(rare, historical) Of, related to, or characteristic of male same-sex erotic desire and relationships; homosexual.
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From many other places in the classics the impression may be won that Uranic love attained a higher position even than her sister. More recent explanations of the homosexual instinct have emanated from philosophers, psychologists and natural scientists.
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1894, Richard Krafft-Ebing (trans F. J. Rebman), Psychopathia Sexualis, page 341:
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The patriotic assassination that so glorified Harmodios and Aristogeiton was in a vengeance for what was a homosexual marriage, we may say, between the two youths—whose uranic love was so virilized.
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1908, Edward Prime-Stevenson, The Intersexes A History of Similisexualism as a Problem in Social Life[1], page 189:
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But the fact was that ever since Frederick the Great had forbidden women to his Praetorian Guard in the 1750s, obliging the guards to seek the company of boys for their pleasure, Berlin had been identified with soldierly inversion and uranic sexuality. Paragraph 175 of the Federal Criminal Code still forbade all homosexual activity but there were so many male prostitutes in Berlin […] that the law was more or less unenforceable.
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2019, Philip Kerr, Metropolishttps://www.google.ca/books/edition/Metropolis/Y_xlDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=uranic+sexuality&pg=PA41, page 41: