skip to primary navigation skip to content
 

 

infant mortality « Top of the Campops: 60 things you didn't know about family, marriage, work, and death since the middle ages

Top of the Campops: 60 things you didn't know about family, marriage, work, and death since the middle ages

Skip to blog menu ▼

Posts Tagged ‘infant mortality’

Call the midwife! Birth attendance and birth outcomes across history.

Thursday, March 27th, 2025

Alice Reid

Both my grandmothers lost children during or shortly after birth, and laid at least some of the blame on their care during that period. My maternal grandmother, a trained midwife, was worried about being allowed to go well beyond her due date less than two years after a previous caesarean birth. When she finally went into labour the doctor delayed his attendance because he was reluctant to leave his game of bridge, and the baby was stillborn. My paternal grandmother blamed a bombing raid for precipitating early labour, and her baby only lived three days. As a premature infant the baby would have been very vulnerable, but my grandmother felt she would have lived had the midwife not insisted on bathing her so frequently 

(more…)

The vulnerability of non-marital births

Thursday, January 30th, 2025

Alice Reid

A previous blog charted trends in non-marital conceptions and births in England from 1550 to the present. It argued that although many couples engaged in sexual intercourse before marriage, in most cases when a woman fell pregnant she and her partner married swiftly, so that the majority of extra-marital conceptions were born within marriage. Not all pregnant women were able to marry however, giving rise to extra-marital births, or ‘illegitimate’ children.

(more…)

« Home
  • Recent posts

  • Pages

  • Archive

  • Tags

  • age at marriage agricultural revolution childbirth coal demographic transition demography doctors economic history energy English peasants extended family family history family size family tree famine fertility fossil fuels genealogies households illegitimacy industrial revolution marriage maternal mortality medieval medieval history middle ages migration mortality naming practices non-marital fertility occupational structure occupations old age old people organic economy poor laws population size service social history surnames urbanisation women's employment women's history women's wages women's work