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以下内容为女同性恋者,男同性恋者,双性恋者,与跨性别者(LGBT) 的历史年表

史前时期

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公元前9660年到公元前5000年

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  • 中石器時代西西里岛岩画中描绘了成双成对带有菲勒斯特征(突出勃起的阳具)的男性形象,对此场景有多种解释,包括捕猎、杂耍、宗教仪式以及男性同性恋性交场景。 [1]

公元前1700年到公元前7000年

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古代

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公元前22世纪

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  • 在公元前2900年到公元前2500年间,一名身着女性传统服装的服装男子被埋葬在捷克共和国布拉格的郊区。人类学家认为这名男子为跨性别者或第三性别者。[3]

公元前7世纪

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  • 约公元前630年,一枚在克里特岛发现的牌匾最早记录了的多利安人贵族和其青少年男性之间建立的这种被称为古希腊娈童恋的社会现象。[6] (另见克里特娈童恋 Cretan pederasty)。古希腊男性之间的婚姻并不被法律所承认,但是男性可以保持长达一生的娈童恋(娈童恋这个词不同于现代,在当时没有轻佻的负面含义),这种伙伴关系不同于异性恋婚姻在于其中年长的一方同时充当年轻一方的教育者和导师的角色。 [7]
  • 希腊莱斯博斯岛的抒情诗人莎孚(生于公元前630-612,卒于公元前570前后),以其描绘女同性恋主题的作品著称,亚历山大居民将其位列九名抒情诗人之一。西方语言中「女同性恋者」一词(例如德語Lesbe法語lesbienne英語lesbian),即源自其居住地莱斯博斯岛(現代希腊语:Λέσβος,拉丁字母转写:Lesvos)。她于公元前600年被放逐。

约公元前6世纪

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公元前4世纪

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公元前2世纪

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  • 公元前149年及以前,在罗马共和国时期,斯堪提尼亚法(Lex Scantinia)惩罚那些侵犯自由民青年的性犯罪者;偶尔也适用于检举那些愿意在同性关系中作为被动者的男性公民(罗马人认为在同性关系中充当被动者是丧失男子气概的表现,并予以谴责)[14],对这些人的惩罚是死刑还是罚款并不十分清楚。对于一个成年男性罗马公民而言,只要他的伴侣是男妓,奴隶或丧失荣誉者infamis)等其他失去公民资格的人,那么他自愿地参与到同性关系被认为是自然和可被接受的。 在罗马帝国时期,斯堪提尼亚法被图密善作为他司法和道德改革的一部分而发扬。[15]
  • 约公元前九十到八十年代,卡图鲁斯加入了以写作流行于罗马后期的简短希腊式讽刺诗歌的诗人小团体中,他的以男性为渴望对象的讽刺诗,显示了罗马文化中新一轮的同性恋美学风潮。[16]

公元前1世纪

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  • 公元前57年,卡图卢斯创作了卡米亚(Carmina),其中包括对Juventius的情诗,称赞了年轻人蓬勃的性能力,猛烈地抨击了被动的鸡奸者。(这什么玩意儿,我不会翻这一段。校对请求)
  • 公元前42年到39年,维吉尔的《牧歌集》中的第十章是著名的拉丁文版本的同性恋题材。
  • 公元前26年到18年,提布鲁斯挽歌中涉及到了同性恋题材。

公元1世纪

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  • 公元1世纪  - 沃伦杯被制作,这个银质饮水杯上有描绘了两个男性的同性性行为场景的浮雕。
庞贝郊区浴室墙上的女性伴侣壁画
  • 98年 – 图拉真, 罗马帝国最受爱戴之一的一位皇帝开始了他的统治,他以对男性的迷恋著称,他的这一点被一些国王所利用,如 奥斯若恩Abgar VII,在因某些罪行招致图拉真愤怒后通过贡献自己年轻英俊的儿子取得原谅。[18]

公元2世纪

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  • 130年 -- 安提诺乌斯,这位罗马皇帝哈德良最宠爱的男孩十九岁时神秘地死于作为罗马行省时的埃及。哈德良因为他的死十分悲痛,全国性地通过命名城市、树立雕像、发行纹章的方式来纪念他,还举行仪式效仿亚历山大大帝纪念情人的方式宣布他为神。
  • 165年 – 基督教殉道者Giustino 写到:“我们了解到一个对于新生儿可怕的事,那就是几乎在任何地方,不但女孩,甚至男孩也被强迫卖淫”。[19]

公元3世纪

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公元4世纪

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公元5世纪

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  • 498年 – 尽管宣布同性性行为违法,基督徒罗马皇帝继续向男妓收税,直到阿纳斯塔修斯一世最后废除这项税收。[23]

公元6世纪

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公元7世纪

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公元9世纪

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公元10世纪

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  • 966年 – 波兰大公梅什科一世接受天主教为国教,建立皮亚斯特王朝。据称,波兰历史上从未在法律上将同性恋定义为罪行。(见1835和1932).[27][來源請求]

公元11世紀

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公元12世纪

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公元13世纪

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公元14世纪

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  • 1308-14年 – 法国国王腓力四世以异端、偶像崇拜和鸡奸罪命令逮捕所有圣殿骑士,但是实际上他们只是国王为了解决财务危机的牺牲品。骑士团领袖被判处死刑并于1314年3月18日在巴黎圣母院附近于火刑柱上烧死。
  • 1321年 – 但丁神曲中将鸡奸者置于地狱第七层。
  • 1327年 – 英格兰废王爱德华二世被杀,据说被用烧热的拨火棍刺穿直肠而死。爱德华二世曾经为他多次被驱逐的情人第一任康沃尔伯爵皮尔斯格·威斯顿与贵族争斗。[來源請求]
  • 1347年 – Rolandino Roncaglia因被指控鸡奸而在意大利引起轰动。他承认自己从未与妻子或者其他女人有过性接触,因为他对此从未感到过渴望也从未因她们而勃起过。在他的妻子因瘟疫死后,Rolandino开始衣着女性服装卖淫。尽管他有着男性而不是女性的性器官,很多人还是认为他是女人,因为他有着女性的外观、声音和步态。[30]
  • 1370左右 – Jan van Aersdone 和 Willem Case 两位男性在1370年左右在比利时安特卫普被判处死刑,他们被指控因进行同性性行为而严重触犯欧洲中世纪的法律。[來源請求] 相关文件的发现使得Aersdone 和 Case的名字为人所知。十四世纪另一对已知的同性恋者是威尼斯的Giovanni Braganza 和 Nicoleto Marmagna。[31]
  • 1395年 – John Rykener是英国伦敦附近活跃于牛津的一位变装男妓,他于1395年因变装被逮捕和审讯。

公元15世纪

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  • 1424年 – 天主教圣徒锡耶纳的圣伯纳丁(Bernardio_of_Siena)在意大利佛罗伦萨讲道三日,斥责同性恋和其他形式的肉欲,并以焚烧化妆品、假发以及其他美容装饰品的仪式结束。他同时呼吁判处鸡奸者以陶片放逐制驱逐流放。这种布道以及其他神职人员的做法强化并鼓动了政府更多的对于同性恋人群的迫害。[32]
  • 1432年 – 佛罗伦萨建立了第一个特别为检举鸡奸者的组织“夜间警卫”,在之后的70年里逮捕了大约1000名成年男子和男孩,判罪2000余人,大多数处以罚款。
  • 1451年 – 教宗尼古拉五世授意宗教裁判所迫害鸡奸者。
  • 1475年 – 秘鲁卡帕克·尤潘基统治下的一部编年史记录了对同性恋者处以公开火刑并捣毁住所的迫害(通常用于被征服的部落)。
  • 1476年 – 佛罗伦萨法庭1476年的一份记录显示达芬奇和其他三名年轻男性两次被指控犯有鸡奸罪,最后无罪释放。[33]
  • 1483年 – 西班牙宗教裁判所建立,鸡奸罪犯被处以石刑、阉割和火刑。在1540到1700年间,超过1600人被判处鸡奸罪。[12]
  • 1492年 – 著名的人文主义思想家神学家德西德里乌斯·伊拉斯谟在荷兰Steyn的一座修道院期间写作了一系列情书给另一位僧侣。[34]
  • 1494年 – 意大利多明我会修士萨佛纳罗拉 批判佛罗伦萨民众"可怕的罪行"(主要是同性恋和赌博)并且劝告他们离开他们年轻无须的情人。
  • 1497年 – 在西班牙,斐迪南和伊莎贝拉加强了一直以来只是在城市实行的鸡奸法,使其在严重程度上等同于叛国罪和异端罪,而判罚所需的证据数量却被减少了,并允许使用刑罚来获取证据,被告人的财产会被没收。

公元16世纪

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公元17世纪

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公元18世纪

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  • 1721年 – 在德国,Catherina Margaretha Linck 因女性鸡奸罪被执行死刑。
  • 1726年 – 玛格丽特·克莱普茉莉屋在伦敦被警方搜查,三个男性被判处死刑。在茉莉屋中男性被允许穿着女式服装出入,可以自由结交朋友。[43]
  • 1730年-1811年荷兰共和国内出现一股恐慌,导致许多针对鸡奸者的判罚,这股迫害在1730年到1737年,1764年,1776年,1795年到1798年最为严重。[來源請求]
  • 1785年 – 英国哲学家、法学和社会改革家杰里米·边沁在英格兰第一个为鸡奸者的无罪化辩护。[12]
  • 1791年 – 法国在大革命期间(以及安道尔)施行1791法国刑法典,不再将鸡奸行为判罪。法国成为西欧第一个将成年人间自愿的同性行为去罪化的国家。[44]
  • 1794年 – 普鲁士王国废除了对于鸡奸者的死刑。[12]

公元19世纪

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卡尔·亨利希·乌尔利克斯 (1825–1895),LGBT人权先驱

