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Kate Lister: 我对中世纪女同性恋文化的研究充满兴趣,尽管寻找相关证据非常困难,但通过对现有资料的分析,我们可以发现一些线索,例如墓碑铭文、法律案件记录等。同时,我也很好奇中世纪的人们是如何看待女同性恋的,以及女同性恋在当时的社会中扮演着什么样的角色。 Tess Wingard: 我在研究中采用了“女同性恋式”(lesbian-like)的方法,即不局限于寻找性行为的直接证据,而是关注更广泛的亲密关系和情感表达。通过对墓碑铭文、法律案件记录以及修道院生活的研究,我们可以发现一些暗示中世纪女同性恋存在的证据。中世纪社会缺乏现代意义上的性身份认同,‘鸡奸者’(sodomite)是一个模糊的类别,而非自我认同。法律案件中,使用人工阴茎的女性更容易受到指控,这可能与性别颠覆有关。 此外,中世纪医学理论中也存在对女性性行为的描述,部分著作认识到阴蒂是女性性快感的来源,甚至认为女性可以通过阴蒂刺激达到高潮。关于男性同性恋受到的迫害比女性同性恋更为严重的原因,可能与法律更关注涉及性插入的同性恋行为有关。 在修道院中,可能存在女同性恋者聚集或互相认识的现象,这既体现在外部人士的担忧中,也体现在修女之间亲密关系的记录中。 Tess Wingard: 我目前的研究重点是14世纪英格兰教会的法律记录,希望能发现更多关于女性同性恋的案例。在已有的案例中,例如加西亚案和赫策尔多弗案,我们可以看到女同性恋者在面对法律指控时的不同反应和结局。加西亚案中,她公然承认自己的性取向,并展现出一种勇敢和无畏的态度;而赫策尔多弗案则更加复杂,她可能是一位跨性别者,其使用人工阴茎的行为可能与其性别认同有关。这些案例反映了中世纪社会对性行为和性别认同的复杂态度。 中世纪可能不存在有组织的女同性恋亚文化,但修道院可能是女同性恋者聚集或互相认识的地方。一些修女之间的信件也暗示了她们之间可能存在的深厚感情。

Deep Dive

Chapters
The episode explores the challenges of researching medieval lesbian history due to societal norms and lack of explicit records. It introduces Tess Wingard, a medieval historian, and previews the use of broader evidence beyond explicit sexual acts to understand lesbian lives in the medieval period.
  • Difficulty in finding direct evidence of lesbian culture before 1970
  • Focus on broader evidence of intimacy and closeness between women
  • Introduction of Tess Wingard and her book "Unclean Beasts"

Shownotes Transcript

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Hi, I'm your host, Kate Lister. If you would like Betwixt the Sheets ad-free and get early access, sign up to History Hit. With a History Hit subscription, you can also watch hundreds of original documentaries with top history presenters and enjoy a new release every single week. Sign up now by visiting historyhit.com forward slash subscribe.

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Hello, my lovely betwixters. It's me, Kate Lister, and you are you, and I'm so glad that you are here. But before we can continue together, I have to tell you, this is an adult podcast spoken by adults to other adults about adulty things in an adulty way, covering a range of adult subjects, and you should be an adult too, which basically means if you are of a sensitive disposition, f*** off. Just f*** off. We don't want you around here. Sorry. It had to be said. Right, on with the show. ♪

If you're looking for indisputable evidence of lesbian culture and lesbian lives and wealth, almost any kind of queer history before like 1970, you are going to be in for a tough time. But that's not to say that the clues aren't there if you know where to look. Here in the modest, unassuming medieval church in the south of England is a brass memorial etching laid into the stone beneath our feet.

These weren't uncommon, but they were usually done for married couples. And what's notable about this one is that it features two women, Elizabeth Etchingham and Agnes Oxenbridge. They're not wearing headscarves either, which typically meant that they were unmarried. And rather than looking out at the viewer, they're gazing into each other's eyes.

this be a glimpse into medieval lesbian life? And if it is, well, what other examples do we have? Well, in this episode, we are going to find out. What do you look for in a man? Oh, money, of course. You're supposed to rise when an adult speaks to you. I make perfect copies of whatever my boss needs by just turning a knob and pushing the button. What do you read? What do you read?

Yes, social courtesy does make a difference. Goodness, what beautiful dance. Goodness, it had nothing to do with it, did it? Hello and welcome back to Betwixt the Sheets, the history of sex scandal in society, with me, Kate Lister. As we well know, we well know, lesbians and same-sex attractive people have existed since day dot, whether the historical records actually capture that or not.

due to the nature of, well, oppression, homophobia, sexism, misogyny. I mean, what a list. But

But all of that means finding examples in history, not just of same-sex relationships, but relationships between women is really, really difficult to do. But I love a challenge, and so do many other historians, thankfully. Joining me today is one of those amazing historians, Tess Wingard, who is here to tell us about medieval lesbian culture.

If this kind of history piques your interest, and why wouldn't it, why not click back to our episode on Tudor lesbians after you've listened to this one. Well, without further ado, let's crack on.

Hello, and welcome to Betwixt the Sheets. It's only Tess Wingard. How are you doing? Doing good. It's great to be here. We're here to talk about, well, many things, but your work, you are the author of, let me get the title right, Unclean Beasts, Sex, Animality and the Invention of Heteronormativity 1200-1550.

Tess, what made you want to write this book? So it emerged out of my PhD thesis. So I did my first major research project looking at how

ideas around sexuality and categories of sex and gender really kind of changed and developed in the 13th century. And I was particularly interested in the role that new ideas around animals, animal-human difference and the natural world, which also emerged in the same period in the 13th century, how that played a role in shaping these new ideas around sex.

What was happening around 1300 to make all these changes that you identified? That's a huge question. I'm sorry. What are the main influences that you looked at in your work? So there's two really, really big key historical changes that's taking place around the year 1200 through to 1300. So on the sex side of things, you have the Fourth Lateran Council, which is this big meeting of the Catholic Church around

where they decided a lot of stuff. But one of the key things that they were really interested in is making it mandatory for all Christians to receive confession at least once a year. So before then, it was the kind of thing where you might only really get confession perhaps once in your lifetime. If you were not very devout, you'd get it before you die. But otherwise, it's not really a regular part of people's lives.

And so after latter and four, they make it so in theory, everyone has to do it at least once a year. And so with that, you have kind of a growing interest in classifying different kinds of sinful behavior. So different kinds of sexual acts.

and in educating lay people more about that and how to kind of identify when they are doing something immoral. Ooh, is that where the penitentials come from? They're my favourite, the medieval indexes of sin that the early church would use to look up certain sins to see what the punishment is. And they are mad. They are absolutely bonkers. The penitentials are a little bit earlier. We see them more from...

I think really the sixth century through to the 10th and 11th. But they are great fun with how, like you say, how weirdly specific they get. They kind of break down different kinds of sexual acts. Like, oh, if you masturbate, that's X number of years of penance you have to do. If you have sex with someone who's unmarried, that's so many years of penance. And if you have sex with an animal, that's even more penance.

But by the 13th century, there's a bit of a change in attitudes, really. And you have a lot of writers, people like Thomas of Chobham, later John de Boer, who they say, you know, these penitentials, these list of punishments, they're good in theory, but they're too strict to actually really make anyone follow. So we need to have a more kind of common sense approach to what...

penitents are supposed to do to make up for or to really

express penance and regret for the acts they've done. We are here to talk very specifically about lesbians in the medieval period. Now, this is a fascinating subject because we know that they were there. They were definitely there. They were definitely there. But finding evidence of this history is notoriously difficult. It's much harder than finding history of gay men or

How have you gone about researching something like this? What sources are you using? A big part of what's informing my approach there is this idea that a historian of medieval lesbians, Judith Bennett, came up with. So she puts forward this idea of the lesbian-like, which is where she basically says that

It's very hard if you're looking only for evidence of sexual acts and specifically genital acts as the smoking gun for lesbians in the historical record, you aren't really going to find very much.

