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Xena: How Hollywood Created a Greek Warrior Princess Who Never Existed

By: guest
10 June 2026 at 21:46
Xena, played by Lucy Lawless
Xena, played by Lucy Lawless. Photo: Screenshot from Season 2, episode “Return of Callisto.” Courtesy: Studios USA Television

Xena the Greek warrior princess, who started as an antagonist of Hercules, captivated audiences around the world more than twenty years ago. One of the joys of looking back at Xena is its playfulness. It features some badass female characters and at times offers a serious message about female solidarity and feminism.

By Amanda Potter

Xena the fictional Warrior Princess, played by Lucy Lawless, captivated audiences around the world for six series with her high kicks, sword skills, and distinctive war cry. The series followed her as she fought her way through armies, monsters, and gods alongside her soul mate and moral compass, Gabrielle (Renee O’Connor).

Xena travelled across space and time, taking us from ancient Greece to Rome, Egypt, Britain, China, India, Scandinavia, and finally to Japan, where it all came to an end twenty years ago on June 18, 2001.

Starting life as an antagonist of Hercules in three episodes of Hercules: The Legendary Journeys, Xena was so popular as a character that she was given her own spin-off series that ran from 1995 to 2001. At the time, Xena: Warrior Princess was considered groundbreaking, as it starred a strong female action heroine and was the only popular adventure, action, science fiction, or fantasy show that featured female leads without male counterparts.

On the twentieth anniversary of the final episode, it is worth revisiting this great show and exploring why it was loved by a broad spectrum of viewers, from young girls drawn in by an active female role model to ancient history buffs, sci-fi fans and the LGBTQ community.

The Fictional Greek Warrior Princess and the Amazons

A reformed warlord from ancient Greece, Xena was not an Amazon but a friend to the tribe of warrior women. To ancient Greek writers, the Amazons were women who fought and behaved like men and were unnatural barbarians. They have since been adopted as positive female role models who break with misogynistic stereotypes of womanhood—they live in a self-sufficient, female-dominated society as warriors and intellectuals. The term “Amazon feminism” is now used to describe a branch of feminism that promotes female physical prowess as a way to achieve gender equality.

Before Xena, the Amazons featured in the 1970s Wonder Woman television series. Not quite the feminist icons we expect today, these women wore pastel-colored negligees as they adopted a peaceful life—without men—on Paradise Island.

In Xena, while the Amazons may also have been attired in revealing costumes made of furs and skins, their separatist society valued martial, as well as academic, skills. An Amazon tells Gabrielle that the Amazon world is based on “truth and an individual woman’s strength.”

The Amazons from Greek mythology lived apart from men at the edge of the known world and fought bravely against male heroes such as Hercules, Theseus, and Achilles. In Xena, the Amazons also lived in a matriarchal society and were skilled fighters who could hold their own against men.

The Amazons in Wonder Woman (2017) can be seen as Xena’s big-screen descendants. The costumes and fighting prowess of Penthesilea (Nina Milner) in the BBC drama Troy: Fall of a City (2018) has tinges of Xena. The leadership ability of the immortal Amazon Andy (Charlize Theron) in the Netflix film The Old Guard can also be seen as inspired by Xena.

But while Troy: Fall of a City and The Old Guard are aimed at older audiences, Xena was popular across all age groups. For instance, episodes of Xena were broadcast in the UK on Channel Five’s Milkshake! Saturday morning slot in the ’90s and early 2000s for young viewers. This led many young girls to adopt Xena as their role model.

The Xena subtext

Xena was also popular with gay and lesbian viewers. In the 1990s, openly gay relationships were mostly missing from popular US television series. However, Xena’s relationship with Gabrielle was interpreted as friends and lovers as much as hero and sidekick. Series producers began to play with this idea, for example, putting Xena and Gabrielle together in a sexy bath in season two fan-favorite episode “A Day in the Life,” so that for many, the subtext became the main text.

Although a lot of fans were dismayed that Xena died in the final episode, they were treated to a long goodbye kiss between Gabrielle and Xena’s ghost. Series producers never openly made Xena and Gabrielle a lesbian couple. But LGBTQ+ fans championed their relationship, which is believed to have paved the way for the openly gay relationships we see in television series today.

One of the joys of looking back at Xena twenty years afterward is its playfulness when compared with dark sci-fi fantasies like Game of Thrones. It features some badass female characters and at times offers a serious message about female solidarity and feminism, but doesn’t take itself too seriously. Some of the special effects may now seem dated, but the storylines still ring true, and the characters of Xena and Gabrielle can continue to be inspirational for a new generation of young female viewers.

Amanda Potter is a Visiting Research Fellow at The Open University. The article was published in The Conversation and is republished here under a Creative Commons License.

AI fever sparks an IPO race that threatens to change the balance of financial markets

Artificial intelligence (AI) is addicted to money. The major labs developing AI models are intoxicated with the dollars that will finance the technology’s evolution. The three leading companies in the sector, Anthropic, OpenAI and SpaceX, have announced in recent days plans to go public to raise more funds in an endless race. Other long-established tech multinationals such as Google, Microsoft, Meta and Amazon have also launched financial operations in what is shaping up to be the biggest capital raising effort in the sector’s history.

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© OLGA FEDOROVA (EFE)

Protests at Nasdaq headquarters against Elon Musk and SpaceX’s IPO.

Global brands ‘likely’ using mineral that funds rebels accused of atrocities in DRC, investigation finds

10 June 2026 at 06:00

Amazon and Sony among firms that may have sourced coltan, used in phones, from supply chains controlled by the M23 rebels, says Global Witness

Leading global brands including Amazon, Ericsson and Sony are “likely” to have sourced minerals linked to a militia accused of widespread sexual violence, summary executions and torture, a new investigation claims.

The companies allegedly, but unknowingly, acquired coltan smuggled from mines in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) that are occupied by the M23 militia, which has committed myriad atrocities in eastern DRC.

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© Photograph: Camille Laffont/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Camille Laffont/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Camille Laffont/AFP/Getty Images

Limpiar un difusor de aromas parecía fácil hasta que empecé este artículo: una guía práctica de todo lo que no debes hacer (basada en mis propios errores)

10 June 2026 at 11:23
Prueba de limpieza con el difusor de aromas Cecotec Pure Aroma 300 Yin.

Hace tiempo que los difusores de aromas dejaron de ser un simple capricho decorativo y se convirtieron en uno de esos pequeños gestos cotidianos que cambian por completo una casa. Basta con encender uno al final del día para que el ambiente resulte más agradable, acogedor y, por supuesto, más relajante. Hay quien los utiliza para crear un rincón de calma antes de dormir, quien recurre a aromas cítricos para trabajar con más concentración y quien simplemente disfruta de esa sensación (casi de hotel) que son capaces de crear en cualquier estancia.

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Difusor de aromas Cecotec Pure Aroma 300 Yin.No debes limpiar tu difusor de aromas con agua directa del grifo.La forma correcta de limpiar un difusor de aromas es con un paño ligeramente húmedo.Nunca debes utilizar un cuchillo u otros objetos metálicos para limpiar tu difusor de aromas.Para limpiar tu difusor de aromas elige otras opciones más suaves como bastoncillos, algodón o paños.No utilices estropajos de ningún tipo para limpiar tu difusor. Es mejor un paño suave.También puedes utilizar cepillos de limpieza finos para acceder a zonas complicadas, pero siempre con cuidado.No utilices sprays multiusos u otro tipo de productos abrasivos para limpiar tu difusor.Mejor opta por mezclar agua con vinagre de limpieza y utiliza un paño suave.No limpies el difusor cuando esté enchufado y respeta el límite máximo de agua que indica.Desenchufa siempre el difusor, aunque solo sea para pasar un paño húmedo. También debes respetar el nivel máximo de agua.Recuerda añadir siempre los aceites esenciales donde indica el fabricante y en la cantidad recomendada.Vacía y seca el difusor después de cada uso. No dejes que el agua se estanque.
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