Lord Nelson ‘was queer’, leading gallery says… after years of speculation around hero admiral’s last words

A prestigious gallery said Admiral Lord Nelson was ‘Queer’.
The British maritime hero died for his country after expressing his greatest victory over the French and Spanish fleets during the Trafalgar War on October 21, 1805.
In 1805, the Royal Navy was killed in 1805 during the Trafalgar War, where France and Spain won the united forces.
The Walker Art Gallery, financed by the taxpayer in Liverpool, exhibits two paintings that show Nelson’s last moments in HMS victory.
It is generally believed to be ‘Kiss Me Hardy’, which he said to Sir Thomas Hardy, the flag captain, the flag captain, Vice President of the Flag, Sir Thomas Hardy.
In response, Lord Nelson received a kiss on his hands and foreheads from Hardy.
However, a letter sent by comrade six days after the war offers a different account.
Despite the various work of the Admiral, curators placed it in a ‘Queer Relations’ collection in the gallery.
A prestigious gallery said Admiral Lord Nelson was ‘queer’, it appeared
According to Telegraph, Nelson’s death was added to an article on ‘LGBTQ+ Love History’.
Liverpool Group, which is a part of the public national museums, says: ‘Historians speculated the exact nature of the relationship between Hardy and Nelson.
‘Whatever the truth, for many, Nelson’s famous will are the symbol of the history of life, sometimes hidden Queer life.’
“It is not known whether their relationship is sexual, but their friendship reflects close relations between men in the sea.”
‘Close relationships that are both sexually and platonic can develop between those on board.’
The campaigns criticized the movement they claim to distract known LGBT figures.
The advocacy group LGB Alliance CEO Kate Barker said: ‘We have enough LGB hero from history without claiming that straight people are gay.
Instead of ‘queering’, which cannot respond back, museums should celebrate all gay, lesbian and bisexual British reaching bright things – they live in much less tolerant times than ourselves. ‘
The death of Daniel Maclise’s Nelson, 1805, ‘Queer Relations’ collection is exhibited at the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool
George Sievers, the second HMS Belleisle weapons in the British column, Nelson’ın ‘won of the magnificent victory has survived long enough to be informed about the scope’ announced.
Siers said that Nelson said: ‘Thanks to God, but I have lived today and now I’m dying content.’
Siers wrote on 27 October 1805 from Gibraltar: ‘Lord Nelson in the victory was most closely engaged in the French admiral, injured by a grape cut on the side of his master in the heat of the action and was forced to move below.
Immediately dressed in the wound, he insisted again when he was brought back soon. [received] A shot from his body survived until the evening: long enough to be informed about the capture of the French Admiral and the scope of the magnificent victory he achieved.
‘Thanks to God, but I lived today and now I’m dying content.’
William Shakespeare has emerged as an unknown portrait that he could be a gay lover.
The miniature portrait painted behind a play card can be a sincere picture of the playwright’s boss and paramour.
In the opposite of the coin, a large black arrow – the red heart of a game card like a motif that appears to be the personal coat of the game writer can be seen.
The portrait of a androgen figure depicts Henry Wriothesley, the third Earl of Southampton, and was probably given to William Shakespeare as a love coach
He is an art historian and an honorary reader at the University of Warwick. Elizabeth Golding has announced that the 16th century picture is probably a love coin with great emotional importance for the owner.
The portrait of a Androgen figure depicts Henry Wriothesley, the third Earl of Southampton.
It was painted by Queen Elizabeth I’s favorite portraitist Nicholas Hilliard, created in the 1590s.
The period of time period of the poet’s two erotic poems – Venus and Adonis (1593) and Lucrece rape (1594) – Both are dedicated to Earl.