So when she was writing in the 1990s, historians generally thought there was maybe around a dozen or so legal cases of lesbianism that met that very, very narrow criteria that they could find before 1600, let's say. And what Judith Bennett was saying was we need to think more broadly about

kinds of medieval lives and what kinds of evidence might demonstrate the kind of presence of lesbians in the historical record. So broadening out what we think of as sexual acts and erotic acts. So not just looking for

genital contact strap on that kind of thing but thinking more about other kinds of maybe physical intimacy emotional intimacy between women that kind of thing that's fascinating what kind of evidence would you i mean you're on it's dangerous and historians are notorious for going yes but they might have just been good friends

That's like an ongoing internet joke now that we do that. So what would you be looking for as this kind of broadening of evidence where you're like, okay, it's not a strap-on, but it is evidence of intimacy. What kind of things would you be looking for? So the kinds of things I'd really be focusing on would be...

or recorded expressions of intimacy and closeness that go beyond the norms of platonic friendship in a given period or that in some way seem to mirror or emulate the kinds of expressions of intimacy that you see between identifiably straight couples in this period. Mm-hmm.

So one of the really classic examples for this is the case of Elizabeth Etchingham and Agnes Oxenbridge. Okay, hit me. They're these two women in mid-15th century England, specifically in the area of Sussex. And they have a memorial brass plaque to them in the Etchingham Parish Church.

And you can still see it today. And it's this really, really beautiful kind of design. And it shows the two women, Elizabeth and Agnes, not quite facing directly to each other, but kind of tilted towards each other.

And it comes with a little memorial inscription underneath that commends the souls of both women to God. And we don't really know a lot about these two women beyond this memorial plaque. We do know that neither of them ever married. We have no other records of them appearing anywhere else as kind of anyone's wives.

What we do know about this plaque is that it's very, very striking. So the way that these two women are depicted facing each other, we can also tell from the design of these two women on the plaque that they are shown with long uncovered hair. I'm looking at it right now. So they're shown with long uncovered hair, which is a sign that they are both maidens. So they're both unmarried. And

And so this design, though, the way that they are both memorialised on this plaque together and the specific way they're shown facing each other in that way, that is a design which is almost exclusively used for married straight couples in this period. So the only rare exceptions you see to that are sometimes you might see siblings portrayed like that or sometimes a parent and child portrayed

Almost never do you see two unrelated people of the same gender portrayed like that. It's fascinating. And it's also, when the brass plaque was made in the 1480s, that style of design was also very, very kind of new and trendy.

And it's again one that a lot of art historians have looked at that and they've said this is showing a greater degree of emotional intimacy and warmth between a couple compared with the older styles of memorials for couples that tend to be more melancholic.

Maybe a bit kind of more rigid, emotionless. They usually portray the couple as they would be buried. So both facing the viewer and it's a bit less emotionally warm, whereas this new style is much more intimate and close. So that's kind of interesting that they chose that one.

see lesbians leading the way in interior design for the last thousand years but that leads me on to my next question which is a really important one when with anybody doing this kind of research is how would the medieval people have viewed this because today our understanding of sexuality is it's

It's an identity. As you come out, you say, I am gay. I am straight. I am... Actually, no, people don't come out and say that they're straight. That would be a weird one, but maybe they should. But what do we talk about in the medieval period? How did they understand sexuality?

So medieval society, it doesn't have the same kinds of categories of sexual identity that we have today. So there's not really anything like, you know, a straight or heterosexual identity or a gay or lesbian identity.

