Royal secrets - The gay, lesbian and bisexual royals you may not know

With Prince Harry and Meghan getting married, something of the royal has changed, but something and some people never change. The monarchy has had hidden gay and bisexual members for hundreds of years. Despite rarely royal family has come out publicly as gay or bisexual, many well-known figures lived relatively openly with same-sex partners or lovers.

Queen Anne of Great Britain (1655-1714)

Gay, lesbian, bisexual royals

Queen Anne was most likely bisexual. Known for England and Scotland united as a single sovereign state during her reign, she also oversaw a passionate affair with Sarah Churchill, the wife of the Duke of Marlborough.

The two were the embodiment of ‘opposites attract’. Sarah was beautiful and assertive and Anne plain and reserved. The two fell in and out of love until Anne dumped Sarah due to her argumentative attitudes, often disagreeing with the Queen.

William II of England (1056-1100)

William II filled his courts with attractive young men. Never marrying and without children, he instead dressed his courtiers in pointed shoes and ordered they grow out their hair. Choosing to promote based on performance in bed, rather than talent. After being apparently assassinated, his successor, Henry I, forced his courtiers to trim their hair. William’s legacy was cut short.

Richard I of England, The Lionheart (1189-1199)

Despite spending just six months of his ten-year reign in the country, Richard I is one of England’s most iconic kings. When he was Duke of Aquitaine, he revolted against his father, Henry II. For the sake of “diplomacy”, he allied with Philip II of France and “ate every day at the same table and from the same dish, and at night their beds did not separate them,” wrote Roger of Hovden, a chronicler who knew Richard personally.

EDWARD II (1284-1327)

In the Hollywood blockbuster, Braveheart, Edward II was portrayed as camp and correspondingly incompetent. While not the most pro-LGBT depiction, Edward II is one of more famously ‘gay’ monarchs. He was ‘wedded brothers’ with Piers Gaveston, the Earl of Cornwall. The friendship agreement has often been likened to a church-approved same-sex partnership by historians. The Earl was often given special access to the King, much to the anger of nobles.

Richard II (1377-1400)

Richard was just 10-years-old when he became king. This meant leading nobles ran the country on his behalf. But when old enough to rule for himself, he surrounded himself with nobles such as Robert de Vere, the Earl of Oxford. The two were allegedly in a relationship. When de Vere died, Richard ordered for his coffin to be opened. He kissed his friend’s hand and reportedly gazed at his face one final time before the burial.

Henry VIII of England (1491-1547)

Despite his obvious love of women – and wives – some historians claim Henry VIII’s sexual appetite also included men. However, there is very little proof to substantiate the claims. With academics often referencing cases of extreme homophobia as a sign of denial. King Henry criminalizing gay sex in the Buggery Act of 1533 is considered as an example of this.

James IV and I (1566-1625)

James was King of Scotland as James VI from 24 July 1567 and King of England and Ireland as James I from the union of the Scottish and English crowns on 24 March 1603. But the union of two crowns wasn’t the only union he oversaw. He was disputedly in a relationship with Robert Carr, who he made Earl of Somerset.

Philippe I, Duke of Orléans (1640-1701)

Philippe I, King Louis XIV’s younger brother, was an openly gay and enjoyed dressing in women’s clothes. Except for his two wives, he had a number of male lovers, most famously the Philipe de Lorraine. The pair were the focus of the historical drama Versailles.

William III of England (1650-1702)

Following the death of his wife Mary, rumors circulated concerning the king’s homosexuality. These surfaced following satirical pamphlets that aimed to discredit the king’s legitimacy. Alleging that the monarch has homosexual inclinations as he had more close male friendships than mistresses. But these are based on more than suspicion, as two Dutch courtiers are among his likely lovers. This was due to their quick promotions and youth.

Emperor Ai of Han (27-1BC)

Emperor Ai of Han was an emperor of the Chinese Han Dynasty. He ascended the throne when he was 20 and reigned from 7 to 1 BC. Late in his reign, he entered into a relationship with court official Dong Xian, who benefited greatly from their same-sex love affair.

Al-hakam II (961AD-976)

Al-Hakam II was the openly Muslim homosexual ruler of Al-Andalus (now Spain). He openly kept a male harem, who he took everywhere with him during his reign. Carrying the legacy of his father, his son Hisham II did the very same.

Galba (3BC-69AD)

The Roman Emperor served for less than seven months, but his administration did not tolerate indiscipline. Earning Galba the reputation of callous cruelty. Alongside ruthlessness, he was known to be “more inclined to males, and then none but the hard bodied and those past their prime” when it came to “sexual matters.” This is the only case in Roman history where a named individual male is stated as homosexual.

Princess Isabella of Bourbon-Parma (1741-1763)

The princess was deeply in love with her husband’s sister, Archduchess Maria Christina. The two spent so much time together that they earned the comparison with Orpheus and Eurydice. During the few years, Isabella and Christina knew each other, they exchanged 200 letters expressing their affection for each other.

Gay, lesbian, bisexual royals

Lord Ivar Mountbatten (1963-present)

The Queen’s cousin became the first member of the British royal family to come out as gay after revealing he is dating James Coyle. Lord Ivar Mountbatten is the Queen’s cousin, the great, great, great grandson of Queen Victoria and the great-nephew of Earl Mountbatten of Burma. He had previously married and had three children with Penelope Thompson.

Prince Manvendra Singh Gohil (1965-present)

Prince Manvendra Singh Gohil is an openly gay Indian prince, who is the son and probable heir of the Maharaja of Rajpipla in Gujarat. He runs a public charity servicing LGBT and HIV/AIDS community named The Lakshya Trust. Manavendra is made headlines when he came out in 2006 and becoming the first prince to do so.

Charles I of Württemberg (1823-1891)

Charles was King of Württemberg, from 25 June 1864 until his death in 1891. His most notorious affair was with the American Charles Woodcock – the pair even appeared in public dressed identically. Following Woodcock, in 1881 the monarch asked Baron von Jackson to join his household as a “confidential friend and companion.”

Ludwig II of Bavaria (1845-1866)

Ludwig never married, nor had any known mistresses. It is known from his diary, private letters, and other surviving personal documents, that he had strong homosexual desires. He struggled all his life to suppress his sexual desires and remain true to his Roman Catholic faith.