公元20世纪

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1901–1909

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1910s

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1920s

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  • 1921 – 在英格兰历史上,第一次试图将女同性恋设为违法的尝试以失败告终。[59]
  • 1922 – 苏联在刑法典中讲同性恋行为去刑事化(合法化)。
  • 1923 – 同性恋一词fag 第一次在Nels Anderson 的作品 The Hobo 中出现: "Fairies or Fags are men or boys who exploit sex for profit."
  • 1923 – 女同性恋Elsa Gidlow 在英格兰出生。 她在美国发表了第一部描写女同性恋的诗歌《On A Grey Thread》[60]
  • 1924 – Henry Gerber 在芝加哥建立了美国第一个同性恋权益组织“人权协会“[61]。该组织在警方的压力下只维持了几个月[62]。 同性恋在巴拿马,巴拉圭和秘鲁合法化。
  • 1926 – 同性恋“homosexuality”一词第一次出现在美国主流刊物纽约时报[12]
  • 1927– 波兰同性恋作曲家卡罗尔·马切伊·席曼诺夫斯基被任命为国立音乐学院 Fryderyk Chopin Music Academy主任。
  • 1928 – 瑞克里芙·霍尔的《寂寞之井》在英国出版,之后进入美国。它的发表出发了法律争议并将同性恋问题带入公众议题。
  • 1929 – 5月22日,《美丽的阿美利加》作者Katharine Lee Bates去世。 10月16日,德意志帝国议会投票废除德國刑事法第175條,纳粹掌权后制止了投票的生效。

1930s

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Picture needed

  • 1931 - Mädchen in Uniform, one of the first explicitly lesbian films and the first pro-lesbian film, is released.
  • 1932 – Poland codifies the homosexual and heterosexual age of consent equally at 15. Polish law had never criminalized homosexuality, although occupying powers had outlawed it in 1835.[27]
  • 1933 – New Danish penalty law decriminalizes homosexuality.
  • 1933 – The National Socialist German Workers Party bans homosexual groups. Homosexuals are sent to concentration camps. Nazis burn the library of Magnus Hirschfeld's Institute for Sexual Research, and destroy the Institute; Denmark and Philippines decriminalizes homosexuality. Homosexual acts are recriminalized in the USSR. (Certain persons, including Scott Lively (presently charged with Crimes against humanity[63]), assert that the Nazi opposition to homosexuality was 'selective'. In order to persecute other 'types' of people, the Nazi party used homosexual behavior as a convenient excuse. The faithful Nazis, who were themselves blatant homosexuals, were tolerated.[64]) Scholars and historians in general reject this allegation and Lively is named a holocaust revisionist both the Southern Poverty Law Center and by the ADL [65][66][67]
  • 1934 – Uruguay decriminalizes homosexuality. The USSR once again criminalizes muzhelozhstvo (specific Russian definition of “male sexual intercourse with male”, literally “man lying with man”), punishable by up to 5 years in prison – more for the coercion or involvement of minors.[68]
  • 1936 – Mona's 440 Club, the first lesbian bar in America, opened in San Francisco in 1936.[69][70] Mona's waitresses and female performers wore tuxedos and patrons dressed their roles.[70]
  • 1936 – Federico García Lorca, Spanish poet, is shot at the beginning of the civil war.
  • 1937 – The first use of the pink triangle for gay men in Nazi concentration camps.
  • 1938 – The word Gay is used for the first time in reference to homosexuality.[71]
  • 1939 – Frances V. Rummell, an educator and a teacher of French at Stephens College, published an autobiography under the title Diana: A Strange Autobiography; it was the first explicitly lesbian autobiography in which two women end up happily together.[72] This autobiography was published with a note saying, "The publishers wish it expressly understood that this is a true story, the first of its kind ever offered to the general reading public".[72]

1940s

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  • 1940 – Iceland decriminalizes homosexuality; the NWHK is disbanded in the Netherlands in May due to the German invasion, and most of its archive is voluntarily destroyed, while the rest is confiscated by Nazi soldiers.
  • 1941 – Transsexuality was first used in reference to homosexuality and bisexuality.
  • 1942 – Switzerland decriminalizes homosexuality, with the age of consent set at 20.
  • 1944 – Sweden decriminalizes homosexuality, with the age of consent set at 20 and Suriname legalizes homosexuality.
  • 1945 – Upon the liberation of Nazi concentration camps by Allied forces, those interned for homosexuality are not freed, but required to serve out the full term of their sentences under Paragraph 175; Portugal decriminalises homosexuality for the second time in its history. Four honourably discharged gay veterans form the Veterans Benevolent Association, the first LGBT veterans' group.[73] Gay bar Yanagi opened in Japan.[74]
  • 1946 – "COC" (Dutch acronym for "Center for Culture and Recreation"), one of the earliest homophile organizations, is founded in the Netherlands. It is the oldest surviving LGBT organization.
  • 1947 – Vice Versa, the first North American lesbian publication, is written and self-published by Lisa Ben (real name Edith Eyde) in Los Angeles.
  • 1948 – "Forbundet af 1948" ("League of 1948"), a homosexual group, is formed in Denmark.
  • 1948 – The communist authorities of Poland make 15 the age of consent for all sexual acts, homosexual or heterosexual.

1950s

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File:Mattachine Review 1959.jpg
Mattachine Review published by the Mattachine Society
  • 1950 – The Organization for Sexual Equality, now Swedish Federation for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights (RFSL), is formed in Sweden; East Germany partially abrogates the Nazis' emendations to Paragraph 175; The Mattachine Society, the first sustained American homosexual group, is founded in Los Angeles (11 November); 190 individuals in the United States are dismissed from government employment for their sexual orientation, commencing the Lavender scare.
  • 1951 – Greece decriminalizes homosexuality.
  • 1951 – Jordan In 1951, a revision of the Jordanian Criminal Code legalized private, adult, non-commercial, and consensual sodomy, with the age of consent set at 16.
  • 1952 – "Spring Fire," the first lesbian paperback novel, and the beginning of the lesbian pulp fiction genre, was published in 1952 and sold 1.5 million copies.[75][76] It was written by lesbian Marijane Meaker under the false name Vin Packer.[75]
  • 1952 – In the spring of 1952, Dale Jennings was arrested in Los Angeles for allegedly soliciting a police officer in a bathroom in Westlake Park, now known as MacArthur Park. His trial drew national attention to the Mattachine Society, and membership increased drastically after Jennings contested the charges, resulting in a hung jury.[77]
  • 1952 – Christine Jorgensen(George William Jorgensen, Jr.) becomes the first widely publicized person to have undergone sex reassignment surgery, in this case, male to female, creating a world-wide sensation.
  • 1952 – In Japan it was "Adonis" launched. Mishima Yukio was Contributed to this magazine.
  • 1954 – 7 June–Mathematical and computer genius Alan Turing commits suicide by cyanide poisoning, 18 months after being given a choice between two years in prison or libido-reducing hormone treatment for a year as a punishment for homosexuality.[78] A succession of well-known men, including Lord Montagu, Michael Pitt-Rivers and Peter Wildeblood, were convicted of homosexual offences as British police pursued a McCarthy-like purge of Society homosexuals.[79] Arcadie, the first homosexual group in France, is formed.
  • 1955 – The Daughters of Bilitis (DOB) was founded in San Francisco in 1955 by four lesbian couples (including Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon) and was the first national lesbian political and social organization in the United States.[80] The group's name came from "Songs of Bilitis," a lesbian-themed song cycle by French poet Pierre Louÿs, which described the fictional Bilitis as a resident of the Isle of Lesbos alongside Sappho.[80] DOB's activities included hosting public forums on homosexuality, offering support to isolated, married, and mothering lesbians, and participating in research activities.[80] Mattachine Society New York chapter founded.
  • 1956 – Thailand decriminalizes homosexual acts.
  • 1957 – The word "Transsexual" is coined by U.S. physician Harry Benjamin; The Wolfenden Committee's report recommends decriminalizing consensual homosexual behaviour between adults in the United Kingdom; Psychologist Evelyn Hooker publishes a study showing that homosexual men are as well adjusted as non-homosexual men, which becomes a major factor in the American Psychiatric Association removing homosexuality from its handbook of disorders in 1973.
  • 1958 – The Homosexual Law Reform Society is founded in the United Kingdom; Barbara Gittings founds the New York chapter of Daughters of Bilitis.
  • 1958 – The United States Supreme Court rules in favor of the First Amendment rights of a gay and lesbian magazine, marking the first time the United States Supreme Court had ruled on a case involving homosexuality.
  • 1959 – ITV, at the time the UK's only national commercial broadcaster, broadcasts the first gay drama, South, starring Peter Wyngarde.[81]