You do have this category of the sodomite. Ah, yes. So it's a category that basically does what it says on the tin. It's anyone who engages in sodomy. The problem is this is a very kind of fuzzy, broad category that different clerical authors will describe sodomy as being different kinds of things. But generally a good rule of thumb is it's any kind of sexual act that can't potentially

potentially lead to reproduction and pregnancy. So that can be as broadly inclusive as maybe oral or anal sex between a man and a woman, or sometimes some authors define it much more narrowly as just involving sex between two people of the same gender. So two men, two women. But the thing is this category of the sodomite category,

different from our kind of modern categories because as far as we know it's never really used as a self-identifier so we don't have any record of anyone saying you know I'm a sodomite I associate with other sodomites it's only ever really used as a way to classify someone else and more usually to kind of insult them or criminalize them is

Is there any records of anybody being prosecuted for other crimes of sodomy contained within that label? Has anyone ever been dragged to court for giving someone a blowjob or giving somebody oral sex or masturbating? Because all of those things could technically be sodomy. Or was this largely and pretty much exclusively used to target the queer community, although they wouldn't have used those words? We do have some very kind of rare evidence

evidence of sodomy as a criminal offence being used to target what we might call straight people or people engaged in straight sex but the kinds of things like oral or anal

We do have some records of that, but in practice, it's much more commonly used to target queer people. And overwhelmingly, it's usually more applied to men who have sex with other men. But we do have some records of it also being applied to women who have sex with other women.

Apparently oral sex is still on the statute books as being illegal in several American states. It's unenforceable because it's no longer the law, but that's because it was part of the sodomy law that sodomy was illegal. So technically, technically oral sex was as well. And that's quite freaking recent history, isn't it? Let's talk about lesbians.

How were they understood in the medieval period? Because there's a wealth of research trying to understand how they would have conceptualised of somebody that we would now say is gay. They wouldn't have identified as a sodomite. I've read an argument that sexuality was something, it wasn't who you were, it was something you did. How do you apply this to women who were notoriously difficult to research anyway? There were...

some interesting medical ideas in this period about what made some women be attracted towards other women oh is this the giant clitoris is this is this yeah oh god it's it's the giant completely bonkers sorry i do love this one go on keep going

So there's this idea in medieval science, which actually derived originally from kind of medieval Islamic writings on sex that got translated and transmitted to the Christian world, which is.

There's this idea that some women just naturally through how their bodies are made or how they develop, that they are thought to have kind of enlarged clitorises, which they use to penetrate other women. These women are called tribades. And that's where we have this kind of modern idea

slightly old-fashioned term, but tribidism that's used for kind of lesbians. I wonder about this. This is my theory on how they understood or misunderstood lesbianism throughout much of history. And it goes back to this idea of this large clitoris.

And it comes down to the fact that they couldn't conceive of sex without a penis. They couldn't understand. Like they just, even today, people struggle with that. You ask any lesbian at all and they will have got at least once in their life have heard something along the lines of, but what do you do in bed? As if like they're just sat there waiting for the penis to show up. And that's,

Certainly the truth throughout our history. And I have a feeling that this emphasis on, well, they must be growing this massive clitoris, which is actually a penis, because then that kind of makes sense to them of like, but that's how they would have sex. So what do you think of that?

So there is some awareness in some kind of medieval medical writers that the clitoris, and this can be kind of normal sized clitorises as well as the gigantic ones, that they are

are kind of the source of sexual pleasure in women. So we see this in the writings of people like Gilbert the Englishman or Peter Urbano, these two very kind of famous 13th century authors.

And they kind of identify roughly that the clitoris is a body part that's full of nerves and those nerves can be stimulated to achieve orgasm. Well done, lad. So actually Peter Vabano writes that women can achieve orgasm through the stimulation of the clitoris alone. So that kind of idea that medieval people can't imagine sex without a penis is

can be true in many contexts but there is definitely some awareness of ways of having and doing sex that don't necessarily involve a penis or penetration of any kind this is a big question i'm not sure that anyone's ever been able to answer it and have everybody go oh that makes sense

Why is it, do you think, that gay men have historically been persecuted much more severely than women having sex with women? Not exclusively, and we're going to talk in a bit about some of the women who were prosecuted under sodomy laws, so they're certainly not exempt from it, but historically, gay men have drawn much more attention than gay women. There's been a lot of theories about it, and I don't think anyone's ever really had a very...

definitive answer on it. But one argument that's very commonly been put forward is

is that the law tends to be more concerned about kinds of queer sex that involve penetration of some kind. So the handful of legal cases that we do have that involve women almost always involve the women fashioning some kind of dildo or some kind of strap that they use in order to penetrate other women.

