Margarida Borràs
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Margarida Borràs is the assumed name of a transgender woman executed under anti-sodomy laws in Valencia in 1460. The case has become an icon of LGBT rights in Valencia since 1995, when it was discussed by Vicent Josep Escartí, professor at the University of Valencia and the Margarida Borràs Award was created for "persons and institutions that stand out in the defense of LGBT-rights and against all discrimination on the ground of sexuality or gender". In January 2016, a square in Valencia was named after her.
Margarida Borràs was born Miquel as the son of a wealthy official from Mallorca. She changed her name to Margarida and dressed and lived as a woman in Valencia. Borràs was arrested, subjected to torture, and executed by hanging on 28 July 1460.
References
[edit]- "Margarida Borràs, una transexual valenciana en el siglo XV". 2014. Archived from the original on 2020-02-12. Retrieved 2016-11-15.
- "La cruel ejecución de Margarida Borrás, la hija del notario que nació hombre". 2014.
- La força dels somnis. 25 anys lambda. Catàleg de la mostra expositiva del Col·lectiu Lambda de lesbianes, gais, transsexuals i bisexuals celebrada amb motiu del seu 25é aniversari (1986 - 2011) (2012), felgtb.org Archived 2016-01-28 at the Wayback Machine
- "Las valencianas ilustres recuperan terreno en el callejero de la ciudad". 2016.
- LGBTQ rights in Spain
- 15th-century births
- 1460 deaths
- 15th-century people from the Kingdom of Aragon
- Male-to-female cross-dressers
- Spanish transgender women
- Executed Spanish people
- People prosecuted under anti-homosexuality laws
- 15th-century LGBTQ people
- People executed by Spain by hanging
- 15th-century executions
- Medieval Spanish LGBTQ people