A Good Birth
Helen Castor reveals how the moment of labour and birth was one of the most dangerous times for a medieval woman, with no antiseptics or anaesthetics available.
For a medieval woman approaching the moment of labour and birth, there were no antiseptics to ward off infection or anaesthetics to deal with pain. Historian Helen Castor reveals how this was one of the most dangerous moments a medieval woman would ever encounter, with some aristocratic and royal women giving birth as young as 13. Birth took place in an all-female environment and the male world of medicine was little help to a woman in confinement. It was believed that the pains of labour were the penalty for the original sin of humankind - so, to get through them, a pregnant woman needed the help of the saints and the blessing of God himself.
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Clip
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Sex in marriage in the Middle Ages
Duration: 01:57
Music Played
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Thomas Tallis
Salvator Mundi
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Dizzi Dulcimer
Mermaid
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Dizzi Dulcimer
Fantasy
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Maggie Sansome
Mummers Tale
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Helen Castor |
Series Producer | Lucy Swingler |
Director | Lucy Swingler |
Broadcasts
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