History of Circumcision
This index page links to material relating to the origin
and history of male circumcision. Material is indexed in
chronological order of publication.
Introduction
The practice of male genital mutilation is far older than
recorded history. Certainly, it is far older than the
Biblical account of Abraham (Genesis 17). It seems to have
originated in eastern Africa long before this time.8 21
Many theories have been advanced to explain the origin of
genital mutilation. One theory postulates that circumcision
began as a way of "purifying" individuals and society by
reducing sexuality and sexual pleasure. Human sexuality was
seen as dirty or impure in some societies; hence cutting off
the pleasure-producing parts was the obvious way to "purify"
someone.
It is now known that the male foreskin, or prepuce, is the
principal location of erogenous sensation in the human male
(see Anatomy.) Removal of the
prepuce substantially reduces erogenous sensation.14,19 Therefore (in the appropriate
cultural context), circumcision is revealed as a sacrifice of
"sinful" human enjoyment (in this earthly life), for the sake
of holiness in the afterlife.14
The Jews adopted circumcision as a religious ritual10,13,16,20 and preserved this
prehistoric practice into modern times.11,20 The circumcision of Abraham
removed only the very tip that extended beyond the glans
penis.11,20,26,31 Moses and his
sons were not circumcised. (Exodus 4:25) Although Moses
apparently prohibited circumcision during the 40 years in the
wilderness,20,21,24 (Joshua
5:5) Joshua reinstituted circumcision at Gilgal after the
death of Moses.20,21,24 (Joshua
5:2-10) It is interesting to note that after the Israelites
were circumcised, they immediately became soldiers in
Joshua's army for the conquest of Palestine. (Joshua
6:1-3)
In contrast to the Jews, the Greeks and the Romans placed
a high value on the prepuce..3
34 The Romans passed several
laws to protect the prepuce by prohibiting
circumcision.3 34 The laws were applied to everyone
and were not directed against the Jews. 3
Much later in the Hellenic period, about 140 C.E., the
Jewish authorities modified circumcision procedure to make it
impossible for a Jew to appear to be an uncircumcised
Greek.10,11,20,30 A radical new
procedure called peri'ah was introduced by the priests
and rabbis. In this procedure the foreskin was stripped away
from the glans, with which it is fused in the infant (See Normal.) In a painful procedure
known today as a synechotomy, more foreskin was
removed than before and the injury was correspondingly
greater. With the introduction of peri'ah, the glans
could not easily be recovered, and so no Jewish male would
easily be able to appear as an uncircumcised Greek.10,11,20,31 This radical modified
procedure eventually was adopted by the medical profession
and is the circumcision operation used today.
Although Judaism mandated circumcision, not all Jews
wanted to be circumcised. Several methods of foreskin
restoration were devised and practiced.101125
It may have been at this time that the Pondus
Judaeus (also known as Judaeum Pondum), a bronze
weight worn by Jews on the residual foreskin to stretch it
back into a foreskin,10,11,25
gained popularity amongst Jewish males. This lessened the
ugly appearance of the bare exposed circumcised penis.10 25
This restorative procedure was known by the Greek word
epispasm,10 or "rolling
inward."
The third stage of ritual circumcision, the Messisa
or Metzitzah, was not introduced until the Talmudic
period (500-625 C.E).11,20,25
In Metzitzah, the mohel (ritual circumciser) sucks
blood from the penis of the circumcised infant with his
mouth.34 This procedure has
been responsible for the death of many Jewish babies due to
infection.16 In modern times, a
glass tube is sometimes used instead.19
The Reform movement within Judaism considered circumcision
to be a cruel practice.20 The
Reform movement at Frankfort declared in 1843 that
circumcision was not necessary.20,24 Theodor Hertzl, the founder of
Zionism, refused to have his son circumcised.
The Christians took a strong stand against circumcision in
the first century. Christians rejected circumcision at the
Council at Jerusalem.16 (Acts 15) St.
Paul, the apostle to the gentiles, taught parents that they
should not circumcise their children. (Acts 21:25)
In a reference to the old practices of genital mutilation,
St. Paul warned Titus to beware of the "circumcision group."