And so what we perhaps might be seeing a pattern of there is that women who don't engage in that may just simply not be considered transgressive enough or really doing something serious enough to merit prosecution. And it's only when they are known to be doing

doing that kind of penetration, which is acting as a kind of gender subversion. So in that case, the women who are penetrating other women, they are, in a sense, becoming men or kind of fulfilling a male role. And so it's specifically that kind of gender transgression that's the real issue there, rather than necessarily inherently the fact that it's two women having sex. And we're kind of back again to that idea that, well, that's what counts as sex.

Like the rest is just like kind of jolly japes almost. I read there was one case, they all seem to be called Catherine, but there was one in, I think it was Germany. And most of the transcript is taken up with people on the jury philosophizing about whether or not two women could even have sex. And they almost got off, but they didn't.

But like they almost because they can't be sodomite, they can't be because they don't have penis. They just can't get their heads around it at all. It's a really, I don't know if I'm glad to hear, but it's good to hear that you found some space for there is an understanding that sexual pleasure doesn't just exist.

involve a penis. It seems very progressive for them. Let's talk about some of the cases because I think that these are important because unfortunately all the records that are left to us are kind of skewed because the way we find a lot of examples of women that we would call lesbians or queer or I think is in court records.

So what kind of cases have you found? I'm still kind of at the early stages of my current project, which is going to be surveying the kind of legal records of the English church in the 14th century. Wow.

So these are the courts where we would hope to find cases of sodomy involving women. But some of the kind of most interesting cases that we already have, that historians are kind of already aware of. One of my favourites is from Bologna. So in Italy,

And it's from the very end of the 13th century in 1295. And it's before the civic courts. So it's the secular city courts rather than the church courts. And this is a woman called Bertolina, who is nicknamed Garcia. And usually in the court record, she's called by this nickname Garcia. So she's basically brought before the court on several charges. So she's accused of the act of sodomy.

but also of love magic. So trying to cast spells to make people fall in love with her and fortune telling, which at this time is also a crime. I'll be back with Tess after the short break.

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Discover more on Soundcore.com. S-O-U-N-D-C-O-R-E. Soundcore. Use code SLEEP at checkout to get $30 off. S-L-E-E-P in all caps. Lesbianism and fortune telling. Right, okay. That's two quite disparate crimes being brought together. Yeah, she's very much a prototypical astrology girly. I love her so much. LAUGHTER

But her story is brilliant. The narrative that we get in court once the witnesses start being interrogated about what she's actually done. So they say that this Garcia had fallen in love with a widow and she had actually basically hired some singers to

to come and serenade this widow outside her home. We've got to admire the chutzpah of that. Okay. Exactly. And the thing is, she's absolutely fearless. She's so great.

Because she basically says to one of her neighbours, who ends up being a witness in the trial against her, she just straight up says, you know, I fancy this woman. I would like to have sex with her. And the witness says to her, you know, you can't really do that. That's not okay.

and gercia just replies doesn't care and then shows the witness something that in the document is called a virilia and it's not exactly certain what that means it's not really a word that we have a lot of other examples of it being used in court records but it's probably a dildo that

that she's using because it's included as one of these things that she's using to have sex with other women. So despite the fact that this is, you know, a crime, she's completely brazen about it and I just love her for it. Why do you think she wasn't worried about that? I mean, because this stuff...

It's not like they were hauled up in front of the court and they went, right, don't do that again. Please desist. Some of these women were burnt to death. Why do you think that Bertie was so, no, fuck it, I'm off to, I fancy you, I'm going to sing you songs. That's so brave to the point of bonkers. I think the key thing in her case is that it really seems like even though Bertie

you know, sex between women is a crime on the books. It just seems to be something that in her community people just don't really care about. They might disapprove of it. They might think there's something weird or wrong with her for doing it, but it's not really something that motivates them to take action. So it's very notable actually that at this trial,

All the witnesses say that these events involving Garcia and the widow, all of this takes place months and months ago. And no one has really taken it to court until now when this man in particular decides to get her prosecuted. And there's a suggestion, but we don't necessarily know.

