Ancient Greece and Rome Greece Greek historian
Plutarch recounts that Periander, the tyrant of
Ambracia, asked his "boy", "Aren't you pregnant yet?" in the presence of other people, causing the boy to kill him in revenge for being treated as if effeminate or a woman (
Amatorius 768F). When
Aeschines was accused of treason by Athenians Timarchus and
Demosthenes in 346 BC, he brought a counter suit claiming Timarchus had prostituted himself to (or been "kept" by) other men (
Against Timarchus). He also attributed
Demosthenes' nickname Batalos ("arse") to his "unmanliness and
kinaidiā" and frequently commented on his "unmanly and womanish temper", even criticising his clothing: "If anyone took those dainty little coats and soft shirts off you... and took them round for the jurors to handle, I think they'd be quite unable to say, if they hadn't been told in advance, whether they had hold of a man's clothing or a woman's." In ancient Koine Greek, the word for effeminate is κίναιδος
kinaidos (
cinaedus in its Latinized form), or μαλακός
malakoi: a man "whose most salient feature was a supposedly 'feminine' love of being sexually penetrated by other men": The late Greek
Erôtes ("Loves", "Forms of Desire", "Affairs of the Heart"), preserved with manuscripts by
Lucian, contains a debate "between two men, Charicles and Callicratidas, over the relative merits of women and boys as vehicles of male sexual pleasure." Callicratidas, "far from being effeminised by his sexual predilection for boys... Callicratidas's inclination renders him hypervirile... Callicratidas's sexual desire for boys, then, makes him more of a man; it does not weaken or subvert his male
gender identity but rather consolidates it." In contrast, "Charicles' erotic preference for women seems to have had the corresponding effect of effeminising him: when the reader first encounters him, for example, Charicles is described as exhibiting 'a skillful use of cosmetics, so as to be attractive to women.
Rome 's tale of the two young lovers,
Nisus and Euryalus, Euryalus was "beautiful" and had a close relationship with his mother, while Nisus was fast and skilled with weaponry. Over-refinement, fine clothes and other possessions, the company of women, certain trades, and too much fondness with women were all deemed effeminate traits in Roman society. Taking an inappropriate sexual position, passive or "
bottom", in same-gender sex was considered effeminate and unnatural. Touching the head with a finger and wearing a
goatee were also considered effeminate. Roman consul
Scipio Aemilianus questioned one of his opponents, P. Sulpicius Galus: "For the kind of man who adorns himself daily in front of a mirror, wearing perfume; whose eyebrows are shaved off; who walks around with plucked beard and thighs; who when he was a young man reclined at banquets next to his lover, wearing a long-sleeved tunic; who is fond of men as he is of wine: can anyone doubt that he has done what
cinaedi are in the habit of doing?" Roman orator
Quintilian described, "The plucked body, the broken walk, the female attire," as "signs of one who is soft [mollis] and not a real man." For Roman men masculinity also meant self-control, even in the face of painful emotions, illnesses, or death.
Cicero says, "There exist certain precepts, even laws, that prohibit a man from being effeminate in pain," and
Seneca adds, "If I must suffer illness, it will be my wish to do nothing out of control, nothing effeminately." Emperor/philosopher
Julian the Apostate, in his
Against the Galileans, wrote:
Why are the Egyptians more intelligent and more given to crafts, and the Syrians unwarlike and effeminate, but at the same time intelligent, hot-tempered, vain and quick to learn? In his
Commentaries on the Gallic Wars,
Julius Caesar wrote that the
Belgians were the bravest of all
Gauls because "merchants least frequently resort to them, and import those things which tend to effeminate the mind". Emperor
Marcus Aurelius evidently considered effeminacy an undesirable trait, but it is unclear what or who was being referred to. ==Gay men==