, but not how they preferred to label their gender identity. For example, it's not known whether certain historical people who were assigned female at birth (AFAB) lived as men because they identified as men (were transgender men), or because it was the only way to have a career in that time and place (and were gender non-conforming cisgender women). This should be mentioned in the more respectful form of, for example, "assigned male at birth (AMAB), lived as a woman," rather than "really a man, passed as a woman." For another example, writing "a military doctor discovered Smith was AFAB" is more respectful than saying "a military doctor discovered Smith was really a woman." For people who lived before the word "transgender" was created, it may be more suitable to call them "gender variant" rather than "transgender."

    Wanted events in this time-line

    Please help fill out this time-line if you can add information of these kinds:

    • Events in the movement for keeping the genders of babies undisclosed.
    • Events concerning nonbinary celebrities, and historical persons who clearly stated they were neither female nor male, or both, or androgynes, etc.
    • Skim nonbinary blogs looking for past and current historical events.
    • Events that show that transgender and especially nonbinary gender identities existed long before the twentieth century.
    • Changes in the use of gendered versus gender-neutral language.


    Earlier than the eighteenth century

    • Many cultures and ethnic groups have concepts of traditional gender-variant roles, with a history of them going back earlier than the eighteenth century. For example, Hijra and Two-Spirit. These gender identities and roles are often analogous to nonbinary identity, as they don't fit into the Western idea of the gender binary roles.
    • Old English once had grammatical gender for inanimate objects, but this practice started to disappear in the 700s, and vanished in the 1200s. The population of England at that time spoke several languages, and the same inanimate objects had different genders in those different languages. They may have stopped using that part entirely just to make it simpler. English stopped using grammatical gender for inanimate objects, but it still uses grammatical gender for people and pronouns.[1]
    • In the fourteenth century, Middle English used a gender-neutral pronoun, a, which is still in use in some living English dialects today.[2]

    Eighteenth century

    • "Singular they" had been the standard gender-neutral pronoun in English for hundreds of years. However, in 1745, prescriptive grammarians began to say that it was no longer acceptable. They instead began to recommend using "he" as a gender-neutral pronoun.[3] This started the dispute over the problem of acceptable gender-neutral pronouns in English, which still goes on today.
    • In 1789, a native English dialect was recorded using gender-neutral ou pronouns.

    Nineteenth century

    • 1858: Creation of the gender-neutral pronoun thon (a contraction of "that one"),[4] which was put into Webster's International Dictionary in 1910.[5]
    • The earliest transsexual genital conversion surgery was performed in 1882 on a trans man named Herman Karl (née Sophia Hedwig).[6] However, "earliest transsexual genital conversion surgery" depends on one's definition. Eunuchs have been around for all of human history, and while many eunuchs consider themselves cisgender men, many others consider themselves another gender that isn't female or male. Some sources credit the first trans male genital conversion surgery as, instead, the one performed on a trans man named Michael Dillon in the 1930s, perhaps depending on how one defines that surgery.
    • 1884: Creation of gender-neutral pronouns ip,[7][8] and le.[9][10]
    • 1888: Creation of gender-neutral pronouns ir.[11][12]
    • Clinical beliefs around the time of the 1890s "conflat[ed] sex, sexual orientation, and gender expression," thinking of (to use modern words for them) gay, lesbian, transgender, and gender non-conforming people as all having some kind of intersex condition.[13]
    • 1890: Creation of gender-neutral pronouns E (the first of several versions_.[14][15]
    • "In 1895, a group of self-described 'androgynes' in New York organized a 'little club called the Cercle Hermaphroditos, based on their self-perceived need 'to unite for defense against the world's bitter persecution.'" This group included people who, in today's words, may have called themselves cross-dressers and transgender people.[16]

    Twentieth century

    In 1933, Nazis in Berlin burned works by leftists and other authors considered "un-German", including thousands of books looted from the library of Hirschfeld's Institute of Sex Research.
    • During the 1910s, German sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld created the word "transvestite," which at the time meant many more kinds of transgender and even transsexual people. Hirschfeld opened the first clinic to regularly serve them.[17]
    • In autobiographical writings from 1918 and 1922, Jennie June (née Earl Lind) described herself as a "fairie" and "androgyne."[18][19]
    • 1920: "In David Lindsay's Voyage to Arcturus (1920) a man from earth meets people on another planet who are neither man nor woman so he invents a new pronoun ae to refer to them."[20]
    • Although Christine Jorgensen was not one of the first trans women to get surgery, she became the center of a "media frenzy" in 1952.[21] This was how many people first heard of transsexuality and the possibility of transition.
    • During the 1950s, doctors made it common practice to try to surgically and socially erase all trace of the existence of intersex conditions, without the consent or knowledge of the intersex infants in question. This practice was tied with many of the cisgender male sexologist John Money's claims about gender, which were influential to feminism, but have since been drawn into question.[22]
    • 1970: Creation of gender-neutral pronouns co.[23][24]
    • The earliest known recorded mention of the gender-neutral title M