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1[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cae15daf4846e7e768c00fda5b23d4fc.jpg]]
2
3->''"Some say the muses number nine--\
4How careless!\
5Behold, Sappho of Lesbos: the tenth."''
6-->--attributed to '''Creator/{{Plato}}'''
7
8Sappho (c. 630-570 BC) was born on the Greek island of Lesbos, about 2700 years ago. It's hard to overstate her reputation in the ancient world: she was on the Greek curriculum of classics for a ''thousand'' years[[note]]Creator/WilliamShakespeare: 400 years so far[[/note]], and there's basically no reference to her that isn't along the lines of "[[SugarWiki/GushingAboutShowsYouLike is completely fucking awesome]]".
9
10Sappho's back catalog is subject to one of history's more heartbreaking cases of {{Missing Episode}}s: she left at least nine volumes of {{poetry}}... of which ''one'' complete poem survives. So do about two hundred fragments, some as short as a single word. She was dropped from the standard classical curriculum during the Byzantine era (ca. 6th century AD), possibly because her dialect of Greek was considered archaic and difficult by then.
11
12These days, Sappho isn't known so much for her poetry as for her association with female homosexuality. Her native island, Lesbos, is the [[TropeNamer source of the word]] "lesbian", as is her own name for "UsefulNotes/{{sapphi|sm}}c".[[note]]”Lesbian” being used for women attracted exclusively to women, and “sapphic” to encompass all women-loving women including bi and pan women.[[/note]]
13
14Due partly to the loss of her work, hardly anything is known of her personal, let alone sexual life, and some scholars doubt that her poems are even meant to be autobiographical--but there is no reason to assume they were not, either. All that is certain is that the fragments where the gender of the beloved is specified, all (except fragment 102, which is hotly debated) identify her as female. And that Sappho herself was one of the most important poets who ever lived, and arguably the TropeMaker, or at least TropeCodifier, for many of the concepts of romantic love in western culture.
15----
16!!Sappho provides examples of:
17* FlauntingYourFleets:
18-->"Some say horsemen, some say warriors,\
19Some say a fleet of ships is the loveliest\
20Vision in this dark world, but I say it's\
21What you love. [...]\
22And I recall Anaktoria, whose sweet step\
23Or that flicker of light on her face,\
24I'd rather see than Lydian chariots\
25Or the armed ranks of the hoplites."
26* QueerFlowers: Her poetry is the UrExample, specifically using violets for romance between women. She would make reference to a girl or woman "with violets in her lap" as a metaphor for homosexual romance.
27
28!!Sappho in popular culture:
29[[AC:Anime & Manga]]
30* Sappho appears in ''Utae! Erinna'' by Futaba Sato as the mentor of the titular character.
31
32[[AC:Comic Books]]
33* ''Franchise/WonderWoman'':
34** ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1942'': "Suffering Sappho!" is one of Wonder Woman's {{catchphrase}}s.
35** ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1987'': Themyscira's vast library has a far more complete record of Sappho's works than has survived in the real world.
36** ''ComicBook/WonderWomanRebirth'': [[ComicBook/{{Cheetah}} Barbara-Ann Minerva]] and ComicBook/EttaCandy have an innuendo filled conversation about the works of Sappho that reveals they're both attracted to women.
37
38[[AC:Films -- Live-Action]]
39* ''Film/{{Sappho}}'' has a woman who shares her name visiting Greece. During this visit she falls for another woman, with the historical Sappho discussed as well.

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