(Titus
1:10-16)
The modern use of Hebrew circumcision as a medicalized
practice dates from about 1865 in England and about 1870 in
the US.12 The procedure
accepted for medical use essentially was the Jewish
peri'ah. Moscucci reports that circumcision was
imposed in an attempt to prevent masturbation.18 Gollaher further
describes the history of medicalized circumcision.13 No scientific studies were carried
out to determine the efficacy and safety of circumcision
prior to its introduction into medical practice,13 nor were any studies conducted to
determine the social effects of imposing genital alteration
surgery on a large portion of the population.
South Koreans started to circumcise children during the
American trusteeship following World War II. The American
cultural practice of circumcision became nearly universal in
South Korea after the Korean War of 1950-52.27
In 1949, Gairdner
wrote that circumcision was medically unnecessary and
non-beneficial, and contraindicated because of complications
and deaths.5 The British
National Health Service (NHS) deleted non-therapeutic
neonatal circumcision from the schedule of covered procedures
in 1950. The incidence of neonatal circumcision in the United
Kingdom declined sharply to a very low level after
publication of this article after the procedure was delisted
by the NHS.
America waited another 20 years before addressing the
problem of non-therapeutic circumcision. The Journal of
the American Medical Association published an influential
landmark article by
Dr. E. Noel Preston, Captain, MC, USAF.6 Dr. Preston established that there is
no therapeutic or prophylactic benefit to circumcision. He
also cited "undesirable psychologic, sexual, and medico-legal
difficulties."6
Influenced by Preston, the American Academy of Pediatrics
(AAP), in 1971, issued a statement that
"[t]here are no valid medical indications for circumcision in
the neonatal period."12 This
marked the beginning of the end of America's infatuation with
male circumcision. The incidence of male neonatal
circumcision in the U.S. peaked in 1971 and began a slow
decline that continues to the present day.
Recent History
The AAP convened an "ad hoc Task Force" under the chair of
Hugh C. Thompson, M.D., to review the issue of circumcision
in 1975. The 1975 Task
Force reaffirmed the 1971 AAP statement.11 The Canadian Paediatric Society
(CPS) also took a position in 1975 that
circumcision is medically unnecessary.
The matter rested there until 1985, when retrospective
data collected from U.S. Army medical records by Thomas
Wiswell, M.D. seemed to show a somewhat higher rate of
urinary tract infection (UTI) in non-circumcised boys.
Careful examination of Wiswell's methods and data revealed
many methodological flaws which rendered his conclusions
questionable and unreliable. This created new controversy
about the value of neonatal circumcision. The Canadian Paediatric Society
examined Wiswell's data in 1989 and found it to be
"insufficiently compelling" to cause it to change its 1975
policy statement, which is against circumcision.
The National Organization of Circumcision Information
Resource Centers (NOCIRC) was formed in 1986.
The mandate of NOCIRC is to provide accurate information
regarding male circumcision, to promote children's rights,
and to shed light on the medical mistakes of the past.
Professor George C. Denniston, M.D., M.P.H., founded Doctors Opposing Circumcision (DOC) in
1995 to promote the health advantages of genital integrity
within the medical community.
The Circumcision Information and Resource
Pages (CIRP) were created in 1995 to provide a source of
accurate information about circumcision on the World Wide
Web.
The development of new information in the medical
literature since 1975 caused the AAP to revisit the matter of
circumcision in 1989. A new Task Force under the chair of
Edgar J. Schoen, M.D., examined new data about neonatal pain,
behavior changes, and loss of sexual sensitivity secondary to
neonatal circumcision. New data also conclusively established
the role of the human papillomavirus (HPV) in the
pathogenesis of genital cancers. This removed any lingering
belief that the prepuce somehow caused cancer.
The Canadian Paediatric Society revisited
the matter of neonatal circumcision in 1996. A new
evidence-based policy statement was issued that strengthened
its 1975 recommendation, stating that circumcision is
medically unnecessary. The CPS recommended: "Circumcision
should not be routinely performed."