1960s

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  • 1960 – Cpls. Fannie Mae Clackum and Grace Garner, U.S. Air Force reservists in the late 1940s and early 1950s, became the first people to successfully challenge their discharges from the U.S. military for being gay, although the ruling turned on the fact that there wasn’t enough evidence to show the women were lesbians — rather than that there was nothing wrong with it if they were.[82]
  • 1961 – Czechoslovakia and Hungary decriminalize sodomy; the Vatican declares that anyone who is "affected by the perverse inclination" towards homosexuality should not be allowed to take religious vows or be ordained within the Roman Catholic Church; The Rejected, the first documentary on homosexuality, is broadcast on KQED TV in San Francisco on 11 September 1961; José Sarria becomes the first openly gay candidate for public office in the United States when he runs for the San Francisco Board of Supervisors.[83]
  • 1961 – Illinois becomes first U.S. state to remove sodomy law from its criminal code (effective 1962).[84]
  • 1963 – Israel de facto decriminalizes sodomy and sexual acts between men by judicial decision against the enforcement of the relevant section in the old British-mandate law from 1936 (which in fact was never enforced).[來源請求]
  • 1964 – Canada sees its first gay-positive organization, ASK, and first gay magazines: ASK Newsletter (in Vancouver), and Gay (by Gay Publishing Company of Toronto). Gay was the first periodical to use the term 'Gay' in the title and expanded quickly, including outstripping the distribution of American publications under the name Gay International. These were quickly followed by Two (by Gayboy (later Kamp) Publishing Company of Toronto).[85][86]
  • 1964 – Canada March 1964, ted northe founds the 'Imperial Court of Canada' a monarchist society compromised primarily of drag personalities and becomes a driving force in the effort to achieve equality in Canada. The Courts of Canada now have over 14 chapters across the country and is the oldest, continuously running, GLBT Organization in Canada.
  • 1964 – The first photograph of lesbians on the cover of lesbian magazine The Ladder was done in September 1964, showing two women from the back, on a beach looking out to sea.
  • 1965 – Everett George Klippert, the last person imprisoned in Canada for homosexuality, is arrested for private, consensual sex with men. After being assessed "incurably homosexual", he is sentenced to an indefinite "preventive detention" as a dangerous sexual offender. This was considered by many Canadians to be extremely homophobic, and prompted sympathetic articles in Maclean's and The Toronto Star, eventually leading to increased calls for legal reform in Canada which passed in 1969.[來源請求] Conservatively dressed gays and lesbians demonstrate outside Independence Hall in Philadelphia on 4 July 1965. This was the first in a series of Annual Reminders that took place through 1969.
  • 1966 – The Mattachine Society stages a "Sip-In" at Julius Bar in New York City challenging a New York State Liquor Authority prohibiting serving alcohol to gays; the National Planning Conference of Homophile Organizations is established (to became NACHO—North American Conference of Homophile Organizations later that year); the Compton's Cafeteria Riot occurred in August 1966 by transgender women and Vanguard members in the Tenderloin district of San Francisco. This incident was one of the first recorded transgender riots in United States history, preceding the more famous 1969 Stonewall Riots in New York City by three years. Vanguard was founded to demonstrate for equal rights.
  • 1966 – The first lesbian to appear on the cover of the lesbian magazine The Ladder with her face showing was Lilli Vincenz in January 1966.
  • 1967 – The Black Cat Tavern in the Silver Lake neighborhood of Los Angeles is raided on New Year's day by 12 plainclothes police officers who beat and arrested employees and patrons. The raid prompted a series of protests that began on 5 January 1967, organized by P.R.I.D.E. (Personal Rights in Defense and Education). It's the first use of the term "Pride" that came to be associated with LGBT rights.
  • 1967 – The Advocate was first published in September as "The Los Angeles Advocate," a local newsletter alerting gay men to police raids in Los Angeles gay bars.
  • 1967 – The Sexual Offences Act decriminalised homosexual acts between two men over 21 years of age in private in England and Wales.;[87] The act did not apply to Scotland, Northern Ireland nor the Channel Islands; The book Homosexual Behavior Among Males by Wainwright Churchill breaks ground as a scientific study approaching homosexuality as a fact of life and introduces the term "homoerotophobia", a possible precursor to "homophobia"; The Oscar Wilde Bookshop, the world's first homosexual-oriented bookstore, opens in New York City; "Our World" ("Nuestro Mundo"), the first Latino-American homosexual group, is created in Argentina; A raid on the Black Cat Tavern in Los Angeles, California promotes homosexual rights activity. The Student Homophile League at Columbia University is the first institutionally recognized gay student group in the United States.[來源請求]
  • 1968 – Paragraph 175 is eased in East Germany decriminalizing homosexual acts over the age of 18; Bulgaria decriminalizes adult homosexual relations.

1970s

[编辑]
  • 1972 – Sweden becomes first country in the world to allow transsexuals to legally change their sex, and provides free hormone therapy;[95] Hawaii legalizes homosexuality; In South Australia, a consenting adults in private-type legal defence was introduced; Norway decriminalizes homosexuality; East Lansing, Michigan and Ann Arbor, Michigan and San Francisco, California become the first cities in United States to pass a homosexual rights ordinance. Jim Foster, San Francisco and Madeline Davis, Buffalo, New York, first gay and lesbian delegates to the Democratic Convention, Miami, McGovern; give the first speeches advocating a gay rights plank in the Democratic Party Platform. "Stonewall Nation" first gay anthem is written and recorded by Madeline Davis and is produced on 45 rpm record by the Mattachine Society of the Niagara Frontier. Lesbianism 101, first lesbianism course in the U.S. taught at the University of Buffalo by Margaret Small and Madeline Davis.[來源請求]Jeanne Manford marched with her gay son in New York's Pride Day parade. This was the beginning of PFLAG - Parents Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays.[96] Nancy Wechsler became the first openly gay or lesbian person in political office in America; she was elected to the Ann Arbor City Council in 1972 as a member of the Human Rights Party and came out as a lesbian during her first and only term there.[97] Also in 1972, Camille Mitchell became the first open lesbian to be awarded custody of her children in a divorce case, although the judge restricted the arrangement by precluding Ms. Mitchell's lover from moving in with her and the children.[98] Freda Smith became the first openly lesbian minister in the Metropolitan Community Church (she was also their first female minister).[99][100] Beth Chayim Chadashim was founded in 1972 as the world's first lesbian and gay synagogue recognized by the Reform Jewish community.[101] A Quaker group, the Committee of Friends on Bisexuality, issued the “Ithaca Statement on Bisexuality” supporting bisexuals.[102]

The Statement, which may have been "the first public declaration of the bisexual movement" and "was certainly the first statement on bisexuality issued by an American religious assembly," appeared in the Quaker Friends Journal and The Advocate in 1972.[103][104][105]

Today Quakers have varying opinions on LGBT people and rights, with some Quaker groups more accepting than others.[106]

  • 1973 – The American Psychiatric Association removes homosexuality from its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-II), based largely on the research and advocacy of Evelyn Hooker; Malta legalizes homosexuality; In West Germany, the age of consent is reduced for homosexuals to 18 (though it is 14 for heterosexuals).[來源請求]; Sally Miller Gearhart became the first open lesbian to obtain a tenure-track faculty position when she was hired by San Francisco State University, where she helped establish one of the first women and gender study programs in the country.[107]
  • 1975 – Homosexuality is legalized in California due to the Consenting Adult Sex Bill, authored by and successfully lobbied for in the state legislature by State Assemblyman from San Francisco Willie Brown; Leonard Matlovich, a Technical Sergeant in the United States Air Force, becomes the first U.S. gay service member to purposely out himself to fight their ban; South Australia becomes the first state in Australia to make homosexuality legal between consenting adults in private. Panama is the second country in the world to allow transsexuals who have gone through gender reassignment surgery to get their personal documents reflecting their new sex; [來源請求] UK journal Gay Left begins publication.;[111] Minneapolis becomes the first city in the United States to pass trans-inclusive civil rights protection legislation.[112]
Gay rights protesters in New York City, protesting at the United States' 1976 Democratic National Convention
  • 1978 – San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone are assassinated by former Supervisor Dan White; the first Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras is held, with 2000 people attending and 53 subsequently arrested and some seriously beaten by police. ; The rainbow flag is first used as a symbol of homosexual pride; Sweden establishes a uniform age of consent. Samois the earliest known lesbian-feminist BDSM organization is founded in San Francisco; well-known members of the group include Patrick Califia and Gayle Rubin; the group is among the very earliest advocates of what came to be known as sex-positive feminism[來源請求]; The International Lesbian and Gay Association (ILGA) is established.[124] Robin Tyler became the first out lesbian on U.S. national television, appearing on a Showtime comedy special hosted by Phyllis Diller. The same year she released her comedy album, Always a Bridesmaid, Never a Groom, the first comedy album by an out lesbian.[125]

