Christina of Sweden: The Queen Who Refused to Be a Woman
Crowned queen at the age of six and ruling in her own right by eighteen, Christina of Sweden stood as one of the most enigmatic and transgressive monarchs of the 17th century — a woman who refused marriage, dressed in men’s clothing, and filled her court with artists, philosophers, and female companions.
Christina cultivated a persona that rejected femininity and challenged dynastic expectations. She openly declared herself uninterested in marriage, calling it a “horrible and offensive thing.” She wore trousers, collected weapons, and preferred horseback riding to embroidery. But beneath the politics of refusal lay a more intimate rebellion: Christina was deeply attached to women, particularly Ebba Sparre, whom she called her “bedfellow” and “the object of my love.”
Their letters are saturated with romantic longing. While such language has often been dismissed as “romantic friendship,” Christina’s lifelong refusal of heterosexual norms, her masculine self-fashioning, and the central role of women in her emotional life suggest a queer consciousness articulated through sovereign performance.
In 1654, Christina abdicated her throne, converted to Catholicism, and relocated to Rome, where she lived as a patron of the arts and philosophy – continuing to inhabit liminal spaces of gender, faith, and sexuality until her death. She was buried in the Vatican, one of the few women to receive such honour – though she had spent her life rejecting the identity that burial presumed.
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