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The word circumcision comes from Latin circum (="around") and cædere (="to cut"). In males, circumcision is the surgical removal of the prepuce (foreskin), and sometimes the excision of the frenulum. Unless otherwise noted, in this article "circumcision" should be taken to refer specifically to male circumcision. For information on procedures performed on the female genitalia, see female circumcision.

First Section
An uncircumcised penis, a circumcised penis

Circumcision in the Ancient World
Circumcision was common, although not universal, among ancient Semitic peoples. The Book of Jeremiah, written in the sixth century BC, lists the Egyptians, Jews, Edomites, Ammonites, and Moabites as circumcising people. Herodotus, writing in the fifth century BC, would add the Colchians, Ethiopians, Phoenicians, and Syrians to that list.

The ancient Greeks, however, considered an unmodified penis far more aesthetic than a circumcised one. Ancient Greek artwork portrayed penises as covered by the foreskin (sometimes in exquisite detail), except in the portrayal of satyrs, lechers, and barbarians. The Greek preference for the uncircumcised penis is reflected in Herodotus' comment on the Egyptians: "They practice circumcision for the sake of cleanliness, considering it better to be clean than comely." (Herodotus, Book 2, 37:2).

Another Section
In the aftermath of Alexander the Great's conquests, the Greek prejudice against the appearance of the circumcised penis led to a decline in the incidence of circumcision among many peoples that had previously practiced it. The writer of 1 Maccabees wrote that under the Seleucids, many Jewish men attempted to hide or reverse their circumcision so they could exercise in Greek gymnasia (see foreskin restoration). Similar cultural pressures operated throughout the Hellenistic world: when the Judean king John Hyrcanus conquered the Idumeans, he forced them to become circumcised and convert to Judaism, but their ancestors the Edomites had practiced circumcision in pre-Hellenistic times. In Egypt, only the priestly caste retained circumcision, and by the second century, the only circumcising groups in the Roman Empire were Jews, Egyptian priests, and the Nabatean Arabs. Circumcision was sufficiently rare among non-Jews that being circumcised was considered conclusive evidence of Judaism in Roman courts&mdash;Suetonius described a court proceeding in which a ninety-year-old man was stripped naked before the court to determine whether he was evading the head tax placed on Jews.