Everything about Castrate totally explained
Castration (also referred to as:
gelding,
neutering,
fixing,
orchiectomy, orchidectomy, and
oophorectomy) is any action,
surgical,
chemical, or otherwise, by which a
male loses the functions of the
testes or a
female loses the functions of the
ovaries. In common usage the term is usually applied to males, although as a medical term it's applied to both males and females. For more information about female castration, see
oophorectomy.
Castration in humans
The practice of castration has its roots before recorded human history. Castration was frequently used in certain cultures of
Europe, the
Middle East,
India,
Africa and
China, for religious or social reasons. After battles in some cases, winners castrated their captives or the corpses of the defeated to symbolise their victory and 'seize' their power. Castrated men —
eunuchs — were often admitted to special social classes and were used particularly to staff
bureaucracies and palace households: in particular, the
harem. Castration also figured in a number of religious castration cults. Other religions, for example
Judaism and
Islam, were strongly opposed to the practice. The
Leviticus Holiness code, for example, specifically excludes eunuchs or any males with defective genitals from the priesthood, just as castrated animals are excluded from
sacrifice.
Eunuchs in China have been known to usurp power in many eras of
Chinese history, most notably in the
Later Han, late
Tang and late
Ming Dynasties. There are similar recorded Middle Eastern events.
In ancient times, castration often involved the total removal of all the
male genitalia. This involved great danger of death due to
bleeding or infection and, in some states, such as the
Byzantine Empire, was seen as the same as a death sentence. Removal of only the testicles had much less risk.
In China, castration of a male who entered the caste of eunuchs during imperial times involved the removal of the whole genitalia, that is, the removal of the testes, penis, and scrotum. The removed organs were returned to the eunuch to be interred with him when he died so that, upon rebirth, he could become a whole man again. The penis, testicles, and scrotum were euphemistically termed
bǎo (寶) in Mandarin Chinese, which literally means 'precious treasure'. These were preserved in alcohol and kept in a pottery jar by the eunuch.
Reasons
Medical
Testicular cancer is generally treated by surgical removal of the cancerous testicle(s) (
orchiectomy), often followed by
radiation or
chemotherapy. Unless both testicles are cancerous, only one is removed.
Either surgical removal of both testicles or
chemical castration may be carried out in the case of
prostate cancer, as
hormone testosterone-depletion treatment to slow down the cancer. Similarly, testosterone-depletion treatment (either surgical removal of both testicles or
chemical castration) is used to greatly reduce sexual drive or interest in those with sexual drives, obsessions, or behaviors, or any combination of those that may be considered deviant. Castration in humans has been proposed, and sometimes used, as a method of birth control in certain poorer regions.
Male-to-female
transsexuals often undergo orchiectomy, as do some other
transgendered people. Orchiectomy may be performed as a part of more general
sex reassignment surgery, either before or during other procedures, but it may also be performed on someone who doesn't desire, or can't afford, further surgery.
As punishment
Involuntary castration also appears in the history of warfare, sometimes used by one side to torture or demoralize their enemies. It was also practiced to extinguish opposing male lineages and thus allow the victor to sexually possess the defeated group's women.
Tamerlane was recorded to have castrated
Armenian prisoners of war who had fought as allies of the Ottoman
Sultan Bayezid I, while others were buried alive.
Edward Gibbon's famous work
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire reports castration of defeated foes at the hands of the
Normans. Castration has also been used in modern conflicts, as the
Janjaweed militiamen currently (as of
2005) attacking citizens of the
Darfur region in
Sudan, often castrating villagers and leaving them to bleed to death .
Sima Qian, the famous Chinese Historian, was castrated by order of the Emperor of China for dissent.
Another famous victim of castration was the medieval French philosopher, scholar, teacher, and (later) monk
Pierre Abélard, castrated by relatives of his lover,
Héloïse.
Bishop Wimund, a 12th Century English adventurer and invader of the Scottish coast, was also castrated.
When
Zheng He was captured by the Ming Army as a child in 1381 he was castrated; he later became an admiral, who led a large fleet on several voyages of exploration.
"Voluntary" chemical or surgical castration has been in practice in many countries—reports are available from American, Scandinavian, and European countries, in particular, for the past eighty-plus years (chemical for the last thirty or so years)—as an option for treatment for people who have broken laws of a sexual nature, allowing them to return to the community from otherwise lengthy detentions . The effectiveness and ethics of this treatment are heavily debated.