1980s

[编辑]
  • 1980 – The United States Democratic Party becomes the first major political party in the U.S. to endorse a homosexual rights platform plank; Scotland decriminalizes homosexuality; David McReynolds becomes the first openly LGBT individual to run for President of the United States, appearing on the Socialist Party U S A ticket; The Human Rights Campaign Fund is founded by Steve Endean; The Human Rights Campaign is America’s largest civil rights organization working to achieve lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equality.[126]
  • 1981 – The European Court of Human Rights in Dudgeon v. United Kingdom strikes down Northern Ireland's criminalisation of homosexual acts between consenting adults, leading to Northern Ireland decriminalising homosexual sex the following year; Victoria (Australia) and Colombia decriminalize homosexuality with a uniform age of consent; The Moral Majority starts its anti-homosexual crusade; Norway becomes the first country in the world to enact a law to prevent discrimination against homosexuals; Hong Kong's first sex-change operation is performed. The first official documentation of the condition to be known as AIDS was published by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on 5 June 1981.[127] Tennis player Billie Jean King became the first prominent professional athlete to come out as a lesbian, when her relationship with her secretary Marilyn Barnett became public in a May 1981 "palimony" lawsuit filed by Barnett.[128] Due to this she lost all of her endorsements.[129] Mary C. Morgan became the first openly gay or lesbian judge in America when she was appointed by California Governor Jerry Brown to the San Francisco Municipal Court.[130]
  • 1982 – Laguna Beach, CA elects the first openly gay mayor in United States history; France equalizes the age of consent; The first Gay Games is held in San Francisco, attracting 1,600 participants; Northern Ireland decriminalizes homosexuality; Wisconsin becomes the first US state to ban discrimination against homosexuals; New South Wales becomes the first Australian state to outlaw discrimination on the basis of actual or perceived homosexuality. The condition to be known as AIDS had acquired a number of names – GRID5 (gay-related immune deficiency), ‘gay cancer’, ‘community-acquired immune dysfunction’ and ‘gay compromise syndrome’[131] The CDC used the term AIDS for the first time in September 1982, when it reported that an average of one to two cases of AIDS were being diagnosed in America every day.[132] Ken Togo is founding the Deracine Party in Japan.
  • 1983 – Massachusetts Representative Gerry Studds reveals he is gay on the floor of the House, becoming the first openly gay member of Congress; Guernsey (Including Alderney, Herm and Sark) decriminalizes homosexuality; Portugal decriminalizes homosexuality for the third time in its history; AIDS is described as a "gay plague" by Reverend Jerry Falwell.
  • 1984 – The lesbian and gay association "Ten Percent Club" is formed in Hong Kong; Massachusetts voters reelect representative Gerry Studds, despite his revealing himself as homosexual the year before; New South Wales and the Northern Territory in Australia make homosexual acts legal; Chris Smith, newly elected to the UK parliament declares: "My name is Chris Smith. I'm the Labour MP for Islington South and Finsbury, and I'm gay", making him the first openly out homosexual politician in the UK parliament. The Argentine Homosexual Community (Comunidad Homosexual Argentina, CHA) is formed uniting several different and preexisting groups. Berkeley, California becomes the first city in the U.S. to adopt a program of domestic partnership health benefits for city employees; West Hollywood, CA is founded and becomes the first known city to elect a city council where a majority of the members are openly gay or lesbian. Reconstructionist Judaism became the first Jewish denomination to allow openly lesbian rabbis and cantors.[133] ILGA Japan was founded in Japan.
  • 1985 – France prohibits discrimination based on lifestyle (moeurs) in employment and services; the first memorial to gay Holocaust victims is dedicated; Belgium equalizes the age of consent; the Restoration Church of Jesus Christ (the Gay Mormon Church) is founded by Antonio A. Feliz.[134] Actor Rock Hudson dies of AIDS. He is the first major public figure known to have died from an AIDS-related illness.[135] The Reconstructionist Rabbinical College ordained Deborah Brin as the first openly gay or lesbian rabbi in Judaism.[136] Terry Sweeney becomes Saturday Night Live's first openly gay male cast member; Sweeney was "out" prior to being hired as a cast member.[137] The Bisexual Resource Center (BRC) in Massachusetts has served the bisexual community since 1985.
  • 1986 – Homosexual Law Reform Act passed in New Zealand, legalizing sex between males over 16; Haiti decriminalizes homosexuality, June in Bowers v. Hardwick case, U.S. Supreme Court upholds Georgia law forbidding oral or anal sex, ruling that the constitutional right to privacy does not extend to homosexual relations, but it does not state whether the law can be enforced against heterosexuals. Becky Smith and Annie Afleck became the first openly lesbian couple in America granted legal, joint adoption of a child.[138] From 1 till 3 May, the 1986, ILGA Asia Conference took place in Japan's capital Tokyo.[139]
  • 1987 – AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power(ACT-UP) founded in the US in response to the US government’s slow response in dealing with the AIDS crisis.[140] ACT UP stages its first major demonstration, seventeen protesters are arrested; U.S. Congressman Barney Frank comes out. Boulder, CO citizens pass the first referendum to ban discrimination based on sexual orientation.[141][142] In New York City a group of Bisexual LGBT rights activist including Brenda Howard found the New York Area Bisexual Network (NYABN); Homomonument, a memorial to persecuted homosexuals, opens in Amsterdam. David Norris is the first openly gay person to be elected to public office in the Republic of Ireland.
  • 1988 – Sweden is the first country to pass laws protecting homosexual regarding social services, taxes, and inheritances. The anti-gay Section 28 passes in England and Wales; Scotland enacts almost identical legislation; Canadian MP Svend Robinson comes out; Canada lowers the age of consent for sodomy to 18; Belize and Israel decriminalize (de jure) sodomy and sexual acts between men (the relevant section in the old British-mandate law from 1936 was never enforced in Israel). After losing an Irish High Court case (1980) and an Irish Supreme Court case (1983), David Norris takes his case (Norris v. Ireland) to the European Court of Human Rights. The European Court strikes down the Irish law criminalising male-to-male sex on the grounds of privacy. Stacy Offner became the first openly lesbian rabbi hired by a mainstream Jewish congregation, Shir Tikvah Congregation of Minneapolis (a Reform Jewish congregation).[143][144]
  • 1989 – Western Australia decriminalizes male homosexuality (but the age of consent is set at 21); Liechtenstein legalizes homosexuality; Denmark is the first country in the world to enact registered partnership laws (like a civil union) for same-sex couples, with most of the same rights as marriage (excluding the right to adoption (until June 2010) and the right to marriage in a church).

1990s

[编辑]

(See individual year page for more info)

  • 1990
    • Equalization of age of consent: Czechoslovakia (see Czech Republic, Slovakia)
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: UK Crown Dependency of Jersey and the Australian state of Queensland
    • LGBT Organizations founded: BiNet USA (USA), OutRage! (UK) and Queer Nation (USA)
    • Other: Justin Fashanu is the first professional footballer to come out in the press.
    • Reform Judaism decided to allow openly lesbian and gay rabbis and cantors.[145]
    • Dale McCormick became the first open lesbian elected to a state Senate (she was elected to the Maine Senate).[146]
    • In 1990, the Union for Reform Judaism announced a national policy declaring lesbian and gay Jews to be full and equal members of the religious community. Its principal body, the Central Conference of American Rabbis (CCAR), officially endorsed a report of their committee on homosexuality and rabbis. They concluded that "all rabbis, regardless of sexual orientation, be accorded the opportunity to fulfill the sacred vocation that they have chosen" and that "all Jews are religiously equal regardless of their sexual orientation."
  • 1991
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: Bahamas, Hong Kong and Ukraine
    • AIDS Related: The red ribbon is first used as a symbol of the campaign against HIV/AIDS.
    • Sherry Harris was elected to the City Council in Seattle, Washington, making her the first openly lesbian African-American elected official.[147]
    • The first lesbian kiss on television occurred; it was on "L.A. Law" between the fictional characters of C.J. Lamb (played by Amanda Donohoe) and Abby (Michele Greene).[148]
  • 1993
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
      • Passed and Came into effect: Norway (without adoption until 2002, replaced with same-sex marriage in 2008/09)
    • Repeal of Sodomy laws: Australian Territory of Norfolk Island
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: Belarus, UK Crown Dependency of Gibraltar, Ireland, Lithuania, Russia (with the exception of the Chechen Republic);
    • Anti-discrimination legislation: US state of Minnesota (gender identity), New Zealand parliament passes the Human Rights Amendment Act which outlaws discrimination on the grounds of sexual orientation or HIV.
    • Ban on gays serving openly in the military: USA (see Don't ask, don't tell, repealed 2010)
    • End to ban on gay people in the military: New Zealand
    • Significant LGBT Murders: Brandon Teena
    • Melissa Etheridge came out as a lesbian.
    • The Triangle Ball was held; it was the first inaugural ball in America to ever be held in honor of gays and lesbians.
    • The first Dyke March (a march for lesbians and their straight female allies, planned by the Lesbian Avengers) was held, with 20,000 women marching.[150][151]
    • Roberta Achtenberg became the first openly gay or lesbian person to be nominated by the president and confirmed by the U.S. Senate when she was appointed to the position of Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity by President Bill Clinton.[152]
  • 1994
    • Unregistered Cohabitation recognition:
      • Passed and Came into effect: Israel (without adoption, without step-adoption until 2005)
    • Anti-discrimination legislation: South Africa (sexual orientation, interim constitution)
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: Bermuda, Germany, UK Crown Dependency of Isle of Man and Serbia
    • Equalization of age of consent:
      • Partial: UK reduces the age of consent for homosexual men to 18;
    • Homosexuality no longer an illness: American Medical Association
    • LGBT Organizations founded: National Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality (South Africa)
    • Other : Canada grants refugee status to homosexuals fearing for their well-being in their native country; Toonen v. Australia decided by UN Human Rights Committee; fear of persecution due to sexual orientation becomes grounds for asylum in the United States.[153]
    • Deborah Batts became the first openly gay or lesbian federal judge; she was appointed to the U.S. District Court in New York.[154][155]
    • Gay Parade was held in Japan. (8.1994)
    • Susan Stryker's essay "My Words to Victor Frankenstein Above the Village of Chamounix" became the first article to be published in a peer-reviewed academic journal by an openly transgender author.[156]
  • 1995
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
      • Passed and Came into effect: Sweden (with adoption, replaced with same-sex marriage in Apr 2009)
    • Anti-discrimination legislation: Canada (sexual orientation)
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: Albania and Moldova
    • AIDS Related: Triple combination therapy of drugs such as 3TC, AZT and ddC shown to be effective in treating HIV, the virus responsible for AIDS[157]
    • Other : The Human Rights Campaign drops the word "Fund" from their title and broadens their mission to promote "an America where gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people are ensured equality and embraced as full members of the American family at home, at work and in every community;"
    • LGBT Organizations founded: Gay Advice Darlington/Durham was founded by local gay and bisexual men, and has developed into a Charity that work with and for the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) Community of County Durham and Darlington.
    • Rachel Maddow became the first openly gay or lesbian American to win an international Rhodes scholarship.
  • 1996
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
      • Passed and Came into effect: Iceland (with step-adoption, without joint adoption until 2006, replaced with same-sex marriage in 2010)
    • Unregistered Cohabitation recognition:
      • Passed and Came into effect: Hungary (replaced with registered partnerships in 2009)
    • Restriction of LGBT partnership rights: USA, (federal, see DOMA)
    • Equalization of age of consent: Burkina Faso
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: Romania, Macedonia, Macau
    • The first lesbian wedding on television occurred, held for fictional characters Carol (played by Jane Sibbett) and Susan (played by Jessica Hecht) on the TV show "Friends".[158]
  • 1997
    • Anti-discrimination legislation: Fiji (sexual orientation, constitution) and South Africa (sexual orientation, constitution)
    • Equalization of age of consent: Russia
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: Ecuador, Venezuela and the Australian state of Tasmania
    • Other : Israeli President Ezer Weizman compares homosexuality to alcoholism in front of high school students.[159] The UK extends immigration rights to same-sex couples akin to marriage; Ellen DeGeneres came out as a lesbian, one of the first celebrities to do so.[160] Furthermore, later that year her character Ellen Morgan came out as a lesbian on the TV show "Ellen", making Ellen DeGeneres the first openly lesbian actress to play an openly lesbian character on television.[161][162]
  • Patria Jiménez became the first openly gay person to win a position in the Mexican Congress, doing so for the Party of the Democratic Revolution.[163]
  • 1999
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
      • Passed and Came into effect: US State of California (without adoption, without step adoption until 2001, same-sex marriage in Jun 2008-Nov 2008)
      • Passed and Came into effect: France
    • Equalization of age of consent: Finland (without adoption)
    • LGBT Organizations founded: "Queer Youth Alliance" (UK)
    • Other: Israel’s supreme court recognizes a lesbian partner as another legal mother of her partner’s biological son; South Africa grants spousal immigration benefits to same-sex partners.
    • Steven Greenberg publicly came out as gay in an article in the Israeli newspaper Maariv. As he has a rabbinic ordination from the Orthodox rabbinical seminary of Yeshiva University (RIETS), he is generally described as the first openly gay Orthodox Jewish rabbi.[171] However, some Orthodox Jews, including many rabbis, dispute his being an Orthodox rabbi.[172]
    • In 1999, the first Celebrate Bisexuality Day was organized by Michael Page, Gigi Raven Wilbur, and Wendy Curry.[173]

