Gay sex british
UK Gay Glossary
See an A-Z glossary of words and phrases relating to gay life in Britain.
The glossary includes Acts of Parliament, male lover villages in Britain, history, people, and current and archaic gay slang.
Further knowledge on many of the listed terms is available via accompanying links.
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A
AC/DC - slang for attracted to both genders (slur).
Ace - a shortened term for asexual.
Albany Trust - a registered nonprofit set up in 1958 to complement the Homosexual Statute Reform Society (see below).
Ally - (typically) straight supporter of the gay movement.
Asexual - a person who feels short-lived or no sexual attraction.
B
Bear - male lover term for a large hairy male.
BFI Flare: London LGBTIQ+ Film Festival - Europe's largest LGBTIQ+ film festival held in spring.
Biphobia - fear or despise of someone who identifies as fluid (bi).
Bisexual - (bi) a person who feels sexual attraction across genders.
Boi - a boyish lesbian.
Buggery Act - introduced in 1533 during the reign of Henry VIII. Men having sex with men was punishable by death in Britain until 1861. It was the country's first civil sodomy law; previously, cases were administered by eccl
(Image credit: ANDREW COWIE/AFP/Getty Images)
Fifty years ago, the Sexual Offences Proceed 1967 came into effect. The act, which decriminalised homosexual sex acts between consenting men over the age of 21, opened the door to a slew of legal and social changes which would transform the way British society viewed same-sex relationships over the next 50 years.
Here are some of the key dates in the history of gay rights in the UK:
1533: The Buggery Act, the first ever law to specifically outlaw anal sex, was signed into English law. The text of the act described "buggery" as a "detestable and abominable Vice", punishable by death whether devoted with "mankind or beast".
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Walter Hungerford, 1st Baron Hungerford, was the first person to be ex
7 British Monarchs Who May Have Been Gay
For centuries men lived in one sphere and women in another and they would approach together for marriage and having children. It seemed that the sexes co-existed mainly to endure the human race. Love and sex can be very different factors but, when put together, they can form the most electric sensation. This was no different for kings and queens who were shut to their favourites. There are several British monarchs who may have been gay. In truth, six kings – and one queen are thought to have been same-sex attracted, members of what we now dial the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bi- and transexual) community. They include:
William II of England
The son of William the Conqueror, who took the throne of England in 1066, was known as William Rufus because of his red hair (‘rufus’ meaning red). William II became King of England in 1087 and was often described as ‘effeminate’ and with a keen interest in fashionable young men.
William II of England drawn by Matthew Paris. Photo Credit: © Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.
Edward II of England
Perhaps the most well-known of the homosexual kings, Edward II became King of England in 1307. He spent much o
5 gay British Kings and Queens from history
Centuries before homosexuality was made legal between consenting adults in 1967, the ‘love that dare not speak its name’ was viewed as a sin in England, particularly by the church, and technically punishable by death.
It is not surprising that many gay and attracted to both genders monarchs kept their cherish lives with members of the same sex a closely guarded secret.
1. William II of England: Reign 1087 – 1100
Known as ‘Rufus’ due to his ruddy complexion and red hair, the third son of William the Conqueror became King of England in 1087 and is assumed to contain been gay or double attraction. Described by historians as both ‘effeminate’ and ‘boorish’, as well as creature a devil-may-care soldier, his temperament swung between extremes of calmness and belligerence.
The Anglo-Norman king, who never married or sired children, was capable of both wise governing and acting with contentiousness. Unlike other monarchs of the period, William lacked religious piety and is said to have indulged in sexual vices that shocked his council.
His death while hunting in the New Forest when he was shot by an arrow, has led to the suggestion he