A
temporary chemical castration has been studied and developed as a preventive measure and
punishment for several repeated
sex crimes, such as
rape or other
sexually related violence. Chemical castration was
Alan Turing's punishment when he was convicted of "acts of gross indecency" (
homosexual acts) in 1952; it resulted indirectly in his
suicide.
Physical castration appears to be highly effective as, historically, it results in a 20-year re-offense rate of less than 2.3% vs. 80% in the untreated control group, according to a large 1963 study involving a total of 1036 sex offenders by the German researcher A. Langelüddeke, among others, much lower than what was otherwise expected. Compare to overall
sex offender recidivism rates.
Sexual
Castration play is one of many
fetishes within the
BDSM community although it isn't as well known by the mainstream. In castration play, one simulates the effects of castration without going all the way to castration.
For religious reasons
In Europe, when females were not permitted to
sing in church or cathedral choirs in the Roman Catholic Church, boys were sometimes castrated to prevent their voices breaking at
puberty and to develop a special high
voice. The first documents mentioning
castrati are Italian church records from the 1550s. In the baroque music era these singers were highly appreciated by Opera composers as well. Famous castrati include
Farinelli,
Senesino,
Carestini, and
Caffarelli. The last castrato was
Alessandro Moreschi (1858-1922) who served in the
Sistine Chapel Choir. However, in the late 1800s, the Roman Catholic Church, which had always considered castration to be mutilation of the body and therefore a severe sin, condemned the production of castrati; their castrations had been performed clandestinely in contravention of Church law.
A number of
religious cults have included castration as a central theme of their practice. These include:
- The cult of Cybele, in which devotees castrated themselves in ecstatic emulation of Attis: see Gallus.
- Some followers of early Christianity considered castration as an acceptable way to counter sinful desires of the flesh. Origen is reported by Eusebius to have castrated himself based on his reading of the Gospel of Matthew, although there's some doubt concerning this story (Schaff considers the account genuine but cites Baur et al. in opposition). Boston Corbett was likewise inspired by this same verse to castrate himself (Corbett was the 19th-century American soldier who is generally believed to have fired the shot that killed John Wilkes Booth.) Bishop Melito of Sardis (d. ca 180) was a eunuch, according to the church history of Eusebius of Caesarea, though, significantly the word "virgin" was substituted in Rufino's Latin translation of Eusebius.
- Skoptsy
- Heaven's Gate
While expels castrated men from the assembly of Israel,
, gives a much more accepting view of eunuchs, and in
Acts 8:34-39
, a eunuch is baptized.
Chemical
In the case of chemical castration, ongoing regular injections of
anti-androgens are required.
Chemical castration seems to have a greater effect on bone density than physical castration. Since the development of
teriparatide, this severe bone loss has been able to be reversed in nearly every case. At this time there's a limitation on the use of this medication to 24 months until the long-term use is better evaluated.
With the advent of chemical castration, physical castration isn't generally recommended by the medical community unless medically necessary or desired.
Medical consequences
A subject of castration who is castrated before the onset of
puberty will retain a high voice, non-muscular build, and small genitals. They may well be taller than average, as the production of sex hormones in puberty—particularly testosterone—stops long bone growth. The person may not develop
pubic hair and will have a small sex drive or none at all. Castrations after the onset of puberty will typically reduce the sex drive considerably or eliminate it altogether. Also castrated people are automatically
sterile, because the
testes (for males) and
ovaries (for females) produce
sex cells needed for
sexual reproduction. Once removed the subject is infertile. The voice doesn't change. Some castrates report mood changes, such as
depression or a more serene outlook on life. Body strength and muscle mass can decrease somewhat. Body hair sometimes may decrease. Castration prevents
male pattern baldness if it's done before hair is lost; however, castration won't restore hair growth after hair has already been lost due to male pattern baldness. Castration eliminates the risk of testicular cancer.
Historically, eunuchs who additionally underwent a
penectomy reportedly suffered from urinary incontinence associated with the removal of the penis, and they'd their own specialist doctors.
Without Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT), typical symptoms (similar to those experienced by menopausal women) include hot flashes; gradual bone-density loss, resulting in osteopenia or osteoporosis; potential weight gain or redistribution of body fat to the hips/chest. Replacement of testosterone in the form of gel, patches, or injections can largely reverse these effects, although breast enlargement has also been reported as a possible side effect of testosterone usage .
