>>513406926
>Ancient Greece knew the beauty pageants, it is known that the Callipyge festivals were celebrated in honor of Aphrodite, the celebration consisted of a beauty pageant in which women exposed their buttocks to be judged, hence the term Callipyge, the one with beautiful buttocks

>In Ancient Greek literature, as frequent are the descriptions or exclamations of admiration for a beautiful butt, those for a beautiful breast are equally rare, not to mention the female genitals which were always passed over in silence

>Alciphron also describes a competition that took place between two girls over who had the most beautiful and delicate bottom: Mirrina was the first to untie her belt and began to move her buttocks, which were shaking like pudding, and turned her head backwards to check the butt movement; then he began to make soft moans. Triallide didn't give up... She took off her tunic and, bending her back a little, said: look, look at that colour, full of youth, intact and pure: the pinkness of her hips, their slope towards the thighs; they are neither too plump nor gaunt, and then the dimples at the ends (Letters of Courtesans, "Megara to Bacchide", 14)

>Hesiod had already alluded to later beauties to warn man against the power of seduction of women: "Let not a woman who adorns her behind deceive your heart by whispering caressing words to you" (Works and Days)