2000

[编辑]

21st century

[编辑]

2001–2009

[编辑]
全球同性伴侶关系的法律现状
同性性行为合法同性性行为非法
  
同性婚姻法制化
  
违法但未执行或极少执行
  
非婚姻形式的伴侣登记、民事結合
  
有期徒刑
  
承认事實上的同居关系
  
无期徒刑
  
承认外国同婚伴侣但不承认本国
  
死刑但未施行或极少施行
  
有限承认(外国居留权)
  
法外处决
  
无任何保障
  
死刑
  
言論及結社自由受法律限制

(See individual year page for more info)

  • 2001
    • Same-sex marriages laws:
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
      • Came into effect: Germany (without joint adoption until Oct 2004, then with step-adoption)
      • Passed: Finland (without joint adoption until May 2009, then with step-adoption)
    • Limited Partnership laws:
      • Passed and Came into effect: Portugal (without joint adoption) (replaced with marriage 2009)
      • Came into effect: Swiss canton of Geneva (without joint adoption)
    • Anti-discrimination legislation: US states of Rhode Island (private sector, gender identity) and Maryland (private sector, sexual orientation)
    • Equalization of age of consent: Albania, Estonia and Liechtenstein, United Kingdom.
    • Repeal of Sodomy laws: US state of Arizona
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: the rest of the United Kingdom's territories[來源請求]
    • Homosexuality no longer an illness: China
    • Marches and Prides: Protesters disrupt the first Pride march in the Serbian city of Belgrade
  • 2004
    • Same-sex marriage laws:
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
    • Limited Partnership laws:
    • Same-sex couple adoption legalisation: Germany (Step Adoption)
    • Banning of Same-sex marriage: Australia, US states of Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Oregon and Utah
    • Banning of Same-sex marriage and civil unions: US states of Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Virginia and Wisconsin
    • Anti-discrimination legislation: Portugal, US States of Indiana (public sector, gender identity), Louisiana (public sector, sexual orientation) and Maine
    • Equalization of age of consent: Lithuania
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: Cape Verde, Marshall Islands and San Marino
    • Other: UK Gender Recognition Bill, James McGreevey becomes the first openly gay Governor in U.S. history.[來源請求]
    • The first all-transgender performance of the Vagina Monologues was held. The monologues were read by eighteen notable transgender women, and a new monologue revolving around the experiences and struggles of transgender women was included.[179]
    • Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon became the first same-sex couple to be legally married in the United States,[180] when San Francisco mayor Gavin Newsom allowed city hall to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples.[181] However, all same-sex marriages done in 2004 in California were annulled.[182] After the California Supreme Court decision in 2008 that granted same-sex couples in California the right to marry, Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon remarried, and were again the first same-sex couple in the state to marry.[183][184] Later in 2008 Prop 8 illegalized same-sex marriage in California,[185] but the marriages that occurred between the California Supreme Court decision legalizing same-sex marriage and the approval of Prop 8 illegalizing it are still considered valid, including the marriage of Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon.[186] However, Del Martin died in 2008.[187]
    • James McGreevey, then governor of New Jersey, came out as gay, thus becoming the first openly gay state governor in United States history.[188] He resigned soon after.[188]
  • 2005
    • Same-sex marriage laws:
      • Passed and Came into effect: Canada, Spain (with joint adoption)
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
    • Same-sex couple adoption legalisation: UK Subdivisions of England and Wales
    • Banning of Same-sex marriage: Latvia and Uganda
    • Banning of Same-sex marriage and civil unions: US states of Kansas and Texas
    • Anti-discrimination legislation: US States of Illinois (private sector, sexual orientation and gender identity) and Maine (private sector, sexual orientation and gender identity)[來源請求]
    • Repeal of Sodomy laws: Puerto Rico
    • Other: two gay male teenagers, Mahmoud Asgari and Ayaz Marhoni, are executed in Iran, André Boisclair is chosen leader of the Parti Québécois, becoming the first openly gay man elected as the leader of a major political party in North America. Bonnie Bleskachek became the first openly lesbian fire chief of a major metropolitan area in the United States (specifically, Minneapolis.) The Roman Catholic Church issues an instruction prohibiting any individuals who "present deep-seated homosexual tendencies or support the so-called 'gay culture'" from joining the priesthood.[190]
    • The Simpsons became the first cartoon series to dedicate an entire episode to the topic of same-sex marriage.[191]
  • 2007
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
    • Limited Partnership laws:
    • Anti-discrimination legislation: United Kingdom[200] (sexual orientation) and US states of Colorado (private sector, sexual orientation and gender identity), Iowa (private sector, sexual orientation and gender identity), Kansas (public sector, sexual orientation and gender identity), Michigan (public sector, gender identity), Ohio (public sector, sexual orientation and gender identity), Oregon (private sector, sexual orientation and gender identity) and Vermont (private sector, gender identity)
    • Equalization of age of consent: Portugal, South Africa, UK territory of Jersey,[201][202] Vanuatu
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: Nepal and New Zealand territories of Niue and Tokelau
    • Marches and Prides: the first ever gay pride parade in a Muslim country is held in Istanbul, Turkey;[203]
    • Other: on 9 August 2007, the Logo cable channel hosts the first presidential forum in the United States focusing specifically on LGBT issues. Six Democratic Party candidates participate in the event. GOP candidates were asked to attend but turned it down. On 29 November, the first foreign gay wedding was held in Hanoi, Vietnam between a Japanese and an Irish national. The wedding raised much attention in the gay and lesbian community in Vietnam.[204]
    • From 2007 to 2008 actress Candis Cayne played Carmelita Rainer, a transgender woman having an affair with married New York Attorney General Patrick Darling (played by William Baldwin), on the ABC prime time drama Dirty Sexy Money.[205][206][207] The role made Cayne the first openly transgender actress to play a recurring transgender character in prime time.[205][206][207]
    • On 29 November, the first foreign gay wedding was held in Hanoi, Vietnam between a Japanese and an Irish national. The wedding raised much attention in the gay and lesbian community in Vietnam.[204]
    • Jalda Rebling, a German woman born in Holland and ordained in America, became the first openly lesbian cantor ordained by the Jewish Renewal movement.
    • Rabbi Toba Spitzer became the first openly lesbian or gay person to head a rabbinical assembly when she was elected president of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical Assembly at the group's annual convention, held in Scottsdale, Arizona.[208]
    • Joy Ladin became the first openly transgender professor at an Orthodox institution (Stern College for Women of Yeshiva University).[209][210]
  • Amaranta Gómez Regalado (for México Posible) became the first transsexual person to appear in the Mexican Congress.
  • Ellen DeGeneres became the first open lesbian to host the Academy Awards.[211]
  • 2008
    • Same-sex marriage laws:
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
    • Limited Partnership laws:
    • Banning of Same-sex marriage: US states of Arizona and California
    • Banning of Same-sex marriage and civil unions: US state of Florida
    • Same-sex couple adoption legalisation: Uruguay
    • Banning of Same-sex adoption: Arkansas (struck down by the Arkansas Supreme Court in 2011)
    • Anti-discrimination legislation: California[來源請求]
    • Equalization of age of consent: Nicaragua, Panama
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: Nicaragua and Panama
    • Marches and Prides: the first ever gay pride parade in Bulgaria
    • Other: Kosovo declares itself to be an independent country with a new constitution that includes mention of "sexual orientation", the first of its kind in Eastern Europe,[來源請求] Portland voters elect Sam Adams (Oregon politician) mayor, making it the largest city in the US with an openly gay mayor (the next largest is Providence, Rhode Island), 3 June the first two same-sex civil marriages (two men and two women)take place in Greece on the island of Tilos, the supreme court prosecutor and the minister of Justice claim the marriages are null and void.
    • Silverton, Oregon elected Stu Rasmussen as the first openly transgender mayor in America.[212][213]
    • Angie Zapata, a transgender woman, was murdered in Greeley, Colorado. Allen Andrade was convicted of first-degree murder and committing a bias-motivated crime, because he killed her after he learned that she was transgender. This case was the first in the nation to get a conviction for a hate crime involving a transgender victim.[214] Angie Zapata's story and murder were featured on Univision's "Aqui y Ahora" television show on 1 November 2009.
    • The first ever U.S. Congressional hearing on discrimination against transgender people in the workplace was held, by the House Subcommittee on Health, Employment, Labor, and Pensions.[215]
    • Rachel Maddow became the first openly gay or lesbian anchor of a major prime-time news program in the United States when she began hosting The Rachel Maddow Show on U.S. cable network MSNBC.[216]
    • Annise Parker was elected as the first openly gay or lesbian mayor of Houston, Texas.[217]
    • Kate Brown was elected as the Oregon Secretary of State in the 2008 elections, becoming America's first openly bisexual statewide officeholder.[218][219][220][221]
  • 2009
    • Same-sex marriage laws:
      • Passed and Came into effect: Sweden[222] (with joint adoption), US states of Iowa,[223] and Vermont[224]
      • Came into effect: Norway (with joint adoption) and same-sex marriage in the Coquille Indian Tribe on the southern Oregon coast,[225] In 2009 Kitzen and Jeni Branting married in the Coquille Indian tribe's Coos Bay plankhouse, a 3-year-old meeting hall built in traditional Coquille style with cedar plank walls. They were the first same-sex couple to have their marriage recognized by the tribe, of which Kitzen was a member.[226][227]
      • Passed: Mexican City of Mexico City (with joint adoption), US states and districts of New Hampshire (step adoption only), Maine[228] (never came into effect), Washington, D.C.[229]
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
      • Passed and Came into effect: Hungary (without joint adoption), Colombia (expansion of previous rights without joint adoption), US states of Nevada and Washington[230] (expansion of previous rights)
      • Passed: Austria (without joint adoption)
    • Limited Partnership laws:
    • Abroad Union recognition: Japan,[231] US district of Washington, D.C.
    • Same-sex couple adoption legalisation: Finland[232] (step adoption), UK Subdivision of Scotland
    • Banning of Same-sex marriage: Maine[233]
    • Anti-discrimination legislation: Serbia, US state of Delaware (private sector, sexual orientation), USA Matthew Shepard Act.[234]
    • End to ban on gay people in the military: Argentina, Philippines, Uruguay
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: India[235]
    • Other: Iceland elects the first openly gay head of government in the world, Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir;[236] On 10 March 2009, in Tel Aviv, Uzi Even and his life partner was the first same-sex male couple in Israel whose right of adoption has been legally acknowledged.;[237] (26 May), the California Supreme Court upholds Proposition 8, the ballot initiative that banned same-sex marriage in November 2008, with a 6–1 vote;[238] the Canadian province of Alberta becomes the last province to include the words "sexual orientation" in the Human Rights Act;[239] Washington state voters approve keeping same-sex relationship rights as Domestic Partnerships by 51 percent; (12 Dec), Annise Parker is elected mayor of Houston, Texas, which becomes the largest city in the United States with an openly gay mayor[240] Welsh rugby star Gareth Thomas becomes the first known top-level professional male athlete in a team sport to come out while still active.[241]
    • Diego Sanchez became the first openly transgender person to work on Capitol Hill; he was hired as a legislative assistant for Barney Frank.[242] Sanchez was also the first transgender person on the Democratic National Committee's (DNC) Platform Committee in 2008.[243][244]
    • Barbra “Babs” Siperstein was nominated and confirmed as an at-large member of the Democratic National Committee, becoming its first openly transgender member.[245]
    • Carol Ann Duffy was chosen as the first openly lesbian or gay Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom.[246]

2010s

[编辑]

(See individual year page for more info)

  • 2010
    • Same-sex marriage laws:
      • Passed and Came into effect: Portugal (without joint adoption), Iceland (with joint adoption), Argentina (with adoption)[247]
      • Came into effect: Mexican City of Mexico City (with joint adoption). US state of New Hampshire (step adoption only) and Washington, D.C.[229]
      • Recognition: The Mexican Supreme Court rules that marriages contracted in Mexico City are valid throughout the country, although no other jurisdiction is required to perform them. Australian State of Tasmania recognises same-marriages performed in other jurisdictions.
      • Other: U.S. state of California, United States District Judge Vaughn Walker strikes down California's Proposition 8 as violative of the United States Constitution's Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses.[248]
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
      • Came into effect: Austria (without adoption and IVF access rights)
      • Passed: Ireland (without adoption rights)
    • Limited Partnership laws:
      • Passed and Came into effect: Australian state of New South Wales (without joint adoption until Sep 2010)
    • Same-sex couple adoption legislation: Australian state of New South Wales, Denmark
    • End to ban of same-sex couple adoption: US states of Arkansas and Florida
    • End to ban of gay people in the military: Serbia
    • End to ban of trans people in the military: Australia
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: Fiji[249]
    • Marches and Prides: the first ever legal gay pride parade in Russia, held in St. Petersburg
    • Tyler Clementi committed suicide
    • Guinness World Records recognized transgender man Thomas Beatie as the world's "First Married Man to Give Birth."[250]
    • Amanda Simpson became the first openly transgender presidential appointee in America when she was appointed as senior technical adviser in the Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security.[251]
    • Kye Allums became the first openly transgender athlete to play in NCAA basketball.[252][253] He was a transgender man who played on George Washington University's women's team.[254][255]
  • Victoria Kolakowski became the first openly transgender judge in America.[256]
  • Mary Albing became the first openly lesbian minister ordained by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, serving the Lutheran Church of Christ the Redeemer on the south side of Minneapolis.[257]
  • Chai Feldblum, who was openly lesbian, became the first openly LGBT person to serve on the EEOC.[258]
  • Donna Ryu became the first Asian-American woman, first Korean American, and first lesbian to be appointed as a judge of the United States District Court, Northern District of California.[259]
  • 2011
    • Same-sex marriage laws:
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: Mozambique
    • End to ban on gay people in the military: USA (see Don't Ask, don't tell)
    • Tony Briffa, believed to be the world’s first intersex mayor, elected in the City of Hobsons Bay in the suburbs of Melbourne, Australia, at the end of November.[262]
    • Elio Di Rupo, first openly-gay male head of government, becomes Prime Minister of Belgium, 6 December.
    • Chaz Bono appeared on the 13th season of the US version of Dancing with the Stars in 2011. This was the first time an openly transgender man starred on a major network television show for something unrelated to being transgender.[263]
    • Harmony Santana became the first openly transgender actress to receive a major acting award nomination; she was nominated by the Independent Spirit Awards as Best Supporting Actress for the movie Gun Hill Road.[264]
    • The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) voted to allow the ordination of openly gay and lesbian ministers.[265]
    • Rachel Isaacs became the first openly lesbian rabbi ordained by the Conservative movement’s Jewish Theological Seminary.[266]
    • Petty Officer 2nd Class Marissa Gaeta of California and Petty Officer 3rd Class Citlalic Snell of Los Angeles became the first same-sex couple chosen to share the first kiss upon a U.S. Navy ship's return.[267][268]
    • Brenda Sue Fulton was named to the West Point Board of Visitors, making her the first openly gay member of the board that advises the Academy.[269]
    • Brooke (last name withheld) was hired as the New York Fire Department's first openly transgender employee.[270]
  • 2012
    • Same-sex marriage laws:
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
      • Came into effect: U.S. State of Hawaii
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: São Tomé and Príncipe
    • The first gay Israeli couple was granted a divorce by an Israeli family court. The divorce of Tel Aviv University Professor Avi Even, the first openly gay Knesset member, and Dr. Amit Kama was granted on Sunday by the Ramat Gan Family Court, according to Haaretz, which ordered the Interior Minister to register their status as divorced.[271]
    • The U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development's Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity issued a regulation to prohibit LGBT discrimination in federally assisted housing programs. The new regulations ensure that the Department's core housing programs are open to all eligible persons, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity.
    • Katie Ricks became the first open lesbian ordained by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)[272]
    • Barack Obama became the first U.S. president to publicly announce support for same-sex marriage on 9 May.[273][274]
    • Taiwan's first same-sex Buddhist wedding was held for Fish Huang and her partner You Ya-ting, with Buddhist master Shih Chao-hui presiding over the ritual.[275]
    • City Councilmember Marlene Pray joined the Doylestown, Pennsylvania council in 2012, though she resigned in 2013; she was the first openly bisexual office holder in Pennsylvania.[276][277]
    • Tammy Baldwin was elected as the first openly lesbian or gay U.S. Senator.[278]
    • Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) became the first openly bisexual person elected to the US Congress.[279]
    • Stacie Laughton became the first openly transgender person elected to any American state legislature when she won a seat in the New Hampshire House of Representatives.[280] However, she resigned from the New Hampshire state legislature before she took office, after it was revealed that she had served four months in Belknap County House of Corrections following a 2008 credit card fraud conviction.[281][282]
    • San Francisco voted to become the first U.S. city to provide and cover the cost of sex reassignment surgeries for uninsured transgender residents.[283]
    • Mark Pocan was elected in Wisconsin’s 2nd Congressional District, becoming the first openly gay candidate who will follow an openly gay member of the U.S. Congress (in this case Tammy Baldwin).[284]
    • Sean Patrick Maloney became the first openly gay candidate elected to represent New York in Congress.[285]
    • Mark Takano became the first openly gay person of color to win election to the U.S. House. He was elected to represent California’s 41st Congressional District.[284]
    • Josh Boschee was elected as North Dakota's first openly gay legislator.[286]
    • Stephen Skinner was elected as West Virginia's first openly gay state legislator.[287]
    • Jacob Candelaria was elected as New Mexico's first openly gay male state legislator.[288]
    • Brian Sims became Pennsylvania's first openly gay state legislator who was out when he was elected.[289]
    • After Brian Sims was elected but before he took office, Rep. Mike Fleck came out as gay, making him Pennsylvania's first openly gay state legislator.[290]
    • David Richardson was elected as Florida's first openly gay state legislator.[291]
    • Colorado Democrats elected Mark Ferrandino as the first openly gay House speaker in state history.[292]
    • Tina Kotek is elected the first openly gay House speaker in the State of Oregon.[293]
    • Maine, Maryland, and Washington became the first states to pass same-sex marriage by popular vote.[294] Maine was the very first state to do so, followed by Maryland.[295]
    • The first same-sex marriage at the U.S. Military Academy was held for a young lieutenant and her partner (Ellen Schick and Shannon Simpson) at the Old Cadet Chapel in West Point’s cemetery.[296][297]
    • The first same-sex marriage at the U.S. Military Academy's Cadet Chapel at West Point (not to be confused with the Old Cadet Chapel) was held for Brenda Sue Fulton and Penelope Dara Gnesin.[296][298] Fulton was a veteran and the communications director of an organization called Outserve, which represents actively serving gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender military personnel.[298]
    • The first same-sex couple became engaged in the White House (Ben Schock and Matthew Phelps).[299]
    • Air Force Col. Ginger Wallace became the first known out member of the U.S. military to have their same-sex partner participate in the pinning ceremony tradition that had been reserved for spouses and family members. Her partner of 10 years, Kathy Knopf, pinned colonel wings on Wallace days after the two attended President Obama's State of The Union address as a guest of the First Lady.[300]
    • At a ceremony in Arlington, Army Reserve officer Tammy Smith became the first openly gay, active duty general in American history. Smith was promoted to brigadier general at a private ceremony at the Women's Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery.[301]
    • Navy Chief Elny McKinney and Anacelly McKinney became the first known same-sex couple to marry on a U.S. military base. They were wed at Naval Base Point Loma in San Diego.[302]
    • Kate McKinnon became Saturday Night Live's first openly lesbian cast member; Danitra Vance never disclosed her sexual orientation publicly, but was revealed to be a lesbian when she died.[303][304]
    • On 28 June 2012 Diana King declared "Yes I am a Lesbian" to her fans from her official facebook page, thus becoming the first Jamaican artist to ever publicly come out.[305][306]
    • California became the first state to sign a ban on therapy that claims to convert gay people into heterosexual. The California law, enacted in 2012, is as of 2013 held up in federal courts on first amendment grounds.[307][308]
    • Orlando Cruz became the world's first professional boxer to come out as gay.[309]
    • On September 18, 2012, Berkeley, California became what is thought to be the first city in the U.S. to officially proclaim a day recognizing bisexuals.[310] The Berkeley City Council unanimously and without discussion declared Sept. 23 as Bisexual Pride and Bi Visibility Day.[311]
    • Emily Aviva Kapor, who had been ordained privately by a Conservadox rabbi in 2005, began living as a woman in 2012, thus becoming the first openly transgender female rabbi.[312]
  • 2013
    • Same-sex marriage laws:
    • Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:
      • Came into effect: U.S. State of Colorado
    • Same-sex couple adoption legalisation: New Zealand, Gibraltar, France
    • Decriminalisation of homosexuality: Benin
    • Recriminalisation of homosexuality: India
    • Anti-discrimination legislation:
      • For sexual orientation and gender identity: Cyprus, Puerto Rico
      • For gender identity: Delaware
    • Anti-discrimination executive action: Virginia
    • Barack Obama mentioned the word "gay" and the issue of gay rights for the first time in a speech at the U.S. presidential swearing in; specifically, he did so in his inaugural address.[320]