We don't necessarily have the full evidence for it, but it seems likely that maybe this was a witness bringing a charge of sodomy against her as a kind of pretext for some other kind of fight or dispute that they're having. Oh.

I love the fact that they interviewed the neighbours and they were just going, yeah, it's just the lesbians being mad again. What do you want from us? It's just some horrible, horrible man. But I've noticed, but then I'm not as, this isn't my specialist area like it is with you, but it seems to me that prosecutions like this come in waves. It's almost like the witchcraft trials. It's like they, in certain areas, they pop up and there's like, oh my God, we've got to prosecute people. And then they kind of,

and when they're dying away, I'm often wondering, is there a kind of an uneasy understanding of what's happening in these communities? Is it just that people knew and they just kind of tutted and rolled their eyes or what happens to make it suddenly become an issue with the courts, do you think, in these places? It's very often connected with other kind of bigger situations

social or political factors so a lot of the times when you're seeing these sudden big spikes in prosecution for sodomy it's taking place at times of other kind of bigger social change so

perhaps when some of the most well-known examples are a little bit later, sort of towards the end of the Middle Ages. But during the Reformation, at times when certain regions are starting to go through the process of reforming, converting to Protestantism, you see this kind of spike in prosecutions. And there's a lot of

There's a lot of theories around this that suggest that maybe it's kind of a way of channeling all this anxiety around moral decay and the state of society into targeting this kind of sexual behaviour that before people weren't so interested in. What happened to Bertie? Was she okay? So the good news with Bertie is that the end of the court record says that officers of the court were summoned to try and find her.

but she had already fled the city by the conclusion of the case. Yeah. So as far as we know, she had a happy end.

Oh, she might still be on the run. A lot of them didn't. My producer, Stuart, has just messaged me to go, hurrah! So yeah, hurrah for everybody. Hurrah for Bertie. Everyone listening, yes. But a lot of them didn't get that ending where they ran away. I'm going to butcher this now and I'm so sorry. Katharina Herzl-Dofora, that's spoken like a German native. What was her case?

So Katharina Hetzeldorfer, she was someone who appeared before the court in Speyer. So that's a German town in the year 1477. So right at the end of the Middle Ages. And Hetzeldorfer's case is kind of quite a difficult one to look at. There's a lot of different layers to it.

Because the only name we have for Hetzeldorfer is the one given in the record, Katharina Hetzeldorfer. But there seems to be some suggestion in the court records that they might have been someone we might think of as transgender today. I have wondered that looking at this stuff. No, I'm getting ahead of myself, but I'm going to ask you next. How as a historian do you go about navigating that? But tell us her story or their story first.

Hetzeldorfer's story is quite a complicated one. It's hard to kind of trace through because all we have are the witness statements and Hetzeldorfer's own confession. And a lot of them seem to almost contradict each other. So as best as we can tell, Hetzeldorfer is someone who has traveled to Speer from elsewhere in Germany along with a younger woman.

who at times, Hetzeldorfer, there's a suggestion that this is their sister. At other times, there's a suggestion that maybe it's just another random woman that they're trying to pass off as a woman. And they come to Speer and it seems like at least some of the time they are

are dressing and presenting themselves as a man so some of the witnesses say that and i quote here she who stands in the dock i hetzeldorfer and who is supposed to be a man so this idea that they literally think that hetzeldorfer is a man and is trying to pass themselves off as one yeah i'll be back with tess after the short break

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How do, because it's so complicated this and you are into, you're into a minefield with this stuff, aren't you? Because unfortunately, Katharina was not here to say, I identify as this. And as you rightly point out, all we've got are biased records speaking about this person. And there have been many cases of women just dressing as men because they're

Life was a bit trick and easier to do that. How do you go about when you're writing about somebody like Katharina? How do you go about writing about them? This is something where actually I think there's a lot of value in taking that original idea of the lesbian like and adapting it to thinking about the transgender like.

