TigerLover Wrote:The biggest army won everytime.
This was not true. Let's not even get into the fact that back then armies were often made up of paid mercenary soldiers, who did it for living, rather than actual citizens; but it is also not true that the biggest army won by rule.
The Judeo-origin comes from the fact that Jewish tribes were small (I don't know just how small, but I know they were less populous and less significant than their neighbors), and they simply needed their numbers to grow. Homosexuality was perceived as a threat to population. It was all also mixed up with feelings of homosexuality being something that 'defiles' the community and thus making it less pure (that was important to those Jewish tribal people).
Homosexuality was widely practiced in Egypt, Assyria, Babylonia, and Persia (especially) which were all neighboring those Jewish tribes, and negative attitude toward homosexuality also grew out of Jewish aversion toward those foreign powers, their ways of life, and the hostility between them.
Early christian theologians messed it all up even further by twisting Plato's philosophy, and by sheer invention.
I have read a lot of history books on homosexuality, but one I recommend to check out, if you want to get a clear perspective on this topic is Louis Crompton's
Homosexuality and Civilization. It is an amazing, wide-perspective research.
This hatred never had to do with armies and fighting. It didn't trace back to that. The opposite is true. History actually records men who loved other men being regarded better fighters than men who were into women. In ancient Greece there were several 'armies' (more like battalions on our terms, maybe) of male lovers, the most famous of which was the Sacred Band of Thebes. Greeks figured it out quite early on that men who love other men will make superior fighters on the battlefield with their lovers. And it was not untrue. Philip of Macedon was the one who destroyed the Sacred Band of Thebes in the battle of Chaeronea and he is said to have wept at the sight.