    • Kathleen Wynne became the first openly LGBT premier of a Canadian province, namely Ontario, after defeating Sandra Pupatello in the third round of voting of the Ontario Liberal party's leadership race on January 26, 2013. Sworn in on February 11, 2013, she is the party's first openly LGBT leader and Ontario's first female premier.[來源請求]
    • Robbie Rogers announced he was gay on February 15, 2013, becoming the only male fully capped international association footballer to do so.
    • Jason Collins on April 29, 2013, became the first active male professional athlete in a major North American team sport to publicly come out as gay.
    • Rep. Mark Pocan's spouse Philip Frank became the first same-sex spouse of a federal lawmaker to officially receive a House Spouse ID.[321][322] In 2009, Marlon Reis, the spouse of Rep. Jared Polis (D-Colo.), was issued a congressional spouse ID, but later card services told him that he had been given the designation accidentally.[322]
    • For the first time the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs decided to allow the same-sex spouse of a military veteran to be buried in a U.S. national cemetery. VA Secretary Eric Shinseki gave permission for retired Air Force officer Linda Campbell, 66, to bury the ashes of her same-sex spouse Nancy Lynchild at Williamette National Cemetery in Oregon.[323]
    • Autumn Sandeen, a U.S. veteran and transgender woman, received a letter from a Navy official stating, “Per your request the Defense Enrollment Eligibility Reporting System (DEERS) has been updated to show your gender as female effective April 12th, 2013.” Allyson Robinson of Outserve declared, "To our knowledge, this is the first time that the Department of Defense has recognized and affirmed a change of gender for anyone affiliated, in a uniformed capacity — in this case a military retiree."[324]
    • The first same-sex kiss ever on a Eurovision stage occurred at the 2013 Eurovision Song Contest when Krista Siegfrids, who sang "Marry Me", ended her semi-final performance by kissing one of her female dancers.[325]
    • Dr. Saul Levin was named on May 15, 2013 as the new chief executive officer and medical director of the American Psychiatric Association, making him the first known openly gay person to head the APA.[326]
    • Ukraine had its first gay pride march, which was held in Kiev.[327]
    • Robbie Rogers joined the Los Angeles Galaxy, making him the first openly gay male athlete to compete in Major League Soccer.[328]
    • Rehana Kausar and Sobia Kamar, both from Pakistan, became the first Muslim lesbian couple to enter into civil partnership in the United Kingdom.[329]
    • Fallon Fox came out as transgender, thus becoming the first openly transgender athlete in mixed martial arts history.[330]
    • Jallen Messersmith of Benedictine College in Atchison, Kan., came out and is believed to be the first openly gay player in U.S. men's college basketball.[331]
    • Guy Erwin became the first openly gay bishop to be elected by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America; he was elected to the Southwest California Synod of the ELCA.[332]
    • Major General Patricia “Trish” Rose became the first openly lesbian two-star general in the U.S. Air Force, and the highest ranking openly gay officer in the entire U.S. military at the time.[333]
    • Kristin Beck, formerly Chris Beck, came out as the first openly transgendered retired Navy SEAL.[334]
    • The Bi Writers Association, which promotes bisexual writers, books, and writing, announced the winners of its first Bisexual Book Awards.[335] An awards ceremony was held at the Nuyorican Poets Café in New York City.[335]
    • The U.S. Senate confirmed Nitza Quiñones Alejandro to a federal judgeship, making her the first openly gay Latina to hold such a post.[336]
    • Cason Crane became the first openly gay man to summit the Seven Summits and the first the bring the rainbow flag to the summit of Mt. Everest.[337]
    • U.S. Air Force Under Secretary Eric Fanning took over as acting secretary of the U.S. Air Force, becoming the highest ranking openly LGBT official at the Department of Defense; he is openly gay.[338]
    • The Directors Guild Of America elected Paris Barclay as its first black and first openly gay president.[339]
    • Julian Marsh and Traian Povov become the first married gay couple to have a green card application approved, in this case for Julian Marsh.[340]
    • Kristin Perry and Sandra Stier became the first same-sex couple to be married in California since Proposition 8 was overturned.[341]
    • Daniel Kawczynski became the first MP in Britain to come out as bisexual.[342]
    • A married lesbian couple in Colorado became the first to receive a marriage-based green card, making Cathy Davis the first same-sex spouse to become a lawful permanent resident of the United States.[343]
    • Maureen Le Marinel became the first openly lesbian union president elected in Britain.[344] She was elected to the presidency of Unison, one of Britain's largest trade unions.[344]
    • Same Love, a hit single from Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, became the first Top 40 song in the U.S. to promote and celebrate same-sex marriage.[345]
    • For the first time, the California Department of Education's list of recommended books for grades Pre-K-through-12 included a book with a transgender theme, I Am J by Cris Beam.[346]
    • Benjamin Medrano was elected as the first openly gay mayor in Mexico's history, being elected mayor of the township of Fresnillo.[347]
    • The first UFC match between two openly-gay fighters, Liz Carmouche and Jessica Andrade, was held.[348]
    • Although same-sex marriage is illegal in Pennsylvania as of July 2013, in that month Loreen Bloodgood married Alicia Terrizzi, making them the first same-sex couple to marry in Pennsylvania; the Montgomery County register of wills, D. Bruce Hanes, had said that his office would issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples.[349][350]
    • Although same-sex marriage is illegal in Pennsylvania as of August 2013, in that month Mayor John Fetterman officiated the first same-sex marriage in Allegheny County, between John Kandray and Bill Gray.[351]
    • California enacted America's first law protecting transgender students; the law, called the School Success and Opportunity Act, declares that every public school student in California from kindergarten to 12th grade must be “permitted to participate in sex-segregated school programs and activities, including athletic teams and competitions, and use facilities consistent with his or her gender identity, irrespective of the gender listed on the pupil’s records.”[352]
    • New Jersey became the second state, after California, to sign a ban on therapy that claims to convert gay people into heterosexual. The California law, enacted in 2012, is as of 2013 held up in federal courts on first amendment grounds.[307][308]
    • Darren Young (real name: Fred Rosser) became the first active professional wrestler to come out as gay.[353]
    • Russia's government adopted a federal bill banning the distribution of "propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations" to minors. The law imposes heavy fines for using the media or internet to promote "non-traditional relations".
    • Master Sgt. Angela Shunk and her wife, Tech. Sgt. Stacey Shunk, became the first same-sex couple to receive an assignment together under the U.S. Air Force’s Join Spouse program.[354]
    • Jennifer Pritzker came out as transgender in 2013 and thus became the world's first openly transgender billionaire.[355]
    • On Celebrate Bisexuality Day, the White House held a closed-door meeting with almost 30 bisexual advocates so they could meet with government officials and discuss issues of specific importance to the bisexual community; this was the first bi-specific event ever hosted by any White House.[356][357]
    • Movie director Kim Jho Gwang-soo and his partner Kim Seung-hwan became the first South Korean gay couple to publicly wed, although it was not a legally recognized marriage.[358]
    • Harvey Milk was chosen as the first openly LGBT political official to be featured on an American postage stamp.[359]
    • Carol McCrory and Brenda Clark became the first same-sex couple to have their marriage application accepted by Buncombe County Register of Deeds Drew Resigner, which makes them the first same-sex couple to have their marriage application accepted in the South.[360]
    • Andy Herren became the first openly gay winner of the American version of the "Big Brother" reality show.[361]
    • The first gay pride parade in Montenegro was held.[362]
    • The first gay pride week in Curacao was held.[363]
    • The first Indo-American lesbian wedding was held.[364] It was held in Los Angeles.[365]
    • The first televised Romanian same-sex wedding was held.[366] It was between two men, and was done on the reality show Four Weddings and a Challenge.[366]
    • The Portland Trailblazers became the first NBA team to support same-sex marriage.[367][368]
    • Todd Hughes became the first openly gay U.S. circuit judge.[369]
    • The first United Nations ministerial meeting on the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals was held.[370] Representatives from the US, France, Argentina, Brazil, Croatia, the Netherlands, Norway, Japan, New Zealand and the EU, along with executive directors of Human Rights Watch and the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission reaffirmed their commitments to working together to end discrimination and violence towards the LGBT community.[370] UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay delivered remarks [press release] commending the LGBT community and praising the fact that, "many countries have embarked on historic reforms—strengthening anti-discrimination laws, combating hate crime against LGBT people and sensitizing public opinion." [370]
    • New Jersey held its first legal same-sex marriages.[371]
    • Rabbi Deborah Waxman was elected as the President of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College.[372][373] As the President, she is believed to be the first woman and first lesbian to lead a Jewish congregational union, and the first female rabbi and first lesbian to lead a Jewish seminary; RRC is both a congregational union and a seminary.[372][374]
    • A six-year-old girl named Luana, who was born a boy, became the first transgender child in Argentina to have her new name officially changed on her identity documents.[375] She is believed to be the youngest to benefit from the country’s new Gender Identity Law, which was approved in May 2012.[375]
    • Q Radio, which went on the airwaves in September, claims to be India’s first radio station which caters to the country’s lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgender people.[376]
    • Jennifer Finney Boylan was chosen as the first openly transgender co-chair of GLAAD's National Board of Directors.[377]
    • On 31 October 2013 Paris Lees became the first openly transgender panellist to appear on the BBC's Question Time programme, drawing praise from commentators who included former Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott and the Labour Party deputy leader Harriet Harman.[378]
    • Stephen Alexander, of Rhode Island, became the first high school coach to come out publicly as transgender.[379]
    • Nikki Sinclaire came out as transgender, thus becoming the United Kingdom’s first openly transgender Parliamentarian.[380]
    • San Francisco's first Project Homeless Connect for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people was held.[381]