So again, the perfect or the best form of smoking gun for trying to explore a trans life in the medieval record would be to find some clear evidence where someone says, yeah, a diary or some kind of statement that, you know, I experience gender dysphoria or I want to be seen as this gender.

And there is some evidence for that in some sources, but most of the time you have to look more indirectly for other signs or evidence that might point to someone, you know, living in ways that mirror the modern transgender experience. And so in Hetzeldorf's case, one of the most kind of compelling bits of evidence that suggests that they are best understood perhaps as a trans person is

returning back to the theme of dildos. It's the dildo. In every case, it's there. Yeah.

It's here in this one and actually it's part of Hetzeldorfer's own confession. They admit that they have crafted this thing. But what's different about this one is that it's not just something that Hetzeldorfer is using as a sex toy, basically, but it's fashioned out of red leather stuffed with cotton and with a kind of hole in the middle of it. And then they kind of tie it around themselves and

And what's significant is that actually the other witnesses in the case say that Hetzeldorfer uses this to, well, to pee through.

So it's kind of like a medieval shiwi, essentially. That's smart. That is a smart cookie. Because that would give you away, wouldn't it? Straight away, if you couldn't be standing up back then, that would do it. But that's the kind of really possibly trans side to this, is that Herzldorfer is clearly wearing this thing on a day-to-day basis, not just when they're having sex, but it's actually...

It's in some way perhaps kind of gender affirming or helping them to pass as male in the way that perhaps a trans man or other kind of trans masculine people today might have a packer or other kind of prosthetic penis. Wow. Before we get to other cases, what happens to Herzl Dorfer? So unfortunately, Herzl Dorfer does not have as happy an end as Garcia. So they are convicted and

And they are executed by being drowned in a river, which is, it's a punishment that is very, very exclusively reserved usually for women in, particularly in medieval German courts. So it's really a kind of final kind of insult to injury that, you know, if we are to think of Hetzeldorfer as trans, and certainly that's what I think they are,

It's kind of a final indignity that they are killed in a very kind of female way as kind of a final negation of their gender identity.

that case even end up at court? Because this stuff, in order to kind of catch people out, what we're talking about here is basically sex acts. And for the medieval mindset, they kind of were looking for smoking guns. So the evidence that they need is as blunt as you have a penis, you have a vagina, you were trying to put that penis into that blah, blah, blah. It's like that. How did this case end up in court? How does any of it end up in court?

So we unfortunately don't really know for Hetzeldorf how it came to the attention of the courts.

But generally there's kind of different legal systems in Europe at this time and there's different ways for cases to end up in the courts. So for the church courts, which is where a lot of sodomy cases end up because sodomy is across all of Europe at this period, it's what we call an ecclesiastical crime. So it's something that can be tried by the church.

So those cases will be brought to the attention of the courts if they're already kind of public knowledge in a community. So we have this concept of the Latin phrase publica fama, so public knowledge or kind of public reputation. So if, let's say, everyone in a town knows that one person or one woman is a lesbian and is having sex with other women,

When the church courts come round, so they tend to come round in a kind of cycle, so every few months or every year or so they'll come back to the region.

the church court officials will say, you know, what's happening in this region? Who kind of has a bad reputation at the moment? Show them with lesbians. Exactly. So at that point, the person's community might essentially dob them in and bring it to the attention of the courts. And then that starts the trial process. Okay. But,

In other regions, so in a lot of Europe, we have kind of secular courts which also prosecute sodomy as a kind of secular crime. So this is particularly anywhere that adopted Roman law. England very famously never adopts Roman law. It has its own legal system. But in a lot of places like Germany and Italy, they do have this civil law. And the civil law, which is the law of the kind of

late antique Roman Empire, so way back into the kind of fourth and fifth centuries, that specifically has a, you know, it registers sex between men or sex between women as a crime that's punishable by death. So in these places that have this kind of civil court system, you might sometimes have

special courts that specifically investigate moral offences or sexual offences and there might be officers of this court going out into communities investigating these cases and bringing people to the attention of the courts.