The incidence of
neonatal circumcision in the US has continued to decline,
and stood at only 60% in 1996. In the same year, the
Australian College of Paediatrics (ACP) reported that the incidence of neonatal
circumcision in Australia has continued its decline to
10%. The ACP termed circumcision traumatic, a possible
violation of human rights, and called for parents to be
provided with full and complete information about
circumcision before making a decision.
John R. Taylor and colleagues published a landmark article
in 1996 that described original research into the anatomy and
histology of the foreskin. The research showed that the
foreskin is highly innervated tissue with the characteristics
of a sensory organ designed to provide erogenous
sensation.19
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the American
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), in a joint
statement, reclassified neonatal circumcision from "routine"
to "elective" in 1997.23 The
change in policy was announced the year after the publication
of Taylor's important article that describes in
detail the injury inherent in every circumcision. This action
removes any suggestion that circumcision is beneficial or
that it is recommended by medical authorities. It may also be
an attempt to shift legal liability for the injury that is
inherent in every child circumcision from the doctor to the
parents.
Persistent criticism of the obvious flaws of the
supplemental 1989
Report of the Task Force on Circumcision has caused the
AAP to distance itself from its own report. The AAP has
removed its policy statement from its website. The AAP
convened a new Task Force under the chair of Carole Marie
Lannon, MD, in 1997 to develop a new evidence-based
policy statement which was released in March 1999. After
fully reviewing the medical evidence, the Task Force
concluded that routine neonatal circumcision cannot be
recommended because of lack of any proved benefit. It said
that the benefits are "potential" (i.e. they are
unproven).
The Council on Scientific Affairs of the American Medical
Association issued a policy report in December 1999 that
re-classified neonatal circumcision as a "non-therapeutic"
procedure.33 This may have a medico-legal
impact.
The ratio of boys circumcised to boys preserved intact
continues to decline in America. In 2001, it had further
declined to a ratio of 55 percent circumcised, while the
percentage of boys preserved intact had risen to 45
percent.40
Highlights
The Encyclopædia Britannica article from the 9th
edition (1876) provides us with a Victorian view of
circumcision. Interestingly, it does not mention any alleged
medical purposes.2
Gairdner's
historic world famous landmark classic medical article (1949)
is presented.5
Preston's historic
influential medical article (1970) is presented.6
Paige (1978) provides us with a history
of cirumcision in the US. She discusses the fear of
masturbation that lead to the commencement of the
circumcision of boys.7
DeMeo (1989) says geographical patterns
of global distributions of the male and female genital
mutilations among native, non-Western peoples, along with
history and archaeology, suggest their genesis in the deserts
of Northeast Africa and the near East, with a subsequent
diffusion outward into sub-Saharan, Oceania and possibly even
into parts of the New World.8
Montagu (1991) uses anthropological
knowledge to give insight into the origins of genital
mutilation.9
Bigelow (1992) traces the development of various forms of
circumcision within Judaism through the centuries and into
modern times.11
Voskuil
(1994) suggests that the identical 28 day lunar month and the
monthly menstruation cycle of the woman are linked to the
origin of circumcision.12
Gollaher (1994)
describes the transformation of ritual circumcision into a
medical procedure.13
McLaren gives us a not very complimentary
portrait of Dr. John Harvey Kellogg who promoted circumcision
and corn flakes as a cure for masturbation.14
Warren and
Bigelow (1994) discuss the sacrificial origin of
circumcision.15
Frederick M. Hodges, Jerry W. Warner. The Right to Our Own
Bodies: The History of Male Circumcision in the U.S.
M.E.N. Magazine 1995 (November).17
Moscucci reports the results of her research into the
introduction of male circumcision to prevent masturbation in
the late 19th century.18
The Oxford
Dictionary of the Jewish Religion (1997) reviews the
history of Jewish circumcision.20
DeMeo
(1996) revisits his earlier work and discusses several
theories regarding the origin of male and female
circumcision. DeMeo identifies anxiety about sexual pleasure
as the underlying psychological reason for both male and
female circumcision.21
Schultheiss
and others (1998) provide an account of the long history
of man's attempts to restore the prepuce after unwanted
circumcision.25
Dunsmuir and
Gordon (1999) provide a good general history of
circumcision with particular attention paid to the history of
the development of surgical technique.26
Kim and colleagues
provide a history of circumcision in South Korea.27
Brandes and
McAninch review the history of efforts to undo the
effects of male circumcision.28
Frederick Mansfield
Hodges (1999) unveils the medical treatment of phimosis
and paraphimosis in the classical medical literature.29
James E. Peron
illuminates the development of circumcision in Jewish history
from a minor procedure into a major mutilation, and how this
most mutilating and injurious form of circumcision was
accepted into medical practice.31
Frederick Mansfield
Hodges, D. Phil., has researched the Greek and Roman
attitudes toward the prepuce. He reports in this profusely
illustrated document that the Greeks and Romans placed a high
value on the prepuce, preferred long tapering prepuces, and
later the Romans protected the prepuce by law.34
John M. Ephron
reports that German Jews used medical arguments to justify
and promote the practice of male circumcision to Gentiles
during the 19th and early 20th centuries.35
John Evelyn
observed a Jewish circumcision at Rome in 1645 and recorded
it in his diary.36
See also
Holdings
- Anonymous. Clitoridectomy
and Medical Ethics. Medical Times and Gazette
(London) 1867:(1):391-2.
- Encyclopædia
Britannica, 9th Ed. s.v. "Circumcision,"
by Rev. T. K. Cheyne.
- Offord J. Restrictions concerning circumcision under
the Romans. Proc R Soc Med 1913;6(Sect Hist
Med):102-7. (PDF)
- Pirie GR. The story of circumcision. Can Med
Assoc J 1927;17(12):1540-2. (PDF)
- Gairdner DA. The fate of the foreskin:
a study of circumcision.. BMJ
1949;2:1433-1437.
- Preston EN. Whither the foreskin? A
consideration of routine neonatal circumcision.
JAMA 1970;213:1853-1858.
- Paige, Karen Eriksen. The
ritual of circumcision. Human Nature, pp 40-48,
May 1978. (Link to www.noharmm.org)
- James deMeo. The Geography of Genital Mutilations.
The Truth Seeker, pp 9-13, July/August 1989. (Link
to www.noharmm.org)
- Montagu, Ashley.
Mutilated Humanity. Presented at the Second
International Symposium on Circumcision. San Francisco,
California. April 30-May 3, 1991. (Link to
www.nocirc.org)
- Hall RG. Epispasm: circumcision
in reverse. Bible Review 1992;August:52-7.
- Bigelow J, Ph.D., The
Development of Circumcision in Judaism. In: Bigelow J.,
The Joy of Uncircumcising! Hourglass Book
Publishing, Aptos, California 95001, 1992, 1995. (ISBN
0-934061-22-X) (out of print)
- Voskuil, D, Ph.D. From Genetic Cosmology to Genital
Cosmetics: Origin Theories of the Righting Rites of Male
Circumcision. Presented at the Third International
Symposium on Circumcision. University of Maryland, College
Park, Maryland, May 22-25, 1994. (Link to
www.nocirc.org)
- Gollaher, David L. From ritual to science:
The medical transformation of circumcision in America.
Journal of Social History Volume 28 Number 1, p.
5-36 (Fall 1994).
- McLaren, Carrie. Porn Flakes: Kellogg, Graham and the
Crusade for Moral Fiber. (courtesy of STAYFREE!
Homepage)
- Warren J, Bigelow J. The case against
circumcision. British Journal of Sexual
Medicine, September/October 1994:6-8.
- John J. Tierney. Circumcision. In: The Catholic
Encyclopedia, 1913, 1997.
- Frederick M. Hodges, Jerry
W. Warner. The
Right to Our Own Bodies: The History of Male Circumcision
in the U.S. M.E.N. Magazine 1995 (November)
- Moscucci, Ornella.
Clitordectomy, Circumcision, and the Politics of Sexual
Pleasure in Mid-Victorian Britain. Sexualities in
Victorian Britain. Indiana University Press,
Bloomington and Indianapolis, 1996.
