When people think of eunuchs, someone like Lord Varys from Game of Thrones often springs to mind. Chubby, obsequious and a flatterer, he is involved in court intrigues and manipulates people and events behind the scenes.
These traits oppose military prowess and valour endorsed by traditional models of masculinity across various times and cultures. According to those tropes, a eunuch’s weapon is the whisper, not the sword.
In reality, not every eunuch in the ancient world was a servile, cloistered being. In fact, eunuchs sometimes led armies on campaign, and were entrusted with high-level administrative tasks.
Details
Title
From Ancient Rome to Persia, eunuchs often led armies and were powerbrokers of the ancient world
Creators
Michael B Charles - Southern Cross University
Publication Details
The Conversation
Publisher
The Conversation Media Group
Identifiers
991013239713602368
Academic Unit
Management; Faculty of Business, Law and Arts
Language
English
Resource Type
Magazine article
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From Ancient Rome to Persia, eunuchs often led armies and were powerbrokers of the ancient world