G: Homosexual Individuals

Chaplais, Pierre, Piers Gaveston: Edward II's Adoptive Brother, (Oxford: 199?)
Argues that Edward II was not homosexual , and that Gaveston was his adoptive brother.
Cuttino, G.P. & T.W. Lyman, "Where is Edward II?", Speculum 53 (1978), pp. 522-544
Daniel, Marc, "Was St. Thomas a Homosexual", trans. Marcel Martin, Homophile Studies: ONE Institute Quarterly 19 (1963), pp. 68-71
Denies Jean Anouilh's portrayal of Becket and Henry II as lovers.
Gillingham, John, "Richard I and Berengaria of Navarre", Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 53:128 (1980), pp. 157-173
The alliance with Navarre vs. France and Richard's supposed homosexuality.
Gilman, Sander L., "Leonardo sees himself: reading Leonardo's first representations of human sexuality", Social Research 54:1 (1987), pp. 149-171
Goldberg, J., "Society and Sodomy: The Case of Christopher Marlowe", Southwest Review 69 (1984?), pp. 371-378
Graham, James, The Homosexual Kings of England, (London: Universal Tandem Pub. Co, 1968)
brief and superficial: William II, Richard I, Edward II, James I and William III.
McGuire, B., "Love, Friendship and Sex in the 11th Century: The Experience of Anselm", Studia Theologia 28 (1974), pp. 11-32
Looks at spiritual/erotic affections. Finds Anselm unobsessed with male sexuality.
Russo, William, "Leonardo: A Brush with Gayness", In Touch no. 37 (Sept-Oct, 1978), pp. 39, 92-95
Published records show 1474 sodomy charge against Leonardo. He later took boys as lovers.
Russo, William, "Caravaggio", In Touch 39 (Jan-Feb 1979), pp. 74-75, 78-79
Russo, William, "Edward II, England's Gay King", In Touch 43 (Sept-Oct 1979), pp. 61-63
Southern, Richard W., St. Anselm and his Biographer, (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1963)
pp.67-76 on the cult of Ganymede
Hosted by uCoz