Castration in psychoanalysis and literary theory
The concept of castration plays an important role in
psychoanalysis; see, for example,
castration anxiety.
Castration also plays an important role in psychoanalytically-influenced literary theory, for example
Harold Bloom's
The Anxiety of Influence. Poetry can also be seen as castrating, with male poets either being castrated through being outdone by their male predecessors (as in Bloom), or male poets (and even mere readers) being castrated by the force of the female sublime as conveyed to them through poetry (as in Maxwell). Catherine Maxwell identifies
Philomela as being castrated by Tereus when he rapes and mutilates her.
Castration in veterinary practice
Castration is commonly performed on domestic animals not intended for breeding.
Domestic animals are usually castrated in order to avoid unwanted or uncontrolled
reproduction; to reduce or prevent other manifestations of sexual behaviour such as territorial behaviour or aggression (eg. fighting between groups of entire (uncastrated) males of a species); or to reduce other consequences of sexual behaviour that may make animal husbandry more difficult, such as boundary/fence/enclosure destruction when attempting to get to nearby females of the species.
Male
horses are usually castrated (
gelded) using
emasculators, because
stallions are rather aggressive and troublesome. The same applies to male
mules, although they're sterile. Male
cattle are castrated to improve muscling and docility for use as
oxen.
Breeding individuals are kept
entire and used for breeding: they may fetch higher prices when sold.
Livestock may be castrated when used for food in order to increase growth or weight or both of individual male animals and because of the undesirable taste and odor of the meat from sexually mature males. In
domestic pigs the taint is caused by
androstenone and
skatole concentrations stored in the fat tissues of the animal after sexual maturity. It is released when the fat is heated and has a distinct odor and flavor that's widely considered unpalatable to consumers. Consequently, in commercial meat production, male pigs are either castrated shortly after birth or slaughtered before they reach sexual maturity.
In the case of pets, castration is usually called
neutering, and is encouraged to prevent overpopulation of the community by unwanted animals, and to reduced certain diseases such as prostate disease and testicular cancer in male dogs (oophorectomy in female pets is often called
spaying). Testicular cancer is rare in dogs, but prostate problems are somewhat common in unaltered male dogs when they get older. Neutered individuals have a much lower risk of developing prostate problems in comparison. Unaltered male cats are more likely to develop an obstruction in their urethra, preventing them from urinating to some degree; however neutering doesn't seem to make much difference statistically because many neutered toms also have the problem.
A specialized vocabulary has arisen for neutered animals of given species:
Barrow (pig)
Bullock (cattle)
Capon (chicken)
Dinmont (sheep, goat)
Gelding (horse)
Gib (cat, ferret)
Havier (deer)
Lapin (rabbit)
Stag (cattle, sheep)
Steer (cattle)
Wether (sheep, goat)
Methods of veterinary castration include instant surgical removal, the use of an elastrator tool to secure a band around the testicles that disrupts the blood supply, the use of a Burdizzo tool or emasculators to crush the spermatic cords and disrupt the blood supply, pharmacological injections and implants and immunological techniques to inoculate the animal against its own sexual hormones.
Certain animals, like horses and swine, are usually surgically treated with a scrotal castration (which can be done with the animal standing while sedated and after local anaesthetic has been applied), while others, like dogs and cats, are anaesthetised and recumbent when surgically castrated with a pre-scrotal incision in the case of dogs, or a pre-scrotal or scrotal incision used for cats.
In veterinary practice an "open" castration refers to a castration in which the inguinal tunic is incised and not sutured. A "closed" castration refers to when the procedure is performed so that the inguinal tunic is sutured together after incision.
Miscellaneous
Orthodox Judaism and Islam forbid the castration of either humans or animals. In ancient Judaism, castrated animals were deemed unfit for sacrifice in the Temple (Lv. 22:24); Castrated members of the priestly caste were forbidden to enter certain parts of the Temple, to approach the altar, or to make sacrifices, although they could eat their share of the offerings (Lv. 21:16–24). Traditionally, no eunuch is allowed to convert to Judaism (Dt. 23:2, or Dt. 23:1, NRSV).
Castration is used as a treatment for prostate cancer.(External Link
)
Some parasitic nematodes chemically castrate their hosts, see microphallus.Further Information
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