See also

[编辑]

Footnotes

[编辑]
  1. ^ Margherita Mussi, Earliest Italy: An Overview of the Italian Paleolithic and Mesolithic (Kluwer Academic, 2002), pp. 340ff., especially pp. 343–344.
  2. ^ Lauren E. Talalay, "The Gendered Sea: Iconography, Gender, and Mediterranean Prehistory," in The Archaeology of Mediterranean Prehistory (Blackwell, 2005), pp. 130–148, especially p. 136.
  3. ^ Grave of stone age transsexual excavated in Prague. Archeology News Network. [6 July 2013]. 
  4. ^ Greenberg, David, The Construction of Homosexuality, 1988; Parkinson, R.B.,‘Homosexual’ Desire and Middle Kingdom Literature Journal of Egyptian Archaeology, vol. 81, 1995, p. 57-76; Montserrat, Dominic, Akhenaten: History, Fantasy, and Ancient Egypt, 2000. More details at [1] & [2]
  5. ^ Lynn Meskell, when writing about homosexuality, calls it "Another well documented example" (Archaeologies of social life: age, sex, class et cetera in ancient Egypt, Wiley-Blackwell, 1999, p.95)
  6. ^ Kenneth Dover, Greek Homosexuality (Harvard University Press, 1978, 1898), pp. 205-7
  7. ^ Boswell, John (1994). Same-Sex Unions in Pre-Modern Europe. New York: Vintage Books
  8. ^ Stephan Steingräber, Abundance of Life: Etruscan Wall Painting (Getty Publications, 2006), pp. 67, 70, 91–92; Otto Brendel, Etruscan Art, translated by R. Serra Ridgway (Yale University Press, 1978, 1995), pp. 165–170; Fred S. Kleiner, A History of Roman Art (Wadsworth, 2007, 2010), p. xxxii.
  9. ^ Symposium. Symposium 189c. [18 September 2011].  Authors list列表中的|first1=缺少|last1= (帮助)
  10. ^ Symposium 201d. Symposium.  Authors list列表中的|first1=缺少|last1= (帮助)
  11. ^ Symposium 214e. Symposium.  Authors list列表中的|first1=缺少|last1= (帮助)
  12. ^ 12.00 12.01 12.02 12.03 12.04 12.05 12.06 12.07 12.08 12.09 12.10 12.11 12.12 12.13 12.14 12.15 12.16 Fone, Byrne R. S. Homophobia: a history. New York: Metropolitan Books. 2000. ISBN 0-8050-4559-7.  引用错误:带有name属性“Fone”的<ref>标签用不同内容定义了多次
  13. ^ Haggerty, George E. Gay histories and cultures: an encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. 2000: 418. ISBN 978-0-8153-1880-4. 
  14. ^ Thomas A.J. McGinn, Prostitution, Sexuality and the Law in Ancient Rome (Oxford University Press, 1998), pp. 140–141; Amy Richlin, The Garden of Priapus: Sexuality and Aggression in Roman Humor (Oxford University Press, 1983, 1992), pp. 86, 224; John Boswell, Christianity, Social Tolerance, and Homosexuality: Gay People in Western Europe from the Beginning of the Christian Era to the Fourteenth Century (University of Chicago Press, 1980), pp. 63, 67–68; Craig Williams, Roman Homosexuality: Ideologies of Masculinity in Classical Antiquity(Oxford University Press, 1999), p. 116.
  15. ^ James L. Butrica, "Some Myths and Anomalies in the Study of Roman Sexuality," in Same-Sex Desire and Love in Greco-Roman Antiquity and in the Classical Tradition (Haworth Press, 2005), p. 231.
  16. ^ Eva Cantarella, Bisexuality in the Ancient World (Yale University Press, 1992, 2002, originally published 1988 in Italian), p. 120; Edward Courtney, The Fragmentary Latin Poets (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992), p. 75.
  17. ^ Ornamentis Augustarum: Suetonius, Life of Nero 28–29, discussed by Craig A. Williams, Roman Homosexuality (Oxford University Press, 1999), p. pp. 284, 400, 424.
  18. ^ Dio Cassius, Epitome of Book 68.6.4; 68.21.2–6.21.3
  19. ^ Apologia I, 27, UTA, RANKE-HEINEMANN, Eunuchi per il regno dei cieli, Rizzoli 1990, p. 66.
  20. ^ Augustan History, Life of Elagabalus 10
  21. ^ Theodosian Code 9.8.3: "When a man marries and is about to offer himself to men in womanly fashion (quum vir nubit in feminam viris porrecturam), what does he wish, when sex has lost all its significance; when the crime is one which it is not profitable to know; when Venus is changed to another form; when love is sought and not found? We order the statutes to arise, the laws to be armed with an avenging sword, that those infamous persons who are now, or who hereafter may be, guilty may be subjected to exquisite punishment.
  22. ^ (Theodosian Code 9.7.6): All persons who have the shameful custom of condemning a man's body, acting the part of a woman's to the sufferance of alien sex (for they appear not to be different from women), shall expiate a crime of this kind in avenging flames in the sight of the people.
  23. ^ Evagrius Ecclesiastical History 3.39
  24. ^ Justinian Novels 77, 144
  25. ^ Visigothic Code 3.5.5, 3.5.6; "The doctrine of the orthodox faith requires us to place our censure upon vicious practices, and to restrain those who are addicted to carnal offences. For we counsel well for the benefit of our people and our country, when we take measures to utterly extirpate the crimes of wicked men, and put an end to the evil deeds of vice. For this reason we shall attempt to abolish the horrible crime of sodomy, which is as contrary to Divine precept as it is to chastity. And although the authority of the Holy Scriptures, and the censure of earthly laws, alike, prohibit offences of this kind, it is nevertheless necessary to condemn them by a new decree; lest if timely correction be deferred, still greater vices may arise. Therefore, we establish by this law, that if any man whosoever, of any age, or race, whether he belongs to the clergy, or to the laity, should be convicted, by competent evidence, of the commission of the crime of sodomy, he shall, by order of the king, or of any judge, not only suffer emasculation, but also the penalty prescribed by ecclesiastical decree for such offences, and promulgated in the third year of our reign."
  26. ^ David Bromell. Who's Who in Gay and Lesbian History, London, 2000 (Ed. Wotherspoon and Aldrich)
  27. ^ 27.0 27.1 6. Homoerotic, Homosexual, and Ambisexual Behaviors
  28. ^ PETRI DAMIANI Liber gomorrhianus , ad Leonem IX Rom. Pon. in Patrologiae Cursus completus...accurante J.P., MIGNE, series secunda, tomus CXLV, col. 161; CANOSA, Romano, Storia di una grande paura La sodomia a Firenze e a Venezia nel quattrocento, Feltrinelli, Milano 1991, pp.13–14
  29. ^ Opera Omnia.
  30. ^ storia completa qui
  31. ^ Crompton, Louis. Homosexuality and Civilization. Cambridge & London: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2003
  32. ^ Louis Crompton, Homosexuality and civilisation, Harvard University, 2003
  33. ^ della Chiesa, Angela Ottino. The Complete Paintings of Leonardo da Vinci. 1967: 83. 
  34. ^ Diarmaid MacCulloch (2003). Reformation: A History. pg. 95. MacCulloch says "he fell in love" and further adds in a footnote "There has been much modern embarrassment and obfuscation on Erasmus and Rogerus, but see the sensible comment in J.Huizinga, Erasmus of Rotterdam (London, 1952), pp. 11–12, and from Geoffrey Nutuall, Journal of Ecclesiastical History 26 (1975), 403
  35. ^ Michael Rocke, Forbidden Friendships: Homosexuality and Male culture in Renaissance Florence, Oxford University Press, 1996
  36. ^ I. Arnaldi, La vita violenta di Benvenuto Cellini, Bari, 1986
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References

[编辑]
  • Archer, Bert (2004). The End of Gay: And the Death of Heterosexuality. Thunder's Mouth Press. ISBN 1-56025-611-7.
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  • Gallo, Marcia M. (2007) Different Daughters: A History of the Daughters of Bilitis and the Rise of the Lesbian Rights Movement. California: Seal Press. ISBN 1580052525
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  • Stryker, Susan (2008). Transgender History. New York, Seal Press. ISBN 978-1580052245
[编辑]

Template:LGBT history