posted on 2019-09-13, 09:34authored byAngela Joy Muir
The history of childbirth in England has gained increasing momentum, but no studies have been carried out for Wales, and therefore the nature of childbirth in early modern Wales remains largely unknown. This article seeks to redress this imbalance in two ways: First, by examining Welsh parish, court and ecclesiastical records for evidence of those who attended parturient women. This evidence demonstrates that Welsh midwives were not a homogeneous group who shared a common status and experience, but were a diverse mix of practitioners drawn from a range of socioeconomic backgrounds. Secondly, by assessing the care these practitioners provided to some of the most marginalised in Welsh society: unmarried pregnant women. Parish resources were limited, and poor law provision often covered only what was considered absolutely necessary. Analysis of what was deemed essential for the safe delivery of illegitimate infants provides a revealing glimpse of to the ‘ceremony of childbirth’ in eighteenth-century Wales.
Funding
This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust under Grant number WT104885MA; and Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada under Grant number 752-2015-0033. Research for this article was undertaken at the University of Exeter.
Angela Muir was appointed Lecturer in British Social and Cultural History in the Centre for English Local History at the University of Leicester in 2018. She was the 2017–18 EHS Power Fellow and Lecturer in Welsh History at Cardiff University. She completed her doctoral research at the University of Exeter with funding from the Wellcome Trust and SSHRC. Her research looks at the experience and broader social, cultural and medical context of illegitimacy and childbirth in eighteenth-century Britain.
History
Citation
Social History of Medicine, 2018, hky092
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/School of History, Politics and International Relations
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Social History of Medicine
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP) for Society for the Social History of Medicine