- Taylor JR, Lockwood AP,
Taylor AJ. The prepuce:
specialized mucosa of the penis and its loss to
circumcision. Br J Urol 1996;77:291-295.
- Circumcision. In:
The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion, Oxford
University Press, New York & Oxford 1997.
- DeMeo, James. The Geography of Genital Mutilations.
(Presented at the Fourth Symposium on Sexual Mutilations,
University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland. August 9-11,
1996.) Published in: Sexual Mutilations, A Human
Tragedy, Plenum Press, New York, 1997 (ISBN
0-306-45589-7). (link to www.nocirc.org)
- Hodges FM. A short history
of the institutionalization of involuntary sexual
mutilations in the United States. in: Denniston GC, Milos
MF (eds.), Sexual Mutilations: A Human Tragedy (New
York: Plenum Publishing, 1997), pp. 17-40. (ISBN
0-306-45589-7)
- Oh W, Merenstein G. Fourth
Edition of the Guidelines for Perinatal Care:
Summary of Changes. Pediatrics
1997;100(6)1021-1027.
- Goldman Ronald, Ph.D.,
Origins and Background. In: Questioning Circumcision: A
Jewish Perspective. Vanguard Publications, Boston,
1998. (ISBN 0-9644895-6-2)
- Schultheiss D, Truss MC,
Stief CG, Jonas U. Uncircumcision: a
historical review of preputial restoration. Plast
Reconstr Surg 1998;101(7): 1990-1998.
- Dunsmuir WD, Gordon EM. The history of
circumcision. BJU Int 1999; 83, Suppl. 1:
1-12.
- Kim DS, Lee JY, Pang MG. Male circumcision: a Korean
perspective. BJU Int 1999; 83 Suppl.
1:28-33.
- Brandes SB, McAninch. Surgical methods of
restoring the prepuce: a critical review. BJU
Int 1999; 83 Suppl. 1:109-113.
- Hodges FM. The history of
phimosis from antiquity to the present. in: Denniston GC,
Hodges MF, Milos MF (eds.), Male and Female
Circumcision: Medical, Legal, and Ethical Considerations in
Pediatric Practice (New York/London: Kluwer
Academic/Plenum Publishing, 1999), pp. 37-62.
- Hodges FM. Phimosis in antiquity.
World Journal of Urology 1999; 17(3):133-136.
- Peron, James E. Circumcision: Then and
Now. Many Blessings 2000;III:41-42.
- Gollaher, David A.,
Circumcision: A History of the World's Most
Controversial Surgery. New York: Basic Books, 2000. 253
pages. (ISBN: 0-465-04397-6)
- Council on Scientific
Affairs, American Medical Association. Report 10: Neonatal
circumcision. July 6, 2000.
- Hodges FM. The Ideal Prepuce in
Ancient Greece and Rome: Male Genital Aesthetics and Their
Relation to Lipodermos, Circumcision, Foreskin
Restoration, and the Kynodesme. Bull
Hist Med 2001 Fall;75(3):375-405.
- John M. Ephron. Medicine and the German
Jews. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001:
222-233. (ISBN 0-300-08377-7)
- John Evelyn. Diary, January 15,
1645. In: The Times, London, 15 January
2003.
- Robert Darby. `Where doctors differ:' The
debate on circumcision as a protection against syphilis,
1855-1914. Social History of Medicine
2003;16(1):57-78.
- Robert Darby. The masturbation taboo and the rise of
routine male circumcision: a review of the
historiography. J Soc Hist 2003;36:737-57.
- Robert J L Darby. Medical history and medical practice:
persistent myths about the foreskin. Med J Aust
2003; 178(4):178-9.
- Bollinger D. (2003) Intact Versus
Circumcised: Normal versus Circumcised: U.S. Neonatal Male
Genital Ratio. Circumcision Reference Library (an
original online publication), 22 April 2003.
- Darby R. The riddle of the sands: circumcision,
history, and myth. N Z Med J
2005;118(1218):U1564.
- Androutsos G. The truth about Louis XVI's marital
difficulties. Prog Urol 2002;12:132-7.
(Translated from the French by Dennis Harrison.)