Maybe a kind of parallel might be the idea of how in, at least in the modern British criminal system, for instance, you can have, you know, the police or I think it's the Crown Prosecution Service will bring charges against a person if it's for an offence that not necessarily individually press charges against them for.

So, as a final question then, although I could talk to you about this forever and ever, I'm always interested in what kind of lesbian subculture could have existed at this time, because it seems that you can find...

remnant shadows, hints of a gay subculture. And I think that's enabled by the fact that men are allowed into public spaces in a way that women are not. But do you think that there was a lesbian subculture at this time? What do you think? I don't think there was ever a very organised or self-conscious lesbian subculture in the way that we might see much later, really from the 19th century onwards,

But I think where you do perhaps see some suggestion of places where medieval lesbians might congregate or might kind of find each other, it's in the convents and in the nunneries. Of course it is. But it's an interesting one because we kind of have evidence from really both sides of the fence there.

So even in the Middle Ages themselves, we have a lot of writers and a lot of groups who are very concerned about what they see as rampant queerness in both for men monasteries and also for women in nunneries.

So in the 1390s in England, you have this group of, some people call them heretics, some people would call them religious reformers, but the Lollards who want a lot of reforms of the church and its practices. But one of the things that they are particularly concerned about is,

basically in convents they're worried that all these women who are taking vows of chastity and are swearing off sex with men that this is leading them to basically engage in all kinds of everything from masturbation to sex with other women so you have this kind of anxiety on the one side that people outside the convents think there's loads of lesbian sex going on in there and

But actually, if you also look at some of the records of nuns in these institutions, you do see some interesting suggestions of what might be evidence of maybe kind of lesbian intimacy or very close lesbian friendships. Hildegard Bingen. Hildegard. There was a sneaky hint that she's one of my favourites. Hildegard might have been a bit close to some nuns here and there.

Yeah, if you look at Hildegard's letters, she has this one particular nun who's a real favourite of hers. This is Richardus.

and she writes all these letters to richardus about how disappointed she is in her quote-unquote friend when she moves abbeys and moves far away from her but one of my other really really favorite examples because it's just quite sweet um

is we have the records of this one letter that was written in the 12th century and it was written between two nuns so it's one nun sending it to the other

And it's just hard to read it as anything other than very, very deep romantic love. Some people have said it's friendship. I'm not convinced. So this letter says in the kind of modern translation to C. So just the initial C, sweeter than honey or honeycomb. B, so again, initial B, sends all the love there is to her love.

Oh, come on. That's two seconds away from adopting a pug together. That's not just mates.

Oh, that's lovely. Oh, I love that. It's so sweet. Actually, two friends of mine chose that letter for a reading at their wedding. So it's got resonance for lesbians today just as much as in the 12th century. That's amazing. Tess, you have been fascinating to speak to. You really have. And if people want to know more about you and your work, where can they find you?

So I have a website. It's very straightforwardly just Tess Wingard. I think it's tesswingard.wordpress.com. But if you Google my name, it's one of the first things that comes up. And that's got all my publications and everything and tells you a little bit more about my work. Thank you so much for coming to talk to me today. You've been marvellous. Oh, thank you. It's lovely to be here.

Thank you for listening and thank you so much to Tess for joining me. And if you like what you heard, please don't forget to like, review and follow along wherever it is that you get your podcasts. If you'd like us to explore a subject or maybe you just fancied saying hi, then you can email us at betwixt at historyhit.com. Coming up, we've got episodes on the origins of sexting and dinosaur sex. Yes, you did hear that correctly.

This podcast was edited and produced by Stuart Beckwith. The senior producer was Charlotte Long. Join me again betwixt the sheets, the history of sex scandal in society, a podcast by History Hit. This podcast contains music from Epidemic Sound.

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